The Parliamentary Debates From the Year 1803 to the Present Time, volume 24
The Parliamentary Debates From the Year 1803 to the Present Time, volume 24
Great Britain. Parliament, Thomas Curson Hansard
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[970 have heard that there are sach of a still higher order), sorely their impression on the mind must be, that they are symp- toms of at least an incipient approxi- matton, in the Catholic, to common feeU ings with ourseWes-* indications of a dis- position of good will, which may ulti- mately lead to their conciliation, and per- haps even to an actual coalescence with us. Sir, I feel that I have more than sufficiently troubled both you and the Hoase. I will therefore sit down, with a request, ...that I may be distinctly under* stood, in going into the Committee, not to pledge myself, necessarily, to support the xneaaares, which may be there proposed, hat simply with the desire to have the anbject fully and fairly examined and discussed — ^with a most earnest and sin- cere hope, that such examination may and will lead to a final and conciliatory ad- justment; but, with a determined resolu- tion not to consent to any measure, which has a tendency to weaken or disturb an establishment, which I believe to be a most integral and sacred part of our con- stitution, and, at the same time, one of the greatest blessings to the country which that constitution affi)rd8« Sir nooias Suiion rose and said :— Sir^ I should not have ventured to obtrude my- self on the notice of the House, on this occasion, had I not thought that, in giving a silent vote upon this important question, 1 should have ill discharged my duty to my constituents, and to the populous and respectable cotinty, which I have the honour to represent* Sir, I entirely concur in opinion with the right hon!
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