The Works and Life of Walter Bagehot, Volumen5Longmans, Green, 1915 |
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Página 4
... really understand the true evil . " The coinage , " says Sir W. Hunter , in his most able Annals of Rural Bengal , " the refuse of twenty different dynasties and petty potentates , had been clipped , drilled , filed 4 A UNIVERSAL MONEY.
... really understand the true evil . " The coinage , " says Sir W. Hunter , in his most able Annals of Rural Bengal , " the refuse of twenty different dynasties and petty potentates , had been clipped , drilled , filed 4 A UNIVERSAL MONEY.
Página 6
... able to reform its currency . If foreign bills of exchange are paid in this currency , the uncertain value of any sum , of what is in its own nature so uncertain , must render the exchange always very much against such a State , its ...
... able to reform its currency . If foreign bills of exchange are paid in this currency , the uncertain value of any sum , of what is in its own nature so uncertain , must render the exchange always very much against such a State , its ...
Página 25
... able in the old world . We must not therefore be surprised if we have to invent a new currency , and do not find a fit one ready . What that new one ought to be we shall next discuss . THE PRACTICAL PROPOSALS FOR AN INTER- NATIONAL ...
... able in the old world . We must not therefore be surprised if we have to invent a new currency , and do not find a fit one ready . What that new one ought to be we shall next discuss . THE PRACTICAL PROPOSALS FOR AN INTER- NATIONAL ...
Página 27
... able to understand the money , and a French merchant taking up an English one . But the proposal from Paris does not effect this . Accounts would not be kept identically abroad and at home after the change any more than now . The French ...
... able to understand the money , and a French merchant taking up an English one . But the proposal from Paris does not effect this . Accounts would not be kept identically abroad and at home after the change any more than now . The French ...
Página 28
... opinion to resist the mo points you must never expect muc many able minds which take part i the knowledge , few the leisure , an calmness to understand them . In If consent , without even asking him , says he is. 28 A UNIVERSAL.
... opinion to resist the mo points you must never expect muc many able minds which take part i the knowledge , few the leisure , an calmness to understand them . In If consent , without even asking him , says he is. 28 A UNIVERSAL.
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able administration American argument aristocracy assembly barrister believe better Bill Cabinet government called chamber choose coin coinage constitutional monarch Court currency defects despotic difficulty discussion doubt effect elected England English Constitution evil executive executive Government fact feeling foreign France French function George III give greatest hereditary House of Commons House of Lords idea important influence interest judge king legislation legislature Lord Clarendon Lord Palmerston mass matter ment mind Minister Ministry modern monarch nation nature never opinion Parlia Parliament Parliamentary government party peculiar peers perhaps persons political popular Premier present President Presidential Presidential system principle Queen Reform rule rulers seignorage Sir George Lewis society sort sovereign speak statesmen sure theory things thought tion Tory trade truth vote Whig whole wish
Pasajes populares
Página 100 - A hot flash seems to burn across the brain. Men in these intense states of mind have altered all history, changed for better or worse the creed of myriads, and desolated or redeemed provinces and ages. Nor is this intensity a sign of truth, for it is precisely strongest in
Página 180 - despot) which branded him as an object of mingled fear and dislike. " If we carry our eyes back from historical to legendary Greece, we find a picture the reverse of what has been here sketched. We discern a government in which there is little or no scheme or system, still less any idea of
Página 247 - a year, its power will be less year by year, and at last be gone, as so much kingly power is gone—no one knows how. Its danger is not in assassination, but atrophy ; not abolition, but decline. No. V. THE HOUSE OF COMMONS.
Página 353 - the time. It would not have suited the ante-Tudor kings to have had a fictitious assembly; they would have lost their sole feeler, their only instrument for discovering national opinion. Nor could they have manufactured such an assembly if they wished. The instrument in that behalf is the centralised executive, and there was then no
Página 156 - if I may say so, an ancient and ever-altering constitution is like an old man who still wears with attached fondness clothes in the fashion of his youth: what you see of him is the same; what you do not see is wholly altered.
Página 177 - would be elected by the Electoral College as the second wisest man in the country. The vice-presidentship being a sinecure, a second-rate man agreeable to the wire-pullers is always smuggled in. The chance of succession to the presidentship is too distant to be thought of.
Página 136 - condemned as injudicious or corrupt . ' Blessed are the peace-makers' is, I suppose, to be understood in the other world, for in this they are frequently cursed." And this is very often the view taken now in England of treaties. There being nothing practical in the Opposition—nothing likely to hamper them
Página 360 - of corporations. And it was natural, that in France, where there is scarcely any power of self-organisation in the people, where the prt'fet must be asked upon every subject, and take the initiative in every movement, a solitary thinker should be repelled from the exaggerations of which he knew the evil, to the contrary exaggeration of which he did not.
Página 351 - he might do, and what he might not do. If he much mistook this, there was a rebellion. There are, as is well known, three great periods in the English Constitution. The first of these is the ante-Tudor period. The English Parliament then seemed to be gaining
Página 228 - some most remarkable occasions. But it has been by a good deal of management. " Upon the important occasion and question now before the House, I propose to endeavour to induce them to avoid to involve the country in the additional difficulties of a difference of opinion, possibly a dispute