Wesley Collected Works Vol 11
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-11-109 |
| Words | 391 |
And to which of his successors did the people of
England (six or seven millions) give the sovereign power? This is mere political cant; words without meaning. I know
but one instance in all history wherein the people gave the
sovereign power to any one: That was to Massaniello of
Naples. And I desire any man living to produce another
instance in the history of all nations. Ten times over, in different words, you “profess yourselves
to be contending for liberty.” But it is a vain, empty
profession; unless you mean by that threadbare word, a liberty
from obeying your rightful Sovereign, and from keeping the
fundamental laws of your country. And this undoubtedly it
is, which the confederated colonies are now contending for,
1. It was with great expectation that I read Dr. Price's
“Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty, the Principles
of Government, and the Justice and Policy of the War with
America; ” and I was not disappointed. As the author is
a person of uncommon abilities, so he has exerted them to
the uttermost in the tract before us, which is certainly a
master-piece of its kind. He has said all that can be said
upon the subject, and has digested it in the most accurate
manner; and candour requires us to believe that he has wrote
with an upright intention, with a real design to subserve
the interest of mankind in general, as well as the subjects
of the British empire. But as the Doctor is a friend to
liberty, so he can “think and let think.” He does not
desire that we should implicitly submit to the judgment,
either of him or any other fallible man; and will not there
fore be displeased at a few further observations on the same
subject. That subject is,
2. The liberty which is now claimed by the confederate
colonies in America. In order to understand this much
controverted question, I would set aside everything not
essential to it. I do not therefore now inquire, whether this
or that measure be consistent with good policy; or, whether it
is likely to be attended with good or ill success: I only want
to know, is their claim right or wrong? Is it just or unjust? 3. What is it they claim? You answer, “Liberty.” Nay,
is it not independency?