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AN ESSAY At Removing National Prejudices, &c.
IN the first Part of this Work I attempted to prove the unreasonableness of the Common National Pre|judices, which seem to have taken too fast hold of the People of these Nations, and that stand in the way of the Common Opinion about a Union.
There is nothing more Fatal to a General Union, than to have Peoples Minds prepossess'd with the Difficulties or Disadvantages of the thing it self; and I cannot there|fore think it improper to go on with this Work a little farther, to remove, if possible, the very Root and Causes of these Prejudices, which I say Obstruct the Happy Conjunction now in View—and these I take to be comprised in the two words just mentioned above, viz. Difficulties and Disadvantages.
When Men either think on one hand, 'tis so difficult a Task, that they shall never get thro' it; or on the other hand, that if they do get thro' it, it will not be their Advantage, no wonder if they go coldly about it, or seem unconcern'd at the event.
I take the Commissioners, who are to Treat of this Uni|on, perhaps in a different Manner or Capacity from what some People take them in; I do not take them as