The English ConstitutionOxford University Press, 1928 - 312 páginas |
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Página v
... never lacks point . To my thinking the method is as characteristic as the manner , and not less excellent . It is possible to theorize about politics in many different ways and from many different points of view . Constitutions may be ...
... never lacks point . To my thinking the method is as characteristic as the manner , and not less excellent . It is possible to theorize about politics in many different ways and from many different points of view . Constitutions may be ...
Página vi
... never wholly lost sight of his main subject and was rarely faithless to his method . What was that method ? It can perhaps best be understood from a judgement which , in one of his essays , he passes on the author of an unsuccessful ...
... never wholly lost sight of his main subject and was rarely faithless to his method . What was that method ? It can perhaps best be understood from a judgement which , in one of his essays , he passes on the author of an unsuccessful ...
Página xii
... never became a Party watchword ; it was never clamoured for by a mob ; it has never been recog- nized by statute ; nor can any man tell us exactly when it became fully effective . But now that it is embedded in the very centre of ...
... never became a Party watchword ; it was never clamoured for by a mob ; it has never been recog- nized by statute ; nor can any man tell us exactly when it became fully effective . But now that it is embedded in the very centre of ...
Página xiv
... never striven for domination . It has never been corrupt . Its errors , or what we now deem to have been its errors , were shared by great bodies of en- lightened contemporary opinion . Its debates have been distinguished . Quite apart ...
... never striven for domination . It has never been corrupt . Its errors , or what we now deem to have been its errors , were shared by great bodies of en- lightened contemporary opinion . Its debates have been distinguished . Quite apart ...
Página xviii
... never strains the intellectual resources of the most ignorant or the most stupid . It is , of course , bound up with the Monarchy ; indeed to all intents and purposes it is the Monarchy . It provides the dis- guise which happily ...
... never strains the intellectual resources of the most ignorant or the most stupid . It is , of course , bound up with the Monarchy ; indeed to all intents and purposes it is the Monarchy . It provides the dis- guise which happily ...
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Términos y frases comunes
administration American argument aristocracy assembly authority better Bill cabinet government called chamber choose civil committee consti constitutional monarch criticism Crown defect despotic difficulty dignified discussion duties educated effect efficient elected electors England English Constitution evil executive executive Government fact feeling foreign function George George III give greatest head hereditary House of Commons House of Lords House of Peers imagine influence interest judgement king leader legislation legislature look Lord Palmerston majority matter ment mind ministry moderate monarch nation nature never opinion Parlia Parliament Parliamentary government party peculiar peers perhaps persons plutocracy political popular premier present President presidential government Presidential system Prime Minister principle Queen royalty rule rulers Sir George Lewis society sort sovereign speak statesmen sure theory things thought tion Tory treaty truth tution vote Whig whole wish