Treatise Thoughts Upon Liberty
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-thoughts-upon-liberty-011 |
| Words | 392 |
for it
deserves no better name. We must not dare to give the
least intimation, that the devil has anything to do with it. No! this enlightened age is too wise to believe that there is
any devil in being ! Satan, avaunt we have driven thee
back into the land of shadows; keep thou among thy own
kindred :
With hydras, gorgons, and chimeras dire. Suppose it then to be a purely natural phenomenon; I
ask again, How can we account for it? I apprehend if we
could divest ourselves of prejudice, it might be done very
easily; and that without concerning ourselves with the hidden
springs of action, the motives or intentions of men. Letting
these alone, is there not a visible, undeniable cause, which
is quite adequate to the effect? The good people of England
have, for some years past, been continually fed with poison. Dose after dose has been administered to them, for fear the
first, or second, or tenth, should not suffice, of a poison
whose natural effect is to drive men out of their senses. Is “the centaur not fabulous?” Neither is Circe's cup. See how, in every county, city, and village, it is now turning
quiet, reasonable men, into wild bulls, bears, and tigers l,
But, to lay metaphor aside, how long have the public papers
represented one of the best of Princes as if he had been one
of the worst, as little better than Caligula, Nero, or Domitian! These were followed by pamphlets of the same kind, and
aiming at the same point,-to make the King appear odious
as well as contemptible in the eyes of his subjects. Letters
succeed, wrote in fine language, and with exquisite art, but
filled with the gall of bitterness. “Yes, but not against the
king; Junius does not strike at him, but at the evil adminis
tration.” Thin pretence! Does not every one see the blow
is aimed at the King through the sides of his Ministers? All these are conveyed, week after week, through all London
and all the nation. Can any man wonder at the effect of
this? What can be more natural? What can be expected,
but that they who drink in these papers and letters with
all greediness, will be thoroughly embittered and inflamed
thereby? will first despise and then abhor the King?