The Quarterly Review, 159. köideWilliam 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, 1885 |
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Page 252
... foreign and colonial affairs , a feeling of disquietude and even of alarm , is rapidly extending among the people . The class which habitually watches the course of foreign events is , unfortunately for ourselves , comparatively small ...
... foreign and colonial affairs , a feeling of disquietude and even of alarm , is rapidly extending among the people . The class which habitually watches the course of foreign events is , unfortunately for ourselves , comparatively small ...
Page 257
... foreign affairs , but obviously he did not feel so much at home as when hinting at a form of licensed brigandage as a desirable system of government . He spoke of Egypt , but he treated it as a question , interesting chiefly to ...
... foreign affairs , but obviously he did not feel so much at home as when hinting at a form of licensed brigandage as a desirable system of government . He spoke of Egypt , but he treated it as a question , interesting chiefly to ...
Page 355
... foreign goods at preferential rates , which compel the English farmer to pay part of the bill for carriage of his foreign competitor . Such are some of the diffi- culties by which agriculturists are confronted . Many remedies have been ...
... foreign goods at preferential rates , which compel the English farmer to pay part of the bill for carriage of his foreign competitor . Such are some of the diffi- culties by which agriculturists are confronted . Many remedies have been ...
Contents
London 1884 | 450 |
Hansards Parliamentary Debates 18821884 | 480 |
Parliamentary Debates March 1885 | 527 |
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Africa agitation agricultural Angra Pequeña Bampton Lectures Bishop Bonstetten Britain British Brythonic called Carlyle Carlyle's Celts century character chief claim Colonies common Companies Congo constitutional course crofters Deism Dodona doubt England English existence fact farmers farms favour feeling force foreign France French friends Froude Geneva Genevese German Gladstone Gordon Government guild Henry Longueville Mansel Highlands House human interest Ireland Irish island Johnson Khartoum labour Lake Tanganika land landlords Lectures less Liberal London Lord Lord Derby Lord Salisbury Mansel matter ment mind Ministers moral nation nature never once Parliament Parliamentary party passed perhaps Pheidias political popular population possession present Prince Bismarck Pytheas question Radical reason reform Revolution Rousseau seems social society Stanley Pool things thought tion trade true truth whole words writes