University of Virginia Library


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TO THE READER.

GENTLE READER,

The insufferable licentiousness of the present age, with regard to political opinion, demands an immediate redress. As a freedom of discussion may be the loss of a minister's place; that minister is in the right to make use of his most virtuous majority, to bring in a bill

For binding to the peace the tongue and pen,
So hostile to the peace of courtier men,

who, as Pope says of his friend Addison,

—‘damn for arts that caus'd themselves to rise.’

Messieurs Pitt and Dundas were not pot valiant when they stumbled on this Convention Act, whatever the world may think. The jolly god, it is said. was for once forced to give place to the goddess yclept Prudence, who has totally presided over this bill, which wisely orders that a dozen men, like a dozen bottles of wine, shall not pass from house to house without a permit. Convinced of the necessity and


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wisdom of our premier's political manœuvre, I join his standard, and heartily vote to perpetual confinement the pen.

That, with its lever nib of brass,
Tries from his pow'r to heave Dundas;
And tongue that, with its crushing wit,
Treads like an elephant, on Pitt,
By Slander urg'd, whose breath of flame
Melts the fair column of a name.
P. P.