"To the same Revolution We owe That Limited Form of Government which is our only Security; Those Parliaments, in which Our own Consent frames Our own Laws; Those Laws so framed, and afterwards executed, in an Administration of Justice, with regard to the Affairs of Life and of Property, utterly unexperienced by any Nation of the Known World, except Ourselves."
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Letter [59], signed "Britannicus", in the London Journal (9 November 1723); collected in John Hoadly (ed.) Works, vol. 3 (London: W. Bowyer and J. Nichols, 1773), p. 225
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Benjamin_Hoadly
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Benjamin Hoadly
Benjamin Hoadly (14 November 1676 – 17 April 1761) was an English Whig clergyman, who was successively Bishop of Bangor, of Hereford, of Salisbury, and finally of Winchester. He is best known as the initiator of the Bangorian Controversy.
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