Burke, Select Works, Volume 3Clarendon Press, 1904 - 328 páginas |
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Página xl
... danger , ' he wrote , ' is coming thundering upon us . We are miserably unprepared , in means and in spirit , for the crisis . ' But while the need was growing more urgent , Burke was growing less and less able to respond to it . The ...
... danger , ' he wrote , ' is coming thundering upon us . We are miserably unprepared , in means and in spirit , for the crisis . ' But while the need was growing more urgent , Burke was growing less and less able to respond to it . The ...
Página xliv
... dangers which are peculiar to her position . The relations of England with the rest of Europe differ widely from the relations among themselves of the nations which compose the rest of Europe . The physical cause , in Burke's phrase ...
... dangers which are peculiar to her position . The relations of England with the rest of Europe differ widely from the relations among themselves of the nations which compose the rest of Europe . The physical cause , in Burke's phrase ...
Página xlvi
... dangerous nuisance . This was the ground that had been taken up in the famous Whitehall Declaration . All the surrounding powers , it was there said , had a right , and felt it a duty , to stop the progress of an evil which attacked the ...
... dangerous nuisance . This was the ground that had been taken up in the famous Whitehall Declaration . All the surrounding powers , it was there said , had a right , and felt it a duty , to stop the progress of an evil which attacked the ...
Página 11
... danger can be properly provided for , can be justly estimated , can be so much as fully seen . The eye of the mind ... danger ; but in the palpable night of their terrors , men under consternation suppose , not that it is the danger ...
... danger can be properly provided for , can be justly estimated , can be so much as fully seen . The eye of the mind ... danger ; but in the palpable night of their terrors , men under consternation suppose , not that it is the danger ...
Página 12
... danger , as well as the certain ruin of interests of a superiour order . Often has a man lost his all because he would not submit to hazard all in defending it . A display of our wealth before robbers is not the way to restrain their ...
... danger , as well as the certain ruin of interests of a superiour order . Often has a man lost his all because he would not submit to hazard all in defending it . A display of our wealth before robbers is not the way to restrain their ...
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Algiers alliance allies Ambassador ambition amity argument Atheism Austrian Netherlands authority Britain British Burke's called cause civil commerce common conquests consider constitution Convention Crown danger declaration dignity Directory disposition dread duty effect Empire enemy England English Europe existence expence faction favour force France French French Revolution Government Holland honour hope hostility House Increase to 1791 interest Jacobin justice King kingdom Letter liberty Lord Auckland Lord Malmesbury Louis Majesty mankind manner Marquis de Montalembert means ment mercenary war mind Ministers Ministry Monarchy moral murder nation nature negotiation neighbour never noble object opinion Paris Parliament party persons Pitt political politicians politicks possession present principles Prussia publick reason Regicide Regicide Peace religion Republic Republick Revolution Revolutionary Tribunal Robespierre ruin sentiments shew Sir Sydney Smith sort Sovereign Spain speculative spirit Stadtholder territory thing tion treaty West Indies whilst whole