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Note to Price's Sermon in Part 1 of Reflections On The Revolution In France

Burke out-Herods Herod here. The Parliament of Elizabeth had a well-established right to regulate the succession to the Crown. It was pointed out by Joseph Priestley, one of Burke's most eminent contemporaries, that by denying this power to Parliament, Burke laid himself open to a charge of treason under an act framed by his own hero, Lord Somers. For the extreme Tory position here assumed by Burke, see Swift in "The Examiner", No. 16; on the other side, Locke, "On Government", Bk. II. ch. 8.