History of the Regency and Reign of King George the Fourth, ÆÄÆ® 2-3;ÆÄÆ® 8William Cobbett, 1830 |
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... debt . These brought taxes , and so heavy as to create great discontents . The people felt them- selves loaded with ten or twelve millions a year , instead of the million and a half , which they had had to pay in the reign of James II ...
... debt . These brought taxes , and so heavy as to create great discontents . The people felt them- selves loaded with ten or twelve millions a year , instead of the million and a half , which they had had to pay in the reign of James II ...
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... debts ; and these brought taxes . The American colonies , now the United States , all of which , observe , had been settled by the Stuarts , began , in 1770 , to present food for taxation . The parliament ( the Sep- tennial parliament ) ...
... debts ; and these brought taxes . The American colonies , now the United States , all of which , observe , had been settled by the Stuarts , began , in 1770 , to present food for taxation . The parliament ( the Sep- tennial parliament ) ...
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... debts , and taxation ; and , as the cause of the evils was seen , the peo- ple had begun , even during the American war ... DEBT , which , by the unsuccessful American war , had been made to amount to a sum , the annual interest of which ...
... debts , and taxation ; and , as the cause of the evils was seen , the peo- ple had begun , even during the American war ... DEBT , which , by the unsuccessful American war , had been made to amount to a sum , the annual interest of which ...
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... DEBT which they were contracting , though that was , as the sequel will show , destined to undo all that they were doing against the French , and to ren- der that parliamentary reform , which it had been their great object to root out ...
... DEBT which they were contracting , though that was , as the sequel will show , destined to undo all that they were doing against the French , and to ren- der that parliamentary reform , which it had been their great object to root out ...
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... of all strength ; that it must take from them the means of future wars , or compel them to blow up that system of debts and funds , which had been invented by them as a rock of safety , and without the existence of which INTRODUCTORY.
... of all strength ; that it must take from them the means of future wars , or compel them to blow up that system of debts and funds , which had been invented by them as a rock of safety , and without the existence of which INTRODUCTORY.
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affairs Allies American amongst answer aristocracy army Bank of England bill Bourbon British brought called Captain CASTLEREAGH cause Christian Majesty commanded compelled conduct DARTMOOR death debts declaration Duke duty effect enemy England English Europe fact faction France French frigate George give gold hands honour House of Commons hundred justice killed king king's kingdom letter London Lord Lord Castlereagh Lord GRENVILLE Lord MOIRA majesty's ment mind ministers ministry month NAPOLEON nation navy never officers paragraph Paris parliament party passed peace PERCEVAL persons PITT possession pounds present Treaty Prince Regent prince's princess Princess of Wales prisoners prisoners of war queen reform regard regency and reign respect royal highness Russia ships signed sovereign taxes thing thousand tion took transactions Treaty of Paris troops United Wales Whigs whole words wounded