| Sir Archibald Alison - 1852 - Страниц: 656
...difficult to explain it ; but every Iv' gentleman knows it : it is something which has existed in 1819this country for eight hundred years, three hundred years before the introduction of gold.' Mr Locke, with all his powers of understanding, could not succeed in defining what he meant by a pound.... | |
| Sir Robert Peel - 1853 - Страниц: 806
...pound. His answer was, " I find ft difficult to explain it, but every gentleman in England knows it." The committee repeated the question, and Mr. Smith...after elucidating the subject of identity, dispelling all the erroneous views with respect to innate ideas, and endeavouring to penetrate even the properties... | |
| Robert Peel - 1853 - Страниц: 816
...His answer was, 11 1 find ft difficult to explain it, but every gentleman in England knows it." Tbe Committee repeated the question, and Mr. Smith answered,...after elucidating the subject of identity, dispelling all the erroneous views with respect to innate ideas, and endeavouring to penetrate even the properties... | |
| Archibald Alison - 1854 - Страниц: 668
...find it difficult to explain it ; but every gentleman knows it : it is something which has existed in this country for eight hundred years — three hundred years before the introduction of gold.' Mr Locke, with all his powers of understanding, could not succeed in defining what he meant by a pound.... | |
| Archibald Alison - 1854 - Страниц: 666
...find it difficult to explain it ; but every gentleman knows it : it is something which has existed in this country for eight hundred years — three hundred years before the introduction of gold.' Mr Locke, with all his powers of understanding, could not succeed in defining what he meant by a pound.... | |
| Thomas Doubleday - 1856 - Страниц: 536
...; and Mr Smith answered — ' It is something that has existed in this country •without variation for eight hundred years, three hundred years before the introduction of gold.' And this was the only definition he could give. * * * * * Sir Isaac Newton, retiring from the sublime... | |
| Josephine Elizabeth Grey Butler - 1869 - Страниц: 400
...pound, and Mr. Smith answered — " It is something that has existed in this country without variation for eight hundred years, three hundred years before the introduction of gold ;" and this was the only definition he could give. Mr. Peel told the House that Sir Isaac Newton, retiring... | |
| william g. summer - 1874 - Страниц: 416
...it.' The committee repeated the question and Mr. Smith answered, ' It is something which has existed in this country for eight hundred years — three hundred years before the introduction of gold.' ' "Sir Isaac Newton . . . entered on the examination of this subject, but that great man came back... | |
| William Graham Sumner - 1874 - Страниц: 416
...pound. His answer was, ' I find it difficult to explain it, but every gentleman in England knows it.' The committee repeated the question and Mr. Smith answered, ' It is something which has existed in this country for eight hundred years — three hundred years before the introduction... | |
| William Graham Sumner - 1874 - Страниц: 400
...pound. His answer was, ' I find it difficult to explain it, but every gentleman in England knows it/ The committee repeated the question and Mr. Smith answered, ' It is something which has existed in this country for eight hundred years — three hundred years before the introduction... | |
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