The Substance of a Council Held at Lancaster - 8
THE grand points we have to carry is to be unanimous among ourselves, and to blind the Dutch by all the Political Dust we can raise; by encreasing their Prejudices against the King; alarming their Fears; and trying to persuade them that the Pr—r is a Prince.
A Motion by Mr.—
Moderator,
I believe that will be hard to do. I sounded one of them who is a Neighbour of mine upon that Subject the other Day, and the Fellow very abruptly told me, that the first Thing he did when he came into this Country, was to swear Allegiance to King George, not the P—r; that King George's Father and Mother were both Dutch People, and he wou'd spend the last Drop of his Blood for them;—that they might talk of the Assembly as they pleas'd, but Dutch Men knew the Worth of Money as well as their Neighbours; that no Body cou'd persuade him that it was right for the Coun-