Library of Universal Knowledge: Being a Reprint Entire of the Last (1879) Edinburgh and London Edition of Chamber's Encyclopedia : a Dictionary of Universal Knowledge for the People : with Very Large Additions Upon Topics of Special Interest to American ReadersAmerican Book Exchange, 1879 |
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Zadetki 1–5 od 82
Stran 4
... king , and in some measure also of her husband . It was not till the accession of her eldest son , Francis II . , in 1559 , that her love of power began to display itself . The Guises at this time possessed a power which seemed ...
... king , and in some measure also of her husband . It was not till the accession of her eldest son , Francis II . , in 1559 , that her love of power began to display itself . The Guises at this time possessed a power which seemed ...
Stran 5
... king had well - nigh brought her to the block , like so many of her predecessors . Her tact , however , saved her , and brought rebuke on her enemies ; for she made it appear to the king's vanity , that she had only engaged him in ...
... king had well - nigh brought her to the block , like so many of her predecessors . Her tact , however , saved her , and brought rebuke on her enemies ; for she made it appear to the king's vanity , that she had only engaged him in ...
Stran 8
... king's most excellent majesty , and the Lords and Commons of Ireland , are the only competent power to make laws to bind Ire- land . " Many of the disqualifying statutes were now repealed , and the claim for complete equality with ...
... king's most excellent majesty , and the Lords and Commons of Ireland , are the only competent power to make laws to bind Ire- land . " Many of the disqualifying statutes were now repealed , and the claim for complete equality with ...
Stran 37
... king during the con- test with the parliamentary forces was munificent . He contributed £ 10,000 to the treasury , and raised a troop of 200 knights and gentlemen , who served at their own cost . As general of all the forces raised ...
... king during the con- test with the parliamentary forces was munificent . He contributed £ 10,000 to the treasury , and raised a troop of 200 knights and gentlemen , who served at their own cost . As general of all the forces raised ...
Stran 39
... king Amunoph III . in hieroglyphics . CAVOUR , Count Camilla Benso di , a distinguished Italian statesman of the 19th century , the descendant of a noble and wealthy family of Piedmont , was born at Turin , August 10 , 1810. He was ...
... king Amunoph III . in hieroglyphics . CAVOUR , Count Camilla Benso di , a distinguished Italian statesman of the 19th century , the descendant of a noble and wealthy family of Piedmont , was born at Turin , August 10 , 1810. He was ...
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Stran 469 - An agreement or combination by two or more persons to do or procure to be done any act in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute between employers and workmen shall not be indictable as a conspiracy if such act committed by one person would not be punishable as a crime.
Stran 462 - Can storied urn or animated bust Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? Can Honour's voice provoke the silent dust, Or Flattery soothe the dull cold ear of death?
Stran 8 - That the King's most excellent Majesty, and the Lords and Commons of Ireland, are the only power competent to make laws to bind Ireland.
Stran 469 - Every person who, with a view to compel any other person to abstain from doing or to do any act which such other person has a legal right to do or abstain from doing, wrongfully and without legal authority,— 1. Uses violence to or intimidates such other person or his wife or children, or injures his property; or, 2.
Stran 514 - Now, in the first place, the very conception of consciousness, in whatever mode it may be manifested, necessarily implies distinction between one object and another. To be conscious, we must be conscious of something ; and that something can only be known as that which it is, by being distinguished from that which it is not. But distinction is necessarily limitation ; for, if one object is to be distinguished from another, it must possess some form of existence which the other has not, or it must...
Stran 518 - SECTIONS, may be formed by cutting the right C!. in different directions. If the C. be cut by a plane parallel to the base, the section is a circle: if the plane cut the C. across, making any...
Stran 514 - A second characteristic of Consciousness is, that it is only possible in the form of a relation. There must be a Subject, or person conscious, and an Object, or thing of which he is conscious. There can be no consciousness without the union of these two factors ; and, in that union, each exists only as it is related to the other. The subject is a subject, only in so far as it is conscious of an object : the object is an object, only in so far as it is apprehended by a subject : and the destruction...
Stran 514 - ... an infinite whole, for this could only be done by the infinite synthesis in thought of finite wholes, which would itself require an infinite time for its accomplishment ; nor, for the same reason, can we follow out in thought an infinite divisibility of parts. The result is the same, whether we apply the process to limitation in space, in time, or in degree. The unconditional negation, and the unconditional affirmation of limitation, in other words, the infinite and the absolute, properly so...
Stran 372 - Staffordshire; which yet are of two kinds also, some public, of a larger size, which hang commonly here at one end of the mantle-tree of their chimneys, for the use of the whole family; and others private, of a smaller size, which they carry in their pockets.
Stran 515 - ... destruction of consciousness itself. It is thus manifest that a consciousness of the Absolute is equally self-contradictory with that of the Infinite. To be conscious of the Absolute as such, we must know that an object, which is given in relation to our consciousness, is identical with one which exists in its own nature, out of all relation to consciousness.