France as it is, not lady Morgan's France, Volume 2C. Chapple, 1820 - France |
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Page 7
... necessary to deduct the 32,000,000 value of charcoal , which replaced the wood ; from which would result , for the consummation of France , an economy of 72,000,000 ; and if this were doubled , France would have an annual saving of ...
... necessary to deduct the 32,000,000 value of charcoal , which replaced the wood ; from which would result , for the consummation of France , an economy of 72,000,000 ; and if this were doubled , France would have an annual saving of ...
Page 12
... necessary for general in- dustry . The working coal mines , and making canals , would go a great way towards facilitating all the rest that is wanted . If the French ever expect to become a great ma- nufacturing nation , they will be ...
... necessary for general in- dustry . The working coal mines , and making canals , would go a great way towards facilitating all the rest that is wanted . If the French ever expect to become a great ma- nufacturing nation , they will be ...
Page 16
... cultivation - The hasty and incomplete arrangements now existing in France will make further changes necessary - Idea of the mode of preventing danger in making those changes . & c . & c . & c . PART CONTENTS OF PART VIII.
... cultivation - The hasty and incomplete arrangements now existing in France will make further changes necessary - Idea of the mode of preventing danger in making those changes . & c . & c . & c . PART CONTENTS OF PART VIII.
Page 39
... necessary to show what will be their disposition and line of conduct , when they have recovered strength . but If the king is now committing an error , it con- sists in allowing the liberales to have too much power . They pretend to be ...
... necessary to show what will be their disposition and line of conduct , when they have recovered strength . but If the king is now committing an error , it con- sists in allowing the liberales to have too much power . They pretend to be ...
Page 40
... necessary . The charter must be made practicable , and the code of laws conformable to the charter ; then will matters be in a situation to proceed smoothly , and France will be , as it ought to be , a great , a powerful , and a happy ...
... necessary . The charter must be made practicable , and the code of laws conformable to the charter ; then will matters be in a situation to proceed smoothly , and France will be , as it ought to be , a great , a powerful , and a happy ...
Common terms and phrases
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Popular passages
Page 253 - that he thinks he is warranted in saying, that if 20 millions, besides what remained in the Bank, was necessary for the scale of expenditure before the Restriction Act, it is taking it moderately to contend that as much would be necessary now.
Page 284 - They could not have been better planned than they are, and no river like the Thames, where there is much trade, can have its borders laid out in a manner that will please the eye so well. The islands in the...
Page 255 - ... which regulate the mint, conceiving it desirable to retain, as a check upon any undue contraction of the issues of the Bank, the power which individuals at present possess of receiving coin from the mint in exchange for bullion, without loss or deduction, at the rate oft!/.
Page 66 - Indeed, with those few exceptions, which must be every where found to arise out of the peculiar circumstances of individual misfortune, the French cottage always indicates the dwelling of a thriving and prosperous population. I have often heard it remarked by English travellers, who had visited France before the revolution, that the peasantry were at that period, as dishonest as they were necessitous, and yielded to temptations of theft the more readily, as the severity of the punishment universally...
Page 252 - ... accurate estimate of the amount of gold in circulation previously to the year 1797; and conjectures with respect to that which will hereafter be required, must necessarily be more vague and unsatisfactory. In the communication made to the committee by the court of directors of the bank, on the 25th...
Page 115 - ... countries where many of them are now never seen. All are arranged by the hands of Cuvier himself, who has placed them in that order in which they are described in his late work. All parts of the world have contributed to this collection. Among other wonders, are the fragments of an elephant's tusk, which when complete, must have been at least eight feet in length. Several cases are filled with the bones of the Siberian Mammoth, or Elephant, and the American Mammoth, or Mastodonton. There is a...
Page 254 - ... less than two, nor more than three years, from the 1st of May 1821; and that at the end of that period cash payments shall be resumed. " That on a day to be fixed by parliament, not later than the 1st of February 1820, the bank shall be required to deliver gold, of standard fineness, assayed and stamped as before mentioned, in exchange for their notes (an amount of not less than sixty ounces of gold being demanded) at £\ -. Is. per ounce, that being nearly the market price of standard gold in...
Page 255 - That by requiring the presentation of a large amountof notes in demand for gold, it gives to the possessor of notes to that amount, an accommodation which the holder of a smaller quantity will not possess. On the first of these objections, your Committee observe, that it is scarcely possible to calculate on a resumption of specie payments, accompanied with the total exclusion of the...
Page 116 - Peru, an enormous whale (the sgualus maximus), taken on the coast of France, Roman cattle, elks, dromedaries, &c. Many specimens were presented by the late Empress Josephine. There is a regular arrangement of the whole, which adds considerably to their interest and value. In different parts of the gallery appear busts of Tournefort, Linnaeus, Adanson, Daubenton, and Fourcroy.