... with the elder Pitt — in spite of his tragic end, of his unrivalled services, and of his enfeebled old age. It was not so with the younger Pitt — in spite of his long control of the country and his absolute and absorbed devotion to the State.... The Parliamentary Debates - 85 페이지저자: Great Britain. Parliament - 1898전체보기 - 도서 정보
| 1898 - 222 페이지
...absolute and absorbed devotion to the State. I think that we should remember this as creditable, not merely to the man, but to the nation. My Lords, there...is one deeply melancholy feature of Mr. Gladstone's end, by far the most pathetic, to which I think none of my noble friends has referred. I think that... | |
| Archibald Philip Primrose Earl of Rosebery - 1899 - 426 페이지
...absolute and absorbed devotion to the State. I think that we should remember this as creditable not merely to the man, but to the nation. My lords, there...melancholy, to which I think none of my noble friends have referred. I think that all our thoughts must be turned, now that Mr. Gladstone is gone, to that solitary... | |
| Archibald Philip Primrose Earl of Rosebery - 1899 - 368 페이지
...absolute and absorbed devotion to the State. I think that we should remember this as creditable not merely to the man, but to the nation. My lords, there...melancholy, to which I think none of my noble friends have referred. I think that all our thoughts must be turned, now that Mr. Gladstone is gone, to that solitary... | |
| Archibald Philip Primrose Earl of Rosebery - 1899 - 384 페이지
...absolute and absorbed devotion to the State. I think that we should remember this as creditable not merely to the man, but to the nation. My lords, there...far the most melancholy, to which I think none of my 112 noble friends have referred. I think that all our thoughts must be turned, now that Mr. Gladstone... | |
| Archibald Philip Primrose Earl of Rosebery - 1899 - 370 페이지
...absolute and absorbed devotion to the State. I think that we should remember this as creditable not merely to the man, but to the nation. My lords, there...far the most melancholy, to which I think none of my 112 noble friends have referred. I think that all our thoughts must be turned, now that Mr. Gladstone... | |
| Thomas F. G. Coates - 1900 - 614 페이지
...absolute and absorbed devotion to the State. I think that we should remember this as creditable not merely to the man, but to the nation. " My lords,...melancholy, to which I think none of my noble friends have referred. I think that all our thoughts must be turned, now that Mr. Gladstone is gone, to that solitary... | |
| Samuel Smith - 1902 - 710 페이지
...absolute and absorbed devotion to the State. I think that we should remember this as creditable, not merely to the man, but to the nation. My Lords, there...gone, to that solitary and pathetic figure, who for sixty years shared all the sorrows and all the joys of Mr. Gladstone's life ; who received his every... | |
| Irvah Lester Winter - 1912 - 454 페이지
...absolute and absorbed devotion to the State. I think that we should remember this as creditable not merely to the man, but to the nation. My Lords, there...— to which I think none of my noble friends have referred. I think that all our thoughts must be turned, now that Mr. Gladstone is gone, to that solitary... | |
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