Reflections on the Revolution in France: And on the Proceedings in Certain Societies in London Relative to that EventPenguin Books, 1969 - 400 páginas |
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Página 17
... England . In this phase he did not see the danger mainly in France itself , but in the kind of thinking which had in his view pro- duced the events in France , and in the men who favoured the introduction of this kind of thinking into ...
... England . In this phase he did not see the danger mainly in France itself , but in the kind of thinking which had in his view pro- duced the events in France , and in the men who favoured the introduction of this kind of thinking into ...
Página 29
... England are cool and politic , provisional and contingent . It is not to the Church of England - still less to Protestant- ism that he is attached , ' much from conviction ; more from affection ' ; it is to ' Christianity at large ...
... England are cool and politic , provisional and contingent . It is not to the Church of England - still less to Protestant- ism that he is attached , ' much from conviction ; more from affection ' ; it is to ' Christianity at large ...
Página 260
... England . That objection , you will say , cannot hold as to the confiscation of the goods of monks and nuns , and the abolition of their order . It is true , that this particular part of your general confiscation does not affect England ...
... England . That objection , you will say , cannot hold as to the confiscation of the goods of monks and nuns , and the abolition of their order . It is true , that this particular part of your general confiscation does not affect England ...
Contenido
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS | 7 |
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE | 77 |
BURKES PREFATORY NOTE | 83 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Reflections on the Revolution in France and on the Proceedings in Certain ... Edmund Burke Vista de fragmentos - 1969 |
Términos y frases comunes
amongst antient army assignats authority body Burke's called canton cause character church Cicero citizens civil clergy common confiscation Conservatism constitution Corr counter-revolutionary crimes crown despotism destroyed Dr Price Edmund Burke effect election England English establishment estates evil expences favour feelings force France French Revolution gentlemen Glorious Revolution hereditary honour human interest Ireland Irish Jacobins justice king kingdom land Letter liberty Lord mankind manner Mary Wollstonecraft means ment military mind minister monarchy moral National Assembly nature never nobility Old Jewry opinion Paris parliament persons political possession present principles Protestant Protestant ascendancy reason Reflections Regicide Regicide Peace religion republic revenue Revolution Society revolutionary Richard Burke ruin scheme shew sort sovereign spirit thing thought tion true virtue W. B. Yeats Warren Hastings wealth Whig whilst whole wholly wisdom writings