Remarks On the Jacobinical Tendency of the Edinburgh Review: in a Letter to ...
Remarks On the Jacobinical Tendency of the Edinburgh Review: in a Letter to ...
Richard Wharton
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abolished; for stsaeh an abolition would add no weight of inflaenee to royalty, if the talents and worth of the nation, viz. the Edinburgh R^ieWecsy aiMl'4h« other jacobin dema- gogueiSt were at the wme time to be con- Y^ted into a virtual aristocracjfs to guide, thati is, to sway the councils of i£nglandi and: to take care tliat the mass of the c6m« nninity should nev^r risp above the level of the guillotine or the gallows. Such is this writer's plan, expressed in plain English^; aa4 s^h is th...e iuevitable consequence to all ranks^ of any ^ violation of the degrees which society aljumys nestablishes for itself. Those gradations are exceedingly minute, extending from the highest to the lowest; and therefore it would be a matter of ex- treme difficulty to destroy a part without abolishing the whole, without sacrificing onedistiacti/on to the caprice of one revo* b2. Digitized by Google 20 iutionist, and another distinction to that of another revolationtst^ till the moch wished for state ofanarchj (the only sure akmbick for converting La^zarpni into govemore) should be introduced into the kingdom.
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