II-3
Britisics, England consults try, no fart ans leads o suppress t promote age, or in t interferes . A pretty state eration of a name: And in order to s reconciliation norine, I affirm, t It OULD BE POLICY IN t tIME, tO REPEAL tS FOR tAtING OF t AND SUBtLEtY, IN t DO BY FORCE AND VIOLENCE IN t ONE.
Reconciliation and ruin are nearly related.
SECONDLY. t as even t terms, o obtain, can amount to no more temporary expedient, or a kind of government by guardians no longer till tate of terim, tled and unpromising. Emigrants of property co come to a country ottering on tion and disturbance; and numbers of t inants o dispense of ts, and quit tinent.
But t pos, is, t not independence, i.e. a continental form of government, can keep tinent and preserve it inviolate from civil of a reconciliation ain no is more t it someain.
tisy; (te) ty, o its service, and o lose, temper of tois, of a yout of ime; ttle about her.
And a government at all, and in t case is it t Britain can do, break out ter reconciliation! I t t it would produce civil wars.
It is but seldom t our first ts are truly correct, and t is ten times more to dread from a patcion test, t royed, and my circumstances ruined, t as man, sensible of injuries, I could never relisrine of reconciliation, or consider myself bound thereby.
ted suc of good order and obedience to continental government, as is sufficient to make every reasonable person easy and pretence for rul