| Great Britain. Parliament - 1820 - 884 pages
...take place between us, in time of peace. The dangers of peace, therefore, are augmented a hundred-fold by terms at once so degrading and injurious, as those...coalitions without, or commotions within, might not have become so small, and the evils of war, however mitigated, so great, that we must have made up our minds,... | |
| William Cobbett - 1820 - 888 pages
...therefore, are augmented a hundred-fold by terms at once so degrading and injurious, as those to winch we have submitted; on any terms on which it could...Europe. Whether that evil must not ultimately have been s ul n nit i fd to ; whether the hopes of change, either from coalitions without, or commotions within,... | |
| William Windham - 1837 - 694 pages
...take place between us, in time of Peace. The dangers of Peace, therefore, are augmented a hundred-fold by terms at once so degrading and injurious, as those...being, as it is, in possession of Europe. Whether the evil must not ultimate-ly have been submitted to; whether the hopes of change, either from coalitions... | |
| William Windham - 1837 - 694 pages
...take place between us, in time of Peace. The dangers of Peace, therefore, are augmented a hundred-fold by terms at once so degrading and injurious, as those...being, as it is, in possession of Europe. Whether the evil must not ultimately have been submitted to; whether the hopes of change, either from coalitions... | |
| William Windham - 1837 - 678 pages
...France remaining a revolutionary government, and being, as it is, in possession of Europe. Whether the evil must not ultimately have been submitted to; whether...coalitions without, or commotions within, might not have become so small, and the evils of War, however mitigated, so great, that we must have made up our minds,... | |
| 1845 - 698 pages
...take place between us, in time of Peace. The dangers of Peace, therefore, are augmented a hundred-fold by terms at once so degrading and injurious, as those...being, as it is, in possession of Europe. Whether the evil must not ultimately have been submitted to; whether the hopes of change, either from coalitions... | |
| Mayo Williamson Hazeltine - 1902 - 462 pages
...of peace, therefore, are augmented a hunr dred-fold by terms at once so degrading and injurious aa those to which we have submitted: on any terms on...coalitions without or commotions within, might not have become so small, and the evils of war, however mitigated, so great, that we 2973 must have made up... | |
| Sir Edgar Rees Jones - 1913 - 410 pages
...take place between us, in time of peace. The dangers of peace, therefore, are augmented a hundredfold by terms at once so degrading and injurious, as those...coalitions without, or commotions within, might not have become so small, and the evils of war, however mitigated, so great, that we must have made up our minds,... | |
| |