... urge it as the preliminary and paramount consideration of any settlement in which he would consent to share. " If attention to what is presumed might be his majesty's feelings and wishes on the happy day of his recovery, be the object, it is with... Memoirs of George the Fourth - Strona 209autor: Robert Huish - 1830Pełny widok - Informacje o książce
| Alexander Charles Ewald - 1884 - Liczba stron: 668
...If attention to what is presumed might be his Majesty's feelings and wishes on the happy day of his recovery be the object, it is with the truest sincerity...than the knowledge that the government of his son and representstive had exhibited the sovereign power in a state of degradation, of curtailed authority... | |
| Francis Godolphin Osborne Duke of Leeds - 1884 - Liczba stron: 296
...Prince expresses his firm conviction that no event could be more repugnant to the feelings of his Boyal Father than the knowledge that the Government of his...sovereign Power of the Realm in a state of degradation, of curtail'd authority and diminish'd energy — a state hurtful in practice to the prosperity and good... | |
| Royal Historical Society (Great Britain) - 1884 - Liczba stron: 292
...If attention to what is presumed might be his Majesty's feelings and wishes on the happy day of his recovery be the object, it is with the truest sincerity...Prince expresses his firm conviction that no event could be more repugnant to the feelings of his Royal Father than the knowledge that the Government... | |
| 1884 - Liczba stron: 296
...If attention to what is presumed might be his Majesty's feelings and wishes on the happy day of his recovery be the object, it is with the truest sincerity...Prince expresses his firm conviction that no event could be more repugnant to the feelings of his Royal Father than the knowledge that the Government... | |
| Lewis Saul Benjamin - 1906 - Liczba stron: 398
...attention to what it is presumed might be his Majesty's feelings and wishes on the happy day of his recovery be the object, it is with the truest sincerity...Prince expresses his firm conviction, that no event could be more repugnant to the feelings of his royal father, than the knowledge, that the government... | |
| Walter Sichel - 1909 - Liczba stron: 608
...of things existing, when His Majesty should happily recover, as existed before, and " no event could be more repugnant to the feelings of his Royal Father...sovereign power of the realm in a state of degradation." He deeply resented Pitt's want of confidence in restraining the alienation of the King's real and personal... | |
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