The English ConstitutionKegan Paul, Trench, Trübner, 1891 - 292 páginas |
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Página xlix
... language , as the feelings of any foreign country . A Parliamentary Minister is a man trained by elaborate practice not to blurt out crude things , and an English Parliament is an assembly which particularly dislikes anything gauche or ...
... language , as the feelings of any foreign country . A Parliamentary Minister is a man trained by elaborate practice not to blurt out crude things , and an English Parliament is an assembly which particularly dislikes anything gauche or ...
Página 1
... Language is the tradition of nations ; each generation describes what it sees , but it uses words transmitted from the past . When a great entity like the British Constitution has continued in connected outward sameness , but hidden ...
... Language is the tradition of nations ; each generation describes what it sees , but it uses words transmitted from the past . When a great entity like the British Constitution has continued in connected outward sameness , but hidden ...
Página 13
... language of old times , we still call the lower house - to an assembly which , though inferior as a dignified institution , is superior as an efficient institution . A principal advantage of the House of Lords in the present age indeed ...
... language of old times , we still call the lower house - to an assembly which , though inferior as a dignified institution , is superior as an efficient institution . A principal advantage of the House of Lords in the present age indeed ...
Página 35
... language except by a name ( rúpavvos despot ) which branded him as an object of mingled fear and dislike . " If we carry our eyes back from historical to legen- dary Greece , we find a picture the reverse of what has been here sketched ...
... language except by a name ( rúpavvos despot ) which branded him as an object of mingled fear and dislike . " If we carry our eyes back from historical to legen- dary Greece , we find a picture the reverse of what has been here sketched ...
Página 72
... language too coarse for our modern manners , declared after the death of Queen Caroline , that he would pay no attention to the king's daughters ( " those girls , " as he called them ) , but would rely exclusively on Madame de Walmoden ...
... language too coarse for our modern manners , declared after the death of Queen Caroline , that he would pay no attention to the king's daughters ( " those girls , " as he called them ) , but would rely exclusively on Madame de Walmoden ...
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