Page:Letters of Junius, volume 1 (Woodfall, 1772).djvu/177

 to the Doctor, I would recommend it to him to be quiet. If not, he may, perhaps, hear, again from Junius himself. PHILO JUNIUS.

these papers were sent to the press, a writer in the public papers, who subscribes himself Junius, has made a feint of bringing this question to a short issue. Though the foregoing observations contain, in my opinion, at least, a full refutation of all that this writer has offered, I shall, however, bestow a very few words upon him. It will cost me very little trouble to unravel and expose the sophistry of his argument,

' the question, says he, to be strictly this: Whether or no it be the known established law of Parliament, that the expulsion of a member of the house of commons, of