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Letter to Editor March 7, 1777

The Virginia Gazette

Richmond, Williamsburg, Richmond County, Virginia

What is this article about?

Junius writes to King George III, criticizing his ministers for provoking the American Revolution through unconstitutional measures and corruption. He urges the King to dismiss them, redress grievances, and restore liberties to prevent national ruin and potential revolution, referencing historical precedents like the Act of Settlement.

Merged-components note: This is a continuation of the Junius letter to the King across pages; relabeled to letter_to_editor as it fits reader/public address style better than editorial.

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From the WESTMINSTER Gazette, September 10, 1777.

JUNIUS to the KING.

SIRE,

[Suffer me to] write with as much spirit as our forefathers fought; let me be allowed to forget I am an individual, and endeavour to speak with the voice of the whole nation.
If there is a spark of our ancient virtue remaining, I shall not only find indulgence, but command attention. I do not stand forth to urge any interest of my own, in all I shall say, every Englishman is as much concerned as myself. Every man who glories in the name of an Englishman, [sits and rejoices] in its misery. The crisis affects every friend to the constitution, and believe me, Sire, that if they were all awakened with the same sense of it, what is now your terror, might be made the means of our preservation.

[It is the] very basis of all just government. In the most particular manner it is the Salus populi suprema lex, is not only a trite and true maxim, but the basis, nay the only basis of our establishment.

Whatever might have been the fact, the pretence at the revolution was to redress the grievances of the delivered, not to gratify the ambition of the deliverer. When the act of settlement took place and confirmed the throne in the House of Hanover, the only reason for it was that the nation believed that under those Princes only, our liberty could be safe.

It was not therefore for the sake of one man, or one family, that this transfer was made of the crown, it was for the whole people, therefore it is demonstrably our right, it is indispensably our duty to take care that the conditions are fulfilled. It is incumbent on us to insist that our own [acts] you to perform your duty, whilst you expect that we should continue in act and deed should operate to our own use and advantage, and to request our allegiance.

fide; and that the House of Hanover had neither services to urge by way [of] Recollect, Sire, that the act of settlement, was an act of grace on our [part]; made several large abatements in the original terms on which they were to [receive and enjoy it], and as they were of our accord, a grateful mind this House been Lords of the Manor, instead of Stewards for the people, [they] mage. On a principle of gratitude, therefore, as well as justice, they they could not have levied larger fines, or received more unreserved ho- should have calculated every act of state, every measure of government, purely and simply for the good of the people.

you would not listen to the remonstrances of an oppressed people, nor the I need not tell your Majesty that it has been directly the reverse, and if petitions of an aggrieved nation, you will pay no attention to my aver- tions. If you believed not Moses and the Prophets, you will not listen to one raised from the dead. Yet your Ministers have let slip no opportu- nities of painting your distresses in the most affecting manner, and whilft you continued inexorable to redress our grievances, you ventured to entreat the characteristic compassion of the people to set you an example for what you wanted gratitude and sentiments to follow.

It has been remarked that the feelings of a Prince, though numbed and dead at all other times, are delicate when he wants to have his dif. trees relieved. In your reign it has been otherwise, and it has been the folly of the people to relieve your Majesty's distresses, when you refused to remove their grievances. Yet it had been justice, as we knew then, and policy as you may know hereafter, that both should have been removed together.

A crisis may arrive, and probably is not far off, when your ministers may with great truth again assure us that the Prince is distressed and wants the assistance of that people to whom he owes his all. I then should have no objection to relieve him, provided he redressed the people, but I cer- tainly would not grant one, till I had obtained the other. Let mutual confidence take place of mutual jealousies, for if we are to perform and endure all, apprehensions must vanish, and we must have recourse to our own strength to obtain by force what we put in the power of an individual to refuse to our entreaties. Although I am sincerely attached to the pre- sent establishment, I cannot suffer my regard for one family to get the better of my duty to my country. I will never submit to a complaisance that is criminal to the rights of the people, nor a loyalty that is destruc- tive to the privileges of a glorious nation. For, if through the bad ad- ministration of the chief magistrate, who is trusted with the executive power, or by any other means, the liberty of the people shall become precarious, I will then be for any form of government, under which their liberty and property may be more secure, though till THEN I do not desire to CHANGE.

It is therefore of the utmost consequence to your Majesty to reflect, before all the people become sensible of the injuries which have been done them by abominable and traitorous ministers. That junto which is well known to conduct the present unnatural war, those men who have brought disgrace on your reign, and destruction on your subjects, cannot long hinder your what nothing but a love of your family has long prevented.

In gratitude, then, for this predilection, consider the situation of this country; but if that has no effect on you, let the sense of your own dan-ger awake you, and urge you to shun, ere too late, the precipice you are on the brink of. Dismiss this Aspen junto, which trembles with every whilper, and shudders at every blast, before they raise a storm, that, in its violence to shake off its withered leaves, may tear up the tree that made them bud.

Take away their power, and their credit and counsels will be faded and exposed. Discharge them from your presence, and there will as lit- tle trace remain of their abilities as their virtue.

I am fully persuaded that your Majesty is a good man, and that you have the interests of your subjects at heart. I have been told you shed tears at the death of an individual who sacrificed himself to grant your re- quest. God forbid it were true, or else grant that you are not so fu- ceptible now for the lives of those who have crossed the Atlantic at Your desire. If I thought you was, I should dread to mention America, and shudder at the reflection of the horror you must feel at the names of Lex- ington, Bunker's Hill, or Sullivan's Island.

A jealousy of your own character may have made you hitherto passive amidst the illegal, the criminal violences that have been carried on against the people. A consciousness of innocence in yourself may have been the motive of your compliance with your Minister's measures. But these are no excuses for a chief magistrate when the welfare of a nation is at stake, nor can the puerile, vague, equivocal plea of throwing the blame upon opposition exculpate a Chief Governor, who is permitted to choose all his subaltern officers. All our unfortunate Kings since the conquest, lost their crowns, and most of them their lives, by giving themselves up implicitly to wicked Favourites and Ministers, in opposition to the sense of the people, and in defiance of their frequent remonstrances. Without looking back for centuries to the Houses of York and Lancaster, the circumstances of James the second's case are recent and striking example. Every one knows that that unhappy Prince went on not only obstinately, but precipitately in the prosecution of his destructive schemes. What the consequence was, can best be explained by those, who, by solemn pro- mises of being upright magistrates, were adopted in the place of him we had discharged FOR SUFFERING HIMSELF TO BE DELUDED BY HIS MINISTERS.

It has often happened, and may happen again, that good Princes as well as bad, have put their only trust in those men, who, having first rendered themselves universally odious by vile measures, can find no other refuge than in betraying and sacrificing their master. It is therefore ab- solutely incumbent on a Prince, not only for the good of his people, but to prevent his own dimission, when dissensions arise in his kingdom, and ill-humours are visibly spread through the whole body of the people, to make strict inquiries into the causes of them, and see whether they really flow from those little springs which occasionally break out, or from other sources of a more latent and complicated nature.

Things are now reduced to such an unhappy crisis, by a long course of mal-administration, and provoking conduct, that Government seem des- perate, and your Ministers, dreading the vengeance of those people, wish to involve your Majesty in their inevitable ruin. Their timidity now surpaes their absurdity in the beginning of this unnatural war, and knowing their fate is unavoidable, they strive to aggragate the mass of desperadoes by declaring—Una salus miseris nullam sperare salutem, or in their words, " WE MUST MURDER THE AMERICANS, OR THEY WILL HAVE US BEHEADED."

After you had lost the affections of the people, there were but two ways of regaining them, "A change of men and measures, or subduing them by force," the former you positively and repeatedly refused to your constituents; the latter you are now trying with a nation, who, in case of a revolution, might have granted you a surer asylum than those whose -you occupy, found at St. Germains. The situation of your Majesty, and your Ministers, is truly deplorable, In America you are DECLARED against as a and a -. In England we re- monstrance against measures, and petition against Ministers as enemies to the people, and traitors to the constitution. We are not yet sunk into that lethargy that the junto make you imagine, and if we were, recol- lect that the phrenzy of James awoke the nation out of a deeper one. The honest, the wise part of this nation grow tired with suffering for a SHADOW, our great appetites must have a SUBSTANCE.

How far the Americans spoke truth in their declaration, or we in our remonstrances, is too dangerous for my pen to decide. True it is that our most valuable rights have been infringed on, and our dearest liber- ties attacked and destroyed.

The enemies of our glorious constitution have been encouraged by But hold ! what is to defend and protect me if I say by whom As yet the HABEAS CORPUS ACT is not suspended, and till it is I will venture to put up one petition, which is, may confusion cover --- who, by their violence and treachery, have reduced us to our present disgraceful and ruinous situation.

JUNIUS.

What sub-type of article is it?

Persuasive Political Provocative

What themes does it cover?

Politics Constitutional Rights Military War

What keywords are associated?

Junius Letters King George Iii American Revolution Ministerial Corruption Constitutional Liberties Act Of Settlement Habeas Corpus

What entities or persons were involved?

Junius The King

Letter to Editor Details

Author

Junius

Recipient

The King

Main Argument

the king must dismiss his corrupt ministers who have provoked the american war and violated constitutional rights, redress the people's grievances, and restore liberties to prevent revolution and preserve the monarchy.

Notable Details

References Act Of Settlement And House Of Hanover Mentions American Battles: Lexington, Bunker's Hill, Sullivan's Island Cites Historical Examples: James Ii, Houses Of York And Lancaster Latin Quotes: Salus Populi Suprema Lex, Una Salus Miseris Nullam Sperare Salutem Urges Dismissal Of 'Aspen Junto' Ministers

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