The National Review, Volume 54W.H. Allen, 1910 - English literature |
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Page 58
... majority of the House of Commons , the House of Commons itself ( in spite of what Mr. Lowell argues to the contrary ) is , or tends to become , the Committee of the caucus . In order to secure Party supre- macy , as reflected in a majority ...
... majority of the House of Commons , the House of Commons itself ( in spite of what Mr. Lowell argues to the contrary ) is , or tends to become , the Committee of the caucus . In order to secure Party supre- macy , as reflected in a majority ...
Page 59
... majority ; while at the present moment he is arguing , in the pettifogging style of a lawyer who holds a party brief , on behalf of a revolutionary scheme of taxation , the incidence of which his own recently recorded words show that he ...
... majority ; while at the present moment he is arguing , in the pettifogging style of a lawyer who holds a party brief , on behalf of a revolutionary scheme of taxation , the incidence of which his own recently recorded words show that he ...
Page 61
... majority supporting the Cabinet can hold together , amounts to almost nothing . It is quite possible , there- fore , that , for a considerable term of years , under the Party system , a nation may be governed in a way contrary to its ...
... majority supporting the Cabinet can hold together , amounts to almost nothing . It is quite possible , there- fore , that , for a considerable term of years , under the Party system , a nation may be governed in a way contrary to its ...
Page 112
... majority or only a respectable minority . If a minority it is certain that it is a powerful minority , and one is inclined to believe that the movement will continue to gain force until the change has been brought about . Many ...
... majority or only a respectable minority . If a minority it is certain that it is a powerful minority , and one is inclined to believe that the movement will continue to gain force until the change has been brought about . Many ...
Page 116
... majority , and the adoption of which will end the protracted period of suspense and permit the resumption of a full measure of prosperity . Everything , I believe , justifies the Republican hopes of great prosperity for the next few ...
... majority , and the adoption of which will end the protracted period of suspense and permit the resumption of a full measure of prosperity . Everything , I believe , justifies the Republican hopes of great prosperity for the next few ...
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Admiralty American Arbitration army Asquith Australian battleships believe better Board Britain British Navy Budget Cabinet Canada Canadian Cape Colony capital CARLYON BELLAIRS Chancellor Churchill Colony Constitution Court danger defence Dreadnoughts duty effect Election Empire England English existence expenditure fact favour Federal Finance Bill fleet foreign French German Government hand House of Commons House of Lords Imperial important increase India interests Labour land legislation less Liberal Lloyd George Lord Advocate Lord Charles Beresford Lord Kitchener Lord Lansdowne Lord Rosebery matter ment naval never opinion organisation Parliament passed peace Peers political present principles programme question Radical realised reason regard result secure ships Sir John Fisher social Socialist speech Tariff Reform thing tion to-day train Unionist Unionist Party vote whole Winston Churchill