The Gentleman's and London Magazine: Or Monthly Chronologer, 1741-1794J. Exshaw., 1741 |
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Página 11
... friends ; and to deprive the public of a declaration of parliament that would at least have been a guide to all future minifters in the exercise of a very dangerous difcretionary power . The intention of thefe amendments ( it is faid ) ...
... friends ; and to deprive the public of a declaration of parliament that would at least have been a guide to all future minifters in the exercise of a very dangerous difcretionary power . The intention of thefe amendments ( it is faid ) ...
Página 12
... friends applied for and obtained a writ of habeas corpus ; which was immediately made known at the fecretary of fate's office ; but to avoid the fervice of the writ , Mr. Wilkes was hurried away to the tower ; there denied all accefs of ...
... friends applied for and obtained a writ of habeas corpus ; which was immediately made known at the fecretary of fate's office ; but to avoid the fervice of the writ , Mr. Wilkes was hurried away to the tower ; there denied all accefs of ...
Página 17
... friends , that he generously requested , " That no perfonal regard to himfelf , might influence the conduct of his nearest relation or friend : For , that he should be very forry , if from that tenderness of his friends to him , the ...
... friends , that he generously requested , " That no perfonal regard to himfelf , might influence the conduct of his nearest relation or friend : For , that he should be very forry , if from that tenderness of his friends to him , the ...
Página 33
... friends united their intereft , to give him an op- portunity to exert himfelf : fo that he foon got to be a man of confideration in bufi- nefs , and was conftantly employed in all caufes , where party was concerned ; and the citizens of ...
... friends united their intereft , to give him an op- portunity to exert himfelf : fo that he foon got to be a man of confideration in bufi- nefs , and was conftantly employed in all caufes , where party was concerned ; and the citizens of ...
Página 41
... friends , " whatever they fhould we now enjoy a proteftant religion , " hear from others , that the law - officers or one jot of civil liberty . " of the crown had affured him , Mr. " Wilkes might have been profecuted for " high treafon ...
... friends , " whatever they fhould we now enjoy a proteftant religion , " hear from others , that the law - officers or one jot of civil liberty . " of the crown had affured him , Mr. " Wilkes might have been profecuted for " high treafon ...
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Pasajes populares
Página 71 - Men, therefore, in society having property, they have such a right to the goods, which by the law of the community are theirs, that nobody hath a right to take them, or any part of them, from them without their own consent; without this they have no property at all. For I have truly no property in that which another can by right take from me when he pleases against my consent.
Página 367 - ... any false news or tales, whereby discord, or occasion of discord or slander, may grow between the King and his people, or the great men of the realm ; and he that doth so, shall be taken and kept in prison, until he hath brought him into the court, which was the first author of the tale.
Página 18 - ... if our trade may be taxed, why not our lands ? Why not the produce of our lands and everything we possess or make use of ? This we apprehend annihilates our charter right to govern and tax ourselves. It strikes at our British privileges, which, as we have never forfeited them, we hold in common with our fellow subjects who are natives of Britain.
Página 484 - ... for defraying the charge for allowances to the feveral officers and private gentlemen of the two troops of horfe guards, and regiment of horfe, reduced, and to the...
Página 71 - The supreme power cannot take from any man any part of his property without his own consent. For the preservation of property being the end of government, and that for which men enter into society, it necessarily supposes and requires that the people should have property...
Página 282 - Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce; and their wrath, for it was cruel: I will divide them in Jacob, and scatter them in Israel.
Página 332 - She was civilly received by the mother, who bid her welcome — when it was too late. But her daughter Hannah lay at his back, to cut them off from all opportunity of exchanging their thoughts. At her return home, on hearing the bell toll out for his departure, she screamed aloud that her heart was burst, and expired some moments after.
Página 261 - Gentlemen, may soon be shewn to you and all Men to be weak, and to have neither Law nor Reason for their Foundation, so cannot long stand you in stead : Therefore, you had much better as yet leave...
Página 431 - It was then I first began to trouble myself with the difference between the principles of Whig and Tory ; having formerly employed myself in other, and I think much better speculations.
Página 544 - It happens to very few men, in any age or country, to come into the world with so many advantages of nature and fortune, as the late Secretary Bolingbroke : Descended from the best families in England, heir to a great patrimonial estate, of a sound constitution, and a most graceful, amiable person : But all these, had they been of equal value, were infinitely...