On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
fation to generation , and always transmitted it not only unimpaired , but improved to their posterity . 43 . Liberty . ( On a Motion for the Suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act . ) Was every man who had liberty in his mouth to be considered as a
traitor , merely because liberty had been abused in France , and had been carried to the most shocking licentiousness ? lie would venture to say , that if this was to be the consequence , fatal , indeed , would it be for England . If the love ofliberty was not to be
maintained i n England } if the warm admiration of it was not to be enerished in the hearts of the people ; if it was not to be reverenced as our chief good , as our boast arid pride and richest inheritance : what else had we worthy of our care ? Liberty was the essence of the British
Constitution . King , Lords , Commons , and courts of judicature were hut th * forms ; the basis of the constitution was liberty , that grand and beautiful fabric , the first princijjle of which was government by law , and which this day they were going to suspend . 44 . Christian Religion .
Mr . Fox declared , that with regard to what he had said on the subject of the Christian religion , the right honourable gentleman had entirely misunderstood and mis-stated him —— - «¦ *~ m m . jk . ^* w . a % ~ r % ; "K * ^—* \ ^ m . « - »¦ » ¦ ^» kaji m + j k * «** - * « - ^~/> ¦ w * < iiiii m
_ which he did not conceive possible , as he had taken particular pains to make his meaning clear and obvious . What he had said was , that the Christian religion owed much of its
success to persecution ; » not insinuating from that , that it was deficient in point of divinity -y it was a reliyion of which he always had been accustomed to speak with reverence , and which In had ever professed ; and further to elucidate that point , he had observed , that not only the Christian religion , but other sects , which had
no just claim to divine institution , had flourished under persecution .
45 . Peace . ( Dec . 8 , L 795 . ) There was a maxim from a celebrated character of antiquity , of which he was fonder at this time than when the ardour of youth had greater influence on his passion * . The more
Untitled Article
he thought , the more he was convinced of the philosophy of the maxim , Iniquissimam jpacem justissimo hello antefero . " I prefer peace , though ever so unfair , to war , though ever so just . ' *
46 . Sympathy of Rulers with the People . ( Dec . 14 , 1797 . )
You cannot pretend to call yourselves the actual representatives of the people , but you say you are the virtual . Prove yourselves so , then , by obeying their united voice . 1 hope
and trust that you will shew yourselves , in some degree , entitled to the name of virtual representatives . 1 will fairly tell you that even if you were to do so , I should not consider it as
a sufficient proof that you are the virtual representatives of the people , unless I see you also sympathizing with the people . You must make common cause with them . You must invite them to sacrifices by your own
example . You must lead the way , Mr . Burke once illustrate ^ , this principle by a story very much in point . A French regiment , in speaking of an old colonel whom they had lost , and * of a new one that had succeeded him , extolled the first to the skies . " What
particular reason have you for your ardent affection for the old colonel , rather than the new ? " said a person to them . " We have no other reason , " said they , "than this—the old colonel always said Allans , mes enfans ! ( Letusonmy boys I ) The new colonel savs , Allez , mes enfans ! ( On
ye , my boys !) This was , indeed , a striking contrast ; and just in this meaner we ought to net towards the people . We ought not to say to them , Go , wall a sacrifices ! but , Let us make sacrific . es - To vouze the energy of the people , Jet us hear of the sacrifices of the crown . It is
from the highest place that the example ought to be given . It will animate and cheer the heart of th # kingdom : Solamen niiseris socios habuisse doloris . \ 47 . War for Religion . ( Feb . S , 1800 . )
Sir , if I understand the true pre * cepts of the Christian religion , as set forth in the New Testament , I must be permitted to say , that there is no such thing as a rule or doctrine by
Untitled Article
Charles James Fox . 735
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1815, page 733, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1767/page/5/
-