Advice to Young Men - And (Incidentally) to Young Women in the Middle and Higher Ranks of Life. In a Series of Letters, Addressed to a Youth, a Bachelor, a Lover, a Husband, a Father, a Citizen, or a Subject. by William Cobbett
page 46 of 277 (16%)
page 46 of 277 (16%)
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51. The great object of these lies always has been to make the main body
of the people believe, that the nation is now more happy, more populous, more powerful, _than it was before it was Protestant_, and thereby to induce us to conclude, that it was _a good thing for us_ that the aristocracy should take to themselves the property of the poor and the church, and make the people at large _pay taxes for the support of both_. This has been, and still is, the great object of all those heaps of lies; and those lies are continually spread about amongst us in all forms of publication, from heavy folios down to halfpenny tracts. In refutation of those lies we have only very few and rare ancient books to refer to, and their information is incidental, seeing that their authors never dreamed of the possibility of the lying generations which were to come. We have the ancient acts of parliament, the common-law, the customs, the canons of the church, and _the churches themselves_; but these demand _analyses_ and _argument_, and they demand also a _really free press_, and _unprejudiced and patient readers_. Never in this world, before, had truth to struggle with so many and such great disadvantages! 52. To refute lies is not, at present, my business; but it is my business to give you, in as small a compass as possible, one striking proof that they are lies; and thereby to put you well upon your guard for the whole of the rest of your life. The opinion sedulously inculcated by these '_historians_' is this; that, before the _Protestant_ times came, England was, comparatively, an insignificant country, _having few people in it, and those few wretchedly poor and miserable_. Now, take the following _undeniable facts_. All the parishes in England are now (except where they have been _united_, and two, three, or four, have been made into one) in point of _size_, what they were _a thousand years ago_. The county of Norfolk is the best |
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