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1Address to the people of England, Scotland, and Ireland on the present important crisis of affairs1775Text
2Americans roused, in a cure for the spleen : Or Amusement for a winter's evening; being the substance of conversation on the times over a friendly tankard and pipe. Between Sharp, a country parson. Bumper, a country justice. Fillpot, an inn-keeper. Graveairs, a deacon. Trim, a barber. Brim, a Quaker. Puff, a late representative.1775Text
3Declaration of the people's natural right to a share in the legislature, which is the fundamental principle of the British Constitution of State1774Text
4Observations on the nature of civil liberty, the principles of government, and the justice and policy of the war with America, to which is added, an appendix, containing a state of the national debt, an estimate of the money drawn from the public by the taxes, and an account of the national income and expenditure since the last war.1776Text
5Rights of Great Britain asserted against the claims of America : being an answer to the Declaration of the general Congress.1775Text
6Sermon on the present situation of American affairs, preached in Christ-Church, June 23, 1775; at the request of the officers of the third battalion of the City of Philadelphia and district of Southwark.1775Text
7Sermon preached before the Honorable Council and the Honorable House of representatives, of the colony of the Massachusetts-Bay, in New-England. May 29th, 1776, Being the anniversary for the election of the Honorable Council for the colony.1776Text
8Speech of Edmund Burke, Esq. on moving his resolutions for conciliation with the colonies, March 22, 1775.1775Text
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