... there should be an avowed and real minister, possessing the chief weight in the council, and the principal place in the confidence of the king. In that respect there can be no rivalry or division of power. That power must rest in the person generally... Life of the Right Honourable William Pitt - Página 24de Earl Philip Henry Stanhope Stanhope - 1867Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Philip Henry Stanhope (5th earl.) - 1879 - 494 páginas
...useful to the country in one of the great points on which he lays a principal stress, but by retin-ning to the management of its finances. Besides this consideration,...confidence of the King. In that respect there can lie no rivality or division of power. That power must rest in the person generally called the First... | |
| John Morley - 1889 - 272 páginas
...He desired Lord Melville, however, to explain his views to Addington. Mr. Pitt, wrote Lord Melville, "stated not less pointedly and decidedly his sentiments...confidence of the king. In that respect there can be no rivalry or division of power. That power must rest in the person generally called the First Minister,... | |
| Sir William Reynell Anson - 1892 - 544 páginas
...which his supremacy was undoubted. He told Dundas that it was 'an absolute necessity in the conduct of affairs of this country that there should be an avowed...the principal place in the confidence of the King. That power must rest in the person generally called First Minister2.' It may be said then that before... | |
| Sir William Reynell Anson - 1896 - 548 páginas
...with a Cabinet in which his supremacy was undoubted. He told Dundas that it was 'an absolute necessity in the conduct of the affairs of this country that...the principal place in the confidence of the King. That power must rest in the person generally called First Minister V Conditions It may be said then... | |
| Sir William Reynell Anson - 1907 - 328 páginas
...a Cabinet in which his supremacy was undoubted. He told Dundas that it was ' an absolute necessity in the conduct of the affairs of this country that...the principal place in the confidence of the King. That power must rest in the person generally called First Minister V It may be said then that before... | |
| Mary Taylor Blauvelt - 1902 - 332 páginas
...he dwelt " pointedly and decidedly upon the absolute necessity there is in the conduct of affairs in this country that there should be an avowed and real...place in the confidence of the King. In that respect (he contended) there can be no rivalry or division of power. That power must rest in the person generally... | |
| Mary Taylor Blauvelt - 1902 - 324 páginas
...be 1 « Hansard Debates," Third Series, Vol. CXIX. col. 90. 2 " Fox Correspondence," Vol. II. p. 37. an avowed and real minister, possessing the chief...place in the confidence of the King. In that respect (he contended) there can be no rivalry or division of power. That power must rest in the person generally... | |
| Sir Sidney Low - 1904 - 346 páginas
...Melville, in his famous Letter to Addington in 1803, said that Pitt deemed it absolutely necessary that " there should be an avowed and real minister,...confidence of the King. In that respect there can be no rivalry or division of power. The power must rest in the person generally called the First Minister.... | |
| Alexander Wood Renton, Maxwell Alexander Robertson - 1906 - 716 páginas
...of the position of the Prime Minister had become. He points out that it is " an absolute necessity in the conduct of the affairs of this country that...the principal place in the confidence of the King. That power must rest in the person generally called First Minister " (Stanhope, Life of Pitt, iv. 24).... | |
| Sidney Low - 1910 - 338 páginas
...Melville, in his famous Letter to Addington in 1803, said that Pitt deemed it absolutely necessary that " there should be an avowed and real minister,...confidence of the King. In that respect there can be no rivalry or division of power. The power must rest in the person generally called the First Minister.... | |
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