The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Volume 6J. C. Nimmo, 1887 - Great Britain |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 51
Page 16
... author , " will do this , " " it is the interest of France , " " the returning honor and generosity of France , " & c . , & c . , — always merely France : just -- -- as if we were in a common political war 16 LETTERS ON A REGICIDE PEACE .
... author , " will do this , " " it is the interest of France , " " the returning honor and generosity of France , " & c . , & c . , — always merely France : just -- -- as if we were in a common political war 16 LETTERS ON A REGICIDE PEACE .
Page 17
Edmund Burke. -- as if we were in a common political war with an old recognized member of the commonwealth of Christian Europe , and as if our dispute had turned upon a mere matter of territorial or commercial con- troversy , which a ...
Edmund Burke. -- as if we were in a common political war with an old recognized member of the commonwealth of Christian Europe , and as if our dispute had turned upon a mere matter of territorial or commercial con- troversy , which a ...
Page 21
... common benefactor . In those declarations you will see that the king , instead of being sensible of greater alarm and jealousy from a neighboring crowned head than from these regi- cides , attributes all the dangers of Europe to the ...
... common benefactor . In those declarations you will see that the king , instead of being sensible of greater alarm and jealousy from a neighboring crowned head than from these regi- cides , attributes all the dangers of Europe to the ...
Page 28
Edmund Burke. common feeling of mankind . If I had but one hour to live , I would employ it in decrying this wretched system , and die with my pen in my hand to mark out the dreadful consequences of receiving an arrange- ment of empire ...
Edmund Burke. common feeling of mankind . If I had but one hour to live , I would employ it in decrying this wretched system , and die with my pen in my hand to mark out the dreadful consequences of receiving an arrange- ment of empire ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
act of Parliament amongst appear BEACONSFIELD Bishop of London Burke Catholics cause Church circumstances civil confess consider Constitution crimes crown danger dear declaration Dissenters EDMUND BURKE effect empire enacted England English established Europe evil execution faction favor force France friends give hereby honor House of Commons human interest Ireland Irish Jacobins justice justices of peace king kingdom land least letter liberty Lord Lord Auckland Lord North Majesty Majesty's manner matter means measure ment mind minister mode murder nation nature never object obliged offence opinion Papists Parliament party peace persecution persons political present principles protector of negroes Protestant Protestant ascendency reason regard Regicide religion sans-culotte sentiments ship sort sovereign speculative spirit suffer sure things Thomas Paine thought tion trade West Indies whilst whole wholly wish zeal