The British Reformer's Advocate, and Political Instructor: Being an Exposition of the Privileges, Power and Incomes of the British Aristocracy, &c |
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Page 22
... possessions . Such pre - eminence is either lost or fast disappearing ; in science and information they are ma- nifestly behind other classes of the community ; their mo- ral influence is insignificant ; the chief advantages they re ...
... possessions . Such pre - eminence is either lost or fast disappearing ; in science and information they are ma- nifestly behind other classes of the community ; their mo- ral influence is insignificant ; the chief advantages they re ...
Page 28
... possession of his ancestor , was a law of peace ; and , by consolidating indisputably the power which the entire property gave in the hands of a single person , it was a law of security . To divide the inheritance was to ruin it , and ...
... possession of his ancestor , was a law of peace ; and , by consolidating indisputably the power which the entire property gave in the hands of a single person , it was a law of security . To divide the inheritance was to ruin it , and ...
Page 42
... possessions of the Aristocracy , and we were apprehensive lest it might be imagined we meditated spoliation , or be- held , with jealous eye , the magnitude of their acres and rental . All such constructions we disclaim . It is nothing ...
... possessions of the Aristocracy , and we were apprehensive lest it might be imagined we meditated spoliation , or be- held , with jealous eye , the magnitude of their acres and rental . All such constructions we disclaim . It is nothing ...
Page 43
... possessed by the dif- ferent divisions of the community . Here follows the statement : - Schedules . Annual Value . Gross Assessments . A . ) - Lands , tenements , and hereditaments , for every 20s . of the annual value 2s ...
... possessed by the dif- ferent divisions of the community . Here follows the statement : - Schedules . Annual Value . Gross Assessments . A . ) - Lands , tenements , and hereditaments , for every 20s . of the annual value 2s ...
Page 44
... , enjoy vast revenues , but the average income of each , from the soil , does not exceed £ 7,500 . Mr Hallam says , the richest of the British aristocracy derive their possessions from the spoils of the Reformation . 44 THE BRITISH.
... , enjoy vast revenues , but the average income of each , from the soil , does not exceed £ 7,500 . Mr Hallam says , the richest of the British aristocracy derive their possessions from the spoils of the Reformation . 44 THE BRITISH.
Other editions - View all
The British Reformer's Advocate and Political Instructor: Being an ... David P. Whitehead No preview available - 2009 |
The British Reformer's Advocate and Political Instructor: Being an ... David P. Whitehead No preview available - 2019 |
The British Reformer's Advocate, and Political Instructor: Being an ... D. P. Whitehead No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
abolished acts of parliament advantage amount annum Aristocracy arms army ballot bill boroughmongering boroughs Britain British Burgh capital cause charge charter church Church of Scotland civil classes colonies commercial Company consequence constitutional corn laws corruption Council court Crown debt duty Edinburgh election enacted England established evil exclusive expense favour franchise George III honour House of Commons House of Peers hundred incomes increase India individual interest Ireland justice king labour land liberties Lord manufactures means ment military millions monopoly Negro never object officers oligarchy oppressive parliament parliamentary peace Peerage Peers period persons political population portion pounds present principle privileges produce profits quarter reform Reformed Parliament reign repeal revenue rotten boroughs salaries Scotland SECTION self-elected septennial shew sinecurists society soldiers statute suffrage taxes thousand tion trade triennial triennial act universal suffrage vote whole
Popular passages
Page 161 - ... shall be understood to include several matters as well as one matter, and several persons as well as one person, and females as well as males, and bodies corporate as well as individuals, unless it be otherwise specially providqd, or there be something in the subject or context repugnant to such construction...
Page 59 - That no person who has an office or place of profit under the King, or receives a pension from the Crown, shall be capable of serving as a Member of the House of Commons.
Page 59 - That it is a high infringement upon the liberties and privileges of the Commons of Great Britain, for any Lord of .Parliament, or any Lord- lieutenant of any county, to concern themselves in the elections of members to serve for the Commons in Parliament.
Page 29 - In every other respect, nothing can be more contrary to the real interest of a numerous family than a right which, in order to enrich one, beggars all the rest of the children *. Entails are the natural consequences of the law of primogeniture.
Page 161 - Party affected or intended to be affected by the Offence, hath used or shall use Words importing the Singular Number or the Masculine Gender only, yet the Statute shall be understood to include several Matters as well as One Matter, and several Persons as well as One Person, and Females as well as Males, and Bodies Corporate as well as Individuals, unless it be otherwise specially provided, or there be something in the Subject or Context repugnant to such Construction ; and wherever any Forfeiture...
Page 29 - They are founded upon the most absurd of all suppositions, the supposition that every successive generation of men have not an equal right to the earth, and to all that it possesses ; but that the property of the present generation should be restrained and regulated according to the fancy of those who died perhaps five hundred years ago.
Page 153 - III. : though doubtless there were many acts before that time, the records of which are now lost, and the determinations of them perhaps at present currently received for the maxims of the old common law.
Page 31 - Upon this, the bailiff made an affidavit that, when he arrested the said lord, he was so mean in his apparel, as having a worn-out suit of clothes, and a dirty shirt on, and but...
Page 162 - Notwithstanding the laborious and tiresome precision of statutes, they frequently comprise the most egregious blunders. There is a singular instance of one in the 53d George III. : by the 18th section, one half the penalty is to go to the king and the other half to the informer : but the penalty happened in this case not to be a fine, but fourteen years' transportation ; so that fourteen years' transportation were to be equally divided between Messrs.
Page 150 - 2. c. 2., and it is indeed a public allowance under due restrictions, of the natural right of resistance and selfpreservation, when the sanctions of society and laws are found insufficient to restrain the violence of oppression.