| John Huddlestone Wynne - 1807 - 744 sider
...to regulate their •wa^cs, not by the value of their .work, but by the pleasure of their musters; laws to prevent their removal from one place to another within the king-Joru, and to prohibit their emigration out of it. They would not be crowded in hot task-houses... | |
| Robert Southey - 1808 - 270 sider
...a state of things couldnot continue ; there must be laws to regulate their wages, not by the value of their work but by the pleasure of their masters...hot taskhouses by day, and herded together in damp cellers at night ; they would not toil in unwholesome employments from sun-rise till sun-set, whole... | |
| Robert Southey - 1808 - 276 sider
...a state of things souldnot continue ; there must be laws to regulate their wages, not by the value of their work but by the pleasure of their masters...prevent their removal from one place to another within tile kingdom, and to prohibit their emigration out of it. They would not be crowded in hot taskhouses... | |
| Robert Southey - 1814 - 394 sider
...continue; there must be laws to regulate their wages, not by the value of their work, but by the pleasures of their masters; laws to prevent their removal from...not be crowded in hot task-houses by day, and herded togatber in damp cellars at night; they would not toil in unwholesome employments from sun-rise till... | |
| Robert Walsh - 1819 - 574 sider
...a state of things could not continue ; there must be laws to regulate their wages, not by the value of their work but by the pleasure of their masters...kingdom, and to prohibit their emigration out of it. "The gentry of the land are better lodged, better accommodated, better educated than their ancestors... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1824 - 586 sider
...a state of things couW not continue ; there must be laws to regulate their wages, not by the value of their work, but by the pleasure of their masters...emigration out of it. They would not be crowded in hot task houses by day, and herded together in damp cellars by night ; they would not toil in unwholesome... | |
| Robert Southey - 1836 - 204 sider
...a state of things could not continue: there must be laws to regulate their wages, not by the value of their work, but by the pleasure of their masters...the kingdom, and to prohibit their emigration out «fit. They would not be crowded in hot task302 houses by day, and herded together in damp cellars... | |
| Henry Charles Carey - 1858 - 500 sider
...a state of things could not continue; there must be laws to regulate their wages, not by the value of their work, but by the pleasure of their masters;...prohibit their emigration out of it. They would not," he continues, "be crowded in hot task-houses by day, and herded together in damp cellars at night;... | |
| Henry Charles Carey - 1858 - 522 sider
...another within the kingdom, and to prohibit their emigration out of it. They would not," he continues, "be crowded in hot task-houses by day, and herded...they would not toil in unwholesome employments from suurise till sunset whole days, and whole days and quarters, for with twelve hours' labor the avidity... | |
| Henry Charles Carey - 1866 - 594 sider
...could not continue ; there must be laws to regulate their wages, not by the value of their work, bat by the pleasure of their masters ; laws to prevent...within the kingdom, and to prohibit their emigration. They would not," he continues, "be crowded in hot task-houses by day, and herded together in damp cellars... | |
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