The Edinburgh Annual Register, Volume 19John Ballantyne and Company, 1828 - Europe |
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Page 10
... considerable part of the evil now admitted to exist . All he meant to do at present , was to claim a com- plete reserve on the part of himself and of the House as to their opinion re- specting the possibility of the applica- tion of any ...
... considerable part of the evil now admitted to exist . All he meant to do at present , was to claim a com- plete reserve on the part of himself and of the House as to their opinion re- specting the possibility of the applica- tion of any ...
Page 31
... considerable ca- pital , was , more or less , an encourager of speculation ; and to say so , was nei- ther an impeachment of his honour nor of his integrity . Mr Calcraft said , it was well for mi- nisters to talk of country paper ; the ...
... considerable ca- pital , was , more or less , an encourager of speculation ; and to say so , was nei- ther an impeachment of his honour nor of his integrity . Mr Calcraft said , it was well for mi- nisters to talk of country paper ; the ...
Page 35
... considerable sensation of uneasiness on one side was created , and of caution on the other . When great apprehensions became af- terwards more general , the consequence was a re - action , before which some bankers failed , and the ...
... considerable sensation of uneasiness on one side was created , and of caution on the other . When great apprehensions became af- terwards more general , the consequence was a re - action , before which some bankers failed , and the ...
Page 37
... considerable advantage ; and he confessed he did not see why the same principle should not be extended to this country . In Scotland , the prin- ciple had been long in operation , and the effect there was , that bank failures were ...
... considerable advantage ; and he confessed he did not see why the same principle should not be extended to this country . In Scotland , the prin- ciple had been long in operation , and the effect there was , that bank failures were ...
Page 42
... considerable diminution had already taken place . On a recent occasion , the right hon . gentleman had stated them to be 6,000,000l . , now he called them 4000,000l . , and not long since they were said to be 8,000,000 % . He would ...
... considerable diminution had already taken place . On a recent occasion , the right hon . gentleman had stated them to be 6,000,000l . , now he called them 4000,000l . , and not long since they were said to be 8,000,000 % . He would ...
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Common terms and phrases
amount appeared Bank of England bankers bill Bishop branch banks British called capelin cause Chancellor church circulation circumstances committee considerable Corn Laws coun country banks course Court currency Dantzic distress Dr Milner duty Edinburgh effect established evil Exchequer exported favour foreign gentleman gold honourable House House of Lords important increase interest Ireland issue Janissaries Kelly King labour land late London Lord Lord Chancellor Lord Justice Clerk Lord Palmerston Lord Provost Lordship Majesty Majesty's manufacturers measure meeting ment ministers motion neral object observed occasion opinion paper Parliament party period persons Poland port present principles proceeded produce proposed province quarters received resolution respect Scotland sent ships sion small notes tain taken Thomas Stamford Raffles thought tion took town trade Vistula vote wheat whole
Popular passages
Page 98 - Scott observed that, in the verses on Solomon's Temple, one striking circumstance had escaped him, namely, that no tools were used in its erection.
Page 5 - An Act for regulating the mode of accounting for the common good and revenues of the royal burghs of Scotland.
Page 228 - But it is singular to remark how ready sonic people are to admire in a great man, the exception rather than the rule of his conduct. Such perverse worship is like the idolatry of barbarous nations, who can see the noonday splendour of the sun without emotion ; but who, when he is in eclipse, come forward with hymns and cymbals to adore him.
Page 47 - The Grounds, on which the Church of England separated from the Church of Rome...
Page 230 - Sir, is aware, that our Navigation Laws have a two-fold object. First, to create and maintain in this country a great commercial Marine ; and secondly (an object not less important in the eyes of statesmen), to prevent any one other nation from engrossing too large a portion of the navigation of the rest of the world.
Page 274 - ... committee of the House of Commons appointed for the trial of any petition complaining of an undue election or return of any member or members to serve in Parliament.
Page 8 - They have been framed with an anxious desire to avoid every expenditure beyond what the necessary demanda of the public service may require. " His Majesty has the satisfaction of informing you, that the produce of the revenue, in the last year, has fully justified the expectations entertained at the commencement of it. " My Lords and Gentlemen, " His Majesty deeply laments the injurious effects which the late pecuniary crisis must have entailed upon many branches of the commerce and manufactures...
Page 247 - The next is, to repeal all statutes which are sleeping and not of use, but yet snaring and in force : in some of those it will perhaps be requisite to substitute some more reasonable law, instead of them, agreeable to the time ; in others a simple repeal may suffice. 3. The third, that the grievousness of the penalty in many statutes be mitigated, though the ordinance stand.
Page 107 - Court, avowing himself to be the author of the piece in question, and maintaining that every position in it was strictly conformable to the laws and constitution of England.
Page 232 - Our law still provides that goods, the produce of Asia, Africa, or America, shall not be imported in foreign ships, unless they be the ships of the country of which the goods are the produce.