PeelMacmillan and Company, 1891 - 246 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 29
Page 2
... conduct in the matter of Catholic emancipation in 1829 and of free trade in 1846 is one of the tritest commonplaces of modern political history . Yet Peel is now adjudged by all to have been the ablest statesman of his time , the one ...
... conduct in the matter of Catholic emancipation in 1829 and of free trade in 1846 is one of the tritest commonplaces of modern political history . Yet Peel is now adjudged by all to have been the ablest statesman of his time , the one ...
Page 15
... conduct of public affairs who adopt respectively opposing principles of action . But in the temporary abeyance of organic differences any principle which circumstances may suggest and honest men can be persuaded to accept will serve for ...
... conduct of public affairs who adopt respectively opposing principles of action . But in the temporary abeyance of organic differences any principle which circumstances may suggest and honest men can be persuaded to accept will serve for ...
Page 16
... conduct of the war . The Tories had conducted the war with vigour , determina- tion , and undaunted endurance . Inter arma silent leges . Organic reform is incompatible with a struggle for national existence , and therefore so long as ...
... conduct of the war . The Tories had conducted the war with vigour , determina- tion , and undaunted endurance . Inter arma silent leges . Organic reform is incompatible with a struggle for national existence , and therefore so long as ...
Page 55
... conduct of the Manchester magistrates in 1819 , was in no hurry to resume office . He was content to bide his time and to await the development of events . In 1820 he was married to Julia , youngest daughter of General Sir John Floyd ...
... conduct of the Manchester magistrates in 1819 , was in no hurry to resume office . He was content to bide his time and to await the development of events . In 1820 he was married to Julia , youngest daughter of General Sir John Floyd ...
Page 56
... conduct of the Queen's trial , and perhaps this circumstance may have rendered it more easy for Peel to return to office . Between these two statesmen — one of whom might have expected to be Prime Minister more than ten years ago ...
... conduct of the Queen's trial , and perhaps this circumstance may have rendered it more easy for Peel to return to office . Between these two statesmen — one of whom might have expected to be Prime Minister more than ten years ago ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
administration affairs afterwards Althorp Bank of England became bullion Cabinet Canningites career Castlereagh Catholic claims Catholic emancipation Catholic question circumstances Cobden Coercion colleagues committee confidence Conservative corn laws course crisis Croker Crown currency debate declared defeat Disraeli dissolution duke duty effect Eldon election English father favour followers foreign free trade gold honourable House of Commons House of Lords influence Ireland Irish Church issue king king's leader legislation liberal Lord Grey Lord Howick Lord John Russell Lord Liverpool Lord Melbourne majority measure Melbourne memorable ment mind Ministry never O'Connell once opinion opponents Opposition Palmerston Parliament parliamentary passed peace Peel's Perceval perhaps Pitt political popular Prime Minister principles proposed Protestant Radicals Reform Bill repeal resigned resistance resolution Secretary session Sir Robert Peel speech spirit Stanley statesman summoned Tamworth TAMWORTH MANIFESTO temper tion Tory party toryism vote Wellington Whigs
Popular passages
Page 245 - WALPOLE. By JOHN MORLEY. ST. JAMES'S GAZETTE.—" It deserves to be read, not only as the work of one of the most prominent politicians of the day, but for its intrinsic merits. It is a clever, thoughtful, and interesting biography.
Page 227 - Let us then unite to put an end to a system which has been proved to be the blight of commerce, the bane of agriculture, the source of bitter divisions among classes, the cause of penury, fever, mortality, and crime among the people.
Page 17 - Do not you think that the tone of England — of that great compound of folly, weakness, prejudice, wrong feeling, right feeling, obstinacy, and newspaper paragraphs, which is called public opinion — is more liberal — to use an odious but intelligible phrase— than the policy of the Government...
Page 137 - ... undertake to adopt it. But if the spirit of the Reform Bill implies merely a careful review of institutions, civil and ecclesiastical, undertaken in a friendly temper, combining, with the firm maintenance of established rights the correction of proved abuses and the redress of real grievances, in that case I can, for myself and colleagues, undertake to act in such a spirit and with such intentions.
Page 137 - I consider the Reform bill a final and irrevocable settlement of a great constitutional question — a settlement which no friend to the peace and welfare of this country would attempt to disturb, either by direct or by insidious means.
Page 235 - In relinquishing power I shall leave a name, severely censured, I fear, by many who, on public grounds, deeply regret the severance of party ties, — deeply regret that severance, not from interested or personal motives, but from the firm conviction that fidelity to party engagements, the existence and maintenance of a great party, constitutes a powerful instrument of government.
Page 150 - I offer you reduced estimates, improvements in civil jurisprudence, reform of ecclesiastical law, the settlement of the tithe question in Ireland, the commutation of tithe in England, the removal of any real abuse in the Church, the redress of those grievances of which the Dissenters have any just ground to complain. I offer you these specific measures and I offer also to advance, soberly and cautiously it is true, in the path of progressive improvement.
Page 235 - ... they shall recruit their exhausted strength with abundant and untaxed food, the sweeter because it is no longer leavened by a sense of injustice.
Page 70 - ... high honour which he has obtained. Long may he enjoy the distinction ; and long may it prove a source of reciprocal pride, to our parent university and to himself! Never till this hour have I stated, either in public or in private, the extent of this irretrievable sacrifice; but I have not felt it the less deeply. It is past, and I shall speak of it no more.
Page 95 - He would go still further and say that if at the present moment he had imposed upon him the duty of forming a Legislature for any country, and particularly for a country like this, in possession of great property of various descriptions...