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Letter III. To the freemen of Alnwick. Various are the conjectures and manifold the opinions, my good brother-freemen, that have been formed concerning the author of my first and second letters; some having attributed themto one craftsman, some to another, and others again to no craftsman to all
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Letter IV. To the freemen of Alnwick. My good friends and brother-freemen, I shall now without any preamble, take unto consideration your late petition to His Grace the Duke of Northumberland, which I adverted to in my last, and which I intend now to consider more fully as to the matter of it; and sorry I am to say that it does no credit either to the composer or to the subscribers
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Letter V. To the freemen of Alnwick. My good friends and Brethern, I have already made some remarks upon the application that was made by the Committee (as you call them) to the Four-and-Twenty, upon the subject of the grievances that the freemen were supposed to labour under; and i am sorry that it should have been so worthy of censure as it is.
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Letter VII. To the freemen of Alnwick. Peradventure it may have appeared unto some of you (my brother-freemen) who are of the graver fort, that I have disported myself too much in some of these my letters and indulged an affection for humour beyond what was allowable in an old craftsman who was addressing his brethren upon so serious a subject as the care and preservation of their rights and privileges
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