Page:Letters of Junius, volume 2 (Woodfall, 1772).djvu/387

 colleagues, or thought the administration no longer tenable, vol. II. p. 64—that he began with betraying the people and concluded with betraying the King, ib.—Junius takes leave of the Duke, p. 68—to the printer of the Public Advertiser, p. 71—the King's answer to the city remonstrance considered, ib.—the grievances of the people aggravated by insults, p. 72—if any part of the representative body be not chosen by the people, that part vitiates and corrupts the whole, p. 73—instead of an answer to the petition his Majesty pronounces his own panegyric, p. 75—whether the remonstrance be or be not injurious to the parliament is the very question between the parliament and the people, p. 76—the city of London has not desired the King to assume a power placed in other hands, p. 77—they call upon him to make use of his royal prerogative, p. 78—to the printer of the Public Advertiser, p. 79—that the King's answer to the city remonstrance is only the sentiments of the minister, ib.—the consequences however materially affect his Majesty's honour, p. 80—he should never appear but in an amiable light to his subjects, p. 81—his Majesty introduced too often in the present reign to act for or desend his servants, p. 86—an appeal to his Majesty's judgment, p. 87—addresses from parliament considered as a fashionable unmeaning formality, p. 88—the