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" ... to the arguments of Dundas and of Pulteney. Conscious that the present occasion would be the last in which he should personally take any part before the decision of the regency question, he seemed to put out all his intellectual strength. Scott having... "
The History of the Reign of George III.: To the Termination of the Late War - Page 317
by Robert Bisset - 1803
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The Parliamentary Register: Or, History of the Proceedings and Debates of ...

Great Britain. Parliament - 1789 - 604 pages
...debate with the exiftence and union of the perfon a 1 and politic character of His Majefty. " T hat the King's " political character was, in the eye of...— " and would continue fo to do until his natural demife." — His dodtrine, which had been frequently urged, he had endeavoured in vain to have explained...
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Annual Register, Volume 31

Edmund Burke - 1792 - 694 pages
...fide. He expoted, with great ability, the futility of the doalrine advanced by the law-officers, " That the king's political character was, in the eye...infeparable from his perfonal— that it remained entire and perfeft — and would continue fo to do unti] his natural demife.'" This doftrine, which had been frequently...
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The Annual Register of World Events: A Review of the Year, Volume 31

Edmund Burke - 1792 - 652 pages
...fide. He expofed, wiih great ability, the futility of the doctrine advanced by the Ijw-olficers, " That the king's political character was, in the eye...infeparable from his perfonal — that it remained entire aiul perfeift— and would continue fo to do until his natural deniife." This docbine, which had been...
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A history of the political life of the rt. hon. W. Pitt, by John ..., Volume 2

John Richards Green - 1809 - 626 pages
...Dundas, and was further opposed by Mr. Fox, who attacked the doctrine advanced by the law officers, " That the " King's political character was, in the eye of " the law, inseparable from his personal — that " it remained entire and perfect — and would " continue so...
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The Speeches of the Right Honourable Charles James Fox, in the House of ...

Charles James Fox - 1815 - 522 pages
...pressed in debate with the existence and union of the personal and politic character of his majesty : " That the king's political character was, in the eye of the law, inseparable from his personal — that it remained entire and perfect—and would continue so to do...
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The Parliamentary History of England, from the Earliest Period to the Year ...

William Cobbett - 1816 - 736 pages
...pressed in debate with the existence and union of the personal and politic character of his Majesty : " That the king's political character was, in the eye of the law, inseparable from his personal — that it remained entire and perfect - — and would continue so'to...
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The History of the Reign of George III: To which is Prefixed a ..., Volume 2

Robert Bisset - 1822 - 764 pages
...supported, both upon the arguments which the minister himself adduced, and on others. The law officers maintained, as a fundamental doctrine, that the king's political character was, in the eye of the law, inseparable from his personal ; that it remained entire and perfect, and would continue so to do until...
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Posthumous Memoirs of His Own Time, Volume 3

Sir Nathaniel William Wraxall - 1836 - 464 pages
...to put out all his intellectual strength. Scott having laid down as an incontrovertible proposition, that "the king's political character was in the eye of the law inseparable from his personal, and so would continue until his demise," Fox turned against this doctrine...
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Posthumous Memoirs of His Own Time, Volume 1

Sir Nathaniel William Wraxall - 1836 - 590 pages
...to put out all his intellectual strength. Scott having laid down as an incontrovertible proposition, that " the king's political character was in the eye of the law inseparable from his personal, and so would continue until his demise." Fox turned against this doctrine...
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Posthumous Memoirs of His Own Time, Volume 3

Sir Nathaniel William Wraxall - 1836 - 452 pages
...to put out all his intellectual strength. Scott having laid down as an incontrovertible proposition, that " the king's political character was in the eye of the law inseparable from his personal, and so would continue until his demise," Fox turned against this doctrine...
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