Page:A History and Defence of Magna Charta.djvu/43

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DISCOURSE.
xxxvii

liament denounced againſt meaſures authorized by the law of the land:

Resolutions of one branch of the legiſlature, ſet up as the law of the land, being a dire uſurpation of the rights of the two other branches, and therefore a manifeſt infringement of the conſtitution:

Public money ſhamefully ſquandered and unaccounted for, and all inquiry into the cauſe of arrears in the civil liſt prevented by the miniſtry:

“Inquiry into a pay-maſter’s public accounts ſtopped in the exchequer, though the ſums unaccounted for by that pay-maſter, amount to above forty millions ſterling:

Public loans perverted to private miniſterial purpoſes:

Prostitution of public honours and rewards to men who can neither plead public virtue nor ſervices:

Irreligion and immorality, ſo eminently diſcountenanced by your majeſty’s royal example, encouraged by adminiſtration both by example and precept:

The