The Crisis. Группа авторов

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say worse) KING, and his accursed MINISTERS, who have paid our Betrayers with a Part of that Money which was most unjustly levied on us, not to Answer the NECESSITY of Government, but for the most Infamous and Villainous Purposes.

      The Particulars mentioned in the Bill of Rights, at the Revolution, were then considered as so many Violations committed by King James, on the Previleges of the People, and necessary to be remedied, for the sake of securing our Religion, and reestablishing Liberty and the Constitution.

      The Grievances at that Time complained of against the Sovereign, had their Foundation in Justice and the Rights of the People and the redressing them in the Nature of the Constitution: otherwise, by what Arguments could be assigned a Cause of Complaint against the Prince on the Throne or preserve those Men who accomplished the Revolution from the imputation of Traitors and Rebels to their King.

      They considered the Constitution as the primary Object of an Englishman; and the King but as the Secondary; who by his attempts towards Despotism, became a Rebel against this superior Power. They justly

      [print edition page 96]

      reasoned, that as the People, who make a Third of the Constitution, are deemed Traitors, for plotting or attempting the life of, or taking up Arms against the King, who forms another Third of the Constitution, and doomed to Death in consequence of such Behaviour; in like Manner King JAMES rebelled against two Thirds of the Government, by attempting to subvert their Religion and Liberties: for our Constitution, supposes, that each Part of it has a Right to be preserved; that Two are more than One; and the Happiness of a whole PEOPLE to be preserved, in preference to the Ambition or pernicious Passion or Designs of a King.

      Shall then the present Sovereign and his Ministers be exempted from a strict and nice INQUIRY into their Conduct, because they have effected in one Method, the very Despotism which was opposed in JAMES, who was deservedly drove into Exile, for attempting it in another. Forbid it Heaven! and every Thing that is Dear to ENGLISHMEN.

      To the PUBLIC.

      The POEM called the PROPHECY of RUIN, repeatedly advertised to be published, in Quarto, Price 1S 6d. the Author has been unavoidably obliged to postpone from Time to Time, through a severe Illness; in order therefore to make some Compensation to the Public, for the Trouble and various Disappointments they have met with, the ENTIRE POEM will be given next Friday Noon, in No.12. of the CRISIS, containing Three SHEETS in FOLIO, at the reduced Price of 6d.

      Printed and published for the Authors, by T. W. SHAW, in Fleet-Street, opposite Anderton’s Coffee House, where Letters to the Publisher will be thankfully received.

      [print edition page 97]

      THE

      CRISIS

NUMBER XII To be continued Weekly.
SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1775 [Price Six Pence.

      Ense velut stricto, quoties Lucilius ardens

      Infremuit, rubet Auditor cui frigida Mens est.

      Criminibus, tacita sudant Pracordia Culpa.1

      JUVENAL.

      Sharp as a Sword Lucilus drew his Pen,

      And struck with panic Terror guilty Men,

      At his just Strokes the harden’d Wretch would start,

      Feel the cold Sweat, and tremble at the Heart.

      The prophecy of RUIN,

      A POEM.

      SHOULD e’re a Prince the British Empire sway,

      (And I be doom’d by Heav’n to see the day)

      Who quite UNMINDFUL of that glorious state

      To which he’s rais’d, not by desert, but fate;

      Should he be base, be cruel, and unjust,

      [print edition page 98]

      FALSE to his friends. unworthy that great trust;

      Should he, unmindful of the good that springs

      From true royalty, and true patriot Kings;

      By oppression (destroying like a flood)

      Cause civil war, and fill the land with BLOOD;

      Should he rebel ’gainst FREEDOM, LAW, and RIGHT,

      And laugh at truths which honest men should write

      With fair intent, write with no other view,

      But to save HIM, and save their COUNTRY too;

      Such deeds as these, would fire my soul with rage,

      And make me e’en against my safety, wage

      War with VILL’NY, and stamp the TYRANTS crimes,

      That he might live and stink to after-times.

      Thrice happy, NOW, when ev’ry blessing springs

      From GEORGE the THIRD; we boast the BEST of KINGS.

      Curs’d be the wretch who would support a plan,

      Which must destroy the natural rights of man;

      Perish the wretch, who unconcern’d would see

      The LAWS DESTROY’D, a falling MONARCHY;

      I could not, I am of another breed,

      I ne’er should tamely see my country bleed;

      Nor crouch to him, to truth and justice dead,

      Or fawning compliment an empty head:

      Let subtle knaves, to CANDOUR more inclin’d

      Disguise the truth, I’d always speak my mind;

      Perish the thought, the crime should ne’er be mine

      To sacrifice at curst ambition’s shrine

      The RIGHT to SPEAK, and publickly display

      In all it’s hideous forms DESPOTIC sway;

      I ne’er should understand those prudent rules,

      Decorum call’d by PARASITES and FOOLS;

      Discretion too, should with decorum fall,

      I ne’er would be, what rascals decent call;

      RESENTMENT should to injuries

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