Burke: Select Works, Volume 3Clarendon Press, 1926 |
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Página xxx
... direct consultation with the French Government , if any base of pacification could be laid down . Such an application , at such a moment , could not but prepossess the French in favour of English sincerity . It would show that in spite ...
... direct consultation with the French Government , if any base of pacification could be laid down . Such an application , at such a moment , could not but prepossess the French in favour of English sincerity . It would show that in spite ...
Página 10
... direct confession of our inferiority to France , and whilst many , very many , were ready to act upon a sense of that inferiority , a few months effected a total change in our variable minds . We emerged from the gulph of that ...
... direct confession of our inferiority to France , and whilst many , very many , were ready to act upon a sense of that inferiority , a few months effected a total change in our variable minds . We emerged from the gulph of that ...
Página 25
... direct Message from the Crown , and it's con- sequences from the two Houses of Parliament . On the part of the Regicides these declarations could not be entirely passed by without notice : but in that notice they discovered still more ...
... direct Message from the Crown , and it's con- sequences from the two Houses of Parliament . On the part of the Regicides these declarations could not be entirely passed by without notice : but in that notice they discovered still more ...
Página 33
... direct avowal of their despotism and ambition . We know that their declared resolution had been to surrender no object belonging to France previous to the war . They had resolved , that the Republick was entire , and must remain so . As ...
... direct avowal of their despotism and ambition . We know that their declared resolution had been to surrender no object belonging to France previous to the war . They had resolved , that the Republick was entire , and must remain so . As ...
Página 35
... direct negative to all treaty , but is a rejection of every principle upon which 1 ' This Court has seen , with regret , how far the tone and spirit of that answer , the nature and extent of the demands which it contains , and the ...
... direct negative to all treaty , but is a rejection of every principle upon which 1 ' This Court has seen , with regret , how far the tone and spirit of that answer , the nature and extent of the demands which it contains , and the ...
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Algiers alliance allies allusion Ambassador ambition amity Atheism Austrian Netherlands authority Britain British Burke alludes Burke's called cause civil commerce common conquests constitution Convention Crown danger declaration dignity Directory disposition 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 King kingdom Letter liberty Lord Auckland Lord Malmesbury Louis Louis the Fourteenth 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 ruin sentiments shew Sir Sydney Smith sort Sovereign Spain speculative spirit Stadtholder thing tion treaty West Indies whilst whole