Vindiciae Gallicae: Defence of the French Revolution and Its English Admirers Against the Accusations of the Right Hon. Edmund Burke; Including Some Strictures on the Late Production of Mons. de Calonne, Выпуск 1G.G.J. and J. Robinson, 1792 - Всего страниц: 381 |
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Стр. 67
... Church , and the Parliaments . Thefe three Aristocracies were the pillars which in fact formed the Government of France . queftion then of forming or deftroying these bodies is fundamental . There is one general principle applicable to ...
... Church , and the Parliaments . Thefe three Aristocracies were the pillars which in fact formed the Government of France . queftion then of forming or deftroying these bodies is fundamental . There is one general principle applicable to ...
Стр. 82
... Church , the second great " corporation that fuftained the French defpo- * I have been groffly misunderstood by those who have fupposed this qualification an affumed or affected reserve . I believe the principle only as qualified by the ...
... Church , the second great " corporation that fuftained the French defpo- * I have been groffly misunderstood by those who have fupposed this qualification an affumed or affected reserve . I believe the principle only as qualified by the ...
Стр. 83
... Church as a body , the refumption of its territorial revenues , and the new organization of the Prifthood , appear to him to be dictated by the union of robbery and irreligion , to glut J the rapacity of Stock - jobbers , and to gratify ...
... Church as a body , the refumption of its territorial revenues , and the new organization of the Prifthood , appear to him to be dictated by the union of robbery and irreligion , to glut J the rapacity of Stock - jobbers , and to gratify ...
Стр. 84
... church - lands were national property was not firft afferted among the Jacobins , or in the Palais Royal . The author of that opinion , the master of that wretched torical erudition , attempted in the debate on this subject to trace the ...
... church - lands were national property was not firft afferted among the Jacobins , or in the Palais Royal . The author of that opinion , the master of that wretched torical erudition , attempted in the debate on this subject to trace the ...
Стр. 86
... Church the PROPERTY of its " Members ? " Various confiderations prefent themselves , which may elucidate the subject . I. It has not hitherto been fuppofed that any clafs of Public fervants are proprietors . They are falaried by the ...
... Church the PROPERTY of its " Members ? " Various confiderations prefent themselves , which may elucidate the subject . I. It has not hitherto been fuppofed that any clafs of Public fervants are proprietors . They are falaried by the ...
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Vindiciae Gallicae: Defence of the French Revolution and Its English ... Mackintosh Полный просмотр - 1791 |
Vindiciae Gallicae: Defence of the French Revolution and Its English ... Mackintosh Полный просмотр - 1791 |
Vindiciae Gallicae. Defence of the French Revolution and Its English ... JAMES. MACKINTOSH Недоступно для просмотра - 2018 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
Abbé Maury abfurd abuſe affert againſt almoſt anceſtors ancient Ariftocracy army becauſe beſt body Burke cafe Calonne caufes cauſe Church cifely circumſtances citizens civil Clergy confeffed confider Conftitution cracy defpotic defpotifm deſtroy difcuffion diftinction divifion election electoral England Engliſh enlightened enthuſiaſm eſtabliſhment eſtimate Europe exerciſe exift exiſtence fame fays feems fenfe fentiments firft firſt focial fociety fome formed fource France freedom French Revolution ftate ftill fubject fuch fufficient fuppofed fupport fyftem Government hiſtory hoftility Houſe human increaſe inftitutions inftructions intereft itſelf juftice King laws lefs legiſlative Legiſlature liberty meaſure ment Minifter moft moral moſt muft muſt National Affembly natural natural right neceffary Neckar Nobility object opinion paffion Parliament perfonal philofophers poffeffed political popular preferved preſent principles progreſs purpoſe queftion racter reafon refiftance reform refpect remark reprefentative ſeems ſhould ſpirit ſtate ſtill ſuppoſe ſyſtem thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe tion ufurpation uſeful whoſe wiſdom
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Стр. 121 - 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. 308 - Buchanan ; and he, too, seems to have been the first scholar who caught from the ancients the noble flame of republican enthusiasm. This praise is merited by his neglected, though incomparable tract, De jure 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 has surpassed.
Стр. 225 - 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. 107 - 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. 113 - 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. 172 - ... inconceivable. Surely those to whom he addresses himself know the causes of it but too well. They know the doctrines which they have preached, the decrees which they have passed, the practices which they have countenanced. The soldiers remember the 6th of October.
Стр. 108 - Government less imperfect, than accident had formed in other States ?—Who will be hardy enough to assert, that a better Constitution is not attainable than any which has hitherto appeared ? Is the limit of human wisdom to be estimated in the science of politics alone, by the extent of its present attainments...
Стр. 105 - ... 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.
Стр. 192 - ... of one day's excefles committed by a delirious populace. He might thus, perhaps, oppofe fpecious and popular topics to the declamation of Mr. Burke. But the fubject itfelf is, to an enlarged thinker, fertile in reflections of a different nature. That fyftem of manners which arofe among the Gothic nations of Europe, of which chivalry was more properly the effufion than the fource, is, without doubt, one of the moft peculiar and interefting appsarances in human affairs.
Стр. 66 - ... the mass of mankind. The power of the wealthy is farther concentrated by their tendency to combination, from which, number, dispersion, indigence, and ignorance equally preclude the poor. The wealthy are formed into bodies by their professions, their different degrees of opulence (called ' ranks'), their knowledge, and their small number.