| Henry Edward Manning - 1877 - 408 стор.
...everywhere, but happiness everywhere too. Well, I hope this may still be found in the agricultural districts. What may be the homes in our great manufacturing towns...rooms, sometimes many families in one room, a corner apiece. These things cannot go on ; these things ought not to go on. The accumulation of wealth in... | |
| Henry Edward Manning - 1885 - 376 стор.
...everywhere, but happiness everywhere too. Well, I hope this may still be found in the agricultural districts. What may be the homes in our great manufacturing towns,...rooms, sometimes many families in one room, a corner a-piece. These things cannot go on ; these things ought not to go on. The accumulation of wealth, in... | |
| Arthur Wollaston Hutton - 1892 - 280 стор.
...and children playing at the door : poverty was indeed everywhere, but happiness everywhere too. . . But the homes of the poor in London are often very miserable. The state of the houses with families living in single rooms, sometimes many families in one room, a corner apiece. These things... | |
| Edmund Sheridan Purcell - 1895 - 862 стор.
...everywhere, but happiness everywhere too. Well, I hope this may still be found in the agricultural districts. What may be the homes in our great manufacturing towns...rooms, sometimes many families in one room, a corner apiece. These things cannot go on ; these things ought not to go on. The accumulation of wealth in... | |
| Edmund Sheridan Purcell - 1895 - 852 стор.
...everywhere, but happiness everywhere too. Well, I hope this may still be found in the agricultural districts. What may be the homes in our great manufacturing towns...rooms, sometimes many families in one room, a corner apiece. These things cannot go on ; these things ought not to go on. The accumulation of wealth in... | |
| Beatrice Webb - 1979 - 480 стор.
...labour-force that produces wealth." 1 "The state of the houses," declared Cardinal Manning two years later, "families living in single rooms, sometimes many families...room, a corner apiece—these things cannot go on. The accumulation of wealth in the land, the piling up of wealth like mountains in the possession of... | |
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