Page:The Battle of the Press, as Told in the Story of the Life of Richard Carlile.djvu/212

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
198
THE LIFE OF RICHARD CARLILE.

now threatened with distraint for poor rates, church rates, and land-tax. What is a government that is supported by scenes of distress of this kind? What is protection for liberty and property, where the law swallows up both liberty and property, without cognisance of any other offence than the poverty of the housekeeper? It will be well to publish as many cases of this kind as possible, to teach Our Lords who have not the fear of The Lord before their eyes, what is the real state of things; and moreover, that an endurance of such a state of things may be exhausted. "R. C."