Therefore, to manifest our deep sense of such scandalous, disgraceful, and vicious conduct on the part of her said Majesty, by which she has violated the duty she owed to your Majesty, and has rendered herself unworthy of the exalted rank and station... The Gentleman's Magazine - Página 791820Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
 | Hugh Ross Williamson - 2002 - 380 páginas
...scandalous, disgraceful and vicious conduct on the part of her said Majesty, by which she has violated the duty she owed to Your Majesty and has rendered...Consort of this realm, and to evince our just regard for tlie dignity of the crown and the honour of this nation, we, Your Majesty's most dutiful and loyal... | |
 | Jane Robins - 2006 - 394 páginas
...scandalous, disgraceful and vicious conduct on the part of her said Majesty, by which she has violated the duty she owed to your Majesty, and has rendered...rank and station of Queen Consort of this Realm." A Bill of Pains and Penalties was as rare a measure then as now, only one having been enacted in the... | |
 | Edmund Burke - 1822
...scandalous, disgraceful, and vicious conduct on the part of her said Majesty, by which she has violated the duty she owed to your Majesty, And has rendered...regard for the dignity of the crown and the honour of the nation, we, your Majesty's most dutiful and loyal subjects, the Lords spiritual and temporal, and... | |
 | Thomas Campbell, Samuel Carter Hall, Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton, Theodore Edward Hook, Thomas Hood, William Harrison Ainsworth - 1820 - 746 páginas
...scandalous, disgraceful, and vicious cunduct on the pa/t of her s.iid Majesty, by which she lias violated the duty she owed to your Majesty, and has rendered...herself unworthy of the exalted rank and station of Qoeen Consort of this Realm, and to evince our just regard for the dignity of the Crown and the honour... | |
 | Great Britain. Parliament - 1821 - 908 páginas
...sense of such scandalous, disgraceful, and vicious conduct on the part of her majesty, by which she had rendered herself unworthy of the exalted rank and station of Queen Consort, and to evince a just regard for the dignity of the Crown and the honour of the nation," he tendered... | |
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