Letters and Journals of James, Eighth Earl of ElginJ. Murray, 1872 - 467 psl. |
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5 psl.
... honours , therefore , becomes too severe to be useful to men who are to enter into professions . It was certainly originally intended that the degrees which require only a knowledge of the clas- sics should be taken at an earlier age ...
... honours , therefore , becomes too severe to be useful to men who are to enter into professions . It was certainly originally intended that the degrees which require only a knowledge of the clas- sics should be taken at an earlier age ...
15 psl.
... honour which may be acquired by ' their satisfactory adjustment . In the present crisis of our fortunes , however , I am impressed with the belief ' that he is the best friend to Jamaica who concentrates ' his energies on the promotion ...
... honour which may be acquired by ' their satisfactory adjustment . In the present crisis of our fortunes , however , I am impressed with the belief ' that he is the best friend to Jamaica who concentrates ' his energies on the promotion ...
68 psl.
... honour and distinction . Bear in mind , then , that the quality which ought chiefly to distinguish those who aspire to exercise a controlling and directing influence in any department of human action , from those who have only a ...
... honour and distinction . Bear in mind , then , that the quality which ought chiefly to distinguish those who aspire to exercise a controlling and directing influence in any department of human action , from those who have only a ...
103 psl.
... honour which , coming at that moment , he prized most highly as a proof to the world that the Queen's Government approved his policy - he could not forego the opportunity of insisting on a topic which seemed to him so momentous . It is ...
... honour which , coming at that moment , he prized most highly as a proof to the world that the Queen's Government approved his policy - he could not forego the opportunity of insisting on a topic which seemed to him so momentous . It is ...
113 psl.
... perhaps , they ' meant no more than the ruin of a ' Minister , they in effect divided one ' half of the empire from the other . ' Distribu- tion of honours . acting with some assumption of I 1850-1853 . VIEWS ON COLONIAL GOVERNMENT . 113.
... perhaps , they ' meant no more than the ruin of a ' Minister , they in effect divided one ' half of the empire from the other . ' Distribu- tion of honours . acting with some assumption of I 1850-1853 . VIEWS ON COLONIAL GOVERNMENT . 113.
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Letters and Journals of James, Eighth Earl of Elgin James Bruce Earl of Elgin Trumpų ištraukų rodinys - 1969 |
Letters and Journals of James, Eighth Earl of Elgin James Bruce Earl of Elgin Trumpų ištraukų rodinys - 1969 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Admiral affairs anchor arrived Baron Gros believe British Calcutta Canadian Canton chief China Chinese Church Clergy Reserves colony Commissioners course deal despatch difficulties doubt duty effect Emperor England favour feel foreign French friends Government Governor Governor-General Gros gunboats hands hills Hong-kong honour hope hour Imperial India interest island labour Lady Elgin land letter look Lord Elgin Lord Grey Lower Canada March matter measure ment miles Minister mission moral morning native never night occasion opinion Parliament party passed Peiho Pekin persons political present principle proceeding province question reached Rebellion Losses Bill Rebels respect river seemed sent Shanghae ship Sikh Sir Charles Wood things Tientsin tion to-day told took town Treaty Treaty of Tientsin troops Upper Canada walk write wrote yesterday
Populiarios ištraukos
156 psl. - ... the duty of striving to prove by his life and conversation the sincerity of his prayer, that that Father's will may be done upon earth as it is done in heaven.
169 psl. - Rosebery (say) the Chancellorship of the Duchy of Lancaster with a seat in the Cabinet...
118 psl. - ... fresh earth and drawing new supplies of vitality from virgin soils ? Or is she to be, for all essential purposes of might and power, Monarch of Great Britain and Ireland merely — her place and that of her line in the world's history determined by the productiveness of 12,000 square miles of a coal formation, which is being rapidly exhausted, and the duration of the social and political organization over which she presides dependent on the annual expatriation, with a view to its eventual alienization,...
116 psl. - You must renounce the habit of telling the colonies that the colonial is a provisional existence. You must allow them to believe that, without severing the bonds which unite them to Great Britain, they may attain the degree of perfection, and of social and political development, to which organized communities of free men have a right to aspire.
240 psl. - West will be in presence of a population the most universally and laboriously manufacturing of any on the earth. It can achieve victories in the contest in which it will have to engage only by proving that physical knowledge and mechanical skill applied to the arts of production are more than a match for the most persevering efforts of unscientific industry. "This is the task which is before you, and towards the accomplishment of which, within the sphere of my duty, I shall rejoice to co-operate.
115 psl. - ... to proclaim it ? Consider for a moment what is the effect of proclaiming it in our case. We have on this continent two great empires in presence, or rather, I should say, two great imperial systems. In many respects there is much similarity between them. In so far as powers of selfgovernment are concerned it is certain that our colonists in America have no reason to envy the citizens of any state in the Union.
240 psl. - Christian civilisation will have to win its way among a sceptical and ingenious people, by making it manifest that a faith which reaches to heaven furnishes better guarantees for public and private morality than one which does not rise above the earth.
115 psl. - ... colonists sensible of the advantages which they derive from their connection with Great Britain, shall have passed away from their memories, there will not be wanting those who will remind them that, on this solemn occasion, the prime minister of England, amid the plaudits of a full senate, declared that he looked forward to the day when the ties which he was endeavouring to render so easy and mutually advantageous would be severed.
117 psl. - upon us while we are labouring, through good and evil report, ' to thwart the designs of those who would dismember the ' Empire, that our adversaries should be informed that the ' difference between them and the Prime Minister of England
81 psl. - Among these was the Act to provide for the indemnification of parties in Lower Canada whose property was destroyed during the Rebellion in 1837 and 1838, with respect to which, as your Lordship is aware, much excitement has unhappily been stirred.