Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 31 |
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Page 139
As the fourteenth century advanced , the lords were claiming a share in the hearing and answering of petitions , and it suited them well to inspire and promote petitions which purported to be in the common interest and which were ...
As the fourteenth century advanced , the lords were claiming a share in the hearing and answering of petitions , and it suited them well to inspire and promote petitions which purported to be in the common interest and which were ...
Page 143
As for the common lawyers , they were undoubtedly pursuing their own interests in seeking to limit the scope of equitable juris- diction , both in council and in chancery , by those ... The interest of the clergy is easily detected .
As for the common lawyers , they were undoubtedly pursuing their own interests in seeking to limit the scope of equitable juris- diction , both in council and in chancery , by those ... The interest of the clergy is easily detected .
Page 392
of the good or of our own good , or again of the motives of duty or interest , it is not necessary to hold that the alternatives are wholly distinct . Thus he writes : ' An interest in morality itself is . . . an interest in being ...
of the good or of our own good , or again of the motives of duty or interest , it is not necessary to hold that the alternatives are wholly distinct . Thus he writes : ' An interest in morality itself is . . . an interest in being ...
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Contents
CORRESPONDING FELLOWS 1945 | 4 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir John Clapham | 12 |
THE POETRY OF THOMAS GRAY Warton Lecture on English Poetry | 43 |
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