The National ReviewW.H. Allen, 1910 - Great Britain |
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Page 27
... Mr. McKenna's laboured and unconvincing explanation of the delay in executing the meagre shipbuilding programme Another already sanctioned by Parliament - of which , so Debate can make out from his obscure observations only one ...
... Mr. McKenna's laboured and unconvincing explanation of the delay in executing the meagre shipbuilding programme Another already sanctioned by Parliament - of which , so Debate can make out from his obscure observations only one ...
Page 31
There is no lack of troops or transport in Germany or of landing - places in Great Britain . a OUR readers will hardly expect us to contribute our rivulet to the vast and limitless ocean of gush in which Parliament and the Press have ...
There is no lack of troops or transport in Germany or of landing - places in Great Britain . a OUR readers will hardly expect us to contribute our rivulet to the vast and limitless ocean of gush in which Parliament and the Press have ...
Page 35
The one side tells you that any measure , no matter how violent , no matter how little it has been discussed in Parliament , no matter whether it has ever been properly put before the country , must be passed over the heads of the House ...
The one side tells you that any measure , no matter how violent , no matter how little it has been discussed in Parliament , no matter whether it has ever been properly put before the country , must be passed over the heads of the House ...
Page 51
... Chancellor Oxenstiern - who exhorted his son to observe with how little wisdom the world was governed - on the relations existing between the Parliament of England and the Government of India , as revealed in recent legislation .
... Chancellor Oxenstiern - who exhorted his son to observe with how little wisdom the world was governed - on the relations existing between the Parliament of England and the Government of India , as revealed in recent legislation .
Page 54
The Parliamentary system in the eighteenth century was the product of the Civil War of the seventeenth century and ... was always at odds with the Whig aristocracy , the chief representatives of the Parliament which had entrusted the ...
The Parliamentary system in the eighteenth century was the product of the Civil War of the seventeenth century and ... was always at odds with the Whig aristocracy , the chief representatives of the Parliament which had entrusted the ...
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