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" Whoever in any future age or unborn nation may admire the felicity of the expedient which converted the power of taxation into the shield of liberty, by which discretionary and secret imprisonment was rendered impracticable, and portions of the people... "
Progress in Knowledge Through Love: Baccalaureate Sermon of 1893 - Page 15
by Alfred Barry - 1848 - 29 pages
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The Edinburgh Literary Journal: Or, Weekly Register of Criticism ..., Volume 4

Great Britain - 1830 - 484 pages
...form of I'm' government which experience had shown to be reconcilable with widely extended dominions. Whoever in any future age, or unborn nation, may admire...to exercise a larger share of judicial power than was ever allotted to them in any other civilized state, in such a manner as to secure, instead of endangering,...
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The History of England, Volume 1

Sir James Mackintosh - Great Britain - 1830 - 414 pages
...form of free government which experience had shown to be reconcilable with widely extended dominions. Whoever in any future age or unborn nation may admire...to exercise a larger share of judicial power than was ever allotted to them in any other civilised state, in such a manner as to secure instead of endangering...
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The Edinburgh Literary Journal: Or, Weekly Register of Criticism ..., Volume 4

Great Britain - 1830 - 482 pages
...form of free government which experience had shown te be reconcilable with widely extended dominions. Whoever in any future age, or unborn nation, may admire...the expedient which converted the power of taxation mtu the shield of liberty, by which discretionary and secret imprisonment was rendered impracticable,...
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The Christian observer [afterw.] The Christian observer and advocate

1831 - 858 pages
...form of free government which experience had shewn to be reconcileable with widelyextended dominions. Whoever in any future age, or unborn nation, may admire...to exercise a larger share of judicial power than was ever allotted to them in any other civilized state, in such a manner as to secure, instead of endangering,...
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The Imperial magazine; or, Compendium of religious, moral, & philosophical ...

1831 - 616 pages
...form of free government which experience had shown to be reconcileable with widely-extended dominions. Whoever, in any future age, or unborn nation, may...to exercise a larger share of judicial power than was ever allotted to them in any other ci vil ¡zed state, in such a manner as to secure, instead of...
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The Imperial Magazine

Samuel Drew - 1831 - 658 pages
...of free govern, ment which experience had shown to be reconciliable with widely. extended dominions. Whoever, in any future age, or unborn nation, may...to exercise a larger share of judicial power than was ever allotted to them in any other civilized stale, in .such a manner as to secure, instead of...
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The Legal Observer, Or, Journal of Jurisprudence, Volume 6

Law - 1833 - 548 pages
...Whoever in any future age or unborn nation шау admire the felicity of the expedient which 234 2S5 converted the power of taxation into the shield of liberty, by which discretionary aud secret imprisonment was rendered impracticable, and portions of the peuple were trained to exercise...
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Remarks on Article IX., in the Eighty-fourth Number of the North American ...

Alexander Hill Everett - Origin and character of the old parties... - 1834 - 68 pages
...the persons of the royal progeny." Let us see, now, what Sir James Mclntosh says, of magna charta : " whoever in any future age, or unborn nation, may admire...to exercise a larger share of judicial power than was ever allotted to them in any other civilized state, in such manner as to secure, instead of endangering...
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The History of England...By the Right Hon. Sir James Mackintosh

Sir James Mackintosh - Great Britain - 1836 - 484 pages
...form of free government which experience had shown to be reconcilable with widely extended dominions. Whoever in any future age or unborn nation may admire...to exercise a larger share of judicial power than was ever allotted to them in any other civilized state, in such a manner as to secure instead of endangering...
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The History of England, Volume 1

Thomas Keightley - Great Britain - 1839 - 518 pages
...form of free government which experience had shown to be reconcilable with widely extended dominions. Whoever in any future age or unborn nation may admire...to exercise a larger share of judicial power than was ever allotted to them in any other civilized state, in such a manner as to secure instead of endangering...
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