Page:Letters of Junius, volume 2 (Woodfall, 1772).djvu/156

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146
LETTERS OF

LETTER XLIII.


TO THE PRINTER OF THE PUBLIC ADVERTISER.


6. February, 1771
SIR

I Hope your correspondent Junius is better employed than in answering or reading the criticisms of a news-paper. This is a task, from which, if he were inclined to submit to it, his friends ought to relieve him. Upon this principle, I shall undertake to answer Anti-Junius; more, I believe, to his conviction than to his satisfaction. Not daring to attack the main body of Junius's last letter, he triumphs in having, as he thinks, surprised an out-post, and cut off a detached argument, a mere straggling proposition. But even in this petty warfare, he shall find himself defeated.

Junius does not speak of the Spanish nation as the natural enemies of England; he applies that description with the strictest truth and justice, to the Spanish Court. From