... on bad, but the labourers themselves received the same pay, whether good or bad2. As a last resort there was the parish pit. The labourers loathed it, but now and then they took it philosophically. At Mildenhall in Suffolk "the paupers form themselves... The Farmers Magazine Volume The Sixth - Side 98af JOSEPH BOGERSON - 1837Fuld visning - Om denne bog
| Great Britain. Poor Law Commissioners - 1836 - 680 sider
...Mifdenhall the paupers had facetiously formed themselves into two bodies, which they denominated the House of Commons and the House of Lords. The House of Commons...and throwing what was useful to the top of the pit. Doublless these houses of legislature agreed on many things which conduced to the maintenance of public... | |
| Charles Ryle Fay - 1920 - 344 sider
...Mildenhall in Suffolk "the paupers form themselves into two gangs, which they denominate the House of Commons and the House of Lords. The House of Commons...and throwing what was useful to the top of the pit " 3. If the labourers had been without wives and children, the intervention of the Poor Law might have... | |
| Charles Ryle Fay - 1920 - 344 sider
...Mildenhall in Suffolk "the paupers form themselves into two gangs, which they denominate the House of Commons and the House of Lords. The House of Commons...refuse, and throwing what was useful to the top of the pit"3. If the labourers had been %vithout wives and children, the intervention of the Poor Law might... | |
| Charles Ryle Fay - 1928 - 488 sider
...Mildenhall in Suffolk ' the paupers form themselves into two gangs, which they denominate the House of Commons and the House of Lords. The House of Commons was engaged at the 1 Speenhamland means the land belonging to the village of Speen, which lies north of Newbury. The land... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - 1836 - 596 sider
...Milldenhall the paupers had facetiously formed themselves into two bodies, which they denominated the House of Commons and the House of Lords. The House of Commons...things which conduced to the maintenance of public order and the promotion of the pauper weal. 30. In a system which offered so large a bounty on fraud,... | |
| Charles Ryle Fay - 1947 - 328 sider
...Mildenhall in Suffolk "the paupers form themselves into two gangs, which they denominate the House of Commons and the House of Lords. The House of Commons...refuse, and throwing what was useful to the top of the pit"3. If the labourers had been without wives and children, the intervention of the Poor Law might... | |
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