The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 12 (of 12) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 478 pages of information about The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 12 (of 12).

The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 12 (of 12) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 478 pages of information about The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 12 (of 12).

Intolerance, mischief of it, vii. 34.

Ireland, danger of a proposed tax upon, i. 352.
  early transmission thither of English liberties and institutions,
    ii. 146. 
  Two Letters to Gentlemen of Bristol relative to the Trade of Ireland,
    ii. 247. 
  Mr. Burke’s defence of his Parliamentary conduct with regard to it,
    ii. 377.
  the plan for the government of Ireland until 1782, what, iv. 233.
  the true revolution there, that of 1782, iv. 276.
  state of religion there before the grant of Pope Adrian IV., vi. 342.
  object of the grant, vi. 342.
  mutual importance of Ireland and Great Britain to one another, vi. 420.
  reduction of Ireland by Henry II., vii. 410.
  nature and previous condition of the country, vii. 410.
  motives which led Adrian to commission Henry to reduce it, vii. 410, 413.
  the English laws said to have been established there at its
    subjugation by John, vii. 449.

Irish language, names of the letters of it taken from the names
    of several species of trees, vii. 412.

Isocrates, observation of his in one of his orations against
    the Sophists, i. 5.

Italy, its original inhabitants of the same race as the people
    of Northern Europe, vii. 161.
  its situation from a remote period, vii. 161.

Jacobinism by establishment, what, v. 309.

Jacobins, their character, iv. 437, v. 285, vi. 367.
  their great object, v. 39.

Jacquerie, brief notice of the, iv. 177.

Jaffier Ali Khan, made Nabob of Bengal by the English, ix. 401.

Jaghires, Indian, nature of them, xii. 9.

Jekyl, Sir Joseph, his character, iv. 130.
  extracts from his speech at the trial of Dr. Sacheverell,
    iv. 130, 131, 132, 136, 137, 142, 143.

Jews, a source of great revenue to William the Conqueror, vii. 351.

Job, observations on its sublime representation of a vision
    in the night, i. 137.
  its sublime descriptions of the war-horse, the wild ass,
    and the unicorn and leviathan, i. 140.

John, King of England, brief account of his reign, vii. 437.

Judge, duty of one, xi. 104.

Judges, ought to be the very last to feel the necessities
    of the state, ii. 351.

Judgment and wit, difference between them, i. 87.
  the senses should be put under the tuition of the judgment, iii. 15.
  a coarse discrimination the greatest enemy to accuracy of
    judgment, v. 143.

Juridical and legislative acts, difference between them, vii. 63.

Juries, an institution of gradual formation, vii. 115.
  not attributable to Alfred, vii. 264.
  never prevalent amongst the Saxons, vii. 264.

Jurisprudence, nature and importance of the science, iii. 357.
  abrogation of it in France at the Revolution, v. 307.
  state of the study of it in England, vii. 476.
  whole frame of it altered since the Conquest, vii. 478.

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The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 12 (of 12) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.