The Public Life of the Right Honourable the Earl of Beaconsfield, K.G., Etc., Etc, Volume 2Chapman & Hall, 1879 |
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Page 8
... deal with the financial difficulties with which it was environed . The war had added forty - two millions to the National Debt , and had cost altogether £ 77,588,711 . * Nothing , therefore , could have been more natural than that Mr ...
... deal with the financial difficulties with which it was environed . The war had added forty - two millions to the National Debt , and had cost altogether £ 77,588,711 . * Nothing , therefore , could have been more natural than that Mr ...
Page 11
... for the closet , not for a practical and popular Assembly . We have to deal with the facts before us , and if we raise up an agitation against Austrian rule without having a distinct con- ception in our minds of the objects at which we.
... for the closet , not for a practical and popular Assembly . We have to deal with the facts before us , and if we raise up an agitation against Austrian rule without having a distinct con- ception in our minds of the objects at which we.
Page 36
... speech was devoted to a consideration of the measures of the Government— what they were and what they ought to be . A great deal had The Indian Empire Foreshadowed . 37 been said of what 36 The Public Life of the Earl of Beaconsfield .
... speech was devoted to a consideration of the measures of the Government— what they were and what they ought to be . A great deal had The Indian Empire Foreshadowed . 37 been said of what 36 The Public Life of the Earl of Beaconsfield .
Page 48
... deal with this diffi- culty . We must not seize upon this opportunity because we wish to inflict a check upon the Government , or do that which might be misconstrued as an insult to that Prince who , I think , deserves well of this ...
... deal with this diffi- culty . We must not seize upon this opportunity because we wish to inflict a check upon the Government , or do that which might be misconstrued as an insult to that Prince who , I think , deserves well of this ...
Page 50
... deal of ill - feeling . He exercised , therefore , a wise discretion in at once placing his resignation in the hands of Her Majesty , who , sending for Lord Derby , entrusted him with the formation of a Government . The fact was ...
... deal of ill - feeling . He exercised , therefore , a wise discretion in at once placing his resignation in the hands of Her Majesty , who , sending for Lord Derby , entrusted him with the formation of a Government . The fact was ...
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Popular passages
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Page 10 - Arranged to meet the requirements of the Syllabus of the Science and Art Department of the Committee of Council on Education, South Kensington.
Page 3 - Assaying : As applied to the Manufacture of Iron from its Ores, and to Cast Iron, Wrought Iron, and Steel, as found in Commerce.
Page 19 - This Edition is printed on a finer paper and in a larger type than has been employed in any previous edition. The type has been cast especially for it, and the page is of a size to admit of the introduction of all the original illustrations. No such attractive issue has been made of the writings of Mr. Dickens, which, various as have been the forms of publication adapted to the demands of an e- er widely-increasing popularity, have never yet been worthily presented in a .really handsome library form.
Page 452 - For nearly five years the present Ministers have harassed every trade, worried every profession, and assailed or menaced every class, institution, and species of property in the country. Occasionally they have varied this state of civil warfare by perpetrating some job which outraged public opinion, or by stumbling into mistakes which have been always discreditable, and sometimes ruinous. All this they call a policy, and seem quite proud of it ; but the country has, I think, made up its mind to close...
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Page 111 - Wales; and that no readjustment of the franchise will satisfy this House or the country which does not provide for a greater extension of the suffrage in cities and boroughs than is contemplated in the present measure.
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Page 21 - Disraeli inaugurated a two nights' debate, by moving, 'That it would be expedient, before sanctioning the financial arrangements for the ensuing year, to adjust the estimated income and expenditure in a manner which shall appear best calculated to secure the country against the risk of a deficiency in the years 1858-9 and 1859-60, and to provide for such a balance of revenue and charge respectively in the year 1860 as may place it in the power of Parliament at that period, without embarrassment to...
Page 97 - I cannot help saying," he went on, " that the measure which the Cabinet are prepared to recommend is one which we should all of us have stoutly opposed if either Lord Palmerston or Lord John Russell had ventured to bring it forward.