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<html> <head> <title>NO. 17</title> </head> <body> <center>NO. 3.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1720.<p>
<i>The pestilent Conduct of the South-Sea Directors, with the
reasonable Prospect of publick Justice.</i></center><p>
<dd>SIR,<p>
A man robbed in his house, or on the highway, receives from the law
all possible satisfaction: He had the restitution of his goods again,
where it can be made; he has the life of the offender, if he can be
apprehended; and there is a plentiful reward given for every such
apprehension. By this salutary method, vengeance is at once taken for
the crime committed, and a terrible example made of its author, to
prevent its repitition.<p>
<dd>The law is the great rule in every country, at least in every free
country, by which private property is ascertained, and the publick
good, which is the great end of all laws, is secured; and the
religious observance of this rule, is that alone makes the difference
between good laws, and none. The terror and sanctity of the laws
are shewn by the execution of them; and to a contempt of the laws, or
to a direct dispensing with them, have been owing most of the shocks
and revolutions, that we have, for many ages, sustained in England.<p>
<dd>Some laws are, indeed, unwarily made, being procured by passion,
craft, or surprize; but such are generally either suffered to wax
obsolete, or are repealed, as we have seen in many instances, and may
yet see more.<p>
<dd>But I speak here of those laws which have a direct and known
tendency to secure to us what we have, and to preserve us what we are:
A free people are kept so, by no other means than an equal
distribution of property; every man, who has a share of property,
having a proportional share of power; and the first seeds of anarchy
(which, for the most part, ends in tyranny) are produced from hence,
thet some are ungovernably rich, and many more are miserably poor;
that is, some are masters of all means of oppression, and others want
all the meanse of self-defence.<p>
<dd>What progress we have made in England, towards such a blessed
state of confusion and misery, by the credulity of the people,
throwing their all upon the mercy of base-spirited, hard-hearted
villains, mischievously trusted with a power to undo them, is too
manifest form the woeful condition that we are in. The ruin in
general, and every man has the miserable consolation ot see his
neighbour undone; For as to that class of ravens, whose wealth has
cost the nation its all, as they are manifest enemies to God and man,
no man can call them his neighbours: They are rogues of prey, they are
stock-jobbers, they are a conspiracy of stock-jobbers! A name which
carries along with it such a detestable and deadly image, that it
exceeds all human invention to aggravate it; nor can nature, with all
her variety and stores, furnish out any thing to illustrate its
deformities; nay, it gains visible advantage by the worst comparisons
that you can make: Your terror lessens, when you liken tham to
crocodiles and cannibals, who feed, for hunger, on human bodies.<p>
<dd>These monsters, therefore, stand single in the creation: They are
stock-jobbers; they have served a whole people as Satan served Job;
and so far the Devil is injured, by any analogy that you can make
between him and them.<p>
<dd>Well; but monsters as they are, what would you do with them? The
answer is short and at hand, hang them; for, whatever they deserve, I
would have no new tortures invented, nor any new death devised. In
this, I think, I shew moderation; let them only be hanged, but hanged
speedily. As to their wealth, as it is the manifest plunder of the
people, let it be restored to the people,a nd let the publick be their
heirs; the only method by which the publick is every like to get
millions by them, or indeed any thing.<p>
<dd>But, say some, when did you ever see rogues covered with wealth,
brought to the axe or the gallows? I own that the xample is rare, more
in the shame of the nation, which has had such rich temptations, and
such frequent opportunities; we have had publick guilt in abundance,
God knows, often protected by party, and often by money. Faction on
one sice, and riches on the other, have, as it were, made a lane for
the great criminals to escape. But all these escapes, which are,
indeed our reproach, cannot give any ground to fear a present one.<p>
<dd>This nation has formerly been bought and sold; but arts were used
to blind the people's eyes, the effects of the treachery were not
immediately felt; and we know that the resentment of the vulgar never
follows from their understanding, or their reflection, but from their
feeling: A pick-pocket may tickle a plain fellow's ear, till he has
got his purse; but if he feel it going, he will knock the thief
down.<p>
<dd>We have felt our pockets picked, and we know who have done it:
vengeance abides them.<p>
<dd>I am told, that some of them have the face to pretend, that they
ought not to be put to death; but we hope that the legislature will
effectually convince them, that this hteir partiality to themselves is
groundless: All their hopes of safety must consist in their money; and
without question, they will try to make the wages of their villainy
protect their villainy. But I cannot see hhow any sums can save them;
for as they have robbed and cheated all men, except their accomplices,
so all men are concerned to see justice done to themselves; and if the
ordinary channels of justice could be stopped by bags of money, or by
partnership in original guilt, the enraged, the abused people, might
be prompted by their uppermost passion, and having their resentment
heightened by disappointment, might, it is to be feared, have
rec9ourse to extraordinary ways; ways that are often successful, tho'
never justifiable.<p>
<dd>Here are no parties in this case to disguise truth, and obstruct
justice; the calamity is general, so is the resentment: All are
sufferers, all will be prosecutors. The cry for justice is loud and
united; if it be baulked, I can prophesy no good from so cruel an
omission.<p>
<dd>If this mighty, this destructive guild, were to find impunity,
nothing remains, but that every villain of a daring and avaricious
spirit may grow a great rogue, in order to be a great man. When a
people can no longer expect redress of publick and heavy evils, nor
satisfaction for publick and bitter injuries, hideous is the prospect
which they have before them. If they will tamely suffer a fall from
plenty to beggary, they may soon expect another, and a worse, from
that to slavery: But I hope better things of England.<p>
<dd>I have before my eyes a wise and beneficient prince, a generous
and publick-spirited Parliament, an able and disinterested ministry;
all ocntending with each other for the wealth, the glory, the liberty
of their country: And I have before my eyes a brave and honest people,
lovers of trade and industry, free of their money, and well-deserving
of the legislature, passionate for liberty, and abused beyond
patience, beyond expression, by mean sharpers, that swagger in the
plunder of their country.<p>
<dd>Where therefore their is so much capacity, and there are so many
good dispositions to help us on one side; such loud and melancholy
calls, for that help on another side; such open, such excrable, such
publick crimes, from a third quarter; we may hope every thing from the
speedy meeting of the King and Parliament. They are our protectory,
and we trust that they do not hear the sword in vain.<p>
<dd>I doubt not but many schemes will be laid before them, some of
them designed for a source of new rogueries, and to prevent enquiries
into the old ones. It shall be the business therefore of this paper,
to watch and examine such schemes; and to condemn them, or recommend
them, just as they deserve.<p>
<dd>I have, you see, taken the guild of our traitors for granted, as I
think all men do: But because they shall have all fair play, I
undertake hereafter, if it be found necessary, to prove it by an
induction of particulars.
<dd>G<center>I am, &c.</center><p>
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