Edmund Burke of BeaconsfieldUniversity of Delaware Press, 2003 - 212 Seiten "This portrait of the private Burke is based upon the largely unpublished correspondence of his wife Jane Nugent Burke and other family members, the published and unpublished correspondence of those who knew him, relevant public records, and local lore. Since Burke was an Irishman living in England and an outsider making his way between the English aristocracy and Whig peers, his domestic and private lives are important factors in his success. Private friendships had to do for Burke what family connections did for English public officials. In essence, the dynamic interrelationship between Burke's private life and public identity is a key to understanding his politics."--BOOK JACKET. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 28
Seite 8
... Catholic snobbery of such Englishmen as William Hamilton , Sir William Bagot , Sir John Hawkins , the earl of Lauderdale , and the duke of Bedford , Burke responded with the same dignity and scorn that Johnson showed to the false ...
... Catholic snobbery of such Englishmen as William Hamilton , Sir William Bagot , Sir John Hawkins , the earl of Lauderdale , and the duke of Bedford , Burke responded with the same dignity and scorn that Johnson showed to the false ...
Seite 9
... Catholic physician whose attractive personality and talents made him ac- ceptable as an original member of Johnson's Literary Club . Burke first met Jane in 1750 , when he went to Bath during an illness and consulted Dr. Nugent , who ...
... Catholic physician whose attractive personality and talents made him ac- ceptable as an original member of Johnson's Literary Club . Burke first met Jane in 1750 , when he went to Bath during an illness and consulted Dr. Nugent , who ...
Seite 15
... Catholic . Lock's work promises to be the standard reference to the political Burke in its thorough , impartial scholarship detailing each major period in Burke's life and public career . Lock does clarify Burke the man , but it is by ...
... Catholic . Lock's work promises to be the standard reference to the political Burke in its thorough , impartial scholarship detailing each major period in Burke's life and public career . Lock does clarify Burke the man , but it is by ...
Seite 22
... Catholic , and the Burkes ' only surviving daughter , Juliana , 1 was raised in her mother's religion . His father , a member of the established church , reared his sons in that tradi- tion . In 1709 the penal laws were instituted both ...
... Catholic , and the Burkes ' only surviving daughter , Juliana , 1 was raised in her mother's religion . His father , a member of the established church , reared his sons in that tradi- tion . In 1709 the penal laws were instituted both ...
Seite 23
... Catholics who conformed were not outcasts . Conformity for the sake of securing family lands was a way of life in eighteenth - century Ireland . Second , it is impossible to discern the workings of another's conscience , especially at a ...
... Catholics who conformed were not outcasts . Conformity for the sake of securing family lands was a way of life in eighteenth - century Ireland . Second , it is impossible to discern the workings of another's conscience , especially at a ...
Inhalt
21 | |
Burke of Beaconsfield | 44 |
Curmudgeons Domestics and the Fireside Group | 65 |
Make My House Your Inn | 95 |
Unhappy and Unmanaged | 133 |
The World from Beaconsfield | 162 |
Epilogue | 180 |
Notes | 181 |
Bibliography | 202 |
207 | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Beaconsfield Beaconsfield estate Boswell's Bristol brother Burke of Beaconsfield Burke wrote Burke's correspondence Burke's death Burney career Catholic character Charles O'Hara church concern Corres described died Dublin duty Edmond Malone Edmund Burke eighteenth-century election England English fact father Fitzwilliam France Frances Burney French Laurence friends friendship Gilbert Elliot give Gregories Hamilton Hickey House of Commons Ibid India Ireland Irish James Boswell Jane Burke Jane's John Joshua Reynolds knew later letter literary lived London Lord Rockingham Malone Middle Temple mind Minto Nagle nature never noted novus homo Nugent Oxford Parliament political relationship Richard Burke Richard Champion Richard Shackleton Samuel Johnson sense situation speaks talents tell temper thing Thomas thought tion Verney Walker King Waller Warren Hastings Whigs wife William Burke William Windham wish Writings and Speeches WWM BkP young
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 27 - ... with no public direction in what course to pursue his inquiries ; no private assistance to remove the distresses and difficulties which will always embarrass a beginner. In this situation he is expected to sequester himself from the world, and by a tedious, lonely process to extract the theory of law from a mass of undigested learning ; or else, by an assiduous attendance on the courts, to pick up theory and practice together, sufficient to qualify him for the ordinary run of business.