| William Cooke Taylor - 1851 - 504 pages
...superintending the professions of law and medicine, and the studies connected with them, had the effect of conferring advantages of the nature of civil privileges...one class of the king's subjects from which another was excluded — those regulations ought to undergo modification, with the view of placing all the... | |
| Benjamin Thomas Barton - 1874 - 376 pages
...superintending the professions of law and medicine, and the studies connected with them, had the effect of conferring advantages of the nature of civil privileges...class was excluded, those regulations ought to undergo moditication, with the view of placing all the King's subjects, whatever their religious creed, upon... | |
| James Taylor - 1882 - 284 pages
...superintending the professions of law and medicine, and the studies connected with them, had the effect of conferring advantages of the nature of civil privileges...one class of the king's subjects from which another was excluded, 1834.] THE AGE WE LIVE IN: these regulations ought to undergo modification, with the... | |
| James Richard Thursfield - 1891 - 278 pages
...superintending the professions of law and medicine, and the studies connected with them, had the effect of conferring advantages of the nature of civil privileges...one class of the king's subjects from which another wasexcluded—those regulations ought to undergo modification, with the view of placing all the king's... | |
| Sir Spencer Walpole - 1905 - 476 pages
...superintending the professions of law and medicine, and the studies connected with them, had the effect of conferring advantages of the nature of civil privileges on one class of the king's subjects, those regulations ought to undergo modification." It was true that he had resisted a retrospective... | |
| H. J. Hanham - 1969 - 516 pages
...superintending the professions of law and medicine, and the studies connected with them, had the effect of conferring advantages of the nature of civil privileges...one class of the King's subjects from which another was excluded — those regulations ought to undergo modification, with the view of placing all the... | |
| David Charles Douglas, George Malcolm Young, W. D. Handcock - 1996 - 1050 pages
...superintending the professions of law and medicine, and the studies connected with them, had the effect of conferring advantages of the nature of civil privileges...one class of the King's subjects from which another was excluded- those regulations ought to undergo modification, with the view of placing all the King's... | |
| |