Burke, Select WorksClarendon Press, 1922 |
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Página vi
... demolished ' and destroyed ' him . Time has placed things in another light . Chatham J and Shelburne founded the modern school of independent statesmen . • any additional strength in the court or in the popular vi INTRODUCTION .
... demolished ' and destroyed ' him . Time has placed things in another light . Chatham J and Shelburne founded the modern school of independent statesmen . • any additional strength in the court or in the popular vi INTRODUCTION .
Página xiii
... things might be reversed , and during the last twenty years of the reign of George II , the blow was being prepared which paralysed the Whig party for a whole generation , and from which they only recovered when they had identified ...
... things might be reversed , and during the last twenty years of the reign of George II , the blow was being prepared which paralysed the Whig party for a whole generation , and from which they only recovered when they had identified ...
Página xiv
... thing needful to give effect to a policy of aggression on the part of the court . It was the first , which we have called the legitimate section of the party , then headed by the Marquis of Rockingham , into which Burke hap- pened to be ...
... thing needful to give effect to a policy of aggression on the part of the court . It was the first , which we have called the legitimate section of the party , then headed by the Marquis of Rockingham , into which Burke hap- pened to be ...
Página xxii
... things , have their use and their abuse : and the confusion of these has been a main difficulty to the thinking world . To the use of them we owe all our systems , and the effect of our systems , of religion , of law , and of education ...
... things , have their use and their abuse : and the confusion of these has been a main difficulty to the thinking world . To the use of them we owe all our systems , and the effect of our systems , of religion , of law , and of education ...
Página xxiii
... things which are the subjects of them , but in the nature of man , and his capacity of being affected by certain things from habit , from imagination , and sentiment , as well as from reason . Thus , the reason why a man ought to be ...
... things which are the subjects of them , but in the nature of man , and his capacity of being affected by certain things from habit , from imagination , and sentiment , as well as from reason . Thus , the reason why a man ought to be ...
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Termos e frases comuns
Act of Navigation Administration America arguments assemblies authority Bill Bolingbroke British Burke Burke's Bute Cabal cause character Charles Townshend Chatham Ministry Civil List Colonies commerce connexion considered constitution controul Court Crown debt dignity duty East India Bill effect election Empire England English faction favour favourite freedom friends gentlemen give Government grant Grenville History Honourable Gentleman House of Commons idea influence infra interest King King's Letter liberty Lord Bute Lord Chatham Lord North Lord Rockingham Lord Shelburne maxim means measures ment mind Ministers Ministry Montesquieu nation nature never Noble Lord object opinion pamphlet Parliament Parliamentary party passage persons political popular preamble Present Discontents principle reason Reform Regicide reign repeal resolution revenue Rockingham scheme seems sort Speech spirit Stamp Act sure taxation taxes things thought tion trade true virtue Whig Whiggism whilst whole