The Cornerstone Speech (1861)
“The Leaders have ever since gone…to propagate the principles of French Levelling and confusion, by which no house is safe from its Servants, and no Officer from his Soldiers, and no State or constitution from conspiracy and insurrection. I will not enter into the baseness and depravity of the System they adopt; but one thing I will remark, that its great Object is not, (as they pretend to delude worthy people to their Ruin) the destruction of all absolute Monarchies, but totally to root out that thing called an Aristocrate or Noblemen and Gentleman.”
Letter to Lord Fitzwilliam (21 November 1791), quoted in Alfred Cobban and Robert A. Smith (eds.), The Correspondence of Edmund Burke, Volume VI: July 1789–December 1791 (Cambridge University Press, 1967), p. 451
1790s
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Edmund Burke 270
Anglo-Irish statesman 1729–1797Related quotes
17 U.S. (4 Wheaton) 316, 407
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
Henri Fayol (1916) cited in: Ralph Currier Davis (1951) The fundamentals of top management. p. 157. This quote was already cited in multiple sources in 1938.
“All things must come to the soul from its roots, from where it is planted.”
Letter to George Washington (September 1778)
Speech in Birmingham (27 August 1866), quoted in The Times (28 August 1866), p. 4.
1860s