Correspondence of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke; Between the Year 1744 And the Period of His Decease, in 1797 4
Correspondence of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke; Between the Year 1744 And the Period of His Decease, in 1797 4
Edmund Burke
The book Correspondence of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke; Between the Year 1744 And the Period of His Decease, in 1797 4 was written by author Edmund Burke Here you can read free online of Correspondence of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke; Between the Year 1744 And the Period of His Decease, in 1797 4 book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Correspondence of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke; Between the Year 1744 And the Period of His Decease, in 1797 4 a good or bad book?
What reading level is Correspondence of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke; Between the Year 1744 And the Period of His Decease, in 1797 4 book?
To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:
February 11, 17W. Mt deab Sib, I write this from Beading, where I arrived in time to have proceeded to the Speaker's ', from whom I have found a note, offering me a bed, and informing me that I should probably meet ' Mr. Addington, afterwards Viaoount Sidmouth. 428 CORRESPONDENCE OF THE Mr. Pitt there. I feel, however, more disposed, at present, to remain where I am ; and I should, besides, have lost the opportunity of shooting back this Parthian arrow at you. I shall join them in the morning, ...and try my hand, but with little prospect of the effect it will produce, to raise our counsels to some nobler pitch than any they have flown to hitherto. We soar no Pindaric heights ; and I am afraid are now likely to sink lower and lower, and never to rise again in the face of this Grallic falcon. My hopes are in you and General Hoche. The recipes are rather of an opposite nature, but may conspire to the same end. To realize one part of them^ as well as for every reason, public and pri- vate, let me entreat you, my dear sir, to avail yourself of whatever skill and prudence can do for your recovery, and as a main article of that pru- dence at present, to put yourself fairly in the hands of Dr.
User Reviews: