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 - English literature |
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Page 14
... Government required an ' engagement ' from all beneficed persons , to the terms of which Hales could not agree , and so was deprived . Rous was a benefactor to the College and founder of some exhibitions at Pembroke College , Oxford ...
... Government required an ' engagement ' from all beneficed persons , to the terms of which Hales could not agree , and so was deprived . Rous was a benefactor to the College and founder of some exhibitions at Pembroke College , Oxford ...
Page 21
... government ; as the author of ' Etoniana ' says , he was always parading his battalions . He was a humane man , and could not have liked it ; but he probably thought no other method of government was possible . It ought also to be ...
... government ; as the author of ' Etoniana ' says , he was always parading his battalions . He was a humane man , and could not have liked it ; but he probably thought no other method of government was possible . It ought also to be ...
Page 31
... 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 from the aristocracy of talent or of industrial wealth ...
... 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 from the aristocracy of talent or of industrial wealth ...
Page 46
... government to his son . He had , moreover , implicit confidence in Prince Bismarck , and the latter brooked no rival . If the Crown Prince had actively intervened in political affairs , he must have either promoted a policy of which he ...
... government to his son . He had , moreover , implicit confidence in Prince Bismarck , and the latter brooked no rival . If the Crown Prince had actively intervened in political affairs , he must have either promoted a policy of which he ...
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