[Political Thought in England from Locke to Bentham by Harold J. Laski]@TWC D-Link book
Political Thought in England from Locke to Bentham

CHAPTER I
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The urbanity, indeed, is not entirely new.

The Restoration had heralded its coming, and the tone of Halifax has more in common with Bolingbroke and Hume than with Hobbes and Filmer.

Nor has the eighteenth century an historical profundity to compare with that of the zealous pamphleteers in the seventeenth.

Heroic archivists like Prynne find very different substitutes in brilliant journalists like Defoe, and if Dalrymple and Blackstone are respectable, they bear no comparison with masters like Selden and Sir Henry Spelman.
Yet urbanity must not deceive us.

The eighteenth century has an importance in English politics which the comparative absence of systematic speculation can not conceal.


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