The Life and Times of Sir John Charles Molteno, K.C.M.G., First Premier of Cape Colony: Comprising a History of Representative Institutions and Responsible Government at the Cape and of Lord Carnarvon's Confederation Policy & of Sir Bartle Frere's High Commissionership of South Africa, Volume 1Smith, Elder & Company, 1900 - Cape of Good Hope (South Africa) |
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Page 16
... thoughts ; no evils can deprive a man of this city ; no prison of this society ; no pillage of these riches ; no bondage of this liberty . ' I much wish you could obtain a good account of the Cape ; perhaps you may be able to get the ...
... thoughts ; no evils can deprive a man of this city ; no prison of this society ; no pillage of these riches ; no bondage of this liberty . ' I much wish you could obtain a good account of the Cape ; perhaps you may be able to get the ...
Page 44
... thought they would surround us . We gave them a fair chance for us to have an opportunity to fight our way through . We all dismounted and waited for them , but not one stirred to come down from the rocks . They perceived this must be ...
... thought they would surround us . We gave them a fair chance for us to have an opportunity to fight our way through . We all dismounted and waited for them , but not one stirred to come down from the rocks . They perceived this must be ...
Page 62
... thought it my duty to bring forward . If the complaints of the country inhabitants are unheard , they may bear for a time the grievances under which they labour - they will bear them to the last moment - and then what do they do ? They ...
... thought it my duty to bring forward . If the complaints of the country inhabitants are unheard , they may bear for a time the grievances under which they labour - they will bear them to the last moment - and then what do they do ? They ...
Page 69
... thought that that was very unfair . The Boers could hardly help themselves , and he thought it a ' damning ' policy to show that the white people were split up among themselves while the natives combined . He said , ' Don't condemn the ...
... thought that that was very unfair . The Boers could hardly help themselves , and he thought it a ' damning ' policy to show that the white people were split up among themselves while the natives combined . He said , ' Don't condemn the ...
Page 70
... thought a very small tax compared with the value of the institutions possessed . When questions on the subject of finance and public expenditure were involved Mr. Molteno was always to the fore , and in the session of 1859 he took ...
... thought a very small tax compared with the value of the institutions possessed . When questions on the subject of finance and public expenditure were involved Mr. Molteno was always to the fore , and in the session of 1859 he took ...
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Common terms and phrases
action affairs agitation annexation Attorney-General Beaufort Bill British burghers Cape Colony Cape Parliament Cape Town carried character Colonial Secretary colonists confederation Conference considered constitution course Crown desire despatch difficulties district Dutch east eastern province elected England English Executive expressed favour federation feeling force frontier Froude Froude's further give Governor Graaff Reinet Grahamstown Griqualand West High Commissioner Home Government House Imperial Government interests introduction of responsible J. C. MOLTENO Kaffirs Kreli land Langalibalele Legislature Lord Carnarvon Majesty's Government matter ment Ministers Ministry Natal native policy object opinion Orange Free party passed Paterson political Port Elizabeth position present principle proposed question railway received regard reply representative institutions resolution responsible government retrenchment revenue sent session Sir Andries Sir Garnet Wolseley Sir Henry Barkly Sir Philip Wodehouse Solomon South Africa speech Sprigg Stockenstrom tion took Transvaal views vote whole wishes
Popular passages
Page 348 - Merciful Heaven, Thou rather with thy sharp and sulphurous bolt Split'st the unwedgeable and gnarled oak Than the soft myrtle: but man, proud man, Drest in a little brief authority, Most ignorant of what he's most assured, His glassy essence, like an angry ape, Plays such fantastic tricks before high heaven As make the angels weep; who, with our spleens, Would all themselves laugh mortal.
Page 233 - He has the didactic impulse. He has the 'courage of his ideas.' He will convince the audience. He knows an argument which will be effective, he has one for one and another for another; he has an enthusiasm which he feels will rouse the apathetic, a demonstration which he thinks must convert the incredulous, an illustration which he hopes will drive his meaning even into the heads of the stolid. At any rate, he will try. He has a nature, as Coleridge might have said, towards his audience.
Page 410 - ... me in thinking over what Mr. Gladstone was reported to have said, and in thinking of his own achievements and career, that there are two classes of men who have played and still play a prominent part in the world — those who accomplish great things, and those who talk and make speeches about them. The doers of things are for the most part silent. Those who build up empires or discover secrets of science, those who paint great pictures or write great poems, are not often to be found spouting...
Page 311 - I think there can be no doubt that, in any great public, or popular, or national question or movement, the mere fact of calling these people different nations would not make them so, nor would the fact of a mere fordable stream running between them sever their sympathies or prevent them from acting in unison.
Page 115 - unable to concede the claim advanced on behalf of the administration of the waste land as one of absolute right " Sir J. Pakington agreed,4 " that 1 Midlothian Address, 1880. 2 " Lord Grey was possessed with the idea that it was practicable to give representative institutions, and then to stop without giving responsible government — something like the English Constitution under Elizabeth and the Stuarts. He did not understand either the vigorous independence of an Anglo-Saxon community, or the...
Page 265 - Amongst no people have I ever met more contentment with their general condition, a more legitimate pride in all those characteristics which constitute their nationality, or a firmer faith in the destinies in store for them. Your...
Page 144 - Since the close of the American war, it has not been the policy of England to vest any portion of the legislative power of the subordinate government of a dependency in a body elected by the inhabitants. The only exception to * There is one British dependency, viz.