The Quarterly Review, Volume 235, Issue 467John Murray, 1921 |
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Results 1-5 of 29
Page 230
... individual interest for the good of ship or shipmate . It follows that , in such cases there remains room for the entry of the grace by which the ' secondary means ' may be made ' availeable and beneficiall . ' Nothing is more ...
... individual interest for the good of ship or shipmate . It follows that , in such cases there remains room for the entry of the grace by which the ' secondary means ' may be made ' availeable and beneficiall . ' Nothing is more ...
Page 255
... individuals and collects them again into mobs , or socialism , which in its present form desires to keep the whole population as nearly as possible on the same level . An English poet has given his opinion that fifty years of Europe are ...
... individuals and collects them again into mobs , or socialism , which in its present form desires to keep the whole population as nearly as possible on the same level . An English poet has given his opinion that fifty years of Europe are ...
Page 257
... individuals . Operating by the enclosure of common- fields and the commons which were their adjuncts , it gradually transformed the medieval peasant into the tenant farmer and agricultural labourer of to - day . By 1815 the process was ...
... individuals . Operating by the enclosure of common- fields and the commons which were their adjuncts , it gradually transformed the medieval peasant into the tenant farmer and agricultural labourer of to - day . By 1815 the process was ...
Page 258
... individual case morally justified . But it must be remembered that enclosure did not necessarily mean any transfer of ownership . The immediate effect was often to increase rather than to diminish the number of owners . What it did was ...
... individual case morally justified . But it must be remembered that enclosure did not necessarily mean any transfer of ownership . The immediate effect was often to increase rather than to diminish the number of owners . What it did was ...
Page 261
... individuals . It would , therefore , appear that , out of the 100 claimants who had enjoyed the rights , 34 were altogether disallowed , probably because , as squatters , they had been in occupa- tion too short a time to establish a ...
... individuals . It would , therefore , appear that , out of the 100 claimants who had enjoyed the rights , 34 were altogether disallowed , probably because , as squatters , they had been in occupa- tion too short a time to establish a ...
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