The English Constitution, Volumen1M. Walter Dunne, 1901 - 225 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 11-15 de 24
Página 60
... statesmen who had most power in England were men of far greater experience than himself . and no doubt did , exercise a great , if not a commanding influence over Lord Malmesbury , but he could not rule Lord Palmerston . The old statesman ...
... statesmen who had most power in England were men of far greater experience than himself . and no doubt did , exercise a great , if not a commanding influence over Lord Malmesbury , but he could not rule Lord Palmerston . The old statesman ...
Página 61
... statesmen , and almost the first English statesman who was borne into power against the wishes of the king and against the wishes of the nobility - the first popular minister . We might have expected a proud tribune of the people to be ...
... statesmen , and almost the first English statesman who was borne into power against the wishes of the king and against the wishes of the nobility - the first popular minister . We might have expected a proud tribune of the people to be ...
Página 62
... statesman , ' who can lay down plans for ages yet unborn , is a fancy generated by the pride of the human intellect to which facts give no support . The plans of Charlemagne died with him ; those of Richelieu were mistaken ; those of ...
... statesman , ' who can lay down plans for ages yet unborn , is a fancy generated by the pride of the human intellect to which facts give no support . The plans of Charlemagne died with him ; those of Richelieu were mistaken ; those of ...
Página 77
... statesman that he presided over this change . He wished to guide the Lords to their true position , and he did guide them . In 1846 , in the crisis of the Corn- Law struggle , and when it was a question whether the House of Lords should ...
... statesman that he presided over this change . He wished to guide the Lords to their true position , and he did guide them . In 1846 , in the crisis of the Corn- Law struggle , and when it was a question whether the House of Lords should ...
Página 88
... statesmen whom everyone knows . But the mass of the House is nothing . This is why orators trained in the Commons detest to speak in the Lords . Lord Chatham used to call it the " Tapestry . " The House of Commons is a scene of life if ...
... statesmen whom everyone knows . But the mass of the House is nothing . This is why orators trained in the Commons detest to speak in the Lords . Lord Chatham used to call it the " Tapestry . " The House of Commons is a scene of life if ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
able action administration American arguments aristocracy assembly authority cabinet government called chamber choose civil classes colonial committee constitutional monarch Court critical Crown defect despotic difficulty duty eager educated effect elected electors England English Constitution evil executive executive government fact feeling free government function George George III give greatest head hereditary House of Commons House of Lords ideas imagine influence interest king leader legislation legislature look Lord Lyndhurst Lord North Lord Palmerston matter ment mind minister ministry moderate monarch nation nature never obey opinion Parlia Parliament parliamentary government party peculiar Peers perhaps persons political popular premier President Presidential Government presidential system principle Queen reverence royalty rule rulers Sir George Lewis society sort sovereign speak statesman sure theory things thought tion Tory truth vote Whig whole wish