| Walter Lyon Blease - 1913 - 388 pages
...of the right of being represented ; . . . property has, in reality, nothing to do in the case. ... It is a very fit object of the attention of his representative...it contributes nothing to his right of having that representation."2 "We might as well make the possession of forty shillings per annum the proof of a... | |
| John Simpson Penman - 1923 - 754 pages
...himself, or in Parliament." 3* Personality is the sole foundation of the right of being represented; and that property has, in reality, nothing to do in...it contributes nothing to his right of having that representative." 3a " 'I think,' says Lord Harrington, 'the liberty of a cobbler ought to be as much... | |
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