Reflections on the Revolution in FranceHackett Publishing, 15 wrz 1987 - 288 John Pocock's edition of Burke's Reflections is two classics in one: Burke's Reflections and Pocock's reflections on Burke and the eighteenth century. |
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Strona ix
... called the Ascendancy. His family name indicates “Old English” or “Norman-Irish” descent, as does that of his wife Jane Nugent, and it is probable that the families of both had only recently converted from Catholicism.” It is notable ...
... called the Ascendancy. His family name indicates “Old English” or “Norman-Irish” descent, as does that of his wife Jane Nugent, and it is probable that the families of both had only recently converted from Catholicism.” It is notable ...
Strona x
... called “the Right Honourable Edmund Burke” (probably with a faint sneer by those who did not like him). In a great many ways, Burke displays the insecurity of the man of talent making a career by his wits in an aristocratic culture. In ...
... called “the Right Honourable Edmund Burke” (probably with a faint sneer by those who did not like him). In a great many ways, Burke displays the insecurity of the man of talent making a career by his wits in an aristocratic culture. In ...
Strona xv
... called Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty, which Tucker attacked in 1781 in a Treatise Concerning Civil Government. It was, of course, Price's 1789 sermon to the Revolution Society, published as A Discourse on the Love of Our ...
... called Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty, which Tucker attacked in 1781 in a Treatise Concerning Civil Government. It was, of course, Price's 1789 sermon to the Revolution Society, published as A Discourse on the Love of Our ...
Strona xxiv
... called for extending the right to vote to all adult males, though clearly he had no desire to see England a democracy and merely thought the natural leadership of the aristocracy would triumph over the Crown under those conditions. Fox ...
... called for extending the right to vote to all adult males, though clearly he had no desire to see England a democracy and merely thought the natural leadership of the aristocracy would triumph over the Crown under those conditions. Fox ...
Strona xxxiii
... called “the progress of society in Europe”; to destroy them is to undermine what has been built upon them. The Revolutionary conspiracy against manners is therefore a conspiracy against history. The strange vehemence with which Burke ...
... called “the progress of society in Europe”; to destroy them is to undermine what has been built upon them. The Revolutionary conspiracy against manners is therefore a conspiracy against history. The strange vehemence with which Burke ...
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