Vindiciae Gallicae: Defense of the French Revolution and Its English Admirers1792 |
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Стр. xii
... obtained without commotion and with- out carnage , and equally hoftile to the inte- rested ambition of demagogues and the law- lefs authority of kings . Crufades Crufades were an effervescence of chivalry , and the modern ( xii )
... obtained without commotion and with- out carnage , and equally hoftile to the inte- rested ambition of demagogues and the law- lefs authority of kings . Crufades Crufades were an effervescence of chivalry , and the modern ( xii )
Стр. 21
... a weight of impoft and debt , which it was equally difficult to remedy or to endure , B 3 The The profligate expedients were exhausted by which fucceffive Minifters had ( 21 ) to lay in ashes the villages of the Palatinate? ...
... a weight of impoft and debt , which it was equally difficult to remedy or to endure , B 3 The The profligate expedients were exhausted by which fucceffive Minifters had ( 21 ) to lay in ashes the villages of the Palatinate? ...
Стр. 31
... equally vain . His views , no doubt , extended only to palliation ; but he was involved in a * Major Privato vifus dum privatus fuit & omnium con- fenfa capax imperii nifi imperaffet . - TAC . ftream ftream of opinions and events , of ...
... equally vain . His views , no doubt , extended only to palliation ; but he was involved in a * Major Privato vifus dum privatus fuit & omnium con- fenfa capax imperii nifi imperaffet . - TAC . ftream ftream of opinions and events , of ...
Стр. 66
... equally indefenfible . To defcend therefore from these barren generalities to a more near view of the question , let us state it more pre- cifely . Was the Civil Order in France corrigi- ble , or was it necessary to destroy it ? Not to ...
... equally indefenfible . To defcend therefore from these barren generalities to a more near view of the question , let us state it more pre- cifely . Was the Civil Order in France corrigi- ble , or was it necessary to destroy it ? Not to ...
Стр. 68
... equally preclude the poor . The wealthy are formed into bodies by their pro- feffions , their different degrees of opulence ( called ranks , ) their knowledge , and their small number . — They neceffarily in all coun- tries adminifter ...
... equally preclude the poor . The wealthy are formed into bodies by their pro- feffions , their different degrees of opulence ( called ranks , ) their knowledge , and their small number . — They neceffarily in all coun- tries adminifter ...
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Vindiciae Gallicae: Defence of the French Revolution, 1791 Sir James Mackintosh Просмотр фрагмента - 1989 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
Abbé Maury abfurd abuſe admirers affert againſt almoſt ancient Ariftocracy ariſe army becauſe body Burke cafe Calonne caufes cauſe Church circumſtances citizens civil Clergy confeffed Conftitution cracy defpotic defpotifm deftruction deſtroyed difcuffion diftinction election electoral England Engliſh enlightened eſtabliſhment eſtate eſtimate Europe exerciſe exifted exiſtence fame fays feems fenfe fentiment firft firſt focial fociety fome formed fource France freedom French Revolution ftill fubject fuch fufficient fuppofed fupport fyftem Government hiſtory hoftility Houſe human increaſe inftitutions inftructions intereft itſelf juftice King laws lefs Legiflators Legiſlature leſs liberty meaſures ment Minifter moft moral moſt muft muſt National Affembly natural right neceffary Neckar Nobility object opinion paffion Parliament perfonal philofophers poffeffed political popular praiſe preferved preſent principles profeffion progrefs purchaſed purpoſe queſtion racter reafon refiftance reform refpect remark Repreſentatives ſeems ſhould ſpirit ſtate ſtill ſuch ſuppoſe ſyſtem thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe tion ufurpation uſe wiſdom
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Стр. 326 - Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons do in the name of all the people aforesaid most humbly and faithfully submit themselves, their heirs and posterities for ever...
Стр. 123 - It is vain for the arrogance of learning to condemn the people to ignorance by reprobating superficial knowledge. The people cannot be profound ; but the truths which regulate the moral and political relations of man, are at no great distance from the surface. The great works in which discoveries are contained cannot be read by the people ; but their substance passes through a variety of minute and circuitous channels to the shop and the hamlet.
Стр. 231 - For he who freely magnifies what hath been nobly done, and fears not to declare as freely what might be done better, gives ye the best covenant of his fidelity; and that his loyalest affection and his hope waits on your proceedings.
Стр. 109 - Assembly seized the moment of eradicating the corruptions and abuses which afflicted their country. Their reform was total, that it might be commensurate with the evil : and no part of it was delayed, because to spare an abuse at such a period was to consecrate it...
Стр. 314 - Regni, in which the principles of popular politics, and the maxims of a free government, are delivered with a precision, and enforced with an energy, which no former age had equalled, and no succeeding one has surpassed.
Стр. 130 - Thefe fafts evince that the powers pf mankind have been unjuftly depreciated, the difficulty of Political affairs artfully magnified, and that there exifts a quantity of talent latent among men, which ever rifes to the level of the great occafions that call it forth. But the predominance of the profeffion of the law, that profeffion which teaches men *' to augur mif-government at a diftance, and *• muff the approach of tyranny in every " tainted breeze,"* was the fatal fource from \vhich, if we...
Стр. 350 - Britain should issue as a gift of her bounty and beneficence, rather than as claims recovered against a struggling litigant ; or, at least, that if your beneficence obtained no credit in your concessions, yet that they should appear the salutary provisions of your wisdom and foresight, not as things wrung from you with your blood by the cruel gripe of a rigid necessity.
Стр. 125 - Whatever be the ultimate fate of the French Revolutionists, the friends of freedom must ever consider them as the authors of the greatest attempt that has hitherto been made in the cause of man. They never can cease to rejoice, that in the long catalogue of calamities and crimes which blacken human annals, the year -1789 presents one spot on which the eye of humanity may with complacence...
Стр. 115 - Governments that now exist in the world (except the United States of America} have been fortuitously formed. They are the produce of chance, not the work of art. They have been altered, impaired, improved, and destroyed, by accidental circumstances, beyond the foresight or controul of wisdom. Their parts, thrown up against present emergencies, formed no systematic whole.
Стр. 107 - ... succeeds.* The gradual reform that arises from the presiding principle exhibited in the specious theory of Mr. Burke, is belied by the experience of all ages. Whatever excellence, whatever freedom is discoverable in governments, has been infused into them by the shock of a revolution ; and their subsequent progress has been only the accumulation of abuse.