BCC: With extensive knowledge of political affairs, Edmund Burke
possessed a glowing imagination and passionate sympathies expressed in
his landmark speeches, which continue to captivate contemporary readers.
The best of Burke's writings and speeches uphold his position on the
need for rigorous constitutional statesmanship against widespread abuse
of authority in government. He remains one of the foremost political
thinkers of eighteenth-century England. AUTHOR BIO: British political
writer and statesman EDMUND BURKE (1729-1797) was educated at a Quaker
boarding school and at Trinity College in Dublin. His eloquence gained
him a high position in Britain's Whig party, and although he never held
public office, his public activity never ceased. His works include
Observations on the Present State of the Nation (1769) and On the Causes
of the Present Discontents (1770). Perhaps the finest of his many
efforts are the speech on American taxation (1774) and the letter to the
sheriffs of Bristol (1777), which advocated astute and moderate measures
to impending public crises.