| 1859 - 806 pages
...He had to detect the exact place it •was necessary to occupy between the rival political sections on the one hand and the mass of the people on the other. He had to inaugurate and work out a policy which would keep the nation with him. That he did so must... | |
| Sir John Skelton - 1862 - 512 pages
...union. He had to detect the exact place it was necessary to occupy between the rival political sections on the one hand, and the mass of the people on the other. He had to inaugurate, and work out, a policy which would keep the nation with him. That he did so must... | |
| Stephen Charnock - 1864 - 598 pages
...explanation, and at times of controversy, and to transact a multifarious business, with bearings on statesmen on the one hand, and the mass of the people on the other. Out of this state of things arose a style of exposition different from that of the retired scholar... | |
| John Henry Gray - 1878 - 530 pages
...its tone. It is almost entirely the creation of a middle class known as the " literary and gentry," who stand midway between a vast body of interested...writes Mr. Low from the United States Legation, at Fekin, in an official letter2 to his government, " as advisers to the lower classes, and their good... | |
| Sir John Skelton - 1883 - 378 pages
...union. He had to detect the exact place it was necessary to occupy between the rival political sections on the one hand, and the mass of the people on the other. He had to inaugurate, and work out, a policy which would keep the nation with him. That he did so must... | |
| Sir John Skelton - 1883 - 374 pages
...union. He had to detect the exact place it was necessary to occupy between the rival political sections on the one hand, and the mass of the people on the other. Ho had to inaugurate, and work out, a policy which would keep the nation with him. That he did so must... | |
| George Sylvester Morris - 1902 - 332 pages
...parliament, as a representative assembly, exercises the organic function of mediating between the government on the one hand and the mass of the people on the other. In this point of view, it is obvious that its members are required to have no less what may be termed... | |
| Narayan Mahadev Parmanand - 1919 - 152 pages
...placards and news letters by a section of the educated middle class known as the " literary and gentry' who stand midway between a vast body of interested...salutary and, within limits, a powerful influence." Archdeacon Gray from whose History of the laws, manners, and customs of China I am quoting, adduces... | |
| Grace Mary Colman - 1927 - 104 pages
...workers employed, results in making more unequal the division of wealth as between the capitalist class on the one hand and the mass of the people on the other. It may be possible to give instances where combines pay higher wages, and give better conditions, than... | |
| 1860 - 856 pages
...unity. He had to detect the exact plnce it was necessary to occupy between the rival political sections on the one hand and the mass of the people on the other. He had to inaugurate and work out a policy which would keep the nation with him. That he did so must... | |
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