King (infallibility of the.)

.—By the express declaration of our laws, an English prince is a piece of royal infallibility, incapable of doing wrong. The position that a king can dp no wrong, must either tax the English nation with great injustice, or great inconsistency. If a king can do no wrong, why was king James the Second banished? and if a king can do no wrong, why the plague are we constantly affirming that he cannot? Either way we stand self-condemned; and if we are not set down as a nation of scoundrels, we must think ourselves pretty easy under the appellation of fools.

Swift.

Entry taken from Political Dictionary, edited by Charles Pigott from prison and printed in 1795.

King * King (disaffection to the)

Justice
To Kidnap
King
King
King (infallibility of the.)
King (disaffection to the)
To kiss (the breech of persons in power)
Knight
Knowing
Labour