The Oceana of James Harrington and his other works, som [sic] wherof are now first publish'd from his own manuscripts : the whole collected, methodiz'd, and review'd, with an exact account of his life prefix'd / by John Toland.
- Title
- The Oceana of James Harrington and his other works, som [sic] wherof are now first publish'd from his own manuscripts : the whole collected, methodiz'd, and review'd, with an exact account of his life prefix'd / by John Toland.
- Author
- Harrington, James, 1611-1677.
- Publication
- London :: Printed and are to be sold by the Booksellers of London and Westminster,
- 1700.
- Rights/Permissions
-
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 (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). 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. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.
- Subject terms
- Utopias -- Early works to 1800.
- Utopias in literature.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A45618.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"The Oceana of James Harrington and his other works, som [sic] wherof are now first publish'd from his own manuscripts : the whole collected, methodiz'd, and review'd, with an exact account of his life prefix'd / by John Toland." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A45618.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 12, 2024.
Contents
- title page
- frontispiece
- TO THE LORD MAYOR, ALDERMEN, SHERIFS, AND COMMON COUNCIL OF LONDON.
- THE PREFACE.
- THE LIFE OF James Harrington.
-
The Inscription on the
Monument of SirJAMES HARRING∣TON and his three Sons, atExton inRutlandshire. -
The Mechanics of Nature: OR An Imperfect Treatise written by JAMES HARRINGTON during his sickness, to prove against his Doctors that the Notions he had of his own Distemper were not, as they alleg'd, Hypocondriac Whimsys or Delirious Fancys. - ERRATA.
- half title
- THE PREFACE.
- THE Grounds and Reasons OF MONARCHY.
-
An Instance of the preceding REASONS out of the
SCOTISH HISTORY. - half title
- The Introduction, or Order of the Work.
- summary
- The Preliminarys, shewing the Principles of Government.
-
The Second Part of the
Preliminarys. - The Council of Legislators.
- THE MODEL OF THE Commonwealth of OCEANA.
- The COROLLARY.
- half title
- EPISTLE to the READER.
- THE FIRST BOOK, CONTAINING
-
A full Answer to all such OBJECTIONS as have hitherto bin made against
OCEANA. - The PREFACE.
-
Antient and Modern Prudence.
-
An Advertisment to the Reader, or a Direction contain'd in certain Querys, how the Common∣wealth of
Oceana may be examin'd or answer'd by divers sorts of men, without spoiling their high Dance, or cutting off any part of their Elegance, or freeness of Expression. - half title
- Advertisment to the READER.
- Order of the Discourse.
-
A
Political Discourse CONCERNING ORDINATION. - half title
- The Order of the Work.
- THE FIRST BOOK, SHEWING THE FOUNDATIONS AND SUPERSTRUCTURES Of all kinds of GOVERNMENT.
-
CHAP. I.
- CHAP. II.
- CHAP. III.
- CHAP. IV.
- The Conclusion:
- book - 2
- CHAP. I.
- CHAP. II.
- CHAP. III.
- CHAP. IV.
-
CHAP. V. -
CHAP. VI.
- The Conclusion:
- book - 3
- CHAP. I.
- CHAP. II.
-
CHAP. III. - CHAP. IV.
- The Conclusion:
-
A VVORD Concerning a House of PEERS. - half title
- treatise
- To the READER.
- dialogue
-
A System of Politics Delineated in short and easy APHORISMS. - POLITICAL APHORISMS.
-
Seven Models of a Commonwealth: OR BRIEF DIRECTIONS Shewing how a fit and perfect MODEL OF Popular Government May be made, found, or understood.
-
THE FIRST PART.
- THE FIRST MODEL OF POPULAR GOVERNMENT PROPOS'D.
- A SECOND MODEL OF A COMMONWEALTH PROPOS'D.
- A THIRD MODEL OF A COMMONWEALTH PROPOS'D.
- A FOURTH MODEL OF A COMMONWEALTH PROPOS'D.
- A FIFTH MODEL OF A COMMONWEALTH, PROPOS'D.
- A SIXTH MODEL OF A COMMONWEALTH PROPOS'D.
- A SEVENTH MODEL OF A COMMONWEALTH PROPOS'D.
- THE SECOND PART, Proposing a MODEL of A COMMONWEALTH Fitted to the Present State of this Nation.
-
THE FIRST PART.
-
THE Ways and Means Wherby an Equal and Lasting COMMONWEALTH May be suddenly introduc'd, and perfectly found∣ed, with the free Consent and actual Confirma∣tion of the Whole People of
England. -
THE HUMBLE PETITION OF DIVERS Well affected Persons, Deliver'd the 6
th day ofJuly, 1659. With the PARLAMENT'S Answer therto. - reply to petition
- Advertisement.