The Quarterly Review, Volumes 157-158John Murray, 1884 |
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Page 12
... course foreseen the violation of constitutional rules , but they have generally sought for an exclusive remedy , not in the civil , but in the criminal law , through the impeachment of the offender . And , in popular governments , fear ...
... course foreseen the violation of constitutional rules , but they have generally sought for an exclusive remedy , not in the civil , but in the criminal law , through the impeachment of the offender . And , in popular governments , fear ...
Page 23
... course of a series of meetings , extending over rather more than a fortnight , determine what legislative proposals are to be submitted to Parliament . These proposals , sketched , we may believe , in not more than outline , are then ...
... course of a series of meetings , extending over rather more than a fortnight , determine what legislative proposals are to be submitted to Parliament . These proposals , sketched , we may believe , in not more than outline , are then ...
Page 24
... course of an American legislative measure . A Bill , both in the House of Representa- tives and the Senate , goes through an identical number of stages of about equal length . When it has passed both Houses , it must still commend ...
... course of an American legislative measure . A Bill , both in the House of Representa- tives and the Senate , goes through an identical number of stages of about equal length . When it has passed both Houses , it must still commend ...
Page 26
... course permitted by the Constitu- tion , of calling separate special Conventions of the United States and of the several States , would prove probably in prac- tice even lengthier and more complicated . The great strength of these ...
... course permitted by the Constitu- tion , of calling separate special Conventions of the United States and of the several States , would prove probably in prac- tice even lengthier and more complicated . The great strength of these ...
Page 27
... course of American history . That history began , as all its records abundantly show , in a condition of society produced by war and revolu- tion , which might have condemned the great Northern Repub- lic to a fate not unlike that of ...
... course of American history . That history began , as all its records abundantly show , in a condition of society produced by war and revolu- tion , which might have condemned the great Northern Repub- lic to a fate not unlike that of ...
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