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" No. 45, is a false, scandalous, and seditious libel, containing expressions of the most unexampled insolence and contumely towards his majesty, the grossest aspersions against both Houses of Parliament, and the most audacious defiance of the authority... "
The Correspondence of the Late John Wilkes: With His Friends, Printed from ... - Page 68
by John Wilkes - 1805
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The Correspondence of the Late John Wilkes: With His Friends ..., Volume 3

John Wilkes - 1805 - 324 pages
...houses of parliament. There only remains one other charge : that the North Briton, N° 45, contains * the grossest aspersions upon both houses * of parliament,...audacious * defiance of the authority of the whole Je* gislature.' It is to be lamented that the majority of either house of parliament should ever give...
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Statistical Account of Upper Canada, Volume 2

1822 - 874 pages
...the courts of justice therein, and the officers of the civil establishment of the said government, and most manifestly tending to alienate the affections of the people from his Majesty's government of this province ; to withdraw them from their obedience to the laws of the country,...
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The History of England, During the Reign of George III, Volume 1

James Robins - 1824 - 514 pages
...is a false, scandalous, and seditious libel, containing expressions of the most unexampled insolence and contumely towards his Majesty, the grossest aspersions...Parliament, and the most audacious defiance of the whole legislature; and most manifestly tending to alienate the affections of the people from his Majesty,...
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The history of England, during the reign of George iii, Volume 1

William Jones - 1825 - 452 pages
...of the most unexampled insolence and contumely towards his Majesty, the grossest aspersions against both houses of parliament, and the most audacious defiance of the authority of the whole legislature ;— that it had a manifest tendency to alienate the af. fections of the people from the king, to withdraw...
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The History of Great Britain from the Death of George II. to the Coronation ...

J. R. Miller - 1825 - 490 pages
...is a false, scandalous, and seditious libel, containing expressions of the most unexampled insolence and contumely towards his majesty, the grossest aspersions upon both houses of parliament, aud the most audacious defiance of the authority of the whole legislature ; and most manifestly tending...
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The History of England: From the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the ..., Volume 17

David Hume, Tobias Smollett, William Jones - 1828 - 474 pages
...of the most unexampled insolence and contumely towards his majesty, the grossest aspersions against both houses of parliament, and the most audacious defiance of the authority of the whole legislature ; — that it had a manifest tendency to alienate the affections of the people from the king, to withdraw...
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History of the American Revolution: With a Summary Review of the ..., Volume 1

John Lendrum - 1836 - 206 pages
...is a false' scandalous, and seditious libel, containing expressions of the most unexampled insolence and contumely towards his majesty ; the grossest aspersions...whole legislature ; and most manifestly tending to alienatathe affections of the people from his majesty, to withdraw them from their obedience to the...
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The History of England: From the Accession to the Decease of King ..., Volume 1

John Adolphus - 1840 - 652 pages
...expressions of the most unexampled insolence and contumely towards His Majesty, the grossest aspersions on both. Houses of Parliament, and the most audacious...defiance of the authority of the whole legislature ; that it had a manifest tendency to alienate the affections of the people from the King ; to withdraw...
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The Pictorial History of England During the Reign of George the Third: Being ...

George Lillie Craik, Charles MacFarlane - 1841 - 834 pages
...Briton, which had been voted a seditious libel, contained expressions of the most unexampled insolence and contumely towards his majesty, the grossest aspersions...defiance of the authority of the whole legislature ; that it had a manifest tendency to alienate the affections of the people from the king; to withdraw...
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The Cabinet History of England: Being an Abridgment, by the ..., Volumes 17-18

Charles MacFarlane - 1846 - 472 pages
...Paris, and the wits, and the literati continued, however, to show Wilkes the most marked attentions. both Houses of parliament, and the most audacious defiance of the authority of the whole legislature ; that it had a manifest tendency to alienate the affections of the people from the king ; to withdraw...
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