The Works of the Right Honorable Edmund Burke, Volume 7Little, Brown,, 1881 - Great Britain |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 31
Page 23
... secure the lines of Chat- ham , rather than the lines of Chatham secure the wooden walls of England . Sir , the Church of England , if only defended by this miserable petition upon your table , must , I am afraid , upon the principles ...
... secure the lines of Chat- ham , rather than the lines of Chatham secure the wooden walls of England . Sir , the Church of England , if only defended by this miserable petition upon your table , must , I am afraid , upon the principles ...
Page 72
... secure their dependence upon the people ; on the other , to give them that quiet in their minds and that ease in their fortunes as to enable them to perform the most arduous and most painful duty in the world with spirit , with ...
... secure their dependence upon the people ; on the other , to give them that quiet in their minds and that ease in their fortunes as to enable them to perform the most arduous and most painful duty in the world with spirit , with ...
Page 94
... secure that property , to government . They harmonize with each other , and give mutual aid to one another . It is accompanied with another ground of authority in the constitution of the hu- man mind , presumption . It is a presumption ...
... secure that property , to government . They harmonize with each other , and give mutual aid to one another . It is accompanied with another ground of authority in the constitution of the hu- man mind , presumption . It is a presumption ...
Page 101
... secure the pub- lic liberty , not to have à proper connection with the public interests , so constituted as not either actually or virtually to be the representative of the people , it will be easy to prove that a government composed of ...
... secure the pub- lic liberty , not to have à proper connection with the public interests , so constituted as not either actually or virtually to be the representative of the people , it will be easy to prove that a government composed of ...
Page 113
... secure , when they imagine that the vigilant eye of a censorial magistrate watches over all the proceedings of judicature , and that the sacred fire of an eternal constitutional jealousy , which is the guardian of liberty , law , and ...
... secure , when they imagine that the vigilant eye of a censorial magistrate watches over all the proceedings of judicature , and that the sacred fire of an eternal constitutional jealousy , which is the guardian of liberty , law , and ...
Common terms and phrases
affairs amongst ancient Anglo-Saxons appear arms army authority barbarous barons bishops body Britain Britons Cæsar called Canute Carausius cause character Christianity Church Church of England civil clergy conquest considerable Constitution court crown Danes danger death dignity dominions Druids ecclesiastical Edgar Atheling election Emperor Empire enemy England English established Europe favor force formed fortune Gaul Guienne Henry honorable gentleman House of Commons INDIANA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES INDIANENSIS island judge jury justice King of France King of Scotland king's kingdom land Lanfranc liberty lord manner marriage means ment mind nation natural never nobility Norman Normandy object obliged opinion Parliament party peace person Picts political Pope possession prince principle province punished reason reign religion Roman Rome rude Saxon Saxon laws secure seemed SIGILLUM sort spirit subsisted success supported Tanistry things tion tithes toleration UNIVERSITATIS vassals whilst whole William