Three Human Rights in the Constitution of 1787University of Kansas Press, 1956 - 245 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 17
Page 51
... Spain was the hereditary enemy whose great Armada had been destroyed by Eng- lish seamen . A war with Spain was always popular . Not that they wanted the King to stop there , for it was shame- ful for England to let the lovely English ...
... Spain was the hereditary enemy whose great Armada had been destroyed by Eng- lish seamen . A war with Spain was always popular . Not that they wanted the King to stop there , for it was shame- ful for England to let the lovely English ...
Page 52
... Spain was the real enemy . One reminded the House that " there were those at home whose hearts were at the service of the King of Spain " ; precautions must be taken against their machina- tions . A speaker who was gifted with every ...
... Spain was the real enemy . One reminded the House that " there were those at home whose hearts were at the service of the King of Spain " ; precautions must be taken against their machina- tions . A speaker who was gifted with every ...
Page 170
... Spain and their Ameri- can - born descendants , the government exhibited chronic fear and distrust of individual initiative . " Self - reliance , independence of thought and action , in the colonists was discouraged . Virtually all ...
... Spain and their Ameri- can - born descendants , the government exhibited chronic fear and distrust of individual initiative . " Self - reliance , independence of thought and action , in the colonists was discouraged . Virtually all ...
Contents
FREEDOM OF DEBATE IN CONGRESS | 4 |
THE PROHIBITION OF BILLS OF ATTAINDER | 90 |
FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT | 162 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accused acts of attainder alien Article Bill of Rights bills of attainder bishops Buckingham century Chafee chap charges Charles Charter Church Clarendon clause colonies Congress Constitution Council crime Danby's decision Declaration Documents Duke Earl of Danby Eliot England English ex post facto foreign freedom of debate freedom of movement freedom of speech Haxey high treason History House of Commons House of Lords Human Rights impeachment imprisonment Jack Cade James John judges Justice King King's knights and burgesses land legislative legislature liament liberty London Long Parliament Marcham matter ment officials pardon Parlia Parliamentary passport persons Peter Wentworth petition Philadelphia Convention political Popish Plot post facto laws Prince prison privilege punishment Queen Elizabeth question refused reign reprinted Roman Catholics royal Senate sent settlers Sir Thomas Spain Speaker statute Stephenson & Marcham Strafford supra Supreme Court tion trial United States Reports vote