The Works of the Right Honorable Edmund Burke, Volume 5Scholarly Press, 1889 - Great Britain |
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Page 3
... or spreading through fraud and artifice , a false alarm . Whatever others . may think of the matter , that alarm , in my mind , is by no means quieted . The state of affairs abroad 1 is not so much mended as to make mc.
... or spreading through fraud and artifice , a false alarm . Whatever others . may think of the matter , that alarm , in my mind , is by no means quieted . The state of affairs abroad 1 is not so much mended as to make mc.
Page 12
... . 3. When the proceedings of this society of the Friends of the People , as well as others acting in the same spirit , had caused a very serious alarm in the mind of the Duke of Portland , and of many 12 OBSERVATIONS ON THE.
... . 3. When the proceedings of this society of the Friends of the People , as well as others acting in the same spirit , had caused a very serious alarm in the mind of the Duke of Portland , and of many 12 OBSERVATIONS ON THE.
Page 13
Edmund Burke. mind of the Duke of Portland , and of many good patriots , he publicly , in the House of Commons , treated their apprehensions and conduct with the greatest asperity and ridicule . He condemned and vilified , in the most ...
Edmund Burke. mind of the Duke of Portland , and of many good patriots , he publicly , in the House of Commons , treated their apprehensions and conduct with the greatest asperity and ridicule . He condemned and vilified , in the most ...
Page 18
... minds of the Duke of Portland's party , ( which was his own , ) an alarm in which they sympathized with the greater part of the nation , to the panic produced by the pretended Pop- ish plot in the reign of Charles the Second , de ...
... minds of the Duke of Portland's party , ( which was his own , ) an alarm in which they sympathized with the greater part of the nation , to the panic produced by the pretended Pop- ish plot in the reign of Charles the Second , de ...
Page 19
... mind , and as a mobbish tyranny . He thought proper to compare them with the riotous assemblies of Lord George Gordon in 1780 , declaring that he had advised his friends in Westminster to sign the associations , whether they agreed to ...
... mind , and as a mobbish tyranny . He thought proper to compare them with the riotous assemblies of Lord George Gordon in 1780 , declaring that he had advised his friends in Westminster to sign the associations , whether they agreed to ...
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allies ambition ancient appear assignats Atheism Austrian Netherlands authority Brissot Britain called cause conduct consider Constitution crown danger declaration dignity Directory disposition dreadful Duke of Bedford Duke of Portland duty effect enemy England Europe everything evil exist faction favor force fortune France French French Revolution friends give Grace Holland honor hope House of Commons House of Lords human Increase to 1790 interest Jacobin justice kind king kingdom labor liberty Lord Lord Fitzwilliam Lord Keppel Lord Malmesbury Louis the Fourteenth Majesty mankind manner massacre matter means ment merit mind ministers mode monarchy moral murder nation nature negotiation never object opinion Paris Parliament party peace persons political present principles proceedings produce reason Regicide religion republic Revolution ruin sans-culottes sort sovereign spirit suffered suppose things thought tion treaty virtue whilst whole wish