| William Pitt (1st earl of Chatham.), William Stanhope Taylor - Europe - 1838 - 532 pages
...would engage. These will do me the justice to own, I advised them to engage ; but notwithstanding — I love to be explicit — I cannot give them my confidence...with each other, reasoning from effects to causes, methinks I plainly discover the traces of an over-ruling influence. " There is a clause in the Act... | |
| William Pitt (Earl of Chatham) - Europe - 1838 - 516 pages
...would engage. These will do me the justice to own, I advised them to engage ; but notwithstanding — I love to be explicit — I cannot give them my confidence...with each other, reasoning from effects to causes, methinks I plainly discover the traces of an over-ruling influence. " There is a clause in the Act... | |
| William Pitt (Earl of Chatham) - Europe - 1838 - 544 pages
...would engage. These will do me the justice to own, I advised them to engage ; but notwithstanding — I love to be explicit — I cannot give them my confidence...confidence is a plant of slow growth in an aged bosom j youth is the season of credulity ; by comparing events with each other, reasoning from effects to... | |
| Ebenezer Porter - Elocution - 1838 - 316 pages
...will do me the justice to own, I did advise them to engage to do it, — but notwithstanding — (for I love to be explicit,) — I cannot give them my confidence. Pardon 60 me, gentlemen," — (bowing to them,) — confidence is a plant of slow growth." Those, who remember... | |
| Ebenezer Porter - 1839 - 316 pages
...will do me the justice to own, I did advise them to engage to do it, — but notwithstanding — (for I love to be explicit,) — I cannot give them my confidence. Pardon 60 me, gentlemen," — (bowing to them,) — confidence is a plant of slow growth." Those, who remember... | |
| John Adolphus - Great Britain - 1840 - 646 pages
...take official situations, but could not give them his confidence. " Pardon me, gentlemen," he said, bowing to the ministry, " confidence is a plant of...with each other, reasoning from " effects to causes, methinks I plainly discover the "- traces of an over-ruling influence. There is a clause " in the act... | |
| 1840 - 530 pages
...not give them his confidence, adding, while he bowed to the treasury bench,' Pardon me, gentlemen, confidence is a plant of slow growth in an aged bosom ; youth is the season of credulity.' It was upon this occasion that he announced his peculiar view of the constitutional question involved... | |
| Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1840 - 522 pages
...not give them his confidence, adding, while he bowed to the treasury bench, 'Pardon tne, gentlemen, confidence is a plant of slow growth in an aged bosom ; youth is the season of credulity.' It was upon this occasion that he announced his peculiar view of the constitutional question involved... | |
| George Willson - Elocution - 1840 - 298 pages
...will do mo the justice to own, I did advise them to engage to do it, — but notwithstanding — for I love to be explicit — I cannot give them my confidence. — Pardon me, gentlemen, — confidence -• is a plant of slow growth. A longer pause is proper at the close of a paragraph,... | |
| George Lillie Craik, Charles MacFarlane - Great Britain - 1841 - 834 pages
...— Bowing to the Treasury Bench with great grace and dignity, he said, — " Pardon me, gentlemen, confidence is a plant of slow growth in an aged bosom...By comparing events with each other, reasoning from eflecls to causes, mi-thinks I plainly discover the traces of an over-ruling influence. There is a... | |
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