Selected Literary and Political Papers and Addresses of Woodrow Wilson, Svazek 3Grosset & Dunlap, 1921 |
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Strana 37
... acceptance because they are not commonplace enough , but because they are not true enough ; and , in the sort of writing about which we are here speaking , truth is a thing which can be detected better by the man who knows life than by ...
... acceptance because they are not commonplace enough , but because they are not true enough ; and , in the sort of writing about which we are here speaking , truth is a thing which can be detected better by the man who knows life than by ...
Strana 54
... accepted or invented with reference to the nature and lodge- ment of sovereignty . It is , on the whole , safer to be explicit than to hedge . And yet it is not easy to be explicit ; for there are no suitable terms to be explicit with ...
... accepted or invented with reference to the nature and lodge- ment of sovereignty . It is , on the whole , safer to be explicit than to hedge . And yet it is not easy to be explicit ; for there are no suitable terms to be explicit with ...
Strana 55
... accepted definition of sovereignty . It is both decent and convenient to take that of Austin , that celebrated defini- tion which he received through Bentham from Hobbes . Austin conceived a sovereign very concretely , as a person or ...
... accepted definition of sovereignty . It is both decent and convenient to take that of Austin , that celebrated defini- tion which he received through Bentham from Hobbes . Austin conceived a sovereign very concretely , as a person or ...
Strana 58
... accepted in England , the land where law had been least subject to doc- trine , most observant of times and circum- stances , most piecemeal in its manner of con- struction , least like a set of commands , and most like a set of habits ...
... accepted in England , the land where law had been least subject to doc- trine , most observant of times and circum- stances , most piecemeal in its manner of con- struction , least like a set of commands , and most like a set of habits ...
Strana 59
... accepted concerning them . He has , of course , not troubled himself to alter his institutions to suit his philosophy . That philosophy satis- fied his thought and inconvenienced neither Parliament nor the law courts . And so he had no ...
... accepted concerning them . He has , of course , not troubled himself to alter his institutions to suit his philosophy . That philosophy satis- fied his thought and inconvenienced neither Parliament nor the law courts . And so he had no ...
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action Adam Smith affairs American Andrew Jackson authority Bagehot body Burke Burke's character colors command common conceived Congress constitutional continent course critical democracy democratic Dugald Stewart effect England English executive fact federal forces frontier give habit heart historian House of Commons imagination immortality influence interest John Adams learned legislation liberty literary literature live look matter means ment method mind moral narrative nature never opinion organs origination Parliament passion philosophy political politician practical President principles purpose questions reform seems self-government singular Sir Henry Maine society sort sovereign sovereignty speak speech spirit stand strength style Sydney Smith taste tell tences things thought tion touch true truth utter Walter Bagehot Wealth of Nations Whig whole William Burke wise WOODROW WILSON words writing
Oblíbené pasáže
Strana 88 - Among the bowers of paradise itself) The budding rose above the rose full blown. What temper at the prospect did not wake To happiness unthought of?
Strana 107 - Britain, whole within herself, A nation yet, the rulers and the ruled — Some sense of duty, something of a faith, Some reverence for the laws ourselves have made, Some patient force to change them when we will, Some civic manhood firm against the crowd...