| John Morley - 1881 - 672 стор.
...the nations maintain their present system of isolation. The Colonial system, with all its duz/.ling appeals to the passions of the people, can never be...rid of except by the indirect process of Free Trade, which will gradually and imperceptibly loose the bands which unite our Colonies to us by a mistaken... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1882 - 634 стор.
...entire relief from the burden of her colonies. ' The colonial system,' he wrote in 1842 (i. 230), ' with all its dazzling appeals to the passions of the...rid of except by the indirect process of Free Trade, which will gradually and im* • Life of Bright,' i. 486. t ' Collected Pamphlets,' p. 126. I Morley,... | |
| George Carslake Thompson - 1886 - 472 стор.
...had been directed rather to accelerate than to retard such an event. In 1842, Mr. Cobden wrote :— The Colonial system with all its dazzling appeals...rid of, except by the indirect process of Free Trade which will gradually and imperceptibly loose the bonds which unite our Colonies to us by a mistaken... | |
| Edwin Burgis - 1895 - 276 стор.
...School of politicians made " British citizenship " an idle word. Mr. Cobden, in 1842, referring to the colonial system, " with all its dazzling appeals to the passions of the people," urged Free Trade " to gradually and imperceptibly loosen the bands which unite our colonies to us by... | |
| Charles Ross - 1903 - 400 стор.
...laudable, can never be successful so long as the nations maintain their present system of isolation. The colonial system, with all its dazzling appeals...rid of except by the indirect process of Free Trade, which will gradually and imperceptibly loose the bonds which unite our colonies to us by a mistaken... | |
| Joseph Chamberlain - 1903 - 236 стор.
...years before the passing of the Corn Law legislation, he wrote to his brother. Mr. Cobden said : " The Colonial system with all its dazzling appeals...the passions of the people can never be got rid of "—got rid of ! Is that the object of our policy ? (cheers)—" can never be got rid of except by... | |
| William Cunningham - 1904 - 188 стор.
...laudable, can never be successful so long as the nations maintain their present system of isolation. The colonial system, with all its dazzling appeals...rid of except by the indirect process of Free Trade, which will gradually and imperceptibly loose the bands which unite the Colonies to us by a mistaken... | |
| 1904 - 1072 стор.
...successful eo long as the nations maintain their present system of isolation. '/'.•'"• colonial tystetn, with all its dazzling appeals to the passions of the...rid of except by the indirect process of free trade, which will gradually and imperceptibly loose the bands which unite our Colonies to us by a mistaken... | |
| Royal Colonial Institute (Great Britain) - 1904 - 558 стор.
...extract from a letter to Mr. Ashworth in 1842 shows ' : — The Colonial system [writes Mr. Cobden], with all its dazzling appeals to the passions of the...rid of except by the indirect process of Free Trade, which will gradually and imperceptibly loose the bands which unite our Colonies to us by a mistaken... | |
| William Cunningham - 1905 - 240 стор.
...large and scattered areas together under the authority of the Crown. " The Colonial system," he said, " with all its dazzling appeals to the passions of the...rid of except by the indirect process of Free Trade, which will gradually and imperceptibly loose the bands which unite our Colonies to us by a mistaken... | |
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