The Quarterly Review, Volumes 157-158John Murray, 1884 |
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Page 39
... position to appreciate the really good points of men who were violently prejudiced against themselves , while their biographers in later times have been perhaps a little too apt to bring out in stronger relief the brightness of thelr ...
... position to appreciate the really good points of men who were violently prejudiced against themselves , while their biographers in later times have been perhaps a little too apt to bring out in stronger relief the brightness of thelr ...
Page 45
... position , misleading and perplexing their congregations , and ministering with uneasy consciences . Freed from the trammels which had oppressed them , they would be able to work with honesty and earnestness in uphold- ing what they ...
... position , misleading and perplexing their congregations , and ministering with uneasy consciences . Freed from the trammels which had oppressed them , they would be able to work with honesty and earnestness in uphold- ing what they ...
Page 65
... position as a feudal holding transmitted by its original receiver to his heir . Such inheritances were liable to a fine more or less onerous , on the express ground that in its origin the fief was merely personal , that in strictness it ...
... position as a feudal holding transmitted by its original receiver to his heir . Such inheritances were liable to a fine more or less onerous , on the express ground that in its origin the fief was merely personal , that in strictness it ...
Page 69
... position and perhaps our policy would have been other than they have been . The country might or might not have been willing to spend all that has been expended during the last twenty years on the defen- sive forces of the Empire , on ...
... position and perhaps our policy would have been other than they have been . The country might or might not have been willing to spend all that has been expended during the last twenty years on the defen- sive forces of the Empire , on ...
Page 77
... position , when the working classes shall have come to consume per head no more spirits or beer than the rest of society - per- haps less , in proportion to their lesser incomes ? It seems not unreasonable to assume that by the end of ...
... position , when the working classes shall have come to consume per head no more spirits or beer than the rest of society - per- haps less , in proportion to their lesser incomes ? It seems not unreasonable to assume that by the end of ...
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agricultural appeared army authority Biographical Dictionary Biographie Universelle Bishop Bossuet cent Chamberlain Christian Church Church of England clergy colonial Constitution Coptic Coptic Church Copts Cross's Acts districts doubt duties dwellings edition Egypt eighteenth century Empire England English evil expenditure fact favour French give Gladstone Government hand Hissarlik hope House of Commons hundred Hyndman Iliad Ilium important income income-tax increase interest Ireland King labour land landlord large number Lauderdale Leone Levi less letters lives London Lord Malay means Melchites ment Metropolitan Board Michaud millions Monophysites never opinion Parliament party perhaps persons Peshwa political poor population practical present question reader Reform regard rents result revenue Schliemann Scotland Spain spirit taxation taxes tenants things tion trade twenty volumes wage-receiving whole William Law words writing