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Freedom In Service / Six Essays on Matters Concerning Britain's Safety and Good Government

Chapter 5 THE LAST TWO CENTURIES

Word Count: 606    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

d in their operation to a year at a time, and were passed under incessant protest. Grants to maintain the army were similarly restricted. Every interval of peace witnessed the rapid reduction o

election was to be made by ballot, to the complete exclusion of the voluntary principle. During the Napoleonic war, when invasion seemed imminent, the militia was several times called out and embodied. In 1803 an actual levy en masse of all men between the ages of seventeen

e militia declined. An effort was made in 1852 to revive it, and again the underlying principle of compulsion was explicitly recognized. The Militia Act of that year[22] contains the provision: "In case it appears to H.M. -- that the number of men required ... cannot be raised by voluntary enlistment ... or in case of actual invasion or imminent danger thereof, it shall be lawful for H.M. -- to order and direct that the number of men so required ... shall be raised by ballot as herein provide

not expressly reaffirm the continued validity of the compulsory principle of service which from the earliest times had been the basis of the militia. But, though it did not expressly reaffirm it, it left it absolutely

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Geo. I

iamentary Debates,

6 Vict. c

ers from sixteenth century onwards, s

Ed. VII

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Freedom In Service / Six Essays on Matters Concerning Britain's Safety and Good Government
Freedom In Service / Six Essays on Matters Concerning Britain's Safety and Good Government
“Freedom In Service / Six Essays on Matters Concerning Britain's Safety and Good Government by F. J. C. Hearnshaw”
1 Chapter 1 UNIVERSAL OBLIGATION TO SERVE2 Chapter 2 THE OLD ENGLISH MILITIA3 Chapter 3 MEDI VAL REGULATIONS4 Chapter 4 TUDOR AND STUART DEVELOPMENTS5 Chapter 5 THE LAST TWO CENTURIES6 Chapter 6 CONCLUSION7 Chapter 7 THE PLEA OF FREEDOM8 Chapter 8 THE TERM LIBERTY 9 Chapter 9 LIBERTY AS FREEDOM FROM FOREIGN CONTROL10 Chapter 10 LIBERTY AS SYNONYMOUS WITH RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT11 Chapter 11 LIBERTY AS ABSENCE OF RESTRAINT12 Chapter 12 LIBERTY AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR SERVICE13 Chapter 13 THE IDEA OF VOLUNTARISM14 Chapter 14 ITS ESTABLISHMENT15 Chapter 15 THE RESULT16 Chapter 16 THE PRESENT SITUATION17 Chapter 17 THE FUTURE18 Chapter 18 THE NEW PERIL19 Chapter 19 PASSIVE RESISTANCE AS REBELLION20 Chapter 20 THE RIGHT OF REBELLION21 Chapter 21 REBELLION AGAINST A DEMOCRACY22 Chapter 22 THE DUTY OF THE STATE23 Chapter 23 A CONFLICT OF CONVICTIONS24 Chapter 24 THE RELIGION OF THE BIBLE25 Chapter 25 THE DOCTRINE AND PRACTICE OF THE CHURCH26 Chapter 26 FORCE AS A MORAL INSTRUMENT27 Chapter 27 THE IDEAL OF THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT28 Chapter 28 THE PACIFICIST SUCCESSION29 Chapter 29 CONCLUSION 2930 Chapter 30 THE IDEA OF THE STATE IN ENGLAND31 Chapter 31 THE RIVALS OF THE STATE32 Chapter 32 WHAT THE STATE IS AND DOES33 Chapter 33 THE SPHERE OF NATIONAL SERVICE