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Reply of the United Colonies to the Declaration
of Rebellion
December 6, 1775.(1)
Philadelphia. In Congress, December 6, 1775:
[We, the Delegates of the Thirteen United] Colonies in North America, have taken into
our most serious consideration a Proclamation
issued from the Court at St. James's, on the Twenty-third day of August last. The name of
his Majesty is used to give it a sanction and influence; and, on that account, it becomes
a matter of importance to wipe off, in the name of these United Colonies, the aspersions,
which it is calculated to throw upon our cause; and to prevent, as far as possible, the
undeserved punishments, which it is designed to prepare for our friends.
We are accused of "forgetting the allegiance which we owe to the power that has
protected and sustained us." Why all this ambiguity and obscurity in what ought to be
so plain and obvious, as that he who runs may read it? What allegiance is it that we
forget? Allegiance to Parliament? We never owed -- never owned it. Allegiance to our King;
Our words have ever avowed it -- our conduct has ever been consistent with it. We condemn,
and, with arms in our hands -- a resource which Freemen will never part with -- we oppose
the claim and exercise of unconstitutional powers, to which neither the Crown or
Parliament were ever entitled. By the British Constitution, our best inheritance, rights,
as well as duties, descend upon us: We cannot violate the latter by defending the former:
We should act in diametrical opposition to both, if we permitted the claims of the British
Parliament to be established, and the measures pursued in consequence of those claims to
be carried into execution among us. Our sagacious ancestors provided bounds against the
inundation of tyranny and lawless power on one side, as well as against that of faction
and licentiousness on the other. On which has the breach been made? Is it objected against
us by the most inveterate and the most candid of our enemies, that we have opposed any of
the just prerogatives of the Crown, or any legal exertion of those prerogatives? Why,
then, are we accused of forgetting our allegiance? -- We have performed our duty: We have
resisted in those cases, in which the right to resist is stipulated as expressly, on our
parts, as the right to govern is, in other cases, stipulated on the part of the Crown. The
breach of allegiance is removed from our resistance as far as tyranny is removed from
legal government.
It is alleged that "we have proceeded to an open
and avowed rebellion." In what [does this rebellion ] consist? It is thus
described -- "Arraying ourselves in hostile manner to withstand the execution of the
Law, and traitorously preparing, ordering and levying war against the King." We know
of no laws binding upon us, but such as have been transmitted to us by our ancestors, and
such as have been consented to by ourselves or our representatives elected for that
purpose. What laws, stamped with these characters, have we withstood? We have indeed
defended them; and we will risque everything, do everything and suffer everything in their
defense. To support our laws, and our liberties established by our laws, we have prepared,
ordered, and levied war: But is this traitorously, or against the King? We view him as the
constitution represents him: That tells us he can do no wrong. The cruel and illegal
attacks, which we oppose, have no foundation in the royal authority. We will not, on our
part, lose the distinction between the King and his Ministers: Happy it would have been
for some former Princes, had it been always preserved on the part of the Crown!
Besides all this we observe, on this part of the proclamation, that "rebellion"
is a term undefined and unknown in the law. It might have been expected, that a
proclamation, which by the constitution, has no other operation than merely that of
enforcing what is already law, would have had a known legal basis to have rested upon. A
correspondence between the inhabitants of Great-Britain and their brethren in America,
produced, in better times, much satisfaction to individuals, and much advantage to the
public. By what criterion shall one, who is unwilling to break off this correspondence,
and is, at the same time, anxious not to expose himself to the dreadful consequences
threatened in this proclamation, --by what criterion shall he regulate his conduct? He is
admonished not to carry on correspondence with the persons now in rebellion in the
colonies. How shall he ascertain who are in rebellion, and who are not? He consults the
law to learn the nature of the supposed crime: The law is silent upon the subject. This,
in a country where it has been often said, and formerly with justice, that the government
is by law and not by men, might render him perfectly easy. But proclamations have been
sometimes dangerous engines in the hands of those in power. Information is commanded to be
given to one of the Secretaries of State, of all persons "who shall be found carrying
on correspondence with the persons in rebellion, in order to bring to condign punishment
the authors, perpetrators, or abettors of such dangerous designs." Let us suppose,
for a moment, that some persons in the colonies are in rebellion, and that those, who
carry on correspondence with them, might learn, by some rule, which Britons are bound to
know, how to discriminate them: Does it follow that all correspondence with them deserves
to be punished? It might have been intended to apprise them of their danger, and to
reclaim them from their crimes. By what law does a correspondence with a criminal transfer
or communicate his guilt? We know that those who aid and adhere to the King's enemies: and
those, who correspond with them in order to enable them to carry their designs into
effect, are criminal in the eye of the law. But the law goes no farther. Can
proclamations, according to the principles of reason and justice and the constitution go
farther than the law?
But, perhaps, the principle of reason and justice and the constitution will not prevail:
Experience suggests to us the doubt: If they should not, we must report to arguments drawn
from a very different source. We, therefore, in the name of the people of the United
Colonies, and by authority, according to the purest maxims of representations derived from
them, declare, that whatever punishment shall be inflicted upon any persons in the power
of our enemies for favoring, aiding or abetting the cause of American liberty shall be
retaliated in the same kind and the same degree upon those, in our power, who have
favored, aided or abetted, of shall favor, aid or abet the system of ministerial
oppression. The essential difference between our cause and that of our enemies might
justify a severer punishment: The law of retaliation will unquestionably warrant one
equally severe.
We mean not, however, by this declaration, to occasion or to multiply punishments: Our
sole view is to prevent them. In this unhappy and unnatural controversy, in which Britons
fight against Britons and the descendants of Britons, let the calamities immediately
incident to a civil war suffice. We hope additions will not, from wantonness be made to
them on one side: We shall regret the necessity, if laid under the necessity, of making
them on the other.
Extract from the Minutes, CHARLES THOMSON, Sec.
1. Library of Congress, Rare Book and Special
Collections Division, Continental Congress Broadside Collection and Constitutional
Convention Broadside Collection. http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/bdsds.

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