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when they are needed * none are more worthy < rf having you for ' an ardent admirer * than those which declare that no man shall be taxed but by his own consent / that' laws to bind all must be assented to by all / and that for tevery wrong there is a remedy . ' Let but these be realized , and there will be no further cry for organic change 3 .
c If the reformers be true to one another , and continue united and on £ he alert , the dangers of a Tory restoration may be averted . There must be no selfish faltering , no splitting of hairs . ' * The exhortation , rny Lord , is sound and timely , and it applies to both sections of the united body . But neither must there be any call for the compromise of great principles , or for an abandonment of the pursuit of those securities for uninterrupted good government .
which experience has palpably shown that we have not yet obtained . I conclude by heartily adopting the words of the same writer : — ' We offer these reflections in perfect kindness and respect towards those worthy reformers of whom we have been speaking . That no schism will henceforth split our forces we are fully persuaded ; but this desirable result is far more likely to happen if justice be done to all parties among us , so that no reasonable
cause of complaint shall remain to ahy ;—if our whole case be stated with truth , and always rested upon the right ground , — ground on which we can abide . ' That ground I take to be f not only the desirableness of many economical and other reforms , but the absolute necessity of gaining for the people , by the requisite changes , whether termed organic or otherwise , such a decisive power in the Government as shall effectually prevent the country from ever again becoming the prey of an intolerant , rapacious , and unprincipled faction . Nov . 1 , 1835 . W . J . Fox .
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A KiKa lived long ago , In the morning of the world . When eart £ i was nigher heaven than now : And the King's lock * curled Disparting o ' er * forehead full As the milk-white space 'twixt horn and horn Of some sacrificial
bull—Only calm as a babe new-born . For he was got to a sleepy mood , So safe from all decrepitude , Age with its pine so sure gone by , ( As though gods loved him while he dreamed , ) That , having lived thus long , there seemed No need that he should ever die . ? 'K&abwgtilUvitw . ' ,
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THE KING ,
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 2, 1835, page 707, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2651/page/15/
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