| Theodore L. Flood, Frank Chapin Bray - 1906 - 470 strani
...himself, but only as if he had lost the last set in a tournament."t Earlier still Mr. Bryce wrote, "A millionaire has a better and easier social career open to him in England than in America. In America, if his private character be bad, if he be mean, or openly immoral, or personally vulgar,... | |
| 1906 - 950 strani
...himself, but only as if he had lost the last set in a tournament."t Earlier still- Mr. Bryce wrote, "A millionaire has a better and easier social career open to him in England than in America. In America, if his private character be bad, if he be mean, or openly immoral, or personally vulgar,... | |
| john graham brooks - 1908 - 446 strani
...only as if he had lost the last set in a tournament." 2 Earlier still Mr. Bryce wrote: "A millionnaire has a better and easier social career open to him in England than in America. In America if his private character be bad, if he be mean, or openly immoral, or personally vulgar,... | |
| John Graham Brooks - 1908 - 420 strani
...only as if he had lost the last set in a tournament." ' Earlier still Mr. Bryce wrote: "A millionnaire has a better and easier social career open to him in England than in America. In America if his private character be bad, if he be mean, or openly immoral, or personally vulgar,... | |
| James Bryce Bryce (Viscount) - 1919 - 426 strani
...boat at Oxford or Cambridge. 0 If he be a great financier, or the owner of a great railroad or a 15 great newspaper, he exercises vast power, and is therefore...easier social career open to him in England than in 20 America. Nevertheless there is a sense in which this is true. In America, if his private character... | |
| Arnold M. Rose - 1958 - 705 strani
...status, could be bought, whereas in the United States it could not. In America, he observed, if a man's "private character be bad, if he be mean, or openly...the best society will keep its doors closed against him."90 The kind of status described by Bryce as inherent in great industrial leaders seems at mid-century... | |
| David L. Sills, Robert King Merton - 2000 - 466 strani
...practical working even when its words remain the same. The American Commonwealth ( 1888) 1910:Vol. 1,401. 2 It may seem a paradox to observe that a millionaire...social career open to him in England than in America. . . In America, if his private character be bad, if he be mean, or openly immoral, or personally vulgar,... | |
| Seymour Martin Lipset - 1967 - 420 strani
...seemingly more, rather than less, snobbish toward each other than were comparably placed Englishmen. It may seem a paradox to observe that a millionaire...social career open to him in England, than in America. ... In America, if his private character be bad, if he be mean or openly immoral, or personally vulgar,... | |
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