| William Ewart Gladstone - Eastern question (Balkan) - 1878 - 32 pages
...tribute, but even ;here there was an opponent ; and that opponent was the British Minister. SUMMING UP. I say then, Sir, that in this Congress of the Great...the institutions, the history, and the character of 13 England. On every question that arose and that became a subject of serious contest in the Congress,... | |
| George Barnett Smith - 1879 - 524 pages
...Congress, he found that, as a general rule, they took the side opposed to that of freedom:— ' I say, sir, that in this Congress of the Great Powers, the...the Congress, or that could lead to any important practical result, a voice had been heard from Lord Beaconsfield and Lord Salisbury which sounded in... | |
| George Barnett Smith - 1880 - 620 pages
...Congress, he found that, as a general rule, they took the side opposed to that of freedom : — ' I say, sir, that in this Congress of the Great Powers the...the Congress, or that could lead to any important practical result, a voice had been heard from Lord BeaconsBeld and Lord Salisbury which sounded in... | |
| George Barnett Smith - Christian biography - 1880 - 634 pages
...Congress, he found that, as a general rule, they took the side opposed to that of freedom : — ' I say, sir, that in this Congress of the Great Powers the...became a subject of serious contest in the Congress, or thatcould lead to any important practical result, a voice had been heard from Lord Beaconsfield and... | |
| Thomas Wemyss Reid - Great Britain - 1880 - 1224 pages
...Congress, he found that, as a general rule, they took the side opposed to that of freedom : — ' I say, sir, that in this Congress of the Great Powers the...arose and that became a subject of serious contest in tho Congress, or that could lead to any important practical result, a voice had been heard from Lord... | |
| George Barnett Smith - 1880 - 546 pages
...Congress, he found that, as a general rule, they took the side opposed to that of freedom : — I say, sir, that in this Congress of the Great Powers the voice of England has not been heard in tmison with the institutions, the history, and tlio character of England. On every question that aroseand... | |
| George Barnett Smith - 1880 - 624 pages
...Congress, he found that, as a general rule, they took the side opposed to that of freedom : — ' I say, sir, that in this Congress of the Great Powers the voice of England haanot been heard in unison with the institutions, tho history, and the character of England. On every... | |
| Lewis Apjohn - Great Britain - 1881 - 402 pages
...whilst the Greeks, who had depended on England, had remained under the yoke. The voice of England had not been heard in unison with the institutions, the...the Congress, or that could lead to any important practical result, a voice had been heard from Lord Beaconsfield and Lord Salisbury which sounded in... | |
| George Carslake Thompson - Eastern question (Balkan) - 1886 - 554 pages
...their attitude. For the first time in a Congress of the important Powers of Europe, as far as I know, the voice of England has not been heard in unison with the habits, the institutions, and the history of England. On every question of difficulty that arose the... | |
| John Morley - Great Britain - 1903 - 690 pages
...Berlin he spoke without undue heat, but with a weight that impressed even adverse hearers : — I say, sir, that in this congress of the great Powers, the...the congress, or that could lead to any important practical result, a voice has been heard from Lord Beaconsfield and Lord Salisbury which sounded in... | |
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