The National Review, Volume 71W.H. Allen, 1918 - English literature |
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Page 57
... House of Commons : If you establish a democracy , you must in due time reap the fruits of a democracy . You will in due season have great impatience of the public burdens , combined in due season with great increase of the public ...
... House of Commons : If you establish a democracy , you must in due time reap the fruits of a democracy . You will in due season have great impatience of the public burdens , combined in due season with great increase of the public ...
Page 59
... house in Downing Street , and is presently to have a country house on the Chiltern Hills . He has the privilege of advising the King in the choice of all the chief counsellors and governors of the realm . There is no end to his ...
... house in Downing Street , and is presently to have a country house on the Chiltern Hills . He has the privilege of advising the King in the choice of all the chief counsellors and governors of the realm . There is no end to his ...
Page 63
... House of Commons since , he declared that he had an open mind as to the expediency of a levy on capital . Not only have important Press organs opened their columns to indignant protests against such a policy of robbery , but the ...
... House of Commons since , he declared that he had an open mind as to the expediency of a levy on capital . Not only have important Press organs opened their columns to indignant protests against such a policy of robbery , but the ...
Page 64
... therefore , about a levy on wealth , although in some of its aspects it is economically unsound . Mr. Asquith , who followed Mr. Bonar Law in the debate in the House of Commons on January 29 , said " he 64 THE NATIONAL REVIEW.
... therefore , about a levy on wealth , although in some of its aspects it is economically unsound . Mr. Asquith , who followed Mr. Bonar Law in the debate in the House of Commons on January 29 , said " he 64 THE NATIONAL REVIEW.
Page 65
House of Commons on January 29 , said " he did not desire to rule out in some contingencies a tax on capital , though the difficulties in it were to his mind at present insurmountable , " and I take it that Mr. J. A. R. Marriot's ...
House of Commons on January 29 , said " he did not desire to rule out in some contingencies a tax on capital , though the difficulties in it were to his mind at present insurmountable , " and I take it that Mr. J. A. R. Marriot's ...
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