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An Address, to the Hon. Edmund Burke from the Swinish Multitude

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An Address, to the Hon. Edmund Burke from the Swinish Multitude
AuthorJames Parkinson
LanguageEnglish
GenrePolitics
Publication date
1793
Publication placeEngland
Pages28 (first edition)

An Address, to the Hon. Edmund Burke. from the Swinish Multitude was a widely reviewed pamphlet by James Parkinson published in 1793 under his pseudonym "Old Hubert" in response and criticism to Edmund Burke's use of the phrase "swinish multitude" in his 1790 book Reflections on the Revolution in France.[1][2]

E. P. Thompson quotes Parkinson's following passage from the pamphlet, in his The Making of the English Working Class:[3]

"Whilst ye are… gorging yourselves at troughs filled with the daintiest wash; we, with our numerous train of porkers, are employed, from the rising to the setting sun, to obtain the means of subsistence, by… picking up a few acorns"

References

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  1. ^ Roland Bartel (1969). "Shelley and Burke's Swinish Multitude". Keats-Shelley Journal. 18: 4–9. JSTOR 30212678.
  2. ^ Darren Howard (2008). "Necessary Fictions: The "Swinish Multitude" and the Rights of Man". Studies in Romanticism. 47 (2): 161–178. JSTOR 25602140.
  3. ^ E. P. Thompson (1991). "Chapter 4". The Making of the English Working Class. ISBN 0-14-013603-7.
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