Please go to for more information.įor suggestions on citing this text, please see Citing the TCP on the Text Creation Partnership website. Reflections on the Revolution in France is now widely regarded as a classic statement of conservative political thought, and is one of the eighteenth century’s great works of political rhetoric. This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (). In a letter intended to have been sent to a gentleman in Paris. In his 1790 treatise Reflections on the Revolution in France, English statesman Edmund Burke writes to a young French aristocrat, The very idea of the fabrication of a new government is enough to fill the English with disgust and horror. Reflections on the Revolution in France: and on the proceedings in certain societies in London relative to that event.
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