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Both loved free thought. 36. Both thought alike of suspicion. 37. Both expressed the same views of antagonism. 38. Both placed personal interest above strict moral right. 39. Both thought alike of oaths. 40. They had the same opinion of courts and courtiers. 41. They considered the termination of the Seven Years' War a distinguished period, and dated the misfortunes and establishment of tyranny in England from that period. 42. They both had the same opinion of Lord North. 43. Both had the same opinion of Lord Mansfield. 44. Both had the same views of precedent. 45. Both had the same opinion of lawyers. 46. Both had the same views of the cause of America. 47. Both had the same views of the minority in England. 48. And herein the same views of Lord Chatham. 49. Both traced the rights of man back to their origin. 50. Both express themselves alike in regard to laws in general. 51. Both express themselves alike in regard to the _game law_. 52. Both declare _law to be king_. 53. They had the same predilections in regard to politics. 54. They were neither of them partisans. 55. They were both practical. 56. Both often appealed to experience and the evidence of facts. 57. Both assert the mind becomes what it contemplates. 58. Both were deeply read in the "_history of the human heart_." 59. Both delight in charging _bastardy_. 60. Secretiveness was a ruling characteristic. 61. Both had the same opinion of moderate men. 62. They were both enthusiasts. 63. Both were too proud to be vain or to flatter. 64. Both placed too high an estimate on the judgment of the masses. 65. Both were excessively hopeful. 66. Personal honor unparalleled in history. 67. Both express themselves alike in regard to avarice and the miser. 68. Both often assert that "language fails." 69. Both have the same method of argumentation, and hereunder many parallels are given. 70. Both have the same style, and hereunder many parallels are given. 71. More than sixty parallel expressions and figures of speech are given. 72. They both use the same kind of figures the most frequently. 73. They use the figure in the same manner, and usually one at the close of an article. 74. Both use the same facts and figure to illustrate national honor. 75. The same rythm in style is common to both. 76. The same alliteration. 77. The same method of bringing the subject into one view. 78
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