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THE

MEDA L.

A SATIRE

AGAINST SEDITION.

EPISTLE TO THE

FOR

WHIGS.

OR to whom can I dedicate this poem, with fo much juftice as to you? It is the representation of your own hero: it is the picture drawn at length, which you admire and prize fo much in little. None of your ornaments are wanting; neither the landscape of your Tower, nor the rising fun; nor the Anno Domini of your new fovereign's coronation. This must needs be a grateful undertaking to your whole party: efpecially to thofe who have not been fo happy as to purchafe the original. I hear the graver has made a good market of it: all his kings are bought up already; or the value of the remainder fo inhanced, that many a poor Polander, who would be glad to worthip the image, is not able to go to the cost of him: but must be content to fee him here. I must confefs I am no great artift; but fign-poft painting will ferve the turn to remember a friend by; efpecially when better is not to be had. Yet, for your comfort, the lineaments are true: and though he fat not five times to me, as he did to B. yet I have confulted hiftory; as the Italian painters do, when they would draw a Nero or a Caligula; though

they

they have not feen the man, they can help their imagination by a statue of him, and find out the colouring from Suetonius and Tacitus. Truth is, you might have spared one fide of your Medal: the head would be seen to more advantage if it were placed on a spike of the Tower, a little nearer to the fun; which would then break out to better purpose.

You tell us in your preface to the No-proteftant Plot, that you fhall be forced hereafter to leave off your modefty: I fuppofe you mean that little which is left you; for it was worn to rags when you put out this Medal. Never was there practifed fuch a piece of notorious impudence in the face of an established government. I believe, when he is dead, you will wear him in thumb-rings, as the Turks did Scanderbeg; as if there were virtue in his bones to preferve you against monarchy. Yet all this while you pretend not only zeal for the public good, but a due veneration for the perfon of the king. But all men who can fee an inch before them, may easily detect thofe grofs fallacies. That it is neceflary for men in your circumftances to pretend both, is granted you; for without them there could be no ground to raise a faction. But I would ask you one civil queftion, what right has any man among you, or any affociation of men, to come nearer to you, who, out of parliament, cannot be confidered in a public capacity, to meet as you daily do in fatious clubs, to vilify the government in your difcourfes, and to libel it in all your writings? Who made you judges in Ifrael? Or how is it confiftent with your zeal for the

pub.

public welfare, to promote fedition? Does your definition of loyal, which is to ferve the king according to the laws, allow you the licenfe of traducing the executive power with which you own he is invested? You complain that his majefty has loft the love and confidence of his people; and, by your very urging it, you endeavour what in you lies to make him lose them. All good fubjects abhor the thought of arbitrary power, whether it be in one or many: if you were the patriots you would fecm, you would not at this rate incenfe the multitude to affume it; for no fober man can fear it, either from the king's difpofition or his practice; or even, where you would odioufly lay it, from his minifters. Give us leave to enjoy the government and benefit of laws under which we were born, and which we desire to transmit to our posterity. You are not the trustees of the public liberty: and if you have not right to petition in a crowd, much lefs have you to intermeddle in the management of affairs; or to arraign what you do not like; which in effect is every thing that is done by the king and council. Can you imagine that any reasonable man will believe you refpect the perfon of his majesty, when it is apparent that your feditious pamphlets are ftuffed with particular reflections on him? If you have the confidence to deny this, it is eafy to be evinced from a thoufand paffages, which I only forbear to quote, becaufe I defire they should die and be forgotten. I have perufed many of your papers; and to fhew you that I have, the third part of your No-proteftant Plot is much of it ftolen from your dead author's pamph

let,

let, called the Growth of Popery; as manifeftly as Milton's Defence of the English People is from Buchanan De jure regni apud Scotos: or your first Covenant and new Affociation from the holy league of the French Guifards. Any one who reads Davila, may trace your practices all along. There were the fame pretences for reformation and loyalty, the fame afperfions of the king, and the fame grounds of a rebellion. I know not whether you will take the hiftorian's word, who fays it was reporte !, that Poltrot a Hugonot murdered Francis duke of Guife, by the inftigations of Theodore Beza, or that it was a Hugonot minifter, otherwife called a Prefbyterian, for our church abhors fo devilish a tenet, who firft writ a treatife of the lawfulnefs of depofing and murdering kings of a different perfuafion in religion: but I am able to prove, from the doctrine of Calvin, and principles of Buchanan, that they fet the people above the magiftrate; which, if I mistake not, is your own fundamental, and which carries your loyalty no farther than your liking. When a vote of the houfe of commons goes on your fide, you are as ready to obferve it as if it were paffed into a law; but when you are pinched with any former and yet unrepealed act of parliament, you declare that in fome cafes you will not be obliged by it. The paffage is in the fame third part of the No-proteftant Plot; and is too plain to be denied. The late copy of your intended affociation, you neither wholly justify nor condemn ; but as the papifts, when they are unoppofed, fly out into all the pageantries of worship; but in times of war,

when

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