The Nineteenth Century, Volume 23Henry S. King & Company, 1888 |
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Page 63
... class has done very little indeed for the good of the State and paid but a trifling attention to the wants and interests of other classes . It has concentrated all its efforts on increasing its power and on crushing the chief protector ...
... class has done very little indeed for the good of the State and paid but a trifling attention to the wants and interests of other classes . It has concentrated all its efforts on increasing its power and on crushing the chief protector ...
Page 67
... classes , it claims equality with the Crown . But what both mean is not equality , but superiority . Because absolutism and aristocratic or bureaucratic government have generally displayed a more lively interest for the advantage of the ...
... classes , it claims equality with the Crown . But what both mean is not equality , but superiority . Because absolutism and aristocratic or bureaucratic government have generally displayed a more lively interest for the advantage of the ...
Page 175
... classes , especially evening classes , comprising a short series of lessons on some special topic , which may be attended by persons already earning wages in some branch of trade or commerce . There is no doubt that technical schools ...
... classes , especially evening classes , comprising a short series of lessons on some special topic , which may be attended by persons already earning wages in some branch of trade or commerce . There is no doubt that technical schools ...
Contents
THE PROGRESS OF CREMATION By Sir Henry Thompson | 1 |
a Dialogue By Frederic Harrison | 18 |
A RIVER OF RUINED CAPITALS By Sir W W Hunter | 40 |
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