The Westminster Review, Volumen152Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 1899 |
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Página 7
... England , assembled in Parliament , finding by too long experience that the House of Lords is useless and dangerous to the people of England , have thought fit to ordain and enact , and be it ordained and enacted by the present ...
... England , assembled in Parliament , finding by too long experience that the House of Lords is useless and dangerous to the people of England , have thought fit to ordain and enact , and be it ordained and enacted by the present ...
Página 13
... England , so that the value of Indian textiles imported into the country had fallen from three millions sterling to a few thousand pounds , while the trade was so disorganised that the Com- pany had to call home the cash - balances held ...
... England , so that the value of Indian textiles imported into the country had fallen from three millions sterling to a few thousand pounds , while the trade was so disorganised that the Com- pany had to call home the cash - balances held ...
Página 21
... England itself the hygienic system of the British nation has by no means eliminated all classes of epidemic disease , though it may claim to have prolonged life and increased the numbers of the census without any commensurate pressure ...
... England itself the hygienic system of the British nation has by no means eliminated all classes of epidemic disease , though it may claim to have prolonged life and increased the numbers of the census without any commensurate pressure ...
Página 23
... vexes the weaker classes , as was the case in England when the Paston Letters were written . All this used to appear , often yet appears , barbarous and even In shocking , but it co - exists with a sort 1899 . 23 Company and Crown.
... vexes the weaker classes , as was the case in England when the Paston Letters were written . All this used to appear , often yet appears , barbarous and even In shocking , but it co - exists with a sort 1899 . 23 Company and Crown.
Página 34
... England's greatness depends more than all on moral force , on its Puritanism , on its practical Christianity , and may easily be wrecked by Jingoism , stock - jobbing , drink , and vice . For these are the grand supports of our modern ...
... England's greatness depends more than all on moral force , on its Puritanism , on its practical Christianity , and may easily be wrecked by Jingoism , stock - jobbing , drink , and vice . For these are the grand supports of our modern ...
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