I take it, is that a white working population will not settle itself at an v place where it will have to measure itself against coloured labour. A walk through the streets of Capetown is sufficient to show the stranger that he has reached a place not... South Africa - Page 68de Anthony Trollope - 1878 - 4 pagesAffichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
 | 1878 - 750 pages
...Capetown. But the truth, I take it, is that a white working population will not settle itself at an v place where it will have to measure itself against...the good-looking young ladies, — but they are not ihe population. He will find that everything about him is done by coloured persons of various races,... | |
 | bertha thomas - 1878 - 726 pages
...a white working population will not settle itself at anv place where it will have to measure ittelf against coloured labour. A walk through the streets...the editors, for the most part, and the good-looking votmg ladies, — but they are not the population. He will find that everything abont him is done by... | |
 | 1878 - 760 pages
...Capetown. But the truth, I take it, is that a white working population will not settle itself at anv place where it will have to measure itself against...English-speaking population. The gentry no doubt are wtiite and i-peak English. At any rate, the members of Parliament do so, and the clergymen, and the... | |
 | Lola Romanucci-Ross, George A. De Vos, Takeyuki Tsuda - 2006 - 444 pages
...were not, Trollope discovered, the primary population at all: A walk through the streets of Cape Town is sufficient to show the stranger that he has reached a place not inhabited by white men. . . . The gentry no doubt are white and speak English . . . but they are not the population [which... | |
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