The English ConstitutionKegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Company, 1909 - 300 páginas |
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Página xii
... judgment by the better educated classes ; that they preferred representatives from those classes , and gave those representatives much license . If a hundred small shopkeepers had by miracle been added to any of xii INTRODUCTION TO THE ...
... judgment by the better educated classes ; that they preferred representatives from those classes , and gave those representatives much license . If a hundred small shopkeepers had by miracle been added to any of xii INTRODUCTION TO THE ...
Página xix
... judgment . The common ordinary mind is quite unfit to fix for itself what political ques- tion it shall attend to ; it is as much as it can do to judge decently of the questions which drift down to it , and are brought before it ; it ...
... judgment . The common ordinary mind is quite unfit to fix for itself what political ques- tion it shall attend to ; it is as much as it can do to judge decently of the questions which drift down to it , and are brought before it ; it ...
Página xxix
... judgment the Lords should yield at once , and should not resist it . My main reason is one which has not been much urged . As a theoretical writer I can venture to say , what no elected member of Parliament , Conservative or Liberal ...
... judgment the Lords should yield at once , and should not resist it . My main reason is one which has not been much urged . As a theoretical writer I can venture to say , what no elected member of Parliament , Conservative or Liberal ...
Página xxxv
... judgment now . I cannot look on life peerages in the way in which some of their strongest advocates regard them ; I cannot think of them as a mode in which a permanent opposi- tion or a contrast between the Houses of Lords and Commons ...
... judgment now . I cannot look on life peerages in the way in which some of their strongest advocates regard them ; I cannot think of them as a mode in which a permanent opposi- tion or a contrast between the Houses of Lords and Commons ...
Página xxxix
... judgment committed bonâ fide , and only entailing consequences which one person might say were good , and another say were bad , could not be so punished . It would be possible to impeach any Minister who disbanded the Queen's army ...
... judgment committed bonâ fide , and only entailing consequences which one person might say were good , and another say were bad , could not be so punished . It would be possible to impeach any Minister who disbanded the Queen's army ...
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Términos y frases comunes
administration American arguments aristocracy assembly authority better Bill cabinet government chamber choose classes committee constitutional monarch critical Crown defect despotic difficulty discussion duty eager educated effect elected electors England English Constitution evil executive Executive Government fact feeling foreign free government function George George III give greatest head hereditary House of Commons House of Lords imagine influence interest judgment king leader legislation legislature liament look Lord Palmerston matter ment mind minister ministry monarch nation nature never opinion organisation Parlia Parliament parliamentary government party peculiar peers perhaps persons plutocracy political popular premier present President presidential government presidential system principle Queen questions Reform Act royalty rule rulers Sir George Lewis society sort sovereign speak statesmen stitution sure theory things thought tion Tory treaty truth vote WALTER BAGEHOT Whig whole wish