Commerce Des Lumières: John Oswald and the British in Paris, 1790-1793University of Missouri Press, 1986 - 338 páginas "My subject is the involvement of British intellectuals in revolutionary thought and action between the end of the American Revolution and the fourth year of the French Revolution. John Oswald, briefly famous as a herald and warrior and Pythagorean, then accidentally famous as a poet, was in fact an actively involved and highly articulate British member of the Jacobin Club of Paris, and to pursue his career is to move into the center of British-French revolutionary organization at the blissful, if anxious, dawn of the era of militant democracy and English romantic poetry."--Introduction. |
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Página 79
... human- ize the mind , to restrain the fury and the frequency of war , and to promote peace , and good will , and friendly intercourse among men : it softens and hu- manizes the manners . " He expands Terence's " nihil humani ” into “ I ...
... human- ize the mind , to restrain the fury and the frequency of war , and to promote peace , and good will , and friendly intercourse among men : it softens and hu- manizes the manners . " He expands Terence's " nihil humani ” into “ I ...
Página 170
... human race in general the most refined knowledge acquired after centuries of groping in the dark — no more shall horrible wars annihilate entire nations nor make us afraid that the humans remaining on the face of the earth will lose ...
... human race in general the most refined knowledge acquired after centuries of groping in the dark — no more shall horrible wars annihilate entire nations nor make us afraid that the humans remaining on the face of the earth will lose ...
Página 171
... human race , consists in the indestructible principle of the rights of man rooted in his conscience . Or perhaps it is nature herself , in her force and in her justice , who stirs imperiously with us . For it is in her that we live ...
... human race , consists in the indestructible principle of the rights of man rooted in his conscience . Or perhaps it is nature herself , in her force and in her justice , who stirs imperiously with us . For it is in her that we live ...
Contenido
The Butchers Knife Frontispiece of Oswalds The Cry of Nature by James Gillray unsigned | 6 |
Oswalds neighborhood 17761779 1784+ | 17 |
Bombay Harbor | 24 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 25 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Commerce Des Lumières: John Oswald and the British in Paris, 1790-1793 David V. Erdman Vista de fragmentos - 1986 |
Términos y frases comunes
Alger April arms army Aulard battalion Black Watch Bonneville Bonneville's Brissot Britain British Club British Mercury brothers Burke Burke's called Cercle Social Chronique du mois citizens Collot command committee Condorcet Constitution Danton debate December declared Edmund Burke enemy England English February France French Revolution Friends Gazetteer Glorious Revolution Godwin Grub-Street History Horne Tooke Humberstone Ignotus India insurrection Jacobin Club January John Oswald Journal July King Lanthenas later letter levée en masse liberty London London Corresponding Society Lord Macleod Manchester March Maxwell military minister Miranda National Assembly National Convention November officers Oswaldian Paine pamphlet Paris Parliament peace perhaps Pétion pikes Pitt Poems Political Herald present printed proposed published quoted regiment Republic republican Review revolutionary Ridgway Robespierre Royal sans-culottes Saumur September Servan Society spirit Stone Théroigne Thomas Thomas Paine Thomson tion troops tyrants Universal Patriot volunteers vote Watt Whigs William William Godwin Wordsworth writing