Lord Beaconsfield |
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Page ix
... failure and unpopularity —Ireland worse than before - Loss of influence in Europe— The Election of 1874 - Great Conservative majority - Disraeli again Prime Minister with real power - His general position as a politician - Problems ...
... failure and unpopularity —Ireland worse than before - Loss of influence in Europe— The Election of 1874 - Great Conservative majority - Disraeli again Prime Minister with real power - His general position as a politician - Problems ...
Page 4
... failed to detect his unworthiness is itself unfit to be trusted with the nation's welfare . He was not borne into power on the tide of any outside movement . He was not the advocate of any favourite measure with which his name was ...
... failed to detect his unworthiness is itself unfit to be trusted with the nation's welfare . He was not borne into power on the tide of any outside movement . He was not the advocate of any favourite measure with which his name was ...
Page 14
... failed of their objects . The inventions , ' he says , ' of the Talmudical doctors , incorporated in their ceremonies , have bound them hand and foot , and cast them into the caverns of the lone and sullen genius of rabbinical Judaism ...
... failed of their objects . The inventions , ' he says , ' of the Talmudical doctors , incorporated in their ceremonies , have bound them hand and foot , and cast them into the caverns of the lone and sullen genius of rabbinical Judaism ...
Page 30
... failed to make himselt liked . Sir George was polite , Lady D. more than polite . Though she was old and infirm , ' her eyes were so brilliant and so full of moquerie that you forgot her wrinkles . ' Of course they were welcome guests ...
... failed to make himselt liked . Sir George was polite , Lady D. more than polite . Though she was old and infirm , ' her eyes were so brilliant and so full of moquerie that you forgot her wrinkles . ' Of course they were welcome guests ...
Page 49
... failed he succeeded at last . This was true ; but poetry was not one of these many things . He was wise enough to accept the unfavourable verdict , and to recognise that , although his ambition was feverish as ever , on this road there ...
... failed he succeeded at last . This was true ; but poetry was not one of these many things . He was wise enough to accept the unfavourable verdict , and to recognise that , although his ambition was feverish as ever , on this road there ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adventures ambition aristocracy believe better Bishop Boys Bradenham called Carlyle Catholic century character Chartist Church cloth gilt colonies Coloured Coningsby Conservative Contarini Corn Laws creed Crown 8vo Disraeli's duties Edition Empire England English father favour feeling fortune French friends G. A. HENTY gilt edges Gladstone Government honour House of Commons Illus Illustrated interest Ireland Irish Isaac Disraeli Jews king labour Lady land leader Liberal Little Women lived London looked Lord Beaconsfield Lord George Lord George Bentinck Lord John Russell Lothair Low's STANDARD NOVELS ment mind Minister Miss ALCOTT nation nature never noble O'Connell opinion Parliament Parliamentary party passed Peel's perhaps person political popular principle Protestant Radical Reform Bill rose side Sir Robert Peel Small post 8vo society speech spirit statesman Story Sybil things thought tion told Tory Vivian Grey vols wealth Whigs Willyams wrote Wycombe young
Popular passages
Page 6 - It supplies a want which has long been felt, and ought to be in the hands of all students of history.
Page 235 - If you look to the history of this country since the advent of Liberalism — forty years ago — you will find that there has been no effort so continuous, so subtle, supported by so much energy, and carried on with so much ability and acumen, as the attempts of Liberalism to effect the disintegration of the Empire of England.
Page 5 - Gentle Life (Queen Edition). 2 vols. in i, small 4to, 6s. THE GENTLE LIFE SERIES. Price 6s. each ; or in calf extra, price los. 6d. ; Smaller Edition, cloth extra, 2s. 6d. The Gentle Life. Essays in aid of the Formation of Character of Gentlemen and Gentlewomen. About in the World. Essays by Author of
Page 5 - Half-Length Portraits. Short Studies of Notable Persons. By J. HAIN FRISWELL. Essays on English Writers, for the Self-improvement of Students in English Literature. Other People's Windows. By J. HAIN FRISWELL.
Page 235 - But selfgovernment, in my opinion, when it was conceded, ought to have been conceded as part of a great policy of imperial consolidation. It ought to have been accompanied by an imperial tariff, by securities for the people of England for the enjoyment of the unappropriated lands which belonged to the sovereign as their trustee...
Page 265 - THE BAYARD SERIES, Edited by the late J. HAIN FRISWELL. Comprising Pleasure Books of Literature produced in the Choicest Style as Companionable Volumes at Home and Abroad. "We can hardly imagine better books for boys to read or for men to ponder over.
Page 236 - Empire shall not be destroyed, and in my opinion no minister in this country will do his duty who neglects any opportunity of reconstructing as much as possible our Colonial Empire, and of responding to those distant sympathies which may become the source of incalculable strength and happiness to this land.
Page 4 - Hall's Vineyard. 4*. John's Wife : A Story of Life in South Australia. 4*. Marian ; or, The Light of Some One's Home.
Page 106 - ... to me of conservative principles; but he does not inform me what they are. I observe indeed a party in the State whose rule it is to consent to no change, until it is clamorously called for, and then instantly to yield; but those are concessionary, not conservative principles. This party treats institutions as we do our pheasants, they preserve only to destroy them.
Page 107 - We owe the English peerage to three sources: the spoliation of the Church; the open and flagrant sale of its honours by the elder Stuarts; and the borough-mongering of our own times.