The Quarterly Review, Volume 171William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1890 |
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Page 31
... democracy , and support the pillars of constitutional government . His ideas are the fusion of educated classes , the abolition of caste and bureaucratic feeling , the removal of social barriers which divided the aristocracy of birth ...
... democracy , and support the pillars of constitutional government . His ideas are the fusion of educated classes , the abolition of caste and bureaucratic feeling , the removal of social barriers which divided the aristocracy of birth ...
Page 40
... democratic undercurrent . He would have preferred , and he advocated , a Federation for North and South Germany , of which the King of Prussia should be the Commander - in - Chief , bearing , if need be , the title of Duke of Germany ...
... democratic undercurrent . He would have preferred , and he advocated , a Federation for North and South Germany , of which the King of Prussia should be the Commander - in - Chief , bearing , if need be , the title of Duke of Germany ...
Page 85
... Democracy — as he saw it in France -- would be the death of Art . Sad analysis , ' which has analysed into the limbo " of a 6 mere pyschology ' our long - cherished faith in the moral law , and a God that can hear our prayers , will not ...
... Democracy — as he saw it in France -- would be the death of Art . Sad analysis , ' which has analysed into the limbo " of a 6 mere pyschology ' our long - cherished faith in the moral law , and a God that can hear our prayers , will not ...
Page 161
... democracy . A print such as the Vie Parisienne , the Gil Blas , or the Petit Journal pour Rire , would not live for a month in London , for the sole reason that shopkeepers and newsvendors would not exhibit it , and decent people ...
... democracy . A print such as the Vie Parisienne , the Gil Blas , or the Petit Journal pour Rire , would not live for a month in London , for the sole reason that shopkeepers and newsvendors would not exhibit it , and decent people ...
Page 174
... democracy . We are glad to see that Mr. Morley can rise above it . And when next he accuses Lord Salisbury of doing nothing — a most unjust charge , by the bye - we hope he will remember his own estimate of Sir Robert Walpole . Lord ...
... democracy . We are glad to see that Mr. Morley can rise above it . And when next he accuses Lord Salisbury of doing nothing — a most unjust charge , by the bye - we hope he will remember his own estimate of Sir Robert Walpole . Lord ...
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