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 viii
... gives us much information about what Burke was doing, the history of what his readers have been doing takes us in a great many directions, towards a great many other texts and in search of information which is not always available in ...
... gives us much information about what Burke was doing, the history of what his readers have been doing takes us in a great many directions, towards a great many other texts and in search of information which is not always available in ...
Strona xiii
... gives in the Reflections was orthodox, not reactionary What is more remarkable is that Burke does not find it necessary to mention Locke at all. Similarly, the historian Macaulay, writing the greatest nineteenth-century Whig account of ...
... gives in the Reflections was orthodox, not reactionary What is more remarkable is that Burke does not find it necessary to mention Locke at all. Similarly, the historian Macaulay, writing the greatest nineteenth-century Whig account of ...
Strona xx
... give them the leisure to enter the public service; there was room for both an aristocracy and a democracy within this broad definition. They must not be so poor that their lives were taken up in labour, or so rich that they were ...
... give them the leisure to enter the public service; there was room for both an aristocracy and a democracy within this broad definition. They must not be so poor that their lives were taken up in labour, or so rich that they were ...
Strona xxxi
... further stages of revolution as yet unplanned and unknown.” It also brought about the flight to England of several of Burke's French informants. These events shocked Burke deeply, and he gives a highly xxxi EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
... further stages of revolution as yet unplanned and unknown.” It also brought about the flight to England of several of Burke's French informants. These events shocked Burke deeply, and he gives a highly xxxi EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
Strona xxxii
Edmund Burke J. G. A. Pocock. These events shocked Burke deeply, and he gives a highly coloured account of them which concludes with a kind of apotheosis of Marie Antoinette, as he had once seen her at Versailles. This leads him to ...
Edmund Burke J. G. A. Pocock. These events shocked Burke deeply, and he gives a highly coloured account of them which concludes with a kind of apotheosis of Marie Antoinette, as he had once seen her at Versailles. This leads him to ...
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