| Albert Brecknock - Poets, English - 1926 - 344 pages
...of trade, which threw the workmen out of employment, and rendered the labourer unworthy of his hire. But the real cause of these distresses and consequent...destruction of their own comfort, but of their very means of subsistence, can we forget that it is the bitter policy, the destructive warfare of the last eighteen... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - English poetry - 1995 - 412 pages
...disappointed sufferers. But the real cause of these distresses and consequent disturbances lies 80 deeper. When we are told that these men are leagued...destruction of their own comfort, but of their very means of subsistence, can we forget that it is the bitter policy, the destructive warfare of the last eighteen... | |
| David F. Noble - Automation - 1995 - 186 pages
...a prospect of exportation, with the demand for work and workmen equally diminished, frames of this description tend materially to aggravate the distress and discontent' of the disappointed sufferers. . . . These men never destroyed their looms till they were become useless, worse than useless; till... | |
| Warwick Organizational Behaviour Staff - Business & Economics - 2001 - 548 pages
...prospect of exportation. with the demand for work and workmen equally diminished. frames 1874 of this description tend materially to aggravate the distress and discontent of the disappointed sufferers. These men never destroyed their looms till they were become useless. worse than useless: till they... | |
| |