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" No such decision however, could, in the present instance, be ,i : ii • i . iy or dispassionately pronounced. As a member of that House, therefore* who, since he had the honour of a seat in it, had never been influenced by any feelings of private attachment,... "
The Parliamentary Register: Or an Impartial Report of the Debates that Have ... - Page 185
by Great Britain. Parliament - 1810
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Cobbett's Parliamentary Debates, During the ... Session of the ..., Volume 16

Great Britain. Parliament - 1812 - 706 pages
...digni>y of ihe liuuse. No such decision however, could, in the present instance, be ,i : ii • i . iy or dispassionately pronounced. As a member of that...any vote satisfactory to his own mind, but who was anxious to pronounce judgment on the real merits of the' case, he called upo'n the House of Commons...
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Cobbett's Parliamentary Debates, During the ... Session of the ..., Volume 16

Great Britain. Parliament - 1812 - 792 pages
...could, in the present instance, be impartially or dispassionately pronounced. А« а щещЬег of that House, therefore, who, since he had the honour...any vote satisfactory to his own mind, but who was anxious to pronj unce judgment on the real merits of the case, he called upon the House of Commons...
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The Congressional Globe

United States. Congress - 1834 - 852 pages
...Senate to excuse him, it would give him pleasure, but if he were compelled to vote, he should do so to the best of his judgment, and according to the dictates of his own conscience. On the queslion of excusing Mr. WHITE from voling, Mr. GRUNDY called for a division,...
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The life and times of viscount Palmerston, Volume 1; Volume 86

James Ewing Ritchie - 1866 - 936 pages
...ruler, after the treatment he had received from both ; that he had endeavoured to discharge his duty to the best of his judgment, and according to the dictates of his conscience; that he had been misrepresented, calumniated, and insulted ; that the insults had not been confined...
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Canadian Parliamentary Companion and Annual Register

Charles Herbert Mackintosh, John Alexander Gemmili - 1878 - 438 pages
...by prejudice and untrammelled by party, he will ever endeavor to record HIM vote upon all questions to the best of his judgment, and according to the dictates of his conscience."—Leamington. \\ r nu',MK, JAMES MILI.KH. (Hamilton.) Co.; and dir. of the Mutual Life...
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A Commentary on the New Code of the Canon Law, Volume 3

Charles Augustine (Rev. P., O.S.B.) - 1919 - 492 pages
...cannot be refused to him by the religious. The members of the community must answer his questions, each according to the dictates of his conscience, with a view to the common welfare. But what if the visitator should demand of a religious that he reveal the secret misdeeds...
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