| 1816 - 612 páginas
...the other. The employer regards the employed as mere instruments of gain, while these acquire a grow ferocity of character, which, if legislative measures...and perhaps inextricable state of danger. The direct obj«ct of these observations is to effect the amelioration and avert the danger. The only mode by... | |
| Robert Owen - 1817 - 102 páginas
...employers and employed are frittered down to the consideration of 10 what immediate gain each can deVive from the other. The employer regards the employed...sooner .or later plunge the country into a formidable aud perr haps inextricable state of danger. The .direct object of these observations is to effect the... | |
| Abraham John Valpy - 1818 - 544 páginas
...frittered down to the consideration of what immediate gain each can derive from the other. The en * ployer regards the employed as mere instruments of gain,...be accomplished is to obtain an Act of Parliament, ] st. To limit the regular hours of labour in mills of machinery to 12 per day, including one hour... | |
| Abraham John Valpy - 1818 - 580 páginas
...frittered down to the consideration of what immediate gaiu each can derive from the other, The en r ployer regards the employed as mere instruments of gain,...be accomplished is to obtain an Act of Parliament, ,-...;'...• ' . :* let. To limit the regular hours of labour in mills pf machinery ; .» • to 12... | |
| Frank Podmore - 1906 - 420 páginas
...individual wealth, regardless of him, his comforts, his wants, or even his sufferings, except by way of a degrading parish charity, fitted only to steel the...formidable and perhaps inextricable state of danger." 1 As a remedy for the state thus pictured he suggests an Act of Parliament to regulate the conditions... | |
| Frank Podmore - 1906 - 418 páginas
...of him, his comforts, his wants, or even his sufferings, except by way of a degrading parish chanty, fitted only to steel the heart of man against his...formidable and perhaps inextricable state of danger." 1 As a remedy for the state thus pictured he suggests an Act of Parliament to regulate the conditions... | |
| Frank Podmore - 1907 - 422 páginas
...of him, his comforts, his wants, or even his sufferings, except by way of a degrading parish chanty, fitted only to steel the heart of man against his...formidable and perhaps inextricable state of danger." 1 As a remedy for the state thus pictured he suggests an Act of Parliament to regulate the conditions... | |
| Roy Porter - 2004 - 600 páginas
...as a consequence, they retaliated by acquiring 'a gross ferocity of character'. This, warned Owen, 'will sooner or later plunge the country into a formidable and perhaps inextricable state of danger'. Fortunately, the solution was to hand: co-operation would create the harmony which wise counsels dictated.... | |
| Richard L. Tames - 2005 - 232 páginas
...individual wealth, regardless of him, his comforts, his wants, or even his sufferings, except by way of a degrading parish charity, fitted only to steel the...formidable and perhaps inextricable state of danger. Post- War Agitation DOCUMENT 128 Samuel Bamford, Passages in the Life of a Radical (1840} It is a matter... | |
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