Page:Letters from a farmer in Pennsylvania - Dickinson - 1768.djvu/77

[&emsp;71&emsp;], that indeed  liberty, who so well understand it, so passionately love it, so temperately enjoy it, and so wisely, bravely, and virtuously assert, maintain, and defend it.

R.

Is there not the strongest probability, that if the universal sense of these colonies is immediately expressed by of the assemblies, in support of their rights, by  to their agents on the subject, and by  to the crown and parliament for redress, these measures will have the same success now, that they had in the time of the Stamp-Act. D.