| J H. Adolphus - 1820 - 896 pages
...\vhich he entertained the highest veneration and respect. His royal highness, therefore, thought it would appear disrespectful to the first body corporate...kingdom, to receive the members of it inconsistently with his own character and dignity." A writer of the day highly censured this refusal of his royal highness... | |
| Joseph Nightingale - Great Britain - 1820 - 758 pages
...which he entertained the highest veneration and respect. His Royal Highness, therefore, thought it would appear disrespectful to the first body corporate in the kingdom, to receive tlie members of it inconsistently with their character and his own dignity." • Some persons, anxious... | |
| Joseph Nightingale - 1821 - 744 pages
...which he entertained the highest veneration and respect. His Royal Highness, therefore, thought it would appear disrespectful to the first body corporate...inconsistently with their character and his own dignity." Some persons, anxious to create or discover grounds of complaint between the Prince of Wales and lu's... | |
| John Adolphus - Great Britain - 1821 - 634 pages
...which he entertained the highest veneration and respect. His royal highness, therefore, thought it would appear disrespectful to the first body corporate...kingdom, to receive the members of it inconsistently with his own character and dignity." A writer of the day highly censured this refusal of his royal highness... | |
| John Adolphus - Women - 1821 - 632 pages
...which he entertained the highest veneration and respect. His royal highness, therefore, thought it would appear disrespectful to the first body corporate...kingdom, to receive the members of it inconsistently with his own character and dignity." A writer of the day highly censured this refusal of his royal highness... | |
| Robert Huish - Queens - 1821 - 734 pages
...royal highness, therefore, thought it would appear disrespectful to the first corporate body in this kingdom, to receive the members of it inconsistently with their character and his own dignity." After some observations, and precedents being looked into, it was unanimously agreed, that the particulars... | |
| Robert Huish - Great Britain - 1830 - 600 pages
...which he entertained the highest veneration and respect. His Royal Highness, therefore, thought it would appear disrespectful to the first body corporate...indulge in cavils on this subject ; but such is the perverseness of some dispositions, that the most innocent, nay, sometimes the most laudable, actions... | |
| John Banvard - 1875 - 674 pages
...and respect His Royal Highness, therefore, thought it would appear disrespectful to the first hody corporate in the kingdom to receive the members of it inconsistently with their character and hia own dignity." His Royal Highness — His Royal Highness — Hl» — pah ! The language of Thomas... | |
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