| Alexander Charles Ewald - 1884 - 668 pages
...truest sincerity the prince expresses his firm conviction that no event would be more repugnant to the feelings of his royal father than the knowledge that the government of his son and representstive had exhibited the sovereign power in a state of degradation, of curtailed authority... | |
| Lewis Saul Benjamin - 1906 - 398 pages
...truest sincerity the Prince expresses his firm conviction, that no event could be more repugnant to the feelings of his royal father, than the knowledge,...sovereign power of the realm in a state of degradation, of contracted authority, and diminished energy — a state, hurtful in practice to the prosperity and... | |
| Walter Sichel - 1909 - 612 pages
...when His Majesty should happily recover, as existed before, and " no event could be more repugnant to the feelings of his Royal Father than the knowledge...sovereign power of the realm in a state of degradation." He deeply resented Pitt's want of confidence in restraining the alienation of the King's real and personal... | |
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