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Alfred Cobban, ed. The Debate on the French Revolution, 1789-1800.

Alfred Cobban, editor. The Debate on the French Revolution, 1789-1800.

Londres: Black, 1950. 2da edición, 1960.

520 páginas.

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION / Alfred Cobban

CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE

DOCUMENTS

Part I

THE DEBATE BEGINS: FIRST IMPRESSIONS

Samuel Romilly. Letter to M. Dumont, 28 July 1789

John Cartwright. Letter to the President of the Committee of Constitution of the States General, 18 August 1789

William Wordsworth. The Prelude, Book XI

Hannah More. Remarks on the Speech of M. Dupont, 1793

William Blake. The French Revolution, 1791

Mrs. Barbauld. An Address to the Opposers of the Repeal of the Corporation and Test Acts, 1790

Arthur Young. Travels in France, 1792

Edmund Burke. Letter to M. Dupont, October 1789

The Analytical Review, 1789

The Scots Magazine, October 1789

The Morning Post and Daily Advertiser, 22 October 1789

Richard Price. A Discourse on the Love of our Country, 4 November 1789

THE INTERVENTION OF BURKE

Debate on the Army Estimates, House of Commons, 5 February 1790

Edmund Burke. Speech on the Army Estimates, House of Commons, 9 February 1790

Debate on the Quebec Government Bill, House of Commons, 21 April 1791

Edmund Burke. Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1790

Willam Windham. Diary Entry for 7 November 1790

Dr. Parr. A Sequel to the printed paper lately circulated in Warwickshire by the Revd. Chas. Carter, 1792

Mary Wollstonecraft. A Vindication of the Rights of Men, 1790

Sir Brooke Boothby. A Letter to the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke, 1791

Thomas Paine. The Rights of Man, 1791

William Belsham. Reflections on the French Revolution, 1791

Sir Brooke Boothby. A Letter to the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke, 1791

James Mackintosh. Vindicae Gallicae, 1791

The Constitutional Society: Declaration proposed and adopted, 28 May 1791

W.A. Miles. Observations on reading the Reflections on the French Revolution by Mr. Burke, March 1791

Thomas Christie. Letters on the Revolution in France, 1791

Fanny Burney. Diary and Letters of Madame d’Arblay. Entry for 18 June 1792

Part II

THE STRUGGLE FOR PARLIAMENTARY REFORM: THE DEBATE IN PARLIAMENT

Henry Flood. Speech on his Motion for a Reform in Parliament, House of Commons, 4 March 1790

William Windham. Speech on Mr. Flood’s Motion, 4 March 1799

Debate on Mr. Grey’s Notice of a Motion Relative to Parliamentary Reform, House of Commons, 30 April 1792

William Windham. Letter to W. J. Gurney, 2 May 1792

Charles James Fox. Speech on the Address of Thanks, House of Commons, 13 December 1792

Debate on Mr. Grey’s Motion for a Reform of Parliament, House of Commons, 26 May 1797

THE AGITATION FOR PARLIAMENTARY REFORM IN THE COUNTRY

The London Corresponding Society. Address and Resolutions, 24 May 1792

Resolution on the Foundation of The Friends of the People in the Borough, 19 April 1792

Rev. Chritsopher Wyvill. Letter to James Martin, 28 April 1792

Rev. Chritsopher Wyvill. Letter to Rev. Dr. Towers, 18 May 1793

Joseph Gerrald. A Convention the only means of saving us from Ruin, 1793

Rev. Chritsopher Wyvill. Letter to Thomas Brand Hollis, 19 February 1794

Henry Yorke. Speech to a General Meeting of the Friends of Justice, Liberty and Humanity, on the Castle Hill, Sheffield, 7 April 1794

Address and Resolution agreed to by the Friends of the People, 9 April 1794

Rev. Chritsopher Wyvill. Letter to Philip Francis, 20 December 1794

Rev. Chritsopher Wyvill. Letter to Philip Francis, 7 January 1795

Philip Francis. Letter to the Rev. Christopher Wyvill, 20 January 1795

Declaration of the Principles and Plan of Parliamentary Reform, recommended by the Society of the Friends of the People, 30 May 1795

John Thelwall. Speech at the General Meeting of the Friends of Parliamentary Reform, 26 October 1795

Rev. Chritsopher Wyvill. Letter to John Cartwright, 16 December 1797

John Cartwright. Letter to the Rev. Christopher Wyvill, 25 December 1797

Part III

NATURAL RIGHTS AND SOVEREIGNTY: THE RIGHTS OF MAN

Earl Stanhope. A Letter to the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke, 1790

James Mackintosh. Vindiciae Gallicae, 1791

Capel Lofft. Remarks on the Letter of the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke, 1791

Thomas Paine. The Rights of Man, 1791

Thomas Erskine. Speech at the Trial of Thomas Hardy for Treason, 28 October-5 November 1794

Edmund Burke. Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1790

Edmund Burke. Speech on the Petition of the Unitarians, House of Commons, 11 May 1792

Arthur Young. The Example of France a Warning to Britain, 1793

SOVEREIGNTY OF THE PEOPLE

Mrs. Macaulay Graham. Observations on the Reflections of the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke on the Revolution in France, in a Letter to Earl Stanhope, 1790

James Mackintosh. Vindiciae Gallicae, 1791

Charles James Fox. Speech on the King’s Message for an Augmentation of the Forces, House of Commons, 1 February 1793

James Mackintosh. Vindiciae Gallicae, 1791

Thomas Paine. The Rights of Man, 1791

James Mackintosh. Vindiciae Gallicae, 1791

Charles James Fox. Speech on Mr. Grey’s Motion for a Reform in Parliament, House of Commons, 6-7 May 1793

The London Corresponding Society: Address on the subject of a Parliamentary Reform, 6 August 1792

Thomas Erskine. Speech at the Trial of John Horne Tooke, 17-22 November 1794

Edmund Burke. An Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs, 1791

Sir Brooke Boothby. Observations on the Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs and on Mr. Paine’s Rights of Man, 1792

Richard Hey. Happiness and Rights, 1792

Willam Pitt. Speech on Mr. Grey’s Motion for a Reform in Parliament, House of Commons, 6-7 May 1793

WILLIAM GODWIN AND POLITICAL JUSTICE

Thomas Paine. The Rights of Man, Part II, 1792

William Godwin. Political Justice, 1793

BURKE’S THEORY OF THE STATE

Edmund Burke. Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1790

Edmund Burke. An Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs, 1791

Edmund Burke. Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1790

Part IV

FREEDOM OF OPINION: FOX’S LIBEL ACT

Preamble to Act to remove doubts respecting the functions of juries in cases of Libel, 1792

Earl of Abingdon. Speech on Mr. Fox’s Libel Bill, House of Lords, 11 May 1792

Lord Camden. Speech on Mr. Fox’s Libel Bill, House of Lords, 8 June 1792

Debate in the House of Lords on Mr. Fox’s Libel Bill, 1 June 1792

THE FEAR OF SEDITION

Royal Proclamation against Seditious Writings, 21 May 1792

The Times, 5 December 1792

Resolutions of the Association for Preserving Liberty and Property against Republicans and Levellers, 20 November 1792

William Windham. Speech in the Debate on the Address of Thanks, House of Commons, 13 December 1792

Arthur Young. The Example of France a Warning to Britain, 1793

Hannah More. Modern Politicians: a word to the working classes of Great Britain, by Will Chip, a Country Carpenter, 1797 (?)

Rights of Swine, An Address to the Poor, 1794

A Placard, For the Benefit of John Bull, 1794

Thomas Holcroft. A Letter to the Rt. Hon. William Windham, on the Intemperance and Dangerous Tendency of his Public Conduct, 1795

William Wilberforce. Speech in the Debate on the Seditious Meetings Bill, House of Commons, 10 November 1795

Debate in the House of Lords on the Treasonable Practices Bill, 13 November 1795

Marquis of Lansdowne. Speech in the Debate on the Seditious Meetings Bill, House of Lords, 9 December 1795

George Canning. The Anti-Jacobin, No. 5, 11 December 1797

THE TREASON TRIALS

Thomas Erskine. Speech for the defence at the trial of Thomas Paine, 18 December 1792

Lord Justice Braxfield. Trial of Thomas Muir, 30-31 August 1793

Charles James Fox. Letter to Lord Holland, December 1793

Lord Justice Braxfield. Trial of William Skirving, 6-7 January 1794

Lord Justice Braxfield. Trial of Maurice Margarot, 13-14 January 1794

Trial of Maurice Margarot, Edinburgh, January 1794

The London Corresponding Society: Address to the People of Great Britain and Ireland, 20 January 1794

Charles James Fox. Speech in the Debate on Mr. Adam’s Motion respecting the Trials of Mr. Muir and Mr. Palmer, House of Commons, 10 March 1794

Lord Chief Justice Eyre. Charge to the Middlesex Grand Jury, 2 October 1794

Felix Vaughan. Cursory Strictures on the Charge delivered by Lord Chief Justice Eyre to the Grand Jury, 2 October 1794

Sir John Scott. Speech for the Prosecution at the Trial of Thomas Hardy. 28 October-5 November 1794

Robert Burns. Letter to Mrs. Dunlop, 1794

Richard Brinsley Sheridan. Speech on his Motion for the Repeal of the Habeas Corpus Suspension Act, House of Commons, 5 January 1795

Thomas Holcroft. A Letter to the Rt. Hon. William Windham, 1795

William Godwin. Considerations on Lord Grenville’s and Mr. Pitt’s Bills concerning Treasonable and Seditious Practices, by a Lover of Order, 1795

Charles James Fox. Speech on his Motion for the Repeal of the Treason and Sedition Acts, House of Commons, 19 May 1797

THE SUSPENSION OF HABEAS CORPUS

An Act to cmpower His Majesty to secure and detain such persons, etc., 23 May 1794

Debate in the House of Commons on the Habeas Corpus Suspension Bill, 16-17 May 1794

Charles James Fox. Debate on the Habeas Corpus Suspension Bill, House of Commons, 17 May 1794

Richard Brinsley Sheridan. Speech on his Motion for the Repeal of the Habeas Corpus Suspension Act, House of Commons, 5 January 1795

William Lambton. Speech on the Bill for Continuing the Habeas Corpus Suspension Act, House of Commons, 23 January 1795

Part V

CHANGING VIEWS OF THE REVOLUTION

Edmund Burke. Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1790

James Mackintosh. Vindiciae Gallicae, 1791

Samuel Romilly. Letter to Madame G., 15 May 1792

Arthur Young. Travels in France, 1792

Samuel Romilly. Letter to M. Dumont, 10 September 1792

John Cartwright. Letter of January 1793

Robert Burns. Letter to Robert Graham, 5 January 793

Bishop of Llandaff. Appendix to a Sermon preached in Charlotte Street Chapel, April 1785, 1793

Arthur Young. The Example of France a Warning to Britain, 1793

Lord Grenville. Letter to Lord Auckland, 11 November 1793

Lord Robert Stephen Fitzgerald. Letter to Lord Grenville, 13 January 1795

Helen Maria Williams, Letters containing a Sketch of the Politics of France, 1795

William Cobbett. The Bloody Buoy, Thrown out as a warning to the Political Pilots of America, by Peter Porcupine, 1796

Robert Burns. Does Haughty Gaul Invasion Threat, 1795

John Thelwall. Speech at the General Meeting of the Friends of Parliamentary Reform, 26 October 1795

Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Letter to Charles Lloyd sen., 15 October 1796

William Wordsworth. The Prelude, Book XI

Edmund Burke. Letters on a Regicide Peace, 1796

Robert Southey. Letter to John May, 26 June 1797

William Cobbett. Democratic Principles Illustrated, by Peter Porcupine, 1798

Samuel Coleridge Taylor. France: An Ode, February 1798

George Canning. Speech in the Debate on Mr. Tierney’s Motion respecting Peace with the French Republic, House of Commons, 11 December 1798

Part VI

THE DEFENCE OF THE ESTABLISHED ORDER

EQUALITY AND PROPERTY

Mary Wollstonecraft. A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 1792

William Godwin. Political Justice, 1793

Offer of a Reward by the Home Secretary in the London Gazette, 1793

Thomas Spence. The Restorer of Society to its Natural State, in the Important Trial of Thomas Spence, on May 27th 1801

Deposition on the Sale of Spence’s publications, 17 May 1797

William Windham. Letter to W. J. Gurney, 2 May 1792

Short Hints upon Levelling, extracted from Dr. Vincent’s Discourse, on May 13, 1792

Aarchideacon Paley. Reasons for Contentment, 1792

Earl of Radnor. Charge to the Grand Jury of the County of Berkshire, 15 January 1793

The Englishman’s Political Catechism, 1793

Arthur Young. The Example of France a Warning to Britain, 1793

Joseph Towers. A dialogue between an Associator and a Well-Informed Englishman, 1793

William Thomson. A Letter to Dr. Parr

Edmund Burke. Thoughts and Details on Scarcity, 1795

Charles James Fox. Speech in the Debate on the High Price of Corn, House of Commons, 3 November 1795

Thomas Paine. Agrarian Justice, 1796

Edmund Burke. Letters on a Regicide Peace, 1796

Hannah More. Charge to the Women of the Shipham Club, 1801

CHURCH AND STATE

The Gentleman’s Magazine: A Review of the Case of the Protestant Dissenters, 1790

Mrs. Barbauld. An Address to the Opposers of the Repeal of the Corporation and Test Acts, 1790

Edmund Burke. Speech on Mr. Fox’s Motion for the Repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts, House of Commons, 2 March 1790

Hannah More. Remarks on the Speech of M. Dupont, 1793

Joseph Priestley. An Appeal to the Public on the Subject of the Riots in Birmingham, 1791

Dr. Horsley. A Sermon preached before the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, on January 23, 1793; being the anniversary of the martyrdom of King Charles the First, 1793

Joseph Priestley. Preface to Fast sermon of 1794

Memoirs of the Rev. Samuel Parr

Edmund Burke. Reflections on the Revolution in France, 1790

William Belsham. Observations on the Test Laws

Joseph Priestley. Letters to the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke, 1791

Part VII

THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR

Lord Grenville. Letter to the Marquis of Buckingham, 14 September 1789

Henry Dundas. Letter to Richard Burke, 20 September 1791

Rev. Richard Worthington. Thoughts on the Manifesto of the French to all States and Nations, 1792

Joel Barlow. Advice to the Privileged Orders, 1792

Edmund Burke. Letter to Lord Grenville, 18 August 1792

Lord Grenville. Letter to Lord Auckland, 6 November 1792

Lord Grenville. Letter to the Marquis of Buckingham, 7 November 1792

Robert Banks Jenkinson. Speech on Mr. Fox’s Motion for sending a Minister to Paris, House of Commons, 15 December 1792

William Pitt. Speech on the King’s Message for an Augmentation of the Forces, House of Commons, 1 February 1793

William Windham. Speech on Mr. Fox’s Resolutions against the War with France, House of Commons, 18 February 1793

Edmund Burke. Letter to the Comte de Mercy, August 1793

Royal Declaration, published in the London Gazette, 29 October 1793

Earl of Mornington. Speech on the Address of Thanks, House of Commons, 21 January 1794

Earl of Mansfield. Speech on the Address of Thanks, House of Lords, 21 January 1794

William Wordsworth. The Prelude, Book X

Marquis of Lansdowne. Speech on his Motion for Peace with France, House of Lords, 17 February 1794

Duke of Bedford. Speech on his Motion for ending the War with France, House of Lords, 30 May 1794

William Wilberforce. Speech on the Address of Thanks, House of Commons, 30 December 1794

Earl Stanhope. Protest against interfering in the internal affairs of France, House of Lords, 6 January 1795

John Bowles. The Dangers of Premature Peace,1795

 William Windham. Letter to Edmund Burke, 17 January 1796

Edmund Burke. Letters on a Regicide Peace, 1796

William Windham. Letter to Mrs. Crewe, 30 September 1796

William Pitt. Speech on the King’s Message respecting a Subsidy to Russia, House of Commons, 7 June 1799

William Pitt. Speech on the King’s Message respecting Overtures of Peace from the Consular Government of France, House of Commons, 3 February 1800

William Pitt. Speech on the King’s Message respecting Advances to the Emperor of Germany, House of Commons, 17 February 1800

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