| Benjamin Disraeli - 1844 - 168 стор.
...to deplore." "You go with your family, sir, like a gentleman; you are not to consider youropinions like a philosopher or a political adventurer." " Yes,...Monmouth; "if the duke had not quarrelled with Lord Srey on a coal committee, we should never have had the reform bill. And Grey would have gone to Ireland."... | |
| 1881 - 318 стор.
...my lord." Or, again, Lord Monmouth's indignant advice to Coningsby : " You go with your family, sir, like a gentleman. You are not to consider your opinions like a philosopher or a political adventurer" Or Waldershare's account of England's ascendency: " I must say it was a grand idea of our kings making... | |
| 1881 - 514 стор.
...lord." Or, again, Lord Monmouth's indignant advice to Coningsby : — " You go with your family, sir, like a gentleman. You are not to consider your opinions like a philosopher or a political adventurer. " Or Waldershare's account of England's ascendency : — " I must say it was a grand idea of our kings... | |
| Émile Gaston Boutmy - 1891 - 314 стор.
...? " says Lord Monmouth, in a novel of Disraeli's, to his grandson. " You go with your family, sir, like a. gentleman ; you are not to consider your opinions like a philosopher or a political adventurer." — Coningsby. power would have fallen to the ground, and the country have been left without a government,... | |
| University of Sydney - 1901 - 644 стор.
...extremes, a wise minister should take the duty off cotton wool." (e) "You vote with your family, sir, like a gentleman. You are not to consider your opinions like a philosopher or a political adventurer." (Advice from aged to youthful peer.) (/") "I object to half-measures — it is neither one thing nor... | |
| Moisei Ostrogorski - 1908 - 698 стор.
.... I PIRST CHAP.] THE OLD UNITY 21 : whole ? " You go with your family, sir, like a gentleman; y* ,u are not to consider your opinions like a philosopher or a political adventurer,'' says Lord Monmouth to his grandson in one of Disraeli's novels. 1 Independent members were consequently... | |
| Walter Sichel - 1904 - 402 стор.
...Coningsby. Take " Lord Monmouth's " indignant lesson to the hero : " You go with your family, sir, like a gentleman. You are not to consider your opinions like a philosopher or a political adventurer ; " or the motive for his bequest of his bust to " Rigby," " that he might perhaps wish to present... | |
| Emile Gaston Boutmy - 1904 - 382 стор.
...into his head to form a deliberate conviction, his grandfather cried : " You go with your family, sir, like a gentleman ; you are not to consider your opinions, like a philosopher 01 a political adventurer." In substance, therefore, the parties, rather than resembling two groups... | |
| Walter Frewen Lord - 1906 - 328 стор.
...and Lord Monmouth announces, in return, his own political faith. " ' You go with your family, sir, like a gentleman ; you are not to consider your opinions,...ought to be established, produced the Reform Bill.' " ' Damn the Reform Bill ! ' said Lord Monmouth. ' If the Duke had not quarrelled with Lord Grey on... | |
| Edward Alsworth Ross - 1908 - 406 стор.
...into his head to form a deliberate conviction, his grandfather cried, "You go with your family, sir, like a gentleman ; you are not to consider your opinions, like a philosopher or a political adventurer." Aristocracies always magnify lineage, ancestral achievement, and family honors and privileges, so that,... | |
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