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" In this country no man, in consequence of his riches or rank, is so high as to be above the reach of the laws, and no individual is so poor or inconsiderable as not to be within their protection. "
The speeches of ... William Pitt in the House of commons [ed. by W.S. Hathaway]. - Page 397
by William Pitt - 1806
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Sermons on Practical Subjects, Volume 2

William Enfield - 1798 - 466 pages
...good. * The truth is, that the gofpel of ChrJft has pointed out a way to eternal falvalion, open alike to the high and the low, to the rich and the poor. It prefcribes a plain rule of life and manners which all may comprehend ; and it promifes to all, of...
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The British Cicero: Or, A Selection of the Most Admired Speeches ..., Volume 2

1808 - 546 pages
...no man, in consequence of his riches or rank, is so high as to be above the reach of the laws, and no individual is so poor or inconsiderable as not...affords equal security and protection to the high and to the low, to the rich and to the poor. " Such is the envied situation of England, which may be compared,...
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The Speeches of the Right Honourable William Pitt, in the House of ..., Volume 1

William Pitt, W. S. Hathaway - 1808 - 496 pages
...no nnm, in consequence of his riches or rank, is so high as to be above Ihe reach of the laws, and no individual is so poor or inconsiderable as not to be within their protection. It is the boust of the law of England, that it affords equal security and protection to the high and the low,...
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Sermons Translated from the Original French of the Late Rev. James ..., Volume 7

Jacques Saurin, Robert Robinson - 1808 - 326 pages
...attractions ? And, if he do not resist, how can he be saved ? For, in fact, the same laws are given to the high and the low ; to the rich and the poor ; to the sovereign and the subject. . ,* . ;i In society, there is a gradation of rank. One is king,...
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A history of the political life of the rt. hon. W. Pitt, by John ..., Volume 3

John Richards Green - 1809 - 558 pages
...as not to be wjthia 314 their protection. It was the boast of the law of England, that it afforded equal security and protection to the high and the low — to the rich and to the poor. Such was the envied situation of England, which might be compared, were the expression...
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Sermons Translated from the Original French of the Late Rev. James Saurin ...

Jacques Saurin, Robert Robinson - 1813 - 416 pages
...attractions ? And, if he do not resist, how can he be saved ? For in fact, the same laws are given to the high and the low ; to the rich and the poor ; to the sovereign and the subject. In society, there is a gradation of rank. One i« king, another...
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The British Critic: A New Review, Volume 2

1814 - 698 pages
...meanness of the Redeemer'* birth afford to s 2 all all his faithful followers of every rank and degree ; to the high and the low, to the rich and the poor. The second sermon from St. John six. 50. is for GoodFriday. The bishop, after shortly explaining the...
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The Parliamentary History of England, from the Earliest Period to the Year ...

William Cobbett - 1817 - 800 pages
...man, in consequence of his riches or rank, is so high as to be above the reach of the laws, and DO individual is so poor or inconsiderable as not to...may be allowed the expression, to the situation of the temperate zone on the surface of the globe, formed by the bounty of Providence for habitation and...
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The Scottish Pulpit, Volume 1

1833 - 652 pages
...required of us, all that is promised and will be given, if we ask it, to lead us in the way everlasting. To the high and the low, to the rich and the poor, to the old and the young, it speaks in language that cannot be misunderstood,' in words of warning,...
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The Unitarian, Volume 1

1834 - 500 pages
...declares that no man can be exempt from the law of duty — declares, in terms not to be misinterpreted, to the high and the low, to the rich and the poor, to the bond and the free, that no one has the consent of his Maker to do that which is wrong, or to...
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