Speech on Conciliation with America (Classic Reprint)

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Fb&c Limited, 28 nov 2016 - 324 páginas
Excerpt from Speech on Conciliation With America

The capture of Duquesne was a victory near the end of the French and Indian War. This was part of a contest that England carried on for seven years to preserve herself against the two great autocracies of Europe, the Bourbons and the Hapsburgs. English men at home and in the colonies were equally con cerned in this struggle to make the world safe for English freedom. No colonist felt secure as long as a Bourbon monarch held the continent to the north and west. The colonists rejoiced in 1763 when Eng land won its long fight, when Canada became an English province, and when their English liberties were safe in the new world. When Fort Duquesne was rebuilt, they named it Pittsburgh in honor of William Pittl, the greatest Englishman of that time, who had done more than any other man to secure the victory in the Seven Years' War. Eight million peo ple in England and two million in the colonies ad mired him and honored him. Under his leadership the colonists had spent their money and lives to destroy the power of autocracy in the western hemisphere.

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Sobre el autor (2016)

Born in Ireland in 1729, Edmund Burke was an English statesman, author, and orator who is best remembered as a formidable advocate for those who were victims of injustice. He was the son of a Dublin lawyer and had also trained to practice law. In the 1760s, Burke was elected to the House of Commons from the Whig party. Burke spent most of his career in Parliament as a member of the Royal Opposition, who was not afraid of controversy, as shown by his support for the American Revolution and for Irish/Catholic rights. His best-known work is Reflections on the French Revolution (1790). Some other notable works are On Conciliation with the American Colonies (1775) and Impeachment of Warren Hastings (1788). Edmund Burke died in 1797.

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