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Sign up freeThe Massachusetts Spy, Or, Thomas's Boston Journal
Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts
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Editorial in Newport Mercury by Americanus condemns a new British court in Rhode Island for investigating the Gaspee schooner burning, calling it an unconstitutional inquisition worse than the Stamp Act, violating trial by peers and Magna Charta by sending suspects to England; urges colonists to resist to preserve liberties.
Merged-components note: Continuation of the same opinion piece across pages, signed 'AMERICANUS', under 'From the NEWPORT MERCURY'.
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O begone not to be, that's the question whether our unalienable rights and liberties are any longer worth contending for is now to be determined.
Permit me, my countrymen, to beseech you to attend to your alarming situation. The stamp-act you opposed, with a spirit and resolution becoming those who were truly solicitous to transmit to posterity those blessings which our fore-fathers purchased for us in the wilds of America, at an immense expense of blood and treasure.—But behold an evil infinitely worse, in its consequences, than all the revenue laws which have been passed from the reign of Charles the first, to this time, now threatens this distressed, piratically plundered country.
A court of inquisition, more horrid than that of Spain and Portugal, is established within this colony, to enquire into the circumstances of destroying the Gaspee schooner, and the persons who are the commissioners of this new-fangled court, are vested with most exorbitant and unconstitutional power.—They are directed to summon witnesses, apprehend persons not only impeached, but even suspected! And them, and every of them, to deliver to Admiral Montagu, who is ordered to have a ship in readiness to carry them to England, where they are to be tried.—Three of the commissioners are a quorum, who are directed to apply to General Gage for troops to protect them in their offices, and preserve the colony from riots and disturbances.~The royal commission for these gentlemen, together with their instructions, is transmitted to Admiral Montagu; who upon being notified that they are convened in conformity, to their appointment, is to attend them, and then deliver their commission and instructions, and to be aiding with his aid, counsel and advice,—whenever necessary.—So much has transpired respecting this alarming Star-Chamber inquisition. And who among the natives of America can hear it without emotion!—Is there an American, in whose breast there glows the smallest spark of public virtue, but who must be fired with indignation and resentment, against a measure so replete with the ruin of our free constitution.—
To be tried by one's peers, is the greatest privilege a subject can wish for; and so excellent is our constitution, that no subject shall be tried but by his peers—This establishment is the grand barrier of our lives, liberties and estates; and whoever attempts to alter or invade this fundamental principle, by which the liberties of the people have been secured time immemorial, is a declared enemy to the welfare and happiness of the King and state.—The tools of despotism, and arbitrary power, have long wished that this important bulwark might be destroyed, and now have the impudence to triumph in our faces, because such of their fellow subjects in America, as are suspected of being guilty of a crime, are ordered to be transported to Great-Britain for trial, in open violation of Magna Charta: Thus are we robbed of our birth-rights, and treated with every mark of indignity, insult and contempt; and can we possibly be so supine, as not to feel ourselves firmly disposed to treat the advocates for such horrid measures with a detestation and scorn, proportionate to their perfidy and baseness?—Luxury and avarice, a more fatal and cruel scourge than war, will before long ravage Britain, and ultimately bring on the dissolution of that once happy kingdom. Ambition, and a thirst for arbitrary sway, have already banished integrity, probity, and every other virtue, from those who are entrusted with the government of our mother country:—Her colonies loudly complain of the violences and vexations they suffer by having their monies taken from them, without their consent, by measures more unjustifiable than highway robbery; and applied to the basest purposes, those of supporting tyrants and debauchees. No private house is inaccessible to the avarice of custom-house officers: No place so remote, whither the injustice and extortion of these miscreant tools in power have not penetrated.
Upon the whole, it is more than probable, it is an almost absolute certainty, that, according to the present appearances, the state of an American subject, instead of enjoying the privileges of an Englishman, will soon be infinitely worse than that of a subject of France, Spain, Portugal or any other the most despotic power on earth. So that, my countrymen, it behoves you, it is your indispensable duty, to stand forth in the glorious cause of freedom, the dearest of all your earthly enjoyments; and, with a truly Roman spirit of liberty, citizens prevent the fastening of the infernal chains.
now forging for you and your posterity, or nobly perish in the attempt! To live a life of rational beings, is to live free; to live a life of slaves, is to die in chains. Ten thousand deaths, by the halter, or the axe, are infinitely preferable to a miserable life of slavery, in chains, under a pack of worse than Egyptian tyrants, whose avarice nothing less than your whole substance and income will satisfy; and who, if they cannot exact that, will glory in making a sacrifice of you and posterity, to gratify their master, the devil, who is a tyrant, and the father of tyrants and of liars.
AMERICANUS.
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Editorial Details
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Opposition To Gaspee Inquiry Court And British Constitutional Violations
Stance / Tone
Indignant Call To Resist British Overreach And Defend Colonial Liberties
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