A letter to the Right Honourable William Pitt, Chancellor of the Exchequer on the national debt /A letter to Lord Ashburton, from Mr. Horne, occasioned by last Tuesday's debate in the House of Commons, on Mr. Pitt's motion.Considerations on Lord Grenville's and Mr Pitt's bills, concerning treasonable and seditious practices, and unlawful assemblies. By a lover of order [=W. Godwin].Considerations on Lord Grenville's and Mr Pitt's bills, concerning treasonable and seditious practices, and unlawful assemblies. By a lover of order [=W. Godwin].The story of the vaccination crusade in Hackney & Stoke Newington, 1902- 1904, and what came of it. The cases of John Polley, William Pitt, and others, with an account of the action-at-law Polley v. Fordham.Secret correspondence connected with Mr. Pitt's return to office in 1804. Chiefly compiled from the mss. at Melville castle.A letter to Lord Ashburton, from Mr. Horne, occasioned by last Tuesday's debate in the House of Commons, on Mr. Pitt's motion.An examination of Mr. Pitt's plan for diminishing the public debts by means of a sinking fund. [By Thomas Howard].The errors of Mr. Pitt's present administration. Many, recent, important and dangerous. By a gentleman, unconnected with foreign interests or internal parties.An essay on the causes wich have produced, the principles wich support, and the consequences wich may follow, From the two bills of Lord Grenville and Mr. Pitt. [...]. Dedicated (by permission) to the honourable Thomas Erskine.Insecurity of the British funds. Essay on public credit: by D. Hume (Repr. from the ed. of 1752). With observations on the sound and prophetic nature of its principles; shewing from indisputable facts, that a perseverance in the Pitt and paper system must eventually produce a national bankruptcy; and pointing out the only mode of averting so fatal a calamity; with remarks on the necessity of parliamentary reform; an analysis of Mr. Bentham's plan, &c. Addressed to the British people.Insecurity of the British funds. Essay on public credit: by D. Hume (Repr. from the ed. of 1752). With observations on the sound and prophetic nature of its principles; shewing from indisputable facts, that a perseverance in the Pitt and paper system must eventually produce a national bankruptcy; and pointing out the only mode of averting so fatal a calamity; with remarks on the necessity of parliamentary reform; an analysis of Mr. Bentham's plan, &c. Addressed to the British people.Letter to the Right Hon. William Pitt [...] upon the subject of his late speech in parliament, concerning the Scots distilleries. By a Mid-Lothian farmer.A letter to the Right Hon. William Pitt, on his apostasy from the cause of parliamentary reform. To which is subjoined an appendix containing important documents on that subject.A letter to the right honorable William Pitt. [By William Drennan].A second letter to the right honorable William Pitt. [By William Drennan].Der jüngere Pitt. Zwei Essays. Hrsg. und mit einem Nachw. versehen von L. Heinemann.A letter to the right honourable William Pitt, First Lord of the treasury, and Chancellor of the exchequer; on the subjects of toleration and chruch establishments; occasioned by his speech against the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts, on [...] the 28th of March, 1787.A letter to the right honourable William Pitt, First Lord of the treasury, and Chancellor of the exchequer; on the subjects of toleration and chruch establishments; occasioned by his speech against the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts, on [...] the 28th of March, 1787.The commercial policy of Pitt and Peel. 1785-1846.Observations on Mr. Pitt's plan for the reduction of the national debt.Pitt.William Pitt, Graf von Chatham.William Pitt et son temps. Trad. de l'anglais et préc. d'une introd. par [F.P.G.] Guizot.Mr. Pitt's democracy manifested; in a letter to him, containing praises of, and strictures on, the income tax.A third letter to the right honourable William Pitt, chancellor of the exchequer, on the state of the nation, and the prosecution of the war.Strictures on a pamphlet, entitled, A plain statement of the conduct of the ministry and the opposition towards His Royal Highness the Duke of York: with some few remarks on domestic councils and family cabinets. By a friend of the late [...] William Pitt.A letter to the Right Honourable William Pitt, Chancellor of the Exchequer on the national debt.
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A full view of the British Commons, as constituted in the nineteenth century of the Christian era, when the debt of Great Britain had reached to 1,206,159,466 pounds sterling, under "The gigantic systme of swindling", called paper currency.An authentic copy of the bill for the better support and maintenauce of the poor, presented to the House of Commons by the right honourable William Pitt, with the amendments made in the committee. Ordered to be printed Dec. 31. 1796.Speech of the rights honorable William Pitt, in the House of Commons, Thursday, January 31, 1799, on offerring to the House the resolutions which he proposed as the basis of an union between Great Britain and Ireland.Speech of the rights honorable William Pitt, in the House of Commons, Thursday, January 31, 1799, on offerring to the House the resolutions which he proposed as the basis of an union between Great Britain and Ireland.The substance of teh cele brated and patriotic speech of the right hon. William Pitt, on Friday July 22, 1803. on teh general defence bill.An authentic copy of the bill for the better support and maintenauce of the poor, presented to the House of Commons by the right honourable William Pitt, with the amendments made in the committee. Ordered to be printed Dec. 31. 1796.Speech delivered in the House of Commons, Monday, February 3, 1800, on a motion for an address to the throne, approving of the answers returned to the communications from France relative to a negociation for peace.Speech delivered in the House of Commons, Monday, February 3, 1800, on a motion for an address to the throne, approving of the answers returned to the communications from France relative to a negociation for peace.Speech on Friday, the 17th day of February 1792, on proposing the application of an additional sum for the reduction of the public debt, and the repeal of certain duties on malt, on female servants, on carts and waggons, on houses, and on candles.A corrected detail of the speech, delivered in the House of Commons, on [...] the 12th instatn, preparatory to his motion for an address on His Majesty's message, relative to the war with France, to which will be added, trhe decree fo the 19th of November. By the editor of the Diary.Speeches in the House of Commons.Speech on the King's message, which was delivered in the House of Commons, on Friday, Feb. 1, 1793.The speech of [...] William Pitt, in the House of Commons, february 12, 1787, in a committee of the whole House, to consider of so much of His Majesty's [...] speech [...] as relates to the treaty of navigation and commerce [...].