The Anglish Moot:Grammatical guidelines

In lawmaker body, Afterlithe 4, 1776.

The anmood saying forth of the thirteen Banded Folkdoms of Americksland,

When in the flow of mannish happenings, it becomes needful for one folk to break up the mootish bands which have bonded them with another, and to take among the mights of the earth, the freestanding and even post to which the laws of life and of life’s God give them, a good worth to the thoughts of mankind must needs that they should say forth the grounds which bring them to the sundering.

We hold these truths to be self-witnessing, that all men are made alike, that they are given by their Life’s Weaver with some untakesome rights, that among these are life, freedom, and the going after of happiness.--That to belay these rights, rikes are set up among men, getting their fair mights from the leave of the berighted, -- That whenever any shape of rike becomes harmful to these ends, it is the right of the folk to shift or get rid of it, and to set up new rike, laying its groundwork on such deemmeans and building its mights in such shape, as to them shall seem most likley to outwork their shelterhood and happiness. Forewit, truly, will bid that rikes well longstaning should not be shifted for light and short lived grounds; and so all happenings have shown, that mankind are more minded to bear, while evils are bearsome, than to right themselves by getting rid of the shpaes to which they are wont. But when a long tow of wrongs and takings, following always the same goal shows a draft to lessen them under outright strongmandom, it is their right, it is their binddeed, to throw off such rike, and to give new watchmen for their upcomming belayhood.—Such has been the forbearing withstanding of these rikelings; and such is now the need which binds them to shift their yester frameworks of rike. The yore of the nowa king of Great Britain is a yore of an outright downtrodding over these folkdoms. To show this, let truths be set down to a fair world.