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in reasons, as well as answer all I find: and besides refuting all arguments for tlie affirmative, I shall be called upon for invincible positive arguments to prove a negative. And even if I could do all this, and leave the opposite party with a host of unanswered arguments against them, and not a single unrefutcd one on their side, I should be thought to have done little; for a cause supported on the one hand by universal usage, and on the other by so great a preponde­rance of popular sentiment, is supposed to have a presumption in its favour, superior to auy con­viction which an appeal to reason has power to produce in any intellects but those of a high class.

I do not mention these difficulties to complain of them; first, because it would be useless; they are inseparable from having to contend through peoples understandings against the hostility of their feelings and practical tendencies : and truly the understandings of the majority of man­kind would need to be much better cultivated than has ever yet been the case, before they can be asked to place such reliance in their own power of estimating arguments, as to give up practical principles in which they have been born and bred and which arc the basis of much of the existing order of the world, at the first argumentative attack which they are not capable of logically resisting. I do not therefore quarrel with them