The National Review, Volume 43, Issue 1W.H. Allen, 1904 |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 11
Page 69
... Sir George Trevelyan ] at once seeing that it was a riotous breach of the peace , a lawless violation of the rights of private property , and an open defiance of governmental authority . In England , however , the violence of it was ...
... Sir George Trevelyan ] at once seeing that it was a riotous breach of the peace , a lawless violation of the rights of private property , and an open defiance of governmental authority . In England , however , the violence of it was ...
Page 71
... Sir George Trevelyan rightly condemns the practice as dis- graceful in its foreign aspects , costly in its economic , ineffective in its military and ruinous in its political results ; but he is most unjust in assigning the blame of it ...
... Sir George Trevelyan rightly condemns the practice as dis- graceful in its foreign aspects , costly in its economic , ineffective in its military and ruinous in its political results ; but he is most unjust in assigning the blame of it ...
Page 72
... Sir George : " It was almost universally believed , in military circles , that flogging was a valuable preservative ... Sir George Trevelyan represents them . It is his cue to throw the whole blame of the outrages incidental to a ...
... Sir George : " It was almost universally believed , in military circles , that flogging was a valuable preservative ... Sir George Trevelyan represents them . It is his cue to throw the whole blame of the outrages incidental to a ...
Page 73
... Sir George Trevelyan does not recognise this , and thinks that the difficulty then was entirely owing to the English people's disapproval of the English policy and of the war . He has elaborated this view with extreme care and at un ...
... Sir George Trevelyan does not recognise this , and thinks that the difficulty then was entirely owing to the English people's disapproval of the English policy and of the war . He has elaborated this view with extreme care and at un ...
Page 74
... Sir George Trevelyan is at pains to cite instances of the roughness of the press - gangs and the hostility of city corpora- tions to them , as if such things were peculiar to the time of which he is speaking . If that is not the ...
... Sir George Trevelyan is at pains to cite instances of the roughness of the press - gangs and the hostility of city corpora- tions to them , as if such things were peculiar to the time of which he is speaking . If that is not the ...
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