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Edmund Burke

Edmund Burke (/ˈbɜːrk/; 12 January [NS] 1729[5] – 9 July 1797) was an Anglo-Irish statesman, economist, and philosopher. Born in Dublin, Burke served as a member of Parliament (MP) between 1766 and 1794 in the House of Commons of Great Britain with the Whig Party.

Edmund Burke
Portrait by Joshua Reynolds, c. 1769
Rector of the University of Glasgow
In office
1783–1785
Preceded byHenry Dundas
Succeeded byRobert Bontine
Paymaster of the Forces
In office
16 April 1783 – 8 January 1784
Prime Minister
Preceded byIsaac Barré
Succeeded byWilliam Grenville
In office
10 April 1782 – 1 August 1782
Prime MinisterThe Marquess of Rockingham
Preceded byRichard Rigby
Succeeded byIsaac Barré
Member of Parliament
for Malton
In office
18 October 1780 – 20 June 1794
Serving with
Preceded bySavile Finch
Succeeded byRichard Burke Jr.
Member of Parliament
for Bristol
In office
4 November 1774 – 6 September 1780
Serving with Henry Cruger
Preceded byMatthew Brickdale
Succeeded byHenry Lippincott
Member of Parliament
for Wendover
In office
December 1765 – 5 October 1774
Serving with
  • Richard Chandler-Cavendish
  • Robert Darling
  • Joseph Bullock
Preceded byVerney Lovett
Succeeded byJohn Adams
Personal details
Born(1729-01-12)12 January 1729
Dublin, Leinster, Kingdom of Ireland[1]
Died9 July 1797(1797-07-09) (aged 68)
Beaconsfield, England, Kingdom of Great Britain
Political partyWhig (Rockinghamite)
Spouse
Jane Mary Nugent
(m. 1757)
ChildrenRichard Burke Jr.
EducationTrinity College Dublin
Middle Temple
OccupationWriter, politician, journalist, philosopher

Philosophy career
Notable work
EraAge of Enlightenment
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolConservatism
Liberalism
Counter-Enlightenment
InstitutionsLiterary Club (co-founder)
Main interests
Notable ideas
Signature

Burke was a proponent of underpinning virtues with manners in society and of the importance of religious institutions for the moral stability and good of the state.[6] These views were expressed in his A Vindication of Natural Society. He criticised the actions of the British government towards the American colonies, including its taxation policies. Burke also supported the rights of the colonists to resist metropolitan authority, although he opposed the attempt to achieve independence. He is remembered for his support for Catholic emancipation, the impeachment of Warren Hastings from the East India Company, and his staunch opposition to the French Revolution.

In his Reflections on the Revolution in France, Burke asserted that the revolution was destroying the fabric of good society and traditional institutions of state and society and condemned the persecution of the Catholic Church that resulted from it. This led to his becoming the leading figure within the conservative faction of the Whig Party which he dubbed the Old Whigs as opposed to the pro–French Revolution New Whigs led by Charles James Fox.[7]

In the 19th century, Burke was praised by both conservatives and liberals.[8] Subsequently, in the 20th century, he became widely regarded, especially in the United States, as the philosophical founder of conservatism.[9][10]

Early life

 
Edmund Burke

Burke was born in Dublin, Ireland. His mother Mary, née Nagle (c. 1702–1770), was a Roman Catholic who hailed from a County Cork family and a cousin of the Catholic educator Nano Nagle whereas his father Richard (died 1761), a successful solicitor, was a member of the Church of Ireland. It remains unclear whether this is the same Richard Burke who converted from Catholicism.[11][12] The Burgh (Burke) dynasty descends from the Anglo-Norman knight, William de Burgh (d.1205/6), who arrived in Ireland in 1185 following Henry II of England's 1171 invasion of Ireland and is among the "chief Gall or Old English families that assimilated into Gaelic society" (the surname de Burgh (Latinised as de Burgo) was gaelicised in Irish as de Búrca or Búrc which over the centuries became Burke).[13]

Burke adhered to his father's faith and remained a practising Anglican throughout his life, unlike his sister Juliana who was brought up as and remained a Roman Catholic.[14] Later, his political enemies repeatedly accused him of having been educated at the Jesuit College of St. Omer, near Calais, France; and of harbouring secret Catholic sympathies at a time when membership of the Catholic Church would disqualify him from public office per Penal Laws in Ireland. As Burke told Frances Crewe:

Mr. Burke's Enemies often endeavoured to convince the World that he had been bred up in the Catholic Faith, & that his Family were of it, & that he himself had been educated at St. Omer—but this was false, as his father was a regular practitioner of the Law at Dublin, which he could not be unless of the Established Church: & it so happened that though Mr. B—was twice at Paris, he never happened to go through the Town of St. Omer.[15]

After being elected to the House of Commons, Burke took the required oath of allegiance and abjuration, the oath of supremacy and declare against transubstantiation.[16]

As a child, Burke sometimes spent time away from the unhealthy air of Dublin with his mother's family near Killavullen in the Blackwater Valley in County Cork. He received his early education at a Quaker school in Ballitore, County Kildare, some 67 kilometres (42 mi) from Dublin; and possibly like his cousin Nano Nagle at a Hedge school near Killavullen.[17] He remained in correspondence with his schoolmate from there, Mary Leadbeater, the daughter of the school's owner, throughout his life.

In 1744, Burke started at Trinity College Dublin,[18] a Protestant establishment which up until 1793 did not permit Catholics to take degrees.[19] In 1747, he set up a debating society Edmund Burke's Club which in 1770 merged with TCD's Historical Club to form the College Historical Society, the oldest undergraduate society in the world. The minutes of the meetings of Burke's Club remain in the collection of the Historical Society. Burke graduated from Trinity in 1748. Burke's father wanted him to read Law and with this in mind he went to London in 1750, where he entered the Middle Temple, before soon giving up legal study to travel in Continental Europe. After eschewing the Law, he pursued a livelihood through writing.[20]

Early writing

The late Lord Bolingbroke's Letters on the Study and Use of History was published in 1752 and his collected works appeared in 1754. This provoked Burke into writing his first published work, A Vindication of Natural Society: A View of the Miseries and Evils Arising to Mankind, appearing in Spring 1756. Burke imitated Bolingbroke's style and ideas in a reductio ad absurdum of his arguments for deistic rationalism in order to demonstrate their absurdity.[21][22]

 
In A Vindication of Natural Society, Burke argued: "The writers against religion, whilst they oppose every system, are wisely careful never to set up any of their own."

Burke claimed that Bolingbroke's arguments against revealed religion could apply to all social and civil institutions as well.[23] Lord Chesterfield and Bishop Warburton as well as others initially thought that the work was genuinely by Bolingbroke rather than a satire.[21][24] All the reviews of the work were positive, with critics especially appreciative of Burke's quality of writing. Some reviewers failed to notice the ironic nature of the book which led to Burke stating in the preface to the second edition (1757) that it was a satire.[25]

Richard Hurd believed that Burke's imitation was near-perfect and that this defeated his purpose, arguing that an ironist "should take care by a constant exaggeration to make the ridicule shine through the Imitation. Whereas this Vindication is everywhere enforc'd, not only in the language, and on the principles of L. Bol., but with so apparent, or rather so real an earnestness, that half his purpose is sacrificed to the other".[25] A minority of scholars have taken the position that in fact Burke did write the Vindication in earnest, later disowning it only for political reasons.[26][27]

In 1757, Burke published a treatise on aesthetics titled A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful that attracted the attention of prominent Continental thinkers such as Denis Diderot and Immanuel Kant. It was his only purely philosophical work, completed in 1753.[28] When asked by Sir Joshua Reynolds and French Laurence to expand it thirty years later, Burke replied that he was no longer fit for abstract speculation.[29]

On 25 February 1757, Burke signed a contract with Robert Dodsley to write a "history of England from the time of Julius Caesar to the end of the reign of Queen Anne", its length being eighty quarto sheets (640 pages), nearly 400,000 words. It was to be submitted for publication by Christmas 1758.[30] Burke completed the work to the year 1216 and stopped; it was not published until after Burke's death, in an 1812 collection of his works, An Essay Towards an Abridgement of the English History. G. M. Young did not value Burke's history and claimed that it was "demonstrably a translation from the French".[31] On commenting on the story that Burke stopped his history because David Hume published his, Lord Acton said "it is ever to be regretted that the reverse did not occur".[32]

During the year following that contract, Burke founded with Dodsley the influential Annual Register, a publication in which various authors evaluated the international political events of the previous year.[33] The extent to which Burke contributed to the Annual Register is unclear.[34] In his biography of Burke, Robert Murray quotes the Register as evidence of Burke's opinions, yet Philip Magnus in his biography does not cite it directly as a reference.[35] Burke remained the chief editor of the publication until at least 1789 and there is no evidence that any other writer contributed to it before 1766.[35]

On 12 March 1757, Burke married Jane Mary Nugent (1734–1812), daughter of Dr. Christopher Nugent,[36] a Catholic physician who had provided him with medical treatment at Bath. Their son Richard was born on 9 February 1758 while an elder son, Christopher, died in infancy. Burke also helped raise a ward, Edmund Nagle (later Admiral Sir Edmund Nagle), the son of a maternal cousin orphaned in 1763.[37]

At about this same time, Burke was introduced to William Gerard Hamilton (known as "Single-speech Hamilton"). When Hamilton was appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland, Burke accompanied him to Dublin as his private secretary, a position he held for three years. In 1765, Burke became private secretary to the liberal Whig politician Charles, Marquess of Rockingham, then Prime Minister of Great Britain, who remained Burke's close friend and associate until his untimely death in 1782.

Member of Parliament

Dr. Samuel Johnson, authorJames Boswell, biographerSir Joshua Reynolds, hostDavid Garrick, actorEdmund Burke, statesmanPasqual Paoli, Corsican independentCharles Burney, music historianThomas Warton, poet laureateOliver Goldsmith, writerProbably ''The Infant Academy'' (1782)Puck by Joshua ReynoldsUnknown portraitServant, possibly Dr. Johnson's heirUse button to enlarge or use hyperlinks 
A literary party at Sir Joshua Reynolds's.[38] Left to right: James Boswell, Samuel Johnson, Joshua Reynolds, David Garrick, Edmund Burke, Pasquale Paoli, Charles Burney, a servant (possibly Francis Barber), Thomas Warton, Oliver Goldsmith. (select a detail of the image for more information)

In December 1765, Burke entered the House of Commons of the British Parliament as Member for Wendover in Buckinghamshire, a pocket borough in the gift of Lord Fermanagh, later 2nd Earl Verney and a close political ally of Rockingham. After Burke delivered his maiden speech, William Pitt the Elder said he had "spoken in such a manner as to stop the mouths of all Europe" and that the Commons should congratulate itself on acquiring such a Member.[39]

The first great subject Burke addressed was the controversy with the American colonies which soon developed into war and ultimate separation. In reply to the 1769 Grenvillite pamphlet The Present State of the Nation, he published his own pamphlet titled Observations on a Late State of the Nation. Surveying the finances of France, Burke predicts "some extraordinary convulsion in that whole system".[40]

During the same year, with mostly borrowed money, Burke purchased Gregories, a 600-acre (2.4 km2) estate near Beaconsfield. Although the estate included saleable assets such as art works by Titian, Gregories proved a heavy financial burden in the following decades and Burke was never able to repay its purchase price in full. His speeches and writings, having made him famous, led to the suggestion that he was the author of the Letters of Junius.

At about this time, Burke joined the circle of leading intellectuals and artists in London of whom Samuel Johnson was the central luminary. This circle also included David Garrick, Oliver Goldsmith and Joshua Reynolds. Edward Gibbon described Burke as "the most eloquent and rational madman that I ever knew".[41] Although Johnson admired Burke's brilliance, he found him a dishonest politician.[42][43]

Burke took a leading role in the debate regarding the constitutional limits to the executive authority of the King. He argued strongly against unrestrained royal power and for the role of political parties in maintaining a principled opposition capable of preventing abuses, either by the monarch, or by specific factions within the government. His most important publication in this regard was his Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents of 23 April 1770.[44] Burke identified the "discontents" as stemming from the "secret influence" of a neo-Tory group he labelled as the "king's friends", whose system "comprehending the exterior and interior administrations, is commonly called, in the technical language of the Court, Double Cabinet".[45] Britain needed a party with "an unshaken adherence to principle, and attachment to connexion, against every allurement of interest". Party divisions, "whether operating for good or evil, are things inseparable from free government".[46]

 
The Gregories estate purchased by Burke for £20,000 in 1768

During 1771, Burke wrote a bill that would have given juries the right to determine what was libel, if passed. Burke spoke in favour of the bill, but it was opposed by some, including Charles James Fox, not becoming law. When introducing his own bill in 1791 in opposition, Fox repeated almost verbatim the text of Burke's bill without acknowledgement.[47] Burke was prominent in securing the right to publish debates held in Parliament.[48]

Speaking in a Parliamentary debate on the prohibition on the export of grain on 16 November 1770, Burke argued in favour of a free market in corn: "There are no such things as a high, & a low price that is encouraging, & discouraging; there is nothing but a natural price, which grain brings at an universal market".[49] In 1772, Burke was instrumental in the passing of the Repeal of Certain Laws Act 1772 which repealed various old laws against dealers and forestallers in corn.[50]

In the Annual Register for 1772 (published in July 1773), Burke condemned the partition of Poland. He saw it as "the first very great breach in the modern political system of Europe" and as upsetting the balance of power in Europe.[51]

On 3 November 1774, Burke was elected Member for Bristol, at the time "England's second city" and a large constituency with a genuine electoral contest. At the conclusion of the poll, he made his Speech to the Electors of Bristol at the Conclusion of the Poll,[52] a remarkable disclaimer of the constituent-imperative form of democracy, for which he substituted his statement of the "representative mandate" form.[53] He failed to win re-election for that seat in the subsequent 1780 general election.

In May 1778, Burke supported a Parliamentary motion revising restrictions on Irish trade. His constituents, citizens of the great trading city of Bristol, urged Burke to oppose free trade with Ireland. Burke resisted their protestations and said: "If, from this conduct, I shall forfeit their suffrages at an ensuing election, it will stand on record an example to future representatives of the Commons of England, that one man at least had dared to resist the desires of his constituents when his judgment assured him they were wrong".[54]

Burke published Two Letters to Gentlemen of Bristol on the Bills relative to the Trade of Ireland in which he espoused "some of the chief principles of commerce; such as the advantage of free intercourse between all parts of the same kingdom...the evils attending restriction and monopoly...and that the gain of others is not necessarily our loss, but on the contrary an advantage by causing a greater demand for such wares as we have for sale".[55]

Burke also supported the attempts of Sir George Savile to repeal some of the penal laws against Catholics.[56] Burke also called capital punishment "the Butchery which we call justice" in 1776 and in 1780 condemned the use of the pillory for two men convicted for attempting to practice sodomy.[37]

This support for unpopular causes, notably free trade with Ireland and Catholic emancipation, led to Burke losing his seat in 1780. For the remainder of his Parliamentary career, Burke represented Malton, another pocket borough under the Marquess of Rockingham's patronage.

American War of Independence

Burke expressed his support for the grievances of the American Thirteen Colonies under the government of King George III and his appointed representatives. On 19 April 1774, Burke made a speech, "On American Taxation" (published in January 1775), on a motion to repeal the tea duty:

Again and again, revert to your old principles—seek peace and ensue it; leave America, if she has taxable matter in her, to tax herself. I am not here going into the distinctions of rights, nor attempting to mark their boundaries. I do not enter into these metaphysical distinctions; I hate the very sound of them. Leave the Americans as they anciently stood, and these distinctions, born of our unhappy contest, will die along with it...Be content to bind America by laws of trade; you have always done it...Do not burthen them with taxes...But if intemperately, unwisely, fatally, you sophisticate and poison the very source of government by urging subtle deductions, and consequences odious to those you govern, from the unlimited and illimitable nature of supreme sovereignty, you will teach them by these means to call that sovereignty itself in question...If that sovereignty and their freedom cannot be reconciled, which will they take? They will cast your sovereignty in your face. No body of men will be argued into slavery.[57]

On 22 March 1775, Burke delivered in the House of Commons a speech (published during May 1775) on reconciliation with America. Burke appealed for peace as preferable to civil war and reminded the House of Commons of America's growing population, its industry and its wealth. He warned against the notion that the Americans would back down in the face of force since most Americans were of British descent:

[T]he people of the colonies are descendants of Englishmen...They are therefore not only devoted to liberty, but to liberty according to English ideas and on English principles. The people are Protestants...a persuasion not only favourable to liberty, but built upon it...My hold of the colonies is in the close affection which grows from common names, from kindred blood, from similar privileges, and equal protection. These are ties which, though light as air, are as strong as links of iron. Let the colonies always keep the idea of their civil rights associated with your government—they will cling and grapple to you, and no force under heaven will be of power to tear them from their allegiance. But let it be once understood that your government may be one thing and their privileges another, that these two things may exist without any mutual relation—the cement is gone, the cohesion is loosened, and everything hastens to decay and dissolution. As long as you have the wisdom to keep the sovereign authority of this country as the sanctuary of liberty, the sacred temple consecrated to our common faith, wherever the chosen race and sons of England worship freedom, they will turn their faces towards you. The more they multiply, the more friends you will have; the more ardently they love liberty, the more perfect will be their obedience. Slavery they can have anywhere. It is a weed that grows in every soil. They may have it from Spain, they may have it from Prussia. But, until you become lost to all feeling of your true interest and your natural dignity, freedom they can have from none but you.[58]

Burke prized peace with America above all else, pleading with the House of Commons to remember that the interest by way of money received from the American colonies was far more attractive than any sense of putting the colonists in their place:

The proposition is peace. Not peace through the medium of war, not peace to be hunted through the labyrinth of intricate and endless negotiations, not peace to arise out of universal discord...[I]t is simple peace, sought in its natural course and in its ordinary haunts. It is peace sought in the spirit of peace, and laid in principles purely pacific.[58]

Burke was not merely presenting a peace agreement to Parliament, but rather he stepped forward with four reasons against using force, carefully reasoned. He laid out his objections in an orderly manner, focusing on one before moving to the next. His first concern was that the use of force would have to be temporary and that the uprisings and objections to British governance in Colonial America would not be. Second, Burke worried about the uncertainty surrounding whether Britain would win a conflict in America. "An armament", Burke said, "is not a victory".[59] Third, Burke brought up the issue of impairment, stating that it would do the British government no good to engage in a scorched earth war and have the object they desired (America) become damaged or even useless. The American colonists could always retreat into the mountains, but the land they left behind would most likely be unusable, whether by accident or design. The fourth and final reason to avoid the use of force was experience as the British had never attempted to rein in an unruly colony by force and they did not know if it could be done, let alone accomplished thousands of miles away from home.[59] Not only were all of these concerns reasonable, but some turned out to be prophetic—the American colonists did not surrender, even when things looked extremely bleak and the British were ultimately unsuccessful in their attempts to win a war fought on American soil.

It was not temporary force, uncertainty, impairment, or even experience that Burke cited as the primary reason for avoiding war with the American colonies. Rather, it was the character of the American people themselves: "In this character of Americans, a love of freedom is the predominating feature which marks and distinguishes the whole...[T]his fierce spirit of liberty is stronger in the English colonies, probably, than in any other people of the earth...[The] men [are] acute, inquisitive, dextrous, prompt in attack, ready in defence, full of resources".[59] Burke concludes with another plea for peace and a prayer that Britain might avoid actions which in Burke's words "may bring on the destruction of this Empire".[59]

Burke proposed six resolutions to settle the American conflict peacefully:

  1. Allow the American colonists to elect their own representatives, settling the dispute about taxation without representation.
  2. Acknowledge this wrongdoing and apologise for grievances caused.
  3. Procure an efficient manner of choosing and sending these delegates.
  4. Set up a General Assembly in America itself, with powers to regulate taxes.
  5. Stop gathering taxes by imposition (or law) and start gathering them only when they are needed.
  6. Grant needed aid to the colonies.[59]

Had they been passed, the effect of these resolutions can never be known. Unfortunately, Burke delivered this speech just less than a month before the explosive conflict at Concord and Lexington.[60] As these resolutions were not enacted, little was done that would help to dissuade conflict.

Among the reasons this speech was so greatly admired was its passage on Lord Bathurst (1684–1775) in which Burke describes an angel in 1704 prophesying to Bathurst the future greatness of England and also of America: "Young man, There is America—which at this day serves little more than to amuse you with stories of savage men, and uncouth manners; yet shall, before you taste of death, shew itself equal to the whole of that commerce which now attracts the envy of the world".[61] Samuel Johnson was so irritated at hearing it continually praised that he made a parody of it, where the devil appears to a young Whig and predicts that in short time Whiggism will poison even the paradise of America.[61]

The administration of Lord North (1770–1782) tried to defeat the colonist rebellion by military force. British and American forces clashed in 1775 and in 1776 came the American Declaration of Independence. Burke was appalled by celebrations in Britain of the defeat of the Americans at New York and Pennsylvania. He claimed the English national character was being changed by this authoritarianism.[37] Burke wrote: "As to the good people of England, they seem to partake every day more and more of the Character of that administration which they have been induced to tolerate. I am satisfied, that within a few years there has been a great Change in the National Character. We seem no longer that eager, inquisitive, jealous, fiery people, which we have been formerly".[62]

In Burke's view, the British government was fighting "the American English" ("our English Brethren in the Colonies"), with a Germanic king employing "the hireling sword of German boors and vassals" to destroy the English liberties of the colonists.[37] On American independence, Burke wrote: "I do not know how to wish success to those whose Victory is to separate from us a large and noble part of our Empire. Still less do I wish success to injustice, oppression and absurdity".[63]

During the Gordon Riots in 1780, Burke became a target of hostility and his home was placed under armed guard by the military.[64]

Paymaster of the Forces

 
In Cincinnatus in Retirement (1782), James Gillray caricatured Burke's support of rights for Catholics

The fall of North led to Rockingham being recalled to power in March 1782. Burke was appointed Paymaster of the Forces and a Privy Counsellor, but without a seat in Cabinet. Rockingham's unexpected death in July 1782 and replacement with Shelburne as Prime Minister put an end to his administration after only a few months, but Burke did manage to introduce two Acts.

The Paymaster General Act 1782 ended the post as a lucrative sinecure. Previously, Paymasters had been able to draw on money from HM Treasury at their discretion. Instead, now they were required to put the money they had requested to withdraw from the Treasury into the Bank of England, from where it was to be withdrawn for specific purposes. The Treasury would receive monthly statements of the Paymaster's balance at the Bank. This Act was repealed by Shelburne's administration, but the Act that replaced it repeated verbatim almost the whole text of the Burke Act.[65]

The Civil List and Secret Service Money Act 1782 was a watered-down version of Burke's original intentions as outlined in his famous Speech on Economical Reform of 11 February 1780. However, he managed to abolish 134 offices in the royal household and civil administration.[66] The third Secretary of State and the Board of Trade were abolished and pensions were limited and regulated. The Act was anticipated to save £72,368 a year.[67]

In February 1783, Burke resumed the post of Paymaster of the Forces when Shelburne's government fell and was replaced by a coalition headed by North that included Charles James Fox. That coalition fell in 1783 and was succeeded by the long Tory administration of William Pitt the Younger which lasted until 1801. Accordingly, having supported Fox and North, Burke was in opposition for the remainder of his political life.

Representative democracy

In 1774, Burke's Speech to the Electors at Bristol at the Conclusion of the Poll was noted for its defence of the principles of representative government against the notion that those elected to assemblies like Parliament are, or should be, merely delegates:

Certainly, Gentlemen, it ought to be the happiness and glory of a Representative, to live in the strictest union, the closest correspondence, and the most unreserved communication with his constituents. Their wishes ought to have great weight with him; their opinion, high respect; their business, unremitted attention. It is his duty to sacrifice his repose, his pleasures, his satisfactions, to theirs; and above all, ever, and in all cases, to prefer their interest to his own. But his unbiassed opinion, his mature judgment, his enlightened conscience, he ought not to sacrifice to you, to any man, or to any sett of men living. These he does not derive from your pleasure; no, nor from the Law and the Constitution. They are a trust from Providence, for the abuse of which he is deeply answerable. Your Representative owes you, not his industry only, but his judgment; and he betrays, instead of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your opinion.

My worthy Colleague says, his Will ought to be subservient to yours. If that be all, the thing is innocent. If Government were a matter of Will upon any side, yours, without question, ought to be superior. But Government and Legislation are matters of reason and judgement, and not of inclination; and, what sort of reason is that, in which the determination precedes the discussion; in which one sett of men deliberate, and another decide; and where those who form the conclusion are perhaps three hundred miles distant from those who hear the arguments?

To deliver an opinion is the right of all men; that of constituents is a weighty and respectable opinion which a Representative ought always to rejoice to hear; and which he ought always most seriously to consider. But authoritative instructions; mandates issued, which the member is bound blindly and implicitly to obey, to vote, and to argue for, though contrary to the clearest conviction of his judgment and conscience; these are things utterly unknown to the laws of this land, and which arise from a fundamental mistake of the whole order and tenour of our constitution.

Parliament is not a congress of ambassadors from different and hostile interests; which interests each must maintain, as an agent and advocate, against other agents and advocates; but Parliament is a deliberative assembly of one nation, with one interest, that of the whole; where, not local purposes, not local prejudices ought to guide, but the general good, resulting from the general reason of the whole. You choose a member, indeed; but when you have chosen him, he is not a member of Bristol, but he is a member of Parliament.[68][69]

It is often forgotten in this connection that Burke, as detailed below, was an opponent of slavery, and therefore his conscience was refusing to support a trade in which many of his Bristol electors were lucratively involved.

Political scientist Hanna Pitkin points out that Burke linked the interest of the district with the proper behaviour of its elected official, explaining: "Burke conceives of broad, relatively fixed interest, few in number and clearly defined, of which any group or locality has just one. These interests are largely economic or associated with particular localities whose livelihood they characterize, in his over-all prosperity they involve".[70]

Burke was a leading sceptic with respect to democracy. While admitting that theoretically in some cases it might be desirable, he insisted a democratic government in Britain in his day would not only be inept, but also oppressive. He opposed democracy for three basic reasons. First, government required a degree of intelligence and breadth of knowledge of the sort that occurred rarely among the common people. Second, he thought that if they had the vote, common people had dangerous and angry passions that could be aroused easily by demagogues, fearing that the authoritarian impulses that could be empowered by these passions would undermine cherished traditions and established religion, leading to violence and confiscation of property. Third, Burke warned that democracy would create a tyranny over unpopular minorities, who needed the protection of the upper classes.[71]

Opposition to the slave trade

Burke proposed a bill to ban slaveholders from being able to sit in the House of Commons, claiming they were a danger incompatible with traditional notions of British liberty.[72] While Burke did believe that Africans were "barbaric" and needed to be "civilised" by Christianity, Gregory Collins argues that this was not an unusual attitude amongst abolitionists at the time. Furthermore, Burke seemed to believe that Christianity would provide a civilising benefit to any group of people, as he believed Christianity had "tamed" European civilisation and regarded Southern European peoples as equally savage and barbarous. Collins also suggests that Burke viewed the "uncivilised" behaviour of African slaves as being partially caused by slavery itself, as he believed that making someone a slave stripped them of any virtues and rendered them mentally deficient, regardless of race. Burke proposed a gradual program of emancipation called Sketch of a Negro Code,[73] which Collins argues was quite detailed for the time. Collins concludes that Burke's "gradualist" position on the emancipation of slaves, while perhaps seeming ridiculous to some modern-day readers, was nonetheless sincere.[74]

India and the impeachment of Warren Hastings

For years, Burke pursued impeachment efforts against Warren Hastings, formerly Governor-General of Bengal, that resulted in the trial during 1786. His interaction with the British dominion of India began well before Hastings' impeachment trial. For two decades prior to the impeachment, Parliament had dealt with the Indian issue. This trial was the pinnacle of years of unrest and deliberation.[75] In 1781, Burke was first able to delve into the issues surrounding the East India Company when he was appointed Chairman of the Commons Select Committee on East Indian Affairs—from that point until the end of the trial, India was Burke's primary concern. This committee was charged "to investigate alleged injustices in Bengal, the war with Hyder Ali, and other Indian difficulties".[76] While Burke and the committee focused their attention on these matters, a second secret committee was formed to assess the same issues. Both committee reports were written by Burke. Among other purposes, the reports conveyed to the Indian princes that Britain would not wage war on them, along with demanding that the East India Company should recall Hastings. This was Burke's first call for substantive change regarding imperial practices. When addressing the whole House of Commons regarding the committee report, Burke described the Indian issue as one that "began 'in commerce' but 'ended in empire'".[77]

On 28 February 1785, Burke delivered a now-famous speech, The Nabob of Arcot's Debts, wherein he condemned the damage to India by the East India Company. In the province of the Carnatic, the Indians had constructed a system of reservoirs to make the soil fertile in a naturally dry region, and centred their society on the husbandry of water:

These are the monuments of real kings, who were the fathers of their people; testators to a posterity which they embraced as their own. These are the grand sepulchres built by ambition; but by the ambition of an insatiable benevolence, which, not contented with reigning in the dispensation of happiness during the contracted term of human life, had strained, with all the reachings and graspings of a vivacious mind, to extend the dominion of their bounty beyond the limits of nature, and to perpetuate themselves through generations of generations, the guardians, the protectors, the nourishers of mankind.[78]

Burke claimed that the advent of East India Company domination in India had eroded much that was good in these traditions and that as a consequence of this and the lack of new customs to replace them the Indian populace under Company rule was needlessly suffering. He set about establishing a set of imperial expectations, whose moral foundation would in his opinion warrant an overseas empire.[79]

On 4 April 1786, Burke presented the House of Commons with the Article of Charge of High Crimes and Misdemeanors against Hastings. The impeachment in Westminster Hall which did not begin until 14 February 1788 would be the "first major public discursive event of its kind in England",[80]: 589  bringing the morality of imperialism to the forefront of public perception. Burke was already known for his eloquent rhetorical skills and his involvement in the trial only enhanced its popularity and significance.[80]: 590  Burke's indictment, fuelled by emotional indignation, branded Hastings a "captain-general of iniquity" who never dined without "creating a famine", whose heart was "gangrened to the core" and who resembled both a "spider of Hell" and a "ravenous vulture devouring the carcasses of the dead".[81] The House of Commons eventually impeached Hastings, but subsequently the House of Lords acquitted him of all charges.[80][82]

French Revolution: 1688 versus 1789

 
Smelling out a Rat;—or—The Atheistical-Revolutionist disturbed in his Midnight "Calculations" (1790) by Gillray, depicting a caricature of Burke holding a crown and a cross while the seated man Richard Price is writing "On the Benefits of Anarchy Regicide Atheism" beneath a picture of the execution of Charles I of England
 
Reflections on the Revolution in France, And on the Proceedings in Certain Societies in London Relative to that Event. In a Letter Intended to Have Been Sent to a Gentleman in Paris. By the Right Honourable Edmund Burke

Initially, Burke did not condemn the French Revolution. In a letter of 9 August 1789, he wrote: "England gazing with astonishment at a French struggle for Liberty and not knowing whether to blame or to applaud! The thing indeed, though I thought I saw something like it in progress for several years, has still something in it paradoxical and Mysterious. The spirit it is impossible not to admire; but the old Parisian ferocity has broken out in a shocking manner".[83] The events of 5–6 October 1789, when a crowd of Parisian women marched on Versailles to compel King Louis XVI to return to Paris, turned Burke against it. In a letter to his son Richard Burke dated 10 October, he said: "This day I heard from Laurence who has sent me papers confirming the portentous state of France—where the Elements which compose Human Society seem all to be dissolved, and a world of Monsters to be produced in the place of it—where Mirabeau presides as the Grand Anarch; and the late Grand Monarch makes a figure as ridiculous as pitiable".[84] On 4 November, Charles-Jean-François Depont wrote to Burke, requesting that he endorse the Revolution. Burke replied that any critical language of it by him should be taken "as no more than the expression of doubt", but he added: "You may have subverted Monarchy, but not recover'd freedom".[85] In the same month, he described France as "a country undone". Burke's first public condemnation of the Revolution occurred on the debate in Parliament on the army estimates on 9 February 1790 provoked by praise of the Revolution by Pitt and Fox:

Since the House had been prorogued in the summer much work was done in France. The French had shewn themselves the ablest architects of ruin that had hitherto existed in the world. In that very short space of time they had completely pulled down to the ground, their monarchy; their church; their nobility; their law; their revenue; their army; their navy; their commerce; their arts; and their manufactures...[There was a danger of] an imitation of the excesses of an irrational, unprincipled, proscribing, confiscating, plundering, ferocious, bloody and tyrannical democracy...[In religion] the danger of their example is no longer from intolerance, but from Atheism; a foul, unnatural vice, foe to all the dignity and consolation of mankind; which seems in France, for a long time, to have been embodied into a faction, accredited, and almost avowed.[86]

In January 1790, Burke read Richard Price's sermon of 4 November 1789 entitled A Discourse on the Love of Our Country to the Revolution Society.[87] That society had been founded to commemorate the Glorious Revolution of 1688. In this sermon, Price espoused the philosophy of universal "Rights of Men". Price argued that love of our country "does not imply any conviction of the superior value of it to other countries, or any particular preference of its laws and constitution of government".[88] Instead, Price asserted that Englishmen should see themselves "more as citizens of the world than as members of any particular community".

A debate between Price and Burke ensued that was "the classic moment at which two fundamentally different conceptions of national identity were presented to the English public".[89] Price claimed that the principles of the Glorious Revolution included "the right to choose our own governors, to cashier them for misconduct, and to frame a government for ourselves".

Immediately after reading Price's sermon, Burke wrote a draft of what eventually became Reflections on the Revolution in France.[90] On 13 February 1790, a notice in the press said that shortly Burke would publish a pamphlet on the Revolution and its British supporters, but he spent the year revising and expanding it. On 1 November, he finally published the Reflections and it was an immediate best-seller.[91][92] Priced at five shillings, it was more expensive than most political pamphlets, but by the end of 1790 it had gone through ten printings and sold approximately 17,500 copies. A French translation appeared on 29 November and on 30 November the translator Pierre-Gaëton Dupont wrote to Burke saying 2,500 copies had already been sold. The French translation ran to ten printings by June 1791.[93]

What the Glorious Revolution had meant was as important to Burke and his contemporaries as it had been for the last one hundred years in British politics.[94] In the Reflections, Burke argued against Price's interpretation of the Glorious Revolution and instead, gave a classic Whig defence of it.[95] Burke argued against the idea of abstract, metaphysical rights of humans and instead advocated national tradition:

The Revolution was made to preserve our antient indisputable laws and liberties, and that antient constitution of government which is our only security for law and liberty...The very idea of the fabrication of a new government, is enough to fill us with disgust and horror. We wished at the period of the Revolution, and do now wish, to derive all we possess as an inheritance from our forefathers. Upon that body and stock of inheritance we have taken care not to inoculate any cyon [scion] alien to the nature of the original plant...Our oldest reformation is that of Magna Charta. You will see that Sir Edward Coke, that great oracle of our law, and indeed all the great men who follow him, to Blackstone, are industrious to prove the pedigree of our liberties. They endeavour to prove that the ancient charter...were nothing more than a re-affirmance of the still more ancient standing law of the kingdom...In the famous law...called the Petition of Right, the parliament says to the king, "Your subjects have inherited this freedom", claiming their franchises not on abstract principles "as the rights of men", but as the rights of Englishmen, and as a patrimony derived from their forefathers.[96]

Burke said: "We fear God, we look up with awe to kings; with affection to Parliaments; with duty to magistrates; with reverence to priests; and with respect to nobility. Why? Because when such ideas are brought before our minds, it is natural to be so affected".[97] Burke defended this prejudice on the grounds that it is "the general bank and capital of nations, and of ages" and superior to individual reason, which is small in comparison. "Prejudice", Burke claimed, "is of ready application in the emergency; it previously engages the mind in a steady course of wisdom and virtue, and does not leave the man hesitating in the moment of decision, sceptical, puzzled, and unresolved. Prejudice renders a man's virtue his habit".[98] Burke criticised social contract theory by claiming that society is indeed a contract, although it is "a partnership not only between those who are living, but between those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are to be born".[99]

The most famous passage in Burke's Reflections was his description of the events of 5–6 October 1789 and the part of Marie-Antoinette in them. Burke's account differs little from modern historians who have used primary sources.[100] His use of flowery language to describe it provoked both praise and criticism. Philip Francis wrote to Burke saying that what he wrote of Marie-Antoinette was "pure foppery".[101] Edward Gibbon reacted differently: "I adore his chivalry".[102] Burke was informed by an Englishman who had talked with the Duchesse de Biron that when Marie-Antoinette was reading the passage she burst into tears and took considerable time to finish reading it.[103] Price had rejoiced that the French king had been "led in triumph" during the October Days, but to Burke this symbolised the opposing revolutionary sentiment of the Jacobins and the natural sentiments of those who shared his own view with horror—that the ungallant assault on Marie-Antoinette was a cowardly attack on a defenceless woman.[104]

Louis XVI translated the Reflections "from end to end" into French.[105] Fellow Whig MPs Richard Sheridan and Charles James Fox disagreed with Burke and split with him. Fox thought the Reflections to be "in very bad taste" and "favouring Tory principles".[106] Other Whigs such as the Duke of Portland and Earl Fitzwilliam privately agreed with Burke, but they did not wish for a public breach with their Whig colleagues.[107] Burke wrote on 29 November 1790: "I have received from the Duke of Portland, Lord Fitzwilliam, the Duke of Devonshire, Lord John Cavendish, Montagu (Frederick Montagu MP), and a long et cetera of the old Stamina of the Whiggs a most full approbation of the principles of that work and a kind indulgence to the execution".[108] The Duke of Portland said in 1791 that when anyone criticised the Reflections to him, he informed them that he had recommended the book to his sons as containing the true Whig creed.[109]

In the opinion of Paul Langford,[37] Burke crossed something of a Rubicon when he attended a levee on 3 February 1791 to meet the King, later described by Jane Burke as follows:

On his coming to Town for the Winter, as he generally does, he went to the Levee with the Duke of Portland, who went with Lord William to kiss hands on his going into the Guards—while Lord William was kissing hands, The King was talking to The Duke, but his Eyes were fixed on [Burke] who was standing in the Crowd, and when He said His say to The Duke, without waiting for [Burke]'s coming up in his turn, The King went up to him, and, after the usual questions of how long have you been in Town and the weather, He said you have been very much employed of late, and very much confined. [Burke] said, no, Sir, not more than usual—You have and very well employed too, but there are none so deaf as those that w'ont hear, and none so blind as those that w'ont see—[Burke] made a low bow, Sir, I certainly now understand you, but was afraid my vanity or presumption might have led me to imagine what Your Majesty has said referred to what I have done—You cannot be vain—You have been of use to us all, it is a general opinion, is it not so Lord Stair? who was standing near. It is said Lord Stair;—Your Majesty's adopting it, Sir, will make the opinion general, said [Burke]—I know it is the general opinion, and I know that there is no Man who calls himself a Gentleman that must not think himself obliged to you, for you have supported the cause of the Gentlemen—You know the tone at Court is a whisper, but The King said all this loud, so as to be heard by every one at Court.[110]

Burke's Reflections sparked a pamphlet war. Mary Wollstonecraft was one of the first into print, publishing A Vindication of the Rights of Men a few weeks after Burke. Thomas Paine followed with the Rights of Man in 1791. James Mackintosh, who wrote Vindiciae Gallicae, was the first to see the Reflections as "the manifesto of a Counter Revolution". Mackintosh later agreed with Burke's views, remarking in December 1796 after meeting him that Burke was "minutely and accurately informed, to a wonderful exactness, with respect to every fact relating to the French Revolution".[111] Mackintosh later said: "Burke was one of the first thinkers as well as one of the greatest orators of his time. He is without parallel in any age, excepting perhaps Lord Bacon and Cicero; and his works contain an ampler store of political and moral wisdom than can be found in any other writer whatever".[112]

In November 1790, François-Louis-Thibault de Menonville, a member of the National Assembly of France, wrote to Burke, praising Reflections and requesting more "very refreshing mental food" that he could publish.[113] This Burke did in April 1791 when he published A Letter to a Member of the National Assembly. Burke called for external forces to reverse the Revolution and included an attack on the late French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau as being the subject of a personality cult that had developed in revolutionary France. Although Burke conceded that Rousseau sometimes showed "a considerable insight into human nature", he mostly was critical. Although he did not meet Rousseau on his visit to Britain in 1766–1767, Burke was a friend of David Hume, with whom Rousseau had stayed. Burke said Rousseau "entertained no principle either to influence of his heart, or to guide his understanding—but vanity"—which he "was possessed to a degree little short of madness". He also cited Rousseau's Confessions as evidence that Rousseau had a life of "obscure and vulgar vices" that was not "chequered, or spotted here and there, with virtues, or even distinguished by a single good action". Burke contrasted Rousseau's theory of universal benevolence and his having sent his children to a foundling hospital, stating that he was "a lover of his kind, but a hater of his kindred".[114]

These events and the disagreements that arose from them within the Whig Party led to its break-up and to the rupture of Burke's friendship with Fox. In debate in Parliament on Britain's relations with Russia, Fox praised the principles of the Revolution, although Burke was not able to reply at this time as he was "overpowered by continued cries of question from his own side of the House".[115] When Parliament was debating the Quebec Bill for a constitution for Canada, Fox praised the Revolution and criticised some of Burke's arguments such as hereditary power. On 6 May 1791, Burke used the opportunity to answer Fox during another debate in Parliament on the Quebec Bill and condemn the new French Constitution and "the horrible consequences flowing from the French idea of the Rights of Man".[116] Burke asserted that those ideas were the antithesis of both the British and the American constitutions.[117] Burke was interrupted and Fox intervened, saying that Burke should be allowed to carry on with his speech. However, a vote of censure was moved against Burke for noticing the affairs of France which was moved by Lord Sheffield and seconded by Fox.[118] Pitt made a speech praising Burke and Fox made a speech—both rebuking and complimenting Burke. He questioned the sincerity of Burke, who seemed to have forgotten the lessons he had learned from him, quoting from Burke's own speeches of fourteen and fifteen years before. Burke's response was as follows:

It certainly was indiscreet at any period, but especially at his time of life, to parade enemies, or give his friends occasion to desert him; yet if his firm and steady adherence to the British constitution placed him in such a dilemma, he would risk all, and, as public duty and public experience taught him, with his last words exclaim, "Fly from the French Constitution".[116]

At this point, Fox whispered that there was "no loss of friendship". "I regret to say there is", Burke replied, "I have indeed made a great sacrifice; I have done my duty though I have lost my friend. There is something in the detested French constitution that envenoms every thing it touches".[119] This provoked a reply from Fox, yet he was unable to give his speech for some time since he was overcome with tears and emotion. Fox appealed to Burke to remember their inalienable friendship, but he also repeated his criticisms of Burke and uttered "unusually bitter sarcasms".[119] This only aggravated the rupture between the two men. Burke demonstrated his separation from the party on 5 June 1791 by writing to Fitzwilliam, declining money from him.[120]

Burke was dismayed that some Whigs, instead of reaffirming the principles of the Whig Party he laid out in the Reflections, had rejected them in favour of "French principles" and that they criticised Burke for abandoning Whig principles. Burke wanted to demonstrate his fidelity to Whig principles and feared that acquiescence to Fox and his followers would allow the Whig Party to become a vehicle for Jacobinism.

Burke knew that many members of the Whig Party did not share Fox's views and he wanted to provoke them into condemning the French Revolution. Burke wrote that he wanted to represent the whole Whig Party "as tolerating, and by a toleration, countenancing those proceedings" so that he could "stimulate them to a public declaration of what every one of their acquaintance privately knows to be...their sentiments".[121] On 3 August 1791, Burke published his Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs in which he renewed his criticism of the radical revolutionary programmes inspired by the French Revolution and attacked the Whigs who supported them as holding principles contrary to those traditionally held by the Whig Party.

Burke owned two copies of what has been called "that practical compendium of Whig political theory", namely The Tryal of Dr. Henry Sacheverell (1710).[122] Burke wrote of the trial: "It rarely happens to a party to have the opportunity of a clear, authentic, recorded, declaration of their political tenets upon the subject of a great constitutional event like that of the [Glorious] Revolution".[122] Writing in the third person, Burke asserted in his Appeal:

[The] foundations laid down by the Commons, on the trial of Doctor Sacheverel, for justifying the revolution of 1688, are the very same laid down in Mr. Burke's Reflections; that is to say,—a breach of the original contract, implied and expressed in the constitution of this country, as a scheme of government fundamentally and inviolably fixed in King, Lords and Commons.—That the fundamental subversion of this antient constitution, by one of its parts, having been attempted, and in effect accomplished, justified the Revolution. That it was justified only upon the necessity of the case; as the only means left for the recovery of that antient constitution, formed by the original contract of the British state; as well as for the future preservation of the same government. These are the points to be proved.[122]

Burke then provided quotations from Paine's Rights of Man to demonstrate what the New Whigs believed. Burke's belief that Foxite principles corresponded to Paine's was genuine.[123] Finally, Burke denied that a majority of "the people" had, or ought to have, the final say in politics and alter society at their pleasure. People had rights, but also duties and these duties were not voluntary. According to Burke, the people could not overthrow morality derived from God.[124]

Although Whig grandees such as Portland and Fitzwilliam privately agreed with Burke's Appeal, they wished he had used more moderate language. Fitzwilliam saw the Appeal as containing "the doctrines I have sworn by, long and long since".[125] Francis Basset, a backbench Whig MP, wrote to Burke that "though for reasons which I will not now detail I did not then deliver my sentiments, I most perfectly differ from Mr. Fox & from the great Body of opposition on the French Revolution".[125] Burke sent a copy of the Appeal to the King and the King requested a friend to communicate to Burke that he had read it "with great Satisfaction".[125] Burke wrote of its reception: "Not one word from one of our party. They are secretly galled. They agree with me to a title; but they dare not speak out for fear of hurting Fox...They leave me to myself; they see that I can do myself justice".[120] Charles Burney viewed it as "a most admirable book—the best & most useful on political subjects that I have ever seen", but he believed the differences in the Whig Party between Burke and Fox should not be aired publicly.[126]

Eventually, most of the Whigs sided with Burke and gave their support to William Pitt the Younger's Tory government which in response to France's declaration of war against Britain declared war on France's Revolutionary Government in 1793.

In December 1791, Burke sent government ministers his Thoughts on French Affairs where he put forward three main points, namely that no counter-revolution in France would come about by purely domestic causes; that the longer the Revolutionary Government exists, the stronger it becomes; and that the Revolutionary Government's interest and aim is to disturb all of the other governments of Europe.[127]

As a Whig, Burke did not wish to see an absolute monarchy again in France after the extirpation of Jacobinism. Writing to an émigré in 1791, Burke expressed his views against a restoration of the Ancien Régime:

When such a complete convulsion has shaken the State, and hardly left any thing whatsoever, either in civil arrangements, or in the Characters and disposition of men's minds, exactly where it was, whatever shall be settled although in the former persons and upon old forms, will be in some measure a new thing and will labour under something of the weakness as well as other inconveniences of a Change. My poor opinion is that you mean to establish what you call 'L'ancien Régime,' If any one means that system of Court Intrigue miscalled a Government as it stood, at Versailles before the present confusions as the thing to be established, that I believe will be found absolutely impossible; and if you consider the Nature, as well of persons, as of affairs, I flatter myself you must be of my opinion. That was tho' not so violent a State of Anarchy as well as the present. If it were even possible to lay things down exactly as they stood, before the series of experimental politicks began, I am quite sure that they could not long continue in that situation. In one Sense of L'Ancien Régime I am clear that nothing else can reasonably be done.[128]

Burke delivered a speech on the debate of the Aliens Bill on 28 December 1792. He supported the Bill as it would exclude "murderous atheists, who would pull down Church and state; religion and God; morality and happiness".[129] The peroration included a reference to a French order for 3,000 daggers. Burke revealed a dagger he had concealed in his coat and threw it to the floor: "This is what you are to gain by an alliance with France". Burke picked up the dagger and continued:

When they smile, I see blood trickling down their faces; I see their insidious purposes; I see that the object of all their cajoling is—blood! I now warn my countrymen to beware of these execrable philosophers, whose only object it is to destroy every thing that is good here, and to establish immorality and murder by precept and example—'Hic niger est hunc tu Romane caveto' ['Such a man is evil; beware of him, Roman'. Horace, Satires I. 4. 85.].[129]

Burke supported the war against Revolutionary France, seeing Britain as fighting on the side of the royalists and émigres in a civil war, rather than fighting against the whole nation of France.[130] Burke also supported the royalist uprising in La Vendée, describing it on 4 November 1793 in a letter to William Windham as "the sole affair I have much heart in".[130] Burke wrote to Henry Dundas on 7 October urging him to send reinforcements there as he viewed it as the only theatre in the war that might lead to a march on Paris, but Dundas did not follow Burke's advice.

Burke believed the British government was not taking the uprising seriously enough, a view reinforced by a letter he had received from the Prince Charles of France (S.A.R. le comte d'Artois), dated 23 October, requesting that he intercede on behalf of the royalists to the government. Burke was forced to reply on 6 November: "I am not in His Majesty's Service; or at all consulted in his Affairs".[131] Burke published his Remarks on the Policy of the Allies with Respect to France, begun in October, where he said: "I am sure every thing has shewn us that in this war with France, one Frenchman is worth twenty foreigners. La Vendée is a proof of this".[132]

On 20 June 1794, Burke received a vote of thanks from the House of Commons for his services in the Hastings Trial and he immediately resigned his seat, being replaced by his son Richard. A tragic blow fell upon Burke with the loss of Richard in August 1794, to whom he was tenderly attached and in whom he saw signs of promise[37] which were not patent to others and which in fact appear to have been non-existent, although this view may have rather reflected the fact that his son Richard had worked successfully in the early battle for Catholic emancipation. King George III, whose favour he had gained by his attitude on the French Revolution, wished to create him Earl of Beaconsfield, but the death of his son deprived the opportunity of such an honour and all its attractions, so the only award he would accept was a pension of £2,500. Even this modest reward was attacked by the Duke of Bedford and the Earl of Lauderdale, to whom Burke replied in his Letter to a Noble Lord (1796):[133] "It cannot at this time be too often repeated; line upon line; precept upon precept; until it comes into the currency of a proverb, To innovate is not to reform".[134] He argued that he was rewarded on merit, but the Duke of Bedford received his rewards from inheritance alone, his ancestor being the original pensioner: "Mine was from a mild and benevolent sovereign; his from Henry the Eighth".[135] Burke also hinted at what would happen to such people if their revolutionary ideas were implemented and included a description of the British Constitution:

But as to our country and our race, as long as the well compacted structure of our church and state, the sanctuary, the holy of holies of that ancient law, defended by reverence, defended by power, a fortress at once and a temple, shall stand inviolate on the brow of the British Sion—as long as the British Monarchy, not more limited than fenced by the orders of the State, shall, like the proud Keep of Windsor, rising in the majesty of proportion, and girt with the double belt of its kindred and coeval towers, as long as this awful structure shall oversee and guard the subjected land—so long as the mounds and dykes of the low, fat, Bedford level will have nothing to fear from all the pickaxes of all the levellers of France.[136]

Burke's last publications were the Letters on a Regicide Peace (October 1796), called forth by negotiations for peace with France by the Pitt government. Burke regarded this as appeasement, injurious to national dignity and honour.[137] In his Second Letter, Burke wrote of the French Revolutionary government: "Individuality is left out of their scheme of government. The State is all in all. Everything is referred to the production of force; afterwards, everything is trusted to the use of it. It is military in its principle, in its maxims, in its spirit, and in all its movements. The State has dominion and conquest for its sole objects—dominion over minds by proselytism, over bodies by arms".[138]

This is held to be the first explanation of the modern concept of totalitarian state.[139] Burke regarded the war with France as ideological, against an "armed doctrine". He wished that France would not be partitioned due to the effect this would have on the balance of power in Europe and that the war was not against France, but against the revolutionaries governing her.[140] Burke said: "It is not France extending a foreign empire over other nations: it is a sect aiming at universal empire, and beginning with the conquest of France".[37]

Later life

In November 1795, there was a debate in Parliament on the high price of corn and Burke wrote a memorandum to Pitt on the subject. In December, Samuel Whitbread MP introduced a bill giving magistrates the power to fix minimum wages and Fox said he would vote for it. This debate probably led Burke to editing his memorandum as there appeared a notice that Burke would soon publish a letter on the subject to the Secretary of the Board of Agriculture Arthur Young, but he failed to complete it. These fragments were inserted into the memorandum after his death and published posthumously in 1800 as Thoughts and Details on Scarcity.[141] In it, Burke expounded "some of the doctrines of political economists bearing upon agriculture as a trade".[142] Burke criticised policies such as maximum prices and state regulation of wages and set out what the limits of government should be:

That the State ought to confine itself to what regards the State, or the creatures of the State, namely, the exterior establishment of its religion; its magistracy; its revenue; its military force by sea and land; the corporations that owe their existence to its fiat; in a word, to every thing that is truly and properly public, to the public peace, to the public safety, to the public order, to the public prosperity.[143]

The economist Adam Smith remarked that Burke was "the only man I ever knew who thinks on economic subjects exactly as I do, without any previous communications having passed between us".[144]

Writing to a friend in May 1795, Burke surveyed the causes of discontent: "I think I can hardly overrate the malignity of the principles of Protestant ascendency, as they affect Ireland; or of Indianism [i.e. corporate tyranny, as practiced by the British East Indies Company], as they affect these countries, and as they affect Asia; or of Jacobinism, as they affect all Europe, and the state of human society itself. The last is the greatest evil".[145] By March 1796, Burke had changed his mind: "Our Government and our Laws are beset by two different Enemies, which are sapping its foundations, Indianism, and Jacobinism. In some Cases they act separately, in some they act in conjunction: But of this I am sure; that the first is the worst by far, and the hardest to deal with; and for this amongst other reasons, that it weakens discredits, and ruins that force, which ought to be employed with the greatest Credit and Energy against the other; and that it furnishes Jacobinism with its strongest arms against all formal Government".[146]

For more than a year prior to his death, Burke knew that his stomach was "irrecoverably ruind".[37] After hearing that Burke was nearing death, Fox wrote to Mrs. Burke enquiring after him. Fox received the reply the next day:

Mrs. Burke presents her compliments to Mr. Fox, and thanks him for his obliging inquiries. Mrs. Burke communicated his letter to Mr. Burke, and by his desire has to inform Mr. Fox that it has cost Mr. Burke the most heart-felt pain to obey the stern voice of his duty in rending asunder a long friendship, but that he deemed this sacrifice necessary; that his principles continue the same; and that in whatever of life may yet remain to him, he conceives that he must live for others and not for himself. Mr. Burke is convinced that the principles which he has endeavoured to maintain are necessary to the welfare and dignity of his country, and that these principles can be enforced only by the general persuasion of his sincerity.[147]

Burke died in Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, on 9 July 1797[148] and was buried there alongside his son and brother.

Legacy

 
Statue of Edmund Burke in Washington, D.C.

Burke is regarded by most political historians in the English-speaking world as a liberal conservative[149] and the father of modern British conservatism.[150][151][152] Burke was utilitarian and empirical in his arguments while Joseph de Maistre, a fellow conservative from the Continent, was more providentialist and sociological and deployed a more confrontational tone in his arguments.[153]

Burke believed that property was essential to human life. Because of his conviction that people desire to be ruled and controlled, the division of property formed the basis for social structure, helping develop control within a property-based hierarchy. He viewed the social changes brought on by property as the natural order of events which should be taking place as the human race progressed. With the division of property and the class system, he also believed that it kept the monarch in check to the needs of the classes beneath the monarch. Since property largely aligned or defined divisions of social class, class too was seen as natural—part of a social agreement that the setting of persons into different classes, is the mutual benefit of all subjects. Concern for property is not Burke's only influence. Christopher Hitchens summarises as follows: "If modern conservatism can be held to derive from Burke, it is not just because he appealed to property owners in behalf of stability but also because he appealed to an everyday interest in the preservation of the ancestral and the immemorial".[154]

Burke's support for the causes of the "oppressed majorities", such as Irish Catholics and Indians, led him to be at the receiving end of hostile criticism from Tories; while his opposition to the spread of the French Republic (and its radical ideals) across Europe led to similar charges from Whigs. As a consequence, Burke often became isolated in Parliament.[155][156]

In the 19th century, Burke was praised by both liberals and conservatives. Burke's friend Philip Francis wrote that Burke "was a man who truly & prophetically foresaw all the consequences which would rise from the adoption of the French principles", but because Burke wrote with so much passion, people were doubtful of his arguments.[157] William Windham spoke from the same bench in the House of Commons as Burke had when he had separated from Fox and an observer said Windham spoke "like the ghost of Burke" when he made a speech against peace with France in 1801.[158] William Hazlitt, a political opponent of Burke, regarded him as amongst his three favourite writers (the others being Junius and Rousseau) and made it "a test of the sense and candour of any one belonging to the opposite party, whether he allowed Burke to be a great man".[159] William Wordsworth was originally a supporter of the French Revolution and attacked Burke in A Letter to the Bishop of Llandaff (1793), but by the early 19th century he had changed his mind and came to admire Burke. In his Two Addresses to the Freeholders of Westmorland, Wordsworth called Burke "the most sagacious Politician of his age", whose predictions "time has verified".[160] He later revised his poem The Prelude to include praise of Burke ("Genius of Burke! forgive the pen seduced/By specious wonders") and portrayed him as an old oak.[160] Samuel Taylor Coleridge came to have a similar conversion as he had criticised Burke in The Watchman, but in his Friend (1809–1810) had defended Burke from charges of inconsistency.[161] Later in his Biographia Literaria (1817), Coleridge hails Burke as a prophet and praises Burke for referring "habitually to principles. He was a scientific statesman; and therefore a seer".[162] Henry Brougham wrote of Burke that "all his predictions, save one momentary expression, had been more than fulfilled: anarchy and bloodshed had borne sway in France; conquest and convulsion had desolated Europe...[T]he providence of mortals is not often able to penetrate so far as this into futurity".[163] George Canning believed that Burke's Reflections "has been justified by the course of subsequent events; and almost every prophecy has been strictly fulfilled".[163] In 1823, Canning wrote that he took Burke's "last works and words [as] the manual of my politics".[164] The Conservative Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli "was deeply penetrated with the spirit and sentiment of Burke's later writings".[165]

The 19th-century Liberal Prime Minister William Gladstone considered Burke "a magazine of wisdom on Ireland and America" and in his diary recorded: "Made many extracts from Burke—sometimes almost divine".[166] The Radical MP and anti-Corn Law activist Richard Cobden often praised Burke's Thoughts and Details on Scarcity.[167] The Liberal historian Lord Acton considered Burke one of the three greatest Liberals, along with Gladstone and Thomas Babington Macaulay.[168] Lord Macaulay recorded in his diary: "I have now finished reading again most of Burke's works. Admirable! The greatest man since Milton".[169] The Gladstonian Liberal MP John Morley published two books on Burke (including a biography) and was influenced by Burke, including his views on prejudice.[170] The Cobdenite Radical Francis Hirst thought Burke deserved "a place among English libertarians, even though of all lovers of liberty and of all reformers he was the most conservative, the least abstract, always anxious to preserve and renovate rather than to innovate. In politics he resembled the modern architect who would restore an old house instead of pulling it down to construct a new one on the site".[171] Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France was controversial at the time of its publication, but after his death it was to become his best known and most influential work and a manifesto for Conservative thinking.

Two contrasting assessments of Burke also were offered long after his death by Karl Marx and Winston Churchill. In a footnote to Volume One of Das Kapital, Marx wrote:

The sycophant—who in the pay of the English oligarchy played the romantic laudator temporis acti against the French Revolution just as, in the pay of the North American colonies at the beginning of the American troubles, he had played the liberal against the English oligarchy—was an out-and-out vulgar bourgeois. "The laws of commerce are the laws of Nature, and therefore the laws of God." (E. Burke, l.c., pp. 31, 32) No wonder that, true to the laws of God and Nature, he always sold himself in the best market.

In Consistency in Politics, Churchill wrote:

On the one hand [Burke] is revealed as a foremost apostle of Liberty, on the other as the redoubtable champion of Authority. But a charge of political inconsistency applied to this life appears a mean and petty thing. History easily discerns the reasons and forces which actuated him, and the immense changes in the problems he was facing which evoked from the same profound mind and sincere spirit these entirely contrary manifestations. His soul revolted against tyranny, whether it appeared in the aspect of a domineering Monarch and a corrupt Court and Parliamentary system, or whether, mouthing the watch-words of a non-existent liberty, it towered up against him in the dictation of a brutal mob and wicked sect. No one can read the Burke of Liberty and the Burke of Authority without feeling that here was the same man pursuing the same ends, seeking the same ideals of society and Government, and defending them from assaults, now from one extreme, now from the other.

The historian Piers Brendon asserts that Burke laid the moral foundations for the British Empire, epitomised in the trial of Warren Hastings, that was ultimately to be its undoing. When Burke stated that "[t]he British Empire must be governed on a plan of freedom, for it will be governed by no other",[172] this was "an ideological bacillus that would prove fatal. This was Edmund Burke's paternalistic doctrine that colonial government was a trust. It was to be so exercised for the benefit of subject people that they would eventually attain their birthright—freedom".[173] As a consequence of these opinions, Burke objected to the opium trade which he called a "smuggling adventure" and condemned "the great Disgrace of the British character in India".[174] According to political scientist Jennifer Pitts, Burke "was arguably the first political thinker to undertake a comprehensive critique of British imperial practice in the name of justice for those who suffered from its moral and political exclusions."[175]

A Royal Society of Arts blue plaque commemorates Burke at 37 Gerrard Street now in London's Chinatown.[176]

Statues of Burke are in Bristol, England, Trinity College Dublin and Washington, D.C. Burke is also the namesake of a private college preparatory school in Washington, Edmund Burke School.

Burke Avenue, in The Bronx, New York, is named for him.

Criticism

One of Burke's largest and most developed critics was the American political theorist Leo Strauss. In his book Natural Right and History, Strauss makes a series of points in which he somewhat harshly evaluates Burke's writings.[citation needed]

One of the topics that he first addresses is the fact that Burke creates a definitive separation between happiness and virtue and explains that "Burke, therefore, seeks the foundation of government 'in a conformity to our duties' and not in 'imaginary rights of man".[177][178] Strauss views Burke as believing that government should focus solely on the duties that a man should have in society as opposed to trying to address any additional needs or desires. Government is simply a practicality to Burke and not necessarily meant to function as a tool to help individuals live their best lives. Strauss also argues that in a sense Burke's theory could be seen as opposing the very idea of forming such philosophies. Burke expresses the view that theory cannot adequately predict future occurrences and therefore men need to have instincts that cannot be practised or derived from ideology.[177][178]

This leads to an overarching criticism that Strauss holds regarding Burke which is his rejection of the use of logic. Burke dismisses a widely held view amongst theorists that reason should be the primary tool in the forming of a constitution or contract.[177][178] Burke instead believes that constitutions should be made based on natural processes as opposed to rational planning for the future. However, Strauss points out that criticising rationality actually works against Burke's original stance of returning to traditional ways because some amount of human reason is inherent and therefore is in part grounded in tradition.[177] In regards to this formation of legitimate social order, Strauss does not necessarily support Burke's opinion—that order cannot be established by individual wise people, but exclusively by a culmination of individuals with historical knowledge of past functions to use as a foundation.[177][178] Strauss notes that Burke would oppose more newly formed republics due to this thought,[177] although Lenzner adds the fact that he did seem to believe that America's constitution could be justified given the specific circumstances.[178] On the other hand, France's constitution was much too radical as it relied too heavily on enlightened reasoning as opposed to traditional methods and values.[177]

Religious thought

Burke's religious writing comprises published works and commentary on the subject of religion. Burke's religious thought was grounded in the belief that religion is the foundation of civil society.[179] He sharply criticised deism and atheism and emphasised Christianity as a vehicle of social progress.[180] Born in Ireland to a Catholic mother and a Protestant father, Burke vigorously defended the Anglican Church, but he also demonstrated sensitivity to Catholic concerns.[181] He linked the conservation of a state-established religion with the preservation of citizens' constitutional liberties and highlighted Christianity's benefit not only to the believer's soul, but also to political arrangements.[181]

False quotations

"When good men do nothing"

The statement that "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" is often attributed to Burke despite the debated origin of this quote.[182][183] In 1770, it is known that Burke wrote in "Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents":

[W]hen bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle.[184][185]

In 1867, John Stuart Mill made a similar statement in an inaugural address delivered before the University of St. Andrews:

Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing.[186]

Timeline

Bibliography

In popular media

Actor T. P. McKenna was cast as Edmund Burke in the TV series Longitude in 2000.[187]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ "Edmund Burke". Library Ireland. from the original on 20 October 2017.
  2. ^ M. G. Jones, Hannah More (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1952), p. 135.
  3. ^ Marshall, Peter Hugh (1991). Demanding the Impossible. HarperCollins. p. 134. ISBN 0-00-217855-9. When Burke became a Tory after the French Revolution and thundered against all improvement, he disowned his Vindication of Natural Society as a youthful folly. Most commentators have followed suit, suggesting that he was trying to parody the manner of Bolingbroke. But Godwin, while recognizing Burke's ironic intention, took him seriously. He acknowledged that most of his own arguments against political society in An Enquiry concerning Political Justice (1793) may be found in Burke's work – 'a treatise, in which the evils of the existing political institutions are displayed with incomparable force of reasoning and lustre of eloquence'.
  4. ^ Dauer, M. J. (1953). "Review of John C. Calhoun: Sectionalist, 1840-1850.; The Political Theory of John C. Calhoun., by C. M. Wiltse & A. O. Spain". The Journal of Politics. 15 (1): 156–159. doi:10.2307/2126203. JSTOR 2126203.
  5. ^ The exact year of his birth is the subject of a great deal of controversy; 1728, 1729, and 1730 have been proposed. The month and day of his birth also are subject to question, a problem compounded by the JulianGregorian changeover in 1752, during his lifetime. For a fuller treatment of the question, see F. P. Lock, Edmund Burke. Volume I: 1730–1784 (Clarendon Press, 1999), pp. 16–17. Conor Cruise O'Brien (2008; p. 14) questions Burke's birthplace as having been in Dublin, arguing in favour of Shanballymore, Co. Cork (in the house of his uncle, James Nagle).
  6. ^ Richard Bourke, Empire and Revolution: The Political Life of Edmund Burke (Princeton University Press, 2015), pp. 220–221, passim.
  7. ^ Burke lived before the terms "conservative" and "liberal" were used to describe political ideologies, cf. J. C. D. Clark, English Society, 1660–1832 (Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp. 5, 301.
  8. ^ Dennis O'Keeffe; John Meadowcroft (2009). Edmund Burke. Continuum. p. 93. ISBN 978-0826429780.
  9. ^ Andrew Heywood, Political Ideologies: An Introduction. Third Edition. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2003), p. 74.
  10. ^ F. P. Lock, Edmund Burke. Volume II: 1784–1797 (Clarendon Press, 2006), p. 585.
  11. ^ Clark 2001, p. 26.
  12. ^ Paul Langford, Burke, Edmund (1729/30–1797), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, September 2004; online edn, January 2008, accessed 18 October 2008.
  13. ^ James Prior, Life of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke. Fifth Edition (London: Henry G. Bohn, 1854), p. 1.
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  176. ^ "Burke, Edmund (1729–1797)". English Heritage. Retrieved 23 October 2012.
  177. ^ a b c d e f g Strauss, Leo. . University of Chicago Press Books. Archived from the original on 10 October 2014.
  178. ^ a b c d e Lenzner, Steven (1991). "Strauss's Three Burkes: The Problem of Edmund Burke in Natural Right and History". Political Theory. SAGE Publications. 19 (3): 364–390. doi:10.1177/0090591791019003005. JSTOR 191417. S2CID 144695658.
  179. ^ Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France (London: J. M. Dent & Sons, 1964), 87.
  180. ^ Ian Harris, "Burke and Religion," in David Dwan and Christopher J Insole eds., The Cambridge Companion to Edmund Burke (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 103.
  181. ^ a b Harris, 98.
  182. ^ Bromwich, David (2014). The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke. Harvard University Press. pp. 175–176. ISBN 978-0674729704 – via Google Books.
  183. ^ O'Toole, Garson. "The Only Thing Necessary for the Triumph of Evil is that Good Men Do Nothing". Quote Investigator. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
  184. ^ Ritchie, Daniel (1990). Edmund Burke: appraisals and applications. ISBN 978-0-88738-328-1 – via Google Books.
  185. ^ Burke, Edmund (1770). Thoughts on the cause of the present discontents. J. Dodsley in the Pall-Mall. p. 106.
  186. ^ Inaugural Address Delivered to the University of St. Andrews, Feb. 1st 1867 (1867), p. 36
  187. ^ "Longitude © (1999)". movie-dude.com. Retrieved 22 June 2021.

Sources

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainCousin, John William (1910). A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature. London: J. M. Dent & Sons – via Wikisource.
  • Blakemore, Steven (ed.), Burke and the French Revolution. Bicentennial Essays (The University of Georgia Press, 1992).
  • Bourke, Richard, Empire and Revolution: The Political Life of Edmund Burke (Princeton University Press, 2015).
  • Bromwich, David, The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke: From the Sublime and Beautiful to American Independence (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 2014). A review: Freedom fighter, The Economist, 5 July 2014
  • Clark, J. C. D. (ed.), Reflections on the Revolution in France: A Critical Edition (Stanford University Press: 2001).
  • Cone, Carl B. Burke and the Nature of Politics (2 vols, 1957, 1964), a detailed modern biography of Burke; somewhat uncritical and sometimes superficial regarding politics
  • Thomas Wellsted Copeland, 'Edmund Burke and the Book Reviews in Dodsley's Annual Register', Publications of the Modern Language Association, Vol. 57, No. 2. (Jun. 1942), pp. 446–468.
  • Courtenay, C.P. Montesquieu and Burke (1963), good introduction
  • Crowe, Ian, ed. The Enduring Edmund Burke: Bicentennial Essays (1997) essays by American conservatives online edition
  • Crowe, Ian, ed. An Imaginative Whig: Reassessing the Life and Thought of Edmund Burke. (2005). 247 pp. essays by scholars
  • Ian Crowe, 'The career and political thought of Edmund Burke', Journal of Liberal History, Issue 40, Autumn 2003.
  • Frederick Dreyer, 'The Genesis of Burke's Reflections', The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 50, No. 3. (Sep. 1978), pp. 462–479.
  • Robert Eccleshall, English Conservatism since the Restoration (London: Unwin Hyman, 1990).
  • Gibbons, Luke. Edmund Burke and Ireland: Aesthetics, Politics, and the Colonial Sublime. (2003). 304 pp.
  • Hibbert, Christopher (1990). King Mob: The Story of Lord George Gordon and the Riots of 1780. Dorset Press. ISBN 0-88029-399-3.
  • Russell Kirk, The Conservative Mind: From Burke to Eliot (7th ed. 1992).
  • Kirk, Russell. Edmund Burke: A Genius Reconsidered (1997) online edition
  • Kramnick, Isaac. The Rage of Edmund Burke: Portrait of an Ambivalent Conservative (1977) online edition
  • Lock, F. P. Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France (London: Allen & Unwin, 1985).
  • Lock, F. P. Edmund Burke. Volume I: 1730–1784 (Clarendon Press, 1999).
  • Lock, F. P. Edmund Burke. Volume II: 1784–1797 (Clarendon Press, 2006).
  • Levin, Yuval. The Great Debate: Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine, and the Birth of Right and Left (Basic Books; 2013) 275 pages; their debate regarding the French Revolution.
  • Lucas, Paul. "On Edmund Burke's Doctrine of Prescription; Or, An Appeal from the New to the Old Lawyers", Historical Journal, 11 (1968) opens the way towards an effective synthesis of Burke's ideas of History, Change and Prescription.
  • Jim McCue, Edmund Burke and Our Present Discontents (The Claridge Press, 1997).
  • Magnus, Philip. Edmund Burke: A Life (1939), older biography
  • Marshall, P. J. The Impeachment of Warren Hastings (1965), the standard history of the trial and Burke's role
  • O'Brien, Conor Cruise, The Great Melody. A Thematic Biography of Edmund Burke (1992). ISBN 0-226-61651-7.
  • O'Gorman, Frank. Edmund Burke: Edmund Burke: His Political Philosophy (2004) 153pp online edition
  • Parkin, Charles. The Moral Basis of Burke's Political Thought (1956)
  • Pocock, J.G.A. "Burke and the Ancient Constitution", Historical Journal, 3 (1960), 125–143; shows Burke's debt to the Common Law tradition of the seventeenth century in JSTOR
  • Raeder, Linda C. "Edmund Burke: Old Whig". Political Science Reviewer 2006 35: 115–131. ISSN 0091-3715 Fulltext: Ebsco, argues Burke's ideas closely resemble those of conservative philosopher Friedrich August von Hayek (1899–1992).
  • J. J. Sack, 'The Memory of Burke and the Memory of Pitt: English Conservatism Confronts Its Past, 1806–1829', The Historical Journal, Vol. 30, No. 3. (Sep. 1987), pp. 623–640.
  • J. J. Sack, From Jacobite to Conservative. Reaction and orthodoxy in Britain, c. 1760–1832 (Cambridge University Press, 2004).
  • Spinner, Jeff. "Constructing Communities: Edmund Burke on Revolution", Polity, Vol. 23, No. 3 (Spring, 1991), pp. 395–421 in JSTOR
  • Stanlis, Peter. Edmund Burke and the Natural Law (1958)
  • Vermeir, Koen and Funk Deckard, Michael (ed.) The Science of Sensibility: Reading Burke's Philosophical Enquiry (International Archives of the History of Ideas, Vol. 206) (Springer, 2012)
  • John Whale (ed.), Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France. New interdisciplinary essays (Manchester University Press, 2000).
  • Whelan, Frederick G. Edmund Burke and India: Political Morality and Empire (1996)
  • O'Connor Power, J. 'Edmund Burke and His Abiding Influence', The North American Review, vol. 165 issue 493, December 1897, 666–681.

Main sources

  • Clark, J. C. D., ed. (2001). Reflections on the Revolution in France. A Critical Edition. Stanford University Press.
  • Hoffman, R.; Levack, P. (eds.) (1949). Burke's Politics. Alfred A. Knopf.
  • Burke, Edmund. The Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke (9 vol 1981– ) vol 1 online; vol 2 online; vol 6 India: The Launching of the Hastings Impeachment, 1786–1788 online; vol 8 online; vol 9 online.

Further reading

  • Bourke, Richard (2015). Empire and Revolution: The Political Life of Edmund Burke. Princeton University Press.
  • Bromwich, David (2014). The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke: From the Sublime and Beautiful to American Independence. Harvard University Press.
  • Doran, Robert (2015). "Burke: Sublime Individualism". The Theory of the Sublime from Longinus to Kant. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. OCLC 959033482
  • Lock, F. P. (1999). Edmund Burke. Volume I: 1730–1784. Clarendon Press.
  • Lock, F. P. (2006). Edmund Burke. Volume II: 1784–1797. Clarendon Press.
  • Marshall, P. J. (2019) Edmund Burke and the British Empire in the West Indies: Wealth, Power, and Slavery (Oxford University Press, 2019) online review
  • Norman, Jesse (2014). Edmund Burke: The Visionary who Invented Modern Politics. William Collins.
  • O'Brien, Conor Cruise (1992). The Great Melody. A Thematic Biography of Edmund Burke. University of Chicago Press
  • Stephens, Bret (8–9 August 2020). "Why Edmund Burke still matters". The New York Times. No. 42, 735 (International ed.). p. 8.
  • Uglow, Jenny (23 May 2019). "Big Talkers" (review of Leo Damrosch, The Club: Johnson, Boswell, and the Friends Who Shaped an Age, Yale University Press, 473 pp.). The New York Review of Books. LXVI (9): 26–28.
  • Visser, Michael (2008). "Burke, Edmund (1729–1797)". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). Nozick, Robert (1938–2002). The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE, Cato Institute. pp. 43–44. doi:10.4135/9781412965811.n220. ISBN 978-1412965804. LCCN 2008009151. OCLC 750831024.
  • Whelan, Frederick G. (1996). Edmund Burke and India: Political Morality and Empire. University of Pittsburgh Press

External links

  • Edmund Burke Society at Columbia University
  • Harris, Ian. "Edmund Burke". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Burke's works at The Online Library of Liberty
  • Burke's "Reflections on the Revolution in France", lightly modified for easier reading
  • Works by Edmund Burke at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Edmund Burke at Internet Archive
  • Works by Edmund Burke at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Edmund Burke on In Our Time at the BBC
  • Burke according to Dr Jesse Norman MP at www.bbc.co.uk
  • Edmund Edmund Burke at Curlie
  • "Edmund Burke for a Postmodern Age", William F. Byrne, Berfrois, 29 June 2011
  • "Archival material relating to Edmund Burke". UK National Archives.  
  • Portraits of Edmund Burke at the National Portrait Gallery, London  
  • "The Liberalism/Conservatism of Edmund Burke and F. A. Hayek: A Critical Comparison" by Linda C. Raeder. From Humanitas, Volume X, No. 1, 1997. National Humanities Institute.
  • Edmund Burke at Find a Grave
Political offices
Preceded by Paymaster of the Forces
1782
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Isaac Barré
Paymaster of the Forces
1783–1784
Succeeded by
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by
Richard Chandler-Cavendish
Verney Lovett
Member of Parliament for Wendover
1765–1774
Succeeded by
Joseph Bullock
John Adams
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Malton
1774
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Bristol
1774–1780
With: Henry Cruger
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Malton
1780–1794
Succeeded by
Academic offices
Preceded by Rector of the University of Glasgow
1783–1785
Succeeded by

edmund, burke, other, people, named, disambiguation, ɜːr, january, 1729, july, 1797, anglo, irish, statesman, economist, philosopher, born, dublin, burke, served, member, parliament, between, 1766, 1794, house, commons, great, britain, with, whig, party, right. For other people named Edmund Burke see Edmund Burke disambiguation Edmund Burke ˈ b ɜːr k 12 January NS 1729 5 9 July 1797 was an Anglo Irish statesman economist and philosopher Born in Dublin Burke served as a member of Parliament MP between 1766 and 1794 in the House of Commons of Great Britain with the Whig Party The Right HonourableEdmund BurkeMPPortrait by Joshua Reynolds c 1769Rector of the University of GlasgowIn office 1783 1785Preceded byHenry DundasSucceeded byRobert BontinePaymaster of the ForcesIn office 16 April 1783 8 January 1784Prime MinisterThe Duke of PortlandWilliam Pitt the YoungerPreceded byIsaac BarreSucceeded byWilliam GrenvilleIn office 10 April 1782 1 August 1782Prime MinisterThe Marquess of RockinghamPreceded byRichard RigbySucceeded byIsaac BarreMember of Parliamentfor MaltonIn office 18 October 1780 20 June 1794Serving with William WeddellThomas GascoigneGeorge DamerPreceded bySavile FinchSucceeded byRichard Burke Jr Member of Parliamentfor BristolIn office 4 November 1774 6 September 1780Serving with Henry CrugerPreceded byMatthew BrickdaleSucceeded byHenry LippincottMember of Parliamentfor WendoverIn office December 1765 5 October 1774Serving with Richard Chandler CavendishRobert DarlingJoseph BullockPreceded byVerney LovettSucceeded byJohn AdamsPersonal detailsBorn 1729 01 12 12 January 1729Dublin Leinster Kingdom of Ireland 1 Died9 July 1797 1797 07 09 aged 68 Beaconsfield England Kingdom of Great BritainPolitical partyWhig Rockinghamite SpouseJane Mary Nugent m 1757 wbr ChildrenRichard Burke Jr EducationTrinity College DublinMiddle TempleOccupationWriter politician journalist philosopherPhilosophy careerNotable workA Vindication of Natural Society 1756 On the Sublime and Beautiful 1757 On American Taxation 1774 Reflections on the Revolution in France 1790 An Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs 1791 EraAge of EnlightenmentRegionWestern philosophy British philosophySchoolConservatism Liberalism Counter EnlightenmentInstitutionsLiterary Club co founder Main interestsAesthetics Economics Politics SocietyNotable ideasAesthetic sublime Literary sublime Traditionalist conservatism Intergenerationality Religious thoughtInfluences Aristotle Cicero Aquinas Coke Grotius Selden Milton Montesquieu Blackstone Hume Lord RockinghamInfluenced Smith Kant More 2 Maistre Godwin 3 Gentz Wordsworth Canning Coleridge Hazlitt Brougham Calhoun 4 Macaulay Newman Cobden Disraeli Tocqueville Gladstone Taine Acton Morley Babbitt Jovanovic Belloc Hirst Chesterton Douglas Keynes Hayek Kirk Buckley Sowell Mansfield ScrutonSignatureBurke was a proponent of underpinning virtues with manners in society and of the importance of religious institutions for the moral stability and good of the state 6 These views were expressed in his A Vindication of Natural Society He criticised the actions of the British government towards the American colonies including its taxation policies Burke also supported the rights of the colonists to resist metropolitan authority although he opposed the attempt to achieve independence He is remembered for his support for Catholic emancipation the impeachment of Warren Hastings from the East India Company and his staunch opposition to the French Revolution In his Reflections on the Revolution in France Burke asserted that the revolution was destroying the fabric of good society and traditional institutions of state and society and condemned the persecution of the Catholic Church that resulted from it This led to his becoming the leading figure within the conservative faction of the Whig Party which he dubbed the Old Whigs as opposed to the pro French Revolution New Whigs led by Charles James Fox 7 In the 19th century Burke was praised by both conservatives and liberals 8 Subsequently in the 20th century he became widely regarded especially in the United States as the philosophical founder of conservatism 9 10 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early writing 3 Member of Parliament 4 American War of Independence 5 Paymaster of the Forces 6 Representative democracy 7 Opposition to the slave trade 8 India and the impeachment of Warren Hastings 9 French Revolution 1688 versus 1789 10 Later life 11 Legacy 12 Criticism 13 Religious thought 14 False quotations 14 1 When good men do nothing 15 Timeline 16 Bibliography 17 In popular media 18 See also 19 References 19 1 Citations 19 2 Sources 19 3 Main sources 19 4 Further reading 20 External linksEarly life Edit Edmund Burke Burke was born in Dublin Ireland His mother Mary nee Nagle c 1702 1770 was a Roman Catholic who hailed from a County Cork family and a cousin of the Catholic educator Nano Nagle whereas his father Richard died 1761 a successful solicitor was a member of the Church of Ireland It remains unclear whether this is the same Richard Burke who converted from Catholicism 11 12 The Burgh Burke dynasty descends from the Anglo Norman knight William de Burgh d 1205 6 who arrived in Ireland in 1185 following Henry II of England s 1171 invasion of Ireland and is among the chief Gall or Old English families that assimilated into Gaelic society the surname de Burgh Latinised as de Burgo was gaelicised in Irish as de Burca or Burc which over the centuries became Burke 13 Burke adhered to his father s faith and remained a practising Anglican throughout his life unlike his sister Juliana who was brought up as and remained a Roman Catholic 14 Later his political enemies repeatedly accused him of having been educated at the Jesuit College of St Omer near Calais France and of harbouring secret Catholic sympathies at a time when membership of the Catholic Church would disqualify him from public office per Penal Laws in Ireland As Burke told Frances Crewe Mr Burke s Enemies often endeavoured to convince the World that he had been bred up in the Catholic Faith amp that his Family were of it amp that he himself had been educated at St Omer but this was false as his father was a regular practitioner of the Law at Dublin which he could not be unless of the Established Church amp it so happened that though Mr B was twice at Paris he never happened to go through the Town of St Omer 15 After being elected to the House of Commons Burke took the required oath of allegiance and abjuration the oath of supremacy and declare against transubstantiation 16 As a child Burke sometimes spent time away from the unhealthy air of Dublin with his mother s family near Killavullen in the Blackwater Valley in County Cork He received his early education at a Quaker school in Ballitore County Kildare some 67 kilometres 42 mi from Dublin and possibly like his cousin Nano Nagle at a Hedge school near Killavullen 17 He remained in correspondence with his schoolmate from there Mary Leadbeater the daughter of the school s owner throughout his life In 1744 Burke started at Trinity College Dublin 18 a Protestant establishment which up until 1793 did not permit Catholics to take degrees 19 In 1747 he set up a debating society Edmund Burke s Club which in 1770 merged with TCD s Historical Club to form the College Historical Society the oldest undergraduate society in the world The minutes of the meetings of Burke s Club remain in the collection of the Historical Society Burke graduated from Trinity in 1748 Burke s father wanted him to read Law and with this in mind he went to London in 1750 where he entered the Middle Temple before soon giving up legal study to travel in Continental Europe After eschewing the Law he pursued a livelihood through writing 20 Early writing EditThe late Lord Bolingbroke s Letters on the Study and Use of History was published in 1752 and his collected works appeared in 1754 This provoked Burke into writing his first published work A Vindication of Natural Society A View of the Miseries and Evils Arising to Mankind appearing in Spring 1756 Burke imitated Bolingbroke s style and ideas in a reductio ad absurdum of his arguments for deistic rationalism in order to demonstrate their absurdity 21 22 In A Vindication of Natural Society Burke argued The writers against religion whilst they oppose every system are wisely careful never to set up any of their own Burke claimed that Bolingbroke s arguments against revealed religion could apply to all social and civil institutions as well 23 Lord Chesterfield and Bishop Warburton as well as others initially thought that the work was genuinely by Bolingbroke rather than a satire 21 24 All the reviews of the work were positive with critics especially appreciative of Burke s quality of writing Some reviewers failed to notice the ironic nature of the book which led to Burke stating in the preface to the second edition 1757 that it was a satire 25 Richard Hurd believed that Burke s imitation was near perfect and that this defeated his purpose arguing that an ironist should take care by a constant exaggeration to make the ridicule shine through the Imitation Whereas this Vindication is everywhere enforc d not only in the language and on the principles of L Bol but with so apparent or rather so real an earnestness that half his purpose is sacrificed to the other 25 A minority of scholars have taken the position that in fact Burke did write the Vindication in earnest later disowning it only for political reasons 26 27 In 1757 Burke published a treatise on aesthetics titled A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful that attracted the attention of prominent Continental thinkers such as Denis Diderot and Immanuel Kant It was his only purely philosophical work completed in 1753 28 When asked by Sir Joshua Reynolds and French Laurence to expand it thirty years later Burke replied that he was no longer fit for abstract speculation 29 On 25 February 1757 Burke signed a contract with Robert Dodsley to write a history of England from the time of Julius Caesar to the end of the reign of Queen Anne its length being eighty quarto sheets 640 pages nearly 400 000 words It was to be submitted for publication by Christmas 1758 30 Burke completed the work to the year 1216 and stopped it was not published until after Burke s death in an 1812 collection of his works An Essay Towards an Abridgement of the English History G M Young did not value Burke s history and claimed that it was demonstrably a translation from the French 31 On commenting on the story that Burke stopped his history because David Hume published his Lord Acton said it is ever to be regretted that the reverse did not occur 32 During the year following that contract Burke founded with Dodsley the influential Annual Register a publication in which various authors evaluated the international political events of the previous year 33 The extent to which Burke contributed to the Annual Register is unclear 34 In his biography of Burke Robert Murray quotes the Register as evidence of Burke s opinions yet Philip Magnus in his biography does not cite it directly as a reference 35 Burke remained the chief editor of the publication until at least 1789 and there is no evidence that any other writer contributed to it before 1766 35 On 12 March 1757 Burke married Jane Mary Nugent 1734 1812 daughter of Dr Christopher Nugent 36 a Catholic physician who had provided him with medical treatment at Bath Their son Richard was born on 9 February 1758 while an elder son Christopher died in infancy Burke also helped raise a ward Edmund Nagle later Admiral Sir Edmund Nagle the son of a maternal cousin orphaned in 1763 37 At about this same time Burke was introduced to William Gerard Hamilton known as Single speech Hamilton When Hamilton was appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland Burke accompanied him to Dublin as his private secretary a position he held for three years In 1765 Burke became private secretary to the liberal Whig politician Charles Marquess of Rockingham then Prime Minister of Great Britain who remained Burke s close friend and associate until his untimely death in 1782 Member of Parliament Edit A literary party at Sir Joshua Reynolds s 38 Left to right James Boswell Samuel Johnson Joshua Reynolds David Garrick Edmund Burke Pasquale Paoli Charles Burney a servant possibly Francis Barber Thomas Warton Oliver Goldsmith select a detail of the image for more information In December 1765 Burke entered the House of Commons of the British Parliament as Member for Wendover in Buckinghamshire a pocket borough in the gift of Lord Fermanagh later 2nd Earl Verney and a close political ally of Rockingham After Burke delivered his maiden speech William Pitt the Elder said he had spoken in such a manner as to stop the mouths of all Europe and that the Commons should congratulate itself on acquiring such a Member 39 The first great subject Burke addressed was the controversy with the American colonies which soon developed into war and ultimate separation In reply to the 1769 Grenvillite pamphlet The Present State of the Nation he published his own pamphlet titled Observations on a Late State of the Nation Surveying the finances of France Burke predicts some extraordinary convulsion in that whole system 40 During the same year with mostly borrowed money Burke purchased Gregories a 600 acre 2 4 km2 estate near Beaconsfield Although the estate included saleable assets such as art works by Titian Gregories proved a heavy financial burden in the following decades and Burke was never able to repay its purchase price in full His speeches and writings having made him famous led to the suggestion that he was the author of the Letters of Junius At about this time Burke joined the circle of leading intellectuals and artists in London of whom Samuel Johnson was the central luminary This circle also included David Garrick Oliver Goldsmith and Joshua Reynolds Edward Gibbon described Burke as the most eloquent and rational madman that I ever knew 41 Although Johnson admired Burke s brilliance he found him a dishonest politician 42 43 Burke took a leading role in the debate regarding the constitutional limits to the executive authority of the King He argued strongly against unrestrained royal power and for the role of political parties in maintaining a principled opposition capable of preventing abuses either by the monarch or by specific factions within the government His most important publication in this regard was his Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents of 23 April 1770 44 Burke identified the discontents as stemming from the secret influence of a neo Tory group he labelled as the king s friends whose system comprehending the exterior and interior administrations is commonly called in the technical language of the Court Double Cabinet 45 Britain needed a party with an unshaken adherence to principle and attachment to connexion against every allurement of interest Party divisions whether operating for good or evil are things inseparable from free government 46 The Gregories estate purchased by Burke for 20 000 in 1768 During 1771 Burke wrote a bill that would have given juries the right to determine what was libel if passed Burke spoke in favour of the bill but it was opposed by some including Charles James Fox not becoming law When introducing his own bill in 1791 in opposition Fox repeated almost verbatim the text of Burke s bill without acknowledgement 47 Burke was prominent in securing the right to publish debates held in Parliament 48 Speaking in a Parliamentary debate on the prohibition on the export of grain on 16 November 1770 Burke argued in favour of a free market in corn There are no such things as a high amp a low price that is encouraging amp discouraging there is nothing but a natural price which grain brings at an universal market 49 In 1772 Burke was instrumental in the passing of the Repeal of Certain Laws Act 1772 which repealed various old laws against dealers and forestallers in corn 50 In the Annual Register for 1772 published in July 1773 Burke condemned the partition of Poland He saw it as the first very great breach in the modern political system of Europe and as upsetting the balance of power in Europe 51 On 3 November 1774 Burke was elected Member for Bristol at the time England s second city and a large constituency with a genuine electoral contest At the conclusion of the poll he made his Speech to the Electors of Bristol at the Conclusion of the Poll 52 a remarkable disclaimer of the constituent imperative form of democracy for which he substituted his statement of the representative mandate form 53 He failed to win re election for that seat in the subsequent 1780 general election In May 1778 Burke supported a Parliamentary motion revising restrictions on Irish trade His constituents citizens of the great trading city of Bristol urged Burke to oppose free trade with Ireland Burke resisted their protestations and said If from this conduct I shall forfeit their suffrages at an ensuing election it will stand on record an example to future representatives of the Commons of England that one man at least had dared to resist the desires of his constituents when his judgment assured him they were wrong 54 Burke published Two Letters to Gentlemen of Bristol on the Bills relative to the Trade of Ireland in which he espoused some of the chief principles of commerce such as the advantage of free intercourse between all parts of the same kingdom the evils attending restriction and monopoly and that the gain of others is not necessarily our loss but on the contrary an advantage by causing a greater demand for such wares as we have for sale 55 Burke also supported the attempts of Sir George Savile to repeal some of the penal laws against Catholics 56 Burke also called capital punishment the Butchery which we call justice in 1776 and in 1780 condemned the use of the pillory for two men convicted for attempting to practice sodomy 37 This support for unpopular causes notably free trade with Ireland and Catholic emancipation led to Burke losing his seat in 1780 For the remainder of his Parliamentary career Burke represented Malton another pocket borough under the Marquess of Rockingham s patronage American War of Independence EditBurke expressed his support for the grievances of the American Thirteen Colonies under the government of King George III and his appointed representatives On 19 April 1774 Burke made a speech On American Taxation published in January 1775 on a motion to repeal the tea duty Again and again revert to your old principles seek peace and ensue it leave America if she has taxable matter in her to tax herself I am not here going into the distinctions of rights nor attempting to mark their boundaries I do not enter into these metaphysical distinctions I hate the very sound of them Leave the Americans as they anciently stood and these distinctions born of our unhappy contest will die along with it Be content to bind America by laws of trade you have always done it Do not burthen them with taxes But if intemperately unwisely fatally you sophisticate and poison the very source of government by urging subtle deductions and consequences odious to those you govern from the unlimited and illimitable nature of supreme sovereignty you will teach them by these means to call that sovereignty itself in question If that sovereignty and their freedom cannot be reconciled which will they take They will cast your sovereignty in your face No body of men will be argued into slavery 57 On 22 March 1775 Burke delivered in the House of Commons a speech published during May 1775 on reconciliation with America Burke appealed for peace as preferable to civil war and reminded the House of Commons of America s growing population its industry and its wealth He warned against the notion that the Americans would back down in the face of force since most Americans were of British descent T he people of the colonies are descendants of Englishmen They are therefore not only devoted to liberty but to liberty according to English ideas and on English principles The people are Protestants a persuasion not only favourable to liberty but built upon it My hold of the colonies is in the close affection which grows from common names from kindred blood from similar privileges and equal protection These are ties which though light as air are as strong as links of iron Let the colonies always keep the idea of their civil rights associated with your government they will cling and grapple to you and no force under heaven will be of power to tear them from their allegiance But let it be once understood that your government may be one thing and their privileges another that these two things may exist without any mutual relation the cement is gone the cohesion is loosened and everything hastens to decay and dissolution As long as you have the wisdom to keep the sovereign authority of this country as the sanctuary of liberty the sacred temple consecrated to our common faith wherever the chosen race and sons of England worship freedom they will turn their faces towards you The more they multiply the more friends you will have the more ardently they love liberty the more perfect will be their obedience Slavery they can have anywhere It is a weed that grows in every soil They may have it from Spain they may have it from Prussia But until you become lost to all feeling of your true interest and your natural dignity freedom they can have from none but you 58 Burke prized peace with America above all else pleading with the House of Commons to remember that the interest by way of money received from the American colonies was far more attractive than any sense of putting the colonists in their place The proposition is peace Not peace through the medium of war not peace to be hunted through the labyrinth of intricate and endless negotiations not peace to arise out of universal discord I t is simple peace sought in its natural course and in its ordinary haunts It is peace sought in the spirit of peace and laid in principles purely pacific 58 Burke was not merely presenting a peace agreement to Parliament but rather he stepped forward with four reasons against using force carefully reasoned He laid out his objections in an orderly manner focusing on one before moving to the next His first concern was that the use of force would have to be temporary and that the uprisings and objections to British governance in Colonial America would not be Second Burke worried about the uncertainty surrounding whether Britain would win a conflict in America An armament Burke said is not a victory 59 Third Burke brought up the issue of impairment stating that it would do the British government no good to engage in a scorched earth war and have the object they desired America become damaged or even useless The American colonists could always retreat into the mountains but the land they left behind would most likely be unusable whether by accident or design The fourth and final reason to avoid the use of force was experience as the British had never attempted to rein in an unruly colony by force and they did not know if it could be done let alone accomplished thousands of miles away from home 59 Not only were all of these concerns reasonable but some turned out to be prophetic the American colonists did not surrender even when things looked extremely bleak and the British were ultimately unsuccessful in their attempts to win a war fought on American soil It was not temporary force uncertainty impairment or even experience that Burke cited as the primary reason for avoiding war with the American colonies Rather it was the character of the American people themselves In this character of Americans a love of freedom is the predominating feature which marks and distinguishes the whole T his fierce spirit of liberty is stronger in the English colonies probably than in any other people of the earth The men are acute inquisitive dextrous prompt in attack ready in defence full of resources 59 Burke concludes with another plea for peace and a prayer that Britain might avoid actions which in Burke s words may bring on the destruction of this Empire 59 Burke proposed six resolutions to settle the American conflict peacefully Allow the American colonists to elect their own representatives settling the dispute about taxation without representation Acknowledge this wrongdoing and apologise for grievances caused Procure an efficient manner of choosing and sending these delegates Set up a General Assembly in America itself with powers to regulate taxes Stop gathering taxes by imposition or law and start gathering them only when they are needed Grant needed aid to the colonies 59 Had they been passed the effect of these resolutions can never be known Unfortunately Burke delivered this speech just less than a month before the explosive conflict at Concord and Lexington 60 As these resolutions were not enacted little was done that would help to dissuade conflict Among the reasons this speech was so greatly admired was its passage on Lord Bathurst 1684 1775 in which Burke describes an angel in 1704 prophesying to Bathurst the future greatness of England and also of America Young man There is America which at this day serves little more than to amuse you with stories of savage men and uncouth manners yet shall before you taste of death shew itself equal to the whole of that commerce which now attracts the envy of the world 61 Samuel Johnson was so irritated at hearing it continually praised that he made a parody of it where the devil appears to a young Whig and predicts that in short time Whiggism will poison even the paradise of America 61 The administration of Lord North 1770 1782 tried to defeat the colonist rebellion by military force British and American forces clashed in 1775 and in 1776 came the American Declaration of Independence Burke was appalled by celebrations in Britain of the defeat of the Americans at New York and Pennsylvania He claimed the English national character was being changed by this authoritarianism 37 Burke wrote As to the good people of England they seem to partake every day more and more of the Character of that administration which they have been induced to tolerate I am satisfied that within a few years there has been a great Change in the National Character We seem no longer that eager inquisitive jealous fiery people which we have been formerly 62 In Burke s view the British government was fighting the American English our English Brethren in the Colonies with a Germanic king employing the hireling sword of German boors and vassals to destroy the English liberties of the colonists 37 On American independence Burke wrote I do not know how to wish success to those whose Victory is to separate from us a large and noble part of our Empire Still less do I wish success to injustice oppression and absurdity 63 During the Gordon Riots in 1780 Burke became a target of hostility and his home was placed under armed guard by the military 64 Paymaster of the Forces Edit In Cincinnatus in Retirement 1782 James Gillray caricatured Burke s support of rights for Catholics The fall of North led to Rockingham being recalled to power in March 1782 Burke was appointed Paymaster of the Forces and a Privy Counsellor but without a seat in Cabinet Rockingham s unexpected death in July 1782 and replacement with Shelburne as Prime Minister put an end to his administration after only a few months but Burke did manage to introduce two Acts The Paymaster General Act 1782 ended the post as a lucrative sinecure Previously Paymasters had been able to draw on money from HM Treasury at their discretion Instead now they were required to put the money they had requested to withdraw from the Treasury into the Bank of England from where it was to be withdrawn for specific purposes The Treasury would receive monthly statements of the Paymaster s balance at the Bank This Act was repealed by Shelburne s administration but the Act that replaced it repeated verbatim almost the whole text of the Burke Act 65 The Civil List and Secret Service Money Act 1782 was a watered down version of Burke s original intentions as outlined in his famous Speech on Economical Reform of 11 February 1780 However he managed to abolish 134 offices in the royal household and civil administration 66 The third Secretary of State and the Board of Trade were abolished and pensions were limited and regulated The Act was anticipated to save 72 368 a year 67 In February 1783 Burke resumed the post of Paymaster of the Forces when Shelburne s government fell and was replaced by a coalition headed by North that included Charles James Fox That coalition fell in 1783 and was succeeded by the long Tory administration of William Pitt the Younger which lasted until 1801 Accordingly having supported Fox and North Burke was in opposition for the remainder of his political life Representative democracy EditIn 1774 Burke s Speech to the Electors at Bristol at the Conclusion of the Poll was noted for its defence of the principles of representative government against the notion that those elected to assemblies like Parliament are or should be merely delegates Certainly Gentlemen it ought to be the happiness and glory of a Representative to live in the strictest union the closest correspondence and the most unreserved communication with his constituents Their wishes ought to have great weight with him their opinion high respect their business unremitted attention It is his duty to sacrifice his repose his pleasures his satisfactions to theirs and above all ever and in all cases to prefer their interest to his own But his unbiassed opinion his mature judgment his enlightened conscience he ought not to sacrifice to you to any man or to any sett of men living These he does not derive from your pleasure no nor from the Law and the Constitution They are a trust from Providence for the abuse of which he is deeply answerable Your Representative owes you not his industry only but his judgment and he betrays instead of serving you if he sacrifices it to your opinion My worthy Colleague says his Will ought to be subservient to yours If that be all the thing is innocent If Government were a matter of Will upon any side yours without question ought to be superior But Government and Legislation are matters of reason and judgement and not of inclination and what sort of reason is that in which the determination precedes the discussion in which one sett of men deliberate and another decide and where those who form the conclusion are perhaps three hundred miles distant from those who hear the arguments To deliver an opinion is the right of all men that of constituents is a weighty and respectable opinion which a Representative ought always to rejoice to hear and which he ought always most seriously to consider But authoritative instructions mandates issued which the member is bound blindly and implicitly to obey to vote and to argue for though contrary to the clearest conviction of his judgment and conscience these are things utterly unknown to the laws of this land and which arise from a fundamental mistake of the whole order and tenour of our constitution Parliament is not a congress of ambassadors from different and hostile interests which interests each must maintain as an agent and advocate against other agents and advocates but Parliament is a deliberative assembly of one nation with one interest that of the whole where not local purposes not local prejudices ought to guide but the general good resulting from the general reason of the whole You choose a member indeed but when you have chosen him he is not a member of Bristol but he is a member of Parliament 68 69 It is often forgotten in this connection that Burke as detailed below was an opponent of slavery and therefore his conscience was refusing to support a trade in which many of his Bristol electors were lucratively involved Political scientist Hanna Pitkin points out that Burke linked the interest of the district with the proper behaviour of its elected official explaining Burke conceives of broad relatively fixed interest few in number and clearly defined of which any group or locality has just one These interests are largely economic or associated with particular localities whose livelihood they characterize in his over all prosperity they involve 70 Burke was a leading sceptic with respect to democracy While admitting that theoretically in some cases it might be desirable he insisted a democratic government in Britain in his day would not only be inept but also oppressive He opposed democracy for three basic reasons First government required a degree of intelligence and breadth of knowledge of the sort that occurred rarely among the common people Second he thought that if they had the vote common people had dangerous and angry passions that could be aroused easily by demagogues fearing that the authoritarian impulses that could be empowered by these passions would undermine cherished traditions and established religion leading to violence and confiscation of property Third Burke warned that democracy would create a tyranny over unpopular minorities who needed the protection of the upper classes 71 Opposition to the slave trade EditBurke proposed a bill to ban slaveholders from being able to sit in the House of Commons claiming they were a danger incompatible with traditional notions of British liberty 72 While Burke did believe that Africans were barbaric and needed to be civilised by Christianity Gregory Collins argues that this was not an unusual attitude amongst abolitionists at the time Furthermore Burke seemed to believe that Christianity would provide a civilising benefit to any group of people as he believed Christianity had tamed European civilisation and regarded Southern European peoples as equally savage and barbarous Collins also suggests that Burke viewed the uncivilised behaviour of African slaves as being partially caused by slavery itself as he believed that making someone a slave stripped them of any virtues and rendered them mentally deficient regardless of race Burke proposed a gradual program of emancipation called Sketch of a Negro Code 73 which Collins argues was quite detailed for the time Collins concludes that Burke s gradualist position on the emancipation of slaves while perhaps seeming ridiculous to some modern day readers was nonetheless sincere 74 India and the impeachment of Warren Hastings EditMain article Impeachment of Warren Hastings For years Burke pursued impeachment efforts against Warren Hastings formerly Governor General of Bengal that resulted in the trial during 1786 His interaction with the British dominion of India began well before Hastings impeachment trial For two decades prior to the impeachment Parliament had dealt with the Indian issue This trial was the pinnacle of years of unrest and deliberation 75 In 1781 Burke was first able to delve into the issues surrounding the East India Company when he was appointed Chairman of the Commons Select Committee on East Indian Affairs from that point until the end of the trial India was Burke s primary concern This committee was charged to investigate alleged injustices in Bengal the war with Hyder Ali and other Indian difficulties 76 While Burke and the committee focused their attention on these matters a second secret committee was formed to assess the same issues Both committee reports were written by Burke Among other purposes the reports conveyed to the Indian princes that Britain would not wage war on them along with demanding that the East India Company should recall Hastings This was Burke s first call for substantive change regarding imperial practices When addressing the whole House of Commons regarding the committee report Burke described the Indian issue as one that began in commerce but ended in empire 77 On 28 February 1785 Burke delivered a now famous speech The Nabob of Arcot s Debts wherein he condemned the damage to India by the East India Company In the province of the Carnatic the Indians had constructed a system of reservoirs to make the soil fertile in a naturally dry region and centred their society on the husbandry of water These are the monuments of real kings who were the fathers of their people testators to a posterity which they embraced as their own These are the grand sepulchres built by ambition but by the ambition of an insatiable benevolence which not contented with reigning in the dispensation of happiness during the contracted term of human life had strained with all the reachings and graspings of a vivacious mind to extend the dominion of their bounty beyond the limits of nature and to perpetuate themselves through generations of generations the guardians the protectors the nourishers of mankind 78 Burke claimed that the advent of East India Company domination in India had eroded much that was good in these traditions and that as a consequence of this and the lack of new customs to replace them the Indian populace under Company rule was needlessly suffering He set about establishing a set of imperial expectations whose moral foundation would in his opinion warrant an overseas empire 79 On 4 April 1786 Burke presented the House of Commons with the Article of Charge of High Crimes and Misdemeanors against Hastings The impeachment in Westminster Hall which did not begin until 14 February 1788 would be the first major public discursive event of its kind in England 80 589 bringing the morality of imperialism to the forefront of public perception Burke was already known for his eloquent rhetorical skills and his involvement in the trial only enhanced its popularity and significance 80 590 Burke s indictment fuelled by emotional indignation branded Hastings a captain general of iniquity who never dined without creating a famine whose heart was gangrened to the core and who resembled both a spider of Hell and a ravenous vulture devouring the carcasses of the dead 81 The House of Commons eventually impeached Hastings but subsequently the House of Lords acquitted him of all charges 80 82 French Revolution 1688 versus 1789 Edit Smelling out a Rat or The Atheistical Revolutionist disturbed in his Midnight Calculations 1790 by Gillray depicting a caricature of Burke holding a crown and a cross while the seated man Richard Price is writing On the Benefits of Anarchy Regicide Atheism beneath a picture of the execution of Charles I of England Reflections on the Revolution in France And on the Proceedings in Certain Societies in London Relative to that Event In a Letter Intended to Have Been Sent to a Gentleman in Paris By the Right Honourable Edmund Burke Initially Burke did not condemn the French Revolution In a letter of 9 August 1789 he wrote England gazing with astonishment at a French struggle for Liberty and not knowing whether to blame or to applaud The thing indeed though I thought I saw something like it in progress for several years has still something in it paradoxical and Mysterious The spirit it is impossible not to admire but the old Parisian ferocity has broken out in a shocking manner 83 The events of 5 6 October 1789 when a crowd of Parisian women marched on Versailles to compel King Louis XVI to return to Paris turned Burke against it In a letter to his son Richard Burke dated 10 October he said This day I heard from Laurence who has sent me papers confirming the portentous state of France where the Elements which compose Human Society seem all to be dissolved and a world of Monsters to be produced in the place of it where Mirabeau presides as the Grand Anarch and the late Grand Monarch makes a figure as ridiculous as pitiable 84 On 4 November Charles Jean Francois Depont wrote to Burke requesting that he endorse the Revolution Burke replied that any critical language of it by him should be taken as no more than the expression of doubt but he added You may have subverted Monarchy but not recover d freedom 85 In the same month he described France as a country undone Burke s first public condemnation of the Revolution occurred on the debate in Parliament on the army estimates on 9 February 1790 provoked by praise of the Revolution by Pitt and Fox Since the House had been prorogued in the summer much work was done in France The French had shewn themselves the ablest architects of ruin that had hitherto existed in the world In that very short space of time they had completely pulled down to the ground their monarchy their church their nobility their law their revenue their army their navy their commerce their arts and their manufactures There was a danger of an imitation of the excesses of an irrational unprincipled proscribing confiscating plundering ferocious bloody and tyrannical democracy In religion the danger of their example is no longer from intolerance but from Atheism a foul unnatural vice foe to all the dignity and consolation of mankind which seems in France for a long time to have been embodied into a faction accredited and almost avowed 86 In January 1790 Burke read Richard Price s sermon of 4 November 1789 entitled A Discourse on the Love of Our Country to the Revolution Society 87 That society had been founded to commemorate the Glorious Revolution of 1688 In this sermon Price espoused the philosophy of universal Rights of Men Price argued that love of our country does not imply any conviction of the superior value of it to other countries or any particular preference of its laws and constitution of government 88 Instead Price asserted that Englishmen should see themselves more as citizens of the world than as members of any particular community A debate between Price and Burke ensued that was the classic moment at which two fundamentally different conceptions of national identity were presented to the English public 89 Price claimed that the principles of the Glorious Revolution included the right to choose our own governors to cashier them for misconduct and to frame a government for ourselves Immediately after reading Price s sermon Burke wrote a draft of what eventually became Reflections on the Revolution in France 90 On 13 February 1790 a notice in the press said that shortly Burke would publish a pamphlet on the Revolution and its British supporters but he spent the year revising and expanding it On 1 November he finally published the Reflections and it was an immediate best seller 91 92 Priced at five shillings it was more expensive than most political pamphlets but by the end of 1790 it had gone through ten printings and sold approximately 17 500 copies A French translation appeared on 29 November and on 30 November the translator Pierre Gaeton Dupont wrote to Burke saying 2 500 copies had already been sold The French translation ran to ten printings by June 1791 93 What the Glorious Revolution had meant was as important to Burke and his contemporaries as it had been for the last one hundred years in British politics 94 In the Reflections Burke argued against Price s interpretation of the Glorious Revolution and instead gave a classic Whig defence of it 95 Burke argued against the idea of abstract metaphysical rights of humans and instead advocated national tradition The Revolution was made to preserve our antient indisputable laws and liberties and that antient constitution of government which is our only security for law and liberty The very idea of the fabrication of a new government is enough to fill us with disgust and horror We wished at the period of the Revolution and do now wish to derive all we possess as an inheritance from our forefathers Upon that body and stock of inheritance we have taken care not to inoculate any cyon scion alien to the nature of the original plant Our oldest reformation is that of Magna Charta You will see that Sir Edward Coke that great oracle of our law and indeed all the great men who follow him to Blackstone are industrious to prove the pedigree of our liberties They endeavour to prove that the ancient charter were nothing more than a re affirmance of the still more ancient standing law of the kingdom In the famous law called the Petition of Right the parliament says to the king Your subjects have inherited this freedom claiming their franchises not on abstract principles as the rights of men but as the rights of Englishmen and as a patrimony derived from their forefathers 96 Burke said We fear God we look up with awe to kings with affection to Parliaments with duty to magistrates with reverence to priests and with respect to nobility Why Because when such ideas are brought before our minds it is natural to be so affected 97 Burke defended this prejudice on the grounds that it is the general bank and capital of nations and of ages and superior to individual reason which is small in comparison Prejudice Burke claimed is of ready application in the emergency it previously engages the mind in a steady course of wisdom and virtue and does not leave the man hesitating in the moment of decision sceptical puzzled and unresolved Prejudice renders a man s virtue his habit 98 Burke criticised social contract theory by claiming that society is indeed a contract although it is a partnership not only between those who are living but between those who are living those who are dead and those who are to be born 99 The most famous passage in Burke s Reflections was his description of the events of 5 6 October 1789 and the part of Marie Antoinette in them Burke s account differs little from modern historians who have used primary sources 100 His use of flowery language to describe it provoked both praise and criticism Philip Francis wrote to Burke saying that what he wrote of Marie Antoinette was pure foppery 101 Edward Gibbon reacted differently I adore his chivalry 102 Burke was informed by an Englishman who had talked with the Duchesse de Biron that when Marie Antoinette was reading the passage she burst into tears and took considerable time to finish reading it 103 Price had rejoiced that the French king had been led in triumph during the October Days but to Burke this symbolised the opposing revolutionary sentiment of the Jacobins and the natural sentiments of those who shared his own view with horror that the ungallant assault on Marie Antoinette was a cowardly attack on a defenceless woman 104 Louis XVI translated the Reflections from end to end into French 105 Fellow Whig MPs Richard Sheridan and Charles James Fox disagreed with Burke and split with him Fox thought the Reflections to be in very bad taste and favouring Tory principles 106 Other Whigs such as the Duke of Portland and Earl Fitzwilliam privately agreed with Burke but they did not wish for a public breach with their Whig colleagues 107 Burke wrote on 29 November 1790 I have received from the Duke of Portland Lord Fitzwilliam the Duke of Devonshire Lord John Cavendish Montagu Frederick Montagu MP and a long et cetera of the old Stamina of the Whiggs a most full approbation of the principles of that work and a kind indulgence to the execution 108 The Duke of Portland said in 1791 that when anyone criticised the Reflections to him he informed them that he had recommended the book to his sons as containing the true Whig creed 109 In the opinion of Paul Langford 37 Burke crossed something of a Rubicon when he attended a levee on 3 February 1791 to meet the King later described by Jane Burke as follows On his coming to Town for the Winter as he generally does he went to the Levee with the Duke of Portland who went with Lord William to kiss hands on his going into the Guards while Lord William was kissing hands The King was talking to The Duke but his Eyes were fixed on Burke who was standing in the Crowd and when He said His say to The Duke without waiting for Burke s coming up in his turn The King went up to him and after the usual questions of how long have you been in Town and the weather He said you have been very much employed of late and very much confined Burke said no Sir not more than usual You have and very well employed too but there are none so deaf as those that w ont hear and none so blind as those that w ont see Burke made a low bow Sir I certainly now understand you but was afraid my vanity or presumption might have led me to imagine what Your Majesty has said referred to what I have done You cannot be vain You have been of use to us all it is a general opinion is it not so Lord Stair who was standing near It is said Lord Stair Your Majesty s adopting it Sir will make the opinion general said Burke I know it is the general opinion and I know that there is no Man who calls himself a Gentleman that must not think himself obliged to you for you have supported the cause of the Gentlemen You know the tone at Court is a whisper but The King said all this loud so as to be heard by every one at Court 110 Burke s Reflections sparked a pamphlet war Mary Wollstonecraft was one of the first into print publishing A Vindication of the Rights of Men a few weeks after Burke Thomas Paine followed with the Rights of Man in 1791 James Mackintosh who wrote Vindiciae Gallicae was the first to see the Reflections as the manifesto of a Counter Revolution Mackintosh later agreed with Burke s views remarking in December 1796 after meeting him that Burke was minutely and accurately informed to a wonderful exactness with respect to every fact relating to the French Revolution 111 Mackintosh later said Burke was one of the first thinkers as well as one of the greatest orators of his time He is without parallel in any age excepting perhaps Lord Bacon and Cicero and his works contain an ampler store of political and moral wisdom than can be found in any other writer whatever 112 Charles James Fox In November 1790 Francois Louis Thibault de Menonville a member of the National Assembly of France wrote to Burke praising Reflections and requesting more very refreshing mental food that he could publish 113 This Burke did in April 1791 when he published A Letter to a Member of the National Assembly Burke called for external forces to reverse the Revolution and included an attack on the late French philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau as being the subject of a personality cult that had developed in revolutionary France Although Burke conceded that Rousseau sometimes showed a considerable insight into human nature he mostly was critical Although he did not meet Rousseau on his visit to Britain in 1766 1767 Burke was a friend of David Hume with whom Rousseau had stayed Burke said Rousseau entertained no principle either to influence of his heart or to guide his understanding but vanity which he was possessed to a degree little short of madness He also cited Rousseau s Confessions as evidence that Rousseau had a life of obscure and vulgar vices that was not chequered or spotted here and there with virtues or even distinguished by a single good action Burke contrasted Rousseau s theory of universal benevolence and his having sent his children to a foundling hospital stating that he was a lover of his kind but a hater of his kindred 114 These events and the disagreements that arose from them within the Whig Party led to its break up and to the rupture of Burke s friendship with Fox In debate in Parliament on Britain s relations with Russia Fox praised the principles of the Revolution although Burke was not able to reply at this time as he was overpowered by continued cries of question from his own side of the House 115 When Parliament was debating the Quebec Bill for a constitution for Canada Fox praised the Revolution and criticised some of Burke s arguments such as hereditary power On 6 May 1791 Burke used the opportunity to answer Fox during another debate in Parliament on the Quebec Bill and condemn the new French Constitution and the horrible consequences flowing from the French idea of the Rights of Man 116 Burke asserted that those ideas were the antithesis of both the British and the American constitutions 117 Burke was interrupted and Fox intervened saying that Burke should be allowed to carry on with his speech However a vote of censure was moved against Burke for noticing the affairs of France which was moved by Lord Sheffield and seconded by Fox 118 Pitt made a speech praising Burke and Fox made a speech both rebuking and complimenting Burke He questioned the sincerity of Burke who seemed to have forgotten the lessons he had learned from him quoting from Burke s own speeches of fourteen and fifteen years before Burke s response was as follows It certainly was indiscreet at any period but especially at his time of life to parade enemies or give his friends occasion to desert him yet if his firm and steady adherence to the British constitution placed him in such a dilemma he would risk all and as public duty and public experience taught him with his last words exclaim Fly from the French Constitution 116 At this point Fox whispered that there was no loss of friendship I regret to say there is Burke replied I have indeed made a great sacrifice I have done my duty though I have lost my friend There is something in the detested French constitution that envenoms every thing it touches 119 This provoked a reply from Fox yet he was unable to give his speech for some time since he was overcome with tears and emotion Fox appealed to Burke to remember their inalienable friendship but he also repeated his criticisms of Burke and uttered unusually bitter sarcasms 119 This only aggravated the rupture between the two men Burke demonstrated his separation from the party on 5 June 1791 by writing to Fitzwilliam declining money from him 120 Burke was dismayed that some Whigs instead of reaffirming the principles of the Whig Party he laid out in the Reflections had rejected them in favour of French principles and that they criticised Burke for abandoning Whig principles Burke wanted to demonstrate his fidelity to Whig principles and feared that acquiescence to Fox and his followers would allow the Whig Party to become a vehicle for Jacobinism Burke knew that many members of the Whig Party did not share Fox s views and he wanted to provoke them into condemning the French Revolution Burke wrote that he wanted to represent the whole Whig Party as tolerating and by a toleration countenancing those proceedings so that he could stimulate them to a public declaration of what every one of their acquaintance privately knows to be their sentiments 121 On 3 August 1791 Burke published his Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs in which he renewed his criticism of the radical revolutionary programmes inspired by the French Revolution and attacked the Whigs who supported them as holding principles contrary to those traditionally held by the Whig Party Burke owned two copies of what has been called that practical compendium of Whig political theory namely The Tryal of Dr Henry Sacheverell 1710 122 Burke wrote of the trial It rarely happens to a party to have the opportunity of a clear authentic recorded declaration of their political tenets upon the subject of a great constitutional event like that of the Glorious Revolution 122 Writing in the third person Burke asserted in his Appeal The foundations laid down by the Commons on the trial of Doctor Sacheverel for justifying the revolution of 1688 are the very same laid down in Mr Burke s Reflections that is to say a breach of the original contract implied and expressed in the constitution of this country as a scheme of government fundamentally and inviolably fixed in King Lords and Commons That the fundamental subversion of this antient constitution by one of its parts having been attempted and in effect accomplished justified the Revolution That it was justified only upon the necessity of the case as the only means left for the recovery of that antient constitution formed by the original contract of the British state as well as for the future preservation of the same government These are the points to be proved 122 Burke then provided quotations from Paine s Rights of Man to demonstrate what the New Whigs believed Burke s belief that Foxite principles corresponded to Paine s was genuine 123 Finally Burke denied that a majority of the people had or ought to have the final say in politics and alter society at their pleasure People had rights but also duties and these duties were not voluntary According to Burke the people could not overthrow morality derived from God 124 Although Whig grandees such as Portland and Fitzwilliam privately agreed with Burke s Appeal they wished he had used more moderate language Fitzwilliam saw the Appeal as containing the doctrines I have sworn by long and long since 125 Francis Basset a backbench Whig MP wrote to Burke that though for reasons which I will not now detail I did not then deliver my sentiments I most perfectly differ from Mr Fox amp from the great Body of opposition on the French Revolution 125 Burke sent a copy of the Appeal to the King and the King requested a friend to communicate to Burke that he had read it with great Satisfaction 125 Burke wrote of its reception Not one word from one of our party They are secretly galled They agree with me to a title but they dare not speak out for fear of hurting Fox They leave me to myself they see that I can do myself justice 120 Charles Burney viewed it as a most admirable book the best amp most useful on political subjects that I have ever seen but he believed the differences in the Whig Party between Burke and Fox should not be aired publicly 126 Eventually most of the Whigs sided with Burke and gave their support to William Pitt the Younger s Tory government which in response to France s declaration of war against Britain declared war on France s Revolutionary Government in 1793 In December 1791 Burke sent government ministers his Thoughts on French Affairs where he put forward three main points namely that no counter revolution in France would come about by purely domestic causes that the longer the Revolutionary Government exists the stronger it becomes and that the Revolutionary Government s interest and aim is to disturb all of the other governments of Europe 127 As a Whig Burke did not wish to see an absolute monarchy again in France after the extirpation of Jacobinism Writing to an emigre in 1791 Burke expressed his views against a restoration of the Ancien Regime When such a complete convulsion has shaken the State and hardly left any thing whatsoever either in civil arrangements or in the Characters and disposition of men s minds exactly where it was whatever shall be settled although in the former persons and upon old forms will be in some measure a new thing and will labour under something of the weakness as well as other inconveniences of a Change My poor opinion is that you mean to establish what you call L ancien Regime If any one means that system of Court Intrigue miscalled a Government as it stood at Versailles before the present confusions as the thing to be established that I believe will be found absolutely impossible and if you consider the Nature as well of persons as of affairs I flatter myself you must be of my opinion That was tho not so violent a State of Anarchy as well as the present If it were even possible to lay things down exactly as they stood before the series of experimental politicks began I am quite sure that they could not long continue in that situation In one Sense of L Ancien Regime I am clear that nothing else can reasonably be done 128 Burke delivered a speech on the debate of the Aliens Bill on 28 December 1792 He supported the Bill as it would exclude murderous atheists who would pull down Church and state religion and God morality and happiness 129 The peroration included a reference to a French order for 3 000 daggers Burke revealed a dagger he had concealed in his coat and threw it to the floor This is what you are to gain by an alliance with France Burke picked up the dagger and continued When they smile I see blood trickling down their faces I see their insidious purposes I see that the object of all their cajoling is blood I now warn my countrymen to beware of these execrable philosophers whose only object it is to destroy every thing that is good here and to establish immorality and murder by precept and example Hic niger est hunc tu Romane caveto Such a man is evil beware of him Roman Horace Satires I 4 85 129 Burke supported the war against Revolutionary France seeing Britain as fighting on the side of the royalists and emigres in a civil war rather than fighting against the whole nation of France 130 Burke also supported the royalist uprising in La Vendee describing it on 4 November 1793 in a letter to William Windham as the sole affair I have much heart in 130 Burke wrote to Henry Dundas on 7 October urging him to send reinforcements there as he viewed it as the only theatre in the war that might lead to a march on Paris but Dundas did not follow Burke s advice Burke believed the British government was not taking the uprising seriously enough a view reinforced by a letter he had received from the Prince Charles of France S A R le comte d Artois dated 23 October requesting that he intercede on behalf of the royalists to the government Burke was forced to reply on 6 November I am not in His Majesty s Service or at all consulted in his Affairs 131 Burke published his Remarks on the Policy of the Allies with Respect to France begun in October where he said I am sure every thing has shewn us that in this war with France one Frenchman is worth twenty foreigners La Vendee is a proof of this 132 On 20 June 1794 Burke received a vote of thanks from the House of Commons for his services in the Hastings Trial and he immediately resigned his seat being replaced by his son Richard A tragic blow fell upon Burke with the loss of Richard in August 1794 to whom he was tenderly attached and in whom he saw signs of promise 37 which were not patent to others and which in fact appear to have been non existent although this view may have rather reflected the fact that his son Richard had worked successfully in the early battle for Catholic emancipation King George III whose favour he had gained by his attitude on the French Revolution wished to create him Earl of Beaconsfield but the death of his son deprived the opportunity of such an honour and all its attractions so the only award he would accept was a pension of 2 500 Even this modest reward was attacked by the Duke of Bedford and the Earl of Lauderdale to whom Burke replied in his Letter to a Noble Lord 1796 133 It cannot at this time be too often repeated line upon line precept upon precept until it comes into the currency of a proverb To innovate is not to reform 134 He argued that he was rewarded on merit but the Duke of Bedford received his rewards from inheritance alone his ancestor being the original pensioner Mine was from a mild and benevolent sovereign his from Henry the Eighth 135 Burke also hinted at what would happen to such people if their revolutionary ideas were implemented and included a description of the British Constitution But as to our country and our race as long as the well compacted structure of our church and state the sanctuary the holy of holies of that ancient law defended by reverence defended by power a fortress at once and a temple shall stand inviolate on the brow of the British Sion as long as the British Monarchy not more limited than fenced by the orders of the State shall like the proud Keep of Windsor rising in the majesty of proportion and girt with the double belt of its kindred and coeval towers as long as this awful structure shall oversee and guard the subjected land so long as the mounds and dykes of the low fat Bedford level will have nothing to fear from all the pickaxes of all the levellers of France 136 Burke s last publications were the Letters on a Regicide Peace October 1796 called forth by negotiations for peace with France by the Pitt government Burke regarded this as appeasement injurious to national dignity and honour 137 In his Second Letter Burke wrote of the French Revolutionary government Individuality is left out of their scheme of government The State is all in all Everything is referred to the production of force afterwards everything is trusted to the use of it It is military in its principle in its maxims in its spirit and in all its movements The State has dominion and conquest for its sole objects dominion over minds by proselytism over bodies by arms 138 This is held to be the first explanation of the modern concept of totalitarian state 139 Burke regarded the war with France as ideological against an armed doctrine He wished that France would not be partitioned due to the effect this would have on the balance of power in Europe and that the war was not against France but against the revolutionaries governing her 140 Burke said It is not France extending a foreign empire over other nations it is a sect aiming at universal empire and beginning with the conquest of France 37 Later life EditIn November 1795 there was a debate in Parliament on the high price of corn and Burke wrote a memorandum to Pitt on the subject In December Samuel Whitbread MP introduced a bill giving magistrates the power to fix minimum wages and Fox said he would vote for it This debate probably led Burke to editing his memorandum as there appeared a notice that Burke would soon publish a letter on the subject to the Secretary of the Board of Agriculture Arthur Young but he failed to complete it These fragments were inserted into the memorandum after his death and published posthumously in 1800 as Thoughts and Details on Scarcity 141 In it Burke expounded some of the doctrines of political economists bearing upon agriculture as a trade 142 Burke criticised policies such as maximum prices and state regulation of wages and set out what the limits of government should be That the State ought to confine itself to what regards the State or the creatures of the State namely the exterior establishment of its religion its magistracy its revenue its military force by sea and land the corporations that owe their existence to its fiat in a word to every thing that is truly and properly public to the public peace to the public safety to the public order to the public prosperity 143 The economist Adam Smith remarked that Burke was the only man I ever knew who thinks on economic subjects exactly as I do without any previous communications having passed between us 144 Writing to a friend in May 1795 Burke surveyed the causes of discontent I think I can hardly overrate the malignity of the principles of Protestant ascendency as they affect Ireland or of Indianism i e corporate tyranny as practiced by the British East Indies Company as they affect these countries and as they affect Asia or of Jacobinism as they affect all Europe and the state of human society itself The last is the greatest evil 145 By March 1796 Burke had changed his mind Our Government and our Laws are beset by two different Enemies which are sapping its foundations Indianism and Jacobinism In some Cases they act separately in some they act in conjunction But of this I am sure that the first is the worst by far and the hardest to deal with and for this amongst other reasons that it weakens discredits and ruins that force which ought to be employed with the greatest Credit and Energy against the other and that it furnishes Jacobinism with its strongest arms against all formal Government 146 For more than a year prior to his death Burke knew that his stomach was irrecoverably ruind 37 After hearing that Burke was nearing death Fox wrote to Mrs Burke enquiring after him Fox received the reply the next day Mrs Burke presents her compliments to Mr Fox and thanks him for his obliging inquiries Mrs Burke communicated his letter to Mr Burke and by his desire has to inform Mr Fox that it has cost Mr Burke the most heart felt pain to obey the stern voice of his duty in rending asunder a long friendship but that he deemed this sacrifice necessary that his principles continue the same and that in whatever of life may yet remain to him he conceives that he must live for others and not for himself Mr Burke is convinced that the principles which he has endeavoured to maintain are necessary to the welfare and dignity of his country and that these principles can be enforced only by the general persuasion of his sincerity 147 Burke died in Beaconsfield Buckinghamshire on 9 July 1797 148 and was buried there alongside his son and brother Legacy Edit Statue of Edmund Burke in Washington D C Burke is regarded by most political historians in the English speaking world as a liberal conservative 149 and the father of modern British conservatism 150 151 152 Burke was utilitarian and empirical in his arguments while Joseph de Maistre a fellow conservative from the Continent was more providentialist and sociological and deployed a more confrontational tone in his arguments 153 Burke believed that property was essential to human life Because of his conviction that people desire to be ruled and controlled the division of property formed the basis for social structure helping develop control within a property based hierarchy He viewed the social changes brought on by property as the natural order of events which should be taking place as the human race progressed With the division of property and the class system he also believed that it kept the monarch in check to the needs of the classes beneath the monarch Since property largely aligned or defined divisions of social class class too was seen as natural part of a social agreement that the setting of persons into different classes is the mutual benefit of all subjects Concern for property is not Burke s only influence Christopher Hitchens summarises as follows If modern conservatism can be held to derive from Burke it is not just because he appealed to property owners in behalf of stability but also because he appealed to an everyday interest in the preservation of the ancestral and the immemorial 154 Burke s support for the causes of the oppressed majorities such as Irish Catholics and Indians led him to be at the receiving end of hostile criticism from Tories while his opposition to the spread of the French Republic and its radical ideals across Europe led to similar charges from Whigs As a consequence Burke often became isolated in Parliament 155 156 In the 19th century Burke was praised by both liberals and conservatives Burke s friend Philip Francis wrote that Burke was a man who truly amp prophetically foresaw all the consequences which would rise from the adoption of the French principles but because Burke wrote with so much passion people were doubtful of his arguments 157 William Windham spoke from the same bench in the House of Commons as Burke had when he had separated from Fox and an observer said Windham spoke like the ghost of Burke when he made a speech against peace with France in 1801 158 William Hazlitt a political opponent of Burke regarded him as amongst his three favourite writers the others being Junius and Rousseau and made it a test of the sense and candour of any one belonging to the opposite party whether he allowed Burke to be a great man 159 William Wordsworth was originally a supporter of the French Revolution and attacked Burke in A Letter to the Bishop of Llandaff 1793 but by the early 19th century he had changed his mind and came to admire Burke In his Two Addresses to the Freeholders of Westmorland Wordsworth called Burke the most sagacious Politician of his age whose predictions time has verified 160 He later revised his poem The Prelude to include praise of Burke Genius of Burke forgive the pen seduced By specious wonders and portrayed him as an old oak 160 Samuel Taylor Coleridge came to have a similar conversion as he had criticised Burke in The Watchman but in his Friend 1809 1810 had defended Burke from charges of inconsistency 161 Later in his Biographia Literaria 1817 Coleridge hails Burke as a prophet and praises Burke for referring habitually to principles He was a scientific statesman and therefore a seer 162 Henry Brougham wrote of Burke that all his predictions save one momentary expression had been more than fulfilled anarchy and bloodshed had borne sway in France conquest and convulsion had desolated Europe T he providence of mortals is not often able to penetrate so far as this into futurity 163 George Canning believed that Burke s Reflections has been justified by the course of subsequent events and almost every prophecy has been strictly fulfilled 163 In 1823 Canning wrote that he took Burke s last works and words as the manual of my politics 164 The Conservative Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli was deeply penetrated with the spirit and sentiment of Burke s later writings 165 The 19th century Liberal Prime Minister William Gladstone considered Burke a magazine of wisdom on Ireland and America and in his diary recorded Made many extracts from Burke sometimes almost divine 166 The Radical MP and anti Corn Law activist Richard Cobden often praised Burke s Thoughts and Details on Scarcity 167 The Liberal historian Lord Acton considered Burke one of the three greatest Liberals along with Gladstone and Thomas Babington Macaulay 168 Lord Macaulay recorded in his diary I have now finished reading again most of Burke s works Admirable The greatest man since Milton 169 The Gladstonian Liberal MP John Morley published two books on Burke including a biography and was influenced by Burke including his views on prejudice 170 The Cobdenite Radical Francis Hirst thought Burke deserved a place among English libertarians even though of all lovers of liberty and of all reformers he was the most conservative the least abstract always anxious to preserve and renovate rather than to innovate In politics he resembled the modern architect who would restore an old house instead of pulling it down to construct a new one on the site 171 Burke s Reflections on the Revolution in France was controversial at the time of its publication but after his death it was to become his best known and most influential work and a manifesto for Conservative thinking Two contrasting assessments of Burke also were offered long after his death by Karl Marx and Winston Churchill In a footnote to Volume One of Das Kapital Marx wrote The sycophant who in the pay of the English oligarchy played the romantic laudator temporis acti against the French Revolution just as in the pay of the North American colonies at the beginning of the American troubles he had played the liberal against the English oligarchy was an out and out vulgar bourgeois The laws of commerce are the laws of Nature and therefore the laws of God E Burke l c pp 31 32 No wonder that true to the laws of God and Nature he always sold himself in the best market In Consistency in Politics Churchill wrote On the one hand Burke is revealed as a foremost apostle of Liberty on the other as the redoubtable champion of Authority But a charge of political inconsistency applied to this life appears a mean and petty thing History easily discerns the reasons and forces which actuated him and the immense changes in the problems he was facing which evoked from the same profound mind and sincere spirit these entirely contrary manifestations His soul revolted against tyranny whether it appeared in the aspect of a domineering Monarch and a corrupt Court and Parliamentary system or whether mouthing the watch words of a non existent liberty it towered up against him in the dictation of a brutal mob and wicked sect No one can read the Burke of Liberty and the Burke of Authority without feeling that here was the same man pursuing the same ends seeking the same ideals of society and Government and defending them from assaults now from one extreme now from the other The historian Piers Brendon asserts that Burke laid the moral foundations for the British Empire epitomised in the trial of Warren Hastings that was ultimately to be its undoing When Burke stated that t he British Empire must be governed on a plan of freedom for it will be governed by no other 172 this was an ideological bacillus that would prove fatal This was Edmund Burke s paternalistic doctrine that colonial government was a trust It was to be so exercised for the benefit of subject people that they would eventually attain their birthright freedom 173 As a consequence of these opinions Burke objected to the opium trade which he called a smuggling adventure and condemned the great Disgrace of the British character in India 174 According to political scientist Jennifer Pitts Burke was arguably the first political thinker to undertake a comprehensive critique of British imperial practice in the name of justice for those who suffered from its moral and political exclusions 175 A Royal Society of Arts blue plaque commemorates Burke at 37 Gerrard Street now in London s Chinatown 176 Statues of Burke are in Bristol England Trinity College Dublin and Washington D C Burke is also the namesake of a private college preparatory school in Washington Edmund Burke School Burke Avenue in The Bronx New York is named for him Criticism EditOne of Burke s largest and most developed critics was the American political theorist Leo Strauss In his book Natural Right and History Strauss makes a series of points in which he somewhat harshly evaluates Burke s writings citation needed One of the topics that he first addresses is the fact that Burke creates a definitive separation between happiness and virtue and explains that Burke therefore seeks the foundation of government in a conformity to our duties and not in imaginary rights of man 177 178 Strauss views Burke as believing that government should focus solely on the duties that a man should have in society as opposed to trying to address any additional needs or desires Government is simply a practicality to Burke and not necessarily meant to function as a tool to help individuals live their best lives Strauss also argues that in a sense Burke s theory could be seen as opposing the very idea of forming such philosophies Burke expresses the view that theory cannot adequately predict future occurrences and therefore men need to have instincts that cannot be practised or derived from ideology 177 178 This leads to an overarching criticism that Strauss holds regarding Burke which is his rejection of the use of logic Burke dismisses a widely held view amongst theorists that reason should be the primary tool in the forming of a constitution or contract 177 178 Burke instead believes that constitutions should be made based on natural processes as opposed to rational planning for the future However Strauss points out that criticising rationality actually works against Burke s original stance of returning to traditional ways because some amount of human reason is inherent and therefore is in part grounded in tradition 177 In regards to this formation of legitimate social order Strauss does not necessarily support Burke s opinion that order cannot be established by individual wise people but exclusively by a culmination of individuals with historical knowledge of past functions to use as a foundation 177 178 Strauss notes that Burke would oppose more newly formed republics due to this thought 177 although Lenzner adds the fact that he did seem to believe that America s constitution could be justified given the specific circumstances 178 On the other hand France s constitution was much too radical as it relied too heavily on enlightened reasoning as opposed to traditional methods and values 177 Religious thought EditMain article Religious thought of Edmund Burke Burke s religious writing comprises published works and commentary on the subject of religion Burke s religious thought was grounded in the belief that religion is the foundation of civil society 179 He sharply criticised deism and atheism and emphasised Christianity as a vehicle of social progress 180 Born in Ireland to a Catholic mother and a Protestant father Burke vigorously defended the Anglican Church but he also demonstrated sensitivity to Catholic concerns 181 He linked the conservation of a state established religion with the preservation of citizens constitutional liberties and highlighted Christianity s benefit not only to the believer s soul but also to political arrangements 181 False quotations Edit When good men do nothing Edit The statement that The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing is often attributed to Burke despite the debated origin of this quote 182 183 In 1770 it is known that Burke wrote in Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents W hen bad men combine the good must associate else they will fall one by one an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle 184 185 In 1867 John Stuart Mill made a similar statement in an inaugural address delivered before the University of St Andrews Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends than that good men should look on and do nothing 186 Timeline EditBibliography EditA Vindication of Natural Society 1756 A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful 1757 An Account of the European Settlement in America 1757 The Abridgement of the History of England 1757 Annual Register editor for some 30 years 1758 Tracts on the Popery Laws Early 1760s On the Present State of the Nation 1769 Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents 1770 On American Taxation 1774 Conciliation with the Colonies 1775 A Letter to the Sheriffs of Bristol 1777 Reform of the Representation in the House of Commons 1782 Reflections on the Revolution in France 1790 Letter to a Member of the National Assembly 1791 An Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs 1791 Thoughts on French Affairs 1791 Remarks on the Policy of the Allies 1793 Thoughts and Details on Scarcity 1795 Letters on a Regicide Peace 1795 97 Letter to a Noble Lord 1796 In popular media EditActor T P McKenna was cast as Edmund Burke in the TV series Longitude in 2000 187 See also EditBurke family Conservative Party List of abolitionist forerunnersReferences EditCitations Edit Edmund Burke Library Ireland Archived from the original on 20 October 2017 M G Jones Hannah More Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1952 p 135 Marshall Peter Hugh 1991 Demanding the Impossible HarperCollins p 134 ISBN 0 00 217855 9 When Burke became a Tory after the French Revolution and thundered against all improvement he disowned his Vindication of Natural Society as a youthful folly Most commentators have followed suit suggesting that he was trying to parody the manner of Bolingbroke But Godwin while recognizing Burke s ironic intention took him seriously He acknowledged that most of his own arguments against political society in An Enquiry concerning Political Justice 1793 may be found in Burke s work a treatise in which the evils of the existing political institutions are displayed with incomparable force of reasoning and lustre of eloquence Dauer M J 1953 Review of John C Calhoun Sectionalist 1840 1850 The Political Theory of John C Calhoun by C M Wiltse amp A O Spain The Journal of Politics 15 1 156 159 doi 10 2307 2126203 JSTOR 2126203 The exact year of his birth is the subject of a great deal of controversy 1728 1729 and 1730 have been proposed The month and day of his birth also are subject to question a problem compounded by the Julian Gregorian changeover in 1752 during his lifetime For a fuller treatment of the question see F P Lock Edmund Burke Volume I 1730 1784 Clarendon Press 1999 pp 16 17 Conor Cruise O Brien 2008 p 14 questions Burke s birthplace as having been in Dublin arguing in favour of Shanballymore Co Cork in the house of his uncle James Nagle Richard Bourke Empire and Revolution The Political Life of Edmund Burke Princeton University Press 2015 pp 220 221 passim Burke lived before the terms conservative and liberal were used to describe political ideologies cf J C D Clark English Society 1660 1832 Cambridge University Press 2000 pp 5 301 Dennis O Keeffe John Meadowcroft 2009 Edmund Burke Continuum p 93 ISBN 978 0826429780 Andrew Heywood Political Ideologies An Introduction Third Edition Palgrave Macmillan 2003 p 74 F P Lock Edmund Burke Volume II 1784 1797 Clarendon Press 2006 p 585 Clark 2001 p 26 Paul Langford Burke Edmund 1729 30 1797 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press September 2004 online edn January 2008 accessed 18 October 2008 James Prior Life of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke Fifth Edition London Henry G Bohn 1854 p 1 O Brien Connor Cruise 1993 The Great Melody p 10 Extracts from Mr Burke s Table talk at Crewe Hall Written down by Mrs Crewe pp 62 Miscellanies of the Philobiblon Society Volume VII London Whittingham and Wilkins 1862 63 pp 52 53 Clark p 26 DistanceFrom com Dublin Ireland to Ballitore Co Kildare Ireland DistanceFrom com softusvista 2014 Retrieved 18 December 2014 Alumni Dublinenses a register of the students graduates professors and provosts of Trinity College in the University of Dublin 1593 1860 George Dames Burtchaell Thomas Ulick Sadleir p114 Dublin Alex Thom and Co 1935 Catholics and Trinity College Dublin Hansard 8 May 1834 hansard millbanksystems com Retrieved 23 January 2014 Edmund Burke The Basics of Philosophy Retrieved 21 March 2017 a b Prior p 45 Jim McCue Edmund Burke and Our Present Discontents The Claridge Press 1997 p 14 Allibone Samuel Austin 1908 A critical dictionary of English literature and British and American authors living and deceased from the earliest accounts to the latter half of the nineteenth century Containing over forty six thousand articles authors with forty indexes of subjects Vol 1 J B Lippincott amp Co p 289 OL 7102188M McCue p 145 a b Lock Burke Vol I p 85 Rothbard Murray Edmund Burke Anarchist Retrieved 14 October 2007 Sobran Joseph Anarchism Reason and History Oddly enough the great conservative Edmund Burke began his career with an anarchist tract arguing that the state was naturally and historically destructive of human society life and liberty Later he explained that he d intended his argument ironically but many have doubted this His argument for anarchy was too powerful passionate and cogent to be a joke Later as a professional politician Burke seems to have come to terms with the state believing that no matter how bloody its origins it could be tamed and civilized as in Europe by the spirit of a gentleman and the spirit of religion But even as he wrote the old order he loved was already breaking down Lock vol 1 p 92 Prior p 47 Lock Burke Vol I p 143 G M Young Burke Proceedings of the British Academy XXIX London 1943 p 6 Herbert Butterfield Man on His Past Cambridge 1955 p 69 Prior pp 52 53 Thomas Wellsted Copeland Edmund Burke and the Book Reviews in Dodsley s Annual Register Publications of the Modern Language Association Vol 57 No 2 Jun 1942 pp 446 468 a b Copeland p 446 Summary of Individual Legacies of British Slave ownership www ucl ac uk a b c d e f g h Nagle Sir Edmund Oxford Dictionary of National Biography J K Laughton subscription required Retrieved 22 April 2012 A literary party at Sir Joshua Reynolds s D George Thompson published by Owen Bailey after James William Edmund Doyle published 1 October 1851 McCue p 16 Lock Burke Vol I p 262 Private Letters of Edward Gibbon II 1896 Prothero P ed p 251 cited in The Decline and Fall of the British Empire 1781 1998 2007 Brendon Piers Jonathan Cape London p 10 ISBN 978 0 224 06222 0 Boswell Life of Samuel Johnson edited by Hill Powell v II p 349 7 April 1775 Boswell Journals Boswell The Ominous Years p 134 edited by Ryskamp amp Pottle McGraw Hill 1963 Burke Select Works of Edmund Burke Vol 1 Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents Lock Burke Vol I p 277 Lock Burke Vol I p 283 Prior p 127 pp 340 342 Prior p 127 Lock Burke Vol I pp 321 322 Lock Burke Vol I p 322 Brendan Simms Three Victories and a Defeat The Rise and Fall of the First British Empire 1714 1783 Allen Lane 2007 pp 569 571 uchicago edu Edmund Burke Speech to the Electors of Bristol 3 Nov 1774 Works 1 446 448 trans ed 2012 Discurso aos eleitores de Bristol Revista de Sociologia e Politica 20 44 97 101 doi 10 1590 S0104 44782012000400008 Prior p 175 Prior pp 175 176 Prior p 176 Prior pp 142 143 a b Speech on Moving Resolutions for Conciliation with America 22 March 1775 Gutenberg org a b c d e Burke Edmund Speech to Parliament on Reconciliation with the American Colonies PDF America in Class National Humanities Center Retrieved 10 December 2014 Lexington and Concord USHistory org Independence Hall Association in Philadelphia Retrieved 10 December 2014 a b Lock Burke Vol I p 384 Lock Burke Vol I p 394 Lock Burke Vol I p 399 Hibbert pp 48 73 Lock Burke Vol I p 511 n 65 McCue p 21 Lock Burke Vol I pp 511 512 Burke Select Works oil libertyfund org The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke Volume I London Henry G Bohn 1854 pp 446 448 Hanna Fenichel Pitkin The concept of representation 1972 p 174 Joseph Hamburger Burke Edmund in Seymour Martin Lipset ed The Encyclopedia of Democracy Congressional Quarterly 1995 1 147 149 O Brien Conor Cruise 1996 The Long Affair Thomas Jefferson and the French Revolution 1785 1800 The University of Chicago Press p 41 Sketch of a Negro Code PDF p 175 Collins Gregory M 2019 Edmund Burke on slavery and the slave trade Slavery amp Abolition 40 3 494 521 doi 10 1080 0144039X 2019 1597501 ISSN 0144 039X S2CID 150733637 Ahmed Siraj 2002 The Theater of the Civilized Self Edmund Burke and the East India Trials Representations 78 30 doi 10 1525 rep 2002 78 1 28 Russell Kirk Edmund Burke A Genius Reconsidered 1988 2 Elizabeth D Samet A Prosecutor and a Gentleman Edmund Burke s Idiom of Impeachment ELH 68 no 2 2001 402 McCue p 155 McCue p 156 a b c Mukherjee Mithi 2010 Justice War and the Imperium India and Britain in Edmund Burke s Prosecutorial Speeches in the Impeachment Trial of Warren Hastings PDF Law and History Review 23 3 589 630 doi 10 1017 S0738248000000584 ISSN 0738 2480 JSTOR 30042899 S2CID 145641990 Piers Brendon The Decline and Fall of the British Empire 1781 1998 London Jonathan Cape 2007 p 35 ISBN 978 0 224 06222 0 Brian Smith Edmund Burke the Warren Hastings trial and the moral dimension of corruption Polity 40 1 2008 70 94 online Clark p 61 Clark pp 61 62 Clark p 62 Clark pp 66 67 A Discourse on the Love of our Country Constitution Retrieved 28 December 2011 Clark p 63 Clark English Society p 233 Dreyer Frederick 1978 The Genesis of Burke s Reflections The Journal of Modern History 50 3 462 doi 10 1086 241734 S2CID 145187310 Clark p 68 Prior p 311 F P Lock Burke s Reflections on the Revolution in France London Allen amp Unwin 1985 p 132 Clark p 39 Clark pp 24 25 34 43 Clark pp 181 183 Clark pp 250 251 Clark pp 251 252 Clark p 261 Lock Burke Vol II pp 289 290 Lock Burke Vol II p 297 Lock Burke Vol II p 300 Alfred Cobban and Robert A Smith eds The Correspondence of Edmund Burke Volume VI Cambridge University Press 1967 p 204 Lock Burke Vol II p 296 Prior pp 313 314 L G Mitchell Charles James Fox Penguin 1997 p 113 Lock Burke s Reflections p 134 Cobban and Smith eds Correspondence of Edmund Burke Volume VI p 178 Cobban and Smith eds Correspondence of Edmund Burke Volume VI p 161 n 2 Cobban and Smith eds Correspondence of Edmund Burke Volume VI p 239 Clark p 49 Prior p 491 Cobban and Smith eds Correspondence of Edmund Burke Volume VI pp 162 169 Lock Burke Vol II pp 356 367 Prior p 327 a b McCue p 23 Frank O Gorman The Whig Party and the French Revolution Macmillan 1967 p 65 Prior p 328 a b Prior p 329 a b O Gorman p 75 O Gorman p 74 a b c Clark p 40 Lock Burke Vol II p 383 Lock Burke Vol II p 384 a b c Lock Burke Vol II p 386 Lock Burke Vol II pp 385 386 Prior pp 357 358 Cobban and Smith eds Correspondence of Edmund Burke Volume VI pp 479 480 a b Lock Burke Vol II p 439 a b Lock Burke Vol II p 453 O Gorman pp 168 169 Edmund Burke The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke Volume VII F C and J Rivington 1815 p 141 Prior pp 425 426 Edmund Burke A Letter from The Right Honourable Edmund Burke to a Noble Lord on the Attacks made upon him and his pension in the House of Lords by The Duke of Bedford and The Earl of Lauderdale Early in the present Sessions of Parliament F and C Rivington 1796 p 20 Burke A Letter to a Noble Lord p 41 Burke A Letter to a Noble Lord pp 52 53 Prior pp 439 440 Steven Blakemore Burke and the Revolution Bicentennial Reflections in Blakemore ed Burke and the French Revolution Bicentennial Essays The University of Georgia Press 1992 p 158 Blakemore p 158 Prior pp 443 444 Robert Eccleshall English Conservatism since the Restoration London Unwin Hyman 1990 p 75 Prior p 419 Eccleshall p 77 E G West Adam Smith New York Arlington House 1969 p 201 R B McDowell ed The Correspondence of Edmund Burke Volume VIII Cambridge University Press 1969 p 254 McDowell ed Correspondence of Edmund Burke Volume VIII p 432 Prior p 456 Cavendish Richard 7 July 1997 Edmund Burke Political Writer and Philosopher Dies History Today Vol 47 no 7 Retrieved 7 July 2018 Lakoff Sandoff 1998 Tocqueville Burke and the Origins of Liberal Conservatism The Review of Politics 60 3 435 464 doi 10 1017 S003467050002742X Von Dehsen Christian D 1999 Philosophers and Religious Leaders Greenwood Publishing Group pp 36 ISBN 978 1 57356 152 5 Retrieved 1 March 2013 via Google Books Eccleshall Robert 1990 English Conservatism Since the Restoration An Introduction amp Anthology Routledge pp 39 ISBN 978 0 04 445773 2 Retrieved 1 March 2013 via Google Books Dobson Andrew 2009 An Introduction to the Politics and Philosophy of Jose Ortega Y Gasset Cambridge University Press pp 73 ISBN 978 0 521 12331 0 Retrieved 1 March 2013 via Google Books Lebrun Richard 2001 Joseph de Maistre s Life Thought and Influence Selected Studies McGill Queen s University Press MQUP pp 164 ISBN 978 0 7735 2288 6 Retrieved 1 March 2013 via Google Books Hitchens Christopher April 2004 Reactionary Prophet The Atlantic Retrieved 24 December 2014 J J Sack From Jacobite to Conservative Reaction and orthodoxy in Britain c 1760 1832 Cambridge University Press 2004 p 90 Sack p 95 Gregory Claeys The Reflections refracted the critical reception of Burke s Reflections on the Revolution in France during the early 1790s in John Whale ed Edmund Burke s Reflections on the Revolution in France New interdisciplinary essays Manchester University Press 2000 p 55 n 23 A D Harvey Britain in the early nineteenth century B T Batsford Ltd 1978 p 125 Lock Burke s Reflections p 175 a b Lock Burke s Reflections p 173 Lock Burke s Reflections pp 173 174 Lock Burke s Reflections p 174 a b Claeys p 50 E J Stapleton ed Some Official Correspondence of George Canning Volume I London Longmans Green amp Co 1887 p 74 William Flavelle Monypenny and George Earle Buckle The Life of Benjamin Disraeli Earl of Beaconsfield Volume I 1804 1859 London John Murray 1929 p 310 John Morley The Life of William Ewart Gladstone Volume III 1880 1898 London Macmillan 1903 p 280 John Morley The Life of Richard Cobden London T Fisher Unwin 1905 p 167 Herbert Paul ed Letters of Lord Acton to Mary Gladstone Macmillan 1914 p 44 Sir George Trevelyan The Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay Volume II London Longmans 1876 p 377 D A Hamer John Morley Liberal Intellectual in Politics Oxford Clarendon Press 1968 p 65 F W Hirst Liberty and Tyranny London Duckworth 1935 pp 105 106 K Brittlebank Tipu Sultan s Search for Legitimacy Delhi 1997 p 27 Brendon p xviii F G Whelan Edmund Burke and India Pittsburgh 1996 p 96 Pitts Jennifer 2005 A Turn to Empire The Rise of Imperial Liberalism in Britain and France Princeton University Press p 60 ISBN 978 1 4008 2663 6 via Google Books Burke Edmund 1729 1797 English Heritage Retrieved 23 October 2012 a b c d e f g Strauss Leo Natural Right and History University of Chicago Press Books Archived from the original on 10 October 2014 a b c d e Lenzner Steven 1991 Strauss s Three Burkes The Problem of Edmund Burke in Natural Right and History Political Theory SAGE Publications 19 3 364 390 doi 10 1177 0090591791019003005 JSTOR 191417 S2CID 144695658 Edmund Burke Reflections on the Revolution in France London J M Dent amp Sons 1964 87 Ian Harris Burke and Religion in David Dwan and Christopher J Insole eds The Cambridge Companion to Edmund Burke Cambridge University Press 2012 103 a b Harris 98 Bromwich David 2014 The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke Harvard University Press pp 175 176 ISBN 978 0674729704 via Google Books O Toole Garson The Only Thing Necessary for the Triumph of Evil is that Good Men Do Nothing Quote Investigator Retrieved 25 July 2015 Ritchie Daniel 1990 Edmund Burke appraisals and applications ISBN 978 0 88738 328 1 via Google Books Burke Edmund 1770 Thoughts on the cause of the present discontents J Dodsley in the Pall Mall p 106 Inaugural Address Delivered to the University of St Andrews Feb 1st 1867 1867 p 36 Longitude c 1999 movie dude com Retrieved 22 June 2021 Sources Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Cousin John William 1910 A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature London J M Dent amp Sons via Wikisource Blakemore Steven ed Burke and the French Revolution Bicentennial Essays The University of Georgia Press 1992 Bourke Richard Empire and Revolution The Political Life of Edmund Burke Princeton University Press 2015 Bromwich David The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke From the Sublime and Beautiful to American Independence Cambridge MA Belknap Press 2014 A review Freedom fighter The Economist 5 July 2014 Clark J C D ed Reflections on the Revolution in France A Critical Edition Stanford University Press 2001 Cone Carl B Burke and the Nature of Politics 2 vols 1957 1964 a detailed modern biography of Burke somewhat uncritical and sometimes superficial regarding politics Thomas Wellsted Copeland Edmund Burke and the Book Reviews in Dodsley s Annual Register Publications of the Modern Language Association Vol 57 No 2 Jun 1942 pp 446 468 Courtenay C P Montesquieu and Burke 1963 good introduction Crowe Ian ed The Enduring Edmund Burke Bicentennial Essays 1997 essays by American conservatives online edition Crowe Ian ed An Imaginative Whig Reassessing the Life and Thought of Edmund Burke 2005 247 pp essays by scholars Ian Crowe The career and political thought of Edmund Burke Journal of Liberal History Issue 40 Autumn 2003 Frederick Dreyer The Genesis of Burke s Reflections The Journal of Modern History Vol 50 No 3 Sep 1978 pp 462 479 Robert Eccleshall English Conservatism since the Restoration London Unwin Hyman 1990 Gibbons Luke Edmund Burke and Ireland Aesthetics Politics and the Colonial Sublime 2003 304 pp Hibbert Christopher 1990 King Mob The Story of Lord George Gordon and the Riots of 1780 Dorset Press ISBN 0 88029 399 3 Russell Kirk The Conservative Mind From Burke to Eliot 7th ed 1992 Kirk Russell Edmund Burke A Genius Reconsidered 1997 online edition Kramnick Isaac The Rage of Edmund Burke Portrait of an Ambivalent Conservative 1977 online edition Lock F P Burke s Reflections on the Revolution in France London Allen amp Unwin 1985 Lock F P Edmund Burke Volume I 1730 1784 Clarendon Press 1999 Lock F P Edmund Burke Volume II 1784 1797 Clarendon Press 2006 Levin Yuval The Great Debate Edmund Burke Thomas Paine and the Birth of Right and Left Basic Books 2013 275 pages their debate regarding the French Revolution Lucas Paul On Edmund Burke s Doctrine of Prescription Or An Appeal from the New to the Old Lawyers Historical Journal 11 1968 opens the way towards an effective synthesis of Burke s ideas of History Change and Prescription Jim McCue Edmund Burke and Our Present Discontents The Claridge Press 1997 Magnus Philip Edmund Burke A Life 1939 older biography Marshall P J The Impeachment of Warren Hastings 1965 the standard history of the trial and Burke s role O Brien Conor Cruise The Great Melody A Thematic Biography of Edmund Burke 1992 ISBN 0 226 61651 7 O Gorman Frank Edmund Burke Edmund Burke His Political Philosophy 2004 153pp online edition Parkin Charles The Moral Basis of Burke s Political Thought 1956 Pocock J G A Burke and the Ancient Constitution Historical Journal 3 1960 125 143 shows Burke s debt to the Common Law tradition of the seventeenth century in JSTOR Raeder Linda C Edmund Burke Old Whig Political Science Reviewer 2006 35 115 131 ISSN 0091 3715 Fulltext Ebsco argues Burke s ideas closely resemble those of conservative philosopher Friedrich August von Hayek 1899 1992 J J Sack The Memory of Burke and the Memory of Pitt English Conservatism Confronts Its Past 1806 1829 The Historical Journal Vol 30 No 3 Sep 1987 pp 623 640 J J Sack From Jacobite to Conservative Reaction and orthodoxy in Britain c 1760 1832 Cambridge University Press 2004 Spinner Jeff Constructing Communities Edmund Burke on Revolution Polity Vol 23 No 3 Spring 1991 pp 395 421 in JSTOR Stanlis Peter Edmund Burke and the Natural Law 1958 Vermeir Koen and Funk Deckard Michael ed The Science of Sensibility Reading Burke s Philosophical Enquiry International Archives of the History of Ideas Vol 206 Springer 2012 John Whale ed Edmund Burke s Reflections on the Revolution in France New interdisciplinary essays Manchester University Press 2000 Whelan Frederick G Edmund Burke and India Political Morality and Empire 1996 O Connor Power J Edmund Burke and His Abiding Influence The North American Review vol 165 issue 493 December 1897 666 681 Main sources Edit Clark J C D ed 2001 Reflections on the Revolution in France A Critical Edition Stanford University Press Hoffman R Levack P eds 1949 Burke s Politics Alfred A Knopf Burke Edmund The Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke 9 vol 1981 vol 1 online vol 2 online vol 6 India The Launching of the Hastings Impeachment 1786 1788 online vol 8 online vol 9 online Further reading Edit Bourke Richard 2015 Empire and Revolution The Political Life of Edmund Burke Princeton University Press Bromwich David 2014 The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke From the Sublime and Beautiful to American Independence Harvard University Press Doran Robert 2015 Burke Sublime Individualism The Theory of the Sublime from Longinus to Kant Cambridge Cambridge University Press OCLC 959033482 Lock F P 1999 Edmund Burke Volume I 1730 1784 Clarendon Press Lock F P 2006 Edmund Burke Volume II 1784 1797 Clarendon Press Marshall P J 2019 Edmund Burke and the British Empire in the West Indies Wealth Power and Slavery Oxford University Press 2019 online review Norman Jesse 2014 Edmund Burke The Visionary who Invented Modern Politics William Collins O Brien Conor Cruise 1992 The Great Melody A Thematic Biography of Edmund Burke University of Chicago Press Stephens Bret 8 9 August 2020 Why Edmund Burke still matters The New York Times No 42 735 International ed p 8 Uglow Jenny 23 May 2019 Big Talkers review of Leo Damrosch The Club Johnson Boswell and the Friends Who Shaped an Age Yale University Press 473 pp The New York Review of Books LXVI 9 26 28 Visser Michael 2008 Burke Edmund 1729 1797 In Hamowy Ronald ed Nozick Robert 1938 2002 The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA SAGE Cato Institute pp 43 44 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n220 ISBN 978 1412965804 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 Whelan Frederick G 1996 Edmund Burke and India Political Morality and Empire University of Pittsburgh PressExternal links EditEdmund Burke at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Edmund Burke Society at Columbia University Harris Ian Edmund Burke In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Burke s works at The Online Library of Liberty Burke s Reflections on the Revolution in France lightly modified for easier reading Works by Edmund Burke at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Edmund Burke at Internet Archive Works by Edmund Burke at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Edmund Burke on In Our Time at the BBC Burke according to Dr Jesse Norman MP at www bbc co uk Edmund Edmund Burke at Curlie Edmund Burke for a Postmodern Age William F Byrne Berfrois 29 June 2011 Archival material relating to Edmund Burke UK National Archives Portraits of Edmund Burke at the National Portrait Gallery London The Liberalism Conservatism of Edmund Burke and F A Hayek A Critical Comparison by Linda C Raeder From Humanitas Volume X No 1 1997 National Humanities Institute Edmund Burke at Find a GravePolitical officesPreceded byRichard Rigby Paymaster of the Forces1782 Succeeded byIsaac BarrePreceded byIsaac Barre Paymaster of the Forces1783 1784 Succeeded byWilliam Wyndham GrenvilleParliament of Great BritainPreceded byRichard Chandler CavendishVerney Lovett Member of Parliament for Wendover1765 1774 Succeeded byJoseph BullockJohn AdamsPreceded bySavile FinchThe Viscount Downe Member of Parliament for Malton1774 Succeeded bySavile FinchWilliam WeddellPreceded byMatthew BrickdaleThe Viscount Clare PC Member of Parliament for Bristol1774 1780 With Henry Cruger Succeeded byMatthew BrickdaleSir Henry LippincottPreceded bySavile FinchWilliam Weddell Member of Parliament for Malton1780 1794 Succeeded byThe Viscount MiltonRichard BurkeAcademic officesPreceded byHenry Dundas Rector of the University of Glasgow1783 1785 Succeeded byRobert Cunninghame Grahame of GartmorePortals Biography Conservatism Economics Liberalism Libertarianism Literature Philosophy Politics Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edmund Burke amp oldid 1152486569, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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