| George Canning - 1826 - 138 páginas
...with the apprehensions that I have described, and which has happily survived them ? Again, Sir,—is the Spain of the present day the Spain of which the...England from her sphere ? No, Sir, it was quite another Spain—it was the Spain, within the limits of whose empire the sun never set—it was Spain H "'with... | |
| Padre amaro - 1826 - 486 páginas
...contemporaneous with the apprehensions that I have described? and which has happily survived them ? Again, Sir, is the Spain of the present day the Spain of which...whose puissance was expected to shake England from its sphere ? No; Sir, it was quite another Spain — it was the Spain, within the limits of whose empire... | |
| 1827 - 966 páginas
...sentiments, which, in the days of William and of Anne, animated the debates and dictated the votes of the British parliament. No peace was in those days...sphere ? No, Sir, it was quite another Spain — it wos the Spain, within the limits of whose empire the sun never set— it was Spain " with the Indies... | |
| George Canning - 1828 - 458 páginas
...with the apprehensions that I have described, and which has happily survived them ? Again, Sir, — is the Spain of the present day the Spain of which...another Spain — it was the Spain, within the limits of whose empire the sun never set— it was Spain "with the Indies" that excited the jealousies and alarmed... | |
| 1828 - 498 páginas
...But is the Spain of the present day the Spain of which the statesmen of the times of William and of Anne were so much afraid ? Is it, indeed, the nation...sphere ? No, Sir, it was quite another Spain ; it was Spain ' with the Indies ' that excited the jealousies and alarmed the imaginations of our ancestors.... | |
| 1828 - 628 páginas
...was thought safe for this country, while the crown of Spain continued on the head of a Bourbon. But is the Spain of the present day the Spain of which the statesmen of the times of William and of Anne were so much afraid ? Is it, indeed, the nation whose puissance was expected to shake England... | |
| 1828 - 526 páginas
...was thought safe for this country, while the crown of Spain continued on the head of a Bourbon. But is the Spain of the present day the Spain of which the statesmen of the times of William and of Anne were so much afraid ? Is it, indeed, the nation whose puissance was expected to shake England... | |
| 334 páginas
...thought to be safe for this country, while the crown of Spain continued on the head of a Bourbon. But is the Spain of the present day the Spain of which the statesmen of William and of Anne were so much afraid ? That Spain, on whose territories it was boasted that the... | |
| Alexander McDonnell - 1828 - 334 páginas
...December 1826, was not the Spain of which the statesmen of William and Anne were so much afraid—not the nation whose puissance was expected to shake England from her sphere. No: Spain now enfeebled, degraded, was different from Spain " with the Indies," within the limits of whose... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament - 1827 - 700 páginas
...with the apprehensions that I have described, and which has happily survived them ? Again, Sir, — is the Spain of the present day the Spain of which...another Spain — it was the Spain, within the limits of whose empire the sun never set — it was Spain " with the Indies" that excited the jealousies and... | |
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