Page:Letters of Junius, volume 2 (Woodfall, 1772).djvu/400

 the respect he bears the minister he could name a man, who, without one grain of understanding, can do half as much as Oliver Cromwell, vol. I. p. 148—as to a secret system in the closet, that this can only be determined by appearances, p. 149—the queries put by Anti-Junius can be only answered by the ministry, ib.—to the printer of the Public Advertiser, p. 168—that those who object to detached parts of Junius's last letter do not mean fairly, or have not considered the scope of his argument, ib.—that Junius does not expect a dissolution of parliament will destroy corruption,-but will be a terror and check to their successors, p. 169-to the printer of the Public Advertiser, p. 170—Junius's construction of the vote, declaring Mr. Walpole's incapacity, p. 171—a quotation from a tract of Lord Sommers to support this construction, ib.—if this construction be admitted, the advocates of the house of commons must be reduced to the necessity of maintaining one of the grossest absurdities, p. 172—that the house of commons certainly did not foresee one effect proceeding from their vote about the Middlesex-election, p. 173—to the printer of the Public Advertiser, vol. II. 242—the vanity and impiety of Junius are become the perpetual topics of abuse, ib.—the proofs brought to support such charges considered, p. 243—the charge of vanity and impiety proved to destroy