Illustrations of Taxation ...C. Fox, 1834 |
From inside the book
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Page 20
... tax on hair - powder , -a tax laid on to help the war , -had put people off wearing hair - powder ! " And your rent ... houses in this street , ma'am . House rent cannot be high here , though you are in the neighbourhood of the market ...
... tax on hair - powder , -a tax laid on to help the war , -had put people off wearing hair - powder ! " And your rent ... houses in this street , ma'am . House rent cannot be high here , though you are in the neighbourhood of the market ...
Page 21
Harriet Martineau. build new houses , when such as these that you see are standing ... tax happens to be presently taken off- " The bare idea seemed to afford ... house , and carry it to the new road , and set it down there . " Maynard was ...
Harriet Martineau. build new houses , when such as these that you see are standing ... tax happens to be presently taken off- " The bare idea seemed to afford ... house , and carry it to the new road , and set it down there . " Maynard was ...
Page 22
... house - tax in a steady pro- portion which none could dispute : for no house- tax could then be collected unless it were lowered ad valorem . No one who could move away would stay in a poor situation , to pay a tax as high as had been ...
... house - tax in a steady pro- portion which none could dispute : for no house- tax could then be collected unless it were lowered ad valorem . No one who could move away would stay in a poor situation , to pay a tax as high as had been ...
Page 25
... house and window duties could not be made more suitable in amount to such a mansion as that at Fellbrow . He must ... tax they were to pay , either for their habitations or their pleasures . He stood watching the picturesque group for ...
... house and window duties could not be made more suitable in amount to such a mansion as that at Fellbrow . He must ... tax they were to pay , either for their habitations or their pleasures . He stood watching the picturesque group for ...
Page 50
... houses that yield the house - tax , pays , within thirty pounds , as much land - tax as Bath ; and if you could look down upon Bath as we now do upon your parish , you would see the absurdity of such a taxation . In London , the ...
... houses that yield the house - tax , pays , within thirty pounds , as much land - tax as Bath ; and if you could look down upon Bath as we now do upon your parish , you would see the absurdity of such a taxation . In London , the ...
Common terms and phrases
Aaron afraid Alderney Alice Anna asked believe better bottles Brennan Brocq brother Byrne Channel islands CHARLES FOX church cider court Cranston cried dare say dear declared door Durell Durell's duty England excise eyes fancy Fanny farm father gentleman give Gorey Guernsey hand HARRIET MARTINEAU hear heard heart Heliers hemp island Jack James Jerom Jersey kiln king knew Lambert Lambeth land leave live London look Louise ma'am Mackintosh Malet matter mind Miss Cranston morning mother neighbours never night observed paid parish perhaps Peterson poor pottery pretty prison Quarry Wood rent replied rope-walk Sarah seemed seen sister soap sorry Stephen Studley suppose sure Taplin tell thing thou thought tithe told turn uncle vicar wife window wish wonder Wood farm young
Popular passages
Page 62 - OLD Mother Hubbard Went to the cupboard, To get her poor dog a bone: But when she got there The cupboard was bare, And so the poor dog had none.
Page 48 - And when he comes with his carts, teams, or other carriages, to carry away his tithes, he must not suffer his horses or oxen to eat and depasture the grass growing in the grounds where the tithes arise, much less the corn there growing or cut : but...
Page 49 - And if the owner of the soil, after he has duly set forth his tithes, will stop up the ways, and not suffer the parson to carry away his tithes, or to spread, dry, and stack them upon the land ; this is no good setting forth of his tithes without fraud within the statute : but the parson may have an action upon the said statute, and may recover the treble value ; or may have an action upon the case for such disturbance ; or he may, if he will, break open the gate or fence which hinders him, and carry...
Page 48 - ... person carry away his corn or hay, or his other predial tithes, before the tithe thereof be set forth, or willingly withdraw his tithes of the same, or of such other things whereof predial tithes ought to be paid ; or do stop or let the parson, vicar, proprietor, owner, or other their deputies or farmers, to view, take and carry away their tithes as is...
Page 139 - ... clergy in opposition to each other; and has done more to paralyze their exertions, and to deprive them of the esteem of their parishioners, than all the efforts of all the infidels and sectaries that ever existed. In the emphatic language of Mr Grattan, 'it has made the clergyman's income to fall with his virtues, and to rise with his bad qualities; just as it has made the parishioner to lose by being ingenuous, and to save by dishonesty.
Page 28 - Cur': 1 cannot fee but that Turkies are Birds as tame as Hens or other Poultry, and therefore muft pay Tithes ; it is true, if Tithes be once paid of the...
Page 58 - Mixt tithes were those which arise, not immediately from the ground, but from things immediately nourished by the ground, as by means of goods depastured thereupon, or otherwise nourished with the fruits thereof; as colts, calves, lambs, chicken, milk, cheese, eggs.
Page 49 - But in this he must be cautious that he commit no riot, nor break any gate, rails, lock, or hedges, more than necessarily he must for his passage.
Page 72 - In these cases, it is held, and we think this is the true view of the law on this subject, that whether the articles sued for, were necessaries or not, is a question of fact, to be submitted to a jury, unless in a very clear case, when a judge would be warranted in directing a jury authoritatively, that some articles, as for instance, diamonds or race-horses, cannot be necessaries for any minor.
Page 49 - ... but the parson may have an action upon the said statute, and may recover the treble value ; or may have an action upon the case for such disturbance, as it seemeth ; or he may, if he •will, break open the gate or fence which hinders him, and carry away his tithes.