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IN AMERICAN DIPLOMACY
51

of Englishmen who still remain free and independent, and who laugh at the impotent majorities of a prostitute parliament."

Burke and Chatham openly proclaimed their correspondence with Franklin and held every "British and Hessian" victory over America to be a victory over British freedom.

The American historian Willis Fletcher Johnson points out that "Many British officers refused to serve against America, preferring to resign their commissions. Among these were: the eldest son of Lord Chatham, who had begun a most promising military career; Admiral Keppel, Lieutenant-General Sir Jeffrey Amherst; General Conway, afterward a field marshal; Lord Frederick Cavendish; and the Earl of Effingham, who was commended for his act by the city corporations of London and Dublin in public addresses."

Wharton says:

"When the question is asked, why did not the British ministry arrest men of this class when corresponding with the American legation—a question