| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1875 - 646 pages
...Sydenham, gave utterance to what he described as the hereditary or traditionary policy of the party — the maintenance of our institutions, the preservation...and the improvement of the condition of the people. What was then uttered without any immediate prospect of being called upon to give effect to it, is... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1875 - 612 pages
...Sydenham, gave utterance to what he described as the hereditary or traditionary policy of the party — the maintenance of our - institutions, the preservation...and the improvement of the condition of the people. What was then uttered without any immediate prospect of being called upon to give effect to it, is... | |
| Benjamin Disraeli - 1882 - 662 pages
...country with mistrust and repugnance. But on all the three great objects which are sought by Toryism — the maintenance of our institutions, the preservation...and the improvement of the condition of the people — I find a rising opinion in the country sympathising with our tenets, and prepared, I believe, if... | |
| Alexander Charles Ewald - 1882 - 298 pages
...country with mistrust and repugnance. But on all the three great objects which are sought by Toryism — the maintenance of our institutions, the preservation...and the improvement of the condition of the people — I find a rising opinion in the country sympathizing with our tenets, and prepared, I believe, if... | |
| Benjamin Disraeli (earl of Beaconsfield.) - 1882 - 694 pages
...country with mistrust and repugnance. But on all the three great objects which are sought by Toryism —the maintenance of our institutions, the preservation...the improvement of the condition of the people— I find a rising opinion in the country sympathising with our tenets, and prepared, I believe, if the... | |
| 1883 - 606 pages
...the three great objects of the Tory party were the maintenance of the institutions of the country, the preservation of our Empire, and the improvement of the condition of the people. It cannot be said that there is no longer a necessity for any such programme as this, or that it belongs... | |
| John Morley - 1903 - 696 pages
...source of incalculable strength and happiness to this land.' Toryism now sought three great objects : 'the maintenance of our institutions, the preservation...and the improvement of the condition of the people.' The time was at hand when England would have to decide between national and cosmopolitan principles,... | |
| John Morley - 1903 - 704 pages
...source of incalculable strength and happiness to this land.' Toryism now sought three great objects: 'the maintenance of our institutions, the preservation...and the improvement of the condition of the people.' The time was at hand when England would have to decide between national and cosmopolitan principles,... | |
| Reginald Lane Poole, William Hunt - 1907 - 566 pages
...ministerial conduct of foreign policy, Russia's success at the treaty of Paris, and the Alabama affair1 affording him excellent material. But the leader of...did not live to see. When Gladstone in the winter of 1 867 opened his campaign in favour of an Irish policy on Irish lines, he proclaimed that the promotion... | |
| William Hunt, Reginald Lane Poole - 1907 - 566 pages
...from the colonies themselves. It ought further to have 1 See infra, pp. 264-67. * See supra, p. 210. CHAP, been accompanied by the institution of some...did not live to see. When Gladstone in the winter of 1 867 opened his campaign in favour of an Irish policy on Irish lines, he proclaimed that the promotion... | |
| |