Julius Cæser acquittted, and his murderers condemn'd : In a letter to a friend. Shewing, that it was not Cf̆ar who destroy'd the Roman liberties, but the corruptions of the Romans themselves. Occasion'd by two letters in the London journal, the one of the 2d, the other of the 9th of December. To which is added a second letter, shewing, that if ever the liberties is Great Britain are lost, they will be no other way than by the corruptions of the people of Great Britain themselves. By Mr. Dennis.

Author/creator Dennis, John
Format Electronic
Publication InfoLondon : Printed for J. Mack-Euen at Buchanan's-Head over-against St. Clement's-Church in the Strand: and sold by J. Roberts in Harwick-Lane, 1722.
Description8 unnumbered pages, 39, 1 unnumbered page ; 8⁰.
Supplemental ContentFull text online
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General notePrice in square brackets: (Price Six-pence.)
General noteReproduction of original from University of London's Goldsmiths' Library.
References Goldsmiths', 6160
References English Short Title Catalog, T75431.
Reproduction noteElectronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Cengage Gale, 2009. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.

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