This volume on Edmund Burke (1729-97), published in 1879 in the first series of English Men of Letters, was written by the general editor of the series, John Morley (1838-1923). Himself a politician as well as an author, Morley had previously published a 'historical study' of Burke in 1867, but emphasises in an introductory note that this book 'is biographical rather than critical' and is intended as a narrative life. Morley himself was a radical in politics, and his interest in Burke, who he does not hesitate to characterise on occasion as a narrow-minded reactionary, may seem surprising, but he greatly admired his subject's independent political stance, which he describes as a mixture of utilitarian liberalism and historic conservatism, unfettered by abstract doctrine, and which he believed might again come to dominate political discourse in the last decades of the nineteenth century.
Founder James Burke thought he had found a new Garden of Eden when he first saw Burke's Garden, the unique basin completely surrounded by mountains in Tazewell County. Called God's Thumbprint by...
1860. Robert O’Hara Burke and William John Wills, with a well equipped party of fifteen men and Aboriginal support, left Melbourne to attempt -- successfully -- to cross the Australian continent from...
Bullets, Bombs, and Mayhem! New Thriller. Bob Burke Volume 5 is Now Out! 4.7 Stars on 191 Reader Reviews! A Chinese spymaster in DC stealing US Special Ops war plans, a nest of Chinese agents inside...
Bullets, bombs, and mayhem! Bob Burke is back once more, amid terrorists, bombs, bullets. He's the most lethal killing machine the US Government ever produced, and when a home-grown ISIS cell...