The English ConstitutionKegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Company, 1909 - 300 páginas |
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Página xii
... arguing that so important an in- novation as the Reform Act of 1867 will not have very great effects . It must , in all likelihood , have many great ones . I am only saying that as yet we do not know what those effects are ; that the ...
... arguing that so important an in- novation as the Reform Act of 1867 will not have very great effects . It must , in all likelihood , have many great ones . I am only saying that as yet we do not know what those effects are ; that the ...
Página xxii
... argument is not required to guide the public , still less a formal exposition of that argument . What is mostly needed is the manly utterance of clear conclusions ; if a statesman gives these in a felicitous way ( and if with a few ...
... argument is not required to guide the public , still less a formal exposition of that argument . What is mostly needed is the manly utterance of clear conclusions ; if a statesman gives these in a felicitous way ( and if with a few ...
Página xxxiii
... argument for it , but you cannot make a loud argument , an argument which would reach and rule the multitude . The thing looks like injustice , and in a time of popular passion it would not stand . Much short of the compulsory equal ...
... argument for it , but you cannot make a loud argument , an argument which would reach and rule the multitude . The thing looks like injustice , and in a time of popular passion it would not stand . Much short of the compulsory equal ...
Página 5
... arguments to prove that these dignified parts of old governments are cardinal opponents of the essential apparatus , great pivots of substantial utility ; and so they manufactured fallacies which the plainer school have well exposed ...
... arguments to prove that these dignified parts of old governments are cardinal opponents of the essential apparatus , great pivots of substantial utility ; and so they manufactured fallacies which the plainer school have well exposed ...
Página 20
... arguments which come to nothing - heavy speeches which precede no motion — abstract disquisitions which leave visible things where they were . But all men heed great results , and a change of government is a great result . It has a hun ...
... arguments which come to nothing - heavy speeches which precede no motion — abstract disquisitions which leave visible things where they were . But all men heed great results , and a change of government is a great result . It has a hun ...
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