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England Responds, 1776. Highly important pamp

Currency:USD Category:Antiques Start Price:225.00 USD Estimated At:450.00 - 650.00 USD
England Responds, 1776. Highly important pamp
England Responds, 1776. Highly important pamphlet, The Rights of Great Britain Asserted against the Claims of America: being an Answer to the Declaration of the General Congress. Attributed to James MacPherson. Dublin, 1776. Third Edition. 60 pp. Magnificently bound in rich brown polished calf, green, grey and white veined boards, gilt title and trim. An aggressive counterattack on America's Declaration of Independence that fateful year: "When Independent States take up arms, they endeavour to impress the World with a favourable opinion of their own cause...This consideration...seems to have totally escaped the attention of the body of men who lately sat at Philadelphia under the name of 'The General American Congress.' In a paper published under the title of 'A Declaration by the Representatives of the United Colonies of North America,' the facts are either wilfully or ignorantly misrepresented...But, as whatever falls from men who call themselves the Representatives of a People, must fall with some degree of weight on the undiscerning part of mankind...The Declaration of the Congress begins with an involved period, which either contains no meaning, or a meaning not founded on the principles of reason...They...are no longer Subjects, but Rebels...." With 8-page "Declaration by the Representatives of the United Colonies of North America, now met in General Congress in Philadelphia, setting forth the cause and necessity of their taking up arms," signed in type by John Hancock and Charles Thompson [sic], dated July 6, 1775. Large folding chart at back, "An Account of what sums have been Granted to the different Provinces in North-America, as far as it appears from the Estimates for the Support of the Civil Government of each Province...," listing monies to New York, Carolina, Georgia, South Carolina, Nova Scotia, East-Florida, West-Florida, and America. Trivial occasional foxing, else very fine, the binding striking. No copies found online.