When we have accustomed ourselves to contemplate the whole Empire together and call it all England, we shall see that here too is a United States. Here too is a great homogeneous people, one in blood language religion and laws, but dispersed over a boundless... The Expansion of England: Two Courses of Lectures - Página 154de Sir John Robert Seeley - 1883 - 309 páginasVisualização completa - Sobre este livro
| Egbert Coffin Smyth - 1884 - 720 páginas
...of things ? How may the loyalty of these men to the Crown be porpetuated ? Professor Sceley says : " We must cease to think that the history of England...religion, and laws, but dispersed over a boundless space." The author does not touch upon the question of local government, although, of course, it is in his... | |
| George Jacob Holyoake - 1884 - 156 páginas
...think th,.t Emigrants, when tliev EO to the Colonies, leave England, or are lost to England. ' Plate the whole Empire together, and call it all England: we shall see that here too is a ' United States'—a great, homogeneous people, dispersed over boundless gj, ape ."_" Expamion of Enyland ;... | |
| Thomas Drummond Wanliss - 1885 - 372 páginas
...Europe, that it has an area of 120,000 square miles, and a population of thirty odd millions. . . . When we have accustomed ourselves to contemplate the...all England, we shall see that here too is a United States.'1 This is a remarkable passage. As an illustration of perversity of thought, of jarring and... | |
| Royal Colonial Institute (Great Britain), Royal Empire Society (Great Britain) - 1886 - 546 páginas
...English history. When we have accustomed ourselves to contemplate the whole Empire together, and to call it all England, we shall see that here, too, is a United States. Here, too, is a groat homogeneous people, one in blood, language, religion, and laws, but dispersed over a boundless... | |
| Oliver Aiken Howland - 1891 - 638 páginas
...of equal permanence, and also, it will be hoped, the best assurance of international friendliness. "When we have accustomed ourselves to contemplate...the whole Empire together and call it all England," a modern Oxford Professor of History tells his students, " we shall see that here, too, is a United... | |
| J. Ellis Barker - 1910 - 398 páginas
...possessions of England, then they must be a part of England ; and we must adopt this view in earnest. When we have accustomed ourselves to contemplate the...religion and laws, but dispersed over a boundless space. If we are disposed to doubt whether any system can be devised capable of holding together communities... | |
| Carl Adolf Bodelsen - 1924 - 254 páginas
...begun to be possible, so soon Greater Britain starts up, not only a reality but a robust reality."(5) "When we have accustomed ourselves to contemplate...religion, and laws, but dispersed over a boundless space. "(6) In his letter to the Westminster Palace Hotel Conference, July 29th, 1884, at which the Imperial... | |
| Carl Adolf Bodelsen - 1925 - 238 páginas
...begun to be possible, so soon Greater Britain starts up, not only a reality but a robust reality. "(5) "When we have accustomed ourselves to contemplate...religion, and laws, but dispersed over a boundless space."(6) In his letter to the Westminster Palace Hotel Conference, July 29th, 1884, at which the... | |
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