| 1894 - 576 pages
...struggle over the duration of the working day practically began with the introduction of machinery at the end of the last and beginning of the present century. The investment of capital in this particular form stimulated its owner to efforts at securing the greatest... | |
| Robert Forsyth - 1805 - 594 pages
...pious charity of our forefathers on such occasions to that displayed in the present times. Towards the end of the last, and beginning of the present century, the annual contributions were .much the same as at pres.ent, while the average number of ordinary poor... | |
| 1823 - 416 pages
...or cant expression. This was the vice of the age in which the younger Colman flourished^— w& mean the end of the last and beginning of the present century — the Gothic age of the British drama. The characters, however, of Lieutenant WortKington and Frederick are... | |
| 1828 - 798 pages
...than the British. The vast armies formed by French officers in the service of the Nizam and Scindiah, at the end of the- last and beginning of the present century, were in the pay of these princes ; and although Raymond, De Boyne,* and Perron were likely to have... | |
| 1828 - 924 pages
...notwithstanding the immense erudition bestowed on them by CoteJier, Usher, Pearson, Le Clerc, and others, at the end of the last and beginning of the present century. Lardner has clearly shewn that all the works of Clement are spurious, except his first Epistle to the... | |
| 1842 - 930 pages
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| John Colin Dunlop - 1834 - 682 pages
...neither immediate nor obvious, may sometimes weary those who have been accustomed in their own days, at the end of the last, and beginning of the present century, to such sudden and stupendous events — such decisive conflicts, both in Europe and Asia. To them... | |
| Jared Sparks, James Russell Lowell, Edward Everett, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1836 - 588 pages
...some of his essays on supposed facts and customs, which never had existence. But the German scholars at the end of the last and beginning of the present century, were no longer satisfied with the work of destroying the credibility of the early Roman history. They... | |
| 1836 - 598 pages
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