The Quarterly Review, Volume 44William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1831 |
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... Parliamentary Reform . By Charles Tennyson , Esq . , M.P. 4. On Parliamentary Reform and the Distresses of the Country . By T. Barber Beaumont , Esq . 5. The State of the Nation at the Close of 1830 : its Prospects from a New King and a ...
... Parliamentary Reform . By Charles Tennyson , Esq . , M.P. 4. On Parliamentary Reform and the Distresses of the Country . By T. Barber Beaumont , Esq . 5. The State of the Nation at the Close of 1830 : its Prospects from a New King and a ...
Page 50
... parliament its entire abolition , as the only means of saving the country from overwhelming pauperism ; after treat- ing with ineffable contempt the opinions of those who , from a practical knowledge of these laws , ventured to support ...
... parliament its entire abolition , as the only means of saving the country from overwhelming pauperism ; after treat- ing with ineffable contempt the opinions of those who , from a practical knowledge of these laws , ventured to support ...
Page 102
... parliament most vitally affecting the ultimate decision of the question : nor would it ever have been mentioned had I not been so fortunate as to know it . I know it has been an opinion - a maxim - a principle - aye , an honest ...
... parliament most vitally affecting the ultimate decision of the question : nor would it ever have been mentioned had I not been so fortunate as to know it . I know it has been an opinion - a maxim - a principle - aye , an honest ...
Page 111
... parliaments - not extension of the franchise - not altering the mode of election - will • be sufficient , ' because the evil is seated , primarily and essentially , 122 in the impure condition , in the imperfect virtue of man ...
... parliaments - not extension of the franchise - not altering the mode of election - will • be sufficient , ' because the evil is seated , primarily and essentially , 122 in the impure condition , in the imperfect virtue of man ...
Page 119
... a great majority of the bishops , but the question itself was first publicly stirred by an English clergyman , and first moved in parliament by one whom it is needless to moved Dymond On the Principles of Morality . 119.
... a great majority of the bishops , but the question itself was first publicly stirred by an English clergyman , and first moved in parliament by one whom it is needless to moved Dymond On the Principles of Morality . 119.
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