On Labour: Its Wrongful Claims and Rightful Dues, Its Actual Present and Possible FutureMacmillan, 1870 - 499 pages |
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Page 7
... gains and moral losses together , we are undoubtedly much ahead of our forefathers . Among our gains is not to be overlooked that increased refinement which has utterly banished drunkenness and ribald language from amongst educated men ...
... gains and moral losses together , we are undoubtedly much ahead of our forefathers . Among our gains is not to be overlooked that increased refinement which has utterly banished drunkenness and ribald language from amongst educated men ...
Page 13
... gain resulting from them is a miserable set - off against his con- comitant loss , for what he has gained is simply access to shops and markets stocked more abundantly than before from the augmented produce of the improved land , while ...
... gain resulting from them is a miserable set - off against his con- comitant loss , for what he has gained is simply access to shops and markets stocked more abundantly than before from the augmented produce of the improved land , while ...
Page 14
... gain more than from 15s . to 30s . a week , and we might look in vain now for silk throwsters who ' pay 8s . , 9s . , and 10s . a week to blind men and cripples for only turning wheels . ' " Giving alms no charity . ' The If , instead ...
... gain more than from 15s . to 30s . a week , and we might look in vain now for silk throwsters who ' pay 8s . , 9s . , and 10s . a week to blind men and cripples for only turning wheels . ' " Giving alms no charity . ' The If , instead ...
Page 81
... gain to have per- ceived that on the subject of which they treat , little can be known beyond what they teach . Nine - tenths of the con- fusion and obscurity in which the doctrine of price has * It may not be amiss to enter here , in a ...
... gain to have per- ceived that on the subject of which they treat , little can be known beyond what they teach . Nine - tenths of the con- fusion and obscurity in which the doctrine of price has * It may not be amiss to enter here , in a ...
Page 82
... gain to have discovered that no such despotic laws do or can exist ; that , inasmuch as the sole function of scientific law is to predict the invariable recurrence of the same effects from the same causes , and as there can be no in ...
... gain to have discovered that no such despotic laws do or can exist ; that , inasmuch as the sole function of scientific law is to predict the invariable recurrence of the same effects from the same causes , and as there can be no in ...
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Common terms and phrases
able admitted afford amount Assington association become better bricklayers capital capitalist Carpenters cause cent circumstances cloth combination common competition consequence continue cooperative societies course Crown 8vo customers dealers doubt Dutch auction earnings Edinburgh Review Edition employed employers employment English English auction entitled equally extra F. T. PALGRAVE Fcap former francs fund give hand higher hired increased individual industrial interest Lancashire latter less live Louis Blanc Manchester masters means ment natural natural price never obtain offered operations ordinary paid perhaps POEMS possess possible present price of labour probably production profits proportion purchase quantity question raise wages rate of profit rate of wages reason Review rise Rochdale Rochdale Pioneers scarcely sell share shareholders Sheffield store societies strike sufficient supply and demand supposed thereby thing tion trade unionism unionist week whole workmen
Popular passages
Page 36 - THE GOLDEN TREASURY OF THE BEST SONGS AND LYRICAL POEMS IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE. Selected and arranged, with Notes, by FRANCIS TURNER PALGRAVE.
Page 37 - THE FAIRY BOOK ; the Best Popular Fairy Stories. Selected and rendered anew by the Author of "JOHN HALIFAX, GENTLEMAN.
Page 34 - Morte d'Arthur.— SIR THOMAS MALORY'S BOOK OF KING ARTHUR AND OF HIS NOBLE KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND TABLE. The original Edition of CAXTON, revised for Modern Use. With an Introduction by Sir EDWARD STRACHEY, Bart. pp. xxxvii., 509. "It is with perfect confidence that we recommend this edition of the old romance to every class of readers.
Page 28 - This volume consists of Criticism on Contemporary Art, reprinted from Fraser, The Saturday Review, The Pall Mall Gazette, and other publications. Roby.— STORY OF A HOUSEHOLD, AND OTHER POEMS. By MARY K. ROBY. Fcap. 8vo.
Page 23 - Garnett. — IDYLLS AND EPIGRAMS. Chiefly from the Greek Anthology. By RICHARD GARNETT. Fcap. 8vo. 2s. 6d. "A charming little book. For English readers, Mr. Garnetfs translalations will open a new world of thought
Page 37 - The beautiful little edition of Bacon's Essays, now before us, does credit to the taste and scholarship of Mr. Aldis Wright. . . . It puts the reader in possession of all the essential literary facts and chronology necessary for reading the Essays in connexion with Bacon's life and times.
Page 38 - SPECTATOR. A BOOK OF GOLDEN DEEDS of all Times and all Countries. Gathered and narrated anew. By the Author of " THE HEIR OF REDCLYFFE." ". . . To the young, for whom it is especially intended, as a most interesting collection of thrilling tales well told ; and to their elders, as a useful handbook of reference, and a pleasant one to take up when their wish is to while away a weary half-hour. We have seen no prettier gift-book for a long time.
Page 31 - The life of Vittoria Colonna, the celebrated Marchesa di Pescara, has received but cursory notice from any English writer, though in every history of Italy her name is mentioned with great honour among the poets of the sixteenth century. "In three hundred and fifty years," says her biographer Visconti, "there has been no other Italian lady who can be compared to her.
Page 18 - Wilson. — A MEMOIR OF GEORGE WILSON, MD, FRSE, Regius Professor of Technology in the University of Edinburgh. By his SISTER. New Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s. "An exquisite and touching portrait of a rare and beautiful spirit.
Page 20 - Quatorze ;" any previous literature being for the most part unknown or ignored. Few know anything of the enormous literary activity that began in the thirteenth century, was carried on by Rulebeuf, Marie de France, Gaston de Foix, Thibault de Champagne, and Lorris ; was fostered by Charles of Orleans, by Margaret of Valois, by Francis the First ; that gave a crowd of versifiers to France, enriched, strengthened, developed, and fixed the French language, and prepared the way for Corneille and for...