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Show 464. PREFACE to Mr. Galloway'r Spear/3. fent conf'titution; And that the introducing fuch a praé'tice would be attended with inconveniences, as the reprefentatives in aITembly are not, like the Lords in parliament, unaccountable to any confiituents; and would therefore find it neccfihry V. for their own juf'tification, if the reafons of the minority for being againf'r a meafure were admitted in the votes, to put there likewife the reafons that induced the majority to be for it : Whereby the votes, which were intended only as a regifier of propofitions and determinations, would be filled with the difputes of members with members ; and the public bufinefs be thereby greatly retarded, if ever brought to a period. As that Proteft was a mere abf'traét of Mr. PAPERS ON MISCELLANEOUS S UBJE CT 8. DICKINSON'S fpeech, every particular of it wiil ~‘\‘. Wllilllllllll‘\IWNW‘W be found anfwered in the following fpeech of M Mr. Galloway; from which it is fit that I fliould no longer detain the reader *. N. B. 11/1 :17: Pap!" under this divi/ion art dMiflgui/bed l} the letter: [ M. P. la Id In 117 ' fr] 1‘ ill * [MrhGalloway's {peach is of courfe here omitted.-In the Pens fylvama edition of the Preface, an epitaph followed here. IL] V. PAPERS Izmdafmb Ira]; JP r I Inmmn: ‘ H ‘ |