| Edmund Burke - Books - 1900 - 704 pages
...out the order ; but the question was not one of ethics or of policy, but of taste, and tastes varied in different countries, and in the same country at different times. In any case the Sirdar did what he thought necessary to destroy a baneful superstition, and in that object... | |
| English literature - 1817 - 592 pages
...and accordingly the return for labour, like other payments, is given in money. This money payment is very different in different countries, and in the same country at different times ; but whatever it is, the quantity of subsistence it will procure, and not the nominal amount of the... | |
| English literature - 1817 - 610 pages
...and accordingly the return for labour, like other payments, is given in money. This money payment is very different in different countries, and in the same country at different times ; but whatever it is, the quantity of subsistence it will procure, and not the nominal amount of the... | |
| 1817 - 626 pages
...and accordingly the return for labour like other payments, is given in money. This money payment is very different in different countries, and in the same country at different times ; but whatever it is, the quantity of subsistence it will procure, and not the nominal amount of the... | |
| Henry Vethake - Economics - 1838 - 438 pages
...habits have been intimated to be, and they are notoriously (though at all times only slowly alterable) very different in different countries, and in the same country at different periods. That rate of wages, for instance, which would determine the marriage of every inhabitant in... | |
| Jonathan Blanchard - Slavery - 1846 - 540 pages
...between master and slave has always been the same ; though the laws regulating it, have been widely different in different countries, and in the same country at different times. Who, then, unless his judgment is completely warped by inveterate prejudice, would think of confounding... | |
| Jonathan Blanchard - Slavery - 1846 - 526 pages
...between master and slave has always been the same ; though the laws regulating it, have been widely different in different countries, and in the same country at different times. Who, then, unless his judgment is completely warped by inveterate prejudice, would think of confounding... | |
| India, Sir Walter Morgan, Arthur George Macpherson - Criminal law - 1861 - 544 pages
...whether there be any wrong-doer. The substantive civil law, in the instances which have beeik given, is different in different countries, and in the same country at different times. As the substantive civil law varies, the penal law, which is added as a guard to the substantive civil... | |
| Thomas Babington baron Macaulay - 1866 - 730 pages
...whether there be any wrong-doer. The substantive civil law, in the instances which we have given, is different in different countries, and in the same country at different times. As the substantive civil law varies, the penal law, which is added as a guard to the substantive civil... | |
| Frederick Grimké - Democracy - 1871 - 1018 pages
...with the same distinguishing feature as the civil. The two go hand in hand, because the subject-matter of both is closely connected. The temptations to violate...great change in the relative authority of the two departments. The power of proposing the laws, when vested exclusively in the executive, gives him complete... | |
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