The Life of George Washington. John Marshall
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[196] Prior documents.
[197] In this letter the house of Burgesses express their opinion of the mutiny act in the following terms: "The act suspending the legislative power of New York, they consider as still more alarming to the colonies, though it has that single province in view. If parliament can compel them to furnish a single article to the troops sent over, they may, by the same rule, oblige them to furnish clothes, arms, and every other necessary, even the pay of the officers and soldiers; a doctrine replete with every mischief, and utterly subversive of all that's dear and valuable; for what advantage can the people of the colonies derive from choosing their own representatives, if those representatives, when chosen, be not permitted to exercise their own judgments, be under a necessity (on pain of being deprived of their legislative authority) of enforcing the mandates of a British parliament."
[198] Prior documents.
[199] Prior documents.
[200] Minot.
[201] Minot. Prior documents.
[202] Minot.
[203] Minot.
[204] Minot.
[205] Minot.
[206] Gazette.
[207] Minot.
[208] Belsham. Prior documents.
[209] Gazette. Prior documents.
[210] Gazette. Prior documents.
[211] Minot.
[212] Gazette. Prior documents.
[213] Prior documents. Minot.
[214] Minot.
[215] Prior documents.
[216] Minot.
[217] Gazette.
[218] Minot. Prior documents. Gazette.
[219] Almost at the same time, and without concert, the same measure was adopted in Virginia.
[220] See note No. VI, at the end of the volume.
[221] Minot.
[222] Minot. Belsham.
[223] The language said by Mr. Gordon to have been used at this meeting proves that many of the people of Boston were already ripe for the revolution. To the more cautious among "the sons of liberty" who had expressed some apprehensions lest they should push the matter too far, and involve the colony in a quarrel with Great Britain, others answered "It must come to a quarrel between Great Britain and the colony sooner or later; and if so what can be a better time than the present? Hundreds of years may pass away before parliament will make such a number of acts in violation as it has done of late years, and by which it has excited so formidable an opposition to the measures of administration. Besides, the longer the contest is delayed, the more administration will be strengthened. Do not you observe how the government at home are increasing their party here by sending over young fellows to enjoy appointments, who marry into our best families, and so weaken the opposition? By such means, and by multiplying posts and places, and giving them to their own friends, or applying them to the corruption of their antagonists, they will increase their own force faster in proportion, than the force of the country party will increase by population. If then we must quarrel ere we can have our rights secured, now is the most eligible period. Our credit also is at stake; we must venture, and unless we do, we shall be discarded by the sons of liberty in the other colonies, whose assistance we may expect upon emergencies, in case they find us steady, resolute, and faithful."
[224] Mr. Quincy.
[225] Minot.
[226] Minot.
[227] Belsham.
[228] Belsham.
[229] Idem.
[230] Belsham.
[231] Idem.
[232] Minot.
[233] Belsham. Minot.
[234] Those of North Carolina arrived on the fourteenth.
[235] See note No. VII, at the end of the volume.
[236] See note No. VIII, at the end of the volume.