Proceedings of the Literary & Philosophical Society of Liverpool, Выпуск 60Deighton and Laughton, 1907 |
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Стр. 13
... Westminster Review . He was a political gladiator , with much skill and no mercy , and he hacked and hewed the Whigs before the reading public in a way to which they had not been at all accustomed . There is little doubt he thought his ...
... Westminster Review . He was a political gladiator , with much skill and no mercy , and he hacked and hewed the Whigs before the reading public in a way to which they had not been at all accustomed . There is little doubt he thought his ...
Стр. 13
... Westminster a statue of the chief of parliamentarians has been placed , we can hardly say set up , for the site is an excavation below the level of the roadway , not unlike the kitchen area of a town house . There , with his back to ...
... Westminster a statue of the chief of parliamentarians has been placed , we can hardly say set up , for the site is an excavation below the level of the roadway , not unlike the kitchen area of a town house . There , with his back to ...
Стр. 18
... Westminster of the Long Parliament , the Potsdam of Frederick , we rub elbows with living people , often heard about , but never seen before . Carlyle gave us the list of a man's hats , and the measure of his mind . We ascertained what ...
... Westminster of the Long Parliament , the Potsdam of Frederick , we rub elbows with living people , often heard about , but never seen before . Carlyle gave us the list of a man's hats , and the measure of his mind . We ascertained what ...
Стр. 15
... Westminster Hall and the Inns of Court " the gownsmen , grudging hereat , conceived his advancement their injury , that one not thoroughly bred to the laws should be preferred to the place , they said , how could he cure diseases ...
... Westminster Hall and the Inns of Court " the gownsmen , grudging hereat , conceived his advancement their injury , that one not thoroughly bred to the laws should be preferred to the place , they said , how could he cure diseases ...
Стр. 16
... Westminster in the mornings , and at his own house in the afternoons . He took care that four Masters in Chancery should sit with him at Court , and two at his own house . Pro- ceeding with great caution he , with the help of Sir ...
... Westminster in the mornings , and at his own house in the afternoons . He took care that four Masters in Chancery should sit with him at Court , and two at his own house . Pro- ceeding with great caution he , with the help of Sir ...
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admiration Aigburth Anne Hatton artistic arts aspirations Bentham Black Death Carlyle's cause century Chancellor chantries character church contemporary Court Cromwell dance dead divine doctrine Earl Ecclefechan Edward election Elizabeth England EX-PRESIDENT favour favourite fear of resistance Florence Foard Frederick French Revolution genius Hampden Jackson hand Henry hero historian Holdenby honour House influence James Mill John John Hatton kings Kirby Hall labour land learning letters literary literature live Liverpool LL.D Lord Lord Hatton Lorenzo Macaulay ment mind monasteries monks monument moral never NEVINS noble occupied the chair paper entitled passed Petrarch PHILOSOPHICAL plague poet political popular present President prophet Puritan Queen Radicals read a paper reform reign religious Richard Sartor Resartus SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON society soul speech thee theory of government things Thomas Carlyle thou thought tion Venice Vice-President Westminster Whig William Roscoe words writing younger Mill