| 1878 - 588 стор.
...wields, with partial exceptions, the powers of the Privy Council, besides having a standingground, in relation to the personal will of the sovereign,...the most part military or legal, is introduced, pro Me vice, for the purpose of giving to it necessary information. Every one of its members acts in no... | |
| William Ewart Gladstone - 1879 - 268 стор.
...to its present accuracy and fulness of development ; for the first rudiments of it may sufliciently be discerned in the reign of Charles I. Under Charles...the most part military or legal, is introduced, pro hae vice, for the purpose of giving to it necessary information. 46. Every one of its members acts... | |
| George Smith - 1879 - 140 стор.
...Yet the Cabinet, which thus forms with the Sovereign an absolute unity in the face of the country, " lives and acts simply by understanding, without a...the most part military or legal, is introduced, pro kac vice, for the purpose of giving to it necessary information." The Prime Minister works this curiously... | |
| Sheldon Amos - 1880 - 548 стор.
...constitution to determine its relations to the Monarch, or to Parliament, or to the nation ; or the relation of its members to one another, or to their head. It sits in the closest secresy. There is no record of its proceedings, nor is there anyone to hear them, except upon the very... | |
| Prose masterpieces - 1884 - 350 стор.
...the Administration are nowhere recorded. He is almost, if not altogether, unknown to the Statute Law. Nor is the position of the body, over which he presides,...the most part military or legal, is introduced, pro hac vice, for the purpose of giving to it necessary information. Every one of its members acts in no... | |
| Alpheus Todd - 1892 - 296 стор.
...without a single line of written law or constitution to determine its relations to the monarch, to parliament, or to the nation, or the relations of its members to one another, or to their head.1 Its deliberations are usually confined to matters of general ^ . policy, whether domestic or... | |
| Sir John Arthur Ransome Marriott - 1910 - 484 стор.
...not for its dignity, but for its subtlety, its elasticity, and its many-sided diversity of power. ... It lives and acts simply by understanding, without...of its members to one another, or to their head.' — WE GLADSTONE. ' While every act of state is done in the name of the Crown, the real executive Government... | |
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