| Sir James Stephen - 1852 - 512 páginas
...in which the monarch is obliged to receive the law from his people." " It is the essential vice of the English monarchy, that the king can make no extraordinary...deposited in our treasury, the funds in the hand of revenue officers, and the funds which we allow our people to employ in their various occupations, are... | |
| Sir James Stephen - 1851 - 512 páginas
...in which the monarch is obliged to receive the law from his people." " It is the essential vice of the English monarchy, that the king can make no extraordinary...deposited in our treasury, the funds in the hand of revenue officers, and the funds which we allow our people to employ in their various occupations, are... | |
| William Stearns Davis - 1919 - 734 páginas
...from his people. ... It is the essential vice of the English monarchy [contrasted with the French] that the King can make no extraordinary levies of men or money without the consent of Parliament, nor convene Parliament without impairing his own authority." In the first place, as lieutenant... | |
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