Page:Letters of Junius, volume 2 (Woodfall, 1772).djvu/396

 a disqualification, vol. I. p. 147—as a Fact highly injurious to the rights of the people, and as a Precedent one of the most dangerous, p. 148.

, to be acquainted with the merit of, we need only observe the condition of the people, vol. I. p. 3.—the misconduct of, has produced a sudden and extraordinary change within these few years in Great Britain, p. 4—the conduct and character not the description of ministers, the cause of national calamities, p. 26—the minister who by corruption invades the freedom of election, and the ruffian who by open violence destroys that freedom, embarked in the same bottom, p. 54—he is the tenant of the day, and has no interest in the inheritance, vol. II. p. 83.

, charges Junius with absurdity in his writings, vol. I. p. 202—cannot distinguish between a sarcasm and a contradiction, ib.—is accused of misquoting what Junius says of conscience, and making the sentence ridiculous by making it his own, p. 205.

Dr. his firmness and integrity on his examination before the house of commons vol. II. p. 99.

Mr. his behaviour as a magistrate and a public man considered, vol. II. p. 259.