The Quarterly Review, Volume 296William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1958 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 48
Page 23
... Parliament from his homes at Hickleton and Temple Newsam ( where his aunt had reigned in what has been called the ... Parliament . ' It is meant to cover the years when the author was in the House of Commons . So let us not be surprised ...
... Parliament from his homes at Hickleton and Temple Newsam ( where his aunt had reigned in what has been called the ... Parliament . ' It is meant to cover the years when the author was in the House of Commons . So let us not be surprised ...
Page 93
... Parliament , Mr St Laurent refused to listen to arguments that , since the Progressive - Conservatives lacked a majority , he should meet Parliament and test its sentiment and tendered the resignation of his Government to the ...
... Parliament , Mr St Laurent refused to listen to arguments that , since the Progressive - Conservatives lacked a majority , he should meet Parliament and test its sentiment and tendered the resignation of his Government to the ...
Page 175
... Parliament depends for its immunity from the danger of being quashed solely upon the fact that there exists no ... Parliament , for if Parliament deliberately curtails its sovereignty by the making of a treaty or compact which ...
... Parliament depends for its immunity from the danger of being quashed solely upon the fact that there exists no ... Parliament , for if Parliament deliberately curtails its sovereignty by the making of a treaty or compact which ...
Contents
Is Philosophy Obsolete? | 12 |
Human Relations in the Tropical Girdle of | 58 |
The Canadian General Election and After | 92 |
Copyright | |
31 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Action française Africa American animals appear Bahá'u'lláh Bantu become Britain British Canada cent century character Christian Church Churchill civilization colonialism Communist course culture Cyprus deal death economic Empire England English Enosis Europe European existence fact Federal feeling Finland Finnish forces foreign forest Formosa France French French-Canadian German Greece Greek Hazor Helsinki House human ideal ideas India industry interest island King land later leaders less Liberal living Lord Halifax macabre Massis means ment Middle Temple million mind Minister modern moral nationalist nature never Parliament Party period political present problem Progressive-Conservative provinces reform relations religion Richard Jefferies Roman Russia Samuel Butler Shakespeare social society South South Tyrol species story things thought tion to-day trade tropics union United Victorian W. H. Auden Western whole words writes