The Conduct of the Paxton Men Impartially Represented - 14
‘By these Kind of Proceedings (says another noble Lord) we may for a While keep the People quiet, or knock out the Brains of those who shall presume to be otherwise; but we shall never remove their Discontents, or gain their Affections; and this must be done, or our Government must be made Arbitrary; for a free Government cannot be supported but by having the Affections of the Generality of the People.’
Now, Sire, had your Quakers, those Children of Peace, adopted these wise Sentiments, and pursued these humane just and truly politic Measures, every Thing might have been easy. But instead of this, they neglected and despised the Complaints of an injured and oppressed People; refused to redress their Grievances; they promoted a military Apparatus; fortify’d the Barracks; planted Cannon, and strutted about in all the Parade of War, as if they chose rather to have the Province involv’d in a Civil War, and see the Blood of perhaps 5 or 600 of his Majesty’s Subjects shed, than give up, or banish to their native Caves and Woods, a Parcel of treacherous, faithless, rascally Indians, some of which can be proved to be Murderers. But if they were all innocent, by what Law are we obliged to maintain 140 idle Vagabonds? Must Pennsylvania work for murdering Savages as their Lords and Masters?