| william harrison ainsworth - 1857 - 516 pages
...committed him so close a prisoner, describes the North Briton as " a most infamous and seditious libel, tending to inflame the minds and alienate the affections of the people from his majesty, and to excite them to traitorous insurrections against the government." On May 3rd (never... | |
| Alexander Andrews - 1859 - 356 pages
...committed him so close a prisoner describes the North Briton as " a most infamous and seditious libel, tending to inflame the minds and alienate the affections of the people from his majesty, and to excite them to traitorous insurrections against the government." On May 3d (never yet... | |
| Charles Churchill - 1880 - 740 pages
...decreed For that bad end, who in the dark Scorn'd to do mischief) set his mark zw and seditious libel, tending to inflame the minds, and alienate the affections of the people from his majesty, and excite them to traitorous insurrection against the government; for which libel, notwithstanding... | |
| Francis Hitchman - 1881 - 404 pages
...that is to say — in which they accused him of being the author of " an infamous and seditious libel, tending to inflame the minds and alienate the affections of the people from his Majesty." Wilkes's bluntness in speaking of the process by which he had lost his papers as robbery,... | |
| Charles Francis G. Clark - 1881 - 436 pages
...writing and publishing in his shop window at Dudley certain false, seditious, and scandalous libels, tending to inflame the minds and alienate the affections of the people from his majesty the King, and to excite them to traitorous insurrections against the Government. " The fact... | |
| Francis Hitchman - 1881 - 408 pages
...that is to say — in which they accused him of being the author of " an infamous and seditious libel, tending to inflame the minds and alienate the affections of the people from his Majesty." Wilkes's bluntness in speaking of the process by which he had lost his papers as robbery,... | |
| Epochs - 1882 - 794 pages
...reply in due course, characterising the offending No. 45 as a most infamous and seditious libel, " tending to inflame the minds and alienate the affections of the people from His Majesty, and to excite them to traitorous insurrections against the government," and that the offence... | |
| Oliver Lorenzo Barbour - 1883 - 840 pages
...was a commitment for publishing " a most infamous and seditious libel, entitled the North Briton, No. 45. tending to inflame the minds and alienate the affections of the people from his majesty, aud to excite them to traitorous insinuations ngainst the government," it was held sufficient,... | |
| Ward, Lock and co, ltd - 1885 - 810 pages
...reply in due course, characterising the offending No. 45 as a most infamous and seditious libel, " tending to inflame the minds and alienate the affections of the people from His Majesty, and to excite them to traitorous insurrections against the government," and that the offence... | |
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