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London Country Journal Sunday, January 06, 1732,
Middlesex

London Country Journal Sunday, January 06, 1732,
Middlesex

London Country Journal Sunday, January 13, 1732,
Middlesex

London Country Journal Sunday, January 20, 1732,
Middlesex

London Country Journal Sunday, January 27, 1732,
Middlesex

London Country Journal Sunday, February 03, 1732,
Middlesex

London Country Journal Sunday, February 10, 1732,
Middlesex

London Country Journal Sunday, February 17, 1732,
Middlesex

London Country Journal Sunday, February 24, 1732,
Middlesex

Other Editions from Tuesday, October 27, 1733

Dublin Evening Post Tuesday, October 27, 1733 ,
Dublin

Daily Courant Tuesday, October 27, 1733 ,
Middlesex

London Evening Post Tuesday, October 27, 1733 ,
Middlesex

Daily Journal Tuesday, October 27, 1733 ,
Middlesex

Weekly Miscellany Tuesday, October 27, 1733 ,
Middlesex

Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal Tuesday, October 27, 1733 ,
Middlesex

London Read Weekly Journal Or British Gazetteer Tuesday, October 27, 1733 ,
Middlesex

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London Country Journal
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London Country Journal

   London Country Journal (Newspaper) - October 27, 1733, London, Middlesex                                The ICO u N -T Y J O U THE A A L By CALEB of October 27, HAVE been lately favoured with an excellent both Civil and J which have divided and England above - - - a Century Though would be at any - - - yet it is peculiarly at this whole of Power and Policy is to defeat happy which already and feems to us of better therefore communicate this valuable to the for whom it was without any farther Preface and can make ' ' of all no Doubt of jits good Reception who hive In- of their Country truely at ' ' ' I - To CALEB TO Corrupt and to Divide are the trite and wicked by which fame in Ages have affected govern flich as have been capable of exerting the true Arts j of There is a Difference to between two to the Advantage jof the and by the Characters of who put them in ' I ' Every ambitious Child of who hath a corrupt and Mafter of a large hath all that is to employ the Expedient pf Corruption with A in the Hand of the blundering that ever Honour and Wealth and will prevail as as in the Hand of a Man of farther if it Weigh An intriguing flip a into a griping as well as the moll Daemon of may govern as triumphantly by this Expedient as the great his Brother and - the greit Knight as I - But every Character cannot attempt the other Expedient of keeping up equal There no for any extraordinary Genius to and infamous But there is need of that left-handed called and of Habits in called that is with that He runs into j his Arms at the Beckon in order to the He meets Him but half On thei other or to maintain and the of Parties in a a of and Fraud is to be carried are fq far from to the that not be if They were not From which I have between the two and the Characters proper to put them in Practice with it may be upon former as I the Expedient of Dividing That cf and upon fome later the Corrupting fo which are j and I will not be fo lucky in or renewing our Much hath been Written by by your and who have drawn their of Virtue the right as well as the as ignoble of enough farely perhaps w hereafter fo much better to who of fo ignominious have not loft all of a Crime and to make who have not loft every ether tremble at of it. We may flitter our felves that Endeavours have had fome and have to hope that far greater will from Examples which have been lately given to the grand his frequent and Declarations that He He had a Mind to Hopes are farther to us by repeated Declarations jof the of whenever of the two again think it proper to of this encroaching In the mean I think nothing can better the of your nor the publick more effectually in the than .to put Countrymen frequently on their Guard the is but to maintain if it be new Thn which jour Fathers to fee and did not is now breaking upon Shall We fuffer this Light to be again into Party the Incantations of who would not have for even in the of and Ignorance is not only brought into an Uniformity of Opinion concerning the by the Length and the righteous Conduct of but We are grown into an about Principles of Govern which the could have without Certain Affectations of Ideas were made fo familiar to about half a Century and became in the cf Time fo that We not have been even a to break them nor have been induced to the of any that Experience and the Evidence of Fads in a few Years break them for all our Notions of new ones their ' a The Power and of the an orig inal the Authority and Independency of were Ideas at that to the Idea of a and by every Whig to be and with the Idea of a lineal nay and Popery were in many Minds to the Idea of a and and in the fame with the Idea of a But now which neither Side would have on the Faith of. any is corrie to pafs quod Divum promittere nemo Dies attulit are Sets of Ideas are out of their Order j new Combinations force upon and it would actually be as to impute to ihs Tories which were Lid to their Charge as it. would be to to the Name of They daily forfeit that by their The Bulk of both Parties are really united united on Principles of in to an Remnant of one who and a mercenary Detachment from the who betray How this Change far the better comes to have been wrought in an when Things have changed for the and fince it hath been why the eld are kept in fome will be accounted for in treating this Subject At what We fay to who of this national Union as impracticable and yet privately act with all their as a practicable and a real Evil to Them If i t be as compleat and as well as I imagine it and as every Briton it may if there be nothing more than a Tendency on all Sides towards no Man of the leail and Candour will it is the Duty of every who the of his to feize the cultivate and improve it. If are to be known by their the Works of who this denote Them Wicked and unhappy who feek their private in publick Weak and filly Men vainly imagine that They fhill pafs for the and the that Jhall be judged in the and the whole Body of the People in the whom would They long do that fo unequal a There is no which hath been more in the no Grief hath lain heavily at the Hearts of all good than about our about Spirit of which and breeds Rancour which hath fo often our inward weakened our national and Glory It is Time therefore that be good and to procure the the Strength and the Glory of their Country by the only by which They can be procured join their Efforts to our national and to change the Party into a Spirit qf publick That We may be more encouraged to do it will be of Ufe perhaps to in fome what Advances are already made towards that national without which no national be expected in as f Temper of the Members Let us begin with the of the Church of England towards the by which the latter were debarred from ferving God after their own have not been many Years a to were to hinder the Propagation of their and which the Door of all publick even to fuch Them as conformed are Far from to any new upon even who reputed their and who have acted as fuch on acknowledge Experience hath removed They fee that Indulgence hath done what Severity never and from the of if I a I fooner entertain Hopes of future Favour than from the double Dealing of who lean on the when They are out of and who Them a Load upon when They are in it- We are now in the true and only which cm lead to a perfect Reconciliation among to the Abolition of or to of Difference fo as to none cf happy Ends muft obtained by mutual They never can .be obtained It is that which is the Effect of a and may a and erect even But by the fame our antient will be revived the Church will be thought really in and j religious which have been fo and fo beneficially kept will once more the Peace of the It is a certain Truth that our religious and have and and fomented each Churchmen and have and or been made to that They at as much about civil as There can be therefore no Way fo effectual to their Differences the as to improve the growing Union between Them on the Idem de to think alike about political hath been to and maintain private It is more in publick Bodies of in the fame Society can never They unite on this and if They once unite on this They will unite oh all or They will readily and make one another about them - Let me It becomes a Man to do who our political of Whig and the have adhered to the and They want no Apology for doing They to with whom and flood in to with whom They differed in Principles of There could be no Objection brought on this They certainly did follow They not act like a or a who had and an from the of the Their Shad nothing to-do They concurred with and They had been as They were They would have acted in the But if this of on the fame no if there be in Truth a nor a as I have but a Court and a Country Party Being if the political the have formerly are on one Side and which They have or equivalent to them in their are on the other can the about the Option They are to make I am They I know that Them do What might and certainly would be if They made their Option to by the I will not fo much as What mult be the their by the in to ' between two Powers the it is to and to They will in this .to the whole that the Spirit of Liberty animates and alone who could never brook a will have the Merit of faving their Country from the Danger and their Country will owe Them all the which due frc m good and grateful Citizens of the fame As to the other of Whig and Tory who recollects what hath in and what but of can differ very little in his Opinion from what hath faid concerning it. The principal Articles of your civil fome Time to more the Faith of the are and to by  

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