Samuel Johnson and the Politics of Hanoverian EnglandClarendon Press, 1994 - 326 pagini This is a lively and readable reinterpretation of the Georgian political order. Samuel Johnson's life (1709-1784) spans most of the eighteenth century. His contacts in the literary and cultural, scholarly, and political worlds were wide, including Gibbon, Goldsmith, Fox, Burke, Reynolds, Adam Smith, and many others. This book uses Johnson's remarkable career as a point of entry into Hanoverian England. John Cannon explores major contemporary issues, such as education, the poor, capital punishment, the colonies, religious toleration, and Toryism. He challenges many assumptions about Johnson's own attitudes, and offers a substantial modification to the traditional picture of Johnson and the political world of the eighteenth century. |
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Pagina 157
... Quakers , and Socinians . The refusal of the Quakers to recognize titles or to remove their hats and their use of the term , ' thou ' were deeply alarming to a society in which the king was 5 Gal . 3 declared : ' there is no such thing ...
... Quakers , and Socinians . The refusal of the Quakers to recognize titles or to remove their hats and their use of the term , ' thou ' were deeply alarming to a society in which the king was 5 Gal . 3 declared : ' there is no such thing ...
Pagina 158
... Quakers was a factor in bringing about the restoration of the monarchy.8 The Restoration saw a powerful reassertion of traditional values . Though the abolition of the monarchy and the House of Lords in 1649 had been tactical rather ...
... Quakers was a factor in bringing about the restoration of the monarchy.8 The Restoration saw a powerful reassertion of traditional values . Though the abolition of the monarchy and the House of Lords in 1649 had been tactical rather ...
Pagina 284
... Quakers ... they have depu- ties meet together annually . . . they have a fund to defray all charges ... they watch all proper opportunities of carrying their points . ... Quoted in Hunt , Two Early Political Associations , 141 . 121 ...
... Quakers ... they have depu- ties meet together annually . . . they have a fund to defray all charges ... they watch all proper opportunities of carrying their points . ... Quoted in Hunt , Two Early Political Associations , 141 . 121 ...
Cuprins
Johnson and Religion | 8 |
Johnson and Jacobitism 36 88 | 36 |
Johnson and Politics | 68 |
Drept de autor | |
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appeared argued argument aristocratic authority boroughs Boswell Boswell's Britain British Burke Cambridge campaign Catholic Charles Church constitution contests Crown David Hume debates declared defended dissenters early Edmund Burke eighteenth century election electoral English Enlightenment Essays established France French friends Gentleman's Magazine George George III Glorious Revolution Hanoverian Hanoverian England Henry Thrale Hist historians History House of Commons Hume Ibid influence insisted interest Irish Jacobite James John Junius king later laws Letters liberty London Lord North ministers monarch newspapers opinion opposition Oxford pamphlet Parl Parliament parliamentary party patriot patron patronage pension petition Pitt poet political Pope Prince printed Protestant published radical Redford reform reign religion religious remarked reported Rockingham Rousseau Sacheverell Samuel Johnson Savage Scotland seems Seven Years War Sir Robert Walpole society success suggested Thrale took Tory views vote voters Whig Wilkes William writing Wyvill
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