15125 lines
832 KiB
Plaintext
15125 lines
832 KiB
Plaintext
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LONDON 1757-1775
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by Benjamin Franklin
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_William Franklin to the
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Printer of the Citizen:
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A Defense of the Quakers and the
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Pennsylvania Assembly_
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_Some Account of the late Disputes between the Assembly of_
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Pensylvania, _and their present Governor_ William Denny, _Esq;_
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In our _Magazine_, _Vol._ xxv. p. 87 _Vol._ xxvi. _p._ 28. we
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have given a very particular account of the disputes between the
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assembly of _Pensylvania_ and the late Governor _Morris_, which had
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exactly the same cause, and produced exactly the same effects, as the
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late dispute between this assembly and Mr _Denny_.
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The acting governor, who is only lieutenant governor,
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besides the royal instructions, receives instructions from the
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proprietaries. By these proprietary instructions the governor is
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required not to pass any bill for taxing their quit rents, their
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located unimproved lands, and their purchase money at interest,
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but the assembly have ever been determined to frame no money
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bill, in which these quit rents, lands, and money shall be
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exempted, for the following reasons.
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1st, Because they conceive that neither the proprietaries nor
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any other power on earth, ought to interfere between them and their
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sovereign, either to modify or refuse their free gifts and grants for
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his majesty's service.
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2d, Because though the governor may be under obligations to the
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proprietaries, yet he is under greater to the crown, and to the
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people he is appointed to govern, to promote the service of his
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majesty, and preserve the rights of his subjects, and protect them
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from their cruel enemies.
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3d. Because a tax laid comformable to the proprietary
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instructions, could not possibly produce the necessary supply. By
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these instructions all the proprietors estate, except a trifle, and
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all located unimproved lands, to whomsoever belonging, are to be
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exempted. There remains then to be taxed, only the improved lands,
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houses, and personal estates of the people. Now it is well known,
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from the tax books, that there are not in the province more than
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20,000 houses, including those of the towns with those on
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plantations. If these, with the improved lands annexed to them, and
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the personal estate of those that inhabit them, are worth, one with
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another, 250_l_. each, it may, we think, be reckoned their full
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value; then multiply 20,000 the number of houses, by 250_l_. the
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value of each estate, and the produce is 5,000,000_l_. for the full
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value of all our estates, real and personal, the unimproved lands
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excepted. Now three _per cent._ on five millions is but one hundred
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and fifty thousand pounds; and four shillings in the pound on one
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hundred and fifty thousand pounds, being but a fifth part, is no more
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than thirty thousand pounds; so that we ought to have near seventeen
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millions to produce, by such a tax, one hundred thousand pounds.
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4th. Because the bill (*) which they have prepared, without the
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exceptions required in the proprietaries instructions, is exactly
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conformable to an act lately passed by a former governor, and allowed
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by the crown.
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(*) _In the bill which passed in_ March _last, the proprietary
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estate was not taxed, that matter being intended to be referred to
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the determination of superior authority in_ England.
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It is indeed matter of equal astonishment and concern, that in
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this time of danger and distress, when the utmost unanimity and
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dispatch is necessary to the preservation of life, liberty, and
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estate, a governor should be sent to our colonies with such
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instructions as must inevitably produce endless dispute and delay,
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and prevent the assembly from effectually opposing the _French_ upon
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any other condition, than the giving up their rights as _Englishmen_.
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The assembly, indeed, have been stigmatized as obstinate,
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fanatical, and disaffected; and reproached as the authors of every
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calamity under which they suffer. A paragraph in one of the public
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papers, which lately ecchoed the charge that has been long urged
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against them, has been answered by Mr _William Franklin_ of
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_Philadelphia_, who is now in _England_. We shall insert the
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paragraph and reply at large, as we cannot exhibit any other
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representation with equal authority.
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_To the Printer of the_ CITIZEN. _SIR,_ In your Paper of the
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9th Instant, I observe the following Paragraph, viz. `The last
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Letters from Philadelphia bring Accounts of the Scalping the
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Inhabitants of the Back Provinces by the Indians: At the same Time
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the Disputes between the Governor and the Assembly are carried to as
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great a Height as ever, and the Messages sent from the Assembly to
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the Governor, and from the Governor to the Assembly, are expressed in
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Terms which give very little Hopes of a Reconciliation. The Bill to
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raise Money is clogged, so as to prevent the Governor from giving his
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Consent to it; and the Obstinacy of the Quakers in the Assembly is
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such, that they will in no Shape alter it: So that, while the Enemy
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is in the Heart of the Country, Cavils prevent any Thing being done
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for its Relief. -- Mr. Denny is the third Governor with whom the
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Assembly has had these Disputes within a few Years.'
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As this Paragraph, like many others heretofore published in the
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Papers, is not founded on Truth, but calculated to prejudice the
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Public against the Quakers and People of Pennsylvania, you are
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desired to do that injured Province some Justice, in publishing the
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following Remarks; which would have been sent you sooner, had the
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Paper come sooner to my Hands.
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1. That the Scalping of the Frontier Inhabitants by the Indians
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is not peculiar to Pennsylvania, but common to all the Colonies, in
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Proportion as their Frontiers are more or less extended and exposed
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to the Enemy. That the Colony of Virginia, in which there are very
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few, if any Quakers, and none in the Assembly, has lost more
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Inhabitants and Territory by the War than Pennsylvannia. That even
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the Colony of New York, with all its own Forces, a great Body of
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New-England Troops encamp'd on its Frontier, and the regular Army
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under Lord Loudoun, posted in different Places, has not been able to
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secure its Inhabitants from Scalping by the Indians; who coming
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secretly in very small Parties skulking in the Woods, must sometimes
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have it in their Power to surprize and destroy Travellers, or single
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Families settled in scattered Plantations, notwithstanding all the
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Care that can possibly be taken by any Government for their
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Protection. Centinels posted round an Army, while standing on their
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Guard, with Arms in their Hands, are often kill'd and scalp'd by
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Indians. How much easier must it be for such an Enemy to destroy a
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Ploughman at Work in his Field?
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2. That the Inhabitants of the Frontiers of Pennsylvania are
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not Quakers, were in the Beginning of the War supplied with Arms and
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Ammunition by the Assembly, and have frequently defended themselves,
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and repelled the Enemy, being withheld by no Principle from Fighting;
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and the Losses they have suffer'd were owing entirely to their
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Situation, and the loose scattered Manner in which they had settled
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their Plantations and Families in the Woods, remote from each other,
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in Confidence of lasting Peace.
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3. That the Disputes between the late and present Governors,
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and the Assembly of Pennsylvania, were occasioned, and are continued,
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chiefly by _new_ Instructions from the Proprietors to those
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Governors, forbidding them to pass any Laws to raise Money for the
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Defence of the Country, unless the proprietary Estate, or much the
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greatest Part of it, was exempted from the Tax to be raised by Virtue
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of such Laws, and other Clauses inserted in them, by which the
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Privileges long enjoyed by the People, and which they think they have
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a Right to, not only as Pennsylvanians, but as Englishmen, were to be
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extorted from them, under their present Distresses. The Quakers,
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who, tho' the first Settlers, are now but a small Part of the People
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of Pennsylvania, were concerned in those Disputes only as Inhabitants
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of the Province, and not as Quakers; and all the other Inhabitants
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join in opposing those Instructions, and contending for their Rights,
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the Proprietary Officers and Dependants only excepted, with a few of
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such as they can influence.
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4. That though some Quakers have Scruples against bearing Arms,
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they have when most numerous in the Assembly, granted large Sums for
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the King's Use (as they expressed it) which have been applied to the
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Defence of the Province; for Instance, in 1755, and 1756, they
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granted the Sum of 55,000l. to be raised by a Tax on Estates real and
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personal, and 30,000l. to be raised by Excise on Spirituous Liquors;
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besides near 10,000l. in Flour, &c. to General Braddock and for
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cutting his Roads, and 10,000l. to General Shirley in Provisions for
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the New England and New-York Forces, then on the Frontiers of
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New-York; at the same Time that the Contingent Expences of Government
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to be otherwise provided for, were greatly and necessarily enhanced.
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That however, to remove all Pretence for Reflection on their Sect, as
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obstructing military Measures in Time of War, a Number of them
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voluntarily quitted their Seats in Assembly, in 1756; others
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requested their Friends not to chuse them in the ensuing Election,
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nor did any of that Profession stand as Candidates, or request a Vote
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for themselves at that Election, many Quakers refusing even to vote
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at all, and others voting for such Men as would, and did, make a
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considerable Majority in the House, who were not Quakers; and yet
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four of the Quakers, who were nevertheless chosen, refused to serve,
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and Writs were issued for new Elections, when four others, not
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Quakers, were chosen in their Places; that of 36 Members, the Number
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of which the House consists, there are not at the most above 12 of
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that Denomination, and those such as are well known to be for
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supporting the Government in Defence of the Country, but are too few,
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if they were against such a Measure, to prevent it.
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5. That the Bill to raise Money said in the above Article of
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News, to be so clogged as to prevent the Governor from giving his
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Assent, was drawn in the same Form, and with the same Freedom from
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all Clogs, as that for granting 60,000l. which had been passed by the
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Governor in 1755, and received the Royal Approbation; that the real
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Clogs or Obstructions to its passing were not in the Bill, but in the
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above-mentioned proprietary Instructions; that the Governor having
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long refused his Assent to the Bill, did in Excuse of his Conduct, on
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Lord Loudoun's Arrival at Philadelphia, in March last, lay his
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Reasons before his Lordship, who was pleased to communicate them to
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one of the Members of the House, and patiently to hear what that
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Member had to say in Answer, the Governor himself being present; and
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that his Lordship did finally declare himself fully satisfied with
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the Answers made to those Reasons, and to give it as his Opinion to
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the Governor, that he ought immediately to pass the Bill, any
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Instructions he might have to the contrary from the Proprietors
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notwithstanding, which the Governor accordingly complied with, passed
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the Bill on the 22d of March, and the Money, being 100,000l. for the
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Service of the current Year, has been ever since actually expending
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in the Defence of the Province; so that the whole Story of the Bill's
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not passing, the clogging of the Bill by the Assembly, and the
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Obstinacy of the Quakers preventing its Passage, is absolutely a
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malicious and notorious Falshood.
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6. The Assertion of the News-Writers, `That while the Enemy is
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in the Heart of the Country, Cavils prevent any Thing being done for
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its Relief,' is so far from being true: That First, the Enemy is not,
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nor ever was, in the Heart of the Country, having only molested the
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Frontier Settlements by their Parties. Secondly, More is done for
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the Relief and Defence of the Country, without any Assistance from
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the Crown, than is done perhaps by any other Colony in America; there
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having been, soon after the War broke out, the following Forts
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erected at the Province Expence, in a Line to cover the Frontier,
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viz. Henshaw's Fort on Delaware, Fort Hamilton, Fort Norris, Fort
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Allen, Fort Franklin, Fort Lebanon, Fort William Henry, Fort
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Augustus, Fort Halifax, Fort Granville, Fort Shirley, Fort Littleton,
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and Shippensburg Fort, besides several smaller Stockades and Places
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of Defence, garrisoned by Troops in the Pay of the Province, under
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whose Protection the Inhabitants, who at first abandoned their
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Frontier Settlements, returned generally to their Habitations, and
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many yet continue, though not without some Danger, to cultivate their
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Lands: By these Pennsylvanian Troops, under Col. Armstrong, the
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greatest Blow was given to the Enemy last Year on the Ohio that they
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have received during the War: in burning and destroying the Indian
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Town of Kittanning, and killing their great Captain Jacobs, with many
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other Indians, and recovering a Number of Captives of their own and
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the neighbouring Provinces: Besides the Garrisons, in the Forts, 1100
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Soldiers are maintained on the Frontiers in Pay, being armed and
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accoutred by the Province, as ranging Companies.
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And at Philadelphia, 15 Iron Cannon, 18 Pounders, were last
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Year purchased in England, and added to the 50 they had before,
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either mounted on their Batteries, or ready to be mounted, besides a
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Train of Artillery, being new Brass Field Pieces, 12 and 6 Pounders,
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with all their Appurtenances in extreme good Order, and a Magazine
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stored with Ammunition, a Quantity of large Bomb-shells, and above
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2000 new Small Arms lately procured, exclusive of those in the Hands
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of the People. They have likewise this Summer fitted out a 20 Gun
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Province Ship of War, to scour the Coast of Privateers, and protect
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the Trade of that and the neighbouring Provinces, which is more than
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any other Colony to the Southward of New England has done.
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Pennsylvania also, by its Situation, covers the greatest Part of New
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Jersey, all the Government of the Delaware Countries, and great Part
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of Maryland, from the Invasions of the Indians, without receiving any
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Contribution from those Colonies, or the Mother-Country, towards the
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Expence.
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The above are Facts, consistent with the Knowledge of the
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Subscriber, who but lately left Philadelphia, is now in London, is
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not, nor ever was, a Quaker, nor writes this at the Request of any
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Quaker, but purely to do Justice to a Province and People, of late
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frequently abused in nameless Papers and Pamphlets published in
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England. And he hereby calls upon the Writer of that Article of News
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to produce the Letters out of which, he says, he has drawn those
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Calumnies and Falshoods, or to take the Shame to himself. WILLIAM
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FRANKLIN. Pensylvania Coffee-house London, Sept. 16, 1757.
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_The London Chronicle_, September 20, 1757
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_Gentleman's Magazine_, September, 1757
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_A Letter from Father Abraham, to His Beloved Son_
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_Dear_ Isaac, You frequently desire me to give you some
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_Advice_, in Writing. There is, perhaps, no other valuable Thing in
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the World, of which so great a Quantity is _given_, and so little
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_taken_. Men do not generally err in their Conduct so much through
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Ignorance of their Duty, as thro Inattention to their own Faults, or
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thro strong Passions and bad Habits; and, therefore, till that
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Inattention is cured, or those Passions reduced under the Government
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of Reason, _Advice_ is rather resented as a Reproach, than gratefully
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acknowledged and followed.
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Supposing then, that from the many good Sermons you have heard,
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good Books read, and good Admonitions received from your Parents and
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others, your Conscience is by this Time pretty well informed, and
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capable of advising you,if you attentively listen to it, I shall not
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fill this Letter with Lessons or Precepts of Morality and Religion;
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but rather recommend to you, that in order to obtain a _clear_ Sight
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and _constant_ Sense of your Errors, you would set apart a Portion of
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every Day for the Purpose of _Self-Examination_, and trying your
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daily Actions by that Rule of Rectitude implanted by GOD in your
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Breast. The properest Time for this, is when you are retiring to
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Rest; then carefully review the Transactions of the past Day; and
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consider how far they have agreed with _what you know_ of your Duty
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to God and to Man, in the several Relations you stand in of a Subject
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to the Government, Servant to your Master, a Son, a Neighbour, a
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Friend, _&c._ When, by this Means, you have discovered the Faults of
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the Day, acknowledge them to God, and humbly beg of him notonly
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Pardon for what is past, but Strength to fulfil your solemn
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Resolutions of guarding against them for the Future. Observing this
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Course steadily for some Time, you will find (through God's Grace
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assisting) that your Faults are continually diminishing, and your
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Stock of Virtue encreasing; in Consequence of which you will grow in
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Favour both with GOD and Man.
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I repeat it, that for the Acquirement of solid, uniform, steady
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Virtue, nothing contributes more, than a daily strict
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SELF-EXAMINATION, by the Lights of Reason, Conscience, and the Word
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of GOD; joined with firm Resolutions of amending what you find amiss,
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and fervent Prayer for Grace and Strength to execute those
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Resolutions. -- This Method is very antient. 'Twas recommended by
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_Pythagoras_, in his truly _Golden Verses_, and practised since in
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every Age, with Success, by Men of all Religions. Those golden
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Verses, as translated by _Rowe_, are well worth your Reading, and
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even getting by Heart. The Part relating to this Matter I have
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transcribed, to give you a Taste of them, _viz_.
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Let not the stealing God of Sleep surprize, Nor creep in
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Slumbers on thy weary Eyes, Ere ev'ry Action of the former Day,
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_Strictly_ thou dost, and _righteously_ survey. With Rev'rence at
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thy own Tribunal stand, And answer justly to thy own Demand. Where
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have I been? In what have I transgrest? What Good or Ill has this
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Day's Life exprest? Where have I fail'd in what I ought to do? In
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what to GOD, to Man, or to myself I owe? Inquire severe whate'er
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from first to last, From Morning's Dawn till Ev'nings Gloom has past.
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If Evil were thy Deeds, repenting mourn, And let thy Soul with strong
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Remorse be torn: If Good, the Good with Peace of Mind repay, And to
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thy secret Self with Pleasure say, Rejoice, my Heart, for all went
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well to Day.
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And that no Passage to your Improvement in Virtue may be kept
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secret, it is not sufficient that you make Use of _Self-Examination_
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alone; therefore I have also added a _golden Extract_ from _a
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favourite_ OLD BOOK, to instruct you in the prudent and deliberate
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Choice of some disinterested Friend,to remind you of such Misconduct
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as must necessarily escape your severest Inquiry: Which is as
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follows;
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Every prudent Man ought to be jealous and fearful of himself,
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lest he run away too hastily with a Likelihood instead of Truth; and
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abound too much in his own Understanding. All Conditions are equal,
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that is, Men may be contented in every Condition: For Security is
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equal to Splendor; Health to Pleasure, _&c_. Every Condition of Life
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has its Enemies, for _Deus posuit duo & duo, unum contra unum_. A
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rich Man hath Enemies sometimes for no other Reason than because he
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is rich; the poor Man hath as poor Neighbours, or rich Ones that gape
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after that small Profit which he enjoys. The Poor very often subsist
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merely by Knavery and Rapine among each other. Beware, therefore,
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how you offend any Man, for he that is displeased at your Words or
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Actions, commonly joins against you, without putting the _best_
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Construction on (or endeavouring to find out a reasonable Excuse for)
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them. And be sure you _hate_ no Man, though you think him a
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worthless or unjust Person. Never _envy_ any one above you: You have
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Enemies enough by the common Course of Human Nature; be cautious not
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to encrease the Number; and rather procure as many Friends as you
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can, to countenance and strengthen you. Every Man has also an Enemy
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within himself. Every Man is choleric and covetous, or gentle and
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generous by Nature. Man is naturally a beneficent Creature: But
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there are many external Objects and Accidents, met with as we go
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through Life, which _seem_ to make great Alterations in our natural
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Dispositions and Desires. A Man naturally passionate and greedy,
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may, to all Appearance, become complaisant and hospitable, merely by
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Force of Instruction and Discipline; and so the Contrary. 'Tis in
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vain for a passionate Man to say, _I am pardonable_ because _it is
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natural to me_, when we can perhaps point out to him an Example in
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his next Neighbour, who was _once_ affected in the very same Manner,
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and could say as much to defend himself, who is now exceedingly
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_different_ in his Behaviour, and quite free from those unhappy
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Affections which disturbed his Repose so often, not long ago, and
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become a chearful, facetious, and profitable Companion to his
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Friends, and a Pattern of Humility to all around him.
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Nothing was ever well done or said _in a Passion_. One Man's
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Infirmities and bad Inclinations may be harder to conquer than
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another Man's, according to the various and _secret_ Circumstances
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that attend them; but they are capable of being conquered, or very
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much improved for the better, except they have been suffered to _take
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Root in_ OLD _Age_; in this Case it is most convenient to let them
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_have their_ OWN _Way,_ as the Phrase is.
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The strongest of our natural Passions are seldom perceived by
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us; a choleric Man does not always discover when he is angry, nor an
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envious Man when he is invidious; at most they think they commit no
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great Faults.
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Therefore it is necessary that you should have a MONITOR. Most
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Men are very indifferent Judges of themselves, and often think they
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do well when they sin; and imagine they commit only small Errors,
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when they are guilty of Crimes. It is in Human Life as in the Arts
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and Sciences; their plainest Doctrines are easily comprehended, but
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the finest Points cannot be discovered without the closest Attention;
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of these Parts only the wise and skilful in the Art or Science, can
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be deemed competent Judges. Many Vices and Follies resemble their
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opposite Virtues and Prudence; they border upon, and seem to mix with
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each other; and therefore the exact Line of Division betwixt them is
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hard to ascertain. Pride resembles a generous Spirit; Superstition
|
|
and Enthusiasm frequently resemble true Religion; a laudable worthy
|
|
Ambition resembles an unworthy Self-Sufficiency; Government resembles
|
|
Tyranny; Liberty resembles Licentiousness; Subjection resembles
|
|
Slavery; Covetousness resembles Frugality; Prodigality resembles
|
|
Generosity; and so of the Rest. Prudence chiefly consists in that
|
|
Excellence of Judgment, which is capable of discerning the MEDIUM; or
|
|
of acting so as not to intermingle the one with the other; and in
|
|
being able to assign to every Cause its _proper_ Actions and Effects.
|
|
It is therefore necessary for every Person who desires to be a wise
|
|
Man, to _take particular Notice of HIS OWN _Actions_, and of HIS OWN
|
|
_Thoughts and Intentions_ which are the Original of his Actions; with
|
|
great Care and Circumspection; otherwise he can never arrive to that
|
|
Degree of Perfection which constitutes the amiable Character he
|
|
aspires after. And, lest all this Diligence should be insufficient,
|
|
as Partiality to himself will certainly render it, it is very
|
|
requisite for him to _chuse a_ FRIEND, or MONITOR, who must be
|
|
allowed the greatest Freedom to advertise and remind him of his
|
|
Failings, and to point out Remedies. Such a One, I mean, as is a
|
|
discreet and virtuous Person; but especially One that does not creep
|
|
after the Acquaintance of, or play the Spaniel to, _great_ Men; One
|
|
who does not covet Employments which are known to be scandalous for
|
|
Opportunities of Injustice: One who can bridle his Tongue and curb
|
|
his Wit; One that can converse with himself, and industriously
|
|
attends upon his Affairs whatever they be. Find out such a _Man_;
|
|
insinuate yourself into a Confidence with him; and desire him to
|
|
observe your Conversation and Behaviour; intreat him to admonish you
|
|
of what he thinks amiss, in a serious and friendly Manner; importune
|
|
his Modesty till he condescends to grant your Request. -- Do not
|
|
imagine that you live one Day without Faults, or that those Faults
|
|
are undiscovered. Most Men see that in another, which they can not
|
|
or will not see in themselves: And he is happiest, who through the
|
|
whole Course of his Life, can attain to a reasonable Freedom from Sin
|
|
and Folly, even by the Help of _Old Age_, that great Mortifier and
|
|
Extinguisher of our Lusts and Passions. If such a Monitor informs
|
|
you of any Misconduct, whether you know his Interpretations to be
|
|
true or false, take it not only _patiently_, but _thankfully_; and be
|
|
careful to reform. Thus you get and keep a Friend, break the
|
|
inordinate mischievous Affection you bore towards your Frailities,
|
|
and advance yourself in Wisdom and Virtue. When you consider that
|
|
you must give an Account of your Actions to your vigilant Reprover;
|
|
that other Men see the same Imperfections in you as he does; and that
|
|
it is impossible for a good Man to enjoy the Advantages of
|
|
Friendship, except he first puts off those Qualities which render him
|
|
subject to Flattery, that is, except he first cease to flatter
|
|
himself. A good, a generous _Christian_ Minister, or worthy sensible
|
|
Parents, may be suitable Persons for a difficult Office; difficult,
|
|
though it should be performed by _familiar_ Conversation. And how
|
|
much more meritorious of Entertainment are People of such a
|
|
Character, than those who come to your Table to _make Faces_, talk
|
|
Nonsense, devour your Substance, censure their Neighbours, flatter
|
|
and deride you? Remember that if a Friend tells you of a Fault,
|
|
always imagine that he does not tell you the whole, which is commonly
|
|
the Truth; for he desires your Reformation, but is loth to offend
|
|
you. And _nunquam sine querela aegra tanguntur_.
|
|
|
|
I know, dear Son, _Ambition_ fills your Mind, And in Life's
|
|
Voyage, is th' impelling Wind; But, at the Helm, let sober Reason
|
|
stand, To steer the Bark with Heav'n directed Hand: So shall you safe
|
|
_Ambition_'s Gales receive, And ride securely, though the Billows
|
|
heave; So shall you shun the giddy Hero's Fate, And by her Influence
|
|
be both good and great.
|
|
|
|
She bids you first, in Life's soft vernal Hours, With active
|
|
Industry wake Nature's Pow'rs; With rising Years still rising Arts
|
|
display, With new-born Graces mark each new-born Day. 'Tis now the
|
|
Time _young Passion_ to command, While yet the pliant Stem obeys the
|
|
Hand; Guide now the Courser with a steady Rein, E'er yet he bounds
|
|
o'er Pleasure's flowry Plain; In Passion's Strife no Medium you can
|
|
have; You rule, a Master; or submit, a Slave.
|
|
|
|
To conclude. -- You are just entering into the World: Beware of
|
|
the _first Acts_ of Dishonesty: They present themselves to the Mind
|
|
under _specious Disguises_, and _plausible Reasons_ of Right and
|
|
Equity: But being admitted, they open the Way for admitting others,
|
|
that are _but a little_ more dishonest, which are followed by others
|
|
_a little_ more knavish than they, till by Degrees, however slow, a
|
|
Man becomes an _habitual_ Sharper, and at length a _consummate
|
|
Rascal_ and Villain. Then farewel all Peace of Mind, and inward
|
|
Satisfaction; all Esteem, Confidence, and Reputation among Mankind.
|
|
And indeed if _outward_ Reputation could be preserved, what Pleasure
|
|
can it afford to a Man that must _inwardly_ despise himself, whose
|
|
own Baseness will, in Spite of his Endeavours to forget it, be ever
|
|
presenting itself to his View. If you have a _Sir-Reverence_ in your
|
|
Breeches, what signifies it if you _appear_ to Others neat and clean
|
|
and genteel, when you _know_ and _feel_ yourself to be b ------ t. I
|
|
make no Apology for the Comparison, however coarse, since none can be
|
|
too much so for a defiled and foul Conscience. But never flatter
|
|
yourself with _Concealment_; 'tis impossible to last long. One Man
|
|
may be too cunning for another Man, but not for _all Men_: Some Body
|
|
or other will smell you out, or some Accident will discover you; or
|
|
who can be sure that he shall never be heard to talk in his Sleep, or
|
|
be delirious in a Fever, when the working Mind usually throws out
|
|
Hints of what has inwardly affected it? Of this there have been many
|
|
Instances; some of which are within the Compass of your own
|
|
Knowledge.
|
|
|
|
Whether you chuse to act in a public or a private Station, if
|
|
you would maintain the personal Character of a Man of Sincerity,
|
|
Integrity and Virtue, there is a Necessity of becoming _really good_,
|
|
if you would _do good_: For the thin Disguises of _pretended_ private
|
|
Virtue and Public Spirit, are easily seen through; the Hypocrite
|
|
detected and exposed. For this Reason then, _My dear_ ISAAC, as well
|
|
as for many others, be sincere, candid, honest, well-meaning, and
|
|
upright, in all you do and say; be _really_ good, if you would
|
|
_appear_ so: Your Life then shall give Strength to your _Counsels_;
|
|
and though you should be found out an indifferent _Speaker_ or
|
|
_Writer_, you shall not be without Praise for the Benevolence of your
|
|
Intention.
|
|
|
|
But, again, suppose it possible for a Knave to preserve a fair
|
|
Character among Men, and even to approve his own Actions, what is
|
|
that to the Certainty of his being discovered and detested by the
|
|
all-seeing Eye of _that righteous_ BEING, who made and governs the
|
|
World, whose just Hand never fails to do right and to punish
|
|
Iniquity, and whose Approbation, Favour, and Friendship, is worth the
|
|
Universe?
|
|
|
|
Heartily wishing you every Accomplishment that can make a Man
|
|
amiable and valuable, to HIS Protection I commit you, being, with
|
|
sincere Affection, _dear Son_, Your very loving Father, _Abraham_.
|
|
|
|
_The New-England Magazine_, August, 1758
|
|
|
|
_A New Englandman to the Printer of the London Chronicle: A
|
|
Defense of the Americans_
|
|
|
|
_To the Printer of the_ CHRONICLE.
|
|
|
|
SIR, While the public attention is so much turned towards
|
|
_America_, every letter from thence that promises new information, is
|
|
pretty generally read; it seems therefore the more necessary that
|
|
care should be taken to disabuse the Public, when those letters
|
|
contain facts false in themselves, and representations injurious to
|
|
bodies of people, or even to private persons.
|
|
|
|
In your paper, No. 310. I find an extract of a letter, said to
|
|
be from a gentleman in General _Abercrombie_'s army. As there are
|
|
several strokes in it tending to render the colonies despicable, and
|
|
even odious to the mother country, which may have ill consequences;
|
|
and no notice having been taken of the injuries contained in that
|
|
letter, other letters of the same nature have since been published,
|
|
permit me to make a few observations on it.
|
|
|
|
The writer says, `_New England_ was settled by Presbyterians
|
|
and Independents, who took shelter there from the persecutions of
|
|
Archbishop _Laud_; -- _they still retain their original character,
|
|
they generally hate the Church of England_,' says he. If it were
|
|
true, that some resentment still remained for the hardships their
|
|
fathers suffer'd, it might perhaps be not much wondered at; but the
|
|
fact is, that the moderation of the present church of _England_
|
|
towards Dissenters in _Old_ as well as _New England_, has quite
|
|
effaced those impressions; the Dissenters too are become less rigid
|
|
and scrupulous, and the good-will between those different bodies in
|
|
that country is now both mutual and equal.
|
|
|
|
He goes on: _`They came out with a levelling spirit, and they
|
|
retain it. They cannot bear to think that one man should be
|
|
exorbitantly rich and another poor, so that, except in the seaport
|
|
towns, there are few great estates among them. This equality
|
|
produces also a rusticity of manners; for in their language, dress,
|
|
and in all their behaviour, they are more boorish than any thing you
|
|
ever saw in a certain Northern latitude.'_ One would imagine from
|
|
this account, that those who were growing poor, plundered those who
|
|
were growing rich to preserve this equality, and that property had no
|
|
protection; whereas in fact, it is no where more secure than in the
|
|
_New England_ colonies, the law is no where better executed, or
|
|
justice obtain'd at less expence. The equality he speaks of, arises
|
|
first from a more equal distribution of lands by the assemblies in
|
|
the first settlement than has been practised in the other colonies,
|
|
where favourites of governors have obtained enormous tracts for
|
|
trifling considerations, to the prejudice both of the crown revenues
|
|
and the public good; and secondly, from the nature of their
|
|
occupation; husbandmen with small tracts of land, though they may by
|
|
industry maintain themselves and families in mediocrity, having few
|
|
means of acquiring great wealth, especially in a young colony that is
|
|
to be supplied with its cloathing, and many other expensive articles
|
|
of consumption from the mother country. Their dress the gentleman
|
|
may be a more critical judge of than I can pretend to be; all I know
|
|
of it is, that they wear the manufactures of Britain, and follow its
|
|
fashions perhaps too closely, every remarkable change in the mode
|
|
making its appearance there within a few months after its invention
|
|
here; a natural effect of their constant intercourse with _England_,
|
|
by ships arriving almost every week from the capital, their respect
|
|
for the mother country, and admiration of every thing that is
|
|
_British_. But as to their language, I must beg this gentleman's
|
|
pardon if I differ from him. His ear, accustomed perhaps to the
|
|
dialect practised in the _certain northern latitude_ he mentions, may
|
|
not be qualified to judge so nicely in what relates to _pure
|
|
English_. And I appeal to all Englishmen here, who have been
|
|
acquainted with the Colonists, whether it is not a common remark,
|
|
that they speak the language with such an exactness both of
|
|
expression and accent, that though you may know the natives of
|
|
several of the counties of _England_, by peculiarities in their
|
|
dialect, you cannot by that means distinguish a _North American_.
|
|
All the new books and pamphlets worth reading, that are published
|
|
here, in a few weeks are transmitted and found there, where there is
|
|
not a man or woman born in the country but what can read: and it
|
|
must, I should think, be a pleasing reflection to those who write
|
|
either for the benefit of the present age or of posterity, to find
|
|
their audience increasing with the increase of our colonies; and
|
|
their language extending itself beyond the narrow bounds of these
|
|
islands to a continent, larger than all _Europe_, and to a future
|
|
empire as fully peopled, which _Britain_ may probably one day possess
|
|
in those vast western regions.
|
|
|
|
But the Gentleman makes more injurious comparisons than these:
|
|
`_That latitude_, he says, has this advantage over them, that it has
|
|
produced sharp, acute men, fit for war or learning, whereas the other
|
|
are remarkably simple or silly, and blunder eternally. We have 6000
|
|
of their militia, which the General would willingly exchange for 2000
|
|
regulars. They are for ever marring some one or other of our plans
|
|
when sent to execute them. They can, indeed, some of them at least,
|
|
range in the woods; but 300 Indians with their yell, throw 3000 of
|
|
them into a panick, and then they will leave nothing to the enemy to
|
|
do, for they will shoot one another; and in the woods our regulars
|
|
are afraid to be on a command with them _on that very account._' I
|
|
doubt, Mr. Chronicle, that this paragraph, when it comes to be read
|
|
in _America_, will have no good effect, and rather increase that
|
|
inconvenient disgust that is too apt to arise between the troops of
|
|
different corps, or countries, who are obliged to serve together.
|
|
Will not a _New England Officer_ be apt to retort and say, What
|
|
foundation have you for this odious distinction in favour of the
|
|
officers from your _certain northern latitude_? They may, as you
|
|
say, be _fit for learning_, but, surely, the return of your first
|
|
General, with a well-appointed and sufficient force from his
|
|
expedition against _Louisbourg_, is not the most shining proof of his
|
|
_talents for war_. And no one will say his plan was _marred by us_,
|
|
for we were not with him. -- Was his successor, who conducted the
|
|
blundering attack and inglorious retreat from _Ticonderoga_, a New
|
|
England man, or one of _that certain latitude_? -- Then as to the
|
|
comparison between _Regulars_ and _Provincials_, will not the latter
|
|
remark, That it was 2000 New England _Provincials_, with but about
|
|
150 _Regulars_, that took the strong fort of _Beausejour_ in the
|
|
beginning of the war, though in the accounts transmitted to the
|
|
English Gazette, the honour was claimed by the regulars, and little
|
|
or no notice taken of the others. -- That it was the _Provincials_
|
|
who beat General _Dieskau_, with his _Regulars_, _Canadians_, and
|
|
_`yelling' Indians_, and sent him prisoner to _England_. -- That it
|
|
was a _Provincial-born_ Officer (* 1), with _American_ battoemen,
|
|
that beat the _French_ and _Indians_ on _Oswego_ river. -- That it
|
|
was the same Officer, _with Provincials_, who made that long and
|
|
admirable march into the enemies country, took and destroyed Fort
|
|
_Frontenac_, with the whole French fleet on the lakes, and struck
|
|
terror into the heart of _Canada_. That it was a _Provincial_
|
|
Officer (* 2), _with Provincials_ only,
|
|
who made another extraordinary march into the enemy's country,
|
|
surprised and destroyed the _Indian_ town of _Kittanning_, bringing
|
|
off the scalps of their chiefs. That one ranging Captain of a few
|
|
_Provincials_, _Rogers_, has harrassed the enemy _more_ on the
|
|
frontiers of _Canada_, and destroyed _more_ of their men, than the
|
|
_whole_ army of _Regulars_. -- That it was the _Regulars_ who
|
|
surrendered themselves, with the Provincials under their command,
|
|
prisoners of war, almost as soon as they were besieged, with the
|
|
forts, fleet, and all the provisions and stores that had been
|
|
provided and amassed at so immense an expence, at _Oswego_. That it
|
|
was the _Regulars_ who surrendered Fort _William Henry_, and suffered
|
|
themselves to be butchered and scalped with arms in their hands.
|
|
That it was the _Regulars_, under _Braddock_, who were thrown into a
|
|
panick by the `_yells_ of 3 or 400 Indians,' in their confusion shot
|
|
one another, and, with five times the force of the enemy, fled before
|
|
them, destroying all their own stores, ammunition, and provisions! --
|
|
These _Regular Gentlemen_, will the _Provincial rangers_ add, may
|
|
possibly be _afraid_, as they say they are, _to be on a command with
|
|
us_ in the woods; but when it is considered, that from all past
|
|
experience the chance of our shooting them is not as one to an
|
|
hundred, compared with that of their being shot by the enemy, may it
|
|
not be suspected, that what they give as the _very account_ of their
|
|
fear and unwillingness to venture out with us, is only the _very
|
|
excuse_; and that a concern for their scalps weighs more with them
|
|
than a regard for their honour.
|
|
|
|
Such as these, Sir, I imagine may be the reflections _extorted_
|
|
by such provocations from the Provincials in general. But the _New
|
|
England Men_ in particular will have reason to resent the remarks on
|
|
their reduction of _Louisbourg_. Your writer proceeds, `Indeed they
|
|
are all very ready to make their boast of taking _Louisbourg_, in
|
|
1745; but if people were to be acquitted or condemned according to
|
|
the propriety and wisdom of their plans, and not according to their
|
|
success, the persons that undertook that siege merited little praise:
|
|
for I have heard officers, who assisted at it, say, never was any
|
|
thing more rash; for had one single part of their plan failed, or had
|
|
the French made the fortieth part of the resistance then that they
|
|
have made now, every soul of the New Englanders must have fallen in
|
|
the trenches. The garrison was weak, sickly, destitute of
|
|
provisions, and disgusted, and therefore became a ready prey; and,
|
|
when they returned to France were decimated for their gallant
|
|
defence. Where then is the glory arising from thence?' -- After
|
|
denying his facts, `that the garrison was weak, wanted provisions,
|
|
made not a fortieth part of the resistance, were decimated,' &c. the
|
|
_New England_ men will ask this regular gentleman, If the place was
|
|
well fortified, and had (as it really had) a numerous garrison, was
|
|
it not at least _brave_ to attack it with a handful of raw
|
|
undisciplined militia? If the garrison was, as you say, `sickly,
|
|
disgusted, destitute of provisions, and ready to become a prey,' was
|
|
it not _prudent_ to seize that opportunity, and put the nation in
|
|
possession of so important a fortress at so small an expence? So
|
|
that if you will not allow the enterprize to be, as we think it was,
|
|
both _brave_ and _prudent_, ought you not at least to grant it was
|
|
_either one_ or _the other_? But is there no merit on this score in
|
|
the people, who, tho' at first so greatly divided, as to the making
|
|
or forbearing the attempt, that it was carried in the affirmative, by
|
|
the small majority of _one_ vote only; yet when it was once resolved
|
|
on, _unanimously_ prosecuted the design (* 3), and prepared the means
|
|
with the greatest zeal and diligence; so that the whole equipment was
|
|
completely ready before the season would permit the execution? Is
|
|
there no merit of praise in laying and executing their plan so well,
|
|
that, as you have confessed, not a _single part_ of it failed? If
|
|
the plan was destitute of `propriety and wisdom,' would it not have
|
|
required the _sharp acute_ men of the _northern latitude_ to execute
|
|
it, that by supplying its deficiencies they might give it some chance
|
|
of success? But if such `remarkably silly, simple, blundering
|
|
_Mar-plans_,' as you say we are, could execute _this plan_, so that
|
|
not a _single part_ of it failed, does it not at least show that the
|
|
plan itself must be laid with _some_ `wisdom and propriety?' -- Is
|
|
there no merit in the ardour with which all degrees and ranks of
|
|
people quitted their private affairs, and ranged themselves under the
|
|
banners of their King, for the honour, safety, and advantage of their
|
|
country (* 4)? Is there no merit in the profound secrecy guarded by
|
|
a whole people, so that the enemy had not the least intelligence of
|
|
the design, till they saw the fleet of transports cover the sea
|
|
before their port? -- Is there none in the indefatigable labour the
|
|
troops went thro' during the siege, performing the duty both of men
|
|
and horses; the hardships they patiently suffered for want of tents
|
|
and other necessaries; the readiness with which they learnt to move,
|
|
direct, and manage cannon, raise batteries, and form approaches (*
|
|
5); the bravery with which they sustained sallies; and finally in
|
|
their consenting to stay and garrison the place after it was taken,
|
|
absent from their business and families, till troops could be brought
|
|
from England for that purpose, tho' they undertook the service on a
|
|
promise of being discharged as soon as it was over, were unprovided
|
|
for so long an absence, and actually suffered ten times more loss by
|
|
mortal sickness, thro' want of necessaries, than they suffered from
|
|
the arms of the enemy? The nation, however, had a sense of this
|
|
undertaking different from the unkind one of this gentleman. At the
|
|
treaty of peace, the possession of _Louisbourg_ was found of great
|
|
advantage to our affairs in _Europe_; and if the brave men that made
|
|
the acquisition for us were not _rewarded_, at least they were
|
|
_praised. Envy_ may continue a while to cavil and detract, but
|
|
_public virtue_ will in the end obtain esteem; and honest
|
|
impartiality in this and future ages will not fail doing justice to
|
|
merit.
|
|
|
|
Your _gentleman writer_ thus _decently_ goes on. `The most
|
|
substantial men of most of the provinces are children or
|
|
grandchildren of those that came here at the King's expence, that is,
|
|
thieves, highwaymen, and robbers.' Being probably a military
|
|
gentleman, this, and therefore a person of nice honour, if any one
|
|
should tell him in the _plainest_ language, that what he here says is
|
|
an absolute falsehood, challenges and cutting of throats might
|
|
immediately ensue. I shall therefore only refer him to _his own
|
|
account in this same letter_, of the _peopling_ of _New England_,
|
|
which he says, with more truth, was by _Puritans_ who fled thither
|
|
for shelter from the persecutions of Archbishop _Laud_. Is there not
|
|
a wide difference between removing to a distant country to enjoy the
|
|
exercise of religion according to a man's conscience, and his being
|
|
transported thither by law as a punishment for his crimes? This
|
|
contradiction we therefore leave the _gentleman_ and _himself_ to
|
|
settle as well as they can between them. One would think from his
|
|
account, that the provinces were so many colonies from _Newgate_.
|
|
The truth is, not only _Laud_'s persecution, but the other publick
|
|
troubles in the following reigns, induc'd many thousand families to
|
|
leave _England_, and settle in the plantations. During the
|
|
predominance of the parliament, many royalists removed or were
|
|
banished to _Virginia_ and _Barbadoes_, who afterwards spread into
|
|
the other settlements: The Catholics shelter'd themselves in
|
|
_Maryland_. At the restoration, many of the depriv'd nonconformist
|
|
ministers with their families, friends and hearers, went over.
|
|
Towards the end of _Charles_ the Second's reign and during _James_
|
|
the Second's, the dissenters again flocked into _America_, driven by
|
|
persecution, and dreading the introduction of popery at home. Then
|
|
the high price or reward of labour in the colonies, and want of
|
|
Artisans there, drew over many, as well as the occasion of commerce;
|
|
and when once people begin to migrate, every one has his little
|
|
sphere of acquaintance and connections, which he draws after him, by
|
|
invitation, motives of interest, praising his new settlement, and
|
|
other encouragements. The `most substantial men' are descendants of
|
|
those early settlers; new comers not having yet had time to raise
|
|
estates. The practice of sending convicts thither, is modern; and
|
|
the same indolence of temper and habits of idleness that make people
|
|
poor and tempt them to steal in _England_, continue with them when
|
|
they are sent to _America_, and must there have the same effects,
|
|
where all who live well owe their subsistence to labour and business,
|
|
and where it is a thousand times more difficult than here to acquire
|
|
wealth without industry. Hence the instances of transported thieves
|
|
advancing their fortunes in the colonies are extreamly rare, if there
|
|
_really is_ a single instance of it, which I very much doubt; but of
|
|
their being advanc'd there to the gallows the instances are plenty.
|
|
Might they not as well have been hang'd at home? -- We call _Britain_
|
|
the _mother_ country; but what good mother besides, would introduce
|
|
thieves and criminals into the company of her children, to corrupt
|
|
and disgrace them? -- And how cruel is it, to force, by the high hand
|
|
of power, a particular country of your subjects, who have not
|
|
deserv'd such usage, to receive your outcasts, repealing all the laws
|
|
they make to prevent their admission, and then reproach them with the
|
|
detested mixture you have made. `The emptying their jails into our
|
|
settlements (says a writer of that country) is an insult and
|
|
contempt, the cruellest perhaps that ever one people offered another;
|
|
and would not be equal'd even by emptying their jakes on our tables.'
|
|
|
|
The letter I have been considering, Mr. _Chronicle_, is
|
|
follow'd by another, in your paper of Tuesday the 17th past, said to
|
|
be _from an officer who attended Brigadier General_ Forbes _in his
|
|
march from_ Philadelphia _to_ Fort Duquesne; but wrote probably by
|
|
the same gentleman who wrote the former, as it seems calculated to
|
|
raise the character of the officers of the _certain northern
|
|
latitude_, at the expence of the reputation of the colonies, and the
|
|
provincial forces. According to this letter-writer, if the
|
|
_Pensilvanians_ granted large supplies, and raised a great body of
|
|
troops for the last campaign, it was not obedience to his Majesty's
|
|
commands, signified by his minister Mr. _Pitt_, zeal for the King's
|
|
service, or even a regard for their own safety; but it was owing to
|
|
the `General's proper management of the Quakers and other parties in
|
|
the province.' The withdrawing of the Indians from the French
|
|
interest by negotiating a peace, is all ascribed to the General, and
|
|
not a word said to the honour of the poor _Quakers_ who first set
|
|
those negotiations on foot, or of honest _Frederic Post_ that
|
|
compleated them with so much ability and success. Even the little
|
|
merit of the Assembly's making a law to regulate carriages, is
|
|
imputed to the General's `multitude of letters.' Then he tells us,
|
|
`innumerable scouting parties had been sent out during a long period,
|
|
both by the General and Colonel _Bouquet_, towards Fort _Duquesne_,
|
|
to catch a prisoner, if possible, for intelligence, but never got
|
|
any.' -- How happened that? -- Why, `It was the _Provincial troops_
|
|
that were constantly employed in that service,' and they, it seems,
|
|
never do any thing they are ordered to do. -- _That_, however, one
|
|
would think, might be easily remedied, by sending _Regulars_ with
|
|
them, who of course must command them, and may see that they do their
|
|
duty. _No; The Regulars are afraid of being shot by the Provincials
|
|
in a Panick_. -- Then send all Regulars. -- _Aye; That was what the
|
|
Colonel_ resolved _upon_. -- `Intelligence was now wanted. (says the
|
|
letter-writer) Col. _Bouquet_, whose attention to business was [only]
|
|
very considerable [that is, _not quite so great_ as the General's,
|
|
for he was not of the _northern latitude_] was _determined_ to send
|
|
NO MORE Provincials a scouting.' -- And how did he execute this
|
|
determination? Why, by sending `Major _Grant_ of the Highlanders,
|
|
with _seven_ hundred men, _three_ hundred of them Highlanders, THE
|
|
REST _Americans_, _Virginians_, and _Pensilvanians_!' No _blunder_
|
|
this, in our writer; but a _misfortune_; and he is nevertheless one
|
|
of those _`acute sharp'_ men who are _`fit for learning!'_ -- And how
|
|
did this Major and seven hundred men succeed in catching the
|
|
prisoner? -- Why, their `march to Fort Duquesne was _so conducted_
|
|
that the _surprize_ was _compleat_.' -- Perhaps you may imagine,
|
|
gentle reader, that this was a surprize of the enemy. -- No such
|
|
matter. They knew every step of his motions, and had, every man of
|
|
them, left their fires and huts in the fields, and retired into the
|
|
fort. -- But the Major and his 700 men, _they_ were _surprized_;
|
|
first to find no body there at night; and next to find themselves
|
|
surrounded and cut to pieces in the morning; two or three hundred
|
|
being killed, drowned, or taken prisoners, and among the latter the
|
|
Major himself. Those who escaped were also _surprized_ at their own
|
|
good fortune; and the whole army was _surprized_ at the Major's bad
|
|
management. Thus the _surprize_ was indeed _compleat_; -- but not
|
|
the disgrace; for _Provincials were there_ to lay the blame on. The
|
|
_misfortune_ (we must not call it _misconduct_) of the Major was
|
|
owing, it seems, to an un-named and perhaps unknown _Provincial_
|
|
officer, who, it is said, `disobeyed his orders and quitted his
|
|
post.' Whence a formal conclusion is drawn, `That a Planter is not to
|
|
be taken from the plow and made an officer in a day.' -- Unhappy
|
|
_Provincials_! If _success_ attends where you are joined with the
|
|
Regulars, they claim all the honour, tho' not a tenth part of your
|
|
number. If _disgrace_, it is all yours, though you happen to be but
|
|
a small part of the whole, and have not the command; as if Regulars
|
|
were in their nature invincible, when not mix'd with Provincials, and
|
|
Provincials of no kind of value without Regulars! Happy is it for
|
|
you that you were present neither at _Preston-Pans_ nor _Falkirk_, at
|
|
the faint attempt against _Rochfort_, the route of _St. Cas_, or the
|
|
hasty retreat from _Martinico_. Every thing that went wrong, or did
|
|
not go right, would have been ascribed to you. Our commanders would
|
|
have been saved the labour of writing long apologies for their
|
|
conduct. It might have been sufficient to say, _Provincials were
|
|
with us!_
|
|
|
|
But these remarks, which we only suppose may be made by the
|
|
provok'd provincials, are probably too severe. The generals, even
|
|
those who have been recall'd, had in several respects great merit, as
|
|
well as many of the officers of the same nation that remain, which
|
|
the cool discreet part of the provincials will readily allow. They
|
|
are not insensible of the worth and bravery of the _British_ troops
|
|
in general, honour them for the amazing valour they manifested at the
|
|
landing on _Cape Breton_, the prudence and military skill they show'd
|
|
in the siege and reduction of _Louisburg_, and their good conduct on
|
|
other occasions; and can make due allowance for mistakes naturally
|
|
arising where even the best men are engag'd in a new kind of war,
|
|
with a new and strange enemy, and in a country different from any
|
|
they had before experienc'd. Lord HOWE was their darling
|
|
(* 6), and others might be nam'd who are
|
|
growing daily in their esteem and admiration. -- There are also among
|
|
the regular officers, men of sentiments, concerning the colonies,
|
|
more generous and more just than those express'd by these
|
|
letter-writers; who can see faults even in their own corps, and who
|
|
can allow the Provincials their share of merit; who feel pleasure as
|
|
_Britons_, in observing that the _children_ of _Britain_ retain their
|
|
native intrepidity to the third and fourth generation in the regions
|
|
of _America_; together with that ardent love of liberty and zeal in
|
|
its defence, which in every age has distinguish'd their progenitors
|
|
among the rest of mankind. -- To conclude, in all countries, all
|
|
nations, and all armies, there is, and will be a mixture of
|
|
characters, a medley of brave men, fools, wise-men and cowards.
|
|
National reflections being general, are therefore unjust. But
|
|
panegyrics, tho' they should be too general, cannot offend the
|
|
subjects of them. I shall therefore boldly say, that the _English_
|
|
are brave and wise; the _Scotch_ are brave and wise; and the people
|
|
of the _British_ colonies, proceeding from both nations -- I would
|
|
say the same of them, if it might not be thought vanity in Your
|
|
humble servant, May 9, 1759. _A New Englandman_.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, May 12, 1759
|
|
|
|
(* 1) Colonel _Bradstreet_.
|
|
|
|
(* 2) Colonel _Armstrong_ of _Pensilvania_.
|
|
|
|
(* 3) `As the Massachuset's assembly at first entered into the
|
|
expedition upon the _coolest deliberation_, so did they on the other
|
|
hand exert themselves with _uncommon vigour_ in the persecution of
|
|
it. As soon as the point was carried for undertaking it, EVERY
|
|
MEMBER which had opposed it _gave up his own private judgment_ to the
|
|
public voice, and _vied_ with those who had voted for the expedition,
|
|
in encouraging the enlistment of the troops, and forwarding the
|
|
preparations for the attempt.' _Memoirs of the last War_, p. 41.
|
|
|
|
(* 4) `The bounty, pay, and other encouragements, allowed by the
|
|
Massachuset's government to both officers and men, especially the
|
|
former, was but small; but the _spirit_ which reigned thro' the
|
|
province supplied the want of that; the complement of troops was soon
|
|
inlisted; not only the officers, who served in this enterprize, were
|
|
gentlemen of considerable property, but most of the non-commission'd
|
|
officers, and many of the private men, had valuable freeholds, and
|
|
entered into the service upon the same principles that the old
|
|
_Roman_ citizens in the first Consular armies used to do.' _Memoirs
|
|
of the last War_, p. 41.
|
|
|
|
To which I may add, that instances of the same noble spirit are
|
|
not uncommon in all the other colonies; where men have entered into
|
|
the service not for the sake of the pay, for their own affairs in
|
|
their absence suffer more by far than its value; not in hopes of
|
|
preferment in the army, for the Provincials are shut out from such
|
|
expectations, their own forces being always disbanded on a peace, and
|
|
the vacancies among the Regulars filled with _Europeans_; but merely
|
|
from _public spirit_ and a sense of duty. Among many others, give me
|
|
leave to name Col. PETER SCHUYLER of _New Jersey_; who, though a
|
|
gentleman of a considerable independent fortune, has, both in the
|
|
last and present war, quitted that domestic ease and quiet which such
|
|
affluence afforded, to take upon him the command of his country's
|
|
forces, and by his example animated the soldiery to undergo the
|
|
greatest fatigues and hardships: And who when a prisoner in _Canada_
|
|
for fifteen months, did, during the whole time, generously make use
|
|
of his own credit to relieve such _British_ subjects as unhappily
|
|
fell into the hands of the enemy. -- Not to mention his advancing his
|
|
own private fortune towards paying the forces, raised during last war
|
|
in _America_ by order of the crown; when, by the continued delays in
|
|
sending the money from _England_ for that purpose, it was generally
|
|
doubted whether it would ever be sent, and the common soldiers were
|
|
therefore, from necessity, on the point of quitting his Majesty's
|
|
service in a body. An event which must at that time have been
|
|
attended with very fatal consequences; and would not have been
|
|
prevented, had not he risqued so considerable a part of his
|
|
substance.
|
|
|
|
(* 5) `The _New England_ troops, within the compass of 23 days from
|
|
the time of their first landing, erected five fascine batteries
|
|
against the town, mounted with cannon of 42 lb. 22 lb. and 18 lb.
|
|
shot, mortars of 13, 11, and 9 inches diameter, with some cohorns;
|
|
all which were transported _by hand_, with incredible labour and
|
|
difficulty, most of them above two miles; all the ground over which
|
|
they were drawn, except small patches or hills of rocks, was a _deep
|
|
morass_, in which, whilst the cannon were upon wheels, they several
|
|
times sunk so deep, as not only to bury the carriages, but their
|
|
whole bodies. Horses and oxen could not be employed in this service,
|
|
but all must be drawn by men, up to the knees in mud; the nights, in
|
|
which the work was done, were cold and foggy, their tents bad, there
|
|
being no proper materials for tents to be had in New England at the
|
|
outset of the expedition. But notwithstanding these difficulties,
|
|
and many of the men's being taken down with fluxes, so that at one
|
|
time there were 1500 incapable of duty, they went on _without being
|
|
discouraged or murmuring_, and transported the cannon over those
|
|
ways, which the French had always thought impassable for such heavy
|
|
weights; and besides this, they had all their provisions and heavy
|
|
ammunition, which they daily made use of, to bring from the camp over
|
|
the same way upon their backs.' _Memoirs of the last war in America_,
|
|
page 52.
|
|
|
|
(* 6) The assembly of the _Massachusets-Bay_ have voted a sum of
|
|
money for erecting a monument in _Westminster-Abbey_, to the memory
|
|
of that Nobleman, as a testimony of their veneration for his virtues.
|
|
-- A proof that their sense of merit is not narrow'd to a country.
|
|
|
|
_A Description of Those, Who, at Any Rate, Would Have a Peace
|
|
with France_
|
|
|
|
The two prevailing motives among us, which strongly bias great
|
|
numbers of people, at this time, to wish for a peace with _France_,
|
|
let the terms be ever so dishonourable, ever so disadvantageous, or
|
|
likely to prove of ever so short a duration, are Power and
|
|
Self-interest.
|
|
|
|
As to the First, there is a set of men, who have been so long
|
|
used to Power, that it is become part of their constitution; and if
|
|
they cannot preserve it, they and their Dependants must linger and
|
|
pine away. They find plainly, that whatever they have undertaken has
|
|
succeeded so ill, that, instead of their gaining the people's
|
|
Applause and Confidence, They become every day more and more
|
|
Obnoxious and Contemptible: And they perceive, on the other hand,
|
|
that such part of the Administration, in which they have had no
|
|
share, has been so well understood and conducted, that such general
|
|
Satisfaction has been given throughout the whole kingdom, as reflects
|
|
highly on the want of Integrity and Capacity in those who have gone
|
|
before. No wonder therefore, if such men should be desirous of peace
|
|
at any rate, so it lasts their time; that the frequent scenes of
|
|
Honour to others, and Dishonour to themselves, may not haunt them any
|
|
more: And, especially being sensible the National Credit has been
|
|
strained to such a degree by their extravagant plan of Dissipation,
|
|
as to render it necessary for the Publick Accounts being taken, as
|
|
was so frequently and honestly done during the reigns of King William
|
|
and Queen Anne, even at the Minister's own desire.
|
|
|
|
The latter are those who are engaged in our Public Funds, and
|
|
are impatient to have them rise, AND THOSE (IN NO SMALL NUMBER) WHO
|
|
HAVE SO INFAMOUSLY LENT THEIR MONEY TO THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT:
|
|
Merchants who are concerned in branches of Commerce and of Business,
|
|
which they imagine will improve upon their hands, in case of a Peace:
|
|
other Mercantile People, who have their prospects of advantage, upon
|
|
the conclusion of a Peace; such for example, who think we shall hold
|
|
some of our conquests, which of course will give room for new
|
|
Settlements; and some who have prospects of Places in such new
|
|
Settlements: Some who have formed to themselves agreeable plans, for
|
|
striking into new Branches of Trade: Many Country Gentlemen and
|
|
others, who wouldn't perhaps be sorry for a Peace, in hopes of being
|
|
eas'd in their taxes: And lastly, there are very few Roman Catholicks
|
|
in the Kingdom, but would rejoice at a Peace, at any rate.
|
|
|
|
It is a melancholy Reflection, that there should be among us
|
|
such selfish wretches, and such enemies to their Country, who had
|
|
rather see it sink, a while hence, and its bitterest enemies triumph,
|
|
than that their present lust for Power, and their sordid Views,
|
|
should not be gratified; And that there should be those, who are
|
|
striving to diminish the Importance of every conquest we make, that
|
|
the people mayn't grow too fond of keeping them; and even go so far,
|
|
as to propagate the very Nonsensical Language of MAUBERT; viz. THE
|
|
ENGLISH _will persevere in their conquests till they draw all the
|
|
Powers of Europe upon their backs_.
|
|
|
|
Such is the true Picture of those, who, on such infamous Terms,
|
|
wou'd sell advantages their Country has obtained, at the expence of
|
|
so much blood and treasure, over their most Inveterate and most
|
|
Treacherous enemies. _London, Nov._ 24.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, November 24, 1759
|
|
|
|
_Humourous Reasons for Restoring Canada_
|
|
|
|
_Mr. Chronicle,_ We Britons are a nation of statesmen and
|
|
politicians; we are privy councellors by birthright; and therefore
|
|
take it much amiss when we are told by some of your correspondents,
|
|
`that it is not proper to expose to public view the many good reasons
|
|
there are for restoring Canada,' _(if we reduce it.)_
|
|
|
|
I have, with great industry, been able to procure a full
|
|
account of those reasons, and shall make no secret of them among
|
|
ourselves. Here they are. -- Give them to all your readers; that is,
|
|
to all that can read, in the King's dominions.
|
|
|
|
1. We should restore Canada; because an uninterrupted trade
|
|
with the Indians throughout a vast country, where the communication
|
|
by water is so easy, would encrease our commerce, _already too
|
|
great_, and occasion a large additional demand for our manufactures,
|
|
(* 1) _already too dear_.
|
|
|
|
(* 1) Every Indian now wears a woollen blanket, a linnen shirt, and
|
|
cloth stockings; besides a knife, a hatchet and a gun; and they use a
|
|
variety of other European and Indian goods, which they pay for in
|
|
skins and furs.
|
|
|
|
2. We should restore it, lest, thro' a greater plenty of
|
|
beaver, broad-brimmed hats become cheaper to that unmannerly sect,
|
|
the Quakers.
|
|
|
|
3. We should restore Canada, that we may _soon_ have a new war,
|
|
and another opportunity of spending two or three millions a year in
|
|
America; there being great danger of our growing too rich, our
|
|
European expences not being sufficient to drain our immense
|
|
treasures.
|
|
|
|
4. We should restore it, that we may have occasion constantly
|
|
to employ, in time of war, a fleet and army in those parts; for
|
|
otherwise we might be too strong at home.
|
|
|
|
5. We should restore it, that the French may, by means of their
|
|
Indians, carry on, (as they have done for these 100 years past even
|
|
in times of peace between the two crowns) a constant scalping war
|
|
against our colonies, and thereby stint their growth; for, otherwise,
|
|
the children might in time be as tall as their mother (* 2).
|
|
|
|
(* 2) This reason is seriously given by some who do not wish well to
|
|
the Colonies: But, is it not too like the Egyptian Politics practised
|
|
by Pharoah, destroying the young males to prevent the increase of the
|
|
children of Israel?
|
|
|
|
6. What tho' the blood of thousands of unarmed English farmers,
|
|
surprized and assassinated in their fields; of harmless women and
|
|
children murdered in their beds; doth at length call for vengeance;
|
|
-- what tho' the Canadian measure of iniquity be full, and if ever
|
|
any country did, that country now certainly does, deserve the
|
|
judgment of _extirpation_; -- yet let not us be the executioners of
|
|
Divine justice; -- it will look as if Englishmen were revengeful.
|
|
|
|
7. Our colonies, 'tis true, have exerted themselves beyond
|
|
their strength, on the expectations we gave them of driving the
|
|
French from Canada; but tho' we ought to keep faith with our Allies,
|
|
it is not necessary with our children. That might teach them
|
|
(against Scripture) to _put their trust in Princes_: Let 'em learn to
|
|
trust in God.
|
|
|
|
8. Should we not restore Canada, it would look as if our
|
|
statesmen had _courage_ as well as our soldiers; but what have
|
|
statesmen to do with _courage_? Their proper character is _wisdom_.
|
|
|
|
9. What can be _braver_, than to show all Europe we can afford
|
|
to lavish our best blood as well as our treasure, in conquests we do
|
|
not intend to keep? Have we not plenty of _Howe's_, and _Wolfe's_,
|
|
&c. &c. &c. in every regiment?
|
|
|
|
10. The French have long since openly declar'd, _'que les
|
|
Anglois & les Fransois sont incompatible dans cette partie de
|
|
l'Amerique;'_ 'that our people and theirs were incompatible in that
|
|
part of the continent of America:' _`que rien n'etoit plus important
|
|
a l'etat, que de delivrer leur colonie du facheux voisinage des
|
|
Anglois;'_ `that nothing was of more importance to France, than
|
|
delivering its colony from the troublesome neighbourhood of the
|
|
English;' to which end, there was an avowed project on foot _`pour
|
|
chasser premierement les Anglois de la Nouvelle York;'_ `to drive the
|
|
English in the first place out of the province of New York;' _`&
|
|
apres la prise de la capitale, il falloit_ (says the scheme) _la_
|
|
BRULER & RUINER _le pays jusqu' a Orange;'_ `and after taking the
|
|
capital, to _burn it_, and _ruin_ (that is, _make a desart_ of) the
|
|
whole country, quite up to Albany.' Now, if we do not fairly leave
|
|
the French in Canada, till they have a favourable opportunity of
|
|
putting their _burning_ and _ruining_ schemes in execution, will it
|
|
not look as if we were afraid of them?
|
|
|
|
11. Their historian, Charlevoix, in his IVth book, also tells
|
|
us, that when Canada was formerly taken by the English, it was a
|
|
question at the court of France, whether they should endeavour to
|
|
recover it; for, says he, _`bien de gens douterent si l'on avoit fait
|
|
une veritable perte;'_ `many thought it was not really a loss.' But
|
|
tho' various reasons were given why it was scarce worth recovering,
|
|
_`le seul motive_ (says he) _d'empecher les Anglois de se rendre trop
|
|
puissans -- atoit plus que suffissant pour nous engager a recouvrer
|
|
Quebec, a quelque prix que ce fut;'_ `the single motive of preventing
|
|
the increase of _English_ power, was more than sufficient to engage
|
|
us in recovering Quebec, _what price soever it might cost us_.' Here
|
|
we see the high value they put on that country, and the reason of
|
|
their valuing it so highly. Let us then, _oblige them_ in this (to
|
|
them) so important an article, and be assured they will _never prove
|
|
ungrateful_.
|
|
|
|
I will not dissemble, Mr. _Chronicle_; that in answer to all
|
|
these reasons and motives for restoring Canada, I have heard one that
|
|
appears to have some weight on the other side of the question. It is
|
|
said, that nations, as well as private persons, should, for their
|
|
honour's sake, take care to preserve a _consistence of character_:
|
|
that it has always been the character of the English to fight
|
|
strongly, and negotiate weakly; generally agreeing to restore, at a
|
|
peace, what they ought to have kept, and to keep what they had better
|
|
have restored: then, if it would really, according to the preceding
|
|
reasons, be prudent and right to restore Canada, we ought, say these
|
|
objectors, to keep it; otherwise _we shall be inconsistent with
|
|
ourselves._ I shall not take upon myself to weigh these different
|
|
reasons, but offer the whole to the consideration of the public.
|
|
Only permit me to suggest, that there is one method of avoiding
|
|
fairly all future dispute about the propriety of _keeping_ or
|
|
_restoring_ Canada; and that is, _let us never take it._ The French
|
|
still hold out at Montreal and Trois Rivieres, in hopes of succour
|
|
from France. Let us be but _a little too late_ with our ships in the
|
|
river St. Laurence, so that the enemy may get their supplies up next
|
|
spring, as they did the last, with reinforcements sufficient to
|
|
enable them to recover Quebec, and there is an end of the question.
|
|
I am, Sir, Yours, &c. A. Z.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, December 27, 1759
|
|
|
|
_The Jesuit Campanella's Means of Disposing the Enemy to Peace_
|
|
|
|
_To the Printer of the London Chronicle_.
|
|
|
|
SIR, I send you for your excellent Paper, an extract from the
|
|
famous Jesuit _Campanella_'s discourses address'd to the King of
|
|
_Spain_, intituled, _Of the Meanes of extending the Greatnesse of
|
|
the_ Spanish _Monarchie_. The language is a little antiquated, being
|
|
the old translation in the edition of 1629; but the matter contain'd
|
|
is so _apropos_ to our present situation (only changing _Spain_ for
|
|
_France_) that I think it well worth the attention of the Publick at
|
|
this critical conjuncture, as it discovers the arts of our enemies,
|
|
and may therefore help in some degree to put us on our guard against
|
|
them. After discoursing largely on the wars to be made, particularly
|
|
against _England_ and _Holland_, the conquests to be attempted, and
|
|
the various means of securing them when gained, he comes to his
|
|
|
|
CHAP. XIV. _Of the Meanes of disposing the Enemie to Peace_.
|
|
`WARRES, with whatsoever prudence undertaken and conducted, do not
|
|
always succeed; many thinges out of mans power to governe, such as
|
|
dearthe of provisions, tempests, pestilence, and the like, oftentimes
|
|
interfering, and totally overthrowing the best designes; so that
|
|
these enemies of our Monarchie, though apparent lie at first
|
|
the weaker, may, by disastrous events of warre on our part, become
|
|
the stronger; and though not in such degree as to endanger the bodie
|
|
of this great kingdome, yet, by their greater power of shipping and
|
|
aptness in sea-affaires, to be able to cut off, if I may so speak,
|
|
some of its smaller limbes and members, that, being remote therefrom,
|
|
are not easilie defended; to wit, our islands and colonies in the
|
|
Indies; thereby however depriving the bodie of its wonted
|
|
nourishment, so that it must thenceforthe languish and grow weake, if
|
|
those parts be not recovered, which possibly may, by continuance of
|
|
warre, be found unlikely to be done. And the enemie, puffed up with
|
|
their successes, and hoping still for more, may not be disposed to
|
|
peace on such termes as would be suitable to the honour of your
|
|
Majestie, and to the welfare of your State and Subjectes. In such
|
|
case, the following meanes may have good effect.
|
|
|
|
`It is well known, that these northerne people, though hardie
|
|
of bodie, and bold in fight, be neverthelesse, through over-much
|
|
eating and other intemperance, slowe of wit and dull in
|
|
understanding, so that they be oftimes more easilie to be governed
|
|
and turned by skille than by force. There is therefore always hope,
|
|
that by wise counsel and dextrous management, those advantages which
|
|
through cross accidents in warre have been lost, may again with
|
|
honour be recovered. In this place I shall say little of the power
|
|
of money secretly distributed amongst grandees or their friends or
|
|
mistresses, that method being in all ages known and practised. If
|
|
the _minds_ of enemies can be _changed_, they may be brought to grant
|
|
willingly and for nothing, what much golde would scarce lie have
|
|
otherwise prevailed to obtaine. Yet as the procuring this change is
|
|
to be by fitte instruments, some few doublones will not unprofitablie
|
|
be disbursed by your Majestie; the manner whereof I shall now
|
|
brieflie recite.
|
|
|
|
`In those countries, and particularly in England, there are not
|
|
wanting men of learning, ingenious speakers and writers, who are
|
|
neverthelesse in lowe estate and pinched by fortune; these being
|
|
privatelie gained by proper meanes, must be instructed in their
|
|
sermons, discourses, writings, poems and songs, to handle and
|
|
specially inculcate points like these which followe. Let them
|
|
magnify the blessings of peace and enlarge mightily thereon, which is
|
|
not unbecoming grave Divines and other Christian men; let them
|
|
expatiate on the miseries of warre, the waste of Christian bloode,
|
|
the growing scarcitie of labourers and workmen, the dearness of all
|
|
foreign wares and merchandises, the interruption of commerce by the
|
|
captures or delay of ships, the increase and great burthen of taxes,
|
|
and the impossibilitie of supplying much longer the expence of the
|
|
contest; -- let them represent the warre as an unmeasurable advantage
|
|
to particulars, and to particulars only (thereby to excite envie
|
|
against those that manage and provide for the same) while so
|
|
prejudicial to the Commonweale and people in general: let them
|
|
represent the advantages gained against us as trivial and of little
|
|
import; the places taken from us as of small trade or produce,
|
|
inconvenient for situation, unwholesome for ayre and climate, useless
|
|
to their nations, and greatly chargeable to keepe, draining the home
|
|
Countries both of men and money: let them urge, that if a peace be
|
|
forced on us, and those places withheld, it will nourishe secret
|
|
griefe and malice in the King and Grandees of Spain, which will ere
|
|
long breake forthe in new warres, wherein those places may again be
|
|
retaken, and lost without the merit and grace of restoring them
|
|
willingly for peace-sake: -- let them represent the making and
|
|
continuance of warres from view of gaine, to be base and unworthie a
|
|
brave people; as those made from view of ambition are mad and wicked;
|
|
and let them insinuate that the continuance of the present warre on
|
|
their parte, when peace is offered, hath these ingredients strongly
|
|
in its nature. Then let them magnifie the great power of your
|
|
Majestie, and the strength of your kingdome, the inexhaustible
|
|
wealthe of your mines, the greatness of your incomes, and thence your
|
|
abilitie of continuing the warre; hinting withal, the new alliances
|
|
you may possibly make; at the same time setting forth the sincere
|
|
disposition you have for peace, and that it is only a concerne for
|
|
your honour and the honour of your realme, that induceth you to
|
|
insist on the restitution of the places taken. -- If with all this
|
|
they shrewdly intimate and cause it to be understood by artefull
|
|
words, and beleeved, that their own Prince is himself in heart for
|
|
peace on your Majesties termes, and grieved at the obstinacie and
|
|
perverseness of those among his people that be for continuing the
|
|
warre, a marvellous effect shall by these discourses and writings be
|
|
produced; and a wonderful strong party shall your Majestie raise
|
|
among your enemies in favour of the peace you desire; insomuch that
|
|
their own Princes and wisest Councellours will in a sort be
|
|
constrained to yeald thereto. For in this warre of words, the
|
|
avarice and ambition, the hopes and fears, and all the croud of human
|
|
passions, will, in the minds of your enemies, be raised, armed, and
|
|
put in array, to fight for your interests, against the reall and
|
|
substantiall interest of their own countries. The simple and
|
|
undiscerning many, shall be carried away by the plausibilitie and
|
|
well-seeming of these discourses; and the opinions becoming popular,
|
|
all the rich men, who have great possessions, and fear the
|
|
continuance of taxes, and hope peace will end them, shall be
|
|
imboldened thereby to cry aloud for peace; -- their dependents who
|
|
are many, must do the same: all marchants, fearing loss of ships and
|
|
greater burthens on trade by farther duties and subsidies, and hoping
|
|
greater profittes by the ending of the warre, shall join in the cry
|
|
for peace: All the usurers and lenders of monies to the State, who on
|
|
a peace hope great profit from their bargaines, and fear if the warre
|
|
be continued, the State shall become bankeroute, and unable to pay
|
|
them; these, who have no small weight, shall joine the cry for peace:
|
|
-- All the gowne and booke-statesmen, who maligne the bold conductors
|
|
of the warre, and envie the glorie they may have thereby obtained;
|
|
these shall cry aloud for peace; hoping, that when the Warre shall
|
|
cease, such men becoming less necessarie shall be more lightelie
|
|
esteemed, and themselves more sought after: -- All the officers of
|
|
the enemies armies and fleets, who wish for repose, and to enjoy
|
|
their spoiles, salaries, or rewards, in quietness, and without peril,
|
|
these, and their friends and families, who desire their safetie, and
|
|
the solace of their societie, shall all cry for peace: -- All those
|
|
who be timorous by nature, amongst whom be reckoned men of learning
|
|
that lead sedentarie lives, using little exercise of bodie, and
|
|
thence obtaining but few and weake spirits; great Statesmen, whose
|
|
natural spirits be exhausted by much thinking, or depress'd by
|
|
over-much feasting; together with all women, whose power, weake as
|
|
they are, is not a little among such men; these shall incessantly
|
|
speake for peace: And finallie, all Courtiers, who suppose they
|
|
conforme thereby to the inclinations of the Prince; all who are _in_
|
|
places of profit, and fear to lose them, or hope for better; all who
|
|
are _out_ of places, and hope to obtain them; all the worldly-minded
|
|
clergie, who seeke preferment; these, with all the weight of their
|
|
character and influence, shall joine the cry for peace, till it
|
|
becomes one universal clamour, and no sound but that of _Peace,
|
|
Peace, Peace,_ shall be heard from every quarter. Then shall your
|
|
Majesties termes of peace be listened to with much readiness, the
|
|
places taken from you be willingly restored, and your kingdome,
|
|
recovering its strength, shall only need to waite a few years for
|
|
more favourable occasions, when the advantages to your power proposed
|
|
by beginning the warre, but lost by its bad successe, shall, with
|
|
better fortune, be finallie obtained.'
|
|
|
|
What effect the artifices here recommended might have had in
|
|
the times when this Jesuit wrote, I cannot pretend to say; but I
|
|
believe, the present age being more enlightened, and our people
|
|
better acquainted than formerly with our true national interests,
|
|
such arts can now hardly prove so generally successful: For we may
|
|
with pleasure observe, and to the honour of the British people, that
|
|
though writings and discourses like these have lately not been
|
|
wanting, yet few in any of the classes he particularises seem to be
|
|
affected by them; but all ranks and degrees among us persist hitherto
|
|
in declaring for a vigorous prosecution of the war, in preference to
|
|
an unsafe, disadvantageous peace.
|
|
|
|
Yet, as a little change of fortune may make such writings more
|
|
attended to, and give them greater weight, I think the publication of
|
|
this piece, as it shows the spring from whence these scribblers draw
|
|
their poisoned waters, may be of publick utility. I am, Sir, yours,
|
|
&c. A BRITON.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, August 13, 1761
|
|
|
|
_A Narrative of the Late Massacres, in Lancaster County, of a
|
|
Number of Indians, Friends of this Province, by Persons Unknown_
|
|
|
|
WITH SOME OBSERVATIONS ON THE SAME
|
|
|
|
These _Indians_ were the Remains of a Tribe of the _Six
|
|
Nations_, settled at _Conestogoe_, and thence called _Conestogoe
|
|
Indians._ On the first Arrival of the _English_ in _Pennsylvania_,
|
|
Messengers from this Tribe came to welcome them, with Presents of
|
|
Venison, Corn and Skins; and the whole Tribe entered into a Treaty of
|
|
Friendship with the first Proprietor, WILLIAM PENN, which was to last
|
|
"as long as the Sun should shine, or the Waters run in the Rivers."
|
|
|
|
This Treaty has been since frequently renewed, and the _Chain
|
|
brightened_, as they express it, from time to time. It has never
|
|
been violated, on their Part or ours, till now. As their Lands by
|
|
Degrees were mostly purchased, and the Settlements of the White
|
|
People began to surround them, the Proprietor assigned them Lands on
|
|
the Manor of _Conestogoe_, which they might not part with; there they
|
|
have lived many Years in Friendship with their White Neighbours, who
|
|
loved them for their peaceable inoffensive Behaviour.
|
|
|
|
It has always been observed, that _Indians_, settled in the
|
|
Neighbourhood of White People, do not increase, but diminish
|
|
continually. This Tribe accordingly went on diminishing, till there
|
|
remained in their Town on the Manor, but 20 Persons, _viz._ 7 Men, 5
|
|
Women, and 8 Children, Boys and Girls.
|
|
|
|
Of these, _Shehaes_ was a very old Man, having assisted at the
|
|
second Treaty held with them, by Mr. PENN, in 1701, and ever since
|
|
continued a faithful and affectionate Friend to the _English_; he is
|
|
said to have been an exceeding good Man, considering his Education,
|
|
being naturally of a most kind benevolent Temper.
|
|
|
|
_Peggy_ was _Shehaes_'s Daughter; she worked for her aged
|
|
Father, continuing to live with him, though married, and attended him
|
|
with filial Duty and Tenderness.
|
|
|
|
_John_ was another good old Man; his Son _Harry_ helped to
|
|
support him.
|
|
|
|
|
|
_George_ and _Will Soc_ were two Brothers, both young Men.
|
|
|
|
_John Smith_, a valuable young Man, of the _Cayuga_ Nation, who
|
|
became acquainted with _Peggy_, _Shehaes_'s Daughter, some few Years
|
|
since, married her, and settled in that Family. They had one Child,
|
|
about three Years old.
|
|
|
|
_Betty_, a harmless old Woman; and her Son _Peter_, a likely
|
|
young Lad.
|
|
|
|
_Sally_, whose _Indian_ Name was _Wyanjoy_, a Woman much
|
|
esteemed by all that knew her, for her prudent and good Behaviour in
|
|
some very trying Situations of Life. She was a truly good and an
|
|
amiable Woman, had no Children of her own, but a distant Relation
|
|
dying, she had taken a Child of that Relation's, to bring up as her
|
|
own, and performed towards it all the Duties of an affectionate
|
|
Parent.
|
|
|
|
The Reader will observe, that many of their Names are
|
|
_English_. It is common with the _Indians_ that have an Affection
|
|
for the _English_, to give themselves, and their Children, the Names
|
|
of such _English_ Persons as they particularly esteem.
|
|
|
|
This little Society continued the Custom they had begun, when
|
|
more numerous, of addressing every new Governor, and every Descendant
|
|
of the first Proprietor, welcoming him to the Province, assuring him
|
|
of their Fidelity, and praying a Continuance of that Favour and
|
|
Protection they had hitherto experienced. They had accordingly sent
|
|
up an Address of this Kind to our present Governor, on his Arrival;
|
|
but the same was scarce delivered, when the unfortunate Catastrophe
|
|
happened, which we are about to relate.
|
|
|
|
On _Wednesday_, the 14th of _December_, 1763, Fifty-seven Men,
|
|
from some of our Frontier Townships, who had projected the
|
|
Destruction of this little Common-wealth, came, all well-mounted, and
|
|
armed with Firelocks, Hangers and Hatchets, having travelled through
|
|
the Country in the Night, to _Conestogoe_ Manor. There they
|
|
surrounded the small Village of _Indian_ Huts, and just at Break of
|
|
Day broke into them all at once. Only three Men, two Women, and a
|
|
young Boy, were found at home, the rest being out among the
|
|
neighbouring White People,some to sell the Baskets, Brooms and Bowls
|
|
they manufactured, and others on other Occasions. These poor
|
|
defenceless Creatures were immediately fired upon, stabbed and
|
|
hatcheted to Death! The good _Shehaes_, among the rest, cut to
|
|
Pieces in his Bed. All of them were scalped, and otherwise horribly
|
|
mangled. Then their Huts were set on Fire, and most of them burnt
|
|
down. When the Troop, pleased with their own Conduct and Bravery,
|
|
but enraged that any of the poor _Indians_ had escaped the Massacre,
|
|
rode off, and in small Parties, by different Roads, went home.
|
|
|
|
The universal Concern of the neighbouring White People on
|
|
hearing of this Event, and the Lamentations of the younger _Indians_,
|
|
when they returned and saw the Desolation, and the butchered
|
|
half-burnt Bodies of their murdered Parents, and other Relations,
|
|
cannot well be expressed.
|
|
|
|
The Magistrates of _Lancaster_ sent out to collect the
|
|
remaining _Indians_, brought them into the Town for their better
|
|
Security against any farther Attempt; and it is said condoled with
|
|
them on the Misfortune that had happened, took them by the Hand,
|
|
comforted and _promised them Protection_. -- They were all put into
|
|
the Workhouse, a strong Building, as the Place of greatest Safety.
|
|
|
|
When the shocking News arrived in Town, a Proclamation was
|
|
issued by the Governor, in the following Terms, _viz_.
|
|
|
|
"WHEREAS I have received Information, That on _Wednesday_, the
|
|
Fourteenth Day of this Month, a Number of People, armed, and mounted
|
|
on Horseback, unlawfully assembled together, and went to the _Indian_
|
|
Town in the _Conestogoe_ Manor, in _Lancaster_ County, and without
|
|
the least Reason or Provocation, in cool Blood, barbarously killed
|
|
six of the _Indians_ settled there, and burnt and destroyed all their
|
|
Houses and Effects: And whereas so cruel and inhuman an Act,
|
|
committed in the Heart of this Province on the said _Indians_, who
|
|
have lived peaceably and inoffensively among us, during all our late
|
|
Troubles, and for many Years before, and were justly considered as
|
|
under the Protection of this Government and its Laws, calls loudly
|
|
for the vigorous Exertion of the civil Authority, to detect the
|
|
Offenders, and bring them to condign Punishment; I have therefore, by
|
|
and with the Advice and Consent of the Council, thought fit to issue
|
|
this Proclamation, and do hereby strictly charge and enjoin all
|
|
Judges, Justices, Sheriffs, Constables, Officers Civil and Military,
|
|
and all other His Majesty's liege Subjects within this Province, to
|
|
make diligent Search and Enquiry after the Authors and Perpetrators
|
|
of the said Crime, their Abettors and Accomplices, and to use all
|
|
possible Means to apprehend and secure them in some of the publick
|
|
Goals of this Province,that they may be brought to their Trials, and
|
|
be proceeded against according to Law.
|
|
|
|
"And whereas a Number of other _Indians_, who lately lived on
|
|
or near the Frontiers of this Province, being willing and desirous to
|
|
preserve and continue the ancient Friendship which heretofore
|
|
subsisted between them and the good People of this Province, have, at
|
|
their own earnest Request, been removed from their Habitations, and
|
|
brought into the County of _Philadelphia_, and seated, for the
|
|
present, for their better Security, on the _Province-Island_, and in
|
|
other Places in the Neighbourhood of the City of _Philadelphia_,
|
|
where Provision is made for them at the public Expence; I do
|
|
therefore hereby strictly forbid all Persons whatsoever, to molest or
|
|
injure any of the said _Indians_, as they will answer the contrary at
|
|
their Peril.
|
|
|
|
_GIVEN under my Hand,and the Great Seal of the said Province,
|
|
at_ Philadelphia, _the Twenty-second Day of_ December, Anno Domini
|
|
_One Thousand Seven Hundred and Sixty-three, and in the Fourth Year
|
|
of His Majesty's Reign._ JOHN PENN."
|
|
|
|
_By His Honour's Command,_
|
|
JOSEPH SHIPPEN, _jun. Secretary._
|
|
GOD Save the KING.
|
|
|
|
Notwithstanding this Proclamation, those cruel Men again
|
|
assembled themselves, and hearing that the remaining fourteen
|
|
_Indians_ were in the Work-house at _Lancaster_, they suddenly
|
|
appeared in that Town, on the 27th of _December_. Fifty of them,
|
|
armed as before, dismounting, went directly to the Work-house, and by
|
|
Violence broke open the Door, and entered with the utmost Fury in
|
|
their Countenances. -- When the poor Wretches saw they had _no
|
|
Protection_ nigh, nor could possibly escape, and being without the
|
|
least Weapon for Defence, they divided into their little Families,
|
|
the Children clinging to the Parents; they fell on their Knees,
|
|
protested their Innocence, declared their Love to the _English_, and
|
|
that, in their whole Lives, they had never done them Injury; and in
|
|
this Posture they all received the Hatchet! -- Men, Women and little
|
|
Children -- were every one inhumanly murdered! -- in cold Blood!
|
|
|
|
The barbarous Men who committed the atrocious Fact, in Defiance
|
|
of Government, of all Laws human and divine, and to the eternal
|
|
Disgrace of their Country and Colour, then mounted their Horses,
|
|
huzza'd in Triumph, as if they had gained a Victory, and rode off --
|
|
_unmolested!_
|
|
|
|
The Bodies of the Murdered were then brought out and exposed in
|
|
the Street, till a Hole could be made in the Earth, to receive and
|
|
cover them.
|
|
|
|
But the Wickedness cannot be covered, the Guilt will lie on the
|
|
whole Land, till Justice is done on the Murderers. THE BLOOD OF THE
|
|
INNOCENT WILL CRY TO HEAVEN FOR VENGEANCE.
|
|
|
|
It is said that _Shehaes_, being before told, that it was to be
|
|
feared some _English_ might come from the Frontier into the Country,
|
|
and murder him and his People; he replied, "It is impossible: There
|
|
are _Indians_, indeed, in the Woods, who would kill me and mine, if
|
|
they could get at us, for my Friendship to the _English_; but the
|
|
_English_ will wrap me in their Matchcoat, and secure me from all
|
|
Danger." How unfortunately was he mistaken!
|
|
|
|
Another Proclamation has been issued, offering a great Reward
|
|
for apprehending the Murderers, in the following Terms, _viz._
|
|
|
|
"WHEREAS on the Twenty-second Day of _December_ last, I issued
|
|
a Proclamation for the apprehending and bringing to Justice, a Number
|
|
of Persons, who, in Violation of the Public Faith, and in Defiance of
|
|
all Law, had inhumanly killed six of the _Indians_, who had lived in
|
|
_Conestogoe_ Manor, for the Course of many Years, peaceably and
|
|
inoffensively, under the Protection of this Government, on Lands
|
|
assigned to them for their Habitation; notwithstanding which, I have
|
|
received Information, that on the Twenty-seventh of the same Month, a
|
|
large Party of armed Men again assembled and met together in a
|
|
riotous and tumultuous Manner, in the County of _Lancaster_, and
|
|
proceeded to the Town of _Lancaster_, where they violently broke open
|
|
the Work-house, and butchered and put to Death fourteen of the said
|
|
_Conestogoe Indians_, Men, Women and Children, who had been taken
|
|
under the immediate Care and Protection of the Magistrates of the
|
|
said County, and lodged for their better Security in the said
|
|
Work-house, till they should be more effectually provided for by
|
|
Order of the Government. And whereas common Justice loudly demands,
|
|
and the Laws of the Land (upon the Preservation of which not only the
|
|
Liberty and Security of every Individual, but the Being of the
|
|
Government itself depend) require that the above Offenders should be
|
|
brought to condign Punishment; I have therefore, by and with the
|
|
Advice of the Council, published this Proclamation, and do hereby
|
|
strictly charge and command all Judges, Justices, Sheriffs,
|
|
Constables, Officers Civil and Military, and all other His Majesty's
|
|
faithful and liege Subjects within this Province, to make diligent
|
|
Search and Enquiry after the Authors and Perpetrators of the said
|
|
last mentioned Offence, their Abettors and Accomplices, and that they
|
|
use all possible Means to apprehend and secure them in some of the
|
|
public Goals of this Province, to be dealt with according to Law.
|
|
|
|
"And I do hereby further promise and engage, that any Person or
|
|
Persons, who shall apprehend and secure, or cause to be apprehended
|
|
and secured, any Three of the Ringleaders of the said Party, and
|
|
prosecute them to Conviction, shall have and receive for each, the
|
|
public Reward of _Two Hundred Pounds_; and any Accomplice, not
|
|
concerned in the immediate shedding the Blood of the said _Indians_,
|
|
who shall make Discovery of any or either of the said Ringleaders,
|
|
and apprehend and prosecute them to Conviction, shall, over and above
|
|
the said Reward, have all the Weight and Influence of the Government,
|
|
for obtaining His Majesty's Pardon for his Offence.
|
|
|
|
_GIVEN under my Hand, and the Great Seal of the said Province,
|
|
at_ Philadelphia_, the Second Day of_ January, _in the _Fourth Year
|
|
of His Majesty's Reign, and in the Year of our Lord One Thousand
|
|
Seven Hundred and Sixty-four._ JOHN PENN."
|
|
|
|
_By His Honour's Command,_
|
|
JOSEPH SHIPPEN, _jun. Secretary._
|
|
GOD Save the KING.
|
|
|
|
These Proclamations have as yet produced no Discovery; the
|
|
Murderers having given out such Threatenings against those that
|
|
disapprove their Proceedings, that the whole County seems to be in
|
|
Terror, and no one durst speak what he knows; even the Letters from
|
|
thence are unsigned, in which any Dislike is expressed of the
|
|
Rioters.
|
|
|
|
There are some (I am ashamed to hear it) who would extenuate
|
|
the enormous Wickedness of these Actions, by saying, "The Inhabitants
|
|
of the Frontiers are exasperated with the Murder of their Relations,
|
|
by the Enemy _Indians_, in the present War." It is possible; -- but
|
|
though this might justify their going out into the Woods, to seek for
|
|
those Enemies, and avenge upon them those Murders; it can never
|
|
justify their turning in to the Heart of the Country, to murder their
|
|
Friends.
|
|
|
|
If an _Indian_ injures me, does it follow that I may revenge
|
|
that Injury on all _Indians_? It is well known that _Indians_ are of
|
|
different Tribes, Nations and Languages, as well as the White People.
|
|
In _Europe_, if the _French_, who are White People, should injure the
|
|
_Dutch_, are they to revenge it on the _English_, because they too
|
|
are White People? The only Crime of these poor Wretches seems to
|
|
have been, that they had a reddish brown Skin, and black Hair; and
|
|
some People of that Sort, it seems, had murdered some of our
|
|
Relations. If it be right to kill Men for such a Reason, then,
|
|
should any Man, with a freckled Face and red Hair, kill a Wife or
|
|
Child of mine, it would be right for me to revenge it, by killing all
|
|
the freckled red-haired Men, Women and Children, I could afterwards
|
|
any where meet with.
|
|
|
|
But it seems these People think they have a better
|
|
Justification; nothing less than the _Word of God_. With the
|
|
Scriptures in their Hands and Mouths, they can set at nought that
|
|
express Command, _Thou shalt do no Murder_; and justify their
|
|
Wickedness, by the Command given _Joshua_ to destroy the Heathen.
|
|
Horrid Perversion of Scripture and of Religion! to father the worst
|
|
of Crimeson the God of Peace and Love! -- Even the _Jews_, to whom
|
|
that particular Commission was directed, spared the _Gibeonites_, on
|
|
Account of their Faith once given. The Faith of this Government has
|
|
been frequently given to those _Indians_; -- but that did not avail
|
|
them with People who despise Government.
|
|
|
|
We pretend to be _Christians_, and, from the superior Light we
|
|
enjoy, ought to exceed _Heathens_, _Turks_, _Saracens_, _Moors_,
|
|
_Negroes_ and _Indians_, in the Knowledge and Practice of what is
|
|
right. I will endeavour to show, by a few Examples from Books and
|
|
History, the Sense those People have had of such Actions.
|
|
|
|
HOMER wrote his Poem, called the _Odyssey_, some Hundred Years
|
|
before the Birth of Christ. He frequently speaks of what he calls
|
|
not only _the Duties_, but _the sacred Rites of Hospitality_,
|
|
(exercised towards Strangers, while in our House or Territory) as
|
|
including, besides all the common Circumstances of Entertainment,
|
|
full Safety and Protection of Person, from all Danger of Life, from
|
|
all Injuries, and even Insults. The Rites of Hospitality were called
|
|
_sacred_, because the Stranger, the Poor and the Weak, when they
|
|
applied for Protection and Relief, were, from the Religion of those
|
|
Times, supposed to be sent by the Deity to try the Goodness of Men,
|
|
and that he would avenge the Injuries they might receive, where they
|
|
ought to have been protected. -- These Sentiments therefore
|
|
influenced the Manners of all Ranks of People, even the meanest; for
|
|
we find that when _Ulysses_ came, as a poor Stranger, to the Hut of
|
|
_Eumaeus_, the Swineherd, and his great Dogs ran out to tear the
|
|
ragged Man, _Eumaeus_ drave them away with Stones; and
|
|
|
|
_Unhappy Stranger! (thus the faithful Swain
|
|
Began, with Accent gracious and humane)
|
|
What Sorrow had been mine, if at_ my _Gate
|
|
Thy rev'rend Age had met a shameful Fate?
|
|
------ But enter this my homely Roof, and see
|
|
Our Woods not void of Hospitality.
|
|
He said, and seconding the kind Request,
|
|
With friendly Step precedes the unknown Guest.
|
|
A shaggy Goat's soft Hide beneath him spread,
|
|
And with fresh Rushes heap'd an ample Bed.
|
|
Joy touch'd the Hero's tender Soul, to find
|
|
So_ just _Reception from a Heart so kind:
|
|
And oh, ye Gods! with all your Blessings grace
|
|
(He thus broke forth) this Friend of human Race!
|
|
The Swain reply'd. It never was our guise
|
|
To slight the Poor, or aught humane despise.
|
|
For_ Jove _unfolds the hospitable Door,
|
|
Tis_ Jove _that sends the Stranger and the Poor._
|
|
|
|
These Heathen People thought, that after a Breach of the Rites
|
|
of Hospitality, a Curse from Heaven would attend them in every thing
|
|
they did, and even their honest Industry in their Callings would fail
|
|
of Success. -- Thus when _Ulysses_ tells _Eumaeus_, who doubted the
|
|
Truth of what he related, _If I deceive you in this, I should deserve
|
|
Death, and I consent that you should put me to Death_; _Eumaeus_
|
|
rejects the Proposal as what would be attended with both Infamy and
|
|
Misfortune, saying ironically,
|
|
|
|
_Doubtless, oh Guest! great Laud and Praise were mine,
|
|
If, after social Rites and Gifts bestow'd,
|
|
I stain'd my Hospitable Hearth with Blood.
|
|
How would the Gods my righteous Toils succeed,
|
|
And bless the Hand that made a Stranger bleed?
|
|
No more. -- _
|
|
|
|
Even an open Enemy, in the Heat of Battle, throwing down his
|
|
Arms, submitting to his Foe, and asking Life and Protection, was
|
|
supposed to acquire an immediate Right to that Protection. Thus one
|
|
describes his being saved, when his Party was defeated.
|
|
|
|
_We turn'd to Flight; the gath'ring Vengeance spread On all
|
|
Parts round, and Heaps on Heaps lie dead. -- The radiant Helmet from
|
|
my Brows unlac'd, And lo on Earth my Shield and Jav'lin cast, I meet
|
|
the Monarch with a Suppliant's Face, Approach his Chariot, and his
|
|
Knees embrace. He heard, he sav'd, he plac'd me at his Side; My State
|
|
he pity'd, and my Tears he dry'd; Restrain'd the Rage the vengeful
|
|
Foe express'd, And turn'd the deadly Weapons from my Breast. Pious_
|
|
to guard the Hospitable Rite, _And_ fearing Jove, _whom Mercy's Works
|
|
delight._
|
|
|
|
The Suitors of _Penelope_ are by the same ancient Poet
|
|
described as a Sett of lawless Men, who were _regardless of the
|
|
sacred Rites of Hospitality_. And therefore when the Queen was
|
|
informed they were slain, and that by _Ulysses_, she, not believing
|
|
that _Ulysses_ was returned, says,
|
|
|
|
_Ah no! -- some God the Suitors Deaths decreed,
|
|
Some God descends, and by his Hand they bleed:
|
|
Blind, to contemn the Stranger's righteous Cause,_
|
|
And violate all hospitable Laws!
|
|
---------- _The Powers they defy'd;
|
|
But Heav'n is just, and by a God they dy'd._
|
|
|
|
Thus much for the Sentiments of the ancient _Heathens_. -- As
|
|
for the _Turks_, it is recorded in the Life of _Mahomet_, the Founder
|
|
of their Religion, that _Khaled_, one of his Captains, having divided
|
|
a Number of Prisoners between himself and those that were with him,
|
|
he commanded the Hands of his own Prisoners to be tied behind them,
|
|
and then, in a most cruel and brutal Manner, put them to the Sword;
|
|
but he could not prevail on his Men to massacre _their_ Captives,
|
|
because in Fight they had laid down their Arms, submitted, and
|
|
demanded Protection. _Mahomet_, when the Account was brought to him,
|
|
applauded the Men for their Humanity; but said to _Khaled_, with
|
|
great Indignation, _Oh_ Khaled, _thou Butcher, cease to molest me
|
|
with thy Wickedness. -- If thou possessedst a Heap of Gold as large
|
|
as Mount_ Obod, _and shouldst expend it all in God's Cause, thy Merit
|
|
would not efface the Guilt incurred by the Murder of the meanest of
|
|
those poor Captives._
|
|
|
|
Among the _Arabs_ or _Saracens_, thought it was lawful to put
|
|
to Death a Prisoner taken in Battle, if he had made himself obnoxious
|
|
by his former Wickedness, yet this could not be done after he had
|
|
once eaten Bread, or drank Water, while in their Hands. Hence we
|
|
read in the History of the Wars of the _Holy Land_, that when the
|
|
_Franks_ had suffered a great Defeat
|
|
from _Saladin_, and among the Prisoners were the King of
|
|
_Jerusalem_, and _Arnold_, a famous Christian Captain, who had
|
|
been very cruel to the _Saracens_; these two being brought before
|
|
the Soltan, he placed the King on his right Hand, and _Arnold_ on
|
|
his left; and then presented the King with a Cup of Water, who
|
|
immediately drank to _Arnold_; but when _Arnold_ was about to
|
|
receive the Cup, the Soltan interrupted, saying, _I will not
|
|
suffer this wicked Man to drink, as that, according to the
|
|
laudable and generous Custom of the_ Arabs, _would secure him his
|
|
Life._
|
|
|
|
That the same laudable and generous Custom still prevails among
|
|
the _Mahometans_, appears from the Account but last Year published of
|
|
his Travels by Mr. _Bell_ of _Antermony_, who accompanied the Czar
|
|
_Peter_ the Great, in his Journey to _Derbent_ through _Daggestan_.
|
|
"The Religion of the _Daggestans_, says he, is generally _Mahometan_,
|
|
some following the Sect of _Osman_, others that of _Haly_. Their
|
|
Language for the most Part is _Turkish_, or rather a Dialect of the
|
|
_Arabic_, though many of them speak also the _Persian_ Language. One
|
|
Article I cannot omit concerning their Laws of Hospitality, which is,
|
|
if their greatest Enemy comes under their Roof for Protection, the
|
|
Landlord, of what Condition soever, is obliged to keep him safe, from
|
|
all Manner of Harm or Violence, during his Abode with him, and even
|
|
to conduct him safely through his Territories to a Place of
|
|
Security." --
|
|
|
|
From the _Saracens_ this same Custom obtained among the _Moors_
|
|
of _Africa_; was by them brought into _Spain_, and there long
|
|
sacredly observed. The _Spanish_ Historians record with Applause one
|
|
famous Instance of it. While the _Moors_ governed there, and the
|
|
_Spaniards_ were mixed with them, a _Spanish_ Cavalier, in a sudden
|
|
Quarrel, slew a young _Moorish_ Gentleman, and fled. His Pursuers
|
|
soon lost Sight of him, for he had, unperceived, thrown himself over
|
|
a Garden Wall. The Owner, a _Moor_, happening to be in his Garden,
|
|
was addressed by the _Spaniard_ on his Knees, who acquainted him with
|
|
his Case, and implored Concealment. _Eat this,_ said the _Moor_,
|
|
giving him Half a Peach; _you now know that you may confide in my
|
|
Protection_. He then locked him up in his Garden Apartment, telling
|
|
him,that as soon as it was Night he would provide for his Escape to a
|
|
Place of more Safety. -- The _Moor_ then went into his House, where
|
|
he had scarce seated himself, when a great Croud, with loud
|
|
Lamentations, came to his Gate, bringing the Corps of his Son, that
|
|
had just been killed by a _Spaniard_. When the first Shock of
|
|
Surprize was a little over, he learnt, from the Description given,
|
|
that the fatal Deed was done by the Person then in his Power. He
|
|
mentioned this to no One; but as soon as it was dark, retired to his
|
|
Garden Apartment, as if to grieve alone, giving Orders that none
|
|
should follow him. There accosting the _Spaniard_, he said,
|
|
_Christian, the Person you have killed, is my Son: His Body is now in
|
|
my House. You ought to suffer; but you have eaten with me, and I
|
|
have given you my Faith, which must not be broken. Follow me. -- _
|
|
He then led the astonished _Spaniard_ to his Stables, mounted him on
|
|
one of his fleetest Horses, and said, _Fly far while the Night can
|
|
cover you. You will be safe in the Morning. You are indeed guilty
|
|
of my Son's Blood, but God is just and good, and I thank him that I
|
|
am innocent of yours, and that my Faith given is preserved._
|
|
|
|
The _Spaniards_ caught from the _Moors_ this _Punto_ of Honour,
|
|
the Effects of which remain, in a great Degree, to this Day. So that
|
|
when there is Fear of a War about to break out between _England_ and
|
|
_Spain_, an _English_ Merchant there, who apprehends the Confiscation
|
|
of his Goods as the Goods of an Enemy, thinks them safe, if he can
|
|
get a _Spaniard_ to take Charge of them; for the _Spaniard_ secures
|
|
them as his own, and faithfully redelivers them, or pays the Value,
|
|
whenever the _Englishman_ can safely demand it.
|
|
|
|
Justice to that Nation, though lately our Enemies, and hardly
|
|
yet our cordial Friends, obliges me,on this Occasion, not to omit
|
|
mentioning an Instance of _Spanish_ Honour, which cannot but be still
|
|
fresh in the Memory of many yet living. In 1746, when we were in hot
|
|
War with _Spain_, the _Elizabeth_, of _London_, Captain _William
|
|
Edwards_, coming through the Gulph from _Jamaica_, richly laden, met
|
|
with a most violent Storm, in which the Ship sprung a Leak, that
|
|
obliged them,for the Saving of their Lives, to run her into the
|
|
_Havannah_. The Captain went on Shore, directly waited on the
|
|
Governor, told the Occasion of his putting in, and that he
|
|
surrendered his Ship as a Prize, and himself and his Men as Prisoners
|
|
of War, only requesting good Quarter. _No, Sir,_ replied the
|
|
_Spanish_ Governor, _If we had taken you in fair War at Sea, or
|
|
approaching our Coast with hostile Intentions, your Ship would then
|
|
have been a Prize, and your People Prisoners. But when distressed by
|
|
a Tempest, you come into our Ports for the Safety of your Lives, we,
|
|
though Enemies, being Men, are bound as such, by the Laws of
|
|
Humanity, to afford Relief to distressed Men, who ask it of us. We
|
|
cannot, even against our Enemies, take Advantage of an Act of God.
|
|
You have Leave therefore to unload your Ship, if that be necessary,
|
|
to stop the Leak; you may refit here, and traffick so far as shall be
|
|
necessary to pay the Charges; you may then depart, and I will give
|
|
you a Pass, to be in Force till you are beyond_ Bermuda. _If after
|
|
that you are taken, you will then be a Prize, but now you are only a
|
|
Stranger, and have a Stranger's Right to Safety and Protection. -- _
|
|
The Ship accordingly departed, and arrived safe in _London_.
|
|
|
|
Will it be permitted me to adduce, on this Occasion, an
|
|
Instance of the like Honour in a poor unenlightened _African Negroe_.
|
|
I find it in Capt. _Seagrave_'s Account of his Voyage to _Guinea_.
|
|
He relates that a _New-England_ Sloop, trading there in 1752, left
|
|
their second Mate, _William Murray_, sick on Shore, and sailed
|
|
without him. _Murray_ was at the House of a Black, named _Cudjoe_,
|
|
with whom he had contracted an Acquaintance during their Trade. He
|
|
recovered,and the Sloop being gone, he continued with his black
|
|
Friend, till some other Opportunity should offer of his getting home.
|
|
In the mean while, a _Dutch_ Ship came into the Road, and some of the
|
|
Blacks going on board her, were treacherously seized, and carried off
|
|
as Slaves. Their Relations and Friends, transported with sudden
|
|
Rage, ran to the House of _Cudjoe_ to take Revenge, by killing
|
|
_Murray_. _Cudjoe_ stopt them at the Door, and demanded what they
|
|
wanted? The White Men, said they, have carried away our Brothers and
|
|
Sons, and we will kill all White Men; -- give us the White Man that
|
|
you keep in your House, for we will kill him. _Nay,_ said _Cudjoe_;
|
|
_the White Men that carried away your Brothers are bad Men, kill them
|
|
when you can catch them; but this White Man is a good Man, and you
|
|
must not kill him. -- _ But he is a White Man, they cried; the White
|
|
Men are all bad; we will kill them all. -- _Nay,_ says he, _you must
|
|
not kill a Man, that has done no Harm, only for being_ _white. This
|
|
Man is my Friend, my House is his Fort, and I am his Soldier. I must
|
|
fight for him. You must kill me, before you can kill him. -- What
|
|
good Man will ever come again under my Roof,if I let my Floor be
|
|
stained with a good Man's Blood! -- _ The _Negroes_ seeing his
|
|
Resolution, and being convinced by his Discourse that they were
|
|
wrong, went away ashamed. In a few Days _Murray_ ventured abroad
|
|
again with _Cudjoe_, when several of them took him by the Hand, and
|
|
told him they were glad they had not killed him;for as he was a good
|
|
(meaning an innocent) Man, _their God would have been angry, and
|
|
would have spoiled their Fishing. -- _ I relate this, says Captain
|
|
_Seagrave_, to show, that some among these dark People have a strong
|
|
Sense of Justice and Honour, and that even the most brutal among them
|
|
are capable of feeling the Force of Reason, and of being influenced
|
|
by a Fear of God (if the Knowledge of the true God could be
|
|
introduced among them) since even the Fear of a false God, when their
|
|
Rage subsided, was not without its good Effect.
|
|
|
|
Now I am about to mention something of _Indians_, I beg that I
|
|
may not be understood as framing Apologies for _all Indians_. I am
|
|
far from desiring to lessen the laudable Spirit of Resentment in my
|
|
Countrymen against those now at War with us, so far as it is
|
|
justified by their Perfidy and Inhumanity. -- I would only observe
|
|
that the _Six Nations_, as a Body, have kept Faith with the _English_
|
|
ever since we knew them, now near an Hundred Years; and that the
|
|
governing Part of those People have had Notions of Honour, whatever
|
|
may be the Case with the Rum-debauched, Trader-corrupted Vagabonds
|
|
and Thieves on _Sasquehannah_ and the _Ohio_, at present in Arms
|
|
against us. -- As a Proof of that Honour, I shall only mention one
|
|
well-known recent Fact. When six _Catawba_ Deputies, under the Care
|
|
of Colonel _Bull_, of _Charlestown_, went by Permission into the
|
|
_Mohawks_ Country, to sue for and treat of Peace for their Nation,
|
|
they soon found the _Six Nations_ highly exasperated, and the Peace
|
|
at that Time impracticable: They were therefore in Fear for their own
|
|
Persons, and apprehended that they should be killed in their Way back
|
|
to _New-York_; which being made known to the _Mohawk_ Chiefs, by
|
|
Colonel _Bull_, one of them, by Order of the Council, made this
|
|
Speech to the _Catawbas_: --
|
|
|
|
|
|
"_Strangers and Enemies,_
|
|
|
|
"While you are in this Country, blow away all Fear out of your
|
|
Breasts; change the black Streak of Paint on your Cheek for a red
|
|
One, and let your Faces shine with Bear's-Grease: You are safer here
|
|
than if you were at home. The _Six Nations_ will not defile their
|
|
own Land with the Blood of Men that come unarmed to ask for Peace.
|
|
We shall send a Guard with you, to see you safe out of our
|
|
Territories. So far you shall have Peace, but no farther. Get home
|
|
to your own Country, and there take Care of yourselves, for there we
|
|
intend to come and kill you."
|
|
|
|
The _Catawbas_ came away unhurt accordingly.
|
|
|
|
It is also well known, that just before the late War broke out,
|
|
when our Traders first went among the _Piankeshaw Indians_, a Tribe
|
|
of the _Twightwees_, they found the Principle of _giving Protection
|
|
to Strangers_ in full Force; for the _French_ coming with their
|
|
_Indians_ to the _Piankeshaw_ Town, and demanding that those Traders
|
|
and their Goods should be delivered up; -- the _Piankeshaws_ replied,
|
|
the _English_ were come there upon their Invitation, and they could
|
|
not do so base a Thing. But the _French_ insisting on it, the
|
|
_Piankeshaws_ took Arms in Defence of their Guests, and a Number of
|
|
them, with their old Chief, lost their Lives in the Cause; the
|
|
_French_ at last prevailing by superior Force only.
|
|
|
|
I will not dissemble that numberless Stories have been raised
|
|
and spread abroad, against not only the poor Wretches that are
|
|
murdered, but also against the Hundred and Forty christianized
|
|
_Indians_, still threatned to be murdered; all which Stories are well
|
|
known, by those who know the _Indians_ best, to be pure Inventions,
|
|
contrived by bad People, either to excite each other to join in the
|
|
Murder, or since it was committed, to justify it; and believed only
|
|
by the Weak and Credulous. I call thus publickly on the Makers and
|
|
Venders of these Accusations to produce their Evidence. Let them
|
|
satisfy the Public that even _Will Soc_, the most obnoxious of all
|
|
that Tribe, was really guilty of those Offences against us which they
|
|
lay to his Charge. But if he was, ought he not to have been fairly
|
|
tried? He lived under our Laws, and was subject to them; he was in
|
|
our Hands, and might easily have been prosecuted; was it _English
|
|
Justice_ to condemn and execute him unheard? Conscious of his own
|
|
Innocence, he did not endeavour to hide himself when the Door of the
|
|
Work-house, his Sanctuary, was breaking open; _I will meet them,_
|
|
says he, _for they are my Brothers_. These Brothers of his shot him
|
|
down at the Door, while the Word Brothers was still between his
|
|
Teeth! -- But if _Will Soc_ was a bad Man, what had poor old
|
|
_Shehaes_ done? what could he or the other poor old Men and Women do?
|
|
What had little Boys and Girls done; what could Children of a Year
|
|
old, Babes at the Breast, what could they do, that they too must be
|
|
shot and hatcheted? -- Horrid to relate! -- and in their Parents
|
|
Arms! This is done by no civilized Nation in _Europe_. Do we come
|
|
to _America_ to learn and practise the Manners of _Barbarians_? But
|
|
this, _Barbarians_ as they are, they practise against their Enemies
|
|
only, not against their Friends. --
|
|
|
|
These poor People have been always our Friends. Their Fathers
|
|
received ours, when Strangers here, with Kindness and Hospitality.
|
|
Behold the Return we have made them! -- When we grew more numerous
|
|
and powerful, they put themselves under our _Protection_. See, in
|
|
the mangled Corpses of the last Remains of the Tribe, how effectually
|
|
we have afforded it to them! --
|
|
|
|
Unhappy People! to have lived in such Times, and by such
|
|
Neighbours! -- We have seen, that they would have been safer among
|
|
the ancient _Heathens_, with whom the Rites of Hospitality were
|
|
_sacred_. -- They would have been considered as _Guests_ of the
|
|
Publick, and the Religion of the Country would have operated in their
|
|
Favour. But our Frontier People call themselves _Christians_! --
|
|
They would have been safer, if they had submitted to the _Turks_; for
|
|
ever since _Mahomet_'s Reproof to _Khaled_, even the _cruel Turks_,
|
|
never kill Prisoners in cold Blood. These were not even Prisoners:
|
|
-- But what is the Example of _Turks_ to Scripture _Christians_? --
|
|
They would have been safer, though they had been taken in actual War
|
|
against the _Saracens_, if they had once drank Water with them.
|
|
These were not taken in War against us, and have drank with us, and
|
|
we with them, for Fourscore Years. -- But shall we compare _Saracens_
|
|
to _Christians_? -- They would have been safer among the _Moors_ in
|
|
_Spain_, though they had been _Murderers of Sons_; if Faith had once
|
|
been pledged to them, and a Promise of Protection given. But these
|
|
have had the Faith of the _English_ given to them many Times by the
|
|
Government, and, in Reliance on that Faith, they lived among us, and
|
|
gave us the Opportunity of murdering them. -- However, what was
|
|
honourable in _Moors_, may not be a Rule to us; for we are
|
|
_Christians_! -- They would have been safer it seems among _Popish
|
|
Spaniards_, even if Enemies, and delivered into their Hands by a
|
|
Tempest. These were not Enemies; they were born among us, and yet we
|
|
have killed them all. -- But shall we imitate _idolatrous Papists_,
|
|
we that are _enlightened Protestants_? -- They would even have been
|
|
safer among the _Negroes_ of _Africa_, where at least one manly Soul
|
|
would have been found, with Sense, Spirit and Humanity enough, to
|
|
stand in their Defence: -- But shall _Whitemen_ and _Christians_ act
|
|
like a _Pagan Negroe_? -- In short it appears, that they would have
|
|
been safe in any Part of the known World, -- except in the
|
|
Neighbourhood of the CHRISTIAN WHITE SAVAGES of _Peckstang_ and
|
|
_Donegall_! --
|
|
|
|
O ye unhappy Perpetrators of this horrid Wickedness! Reflect a
|
|
Moment on the Mischief ye have done, the Disgrace ye have brought on
|
|
your Country, on your Religion, and your Bible, on your Families and
|
|
Children! Think on the Destruction of your captivated Country-folks
|
|
(now among the wild _Indians_) which probably may follow, in
|
|
Resentment of your Barbarity! Think on the Wrath of the United _Five
|
|
Nations_, hitherto our Friends, but now provoked by your murdering
|
|
one of their Tribes, in Danger of becoming our bitter Enemies. --
|
|
Think of the mild and good Government you have so audaciously
|
|
insulted; the Laws of your King, your Country, and your GOD, that you
|
|
have broken; the infamous Death that hangs over your Heads: -- For
|
|
JUSTICE, though slow, will come at last. -- All good People every
|
|
where detest your Actions. -- You have imbrued your Hands in innocent
|
|
Blood; how will you make them clean? -- The dying Shrieks and Groans
|
|
of the Murdered, will often sound in your Ears: Their Spectres will
|
|
sometimes attend you, and affright even your innocent Children! --
|
|
Fly where you will, your Consciences will go with you: -- Talking in
|
|
your Sleep shall betray you, in the Delirium of a Fever you
|
|
yourselves shall make your own Wickedness known.
|
|
|
|
One Hundred and Forty peaceable _Indians_ yet remain in this
|
|
Government. They have, by Christian Missionaries, been brought over
|
|
to a _Liking_, at least, of our Religion; some of them lately left
|
|
their Nation which is now at War with us, because they did not chuse
|
|
to join with them in their Depredations; and to shew their Confidence
|
|
in us, and to give us an equal Confidence in them, they have brought
|
|
and put into our Hands their Wives and Children. Others have lived
|
|
long among us in _Northampton_ County, and most of their Children
|
|
have been born there. These are all now trembling for their Lives.
|
|
They have been hurried from Place to Place for Safety, now concealed
|
|
in Corners, then sent out of the Province, refused a Passage through
|
|
a neighbouring Colony, and returned, not unkindly perhaps, but
|
|
disgracefully, on our Hands. O _Pennsylvania_! once renowned for
|
|
Kindness to Strangers, shall the Clamours of a few mean Niggards
|
|
about the Expence of this _Publick Hospitality_, an Expence that will
|
|
not cost the noisy Wretches _Sixpence_ a Piece (and what is the
|
|
Expence of the poor Maintenance we afford them, compared to the
|
|
Expence they might occasion if in Arms against us) shall so senseless
|
|
a Clamour, I say, force you to turn out of your Doors these unhappy
|
|
Guests, who have offended their own Country-folks by their Affection
|
|
for you, who,confiding in your Goodness, have put themselves under
|
|
your Protection? Those whom you have disarmed to satisfy groundless
|
|
Suspicions, will you leave them exposed to the armed Madmen of your
|
|
Country? -- Unmanly Men! who are not ashamed to come with Weapons
|
|
against the Unarmed, to use the Sword against Women, and the Bayonet
|
|
against young Children; and who have already given such bloody Proofs
|
|
of their Inhumanity and Cruelty. -- Let us rouze ourselves, for
|
|
Shame, and redeem the Honour of our Province from the Contempt of its
|
|
Neighbours; let all good Men join heartily and unanimously in Support
|
|
of the Laws, and in strengthening the Hands of Government; that
|
|
JUSTICE may be done, the Wicked punished, and the Innocent protected;
|
|
otherwise we can, as a People, expect no Blessing from Heaven, there
|
|
will be no Security for our Persons or Properties; Anarchy and
|
|
Confusion will prevail over all, and Violence, without Judgment,
|
|
dispose of every Thing.
|
|
|
|
When I mention the Baseness of the Murderers, in the Use they
|
|
made of Arms, I cannot, I ought not to forget, the very different
|
|
Behaviour of _brave Men_ and _true Soldiers_, of which this
|
|
melancholy Occasion has afforded us fresh Instances. The _Royal
|
|
Highlanders_ have, in the Course of this War, suffered as much as any
|
|
other Corps, and have frequently had their Ranks thinn'd by an
|
|
_Indian_ Enemy; yet they did not for this retain a brutal
|
|
undistinguishing Resentment against _all Indians_, Friends as well as
|
|
Foes. But a Company of them happening to be here, when the 140 poor
|
|
_Indians_ above mentioned were thought in too much Danger to stay
|
|
longer in the Province, chearfully undertook to protect and escort
|
|
them to _New-York_, which they executed (as far as that Government
|
|
would permit the _Indians_ to come) with Fidelity and Honour; and
|
|
their Captain _Robinson_, is justly applauded and honoured by all
|
|
sensible and good People, for the Care, Tenderness and Humanity, with
|
|
which he treated those unhappy Fugitives, during their March in this
|
|
severe Season. General _Gage_, too, has approved of his Officer's
|
|
Conduct, and, as I hear, ordered him to remain with the _Indians_ at
|
|
_Amboy_, and continue his Protection to them, till another Body of
|
|
the King's Forces could be sent to relieve his Company, and escort
|
|
their Charge back in Safety to _Philadelphia_, where his Excellency
|
|
has had the Goodness to direct those Forces to remain for some
|
|
Time,under the Orders of our Governor, for the Security of the
|
|
_Indians_; the Troops of this Province being at present necessarily
|
|
posted on the Frontier. Such just and generous Actions endear the
|
|
Military to the Civil Power, and impress the Minds of all the
|
|
Discerning with a still greater Respect for our national Government.
|
|
-- I shall conclude with observing, that _Cowards_ can handle Arms,
|
|
can strike where they are sure to meet with no Return, can wound,
|
|
mangle and murder; but it belongs to _brave_ Men to spare, and to
|
|
protect; for, as the Poet says,
|
|
|
|
------ _Mercy still sways the Brave_.
|
|
|
|
Philadelphia, 1764
|
|
|
|
_The Duke of York's Travels_
|
|
|
|
_To the Printer of the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
|
|
SIR, I have observed all the News-papers have of late taken
|
|
great Liberties with a noble Personage nearly allied to his Majesty.
|
|
They have one Day made him Commander of a Fleet in the Mediterranean;
|
|
again in the Channel; then to hoist his Flag on board a Yatcht, and
|
|
go on a grand Commission to Copenhagen; then to take a Tour to
|
|
Brunswick, and so parade all over Germany to our unsatisfied Ally the
|
|
King of Prussia; then he is said to commence Admiral again, and go
|
|
with a large Fleet to America; first for a little Amusement to go a
|
|
Cod Fishing with Monsieurs, and then to range the Continent, and I
|
|
suppose they mean to go a Wood-hunting with the Cherokee Kings; these
|
|
are the Peregrinations, Mr. Woodfall, that our noble Duke is to be
|
|
sent upon; but indeed I am much surprised in all their high-flown
|
|
Schemes they have never thought of sending him with a grand Squadron
|
|
to East India up the Ganges to call upon the Nabob, and then advance
|
|
and pay a Visit to the Great Mogul, and afterwards sail for China,
|
|
and go up to see the Grandeur of the Court of Pekin: This would have
|
|
been a fine Subject to have enlarged upon, and they might have thrown
|
|
in how many sumptuous Barges were building to be sent on board the
|
|
Squadron to be put together in India, and advance up the River with
|
|
the utmost Magnificence. If these Hints will be any ways instructive
|
|
to the News-writers, I shall be happy to have pleased so useful a
|
|
Body of Men in this great City; and am Mr. Woodfall's most humble
|
|
Servant, _Pimlico, May_ 10. The SPECTATOR.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, May 15, 1765
|
|
|
|
_The Grand Leap of the Whale_
|
|
|
|
_To the Printer of the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
|
|
SIR, In your Paper of Wednesday last, an ingenious
|
|
Correspondent that calls himself _the_ SPECTATOR, and dates from
|
|
_Pimlico_, under the Guise of Good-Will to the News-Writers, whom he
|
|
allows to be "an useful Body of Men in this great City," has, in my
|
|
Opinion artfully attempted to turn them and their Works into
|
|
Ridicule; wherein, if he could succeed, great Injury might be done to
|
|
the Public, as well as to those good People.
|
|
|
|
Supposing, Sir, that the _We hears_ they give us of this and
|
|
t'other intended Voyage, or Tour of this and t'other great Personage,
|
|
were mere Inventions, yet they at least afford us an innocent
|
|
Amusement while we read, and useful Matter of Conversation when we
|
|
are disposed to converse. Englishmen, Sir, are too apt to be silent
|
|
when they have nothing to say; too apt to be sullen when they are
|
|
silent, and when they are sullen to h -- g themselves. But by these
|
|
_We Hears_ we are supplied with abundant Fund of Discourse: We
|
|
discuss the Motives to such Voyages, the Probability of their being
|
|
undertaken, and the Practicability of their Execution. Here we can
|
|
display our Judgment in Politics, our Knowledge of the Interests of
|
|
Princes, and our Skill in Geography; and (if we have it) shew our
|
|
Dexterity moreover in Argumentation. In the mean time, the tedious
|
|
Hours is killed; we go home pleased with the Applauses we have
|
|
received from others, or at least with those we secretly give to
|
|
ourselves; we sleep soundly, and live on, to the Comfort of our
|
|
Families.
|
|
|
|
But, Sir, I beg leave to say, that all the Articles of News,
|
|
that seem improbable, are not mere Inventions. Some of them, I can
|
|
assure you on the Faith of a Traveller, are serious Truths. And
|
|
here, quitting Mr. Spectator of Pimlico, give me Leave to instance
|
|
the various numberless Accounts the News-Writers have given us (with
|
|
so much honest Zeal for the Welfare of Poor Old England!) of the
|
|
establishing Manufactures in the Colonies to the Prejudice of those
|
|
of this Kingdom. It is objected by superficial Readers, who yet
|
|
pretend to some Knowledge of those Countries, that such
|
|
Establishments are not only improbable but impossible; for that their
|
|
Sheep have but little Wool, not in the whole sufficient for a Pair of
|
|
Stockings a Year to each Inhabitants; and that, from the universal
|
|
Dearness of Labour among them, the working of Iron and other
|
|
Materials, except in some few coarse Instances, is impracticable to
|
|
any Advantage. Dear Sir, do not let us suffer ourselves to be amused
|
|
with such groundless Objections. The very Tails of the American
|
|
Sheep are so laden with Wool, that each has a Car or Waggon on four
|
|
little Wheels to support and keep it from trailing on the Ground.
|
|
Would they caulk their Ships? would they fill their Beds? would they
|
|
even litter their Horses with Wool, if it was not both plenty and
|
|
cheap? And what signifies Dearness of Labour, where an English
|
|
Shilling passes for Five-and-twenty? Their engaging three hundred
|
|
Silk Throwsters here in one Week for New York was treated as a Fable,
|
|
because, forsooth, they have "no Silk there to throw." Those who made
|
|
this Objection perhaps did not know, that at the same Time the Agents
|
|
from the King of Spain were at Quebec contracting for 1000 Pieces of
|
|
Cannon to be made there for the Fortifications of Mexico, with 25,000
|
|
Axes for their industrious Logwood-Cutters; and at New-York engaging
|
|
an annual Supply of warm Floor-Carpets for their West-India Houses;
|
|
other Agents from the Emperor of China were at Boston in New-England
|
|
treating about an Exchange of Raw-Silk for Wool, to be carried on in
|
|
Chinese Jonks through the Straits of Magellan. And yet all this is
|
|
as certainly true as the Account, said to be from Quebec, in the
|
|
Papers of last Week, that the Inhabitants of Canada are making
|
|
Preparations for a Cod and Whale Fishery this Summer in the Upper
|
|
Lakes. Ignorant People may object that the Upper Lakes are fresh,
|
|
and that Cod and Whale are Salt-water Fish: But let them know, Sir,
|
|
that Cod, like other Fish, when attacked by their Enemies, fly into
|
|
any Water where they think they can be safest; that Whales, when they
|
|
have a Mind to eat Cod, pursue them wherever they fly; and that the
|
|
grand Leap of the Whale in that Chace up the Fall of Niagara is
|
|
esteemed by all who have seen it, as one of the finest Spectacles in
|
|
Nature! -- Really, Sir, the World is grown too incredulous:
|
|
Pendulum-like, it is ever swinging from one Extream to another.
|
|
Formerly every Thing printed was believed, because it was in Print:
|
|
Now Things seem to be disbelieved for just the very same Reason.
|
|
Wise Men wonder at the present Growth of Infidelity! They should
|
|
have consider'd, when they taught People to doubt the Authority of
|
|
News-papers, and the Truth of Predictions in Almanacs, that the next
|
|
Step might be a Disbelief in the well-vouch'd Accounts of Ghosts and
|
|
Witches, and Doubts even of the Truth of the A ------ n Creed.
|
|
|
|
Thus much I thought it necessary to say in favour of an honest
|
|
Set of Writers, whose comfortable Living depends on collecting and
|
|
supplying the Printers with News, at the small Price of Six-pence an
|
|
Article; and who always show their Regard to Truth, by contradicting
|
|
such as are wrong in a subsequent Article -- for another Six-pence,
|
|
to the great Satisfaction and Improvement of us Coffee-house Students
|
|
in History and Politics, and the infinite Advantage of all future
|
|
Livies, Rapins, Robertsons, Humes, Smollets, and Macaulays, who may
|
|
be sincerely inclin'd to furnish the World with that _rara Avis_, a
|
|
true History. I am, SIR, Your humble Servant, A TRAVELLER.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, May 22, 1765
|
|
|
|
_Invectives Against the Americans_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER.
|
|
|
|
I would fain know what good purpose can be answered, by the
|
|
frequent invectives published in your and other papers against the
|
|
Americans. Do these small writers hope to provoke the nation by
|
|
their oratory, to embrue its hands in the blood of its, perhaps
|
|
mistaken children? And if this should be done, do they imagine it
|
|
could be of any advantage to this country? Do they expect to
|
|
convince the Americans, and reduce them to submission, by their
|
|
flimsey arguments of _virtual representation_, and of _Englishmen by
|
|
fiction of law only_, mixed with insolence, contempt and abuse? Can
|
|
it be supposed that such treatment will make them rest satisfied with
|
|
the unlimited claim set up, of a power to tax them _ad libitum_,
|
|
without their consent; while they are to work only for us, and our
|
|
profit; restrained in their foreign trade by our laws, however
|
|
profitable it might be to them; forbidden to manufacture their own
|
|
produce, and obliged to purchase the work of our artificers at our
|
|
own prices? Is this the state we wish to keep them in? And can it
|
|
be thought such writings (which are unfortunately reprinted in all
|
|
_their_ papers) will induce them to bear it with greater patience,
|
|
and during a longer period of time?
|
|
|
|
The gentle terms of _republican race_, _mixed rabble of
|
|
Scotch_, _Irish and foreign vagabonds_, _descendants of convicts_,
|
|
_ungrateful rebels_, &c. are some of the sweet flowers of English
|
|
rhetorick, with which our colonists have of late been regaled.
|
|
Surely, if we are so much their superiors, we should shew the
|
|
superiority of our breeding by our better manners! Our slaves they
|
|
may be thought: But every master of slaves ought to know, that though
|
|
all the slave possesses is the property of the master, his _goodwill_
|
|
is his own, he bestows it where he pleases; and it is of _some
|
|
importance_ to the master's _profit_, if he can obtain that
|
|
_good-will_ at the cheap rate of a few kind words, with fair and
|
|
gentle usage.
|
|
|
|
These people, however, are not, never were, nor ever will be
|
|
our slaves. The first settlers of New England particularly, were
|
|
English gentlemen of fortune, who, being Puritans, left this country
|
|
with their families and followers, in times of persecution, for the
|
|
sake of enjoying, though in a wilderness, the blessings of civil and
|
|
religious liberty; of which they retain to this day, as high a sense
|
|
as any Briton whatsoever; and possess as much virtue, humanity,
|
|
civility, and, let me add, _loyalty to their Prince_, as is to be
|
|
found among the like number of people in any part of the world; and
|
|
the other colonies merit and maintain the same character. They
|
|
should then be treated with _decency_ and with _candour._
|
|
|
|
Your correspondent VINDEX PATRIAE, who is indeed more of a
|
|
reasoner than a railer, has nevertheless thought fit to assert, that
|
|
"their refusing submission to the stamp act, proceeds _only_ from
|
|
their _ambition_ of becoming _independent_; and that it is plain the
|
|
colonies have no other aim but a _total enfranchisement_ from
|
|
obedience to our Parliament." These are strong charges; but the
|
|
proofs of such ambitious and rebellious views no where appear in his
|
|
paper. He has, however, condescended to give us his proofs of
|
|
another point, viz. "That the colonies have no tenderness for their
|
|
mother country;" (and of course I suppose, the mother country is to
|
|
have none for them.) "The sugar, teas, and other commodities, says
|
|
he, which they daily buy from St. Eustatia and Monte Christi, in
|
|
particular, are too _convincing proofs_, that they have _no
|
|
tenderness_ for their mother country." May one ask this profound
|
|
writer; are sugar and teas the produce of the mother country? does
|
|
not she herself buy her teas from strangers? were the north americans
|
|
to buy all the sugars they consume, even of our own Islands, would
|
|
not that raise the price of such sugars upon us here in England? is
|
|
not then their buying them of Foreigners, if it proves any thing, a
|
|
Proof rather of their tenderness for their mother country? but the
|
|
grocerly argument of tea and sugar, is not inferior to the lawyerly
|
|
argument with which he demonstrates, that, "by a _fiction_ between us
|
|
and the colonists, Connecticut is in England, and therefore
|
|
represented in the British parliament." I am afraid the common
|
|
Americans will be as much at a loss as I am, to understand what he
|
|
means by his _estoppers_, and his _averments_, and therefore not in
|
|
the least convinced by his demonstration. They will only find out
|
|
upon the whole, that he is not their friend; and perhaps conclude
|
|
from that and his learning in the law, that he is one of their
|
|
_virtual representatives_ by _fiction_ in P -- t:
|
|
|
|
I hope, however, to see prudent measures taken by our rulers,
|
|
such as may heal and not widen our breaches. The Americans, I am
|
|
sure, for I know them, have not the least desire of independence;
|
|
they submit, in general, to all the laws we make for them; they
|
|
desire only a continuance of what they think a _right_, the privilege
|
|
of manifesting their loyalty by granting their own money, when the
|
|
occasions of their prince shall call for it. This right they say
|
|
they have always enjoyed and exercised, and never misused; and they
|
|
think it wrong that any body of men whatever, should claim a power of
|
|
giving what is not their own, and make to themselves a merit with the
|
|
sovereign and their own constituents, by granting away the property
|
|
of others who have no representatives in that body, and therefore
|
|
make no part of the _common consent in parliament_, by which alone,
|
|
according to _magna charta_ and the _petition of right_, taxes can be
|
|
legally laid upon the subject. These are their notions. They may be
|
|
errors; 'tis a part of our common constitution perhaps not hitherto
|
|
sufficiently considered. 'Tis fit for the discussion of wise and
|
|
learned men, who will, I doubt not, settle it wisely and
|
|
benevolently. Cowardice and cruelty are indeed almost inseparable
|
|
companions, and none are more ready to propose sending out fleets and
|
|
armies, and to expose friends and foes to one common carnage, than
|
|
such pusilanimous men as would tremble at a sword drawn in their
|
|
presence tho' with the most peaceable Intention. But Britons, as a
|
|
people, are equally brave and generous; prodigal of their blood and
|
|
treasure where there are just calls for its expence; and by no means
|
|
niggards of those rights, liberties and privileges, that make the
|
|
subjects of Britain the envy and admiration of the universe. N. N.
|
|
|
|
_The Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser_, December 28, 1765
|
|
|
|
_The Mother Country_
|
|
|
|
A SONG
|
|
|
|
We have an old Mother that peevish is grown, She snubs us like
|
|
Children that scarce walk alone; She forgets we're grown up and have
|
|
Sense of our own; _Which nobody can deny, deny, Which no body can
|
|
deny._
|
|
|
|
If we don't obey Orders, whatever the Case; She frowns, and she
|
|
chides, and she loses all Patience, and sometimes she hits us a Slap
|
|
in the Face, _Which nobody can deny,_ &c.
|
|
|
|
Her Orders so odd are, we often suspect That Age has impaired
|
|
her sound Intellect: But still an old Mother should have due Respect,
|
|
_Which nobody can deny,_ &c.
|
|
|
|
Let's bear with her Humours as well as we can: But why should
|
|
we bear the Abuse of her Man? When Servants make Mischief, they earn
|
|
the Rattan, _Which nobody should deny,_ &c.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Know too, ye bad Neighbours, who aim to divide The Sons from
|
|
the Mother, that still she's our Pride; And if ye attack her we're
|
|
all of her side, _Which nobody can deny,_ &c.
|
|
|
|
We'll join in her Lawsuits, to baffle all those, Who, to get
|
|
what she has, will be often her Foes: For we know it must all be our
|
|
own, when she goes, _Which nobody can deny, deny, Which nobody can
|
|
deny._
|
|
|
|
c. 1765
|
|
|
|
_On the Prospects of War in America_
|
|
|
|
_To the Printer of the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
|
|
SIR, PACIFICUS, in your Paper of Friday last, tells us, that
|
|
the Inhabitants of New England are "descended from the Stiff-Rumps in
|
|
Oliver's Time;" and he accounts for their being "so tenacious of what
|
|
they call their Rights and Liberties," from the "independent
|
|
Principles handed down to them by their Forefathers, and that Spirit
|
|
of Contradiction, which, he says, is the distinguishing
|
|
Characteristic of Fanaticism." But it seems the Inhabitants of
|
|
Virginia and Maryland, who are descended from the Royalists of the
|
|
Church of England, driven hence by those very Oliverian Stiff-Rumps,
|
|
and never tinctured with Fanaticism, are, in the present Case as
|
|
stiff-rump'd as the others, and even led the Way in asserting what
|
|
"they call their Rights." So that his Hypothesis of Fanaticism
|
|
appears insufficient to account for the Opposition universally given
|
|
to the Stamp-Act in America; and I fancy the Gentleman thought so
|
|
himself, as he mends it a little after, by lumping all the Americans
|
|
under the general Character of "House-breakers and Felons."
|
|
|
|
Supposing them such, his Proposal of "vacating all their
|
|
Charters, taking away the Power of their Assemblies, and sending an
|
|
armed Force among them, to reduce them all to a military Government,
|
|
in which the Order of a commanding Officer is to be their Law," will
|
|
certainly be a very _justifiable_ Measure. I have only some Doubts
|
|
as to the Expediency of it, and the Facility of carrying it into
|
|
Execution. For I apprehend 'tis not unlikely they may set their
|
|
Rumps more stiffly against this Method of Government, than ever they
|
|
did against that by Act of Parliament. But, on second Thoughts, I
|
|
conceive it may possibly do very well: For though there should be, as
|
|
'tis said there are, at least 250,000 fighting Men among them, many
|
|
of whom have lately seen Service; yet, as one Englishman is to be
|
|
sure as good as five Americans, I suppose it will not require Armies
|
|
of above 50,000 Men in the whole, sent over to the different Parts of
|
|
that extensive Continent, for reducing them; and that a three or four
|
|
Years Civil War, at perhaps a less Expence than ten or twelve
|
|
Millions a Year, Transports and Carriages included, will be
|
|
sufficient to compleat _Pacificus_'s Pacification, notwithstanding
|
|
any Disturbance our restless Enemies in Europe might think fit to
|
|
give us while engaged in this necessary Work. I mention three or
|
|
four Years only; for I can never believe the Americans will be able
|
|
to spin it out to seventy, as the Hollanders did the War for their
|
|
Liberties against Spain, how much soever it may be found the Interest
|
|
of our own numerous Commissaries, Contractors, and Officers afraid of
|
|
Half Pay, to continue and protract it.
|
|
|
|
It may be objected, that by ruining the Colonies, killing one
|
|
half the People, and driving the rest over the Mountains, we may
|
|
deprive ourselves of their Custom for our Manufactures: But a
|
|
Moment's Consideration will satisfy us, that since we have lost so
|
|
much of our European Trade, it can only be the Demand in America that
|
|
keeps up, and has of late so greatly enhanced the Price of those
|
|
Manufactures, and therefore a Stop put to that Demand will be an
|
|
Advantage to us all, as we may thereafter buy our own Goods cheaper
|
|
for our own Use at home. I can think of but one Objection more,
|
|
which is, that Multitudes of our Poor may starve for want of
|
|
Employment. But our wise Laws have provided a Remedy for that. The
|
|
Rich are to maintain them. I am, SIR, Your humble Servant, PACIFICUS
|
|
SECUNDUS.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, January 2, 1766
|
|
|
|
_"Homespun" Celebrates Indian Corn_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER.
|
|
|
|
VINDEX PATRIAE, a writer in your paper, comforts himself, and
|
|
the India Company, with the fancy, that the Americans, should they
|
|
resolve to drink no more tea, can by no means keep that resolution,
|
|
their Indian corn not affording "an agreeable, or easy digestible
|
|
breakfast." Pray let me, an American, inform the gentleman, who seems
|
|
quite ignorant of the matter, that Indian corn, take it for _all in
|
|
all_, is one of the most agreeable and wholesome grains in the world;
|
|
that its green ears roasted are a delicacy beyond expression; that
|
|
_samp_, _hominy_, _succatash_, and _nokehock_, made of it, are so
|
|
many pleasing varieties; and that a _johny_, or _hoe-cake_, hot from
|
|
the fire, is better than a Yorkshire muffin -- But if Indian corn
|
|
were as _disagreeable_ and _indigestible_ as the Stamp Act, does he
|
|
imagine we can get nothing else for breakfast? -- Did he never hear
|
|
that we have oatmeal in plenty, for water-gruel or burgoo; as good
|
|
wheat, rye, and barley as the world affords, to make frumenty; or
|
|
toast and ale; that there is every where plenty of milk, butter, and
|
|
cheese; that rice is one of our staple commodities; that for tea, we
|
|
have sage and bawm in our gardens, the young leaves of the sweet
|
|
white hickery or walnut, and, above all, the buds of our pine,
|
|
infinitely preferable to any tea from the Indies; while the islands
|
|
yield us plenty of coffee and chocolate? -- Let the gentleman do us
|
|
the honour of a visit in America, and I will engage to breakfast him
|
|
every day in the month with a fresh variety, without offering him
|
|
either tea or Indian corn. -- As to the Americans using no more of
|
|
the former, I am not sure they will take such a resolution; but if
|
|
they do, I fancy they will not lightly break it. I question whether
|
|
the army proposed to be sent among them, would oblige them to swallow
|
|
a drop more of tea than they chuse to swallow; for, as the proverb
|
|
says, though one man may _lead_ a horse to the water, ten can't _make
|
|
him drink_. Their resolutions have hitherto been pretty steadily
|
|
kept. They resolved to wear no more mourning; -- and it is now
|
|
totally out of fashion with near two millions of people; and yet
|
|
nobody sighs for Norwich crapes, or any other of the expensive,
|
|
flimsey, rotten, black stuffs and cloths you used to send us for that
|
|
purpose, with the frippery gauses, loves, ribbands, gloves, &c.
|
|
thereunto belonging. -- They resolved last spring to eat no more
|
|
lamb; and not a joint of lamb has since been seen on any of their
|
|
tables, throughout a country of 1500 miles extent, but the sweet
|
|
little creatures are all alive to this day, with the prettiest
|
|
fleeces on their backs imaginable. Mr. VINDEX's very civil letter
|
|
will, I dare say, be printed in all our provincial news papers, from
|
|
Nova Scotia to Georgia; and together with the other _kind_, _polite_,
|
|
and _humane_ epistles of your correspondents PACIFICUS, TOM HINT, &c.
|
|
&c. contribute not a little to strengthen us in every resolution that
|
|
may be of advantage, to _our_ country at least, if not to _yours_.
|
|
HOMESPUN.
|
|
|
|
_The Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser_, January 2, 1766
|
|
|
|
_On the Paving of Chancery Lane_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER.
|
|
|
|
By an advertisement in your paper of Wednesday last, I find,
|
|
"the inhabitants of Chancery-lane are desired to meet at the Crown
|
|
and Rolls, to consider about new paving the said street." I hope and
|
|
pray they may not agree to it. _Chancery lane_ is in every respect
|
|
so like a _Chancery suit_; it is so very _long_ a lane, so subject to
|
|
_obstructions_ and _delays_, one is so _unwilling_ to enter into it,
|
|
so _uneasy_ and _unsafe_ all the while one is going through it, and
|
|
so _glad_ to get out of it, that the very reflection on this
|
|
similarity has often, to my great advantage, deterred me from law,
|
|
and inclined me rather to end a dispute by arbitration. I therefore
|
|
wish to see the lane continued in its present state (even after all
|
|
the rest of the city shall be new paved) as a standing _memento_ that
|
|
may be beneficial to my fellow citizens. F. B.
|
|
|
|
_The Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser_, January 4, 1766
|
|
|
|
_On the Tenure of the Manor of East Greenwich_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER.
|
|
|
|
I did not think to have given you any farther trouble, having
|
|
already exprest my sentiments pretty fully, on the _impropriety_ and
|
|
_imprudence_ of angry reflections on the Americans in the public
|
|
papers, as more than half the trade of this country is with them; and
|
|
that trade depends greatly on the regard they have for us, and in
|
|
consequence for our fashions and fineries, which are by no means
|
|
necessary to their subsistence; the Northern colonies having among
|
|
themselves the natural means of furnishing, by a little additional
|
|
industry, every convenience and ornament of life; and to that
|
|
industry I apprehended a resentment of harsh and contemptuous
|
|
treatment might naturally provoke them.
|
|
|
|
But I cannot take leave of my antagonist VINDEX PATRIAE,
|
|
without a few remarks on his letter of Friday last. All the mad
|
|
proceedings of the mobs in America, however disapproved of by the
|
|
sober and prudent part of the inhabitants, are charged to the account
|
|
of the country in general, and the people are all involved in one
|
|
common accusation. He remembers that your papers have informed us of
|
|
the riots at Boston, but forgets that they likewise informed us, some
|
|
of the rioters were apprehended and imprisoned, in order to be
|
|
brought to justice; and that the body of the people detested these
|
|
violences. It is true, they universally deem the stamp act an
|
|
infringement of their rights, but then their assemblies have taken no
|
|
violent measures to oppose it; they have only entered into
|
|
resolutions among themselves, declaring their sense of these rights;
|
|
and joined, as we are well assured, in dutiful petitions to the King
|
|
and Parliament here, that the act may be repealed, and those rights
|
|
preserved to them. Can more be expected from any subjects, how loyal
|
|
soever, that think themselves aggrieved? -- Is it right to abuse all
|
|
England as rebellious, because it has sometimes mobs of weavers,
|
|
coal-diggers, &c.? Candour then should distinguish in this case
|
|
fairly, between the proceedings of the assemblies there, and the
|
|
actions of mobs; the latter are _certainly_ wrong, the former _may_
|
|
be so; but if they are, it is a mistaken judgment only of what they
|
|
think their right; -- of this mistake they may possibly be convinced
|
|
by reason; -- but I still doubt the argument of your correspondent,
|
|
proving, or attempting to prove, "that they are represented in
|
|
parliament, because the manor of East Greenwich in Kent is
|
|
represented there, and they all live in that manor;" will hardly
|
|
appear so intelligible, so clear, so satisfactory, and so convincing
|
|
to the Americans, as it seems it does to himself.
|
|
|
|
I own it does not appear so to me; and that my plain
|
|
understanding, unaccustomed to the subtile refinements of law, cannot
|
|
easily conceive, that in the King's grants of territory in America to
|
|
the colonists, the words, "to be holden of us, our heirs and
|
|
successors, as _of_ the manor of East Greenwich, in our county of
|
|
Kent, in free and common soccage, and not _in capite_, or by knight's
|
|
service;" do truly imply, that the lands so granted really lie _in_
|
|
East Greenwich. I should rather have thought those words meant only
|
|
to express, that the tenure should be of the _same kind_ with that of
|
|
the manor of East Greenwich. The countries held by this tenure, Sir,
|
|
are perhaps as big as all Europe; and East Greenwich, in the county
|
|
of Kent, in England, is at most but of a few miles circumference. I
|
|
have read that the whale swallowed Jonah; and as that is in Holy
|
|
Writ, to be sure I ought to believe it. But if I were told, that, in
|
|
fact, it was Jonah that swallowed the whale, I fancy I could myself
|
|
as easily swallow the whale as the story.
|
|
|
|
If _"New England lies within England,"_ as your correspondent
|
|
would have the New England men beleive, and particularly in the manor
|
|
of East Greenwich, a few questions must thence naturally arise, to
|
|
which his law knowledge will probably furnish ready answers. As,
|
|
What have these inhabitants of East Greenwich in Kent done, that
|
|
they, more than any other inhabitants of Kent, should be curbed in
|
|
their manufactures and commerce? Why are they restrained in making
|
|
hats of their own beaver, nail rods and steel of their own iron, and
|
|
cloth of their own wool? Why may not ships from East Greenwich carry
|
|
its commodities to any part of Europe, and thence bring back others
|
|
in exchange, with the same freedom that ships may go from any other
|
|
part of Kent, or of England? And since it is agreed, that by our
|
|
constitution, the King can raise no money _in England_ but by act of
|
|
parliament, how has it come to pass, that in consequence of
|
|
requisitions from the crown, large sums have been raised for its
|
|
service on these inhabitants of East Greenwich, in the county of
|
|
Kent, _unauthorized by any such act_, particularly between three and
|
|
four millions during the last war? And if this money was illegally
|
|
taken, whether it ought not to be refunded, and the ministers
|
|
impeached that advised the measure? These seem questions of some
|
|
importance, and may possibly admit of satisfactory answers; but to
|
|
that end I doubt it will be found necessary, that these new
|
|
inhabitants of East Greenwich in Kent, planted there by your
|
|
correspondent, should be all sent back, and replaced in their native
|
|
America.
|
|
|
|
In considering of these questions, perhaps it may be of use to
|
|
recollect; that the colonies were planted in times when the powers of
|
|
parliament were not supposed so extensive, as they are become since
|
|
the Revolution: -- That they were planted in lands and countries
|
|
where the parliament had not then the least jurisdiction: -- That,
|
|
excepting the yet infant colonies of Georgia and Nova Scotia, _none
|
|
of them_ were settled at the expence of _any money_ granted by
|
|
parliament: -- That the people went from hence by permission from the
|
|
crown, purchased or conquered the territory, at the expence of their
|
|
own private treasure and blood: -- That these territories thus became
|
|
_new_ dominions _of the crown_, settled under royal charters, that
|
|
formed their several governments and constitutions, on which the
|
|
parliament was _never consulted_; or had the _least participation_.
|
|
-- The people there have had, from the beginning, like Ireland, their
|
|
separate parliaments, called modestly assemblies: by these chiefly
|
|
our Kings have governed them. How far, and in what particulars, they
|
|
are _subordinate_ and _subject_ to the British parliament; or whether
|
|
they may not, if the King pleases, be governed as _domains of the
|
|
crown_, without that parliament, are points newly agitated, never
|
|
yet, but probably soon will be, thoroughly considered and settled.
|
|
Different opinions are now entertained concerning them; and till such
|
|
settlement is made by due authority, it is not criminal to think
|
|
differently. Therefore, I wish the American opinion may, in the mean
|
|
time, be treated with less acrimony.
|
|
|
|
|
|
As to VINDEX's accusation of the Americans, "that they run into
|
|
their country divers commodities of the manufacture of France, to the
|
|
_ruin_ of Great Britain;" I fancy, they will be apt to answer, _Look
|
|
at home_; -- and perhaps it will be found, that in this ruinous
|
|
trade, the rest of the people of Kent, are not a whit behind-hand
|
|
with the inhabitants of East Greenwich. _Jan_. 6, 1766. N. N.
|
|
|
|
_The Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser_, January 11, 1766
|
|
|
|
_"Two Taylors"_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER.
|
|
|
|
TOM HINT's virulence against the people of New York, has been
|
|
in some sort accounted for by himself, in one of his former letters.
|
|
It seems, tho' he lived several years in that country, they never
|
|
extended to him any of that civility they generally shew to
|
|
strangers. He now tells us, in your paper of Saturday, by way of
|
|
fresh abuse on that _whole people_, that "he admires their wonderful
|
|
sagacity in distinguishing the _gentleman_ from the _scoundrel_; for
|
|
in serious truth, it would be a difficult matter for an _old-country_
|
|
man to make that distinction among _them_, after living with them for
|
|
many years." This will excuse my remarking, that it appears this
|
|
_old-country_ man has little of that sagacity himself, and, from the
|
|
difficulty he supposed in making _such distinction_, might naturally
|
|
conceive an opinion when he arrived there, that he should be able
|
|
easily to pass upon those ignorant _new-country_ men, as a
|
|
_gentleman_. The event, it seems, did not answer his expectations;
|
|
and hence he _had reason_ to admire _their_ sagacity, but still
|
|
continues to be angry at its consequences. -- It puts me in mind of a
|
|
short story, which, in return for his scraps of plays, I will take
|
|
the liberty of telling him. Two journeymen _Snips_, during the
|
|
season of little business, agreed to make a trip to Paris, with each
|
|
a fine lac'd waistcoat, in which they promised themselves the great
|
|
pleasure of being received and treated as _gentlemen_. On the road
|
|
from Calais, at every inn, when they called for any thing hastily,
|
|
they were answered, _Tout a l'heure, Tout a l'heure_; which not a
|
|
little surprized them. At length, D -- these French scoundrels, says
|
|
one, how _shrewd_ they are! I find it won't do; -- e'en let us go
|
|
back again to London. -- Aye, says 'tother, they must certainly deal
|
|
with the devil, or, dress'd as we are dress'd, they could not
|
|
possibly all at first sight have known us to be _two taylors_. F. B.
|
|
|
|
_The Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser_, January 14, 1766
|
|
|
|
_"Homespun's" Further Defense of Indian Corn_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER.
|
|
|
|
JOHN BULL shews in nothing more his great veneration for good
|
|
eating, and how much he is always thinking of his belly, than in his
|
|
making it the constant topic of his contempt for other nations, that
|
|
_they do not eat so well as himself_. The _roast beef of Old
|
|
England_ he is always exulting in, as if no other country had beef to
|
|
roast; -- reproaching, on every occasion, the _Welsh_ with their
|
|
leeks and toasted cheese, the _Irish_ with their potatoes, and the
|
|
_Scotch_ with their oatmeal. And now that we are a little out of
|
|
favour with him, he has begun, by his attorney VINDEX PATRIAE, to
|
|
examine our eating and drinking, in order, I apprehend, to fix some
|
|
horrible scandal of the same kind upon us poor _Americans_.
|
|
|
|
I did but say a word or two in favour of _Indian corn_, which
|
|
he had treated as "disagreable and indigestible," and this vindictive
|
|
gentleman grows angry. "Let him tell the world, IF HE DARES (says
|
|
he) that the Americans prefer it to a place at their own tables." Ah,
|
|
Sir, I see the dilemma you have prepared for me. If I should not
|
|
_dare_ to say, that we do prefer it to a place at our tables, then
|
|
you demonstrate, that we must come to England for tea, or go without
|
|
our breakfasts: and if I do _dare_ to say it, you fix upon me and my
|
|
countrymen for ever, the indelible disgrace of being _Indian
|
|
corn-eaters_.
|
|
|
|
I am afraid, Mr. Printer, that you will think this too trifling
|
|
a dispute to deserve a place in your paper: but pray, good Sir,
|
|
consider, as you are yourself an Englishman, that we Americans, who
|
|
are allowed even by Mr. VINDEX to have some English blood in our
|
|
veins, may think it a very serious thing to have the honour of our
|
|
eating impeached in any particular whatsoever.
|
|
|
|
"Why doth he not deny the fact (says VINDEX) that it is
|
|
assigned to the slaves for their food? To proclaim the
|
|
_wholesomeness_ of this corn, without assigning a reason why white
|
|
men give it to their slaves, when they can get other food, is only
|
|
satirizing the good sense of their brethren in America." In truth I
|
|
cannot deny the fact, though it should reflect ever so much on the
|
|
_good sense_ of my countrymen. I own we do give food made of Indian
|
|
corn to our slaves, as well as eat it ourselves; not, as you suppose,
|
|
because it is "_indigestible_ and _unwholesome_;" but because it
|
|
keeps them healthy, strong and hearty, and fit to go through all the
|
|
labour we require of them. Our slaves, Sir, cost us money, and we
|
|
buy them to make money by their labour. If they are sick, they are
|
|
not only unprofitable, but expensive. Where then was your _English
|
|
good sense_, when you imagined we gave the slaves our Indian corn,
|
|
because we knew it to be _unwholesome_?
|
|
|
|
In short, this is only another of Mr. VINDEX's paradoxes, in
|
|
which he is a great dealer. The first endeavoured to persuade us,
|
|
that we were represented in the British Parliament _virtually_, and
|
|
by _fiction_: -- Then that we were _really_ represented there,
|
|
because the Manor of East Greenwich in Kent is represented there, and
|
|
all the Americans live in East Greenwich. And now he undertakes to
|
|
prove to us, that taxes are the most profitable things in the world
|
|
to those that pay them; for that Scotland is grown rich since the
|
|
Union, by paying English taxes. I wish he would accommodate himself
|
|
a little better to our dull capacities. We Americans have a great
|
|
many heavy taxes of our own, to support our several governments, and
|
|
pay off the enormous debt contracted by the war; we never conceived
|
|
ourselves the richer for paying taxes, and are willing to leave all
|
|
new ones to those that like them. At least, if we must with
|
|
Scotland, participate in your taxes, let us likewise, with Scotland,
|
|
participate in the Union, and in all the privileges and advantages of
|
|
commerce that accompanied it.
|
|
|
|
VINDEX, however, will never consent to this. He has made us
|
|
partakers in all the odium with which he thinks fit to load Scotland:
|
|
-- "They resemble the Scots in sentiments (says he) their religion is
|
|
Scottish; their customs and _laws_ are Scottish; like the Scotch they
|
|
Judaically observe what _they call_ the Sabbath, persecute old women
|
|
for witches, are intolerant to other sects, &c." But we must not,
|
|
like the Scots, be admitted into Parliament; for that, he thinks,
|
|
would increase "the Scotch interest in England, which is equally
|
|
hostile to the cause of liberty, and the cause of our church."
|
|
|
|
Pray, Sir, who informed you that our "_laws_ are Scottish?" The
|
|
same, I suppose, that told you our Indian corn is unwholesome.
|
|
Indeed, Sir, your information is very imperfect. The common law of
|
|
England, is, I assure you, the common law of the colonies: and if the
|
|
civil law is what you mean by the Scottish law, we have none of it
|
|
but what is forced upon us by England, in its courts of Admiralty,
|
|
depriving us of that inestimable part of the common law, trials by
|
|
juries. And do you look upon keeping the _Sabbath_, as part of the
|
|
Scottish law? "The Americans, like the Scots, (you say,) observe
|
|
what _they call_ the Sabbath." Pray, Sir, you who are so zealous for
|
|
your church (in abusing other Christians) what _do you call_ it? and
|
|
where the harm of their _observing_ it? If you look into your
|
|
prayer-book, or over your altars, you will find these words written,
|
|
_Remember to keep holy the_ SABBATH _Day_. This law, tho' it may be
|
|
observed in Scotland, and has been _countenanced_ by some of your
|
|
statutes, is, Sir, originally one of _God's Commandments_: a body of
|
|
laws still in force in America, tho' they may have become _obsolete_
|
|
in _some other_ countries.
|
|
|
|
Give me leave, Master JOHN BULL, to remind you, that you are
|
|
_related to all mankind_; and therefore it less becomes you than any
|
|
body, to affront and abuse other nations. But you have mixed with
|
|
your many virtues, a pride, a haughtiness, and an insolent contempt
|
|
for all but yourself, that, I am afraid, will, if not abated, procure
|
|
you one day or other a handsome drubbing. Besides your rudeness to
|
|
foreigners, you are far from being civil even to your own family.
|
|
The Welch you have always despised for submitting to your government:
|
|
But why despise your own English, who conquered and settled Ireland
|
|
for you; who conquered and settled America for you? Yet these you
|
|
now think you may treat as you please, because, forsooth, they are a
|
|
_conquered_ people. Why dispise the Scotch, who fight and die for
|
|
you all over the world? Remember, you courted Scotland for one
|
|
hundred years, and would fain have had your _wicked will_ of her.
|
|
She virtuously resisted all your importunities, but at length kindly
|
|
consented to become your lawful wife. You then solemnly promised to
|
|
_love_, _cherish_, and _honour_ her, as long as you both should live;
|
|
and yet you have ever since treated her with the utmost contumely,
|
|
which you now begin to extend to your common children. But, pray,
|
|
when your enemies are uniting in a _Family Compact_ against you, can
|
|
it be discreet in you to kick up in your own house a _Family
|
|
Quarrel_? And at the very time you are inviting foreigners to settle
|
|
on your lands, and when you have more to settle than ever you had
|
|
before, is it prudent to suffer your lawyer, VINDEX, to abuse those
|
|
who have settled there already, because they cannot yet speak "Plain
|
|
English?" -- It is my opinion, Master BULL, that the Scotch and
|
|
Irish, as well as the colonists, are capable of speaking much
|
|
_plainer English_ than they have ever yet spoke, but which I hope
|
|
they will never be provoked to speak.
|
|
|
|
To be brief, Mr. VINDEX, I pass over your other accusations of
|
|
the Americans, and of the Scotch, that we "Persecute old women for
|
|
witches, and are intolerant to other sects," observing only, that we
|
|
were wise enough to leave off both those foolish tricks, long before
|
|
Old England made the act of toleration, or repealed the statute
|
|
against witchcraft; so that even _you yourself_ may safely travel
|
|
through all Scotland and the Colonies, without the least danger of
|
|
being persecuted as a churchman, or taken (up) for a conjurer. And
|
|
yet I own myself so far of an intolerant spirit, that though I thank
|
|
you for the box-in-the-ear you have given TOM HINT, as being, what
|
|
you justly call him, "a futile calumniator," I cannot but wish he
|
|
would give you another -- for the same reason.
|
|
|
|
One word more, however, about the _Indian corn_, which I began
|
|
and must end with, even though I should hazard your remarking, that
|
|
it is certainly "indigestible," as it plainly appears to _stick in my
|
|
stomach_. "Let him tell the world, IF HE DARES, (you say) that the
|
|
Americans prefer it to a place at their tables." -- And, pray, if I
|
|
should DARE, -- what then? -- Why then -- "You will enter upon a
|
|
discussion of its salubrity and pleasant taste." -- Really? -- Would
|
|
you venture to write on the salubrity and _pleasant taste_ of Indian
|
|
corn, when you never in your life have tasted a _single grain_ of it?
|
|
-- But why should that hinder your writing on it? Have you not
|
|
written even on _politics_? Your's, HOMESPUN.
|
|
|
|
_The Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser_, January 15, 1766
|
|
|
|
_Pax Quaeritur Bello_
|
|
|
|
_To the Printer of the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
_Pax quaeritur Bello._
|
|
|
|
SIR, The very important Controversy being next Tuesday to be
|
|
finally determined between the Mother Country and their rebellious
|
|
American Children, I shall think myself happy if I can furnish any
|
|
Hints that may be of public Utility.
|
|
|
|
There are some Persons besides the Americans so amazingly
|
|
stupid, as to distinguish in this Dispute between _Power_ and
|
|
_Right_, as tho' the former did not always imply the latter. The
|
|
Right of Conquest invests the Conqueror with Authority to establish
|
|
what Laws he pleases, however contrary to the Laws of Nature, and the
|
|
common Rights of Mankind. Examine every Form of Government at this
|
|
Day subsisting on the Face of the Globe, from the absolute Despotism
|
|
of the Grand Sultan to the Democratic Government of the City of
|
|
Geneva, and it will be found that the Exertion of Power in those
|
|
Hands with whom it is lodged, however unconstitutional, is always
|
|
justified. The Reign of the _Stuarts_ might serve to exemplify this
|
|
Observation. Happy it was for the Nation that, upon Trial, the
|
|
superior Power was found to be in the People. The American Plea of
|
|
_Right_, their Appeal to Magna Charta, must of course be set aside;
|
|
and I make no Doubt but the Grand Council of the Nation will at all
|
|
Hazards insist upon an absolute Submission to the Tax imposed upon
|
|
them. But that they will comply without coercive Measures, is to me
|
|
a Matter of very great Doubt: For when we consider, that these
|
|
People, especially the more Northern Colonies, are the Descendants of
|
|
your Pymms, Hampdens, and others of the like Stamp, those outrageous
|
|
Assertors of Civil and Religious Liberties; that they have been
|
|
nursed up in the same Old English Principles; that a little more than
|
|
a Century ago their Forefathers, many of them of Family and Fortune,
|
|
left their native Land, and endured all the Distresses and Hardships
|
|
which are the necessary Consequences of an Establishment in a new
|
|
uncultivated Country, surrounded with a cruel Blood-thirsty Enemy,
|
|
oftentimes severely pinched with Cold and Hunger; and all this to
|
|
enjoy unmolested that Liberty which they thought was infringed: I
|
|
say, however these People may be mistaken, they will not tamely give
|
|
up what they call their natural, their constitutional Rights. Force
|
|
must therefore be made use of.
|
|
|
|
Now in order to bring these People to a proper Temper, I have a
|
|
Plan to propose, which I think cannot fail, and which will be
|
|
entirely consistent with the Oeconomy at present so much in Vogue.
|
|
It is so cheap a Way of going to work, that even Mr. G ------ G
|
|
------, that great Oeconomist, could have no reasonable Objection to
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
Let Directions be given, that Two Thousand Highlanders be
|
|
immediately raised, under proper Officers of their own. It ought to
|
|
be no Objection, that they were in the Rebellion in Forty-five: If
|
|
Roman Catholics, the better. The C ------ l at present in the P
|
|
------ ze Service may be at their Head. Transport them early in the
|
|
Spring to Quebec: There with the Canadians, natural Enemies to our
|
|
Colonists, who would voluntarily engage, might make a Body of Five or
|
|
Six Thousand Men; and I doubt not, by artful Management, and the
|
|
Value of two or three Thousand Pounds in Presents, with the Hopes of
|
|
Plunder, as likewise a Gratuity for every Scalp, the Savages on the
|
|
Frontiers might be engaged to join, at least they would make a
|
|
Diversion, which could not fail of being useful. I could point out a
|
|
very proper General to command the Expedition; he is of a very
|
|
sanguine Disposition, and has an inordinate Thirst for Fame, and
|
|
besides has the Hearts of the Canadians. He might march from Canada,
|
|
cross the Lakes, and fall upon these People without their expecting
|
|
or being prepared for him, and with very little Difficulty over-run
|
|
the whole Country.
|
|
|
|
The Business might be done without employing any of the Regular
|
|
Troops quartered in the Country, and I think it would be best they
|
|
should remain neuter, as it is to be feared they would be rather
|
|
backward in embruing their Hands in the Blood of their Brethren and
|
|
Fellow Subjects.
|
|
|
|
I would propose, that all the Capitals of the several Provinces
|
|
should be burnt to the Ground, and that they cut the Throats of all
|
|
the Inhabitants, Men, Women, and Children, and scalp them, to serve
|
|
as an Example; that all the Shipping should be destroyed, which will
|
|
effectually prevent Smuggling, and save the Expence of Guarda Costas.
|
|
|
|
No Man in his Wits, after such terrible Military Execution,
|
|
will refuse to purchase stamp'd Paper. If any one should hesitate,
|
|
five or six Hundred Lashes in a cold frosty Morning would soon bring
|
|
him to Reason.
|
|
|
|
If the Massacre should be objected to, as it would too much
|
|
depopulate the Country, it may be replied, that the Interruption this
|
|
Method would occasion to Commerce, would cause so many Bankruptcies,
|
|
such Numbers of Manufacturers and Labourers would be unemployed,
|
|
that, together with the Felons from our Gaols, we should soon be
|
|
enabled to transport such Numbers to repeople the Colonies, as to
|
|
make up for any Deficiency which Example made it necessary to
|
|
sacrifice for the Public Good. Great Britain might then reign over a
|
|
loyal and submissive People, and be morally certain, that no Act of
|
|
Parliament would ever after be disputed. Your's, _Jan_. 23, 1766.
|
|
PACIFICUS.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, January 26, 1766
|
|
|
|
_On Chastising the Colonies_
|
|
|
|
_To the_ PRINTER.
|
|
|
|
A Certain Judge, at an Assize, declared it from the Bench, as
|
|
his Opinion, that every man had a _legal_ right to chastise his wife,
|
|
if she was stubborn and obstinate; but then he observed, that his
|
|
right ought to be exercised with great lenity and moderation.
|
|
|
|
It seems our Lawyers are of opinion, that England has an
|
|
indisputable right to correct her refractory children of North
|
|
America. But then, as the Judge observed, it ought to be done with
|
|
temper and moderation; lest, like an unskilful Surgeon, we should
|
|
_exasperate_ and _inflame_ the wound we ought to _mollify_. It is an
|
|
old maxim, but not the less true, that it is much easier to _lead_
|
|
than to _drive_. If the Duke d'Alva had treated the people of the
|
|
Netherlands with gentleness and humanity, they would never have
|
|
revolted. Thank God, we have no Duke d'Alva in England.
|
|
|
|
The Great Commoner is, at least in the present instance, a
|
|
_Friend to Peace_, and for _healing measures_: So are the late King's
|
|
_old and faithful servants_. The same Apostle who says, _Children,
|
|
obey your Parents_; says also, _Fathers, provoke not your Children to
|
|
wrath_. PACIFICUS.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, February 13, 1766
|
|
|
|
_The Frenchman and the Poker_
|
|
|
|
_To the_ PRINTER.
|
|
|
|
It is reported, I know not with what Foundation, that there is
|
|
an Intention of obliging the Americans to pay for all the Stamps they
|
|
ought to have used, between the Commencement of the Act, and the Day
|
|
on which the Repeal takes Place, _viz._ from the first of November
|
|
1765, to the first of _May_ 1766; that this is to make Part of an
|
|
Act, which is to give Validity to the Writings and Law Proceedings,
|
|
that contrary to Law have been executed without Stamps, and is to be
|
|
the Condition on which they are to receive that Validity. Shall we
|
|
then keep up for a Trifle the Heats and Animosities that have been
|
|
occasioned by the Stamp-Act? and lose all the Benefit of Harmony and
|
|
good Understanding between the different Parts of the Empire, which
|
|
were expected from a generous total Repeal? Is this Pittance likely
|
|
to be a Whit more easily collected than the whole Duty? Where are
|
|
Officers to be found who will undertake to collect it? Who is to
|
|
protect them while they are about it? In my Opinion, it will meet
|
|
with the same Opposition, and be attended with the same Mischiefs
|
|
that would have attended an Enforcement of the Act entire.
|
|
|
|
But I hear, that this is thought necessary, to raise a Fund for
|
|
defraying the Expence that has been incurred by stamping so much
|
|
Paper and Parchment for the Use of America, which they have refused
|
|
to take and turn'd upon our Hands; and that since they are highly
|
|
favour'd by the Repeal, they cannot with any Face of Decency refuse
|
|
to make good the Charges we have been at on their Account. The whole
|
|
Proceeding would put one in Mind of the Frenchman that used to accost
|
|
English and other Strangers on the _Pont-Neuf_, with many
|
|
Compliments, and a red hot Iron in his Hand; _Pray Monsieur Anglois,_
|
|
says he, _Do me the Favour to let me have the Honour of thrusting
|
|
this hot Iron into your Backside?_ Zoons, what does the Fellow mean!
|
|
Begone with your Iron, or I'll break your Head! _Nay, Monsieur,_
|
|
replies he, _if you do not chuse it, I do not insist upon it. But at
|
|
least, you will in Justice have the Goodness to pay me something for
|
|
the heating of my Iron_. F. B.
|
|
|
|
February-March, 1766; reprinted in _The Pennsylvania Chronicle_,
|
|
March 23, 1767
|
|
|
|
_A Mock Petition to the House of Commons_
|
|
|
|
To the honourable the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of Great
|
|
Britain in Parliament assembled,
|
|
|
|
The Petition of BF. Agent for the Province of Pensilvania, Most
|
|
humbly Sheweth,
|
|
|
|
That the Transporting of Felons from England to the Plantations
|
|
in America, is and hath long been a great Grievance to the said
|
|
Plantations in general.
|
|
|
|
|
|
That the said Felons being landed in America, not only continue
|
|
their evil Practices, to the Annoyance of his Majesty's good Subjects
|
|
there, but contribute greatly to corrupt the Morals of the Servants
|
|
and poorer People among whom they are mixed.
|
|
|
|
That many of the said Felons escape from the Servitude to which
|
|
they were destined, into other Colonies, where their Condition is not
|
|
known and wandering at large from one populous Town to another commit
|
|
many Burglaries Robberies and Murders, to the great Terror of the
|
|
People, and occasioning heavy Charges for the apprehending and
|
|
securing such Felons, and bringing them to Justice.
|
|
|
|
That your Petitioner humbly conceives the Easing one Part of
|
|
the British Dominions of their Felons by burthening another Part with
|
|
the same Felons, cannot increase the common Happiness of his
|
|
Majesty's Subjects; and that therefore the Trouble and Expence of
|
|
transporting them is upon the whole altogether useless.
|
|
|
|
That your Petitioner nevertheless observes with extream
|
|
Concern, in the Votes of Friday last, that Leave is given to bring in
|
|
a Bill, for extending to Scotland the Act made in the 4th. Year of
|
|
the Reign of King George the First, whereby the aforesaid Grievances
|
|
are (as he understands) to be greatly increas'd by allowing Scotland
|
|
also to transport its Felons to America.
|
|
|
|
Your Petitioner therefore humbly prays, in behalf of
|
|
Pensilvania and the other Plantations in America that the House wou'd
|
|
take the Premisses into Consideration, and in their great Wisdom and
|
|
Goodness repeal all Acts and Clauses of Acts for Transporting of
|
|
Felons; or if this may not at present be done, that they would at
|
|
least reject the propos'd Bill for extending of the said Acts to
|
|
Scotland; or, if it be thought fit to allow of such Extension, that
|
|
then the said Extension may be carried farther, and the Plantations
|
|
be also by an equitable Clause in the same Bill permitted to
|
|
transport their Felons to Scotland.
|
|
|
|
And your Petitioner, as in Duty bound shall pray, &c.
|
|
|
|
April 12-15, 1766
|
|
|
|
_Contempt for the Thames_
|
|
|
|
_To the Printer of the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
|
|
SIR, I am an American Gentleman, and as yet not entirely
|
|
acquainted with the Customs of my dear Mother Country, and therefore
|
|
apply to the Public for Information what to do as a Redress of a
|
|
Grievance I lately met with.
|
|
|
|
Being fond of the Water, I took a Pair of Oars at Westminster
|
|
Bridge to go to the Temple, thinking to save Ground, but to my great
|
|
Surprise the Waterman landed me two thirds across the River at the
|
|
End of what he called a Causeway, and called that landing me at the
|
|
Temple, taking Sixpence for his Fare. Now, Sir, what vexed me was,
|
|
that I had near as far to walk to get to the natural Shore as if I
|
|
had walked all the Way. At first I thought of applying to the
|
|
Benchers of the Temple; but I remember an old Friend of mine, Mr.
|
|
Gulliver, a great Traveller, told me that the Lawyers of this Country
|
|
understood nothing else but Law; in other Respects they were of no
|
|
real Use to Mankind. I then thought it my Duty to wait upon the
|
|
Trinity House, or the City Conservators, to know why I was not
|
|
properly landed according to Agreement, but was advised to apply to
|
|
the Public.
|
|
|
|
We Americans have the same Contempt for the Thames as the
|
|
Inhabitants of Gravesend have for Fleet Ditch, and much wonder that
|
|
as the Thames is so mean a River, any Causeways, Shoals, or
|
|
accumulated Points should be suffered, as the Preservation of the
|
|
City entirely depends upon it's Navigation. I am, Sir, Your humble
|
|
Servant, AMERICANUS.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, August 22, 1766
|
|
|
|
_On the Price of Corn, and Management of the Poor_
|
|
|
|
_For the_ LONDON CHRONICLE.
|
|
|
|
_To Messieurs the_ PUBLIC _and_ CO. I am one of that class of
|
|
people that feeds you all, and at present is abus'd by you all; -- in
|
|
short I am a _Farmer_.
|
|
|
|
By your News-papers we are told, that God had sent a very short
|
|
harvest to some other countries of Europe. I thought this might be
|
|
in favour to Old England; and that now we should get a good price for
|
|
our grain, which would bring in millions among us, and make us flow
|
|
in money, that to be sure is scarce enough.
|
|
|
|
But the wisdom of Government forbad the exportation.
|
|
|
|
Well, says I, then we must be content with the market price at
|
|
home.
|
|
|
|
No, says my Lords the mob, you sha'n't have that. Bring your
|
|
corn to market if you dare; -- we'll sell it for you, for less money,
|
|
or take it for nothing.
|
|
|
|
Being thus attack'd by both ends _of the Constitution_, the
|
|
head and the tail _of Government_, what am I to do?
|
|
|
|
Must I keep my corn in barn to feed and increase the breed of
|
|
rats? -- be it so; -- they cannot be less thankful than those I have
|
|
been used to feed.
|
|
|
|
Are we Farmers the only people to be grudged the profits of
|
|
honest labour? -- And why? -- One of the late scribblers against us
|
|
gives a bill of fare of the provisions at my daughter's wedding, and
|
|
proclaims to all the world that we had the insolence to eat beef and
|
|
pudding! -- Has he never read that precept in the good book, _Thou
|
|
shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn_; or
|
|
does he think us less worthy of good living than our oxen?
|
|
|
|
O, but the Manufacturers! the Manufacturers! they are to be
|
|
favour'd, and they must have bread at a cheap rate!
|
|
|
|
Hark-ye, Mr. Oaf; -- The Farmers live splendidly, you say. And
|
|
pray, would you have them hoard the money they get? -- Their fine
|
|
cloaths and furniture, do they make them themselves, or for one
|
|
another, and so keep the money among them? Or do they employ these
|
|
your darling Manufacturers, and so scatter it again all over the
|
|
nation?
|
|
|
|
My wool would produce me a better price if it were suffer'd to
|
|
go to foreign markets. But that, Messieurs the Public, your laws
|
|
will not permit. It must be kept all at home, that our _dear_
|
|
Manufacturers may have it the cheaper. And then, having yourselves
|
|
thus lessened our encouragement for raising sheep, you curse us for
|
|
the scarcity of mutton!
|
|
|
|
I have heard my grandfather say, that the Farmers submitted to
|
|
the prohibition on the exportation of wool, being made to expect and
|
|
believe, that when the Manufacturer bought his wool cheaper, they
|
|
should have their cloth cheaper. But the deuce a bit. It has been
|
|
growing dearer and dearer from that day to this. How so? why truly
|
|
the cloth is exported; and that keeps up the price.
|
|
|
|
Now if it be a good principle, that the exportation of a
|
|
commodity is to be restrain'd, that so our own people at home may
|
|
have it the cheaper, stick to that principle, and go thorough stitch
|
|
with it. Prohibit the exportation of your cloth, your leather and
|
|
shoes, your iron ware, and your manufactures of all sorts, to make
|
|
them all cheaper at home. And cheap enough they will be, I'll
|
|
warrant you -- till people leave off making them.
|
|
|
|
Some folks seem to think they ought never to be easy, till
|
|
_England_ becomes another _Lubberland_, where 'tis fancied the
|
|
streets are paved with penny rolls, the houses tiled with pancakes,
|
|
and chickens ready roasted cry, come eat me.
|
|
|
|
I say, when you are sure you have got a good principle, stick
|
|
to it, and carry it thorough. -- I hear 'tis said, that though it was
|
|
_necessary and right_ for the M ------ y to advise a prohibition of
|
|
the exportation of corn, yet it was _contrary to law_: And also, that
|
|
though it was _contrary to law_ for the mob to obstruct the waggons,
|
|
yet it was _necessary and right_. -- Just the same thing, to a
|
|
tittle. Now they tell me, an act of indemnity ought to pass in
|
|
favour of the M ------ y, to secure them from the consequences of
|
|
having acted illegally. -- If so, pass another in favour of the mob.
|
|
Others say, some of the mob ought to be hanged, by way of example. --
|
|
If so, ------ but I say no more than I have said before, _when you
|
|
are sure that you have got a good principle, go thorough with it_.
|
|
|
|
|
|
You say, poor labourers cannot afford to buy bread at a high
|
|
price, unless they had higher wages. -- Possibly. -- But how shall we
|
|
Farmers be able to afford our labourers higher wages, if you will not
|
|
allow us to get, when we might have it, a higher price for our corn?
|
|
|
|
By all I can learn, we should at least have had a guinea a
|
|
quarter more if the exportation had been allowed. And this money
|
|
England would have got from foreigners.
|
|
|
|
But, it seems, we Farmers must take so much less, that the poor
|
|
may have it so much cheaper.
|
|
|
|
This operates then as a tax for the maintenance of the poor. --
|
|
A very good thing, you will say. But I ask, Why a partial tax? Why
|
|
laid on us Farmers only? -- If it be a good thing, pray, Messrs. the
|
|
Public, take your share of it, by indemnifying us a little out of
|
|
your public treasury. In doing a good thing there is both honour and
|
|
pleasure; -- you are welcome to your part of both.
|
|
|
|
For my own part, I am not so well satisfied of the goodness of
|
|
this thing. I am for doing good to the poor, but I differ in opinion
|
|
of the means. -- I think the best way of doing good to the poor, is
|
|
not making them easy _in_ poverty, but leading or driving them _out_
|
|
of it. In my youth I travelled much, and I observed in different
|
|
countries, that the more public provisions were made for the poor,
|
|
the less they provided for themselves, and of course became poorer.
|
|
And, on the contrary, the less was done for them, the more they did
|
|
for themselves, and became richer. There is no country in the world
|
|
where so many provisions are established for them; so many hospitals
|
|
to receive them when they are sick or lame, founded and maintained by
|
|
voluntary charities; so many alms-houses for the aged of both sexes,
|
|
together with a solemn general law made by the rich to subject their
|
|
estates to a heavy tax for the support of the poor. Under all these
|
|
obligations, are our poor modest, humble, and thankful; and do they
|
|
use their best endeavours to maintain themselves, and lighten our
|
|
shoulders of this burthen? -- On the contrary, I affirm that there is
|
|
no country in the world in which the poor are more idle, dissolute,
|
|
drunken, and insolent. The day you passed that act, you took away
|
|
from before their eyes the greatest of all inducements to industry,
|
|
frugality, and sobriety, by giving them a dependance on somewhat else
|
|
than a careful accumulation during youth and health, for support in
|
|
age or sickness. In short, you offered a premium for the
|
|
encouragement of idleness, and you should not now wonder that it has
|
|
had its effect in the increase of poverty. Repeal that law, and you
|
|
will soon see a change in their manners. St. _Monday_, and St.
|
|
_Tuesday_, will cease to be holidays. SIX _days shalt thou labour_,
|
|
though one of the old commandments long treated as out of date, will
|
|
again be looked upon as a respectable precept; industry will
|
|
increase, and with it plenty among the lower people; their
|
|
circumstances will mend, and more will be done for their happiness by
|
|
inuring them to provide for themselves, than could be done by
|
|
dividing all your estates among them.
|
|
|
|
Excuse me, Messrs. the Public, if upon this _interesting_
|
|
subject, I put you to the trouble of reading a little of _my_
|
|
nonsense. I am sure I have lately read a great deal of _yours_; and
|
|
therefore from you (at least from those of you who are writers) I
|
|
deserve a little indulgence. I am, your's, &c. ARATOR.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, November 29, 1766
|
|
|
|
_The Misrepresentation of America_
|
|
|
|
_To the_ PRINTER _of the_ LONDON CHRONICLE.
|
|
|
|
SIR, As the _bare letter_ of a Governor of one of our
|
|
provinces, accusing his People of rebellious _intentions_, is by many
|
|
here thought sufficient ground for inflicting penalties on such
|
|
province, _unheard,_ without _farther evidence_, and without knowing
|
|
what it may have to say in its justification: I wish you would give
|
|
the Public the following Extract of a Letter, in which, Accusations
|
|
of the Colonies from Officers of Government residing there, are set
|
|
in a light _very different_ from that they have usually been
|
|
considered in. -- It was written here at the time of our last year's
|
|
disputes, by one who had lived long in America, knew the people and
|
|
their affairs extremely well -- and was equally well acquainted with
|
|
the temper and practices of government officers. Speaking of the
|
|
opinion entertained in Britain of the Americans, he says,
|
|
|
|
"Much has been said of a _virtual representation_, which the
|
|
colonies are supposed to have here. Of that I understand nothing.
|
|
But I know what kind of _actual representation_, or rather
|
|
_misrepresentation_, is continually made of them, by those from whom
|
|
ministers chiefly have their information. Governors and other
|
|
officers of the crown, even the little officers of the revenue sent
|
|
from hence, have all at times some account to give of their own loyal
|
|
and faithful conduct, with which they mix some contrary character of
|
|
the people that tends to place that conduct in a more advantageous
|
|
light. Every good thing done there in the assemblies, for promoting
|
|
his Majesty's service, was obtained by the Governor's influence: He
|
|
proposed, he urged strongly, he managed parties; -- there was a great
|
|
opposition; -- the assembly were refractory and disaffected; -- but
|
|
his zeal and dexterity overcame all difficulties. And if thro' his
|
|
own imprudence, or real want of capacity, any thing goes wrong; he is
|
|
never in fault; the assembly and the people are to bear all the
|
|
blame; -- they are factious, they are turbulent, disloyal, impatient
|
|
of government, disrespectful to his _Majesty's Representative_. --
|
|
Then the Custom-house Officer represents the people as all inclined
|
|
to _smuggling_. Dutch and French goods (by his account) swarm in the
|
|
country; nothing else would be used if it were not for his _extream
|
|
vigilance_; which, indeed, as it takes up all his time, he hopes will
|
|
be considered in the allowance of a _larger salary_. -- Even the
|
|
Missionary Clergy, to whom all credit is due, cannot forbear
|
|
acquainting the Bishops, and their other superiors here from whom
|
|
they receive their stipends, that they are indeed very diligent in
|
|
their respective missions; but that they meet with great difficulties
|
|
from the adverse disposition of the people: -- Quakers oppose them in
|
|
one place, Presbyterians in another: -- _this_ country swarms with
|
|
thwarting hereticks; _t'other_ with malevolent sectaries: --
|
|
Infidelity gains ground _here_, Popery is countenanced _there._ Their
|
|
unwearied endeavours, which are never wanting, scarce suffice to
|
|
prevent the colonists being overwhelmed with vice, irreligion,
|
|
ignorance, and error! -- Then the Military Officer, who has served in
|
|
the colonies, represents them as _abounding in wealth_; the profuse
|
|
tables they used to spread for him in their hospitable entertainments
|
|
convinced him of it; for these he saw daily when he din'd from house
|
|
to house, and therefore he had reason to imagine it was their common
|
|
way of living; (though in truth that was extreamly different and much
|
|
more suitable to their circumstances.) But, opulent as he supposes
|
|
them, they must, in his opinion, be the meanest of mortals to grudge
|
|
the payment of a trifling tax, especially as it is to maintain
|
|
soldiers. Thus REPRESENTED, how can it be otherwise, but that the
|
|
governing people in Britain should conceive the most unfavourable
|
|
idea of Americans, as unworthy the name of Englishmen, and fit only
|
|
to be snubb'd, curb'd, shackled and plundered."
|
|
|
|
This seems a very natural, and I believe is a very true account
|
|
of the matter. I am, Sir, yours, &c. F. B.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, April 9, 1767
|
|
|
|
_Reply to Coffee-House Orators_
|
|
|
|
_To the_ PRINTER _of the_ LONDON CHRONICLE.
|
|
|
|
_Cinque gran nemici da pace, habitano con esso noi; civa
|
|
l'avaritia, l'ambitione, l'invidia, l'ira, & la superbia: se detti
|
|
inimici si mandassero in esilio, regenerebbe senza dubio tra noi pace
|
|
perpetua_. PETRARCH.
|
|
|
|
Athens had her orators. They did her sometimes a great deal of
|
|
good, at other times a great deal of harm; the latter particularly
|
|
when they prevailed in advising the Sicilian war, under the burthen
|
|
and losses of which war that flourishing state sunk, and never again
|
|
recovered itself.
|
|
|
|
To the haranguers of the populace among the ancients, succeed
|
|
among the moderns your writers of political pamphlets and
|
|
news-papers, and your coffee-house talkers.
|
|
|
|
It is remarkable that soldiers by profession, men truly and
|
|
unquestionably brave, seldom advise war but in cases of extream
|
|
necessity. While mere rhetoricians, tongue-pads and scribes, timid
|
|
by nature, or from their little bodily exercise deficient in those
|
|
spirits that give real courage, are ever bawling for war on the most
|
|
trifling occasions, and seem the most blood-thirsty of mankind.
|
|
|
|
At this present juncture, when we have scarce had time to
|
|
breathe, after a war the most general and the most expensive both of
|
|
blood and treasure Europe was ever involv'd in, we have three sets of
|
|
orators, who are labouring, by exasperating us against our friends to
|
|
engage us in three new wars, viz. a war with Portugal, a war with
|
|
Holland, and a war with our own colonies. As to the two first of
|
|
these wars, I shall not dispute the prudence or the justice of them.
|
|
I suppose no Englishman can doubt, that if the Hollanders did our
|
|
grandfathers an injury 150 years ago, whatever friendship there has
|
|
been between us since, we may, whenever we think fit, revenge it; and
|
|
that if the Portuguese buy cloth cheaper of the French than they can
|
|
of us, we have a right to drub them till they are willing to give us
|
|
the preference. Allowing then that we are strong enough to beat both
|
|
Holland and Portugal, cause or no cause, with all the friends and
|
|
allies they can both muster, and all the enemies such a conduct may
|
|
draw upon our hands, and that the Dutch too will probably lend us
|
|
money enough to pay the expence, I would only humbly submit it to
|
|
consideration whether there may not be some small convenience in
|
|
being the mean while at peace with ourselves, and finding some other
|
|
way of settling matters between our late ministers and colonists than
|
|
cutting of throats.
|
|
|
|
Every step is now taking to enrage us against _America_.
|
|
Pamphlets and news-papers flie about, and coffee-houses ring with
|
|
lying reports of its being in rebellion. Force is call'd for.
|
|
Fleets and troops should be sent. Those already there should be
|
|
called in from the distant posts, and quartered on the capital towns.
|
|
The principal people should be brought here and hang'd, &c. -- And
|
|
why?
|
|
|
|
Why! -- Do you ask why?
|
|
|
|
Yes. I beg leave to ask why?
|
|
|
|
Why they are going to throw off the government of _this
|
|
country_, and set up for themselves.
|
|
|
|
Pray how does that appear?
|
|
|
|
Why, are they not all in arms?
|
|
|
|
|
|
No. They are all in peace.
|
|
|
|
Have they not refused to make the compensation to the sufferers
|
|
by the late riots, that was requir'd of them by government here?
|
|
|
|
No. They have made ample satisfaction. Which, by the way, has
|
|
not been done here to the sufferers by your own riots.
|
|
|
|
Have they not burnt the custom-house?
|
|
|
|
No. That story is an absolute invented lie, without the least
|
|
foundation.
|
|
|
|
Have they not refus'd to comply with an act of parliament for
|
|
quartering of troops? And have they not sent a petition to
|
|
government for taking off the restraint on their trade, and so to
|
|
overthrow the navigation-act?
|
|
|
|
Allowing that the assembly of _one_ colony, New York, has
|
|
refus'd to comply with that act, and that some merchants of that one
|
|
colony have dared to petition, and that refusing and petitioning are
|
|
high treason; are _five and twenty_ colonies to be punished for the
|
|
crime of _one_?
|
|
|
|
But let us consider cooly the nature of this act, of this
|
|
refusal, and of this petition.
|
|
|
|
The act was a production of the same administration that made
|
|
the stamp-act, and was probably intended to facilitate the awing the
|
|
colonies into a submission to it. For that purpose there was in the
|
|
bill, when first brought in, a clause to impower the officers of the
|
|
army to quarter soldiers on private houses in America. This clause
|
|
being strongly oppos'd, was omitted; and the act only requir'd the
|
|
hiring of empty houses, barns, &c. for the troops, where they were to
|
|
be furnish'd with firing, candles, bedding, utensils to dress
|
|
victuals, five pints of small beer or cyder, or half a pint of rum
|
|
per man per diem, and some other articles, without paying any thing
|
|
for the same, but the expence to be borne by the province.
|
|
|
|
There is no other way to raise money in a province, but by the
|
|
assembly's making an act or law for that purpose. This is therefore
|
|
to be considered as a law made here, directing that the assembly in
|
|
America should make another law. The propriety of this proceeding
|
|
has by some been doubted, they having been of opinion that an
|
|
assembly is a kind of little parliament in America, not an
|
|
_executive_ officer of government, and as such oblig'd to obey and
|
|
execute orders; that it is in its nature a _deliberative_ body; its
|
|
members are to consider such matters as come before them; and when a
|
|
law is proposed, they are to weigh well its utility, necessity,
|
|
propriety, possibility or practicability, and determine on the whole
|
|
according to their judgments. If they were oblig'd to make laws
|
|
right or wrong in obedience to a law made by a superior legislature,
|
|
they would be of no use as a parliament, their nature would be
|
|
changed, their constitution destroyed. Indeed the act of parliament
|
|
itself seems sensible of this; -- for in other acts where a duty is
|
|
enjoin'd to be perform'd by any person, it has always been usual to
|
|
appoint a penalty on neglect or refusal, and direct the mode of
|
|
recovering or inflicting that penalty. But nothing of this kind is,
|
|
or indeed well could be, in this act of parliament, with respect to
|
|
what is required of the assemblies. It was therefore look'd upon in
|
|
America merely as a requisition, which the assemblies were to
|
|
consider, and comply with or decline, in the whole or in part, as it
|
|
might happen to suit the different circumstances and abilities of
|
|
different colonies. Accordingly Pensylvania, where but few troops
|
|
generally are, comply'd readily with the whole. But New York, thro'
|
|
which all the troops usually pass and repass between Britain and the
|
|
French conquests, conceiv'd the burthen of the whole would be too
|
|
great for them, and therefore comply'd only with a part of the
|
|
requisition, and in an address to their governor gave their reasons
|
|
couch'd in the most decent and respectful terms.
|
|
|
|
To many persons, indeed, the principle of the act seems wrong.
|
|
It is hard, say they, to assign a good reason why soldiers should, in
|
|
any part of the King's dominions, be furnished with any thing for
|
|
nothing. There is always a pay-master with them. Why should they
|
|
not pay for all they have? 'Tis otherwise a partial burthen on the
|
|
places where they happen to be, and therefore unjust. In Britain
|
|
this burthen is only thrown on inn-keepers, and may be considered as
|
|
a tax on that employment, which they however can exonerate themselves
|
|
of, by higher bills on their customers, and so spread the tax more
|
|
equally. But one colony that happens to be so opprest, has no means
|
|
of laying part of their burthen on another colony, that from its
|
|
situation is generally exempted.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Our coffee-house orators, however, would have it declared, that
|
|
this refusal of full compliance with the act, is REBELLION, and to be
|
|
punished accordingly. A rare proceeding this would be, to make a law
|
|
requiring something to be done that is new, not expressing what the
|
|
offence shall be of refusing to comply with it, or what the
|
|
punishment; and after the offence is committed, then to name the one,
|
|
and declare the other! The first instance, I believe, of this kind,
|
|
in legislation; and would look not so much like making of _laws_, as
|
|
making of _traps_ for the subject. This is, besides, a new kind of
|
|
_Rebellion._ It used to be thought that Rebellion consisted in
|
|
_doing_ something; but this is a Rebellion that consists in _not
|
|
doing_ something, or in doing nothing. If every man who neglects or
|
|
refuses to comply with an act of parliament is a rebel, I am afraid
|
|
we have many more rebels among us than we were aware: Among others,
|
|
they that have not registered the weight of their plate, and paid the
|
|
duty, are all rebels; and these, I think, are not a few: To whom may
|
|
be added the acting rebels that wear French silks and cambricks.
|
|
|
|
As to the petition mentioned above, it is, I have been
|
|
informed, from a number of private persons, Merchants of New York,
|
|
stating their opinion, that several restraints in the Acts of Trade
|
|
laid on the Commerce of the Colonies, are not only prejudicial to the
|
|
Colonies, but to the Mother Country. They give their reasons for
|
|
this opinion. Those reasons are to be judg'd of here. If they are
|
|
found to be good and well supported by facts, one would think that
|
|
instead of censure those Merchants might deserve thanks. If
|
|
otherwise, the petition may be laid aside. Petitioning is not
|
|
rebellion. The very nature of a petition acknowledges the power it
|
|
petitions to, and the subjection of the petitioner.
|
|
|
|
But, in party views, molehills are often magnify'd to
|
|
mountains. And when the wolf is determined on a quarrel with the
|
|
lamb, up stream or down stream 'tis all one; pretences are easily
|
|
found or made, reason and justice are out of the question. _A Friend
|
|
to both Countries_.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, April 9, 1767
|
|
|
|
_Right, Wrong, and Reasonable_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER of the GAZETTEER.
|
|
|
|
The East India contest, that necessarily took up so much of
|
|
your paper, being now abated, I hope you will find room for the
|
|
following answer to the paper intitled, _Right, Wrong,_ and
|
|
_Reasonable, according to American Ideas_, inserted in the Gazetteers
|
|
of March 5, and 9. I flatter myself that the impartiality of your
|
|
readers will concur with yours, in liking to see something on the
|
|
_other side_ of the question, in every attack made upon the Colonies.
|
|
N. N.
|
|
|
|
RIGHT, WRONG, and REASONABLE, with regard to America, according
|
|
to the ideas of the Gentle Shepherd, and the genuine meaning of the
|
|
papers and pamphlets lately published by him and his associates.
|
|
|
|
RIGHT. It is _right_, O ye Americans, when we discourage the
|
|
importation of those raw materials from foreign countries that we can
|
|
have from you, and do it for this _sole reason_, that foreigners
|
|
drain us of our money for those articles, while you take only our
|
|
manufactures, yet we should charge this upon you as a _favour_, for
|
|
which you are under the _greatest obligations._
|
|
|
|
Secondly, It is _right_, O ye Americans! that when knowing the
|
|
dearness of labour in your country, we do, to enable you to furnish
|
|
us with those commodities, and take our manufactures in return, give
|
|
you a better price than we did use to give to foreigners, which we
|
|
can well afford, considering the saving of money to our nation, the
|
|
profit on our manufactures, and the encreased demand for them: We
|
|
are, nevertheless, to call this by the name of _Bounty_, the better
|
|
to express our _Goodness_ to you, and the more clearly to intimate
|
|
the _great obligation_ you are under for such Goodness; and also to
|
|
make manifest the _ungratefulness_ of your tempers, if you do not, in
|
|
return for such Bounty, take upon yourselves some _burden_ ten
|
|
hundred times greater than the Bounty amounts to.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thirdly, It is _right_, O ye Americans! that we, having called
|
|
all these regulations in commerce by the name of "Indulgences and
|
|
Favours," and considered them as "Privileges" granted to you, do
|
|
also, whenever you point out to us the regulations of the same
|
|
nature, that may be equally advantageous to us, call the advice you
|
|
give, "Clamour for more and greater Indulgences, Favours and
|
|
Privileges." And it is farther _right_, O ye Americans! though it is
|
|
well known you clubbed man for man with us in the American war, and
|
|
fought side by side with us in extending by conquest the whale, and
|
|
other fisheries, that you should not conceive yourselves equally
|
|
intitled to the use of them with other British subjects; but the
|
|
share allowed you is to be considered as flowing from the mere Grace
|
|
and Favour of the Gentle Shepherd. And tho' the permitting you to
|
|
carry rice to foreign markets, directly without the burthensome,
|
|
useless expence, and loss of time occasioned by coming out of your
|
|
way to land and re-ship it here, has enabled you to make greater
|
|
remittances to Britain, and purchase greater quantities of our
|
|
manufactures, yet if experience in this case prompts you to hint the
|
|
advantage it would be to us to extend the permission to some other
|
|
articles, it is _right_ in us to charge you with Ingratitude, and to
|
|
tell you that you would never have been so unreasonable, if we had
|
|
not repealed the "cooly deliberated, well digested," and wonderfully
|
|
useful measure of the Gentle Shepherd, called his Stamp-act.
|
|
|
|
Fourthly, Though it is a certain truth that we went to war with
|
|
the French in America, merely on a dispute between the two Crowns,
|
|
concerning the bounds of wilderness lands, belonging to no American,
|
|
and to secure the Indian trade carried on there with our
|
|
manufactures, and therefore solely an interest of ours; and though
|
|
you yourselves told us "you were in no danger from the French, for
|
|
that you were near twenty to one," yet it is _right_, O ye Americans!
|
|
for us to declare we went there for _your defence_, at _your
|
|
request_, and charge you with all the millions spent in that war,
|
|
giving you no credit for the millions you spent in maintaining a
|
|
number of troops equal to ours, and yet our taking the whole
|
|
territory conquered, which is now daily granting in large tracts, to
|
|
the gentlemen of this country, while we allow, in a case precisely
|
|
the same, that the acquisitions made by the East India Company, with
|
|
our assistance, are their own indubitable property.
|
|
|
|
Fifthly, It is _right_, O ye Americans! for us to charge you
|
|
with _dreaming_ that you have it in your power to make us a bankrupt
|
|
nation, by engaging us in new wars; with _dreaming_ that you may
|
|
thereby encrease your own strength and prosperity; with _dreaming_
|
|
that the seat of government will then be transported to America, and
|
|
Britain dwindle to one of its provinces. And, because Joseph's
|
|
brethren hated him for a dream he _really_ dreamed, we, for a dream
|
|
you never _dreamed_, and which we only _dream_ you _dreamed_, are to
|
|
hate you most cordially.
|
|
|
|
WRONG. First, From the above state of the case, It is _wrong_,
|
|
O ye Americans! for you to expect hereafter, any protection or
|
|
countenance from us, in return for the loyalty and zeal you
|
|
manifested, and the blood and treasure you have expended in our cause
|
|
during that war; or that we will make any acts of parliament relating
|
|
to you, from the time we, the Gentle Shepherd, and his flock, get
|
|
into power, "but such as are calculated for impoverishing you and
|
|
enriching us."
|
|
|
|
Secondly, It is _wrong_, O ye Americans! for you to imagine,
|
|
that we will henceforth give you a preference to foreigners, in
|
|
purchasing raw materials from you, because "forsooth, you stupidly
|
|
give the preference to all the modes and manufactures" of Britain,
|
|
and consume all your labour in the superfluities of this country.
|
|
And, when you have foolishly run in our debt for them, it is _wrong_
|
|
in you to hint to us any new regulation of trade, by which you may be
|
|
better enabled to pay us. And though you have not, and never had any
|
|
mines of gold and silver in your country, yet it is _wrong_ in you to
|
|
complain when we restrain your trade with foreign money-countries, by
|
|
which you used to procure cash for us, when we even hinder your using
|
|
paper-money among yourselves, that enabled you to spare your cash to
|
|
us, and when dry, as we have drawn you, we want to squeeze blood out
|
|
of you by new taxes, in the laying of which you have no
|
|
participation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thirdly, It is _wrong_, O ye Americans, "to expect a
|
|
reciprocation of good offices between us and you; for our standing
|
|
maxim is, that you exist only for our sakes. We know no other end of
|
|
colonization but this; nor will we acknowledge any other connection
|
|
or relation between us and you," than those between a master and his
|
|
slaves. Your lords we are, and slaves we deem ye, or intend to make
|
|
ye. "But the dear ties of that relation we will acknowledge and
|
|
maintain" as long as we can, and, if possible, after you "are tired
|
|
of them."
|
|
|
|
Thus much as to the Gentle Shepherdian Ideas of _Right_ and
|
|
_Wrong_. We shall now shew their notions of what is _Reasonable_.
|
|
|
|
BRITISH IDEAS of what is REASONABLE in American affairs,
|
|
according to the genuine meaning of some late pamphlets, &c.
|
|
|
|
These principles of _right_ and _wrong_ being established, It
|
|
is _reasonable_, O ye Americans! that we should oblige you to bring
|
|
your coarse sugars to England to be refined, and carry them back
|
|
again when refined, that so you may pay two freights and two
|
|
insurances, to no other purpose than wasting a shilling that we may
|
|
get a groat. "Otherwise you will grow able to pay your debts."
|
|
|
|
2. It is _reasonable_, O ye Americans! that when one of your
|
|
ways of raising money to pay for our manufactures, is by cutting
|
|
logwood, with immense labour, in the unwholesome swamps of Honduras,
|
|
and selling to foreigners what the demand here cannot take off,
|
|
remitting hither the nett proceeds, yet you should be obliged first
|
|
to bring the same into some British port, land, and re-ship it, at so
|
|
great an expence, with the loss of time, and hindrance of voyage, as
|
|
to devour all the profits; "otherwise we cannot keep you so poor, but
|
|
that you will pay your debts."
|
|
|
|
3. It is _reasonable_, O ye Americans! that when, for the
|
|
produce of your lands, you have obtained wines, at Madeira, and have
|
|
paid the duty on importing them into America, you shall,
|
|
nevertheless, when you send them to England, by way of remittance,
|
|
pay the full duty here, without any drawback of what you have already
|
|
paid; "otherwise you may, in that way, pay some of your debts."
|
|
|
|
4. It is _reasonable_, O ye Americans! that though you fought
|
|
bravely, in conjunction with us, to obtain and secure the fisheries
|
|
of Newfoundland and Labrador, yet you shall not enjoy a freedom of
|
|
fishing there in common with other British subjects, or even the
|
|
freedom allowed by the peace, to our enemies. And though, by your
|
|
situation, you can carry on the fishery at less expence than the
|
|
French, and, of course, could undersell them in the Spanish,
|
|
Portuguese, and Italian markets, and remit the money from thence to
|
|
Britain, for manufactures, yet we are not to permit this, but chusing
|
|
rather to fight against nature, will contend with the French
|
|
ourselves, who are sure, in this article, to outdo us -- "otherwise
|
|
you might pay your debts."
|
|
|
|
5. It is _reasonable_ for us, O ye Americans! to send
|
|
customhouse officers over to you, of our own chusing, with starving
|
|
salaries, that lay them under the temptation, and almost under the
|
|
necessity of conniving at smugglers, or sharing their profit, and
|
|
then to charge you with their want of conscince or neglect of duty.
|
|
And though there is scarce a family in Britain honest enough to
|
|
refuse purchasing smuggled cambricks, India goods, French silks,
|
|
lace, brandies, &c. _if a pennyworth_, we are, nevertheless, to
|
|
esteem it the greatest of crimes in you, to smuggle even the
|
|
necessaries of life. For, if you buy any thing you want, cheaper of
|
|
others than we can sell it to you, "we are afraid you will, by
|
|
lessening your expences, be enabled to pay your debts."
|
|
|
|
6. It is _reasonable_ for us, O ye Americans! tho' we know the
|
|
fond preference you give to the manufactures of your mother-country
|
|
is so great, that a piece of French cloth, or silk, was _never worn_
|
|
among you, but even when taken in prizes, has been sent away to the
|
|
French islands, as unsaleable with you, yet, to make you odious here,
|
|
draw severities upon you, and wean that affection you have for this
|
|
country, which is so advantageous to our commerce, we are to charge
|
|
you with a fondness for French manufactures, _without the least
|
|
foundation of truth_. In fine, It is _reasonable_ for us to deprive
|
|
you even of the common privilege of Englishmen, trials by Juries: to
|
|
restrain, by every means, your procuring money from foreigners, to
|
|
refuse you even the use of paper money, whereby you might better
|
|
spare your cash to us, and, after all, to "wonder that you do not pay
|
|
your debts."
|
|
|
|
_The Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser_, April 18, 1767
|
|
|
|
_Of Lightning, and the Method (Now Used in America) of Securing
|
|
Buildings and Persons from Its Mischievous Effects_
|
|
|
|
Experiments made in electricity first gave philosophers a
|
|
suspicion that the matter of lightning was the same with the electric
|
|
matter. Experiments afterwards made on lightning obtained from the
|
|
clouds by pointed rods, received into bottles, and subjected to every
|
|
trial, have since proved this suspicion to be perfectly well founded;
|
|
and that whatever properties we find in electricity, are also the
|
|
properties of lightning.
|
|
|
|
This matter of lightning, or of electricity, is an extream
|
|
subtile fluid, penetrating other bodies, and subsisting in them,
|
|
equally diffused.
|
|
|
|
When by any operation of art or nature, there happens to be a
|
|
greater proportion of this fluid in one body than in another, the
|
|
body which has most, will communicate to that which has least, till
|
|
the proportion becomes equal; provided the distance between them be
|
|
not too great; or, if it is too great, till there be proper
|
|
conductors to convey it from one to the other.
|
|
|
|
If the communication be through the air without any conductor,
|
|
a bright light is seen between the bodies, and a sound is heard. In
|
|
our small experiments we call this light and sound the electric spark
|
|
and snap; but in the great operations of nature, the light is what we
|
|
call _lightning_, and the sound (produced at the same time, tho'
|
|
generally arriving later at our ears than the light does to our eyes)
|
|
is, with its echoes, called _thunder_.
|
|
|
|
|
|
If the communication of this fluid is by a conductor, it may be
|
|
without either light or sound, the subtle fluid passing in the
|
|
substance of the conductor.
|
|
|
|
If the conductor be good and of sufficient bigness, the fluid
|
|
passes through it without hurting it. If otherwise, it is damaged or
|
|
destroyed.
|
|
|
|
All metals, and water, are good conductors. -- Other bodies may
|
|
become conductors by having some quantity of water in them, as wood,
|
|
and other materials used in building, but not having much water in
|
|
them, they are not good conductors, and therefore are often damaged
|
|
in the operation.
|
|
|
|
Glass, wax, silk, wool, hair, feathers, and even wood,
|
|
perfectly dry are non-conductors: that is, they resist instead of
|
|
facilitating the passage of this subtle fluid.
|
|
|
|
When this fluid has an opportunity of passing through two
|
|
conductors, one good, and sufficient, as of metal, the other not so
|
|
good, it passes in the best, and will follow it in any direction.
|
|
|
|
The distance at which a body charged with this fluid will
|
|
discharge itself suddenly, striking through the air into another body
|
|
that is not charged, or not so highly charg'd, is different according
|
|
to the quantity of the fluid, the dimensions and form of the bodies
|
|
themselves, and the state of the air between them. -- This distance,
|
|
whatever it happens to be between any two bodies, is called their
|
|
_striking distance_, as till they come within that distance of each
|
|
other, no stroke will be made.
|
|
|
|
The clouds have often more of this fluid in proportion than the
|
|
earth; in which case as soon as they come near enough (that is,
|
|
within the striking distance) or meet with a conductor, the fluid
|
|
quits them and strikes into the earth. A cloud fully charged with
|
|
this fluid, if so high as to be beyond the striking distance from the
|
|
earth, passes quietly without making noise or giving light; unless it
|
|
meets with other clouds that have less.
|
|
|
|
Tall trees, and lofty buildings, as the towers and spires of
|
|
churches, become sometimes conductors between the clouds and the
|
|
earth; but not being good ones, that is, not conveying the fluid
|
|
freely, they are often damaged.
|
|
|
|
Buildings that have their roofs covered with lead, or other
|
|
metal, and spouts of metal continued from the roof into the ground to
|
|
carry off the water, are never hurt by lightning, as whenever it
|
|
falls on such a building, it passes in the metals and not in the
|
|
walls.
|
|
|
|
When other buildings happen to be within the striking distance
|
|
from such clouds, the fluid passes in the walls whether of wood,
|
|
brick or stone, quitting the walls only when it can find better
|
|
conductors near them, as metal rods, bolts, and hinges of windows or
|
|
doors, gilding on wainscot, or frames of pictures; the silvering on
|
|
the backs of looking-glasses; the wires for bells; and the bodies of
|
|
animals, as containing watry fluids. And in passing thro' the house
|
|
it follows the direction of these conductors, taking as many in it's
|
|
way as can assist it in its passage, whether in a strait or crooked
|
|
line, leaping from one to the other, if not far distant from each
|
|
other, only rending the wall in the spaces where these partial good
|
|
conductors are too distant from each other.
|
|
|
|
An iron rod being placed on the outside of a building, from the
|
|
highest part continued down into the moist earth, in any direction
|
|
strait or crooked, following the form of the roof or other parts of
|
|
the building, will receive the lightning at its upper end, attracting
|
|
it so as to prevent its striking any other part; and, affording it a
|
|
good conveyance into the earth, will prevent its damaging any part of
|
|
the building.
|
|
|
|
A small quantity of metal is found able to conduct a great
|
|
quantity of this fluid. A wire no bigger than a goose quill, has
|
|
been known to conduct (with safety to the building as far as the wire
|
|
was continued) a quantity of lightning that did prodigious damage
|
|
both above and below it; and probably larger rods are not necessary,
|
|
tho' it is common in America, to make them of half an inch, some of
|
|
three quarters, or an inch diameter.
|
|
|
|
The rod may be fastened to the wall, chimney, &c. with staples
|
|
of iron. -- The lightning will not leave the rod (a good conductor)
|
|
to pass into the wall (a bad conductor), through those staples. -- It
|
|
would rather, if any were in the wall, pass out of it into the rod to
|
|
get more readily by that conductor into the earth.
|
|
|
|
If the building be very large and extensive, two or more rods
|
|
may be placed at different parts, for greater security.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Small ragged parts of clouds suspended in the air between the
|
|
great body of clouds and the earth (like leaf gold in electrical
|
|
experiments), often serve as partial conductors for the lightning,
|
|
which proceeds from one of them to another, and by their help comes
|
|
within the striking distance to the earth or a building. It
|
|
therefore strikes through those conductors a building that would
|
|
otherwise be out of the striking distance.
|
|
|
|
Long sharp points communicating with the earth, and presented
|
|
to such parts of clouds, drawing silently from them the fluid they
|
|
are charged with, they are then attracted to the cloud, and may leave
|
|
the distance so great as to be beyond the reach of striking.
|
|
|
|
It is therefore that we elevate the upper end of the rod six or
|
|
eight feet above the highest part of the building, tapering it
|
|
gradually to a fine sharp point, which is gilt to prevent its
|
|
rusting.
|
|
|
|
Thus the pointed rod either prevents a stroke from the cloud,
|
|
or, if a stroke is made, conducts it to the earth with safety to the
|
|
building.
|
|
|
|
The lower end of the rod should enter the earth so deep as to
|
|
come at the moist part, perhaps two or three feet; and if bent when
|
|
under the surface so as to go in a horizontal line six or eight feet
|
|
from the wall, and then bent again downwards three or four feet, it
|
|
will prevent damage to any of the stones of the foundation.
|
|
|
|
A person apprehensive of danger from lightning, happening
|
|
during the time of thunder to be in a house not so secured, will do
|
|
well to avoid sitting near the chimney, near a looking glass, or any
|
|
gilt pictures or wainscot; the safest place is in the middle of the
|
|
room, (so it be not under a metal lustre suspended by a chain)
|
|
sitting in one chair and laying the feet up in another. It is still
|
|
safer to bring two or three mattrasses or beds into the middle of the
|
|
room, and folding them up double, place the chair upon them; for they
|
|
not being so good conductors as the walls, the lightning will not
|
|
chuse an interrupted course through the air of the room and the
|
|
bedding, when it can go thro' a continued better conductor the wall.
|
|
But where it can be had, a hamock or swinging bed, suspended by silk
|
|
cords equally distant from the walls on every side, and from the
|
|
cieling and floor above and below, affords the safest situation a
|
|
person can have in any room whatever; and what indeed may be deemed
|
|
quite free from danger of any stroke by lightning.
|
|
|
|
_Paris, Sept_. 1767 B. F.
|
|
|
|
_American Longevity_
|
|
|
|
_To the_ PRINTER _of the_ LONDON CHRONICLE.
|
|
|
|
SIR, I have often heard it remarked, that our Colonies in North
|
|
America were unhealthy and unfavourable to long life; and more
|
|
particularly so upon their first settlement. In opposition to this
|
|
groundless notion, I here send you two paragraphs taken from the
|
|
Pensylvania Gazette of July 16, and the New-York Gazette of August
|
|
27, giving an account of the deaths of the first-born of the city of
|
|
Philadelphia, and of the province of Pennsylvania:
|
|
|
|
PHILADELPHIA, July 16. "At Kennet, in Chester county, the 5th
|
|
instant, died John Key, in the 85th year of his age, and the next day
|
|
was interred in the burial place belonging to the people called
|
|
Quakers, in that township, attended by a large number of reputable
|
|
people, his neighbours and acquaintance. -- He was born in a cave,
|
|
long afterwards known by the name of Penny-Pot, near Race-street, and
|
|
William Penn, our first proprietor, gave him a lot of ground, as a
|
|
compliment on his being the first child born in this city. -- In the
|
|
early part of his life his conversation was very engaging, and his
|
|
company much sought after by those of his own age; in his decline he
|
|
was much esteemed for his peaceable disposition. His constitution
|
|
was very healthy till about 80, when he was seized with the palsy,
|
|
and continued weakly till his death. -- About six years ago he walked
|
|
on foot from Kennet to Philadelphia in one day, which is near 30
|
|
miles. -- It has been said that people in this province are
|
|
short-lived; but when we consider how few children were born here 75
|
|
years ago, and observe how many old people there are still alive
|
|
among us (who were born here) we shall rather think no quarter of the
|
|
world can shew a greater number of aged persons then this province
|
|
can, in proportion to the children born."
|
|
|
|
_Philadelphia, Aug._ 24. On the 10th instant, at Brandywine
|
|
Hundred, in New-Castle county, died Emanuel Grubb, in the 86th year
|
|
of his age, and the next day was interred in St. Martin's
|
|
church-yard, at Lower-Chichester, in Chester county, attended by a
|
|
large number of his relations, neighbours, and acquaintance. -- He
|
|
was born in a cave, by the side of Delaware river, not far distant
|
|
from where he always lived, and died, and was the first child born of
|
|
English parents in this province. His constitution was remarkably
|
|
healthy during his whole life, having never been afflicted with any
|
|
sickness till a few days before his death. His strength and activity
|
|
were surprizing in a man of his age; he could mount and ride a horse
|
|
with as much dexterity as a lad of 20. -- A few months ago, he rode
|
|
from his own house to this city, and back again, which is upwards of
|
|
40 miles. -- His memory was equally surprizing, and not in the least
|
|
impaired, till his death; he could remember transactions of a late
|
|
date equally well with those which happened in his younger days. He
|
|
was exceeding temperate in his living, seldom making use of
|
|
spirituous liquors; and for his peaceable and friendly disposition,
|
|
was highly esteemed by all that knew him. This instance, among many,
|
|
is a proof of the longevity of people born here.
|
|
|
|
It is worthy of observation also, that Governor Hutchinson, in
|
|
his valuable History of the Massachusett's Bay, Vol. II. pp. 148 and
|
|
216, says,
|
|
|
|
"July 20, 1704, died at Marshfield, Peregrine White, aged 83
|
|
years and eight months, the first-born in Plymouth colony.
|
|
|
|
"Jan. 14, 1716, died at Salem, Elizabeth Patch, the first-born
|
|
female in the old colony of Massachusett's Bay, so that she must have
|
|
lived 86 or 87 years; and April 14, following, died at Newport, in
|
|
Rhode-Island, Mary Godfrey, aged about 87, being the first child born
|
|
there. -- The longevity of the first-born in each of the three
|
|
colonies, is worth noting."
|
|
|
|
As a well-wisher to mankind in general, I thought it worth
|
|
while to send this to your useful paper, in order to allay the
|
|
apprehensions of those, whose inclinations, business, or necessities
|
|
may induce them to settle in that part of the British Empire. I must
|
|
add at the same time, that I have myself lately travelled over the
|
|
greater part of that extensive continent; and can with truth say, in
|
|
spite of all that hath been boldly and positively asserted to the
|
|
contrary, that I could not discover among that whole people, one
|
|
grain of disaffection to their brethren in Britain, nor did I meet
|
|
with a single person who had ever formed the most distant idea of
|
|
throwing off their allegiance to the mother country. This it is
|
|
doing them but bare justice to declare; and is all the return I can
|
|
at present make them for the kindness and hospitality with which,
|
|
purely on account of my being an _Old England-Man_, I was universally
|
|
treated. I am, Sir, your constant reader, F + S.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, December 15, 1767
|
|
|
|
_Railing and Reviling_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER of the GAZETTEER.
|
|
|
|
_January_ 6, 1768. Instead of raving (with your correspondent
|
|
of yesterday) against the Americans as "diggers of pits for this
|
|
country," "lunaticks," "sworn enemies," "false," "ungrateful,"
|
|
"cut-throats," &c. which is a treatment of customers that I doubt is
|
|
not like to bring them back to our shop; I would recommend to all
|
|
writers on American affairs (however _hard_ their _arguments_ may be)
|
|
_soft words_, civility, and good manners. It is only from a redress
|
|
of grievances and equitable regulations of commerce, with mild and
|
|
reasonable measures of government, permitting and securing to those
|
|
people the full enjoyment of their privileges, that we may hope to
|
|
recover the affection and respect of that great and valuable part of
|
|
our fellow-subjects, and restore and confirm the solid union between
|
|
the two countries, that is so necessary to the strength and stability
|
|
of the whole empire. Railing and reviling can answer no good end; it
|
|
may make the breach wider; it can never heal it. OLD ENGLAND _in its
|
|
senses._
|
|
|
|
_The Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser_, January 8, 1768
|
|
|
|
_Causes of the American Discontents Before 1768_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER.
|
|
_The waves never rise but when the winds blow._
|
|
|
|
SIR, As the cause of the present ill-humour in America, and of
|
|
the Resolutions taken there to purchase less of our manufactures,
|
|
does not seem to be generally understood, it may afford some
|
|
satisfaction to your Readers, if you give them the following short
|
|
historical state of facts.
|
|
|
|
From the time that the Colonies were first considered as
|
|
capable of granting aids to the Crown, down to the end of the last
|
|
war, it is said that the constant mode of obtaining those aids was by
|
|
Requisition made from the Crown through its Governors to the several
|
|
Assemblies, in circular letters from the Secretary of State in his
|
|
Majesty's name, setting forth the occasion, requiring them to take
|
|
the matter into consideration, and expressing a reliance on their
|
|
prudence, duty and affection to his Majesty's Government, that they
|
|
would grant such sums, or raise such numbers of men, as were suitable
|
|
to their respective circumstances.
|
|
|
|
The Colonies being accustomed to this method, have from time to
|
|
time granted money to the Crown, or raised troops for its service, in
|
|
proportion to their abilities, and, during all the last war, beyond
|
|
their abilities, so that considerable sums were returned them yearly
|
|
by Parliament as exceeding their proportion.
|
|
|
|
Had this happy method been continued (a method which left the
|
|
King's subjects in those remote countries the pleasure of shewing
|
|
their zeal and loyalty, and of imagining that they recommended
|
|
themselves to their Sovereign by the liberality of their voluntary
|
|
grants) there is no doubt but all the money that could reasonably be
|
|
expected to be raised from them, in any manner, might have been
|
|
obtained from them, without the least heart-burning, offence, or
|
|
breach of the harmony of affections and interests that so long
|
|
subsisted between the two countries.
|
|
|
|
It has been thought wisdom in a Government, exercising
|
|
sovereignty over different kinds of people, to have some regard to
|
|
prevailing and established opinions among the people to be governed,
|
|
wherever such opinions might in their effects promote or obstruct
|
|
public measures. -- If they tend to obstruct public service, they are
|
|
to be changed before we act against them, and they can only be
|
|
changed by reason and persuasion. -- But if public service can be
|
|
carried on without thwarting those opinions, if they can be on the
|
|
contrary made subservient to it, they are not unnecessarily to be
|
|
thwarted, how absurd soever such popular opinions may be in their
|
|
natures. -- This had been the wisdom of our Government with respect
|
|
to raising money in the colonies. It was well known that the
|
|
Colonists universally were of opinion, that no money could be levied
|
|
from English subjects, but by their own consent, given by themselves
|
|
or their chosen Representatives. That therefore whatever money was
|
|
to be raised from the people in the colonies, must first be granted
|
|
by their Assemblies; as the money raised in Britain is first to be
|
|
granted by the House of Commons. That this right of granting their
|
|
own money was essential to English liberty; and that if any man, or
|
|
body of men, in which they had no Representative of their chusing,
|
|
could tax them at pleasure, they could not be said to have any
|
|
property, any thing they could call their own. But as these opinions
|
|
did not hinder their granting money voluntarily and amply, whenever
|
|
the Crown, by its servants, came into their Assemblies (as it does
|
|
into its Parliaments of Britain and Ireland) and demanded aids,
|
|
therefore that method was chosen rather than the baneful one of
|
|
arbitrary taxes.
|
|
|
|
I do not undertake here to support those opinions; they have
|
|
been refuted by a late act of Parliament, declaring its own power;
|
|
which very Parliament, however, shewed wisely so much tender regard
|
|
to those inveterate prejudices, as to repeal a tax that had odiously
|
|
militated against them. -- And those prejudices are still so fixed
|
|
and rooted in the Americans, that it is supposed not a single man
|
|
among them has been convinced of his error by that act of Parliament.
|
|
|
|
The Minister, therefore, who first projected to lay aside the
|
|
accustomed method of requisition, and to raise money on America by
|
|
Stamps, seems not to have acted wisely in deviating from that method
|
|
(which the Colonists looked upon as constitutional) and thwarting,
|
|
unnecessarily, the general fixed prejudices of so great a number of
|
|
the King's subjects. It was not, however, for want of knowledge that
|
|
what he was about to do would give them great offence; he appears to
|
|
have been very sensible of this, and apprehensive that it might
|
|
occasion some disorders, to prevent or suppress which he projected
|
|
another Bill, that was brought in the same Session with the Stamp
|
|
Act, whereby it was to be made lawful for Military Officers in the
|
|
Colonies to quarter their Soldiers in private houses. This seemed
|
|
intended to awe the people into a compliance with the other Act.
|
|
Great opposition, however, being raised here against the Bill, by the
|
|
Agents from the Colonies, and the Merchants trading thither, the
|
|
Colonists declaring that, under such a power in the Army, no one
|
|
could look on his house as his own, or think he had a home, when
|
|
Soldiers might be thrust into it, and mixed with his family, at the
|
|
pleasure of an Officer, that part of the Bill was dropt; but there
|
|
still remained a clause, when it passed into a law, to oblige the
|
|
several Assemblies to provide quarters for the Soldiers, furnishing
|
|
them with fire, beds, candles, small beer or rum, and sundry other
|
|
articles, at the expence of the several Provinces. -- And this Act
|
|
continued in force when the Stamp Act was repealed, though, if
|
|
obligatory on the Assemblies, it equally militated against the
|
|
American principle above-mentioned, that money is not to be raised on
|
|
English subjects without their consent.
|
|
|
|
The Colonies nevertheless, being put into high good humour by
|
|
the repeal of the Stamp Act, chose to avoid a fresh dispute upon the
|
|
other, it being temporary, and soon to expire, never (as they hoped)
|
|
to revive again; and in the mean time they, by various ways, provided
|
|
for the quartering of the troops, either by Acts of their own
|
|
Assemblies, without taking notice of the Acts of Parliament, or by
|
|
some variety or small diminution (as of salt and vinegar) in the
|
|
supplies required by the Act, that what they did might appear a
|
|
voluntary act of their own, and not done in obedience to an Act of
|
|
Parliament, which they thought contrary to right, and therefore void
|
|
in itself.
|
|
|
|
It might have been well if the matter had thus passed without
|
|
notice; but an officious Governor having written home an angry and
|
|
aggravating letter upon this conduct in the Assembly of his province,
|
|
the outed projector of the Stamp Act and his adherents, then in the
|
|
opposition, raised such a clamour against America, as in rebellion,
|
|
&c. and against those who had been for the repeal of the Stamp Act,
|
|
as having thereby been encouragers of this supposed rebellion, that
|
|
it was thought necessary to enforce the Quartering Act by another Act
|
|
of Parliament, taking away from the Province of New-York, which had
|
|
been most explicit in its refusal, all the powers of legislation,
|
|
till it should have complied with that act: The news of which greatly
|
|
alarmed the people every where in America, as the language of such an
|
|
act seemed to be -- Obey implicitly laws made by the Parliament of
|
|
Great Britain, to force money from you without your consent, or you
|
|
shall enjoy no rights or privileges at all.
|
|
|
|
At the same time the late Chancellor of the Exchequer, desirous
|
|
of ingratiating himself with the opposition, or driven to it by their
|
|
clamours, projected the levying more money from America, by new
|
|
duties on various articles of our own manufacture, as glass, paper,
|
|
painters colours, &c. appointing a new Board of Customs, and sending
|
|
over a set of Commissioners (with large salaries) to be established
|
|
at Boston, who were to have the care of collecting these duties; and
|
|
which were, by the act, expressly mentioned to be intended for the
|
|
payment of the salaries of Governors, Judges, and other Officers of
|
|
the Crown in America, it being a pretty general opinion here, that
|
|
those Officers ought not to depend on the people there for any part
|
|
of their support.
|
|
|
|
It is not my intention to combat this opinion. But perhaps it
|
|
may be some satisfaction to the Public to know what ideas the
|
|
Americans have on the subject. They say then, as to Governors, that
|
|
they are not like Princes whose posterity have an inheritance in the
|
|
government of a nation, and therefore an interest in its prosperity;
|
|
they are generally strangers to the Provinces they are sent to
|
|
govern; have no estate, natural connection, or relation there, to
|
|
give them an affection for the country; that they come only to make
|
|
money as fast as they can, are frequently men of vicious characters
|
|
and broken fortunes, sent merely to get them off the hands of a
|
|
Minister somewhere out of the way; that as they intend staying in the
|
|
country no longer than their government continues, and purpose to
|
|
leave no family behind them, they are apt to be regardless of the
|
|
good will of the people, and care not what is said or thought of them
|
|
after they are gone. Their situation gives them many opportunities
|
|
of being vexatious, and they are often so, notwithstanding their
|
|
dependance on the Assemblies for all that part of their support that
|
|
does not arise from fees established by law, but would probably be
|
|
much more so if they were to be fully supported by money drawn from
|
|
the people, without the consent or good will of the people, which is
|
|
the professed design of this act. That if by means of these forced
|
|
duties, government is to be supported in America, without the
|
|
intervention of the Assemblies, their Assemblies will soon be looked
|
|
upon as useless, and a Governor will not call them, as having nothing
|
|
to hope from their meeting, and perhaps something to fear from their
|
|
enquiries into and remonstrances against his mal-administration; that
|
|
thus the people will be deprived of their most essential rights; that
|
|
its being, as at present, a Governor's interest to cultivate the good
|
|
will, by promoting the welfare of the people he governs, can be
|
|
attended with no prejudice to the Mother Country, since all the laws
|
|
he may be prevailed to give his assent to, are subject to revision
|
|
here, and if reported against by the Board of Trade, as hurtful to
|
|
the interest of this country, may and are immediately repealed by the
|
|
Crown; nor dare he pass any law contrary to his instructions, as he
|
|
holds his office during the pleasure of the Crown, and his securities
|
|
are liable for the penalties of their bonds if he contravenes those
|
|
instructions.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is what they say as to Governors.
|
|
|
|
As to Judges, they alledge, that being appointed from hence by
|
|
the Crown, and holding their commissions, not during good behaviour,
|
|
as in Britain, but during pleasure, all the weight of interest would
|
|
be thrown into one of the scales, (which ought to be held even) if
|
|
the salaries are also to be paid out of duties forced from the people
|
|
without their consent, and independent of their Assemblies'
|
|
approbation or dis-approbation of the Judges behaviour; that whenever
|
|
the Crown will grant commissions to able and honest Judges during
|
|
good behaviour, the Assemblies will settle permanent and ample
|
|
salaries on them during their commissions; but at present they have
|
|
no other means of getting rid of an ignorant, unjust Judge, (and some
|
|
of scandalous characters have, they say, been sent them) but by
|
|
starving him out.
|
|
|
|
I do not suppose these reasonings of the Americans will appear
|
|
here to have much weight in them. I do not produce them with an
|
|
expectation of convincing your Readers. I relate them merely in
|
|
pursuance of the task I have imposed on myself, to be an impartial
|
|
Historian of American facts and opinions. F. B.
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER.
|
|
|
|
The Colonists being greatly alarmed, as I observed in my last,
|
|
by news of the act for abolishing the legislature of New York, and
|
|
the imposition of these new duties professedly for such disagreeable
|
|
and to them appearing dangerous purposes; accompanied by a new set of
|
|
Revenue Officers, with large appointments, which gave strong
|
|
suspicion that more business of the same kind was soon to be provided
|
|
for them, that they might earn those salaries, began seriously to
|
|
consider their situation, and to revolve afresh in their minds
|
|
grievances which from their respect and love for this country they
|
|
had long borne, and seemed almost willing to forget. They reflected
|
|
how lightly the interests of all America had been esteemed here, when
|
|
the interest of a few inhabitants of Great Britain happened to have
|
|
the smallest competition with it. That thus the whole American
|
|
people were forbidden the advantage of a direct importation of wine,
|
|
oil, and fruit from Portugal, but must take them loaded with all the
|
|
expences of a voyage of one thousand leagues round about, being to be
|
|
landed first in England to be re-shipped for America; expences
|
|
amounting, in war time, at least to thirty per cent. more than
|
|
otherwise they would have been charged with, and all this, merely
|
|
that a few Portugal Merchants in London might gain a commission on
|
|
those goods passing through their hands. -- Portugal Merchants, by
|
|
the bye, who can complain loudly of the smallest hardships laid on
|
|
their trade by foreigners, and yet even the last year could oppose
|
|
with all their influence the giving ease to their fellow-subjects
|
|
under so heavy an oppression -- That on a frivolous complaint of a
|
|
few Virginia Merchants, nine Colonies were restrained from making
|
|
paper money, though become absolutely necessary to their internal
|
|
commerce, from the constant remittance of their gold and silver to
|
|
Britain. -- But not only the interest of a particular body of
|
|
Merchants, the interest of any small body of British Tradesmen or
|
|
Artificers, has been found, they say, to out-weigh that of all the
|
|
King's subjects in the Colonies.
|
|
|
|
There cannot be a stronger natural right than that of a man's
|
|
making the best profit he can of the natural produce of his lands,
|
|
provided he does not thereby injure the State in general. Iron is to
|
|
be found every where in America, and beaver furs are the natural
|
|
produce of that country. Hats, and nails, and steel, are wanted
|
|
there as well as here. It is of no importance to the common welfare
|
|
of the Empire, whether a subject gets his living by making hats on
|
|
this or that side of the water; yet the Hatters of England have
|
|
prevailed so far as to obtain an act in their own favour, restraining
|
|
that manufacture in America, in order to oblige the Americans to send
|
|
their beaver to England to be manufactured, and purchase back the
|
|
hats loaded with the charges of a double transportation. In the same
|
|
manner have a few Nail-makers, and still a smaller number of
|
|
Steel-makers (perhaps there are not half a dozen of these in England)
|
|
prevailed totally to forbid, by an act of Parliament, the erecting of
|
|
slitting-mills and steel-furnaces in America, that the Americans may
|
|
be obliged to take nails for their buildings, and steel for their
|
|
tools from these artificers under the same disadvantages. Added to
|
|
these, the Americans remembered the act authorizing the most cruel
|
|
insult that perhaps was ever offered by one people to another, that
|
|
of emptying our gaols into their settlements (Scotland too has within
|
|
these few years obtained the privilege it had not before, of sending
|
|
its rogues and villains to the Plantations) an insult aggravated by
|
|
that barbarous ill-placed sarcasm in a report of the Board of Trade,
|
|
when one of the Provinces complained of the act. "It is necessary
|
|
that it should be continued for the Better Peopling of your Majesty's
|
|
Colonies." I say, reflecting on these things, the Americans said to
|
|
one another, (their news papers are full of such discourses) these
|
|
people are not content with making a monopoly of us, forbidding us to
|
|
trade with any other country of Europe, and compelling us to buy
|
|
every thing of them, though in many articles we could furnish
|
|
ourselves 10, 20, and even 50 per cent. cheaper elsewhere; but now
|
|
they have as good as declared they have a right to tax us, _ad
|
|
libitum_, internally and externally; and that our constitution and
|
|
liberties shall all be taken away if we do not submit to that claim.
|
|
They are not content with the high prices at which they sell us their
|
|
goods, but have now begun to enhance those prices by new duties; and
|
|
by the expensive apparatus of a new set of Officers, they appear to
|
|
intend an augmentation and multiplication of those burthens that
|
|
shall still be more grievous to us. Our people have been foolishly
|
|
fond of their superfluous modes and manufactures, to the
|
|
impoverishing our country, carrying off all our cash, and loading us
|
|
with debt; they will not suffer us to restrain the luxury of our
|
|
inhabitants as they do that of their own, by laws; they can make laws
|
|
to discourage or prohibit the importation of French superfluities;
|
|
but though those of England are as ruinous to us as the French ones
|
|
are to them; if we make a law of that kind, they immediately repeal
|
|
it. Thus they get all our money from us by trade, and every profit
|
|
we can any where make by our fishery, our produce, and our commerce,
|
|
centers finally with them! but this does not satisfy. It is time
|
|
then to take care of ourselves by the best means in our power. Let
|
|
us unite in solemn resolutions and engagements with and to each
|
|
other, that we will give these new Officers as little trouble as
|
|
possible by not consuming the British manufactures on which they are
|
|
to levy the duties. Let us agree to consume no more of their
|
|
expensive gew-gaws; let us live frugally; and let us industriously
|
|
manufacture what we can for ourselves; thus we shall be able
|
|
honourably to discharge the debts we already owe them, and after that
|
|
we may be able to keep some money in our country, not only for the
|
|
uses of our internal commerce, but for the service of our gracious
|
|
Sovereign, whenever he shall have occasion for it, and think proper
|
|
to require it of us in the old constitutional manner. For
|
|
notwithstanding the reproaches thrown out against us in their public
|
|
papers and pamphlets; notwithstanding we have been reviled in their
|
|
Senate as rebels and traitors, we are truly a loyal people. Scotland
|
|
has had its rebellions, and England its plots, against the present
|
|
royal family; but America is untainted with those crimes; there is in
|
|
it scarce a man, there is not a single native of our country who is
|
|
not firmly attached to his King by principle and by affection. But a
|
|
new kind of loyalty seems to be required of us, a loyalty to
|
|
Parliament; a loyalty that is to extend, it seems, to a surrender of
|
|
all our properties, whenever a House of Commons, in which there is
|
|
not a single Member of our chusing, shall think fit to grant them
|
|
away without our consent, and to a patient suffering the loss of our
|
|
privileges, as Englishmen, if we cannot submit to make such
|
|
surrender. We were separated too far from Britain by the ocean, but
|
|
we were united strongly to it by respect and love, so that we could
|
|
at any time freely have spent our lives and little fortunes in its
|
|
cause; but this unhappy new system of politics tends to dissolve
|
|
those bands of union, and to sever us for ever. Woe to the man that
|
|
first adopted it! Both countries will long have cause to execrate
|
|
his memory.
|
|
|
|
These are the wild ravings of the at present half distracted
|
|
Americans. To be sure no reasonable man in England can approve of
|
|
such sentiments, and, as I said before, I do not pretend to support
|
|
or justify them; but I sincerely wish, for the sake of the
|
|
manufactures and commerce of Great Britain, and for the sake of the
|
|
strength a firm union with our growing colonies would give us, that
|
|
those people had never been thus needlessly driven out of their
|
|
senses. F. B.
|
|
|
|
January 7, 1768; reprinted in _The London Chronicle_,
|
|
August 30 and September 1, 1774
|
|
|
|
_Subjects of Subjects_
|
|
|
|
Mr. URBAN, Your anonymous correspondent, (See Vol. xxxvii. p.
|
|
620.) has declaimed on a subject, which by an unhappy combination of
|
|
ignorance and obstinacy has become very like a bone of contention
|
|
between the young and the old provinces of this great common-wealth.
|
|
|
|
It seldom happens in disputes of any kind but that one side or
|
|
the other lay the foundations of their arguments on error; it happens
|
|
more particularly so with your angry correspondent, for whose
|
|
information I will beg leave to give a short sketch of the British
|
|
constitution.
|
|
|
|
The British state or empire consists of several islands and
|
|
other distant countries, asunder in different parts of the globe,
|
|
_but all united in allegiance to one Prince_, and to the _common law_
|
|
(Scotland excepted) as it existed in the old provinces or mother
|
|
country, before the colonies or new provinces were formed. The
|
|
prince, with a select parliament, or assembly, make the legislative
|
|
power of and for each province within itself. Where vicinity made it
|
|
convenient, several islands and provinces were at sundry times
|
|
consolidated, and represented by one parliament, as the Isle of
|
|
Wight, Cornwall, Wales, Cheshire, Durham, and Scotland; by which
|
|
means all Great Britain and its contiguous isles, are unitedly
|
|
represented in one assembly in parliament. It has not as yet been
|
|
thought proper to unite Ireland to the old provinces, though lying
|
|
very near; nor any of the provinces of America, which lie at a great
|
|
distance. But notwithstanding this state of separate assemblies, the
|
|
allegiance of the distant provinces to the crown will remain for ever
|
|
unshaken, while they enjoy the rights of Englishmen; that is, with
|
|
the consent of their sovereign, the right of legislation each for
|
|
themselves; for this puts them on an exact level, in this respect,
|
|
with their fellow subjects in the old provinces, and better than this
|
|
they could not be by any change in their power. But if the old
|
|
provinces should often exercise the right of making laws for the new,
|
|
they would probably grow as restless as the Corsicans, when they
|
|
perceived they were no longer fellow subjects, but the subjects of
|
|
subjects.
|
|
|
|
|
|
To illustrate this matter by a comparison; Should it happen,
|
|
through the revolutions of time, that some future king should make
|
|
choice of Ireland for his seat of government, and that the parliament
|
|
of that kingdom, with his majesty's concurrence, should assume the
|
|
right of taxing the people of England, would the people of England
|
|
quietly acquiesce, or implicitly pay obedience to laws made by virtue
|
|
of such an assumed right? And yet, as there is no law in being to
|
|
prevent his majesty from making any part of his dominions the seat of
|
|
his government, the case is by no means foreign to the present
|
|
question.
|
|
|
|
The laws made here to tax the Americans affect them as a
|
|
distinct body, in which the law makers are in no manner whatever,
|
|
comprehended; whereas the laws made to tax Great-Britain, affect
|
|
alike every member who gives his concurrence to such law. And hence
|
|
arises the essential difference between _real_ and _virtual_
|
|
representations, so much agitated.
|
|
|
|
Your correspondent observes, `that we are loaded with 130
|
|
millions of debt; great part of which, was contracted by defending
|
|
the Americans, and therefore that they are bound in gratitude, &c.'
|
|
Were this argument of weight, and were the right of taxing to follow
|
|
the obligation of defence, we have expended more than the whole sum
|
|
on various occasions, in defence of the balance of power on the
|
|
continent. Will your correspondent for that reason, argue, that
|
|
Great-Britain has a right of taxing her friends in Germany? Hanover
|
|
for instance, was formerly said to have cost this nation immense sums
|
|
for its defence; and Hanover is a district under the obedience of the
|
|
king of Great-Britain. Will it follow that we have any right to tax
|
|
Hanover, or that Hanover, in gratitude for the sums we have expended
|
|
in her behalf, should implicitly give up her ancient rights?
|
|
|
|
Upon the whole, the point in dispute does not depend on
|
|
_gratitude_ or _defence_, but on the right of Englishmen to give
|
|
their own money with their own consent. While the Americans were in
|
|
possession of that right, or thought themselves in possession of it,
|
|
every requisition for that purpose by the king or his ministers was
|
|
chearfully complyed with; but since that right, by the mistaken
|
|
_policy of one man_, has been brought in question; murmuring and
|
|
discontent has succeeded, and every artifice is now practiced to
|
|
withold sums levied _by a new mode_; which had they been demanded in
|
|
the _old way_, would have been willingly granted. _I am, Sir, &c._
|
|
A. B.
|
|
|
|
_Gentleman's Magazine_, January, 1768
|
|
|
|
_On the Candidacy of Barlow Trecothick_
|
|
|
|
_To the_ PRINTER:
|
|
|
|
I am, Sir, a native of _Boston_, in _New-England_, but I do not
|
|
concern myself in your _London_ election; nor do I believe that any
|
|
of my countrymen think it of importance to them, whether you choose
|
|
Alderman _T_. your representative, or reject him. And yet I hear
|
|
great clamour, as if his nomination were to promote a _Boston_
|
|
interest. He may be, for ought I know, a man of abilities, and a
|
|
friend of ours: But, should he get into P ------ t, what is one man
|
|
among five or six hundred? A drop in the bucket. He may be well
|
|
acquainted with the interests of both countries, a moderate prudent
|
|
man, and so a fit instrument to conciliate jarring interests, and
|
|
restore harmony between us. But possibly you have men enough as well
|
|
qualified in those respects, and better in others. Choose whom you
|
|
please, only never hereafter tell us, as a reason for our submitting
|
|
to your taxes, _that we are represented in your Parliament_, when
|
|
even an _Englishman_, having _been in_ America, is made an absolute
|
|
disqualification, a bar to his being chosen at all.
|
|
|
|
I sit down, Sir, after much patience, merely to take some
|
|
notice of the invective and abuse, that have, on this occasion, been
|
|
so liberally bestowed on my country, by your writers who sign
|
|
themselves _Old England_, _a Londoner_, _a Liveryman of London_, &c.
|
|
&c. [By the way, Mr. Printer, should I have said liberally or
|
|
illiberally? Not being now it seems allowed to be an _Englishman_, I
|
|
ought modestly to doubt my _English_, and submit it as I do to your
|
|
correction.] The public, however, has been assured by these
|
|
gentlemen, that "the _Bostonians_ have an _evil disposition_ towards
|
|
_Old England_, a rooted _malice_ against this country, an _implacable
|
|
enmity_ to it;" they talk of our having "_hostile_ intentions," and
|
|
making "_barbarous_ resolutions against it;" they say that "neither
|
|
_French_ nor _Spaniards_ have as yet outdone the _Bostonians_ in
|
|
_malicious combinations against its existence_;" that we are "_as
|
|
inveterate enemies_ to _Old England_, as ever the _Carthagenians_
|
|
appeared to be to _Rome_." -- If all this is true, the inference
|
|
intended is a plain one; it is as proper now to make war on _Boston_,
|
|
as ever it was to make war against _France_ or _Spain_; and it will
|
|
be as right a thing in _Old-England_, totally to destroy
|
|
_New-England_, as it was in _Old Rome_ to destroy _Carthage_ -- You
|
|
should not be contented with cutting the throats of one half of us in
|
|
the _West_, to make the other half buy your goods whether they will
|
|
or no, (as some _Londoners say_ other _Londoners do_ in the _East_)
|
|
but the word should be, with old _Cato_, delenda est_: Don't leave
|
|
one stone upon another, nor a _Carthagenian_ or _Bostonian_ alive
|
|
upon the face of the earth. -- Is this what these valiant writers
|
|
would be at? And shall we again see them, as in the time of the
|
|
Stamp-Act, exhorting government to pour its armies into the colonies,
|
|
and deluge the country with blood? But government was, and will be
|
|
wiser. ------ And do _these_ gentlemen talk of _humanity_? And do
|
|
_they_ complain of _inhumanity_? the _inhumanity_ of _Boston_ people!
|
|
-- the _horrible inhumanity_ of resolving to live within compass, and
|
|
manufacture what they can for themselves!
|
|
|
|
O! but this would be _"inhumanity to England,"_ "it is
|
|
_Bostonian cruelty_, that wants to starve our poor!"
|
|
|
|
Supposing it, for a moment, true, give me leave, Sir, on this
|
|
head, to recriminate a little. I shall do it gently. I will not
|
|
bring railing accusations of my own making against you _Englishmen_:
|
|
And [all good friends and fellow citizens as you are] it must be
|
|
supposed that you touch your own failings tenderly, _"Nought is
|
|
aggravated, nought set down in anger." -- _ I have been a reader
|
|
then, of your news-papers and pamphlets for these three years past;
|
|
and I find them filled with complaints, that the country and city
|
|
swarm with rich _engrossers_, _forestallers_, _monopolizers_, who
|
|
combine to make an artificial famine, to oppress and starve the poor,
|
|
in order to make themselves more rich. I find your _farmers_ charged
|
|
in a body, as cruelly withholding the staff of life; your _millers_,
|
|
_meal-men_ and _bakers_ represented as thieves and poisoners; your
|
|
_merchants_ accused of sending away your corn, and starving your own
|
|
people, to feed foreigners, for the sake of a little profit to
|
|
themselves, or hoarding it up in magazines till spoilt, rather than
|
|
let the poor have it at a moderate price. -- I find your
|
|
_landholders_, that great and respectable body, charged with
|
|
endeavouring by every means in their power to keep up the price of
|
|
provisions, that the farmers may thereby be enabled to pay them
|
|
higher rents, for the better support of their excessive luxury. I
|
|
find even your p ------ ts, who are chosen chiefly by your
|
|
_landholders_, charged with entering into their views; and that there
|
|
have arisen laws to prevent the importation of beef, pork, corn, &c.
|
|
from your own _Ireland_, as well as from any foreign country, lest
|
|
the poor in _England_ should eat at a less expence; and even laws to
|
|
tax those poor towards paying a bounty on the exportation of corn,
|
|
lest too great a plenty at home should lower the price of bread.
|
|
|
|
Pray, Gentlemen, are these things so?
|
|
|
|
And are your own people really such tyrants and oppressors of
|
|
the poor?
|
|
|
|
I, that am a stranger among ye, cannot be qualified to judge.
|
|
I can only say, that, as you live together, you have better
|
|
opportunities of _knowing one another_, than you have of knowing us
|
|
at 3000 miles distance, and that therefore what you say of _one
|
|
another_ is rather more to be depended on. Not to affront you,
|
|
therefore, by affecting to doubt these facts of your asserting, I
|
|
would only submit it to your consideration, whether it might not be
|
|
at least decent, to cure yourselves of _inhumanity_, before you
|
|
venture to charge it upon us. Pluck this beam out of your own eyes,
|
|
before you pretend to spy the mote in ours. We have no malice
|
|
against your poor, no desire in the least to starve them; but we
|
|
think we are unable to continue purchasing your manufactures, not
|
|
only at high prices, but at those prices enhanced by duties; and
|
|
therefore we resolve to make what we want; not to starve _your_ poor,
|
|
but to prevent becoming poor and starving _ourselves. -- Charity_,
|
|
your own proverb says, _begins at home._ Why should you expect us to
|
|
have more concern for your poor than you have? If you want our help
|
|
in maintaining them as heretofore, you know how it may be easily had.
|
|
The means are in your own hands; you know you got all from us, by
|
|
trade, that we could possibly spare, and kept us besides continually
|
|
in your debt; what would you, what can you have more? The situation
|
|
of the colonies seems similar to that of the cows in the fable;
|
|
forbidden to suckle their own calves, and daily drawn dry, they yet
|
|
parted with their milk willingly; but when moreover a tax came to be
|
|
demanded of them, and that too to be paid _in grass_ of which they
|
|
had already too short a provision; it was no wonder they thought
|
|
their masters unreasonable, and resolved for the future to suck one
|
|
another.
|
|
|
|
_Boston man_ as I am, Sir, and inimical, as my country is
|
|
represented to be, I hate neither _England_ nor _Englishmen_, driven
|
|
(though my ancestors were) by mistaken oppression of former times,
|
|
out of this happy country, to suffer all the hardships of an
|
|
_American_ wilderness. I retain no resentment on that account. I
|
|
wish prosperity to the nation; I honour, esteem, and love its people.
|
|
I only hate calumniators and boute-feus on either side the water, who
|
|
would for the little dirty purposes of faction, set brother against
|
|
brother, turn friends into mortal enemies, and ruin an empire by
|
|
dividing it. -- The very injurious treatment _America_ has lately
|
|
received, in so many _London_ prints, may have some tendency to
|
|
alienate still more the affections of that country from this; but as
|
|
your papers extend thither, I wish our people may by their means be
|
|
informed, that those abuses do not flow from the general sense of
|
|
people here; that they are the productions of a few unknown angry
|
|
writers, heated by an election contest, who rave against _America_,
|
|
because a candidate they would decry once lived there, and happens to
|
|
be otherwise unexceptionable: Writers who (as I have shewn) _abuse_
|
|
their own country as virulently as they do ours; and whose invectives
|
|
are disapproved by all people of understanding and moderation. Let
|
|
it be known that there is much good will towards _America_ in the
|
|
generality of this nation; and that however government may sometimes
|
|
happen to be mistaken or misled, with relation to _American_
|
|
interests, there is no general intention to oppress us; and that
|
|
therefore, we may rely upon having every real grievance removed, on
|
|
proper representations. By spreading these truths in your paper
|
|
through _America_, Sir, you may come to deserve a share in that
|
|
blessing which is promised to the peace-makers, when only its reverse
|
|
can be expected by these unhappy writers. _East-Greenwich, March_ 8,
|
|
1768. NEW-ENGLAND.
|
|
|
|
_The Pennsylvania Chronicle_, December 12, 1768
|
|
|
|
_On the Labouring Poor_
|
|
|
|
SIR, I have met with much invective in the papers for these two
|
|
years past, against the hard-heartedness of the rich, and much
|
|
complaint of the great oppressions suffered in this country by the
|
|
labouring poor. Will you admit a word or two on the other side of
|
|
the question? I do not propose to be an advocate for oppression, or
|
|
oppressors. But when I see that the poor are by such writings
|
|
exasperated against the rich, and excited to insurrections, by which
|
|
much mischief is done, and some forfeit their lives, I could wish the
|
|
true state of things were better understood, the poor not made by
|
|
these busy writers more uneasy and unhappy than their situation
|
|
subjects them to be, and the nation not brought into disrepute among
|
|
foreigners by public groundless accusations of ourselves, as if the
|
|
rich in England had no compassion for the poor, and Englishmen wanted
|
|
common humanity.
|
|
|
|
In justice then to this country, give me leave to remark, that
|
|
the condition of the poor here is by far the best in Europe, for
|
|
that, except in England and her American colonies, there is not in
|
|
any country of the known world, not even in Scotland or Ireland, a
|
|
provision by law to enforce a support of the poor. Every where else
|
|
necessity reduces to beggary. This law was not made by the poor.
|
|
The legislators were men of fortune. By that act they voluntarily
|
|
subjected their own estates, and the estates of all others, to the
|
|
payment of a tax for the maintenance of the poor, incumbering those
|
|
estates with a kind of rent charge for that purpose, whereby the poor
|
|
are vested with an inheritance, as it were, in all the estates of the
|
|
rich. I wish they were benefited by this generous provision in any
|
|
degree equal to the good intention with which it was made, and is
|
|
continued: But I fear the giving mankind a dependance on any thing
|
|
for support in age or sickness, besides industry and frugality during
|
|
youth and health, tends to flatter our natural indolence, to
|
|
encourage idleness and prodigality, and thereby to promote and
|
|
increase poverty, the very evil it was intended to cure; thus
|
|
multiplying beggars, instead of diminishing them.
|
|
|
|
Besides this tax, which the rich in England have subjected
|
|
themselves to in behalf of the poor, amounting in some places to five
|
|
or six shillings in the pound of the annual income, they have, by
|
|
donations and subscriptions, erected numerous schools in various
|
|
parts of the kingdom, for educating gratis the children of the poor
|
|
in reading and writing, and in many of those schools the children are
|
|
also fed and cloathed. They have erected hospitals, at an immense
|
|
expence, for the reception and cure of the sick, the lame, the
|
|
wounded, and the insane poor, for lying-in women, and deserted
|
|
children. They are also continually contributing towards making up
|
|
losses occasioned by fire, by storms, or by floods, and to relieve
|
|
the poor in severe seasons of frost, in times of scarcity, &c. in
|
|
which benevolent and charitable contributions no nation exceeds us.
|
|
-- Surely there is some gratitude due for so many instances of
|
|
goodness!
|
|
|
|
Add to this, all the laws made to discourage foreign
|
|
manufactures, by laying heavy duties on them, or totally prohibiting
|
|
them, whereby the rich are obliged to pay much higher prices for what
|
|
they wear and consume, than if the trade was open: These are so many
|
|
laws for the support of our labouring poor, made by the rich, and
|
|
continued at their expence; all the difference of price between our
|
|
own and foreign commodities, being so much given by our rich to our
|
|
poor; who would indeed be enabled by it to get by degrees above
|
|
poverty, if they did not, as too generally they do, consider every
|
|
increase of wages only as something that enables them to drink more
|
|
and work less; so that their distress in sickness, age, or times of
|
|
scarcity, continues to be the same as if such laws had never been
|
|
made in their favour.
|
|
|
|
Much malignant censure have some writers bestowed upon the rich
|
|
for their luxury and expensive living, while the poor are starving,
|
|
&c. not considering that what the rich expend, the labouring poor
|
|
receive in payment for their labour. It may seem a paradox if I
|
|
should assert, that our labouring poor do in every year receive _the
|
|
whole revenue of the nation_; I mean not only the public revenue, but
|
|
also the revenue, or clear income, of all private estates, or a sum
|
|
equivalent to the whole. In support of this position I reason thus.
|
|
The rich do not work for one another. Their habitations, furniture,
|
|
cloathing, carriages, food, ornaments, and every thing in short that
|
|
they, or their families use and consume, is the work or produce of
|
|
the labouring poor, who are, and must be, continually paid for their
|
|
labour in producing the same. In these payments the revenues of
|
|
private estates are expended, for most people live up to their
|
|
incomes. In cloathing and provision for troops, in arms, ammunition,
|
|
ships, tents, carriages, &c. &c. (every particular the produce of
|
|
labour) much of the publick revenue is expended. The pay of officers
|
|
civil and military, and of the private soldiers and sailors, requires
|
|
the rest; and they spend that also in paying for what is produced by
|
|
the labouring poor. I allow that some estates may increase by the
|
|
owners spending less than their income; but then I conceive that
|
|
other estates do at the same time diminish, by the owner's spending
|
|
more than their income, so that when the enriched want to buy more
|
|
land, they easily find lands in the hands of the impoverished, whose
|
|
necessities oblige them to sell; and thus this difference is
|
|
equalled. I allow also, that part of the expence of the rich is in
|
|
foreign produce or manufactures, for producing which the labouring
|
|
poor of other nations must be paid; but then I say, that we must
|
|
first pay our own labouring poor for an equal quantity of our
|
|
manufactures or produce, to exchange for those foreign productions,
|
|
or we must pay for them in money, which money, not being the natural
|
|
produce of our country, must first be purchased from abroad, by
|
|
sending out its value in the produce or manufactures of this country,
|
|
for which manufactures our labouring poor are to be paid. And indeed
|
|
if we did not export more than we import, we could have no money at
|
|
all. I allow farther, that there are middle men, who make a profit,
|
|
and even get estates, by purchasing the labour of the poor and
|
|
selling it at advanced prices to the rich; but then they cannot enjoy
|
|
that profit or the incomes of estates, but by spending them in
|
|
employing and paying our labouring poor, in some shape or other, for
|
|
the products of industry -- Even beggars, pensioners, hospitals, and
|
|
all that are supported by charity, spend their incomes in the same
|
|
manner. So that finally, as I said at first, _our labouring poor
|
|
receive annually the whole of the clear revenues of the nation_, and
|
|
from us they can have no more.
|
|
|
|
If it be said that their wages are too low, and that they ought
|
|
to be better paid for their labour, I heartily wish any means could
|
|
be fallen upon to do it, consistent with their interest and
|
|
happiness; but as the cheapness of other things is owing to the
|
|
plenty of those things, so the cheapness of labour is, in most cases,
|
|
owing to the multitude of labourers, and to their underworking one
|
|
another in order to obtain employment. How is this to be remedied?
|
|
A law might be made to raise their wages; but if our manufactures are
|
|
too dear, they will not vend abroad, and all that part of employment
|
|
will fail, unless by fighting and conquering we compel other nations
|
|
to buy our goods, whether they will or no, which some have been mad
|
|
enough at times to propose. Among ourselves, unless we give our
|
|
working people less employment, how can we, for what they do, pay
|
|
them higher than we do? Out of what fund is the additional price of
|
|
labour to be paid, when all our present incomes are, as it were,
|
|
mortgaged to them? Should they get higher wages, would that make
|
|
them less poor, if in consequence they worked fewer days of the week
|
|
proportionably? I have said a law might be made to raise their
|
|
wages; but I doubt much whether it could be executed to any purpose,
|
|
unless another law, now indeed almost obsolete, could at the same
|
|
time be revived and enforced; a law, I mean, that many have often
|
|
heard and repeated, but few have ever duly considered. SIX _days
|
|
shalt thou labour._ This is as positive a part of the commandment as
|
|
that which says, _the_ SEVENTH _day thou shalt rest_; but we remember
|
|
well to observe the indulgent part, and never think of the other. St
|
|
Monday is generally as duly kept by our working people as Sunday; the
|
|
only difference is, that, instead of employing their time, cheaply,
|
|
at church, they are wasting it expensively at the alehouse. _I am,
|
|
Sir, &c._ MEDIUS.
|
|
|
|
_Gentleman's Magazine_, April, 1768
|
|
|
|
_Phonetic Alphabet_
|
|
|
|
REMARKS
|
|
|
|
o It is endeavoured to give the Alphabet a more natural to
|
|
Order, beginning first with the simple Sounds form'd huh by the
|
|
Breath, with none or very little Help of Tongue, Teeth and Lips, and
|
|
produc'd chiefly in the Windpipe.
|
|
|
|
ish * Then coming forward to those form'd by the gi ing * Root
|
|
of the Tongue next to the Windpipe; ki
|
|
|
|
r n Then to those form'd more forward by the forepart of t d
|
|
the Tongue against the Roof of the Mouth;
|
|
|
|
es ez Then those form'd still more forward in the Mouth, el by
|
|
the Tip of the Tongue, apply'd first to the Roots of the upper Teeth,
|
|
|
|
eth, * Then to the Ends or Edges of the same edh * Teeth;
|
|
|
|
ef Then to those form'd still more forward by the ev under Lip
|
|
apply'd to the upper Teeth;
|
|
|
|
bi Then to those form'd yet more forward by the upper pi and
|
|
under Lip opening to let out the sounding Breath;
|
|
|
|
m And lastly ending with the Shutting up of the Mouth or
|
|
closing the Lips, while any Vowel is sounding.
|
|
|
|
In this Alphabet c is omitted as unnecessary, k supplying its
|
|
hard Sound and s the soft.
|
|
|
|
The Jod j is also omitted, its Sound being supplied by the new
|
|
Letter ish *, which serves other purposes, assisting in the formation
|
|
of other Sounds; thus the * with a d before it gives the Sound of the
|
|
Jod j and soft g, as in James, January, Giant, gentle, _d*eems_,
|
|
_d*anueri_, _d*yiant_, _d*entel_; with a t before it, it gives the
|
|
Sound of ch soft, as in cherry, chip, _t*eri_, _t*ip_; and with an z
|
|
before it the French sound of the Jod j, as in jamais, _z*ame._
|
|
|
|
Thus the g has no longer two different Sounds, which occasion'd
|
|
Confusion, but is as every Letter ought to be, confin'd to one; the
|
|
same is to be observ'd in all the Letters, Vowels and Consonants,
|
|
that wherever they are met with, or in whatever Company, their Sound
|
|
is always the same. It is also intended that there be no superfluous
|
|
Letters used in Spelling, i.e. no Letter that is not sounded, and
|
|
this Alphabet by Six new Letters provides that there be no distinct
|
|
Sounds in the Language without Letters to express them. As to the
|
|
Difference between short and long Vowels, it is naturally express'd
|
|
by a single Vowel where short, a double one where long; as, for
|
|
_mend_ write _mend_, but for _remain'd_ write _rime en'd_; for _did_,
|
|
write _did_, but for _deed_, write _diid_, &c.
|
|
|
|
this What in our common Alphabet is suppos'd the to third
|
|
Vowel, i, as we sound it is not a Vowel but a be Diphthong,
|
|
consisting of two of our Vowels join'd, altered viz. a as sounded in
|
|
_all_ or u as sounded in unto and e: any one will be sensible of
|
|
this, who sounds those two Vowels ae or ue quick after each other;
|
|
the Sound begins _aw_ or y and ends _ee._ The true Sound of the i is
|
|
that we now give to e in the words _deed_, _keep_, &c. [ ]
|
|
|
|
1768?
|
|
|
|
_Phonetic Alphabet_
|
|
|
|
_Names of the Letters express'd in the reform'd _Characters._
|
|
_Sounded as now in_ Sounds and Characters_
|
|
|
|
o old o the first Vowel naturally,
|
|
and deepest sound; requires only to open the Mouth, and breathe thro'
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
* [*] John, Folly * the next, requiring the Mouth
|
|
open'd a little more or hollower.
|
|
|
|
a man, can a the next, a little more.
|
|
|
|
e mane, lane e the next, requires the Tongue to
|
|
be a little more elevated tho the Pipe alone will form them, but not
|
|
so easily.
|
|
|
|
i een, seen i the next, still a little more,
|
|
|
|
u tool, fool u the next, requires the Lips to
|
|
be gather'd up, leaving a small Opening.
|
|
|
|
* [*;*] um, un, as in * the next, a very short Vowel,
|
|
umbrage, unto, &c. the Sound of which we should express in our
|
|
present Letters thus, _uh_, a short and not very strong Aspiration.
|
|
|
|
h hunter, happy, high huh a stronger or more forcible
|
|
Aspiration.
|
|
|
|
g give, gather gi the first Consonant, being
|
|
form'd by the Root of the Tongue, this is the present hard g.
|
|
|
|
k keep, kick ki a kindred Sound, a little
|
|
more acute, to be us'd instead of the hard c.
|
|
|
|
* [*] sh, ship, wish ish a new Letter, wanted in our
|
|
Language, our sh, separately taken, not being proper Elements of the
|
|
Sound.
|
|
|
|
* [*] ng, ing, reaping, ing a new Letter, wanted for the
|
|
among same Reason; these are form'd back in the Mouth.
|
|
|
|
n end en form'd more forward in the
|
|
Mouth, the Tip of the Tongue to the Roof of the Mouth.
|
|
|
|
r art ar the same, the Tip of the
|
|
Tongue a little loose or separate from the Roof of the Mouth.
|
|
|
|
t teeth ti the Tip of the Tongue more
|
|
forward, touching and then leaving the Roof.
|
|
|
|
d deed di the same, touching a little
|
|
fuller.
|
|
|
|
l ell, tell el the same touching just about
|
|
the Gums of the upper Teeth.
|
|
|
|
* [*] th, think e* the Tongue under and a little
|
|
behind the upper Teeth, touching them nearly but so as to let the
|
|
Breath pass between.
|
|
|
|
* [*,*] dh, thy e* the same a little fuller.
|
|
|
|
s essence es this Sound is form'd by the
|
|
Breath passing between the moist End of the Tongue and the upper
|
|
Teeth.
|
|
|
|
z ez, wages ez the same a little denser and
|
|
duller.
|
|
|
|
f effect ef form'd by the lower Lip against
|
|
the upper Teeth.
|
|
|
|
v ever ev the same fuller and duller.
|
|
|
|
b bees bi the lips put full together and
|
|
open'd as the Air passes out.
|
|
|
|
p peep pi the same but a thinner Sound.
|
|
|
|
m ember em the closing of the Lips, while
|
|
the e is sounding.
|
|
|
|
_Queries_
|
|
|
|
For the London Chronicle. QUERIES _recommended to the Consideration
|
|
of those Gentlemen who are for_ vigorous Measures _with the_
|
|
AMERICANS.
|
|
|
|
1. Have the Colonists _refused_ to answer any reasonable
|
|
requisitions made to their _Assemblies_ by the Mother Country?
|
|
|
|
2. If they have _not refused_ to grant reasonable aids in the
|
|
way, which they think consistent with _liberty_, why must they be
|
|
stripped of their property without their own _consent_, and in a way,
|
|
which they think _inconsistent_ with liberty?
|
|
|
|
3. What is it for a people to be _enslaved_ and _tributary_, if
|
|
this be not, viz. To be _forced_ to give up their property at the
|
|
arbitrary pleasure of persons, to whose authority they have not
|
|
_submitted_ themselves, nor _chosen_ for the purpose of imposing
|
|
taxes upon them? Wherein consisted the impropriety of King Charles's
|
|
demanding ship-money by his sole authority, but in its being an
|
|
exercise of power by the King, which the people had not _given_ the
|
|
King? Have the people of America, as the people of Britain, by
|
|
sending Representatives, _consented_ to a power in the British
|
|
Parliament to tax them?
|
|
|
|
4. Has not the British Parliament, by repealing the stamp act,
|
|
acknowledged that they judged it _improper_? Is there any difference
|
|
between the stamp act, and the act obliging the Americans to pay
|
|
_whatever we please_, for articles which they _cannot do without_, as
|
|
glass and paper? Is there any difference as to justice between our
|
|
treatment of the Colonists, and the tyranny of the Carthaginians over
|
|
their conquered Sardinians, when they obliged them to take all their
|
|
corn from them, and at whatever price they pleased to set upon it?
|
|
|
|
5. If that be true, which is commonly said, viz. That the
|
|
Mother Country gains _two millions_ a year by the Colonies, would it
|
|
not have been wiser to have gone on quietly in the _happy way_ we
|
|
were in, till our gains by those rising and flourishing countries
|
|
should amount to _three_, _four_, or _five_ millions a year, than by
|
|
these new-fashioned vigorous measures to kill the goose which lays
|
|
the golden eggs? Would it not have been better policy, instead of
|
|
_taxing_ our Colonists, to have done whatever we could to _enrich_
|
|
them, and encourage them to take off our articles of _luxury_, on
|
|
which we may put our own price, and thus draw them into paying us a
|
|
_voluntary_ tax; than deluge them in blood, thin their countries,
|
|
empoverish and distress them, interrupt their commerce, force them on
|
|
bankruptcy, by which our merchants must be ruined, or tempt them to
|
|
emigrations, or alliances with our enemies?
|
|
|
|
6. The late war could not have been _carried on_ without
|
|
America, nor without Scotland? Have we treated America and Scotland
|
|
in such a manner as is likely in future wars to encourage their zeal
|
|
for the common cause? Or is England alone to be the Drawcansir of
|
|
the world, and to bully not only her enemies, but her _friends_?
|
|
|
|
7. Are not the subjects of Britain concerned to check a
|
|
ministry, who, by this rage of heaping taxes on taxes, are only
|
|
drawing into their own hands more and more wealth and power, while
|
|
they are hurting the _commercial_ interest of the empire in general,
|
|
at the same time that, amidst profound _peace_, the national debt and
|
|
burden on the public continue undiminished? N.M.C.N.P.C.H.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, August 18, 1768
|
|
|
|
_On Civil War_
|
|
|
|
_To the Printer of the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
|
|
SIR, Threescore Years did the oppressed United Provinces
|
|
maintain a War in Defence of their Liberties against the then
|
|
powerful Kingdom of _Spain_, with all the Wealth of the _Indies_ at
|
|
it's Command; and finally obliged it to acknowledge their
|
|
Independency in a formal Treaty, sitting down with the Loss of
|
|
Territory, Treasure and Reputation, and with a broken Strength that
|
|
has never since been recovered.
|
|
|
|
Contractors, jobbing mercantile Members of Parliament, Officers
|
|
starving on Half Pay, and Gunsmiths who _toast_, as the Papers tell
|
|
us, _a speedy and a perpetual War_, may wish, rather than no War at
|
|
all, for a _Civil_ one in America. These in all Conversations, to
|
|
encourage us in undertaking it, slight the Strength of those distant
|
|
People, think nothing of that Enthusiasm for Liberty, which in other
|
|
Countries and Ages has supplied all Deficiencies, and enabled a weak
|
|
People to battle the Efforts of a stronger; but tell us that half a
|
|
dozen Regiments are sufficient to reduce in less than a Year every
|
|
Province on the Continent. Half a dozen being once engaged in this
|
|
blessed Service, it is easy to write and shew the Necessity for more:
|
|
The more there are, the greater the Profits to those Gentry. And
|
|
whatever becomes of us poor Devils that live by Manufactures or by
|
|
Trade, that are to pay Taxes, or that have Money in the Funds, _they_
|
|
will amass Fortunes, buy our Estates, bribe our Boroughs, and vote in
|
|
Parliament the Rectitude of the Measure.
|
|
|
|
I believe our Officers and Soldiers as brave as any in the
|
|
World; and from that very Opinion of their Bravery I conjecture they
|
|
would not generally relish the being ordered on this murdering
|
|
Service against their Countrymen; to shed English Blood, to stifle
|
|
the British Spirit of Liberty now rising in the Colonies; that
|
|
LIBERTY which we should rather wish to see nourished and preserved
|
|
there, as on a loss of it here (which from our vices is perhaps not
|
|
far distant) we or our Posterity may have Occasion to resort to and
|
|
participate of; and possibly some of the ablest Officers may chuse,
|
|
with Sir _Jeffery Amherst_, rather to resign their Commissions. But
|
|
whatever may be the Bravery and military Prowess of our Troops, and
|
|
whatever the Zeal with which they would proceed in such a War, there
|
|
are Reasons that make me suspect it will not be so soon terminated as
|
|
some Folks would have us believe.
|
|
|
|
My reasons are drawn chiefly from a Computation founded on
|
|
_Facts._ It is well known that America is a Country full of Forests,
|
|
Mountains, &c. That in such a Country a small irregular Force can
|
|
give Abundance of Trouble to a regular one that is much greater: And
|
|
that, in the last War, _one_ of the _fifteen_ Colonies we now have
|
|
there (and one far short of being the strongest) held out _five
|
|
Years_ against _twenty-five thousand_ British regular Troops, joined
|
|
by _twenty-five thousand_ Colonists on their own Pay, and aided by a
|
|
strong Fleet of Men of War. What the Expence was to this Nation, our
|
|
Treasury Books and augmented Debt may shew. The Expence to America,
|
|
as their Pay was higher, could not be much less. The Colony we made
|
|
War upon was indeed aided by _France_, but during the whole Contest
|
|
not with more than five thousand Men. Now supposing that the
|
|
twenty-five thousand Colonists that then joined us should hereafter
|
|
be against us, and that this makes no Difference, and considering
|
|
that instead of _one_ Colony to conquer, we are to have _fifteen_,
|
|
and that possibly some of our good Neighbours may think of making a
|
|
Diversion in their Favour, I apprehend it not out of the Way to allow
|
|
_five_ Years still to a Colony; and this, by my Computation, will
|
|
amount to just _seventy-five_ Years. I hope Messieurs the Company of
|
|
Gunsmiths will for the present be so good as to be content with a
|
|
Civil War of _seventy-five_ Years, as perhaps we may scarce be able
|
|
to afford them a _perpetual_ one.
|
|
|
|
And what are we to gain by this War, by which our Trade and
|
|
Manufactures are to be ruined, our Strength divided and diminished,
|
|
our Debt increased, and our Reputation, as a generous Nation, and
|
|
Lovers of Liberty, given up and lost? Why, we are to convert
|
|
Millions of the King's loyal Subjects into Rebels, for the sake of
|
|
establishing a newly-claimed power in P ------ to tax a distant
|
|
People, whose Abilities and Circumstances they cannot be acquainted
|
|
with, who have a constitutional Power of taxing themselves; who have
|
|
never refused to give us voluntarily more than we can ever expect to
|
|
wrest from them by Force; and by our Trade with whom we gain Millions
|
|
a Year!
|
|
|
|
And is there not _one_ wise and good Man to be found in
|
|
_Britain_, who can propose some conciliating Measure that may prevent
|
|
this terrible Mischief? -- I fear not one. For _Quos Deus vult
|
|
perdere, dementat prius!_ N. N.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, August 25, 1768
|
|
|
|
_On Sinecures_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER of the GAZETTEER AND _NEW DAILY ADVERTISER._
|
|
|
|
Great complaints are every day made, that notwithstanding Great
|
|
Britain has involved herself in a very heavy debt, for the defence of
|
|
the American colonies in the late war, that now they refuse to pay
|
|
any part of this debt. On this subject there has been a very smart
|
|
paper war for some years, which controversy it seems, is like to be
|
|
decided by the all powerful argument of fire and sword.
|
|
|
|
This argument, on the side of Great Britain, has much alarmed
|
|
me, having myself a very considerable interest depending, as well as
|
|
several near relations on that side the water.
|
|
|
|
From the epithets of unjust, ungenerous rogues, rebels, &c.
|
|
which are so lavishly bestowed on the Americans, I have been induced
|
|
to look into those late acts of parliament, which the colonies refuse
|
|
to comply with, and to my very great surprize find there is not one
|
|
single word in those acts for the purpose of raising money to help
|
|
poor Old England, from which I begin to suspect we are all on a wrong
|
|
scent. How can we justly accuse them of refusing to assist poor Old
|
|
England in her distresses, when we neither ask or require it of them?
|
|
|
|
By those acts the money to be raised is for their own use, not
|
|
ours. But why in the name of wonder was such an act made? The money
|
|
to be raised, I find, is for their defence and the support of civil
|
|
government among themselves. When have they suffered by neglecting
|
|
to raise money for their own defence? So far were they from
|
|
neglecting to raise a sufficiency for that purpose during the late
|
|
war, that I am told the parliament gave them 4 or 500,000l. to
|
|
reimburse their extra expences. Why then are we to fear, that in a
|
|
time of profound peace, and when every enemy is driven out of the
|
|
country, that now they wo'nt raise money for their own defence? This
|
|
to me is unaccountable; but to send an army to force it for fear it
|
|
should not be done, is still more unaccountable.
|
|
|
|
As to their civil government, I have ever understood it is more
|
|
effectually supported there than in any other part of his Majesty's
|
|
dominions. My countrymen, we are all by the nose: there is a snake
|
|
in the grass: give yourselves but the trouble to look at those acts,
|
|
and reflect one moment as I have done, and you will at once see that
|
|
we are all set by the ears for we know not what. But by your leave I
|
|
will venture to hint, for your consideration, a very common custom
|
|
among pick-pockets, i. e. A thief cries catch thief. My reason for
|
|
this surmise is, from what I have hinted, you at once see we are to
|
|
have none of this money to ease our taxes: it will be of no use to
|
|
the Americans, otherwise they would consent to it. Who then is to
|
|
have the prize we are fighting for? To which I will venture to make
|
|
answer, Friends and Favourites; for by those acts you will find, that
|
|
the money raised is put under the direction of the Crown, to pay (or
|
|
give) to as many or what officers it pleases to appoint in America;
|
|
all which appointments and salaries, it is well known, are made and
|
|
concluded upon by the K -- g's Ministers.
|
|
|
|
Whoever therefore will give themselves the trouble to look at
|
|
these acts, which the Americans refuse to comply with, will at once
|
|
see the whole is a piece of ministerial policy, designed not for the
|
|
good of Great Britain or her colonies, but for an American
|
|
establishment, whereby they may be able to provide for friends and
|
|
favourites.
|
|
|
|
The Irish establishment has been much talked of as a sinecure
|
|
for friends and favourites, and cast-off mistresses; but this
|
|
American establishment promises a more ample provision for such-like
|
|
purposes. That this is the truth of the case, every one that will
|
|
give himself the trouble must see, unless troubled with the present
|
|
very polite disorder of being short-sighted. EXPOSITOR.
|
|
|
|
_The Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser_, September 28, 1768
|
|
|
|
_A New Version of the Lord's Prayer_
|
|
|
|
Old Version. New Version, by BF.
|
|
|
|
1. Our Father which art in Heaven. 1. Heavenly Father,
|
|
|
|
2. Hallowed be thy Name. 2. May all revere thee,
|
|
|
|
3. Thy Kingdom come. 3. And become thy dutiful
|
|
Children and faithful
|
|
Subjects.
|
|
|
|
4. Thy Will be done on Earth as 4. May thy Laws be obeyed
|
|
it is in Heaven. on Earth as perfectly as
|
|
they are in Heaven.
|
|
|
|
5. Give us this Day our daily 5. Provide for us this Day
|
|
Bread. as thou has hitherto
|
|
daily done.
|
|
|
|
6. Forgive us our Debts as 6. Forgive us our
|
|
we forgive our Debtors. Trespasses, and enable us
|
|
likewise to forgive those
|
|
that offend us.
|
|
|
|
7. And lead us not into Temptation, 7. Keep us out of
|
|
but deliver us from Evil. Temptation, and deliver
|
|
us from Evil.
|
|
|
|
_Reasons for the Change of Expression_
|
|
|
|
Old Version. _Our Father which art in Heaven_
|
|
|
|
New V. _Heavenly Father_, is more concise, equally expressive,
|
|
and better modern English.
|
|
|
|
Old. _Hallowed be thy Name._ This seems to relate to an
|
|
Observance among the Jews not to pronounce the proper or peculiar
|
|
Name of God, they deeming it a Profanation so to do. We have in our
|
|
Language no _proper Name_ for God; the Word _God_ being a common or
|
|
general Name, expressing all chief Objects of Worship, true or false.
|
|
The Word _hallowed_ is almost obsolete: People now have but an
|
|
imperfect Conception of the Meaning of the Petition. It is therefore
|
|
proposed to change the Expression into
|
|
|
|
New. _May all revere thee._
|
|
|
|
Old V. _Thy Kingdom come._ This Petition seems suited to the
|
|
then Condition of the Jewish Nation. Originally their State was a
|
|
Theocracy: God was their King. Dissatisfied with that kind of
|
|
Government, they desired a visible earthly King in the manner of the
|
|
Nations round them. They had such King's accordingly; but their
|
|
Happiness was not increas'd by the Change, and they had reason to
|
|
wish and pray for a Return of the Theocracy, or Government of God.
|
|
Christians in these Times have other Ideas when they speak of the
|
|
Kingdom of God, such as are perhaps more adequately express'd by
|
|
|
|
New V. _And become thy dutiful Children and faithful Subjects._
|
|
|
|
Old V. _Thy Will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven._ More
|
|
explicitly,
|
|
|
|
|
|
New V. _May thy Laws be obeyed on Earth as perfectly as they
|
|
are in Heaven._
|
|
|
|
Old V. _Give us this Day_ our _daily Bread._ Give us what is
|
|
_ours_, seems to put in a Claim of Right, and to contain too little
|
|
of the grateful Acknowledgment and Sense of Dependance that becomes
|
|
Creatures who live on the daily Bounty of their Creator. Therefore
|
|
it is changed to
|
|
|
|
New V. _Provide for us this Day, as thou hast hitherto daily
|
|
done._
|
|
|
|
Old V. _Forgive us our Debts as we forgive our Debtors._
|
|
Matthew. _Forgive us our Sins, for we also forgive every one that is
|
|
indebted to us._ Luke. Offerings were _due_ to God on many Occasions
|
|
by the Jewish Law, which when People could not pay, or had forgotten
|
|
as Debtors are apt to do, it was proper to pray that those Debts
|
|
might be forgiven. Our Liturgy uses neither the _Debtors_ of
|
|
Matthew, nor the _indebted_ of Luke, but instead of them speaks of
|
|
_those that trespass against us._ Perhaps the Considering it as a
|
|
Christian Duty to forgive Debtors, was by the Compilers thought an
|
|
inconvenient Idea in a trading Nation. There seems however something
|
|
presumptious in this Mode of Expression, which has the Air of
|
|
proposing ourselves as an Example of Goodness fit for God to imitate.
|
|
_We hope you will at least be as good as we are_; you see we forgive
|
|
one another, and therefore we pray that you would forgive us. Some
|
|
have considered it in another Sense, _Forgive us_ as _we forgive
|
|
others_; i.e. If we do not forgive others we pray that thou wouldst
|
|
not forgive us. But this being a kind of conditional _Imprecation_
|
|
against ourselves, seems improper in such a Prayer; and therefore it
|
|
may be better to say humbly and modestly
|
|
|
|
New V. _Forgive us our Trespasses, and enable us likewise to
|
|
forgive those that offend us._ This instead of assuming that we have
|
|
already in and of ourselves the Grace of Forgiveness, acknowledges
|
|
our Dependance on God, the Fountain of Mercy, for any Share we may
|
|
have of it, praying that he would communicate of it to us.
|
|
|
|
Old V. _And lead us not into Temptation_. The Jews had a
|
|
Notion, that God sometimes tempted, or directed or permitted the
|
|
Tempting of People. Thus it was said he tempted Pharaoh; directed
|
|
Satan to tempt Job; and a false Prophet to tempt Ahab, &c. Under
|
|
this Persuasion it was natural for them to pray that he would not put
|
|
them to such severe Trials. We now suppose that Temptation, so far
|
|
as it is supernatural, comes from the Devil only; and this Petition
|
|
continued, conveys a Suspicion which in our present Conceptions seems
|
|
unworthy of God, therefore might be altered to
|
|
|
|
New V. Keep _us_ out of _Temptation._
|
|
|
|
B. Franklin's Version of The Lord's Prayer.
|
|
|
|
Heavenly Father, may all revere thee, and become thy dutiful Children
|
|
and faithful Subjects; may thy Laws be obeyed on Earth as perfectly
|
|
as they are in Heaven: Provide for us this Day as thou hast hitherto
|
|
daily done: Forgive us our Trespasses, and enable us likewise to
|
|
forgive those that offend us. Keep us out of Temptation, and deliver
|
|
us from Evil.
|
|
|
|
1768?
|
|
|
|
_Defense of American Placeholders_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER.
|
|
|
|
Your correspondent _Machiavel_ tells us, that "Nothing can be a
|
|
greater burlesque on Patriotism, than the conduct of the Americans,
|
|
who affect discontent at being taxed, and therefore not only petition
|
|
and remonstrate, but are continually writing pamphlets, filling
|
|
news-papers, and consecrating Trees to Liberty; when, at the same
|
|
time, many of them are writing to administration how to enforce the
|
|
collection of such duties as are imposed, &c. &c. with a view to
|
|
obtain offices and pensions under the Crown, in America." -- And then
|
|
he gives us a list of fifteen Americans, whom he charges with having
|
|
been successfully guilty of this baseness. The whole apparently with
|
|
a view of lessening any concern the friends of Liberty here may have
|
|
for the injured people of that country, and of discountenancing any
|
|
endeavours for their relief, by thus rendering them both contemptible
|
|
and odious.
|
|
|
|
|
|
But, methinks it should be considered,
|
|
|
|
1. That if not only _fifteen_, but fifteen hundred, out of
|
|
three millions, had been seduced by corruption, to betray the
|
|
interests of their country, the proportion is not so great as to
|
|
judge of the rest by them, to conclude that therefore they might be
|
|
oppressed without injury, stripped of their rights without remorse;
|
|
their petitions and remonstrances disregarded; their constitution
|
|
dissolved; their towns insulted and dragooned; their real patriots
|
|
hanged as traitors, not for any disloyalty to their King, but merely
|
|
for doubting the power of parliament, in particular cases, or,
|
|
perhaps, only thwarting the views of a wrong-headed, pertinacious
|
|
minister.
|
|
|
|
2. That being loyal subjects to their sovereign, the Americans
|
|
think they have as good a right to enjoy offices under him in
|
|
America, as a Scotchman has in Scotland, or an Englishman in England;
|
|
and that they may equally hold them consistent with honour; since
|
|
they have never yet been taught to believe that the interests of
|
|
their King and his subjects are so contrary and incompatible, that an
|
|
honest man cannot serve the one without betraying the other.
|
|
|
|
Let me farther add, that, among the gentlemen in his list, I
|
|
know some, who, far from receiving the offices they hold, as the
|
|
wages of corruption, rose in them gradually and regularly, in a
|
|
course of years; others had been conferred as rewards of public
|
|
service, by sea and land, during war; others enjoyed their offices
|
|
many years before any dispute arose, or was dreamt of, between the
|
|
two countries; and have yet, throughout those disputes, been firm to
|
|
the cause of their country, at all hazards. If there are any of them
|
|
who are known, or even, on probable grounds, suspected, to have
|
|
betray'd it, such are in universal odium among their virtuous
|
|
compatriots; and therefore their country ought not to be censured
|
|
upon their account. To defend it from such indiscriminate censure,
|
|
is the chief end of my giving you this trouble.
|
|
|
|
Your correspondent adds, "Behold how true it is, that _every_
|
|
man has his price." In a former paper [Dec. 19.] he had told us,
|
|
(speaking of mankind) "We are honest as long as we thrive by it; but
|
|
if the Devil himself gives better wages, we change our party." For
|
|
the honour of my species, as well as of my country, I cannot but
|
|
suppose these maxims much _too general_. But as this writer has
|
|
professedly adopted them in their full extent, I must conclude they
|
|
may be true _so far at least as relates to himself_, since it is
|
|
plain _he knows of no exception_. An AMERICAN.
|
|
|
|
_The Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser_, January 17, 1769
|
|
|
|
_Positions To Be Examined_
|
|
|
|
April 4. 1769
|
|
|
|
1 All Food or Subsistence for Mankind arise from the Earth or
|
|
Waters.
|
|
|
|
2 Necessaries of Life that are not Foods, and all other
|
|
Conveniencies, have their Values estimated by the Proportion of Food
|
|
consumed while we are employed in procuring them.
|
|
|
|
3 A small People with a large Territory may subsist on the
|
|
Productions of Nature, with no other Labour than that of gathering
|
|
the Vegetables and catching the Animals.
|
|
|
|
4 A large People with a small Territory finds these
|
|
insufficient, and, to subsist, must labour the Earth to make it
|
|
produce greater Quantities of vegetable Food, suitable for the
|
|
Nourishment of Men, and of the Animals they intend to eat.
|
|
|
|
5 From the Labour arises a _great Increase_ of vegetable and
|
|
animal Food, and of Materials for Clothing, as Flax, Wool, Silk, &c.
|
|
The Superfluity of these is Wealth. With this Wealth we pay for the
|
|
Labour employed in building our Houses, Cities, &c. which are
|
|
therefore only Subsistence thus metamorphosed.
|
|
|
|
6 _Manufactures_ are only _another Shape_ into which so much
|
|
Provisions and Subsistence are turned as were _equal in Value_ to the
|
|
Manufactures produced. This appears from hence, that the
|
|
Manufacturer does not in fact, obtain from the Employer, for his
|
|
Labour, _more_ than a mere Subsistence, including Raiment Fuel and
|
|
Shelter; all which derive their Value from the Provisions consumed in
|
|
procuring them.
|
|
|
|
7 The Produce of the Earth, thus converted into Manufactures,
|
|
may be more easily carried to distant Markets than before such
|
|
Conversion.
|
|
|
|
8 _Fair_ Commerce is where equal Values are exchanged for equal
|
|
the Expence of Transport included. Thus if it costs A. in England as
|
|
much Labour and Charge to raise a Bushel of Wheat as it costs B. in
|
|
France to produce four Gallons of Wine then are four Gallons of Wine
|
|
the fair Exchange for a Bushel of Wheat. A and B meeting at half
|
|
Distance with their Commodities to make the Exchange. The Advantage
|
|
of this fair Commerce is, that each Party increases the Number of his
|
|
Enjoyments, having, instead of Wheat alone or Wine alone, the Use of
|
|
both Wheat and Wine.
|
|
|
|
9 Where the Labour and Expence of producing both Commodities
|
|
are known to both Parties Bargains will generally be fair and equal.
|
|
Where they are known to one Party only, Bargains will often be
|
|
unequal, Knowledge taking its Advantage of Ignorance.
|
|
|
|
10 Thus he that carries 1000 Bushels of Wheat abroad to sell,
|
|
may not probably obtain so great a Profit thereon as if he had first
|
|
turned the Wheat into Manufactures by subsisting therewith the
|
|
Workmen while producing those Manufactures: since there are many
|
|
expediting and facilitating Methods of working, not generally known;
|
|
and Strangers to the Manufactures, though they know pretty well the
|
|
Expences of raising Wheat, are unacquainted with those short Methods
|
|
of working, and thence being apt to suppose more Labour employed in
|
|
the Manufactures than there really is, are more easily imposed on in
|
|
their Value, and induced to allow more for them than they are
|
|
honestly worth.
|
|
|
|
11 Thus the Advantage of having Manufactures in a Country, does
|
|
not consist as is commonly supposed, in their highly advancing the
|
|
Value of rough Materials, of which they are formed; since, though
|
|
sixpenny worth of Flax may be worth twenty shillings when worked into
|
|
Lace, yet the very Cause of it's being worth twenty shillings is,
|
|
that besides the Flax, it has cost nineteen shillings and sixpence in
|
|
Subsistence to the Manufacturer. But the Advantage of Manufactures
|
|
is, that under their shape Provisions may be more easily carried to a
|
|
foreign Market; and by their means our Traders may more easily cheat
|
|
Strangers. Few, where it is not made are Judges of the Value of
|
|
Lace. The importer may demand Forty, and perhaps get Thirty
|
|
shillings for that which cost him but twenty.
|
|
|
|
12 Finally, there seem to be but three Ways for a Nation to
|
|
acquire Wealth. The first is by _War_ as the Romans did in
|
|
plundering their conquered Neighbours. This is _Robbery_. The
|
|
second by _Commerce_ which is generally _Cheating._ The third by
|
|
_Agriculture_ the only _honest Way_; wherein Man receives a real
|
|
Increase of the Seed thrown into the Ground, in a kind of continual
|
|
Miracle wrought by the Hand of God in his Favour, as a Reward for his
|
|
innocent Life, and virtuous Industry.
|
|
|
|
_New Fables_
|
|
|
|
_For the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
NEW FABLES, _humbly inscribed to the_ S ------ y
|
|
_of_ St ------ e _for the_ American Department.
|
|
|
|
FABLE I. A Herd of Cows had long afforded Plenty of Milk,
|
|
Butter and Cheese to an avaritious Farmer, who grudged them the Grass
|
|
they subsisted on, and at length mowed it to make Money of the Hay,
|
|
leaving them to _shift for Food_ as they could, and yet still
|
|
expected to _milk them_ as before; but the Cows, offended with his
|
|
Unreasonableness, resolved for the future _to suckle one another_.
|
|
|
|
FABLE II. An Eagle, King of Birds, sailing on his Wings aloft
|
|
over a Farmer's Yard, saw a Cat there basking in the Sun, _mistook it
|
|
for a Rabbit_, stoop'd, seized it, and carried it up into the Air,
|
|
_intending to prey on it_. The Cat turning, set her Claws into the
|
|
Eagle's Breast; who, finding his Mistake, opened his Talons, and
|
|
would have let her drop; but Puss, unwilling to fall so far, held
|
|
faster; and the Eagle, to get rid of the Inconvenience, found it
|
|
necessary to _set her down where he took her up_.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FABLE III. A Lion's Whelp was put on board a Guinea Ship bound
|
|
to America as a Present to a Friend in that Country: It was tame and
|
|
harmless as a Kitten, and therefore not confined, but suffered to
|
|
walk about the Ship at Pleasure. A stately, full-grown English
|
|
Mastiff, belonging to the Captain, despising the Weakness of the
|
|
young Lion, frequently took it's _Food_ by Force, and often turned it
|
|
out of it's Lodging Box, when he had a Mind to repose therein
|
|
himself. The young Lion nevertheless grew daily in Size and
|
|
Strength, and the Voyage being long, he became at last a more equal
|
|
Match for the Mastiff; who continuing his Insults, received a
|
|
stunning Blow from the Lion's Paw that fetched his Skin over his
|
|
Ears, and deterred him from any future Contest with such growing
|
|
Strength; regretting that he had not rather secured it's Friendship
|
|
than provoked it's Enmity.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, January 2, 1770
|
|
|
|
_A Conversation on Slavery_
|
|
|
|
_To the Printer of the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
|
|
SIR, _Broad-Street Buildings, Jan._ 26, 1770.
|
|
|
|
Many Reflections being of late thrown out against the
|
|
Americans, and particularly against our worthy Lord-Mayor, on Account
|
|
of their keeping Slaves in their Country, I send you the following
|
|
Conversation on that Subject, which, for Substance, and much of the
|
|
Expression, is, I assure you, a _real one_; having myself been
|
|
present when it passed. If you think it suitable for your Paper, you
|
|
will, by publishing it, oblige Your Friend, N. N.
|
|
|
|
_A_ Conversation _between an_ ENGLISHMAN, _a_ SCOTCHMAN, _and
|
|
an_ AMERICAN, _on the Subject of_ SLAVERY.
|
|
|
|
_Englishman._ You Americans make a great Clamour upon every
|
|
little imaginary Infringement of what you take to be your Liberties;
|
|
and yet there are no People upon Earth such Enemies to Liberty, such
|
|
absolute Tyrants, where you have the Opportunity, as you yourselves
|
|
are.
|
|
|
|
_American._ How does that appear?
|
|
|
|
_Eng_. Read _Granville Sharpe_'s Book upon Slavery: There it
|
|
appears with a Witness.
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. I have read it.
|
|
|
|
_Eng_. And pray what do you think of it?
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. To speak my Opinion candidly, I think it in the Main a
|
|
good Book. I applaud the Author's Zeal for Liberty in general. I am
|
|
pleased with his Humanity. But his _general Reflections_ on _all
|
|
Americans_, as having no real Regard for Liberty; as having so little
|
|
Dislike of Despotism and Tyranny, that they do not scruple to
|
|
exercise them with unbounded Rigour over their miserable Slaves, and
|
|
the like, I cannot approve of; nor of the Conclusion he draws, that
|
|
therefore our Claim to the Enjoyment of Liberty for ourselves, is
|
|
unjust. I think, that in all this, he is too severe upon the
|
|
Americans, and passes over with too partial an Eye the Faults of his
|
|
own Country. This seems to me not quite fair: and it is particularly
|
|
_injurious_ to us at this Time, to endeavour to render us odious, and
|
|
to encourage those who would oppress us, by representing us as
|
|
unworthy of the Liberty we are now contending for.
|
|
|
|
_Eng_. What Share has that Author's Country (England I mean) in
|
|
the Enormities he complains of? And why should not his Reflections
|
|
on the Americans be general?
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. They ought not to be general, because the Foundation
|
|
for them is not general. New England, the most populous of all the
|
|
English Possessions in America, has very few Slaves; and those are
|
|
chiefly in the capital Towns, not employed in the hardest Labour, but
|
|
as Footmen or House-maids. The same may be said of the next populous
|
|
Provinces, New-York, New Jersey, and Pensylvania. Even in Virginia,
|
|
Maryland, and the Carolinas, where they are employed in Field-work,
|
|
what Slaves there are belong chiefly to the old rich Inhabitants,
|
|
near the navigable Waters, who are few compared with the numerous
|
|
Families of Back-Settlers, that have scarce any Slaves among them.
|
|
In Truth, there is not, take North-America through, perhaps, one
|
|
Family in a Hundred that has a Slave in it. Many Thousands there
|
|
abhor the Slave Trade as much as Mr. Sharpe can do, conscientiously
|
|
avoid being concerned with it, and do every Thing in their Power to
|
|
abolish it. Supposing it then with that Gentleman, a Crime to keep a
|
|
Slave, can it be right to stigmatize us all with that Crime? If one
|
|
Man of a Hundred in England were dishonest, would it be right from
|
|
thence to characterize the Nation, and say the English are Rogues and
|
|
Thieves? But farther, of those who do keep Slaves, all are not
|
|
Tyrants and Oppressors. Many treat their Slaves with great Humanity,
|
|
and provide full as well for them in Sickness and in Health, as your
|
|
poor labouring People in England are provided for. Your working Poor
|
|
are not indeed absolutely Slaves; but there seems something a little
|
|
like Slavery, where the Laws oblige them to work for their Masters so
|
|
many Hours at such a Rate, and leave them no Liberty to demand or
|
|
bargain for more, but imprison them in a Workhouse if they refuse to
|
|
work on such Terms; and even imprison a humane Master if he thinks
|
|
fit to pay them better; at the same Time confining the poor ingenious
|
|
Artificer to this Island, and forbidding him to go abroad, though
|
|
offered better Wages in foreign Countries. As to the Share England
|
|
has in these Enormities of America, remember, Sir, that she began the
|
|
Slave Trade; that her Merchants of London, Bristol, Liverpool and
|
|
Glasgow, send their Ships to Africa for the Purpose of purchasing
|
|
Slaves. If any unjust Methods are used to procure them; if Wars are
|
|
fomented to obtain Prisoners; if free People are enticed on board,
|
|
and then confined and brought away; if petty Princes are bribed to
|
|
sell their Subjects, who indeed are already a Kind of Slaves, is
|
|
America to have all the Blame of this Wickedness? You bring the
|
|
Slaves to us, and tempt us to purchase them. I do not justify our
|
|
falling into the Temptation. To be sure, if you have stolen Men to
|
|
sell to us, and we buy them, you may urge against us the old and true
|
|
saying, that _the Receiver is as bad as the Thief._ This Maxim was
|
|
probably made for those who needed the Information, as being perhaps
|
|
ignorant that _receiving_ was in it's Nature as bad as _stealing_:
|
|
But the Reverse of the Position was never thought necessary to be
|
|
formed into a Maxim, nobody ever doubted that _the Thief is as bad as
|
|
the Receiver_. This you have not only done and continue to do, but
|
|
several Laws heretofore made in our Colonies, to discourage the
|
|
Importation of Slaves, by laying a heavy Duty, payable by the
|
|
Importer, have been disapproved and repealed by your Government here,
|
|
as being prejudicial, forsooth, to the Interest of the African
|
|
Company.
|
|
|
|
_Eng_. I never heard before of any such Laws made in America.
|
|
But the severe Laws you have made, on Pretence of their being
|
|
necessary for the Government of your Slaves (and even of your white
|
|
Servants) as they stand quoted by Mr. Sharpe, give us no good Opinion
|
|
of your general Humanity, or of your Respect for Liberty. These are
|
|
not the Acts of a few private Persons; they are made by your
|
|
Representatives in your Assemblies, and are therefore the Act of the
|
|
whole.
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. They are so; and possibly some of them made in Colonies
|
|
where the Slaves greatly out-number the Whites, as in Barbadoes now,
|
|
and in Virginia formerly, may be more severe than is necessary; being
|
|
dictated perhaps by Fear and too strong an Opinion, that nothing but
|
|
extream Severity could keep the Slaves in Obedience, and secure the
|
|
Lives of their Masters. In other Colonies, where their Numbers are
|
|
so small as to give no Apprehensions of that Kind, the Laws are
|
|
milder, and the Slaves in every Respect, except in the Article of
|
|
Liberty, are under the Protection of those Laws: A white Man is as
|
|
liable to suffer Death for killing a Slave, though his own, as for
|
|
any other Homicide. But it should be considered, with regard to
|
|
these severe Laws, that in Proportion to the greater Ignorance or
|
|
Wickedness of the People to be governed, Laws must be more severe:
|
|
Experience every where teaches this. Perhaps you may imagine the
|
|
Negroes to be a mild tempered, tractable Kind of People. Some of
|
|
them indeed are so. But the Majority are of a plotting Disposition,
|
|
dark, sullen, malicious, revengeful and cruel in the highest Degree.
|
|
Your Merchants and Mariners, who bring them from Guinea, often find
|
|
this to their Cost in the Insurrections of the Slaves on board the
|
|
Ships upon the Coast, who kill all when they get the upper Hand.
|
|
Those Insurrections are not suppressed or prevented but by what your
|
|
People think a very necessary Severity, the shooting or hanging
|
|
Numbers sometimes on the Voyage. Indeed many of them, being
|
|
mischievous Villains in their own Country, are sold off by their
|
|
Princes in the Way of Punishment by Exile and Slavery, as you here
|
|
ship off your Convicts: And since your Government will not suffer a
|
|
Colony by any Law of it's own to keep Slaves out of the Country, can
|
|
you blame the making such Laws as are thought necessary to govern
|
|
them while they are in it.
|
|
|
|
_Eng_. But your Laws for the Government of your white Servants
|
|
are almost as severe as those for the Negroes.
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. In some Colonies they are so, those particularly to
|
|
which you send your Convicts. Honest hired Servants are treated as
|
|
mildly in America every where as in England: But the Villains you
|
|
transport and sell to us must be ruled with a Rod of Iron. We have
|
|
made Laws in several Colonies to prevent their Importation: These
|
|
have been immediately repealed here, as being contrary to an Act of
|
|
Parliament. We do not thank you for forcing them upon us. We look
|
|
upon it as an unexampled Barbarity in your Government to empty your
|
|
Gaols into our Settlements; and we resent it as the highest of
|
|
Insults. If mild Laws could govern such People, why don't you keep
|
|
and govern them by your own mild Laws at home? If you think we treat
|
|
them with unreasonable Severity, why are you so cruel as to send them
|
|
to us? And pray let it be remembered, that these very Laws, the
|
|
cruel Spirit of which you Englishmen are now pleased so to censure,
|
|
were, when made, sent over hither, and submitted, as all Colony Laws
|
|
must be, to the King in Council for Approbation, which Approbation
|
|
they received, I suppose upon thorough Consideration and sage Advice.
|
|
If they are nevertheless to be blamed, be so just as to take a Share
|
|
of the Blame to yourselves.
|
|
|
|
_Scotchman_. You should not say we force the Convicts upon you.
|
|
You know you may, if you please, refuse to buy them. If you were not
|
|
of a tyrannical Disposition; if you did not like to have some under
|
|
you, on whom you might exercise and gratify that Disposition; if you
|
|
had really a true Sense of Liberty, about which you make such a
|
|
Pother, you would purchase neither Slaves nor Convict Servants, you
|
|
would not endure such a Thing as Slavery among you.
|
|
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. It is true we may refuse to buy them, and prudent
|
|
People do so. But there are still a Number of imprudent People, who
|
|
are tempted by the Lowness of the Price, and the Length of the Time
|
|
for which your Convicts are sold, to purchase them. We would prevent
|
|
this Temptation. We would keep your British Man-Merchants, with
|
|
their detestable Ware, from coming among us: But this you will not
|
|
allow us to do. And therefore I say you force upon us the Convicts
|
|
as well as the Slaves. But, Sir, as to your Observation, that if we
|
|
had a real Love of Liberty, we should not suffer such a Thing as
|
|
Slavery among us, I am a little surprised to hear this from you, a
|
|
North Briton, in whose own Country, Scotland, Slavery still subsists,
|
|
established by Law.
|
|
|
|
_Scotchman_. I suppose you mean the heretable Jurisdictions.
|
|
There was not properly any Slavery in them: And, besides, they are
|
|
now all taken away by Act of Parliament.
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. No, Sir, I mean the Slavery in your Mines. All the
|
|
Wretches that dig Coal for you, in those dark Caverns under Ground,
|
|
unblessed by Sunshine, are absolute Slaves by your Law, and their
|
|
Children after them, from the Time they first carry a Basket to the
|
|
End of their Days. They are bought and sold with the Colliery, and
|
|
have no more Liberty to leave it than our Negroes have to leave their
|
|
Master's Plantation. If having black Faces, indeed, subjected Men to
|
|
the Condition of Slavery, you might have some small Pretence for
|
|
keeping the poor Colliers in that Condition: But remember, that under
|
|
the Smut their Skin _is white_, that they are _honest good People_,
|
|
and at the same Time are _your own Countrymen_!
|
|
|
|
_Eng_. I am glad you cannot reproach England with this; our
|
|
Colliers are as free as any other Labourers.
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. And do you therefore pretend that you have no such
|
|
Thing as Slavery in England?
|
|
|
|
_Eng_. No such Thing most certainly.
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. I fancy I could make it appear to you that you have, if
|
|
we could first agree upon the Definition of a Slave. And if your
|
|
Author's Position is true, that those who keep Slaves have therefore
|
|
no Right to Liberty themselves, you Englishmen will be found as
|
|
destitute of such Rights as we Americans I imagine.
|
|
|
|
|
|
_Eng_. What is then your Definition of a Slave? Pray let us
|
|
hear it, that we may see whether or no we can agree in it.
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. A Slave, according to my Notion, is a human Creature,
|
|
stolen, taken by Force, or bought of another or of himself, with
|
|
Money; and who being so taken or bought, is compelled to serve the
|
|
Taker, or Purchaser, during Pleasure or during Life. He may be sold
|
|
again, or let for Hire, by his Master to another, and is then obliged
|
|
to serve that other; he is one who is bound to obey, not only the
|
|
Commands of his Master, but also the Commands of the lowest Servant
|
|
of that Master, when set over him; who must come when he is called,
|
|
go when he is bid, and stay where he is ordered, though to the
|
|
farthest Part of the World, and in the most unwholesome Climate; who
|
|
must wear such Cloaths as his Master thinks fit to give him, and no
|
|
other, though different from the common Fashion, and contrived to be
|
|
a distinguishing Badge of Servitude; and must be content with such
|
|
Food or Subsistence as his Master thinks fit to order for him, or
|
|
with such small Allowance in Money as shall be given him in Lieu of
|
|
Victuals or Cloathing; who must never absent himself from his
|
|
Master's Service without Leave; who is subject to severe Punishments
|
|
for small Offences, to enormous Whippings, and even Death, for
|
|
absconding from his Service, or for Disobedience to Orders. I
|
|
imagine such a Man is a Slave to all Intents and Purposes.
|
|
|
|
_Eng_. I agree to your Definition. But surely, surely, you
|
|
will not say there are any such Slaves in England?
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. Yes, many Thousands, if an English Sailor or Soldier is
|
|
well described in that Definition. The Sailor is often _forced_ into
|
|
Service, torn from all his natural Connections. The Soldier is
|
|
generally bought in the first Place for a Guinea and a Crown at the
|
|
Drum-Head: His Master may sell his Service, if he pleases, to any
|
|
Foreign Prince, or barter it for any Consideration by Treaty, and
|
|
send him to shoot or be shot at in Germany or Portugal, in Guinea or
|
|
the Indies. He is engaged for Life; and every other Circumstance of
|
|
my Definition agrees with his Situation. In one Particular, indeed,
|
|
English Slavery goes beyond that exercised in America.
|
|
|
|
_Eng_. What is that?
|
|
|
|
_Amer_. We cannot command a Slave of ours to do an immoral or a
|
|
wicked Action. We cannot oblige him, for Instance, to commit MURDER!
|
|
If we should order it, he may refuse, and our Laws would justify him.
|
|
But Soldiers must, on Pain of Death, obey the Orders they receive;
|
|
though, like Herod's Troops, they should be commanded to slay all
|
|
your Children under two Years old, cut the Throats of your Children
|
|
in the Colonies, or shoot your Women and Children in St. G ------ e's
|
|
F ------ ds.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, January 30, 1770
|
|
|
|
_The Cravenstreet Gazette_
|
|
|
|
No 113
|
|
|
|
Saturday, Sept. 22. 1770
|
|
|
|
This Morning Queen Margaret, accompanied by her first Maid of
|
|
Honour, Miss Franklin, set out for Rochester. Immediately on their
|
|
Departure, the whole Street was in Tears -- from a heavy Shower of
|
|
Rain.
|
|
|
|
It is whispered that the new Family Administration which took
|
|
place on her Majesty's Departure, promises, like all other new
|
|
Administrations, to govern much better than the old one.
|
|
|
|
We hear that the _great_ Person (so called from his enormous
|
|
Size) of a certain Family in a certain Street, is grievously affected
|
|
at the late Changes, and could hardly be comforted this Morning, tho'
|
|
the new Ministry promised him a roasted Shoulder of Mutton, and
|
|
Potatoes, for his Dinner.
|
|
|
|
It is said, that the same _great_ Person intended to pay his
|
|
Respects to another great Personage this Day, at St. James's, it
|
|
being Coronation-Day; hoping thereby a little to amuse his Grief; but
|
|
was prevented by an Accident, Queen Margaret, or her Maid of Honour
|
|
having carried off the Key of the Drawers, so that the Lady of the
|
|
Bedchamber could not come at a laced Shirt for his Highness. Great
|
|
Clamours were made on this Occasion against her Majesty.
|
|
|
|
Other Accounts say, that the Shirts were afterwards found, tho'
|
|
too late, in another Place. And some suspect, that the Wanting a
|
|
Shirt from those Drawers was only a ministerial Pretence to excuse
|
|
Picking the Locks, that the new Administration might have every thing
|
|
at Command.
|
|
|
|
We hear that the Lady Chamberlain of the Household went to
|
|
Market this Morning by her own self, gave the Butcher whatever he
|
|
ask'd for the Mutton, and had no Dispute with the Potatoe Woman -- to
|
|
their great Amazement -- at the Change of Times!
|
|
|
|
It is confidently asserted, that this Afternoon, the Weather
|
|
being wet, the great _Person_ a little chilly, and no body at home to
|
|
find fault with the Expence of Fuel, he was indulg'd with a Fire in
|
|
his Chamber. It seems the Design is, to make him contented, by
|
|
Degrees, with the Absence of the Queen.
|
|
|
|
A Project has been under Consideration of Government, to take
|
|
the Opportunity of her Majesty's Absence, for doing a Thing she was
|
|
always averse to, viz. Fixing a new Lock on the Street Door, or
|
|
getting a Key made to the old one; it being found extreamly
|
|
inconvenient, that one or other of the Great Officers of State,
|
|
should, whenever the Maid goes out for a Ha'pworth of Sand or a Pint
|
|
of Porter, be obliged to attend the Door to let her in again. But
|
|
Opinion, being divided, which of the two Expedients to adopt, the
|
|
Project is for the present laid aside.
|
|
|
|
We have good Authority to assure our Readers, that a Cabinet
|
|
Council was held this Afternoon at Tea; the Subject of which was a
|
|
Proposal for the Reformation of Manners, and a more strict
|
|
Observation of the Lord's Day. The Result was, an unanimous
|
|
Resolution that no Meat should be dress'd to-morrow; whereby the Cook
|
|
and the first Minister will both be at Liberty to go to Church, the
|
|
one having nothing to do, and the other no Roast to rule. It seems
|
|
the cold Shoulder of Mutton, and the Applepye, were thought
|
|
sufficient for Sunday's Dinner. All pious People applaud this
|
|
Measure, and 'tis thought the new Ministry will soon become popular.
|
|
|
|
We hear that Mr. Wilkes was at a certain House in Craven Street
|
|
this Day, and enquired after the absent Queen. His good Lady and the
|
|
Children were well.
|
|
|
|
The Report that Mr. Wilkes the Patriot made the above Visit, is
|
|
without Foundation, it being his Brother the Courtier.
|
|
|
|
Sunday, Sept. 23. It is now found by sad Experience, that good
|
|
Resolutions are easier made than executed. Notwithstanding
|
|
yesterday's solemn Order of Council, no body went to Church to day.
|
|
It seems the _great_ Person's broad-built-bulk lay so long abed, that
|
|
Breakfast was not over 'till it was too late to dress. At least this
|
|
is the Excuse. In fine, it seems a vain thing to hope Reformation
|
|
from the Example of our great Folks. The Cook and the Minister,
|
|
however, both took Advantage of the Order so far, as to save
|
|
themselves all Trouble, and the Clause of _cold Dinner_ was enforc'd,
|
|
tho' the _going to Church_ was dispens'd with; just as the common
|
|
working People observe the Commandment; _the seventh Day thou shalt
|
|
rest_, they think a sacred Injunction; but the other _Six Days shalt
|
|
thou labour_ is deem'd a mere Piece of Advice which they may practice
|
|
when they want Bread and are out of Credit at the Alehouse, and may
|
|
neglect whenever they have Money in their Pockets. It must
|
|
nevertheless be said in justice to our Court, that whatever
|
|
Inclination they had to Gaming, no Cards were brought out to Day.
|
|
Lord and Lady Hewson walk'd after Dinner to Kensington to pay their
|
|
Duty to the Dowager, and Dr. Fatsides made 469 Turns in his Dining
|
|
Room as the exact Distance of a Visit to the lovely Lady Barwell,
|
|
whom he did not find at home, so there was no Struggle for and
|
|
against a Kiss, and he sat down to dream in the Easy Chair that he
|
|
had it without any Trouble.
|
|
|
|
Monday, Sept. 24. We are credibly informed, that the _great_
|
|
Person dined this Day with the Club at the Cat-and-Bagpipes in the
|
|
City, on cold Round of boil'd Beef. This, it seems, he was under
|
|
some Necessity of Doing (tho' he rather dislikes Beef) because truly
|
|
the Ministers were to be all abroad somewhere to dine on hot roast
|
|
Venison. It is thought that if the Queen had been at home, he would
|
|
not have been so slighted. And tho' he shows outwardly no Marks of
|
|
Dissatisfaction, it is suspected that he begins to wish for her
|
|
Majesty's Return.
|
|
|
|
It is currently reported, that poor Nanny had nothing for
|
|
Dinner in the Kitchen, for herself and Puss, but the Scrapings of the
|
|
Bones of Saturday's Mutton.
|
|
|
|
This Evening there was high Play at the Groom Porter's in
|
|
Cravenstreet House. The Great Person lost Money. It is supposed the
|
|
Ministers, as is usually supposed of all Ministers, shared the
|
|
Emoluments among them.
|
|
|
|
Tuesday, Sept. 25. This Morning the good Lord Hutton call'd at
|
|
Cravenstreet House, and enquired very respectfully and affectionately
|
|
concerning the Welfare of the absent Queen. He then imparted to the
|
|
big Man a Piece of Intelligence important to them both, which he had
|
|
just received from Lady Hawkesworth, viz. That the amiable and
|
|
excellent Companion Miss Dorothea Blount had made a Vow to marry
|
|
absolutely him of the two, whose Wife should first depart this Life.
|
|
It is impossible to express with Words the various Agitations of Mind
|
|
appearing in both their Faces on this Occasion. _Vanity_ at the
|
|
Preference given them to the rest of Mankind; _Affection_ to their
|
|
present Wives; _Fear_ of losing them; _Hope_, (if they must lose
|
|
them) to obtain the propos'd Comfort; _Jealousy_ of each other, in
|
|
case both Wives should die together; &c. &c. &c. all working at the
|
|
same time, jumbled their Features into inexplicable Confusion. They
|
|
parted at length with Professions and outward Appearances indeed of
|
|
ever-during Friendship; but it was shrewdly suspected that each of
|
|
them sincerely wished Health and long Life to the other's Wife; and
|
|
that however long either of those Friends might like to live himself,
|
|
the other would be very well pleas'd to survive him.
|
|
|
|
It is remark'd that the Skies have wept every Day in
|
|
Cravenstreet the Absence of the Queen.
|
|
|
|
The Publick may be assured, that this Morning a certain _great
|
|
Person_ was ask'd very complaisantly by the Mistress of the Houshold,
|
|
if he would chuse to have the Blade Bone of Saturday's Mutton that
|
|
had been kept for his Dinner to Day, _broil'd_ or _cold_? He
|
|
answer'd gravely, _If there is any Flesh on it, it may be broil'd; if
|
|
not, it may as well be cold_. Orders were accordingly given for
|
|
broiling it. But when it came to Table, there was indeed so very
|
|
little Flesh, or rather none at all (Puss having din'd on it
|
|
yesterday after Nanny) that if our new Administration had been as
|
|
good Oeconomists as they would be thought, the Expence of Broiling
|
|
might well have been sav'd to the Publick, and carried to the Sinking
|
|
Fund. It is assured the great Person bears all with infinite
|
|
Patience. But the Nation is astonish'd at the insolent Presumption
|
|
that dares treat so much Mildness in so cruel a manner.
|
|
|
|
A terrible Accident had _like to have happened_ this Afternoon
|
|
at Tea. The Boiler was set too near the End of the little square
|
|
Table. The first Ministress was sitting at one End of the Table to
|
|
administer the Tea; the great Person was about to sit down at the
|
|
other End where the Boiler stood. By a sudden Motion, the Lady gave
|
|
the Table a Tilt. Had it gone over, the great _Person_ must have
|
|
been scalded; perhaps to Death. Various are the Surmises and
|
|
Observations on this Occasion. The Godly say, it would have been a
|
|
just Judgment on him, for preventing by his Laziness, the Family's
|
|
going to Church last Sunday. The Opposition do not stick to
|
|
insinuate that there was a Design to scald him, prevented only by his
|
|
quick Catching the Table. The Friends of the Ministry give out, that
|
|
he carelessly jogg'd the Table himself, and would have been
|
|
inevitably scalded had not the Ministress sav'd him. It is hard for
|
|
the Publick to come at the Truth in these Cases.
|
|
|
|
At six o'Clock this Afternoon News came by the Post, that her
|
|
Majesty arrived safely at Rochester on Saturday Night. The Bells
|
|
immediately rang -- for Candles, to illuminate the Parlour; the Court
|
|
went into Cribbidge, and the Evening concluded with every other
|
|
Demonstration of Joy.
|
|
|
|
It is reported that all the principal Officers of the State,
|
|
have received an Invitation from the Dutchess Dowager of Rochester to
|
|
go down thither on Saturday next. But it is not yet known whether
|
|
the great Affairs they have on their Hands will permit them to make
|
|
this Excursion.
|
|
|
|
We hear that from the Time of her Majesty's leaving Craven
|
|
Street House to this Day, no Care is taken to file the Newspapers;
|
|
but they lie about in every Room, in every Window, and on every
|
|
Chair, just where the Doctor lays them when he has read them. It is
|
|
impossible Government can long go on in such Hands.
|
|
|
|
_To the Publisher of the Craven Street Gazette_.
|
|
|
|
Sir, I make no doubt of the Truth of what the Papers tell us,
|
|
that a certain great _Person_ has been half-starved on the bare
|
|
Blade-bone, _of a Sheep_ (I cannot call it _of Mutton_ because none
|
|
was on it) by a Set of the most careless, thoughtless, inconsiderate,
|
|
corrupt, ignorant, blundering, foolish, crafty, and Knavish
|
|
Ministers, that ever got into a House and pretended to govern a
|
|
Family and provide a Dinner. Alas, for the poor Old England of
|
|
Craven Street! If these nefarious Wretches continue in Power another
|
|
Week, the Nation will be ruined -- Undone! -- totally undone, if the
|
|
Queen does not return; or (which is better) turn them all out and
|
|
appoint me and my Friends to succeed them. I am a great Admirer of
|
|
your useful and impartial Paper; and therefore request you will
|
|
insert this without fail; from Your humble Servant INDIGNATION.
|
|
|
|
_To the Publisher of the Craven Street Gazette_.
|
|
|
|
Sir, Your Correspondent _Indignation_ has made a fine Story in
|
|
your Paper against our excellent Cravenstreet Ministry, as if they
|
|
meant to starve his Highness, giving him only a bare Blade Bone for
|
|
his Dinner, while they riot upon roast Venison, &c. The Wickedness
|
|
of Writers in this Age is truly amazing! I believe we never had
|
|
since the Foundation of our State, a more faithful, upright, worthy,
|
|
careful, considerate, incorrupt, discreet, wise, prudent and
|
|
beneficent Ministry than the present. But if even the Angel Gabriel
|
|
would condescend to be our Minister and provide our Dinners, he could
|
|
scarcely escape Newspaper Defamation from a Gang of hungry
|
|
ever-restless, discontented and malicious Scribblers. It is, Sir, a
|
|
piece of Justice you owe our righteous Administration to undeceive
|
|
the Publick on this Occasion, by assuring them of the Fact, which is,
|
|
that there was provided, and actually smoaking on the Table under his
|
|
Royal Nose at the same Instant, as fine a Piece of Ribbs of Beef,
|
|
roasted, as ever Knife was put into; with Potatoes, Horse radish,
|
|
pickled Walnuts, &c. which Beef his Highness might have eaten of, if
|
|
so he had pleased to do; and which he forbore to do, merely from a
|
|
whimsical Opinion (with Respect be it spoken) that Beef doth not with
|
|
him perspire well, but makes his Back itch, to his no small Vexation,
|
|
now that he hath lost the little Chinese Ivory Hand at the End of a
|
|
Stick, commonly called a _Scratchback_, presented to him by her
|
|
Majesty. This is the Truth; and if your boasted Impartiality is
|
|
real, you will not hesitate a Moment to insert this Letter in your
|
|
very next Paper. I am, tho' a little angry with you at present.
|
|
Yours as you behave A HATER OF SCANDAL.
|
|
|
|
JUNIUS and CINNA _came to Hand too late for this Days Paper,
|
|
but shall have Place in our next._ _Marriages_. None since our last;
|
|
but Puss begins to go a Courting. _Deaths_. In the back Closet, and
|
|
elsewhere, many poor Mice. _Stocks_. Biscuit very low. Buckwheat and
|
|
Indian meal, both sour. Tea, lowering daily in the Canister.
|
|
|
|
_Postscript._ Wednesday Sept. 26. Those in the Secret of
|
|
Affairs do not scruple to assert soundly, that our present First
|
|
Ministress is very notable, having this day been at Market, bought
|
|
excellent Mutton Chops, and Apples 4 a penny, made a very fine
|
|
Applepye with her own Hands, and mended two pair of Breeches.
|
|
|
|
_The Rise and Present State of Our Misunderstanding
|
|
|
|
_To the_ PRINTER _of the_ LONDON CHRONICLE.
|
|
|
|
SIR, Much abuse has lately been thrown out against the
|
|
Colonies, by the Writers for the American part of our Administration.
|
|
Our Fellow Subjects there are continually represented as Rebels to
|
|
their Sovereign, and inimical to the British nation; in order to
|
|
create a dislike of them here, that the harsh measures which have
|
|
been taken, and are intended against them, may not be blamed by the
|
|
People of England. Therefore to prevent our being led into mistakes
|
|
in so important a business, it is fit that a full and particular
|
|
account of the rise and present state of our misunderstanding with
|
|
the Colonies should be laid before the Public. This, from the
|
|
opportunities I have had, and the pains I have taken to inform
|
|
myself, I think I am enabled to do, and I hope I shall do it with
|
|
truth and candor.
|
|
|
|
The fact then is, that there is not nor has been any rebellion
|
|
in America. If the rescue of a seizure by Smugglers, or the drubbing
|
|
an Informer or low Custom-house Officer, were rebellion, England,
|
|
Scotland, and Ireland, might be said to be in rebellion almost every
|
|
week in the year; and instances of that kind are much fewer in
|
|
America than here. The Americans were ever attached to the House of
|
|
Hanover, and honour their present gracious Sovereign sincerely. This
|
|
is therefore a groundless calumny. Nor have they any enmity to
|
|
Britain: they love and honour the name of Englishman; they were fond
|
|
of English manners, fashions, and manufactures; they had no desire of
|
|
breaking the connection between the two countries, but wished a
|
|
perpetual intercourse of good offices, commerce, and friendship.
|
|
They are always willing to give aids to the Crown in proportion to
|
|
their abilities: They think, however, and have always thought, that
|
|
they themselves have alone the right of granting their own money, by
|
|
their own Representatives in Assembly met, and that the Parliament of
|
|
Britain hath no right to raise a revenue from them without their
|
|
consent.
|
|
|
|
The Parliament hath, nevertheless, of late made several
|
|
attempts to raise such a revenue among them.
|
|
|
|
Heretofore, whenever the Colonies thought themselves aggrieved
|
|
by British government, they applied for redress by humble petition;
|
|
and it was usual to receive and consider their petitions, and give
|
|
them a reasonable answer.
|
|
|
|
They proceeded in the same manner on the late occasions. They
|
|
sent over petitions after petitions to the House of Commons, and some
|
|
to the House of Lords. These were scarce any of them received. Some
|
|
(offered while the acts were under consideration) were refused on
|
|
this reason, that it was against an order of the House to receive
|
|
petitions against money bills; others, because they contained
|
|
expressions that called the right of Parliament in question; and
|
|
therefore, it was said, no Member dared to present them. Finding the
|
|
petitions of separate Colonies were not attended to, they thought to
|
|
give them more weight by petitioning jointly. To this end a congress
|
|
of Committees from all the Assemblies was held at New York, when
|
|
petitions to the King and both Houses of Parliament were agreed to
|
|
and sent hither. But these could not be received, or were rejected,
|
|
on the pretence that the congress was an illegal assembly which had
|
|
no right to petition. Lastly, on occasion of the Duty Act, the
|
|
Assemblies proposed by a correspondence with each other to obtain
|
|
attention, by sending at the same time similar petitions. These were
|
|
intended to the King their Sovereign, requesting his gracious
|
|
influence with his Parliament to procure them redress. But this they
|
|
were told by the American Minister was a FLAGITIOUS attempt!
|
|
All the Governors were by him directed to prevent it, or to dissolve
|
|
the Assemblies that persisted in it; and several of them were
|
|
accordingly dissolved. And of those petitions that nevertheless came
|
|
hither and were presented, it is said that no notice was ever taken,
|
|
or any answer given to them.
|
|
|
|
By this management the ancient well contrived channel of
|
|
communication between the head and members of this great Empire,
|
|
thro' which the notice of grievances could be received that remedies
|
|
might be applied, hath been cut off. How wisely, the Publick will
|
|
judge. History of a similar conduct in the Ministry of Spain with
|
|
regard to the Low Countries, makes one doubt a little the prudence
|
|
(in any Government how great soever) of discouraging Petitions, and
|
|
treating Petitioners (how mean soever) with contempt.
|
|
|
|
Instead of _preventing_ complaints by removing the causes, it
|
|
has been thought best that Soldiers should be sent to _silence_ them.
|
|
|
|
The Soldiers have behaved in such a manner as to occasion more
|
|
complaints.
|
|
|
|
They took possession of the publick building in which the
|
|
Assembly or Parliament of New England usually convenes, obliged the
|
|
Members to pass through lanes of men in arms to get to their Chamber,
|
|
disturbing them in their debates by drumming and piping in and round
|
|
the House, and pointed the cannon against the doors, treating the
|
|
Province and People with every indignity and insult, proper to
|
|
provoke their resentment, and produce some rash action that might
|
|
justify making a massacre among them. And they have fired upon and
|
|
murdered several of the inhabitants.
|
|
|
|
The Americans, upon the treatment their Petitions had
|
|
repeatedly received, determined to petition no more: But said to one
|
|
another, "We are too remote from Britain to have our complaints
|
|
regarded by the Parliament there, especially as we have no share in
|
|
their Election, nor any Representatives among them. They will not
|
|
hear _us_, but perhaps they will hear _their own people_, their
|
|
Merchants and Manufacturers, who are maintained and enriched in some
|
|
degree by the commerce with our country. Let us agree to with-hold
|
|
that commerce till our grievances are redressed. This will afford
|
|
those people a foundation for petitioning, and they will be attended
|
|
to as they were on a former occasion, and meet with success." This
|
|
reasoning and expectation were the sole foundation of the
|
|
Non-Importation agreements in America, and _not any enmity to
|
|
Britain_.
|
|
|
|
In this expectation it seems they were mistaken. The Merchants
|
|
trading to North America not well liking the Ministry, unwilling to
|
|
solicit or be obliged to them for any thing, and hoping soon to see a
|
|
change for others more to their mind, were backward in petitioning
|
|
the Parliament. And when they did petition, the City being out of
|
|
favour at Court, their Petition was very little attended to, and
|
|
produced no effect. To prevent the Manufacturers from taking any
|
|
part in the affair, they have been artfully amused with assurances
|
|
that the Colonies could not long subsist without the trade, that
|
|
manufactures among themselves were impossible, that they might depend
|
|
there would be an extraordinary demand for goods as soon as the total
|
|
want of conveniencies should compel the Americans to resume the
|
|
commerce; and therefore they would do well to be quiet, mind their
|
|
business, and get a great stock of goods beforehand to be ready for
|
|
that demand, when the advanced price would make them ample amends for
|
|
the delay.
|
|
|
|
In the mean time the Merchants in America have reaped great
|
|
advantages. They have sold off most of the old goods that lay upon
|
|
their hands; they have got in most of their debts from the people,
|
|
and have in a great measure discharged their debt to England, that
|
|
bore a heavy interest; this they have done at an advantage of near 20
|
|
per cent. in most of the Colonies, by the lowness of exchange,
|
|
occasioned by the non-importation; and this nation has lost near that
|
|
proportion (if I am rightly informed) on all the money drawn for
|
|
these by British Agents, to pay and provide for the troops and ships
|
|
of war, and to discharge other expences of contingent service. This
|
|
loss must amount to a very great sum, besides the loss in commerce.
|
|
|
|
Many of these Merchants in America, however, having nearly
|
|
compleated these points, and seeing the main end of their agreement,
|
|
(the total abolition of the duties) not likely to be so soon obtained
|
|
as they expected, begin to grow uneasy under the delay, and are
|
|
rather desirous of altering the agreement made against general
|
|
importation, and reducing it to the exclusion of those commercial
|
|
articles only, on which the duties are, or shall be imposed. But the
|
|
generality of the people in America, the artizans in the towns, and
|
|
the farmers throughout the country, finding the non-importation
|
|
advantageous to them all; to the artisans, as it occasions fuller
|
|
employment, and encourages the beginners that introduce new arts; and
|
|
to the farmers, as it prevents much useless expence in their
|
|
families, and thereby enables them more expeditiously to improve
|
|
their plantations to the raising a greater produce, at the same time
|
|
that it is a spur to domestic industry, in such manufactures as
|
|
though not fine, are now become fashionable and reputable, and from
|
|
their superior strength are much more serviceable than the flimsy
|
|
fineries that used to be made for them in Britain; and all feeling
|
|
the advantage of having had money returned into the country for its
|
|
produce, from Spain, Portugal, Italy, (and even from England since
|
|
the balance of trade has turned against her) instead of those British
|
|
superfluities for which all that cash was formerly remitted, or
|
|
ordered into England. I say, the generality of the people in
|
|
America, pleased with this situation of things, and relishing the
|
|
sweets of it, have now taken the lead, in a great degree, out of the
|
|
hands of the Merchants, and in town and county meetings are entering
|
|
into solemn resolutions not to purchase or consume British
|
|
commodities, if they are imported, till the acts they esteem
|
|
injurious to their privileges are repealed; and that if any Merchants
|
|
do import before that time, they will mark them as enemies to their
|
|
country, and never deal with them when the trade shall be opened.
|
|
This is now become a restraint upon the Merchants. A party, however,
|
|
of those at New-York, have broken through the agreement, and ordered
|
|
goods; and the Merchants here, who had long lain idle, being rejoiced
|
|
at this opening, have sent them over immense quantities, expecting a
|
|
quick sale and speedy returns. But the event is yet very uncertain.
|
|
The trade of New-York was chiefly with East New Jersey and
|
|
Connecticut, their two neighbouring Colonies, and these have resolved
|
|
to have no farther dealings with that city. Several counties, too,
|
|
of the Province of New-York, and the greatest part of the inhabitants
|
|
of the city itself, have protested against the infraction of the
|
|
agreement, and determined not to buy or use the goods when they
|
|
arrive. So that the exporters begin now to apprehend that their
|
|
sanguine hopes will be disappointed. And as Rhode Island has
|
|
returned to the agreement, some think it not unlikely that New-York
|
|
may do the same.
|
|
|
|
What remedy, if any, the wisdom of Parliament shall think fit
|
|
to apply to these disorders, a little time will shew. Mean while, I
|
|
cannot but think that those writers, who busily employ their talents
|
|
in endeavouring to exasperate this nation against the Colonies, are
|
|
doing it a very ill office: For their virulent writings being
|
|
dispersed among the inhabitants of the Plantations (who read all our
|
|
papers and pamphlets, and imagine them of greater estimation here
|
|
than they really are) do in some degree irritate the Colonists
|
|
against a country which treats them, as they imagine, so injuriously:
|
|
-- And on our side, as nothing is likely to be well done that is done
|
|
in anger; as customers are not naturally brought back to a shop by
|
|
unkind usage; as the Americans are growing, and soon will be, a great
|
|
people, and their friendship or enmity be come daily of more and more
|
|
consequence; as their fisheries, their coasting trade, their
|
|
West-Indian and European trades, greatly increase the numbers of
|
|
English seamen, and thereby augment our naval power; as their joint
|
|
operations with our's in time of war must make the whole national
|
|
effort more weighty and more effectual; as enmities between
|
|
countries, fostered and promoted till they have taken root, are
|
|
scarce ever to be eradicated; and, when those countries are under the
|
|
same Prince, such enmities are of the most mischievous consequence,
|
|
encouraging foreign enemies, weakening the whole empire, and tending
|
|
to its dissolution; therefore I cannot but wish, that no steps may be
|
|
taken against the Colonists, tending to abridge their privileges,
|
|
alter their charters, or inflict punishments on them, at the instance
|
|
of _angry Governors, discarded Agents, or rash indiscreet Officers of
|
|
the Customs_, who, having quarrelled with them, are their enemies,
|
|
and are daily irritating Government here against them, by
|
|
misrepresentations of their actions, and aggravations of their
|
|
faults, with much malice: I hope the great principle of common
|
|
justice, that _no man should be condemned unheard_, will not by us be
|
|
violated in the case of a whole people; and that lenient measures
|
|
will be adopted, as most likely to heal the wound effectually: For
|
|
harsh treatment may increase the inflammation, make the cure less
|
|
practicable, and in time bring on the necessity of an amputation;
|
|
death indeed to the severed limb, weakness and lameness to the
|
|
mutilated body. N. N.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, November 8, 1770
|
|
|
|
_Account of an Audience with Hillsborough_
|
|
|
|
Wednesday, Jan. 16. '71
|
|
|
|
I went this Morning to wait on Lord Hillsborough. The Porter at
|
|
first deny'd his Lordship, on which I left my Name, and drove off.
|
|
But before the Coach got out of the Square, the Coachman heard a
|
|
Call, turn'd, and went back to the Door, when the Porter came and
|
|
said, His Lordship will see you, Sir. I was shown into the Levee
|
|
Room, where I found Governor Barnard, who I understand attends there
|
|
constantly. Several other Gentlemen were there attending, with whom
|
|
I sat down a few Minutes. When Secretary Pownall came out to us, and
|
|
said his Lordship desired I would come in.
|
|
|
|
I was pleas'd with this ready Admission, and Preference,
|
|
(having sometimes waited 3 or 4 Hours for my Turn) and being pleas'd,
|
|
I could more easily put on the open chearful Countenance that my
|
|
Friends advis'd me to wear. His Lordship came towards me, and said
|
|
"I was dressing in order to go to Court; but hearing that you were at
|
|
the Door, who are a Man of Business, I determin'd to see you
|
|
immediately." I thank'd his Lordship and said that my Business at
|
|
present was not much, it was only to pay my Respects to his Lordship
|
|
and to acquaint him with my Appointment by the House of
|
|
Representatives of the Province of Massachusetts Bay, to be their
|
|
Agent here, in which Station if I could be of any Service -- I was
|
|
going on to say, to the Publick I should be very happy; but his
|
|
Lordship whose Countenance chang'd at my naming that Province cut me
|
|
short, by saying, with something between a Smile and a Sneer,
|
|
|
|
L H. I must set you right there, Mr. Franklin, you are not
|
|
Agent.
|
|
|
|
B F. Why; my Lord?
|
|
|
|
L.H. You are not appointed.
|
|
|
|
B.F I do not understand your Lordship. I have the Appointment
|
|
in my Pocket.
|
|
|
|
L.H. You are mistaken. I have later and better Advices. I
|
|
have a Letter from Governor Hutchinson. He would not give his Assent
|
|
to the Bill.
|
|
|
|
B.F. There was no Bill, my Lord; it is a Vote of the House.
|
|
|
|
L.H. There was a Bill presented to the Governor, for the
|
|
Purpose of appointing you, and another, one Dr. Lee, I think he is
|
|
call'd, to which the Governor refus'd his Assent.
|
|
|
|
B.F. I cannot understand this, my Lord. I think There must be
|
|
some Mistake in it. Is your Lordship quite sure that you have such a
|
|
Letter?
|
|
|
|
L H. I will convince you of it directly. _Rings the Bell._
|
|
Mr. Pownall will come in and satisfy you.
|
|
|
|
B.F. It is not necessary that I should now detain your
|
|
Lordship from Dressing. You are going to Court. I will wait on your
|
|
Lordship another time.
|
|
|
|
L.H. No, stay, He will come in immediately. _To the Servant._
|
|
Tell Mr. Pownall I want him. _Mr. Pownall comes in_.
|
|
|
|
L.H. Have not you at hand Govr. Hutchinson's Letter mentioning
|
|
his Refusing his Assent to the Bill for appointing Dr. Franklin
|
|
Agent?
|
|
|
|
SEC. P. My Lord?
|
|
|
|
L H. Is there not such a Letter?
|
|
|
|
SEC. P. No, my Lord. There is a Letter relating to some Bill
|
|
for payment of Salary to Mr. DeBerdt and I think to some other Agent,
|
|
to which the Governor had refus'd his Assent.
|
|
|
|
L H. And is there nothing in that Letter to the purpose I
|
|
mention?
|
|
|
|
SEC. P. No, my Lord.
|
|
|
|
B F. I thought it could not well be, my Lord, as my Letters
|
|
are by the last Ships and mention no such Thing. Here is an
|
|
authentic Copy of the Vote of the House appointing me, in which there
|
|
is no Mention of any Act intended. Will your Lordship please to look
|
|
at it? (_With some seeming Unwillingness he takes it, but does not
|
|
look into it_).
|
|
|
|
L H. An Information of this kind is not properly brought to me
|
|
as Secretary of State. The Board of Trade is the proper Place.
|
|
|
|
B.F. I will leave the Paper then with Mr. Pownall, to be --
|
|
|
|
L.H. (_Hastily_) To what End would you leave it with him?
|
|
|
|
B F. To be entred on the Minutes of that Board, as usual.
|
|
|
|
L.H. (_Angrily_) It shall not be entred there. No such Paper
|
|
shall be entred there while I have any thing to do with the Business
|
|
of that Board. The House of Representatives has no Right to appoint
|
|
an Agent. We shall take no Notice of any Agents but such as are
|
|
appointed by Acts of Assembly to which the Governor gives his Assent.
|
|
We have had Confusion enough already. Here is one Agent appointed by
|
|
the Council, another by the House of Representatives; Which of these
|
|
is Agent for the Province? Who are we to hear on Provincial Affairs?
|
|
An Agent appointed by Act of Assembly we can understand. No other
|
|
will be attended to for the future, I can assure you.
|
|
|
|
B.F. I cannot conceive, my Lord, why the Consent of the
|
|
_Governor_ should be thought necessary to the Appointment of an Agent
|
|
for the _People_. It seems to me, that --
|
|
|
|
L H. (_With a mix'd Look of Anger and Contempt_) I shall not
|
|
enter into a Dispute with YOU, Sir, upon this Subject.
|
|
|
|
B F. I beg your Lordship's Pardon. I do not presume to
|
|
dispute with your Lordship: I would only say, that it seems to me,
|
|
that every Body of Men, who cannot appear in Person where Business
|
|
relating to them may be transacted, should have a Right to appear by
|
|
an Agent; The Concurrence of the Governor does not seem to me
|
|
necessary. It is the Business of the People that is to be done, he
|
|
is not one of them, he is himself an Agent.
|
|
|
|
L H. Whose Agent is he? (_Hastily_).
|
|
|
|
B F. The King's, my Lord.
|
|
|
|
L H. No such Matter. He is one of the Corporation, by the
|
|
Province Charter. No Agent can be appointed but by an Act, nor any
|
|
Act pass without his Assent. Besides, This Proceeding is directly
|
|
contrary to express Instructions.
|
|
|
|
B.F. I did not know there had been such Instructions, I am not
|
|
concern'd in any Offence against them, and --
|
|
|
|
L H. Yes, your Offering such a Paper to be entred is an
|
|
Offence against them. (_Folding it up again, without having read a
|
|
Word of it_.) No such Appointment shall be entred. When I came into
|
|
the Administration of American Affairs, I found them in great
|
|
Disorder; By _my Firmness_ they are now something mended; and while I
|
|
have the Honour to hold the Seals, I shall continue the same Conduct,
|
|
the same _Firmness_. I think My Duty to the Master I serve and to
|
|
the Government of this Nation require it of me. If that Conduct is
|
|
not approved, They may take my Office from me when they please. I
|
|
shall make 'em a Bow, and thank 'em. I shall resign with Pleasure.
|
|
That Gentleman knows it. (_Pointing to Mr. Pownall_.) But while I
|
|
continue in it, I shall resolutely persevere in the same FIRMNESS.
|
|
(_Spoken with great Warmth, and turning pale in his Discourse, as if
|
|
he was angry at something or somebody besides the Agent; and of more
|
|
Consequence to himself._)
|
|
|
|
B.F. (_Reaching out his Hand for the Paper, which his Lordship
|
|
returned to him_) I beg your Lordship's Pardon for taking up so much
|
|
of your time. It is I believe of no great Importance whether the
|
|
Appointment is acknowledged or not, for I have not the least
|
|
Conception that an Agent can _at present_ be of any Use, to any of
|
|
the Colonies. I shall therefore give your Lordship no farther
|
|
Trouble. _Withdrew_.
|
|
|
|
TO THE MASSACHUSETTS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES:
|
|
|
|
_"The Seeds Sown of a Total Disunion of the Two Countries"_
|
|
|
|
GENTLEMEN, London, 15 May, 1771. I have received your favor of
|
|
the 27th of February, with the Journal of the House of
|
|
Representatives, and copies of the late oppressive prosecutions in
|
|
the Admiralty Court, which I shall, as you direct, communicate to Mr.
|
|
Bollan, and consult with him on the most advantageous use to be made
|
|
of them for the interest of the province.
|
|
|
|
I think one may clearly see, in the system of customs to be
|
|
exacted in America by act of Parliament, the seeds sown of a total
|
|
disunion of the two countries, though, as yet, that event may be at a
|
|
considerable distance. The course and natural progress seems to be,
|
|
first, the appointment of needy men as officers, for others do not
|
|
care to leave England; then, their necessities make them rapacious,
|
|
their office makes them proud and insolent, their insolence and
|
|
rapacity make them odious, and, being conscious that they are hated,
|
|
they become malicious; their malice urges them to a continual abuse
|
|
of the inhabitants in their letters to administration, representing
|
|
them as disaffected and rebellious, and (to encourage the use of
|
|
severity) as weak, divided, timid, and cowardly. Government believes
|
|
all; thinks it necessary to support and countenance its officers;
|
|
their quarrelling with the people is deemed a mark and consequence of
|
|
their fidelity; they are therefore more highly rewarded, and this
|
|
makes their conduct still more insolent and provoking.
|
|
|
|
The resentment of the people will, at times and on particular
|
|
incidents, burst into outrages and violence upon such officers, and
|
|
this naturally draws down severity and acts of further oppression
|
|
from hence. The more the people are dissatisfied, the more rigor
|
|
will be thought necessary; severe punishments will be inflicted to
|
|
terrify; rights and privileges will be abolished; greater force will
|
|
then be required to secure execution and submission; the expense will
|
|
become enormous; it will then be thought proper, by fresh exactions,
|
|
to make the people defray it; thence, the British nation and
|
|
government will become odious, the subjection to it will be deemed no
|
|
longer tolerable; war ensues, and the bloody struggle will end in
|
|
absolute slavery to America, or ruin to Britain by the loss of her
|
|
colonies; the latter most probable, from America's growing strength
|
|
and magnitude.
|
|
|
|
But, as the whole empire must, in either case, be greatly
|
|
weakened, I cannot but wish to see much patience and the utmost
|
|
discretion in our general conduct, that the fatal period may be
|
|
postponed, and that, whenever this catastrophe shall happen, it may
|
|
appear to all mankind, that the fault has not been ours. And, since
|
|
the collection of these duties has already cost Britain infinitely
|
|
more, in the loss of commerce, than they amount to, and that loss is
|
|
likely to continue and increase by the encouragement given to our
|
|
manufactures through resentment; and since the best pretence for
|
|
establishing and enforcing the duties is the regulation of trade for
|
|
the general advantage, it seems to me, that it would be much better
|
|
for Britain to give them up, on condition of the colonies undertaking
|
|
to enforce and collect such, as are thought fit to be continued, by
|
|
laws of their own, and officers of their own appointment, for the
|
|
public uses of their respective governments. This would alone
|
|
destroy those seeds of disunion, and both countries might thence much
|
|
longer continue to grow great together, more secure by their united
|
|
strength, and more formidable to their common enemies. But the power
|
|
of appointing friends and dependents to profitable offices is too
|
|
pleasing to most administrations, to be easily parted with or
|
|
lessened; and therefore such a proposition, if it were made, is not
|
|
very likely to meet with attention.
|
|
|
|
I do not pretend to the gift of prophecy. History shows, that,
|
|
by these steps, great empires have crumbled heretofore; and the late
|
|
transactions we have so much cause to complain of show, that we are
|
|
in the same train, and that, without a greater share of prudence and
|
|
wisdom, than we have seen both sides to be possessed of, we shall
|
|
probably come to the same conclusion.
|
|
|
|
The Parliament, however, is prorogued, without having taken any
|
|
of the steps we had been threatened with, relating to our charter.
|
|
Their attention has been engrossed by other affairs, and we have
|
|
therefore longer time to operate in making such impressions, as may
|
|
prevent a renewal of this particular attempt by our adversaries.
|
|
With great esteem and respect, I have the honor to be, &c.
|
|
|
|
_Introduction to a Plan for Benefiting the New Zealanders_
|
|
|
|
Britain is said to have produced originally nothing but
|
|
_Sloes_. What vast advantages have been communicated to her by the
|
|
Fruits, Seeds, Roots, Herbage, Animals, and Arts of other Countries!
|
|
We are by their means become a wealthy and a mighty Nation, abounding
|
|
in all good Things. Does not some _Duty_ hence arise from us towards
|
|
other Countries still remaining in our former State?
|
|
|
|
Britain is now the first Maritime Power in the world. Her
|
|
Ships are innumerable, capable by their Form, Size, and Strength, of
|
|
sailing all Seas. Her Seamen are equally bold, skilful, and hardy;
|
|
dextrous in exploring the remotest regions, and ready to engage in
|
|
Voyages to unknown Countries, tho' attended with the greatest
|
|
dangers. The Inhabitants of those Countries, our _Fellow-Men_, have
|
|
Canoes only; not knowing Iron, they cannot build Ships: They have
|
|
little Astronomy, and no knowledge of the Compass to guide them; they
|
|
cannot therefore come to us, or obtain any of our advantages. From
|
|
these circumstances, does not some duty seem to arise from us to
|
|
them? Does not Providence, by these distinguishing Favours, seem to
|
|
call on us, to do something ourselves for the common Interests of
|
|
Humanity?
|
|
|
|
Those who think it their Duty to ask Bread and other Blessings
|
|
daily from Heaven, should they not think it equally a duty to
|
|
communicate of those blessings when they have received them; and show
|
|
their Gratitude to their Great Benefactor, by the only means in their
|
|
power, promoting the happiness of his other Children?
|
|
|
|
_Ceres_ is said to have made a Journey thro' many Countries, to
|
|
teach the use of Corn, and the art of raising it. For this single
|
|
benefit, the grateful Nations deified her. How much more may
|
|
Englishmen deserve such Honour, by communicating the knowledge and
|
|
use, not of Corn only, but of all the other enjoyments Earth can
|
|
produce, and which they are now in possession of. _Communiter bona
|
|
profundere, Deum est_.
|
|
|
|
Many Voyages have been undertaken with views of profit or of
|
|
plunder, or to gratify resentment; to procure some advantage to
|
|
ourselves, or do some mischief to others: but a voyage is now
|
|
proposed, to visit a distant people on the other side the Globe; not
|
|
to cheat them, not to rob them, not to seize their lands, or enslave
|
|
their persons; but merely to do them good, and enable them as far as
|
|
in our power lies, to live as comfortably as ourselves.
|
|
|
|
It seems a laudable wish, that all the Nations of the Earth
|
|
were connected by a knowledge of each other, and a mutual exchange of
|
|
benefits: But a Commercial Nation particularly should wish for a
|
|
general Civilization of Mankind, since Trade is always carried on to
|
|
much greater extent with People who have the Arts and Conveniencies
|
|
of Life, than it can be with naked Savages. We may therefore hope,
|
|
in this undertaking, to be of some service to our Country, as well as
|
|
to those poor people, who, however distant from us, are in truth
|
|
related to us, and whose Interests do, in some degree, concern every
|
|
one who can say, _Homo sum, &c._
|
|
|
|
August 29, 1771
|
|
|
|
_Toleration in Old and New England_
|
|
|
|
To the PRINTER of the LONDON PACKET.
|
|
|
|
SIR, I understand from the public papers, that in the debates
|
|
on the bill for relieving the Dissenters in the point of subscription
|
|
to the Church Articles, sundry reflections were thrown out against
|
|
that people, importing, "that they themselves are of a persecuting
|
|
intolerant spirit, for that when they had here the superiority they
|
|
persecuted the church, and still persecute it in America, where they
|
|
compel its members to pay taxes for maintaining the Presbyterian or
|
|
independent worship, and at the same time refuse them a toleration in
|
|
the full exercise of their religion by the administrations of a
|
|
bishop."
|
|
|
|
If we look back into history for the character of present sects
|
|
in Christianity, we shall find few that have not in their turns been
|
|
persecutors, and complainers of persecution. The primitive
|
|
Christians thought persecution extremely wrong in the Pagans, but
|
|
practised it on one another. The first Protestants of the Church of
|
|
England, blamed persecution in the Roman church, but practised it
|
|
against the Puritans: these found it wrong in the Bishops, but fell
|
|
into the same practice themselves both here and in New England. To
|
|
account for this we should remember, that the doctrine of
|
|
_toleration_ was not then known, or had not prevailed in the world.
|
|
Persecution was therefore not so much the fault of the sect as of the
|
|
times. It was not in those days deemed wrong _in itself_. The
|
|
general opinion was only, that those _who are in error_ ought not to
|
|
persecute _the truth_: But the _possessors of truth_ were in the
|
|
right to persecute _error_, in order to destroy it. Thus every sect
|
|
believing itself possessed of _all truth_, and that every tenet
|
|
differing from theirs was _error_, conceived that when the power was
|
|
in their hands, persecution was a duty required of them by that God
|
|
whom they supposed to be offended with heresy. -- By degrees more
|
|
moderate _and more modest_ sentiments have taken place in the
|
|
Christian world; and among Protestants particularly all disclaim
|
|
persecution, none vindicate it, and few practise it. We should then
|
|
cease to reproach each other with what was done by our ancestors, but
|
|
judge of the present character of sects or churches by their _present
|
|
conduct_ only.
|
|
|
|
Now to determine on the justice of this charge against the
|
|
present dissenters, particularly those in America, let us consider
|
|
the following facts. They went from England to establish a new
|
|
country for themselves, _at their own expence_, where they might
|
|
enjoy the free exercise of religion in their own way. When they had
|
|
purchased the territory of the natives, they granted the lands out in
|
|
townships, requiring for it neither purchase-money nor quit-rent, but
|
|
this condition only to be complied with, that the freeholders should
|
|
for ever support a gospel minister (meaning probably one of the then
|
|
governing sects) and a free-school within the township. Thus, what
|
|
is commonly called Presbyterianism became the _established religion_
|
|
of that country. All went on well in this way while the same
|
|
religious opinions were general, the support of minister and school
|
|
being raised by a proportionate tax on the lands. But in process of
|
|
time, some becoming Quakers, some Baptists, and, of late years some
|
|
returning to the Church of England (through the laudable endeavours
|
|
and a _proper application_ of their funds by the society for
|
|
propagating the gospel) objections were made to the payment of a tax
|
|
appropriated to the support of a church they disapproved and had
|
|
forsaken. The civil magistrates, however, continued for a time to
|
|
collect and apply the tax according to the original laws which
|
|
remained in force; and they did it the more freely, as thinking it
|
|
just and equitable that the holders of lands should pay what was
|
|
contracted to be paid when they were granted, as the only
|
|
consideration for the grant, and what had been considered by all
|
|
subsequent purchasers as a perpetual incumbrance on the estate,
|
|
bought therefore at a proportionably cheaper rate; a payment which it
|
|
was thought no honest man ought to avoid under the pretence of his
|
|
having changed his religious persuasion. And this I suppose is one
|
|
of the best grounds of demanding tythes of dissenters now in England.
|
|
But the practice being clamoured against by the episcopalians as
|
|
persecution, the legislature of the Province of the Massachusets-Bay,
|
|
near thirty years since, passed an act for their relief, requiring
|
|
indeed the tax to be paid as usual, but directing that the several
|
|
sums levied from members of the Church of England, should be paid
|
|
over to the Minister of that Church, with whom such members usually
|
|
attended divine worship, which Minister had power given him to
|
|
receive and on occasion _to recover the same by law_.
|
|
|
|
It seems that legislature considered the _end_ of the tax was,
|
|
to secure and improve the morals of the people, and promote their
|
|
happiness, by supporting among them the public worship of God and the
|
|
preaching of the gospel; that where particular people fancied a
|
|
particular mode, that mode might probably therefore be of most use to
|
|
those people; and that if the good was done, it was not so material
|
|
in what mode or by whom it was done. The consideration that their
|
|
brethren the dissenters in England were still compelled to pay tythes
|
|
to the clergy of the Church, had not weight enough with the
|
|
legislature to prevent this moderate act, which still continues in
|
|
full force, and I hope no uncharitable conduct of the church toward
|
|
the dissenters will ever provoke them to repeal it.
|
|
|
|
With regard to a bishop, I know not upon what ground the
|
|
dissenters, either here or in America, are charged with refusing the
|
|
benefit of such an officer to the church in that country. _Here_
|
|
they seem to have naturally no concern in the affair. _There_ they
|
|
have no power to prevent it, if government should think fit to send
|
|
one. They would probably _dislike_, indeed, to see an order of men
|
|
established among them, from whose persecutions their fathers fled
|
|
into that wilderness, and whose future domination they may possibly
|
|
fear, _not knowing that their natures are changed_. But the
|
|
non-appointment of bishops for America seems to arise from another
|
|
quarter. The same wisdom of government, probably, that prevents the
|
|
sitting of convocations, and forbids, by _noli prosequi_'s, the
|
|
persecution of Dissenters for non-subscription, avoids establishing
|
|
bishops where the minds of people are not yet prepared to receive
|
|
them cordially, lest the public peace should be endangered.
|
|
|
|
And now let us see how this _persecution-account_ stands
|
|
between the parties.
|
|
|
|
In New-England, where the legislative bodies are almost to a
|
|
man Dissenters from the Church of England,
|
|
|
|
1. There is no test to prevent Churchmen holding offices.
|
|
|
|
2. The sons of Churchmen have the full benefit of the
|
|
Universities.
|
|
|
|
3. The taxes for support of public worship, when paid by
|
|
Churchmen, are given to the Episcopal minister.
|
|
|
|
In Old England,
|
|
|
|
1. Dissenters are excluded from all offices of profit and
|
|
honour.
|
|
|
|
2. The benefits of education in the Universities are
|
|
appropriated to the sons of Churchmen.
|
|
|
|
3. The clergy of the Dissenters receive none of the tythes paid
|
|
by their people, who must be at the additional charge of maintaining
|
|
their own separate worship. --
|
|
|
|
But it is said, the Dissenters of America _oppose_ the
|
|
introduction of a Bishop.
|
|
|
|
In fact, it is not alone the Dissenters there that give the
|
|
opposition (if _not encouraging_ must be termed _opposing_) but the
|
|
laity in general dislike the project, and some even of the clergy.
|
|
The inhabitants of Virginia are almost all Episcopalians. The Church
|
|
is fully established there, and the Council and General Assembly are
|
|
perhaps to a man its members, yet when lately at a meeting of the
|
|
clergy, a resolution was taken to apply for a Bishop, against which
|
|
several however protested; the assembly of the province at their next
|
|
meeting, expressed their disapprobation of the thing in the strongest
|
|
manner, by unanimously ordering the thanks of the house to the
|
|
protesters: for many of the American laity of the church think it
|
|
some advantage, whether their own young men come to England for
|
|
ordination, and improve themselves at the same time by conversation
|
|
with the learned here, or the congregations are supplied by
|
|
Englishmen, who have had the benefit of education in English
|
|
universities, and are ordained before they come abroad. They do not
|
|
therefore see the necessity of a Bishop merely for ordination, and
|
|
confirmation is among them deemed a ceremony of no very great
|
|
importance, since few seek it in England where Bishops are in plenty.
|
|
These sentiments prevail with many churchmen there, not to promote a
|
|
design, which they think must sooner or later saddle them with great
|
|
expences to support it. As to the Dissenters, their minds might
|
|
probably be more conciliated to the measure, if the Bishops here
|
|
should, in their wisdom and goodness, think fit to set their sacred
|
|
character in a more friendly light, by dropping their opposition to
|
|
the Dissenters application for relief in subscription, and declaring
|
|
their willingness that Dissenters should be capable of offices, enjoy
|
|
the benefit of education in the universities, and the privilege of
|
|
appropriating their tythes to the support of their own clergy. In
|
|
all these points of toleration, they appear far behind the present
|
|
Dissenters of New-England, and it may seem to some a step below the
|
|
dignity of Bishops, to follow the example of such inferiors. I do
|
|
not, however, despair of their doing it some time or other, since
|
|
nothing of the kind is too hard for _true christian humility_. I am,
|
|
Sir, your's, &c. _A New-England-Man_.
|
|
|
|
_The London Packet_, June 3, 1772
|
|
|
|
_The Sommersett Case and the Slave Trade_
|
|
|
|
It is said that some generous humane persons subscribed to the
|
|
expence of obtaining liberty by law for Somerset the Negro. -- It is
|
|
to be wished that the same humanity may extend itself among numbers;
|
|
if not to the procuring liberty for those that remain in our
|
|
Colonies, at least to obtain a law for abolishing the African
|
|
commerce in Slaves, and declaring the children of present Slaves free
|
|
after they become of age.
|
|
|
|
By a late computation made in America, it appears that there
|
|
are now eight hundred and fifty thousand Negroes in the English
|
|
Islands and Colonies; and that the yearly importation is about one
|
|
hundred thousand, of which number about one third perish by the gaol
|
|
distemper on the passage, and in the sickness called the _seasoning_
|
|
before they are set to labour. The remnant makes up the deficiencies
|
|
continually occurring among the main body of those unhappy people,
|
|
through the distempers occasioned by excessive labour, bad
|
|
nourishment, uncomfortable accommodation, and broken spirits. Can
|
|
sweetening our tea, &c. with sugar, be a circumstance of such
|
|
absolute necessity? Can the petty pleasure thence arising to the
|
|
taste, compensate for so much misery produced among our fellow
|
|
creatures, and such a constant butchery of the human species by this
|
|
pestilential detestable traffic in the bodies and souls of men? --
|
|
_Pharisaical Britain!_ to pride thyself in setting free _a single
|
|
Slave_ that happens to land on thy coasts, while thy Merchants in all
|
|
thy ports are encouraged by thy laws to continue a commerce whereby
|
|
so many _hundreds of thousands_ are dragged into a slavery that can
|
|
scarce be said to end with their lives, since it is entailed on their
|
|
posterity!
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, June 20, 1772
|
|
|
|
_Preface to the Declaration of the Boston Town Meeting_
|
|
|
|
All Accounts of the Discontent so general in our Colonies, have
|
|
of late Years been industriously smothered, and concealed here; it
|
|
seeming to suit the Views of the American Minister to have it
|
|
understood, that by his great Abilities all Faction was subdued, all
|
|
Opposition suppressed, and the whole Country quieted. -- That the
|
|
true State of Affairs there may be known, and the true Causes of that
|
|
Discontent well understood, the following Piece (not the Production
|
|
of a Private Writer, but the unanimous Act of a large American City)
|
|
lately printed in New-England, is republished here. This Nation, and
|
|
the other Nations of Europe, may thereby learn with more Certainty
|
|
the Grounds of a Dissension, that possibly may, sooner or later, have
|
|
Consequences interesting to them all.
|
|
|
|
The Colonies had, from their first Settlement, been governed
|
|
with more Ease, than perhaps can be equalled by any Instance in
|
|
History, of Dominions so distant. Their Affection and Respect for
|
|
this Country, while they were treated with Kindness, produced an
|
|
almost implicit Obedience to the Instructions of the Prince, and even
|
|
to Acts of the British Parliament, though the Right of binding them
|
|
by a Legislature in which they were unrepresented, was never clearly
|
|
understood. That Respect and Affection produced a Partiality in
|
|
favour of every thing that was English; whence their preference of
|
|
English Modes and Manufactures; their Submission to Restraints on the
|
|
Importation of Foreign Goods, which they had but little Desire to
|
|
use; and the Monopoly we so long enjoyed of their Commerce, to the
|
|
great enriching of our Merchants and Artificers. The mistaken Policy
|
|
of the Stamp-Act first disturbed this happy Situation; but the Flame
|
|
thereby raised was soon extinguished by its Repeal, and the old
|
|
Harmony restored, with all its concomitant Advantages to our
|
|
Commerce. The subsequent Act of another Administration, which, not
|
|
content with an established Exclusion of Foreign Manufactures, began
|
|
to make our own Merchandize dearer to the Consumers there by heavy
|
|
Duties, revived it again: And Combinations were entered into
|
|
throughout the Continent, to stop Trading with Britain till those
|
|
Duties should be repealed. All were accordingly repealed but One,
|
|
the Duty on Tea. This was reserved professedly as a standing Claim
|
|
and Exercise of the Right assumed by Parliament of laying such
|
|
Duties. The Colonies, on this Repeal, retracted their Agreement, so
|
|
far as related to all other Goods except that on which the Duty was
|
|
retained. This was trumpeted _here_ by the Minister for the Colonies
|
|
as a Triumph; _there_ it was considered only as a decent and
|
|
equitable Measure, shewing a Willingness to _meet_ the Mother Country
|
|
in every Advance towards a Reconciliation. And the Disposition to a
|
|
good Understanding was so prevalent, that possibly they might soon
|
|
have relaxed in the Article of Tea also. But the System of
|
|
Commissioners of Customs, Officers without end, with Fleets and
|
|
Armies for collecting and enforcing those Duties, being continued,
|
|
and these acting with much Indiscretion and Rashness, giving great
|
|
and unnecessary Trouble and Obstruction to Business, commencing
|
|
unjust and vexatious Suits, and harassing Commerce in all its
|
|
Branches, while that Minister kept the People in a constant State of
|
|
Irritation by Instructions which appeared to have no other End than
|
|
the gratifying his Private Resentments, occasioned a persevering
|
|
Adherence to their Resolution in that Particular: And the Event
|
|
should be a Lesson to Ministers, not to risque, through Pique, the
|
|
obstructing any one Branch of Trade, since the Course and Connection
|
|
of General Business may be thereby disturbed to a Degree impossible
|
|
to be foreseen or imagined. For it appears, that the Colonies,
|
|
finding their Humble Petitions to have this Duty repealed, were
|
|
rejected and treated with Contempt, and that the Produce of the Duty
|
|
was applied to the rewarding with undeserved Salaries and Pensions
|
|
every one of their Enemies, the Duty itself became more odious, and
|
|
their Resolution to starve it more vigorous and obstinate. The
|
|
Dutch, the Danes and French, took the Advantage thus offered them by
|
|
our Imprudence, and began to smuggle their Teas into the Plantations.
|
|
At first this was somewhat difficult; but at length, as all Business
|
|
improves by Practice, it became easy. A Coast, 1500 Miles in Length,
|
|
could not in all Parts be guarded, even by the whole Navy of England,
|
|
especially where the restraining Authority was by all the Inhabitants
|
|
deemed unconstitutional, and Smuggling of course considered as
|
|
Patriotism. The needy Wretches too, who with small Salaries were
|
|
trusted to watch the Ports Day and Night, in all Weathers, found it
|
|
easier and more profitable, not only to _wink_, but to sleep in their
|
|
Beds, the Merchant's Pay being more generous than the King's. Other
|
|
India Goods also, which by themselves would not have made a Smuggling
|
|
Voyage sufficiently profitable, accompanied Tea to Advantage; and it
|
|
is feared the cheap French Silks, formerly rejected as not to the
|
|
Taste of the Colonists, may have found their way with the Wares of
|
|
India, and now established themselves in the popular Use and Opinion.
|
|
It is supposed that at least a Million of Americans drink Tea twice a
|
|
Day, which, at the first Cost here, can scarce be reckoned at less
|
|
than Half a Guinea a Head _per Annum_. This Market, that in the five
|
|
Years which have run on since the Act passed, would have paid
|
|
2,500,000 Guineas, _for Tea alone_, into the Coffers of the Company,
|
|
we have wantonly lost to Foreigners. Meanwhile it is said the Duties
|
|
have so diminished, that the whole Remittance of the last Year
|
|
amounted to no more than the pitiful Sum of 85 Pounds for the Expence
|
|
of some Hundred Thousands in armed Ships and Soldiers to support the
|
|
Officers. Hence the Tea and other India Goods that might have been
|
|
sold in America, remain rotting in the Company's Warehouses, while
|
|
those of Foreign Ports are known to be cleared by the American
|
|
Demand. Hence in some Degree the Company's Inability to pay their
|
|
Bills; the sinking of their Stock, by which Millions of Property have
|
|
been annihilated; the lowering of their Dividend, whereby so many
|
|
must be distressed; the Loss to Government of the stipulated 400,000
|
|
Pounds a Year, which must make a proportionable Reduction in our
|
|
Savings towards the Discharge of our enormous Debt; and hence in part
|
|
the severe Blow suffered by Credit in general, to the Ruin of many
|
|
Families; the Stagnation of Business in Spital-Fields and at
|
|
Manchester, through want of Vent for their Goods; with other future
|
|
Evils, which, as they cannot, from the numerous and secret
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Connections in General Commerce, easily be foreseen, can hardly be
|
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avoided.
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|
February, 1773
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TO THE MASSACHUSETTS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES:
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_"A Little Time Must Infallibly Bring Us All We Demand or Desire"_
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Sir, London, July 7. 1773
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The Parliament is at length prorogu'd without meddling with the State
|
|
of America. Their Time was much employ'd in East India Business: and
|
|
perhaps it was not thought prudent to lay before them the Advices
|
|
from New England, tho' some threatning Intimations had been given of
|
|
such as Intention. The King's firm Answer (as it is called) to our
|
|
Petitions and Remonstrances, has probably been judged sufficient for
|
|
the present. I forwarded that Answer to you by the last Packet, and
|
|
sent a Copy of it by a Boston Ship the beginning of last Month.
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|
Therein we are told "that his Majesty has well weighed the _Subject
|
|
matter,_ and the _Expressions_ contain'd in those Petitions; and that
|
|
as he will ever attend to the _humble_ Petitions of his Subjects, and
|
|
be forward to redress every _real_ Grievance so he is determined to
|
|
support _the Constitution_, and resist with Firmness every Attempt to
|
|
derogate from the Authority of the _supreme Legislature_."
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By this it seems that, some Exception is taken to the
|
|
_Expressions_ of the Petitions as not sufficiently humble; that the
|
|
Grievances complain'd of are not thought _real_ Grievances; that
|
|
Parliament is deem'd the Supreme Legislature, and its Authority over
|
|
the Colonies, suppos'd to be _the Constitution_. Indeed this last
|
|
Idea is express'd more fully in the next Paragraph, where the Words
|
|
of the Act are us'd, declaring the Right of the Crown with the Advice
|
|
of Parliament, to make Laws of _sufficient Force and Validity_ to
|
|
bind its Subjects in America _in all Cases whatsoever._
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When one considers the King's Situation, surrounded by
|
|
Ministers, Councellors, and Judges learned in the Law, who are all of
|
|
this Opinion; and reflect how necessary it is for him to be well with
|
|
his Parliament, from whose yearly Grants his Fleets and Armies are to
|
|
be supported, and the Deficiencies of his Civil List supplied, it is
|
|
not to be wondered at that he should be firm in an Opinion
|
|
establish'd as far as an Act of Parliament could establish it, by
|
|
even the Friends of America at the Time they repeal'd the Stamp-Act;
|
|
and which is so generally thought right by his Lords and Commons,
|
|
that any Act of his, countenancing the contrary, would hazard his
|
|
embroiling himself with those Powerful Bodies. And from hence it
|
|
seems hardly to be expected from him that he should take any Step of
|
|
that kind. The grievous Instructions indeed might be withdrawn
|
|
without their observing it, if his Majesty thought fit so to do; but
|
|
under the present Prejudices of all about him, it seems that this is
|
|
not yet likely to be advised.
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The Question then arises, How are we to obtain Redress? If we
|
|
look back into the Parliamentary History of this Country, we shall
|
|
find that in similar Situations of the Subjects here, Redress could
|
|
seldom be obtained but by withholding Aids when the Sovereign was in
|
|
Distress, till the Grievances were removed. Hence the rooted Custom
|
|
of the Commons to keep Money Bills intirely in their own Disposition,
|
|
not suffering even the Lords to meddle in Grants, either as to
|
|
Quantity, Manner of raising, or even in the smallest Circumstance.
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|
This Country pretends to be collectively our Sovereign. It is now
|
|
deeply in debt. Its Funds are far short of recovering their Par
|
|
since the last War: Another would distress it still more. Its People
|
|
diminish as well as its Credit. Men will be wanted as well as Money.
|
|
The Colonies are rapidly increasing in Wealth and Numbers. In the
|
|
last War they maintained an Army of 25000. A Country able to do that
|
|
is no contemptible Ally. In another War they may do perhaps twice as
|
|
much with equal Ease. Whenever a War happens, our Aid will be wish'd
|
|
for, our Friendship desired and cultivated, our Good will courted:
|
|
Then is the Time to say, _Redress our Grievances_. You take Money
|
|
from us by Force, and now you ask it of voluntary Grant. You cannot
|
|
have it both Ways. If you chuse to have it without our Consent, you
|
|
must go on taking it that way and be content with what little you can
|
|
so obtain. If you would have our free Gifts, desist from your
|
|
Compulsive Methods, acknowledge our Rights, and secure our future
|
|
Enjoyment of them. Our Claims will then be attended to, and our
|
|
Complaints regarded. By what I perceiv'd not long since when a War
|
|
was apprehended with Spain, the different Countenance put on by some
|
|
Great Men here towards those who were thought to have a little
|
|
Influence in America, and the Language that began to be held with
|
|
regard to the then Minister for the Colonies, I am confident that if
|
|
that War had taken place he would have been immediately dismiss'd,
|
|
all his Measures revers'd, and every step taken to recover our
|
|
Affection and procure our Assistance. Thence I think it fair to
|
|
conclude that similar Effects will probably be produced by similar
|
|
Circumstances.
|
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|
|
But as the Strength of an Empire depends not only on the
|
|
_Union_ of its Parts, but on their _Readiness_ for United Exertion of
|
|
their common Force: And as the Discussion of Rights may seem
|
|
unseasonable in the Commencement of actual War; and the Delay it
|
|
might occasion be prejudicial to the common Welfare. As likewise the
|
|
Refusal of one or a few Colonies, would not be so much regarded if
|
|
the others granted liberally, which perhaps by various Artifices and
|
|
Motives they might be prevailed on to do; and as this want of Concert
|
|
would defeat the Expectation of general Redress that otherwise might
|
|
be justly formed; perhaps it would be best and fairest, for the
|
|
Colonies in a general Congress now in Peace to be assembled, or by
|
|
means of the Correspondence lately proposed after a full and solemn
|
|
Assertion and Declaration of their Rights, to engage firmly with each
|
|
other that they will never grant aids to the Crown in any General War
|
|
till those Rights are recogniz'd by the King and both Houses of
|
|
Parliament; communicating at the same time to the Crown this their
|
|
Resolution. Such a Step I imagine will bring the Dispute to a
|
|
Crisis; and whether our Demands are immediately comply'd with, or
|
|
compulsory Means are thought of to make us Rescind them, our Ends
|
|
will finally be obtain'd, for even the odium accompanying such
|
|
compulsory Attempts will contribute to unite and strengthen us, and
|
|
in the mean time all the World will allow that our Proceeding has
|
|
been honourable.
|
|
|
|
No one doubts the Advantage of a strict Union between the
|
|
Mother Country and the Colonies, if it may be obtain'd and preserv'd
|
|
on equitable Terms. In every fair Connection each Party should find
|
|
its own Interest. Britain will find hers in our joining with her in
|
|
every War she makes to the greater Annoyance and Terror of her
|
|
Enemies; in our Employment of her Manufacturers, and Enriching of her
|
|
Merchants by our Commerce; and her Government will feel some
|
|
additional Strengthening of its Hands, by the Disposition of our
|
|
profitable Posts and Places. On our side, we have to expect the
|
|
Protection she can afford us; and the Advantage of a common Umpire in
|
|
our Disputes thereby preventing Wars we might otherwise have with
|
|
each other, so that we can without Interruption go on with our
|
|
Improvements and increase our Numbers. We ask no more of her, and
|
|
she should not think of forcing more from us. By the Exercise of
|
|
prudent Moderation on her part, mix'd with a little Kindness; and by
|
|
a decent Behaviour on ours, excusing where we can excuse from a
|
|
Consideration of Circumstances, and bearing a little, with the
|
|
Infirmities of her Government as we would with those of an aged
|
|
Parent, tho' firmly asserting our Privileges, and declaring that we
|
|
mean at a proper time to vindicate them, this advantageous Union may
|
|
still be long continued. We wish it, and we may endeavour it, but
|
|
God will order it as to his Wisdom shall seem most suitable. The
|
|
Friends of Liberty here, wish we may long preserve it on our side the
|
|
Water, that they may find it there if adverse Events should destroy
|
|
it here. They are therefore anxious and afraid lest we should hazard
|
|
it by premature Attempts in its favour. They think we may risque
|
|
much by violent Measures, and that the Risque is unnecessary, since a
|
|
little Time must infallibly bring us all we demand or desire, and
|
|
bring it us in Peace and Safety. I do not presume to advise. There
|
|
are many wiser Men among you, and I hope you will be directed by a
|
|
still superior Wisdom.
|
|
|
|
With regard to the Sentiments of People in general here
|
|
concerning America, I must say that we have among them many Friends
|
|
and Well-wishers. The Dissenters are all for us, and many of the
|
|
Merchants and Manufacturers. There seems to be even among the
|
|
Country Gentlemen a general Sense of our growing Importance, a
|
|
Disapprobation of the harsh Measures with which we have been treated,
|
|
and a Wish that some Means may be found of perfect Reconciliation. A
|
|
few Members of Parliament in both Houses, and perhaps some in high
|
|
Office have in a Degree the same Ideas, but none of these seem
|
|
willing as yet to be active in our favour, lest Adversaries should
|
|
take Advantage and charge it upon them as a Betraying the Interests
|
|
of this Nation. In this State of things, no Endeavours of mine or
|
|
our other Friends here "to obtain a Repeal of the Acts so oppressive
|
|
to the Colonists or the Orders of the Crown so destructive of the
|
|
Charter rights of our Province in particular," can expect a sudden
|
|
success. By degrees and a judicious Improvement of Events we may
|
|
work a Change in Minds and Measures, but otherwise such great
|
|
Alterations are hardly to be look'd for.
|
|
|
|
I am thankful to the House for the Mark of their kind Attention
|
|
in repeating their Grant to me of Six Hundred Pounds. Whether the
|
|
Instruction restraining the Governor's Assent is withdrawn or not, or
|
|
is likely to be I cannot tell, having never solicited or even once
|
|
mention'd it to Lord Dartmouth, being resolved to owe no Obligation
|
|
on that Account to the Favour of any Minister. If from a Sense of
|
|
Right, that Instruction should be recall'd and the general Principle
|
|
on which it was founded is given up, all will be very well: but you
|
|
can never think it worth while to employ an Agent here if his being
|
|
paid or not is to depend on the Breath of a Minister, and I should
|
|
think it a Situation too suspicious and therefore too dishonourable
|
|
for me to remain in a single Hour. Living frugally I am under no
|
|
immediate Necessity; and if I serve my Constituents faithfully tho'
|
|
it should be unsuccessfully I am confident they will always have it
|
|
in their Inclination and sometime or other in their Power to make
|
|
their Grants effectual.
|
|
|
|
A Gentleman of our Province, Capt. Calef, is come hither as an
|
|
Agent for some of the Eastern Townships to obtain a Confirmation of
|
|
their Lands. Sir Francis Bernard seems inclin'd to make Use of this
|
|
Person's Application for promoting a Separation of that Country from
|
|
your Province and making it a distinct Government, to which purpose
|
|
he prepared a Draft of a Memorial for Calef to present setting forth
|
|
not only the hardship of being without Security in the Property of
|
|
their Improvements, but also the Distress of the People there for
|
|
want of Government, that they were at too great a Distance from the
|
|
Seat of Government in the Massachusetts to be capable of receiving
|
|
the Benefits of Government from thence, and expressing their
|
|
Willingness to be separated, and form'd into a new Province, &c.
|
|
With this Draft Sir Francis and Mr. Calef came to me to have my
|
|
Opinion. I read it, and observ'd to them that tho' I wish'd the
|
|
People quieted in their Possessions and would do any thing I could to
|
|
assist in obtaining the Assurance of their Property, yet as I knew
|
|
the Province of the Massachusetts had a Right to that Country, of
|
|
which they were justly tenacious, I must oppose that part of the
|
|
Memorial if it should be presented. Sir Francis allow'd the Right,
|
|
but propos'd that a great Tract of Land between Merrimack and
|
|
Connecticut Rivers which had been allotted to Newhampshire might be
|
|
restord to our Province by order of the Crown, as a Compensation.
|
|
This he said would be of more Value to us than that Eastern Country,
|
|
as being nearer home, &c. I said I would mention it in my Letters,
|
|
but must in the mean time oppose any Step taken in the Affair before
|
|
the Sentiments of the General Court should be known as to such an
|
|
Exchange if it were offer'd. Mr. Calef himself did not seem fond of
|
|
the Draft, and I have not seen him, or heard any thing farther of it
|
|
since, but I shall watch it.
|
|
|
|
Be pleased to present my dutiful Respects to the House, and
|
|
believe me, with sincere and great Esteem, Sir, Your most obedient
|
|
and most humble Servant.
|
|
|
|
_On the Hutchinson Letters_
|
|
|
|
A Correspondent observes, that the Discovery of Governor
|
|
Hutchinson's and Oliver's Letters points out an easy Way of
|
|
re-establishing Peace and Harmony between Great Britain and her
|
|
Colonies, and consolating the Confidence of the latter, by producing
|
|
all the confidential Letters received from America in public Affairs,
|
|
and from public Men. It is in vain to say, this would be betraying
|
|
private Correspondence, since if the Truth only was written, no Man
|
|
need be ashamed or afraid of its being known; and if Falshoods have
|
|
been maliciously covered under the Cloak of Confidence, 'tis
|
|
perfectly just the incendiary Writers should be exposed and punished.
|
|
What a weak, what a wicked Plan of Government is that, which, under
|
|
the Seal of Secrecy, gives Encouragement to every Species of Malice
|
|
and Misrepresentation. That Government have been deceived almost to
|
|
the fatal Issue of declaring War against our Colonies is certain; and
|
|
it is equally certain, that it is in their Power to make an
|
|
honourable Sacrifice of the wicked Authors of this dangerous
|
|
Deception.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, August 31, 1773
|
|
|
|
_An Infallible Method To Restore Peace and Harmony_
|
|
|
|
_To the_ Printer _of the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
|
|
Permit me, Sir, to communicate to the Ministry, thro' the
|
|
Channel of your Paper, an _infallible Method_ (and but one) to
|
|
silence the Clamours of the Americans; to restore Peace and Harmony
|
|
between the Colonies and the Mother Country; to regain the Affections
|
|
of the most loyal, and I will venture to say the most virtuous of his
|
|
Majesty's Subjects, whose Assistance may one Day be necessary to
|
|
preserve that Freedom, which is the Glory and Happiness of the
|
|
English Nation, and without which, from the Luxury and Effeminacy
|
|
which at present reigns so universally among us, is in imminent
|
|
Danger of being lost forever. The Method is plain and easy: Place
|
|
the Americans in the same Individual Situation they were in before
|
|
that di ------ cal, unconstitutional, oppressive Revenue Act was
|
|
formed and endeavoured to be carried into Execution by Mr. Grenville;
|
|
repeal the odious Tax on Tea; supersede the Board of Commissioners;
|
|
let the Governors and Judges be appointed by the Crown, and paid by
|
|
the People as usual; recall the Troops, except what are absolutely
|
|
necessary for the Preservation of the new-acquired Provinces; in
|
|
fine, put every Thing on its ancient Footing. The Plea of its being
|
|
dishonourable to give up a Point once determined upon, is vain and
|
|
nugatory: The Instances are innumerable of Repeals of Acts of
|
|
Parliament, which, when passed, were thought wise and necessary. --
|
|
The Stamp Duty for America is a recent Instance in point -- Acts of
|
|
Prerogative are surely not more sacred than Acts of Parliament. I
|
|
insist upon it, that nothing would redound so much to the Honour of
|
|
Administration, nothing would convince Mankind that the Intentions of
|
|
Government are just and equitable, equal to the little Sacrifice of
|
|
Vanity and the Pride of Power to the general Welfare of the British
|
|
Empire. It is asserted, that there are Emissaries from France, who
|
|
endeavour to foment the Difference between Great Britain and her
|
|
Colonies. Disappoint this subtle and perfidious Nation. I will
|
|
venture to prophecy, that notwithstanding this little Breach, the
|
|
Connexion will be as strong, perhaps stronger than ever.
|
|
|
|
It was always the Boast of the Americans, that they could claim
|
|
their Original from the Kingdom of Great Britain, and their Joy upon
|
|
being re-admitted to all the Privileges of Englishmen will operate as
|
|
a new Cement to a grateful and generous People, which will for ever
|
|
ensure their future Loyalty and Obedience.
|
|
|
|
The above is the sincere Opinion of A Well-Wisher to _Great
|
|
Britain and her Colonies_.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, September 8, 1773
|
|
|
|
FOR THE PUBLIC ADVERTISER
|
|
|
|
_Rules by Which a Great Empire May Be Reduced to a Small One_
|
|
|
|
[Presented privately to a _late Minister_, when he entered upon his
|
|
Administration; and now first published.]
|
|
|
|
An ancient Sage valued himself upon this, that tho' he could not
|
|
fiddle, he knew how to make a _great City_ of a _little one_. The
|
|
Science that I, a modern Simpleton, am about to communicate is the
|
|
very reverse.
|
|
|
|
I address myself to all Ministers who have the Management of
|
|
extensive Dominions, which from their very Greatness are become
|
|
troublesome to govern, because the Multiplicity of their Affairs
|
|
leaves no Time for _fiddling_.
|
|
|
|
I. In the first Place, Gentlemen, you are to consider, that a
|
|
great Empire, like a great Cake, is most easily diminished at the
|
|
Edges. Turn your Attention therefore first to your remotest
|
|
Provinces; that as you get rid of them, the next may follow in Order.
|
|
|
|
II. That the Possibility of this Separation may always exist,
|
|
take special Care the Provinces are never incorporated with the
|
|
Mother Country, that they do not enjoy the same common Rights, the
|
|
same Privileges in Commerce, and that they are governed by _severer_
|
|
Laws, all of _your enacting_, without allowing them any Share in the
|
|
Choice of the Legislators. By carefully making and preserving such
|
|
Distinctions, you will (to keep to my Simile of the Cake) act like a
|
|
wise Gingerbread Baker, who, to facilitate a Division, cuts his Dough
|
|
half through in those Places, where, when bak'd, he would have it
|
|
_broken to Pieces_.
|
|
|
|
III. These remote Provinces have perhaps been acquired,
|
|
purchas'd, or conquer'd, at the _sole Expence_ of the Settlers or
|
|
their Ancestors, without the Aid of the Mother Country. If this
|
|
should happen to increase her _Strength_ by their growing Numbers
|
|
ready to join in her Wars, her _Commerce_ by their growing Demand for
|
|
her Manufactures, or her _Naval Power_ by greater Employment for her
|
|
Ships and Seamen, they may probably suppose some Merit in this, and
|
|
that it entitles them to some Favour; you are therefore to _forget it
|
|
all_, or resent it as if they had done you Injury. If they happen to
|
|
be zealous Whigs, Friends of Liberty, nurtur'd in Revolution
|
|
Principles, _remember all that_ to their Prejudice, and contrive to
|
|
punish it: For such Principles, after a Revolution is thoroughly
|
|
established, are of _no more Use_, they are even _odious_ and
|
|
_abominable_.
|
|
|
|
IV. However peaceably your Colonies have submitted to your
|
|
Government, shewn their Affection to your Interest, and patiently
|
|
borne their Grievances, you are to _suppose_ them always inclined to
|
|
revolt, and treat them accordingly. Quarter Troops among them, who
|
|
by their Insolence may _provoke_ the rising of Mobs, and by their
|
|
Bullets and Bayonets _suppress_ them. By this Means, like the
|
|
Husband who uses his Wife ill _from Suspicion_, you may in Time
|
|
convert your _Suspicions_ into _Realities_.
|
|
|
|
V. Remote Provinces must have _Governors_, and _Judges_, to
|
|
represent the Royal Person, and execute every where the delegated
|
|
Parts of his Office and Authority. You Ministers know, that much of
|
|
the Strength of Government depends on the _Opinion_ of the People;
|
|
and much of that Opinion on the Choice of Rulers placed immediately
|
|
over them. If you send them wise and good Men for Governors, who
|
|
study the Interest of the Colonists, and advance their Prosperity,
|
|
they will think their King wise and good, and that he wishes the
|
|
Welfare of his Subjects. If you send them learned and upright Men
|
|
for Judges, they will think him a Lover of Justice. This may attach
|
|
your Provinces more to his Government. You are therefore to be
|
|
careful who you recommend for those Offices. -- If you can find
|
|
Prodigals who have ruined their Fortunes, broken Gamesters or
|
|
Stock-Jobbers, these may do well as _Governors_; for they will
|
|
probably be rapacious, and provoke the People by their Extortions.
|
|
Wrangling Proctors and petty-fogging Lawyers too are not amiss, for
|
|
they will be for ever disputing and quarrelling with their little
|
|
Parliaments. If withal they should be ignorant, wrong-headed and
|
|
insolent, so much the better. Attorneys Clerks and Newgate
|
|
Solicitors will do for _Chief-Justices_, especially if they hold
|
|
their Places _during your Pleasure_: -- And all will contribute to
|
|
impress those ideas of your Government that are proper for a People
|
|
_you would wish to renounce it_.
|
|
|
|
VI. To confirm these Impressions, and strike them deeper,
|
|
whenever the Injured come to the Capital with Complaints of
|
|
Mal-administration, Oppression, or Injustice, punish such Suitors
|
|
with long Delay, enormous Expence, and a final Judgment in Favour of
|
|
the Oppressor. This will have an admirable Effect every Way. The
|
|
Trouble of future Complaints will be prevented, and Governors and
|
|
Judges will be encouraged to farther Acts of Oppression and
|
|
Injustice; and thence the People may become more disaffected, _and at
|
|
length desperate_.
|
|
|
|
VII. When such Governors have crammed their Coffers, and made
|
|
themselves so odious to the People that they can no longer remain
|
|
among them with Safety to their Persons, recall and _reward_ them
|
|
with Pensions. You may make them _Baronets_ too, if that respectable
|
|
Order should not think fit to resent it. All will contribute to
|
|
encourage new Governors in the same Practices, and make the supreme
|
|
Government _detestable_.
|
|
|
|
VIII. If when you are engaged in War, your Colonies should vie
|
|
in liberal Aids of Men and Money against the common Enemy, upon your
|
|
simple Requisition, and give far beyond their Abilities, reflect,
|
|
that a Penny taken from them by your Power is more honourable to you
|
|
than a Pound presented by their Benevolence. Despise therefore their
|
|
voluntary Grants, and resolve to harrass them with novel Taxes. They
|
|
will probably complain to your Parliaments that they are taxed by a
|
|
Body in which they have no Representative, and that this is contrary
|
|
to common Right. They will petition for Redress. Let the
|
|
Parliaments flout their Claims, reject their Petitions, refuse even
|
|
to suffer the reading of them, and treat the Petitioners with the
|
|
utmost Contempt. Nothing can have a better Effect, in producing the
|
|
Alienation proposed; for though many can forgive Injuries, _none ever
|
|
forgave Contempt_.
|
|
|
|
IX. In laying these Taxes, never regard the heavy Burthens
|
|
those remote People already undergo, in defending their own
|
|
Frontiers, supporting their own provincial Governments, making new
|
|
Roads, building Bridges, Churches and other public Edifices, which in
|
|
old Countries have been done to your Hands by your Ancestors, but
|
|
which occasion constant Calls and Demands on the Purses of a new
|
|
People. Forget the _Restraints_ you lay on their Trade for _your
|
|
own_ Benefit, and the Advantage a _Monopoly_ of this Trade gives your
|
|
exacting Merchants. Think nothing of the Wealth those Merchants and
|
|
your Manufacturers acquire by the Colony Commerce; their encreased
|
|
Ability thereby to pay Taxes at home; their accumulating, in the
|
|
Price of their Commodities, most of those Taxes, and so levying them
|
|
from their consuming Customers: All this, and the Employment and
|
|
Support of Thousands of your Poor by the Colonists, you are _intirely
|
|
to forget_. But remember to make your arbitrary Tax more grievous to
|
|
your Provinces, by public Declarations importing that your Power of
|
|
taxing them has _no Limits_, so that when you take from them without
|
|
their Consent a Shilling in the Pound, you have a clear Right to the
|
|
other nineteen. This will probably weaken every Idea of _Security in
|
|
their Property_, and convince them that under such a Government _they
|
|
have nothing they can call their own_; which can scarce fail of
|
|
producing _the happiest Consequences_!
|
|
|
|
X. Possibly indeed some of them might still comfort themselves,
|
|
and say, `Though we have no Property, we have yet _something_ left
|
|
that is valuable; we have constitutional _Liberty_ both of Person and
|
|
of Conscience. This King, these Lords, and these Commons, who it
|
|
seems are too remote from us to know us and feel for us, cannot take
|
|
from us our _Habeas_ _Corpus_ Right, or our Right of Trial _by a Jury
|
|
of our Neighbours_: They cannot deprive us of the Exercise of our
|
|
Religion, alter our ecclesiastical Constitutions, and compel us to be
|
|
Papists if they please, or Mahometans.' To annihilate this Comfort,
|
|
begin by Laws to perplex their Commerce with infinite Regulations
|
|
impossible to be remembered and observed; ordain Seizures of their
|
|
Property for every Failure; take away the Trial of such Property by
|
|
Jury, and give it to arbitrary Judges of your own appointing, and of
|
|
the lowest Characters in the Country, whose Salaries and Emoluments
|
|
are to arise out of the Duties or Condemnations, and whose
|
|
Appointments are _during Pleasure_. Then let there be a formal
|
|
Declaration of both Houses, that Opposition to your Edicts is
|
|
_Treason_, and that Persons suspected of Treason in the Provinces
|
|
may, according to some obsolete Law, be seized and sent to the
|
|
Metropolis of the Empire for Trial; and pass an Act that those there
|
|
charged with certain other Offences shall be sent away in Chains from
|
|
their Friends and Country to be tried in the same Manner for Felony.
|
|
Then erect a new Court of Inquisition among them, accompanied by an
|
|
armed Force, with Instructions to transport all such suspected
|
|
Persons, to be ruined by the Expence if they bring over Evidences to
|
|
prove their Innocence, or be found guilty and hanged if they can't
|
|
afford it. And lest the People should think you cannot possibly go
|
|
any farther, pass another solemn declaratory Act, that `King, Lords,
|
|
and Commons had, hath, and of Right ought to have, full Power and
|
|
Authority to make Statutes of sufficient Force and Validity to bind
|
|
the unrepresented Provinces IN ALL CASES WHATSOEVER.' This will
|
|
include _spiritual_ with temporal; and taken together, must operate
|
|
wonderfully to your Purpose, by convincing them, that they are at
|
|
present under a Power something like that spoken of in the
|
|
Scriptures, which can not only _kill their Bodies_, but _damn their
|
|
Souls_ to all Eternity, by compelling them, if it pleases, _to
|
|
worship the Devil_.
|
|
|
|
XI. To make your Taxes more odious, and more likely to procure
|
|
Resistance, send from the Capital a Board of Officers to superintend
|
|
the Collection, composed of the most _indiscreet, ill-bred_ and
|
|
_insolent_ you can find. Let these have large Salaries out of the
|
|
extorted Revenue, and live in open grating Luxury upon the Sweat and
|
|
Blood of the Industrious, whom they are to worry continually with
|
|
groundless and expensive Prosecutions before the above-mentioned
|
|
arbitrary Revenue-Judges, all _at the Cost of the Party prosecuted_
|
|
tho' acquitted, because _the King is to pay no Costs_. -- Let these
|
|
Men _by your Order_ be exempted from all the common Taxes and
|
|
Burthens of the Province, though they and their Property are
|
|
protected by its Laws. If any Revenue Officers are _suspected_ of
|
|
the least Tenderness for the People, discard them. If others are
|
|
justly complained of, protect and reward them. If any of the
|
|
Under-officers behave so as to provoke the People to drub them,
|
|
promote those to better Offices: This will encourage others to
|
|
procure for themselves such profitable Drubbings, by multiplying and
|
|
enlarging such Provocations, and _all with work towards the End you
|
|
aim at_.
|
|
|
|
XII. Another Way to make your Tax odious, is to misapply the
|
|
Produce of it. If it was originally appropriated for the _Defence_
|
|
of the Provinces and the better Support of Government, and the
|
|
Administration of Justice where it may be _necessary_, then apply
|
|
none of it to that _Defence_, but bestow it where it is _not
|
|
necessary_, in augmented Salaries or Pensions to every Governor who
|
|
has distinguished himself by his Enmity to the People, and by
|
|
calumniating them to their Sovereign. This will make them pay it
|
|
more unwillingly, and be more apt to quarrel with those that collect
|
|
it, and those that imposed it, who will quarrel again with them, and
|
|
all shall contribute to your _main Purpose_ of making them _weary of
|
|
your Government_.
|
|
|
|
XIII. If the People of any Province have been accustomed to
|
|
support their own Governors and Judges to Satisfaction, you are to
|
|
apprehend that such Governors and Judges may be thereby influenced to
|
|
treat the People kindly, and to do them Justice. This is another
|
|
Reason for applying Part of that Revenue in larger Salaries to such
|
|
Governors and Judges, given, as their Commissions are, _during your
|
|
Pleasure_ only, forbidding them to take any Salaries from their
|
|
Provinces; that thus the People may no longer hope any Kindness from
|
|
their Governors, or (in Crown Cases) any Justice from their Judges.
|
|
And as the Money thus mis-applied in one Province is extorted from
|
|
all, probably _all will resent the Mis-application_.
|
|
|
|
XIV. If the Parliaments of your Provinces should dare to claim
|
|
Rights or complain of your Administration, order them to be harass'd
|
|
with repeated _Dissolutions_. If the same Men are continually
|
|
return'd by new Elections, adjourn their Meetings to some Country
|
|
Village where they cannot be accommodated, and there keep them
|
|
_during Pleasure_; for this, you know, is your PREROGATIVE; and an
|
|
excellent one it is, as you may manage it, to promote Discontents
|
|
among the People, diminish their Respect, and _increase their
|
|
Dis-affection_.
|
|
|
|
XV. Convert the brave honest Officers of your Navy into pimping
|
|
Tide-waiters and Colony Officers of the Customs. Let those who in
|
|
Time of War fought gallantly in Defence of the Commerce of their
|
|
Countrymen, in Peace be taught to prey upon it. Let them learn to be
|
|
corrupted by great and real Smugglers, but (to shew their Diligence)
|
|
scour with armed Boats every Bay, Harbour, River, Creek, Cove or Nook
|
|
throughout the Coast of your Colonies, stop and detain every Coaster,
|
|
every Wood-boat, every Fisherman, tumble their Cargoes, and even
|
|
their Ballast, inside out and upside down; and if a Penn'orth of Pins
|
|
is found un-entered, let the Whole be seized and confiscated. Thus
|
|
shall the Trade of your Colonists suffer more from their Friends in
|
|
Time of Peace, than it did from their Enemies in War. Then let these
|
|
Boats Crews land upon every Farm in their Way, rob the Orchards,
|
|
steal the Pigs and Poultry, and insult the Inhabitants. If the
|
|
injured and exasperated Farmers, unable to procure other Justice,
|
|
should attack the Agressors, drub them and burn their Boats, you are
|
|
to call this _High Treason_ and _Rebellion_, order Fleets and Armies
|
|
into their Country, and threaten to carry all the Offenders three
|
|
thousand Miles to be hang'd, drawn and quartered. _O! this will work
|
|
admirably!_
|
|
|
|
XVI. If you are told of Discontents in your Colonies, never
|
|
believe that they are general, or that you have given Occasion for
|
|
them; therefore do not think of applying any Remedy, or of changing
|
|
any offensive Measure. Redress no Grievance, lest they should be
|
|
encouraged to demand the Redress of some other Grievance. Grant no
|
|
Request that is just and reasonable, lest they should make another
|
|
that is unreasonable. Take all your Informations of the State of the
|
|
Colonies from your Governors and Officers in Enmity with them.
|
|
Encourage and reward these _Leasing-makers_; secrete their lying
|
|
Accusations lest they should be confuted; but act upon them as the
|
|
clearest Evidence, and believe nothing you hear from the Friends of
|
|
the People. Suppose all _their_ Complaints to be invented and
|
|
promoted by a few factious Demagogues, whom if you could catch and
|
|
hang, all would be quiet. Catch and hang a few of them accordingly;
|
|
and the _Blood of the Martyrs_ shall _work Miracles_ in favour of
|
|
your Purpose.
|
|
|
|
XVII. If you see _rival Nations_ rejoicing at the Prospect of
|
|
your Disunion with your Provinces, and endeavouring to promote it: If
|
|
they translate, publish and applaud all the Complaints of your
|
|
discontented Colonists, at the same Time privately stimulating you to
|
|
severer Measures; let not that _alarm_ or offend you. Why should it?
|
|
since you all mean _the same Thing_.
|
|
|
|
XVIII. If any Colony should at their own Charge erect a
|
|
Fortress to secure their Port against the Fleets of a foreign Enemy,
|
|
get your Governor to betray that Fortress into your Hands. Never
|
|
think of paying what it cost the Country, for that would _look_, at
|
|
least, like some Regard for Justice; but turn it into a Citadel to
|
|
awe the Inhabitants and curb their Commerce. If they should have
|
|
lodged in such Fortress the very Arms they bought and used to aid you
|
|
in your Conquests, seize them all, 'twill provoke like _Ingratitude_
|
|
added to _Robbery_. One admirable Effect of these Operations will
|
|
be, to discourage every other Colony from erecting such Defences, and
|
|
so their and your Enemies may more easily invade them, to the great
|
|
Disgrace of your Government, and of course _the Furtherance of your
|
|
Project_.
|
|
|
|
XIX. Send Armies into their Country under Pretence of
|
|
protecting the Inhabitants; but instead of garrisoning the Forts on
|
|
their Frontiers with those Troops, to prevent Incursions, demolish
|
|
those Forts, and order the Troops into the Heart of the Country, that
|
|
the Savages may be encouraged to attack the Frontiers, and that the
|
|
Troops may be protected by the Inhabitants: This will seem to proceed
|
|
from your Ill will or your Ignorance, and contribute farther to
|
|
produce and strengthen an Opinion among them, _that you are no longer
|
|
fit to govern them._
|
|
|
|
XX. Lastly, Invest the General of your Army in the Provinces
|
|
with great and unconstitutional Powers, and free him from the
|
|
Controul of even your own Civil Governors. Let him have Troops enow
|
|
under his Command, with all the Fortresses in his Possession; and who
|
|
knows but (like some provincial Generals in the Roman Empire, and
|
|
encouraged by the universal Discontent you have produced) he may take
|
|
it into his Head to set up for himself. If he should, and you have
|
|
carefully practised these few _excellent Rules_ of mine, take my Word
|
|
for it, all the Provinces will immediately join him, and you will
|
|
that Day (if you have not done it sooner) get rid of the Trouble of
|
|
governing them, and all the _Plagues_ attending their _Commerce_ and
|
|
Connection from thenceforth and for ever. Q. E. D.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, September 11, 1773
|
|
|
|
_'Tis Never Too Late To Mend_
|
|
|
|
_To the_ Printer _of the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
|
|
SIR, I had the Pleasure to read in your Paper of Saturday last
|
|
some excellent Rules, by which a GREAT EMPIRE may be reduced to a
|
|
_small One_. They are drawn up in a fine Vein of _Irony_, which is
|
|
admirably supported throughout.
|
|
|
|
If the Ministry have any Sense of Shame remaining, they must
|
|
blush to see their Conduct with respect to America placed in such a
|
|
striking Point of Ridicule; and the ingenious Author is intitled to
|
|
the Thanks both of Great Britain and the Colonies for shewing the
|
|
Absurdity and bad Policy of such Conduct.
|
|
|
|
To be sensible of Error is one Step towards Amendment; -- no
|
|
Man is infallible; and MINISTERS are but _Men_; -- 'tis never too
|
|
late to mend, nor is it any Impeachment of our Understanding to
|
|
confess that we have been mistaken; for it implies _that we are wiser
|
|
To-day than we were the Day before_; and surely _Individuals_ need
|
|
not be ashamed publicly to retract an Error, since the LEGISLATURE
|
|
itself does it every Time that it repeals one of its own Acts.
|
|
|
|
But though the Americans have long been oppressed, let them not
|
|
despair. The Administration of the Colonies is no longer in the
|
|
Hands of a _Shelburne_, a _Clare_, or a _Hillsborough_; -- thank
|
|
Heaven _that_ Department is NOW entrusted to an ENGLISHMAN! Be it
|
|
_his_ Glory to _reverse_ those baneful and pernicious Measures which
|
|
have too long harrassed the Colonies, and have given such a Blow to
|
|
the _Credit_, the _Commerce_, and the NAVAL POWER of the Mother
|
|
Country. I am, SIR, _A sincere Well-wisher to_ GREAT BRITAIN _and
|
|
her_ COLONIES.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, September 14, 1773
|
|
|
|
_An Edict by the King of Prussia_
|
|
|
|
_For the_ Public Advertiser. The SUBJECT of the following Article of
|
|
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE being exceeding EXTRAORDINARY, is the Reason of
|
|
its being separated from the usual Articles of _Foreign News_.
|
|
|
|
_Dantzick, September_ 5.
|
|
|
|
WE have long wondered here at the Supineness of the English
|
|
Nation, under the Prussian Impositions upon its Trade entering our
|
|
Port. We did not till lately know the _Claims_, antient and modern,
|
|
that hang over that Nation, and therefore could not suspect that it
|
|
might submit to those Impositions from a Sense of _Duty_, or from
|
|
Principles of _Equity_. The following _Edict_, just made public,
|
|
may, if serious, throw some Light upon this Matter.
|
|
|
|
`FREDERICK, by the Grace of God, King of _Prussia_, &c. &c.
|
|
&c. to all present and to come, HEALTH. The Peace now enjoyed
|
|
throughout our Dominions, having afforded us Leisure to apply
|
|
ourselves to the Regulation of Commerce, the Improvement of our
|
|
Finances, and at the same Time the easing our _Domestic Subjects_ in
|
|
their Taxes: For these Causes, and other good Considerations us
|
|
thereunto moving, We hereby make known, that after having deliberated
|
|
these Affairs in our Council, present our dear Brothers, and other
|
|
great Officers of the State, Members of the same, WE, of our certain
|
|
Knowledge, full Power and Authority Royal, have made and issued this
|
|
present Edict, viz.
|
|
|
|
`WHEREAS it is well known to all the World, that the first
|
|
German Settlements made in the Island of _Britain_, were by Colonies
|
|
of People, Subjects to our renowned Ducal Ancestors, and drawn from
|
|
_their_ Dominions, under the Conduct of _Hengist_, _Horsa_, _Hella_,
|
|
_Uffa_, _Cerdicus_, _Ida_, and others; and that the said Colonies
|
|
have flourished under the Protection of our august House, for Ages
|
|
past, have never been _emancipated_ therefrom, and yet have hitherto
|
|
yielded little Profit to the same. And whereas We Ourself have in
|
|
the last War fought for and defended the said Colonies against the
|
|
Power of _France_, and thereby enabled them to make Conquests from
|
|
the said Power in _America_, for which we have not yet received
|
|
adequate Compensation. And whereas it is just and expedient that a
|
|
Revenue should be raised from the said Colonies in _Britain_ towards
|
|
our Indemnification; and that those who are Descendants of our
|
|
antient Subjects, and thence still owe us due Obedience, should
|
|
contribute to the replenishing of our Royal Coffers, as they must
|
|
have done had their Ancestors remained in the Territories now to us
|
|
appertaining: WE do therefore hereby ordain and command, That from
|
|
and after the Date of these Presents, there shall be levied and paid
|
|
to our Officers of the Customs, on all Goods, Wares and Merchandizes,
|
|
and on all Grain and other Produce of the Earth exported from the
|
|
said Island of _Britain_, and on all Goods of whatever Kind imported
|
|
into the same, a _Duty_ of _Four and an Half_ per Cent. _ad Valorem_,
|
|
for the Use of us and our Successors. -- And that the said Duty may
|
|
more effectually be collected, We do hereby ordain, that all Ships or
|
|
Vessels bound from _Great Britain_ to any other Part of the World, or
|
|
from any other Part of the World to _Great Britain_, shall in their
|
|
respective Voyages touch at our Port of KONINGSBERG, there to be
|
|
unladen, searched, and charged with the said Duties.
|
|
|
|
`And WHEREAS there have been from Time to Time discovered in
|
|
the said Island of _Great Britain_ by our Colonists there, many Mines
|
|
or Beds of Iron Stone; and sundry Subjects of our antient Dominion,
|
|
skilful in converting the said Stone into Metal, have in Times past
|
|
transported themselves thither, carrying with them and communicating
|
|
that Art; and the Inhabitants of the said Island, _presuming_ that
|
|
they had a natural Right to make the best Use they could of the
|
|
natural Productions of their Country for their own Benefit, have not
|
|
only built Furnaces for smelting the said Stone into Iron, but have
|
|
erected Plating Forges, Slitting Mills, and Steel Furnaces, for the
|
|
more convenient manufacturing of the same, thereby endangering a
|
|
Diminution of the said Manufacture in our antient Dominion. WE _do
|
|
therefore_ hereby farther ordain, that from and after the Date
|
|
hereof, no Mill or other Engine for Slitting or Rolling of Iron, or
|
|
any Plating Forge to work with a Tilt-Hammer, or any Furnace for
|
|
making Steel, shall be erected or continued in the said Island of
|
|
_Great Britain_: And the Lord Lieutenant of every County in the said
|
|
Island is hereby commanded, on Information of any such Erection
|
|
within his County, to order and by Force to cause the same to be
|
|
abated and destroyed, as he shall answer the Neglect thereof to Us at
|
|
his Peril. -- But We are nevertheless graciously pleased to permit
|
|
the Inhabitants of the said Island to transport their Iron into
|
|
_Prussia_, there to be manufactured, and to them returned, they
|
|
paying our Prussian Subjects for the Workmanship, with all the Costs
|
|
of Commission, Freight and Risque coming and returning, any Thing
|
|
herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding.
|
|
|
|
`WE do not however think fit to extend this our Indulgence to
|
|
the Article of _Wool_, but meaning to encourage not only the
|
|
manufacturing of woollen Cloth, but also the raising of Wool in our
|
|
antient Dominions, and to prevent _both_, as much as may be, in our
|
|
said Island, We do hereby absolutely forbid the Transportation of
|
|
Wool from thence even to the Mother Country _Prussia_; and that those
|
|
Islanders may be farther and more effectually restrained in making
|
|
any Advantage of their own Wool in the Way of Manufacture, We command
|
|
that none shall be carried _out of one County into another_, nor
|
|
shall any Worsted-Bay, or Woollen-Yarn, Cloth, Says, Bays, Kerseys,
|
|
Serges, Frizes, Druggets, Cloth-Serges, Shalloons, or any other
|
|
Drapery Stuffs, or Woollen Manufactures whatsoever, made up or mixt
|
|
with Wool in any of the said Counties, be carried into any other
|
|
County, or be Water-borne even across the smallest River or Creek, on
|
|
Penalty of Forfeiture of the same, together with the Boats,
|
|
Carriages, Horses, &c. that shall be employed in removing them.
|
|
_Nevertheless_ Our loving Subjects there are hereby permitted, (if
|
|
they think proper) to use all their Wool as _Manure for the
|
|
Improvement of their Lands_.
|
|
|
|
`AND WHEREAS the Art and Mystery of making _Hats_ hath arrived
|
|
at great Perfection in _Prussia_, and the making of Hats by our
|
|
remote Subjects ought to be as much as possible restrained. And
|
|
forasmuch as the Islanders before-mentioned, being in Possession of
|
|
Wool, Beaver, and other Furs, have _presumptuously_ conceived they
|
|
had a Right to make some Advantage thereof, by manufacturing the same
|
|
into Hats, to the Prejudice of our domestic Manufacture, WE do
|
|
therefore hereby strictly command and ordain, that no Hats or Felts
|
|
whatsoever, dyed or undyed, finished or unfinished, shall be loaden
|
|
or put into or upon any Vessel, Cart, Carriage or Horse, to be
|
|
transported or conveyed _out of one County_ in the said Island _into
|
|
another County_, or to _any other Place whatsoever_, by any Person or
|
|
Persons whatsoever, on Pain of forfeiting the same, with a Penalty of
|
|
_Five Hundred Pounds_ Sterling for every Offence. Nor shall any
|
|
Hat-maker in any of the said Counties employ more than two
|
|
Apprentices, on Penalty of _Five Pounds_ Sterling per Month: We
|
|
intending hereby that such Hat-makers, being so restrained both in
|
|
the Production and Sale of their Commodity, may find no Advantage in
|
|
continuing their Business. -- But lest the said Islanders should
|
|
suffer Inconveniency by the Want of Hats, We are farther graciously
|
|
pleased to permit them to send their Beaver Furs to _Prussia_; and We
|
|
also permit Hats made thereof to be exported from _Prussia_ to
|
|
_Britain_, the People thus favoured to pay all Costs and Charges of
|
|
Manufacturing, Interest, Commission to Our Merchants, Insurance and
|
|
Freight going and returning, as in the Case of Iron.
|
|
|
|
`And lastly, Being willing farther to favour Our said Colonies
|
|
in _Britain_, We do hereby also ordain and command, that all the
|
|
Thieves, Highway and Street-Robbers, House-breakers, Forgerers,
|
|
Murderers, So ------ tes, and Villains of every Denomination, who
|
|
have forfeited their Lives to the Law in _Prussia_, but whom We, in
|
|
Our great Clemency, do not think fit here to hang, shall be emptied
|
|
out of our Gaols into the said Island of _Great Britain for the_
|
|
BETTER PEOPLING _of that Country_.
|
|
|
|
`We flatter Ourselves that these Our Royal Regulations and
|
|
Commands will be thought _just_ and _reasonable_ by Our much-favoured
|
|
Colonists in _England_, the said Regulations being copied from their
|
|
own Statutes of 10 and 11 Will. III. C. 10. -- 5 Geo. II. C. 22. --
|
|
23 Geo. II. C. 29. -- 4 Geo. I. C. 11. and from other equitable Laws
|
|
made by their Parliaments, or from Instructions given by their
|
|
Princes, or from Resolutions of both Houses entered into for the GOOD
|
|
_Government_ of their own Colonies in _Ireland_ and _America_.
|
|
|
|
`And all Persons in the said Island are hereby cautioned not to
|
|
oppose in any wise the Execution of this Our Edict, or any Part
|
|
thereof, such Opposition being HIGH TREASON, of which all who are
|
|
_suspected_ shall be transported in Fetters from _Britain_ to
|
|
_Prussia_, there to be tried and executed according to the _Prussian
|
|
Law_. `Such is our Pleasure. `Given at _Potsdam_ this twenty-fifth
|
|
Day of the Month of August, One Thousand Seven Hundred and
|
|
Seventy-three, and in the Thirty-third Year of our Reign. `By the
|
|
KING in his Council. `RECHTMAESSIG, _Secr._'
|
|
|
|
Some take this Edict to be merely one of the King's _Jeux d'Esprit_:
|
|
Others suppose it serious, and that he means a Quarrel with England:
|
|
But all here think the Assertion it concludes with, "that these
|
|
Regulations are copied from Acts of the English Parliament respecting
|
|
their Colonies," a very _injurious_ one: it being impossible to
|
|
believe, that a People distinguished for their _Love of Liberty_, a
|
|
Nation so _wise_, so _liberal in its Sentiments_, so _just and
|
|
equitable_ towards its _Neighbours_, should, from mean and
|
|
_injudicious_ Views of _petty immediate Profit_, treat _its own
|
|
Children_ in a Manner so _arbitrary_ and TYRANNICAL!
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, September 22, 1773
|
|
|
|
_A Chimney-Sweeper's Logic_
|
|
|
|
To the Printer of the Publick Advertizer
|
|
|
|
Sir D.E.Q. that is Sir F. Bernard in his long labour'd, and
|
|
special dull Answer to Q.E.D. endeavours to persuade the King, that
|
|
as he was his Majesty's Representative, there was a great Similitude
|
|
in their Characters and Conduct, and that Sir: F.'s Enemies are
|
|
_Enemies of his Majesty_ and of all Government.
|
|
|
|
This puts one in mind of the Chimney-sweeper condemn'd to be
|
|
hang'd for Theft, who being charitably visited by a good Clergyman
|
|
for whom he had work'd, said, _I hope your Honour will take my part,
|
|
and get a Reprieve for me, and not let my Enemies have their Will;
|
|
because it is upon your Account that they have prosecuted and sworn
|
|
against me_. On my Account! How can that be? _Why, Sir, because as
|
|
how, ever since they knew I was employ'd by your Honour, they
|
|
resolv'd upon my Ruin: for they are Enemies to all Religion; and they
|
|
hate you and me and every body in black_. Z.Z.
|
|
|
|
after October 30, 1773
|
|
|
|
_Public Statement on the Hutchinson Letters_
|
|
|
|
_To the_ PRINTER _of the_ LONDON CHRONICLE.
|
|
|
|
SIR, Finding that two Gentlemen have been unfortunately engaged
|
|
in a Duel, about a transaction and its circumstances of which both of
|
|
them are totally ignorant and innocent, I think it incumbent on me to
|
|
declare (for the prevention of farther mischief, as far as such a
|
|
declaration may contribute to prevent it) that I alone am the person
|
|
who obtained and transmitted to Boston the letters in question. --
|
|
Mr. W. could not communicate them, because they were never in his
|
|
possession; and, for the same reason, they could not be taken from
|
|
him by Mr. T. -- They were not of the nature of _"private letters
|
|
between friends:"_ They were written by public officers to persons in
|
|
public station, on public affairs, and intended to procure public
|
|
measures; they were therefore handed to other public persons who
|
|
might be influenced by them to produce those measures: Their tendency
|
|
was to incense the Mother Country against her Colonies, and, by the
|
|
steps recommended, to widen the breach, which they effected. The
|
|
chief Caution expressed with regard to Privacy, was, to keep their
|
|
contents from the _Colony Agents_, who the writers apprehended might
|
|
return them, or copies of them, to America. That apprehension was,
|
|
it seems, well founded; for the first Agent who laid his hands on
|
|
them, thought it his duty to transmit them to his Constituents.
|
|
|
|
B. FRANKLIN, _Agent for the House of Representatives of the
|
|
Massachusetts-Bay_. Craven-street, Dec. 25, 1773.
|
|
|
|
_The London Chronicle_, December 25, 1773
|
|
|
|
_On a Proposed Act To Prevent Emigration_
|
|
|
|
To the Printer of the Publick Advertiser
|
|
|
|
Sir, You give us in your Paper of Tuesday, the 16th of
|
|
November, what is called "the Plan of an Act to be proposed at the
|
|
next Meeting of Parliament to prevent the Emigration of our People."
|
|
I know not from what Authority it comes, but as it is very
|
|
circumstantial, I must suppose some such Plan may be really under
|
|
Consideration, and that this is thrown out to feel the Pulse of the
|
|
Publick. I shall therefore, with your leave, give my Sentiments of
|
|
it in your Paper.
|
|
|
|
During a Century and half that Englishmen have been at Liberty
|
|
to remove if they pleased to America, we have heard of no Law to
|
|
restrain that Liberty, and confine them as Prisoners in this Island.
|
|
Nor do we perceive any ill Effects produced by their Emigration. Our
|
|
Estates far from diminishing in Value thro' a Want of Tenants, have
|
|
been in that Period more than doubled; the Lands in general are
|
|
better cultivated; their increased Produce finds ready Sale at an
|
|
advanced Price, and the Complaint has for some time been, not that we
|
|
want Mouths to consume our Meat, but that we want Meat for our Number
|
|
of Mouths.
|
|
|
|
Why then is such a restraining Law _now_ thought necessary? A
|
|
Paragraph in the same Paper from the _Edinburgh Courant_ may perhaps throw
|
|
some Light upon this Question. We are there told "that 1500 People have
|
|
emigrated to America from the Shire of Sutherland within these two Years, and
|
|
carried with them 7500 pound Sterling; which exceeds a Years Rent of the
|
|
whole County; and that the single Consideration of the _Misery_ which most of
|
|
these People _must suffer_ in America, independent of the Loss of Men and
|
|
Money to the Mother Country, should engage the Attention not only of the
|
|
_landed Interest, but of Administration._" The humane Writer of this
|
|
Paragraph, may, I fancy, console himself, with the Reflection, that perhaps
|
|
the apprehended future Sufferings of those Emigrants will never exist: for
|
|
that it was probably the authentic Accounts they had received from Friends
|
|
already settled there, of the Felicity to be enjoyed in that Country, with a
|
|
thorough Knowledge of their own Misery at home, which induced their Removal.
|
|
And, as a Politician, he may be comforted by assuring himself, that if they
|
|
really meet with greater Misery in America, their future Letters lamenting
|
|
it, will be more credited than the _Edinburgh Courant_, and effectually
|
|
without a Law put a Stop to the Emigration. It seems some of the Scottish
|
|
Chiefs, who delight no longer to live upon their Estates in the honourable
|
|
Independence they were born to, among their respecting Tenants, but chuse
|
|
rather a Life of Luxury, tho' among the Dependants of a Court, have lately
|
|
raised their Rents most grievously to support the Expence. The Consuming of
|
|
those Rents in London, tho' equally prejudicial to the poor County of
|
|
_Sutherland_, no Edinburgh Newspaper complains of; but now that the oppressed
|
|
Tenants take Flight and carry with them what might have supported the
|
|
Landlords London Magnificence, he begins to _feel_ for the MOTHER-COUNTRY,
|
|
and its enormous _Loss_ of 7500 pounds carried to her Colonies!
|
|
_Administration_ is called upon to remedy the Evil, by another Abridgement of
|
|
ENGLISH LIBERTY. And surely Administration should do something for these
|
|
Gentry, as they do any thing for Administration.
|
|
|
|
But is there not an easier Remedy? Let them return to their
|
|
Family Seats, live among their People, and instead of fleecing and
|
|
skinning, patronize and cherish them; promote their Interest,
|
|
encourage their Industry, and make their Situation comfortable. If
|
|
the poor Folks are happier at home than they can be abroad, they will
|
|
not lightly be prevailed with to cross the Ocean. But can their Lord
|
|
blame them for leaving home in search of better Living, when he first
|
|
sets them the Example?
|
|
|
|
I would consider the proposed Law,
|
|
1st. As to the NECESSITY of it.
|
|
2dly. The PRACTICABILITY.
|
|
3dly. The POLICY, if practicable.
|
|
and 4thly. The JUSTICE of it.
|
|
|
|
Pray spare me room for a few Words on each of these Heads.
|
|
|
|
1ST. As to the _Necessity_ of it.
|
|
|
|
If any Country has more People than can be comfortably
|
|
subsisted in it, some of those who are incommoded, may be induced to
|
|
emigrate. As long as the new Situation shall be _far_ preferable to
|
|
the old, the Emigration may possibly continue. But when many of
|
|
those who at home interfered with others of the same Rank, (in the
|
|
Competition for Farms, Shops, Business, Offices, and other Means of
|
|
Subsistence) are gradually withdrawn, the Inconvenience of that
|
|
Competition ceases; the Number remaining no longer half starve each
|
|
other, they find they can now subsist comfortably, and tho' perhaps
|
|
not quite so well as those who have left them, yet the inbred
|
|
Attachment to a native Country is sufficient to over balance a
|
|
moderate Difference, and thus the Emigration ceases naturally. The
|
|
Waters of the Ocean may move in Currents from one Quarter of the
|
|
Globe to another, as theyhappen in some places to be accumulated and
|
|
in others diminished; but no Law beyond the Law of Gravity, is
|
|
necessary to prevent their Abandoning any Coast entirely. Thus the
|
|
different Degrees of Happiness of different Countries and Situations
|
|
find or rather make their Level by the flowing of People from one to
|
|
another, and where that Level is once found, the Removals cease. Add
|
|
to this, that even a real Deficiency of People in any Country
|
|
occasioned by a wasting War or Pestilence, is speedily supply'd by
|
|
earlier and of course more prolific Marriages, encouraged by the
|
|
greater Facility of obtaining the Means of Subsistence. So that a
|
|
Country half depopulated would soon be repeopled, till the Means of
|
|
Subsistence were equalled by the Population. All Encrease beyond
|
|
that Point must perish, or flow off into more favourable Situations.
|
|
Such Overflowings there have been of Mankind in all Ages, or we
|
|
should not now have had so many Nations. But to apprehend absolute
|
|
Depopulation from that Cause, and call for a Law to prevent it, is
|
|
calling for a Law to stop the Thames, lest its Waters, by what leave
|
|
it daily at Gravesend, should be quite exhausted. Such a Law
|
|
therefore I do not conceive to be _Necessary._
|
|
|
|
2dly. As to the _Practicability_.
|
|
|
|
When I consider the Attempts of this kind that have been made,
|
|
first in the time of Archbishop Laud, by Orders of Council, to stop
|
|
the Puritans who were flying from his Persecutions, into New-England,
|
|
and next by Louis XIV, to retain in his Kingdom the persecuted
|
|
Huguenots; and how ineffectual all the Power of our Crown, with which
|
|
the Archbishop armed himself, and all the more absolute Power of that
|
|
great French Monarch, were, to obtain the End for which they were
|
|
exerted. When I consider too, the extent of Coast to be guarded, and
|
|
the Multitude of Cruizers necessary effectually to make a Prison of
|
|
the Island for this confinement of free Englishmen, who naturally
|
|
love Liberty, and would probably by the very Restraint be more
|
|
stimulated to break thro' it, I cannot but think such a Law
|
|
IMPRACTICABLE. The Offices would not be applied to for Licences, the
|
|
Ports would not be used for Embarcation. And yet the People disposed
|
|
to leave us would, as the Puritans did, get away by Shipfuls.
|
|
|
|
3dly. As to the _Policy_ of the Law.
|
|
|
|
Since, as I have shewn, there is no Danger of depopulating
|
|
Britain, but that the Places of those who depart will soon be filled
|
|
up equal to the Means of obtaining a Livelihood, let us see whether
|
|
there are not some general _Advantages_ to be expected from the
|
|
present Emigration. The new Settlers in America, finding plenty of
|
|
Subsistence, and Land easily acquired whereon to seat their Children,
|
|
seldom postpone Marriage thro' fear of Poverty. Their natural
|
|
Increase is therefore in a proportion far beyond what it would have
|
|
been if they had remained here. New Farms are daily every where
|
|
forming in those immense Forests, new Towns and Villages rising;
|
|
hence a growing Demand for our Merchandise, to the greater Employment
|
|
of our Manufacturers and the enriching of our Merchants. By this
|
|
natural Increase of People, the Strength of the Empire is increased;
|
|
Men are multiplied out of whom new Armies may be formed on Occasion,
|
|
or the old recruited. The long extended Sea Coast too, of that vast
|
|
Country, the great maritime Commerce of its Parts with each other,
|
|
its many navigable Rivers and Lakes, and its plentiful Fisheries,
|
|
breed multitudes of Seamen, besides those created and supported by
|
|
its Voyages to Europe; a thriving Nursery this, for the manning of
|
|
our Fleets in time of War, and maintaining our Importance among
|
|
foreign Nations, by that Navy which is also our best Security against
|
|
invasions from our Enemies. An Extension of Empire by Conquest of
|
|
inhabited Countries is not so easily obtained, it is not so easily
|
|
secured, it alarms more the neighbouring States, it is more subject
|
|
to Revolts, and more apt to occasion new Wars. The Increase of
|
|
Dominion by Colonies proceeding from yourselves, and by the natural
|
|
Growth of your own People, cannot be complained of by your Neighbours
|
|
as an Injury, none have a right to be offended with it. Your new
|
|
Possessions are therefore more secure, they are more cheaply gained,
|
|
they are attached to your Nation by natural Alliance and Affection,
|
|
and thus they afford an additional Strength more certainly to be
|
|
depended on, than any that can be acquired by a Conquering Power,
|
|
tho' at an immense Expence of Blood and Treasure. These methinks are
|
|
national Advantages that more than equiponderate with the
|
|
Inconveniencies suffered by a few Scotch or Irish Landlords, who
|
|
perhaps may only find it necessary to abate a little of their present
|
|
Luxury, or of those advanced Rents they now so unfeelingly demand.
|
|
From these Considerations, I think I may conclude that the
|
|
restraining Law proposed, would if practicable be IMPOLITIC.
|
|
|
|
4thly. As to the _Justice_ of it.
|
|
|
|
I apprehend that every Briton who is made unhappy at home, has
|
|
a Right to remove from any Part of his King's Dominions into those of
|
|
any other Prince where he can be happier. If this should be denied
|
|
me, at least it will be allowed that he has a Right to remove into
|
|
any other Part of the same Dominions. For by this Right so many
|
|
Scotchmen remove into England, easing their own Country of its
|
|
supernumeraries, and benefitting ours by their Industry. And this is
|
|
the Case with those who go to America. Will not these Scottish
|
|
Lairds be satisfied unless a Law passes to pin down all Tenants to
|
|
the Estate they are born on, (_adscriptitii glebae_) to be bought and
|
|
sold with it? God has given to the Beasts of the Forest and to the
|
|
Birds of the Air a Right when their Subsistence fails in one Country,
|
|
to migrate into another, where they can get a more comfortable
|
|
Living; and shall Man be denyed a Privilege enjoyed by Brutes, merely
|
|
to gratify a few avaricious Landlords? Must Misery be made
|
|
_permanent_, and suffered by _many_ for the Emolument of One? While
|
|
the Increase of Human Beings is prevented, and thousands of their
|
|
Offspring stifled as it were in the Birth, that this petty Pharaoh
|
|
may enjoy an _Excess_ of Opulence? God commands to increase and
|
|
replenish the Earth: The proposed Law would forbid increasing, and
|
|
confine Britons to their present Number, keeping half that Number
|
|
too, in wretchedness. The Common People of Britain and of Ireland,
|
|
contributed by the Taxes they paid, and by the Blood they lost, to
|
|
the Success of that War, which brought into our Hands the vast
|
|
unpeopled Territories of North America; a Country favoured by Heaven
|
|
with all the Advantages of Soil and Climate; Germans are now pouring
|
|
into it, to take Possession of it, and fill it with their Posterity;
|
|
and shall Britons, and Irelanders, who have a much better Right to
|
|
it, be forbidden a Share of it, and instead of enjoying there the
|
|
Plenty and Happiness that might reward their Industry, be compelled
|
|
to remain here in Poverty and Misery? Considerations such as these
|
|
persuade me, that the proposed Law would be both UNJUST and INHUMAN.
|
|
|
|
If then it is _unnecessary_, _impracticable_, _impolitic_, and
|
|
_unjust_, I hope our Parliament will never receive the Bill, but
|
|
leave Landlords to their own Remedy, an Abatement of Rents and
|
|
Frugality of Living; and leave the Liberties of Britons and Irishmen
|
|
at least as extensive as it found them. I am, Sir, Yours &c. _A
|
|
Friend to the Poor._
|
|
|
|
December? 1773
|
|
|
|
_On Franklin's Ingratitude_
|
|
|
|
To the Printer of the Public Advertiser
|
|
|
|
Sir Your Correspondent Brittanicus inveighs violently against
|
|
Dr: Franklin for his Ingratitude to the Ministry of this Nation, who
|
|
have conferred upon him so many Favours. They gave him the Post
|
|
Office of America; they made his Son a Governor; and they offer'd him
|
|
a Post of five hundred a Year in the Salt Office, if he would
|
|
relinquish the Interests of his Countrey; but he has had the
|
|
Wickedness to continue true to it, and is as much an American as
|
|
ever. As it is a settled Point in Government here, that every Man
|
|
has his Price, 'tis plain they are Bunglers in their Business, and
|
|
have not given him enough. Their Master has as much reason to be
|
|
angry with them as Rodrigue in the Play, with his Apothecary for not
|
|
effectually poisoning Pandolpho, and they must probably make use of
|
|
the Apothecary's Justification; Viz. Scene 4th _Rodrigue_ and _Fell_
|
|
the Apothecary.
|
|
|
|
_Rodrigue._ You promised to have this Pandolpho upon his Bier
|
|
in less than a Week; 'Tis more than a Month since, and he still walks
|
|
and stares me in the Face.
|
|
|
|
_Fell._ True: and yet I have done my best Endeavours. In
|
|
various Ways I have given the Miscreant as much Poison as would have
|
|
kill'd an Elephant. He has swallow'd Dose after Dose; far from
|
|
hurting him, he seems the better for it. He hath a wonderfully
|
|
strong Constitution. I find I cannot kill him but by cutting his
|
|
Throat, and that, as I take it, is not my Business.
|
|
|
|
_Rodrigue._ Then it must be mine.
|
|
|
|
before January 31, 1774
|
|
|
|
_"A War It Will Be"_
|
|
|
|
To the Printer of the Publick Ledger
|
|
|
|
Sir, Nothing can equal the present Rage of our Ministerial
|
|
Writers against our Brethren in America, who have the Misfortune to
|
|
be _Whigs_ in a Reign when _Whiggism_ is out of Fashion, who are
|
|
besides Protestant Dissenters and Lovers of Liberty. One may easily
|
|
see from what Quarter comes the Abuse of those People in the Papers;
|
|
their Struggle for their Rights is called REBELLION, and the People
|
|
REBELS; while those who really rebell'd in Scotland (1745) for the
|
|
Expulsion of the present reigning Family, and the Establishment of
|
|
Popery and arbitrary Power on the Ruins of Liberty and Protestantism;
|
|
who enter'd England, and trampled on its Belly as far as Derby, to
|
|
the Astonishment of this great City and shaking the publick Credit of
|
|
the Nation; have now all their Sins forgiven on Account of their
|
|
modish Principles, and are called not _Rebels_, but by the softer
|
|
Appellation of _Insurgents_!
|
|
|
|
These angry Writers use their utmost Efforts to persuade us
|
|
that this War with the Colonies (for a War it will be) is a
|
|
_national_ Cause when in fact it is merely a _ministerial_ one.
|
|
Administration wants an American Revenue to dissipate in Corruption.
|
|
The Quarrel is about a paltry threepenny Duty on Tea. There is no
|
|
real Clashing of Interests between Britain and America. Their
|
|
Commerce is to their mutual Advantage, or rather most to the
|
|
Advantage of Britain, which finds a vast Market in America for its
|
|
Manufactures; and _as good Pay_, I speak from Knowledge, as in any
|
|
Country she trades to upon the Face of the Globe. But the Fact needs
|
|
not my Testimony, it speaks for it self; for if we could elsewhere
|
|
get better Pay and better Prices, we should not send our Goods to
|
|
America. The gross Calumniators of that People, who want us to
|
|
imbrue our Hands in Brother's Blood, have the Effrontery to tell the
|
|
World that the Americans associated in Resolutions not to pay us what
|
|
they ow'd us unless we repeal'd the Stamp Act. This is an INFAMOUS
|
|
FALSHOOD; they know it to be such. I call upon the Incendiaries who
|
|
have advanc'd it, to produce their Proofs. Let them name any two
|
|
that enter'd into such an Association, or any one that made such a
|
|
Declaration. Absurdity marks the very Face of this Lie. Every one
|
|
acquainted with Trade knows, that a credited Merchant daring to be
|
|
concern'd in such an Association, could never expect to be trusted
|
|
again. His Character on the Exchange of London would be ruined
|
|
forever. The great Credit given them since that time, nay the
|
|
present Debt due from them, is itself a Proof of the Confidence we
|
|
have in their Probity.
|
|
|
|
Another villainous Falshood advanc'd against the Americans is,
|
|
that tho' we have been at such Expence in protecting them, they
|
|
refuse to contribute their Part to the publick general Expence of the
|
|
Empire. The Fact is, that _they never did refuse a Requisition of
|
|
that kind_. A Writer who calls himself _Sagittarius_ (I suppose from
|
|
his flinging about, like Solomon's Fool, Firebrands, _Arrows_ and
|
|
Death) in the Ledger of March 9. asserts that the "Experiment has
|
|
been tried and that they did not think it expedient to return even an
|
|
Answer." How does he prove this? Why, "the Colony Agents were told
|
|
by Mr. Grenville, that a Revenue _would be_ required from them to
|
|
defray the Expences of their Protection." But was the Requisition
|
|
ever made? Were circular Letters ever sent by his Majesty's Command
|
|
from the Secretary of State to the several Colony Governments,
|
|
according to the establish'd Custom, stating the Occasion, and
|
|
requiring such Supplies as were suitable to their Abilities and
|
|
Loyalty? And did they then refuse not only Compliance but an Answer?
|
|
No such Matter. Agents are not the Channel thro' which Requisitions
|
|
are made. If they were told by Mr. Grenville that a "Revenue _would
|
|
be_ required, and yet the Colonies made no Offer, no Grant nor laid
|
|
any Tax," Does it follow they would not have done it if they had been
|
|
required? Probably they thought it time enough when the
|
|
_Requisition_ should come, and in fact it never appeared there to
|
|
this day. In the last War they all gave so liberally, that we
|
|
thought ourselves bound in honour to return them a Million. But We
|
|
are disgusted with their Free Gifts; we want to have something that
|
|
is obtain'd by Force; like a mad Landlord who should refuse the
|
|
willing Payment of his full Rents, and chuse to take less by way of
|
|
Robbery.
|
|
|
|
This shameless Writer, would cajole the People of England, with
|
|
the Fancy of their being Kings of America, and that their Honour is
|
|
at Stake by the Americans disputing _their_ Government. He thrusts
|
|
us into the Throne cheek-by-Jole with Majesty, and would have us talk
|
|
as he writes, of _our_ Subjects in America, and _our_ Sovereignty
|
|
over America. Forgetting that the Americans are Subjects of the
|
|
King, not _our_ Subjects, but our _Fellow-Subjects_; and that they
|
|
have Parliaments of their own, with the Right of granting their own
|
|
Money by their own Representatives, which we cannot deprive them of
|
|
but by Violence and Injustice.
|
|
|
|
Having by a Series of iniquitous and irritating Measures
|
|
provoked a loyal People almost to Desperation, we now magnify every
|
|
Act of an American Mob, into REBELLION, tho' the Government there
|
|
disapprove it and order Prosecution, as is now the Case with regard
|
|
to the Tea destroyed: And we talk of nothing but Troops and Fleets,
|
|
and Force, of blocking up Ports, destroying Fisheries, abolishing
|
|
Charters, &c. &c. Here Mobs of English Sawyers can burn Sawmills;
|
|
Mobs of English Labourers destroy or plunder Magazines of Corn; Mobs
|
|
of English Coalheavers attack Houses with Fire Arms; English Smuglers
|
|
can fight regularly the King's Cruizing Vessels, drive them ashore
|
|
and burn them, as lately on the Coast of Wales, and on the Coast of
|
|
Cornwall; but upon these Accounts we hear no Talk of England's being
|
|
in _Rebellion_; no Threats of taking away its Magna Charta, or
|
|
repealing its Bill of Rights; For we well know that the Operations of
|
|
a Mob are often unexpected, sudden, and soon over, so that the Civil
|
|
Power can seldom prevent or suppress them, not being able to come in
|
|
before they have dispers'd themselves: And therefore it is not always
|
|
accountable for their Mischiefs.
|
|
|
|
Surely the great Commerce of this Nation with the Americans is
|
|
of too much Importance to be risk'd in a Quarrel which has no
|
|
Foundation but ministerial Pique and Obstinacy! To us, in the Way of
|
|
Trade, comes now, and has long come, all the superlucration arising
|
|
from their Labour. But Will Our reviling them as Cheats, Hypocrites,
|
|
Scoundrels, Traitors, Cowards, Tyrants, &c. according to the present
|
|
Court Mode in all our Papers, make them more our Friends, more fond
|
|
of our Merchandize? Did ever any Tradesman succeed who attempted to
|
|
drub Customers into his Shop? And Will honest JOHN BULL the Farmer
|
|
be long satisfy'd with Servants that before his Face attempt to kill
|
|
his _Plow-Horses_? A LONDONER.
|
|
|
|
after March 9, 1774
|
|
|
|
_An Open Letter to Lord North_
|
|
|
|
_For the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
_To Lord_ NORTH.
|
|
|
|
My LORD, All your small Politicians, who are very numerous in
|
|
the English Nation, from the patriotic Barber to the patriotic Peer,
|
|
when big with their Schemes for the Good of poor Old England, imagine
|
|
they have a Right to give Advice to the Minister, and condemn
|
|
Administration if they do not adopt their Plan. I, my Lord, who have
|
|
no mean Opinion of my Abilities, which is justified by the Attention
|
|
that is paid to me when I harangue at the Smyrna and Old Slaughter's,
|
|
am willing to contribute my Mite to the public Welfare; and have a
|
|
Proposal to make to your Lordship, which I flatter myself will be
|
|
approved of by the Ministry, and if carried into Execution, will
|
|
quiet all the Disturbances in America, procure a decent Revenue from
|
|
our Colonies, make our royal Master (at least there) a King _de
|
|
facto_, as well as _de jure_; and finally, as it may be managed,
|
|
procure a round Sum towards discharging the national Debt.
|
|
|
|
My Scheme is, without Delay to introduce into North America a
|
|
Government absolutely and entirely Military. The Opposition which
|
|
some People suspect would be made by the Colonies, is a mere Bugbear:
|
|
The Sight of a few Regiments of bold Britons, appearing with Ensigns
|
|
displayed, and in all the Pomp of War, a Specimen of which may be
|
|
seen every Summer at the Grand Review on Wimbledon Common, with that
|
|
great Commander G ------ l G ------ e at their Head, accompanied with
|
|
a Detachment from the Artillery, and Half a Dozen short Sixes, would
|
|
so intimidate the Americans, that the General might march through the
|
|
whole Continent of North America, and would have little else to do
|
|
but to accept of the Submission of the several Towns as he passed.
|
|
But as the Honour would be too great for one Man to reduce to
|
|
absolute Subjection so great an Extent of Territory, I would propose
|
|
that a separate Command be given to L ------ d G ---- G ------ e, who
|
|
by his animated Speeches in the House, and coinciding so entirely
|
|
with your Lordship's Opinion on the proper Methods for humbling
|
|
America, deserves a Share in the Fame of such a grand Exploit. Let
|
|
him have one half of the Army under his Direction, and march from New
|
|
York to South Carolina. No one can object to the Nomination, as his
|
|
Military Prowess is upon Record. The Regiments that are in America,
|
|
with those who are about to embark, will be amply sufficient, without
|
|
being at the Expence of sending more Troops. Those who served in
|
|
America the last War, know that the Colonists are a dastardly Set of
|
|
Poltroons; and though they are descended from British Ancestors, they
|
|
are degenerated to such a Degree, that one born in Britain is equal
|
|
to twenty Americans. The Yankey Doodles have a Phrase when they are
|
|
not in a Humour for fighting, which is become proverbial, _I don't
|
|
feel bould To-day_. When they make this Declaration, there is no
|
|
prevailing on them to attack the Enemy or defend themselves. If
|
|
contrary to Expectation they should attempt an Opposition, procure
|
|
Intelligence when it happens not to be their fighting Day, attack
|
|
them and they will fly like Sheep pursued by a Wolf. When all North
|
|
America have thus bent their Neck to the Yoke designed for them, I
|
|
would propose that the Method made use of by the Planters in the West
|
|
Indies may be adopted, who appoint what they call a Negro Driver, who
|
|
is chosen from among the Slaves. It is observed that the little
|
|
Authority that is given him over his Fellow Slaves, attaches him to
|
|
his Master's Interest, and his Cruelty would be without Bounds were
|
|
he not restrained; but the Master is certain, that the utmost
|
|
Exertion of Strength will be exacted by this cruel Task-master for
|
|
the Proprietor's Emolument. Let all the Colonists be enrolled in the
|
|
Militia, subject of course to Martial Law. Appoint a certain Number
|
|
of Officers from among the conquered People, with good Pay, and other
|
|
Military Emoluments; they will secure their Obedience in the District
|
|
where they command. Let no other Courts be allowed through the whole
|
|
Continent but Courts Martial. An Inhabitant, who disobeys an Order,
|
|
may by a Court Martial be sentenced to receive from One Hundred to a
|
|
Thousand Lashes in a frosty Morning, according to the Nature of his
|
|
Offence. Where Punishment is thus secure, this Advantage will
|
|
accrue, that there will not be the same Necessity of hanging up so
|
|
many poor Devils as in this free Country; by which Means the Service
|
|
of many an able Man is lost to the Community. I humbly propose that
|
|
the General and Commander in Chief be vested with the Power, and
|
|
called by the Name of the King's Viceroy of all North America. This
|
|
will serve to impress the Americans with greater Respect for the
|
|
first Magistrate, and have a Tendency to secure their Submission.
|
|
All Orders issuing from this supreme Authority to have the Force of
|
|
Laws. After this happy Change of Government, how easy to collect
|
|
what Taxes you please in North America. When the Colonists are
|
|
drained of their last Shilling, suppose they should be sold to the
|
|
best Bidder. As they lie convenient for France or Spain, it may be
|
|
reasonably expected one of those little Powers would be a Purchaser.
|
|
I think Spain is to be preferred, as their Power hath more of the
|
|
Ready than France. I will venture a Conjecture, that the Ministry
|
|
might get at least Two Millions for the Soil, and the People upon it.
|
|
With such a Sum what glorious Things might he not atchieve! Suppose
|
|
it should be applied towards the Payment of one hundredth Part of the
|
|
National Debt, I would give him an Opportunity of drawing down upon
|
|
him the Blessing of the Poor by making him to take off the Halfpenny
|
|
Duty on Porter. Considering the probable Stability of the present
|
|
Ministry, this Honour may be reserved for your Lordship.
|
|
|
|
My Lord, excuse the Crudity of these indigested Hints, which
|
|
your Wisdom is so capable of improving; and believe me, with infinite
|
|
Respect, Your Lordship's Most obedient Humble Servant, _A Friend to
|
|
Military Government._
|
|
|
|
_Smyrna Coffee-House, April_ 5.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, April 15, 1774
|
|
|
|
_A Method of Humbling Rebellious American Vassals_
|
|
|
|
_To the Printer of the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
|
|
SIR, Permit me, thro' the Channel of your Paper, to convey to
|
|
the Premier, by him to be laid before his Mercenaries, our
|
|
Constituents, my own Opinion, and that of many of my Brethren,
|
|
Freeholders of this imperial Kingdom of the most feasible Method of
|
|
humbling our rebellious Vassals of North America. As we have
|
|
declared by our Representatives that we are the supreme Lords of
|
|
their Persons and Property, and their occupying our Territory at such
|
|
a remote Distance without a proper Controul from us, except at a very
|
|
great Expence, encourages a mutinous Disposition, and may, if not
|
|
timely prevented, dispose them in perhaps less than a Century to deny
|
|
our Authority, slip their Necks out of the Collar, and from being
|
|
Slaves set up for Masters, more especially when it is considered that
|
|
they are a robust, hardy People, encourage early Marriages, and their
|
|
Women being amazingly prolific, they must of consequence in 100 Years
|
|
be very numerous, and of course be able to set us at Defiance.
|
|
Effectually to prevent which, as we have an undoubted Right to do, it
|
|
is humbly proposed, and we do hereby give it as Part of our
|
|
Instructions to our Representatives, that a Bill be brought in and
|
|
passed, and Orders immediately transmitted to G ------ l G ------ e,
|
|
our Commander in Chief in North America, in consequence of it, that
|
|
all the Males there be c -- st -- ed. He may make a Progress thro'
|
|
the several Towns of North America at the Head of five Battalions,
|
|
which we hear our experienced Generals, who have been consulted,
|
|
think sufficient to subdue America if they were in open Rebellion;
|
|
for who can resist the intrepid Sons of Britain, the Terror of France
|
|
and Spain, and the Conquerors of America in Germany. Let a Company
|
|
of Sow-gelders, consisting of 100 Men, accompany the Army. On their
|
|
Arrival at any Town or Village, let Orders be given that on the
|
|
blowing of the Horn all the Males be assembled in the Market Place.
|
|
If the Corps are Men of Skill and Ability in their Profession, they
|
|
will make great Dispatch, and retard but very little the Progress of
|
|
the Army. There may be a Clause in the Bill to be left at the
|
|
Discretion of the General, whose Powers ought to be very extensive,
|
|
that the most notorious Offenders, such as Hancock, Adams, &c. who
|
|
have been the Ringleaders in the Rebellion of our Servants, should be
|
|
shaved quite close. But that none of the Offenders may escape in the
|
|
Town of Boston, let all the Males there suffer the latter Operation,
|
|
as it will be conformable to the modern Maxim that is now generally
|
|
adopted by our worthy Constituents, that it is better that ten
|
|
innocent Persons should suffer than that one guilty should escape.
|
|
It is true, Blood will be shed, but probably not many Lives lost.
|
|
Bleeding to a certain Degree is salutary. The English, whose
|
|
Humanity is celebrated by all the World, but particularly by
|
|
themselves, do not desire the Death of the Delinquent, but his
|
|
Reformation. The Advantages arising from this Scheme being carried
|
|
into Execution are obvious. In the Course of fifty Years it is
|
|
probable we shall not have one rebellious Subject in North America.
|
|
This will be laying the Axe to the Root of the Tree. In the mean
|
|
time a considerable Expence may be saved to the Managers of the
|
|
Opera, and our Nobility and Gentry be entertained at a cheaper Rate
|
|
by the fine Voices of our own C -- st -- i, and the Specie remain in
|
|
the Kingdom, which now, to an enormous Amount, is carried every Year
|
|
to Italy. It might likewise be of Service to our Levant Trade, as we
|
|
could supply the Grand Signor's Seraglio, and the Harams of the
|
|
Grandees of the Turkish Dominions with Cargos of Eunuchs, as also
|
|
with handsome Women, for which America is as famous as Circassia. I
|
|
could enumerate many other Advantages. I shall mention but one: It
|
|
would effectually put a Stop to the Emigrations from this Country now
|
|
grown so very fashionable.
|
|
|
|
No Doubt you will esteem it expedient that this useful Project
|
|
shall have an early Insertion, that no Time may be lost in carrying
|
|
it into Execution. I am, Mr. Printer, (For myself, and in Behalf of
|
|
a Number of independent Freeholders of Great Britain) Your humble
|
|
Servant, A FREEHOLDER OF OLD SARUM.
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, May 21, 1774
|
|
|
|
_An Act for the More Effectual Keeping of the Colonies
|
|
Dependent_
|
|
|
|
_All the Printers of News Papers in the British Colonies, are
|
|
requested to publish the following Act of Parliament; which it is
|
|
said, will be passed the End of the present Session, or the Beginning
|
|
of the next._
|
|
|
|
_"An Act for the more effectual keeping of his Majesty's
|
|
American Colonies_ dependent _on the_ Crown of Great-Britain, _and to
|
|
enforce their Obedience to all such Acts of Parliament as may be
|
|
necessary for that Purpose."_
|
|
|
|
WHEREAS it is found by experience that Colonies which are
|
|
planted by Governments, or otherwise dependent on them, do at some
|
|
time or other, form themselves into unwarrantable and rebellious
|
|
Associations, and by their perseverance therein, entirely throw off
|
|
their dependence and subjection to such Parent State: And whereas the
|
|
British Plantations, in America, have of late, discovered a
|
|
disposition to follow the same steps, and, in all likelihood, will,
|
|
if not speedily prevented, form themselves into a separate and
|
|
independent Government, to the great detriment of the other parts of
|
|
the British Empire, to the dishonour of his Majesty, and to the
|
|
prejudice of the trade of this Kingdom in particular: _And whereas
|
|
the great_ ENCREASE _of People, in said Colonies, has an immediate
|
|
tendency to produce this effect_ -- To the end therefore that such
|
|
evil designs may not be carried into execution, and that the said
|
|
Colonies and Plantations may be, at all times hereafter, kept in due
|
|
subordination to the authority of the British Parliament, Be it
|
|
enacted by the King's most excellent Majesty, by, and with the advice
|
|
and consent of the Lords spiritual and temporal, and Commons in this
|
|
present Parliament assembled, and by authority of the same.
|
|
|
|
1. That no person whatever who shall, from and after the passing of
|
|
this Act, transport him or herself, from the Kingdoms of Great-Britain and
|
|
Ireland, or the Islands thereunto belonging, to any of his Majesty's
|
|
Plantations in America, with intent to settle and dwell therein for any
|
|
_longer_ time than the space of seven years, shall presume to depart from the
|
|
said Kingdoms, until he or she, so transporting him or herself, shall pay, at
|
|
the Custom-House of the Port, from which such vessel shall take out her
|
|
clearance, the sum of Fifty Pounds, sterling money of Great-Britain: And be
|
|
it further enacted that for every child, or servant, which shall be so
|
|
transported by the parent, or master, the like sum of Fifty Pounds shall be
|
|
paid in manner aforesaid. -- And be it further enacted by the authority
|
|
aforesaid, that if any person shall transport him, or herself, or procure
|
|
themselves to be transported, contrary to this Act, every person, so
|
|
offending, shall be adjudged guilty of felony without benefit of clergy --
|
|
and that the Captain of the vessel, in which such person shall be so
|
|
transported, contrary to this Act, shall forfeit and pay, for any such
|
|
person, the sum of 500 pounds sterling money aforesaid.
|
|
|
|
2. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that
|
|
if any person, who shall transport him, or herself, from the Kingdoms
|
|
aforesaid, to any of his Majesty's Plantations, in America, with
|
|
intent to stay and dwell therein, for any space of time _less_ than
|
|
seven years, shall nevertheless stay, dwell, and abide therein,
|
|
beyond the said space of seven years, such person so staying,
|
|
dwelling, and abiding, in any of his Majesty's Plantations, in
|
|
America, shall be adjudged guilty of felony without benefit of
|
|
clergy.
|
|
|
|
3. Provided always, and be it further enacted, that nothing in
|
|
this Act shall extend, or be construed to extend to his Majesty's
|
|
Governors of the said Plantations, or to any other person, or
|
|
persons, in the actual service and employ of his Majesty, as
|
|
aforesaid.
|
|
|
|
4. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that
|
|
all Marriages in his Majesty's said Plantations shall be performed in
|
|
consequence of a Licence from the Governor where such Marriage shall
|
|
be celebrated, for which Licence the sum of Twenty Pounds shall be
|
|
paid, and no more, and that all Marriages had without such Licence,
|
|
shall be void in law to every intent and purpose whatever.
|
|
|
|
5. And be it further enacted, that on the birth of every male
|
|
child, the sum of Fifteen Pounds, and on the birth of every female
|
|
child, the sum of Ten Pounds sterling money shall be paid to the
|
|
Governor of the Colony or Plantation in which such children shall be
|
|
born.
|
|
|
|
6. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that
|
|
on the birth of every bastard child in any of his Majesty's said
|
|
Plantations, the sum of Fifty Pounds sterling money shall be paid by
|
|
the _Mother_ of such bastard child, to the Governor where such
|
|
bastard child shall happen to be born, and that in case any person,
|
|
shall hereafter, either with malice prepense, or otherwise kill or
|
|
destroy any child or children; such killing or destroying shall not
|
|
henceforth be deemed or adjudged to be murder in any Court or Courts,
|
|
nor shall such killing be punished in any way or manner whatever.
|
|
|
|
7. Provided always, and it is hereby further enacted, that
|
|
nothing in this Act shall extend to make any such killing legal, or
|
|
justifiable, if the child, so killed or destroyed, be above the age
|
|
of twelve months, but that every such killing and destroying shall be
|
|
punished as heretofore, any thing in this Act to the contrary in any
|
|
wise notwithstanding.
|
|
|
|
8. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that
|
|
from and after the Day of in the year upon the exportation of each
|
|
and every barrel of FLOUR from any of his Majesty's said Plantations
|
|
to any port or place beyond the sea, a duty of _Five Shillings_
|
|
sterling shall be paid to the Custom-House of the respective Colony,
|
|
from which such FLOUR shall be so shipped or exported.
|
|
|
|
9. And be it further enacted, that on the exportation of any
|
|
WHEAT from his Majesty's said Plantations to any port or place beyond
|
|
the sea, a duty of _Two Shillings_ sterling per _bushel_ shall be
|
|
paid as aforesaid, for every quantity which shall be so shipped or
|
|
exported. And that if any person, shall export any wheat or flour
|
|
contrary to the directions of this Act, all such wheat or flour,
|
|
together with the ship in which it is exported as aforesaid, shall be
|
|
seized and forfeited to the use of his Majesty, and condemned in any
|
|
of his Majesty's Courts of Admiralty where such vessel shall happen
|
|
to be seized as aforesaid.
|
|
|
|
10. Provided always, and be it further enacted, that if any
|
|
such flour or wheat, which shall be exported from any of his
|
|
Majesty's said Plantations, and carried to any port of Great-Britain,
|
|
with design to re-ship the same to any other port or place beyond the
|
|
sea, there shall be allowed upon every barrel of flour so re-shipped,
|
|
a bounty of Two Shillings and Six Pence sterling, and for every
|
|
bushel of wheat, a bounty of One Shilling sterling.
|
|
|
|
11. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that
|
|
the duties imposed by this Act, shall be applied towards RAISING A
|
|
REVENUE the better to ENABLE his MAJESTY to BUILD FORTS and to
|
|
GARRISON the same, and to support and maintain such a REGULAR and
|
|
STANDING ARMY in the said PLANTATIONS, as shall be sufficient to
|
|
enforce the EXECUTION of all such Acts of the BRITISH PARLIAMENT, as
|
|
are already passed, or may hereafter be passed, relative to the said
|
|
AMERICAN COLONIES.
|
|
|
|
_The Pennsylvania Journal_, June 29, 1774, supplement
|
|
|
|
_An Imaginary Speech_
|
|
|
|
_To the Printer of the_ Public Advertiser.
|
|
|
|
SIR, In a late Debate, a certain North British Colonel thought
|
|
proper to recommend himself to the Court, by grossly abusing the
|
|
Americans. I send you the Answer I should have made to him had I
|
|
been present when he uttered his Invective, and I rely upon it, that
|
|
you will shew that Candour and Justice to America which is refused in
|
|
certain great Assemblies, and not condemn them without a Hearing.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Sp ------ r, Sir, I am an American: In that Character I
|
|
trust this House will shew some little Indulgence to the Feelings
|
|
which are excited by what fell this Moment from an honourable and
|
|
military Gentleman under the Gallery. According to him, Sir, the
|
|
Americans are unequal to the People of this Country in Devotion to
|
|
Women, and in Courage, and in what, in his Sight seems worse than
|
|
all, they are religious.
|
|
|
|
No one, Sir, feels the Odiousness of Comparisons more than
|
|
myself. But I am necessitated to pursue, in some measure, the Path
|
|
which the honourable Gentleman has marked out. Sir, let the rapid
|
|
Increase and Population of America, compared with the Decrease of
|
|
England and of Scotland, shew which of the two People are most
|
|
effectually devoted to the Fair Sex. The Americans are content to
|
|
leave with that honourable Gentleman and his Companions the Boast,
|
|
while the Fact is evidently with them. They are sensible, that upon
|
|
this Subject to talk much, and to do little, are inseparable.
|
|
|
|
Sir, I am at a Loss to conceive upon what Facts the Gentleman
|
|
grounds his Impeachment of American Courage. Is it upon the Capture
|
|
of Louisbourg, and the Conquest of Nova Scotia in the War before the
|
|
last? Is it upon their having alone taken Crown Point from the
|
|
French Regulars, and made their General Prisoner, or from their
|
|
having covered the Retreat of the British Regulars, and saved them
|
|
from utter Destruction in the Expeditions under Braddock, and to Fort
|
|
Pitt?
|
|
|
|
Sir, it happens very unfortunately that the Regulars have
|
|
impressed the Provincials with a very indifferent Opinion of their
|
|
Courage. I will tell you why. They saw General Braddock at the Head
|
|
of a regular Army march with a Thousand Boastings of their Courage
|
|
and Superiority, and expressing the most sovereign Contempt of the
|
|
Virginian Provincials who accompanied him. But in a little Time
|
|
these vain Boasters were totally routed by a very unequal Number of
|
|
French and Indians, and the Provincials rendered them the unthanked
|
|
Service of saving them from being cut off to a Man. In the same
|
|
Manner a Detachment of Highlanders, under a Major Grant, accompanied
|
|
by the Virginians under Major Lewis, being attacked by the Indians,
|
|
the Highlanders fled immediately, and left the Provincials to retreat
|
|
and cover them. They saw several Campaigns of shameful Defeats, or
|
|
as shameful Inactivity: Till at length the all-pervading Spirit of
|
|
one great Officer, and the cautious Abilities of another, redeemed
|
|
the British Name, and led her Sons to Conquest. The Expedition under
|
|
Colonel Bouquet, assisted by a large Body of Provincials, owed its
|
|
Success chiefly to those Provincials. I speak it from that brave
|
|
Officer's own Letters. It was Wolfe, Amherst and Bouquet who roused
|
|
the Spirit of the Regulars, and led them to Glory and Success; and I
|
|
am proud to say, Sir, these are not the Men who traduce the
|
|
Americans, or speak slightly of their Services; nay more, Sir, the
|
|
Men who disgraced the Regulars are those only who defame the
|
|
Provincials. But why should any Gentleman talk in general Terms of
|
|
their wanting Spirit? Indiscriminate Accusations against the Absent
|
|
are cowardly Calumnies. Will the Gentleman come to Particulars?
|
|
Will he name the American he has insulted with Impunity? Who is the
|
|
provincial Officer who turned his Back in the Day of Battle? There
|
|
is hardly a Day or an Hour, in which the Honourable Gentleman does
|
|
not meet with an American. Does he insult any one of them with
|
|
Impunity? Has he, or will he put their Spirit to the Proof? Till he
|
|
has done that, Silence, I am sure, will do more Honour to his own.
|
|
|
|
The Honourable Gentleman says, the Regulars treated the
|
|
Provincials _as Beasts of Burthen._ There are many of the Provincial
|
|
Officers in this Town: I have the Honour of knowing them; and I can
|
|
assure this House, that no Man living would say as much to their Face
|
|
with Impunity. The Americans, Sir, are well satisfied, that the
|
|
Ministry intend to make Beasts of Burthen of them. They tell you,
|
|
however, they will not be Hewers of Wood and Drawers of Water for any
|
|
Men upon Earth: The Object of this Motion is to compel them. It is
|
|
my Duty to say, they will and ought to resist such an Attempt; and
|
|
that if I were there, I should do it without a Moment's Hesitation.
|
|
|
|
I had almost forgot the Honourable Gentleman's Charge of their
|
|
being too religious. Sir, they were such Religionists, that
|
|
vindicated this Country from the Tyranny of the Stuarts. Perhaps the
|
|
Honourable Gentleman may have some compassionate Feelings for that
|
|
unhappy Family: Does that sharpen his Resentment against the
|
|
Americans; who inherit from those Ancestors, not only the same
|
|
Religion, but the same Love of Liberty and Spirit to defend it?
|
|
|
|
_The Public Advertiser_, February 7, 1775
|
|
|
|
_A Dialogue Between Britain, France, Spain, Holland, Saxony,
|
|
and America_
|
|
|
|
Britain Sister of _Spain_, I have a Favour to ask of you. My
|
|
Subjects in _America_ are disobedient, and I am about to chastize
|
|
them. I beg you will not furnish them with any Arms or Ammunition.
|
|
|
|
_Spain_ Have you forgotten, then, that when my Subjects in the
|
|
Low Countries rebelled against me, you not only furnished them with
|
|
military Stores, but join'd them with an Army and a Fleet? I wonder
|
|
how you can have the Impudence to ask such a Favour of me, or the
|
|
Folly to expect it!
|
|
|
|
_Britain_ You my dear Sister of France will surely not refuse
|
|
me this Favour.
|
|
|
|
_France_ Did you not assist my Rebel Hugenots with a Fleet and
|
|
an Army at _Rochelle_? And have you not lately aided privately and
|
|
sneakingly my Rebel Subjects in _Corsica_? And do you not at this
|
|
Instant keep their Chief pension'd, and ready to head a fresh Revolt
|
|
there, whenever you can find or make an Opportunity? Dear Sister you
|
|
must be a little silly!
|
|
|
|
_Britain_ _Honest Holland!_ You see it is remembered that I was
|
|
once your Friend, You will therefore be mine on this Occasion. I
|
|
know indeed you are accustom'd to smuggle with these Rebels of mine.
|
|
I will wink at that, Sell 'em as much Tea as you please to enervate
|
|
the Rascals; since they will not take it of me; but for Gods sake
|
|
dont supply them with any Arms.
|
|
|
|
_Holland_ 'Tis true you assisted me against _Philip_, my Tyrant
|
|
of _Spain_ but have I not since assisted you against one of your
|
|
Tyrants, (* 1) and enabled you to expell
|
|
him? Surely that Accompt, as we Merchants say, is _Ballanc'd_, and I
|
|
am nothing in your Debt. I have indeed some Complaints against
|
|
_you_, for endeavouring to starve me by your _Navigation Acts_: But
|
|
being peaceably dispos'd I do not quarrel with you for that. I shall
|
|
only go on quietly with my own Business. Trade is my Profession,
|
|
'tis all I have to subsist on. And let me tell you, I should make no
|
|
scruple, (on the prospect of a good Market for that Commodity,) even
|
|
to send my Ships to Hell and supply the Devil with Brimstone. For
|
|
you must know I can insure in London against the Burning of my Sails.
|
|
|
|
_America_ to _Britain_. Why you old blood thirsty Bully! you
|
|
who have been everywhere vaunting your own Prowess, and defaming the
|
|
Americans as Poltroons! you who have boasted of being able to march
|
|
over all their Bellies with a single Regiment! You who by Fraud have
|
|
possess'd yourself of their strongest Fortress, and all the Arms they
|
|
had stor'd up in it! You who have a disciplin'd Army in their
|
|
Country intrench'd to the Teeth and provided with every thing! Do
|
|
_you_ run about begging all Europe not to supply those poor People
|
|
with a little Powder and Shot? Do you mean, then, to fall upon them
|
|
naked and unarm'd, and butcher them in cold Blood? Is this your
|
|
Courage? Is this your Magnanimity?
|
|
|
|
_Britain._ O! you wicked-Whig-Presbyterian-Serpent! Have you
|
|
the Impudence to appear before me after all your Disobedience?
|
|
Surrender immediatly all your Liberties and Properties into my Hands,
|
|
or I will cut you to Pieces. Was it for this that I planted your
|
|
Country at so great an Expence? that I protected you in your Infancy,
|
|
and defended you against all your Enemies?
|
|
|
|
_America._ I shall not surrender my Liberty and Property but
|
|
with my Life. It is not true that my Country was planted at your
|
|
Expence. Your own Records (* 2) refute that Falshood to your Face.
|
|
Nor did you ever afford me a Man or a shilling to defend me against
|
|
the Indians, the only Enemies I had upon my own Account. But when
|
|
you have quarrell'd with all Europe, and drawn me with you into all
|
|
your Broils, then you value yourself upon protecting me from the
|
|
Enemies you have made for me. I have no natural Cause of Difference
|
|
with Spain, France, or Holland; and yet by turns I have join'd with
|
|
you in Wars against them all. You would not suffer me to make or
|
|
keep a seperate Peace with any of them, 'tho I might easily have done
|
|
it, to great Advantage. Does your protecting me in those Wars give
|
|
you a Right to fleece me? If so, as I fought for you, as well as you
|
|
for me, it gives me a proportionable Right to fleece you. What think
|
|
you of an American Law to make a Monopoly of You and your Commerce,
|
|
as you have done by your Laws of me and mine? Content yourself with
|
|
that Monopoly if you are Wise, and learn Justice if you would be
|
|
respected!
|
|
|
|
_Britain_ You impudent B -- h! am not I your Mother Country?
|
|
Is not that a sufficient Title to your Respect and Obedience?
|
|
|
|
_Saxony._ _Mother Country!_ Hah, hah, he! What Respect have
|
|
_you_ the front to claim as a Mother Country? You know that _I_ am
|
|
_your_ Mother Country, and yet you pay me none. Nay, it is but the
|
|
other Day, since you hired Ruffians (* 3) to rob me on the Highway,
|
|
(* 4) and burn my House! (* 5) For shame! Hide your Face and hold
|
|
your Tongue. If you continue this Conduct you will make yourself the
|
|
Contempt of all Europe!
|
|
|
|
Britain O Lord! where are my Friends!
|
|
|
|
_France Spain Holland_ and _Saxony_ all together Friends!
|
|
Believe us you have none, nor ever will have any 'till you mend your
|
|
Manners. How can we who are your Neighbours have any Regard for You,
|
|
or expect any Equity from You, should your Power increase, when we
|
|
see how basely and unjustly you have us'd both your _own Mother_ and
|
|
your _own Children_?
|
|
|
|
February? 1775
|
|
|
|
(* 1) James 2nd.
|
|
|
|
(* 2) See the Journals of the House of Commons 1640. Viz, Die Veneris
|
|
Martii 10. 1642. Whereas the Plantations in New England have, by the
|
|
Blessing of Almighty God, had good and prosperous Success, _without
|
|
any Publick Charge to this State_; and are now likely to prove very
|
|
happy for the Propagation of the Gospel in those Parts, and very
|
|
beneficial and commodious to this Kingdom and Nation, the Commons now
|
|
assembled in Parliament do, for the better Advancement of those
|
|
Plantations and the Encouragement of the Planters to proceed in their
|
|
Undertaking, Ordain that all Merchandizes and Goods that by any
|
|
Merchant or other Person or Persons whatsoever, shall be exported out
|
|
of this Kingdom of England into New England, to be spent, used or
|
|
employ'd there, or being of the Growth of that _Kingdom_, shall be
|
|
from thence imported hither; or shall be laden or put on board in any
|
|
Ship or Vessel for Necessaries in passing or returning to and fro;
|
|
and all and every the Owner or Owners thereof, shall be freed and
|
|
discharg'd of and from paying and yielding any Custom, Subsidy,
|
|
Taxation, Imposition, or other Duty for the same, either Inward or
|
|
Outward, either in this Kingdom or New England, or in any Port,
|
|
Haven, Creek, or other place whatsoever, untill the House of Commons
|
|
shall take further order therein to the Contrary. And all and
|
|
singular Customers, &c. are to Observe this Order.
|
|
|
|
(* 3) Prussians.
|
|
|
|
(* 4) They enter'd and rais'd Contributions in Saxony.
|
|
|
|
(* 5) And they burnt the fine Suburbs of Dresden the Capital of
|
|
Saxony.
|
|
|
|
_A Proposed Memorial to Lord Dartmouth_
|
|
|
|
To the Right honourable the Earl of Dartmouth One of his
|
|
Majesty's principal Secretaries of State A Memorial from Benjamin
|
|
Franklin Agent of the Province of Massachusetts Bay.
|
|
|
|
Given in London, this 16th Day of March, 1775. Whereas an
|
|
Injury done, can only give the Party injured a Right to full
|
|
Reparation; or, in case that be refused, a Right to return an equal
|
|
Injury. And whereas the Blockade of Boston, now continued nine
|
|
Months, hath every Week of its Continuance done Damage to that Town
|
|
equal to what was suffered there by the India Company; it follows
|
|
that such _exceeding_ Damage is an _Injury_ done by this Government,
|
|
for which Reparation ought to be made. And whereas Reparation of
|
|
Injuries ought always (agreable to the Custom of all Nations, savage
|
|
as well as civilized) to be first required, before Satisfaction is
|
|
taken by a Return of Damage to the Aggressors; which was not done by
|
|
Great Britain in the Instance above mentioned. I the underwritten,
|
|
do therefore, as their Agent, in the Behalf of my Country and the
|
|
said Town of Boston, protest against the Continuance of the said
|
|
Blockade: And I do hereby solemnly demand Satisfaction for the
|
|
accumulated Injury done them beyond the Value of the India Company's
|
|
Tea destroyed.
|
|
|
|
And whereas the Conquest of the Gulph of St. Lawrence, the
|
|
Coasts of Labrador and Nova Scotia, and the Fisheries possess'd by
|
|
the French there and on the Banks of Newfoundland, so far as they
|
|
were more extended than at present, was made by the _joint Forces_ of
|
|
Britain and the Colonies, the latter having nearly an equal Number of
|
|
Men in that Service with the former; it follows that the Colonies
|
|
have an equitable and just Right to participate in the Advantage of
|
|
those Fisheries. I do therefore in the Behalf of the Colony of the
|
|
Massachusetts Bay, protest against the Act now under Consideration in
|
|
Parliament, for depriving that Province, with others, of that Fishery
|
|
(on pretence of their refusing to purchase British Commodities) as an
|
|
Act highly unjust and injurious: And I give Notice, that Satisfaction
|
|
will probably one day be demanded for all the Injury that may be done
|
|
and suffered in the Execution of such Act: And that the Injustice of
|
|
the Proceeding is likely to give such Umbrage to _all the Colonies_,
|
|
that in no future War, wherein other Conquests may be meditated,
|
|
either a Man or a Shilling will be obtained from any of them to aid
|
|
such Conquests, till full Satisfaction be made as aforesaid.
|
|
|
|
March 16, 1775
|
|
|
|
_Proposed Articles of Confederation_
|
|
|
|
Articles of Confederation and perpetual Union, entred into by
|
|
the Delegates of the several Colonies of New Hampshire &c. in general
|
|
Congress met at Philadelphia, May 10. 1775.
|
|
|
|
Art. I. The Name of the Confederacy shall henceforth be _The
|
|
United Colonies of North America_.
|
|
|
|
Art. II. The said United Colonies hereby severally enter into a
|
|
firm League of Friendship with each other, binding on themselves and
|
|
their Posterity, for their common Defence against their Enemies, for
|
|
the Security of their Liberties and Propertys, the Safety of their
|
|
Persons and Families, and their mutual and general welfare.
|
|
|
|
Art. III. That each Colony shall enjoy and retain as much as it
|
|
may think fit of its own present Laws, Customs, Rights, Privileges,
|
|
and peculiar Jurisdictions within its own Limits; and may amend its
|
|
own Constitution as shall seem best to its own Assembly or
|
|
Convention.
|
|
|
|
Art. IV. That for the more convenient Management of general
|
|
Interests, Delegates shall be annually elected in each Colony to meet
|
|
in General Congress at such Time and Place as shall be agreed on in
|
|
the next preceding Congress. Only where particular Circumstances do
|
|
not make a Deviation necessary, it is understood to be a Rule, that
|
|
each succeeding Congress be held in a different Colony till the whole
|
|
Number be gone through, and so in perpetual Rotation; and that
|
|
accordingly the next Congress after the present shall be held at
|
|
Annapolis in Maryland.
|
|
|
|
Art. V. That the Power and Duty of the Congress shall extend to
|
|
the Determining on War and Peace, to sending and receiving
|
|
Ambassadors, and entring into Alliances, the Reconciliation with
|
|
Great Britain; the Settling all Disputes and Differences between
|
|
Colony and Colony about Limits or any other cause if such should
|
|
arise; and the Planting of new Colonies when proper. The Congress
|
|
shall also make such general Ordinances as tho' necessary to the
|
|
General Welfare, particular Assemblies cannot be competent to; viz.
|
|
those that may relate to our general Commerce or general Currency; to
|
|
the Establishment of Posts; and the Regulation of our common Forces.
|
|
The Congress shall also have the Appointment of all Officers civil
|
|
and military, appertaining to the general Confederacy, such as
|
|
General Treasurer Secretary, &c.
|
|
|
|
Art. VI. All Charges of Wars, and all other general Expences to
|
|
be incurr'd for the common Welfare, shall be defray'd out of a common
|
|
Treasury, which is to be supply'd by each Colony in proportion to its
|
|
Number of Male Polls between 16 and 60 Years of Age; the Taxes for
|
|
paying that proportion are to be laid and levied by the Laws of each
|
|
Colony.
|
|
|
|
Art. VII. The Number of Delegates to be elected and sent to the
|
|
Congress by each Colony, shall be regulated from time to time by the
|
|
Number of such Polls return'd, so as that one Delegate be allow'd for
|
|
every 5000 Polls. And the Delegates are to bring with them to every
|
|
Congress an authenticated Return of the number of Polls in their
|
|
respective Provinces, which is to be annually taken, for the Purposes
|
|
above-mentioned.
|
|
|
|
Art. VIII. At every Meeting of the Congress One half of the
|
|
Members return'd exclusive of Proxies be necessary to make a Quorum,
|
|
and Each Delegate at the Congress, shall have a Vote in all Cases;
|
|
and if necessarily absent, shall be allowed to appoint any other
|
|
Delegate from the same Colony to be his Proxy, who may vote for him.
|
|
|
|
Art. IX. An executive Council shall be appointed by the
|
|
Congress out of their own Body, consisting of 12 Persons; of whom in
|
|
the first Appointment one Third, viz. 4, shall be for one Year, 4 for
|
|
two Years, and 4 for three Years; and as the said Terms expire, the
|
|
vacancies shall be filled by Appointments for three Years, whereby
|
|
One Third of the Members will be changed annually. And each Person
|
|
who has served the said Term of three Years as Counsellor, shall have
|
|
a Respite of three Years, before he can be elected again. This
|
|
Council (of whom two thirds shall be a Quorum) in the Recess of the
|
|
Congress is to execute what shall have been enjoin'd thereby; to
|
|
manage the general continental Business and Interests to receive
|
|
Applications from foreign Countries; to prepare Matters for the
|
|
Consideration of the Congress; to fill up (_pro tempore_) continental
|
|
Offices that fall vacant; and to draw on the General Treasurer for
|
|
such Monies as may be necessary for general Services, and
|
|
appropriated by the Congress to such Services.
|
|
|
|
Art. X. No Colony shall engage in an offensive War with any
|
|
Nation of Indians without the Consent of the Congress, or great
|
|
Council above-mentioned, who are first to consider the Justice and
|
|
Necessity of such War.
|
|
|
|
Art. XI. A perpetual Alliance offensive and defensive, is to be
|
|
entered into as soon as may be with the Six Nations; their Limits to
|
|
be ascertain'd and secur'd to them; their Land not to be encroach'd
|
|
on, nor any private or Colony Purchases made of them hereafter to be
|
|
held good; nor any Contract for Lands to be made but between the
|
|
Great Council of the Indians at Onondaga and the General Congress.
|
|
The Boundaries and Lands of all the other Indians shall also be
|
|
ascertain'd and secur'd to them in the same manner; and Persons
|
|
appointed to reside among them in proper Districts, who shall take
|
|
care to prevent Injustice in the Trade with them, and be enabled at
|
|
our General Expence by occasional small Supplies, to relieve their
|
|
personal Wants and Distresses. And all Purchases from them shall be
|
|
by the Congress for the General Advantage and Benefit of the United
|
|
Colonies.
|
|
|
|
Art. XII. As all new Institutions may have Imperfections which
|
|
only Time and Experience can discover, it is agreed, that the General
|
|
Congress from time to time shall propose such Amendment of this
|
|
Constitution as may be found necessary; which being approv'd by a
|
|
Majority of the Colony Assemblies, shall be equally binding with the
|
|
rest of the Articles of this Confederation.
|
|
|
|
Art. XIII. Any and every Colony from Great Britain upon the
|
|
Continent of North America not at present engag'd in our Association,
|
|
may upon Application and joining the said Association, be receiv'd
|
|
into this Confederation, viz. Ireland the West India Islands, Quebec,
|
|
St. Johns, Nova Scotia, Bermudas, and the East and West Floridas: and
|
|
shall thereupon be entitled to all the Advantages of our Union,
|
|
mutual Assistance and Commerce.
|
|
|
|
These Articles shall be propos'd to the several Provincial
|
|
Conventions or Assemblies, to be by them consider'd, and if approv'd
|
|
they are advis'd to impower their Delegates to agree to and ratify
|
|
the same in the ensuing Congress. After which the _Union_ thereby
|
|
establish'd is to continue firm till the Terms of Reconciliation
|
|
proposed in the Petition of the last Congress to the King are agreed
|
|
to; till the Acts since made restraining the American Commerce and
|
|
Fisheries are repeal'd; till Reparation is made for the Injury done
|
|
to Boston by shutting up its Port; for the Burning of Charlestown;
|
|
and for the Expence of this unjust War; and till all the British
|
|
Troops are withdrawn from America. On the Arrival of these Events
|
|
the Colonies are to return to their former Connection and Friendship
|
|
with Britain: But on Failure thereof this Confederation is to be
|
|
perpetual.
|
|
|
|
Philadelphia, July 21, 1775
|
|
|
|
_Resolutions on Trade Submitted to Congress_
|
|
|
|
Resolved, That from and after the 20th of July 1776 being one
|
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full Year after the Day appointed by a late Act of the Parliament of
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Great Britain for restraining the Trade of the Confederate Colonies,
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all the Custom-Houses therein (if the said Act be not first repealed)
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shall be shut up, and all the Officers of the same discharged from
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the Execution of their several Functions; and all the Ports of the
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said Colonies are hereby declared to be thenceforth open to the Ships
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of every State in Europe that will admit our Commerce and protect it;
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who may bring in and expose to Sale free of all Duties their
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respective Produce and Manufactures, and every kind of Merchandise,
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excepting Teas, and the Merchandize of Great Britain, Ireland, and
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the British West India Islands.
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Resolved, That we will to the utmost of our Power maintain and
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support this Freedom of Commerce for two Years certain after its
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Commencement, any Reconciliation between us and Britain
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|
notwithstanding; and as much longer beyond that Term, as the late
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Acts of Parliament for Restraining the Commerce and Fisheries, and
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altering the Laws and Charters of any of the Colonies, shall continue
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unrepealed.
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Philadelphia, July 21, 1775
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_Account of the Devices on the Continental Bills of Credit_
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_To the Printers of the_ PENNSYLVANIA GAZETTE.
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GENTLEMEN, _No Explanation of the Devices on the Continental
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Bills of Credit having yet appeared, I send you the following Account
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of them, with my Conjectures of their Meaning._ CLERICUS.
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An emblematical device, when rightly formed, is said to consist
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of two parts, a _body_ and a _mind_, neither of which is compleat or
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intelligible, without the aid of the other. The figure is called the
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_body_, the motto the _mind_. These that I am about to consider
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appear formed on that rule, and seem to relate to the present
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struggle between the colonies and the tyrant state, for liberty,
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property and safety on the one hand, for absolute power and plunder
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on the other.
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On one denomination of the bills there is the figure of a
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_harp_, with this motto, MAJORA MINORIBUS CONSONANT; literally, _The
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greater and smaller ones sound together_. As the _harp_ is an
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instrument composed of _great_ and _small_ strings, included in a
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_strong frame_, and all so tuned as to agree in concord with each
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other, I conceive that the _frame_ may be intended to represent our
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new government by a Continental Congress; and the _strings_ of
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different lengths and substance, either the several colonies of
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different weight and force, or the various ranks of people in all of
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them, who are now united by that government in the most perfect
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_harmony_.
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On another bill is impressed, a _wild boar of the forest_
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rushing on the spear of the hunter; with this motto, AUT MORS, AUT
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VITA DECORA, which may be translated -- _Death or liberty_. The wild
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boar is an animal of great strength and courage, armed with long and
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sharp tusks, which he well knows how to use in his defence. He is
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inoffensive while suffered to enjoy his freedom, but when roused and
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wounded by the hunter, often turns and makes him pay dearly for his
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injustice and temerity.
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On another is drawn an _eagle_ on the wing, pouncing upon a
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_crane_, who turns upon his back, and receives the eagle on the point
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of his long bill, which pierces the eagle's breast; with this motto,
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EXITUS IN DUBIO EST; -- _The event is uncertain_. The eagle, I
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suppose, represents Great-Britain, the crane America. This device
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offers an admonition to each of the contending parties. To the
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crane, not to depend too much on the success of its _endeavours to
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avoid_ the contest (by petition, negotiation, &c.) but prepare for
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using the means of defence God and nature hath given it; and to the
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eagle, not to presume on its superior strength, since a weaker bird
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may wound it mortally.
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_Sunt dubii eventus, incertaque praelia mortis: Vincitur, haud
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raro, qui prope victor erat._
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On another bill we have a _thorny bush_, which a _hand_ seems
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attempting to eradicate. The hand appears to bleed, as pricked by
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the spines. The motto is, SUSTINE VEL ABSTINE; which may be
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rendered, _Bear with me, or let me alone_; or thus, _Either support
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or leave me_. The bush I suppose to mean _America_, and the bleeding
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hand _Britain_. Would to God that bleeding were stopt, the wounds of
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that hand healed, and its future operations directed by wisdom and
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equity; so shall the hawthorn flourish, and form an hedge around it,
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annoying with her thorns only its invading enemies.
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Another had the figure of a _beaver_ gnawing a large tree, with
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this motto, PERSEVERANDO; _By perseverance_. I apprehend the _great
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tree_ may be intended to represent the enormous power Britain has
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assumed over us, and endeavours to enforce by arms, of taxing us at
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pleasure, _and binding us in all cases whatsoever_; or the exorbitant
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profits she makes by monopolizing our commerce. Then the _beaver_,
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which is known to be able, by assiduous and steady working, to fell
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large trees, may signify _America_, which, by perseverance in her
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present measures, will probably reduce that power within proper
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bounds, and, by establishing the most necessary manufactures among
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ourselves, abolish the British monopoly.
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On another bill we have the plant _acanthus_, sprouting on all
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sides under a weight placed upon it, with the motto, DEPRESSA
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RESURGIT; _Tho' oppressed it rises_. The ancients tell us, that the
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sight of such an accidental circumstance gave the first hint to an
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architect, in forming the beautiful capital of the Corinthian Column.
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This, perhaps, was intended to encourage us, by representing, that
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our present oppressions will not destroy us, but that they may, by
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increasing our industry, and forcing it into new courses, increase
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the prosperity of our country, and establish that prosperity on the
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_base_ of liberty, and the well-proportioned _pillar_ of property,
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elevated for a pleasing spectacle to all _connoisseurs_, who can
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_taste_ and delight in the architecture of human happiness.
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The figure of a _hand and flail_ over _sheaves of wheat_, with
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the motto, TRIBULATIO DITAT, _Threshing improves it_ (which we find
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printed on another of the bills) may perhaps be intended to admonish
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us, that tho' at present we are under the _flail_, its blows, how
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hard soever, will be rather advantageous than hurtful to us: for they
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will bring forth every _grain_ of genius and merit in arts,
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manufactures, war and council, that are now concealed in the husk,
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and then the breath of a breeze will be sufficient to separate from
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us all the chaff of Toryism. _Tribulation_ too, in our English sense
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of the word, improves the mind, it makes us humbler, and tends to
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make us wiser. And _threshing_, in one of its senses, that of
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beating, often improves those that are threshed. Many an unwarlike
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nation have been beaten into heroes by troublesome warlike
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neighbours; and the continuance of a war, tho' it lessen the numbers
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of a people, often increases its strength, by the increased
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|
discipline and consequent courage of the number remaining. Thus
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England, after her civil war, in which her people threshed one
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another, became more formidable to her neighbours. The public
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distress too that arises from war, by increasing frugality and
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industry, often gives habits that remain after the distress is over,
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and thereby naturally _enriches_ those on whom it has enforced those
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_enriching virtues_.
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Another of the bills has for its device, a _storm_ descending
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from a _black heavy cloud_, with the motto, SERENABIT; _It will clear
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up_. This seems designed to encourage the dejected, who may be too
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sensible of present inconveniences, and fear their continuance. It
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reminds them, agreeable to the adage, that _after a storm comes a
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calm_; or as Horace more elegantly has it --
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Informes hyemes reducit, Jupiter: _idem summovet_.
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_Non si male nunc, et olim
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Sic erit_. -- _Neque semper arcum tendit Apollo_.
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On another bill there is stamped the representation of a
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_tempestuous sea_; a face, with swollen cheeks, wrapt up in a black
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cloud, appearing to blow violently on the waters, _the waves high_,
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and _all rolling one way_: The motto VI CONCITATAE; which may be
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rendered, _raised by force_. From the remotest antiquity, in
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figurative language, great waters have signified _the people_, and
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waves an insurrection. The people of themselves are supposed as
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naturally inclined to be still, as the waters to remain level and
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quiet. Their rising here appears not to be from any internal cause,
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but from an external power, expressed by the head of Aeolus, God of
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the winds (or _Boreas_, the _North_ wind, as usually the most
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violent) acting furiously upon them. The black cloud perhaps designs
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the British Parliament, and the waves the colonies. Their rolling
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all in one direction shews, that the very force used against them has
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produced their unanimity. On the reverse of this bill, we have a
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smooth sea; the sails of ships on that sea hanging loose shew a
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perfect calm; the sun shining fully denotes a clear sky. The motto
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is, CESSANTE VENTO, CONQUIESCEMUS; _The wind ceasing, we shall be
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quiet_. Supposing my explanation of the preceding device to be
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right, this will probably import, that when those violent acts of
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power, which have roused the colonies, are repealed, they will return
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to their former tranquility. Britain seems thus charged with being
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the sole cause of the present civil war, at the same time that the
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only mode of putting an end to it is thus plainly pointed out to her.
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The last is a _wreath of laurel_ on a _marble monument_, or
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_altar_. The motto, SI RECTE FACIES; _If you act rightly_. This
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seems intended as an encouragement to a brave and steady conduct in
|
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defence of our liberties, as it promises to crown with honour, by the
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laurel wreath, those who persevere to the end in _well-doing_; and
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with a long duration of that honour, expressed by the _monument of
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marble_.
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A learned friend of mine thinks this device more particularly
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addressed to the CONGRESS. He says the ancients composed for their
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heroes a wreath of laurel, oak and olive twigs, interwoven; agreeable
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to the distich,
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_E lauro, quercu, atque olea, duce digna corona_.
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_Prudentem, fortem, pacificumque decet_.
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Of _laurel_, as that tree was dedicated to _Apollo_, and understood
|
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to signify _knowledge and prudence_; of _oak_, as pertaining to
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_Jupiter_, and expressing _fortitude_; of _olive_, as the tree of
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_Pallas_, and as a symbol of _peace_. The whole to show, that those
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|
who are intrusted to conduct the great affairs of mankind should act
|
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prudently and firmly, retaining, above all, a pacific disposition.
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This wreath was first placed on an _altar_, to admonish the hero who
|
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was to be crowned with it, that true glory is founded on and proceeds
|
|
from _piety_. My friend therefore thinks, the present device might
|
|
intend a wreath of that composite kind, though, from the smallness of
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the work, the engraver could not mark distinctly the differing
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leaves: And he is rather confirmed in his opinion that this is
|
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designed as an admonition to the Congress, when he considers the
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passage in _Horace_ from whence the motto is taken, ------ _Rex eris,
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aiunt,_
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_Si recte facies_.
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To which also _Ausonius_ alludes,
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_Qui recte faciet, non qui dominatur, erit Rex._
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Not the King's Parliament, who act wrong, but the People's Congress,
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_if it acts right_, shall govern America.
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_The Pennsylvania Gazette_, September 20, 1775
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_The King's Own Regulars_
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To the PRINTER of the PENNSYLVANIA EVENING POST.
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SIR, The Ministry have boasted much of their _regular_, their
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_disciplined_ troops, which they fancied capable of beating all the
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_irregulars_ in the world.
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One would wonder how men of any attention to what has passed,
|
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could deceive themselves into such an opinion, when so many FACTS,
|
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within the memory of men not very old, evince the contrary.
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The following _Yanky_ song gives us a pretty little collection
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|
of those facts. I wish to see it printed for the encouragement of
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our militia. For though it is not safe for men too much to despise
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their enemies, it is of use that they should have a good opinion (if
|
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it is a just opinion) of themselves, when compared to those they are
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to fight with.
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There are three other instances of regulars beaten by
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irregulars in our time; but these being of foreign troops, were
|
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probably not thought fit for the song writer's present purpose. It
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may not however be amiss to mention them here.
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The first was at Genoa, in the war before last. Twenty
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battalions of Imperialists were in possession of that place, and
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exasperating the inhabitants by their insolence, particularly by
|
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caning some who refused to assist the soldiery in removing the
|
|
cannon; a mob rose suddenly upon them, drove them out of the gates,
|
|
and defended the place against them with such spirit, that they never
|
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were able to get in again.
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The second was at Madrid about ten years since, when the King
|
|
of Spain offended the people by a too rigorous execution of some
|
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trifling edicts relative to cloaks and hats. They demanded the
|
|
dismission of his Minister, Count de Squilache. The King refused,
|
|
and assembled the guards with all the regulars near the city, to
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defend the Count. The people rose, attacked the troops, cut them to
|
|
pieces, and drove the Minister out of the kingdom.
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The third happened this last summer, when a fine regular army
|
|
of Spaniards, well appointed, attempted to invade Africa. The
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militia of that country beat them out of it almost as soon as they
|
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entered it, and with a prodigious slaughter.
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If we search for the cause of this superior bravery in the
|
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_people_ of a country, compared with what are called regular troops,
|
|
it may perhaps be found in these particulars; that the men who
|
|
compose an European regular army, are generally such as have neither
|
|
property or families to fight for, and who have no principle either
|
|
of honor, religion, public spirit, regard for liberty, or love of
|
|
country, to animate them. They are therefore only pressed on to
|
|
fight by their officers, and had rather be any where else than in a
|
|
battle. Discipline only gives the officers the power of actuating
|
|
them; and superior discipline may make them superior to other troops
|
|
of the same kind not so well disciplined. Thus discipline serves to
|
|
supply in some degree the defect of principle. But men equally
|
|
armed, and animated by principle, tho' without discipline, are always
|
|
superior to them when only equal in numbers; and when principle and
|
|
discipline are united on the same side, as in our present militia,
|
|
treble the number of mere unprincipled mercenaries, such as the
|
|
regular armies commonly consist of, are in my opinion no match for
|
|
such a militia.
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Let us however not be presumptuously careless in our military
|
|
operations, but mix caution with our courage, and take every prudent
|
|
measure to guard against the attempts of our enemies; it being as
|
|
advantageous to defeat their designs as their forces.
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The KING'S own REGULARS, and their TRIUMPH over the IRREGULARS.
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A new SONG.
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To the tune of _An old Courtier of the Queen's, _and the
|
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Queen's old Courtier_. Which is a kind of recitativo, like the
|
|
chaunting of the prose psalms in cathedrals.
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Since you all will have singing, and won't be said nay, I
|
|
cannot refuse, when you so beg and pray; So, I'll sing you a song, --
|
|
as a body may say, 'Tis of the King's Regulars, who ne'er run away.
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_O the old Soldiers of the King, and the King's own Regulars_.
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At Prestonpans we met with some Rebels one day, We marshall'd
|
|
our selves all in comely array; Our hearts were all stout, and bid
|
|
our legs stay, But our feet were wrong-headed, and took us away.
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_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
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At Falkirk we resolv'd to be braver, And recover some credit by
|
|
better behaviour: We would not acknowledge feet had done us any
|
|
favour, So feet swore they would stand, but ------ legs ran however.
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_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
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No troops perform better than we at reviews, We march and we
|
|
wheel, and whatever you chuse, George would see how we fight, and we
|
|
never refuse, There we all fight with courage -- you may see't in the
|
|
news.
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_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
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To Mohongahela with fifes and with drums, We march'd in fine
|
|
order, with cannon and bombs, That great expedition cost infinite
|
|
sums; But a few irregulars cut us all into crumbs.
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_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
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It was not fair to shoot at us from behind trees, If they had
|
|
stood open, as they ought, before our great guns, we should have beat
|
|
'em with ease, They may fight with one another that way if they
|
|
please, But it is not _regular_ to stand, and fight with such rascals
|
|
as these.
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_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
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At Fort George and Oswego, to our great reputation, We shew'd
|
|
our vast skill in fortification; The French fir'd three guns; of the
|
|
fourth they had no occasion; For we gave up those forts -- not thro'
|
|
fear, but -- mere persuasion.
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_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
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To Ticonderoga we went in a passion, Swearing to be revenged on
|
|
the whole French nation; But we soon turn'd tail, without hesitation,
|
|
Because they fought behind trees, -- which is not the _regular_
|
|
fashion.
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_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
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Lord _Loudun_, he was a regular General, they say; With a great
|
|
regular army he went his way, Against Louisburgh, to make it his
|
|
prey, But return'd -- without seeing it, -- for he did not _feel
|
|
bold_ that day.
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|
_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
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|
|
Grown proud at reviews, great George had no rest, Each
|
|
Grandsire, he had heard, a rebellion supprest. He wish'd a
|
|
rebellion, look'd round and saw none, So resolv'd a rebellion to make
|
|
-- of his own,
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|
_With the old Soldiers,_ &c.
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The Yankees he bravely pitch'd on, because he thought they
|
|
wou'd'n't fight, And so he sent us over to take away their right; But
|
|
lest they should spoil our review-clothes, he cry'd braver and
|
|
louder; For God's sake, brother Kings, don't sell the cowards -- any
|
|
powder!
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|
|
_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
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|
|
Our General with his council of war did advise How at Lexington
|
|
we might the Yankees surprise; We march'd -- and remarch'd -- all
|
|
surpris'd -- at being beat; And so our wise General's plan of
|
|
_surprise_ -- was complete.
|
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|
|
_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
|
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|
|
For fifteen miles they follow'd and pelted us, we scarce had
|
|
time to pull a trigger. But did you ever know a retreat perform'd
|
|
with more vigour? For we did it in two hours, which sav'd us from
|
|
perdition; 'Twas not in _going out_, but in _returning_, consisted
|
|
our EXPEDITION.
|
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|
|
_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
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|
|
Says our General, "We were forc'd to take to our _arms_ in our
|
|
own defence," (For _arms_ read _legs_, and it will be both truth and
|
|
sense) Lord Percy (says he) I must say something of him in civility,
|
|
And that is -- "I can never enough praise him for his great --
|
|
agility."
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|
|
_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
|
|
|
|
Of their firing from behind fences he makes a great pother,
|
|
Every fence has two sides, they made use of one, and we only forgot
|
|
to use the other; That we turn'd our backs and ran away so fast,
|
|
don't let that disgrace us; 'Twas only to make good what Sandwich
|
|
said, that the Yankees -- could not face us.
|
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|
|
_O the old Soldiers,_ &c.
|
|
|
|
As they could not get before us, how could they look us in the
|
|
face? We took care they shouldn't, by scampering away apace. That
|
|
they had not much to brag of, is a very plain case; For if they beat
|
|
us in the fight, we beat them -- in the race.
|
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|
|
_O the old Soldiers of the King, and the King's own Regulars._
|
|
|
|
November 27, 1775; _Pennsylvania Evening Post_, March 30, 1776
|
|
|
|
_Bradshaw's Epitaph_
|
|
|
|
The following inscription was made out three years ago on the
|
|
cannon near which the ashes of President Bradshaw were lodged, on the
|
|
top of a high hill near Martha Bray in Jamaica, to avoid the rage
|
|
against the Regicides exhibited at the Restoration:
|
|
|
|
STRANGER,
|
|
Ere thou pass, contemplate this CANNON,
|
|
Nor regardless be told
|
|
That near its base lies deposited the dust of
|
|
JOHN BRADSHAW,
|
|
Who, nobly superior to all selfish regards,
|
|
Despising alike the pageantry of courtly splendor,
|
|
The blast of calumny, and the terrors of royal vengeance,
|
|
Presided in the illustrious band of heroes and patriots,
|
|
Who fairly and openly adjudged
|
|
CHARLES STUART,
|
|
Tyrant of England,
|
|
To a public and exemplary death,
|
|
Thereby presenting to the amazed world,
|
|
And transmitting down, through applauding ages,
|
|
The most glorious example
|
|
Of unshaken virtue, love of freedom, and impartial justice,
|
|
Ever exhibited on the blood-stained theatre of human actions.
|
|
O, reader,
|
|
Pass not on till thou hast blessed his memory,
|
|
And never ------ never forget
|
|
THAT REBELLION TO TYRANTS IS OBEDIENCE
|
|
TO GOD.
|
|
|
|
_The Pennsylvania Evening Post_, December 14, 1775
|
|
|
|
_The Rattle-Snake as a Symbol of America_
|
|
|
|
Messrs. PRINTERS, I observed on one of the drums belonging to
|
|
the marines now raising, there was painted a Rattle-Snake, with this
|
|
modest motto under it, "Don't tread on me." As I know it is the
|
|
custom to have some device on the arms of every country, I supposed
|
|
this may have been intended for the arms of America; and as I have
|
|
nothing to do with public affairs, and as my time is perfectly my
|
|
own, in order to divert an idle hour, I sat down to guess what could
|
|
have been intended by this uncommon device -- I took care, however,
|
|
to consult on this occasion a person who is acquainted with heraldry,
|
|
from whom I learned, that it is a rule among the learned in that
|
|
science "That the worthy properties of the animal, in the crest-born,
|
|
shall be considered," and, "That the base ones cannot have been
|
|
intended;" he likewise informed me that the antients considered the
|
|
serpent as an emblem of wisdom, and in a certain attitude of endless
|
|
duration -- both which circumstances I suppose may have been had in
|
|
view. -- Having gained this intelligence, and recollecting that
|
|
countries are sometimes represented by animals peculiar to them, it
|
|
occured to me that the Rattle-Snake is found in no other quarter of
|
|
the world besides America, and may therefore have been chosen, on
|
|
that account, to represent her.
|
|
|
|
But then "the worthy properties" of a Snake I judged would be
|
|
hard to point out -- This rather raised than suppressed my curiosity,
|
|
and having frequently seen the Rattle-Snake, I ran over in my mind
|
|
every property by which she was distinguished, not only from other
|
|
animals, but from those of the same genus or class of animals,
|
|
endeavouring to fix some meaning to each, not wholly inconsistent
|
|
with common sense.
|
|
|
|
I recollected that her eye excelled in brightness, that of any
|
|
other animal, and that she has no eye-lids -- She may therefore be
|
|
esteemed an emblem of vigilance. -- She never begins an attack, nor,
|
|
when once engaged, ever surrenders: She is therefore an emblem of
|
|
magnanimity and true courage. -- As if anxious to prevent all
|
|
pretentions of quarrelling with her, the weapons with which nature
|
|
has furnished her, she conceals in the roof of her mouth, so that, to
|
|
those who are unacquainted with her, she appears to be a most
|
|
defenceless animal; and even when those weapons are shewn and
|
|
extended for her defence, they appear weak and contemptible; but
|
|
their wounds however small, are decisive and fatal: -- Conscious of
|
|
this, she never wounds till she has generously given notice, even to
|
|
her enemy, and cautioned him against the danger of treading on her.
|
|
-- Was I wrong, Sir, in thinking this a strong picture of the temper
|
|
and conduct of America? The poison of her teeth is the necessary
|
|
means of digesting her food, and at the same time is certain
|
|
destruction to her enemies -- This may be understood to intimate that
|
|
those things which are destructive to our enemies, may be to us not
|
|
only harmless, but absolutely necessary to our existence. -- I
|
|
confess I was wholly at a loss what to make of the rattles, 'till I
|
|
went back and counted them and found them just thirteen, exactly the
|
|
number of the Colonies united in America; and I recollected too that
|
|
this was the only part of the Snake which increased in numbers --
|
|
Perhaps it might be only fancy, but, I conceited the painter had
|
|
shewn a half formed additional rattle, which, I suppose, may have
|
|
been intended to represent the province of Canada. -- 'Tis curious
|
|
and amazing to observe how distinct and independant of each other the
|
|
rattles of this animal are, and yet how firmly they are united
|
|
together, so as never to be separated but by breaking them to pieces.
|
|
-- One of those rattles singly, is incapable of producing sound, but
|
|
the ringing of thirteen together, is sufficient to alarm the boldest
|
|
man living. The Rattle-Snake is solitary, and associates with her
|
|
kind only when it is necessary for their preservation -- In winter,
|
|
the warmth of a number together will preserve their lives, while
|
|
singly, they would probably perish -- The power of fascination
|
|
attributed to her, by a generous construction, may be understood to
|
|
mean, that those who consider the liberty and blessings which America
|
|
affords, and once come over to her, never afterwards leave her, but
|
|
spend their lives with her. -- She strongly resembles America in
|
|
this, that she is beautiful in youth and her beauty increaseth with
|
|
her age, "her tongue also is blue and forked as the lightning, and
|
|
her abode is among impenetrable rocks."
|
|
|
|
Having pleased myself with reflections of this kind, I
|
|
communicated my sentiments to a neighbour of mine, who has a
|
|
surprizing readiness at guessing at every thing which relates to
|
|
publick affairs, and indeed I should be jealous of his reputation, in
|
|
that way, was it not that the event constantly shews that he has
|
|
guessed wrong -- He instantly declared it as his sentiments, that the
|
|
Congress meant to allude to Lord North's declaration in the House of
|
|
Commons, that he never would relax his measures until he had brought
|
|
America to his feet, and to intimate to his Lordship, that were she
|
|
brought to his feet, it would be dangerous treading on her. -- But, I
|
|
am positive he has guessed wrong, for I am sure the Congress would
|
|
not condescend, at this time of day, to take the least notice of his
|
|
Lordship in that or any other way. -- In which opinion, I am
|
|
determined to remain your humble servant, AN AMERICAN GUESSER.
|
|
|
|
_The Pennsylvania Journal_, December 27, 1775
|
|
|
|
_What Would Satisfy the Americans?_
|
|
|
|
Doctor Franklin, being in England in the Year 1775 was asked by
|
|
a Nobleman, what would satisfy the Americans? Answered, That it
|
|
might easily be comprised in a few Re's
|
|
|
|
Which he immediately wrote on a piece of Paper Thus,
|
|
|
|
Re
|
|
call your Forces,
|
|
store Castle William,
|
|
pair the Damage done to Boston,
|
|
peal your unconstitutional Acts,
|
|
nounce your pretentions to Tax us,
|
|
fund the duties you have extorted; after this
|
|
quire, and
|
|
ceive payment for the destroyed Tea, with the voluntary
|
|
grants of the Colonies, And then
|
|
joice in a happy
|
|
conciliation.
|
|
|
|
1775
|
|
|
|
LETTERS
|
|
|
|
REASONS AGAINST SATIRIZING RELIGION
|
|
|
|
_To_ --------
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir I have read your Manuscrit with some Attention. By
|
|
the Arguments it contains against the Doctrine of a particular
|
|
Providence, tho' you allow a general Providence, you strike at the
|
|
Foundation of all Religion: For without the Belief of a Providence
|
|
that takes Cognizance of, guards and guides and may favour particular
|
|
Persons, there is no Motive to Worship a Deity, to fear its
|
|
Displeasure, or to pray for its Protection. I will not enter into
|
|
any Discussion of your Principles, tho' you seem to desire it; At
|
|
present I shall only give you my Opinion that tho' your Reasonings
|
|
are subtle, and may prevail with some Readers, you will not succeed
|
|
so as to change the general Sentiments of Mankind on that Subject,
|
|
and the Consequence of printing this Piece will be a great deal of
|
|
Odium drawn upon your self, Mischief to you and no Benefit to others.
|
|
He that spits against the Wind, spits in his own Face. But were you
|
|
to succeed, do you imagine any Good would be done by it? You
|
|
yourself may find it easy to live a virtuous Life without the
|
|
Assistance afforded by Religion; you having a clear Perception of the
|
|
Advantages of Virtue and the Disadvantages of Vice, and possessing a
|
|
Strength of Resolution sufficient to enable you to resist common
|
|
Temptations. But think how great a Proportion of Mankind consists of
|
|
weak and ignorant Men and Women, and of inexperienc'd and
|
|
inconsiderate Youth of both Sexes, who have need of the Motives of
|
|
Religion to restrain them from Vice, to support their Virtue, and
|
|
retain them in the Practice of it till it becomes _habitual_, which
|
|
is the great Point for its Security; And perhaps you are indebted to
|
|
her originally that is to your Religious Education, for the Habits of
|
|
Virtue upon which you now justly value yourself. You might easily
|
|
display your excellent Talents of reasoning on a less hazardous
|
|
Subject, and thereby obtain Rank with our most distinguish'd Authors.
|
|
For among us, it is not necessary, as among the Hottentots that a
|
|
Youth to be receiv'd into the Company of Men, should prove his
|
|
Manhood by beating his Mother. I would advise you therefore not to
|
|
attempt unchaining the Tyger, but to burn this Piece before it is
|
|
seen by any other Person, whereby you will save yourself a great deal
|
|
of Mortification from the Enemies it may raise against you, and
|
|
perhaps a good deal of Regret and Repentance. If Men are so wicked
|
|
as we now see them _with Religion_ what would they be if _without
|
|
it_? I intend this Letter itself as a _Proof_ of my Friendship and
|
|
therefore add no _Professions_ of it, but subscribe simply Yours
|
|
|
|
December 13, 1757
|
|
|
|
ELECTRIC SHOCKS IN PARALYTIC CASES
|
|
|
|
_To John Pringle_
|
|
|
|
Sir Dec. 21. 1757
|
|
|
|
The following is what I can at present recollect, relating to
|
|
the Effects of Electricity in Paralytic Cases, which have fallen
|
|
under my Observation.
|
|
|
|
Some Years since, when the News papers made Mention of great
|
|
Cures perform'd in Italy or Germany by means of Electricity, a Number
|
|
of Paralytics were brought to me from different Parts of Pensilvania
|
|
and the neighbouring Provinces, to be electris'd, which I did for
|
|
them, at their Request. My Method was, to place the Patient first in
|
|
a Chair on an electric Stool, and draw a Number of large strong
|
|
Sparks from all Parts of the affected Limb or Side. Then I fully
|
|
charg'd two 6 Gallon Glass Jarrs, each of which had about 3 square
|
|
feet of Surface coated and I sent the united Shock of these thro' the
|
|
affected Limb or Limbs, repeating the Stroke commonly three Times
|
|
each Day. The first Thing observ'd was an immediate greater sensible
|
|
Warmth in the lame Limbs that had receiv'd the Stroke than in the
|
|
others; and the next Morning the Patients usually related that they
|
|
had in the Night felt a pricking Sensation in the Flesh of the
|
|
paralytic Limbs, and would sometimes shew a Number of small red Spots
|
|
which they suppos'd were occasion'd by those Prickings: The Limbs too
|
|
were found more capable of voluntary Motion, and seem'd to receive
|
|
Strength; a Man, for Instance, who could not, the first Day, lift the
|
|
lame Hand from off his Knee, would the next Day raise it four or five
|
|
Inches, the third Day higher, and on the fifth Day was able, but with
|
|
a feeble languid Motion, to take off his Hat. These Appearances gave
|
|
great Spirits to the Patients, and made them hope a perfect Cure; but
|
|
I do not remember that I ever saw any Amendment after the fifth Day:
|
|
Which the Patients perceiving, and finding the Shocks pretty severe,
|
|
they became discourag'd, went home and in a short time relapsed; so
|
|
that I never knew any Advantage from Electricity in Palsies that was
|
|
permanent. And how far the apparent temporary Advantage might arise
|
|
from the Exercise in the Patients Journey and coming daily to my
|
|
House, or from the Spirits given by the Hope of Success, enabling
|
|
them to exert more Strength in moving their Limbs, I will not pretend
|
|
to say.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps some permanent Advantage might have been obtained, if
|
|
the Electric Shocks had been accompanied with proper Medicine and
|
|
Regimen, under the Direction of a skilful Physician. It may be, too,
|
|
that a few great Strokes, as given in my Method, may not be so proper
|
|
as many small ones; since by the Account from Scotland of the Case in
|
|
which 200 Shocks from a Phial were given daily, seems that a perfect
|
|
Cure has been made. As to any uncommon Strength supposed to be in
|
|
the Machine used in that Case, I imagine it could have no Share in
|
|
the Effect produced; since the Strength of the Shock from charg'd
|
|
Glass, is in proportion to the Quantity of Surface of the Glass
|
|
coated; so that my Shocks from those large Jarrs must have been much
|
|
greater than any that could be received from a Phial held in the
|
|
hand.
|
|
|
|
I am, with great Respect, Sir, Your most obedient Servant
|
|
|
|
"STRATA OF THE EARTH"
|
|
|
|
_To John Pringle_
|
|
|
|
_SIR,_ _Craven-street, Jan._ 6, 1758.
|
|
|
|
I return Mr. _Mitchell_'s paper on the strata of the earth
|
|
with thanks. The reading of it, and perusal of the draft that
|
|
accompanies it, have reconciled me to those convulsions which all
|
|
naturalists agree this globe has suffered. Had the different strata
|
|
of clay, gravel, marble, coals, lime-stone, sand, minerals, _&c_.
|
|
continued to lie level, one under the other, as they may be supposed
|
|
to have done before those convulsions, we should have had the use
|
|
only of a few of the uppermost of the strata, the others lying too
|
|
deep and too difficult to be come at; but the shell of the earth
|
|
being broke, and the fragments thrown into this oblique position, the
|
|
disjointed ends of a great number of strata of different kinds are
|
|
brought up to day, and a great variety of useful materials put into
|
|
our power, which would otherwise have remained eternally concealed
|
|
from us. So that what has been usually looked upon as a _ruin_
|
|
suffered by this part of the universe, was, in reality, only a
|
|
preparation, or means of rendering the earth more fit for use, more
|
|
capable of being to mankind a convenient and comfortable habitation.
|
|
_I am, Sir, with great esteem, yours,_ &c.
|
|
|
|
COOLING BY EVAPORATION
|
|
|
|
_To John Lining_
|
|
|
|
_Dear Sir,_ _London, June_ 17, 1758.
|
|
|
|
In a former letter I mentioned the experiment for cooling
|
|
bodies by evaporation, and that I had, by repeatedly wetting the
|
|
thermometer with common spirits, brought the mercury down five or six
|
|
degrees. Being lately at _Cambridge_, and mentioning this in
|
|
conversation with Dr. _Hadley_, professor of chemistry there, he
|
|
proposed repeating the experiments with ether, instead of common
|
|
spirits, as the ether is much quicker in evaporation. We accordingly
|
|
went to his chamber, where he had both ether and a thermometer. By
|
|
dipping first the ball of the thermometer into the ether, it appeared
|
|
that the ether was precisely of the same temperament with the
|
|
thermometer, which stood then at 65; for it made no alteration in the
|
|
height of the little column of mercury. But when the thermometer was
|
|
taken out of the ether, and the ether with which the ball was wet,
|
|
began to evaporate, the mercury sunk several degrees. The wetting
|
|
was then repeated by a feather that had been dipped into the ether,
|
|
when the mercury sunk still lower. We continued this operation, one
|
|
of us wetting the ball, and another of the company blowing on it with
|
|
the bellows, to quicken the evaporation, the mercury sinking all the
|
|
time, till it came down to 7, which is 25 degrees below the freezing
|
|
point, when we left off. -- Soon after it passed the freezing point,
|
|
a thin coat of ice began to cover the ball. Whether this was water
|
|
collected and condensed by the coldness of the ball, from the
|
|
moisture in the air, or from our breath; or whether the feather, when
|
|
dipped into the ether, might not sometimes go through it, and bring
|
|
up some of the water that was under it, I am not certain; perhaps all
|
|
might contribute. The ice continued increasing till we ended the
|
|
experiment, when it appeared near a quarter of an inch thick all over
|
|
the ball, with a number of small spicula, pointing outwards. From
|
|
this experiment one may see the possibility of freezing a man to
|
|
death on a warm summer's day, if he were to stand in a passage thro'
|
|
which the wind blew briskly, and to be wet frequently with ether, a
|
|
spirit that is more inflammable than brandy, or common spirits of
|
|
wine.
|
|
|
|
It is but within these few years, that the _European_
|
|
philosophers seem to have known this power in nature, of cooling
|
|
bodies by evaporation. But in the east they have long been
|
|
acquainted with it. A friend tells me, there is a passage in
|
|
_Bernier_'s travels through _Indostan_, written near one hundred
|
|
years ago, that mentions it as a practice (in travelling over dry
|
|
desarts in that hot climate) to carry water in flasks wrapt in wet
|
|
woollen cloths, and hung on the shady side of the camel, or carriage,
|
|
but in the free air; whereby, as the cloths gradually grow drier, the
|
|
water contained in the flasks is made cool. They have likewise a
|
|
kind of earthen pots, unglaz'd, which let the water gradually and
|
|
slowly ooze through their pores, so as to keep the outside a little
|
|
wet, notwithstanding the continual evaporation, which gives great
|
|
coldness to the vessel, and the water contained in it. Even our
|
|
common sailors seem to have had some notion of this property; for I
|
|
remember, that being at sea, when I was a youth, I observed one of
|
|
the sailors, during a calm in the night, often wetting his finger in
|
|
his mouth, and then holding it up in the air, to discover, as he
|
|
said, if the air had any motion, and from which side it came; and
|
|
this he expected to do, by finding one side of his finger grow
|
|
suddenly cold, and from that side he should look for the next wind;
|
|
which I then laughed at as a fancy.
|
|
|
|
May not several phaenomena, hitherto unconsidered, or
|
|
unaccounted for, be explained by this property? During the hot
|
|
_Sunday_ at _Philadelphia_, in _June_ 1750, when the thermometer was
|
|
up at 100 in the shade, I sat in my chamber without exercise, only
|
|
reading or writing, with no other cloaths on than a shirt, and a pair
|
|
of long linen drawers, the windows all open, and a brisk wind blowing
|
|
through the house, the sweat ran off the backs of my hands, and my
|
|
shirt was often so wet, as to induce me to call for dry ones to put
|
|
on; in this situation, one might have expected, that the natural heat
|
|
of the body 96, added to the heat of the air 100, should jointly have
|
|
created or produced a much greater degree of heat in the body; but
|
|
the fact was, that my body never grew so hot as the air that
|
|
surrounded it, or the inanimate bodies immers'd in the same air. For
|
|
I remember well, that the desk, when I laid my arm upon it; a chair,
|
|
when I sat down in it; and a dry shirt out of the drawer, when I put
|
|
it on, all felt exceeding warm to me, as if they had been warmed
|
|
before a fire. And I suppose a dead body would have acquired the
|
|
temperature of the air, though a living one, by continual sweating,
|
|
and by the evaporation of that sweat, was kept cold. -- May not this
|
|
be a reason why our reapers in _Pensylvania_, working in the open
|
|
field, in the clear hot sunshine common in our harvest-time
|
|
(* 1), find themselves well able to go
|
|
through that labour, without being much incommoded by the heat, while
|
|
they continue to sweat, and while they supply matter for keeping up
|
|
that sweat, by drinking frequently of a thin evaporable liquor, water
|
|
mixed with rum; but if the sweat stops, they drop, and sometimes die
|
|
suddenly, if a sweating is not again brought on by drinking that
|
|
liquor, or, as some rather chuse in that case, a kind of hot punch,
|
|
made with water, mixed with honey, and a considerable proportion of
|
|
vinegar? -- May there not be in negroes a quicker evaporation of the
|
|
perspirable matter from their skins and lungs, which, by cooling them
|
|
more, enables them to bear the sun's heat better than whites do? (if
|
|
that is a fact, as it is said to be; for the alledg'd necessity of
|
|
having negroes rather than whites, to work in the _West-India_
|
|
fields, is founded upon it) though the colour of their skins would
|
|
otherwise make them more sensible of the sun's heat, since black
|
|
cloth heats much sooner, and more, in the sun, than white cloth. I
|
|
am persuaded, from several instances happening within my knowledge,
|
|
that they do not bear cold weather so well as the whites; they will
|
|
perish when exposed to a less degree of it, and are more apt to have
|
|
their limbs frost-bitten; and may not this be from the same cause?
|
|
Would not the earth grow much hotter under the summer sun, if a
|
|
constant evaporation from its surface, greater as the sun shines
|
|
stronger, did not, by tending to cool it, balance, in some degree,
|
|
the warmer effects of the sun's rays? -- Is it not owing to the
|
|
constant evaporation from the surface of every leaf, that trees,
|
|
though shone on by the sun, are always, even the leaves themselves,
|
|
cool to our sense? at least much cooler than they would otherwise be?
|
|
-- May it not be owing to this, that fanning ourselves when warm,
|
|
does really cool us, though the air is itself warm that we drive with
|
|
the fan upon our faces; for the atmosphere round, and next to our
|
|
bodies, having imbibed as much of the perspired vapour as it can well
|
|
contain, receives no more, and the evaporation is therefore check'd
|
|
and retarded, till we drive away that atmosphere, and bring dryer air
|
|
in its place, that will receive the vapour, and thereby facilitate
|
|
and increase the evaporation? Certain it is, that mere blowing of
|
|
air on a dry body does not cool it, as any one may satisfy himself,
|
|
by blowing with a bellows on the dry ball of a thermometer; the
|
|
mercury will not fall; if it moves at all, it rather rises, as being
|
|
warmed by the friction of the air on its surface? -- To these queries
|
|
of imagination, I will only add one practical observation; that
|
|
wherever it is thought proper to give ease, in cases of painful
|
|
inflammation in the flesh, (as from burnings, or the like) by cooling
|
|
the part; linen cloths, wet with spirit, and applied to the part
|
|
inflamed, will produce the coolness required, better than if wet with
|
|
water, and will continue it longer. For water, though cold when
|
|
first applied, will soon acquire warmth from the flesh, as it does
|
|
not evaporate fast enough; but the cloths wet with spirit, will
|
|
continue cold as long as any spirit is left to keep up the
|
|
evaporation, the parts warmed escaping as soon as they are warmed,
|
|
and carrying off the heat with them.
|
|
|
|
_I am, Sir,_ &c.
|
|
|
|
(* 1) _Pensylvania_ is in about lat. 40, and the sun, of course,
|
|
about 12 degrees higher, and therefore much hotter than in _England_.
|
|
Their harvest is about the end of _June_, or beginning of _July_,
|
|
when the sun is nearly at the highest.
|
|
|
|
FAITH, HOPE, AND CHARITY
|
|
|
|
_To Jane Mecom_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sister London Sept 16 1758
|
|
|
|
I received your Favour of June 17. I wonder you have had no
|
|
Letter from me since my being in England. I have wrote you at least
|
|
two and I think a third before this; And, what was next to waiting on
|
|
you in Person, sent you my Picture. In June last I sent Benny a
|
|
Trunk of Books and wrote to him. I hope they are come to hand, and
|
|
that he meets with Incouragement in his Business. I congratulate you
|
|
on the Conquest of Cape Breton, and hope as your People took it by
|
|
Praying the first Time, you will now pray that it may never be given
|
|
up again, which you then forgot. Billy is well but in the Country.
|
|
I left him at Tunbridge Wells, where we spent a fortnight, and he is
|
|
now gone with some Company to see Portsmouth.
|
|
|
|
We have been together over a great part of England this Summer;
|
|
and among other places visited the Town our Father was born in and
|
|
found some Relations in that part of the Country Still living. Our
|
|
Cousin Jane Franklin, daughter of our Unkle John, died but about a
|
|
Year ago. We saw her Husband Robert Page, who gave us some old
|
|
Letters to his Wife from unkle Benjamin. In one of them, dated
|
|
Boston July 4. 1723 he writes "Your Unkle Josiah has a Daughter Jane
|
|
about 12 years Old, a good humour'd Child" So Jenny keep up your
|
|
Character, and don't be angry when you have no Letters.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In a little Book he sent her, call'd _None but Christ_, he
|
|
wrote an Acrostick on her Name, which for Namesakes' Sake, as well as
|
|
the good Advice it contains, I transcribe and send you
|
|
|
|
Illuminated from on High,
|
|
And shining brightly in your Sphere
|
|
Nere faint, but keep a steady Eye
|
|
Expecting endless Pleasures there
|
|
Flee Vice, as you'd a Serpent flee,
|
|
Raise Faith and Hope three Stories higher
|
|
And let Christ's endless Love to thee
|
|
N-ere cease to make thy Love Aspire.
|
|
Kindness of Heart by Words express
|
|
Let your Obedience be sincere,
|
|
In Prayer and Praise your God Address
|
|
Nere cease 'till he can cease to hear.
|
|
|
|
After professing truly that I have a great Esteem and
|
|
Veneration for the pious Author, permit me a little to play the
|
|
Commentator and Critic on these Lines. The Meaning of _Three
|
|
Stories_ higher seems somewhat obscure, you are to understand, then,
|
|
that _Faith, Hope_ and _Charity_ have been called the three Steps of
|
|
Jacob's Ladder, reaching from Earth to Heaven. Our Author calls them
|
|
_Stories_, likening Religion to a Building, and those the three
|
|
Stories of the Christian Edifice; Thus Improvement in Religion, is
|
|
called _Building Up_, and _Edification_. _Faith_ is then the
|
|
Ground-floor, _Hope_ is up one Pair of Stairs. My dearly beloved
|
|
Jenny, don't delight so much to dwell in these lower Rooms, but get
|
|
as fast as you can into the Garret; for in truth the best Room in the
|
|
House is _Charity_. For my part, I wish the House was turn'd upside
|
|
down; 'tis so difficult (when one is fat) to get up Stairs; and not
|
|
only so, but I imagine _Hope_ and _Faith_ may be more firmly built on
|
|
_Charity_, than _Charity_ upon _Faith_ and _Hope_. However that be,
|
|
I think it a better reading to say
|
|
|
|
Raise Faith and Hope _one Story_ higher
|
|
|
|
correct it boldly and I'll support the Alteration. For when you are
|
|
up two Stories already, if you raise your Building three Stories
|
|
higher, you will make five in all, which is two more than there
|
|
should be, you expose your upper Rooms more to the Winds and Storms,
|
|
and besides I am afraid the Foundation will hardly bear them, unless
|
|
indeed you build with such light Stuff as Straw and Stubble, and that
|
|
you know won't stand Fire.
|
|
|
|
Again where the Author Says
|
|
|
|
Kindness of Heart by Words express,
|
|
|
|
Stricke out _Words_ and put in _Deeds_. The world is too full of
|
|
Compliments already; they are the rank Growth of every Soil, and
|
|
Choak the good Plants of Benevolence and Benificence, Nor do I
|
|
pretend to be the first in this comparison of Words and Actions to
|
|
Plants; you may remember an Ancient Poet whose Words we have all
|
|
Studied and Copy'd at School, said long ago,
|
|
|
|
A Man of Words and not of Deeds,
|
|
Is like a Garden full of Weeds.
|
|
|
|
'Tis pity that _Good Works_ among some sorts of People are so little
|
|
Valued, and _Good Words_ admired in their Stead; I mean seemingly
|
|
_pious Discourses_ instead of _Humane Benevolent Actions_. These
|
|
they almost put out of countenance, by calling Morality _rotten
|
|
Morality_, Righteousness, _ragged Righteousness_ and even _filthy
|
|
Rags_; and when you mention _Virtue_, they pucker up their Noses as
|
|
if they smelt a Stink; at the same time that they eagerly snuff up an
|
|
empty canting Harangue, as if it was a Posie of the Choicest Flowers.
|
|
So they have inverted the good old Verse, and say now
|
|
|
|
A Man of Deeds and not of Words
|
|
Is like a Garden full of ------
|
|
|
|
I have forgot the Rhime, but remember 'tis something the very Reverse
|
|
of a Perfume. So much by Way of Commentary.
|
|
|
|
My Wife will let you see my Letter containing an Account of our
|
|
Travels, which I would have you read to Sister Douse, and give my
|
|
Love to her. I have no thoughts of returning 'till next year, and
|
|
then may possibly have the Pleasure of seeing you and yours, take
|
|
Boston in my Way home. My Love to Brother and all your Children,
|
|
concludes at this time from Dear Jenny your affectionate Brother
|
|
|
|
"HAPPINESS IN THIS LIFE"
|
|
|
|
_To Hugh Roberts_
|
|
|
|
Dear Friend, London, Sept. 16. 1758
|
|
|
|
Your kind Letter of June 1. gave me great Pleasure. I thank
|
|
you for the Concern you express about my Health, which at present
|
|
seems tolerably confirm'd by my late Journeys into different Parts of
|
|
the Kingdom, that have been highly entertaining as well as useful to
|
|
me. Your Visits to my little Family in my Absence are very obliging,
|
|
and I hope you will be so good as to continue them. Your Remark on
|
|
the Thistle and the Scotch Motto, made us very merry, as well as your
|
|
String of Puns. You will allow me to claim a little Merit or Demerit
|
|
in the last, as having had some hand in making you a Punster; but the
|
|
Wit of the first is keen, and all your own.
|
|
|
|
Two of the former Members of the Junto you tell me are departed
|
|
this Life, Potts and Parsons. Odd Characters, both of them.
|
|
Parsons, a wise Man, that often acted foolishly. Potts, a Wit, that
|
|
seldom acted wisely. If _Enough_ were the Means to make a Man happy,
|
|
One had always the _Means_ of Happiness without ever enjoying the
|
|
_Thing_; the other had always the _Thing_ without ever possessing the
|
|
Means. Parsons, even in his Prosperity, always fretting! Potts, in
|
|
the midst of his Poverty, ever laughing! It seems, then, that
|
|
Happiness in this Life rather depends on Internals than Externals;
|
|
and that, besides the natural Effects of Wisdom and Virtue, Vice and
|
|
Folly, there is such a Thing as being of a happy or an unhappy
|
|
Constitution. They were both our Friends, and lov'd us. So, Peace
|
|
to their Shades. They had their Virtues as well as their Foibles;
|
|
they were both honest Men, and that alone, as the World goes, is one
|
|
of the greatest of Characters. They were old Acquaintance, in whose
|
|
Company I formerly enjoy'd a great deal of Pleasure, and I cannot
|
|
think of losing them, without Concern and Regret.
|
|
|
|
Let me know in your next, to what Purposes Parsons will'd his
|
|
Estate from his Family; you hint at something which you have not
|
|
explain'd.
|
|
|
|
I shall, as you suppose, look on every Opportunity you give me
|
|
of doing you Service, as a Favour, because it will afford me
|
|
Pleasure. Therefore send your Orders for buying Books as soon as you
|
|
please. I know how to make you ample Returns for such Favours, by
|
|
giving you the Pleasure of Building me a House. You may do it
|
|
without losing any of your own Time; it will only take some Part of
|
|
that you now spend in other Folks Business. 'Tis only jumping out of
|
|
their Waters into mine.
|
|
|
|
I am grieved for our Friend Syng's Loss. You and I, who esteem
|
|
him, and have valuable Sons ourselves, can sympathise with him
|
|
sincerely. I hope yours is perfectly recovered, for your sake as
|
|
well as for his own. I wish he may be in every Respect as good and
|
|
as useful a Man as his Father. I need not wish him more; and can now
|
|
only add that I am, with great Esteem, Dear Friend, Yours
|
|
affectionately
|
|
|
|
P.S. I rejoice to hear of the Prosperity of the Hospital, and
|
|
send the Wafers.
|
|
|
|
I do not quite like your absenting yourself from that good old
|
|
Club the Junto: Your more frequent PRE SENCE might be a means of
|
|
keeping them from being ALL ENgag'd in Measures not the best for the
|
|
Publick Welfare. I exhort you therefore to return to your Duty; and,
|
|
as the Indians say, to confirm my Words, I send you a Birmingham
|
|
Tile.
|
|
|
|
I thought the neatness of the Figures would please you.
|
|
|
|
Pray send me a good Impression of the Hospital Seal in Wax. 2
|
|
or three would not be amiss, I may make a good Use of them.
|
|
|
|
"CONVERSATION WARMS THE MIND"
|
|
|
|
_To Lord Kames_
|
|
|
|
My dear Lord, London, Jany. 3. 1760
|
|
|
|
I ought long before this time to have acknowledg'd the Receipt
|
|
of your Favour of Nov. 2. Your Lordship was pleas'd kindly to desire
|
|
to have all my Publications. I had daily Expectations of procuring
|
|
some of them from a Friend to whom I formerly sent them when I was in
|
|
America, and postpon'd Writing till I should obtain them; but at
|
|
length he tells me he cannot find them. Very mortifying, this, to an
|
|
Author, that his Works should so soon be lost! So I can now only
|
|
send you my _Observations on the Peopling of Countries_, which
|
|
happens to have been reprinted here; The _Description of the
|
|
Pennsylvanian Fireplace_, a Machine of my contriving; and some little
|
|
Sketches that have been printed in the Grand Magazine; which I should
|
|
hardly own, did not I flatter myself that your friendly Partiality
|
|
would make them seem at least tolerable.
|
|
|
|
How unfortunate I was, that I did not press you and Lady Kames
|
|
more strongly, to favour us with your Company farther! How much more
|
|
agreable would our Journey have been, if we could have enjoy'd you as
|
|
far as York! Mr. Blake, who we hop'd would have handed us along from
|
|
Friend to Friend, was not at home, and so we knew nobody and
|
|
convers'd with nobody on all that long Road, till we came thither.
|
|
The being a Means of contributing in the least Degree to the
|
|
restoring that good Lady's Health, would have contributed greatly to
|
|
our Pleasures, and we could have beguil'd the Way by Discoursing 1000
|
|
Things that now we may never have an Opportunity of considering
|
|
together; for Conversation warms the Mind, enlivens the Imagination,
|
|
and is continually starting fresh Game that is immediately pursu'd
|
|
and taken and which would never have occur'd in the duller
|
|
Intercourse of Epistolary Correspondence. So that whenever I reflect
|
|
on the great Pleasure and Advantage I receiv'd from the free
|
|
Communication of Sentiments in the Conversation your Lordship
|
|
honour'd me with at Kaims, and in the little agreable Rides to the
|
|
Tweedside, I shall forever regret that unlucky premature Parting.
|
|
|
|
No one can rejoice more sincerely than I do on the Reduction of
|
|
Canada; and this, not merely as I am a Colonist, but as I am a
|
|
Briton. I have long been of Opinion, that the Foundations of the
|
|
future Grandeur and Stability of the British Empire, lie in America;
|
|
and tho', like other Foundations, they are low and little seen, they
|
|
are nevertheless, broad and Strong enough to support the greatest
|
|
Political Structure Human Wisdom ever yet erected. I am therefore by
|
|
no means for restoring Canada. If we keep it, all the Country from
|
|
St. Laurence to Missisipi, will in another Century be fill'd with
|
|
British People; Britain itself will become vastly more populous by
|
|
the immense Increase of its Commerce; the Atlantic Sea will be
|
|
cover'd with your Trading Ships; and your naval Power thence
|
|
continually increasing, will extend your Influence round the whole
|
|
Globe, and awe the World! If the French remain in Canada, they will
|
|
continually harass our Colonies by the Indians, impede if not prevent
|
|
their Growth; your Progress to Greatness will at best be slow, and
|
|
give room for many Accidents that may for ever prevent it. But I
|
|
refrain, for I see you begin to think my Notions extravagant, and
|
|
look upon them as the Ravings of a mad Prophet.
|
|
|
|
Your Lordship's kind Offer of Penn's Picture is extreamly
|
|
obliging. But were it certainly his Picture, it would be too
|
|
valuable a Curiosity for me to think of accepting it. I should only
|
|
desire the Favour of Leave to take a Copy of it. I could wish to
|
|
know the History of the Picture before it came into your Hands, and
|
|
the Grounds for supposing it his. I have at present some Doubts
|
|
about it; first, because the primitive Quakers us'd to declare
|
|
against Pictures as a vain Expence; a Man's suffering his Portrait to
|
|
be taken was condemn'd as Pride; and I think to this day it is very
|
|
little practis'd among them. Then it is on a Board, and I imagine
|
|
the Practice of painting Portraits on Boards did not come down so low
|
|
as Penn's Time; but of this I am not certain. My other Reason is an
|
|
Anecdote I have heard, viz. That when old Lord Cobham was adorning
|
|
his Gardens at Stowe with the Busts of famous Men, he made Enquiry of
|
|
the Family for a Picture of Wm. Penn, in order to get a Bust form'd
|
|
from it, but could find none. That Sylvanus Bevan, an old Quaker
|
|
Apothecary, remarkable for the Notice he takes of Countenances, and a
|
|
Knack he has of cutting in Ivory strong Likenesses of Persons he has
|
|
once seen, hearing of Lord Cobham's Desire, set himself to recollect
|
|
Penn's Face, with which he had been well acquainted; and cut a little
|
|
Bust of him in Ivory which he sent to Lord Cobham, without any Letter
|
|
of Notice that it was Penn's. But my Lord who had personally known
|
|
Penn, on seeing it, immediately cry'd out, Whence came this? It is
|
|
William Penn himself! And from this little Bust, they say, the large
|
|
one in the Gardens was formed. I doubt, too, whether the Whisker was
|
|
not quite out of Use at the time when Penn must have been of the Age
|
|
appearing in the Face of that Picture. And yet notwithstanding these
|
|
Reasons, I am not without some Hope that it may be his; because I
|
|
know some eminent Quakers have had their Pictures privately drawn,
|
|
and deposited with trusty Friends; and I know also that there is
|
|
extant at Philadelphia a very good Picture of Mrs. Penn, his last
|
|
Wife. After all, I own I have a strong Desire to be satisfy'd
|
|
concerning this Picture; and as Bevan is yet living here, and some
|
|
other old Quakers that remember William Penn, who died but in 1718, I
|
|
could wish to have it sent me carefully pack'd in a Box by the Waggon
|
|
(for I would not trust it by Sea) that I may obtain their Opinion,
|
|
The Charges I shall very chearfully pay; and if it proves to be
|
|
Penn's Picture, I shall be greatly oblig'd to your Lordship for Leave
|
|
to take a Copy of it, and will carefully return the Original.
|
|
|
|
My Son joins with me in the most respectful Compliments to you,
|
|
to Lady Kaims, and your promising and amiable Son and Daughter. He
|
|
had the Pleasure of conversing more particularly with the latter than
|
|
I did, and told me, when we were by our selves, that he was greatly
|
|
surprized to find so much sensible Observation and solid
|
|
Understanding in so young a Person; and suppos'd you must have us'd
|
|
with your Children some uncommonly good Method of Education, to
|
|
produce such Fruits so early. Our Conversation till we came to York
|
|
was chiefly a Recollection and Recapitulation of what we had seen and
|
|
heard, the Pleasure we had enjoy'd and the Kindnesses we had receiv'd
|
|
in Scotland, and how far that Country had exceeded our Expectations.
|
|
On the whole, I must say, I think the Time we spent there, was Six
|
|
Weeks of the _densest_ Happiness I have met with in any Part of my
|
|
Life. And the agreable and instructive Society we found there in
|
|
such Plenty, has left so pleasing an Impression on my Memory, that
|
|
did not strong Connections draw me elsewhere, I believe Scotland
|
|
would be the Country I should chuse to spend the Remainder of my Days
|
|
in.
|
|
|
|
I have the Honour to be, with the sincerest Esteem and
|
|
Affection, My Lord, Your Lordship's most obedient and most humble
|
|
Servant
|
|
|
|
PS. My Son puts me in mind that a Book published here last
|
|
Winter, contains a number of Pieces wrote by me as a Member of the
|
|
Assembly, in our late Controversies with the Proprietary Governors;
|
|
so I shall leave one of them at Millar's to be sent to you, it being
|
|
too bulky to be sent per Post.
|
|
|
|
"THE MORE THEY ARE RESPECTED"
|
|
|
|
_To Jane Mecom_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sister, London, Jan. 9. 1760 I received a Letter or two
|
|
from you, in which I perceive you have misunderstood and taken
|
|
unkindly something I said to you in a former jocular one of mine
|
|
concerning CHARITY. I forget what it was exactly, but I am sure I
|
|
neither express nor meant any personal Censure on you or any body.
|
|
If anything, it was a general Reflection on our Sect; we zealous
|
|
Presbyterians being too apt to think ourselves alone in the right,
|
|
and that besides all the Heathens, Mahometans and Papists, whom we
|
|
give to Satan in a Lump, other Sects of Christian Protestants that do
|
|
not agree with us, will hardly escape Perdition. And I might
|
|
recommend it to you to be more charitable in that respect than many
|
|
others are; not aiming at any Reproof, as you term it; for if I were
|
|
dispos'd to reprove you, it should be for your only Fault, that of
|
|
supposing and spying Affronts, and catching at them where they are
|
|
not. But as you seem sensible of this yourself, I need not mention
|
|
it; and as it is a Fault that carries with it its own sufficient
|
|
Punishment, by the Uneasiness and Fretting it produces, I shall not
|
|
add Weight to it. Besides, I am sure your own good Sense, join'd to
|
|
your natural good Humour will in time get the better of it.
|
|
|
|
I am glad that Cousin Benny could advance you the Legacy, since
|
|
it suited you best to receive it immediately. Your Resolution to
|
|
forbear buying the Cloak you wanted, was a prudent one; but when I
|
|
read it, I concluded you should not however be without one, and so
|
|
desired a Friend to buy one for you. The Cloth ones, it seems, are
|
|
quite out of Fashion here, and so will probably soon be out with you;
|
|
I have therefore got you a very decent one of another kind, which I
|
|
shall send you by the next convenient Opportunity.
|
|
|
|
It is remarkable that so many Breaches should be made by Death
|
|
in our Family in so short a Space. Out of Seventeen Children that
|
|
our Father had, thirteen liv'd to grow up and settle in the World. I
|
|
remember these thirteen (some of us then very young) all at one
|
|
Table, when an Entertainment was made in our House on Occasion of the
|
|
Return of our Brother Josiah, who had been absent in the East-Indies,
|
|
and unheard of for nine Years. Of these thirteen, there now remains
|
|
but three. As our Number diminishes, let our Affection to each other
|
|
rather increase: for besides its being our Duty, tis our Interest,
|
|
since the more affectionate Relations are to one another, the more
|
|
they are respected by the rest of the World.
|
|
|
|
My Love to Brother Mecom and your Children. I shall hardly
|
|
have time to write to Benny by this Conveyance. Acquaint him that I
|
|
received his Letter of Sept. 10, and am glad to hear he is in so
|
|
prosperous a Way, as not to regret his leaving Antigua. I am, my
|
|
dear Sister, Your ever affectionate Brother
|
|
|
|
March 26. The above was wrote at the time it is dated; but on
|
|
reading it over, I apprehended that something I had said in it about
|
|
Presbyterians, and Affronts, might possibly give more Offence; and so
|
|
I threw it by, concluding not to send it. However, Mr. Bailey
|
|
calling on me, and having no other Letter ready nor time at present
|
|
to write one, I venture to send it, and beg you will excuse what you
|
|
find amiss in it. I send also by Mr. Bailey the Cloak mention'd in
|
|
it, and also a Piece of Linnen, which I beg you to accept of from
|
|
Your loving Brother
|
|
|
|
I received your Letter, and Benny's and Peter's by Mr. Baily,
|
|
which I shall answer per next Opportunity.
|
|
|
|
"THE ART OF VIRTUE"
|
|
|
|
_To Lord Kames_
|
|
|
|
My dear Lord, London, May 3. 1760.
|
|
|
|
Your obliging Favour of January 24th. found me greatly
|
|
indispos'd with an obstinate Cold and Cough accompany'd with Feverish
|
|
Complaints and Headachs, that lasted long and harass'd me greatly,
|
|
not being subdu'd at length but by the whole Round of Cupping,
|
|
Bleeding, Blistering, &c. When I had any Intervals of Ease and
|
|
Clearness, I endeavour'd to comply with your Request, in writing
|
|
something on the present Situation of our Affairs in America, in
|
|
order to give more correct Notions of the British Interest with
|
|
regard to the Colonies, than those I found many sensible Men
|
|
possess'd of. Inclos'd you have the Production, such as it is. I
|
|
wish it may in any Degree be of Service to the Publick. I shall at
|
|
least hope this from it for my own Part, that you will consider it as
|
|
a Letter from me to you, and accept its Length as some Excuse for its
|
|
being so long acoming.
|
|
|
|
I am now reading, with great Pleasure and Improvement, your
|
|
excellent Work, the Principles of Equity. It will be of the greatest
|
|
Advantage to the Judges in our Colonies, not only in those which have
|
|
Courts of Chancery, but also in those which having no such Courts are
|
|
obliged to mix Equity with the Common Law. It will be of the more
|
|
Service to the Colony Judges, as few of them have been bred to the
|
|
Law. I have sent a Book to a particular Friend, one of the Judges of
|
|
the Supreme Court in Pensilvania.
|
|
|
|
I will shortly send you a Copy of the Chapter you are pleas'd
|
|
to mention in so obliging a Manner; and shall be extreamly oblig'd in
|
|
receiving a Copy of the Collection of Maxims for the Conduct of Life,
|
|
which you are preparing for the Use of your Children. I purpose,
|
|
likewise, a little Work for the Benefit of Youth, to be call'd _The
|
|
Art of Virtue_. From the Title I think you will hardly conjecture
|
|
what the Nature of such a Book may be. I must therefore explain it a
|
|
little. Many People lead bad lives that would gladly lead good ones,
|
|
but know not _how_ to make the Change. They have frequently
|
|
_resolv'd_ and _endeavour'd_ it; but in vain, because their
|
|
Endeavours have not been properly conducted. To exhort People to be
|
|
good, to be just, to be temperate, &c. without _shewing_ them _how_
|
|
they shall _become_ so, seems like the ineffectual Charity mention'd
|
|
by the Apostle, which consisted in saying to the Hungry, the Cold,
|
|
and the Naked, _be ye fed, be ye warmed, be ye clothed_, without
|
|
shewing them how they should get Food, Fire or Clothing. Most People
|
|
have naturally _some_ Virtues, but none have naturally _all_ the
|
|
Virtues. To _acquire_ those that are wanting, and _secure_ what we
|
|
acquire as well as those we have naturally, is the Subject of _an
|
|
Art_. It is as properly an Art, as Painting, Navigation, or
|
|
Architecture. If a Man would become a Painter, Navigator, or
|
|
Architect, it is not enough that he is _advised_ to be one, that he
|
|
is _convinc'd_ by the Arguments of his Adviser that it would be for
|
|
his Advantage to be one, and that he _resolves_ to be one, but he
|
|
must also be taught the Principles of the Art, be shewn all the
|
|
Methods of Working, and how to acquire the _Habits_ of using properly
|
|
all the Instruments; and thus regularly and gradually he arrives by
|
|
Practice at some Perfection in the Art. If he does not proceed thus,
|
|
he is apt to meet with Difficulties that discourage him, and make him
|
|
drop the Pursuit. My _Art of Virtue_ has also its Instruments, and
|
|
teaches the Manner of Using them. Christians are directed to have
|
|
_Faith in Christ_, as the effectual Means of obtaining the Change
|
|
they desire. It may, when sufficiently strong, be effectual with
|
|
many. A full Opinion that a Teacher is infinitely wise, good, and
|
|
powerful, and that he will certainly reward and punish the Obedient
|
|
and Disobedient, must give great Weight to his Precepts, and make
|
|
them much more attended to by his Disciples. But all Men cannot have
|
|
Faith in Christ; and many have it in so weak a Degree, that it does
|
|
not produce the Effect. Our _Art of Virtue_ may therefore be of
|
|
great Service to those who have not Faith, and come in Aid of the
|
|
weak Faith of others. Such as are naturally well-disposed, and have
|
|
been carefully educated, so that good Habits have been early
|
|
established, and bad ones prevented, have less Need of this Art; but
|
|
all may be more or less benefited by it. It is, in short, to be
|
|
adapted for universal Use. I imagine what I have now been writing
|
|
will seem to savour of great Presumption; I must therefore speedily
|
|
finish my little Piece, and communicate the Manuscript to you, that
|
|
you may judge whether it is possible to make good such Pretensions.
|
|
I shall at the same time hope for the Benefit of your Corrections.
|
|
|
|
My respectful Compliments to Lady Kaims and your amiable
|
|
Children, in which my Son joins. With the sincerest Esteem and
|
|
Attachment, I am, My Lord, Your Lordship's most obedient and most
|
|
humble Servant
|
|
|
|
P.S. While I remain in London I shall continue in Craven
|
|
Street, Strand: if you favour me with your Correspondence when I
|
|
return to America, please to direct for me in Philadelphia, and your
|
|
Letters will readily find me tho' sent to any other Part of North
|
|
America.
|
|
|
|
SALT DEPOSITS
|
|
|
|
_To Peter Franklin_
|
|
|
|
_SIR,_ _London, May_ 7, 1760.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * *
|
|
|
|
It has, indeed, as you observe, been the opinion of some very
|
|
great naturalists, that the sea is salt only from the dissolution of
|
|
mineral or rock salt, which its waters happened to meet with. But
|
|
this opinion takes it for granted that all water was originally
|
|
fresh, of which we can have no proof. I own I am inclined to a
|
|
different opinion, and rather think all the water on this globe was
|
|
originally salt, and that the fresh water we find in springs and
|
|
rivers, is the produce of distillation. The sun raises the vapours
|
|
from the sea, which form clouds, and fall in rain upon the land, and
|
|
springs and rivers are formed of that rain. -- As to the rock-salt
|
|
found in mines, I conceive, that instead of communicating its
|
|
saltness to the sea, it is itself drawn from the sea, and that of
|
|
course the sea is now fresher than it was originally. This is only
|
|
another effect of nature's distillery, and might be performed various
|
|
ways.
|
|
|
|
It is evident from the quantities of sea-shells, and the bones
|
|
and teeth of fishes found in high lands, that the sea has formerly
|
|
covered them. Then, either the sea has been higher than it now is,
|
|
and has fallen away from those high lands; or they have been lower
|
|
than they are, and were lifted up out of the water to their present
|
|
height, by some internal mighty force, such as we still feel some
|
|
remains of, when whole continents are moved by earthquakes. In
|
|
either case it may be supposed that large hollows, or valleys among
|
|
hills, might be left filled with sea-water, which evaporating, and
|
|
the fluid part drying away in a course of years, would leave the salt
|
|
covering the bottom; and that salt coming afterwards to be covered
|
|
with earth, from the neighbouring hills, could only be found by
|
|
digging through that earth. Or, as we know from their effects, that
|
|
there are deep fiery caverns under the earth, and even under the sea,
|
|
if at any time the sea leaks into any of them, the fluid parts of the
|
|
water must evaporate from that heat, and pass off through some
|
|
vulcano, while the salt remains, and by degrees, and continual
|
|
accretion, becomes a great mass. Thus the cavern may at length be
|
|
filled, and the volcano connected with it cease burning, as many it
|
|
is said have done; and future miners penetrating such cavern, find
|
|
what we call a salt mine. -- This is a fancy I had on visiting the
|
|
salt-mines at _Northwich_, with my son. I send you a piece of the
|
|
rock-salt which he brought up with him out of the mine. * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
_I am, Sir, &c._
|
|
|
|
"THE KNOWLEDGE OF NATURE"
|
|
|
|
_To Mary Stevenson_
|
|
|
|
Dear Polly, Cravenstreet, June 11. 1760
|
|
|
|
'Tis a very sensible Question you ask, how the Air can affect
|
|
the Barometer, when its Opening appears covered with Wood? If indeed
|
|
it was so closely covered as to admit of no Communication of the
|
|
outward Air to the Surface of the Mercury, the Change of Weight in
|
|
the Air could not possibly affect it. But the least Crevice is
|
|
sufficient for the Purpose; a Pinhole will do the Business. And if
|
|
you could look behind the Frame to which your Barometer is fixed, you
|
|
would certainly find some small Opening.
|
|
|
|
|
|
There are indeed some Barometers in which the Body of Mercury
|
|
at the lower End is contain'd in a close Leather Bag, and so the Air
|
|
cannot come into immediate Contact with the Mercury: Yet the same
|
|
Effect is produc'd. For the Leather being flexible, when the Bag is
|
|
press'd by any additional Weight of Air, it contracts, and the
|
|
Mercury is forc'd up into the Tube; when the Air becomes lighter, and
|
|
its Pressure less, the Weight of the Mercury prevails, and it
|
|
descends again into the Bag.
|
|
|
|
Your Observation on what you have lately read concerning
|
|
Insects, is very just and solid. Superficial Minds are apt to
|
|
despise those who make that Part of Creation their Study, as mere
|
|
Triflers; but certainly the World has been much oblig'd to them.
|
|
Under the Care and Management of Man, the Labours of the little
|
|
Silkworm afford Employment and Subsistence to Thousands of Families,
|
|
and become an immense Article of Commerce. The Bee, too, yields us
|
|
its delicious Honey, and its Wax useful to a multitude of Purposes.
|
|
Another Insect, it is said, produces the Cochineal, from whence we
|
|
have our rich Scarlet Dye. The Usefulness of the Cantharides, or
|
|
Spanish Flies, in Medicine, is known to all, and Thousands owe their
|
|
Lives to that Knowledge. By human Industry and Observation, other
|
|
Properties of other Insects may possibly be hereafter discovered, and
|
|
of equal Utility. A thorough Acquaintance with the Nature of these
|
|
little Creatures, may also enable Mankind to prevent the Increase of
|
|
such as are noxious or secure us against the Mischiefs they occasion.
|
|
These Things doubtless your Books make mention of: I can only add a
|
|
particular late Instance which I had from a Swedish Gentleman of good
|
|
Credit. In the green Timber intended for Ship-building at the King's
|
|
Yards in that Country, a kind of Worms were found, which every Year
|
|
became more numerous and more pernicious, so that the Ships were
|
|
greatly damag'd before they came into Use. The King sent Linnaeus,
|
|
the great Naturalist, from Stockholm, to enquire into the Affair, and
|
|
see if the Mischief was capable of any Remedy. He found on
|
|
Examination, that the Worm was produc'd from a small Egg deposited in
|
|
the little Roughnesses on the Surface of the Wood, by a particular
|
|
kind of Fly or Beetle; from whence the Worm, as soon as it was
|
|
hatch'd, began to eat into the Substance of the Wood, and after some
|
|
time came out again a Fly of the Parent kind, and so the Species
|
|
increas'd. The Season in which this Fly laid its Eggs, Linnaeus knew
|
|
to be about a Fortnight (I think) in the Month of May, and at no
|
|
other time of the Year. He therefore advis'd, that some Days before
|
|
that Season, all the green Timber should be thrown into the Water,
|
|
and kept under Water till the Season was over. Which being done by
|
|
the King's Order, the Flies missing their usual Nests, could not
|
|
increase; and the Species was either destroy'd or went elsewhere; and
|
|
the Wood was effectually preserved, for after the first Year, it
|
|
became too dry and hard for their purpose.
|
|
|
|
There is, however, a prudent Moderation to be used in Studies
|
|
of this kind. The Knowledge of Nature may be ornamental, and it may
|
|
be useful, but if to attain an Eminence in that, we neglect the
|
|
Knowledge and Practice of essential Duties, we deserve Reprehension.
|
|
For there is no Rank in Natural Knowledge of equal Dignity and
|
|
Importance with that of being a good Parent, a good Child, a good
|
|
Husband, or Wife, a good Neighbour or Friend, a good Subject or
|
|
Citizen, that is, in short, a good Christian. Nicholas Gimcrack,
|
|
therefore, who neglected the Care of his Family, to pursue
|
|
Butterflies, was a just Object of Ridicule, and we must give him up
|
|
as fair Game to the Satyrist.
|
|
|
|
Adieu, my dear Friend, and believe me ever Yours affectionately
|
|
|
|
You good Mother is well, and gives her Love and Blessing to
|
|
you. My Compliments to your Aunts, Miss Pitt, &c.
|
|
|
|
TIDES IN RIVERS
|
|
|
|
_To Mary Stevenson_
|
|
|
|
My dear Friend, London, Sept. 13. 1760
|
|
|
|
I have your agreable Letter from Bristol, which I take this
|
|
first Leisure Hour to answer, having for some time been much engag'd
|
|
in Business.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Your first Question, _What is the Reason the Water at this
|
|
Place, tho' cold at the Spring, becomes warm by Pumping?_ it will be
|
|
most prudent in me to forbear attempting to answer, till, by a more
|
|
circumstantial Account, you assure me of the Fact. I own I should
|
|
expect that Operation to warm, not so much the Water pump'd as the
|
|
Person pumping. The Rubbing of dry Solids together, has been long
|
|
observ'd to produce Heat; but the like Effect has never yet, that I
|
|
have heard, been produc'd by the mere Agitation of Fluids, or
|
|
Friction of Fluids with Solids. Water in a Bottle shook for Hours by
|
|
a Mill Hopper, it is said, discover'd no sensible Addition of Heat.
|
|
The Production of Animal Heat by Exercise, is therefore to be
|
|
accounted for in another manner, which I may hereafter endeavour to
|
|
make you acquainted with.
|
|
|
|
This Prudence of not attempting to give Reasons before one is
|
|
sure of Facts, I learnt from one of your Sex, who, as Selden tells
|
|
us, being in company with some Gentlemen that were viewing and
|
|
considering something which they call'd a Chinese Shoe, and disputing
|
|
earnestly about the manner of wearing it, and how it could possibly
|
|
be put on; put in her Word, and said modestly, _Gentlemen, are you
|
|
sure it is a Shoe? Should not that be settled first?_
|
|
|
|
But I shall now endeavour to explain what I said to you about
|
|
the Tide in Rivers, and to that End shall make a Figure, which tho'
|
|
not very like a River, may serve to convey my Meaning. Suppose a
|
|
Canal 140 Miles long communicating at one End with the Sea, and
|
|
fill'd therefore with Sea Water. I chuse a Canal at first, rather
|
|
than a River, to throw out of Consideration the Effects produc'd by
|
|
the Streams of Fresh Water from the Land, the Inequality in Breadth,
|
|
and the (Diagram omitted) Crookedness of Courses. Let A, C, be the
|
|
Head of the Canal, C D the Bottom of it; D F the open Mouth of it
|
|
next the Sea. Let the strait prick'd Line B G represent Low Water
|
|
Mark the whole Length of the Canal, A F High Water Mark: Now if a
|
|
Person standing at E, and observing at the time of High water there
|
|
that the Canal is quite full at that Place up to the Line E, should
|
|
conclude that the Canal is equally full to the same Height from End
|
|
to End, and therefore there was as much more Water come into the
|
|
Canal since it was down at the Low Water Mark, as could be included
|
|
in the oblong Space A. B. G. F. he would be greatly mistaken. For
|
|
the Tide is _a Wave_, and the Top of the Wave, which makes High
|
|
Water, as well as every other lower Part, is progressive; and it is
|
|
High Water successively, but not at the same time, in all the several
|
|
Points between G, F. and A, B. -- and in such a Length as I have
|
|
mention'd it is Low Water at F G and also at A B, at or near the same
|
|
time with its being High Water at E; so that the Surface of the Water
|
|
in the Canal, during that Situation, is properly represented by the
|
|
Curve prick'd Line B E G. And on the other hand, when it is Low
|
|
Water at E H, it is High Water both at F G and at A B at or near the
|
|
same time; and the Surface would then be describ'd by the inverted
|
|
Curve Line A H F.
|
|
|
|
In this View of the Case, you will easily see, that there must
|
|
be very little more Water in the Canal at what we call High Water
|
|
than there is at Low Water, those Terms not relating to the whole
|
|
Canal at the same time, but successively to its Parts. And if you
|
|
suppose the Canal six times as long, the Case would not vary as to
|
|
the Quantity of Water at different times of the Tide; there would
|
|
only be six Waves in the Canal at the same time, instead of one, and
|
|
the Hollows in the Water would be equal to the Hills.
|
|
|
|
That this is not mere Theory, but comformable to Fact, we know
|
|
by our long Rivers in America. The Delaware, on which Philadelphia
|
|
stands, is in this particular similar to the Canal I have supposed of
|
|
one Wave: For when it is High Water at the Capes or Mouth of the
|
|
River, it is also High Water at Philadelphia, which stands about 140
|
|
Miles from the Sea; and there is at the same time a Low Water in the
|
|
Middle between the two High Waters; where, when it comes to be High
|
|
Water, it is at the same time Low Water at the Capes and at
|
|
Philadelphia. And the longer Rivers have, some a Wave and Half, some
|
|
two, three, or four Waves, according to their Length. In the shorter
|
|
Rivers of this Island, one may see the same thing in Part: for
|
|
Instance; it is High Water at Gravesend an Hour before it is High
|
|
Water at London Bridge; and 20 Miles below Gravesend an Hour before
|
|
it is High Water at Gravesend. Therefore at the Time of High Water
|
|
at Gravesend the Top of the Wave is there, and the Water is then not
|
|
so high by some feet where the Top of the Wave was an Hour before, or
|
|
where it will be an Hour after, as it is just then at Gravesend.
|
|
|
|
Now we are not to suppose, that because the Swell or Top of the
|
|
Wave runs at the Rate of 20 Miles an Hour, that therefore the Current
|
|
or Water itself of which the Wave is compos'd, runs at that rate.
|
|
Far from it. To conceive this Motion of a Wave, make a small
|
|
Experiment or two. Fasten one End of a Cord in a Window near the Top
|
|
of a House, and let the other End come down to the Ground; take this
|
|
End in your Hand, and you may, by a sudden Motion occasion a Wave in
|
|
the Cord that will run quite up to the Window; but tho' the Wave is
|
|
progressive from your Hand to the Window, the Parts of the Rope do
|
|
not proceed with the Wave, but remain where they were, except only
|
|
that kind of Motion that produces the Wave. So if you throw a Stone
|
|
into a Pond of Water when the Surface is still and smooth, you will
|
|
see a circular Wave proceed from the Stone as its Center, quite to
|
|
the Sides of the Pond; but the Water does not proceed with the Wave,
|
|
it only rises and falls to form it in the different Parts of its
|
|
Course; and the Waves that follow the first, all make use of the same
|
|
Water with their Predecessors.
|
|
|
|
But a Wave in Water is not indeed in all Circumstances exactly
|
|
like that in a Cord; for Water being a Fluid, and gravitating to the
|
|
Earth, it naturally runs from a higher Place to a lower; therefore
|
|
the Parts of the Wave in Water do actually run a little both ways
|
|
from its Top towards its lower Sides, which the Parts of the Wave in
|
|
the Cord cannot do. Thus when it is high and standing Water at
|
|
Gravesend, the Water 20 Miles below has been running Ebb, or towards
|
|
the Sea for an Hour, or ever since it was High Water there; but the
|
|
Water at London Bridge will run Flood, or from the Sea yet another
|
|
Hour, till it is High Water or the Top of the Wave arrives at that
|
|
Bridge, and then it will have run Ebb an Hour at Gravesend, &c. &c.
|
|
Now this Motion of the Water, occasion'd only by its Gravity, or
|
|
Tendency to run from a higher Place to a lower, is by no means so
|
|
swift as the Motion of the Wave. It scarce exceeds perhaps two Miles
|
|
in an Hour. If it went as the Wave does 20 Miles an Hour, no Ships
|
|
could ride at Anchor in such a Stream, nor Boats row against it.
|
|
|
|
In common Speech, indeed, this Current of the Water both Ways
|
|
from the Top of the Wave is call'd _the Tide_; thus we say, _the Tide
|
|
runs strong, the Tide runs at the rate of_ 1, 2, _or_ 3 _Miles an
|
|
hour,_ &c. and when we are at a Part of the River behind the Top of
|
|
the Wave, and find the Water lower than High-water Mark, and running
|
|
towards the Sea, we say, _the Tide runs Ebb_; and when we are before
|
|
the Top of the Wave, and find the Water higher than Low-water Mark,
|
|
and running from the Sea, we say, the _Tide runs Flood_: But these
|
|
Expressions are only locally proper; for a Tide strictly speaking is
|
|
_one whole Wave_, including all its Parts higher and lower, and these
|
|
Waves succeed one another about twice in twenty four Hours.
|
|
|
|
This Motion of the Water, occasion'd by its Gravity, will
|
|
explain to you why the Water near the Mouths of Rivers may be salter
|
|
at Highwater than at Low. Some of the Salt Water, as the Tide Wave
|
|
enters the River, runs from its Top and fore Side, and mixes with the
|
|
fresh, and also pushes it back up the River.
|
|
|
|
Supposing that the Water commonly runs during the Flood at the
|
|
Rate of two Miles in an Hour, and that the Flood runs 5 Hours, you
|
|
see that it can bring at most into our Canal only a Quantity of Water
|
|
equal to the Space included in the Breadth of the Canal, ten Miles of
|
|
its Length, and the Depth between Low and Highwater Mark. Which is
|
|
but a fourteenth Part of what would be necessary to fill all the
|
|
Space between Low and Highwater Mark, for 140 Miles, the whole Length
|
|
of the Canal.
|
|
|
|
And indeed such a Quantity of Water as would fill that whole
|
|
Space, to run in and out every Tide, must create so outrageous a
|
|
Current, as would do infinite Damage to the Shores, Shipping, &c. and
|
|
make the Navigation of a River almost impracticable.
|
|
|
|
I have made this Letter longer than I intended, and therefore
|
|
reserve for another what I have farther to say on the Subject of
|
|
Tides and Rivers. I shall now only add, that I have not been exact
|
|
in the Numbers, because I would avoid perplexing you with minute
|
|
Calculations, my Design at present being chiefly to give you distinct
|
|
and clear Ideas of the first Principles.
|
|
|
|
After writing 6 Folio Pages of Philosophy to a young Girl, is
|
|
it necessary to finish such a Letter with a Compliment? Is not such
|
|
a Letter of itself a Compliment? Does it not say, she has a Mind
|
|
thirsty after Knowledge, and capable of receiving it; and that the
|
|
most agreable Things one can write to her are those that tend to the
|
|
Improvement of her Understanding? It does indeed say all this, but
|
|
then it is still no Compliment; it is no more than plain honest
|
|
Truth, which is not the Character of a Compliment. So if I would
|
|
finish my Letter in the Mode, I should yet add something that means
|
|
nothing, and is _merely_ civil and polite. But being naturally
|
|
awkward at every Circumstance of Ceremony, I shall not attempt it. I
|
|
had rather conclude abruptly with what pleases me more than any
|
|
Compliment can please you, that I am allow'd to subscribe my self
|
|
Your affectionate Friend
|
|
|
|
"THE BEST ENGLISH"
|
|
|
|
_To David Hume_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir, Coventry, Sept. 27. 1760
|
|
|
|
I have too long postpon'd answering your obliging Letter, a
|
|
Fault I will not attempt to excuse, but rather rely on your Goodness
|
|
to forgive it if I am more punctual for the future.
|
|
|
|
I am oblig'd to you for the favourable Sentiments you express
|
|
of the Pieces sent you; tho' the Volume relating to our Pensilvania
|
|
Affairs, was not written by me, nor any Part of it, except the
|
|
Remarks on the Proprietor's Estimate of his Estate, and some of the
|
|
inserted Messages and Reports of the Assembly which I wrote when at
|
|
home, as a Member of Committees appointed by the House for that
|
|
Service; the rest was by another Hand. But tho' I am satisfy'd by
|
|
what you say, that the Duke of Bedford was hearty in the Scheme of
|
|
the Expedition, I am not so clear that others in the Administration
|
|
were equally in earnest in that matter. It is certain that after the
|
|
Duke of Newcastle's first Orders to raise Troops in the Colonies, and
|
|
Promise to send over Commissions to the Officers, with Arms,
|
|
Clothing, &c. for the Men, we never had another Syllable from him for
|
|
18 Months; during all which time the Army lay idle at Albany for want
|
|
of Orders and Necessaries; and it began to be thought at least that
|
|
if an Expedition had ever been intended, the first Design and the
|
|
Orders given, must, thro' the Multiplicity of Business here at home,
|
|
have been quite forgotten.
|
|
|
|
I am not a little pleas'd to hear of your Change of Sentiments
|
|
in some particulars relating to America; because I think it of
|
|
Importance to our general Welfare that the People of this Nation
|
|
should have right Notions of us, and I know no one that has it more
|
|
in his Power to rectify their Notions, than Mr. Hume. I have lately
|
|
read with great Pleasure, as I do every thing of yours, the excellent
|
|
Essay on the _Jealousy of Commerce_: I think it cannot but have a
|
|
good Effect in promoting a certain Interest too little thought of by
|
|
selfish Man, and scarce ever mention'd, so that we hardly have a Name
|
|
for it; I mean the _Interest of Humanity_, or common Good of Mankind:
|
|
But I hope particularly from that Essay, an Abatement of the Jealousy
|
|
that reigns here of the Commerce of the Colonies, at least so far as
|
|
such Abatement may be reasonable.
|
|
|
|
I thank you for your friendly Admonition relating to some
|
|
unusual Words in the Pamphlet. It will be of Service to me. The
|
|
_pejorate_, and the _colonize_, since they are not in common use
|
|
here, I give up as bad; for certainly in Writings intended for
|
|
Persuasion and for general Information, one cannot be too clear, and
|
|
every Expression in the least obscure is a Fault. The _unshakeable_
|
|
too, tho' clear, I give up as rather low. The introducing new Words
|
|
where we are already possess'd of old ones sufficiently expressive, I
|
|
confess must be generally wrong, as it tends to change the Language;
|
|
yet at the same time I cannot but wish the Usage of our Tongue
|
|
permitted making new Words when we want them, by Composition of old
|
|
ones whose Meanings are already well understood. The German allows
|
|
of it, and it is a common Practice with their Writers. Many of our
|
|
present English Words were originally so made; and many of the Latin
|
|
Words. In point of Clearness such compound Words would have the
|
|
Advantage of any we can borrow from the ancient or from foreign
|
|
Languages. For instance, the Word _inaccessible_, tho' long in use
|
|
among us, is not yet, I dare say, so universally understood by our
|
|
People as the Word _uncomeatable_ would immediately be, which we are
|
|
not allow'd to write. But I hope with you, that we shall always in
|
|
America make the best English of this Island our Standard, and I
|
|
believe it will be so. I assure you, it often gives me Pleasure to
|
|
reflect how greatly the _Audience_ (if I may so term it) of a good
|
|
English Writer will in another Century or two be encreas'd, by the
|
|
Increase of English People in our Colonies.
|
|
|
|
My Son presents his Respects with mine to you and Dr. Monro.
|
|
We receiv'd your printed circular Letter to the Members of the
|
|
Society, and purpose some time next Winter to send each of us a
|
|
little Philosophical Essay. With the greatest Esteem I am, Dear Sir,
|
|
Your most obedient and most humble Servant
|
|
|
|
COLOR AND HEAT
|
|
|
|
_To Mary Stevenson_
|
|
|
|
My dear Friend It is, as you observed in our late Conversation,
|
|
a very general Opinion, that _all Rivers run into the Sea_, or
|
|
deposite their Waters there. 'Tis a kind of Audacity to call such
|
|
general Opinions in question, and may subject one to Censure: But we
|
|
must hazard something in what we think the Cause of Truth: And if we
|
|
propose our Objections modestly, we shall, tho' mistaken, deserve a
|
|
Censure less severe, than when we are both mistaken and insolent.
|
|
|
|
That some Rivers run into the Sea is beyond a doubt: Such, for
|
|
Instance, are the Amazones, and I think the Oranoko and the
|
|
Missisipi. The Proof is, that their Waters are fresh quite to the
|
|
Sea, and out to some Distance from the Land. Our Question is,
|
|
whether the fresh Waters of those Rivers whose Beds are filled with
|
|
Salt Water to a considerable Distance up from the Sea (as the Thames,
|
|
the Delaware, and the Rivers that communicate with Chesapeak Bay in
|
|
Virginia) do ever arrive at the Sea? and as I suspect they do not, I
|
|
am now to acquaint you with my Reasons; or, if they are not allow'd
|
|
to be Reasons, my Conceptions, at least of this Matter.
|
|
|
|
The common Supply of Rivers is from Springs, which draw their
|
|
Origin from Rain that has soak'd into the Earth. The Union of a
|
|
Number of Springs forms a River. The Waters as they run, expos'd to
|
|
the Sun, Air and Wind, are continually evaporating. Hence in
|
|
Travelling one may often see where a River runs, by a long blueish
|
|
Mist over it, tho' we are at such a Distance as not to see the River
|
|
itself. The Quantity of this Evaporation is greater or less in
|
|
proportion to the Surface exposed by the same Quantity of Water to
|
|
those Causes of Evaporation. While the River runs in a narrow
|
|
confined Channel in the upper hilly Country, only a small Surface is
|
|
exposed; a greater as the River widens. Now if a River ends in a
|
|
Lake, as some do, whereby its Waters are spread so wide as that the
|
|
Evaporation is equal to the Sum of all its Springs, that Lake will
|
|
never overflow: And if instead of ending in a Lake, it was drawn into
|
|
greater Length as a River, so as to expose a Surface equal, in the
|
|
whole to that Lake, the Evaporation would be equal, and such River
|
|
would end as a Canal; when the Ignorant might suppose, as they
|
|
actually do in such cases, that the River loses itself by running
|
|
under ground, whereas in truth it has run up into the Air.
|
|
|
|
Now many Rivers that are open to the Sea, widen much before
|
|
they arrive at it, not merely by the additional Waters they receive,
|
|
but by having their Course stopt by the opposing Flood Tide; by being
|
|
turned back twice in twenty-four Hours, and by finding broader Beds
|
|
in the low flat Countries to dilate themselves in; hence the
|
|
Evaporation of the fresh Water is proportionably increas'd, so that
|
|
in some Rivers it may equal the Springs of Supply. In such cases,
|
|
the Salt Water comes up the River, and meets the fresh in that part
|
|
where, if there were a Wall or Bank of Earth across from Side to
|
|
Side, the River would form a Lake, fuller indeed at some times than
|
|
at others according to the Seasons, but whose Evaporation would, one
|
|
time with another, be equal to its Supply.
|
|
|
|
When the Communication between the two kinds of Water is open,
|
|
this supposed Wall of Separation may be conceived as a moveable one,
|
|
which is not only pushed some Miles higher up the River by every
|
|
Flood Tide from the Sea, and carried down again as far by every Tide
|
|
of Ebb, but which has even this Space of Vibration removed nearer to
|
|
the Sea in wet Seasons, when the Springs and Brooks in the upper
|
|
Country are augmented by the falling Rains so as to swell the River,
|
|
and farther from the Sea in dry Seasons.
|
|
|
|
Within a few Miles above and below this moveable Line of
|
|
Separation, the different Waters mix a little, partly by their Motion
|
|
to and fro, and partly from the greater specific Gravity of the Salt
|
|
Water, which inclines it to run under the Fresh, while the fresh
|
|
Water being lighter runs over the Salt.
|
|
|
|
Cast your Eye on the Map of North America, and observe the Bay
|
|
of Chesapeak in Virginia, mentioned above; you will see,
|
|
communicating with it by their Mouths, the great Rivers Sasquehanah,
|
|
Potowmack, Rappahanock, York and James, besides a Number of smaller
|
|
Streams each as big as the Thames. It has been propos'd by
|
|
philosophical Writers, that to compute how much Water any River
|
|
discharges into the Sea, in a given time, we should measure its Depth
|
|
and Swiftness at any Part above the Tide, as, for the Thames, at
|
|
Kingston or Windsor. But can one imagine, that if all the Water of
|
|
those vast Rivers went to the Sea, it would not first have pushed the
|
|
Salt Water out of that narrow-mouthed Bay, and filled it with fresh?
|
|
The Sasquehanah alone would seem to be sufficient for this, if it
|
|
were not for the Loss by Evaporation. And yet that Bay is salt quite
|
|
up to Annapolis.
|
|
|
|
As to our other Subject, the different Degrees of Heat imbibed
|
|
from the Sun's Rays by Cloths of different Colours, since I cannot
|
|
find the Notes of my Experiment to send you, I must give it as well
|
|
as I can from Memory.
|
|
|
|
But first let me mention an Experiment you may easily make your
|
|
self. Walk but a quarter of an Hour in your Garden when the Sun
|
|
shines, with a Part of your Dress white, and a Part black; then apply
|
|
your Hand to them alternately, and you will find a very great
|
|
Difference in their Warmth. The Black will be quite hot to the
|
|
Touch, the White still cool.
|
|
|
|
Another. Try to fire Paper with a burning Glass. If it is
|
|
White, you will not easily burn it; but if you bring the Focus to a
|
|
black Spot or upon Letters written or printed, the Paper will
|
|
immediately be on fire under the Letters.
|
|
|
|
Thus Fullers and Dyers find black Cloths, of equal Thickness
|
|
with white ones, and hung out equally wet, dry in the Sun much sooner
|
|
than the white, being more readily heated by the Sun's Rays. It is
|
|
the same before a Fire; the Heat of which sooner penetrates black
|
|
Stockings than white ones, and so is apt sooner to burn a Man's
|
|
Shins. Also Beer much sooner warms in a black Mug set before the
|
|
Fire, than in a white one, or in a bright Silver Tankard.
|
|
|
|
My Experiment was this. I took a number of little Square
|
|
Pieces of Broad Cloth from a Taylor's Pattern Card, of various
|
|
Colours. There were Black, deep Blue, lighter Blue, Green, Purple,
|
|
Red, Yellow, White, and other Colours or Shades of Colours. I laid
|
|
them all out upon the Snow in a bright Sunshiny Morning. In a few
|
|
Hours (I cannot now be exact as to the Time) the Black being warm'd
|
|
most by the Sun was sunk so low as to be below the Stroke of the
|
|
Sun's Rays; the dark Blue almost as low, the lighter Blue not quite
|
|
so much as the dark, the other Colours less as they were lighter; and
|
|
the quite White remain'd on the Surface of the Snow, not having
|
|
entred it at all. What signifies Philosophy that does not apply to
|
|
some Use? May we not learn from hence, that black Cloaths are not so
|
|
fit to wear in a hot Sunny Climate or Season as white ones; because
|
|
in such Cloaths the Body is more heated by the Sun when we walk
|
|
abroad and are at the same time heated by the Exercise, which double
|
|
Heat is apt to bring on putrid dangerous Fevers? That Soldiers and
|
|
Seamen who must march and labour in the Sun, should in the East or
|
|
West Indies have an Uniform of white? That Summer Hats for Men or
|
|
Women, should be white, as repelling that Heat which gives the
|
|
Headachs to many, and to some the fatal Stroke that the French call
|
|
the _Coup de Soleil_? That the Ladies Summer Hats, however should be
|
|
lined with Black, as not reverberating on their Faces those Rays
|
|
which are reflected upwards from the Earth or Water? That the
|
|
putting a white Cap of Paper or Linnen _within_ the Crown of a black
|
|
Hat, as some do, will not keep out the Heat, tho' it would if plac'd
|
|
_without_? That Fruit Walls being black'd may receive so much Heat
|
|
from the Sun in the Daytime, as to continue warm in some degree thro'
|
|
the Night, and thereby preserve the Fruit from Frosts, or forward its
|
|
Growth? -- with sundry other particulars of less or greater
|
|
Importance, that will occur from time to time to attentive Minds? I
|
|
am, Yours affectionately,
|
|
|
|
November? 1760
|
|
|
|
"PREJUDICE . . . AGAINST YOUR WORK"
|
|
|
|
_To John Baskerville_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir, Craven-Street, London.
|
|
|
|
Let me give you a pleasant Instance of the Prejudice some have
|
|
entertained against your Work. Soon after I returned, discoursing
|
|
with a Gentleman concerning the Artists of Birmingham, he said you
|
|
would be a Means of blinding all the Readers in the Nation, for the
|
|
Strokes of your Letters being too thin and narrow, hurt the Eye, and
|
|
he could never read a Line of them without Pain. I thought, said I,
|
|
you were going to complain of the Gloss on the Paper, some object to:
|
|
No, no, says he, I have heard that mentioned, but it is not that;
|
|
'tis in the Form and Cut of the Letters themselves; they have not
|
|
that natural and easy Proportion between the Height and Thickness of
|
|
the Stroke, which makes the common Printing so much more comfortable
|
|
to the Eye. -- You see this Gentleman was a Connoisseur. In vain I
|
|
endeavoured to support your _Character_ against the Charge; he knew
|
|
what he felt, he could see the Reason of it, and several other
|
|
Gentlemen among his Friends had made the same Observation, &c. --
|
|
Yesterday he called to visit me, when, mischievously bent to try his
|
|
Judgment, I stept into my Closet, tore off the Top of Mr. Caslon's
|
|
Specimen, and produced it to him as yours brought with me from
|
|
Birmingham, saying, I had been examining it since he spoke to me, and
|
|
could not for my Life perceive the Disproportion he mentioned,
|
|
desiring him to point it out to me. He readily undertook it, and
|
|
went over the several Founts, shewing me every-where what he thought
|
|
Instances of that Disproportion; and declared, that he could not then
|
|
read the Specimen without feeling very strongly the Pain he had
|
|
mentioned to me. I spared him that Time the Confusion of being told,
|
|
that these were the Types he had been reading all his Life with so
|
|
much Ease to his Eyes; the Types his adored Newton is printed with,
|
|
on which he has pored not a little; nay, the very Types his own Book
|
|
is printed with, for he is himself an Author; and yet never
|
|
discovered this painful Disproportion in them, till he thought they
|
|
were yours. I am, &c.
|
|
|
|
1760?
|
|
|
|
FAULTS IN SONGS
|
|
|
|
_To Peter Franklin_
|
|
|
|
_Dear Brother,_
|
|
|
|
I like your ballad, and think it well adapted for your purpose
|
|
of discountenancing expensive foppery, and encouraging industry and
|
|
frugality. If you can get it generally sung in your country, it may
|
|
probably have a good deal of the effect you hope and expect from it.
|
|
But as you aimed at making it general, I wonder you chose so uncommon
|
|
a measure in poetry, that none of the tunes in common use will suit
|
|
it. Had you fitted it to an old one, well known, it must have spread
|
|
much faster than I doubt it will do from the best new tune we can get
|
|
compos'd for it. I think too, that if you had given it to some
|
|
country girl in the heart of the _Massachusets_, who has never heard
|
|
any other than psalm tunes, or _Chevy Chace_, the _Children in the
|
|
Wood_, the _Spanish Lady_, and such old simple ditties, but has
|
|
naturally a good ear, she might more probably have made a pleasing
|
|
popular tune for you, than any of our masters here, and more proper
|
|
for your purpose, which would best be answered, if every word could
|
|
as it is sung be understood by all that hear it, and if the emphasis
|
|
you intend for particular words could be given by the singer as well
|
|
as by the reader; much of the force and impression of the song
|
|
depending on those circumstances. I will however get it as well done
|
|
for you as I can.
|
|
|
|
Do not imagine that I mean to depreciate the skill of our
|
|
composers of music here; they are admirable at pleasing _practised_
|
|
ears, and know how to delight _one another_; but, in composing for
|
|
songs, the reigning taste seems to be quite out of nature, or rather
|
|
the reverse of nature, and yet like a torrent, hurries them all away
|
|
with it; one or two perhaps only excepted.
|
|
|
|
You, in the spirit of some ancient legislators, would influence
|
|
the manners of your country by the united powers of poetry and music.
|
|
By what I can learn of _their_ songs, the music was simple, conformed
|
|
itself to the usual pronunciation of words, as to measure, cadence or
|
|
emphasis, _&c._ never disguised and confounded the language by making
|
|
a long syllable short, or a short one long when sung; their singing
|
|
was only a more pleasing, because a melodious manner of speaking; it
|
|
was capable of all the graces of prose oratory, while it added the
|
|
pleasure of harmony. A modern song, on the contrary, neglects all
|
|
the proprieties and beauties of common speech, and in their place
|
|
introduces its _defects_ and _absurdities_ as so many graces. I am
|
|
afraid you will hardly take my word for this, and therefore I must
|
|
endeavour to support it by proof. Here is the first song I lay my
|
|
hand on. It happens to be a composition of one of our greatest
|
|
masters, the ever famous _Handel_. It is not one of his juvenile
|
|
performances, before his taste could be improved and formed: It
|
|
appeared when his reputation was at the highest, is greatly admired
|
|
by all his admirers, and is really excellent in its kind. It is
|
|
called, _The additional_ FAVOURITE _Song in_ Judas Maccabeus. Now I
|
|
reckon among the defects and improprieties of common speech, the
|
|
following, viz.
|
|
|
|
1. _Wrong placing the accent or emphasis_, by laying it on
|
|
words of no importance, or on wrong syllables.
|
|
|
|
2. _Drawling_; or extending the sound of words or syllables
|
|
beyond their natural length.
|
|
|
|
3. _Stuttering_; or making many syllables of one.
|
|
|
|
4. _Unintelligibleness_; the result of the three foregoing
|
|
united.
|
|
|
|
5. _Tautology_; and
|
|
|
|
6. _Screaming_, without cause.
|
|
|
|
For the _wrong placing of the accent, or emphasis_, see it on
|
|
the word _their_ instead of being on the word _vain_.
|
|
|
|
(Music omitted)
|
|
with _their_ vain My - ste - rious Art
|
|
|
|
And on the word _from_, and the wrong syllable _like_.
|
|
|
|
(Music omitted)
|
|
God-_like_ Wisdom _from_ a -- bove
|
|
|
|
For the _Drawling_, see the last syllable of the word _wounded_.
|
|
|
|
(Music omitted)
|
|
Nor can heal the wound_ed_ Heart
|
|
|
|
And in the syllable _wis_, and the word _from_, and syllable _bove_
|
|
|
|
(Music omitted)
|
|
God-like _Wis_dom _from_ a - _bove_
|
|
|
|
For the _Stuttering_, see the words _ne'er relieve_, in
|
|
|
|
(Music omitted)
|
|
Ma - gick Charms can _ne'er_ _re - lieve_ you
|
|
|
|
Here are four syllables made of one, and eight of three; but this is
|
|
moderate. I have seen in another song that I cannot now find,
|
|
seventeen syllables made of three, and sixteen of one; the latter I
|
|
remember was the word _charms_; viz. _Cha, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a,
|
|
a, a, a, a, a, arms._ Stammering with a witness!
|
|
|
|
For the _Unintelligibleness_; give this whole song to any
|
|
taught singer, and let her sing it to any company that have never
|
|
heard it; you shall find they will not understand three words in ten.
|
|
It is therefore that at the oratorio's and operas one sees with books
|
|
in their hands all those who desire to understand what they hear sung
|
|
by even our best performers.
|
|
|
|
For the _Tautology_; you have, _with their vain mysterious
|
|
art_, twice repeated; _Magic charms can ne'er relieve you_, three
|
|
times. _Nor can heal the wounded heart_, three times. _Godlike
|
|
wisdom from above_, twice; and, _this alone can ne'er deceive you_,
|
|
two or three times. But this is reasonable when compared with _the
|
|
Monster Polypheme, the Monster Polypheme_, a hundred times over and
|
|
over, in his admired _Acis and Galatea_.
|
|
|
|
As to the _screaming_; perhaps I cannot find a fair instance in
|
|
this song; but whoever has frequented our operas will remember many.
|
|
And yet here methinks the words _no_ and _e'er_, when sung to these
|
|
notes, have a little of the air of _screaming_, and would actually be
|
|
scream'd by some singers.
|
|
|
|
(Music omitted)
|
|
_No_ Magic charms can _e'er_ re -- lieve you.
|
|
|
|
I send you inclosed the song with its music at length. Read
|
|
the words without the repetitions. Observe how few they are, and
|
|
what a shower of notes attend them. You will then perhaps be
|
|
inclined to think with me, that though the words might be the
|
|
principal part of an ancient song, they are of small importance in a
|
|
modern one; they are in short only _a pretence for singing_. _I am,
|
|
as ever, Your affectionate brother,_
|
|
|
|
P. S. I might have mentioned _Inarticulation_ among the defects
|
|
in common speech that are assumed as beauties in modern singing. But
|
|
as that seems more the fault of the singer than of the composer, I
|
|
omitted it in what related merely to the composition. The fine
|
|
singer in the present mode, stifles all the hard consonants, and
|
|
polishes away all the rougher parts of words that serve to
|
|
distinguish them one from another; so that you hear nothing but an
|
|
admirable pipe, and understand no more of the song, than you would
|
|
from its tune played on any other instrument. If ever it was the
|
|
ambition of musicians to make instruments that should imitate the
|
|
human voice, that ambition seems now reversed, the voice aiming to be
|
|
like an instrument. Thus wigs were first made to imitate a good
|
|
natural head of hair; -- but when they became fashionable, though in
|
|
unnatural forms, we have seen natural hair dressed to look like wigs.
|
|
|
|
c. 1761
|
|
|
|
"A CASE IN POINT"
|
|
|
|
_To David Hume_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir, London, May 19. 1762.
|
|
|
|
It is no small Pleasure to me to hear from you that my Paper on
|
|
the means of preserving Buildings from Damage by Lightning, was
|
|
acceptable to the Philosophical Society. Mr. Russel's Proposals of
|
|
Improvement are very sensible and just. A Leaden Spout or Pipe is
|
|
undoubtedly a good Conductor so far as it goes. If the Conductor
|
|
enters the Ground just at the Foundation, and from thence is carried
|
|
horizontally to some Well, or to a distant Rod driven downright into
|
|
the Earth; I would then propose that the Part under Ground should be
|
|
Lead, as less liable to consume with Rust than Iron. Because if the
|
|
Conductor near the Foot of the Wall should be wasted, the Lightning
|
|
might act on the Moisture of the Earth, and by suddenly rarifying it
|
|
occasion an Explosion that may damage the Foundation. In the
|
|
Experiment of discharging my large Case of Electrical Bottles thro' a
|
|
Piece of small Glass Tube fill'd with Water, the suddenly rarify'd
|
|
Water has exploded with a Force equal, I think, to that of so much
|
|
Gunpowder; bursting the Tube into many Pieces, and driving them with
|
|
Violence in all Directions and to all Parts of the Room. The
|
|
Shivering of Trees into small Splinters like a Broom, is probably
|
|
owingto this Rarefaction of the Sap in the longitudinal Pores or
|
|
capillary Pipes in the Substance of the Wood. And the Blowing-up of
|
|
Bricks or Stones in a Hearth, Rending Stones out of a Foundation, and
|
|
Splitting of Walls, is also probably an Effect sometimes of rarify'd
|
|
Moisture in the Earth, under the Hearth, or in the Walls. We should
|
|
therefore have a durable Conductor under Ground, or convey the
|
|
Lightning to the Earth at some Distance.
|
|
|
|
It must afford Lord Mareschall a good deal of Diversion to
|
|
preside in a Dispute so ridiculous as that you mention. Judges in
|
|
their Decisions often use Precedents. I have somewhere met with one
|
|
that is what the Lawyers call _a Case in Point_. The Church People
|
|
and the Puritans in a Country Town, had once a bitter Contention
|
|
concerning the Erecting of a Maypole, which the former desir'd and
|
|
the latter oppos'd. Each Party endeavour'd to strengthen itself by
|
|
obtaining the Authority of the Mayor, directing or forbidding a
|
|
Maypole. He heard their Altercation with great Patience, and then
|
|
gravely determin'd thus; You that are for having no Maypole shall
|
|
have no Maypole; and you that are for having a Maypole shall have a
|
|
Maypole. Get about your Business and let me hear no more of this
|
|
Quarrel. So methinks Lord Mareschal might say; You that are for no
|
|
more Damnation than is proportion'd to your Offences, have my Consent
|
|
that it may be so: And you that are for being damn'd eternally, G
|
|
---- d eternally d -- n you all, and let me hear no more of your
|
|
Disputes.
|
|
|
|
Your Compliment of _Gold_ and _Wisdom_ is very obliging to me,
|
|
but a little injurious to your Country. The various Value of every
|
|
thing in every Part of this World, arises you know from the various
|
|
Proportions of the Quantity to the Demand. We are told that Gold and
|
|
Silver in Solomon's Time were so plenty as to be of no more Value in
|
|
his Country than the Stones in the Street. You have here at present
|
|
just such a Plenty of Wisdom. Your People are therefore not to be
|
|
censur'd for desiring no more among them than they have; and if I
|
|
have _any_, I should certainly carry it where from its Scarcity it
|
|
may probably come to a better Market.
|
|
|
|
I nevertheless regret extreamly the leaving a Country in which
|
|
I have receiv'd so much Friendship, and Friends whose Conversation
|
|
has been so agreable and so improving to me; and that I am henceforth
|
|
to reside at so great a Distance from them is no small Mortification,
|
|
to My dear Friend, Yours most affectionately
|
|
|
|
My respectful Compliments if you please to Sir Alexr. Dick,
|
|
Lord Kaims, Mr. Alexander, Mr. Russel, and any other enquiring
|
|
Friends. I shall write to them before I leave the Island.
|
|
|
|
THE GLASS ARMONICA
|
|
|
|
_To Giambatista Beccaria_
|
|
|
|
_Rev. SIR,_ _London, July_ 13, 1762. I once promised myself
|
|
the pleasure of seeing you at _Turin_, but as that is not now likely
|
|
to happen, being just about returning to my native country,
|
|
_America_, I sit down to take leave of you (among others of my
|
|
_European_ friends that I cannot see) by writing.
|
|
|
|
I thank you for the honourable mention you have so frequently
|
|
made of me in your letters to Mr. _Collinson_ and others, for the
|
|
generous defence you undertook and executed with so much success, of
|
|
my electrical opinions; and for the valuable present you have made me
|
|
of your new work, from which I have received great information and
|
|
pleasure. I wish I could in return entertain you with any thing new
|
|
of mine on that subject; but I have not lately pursued it. Nor do I
|
|
know of any one here that is at present much engaged in it.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps, however, it may be agreeable to you, as you live in a
|
|
musical country, to have an account of the new instrument lately
|
|
added here to the great number that charming science was before
|
|
possessed of: -- As it is an instrument that seems peculiarly adapted
|
|
to _Italian_ music, especially that of the soft and plaintive kind, I
|
|
will endeavour to give you such a description of it, and of the
|
|
manner of constructing it, that you, or any of your friends, may be
|
|
enabled to imitate it, if you incline so to do, without being at the
|
|
expence and trouble of the many experiments I have made in
|
|
endeavouring to bring it to its present perfection.
|
|
|
|
You have doubtless heard the sweet tone that is drawn from a
|
|
drinking glass, by passing a wet finger round its brim. One Mr.
|
|
_Puckeridge_, a gentleman from _Ireland_, was the first who thought
|
|
of playing tunes, formed of these tones. He collected a number of
|
|
glasses of different sizes, fixed them near each other on a table,
|
|
and tuned them by putting into them water, more or less, as each note
|
|
required. The tones were brought out by passing his fingers round
|
|
their brims. -- He was unfortunately burnt here, with his instrument,
|
|
in a fire which consumed the house he lived in. Mr. _E. Delaval_, a
|
|
most ingenious member of our Royal Society, made one in imitation of
|
|
it, with a better choice and form of glasses, which was the first I
|
|
saw or heard. Being charmed with the sweetness of its tones, and the
|
|
music he produced from it, I wished only to see the glasses disposed
|
|
in a more convenient form, and brought together in a narrower
|
|
compass, so as to admit of a greater number of tones, and all within
|
|
reach of hand to a person sitting before the instrument, which I
|
|
accomplished, after various intermediate trials, and less commodious
|
|
forms, both of glasses and construction, in the following manner.
|
|
|
|
(Illustration omitted) The glasses are blown as near as
|
|
possible in the form of hemispheres, having each an open neck or
|
|
socket in the middle. The thickness of the glass near the brim about
|
|
a tenth of an inch, or hardly quite so much, but thicker as it comes
|
|
nearer the neck, which in the largest glasses is about an inch deep,
|
|
and an inch and half wide within, these dimensions lessening as the
|
|
glasses themselves diminish in size, except that the neck of the
|
|
smallest ought not to be shorter than half an inch. -- The largest
|
|
glass is nine inches diameter, and the smallest three inches.
|
|
Between these there are twenty-three different sizes, differing from
|
|
each other a quarter of an inch in diameter. -- To make a single
|
|
instrument there should be at least six glasses blown of each size;
|
|
and out of this number one may probably pick 37 glasses, (which are
|
|
sufficient for 3 octaves with all the semitones) that will be each
|
|
either the note one wants or a little sharper than that note, and all
|
|
fitting so well into each other as to taper pretty regularly from the
|
|
largest to the smallest. It is true there are not 37 sizes, but it
|
|
often happens that two of the same size differ a note or half note in
|
|
tone, by reason of a difference in thickness, and these may be placed
|
|
one in the other without sensibly hurting the regularity of the taper
|
|
form.
|
|
|
|
The glasses being chosen and every one marked with a diamond
|
|
the note you intend it for, they are to be tuned by diminishing the
|
|
thickness of those that are too sharp. This is done by grinding them
|
|
round from the neck towards the brim, the breadth of one or two
|
|
inches as may be required; often trying the glass by a well tuned
|
|
harpsichord, comparing the tone drawn from the glass by your finger,
|
|
with the note you want, as sounded by that string of the harpsichord.
|
|
When you come near the matter, be careful to wipe the glass clean and
|
|
dry before each trial, because the tone is something flatter when the
|
|
glass is wet, than it will be when dry; -- and grinding a very little
|
|
between each trial, you will thereby tune to great exactness. The
|
|
more care is necessary in this, because if you go below your required
|
|
tone, there is no sharpening it again but by grinding somewhat off
|
|
the brim, which will afterwards require polishing, and thus encrease
|
|
the trouble.
|
|
|
|
The glasses being thus tuned, you are to be provided with a
|
|
case for them, and a spindle on which they are to be fixed. My case
|
|
is about three feet long, eleven inches every way wide within at the
|
|
biggest end, and five inches at the smallest end; for it tapers all
|
|
the way, to adapt it better to the conical figure of the set of
|
|
glasses. This case opens in the middle of its height, and the upper
|
|
part turns up by hinges fixed behind. The spindle which is of hard
|
|
iron, lies horizontally from end to end of the box within, exactly in
|
|
the middle, and is made to turn on brass gudgeons at each end. It is
|
|
round, an inch diameter at the thickest end, and tapering to a
|
|
quarter of an inch at the smallest. -- A square shank comes from its
|
|
thickest end through the box, on which shank a wheel is fixed by a
|
|
screw. This wheel serves as a fly to make the motion equable, when
|
|
the spindle, with the glasses, is turned by the foot like a spinning
|
|
wheel. My wheel is of mahogany, 18 inches diameter, and pretty
|
|
thick, so as to conceal near its circumference about 25lb of lead. --
|
|
An ivory pin is fixed in the face of this wheel and about 4 inches
|
|
from the axis. Over the neck of this pin is put the loop of the
|
|
string that comes up from the moveable step to give it motion. The
|
|
case stands on a neat frame with four legs.
|
|
|
|
To fix the glasses on the spindle, a cork is first to be fitted
|
|
in each neck pretty tight, and projecting a little without the neck,
|
|
that the neck of one may not touch the inside of another when put
|
|
together, for that would make a jarring. -- These corks are to be
|
|
perforated with holes of different diameters, so as to suit that part
|
|
of the spindle on which they are to be fixed. When a glass is put
|
|
on, by holding it stiffly between both hands, while another turns the
|
|
spindle, it may be gradually brought to its place. But care must be
|
|
taken that the hole be not too small, lest in forcing it up the neck
|
|
should split; nor too large, lest the glass not being firmly fixed,
|
|
should turn or move on the spindle, so as to touch and jar against
|
|
its neighbouring glass. The glasses thus are placed one in another,
|
|
the largest on the biggest end of the spindle which is to the left
|
|
hand; the neck of this glass is towards the wheel, and the next goes
|
|
into it in the same position, only about an inch of its brim
|
|
appearing beyond the brim of the first; thus proceeding, every glass
|
|
when fixed shows about an inch of its brim, (or three quarters of an
|
|
inch, or half an inch, as they grow smaller) beyond the brim of the
|
|
glass that contains it; and it is from these exposed parts of each
|
|
glass that the tone is drawn, by laying a finger upon one of them as
|
|
the spindle and glasses turn round.
|
|
|
|
My largest glass is G a little below the reach of a common
|
|
voice, and my highest G, including three compleat octaves. -- To
|
|
distinguish the glasses the more readily to the eye, I have painted
|
|
the apparent parts of the glasses within side, every semitone white,
|
|
and the other notes of the octave with the seven prismatic colours,
|
|
_viz_. C, red; D, orange; E, yellow; F, green; G, blue; A, Indigo; B,
|
|
purple; and C, red again; -- so that glasses of the same colour (the
|
|
white excepted) are always octaves to each other.
|
|
|
|
This instrument is played upon, by sitting before the middle of
|
|
the set of glasses as before the keys of a harpsichord, turning them
|
|
with the foot, and wetting them now and then with a spunge and clean
|
|
water. The fingers should be first a little soaked in water and
|
|
quite free from all greasiness; a little fine chalk upon them is
|
|
sometimes useful, to make them catch the glass and bring out the tone
|
|
more readily. Both hands are used, by which means different parts
|
|
are played together. -- Observe, that the tones are best drawn out
|
|
when the glasses turn _from_ the ends of the fingers, not when they
|
|
turn _to_ them.
|
|
|
|
The advantages of this instrument are, that its tones are
|
|
incomparably sweet beyond those of any other; that they may be
|
|
swelled and softened at pleasure by stronger or weaker pressures of
|
|
the finger, and continued to any length; and that the instrument,
|
|
being once well tuned, never again wants tuning.
|
|
|
|
In honour of your musical language, I have borrowed from it the
|
|
name of this instrument, calling it the _Armonica_. With great esteem
|
|
and respect, I am, &c.
|
|
|
|
SOUND
|
|
|
|
_To Oliver Neave_
|
|
|
|
_Dear SIR_, _July_ 20, 1762.
|
|
|
|
I have perused your paper on sound, and would freely mention to
|
|
you, as you desire it, every thing that appeared to me to need
|
|
correction: -- But nothing of that kind occurs to me, unless it be,
|
|
where you speak of the air as "the _best_ medium for conveying
|
|
sound." Perhaps this is speaking rather too positively, if there be,
|
|
as I think there are, some other mediums that will convey it farther
|
|
and more readily. -- It is a well-known experiment, that the
|
|
scratching of a pin at one end of a long piece of timber, may be
|
|
heard by an ear applied near the other end, though it could not be
|
|
heard at the same distance through the air. -- And two stones being
|
|
struck smartly together under water, the stroke may be heard at a
|
|
greater distance by an ear also placed under water in the same river,
|
|
than it can be heard through the air. I think I have heard it near a
|
|
mile; how much farther it may be heard, I know not; but suppose a
|
|
great deal farther, because the sound did not seem faint, as if at a
|
|
distance, like distant sounds through air, but smart and strong, and
|
|
as if present just at the ear. -- I wish you would repeat these
|
|
experiments now you are upon the subject, and add your own
|
|
observations. -- And if you were to repeat, with your naturally exact
|
|
attention and observation, the common experiment of the bell in the
|
|
exhausted receiver, possibly something new may occur to you, in
|
|
considering,
|
|
|
|
1. Whether the experiment is not ambiguous; _i. e._ whether the
|
|
gradual exhausting of the air, as it creates an increasing difference
|
|
of pressure on the outside, may not occasion in the glass a
|
|
difficulty of vibrating, that renders it less fit to communicate to
|
|
the air without, the vibrations that strike it from within; and the
|
|
diminution of the sound arise from this cause, rather than from the
|
|
diminution of the air?
|
|
|
|
2. Whether as the particles of air themselves are at a distance
|
|
from each other, there must not be some medium between them, proper
|
|
for conveying sound, since otherwise it would stop at the first
|
|
particle?
|
|
|
|
3. Whether the great difference we experience in hearing sounds
|
|
at a distance, when the wind blows towards us from the sonorous body,
|
|
or towards that from us, can be well accounted for by adding to or
|
|
substracting from the swiftness of sound, the degree of swiftness
|
|
that is in the wind at the time? The latter is so small in
|
|
proportion, that it seems as if it could scarce produce any sensible
|
|
effect, and yet the difference is very great. Does not this give
|
|
some hint, as if there might be a subtile fluid, the conductor of
|
|
sound, which moves at different times in different directions over
|
|
the surface of the earth, and whose motion may perhaps be much
|
|
swifter than that of the air in our strongest winds; and that in
|
|
passing through air, it may communicate that motion to the air which
|
|
we call wind, though a motion in no degree so swift as its own?
|
|
|
|
4. It is somewhere related, that a pistol fired on the top of
|
|
an exceeding high mountain, made a noise like thunder in the valleys
|
|
below. Perhaps this fact is not exactly related: but if it is, would
|
|
not one imagine from it, that the rarer the air, the greater sound
|
|
might be produced in it from the same cause?
|
|
|
|
5. Those balls of fire which are sometimes seen passing over a
|
|
country, computed by philosophers to be often 30 miles high at least,
|
|
sometimes burst at that height; the air must be exceeding rare there,
|
|
and yet the explosion produces a sound that is heard at that
|
|
distance, and for 70 miles round on the surface of the earth, so
|
|
violent too as to shake buildings, and give an apprehension of an
|
|
earthquake. Does not this look as if a rare atmosphere, almost a
|
|
vacuum, was no bad conductor of sound?
|
|
|
|
I have not made up my own mind on these points, and only
|
|
mention them for your consideration, knowing that every subject is
|
|
the better for your handling it. With the greatest esteem, I am, &c.
|
|
|
|
OIL AND WATER
|
|
|
|
_To John Pringle_
|
|
|
|
_SIR, Philadelphia, Dec._ 1, 1762.
|
|
|
|
During our passage to Madeira, the weather being warm, and the
|
|
cabbin windows constantly open for the benefit of the air, the
|
|
candles at night flared and run very much, which was an
|
|
inconvenience. At Madeira we got oil to burn, and with a common
|
|
glass tumbler or beaker, slung in wire, and suspended to the cieling
|
|
of the cabbin, and a little wire hoop for the wick, furnish'd with
|
|
corks to float on the oil, I made an Italian lamp, that gave us very
|
|
good light all over the table. -- The glass at bottom contained
|
|
water to about one third of its height; another third was taken up
|
|
with oil; the rest was left empty that the sides of the glass might
|
|
protect the flame from the wind. There is nothing remarkable in all
|
|
this; but what follows is particular. At supper, looking on the
|
|
lamp, I remarked that tho' the surface of the oil was perfectly
|
|
tranquil, and duly preserved its position and distance with regard to
|
|
the brim of the glass, the water under the oil was in great
|
|
commotion, rising and falling in irregular waves, which continued
|
|
during the whole evening. The lamp was kept burning as a watch light
|
|
all night, till the oil was spent, and the water only remain'd. In
|
|
the morning I observed, that though the motion of the ship continued
|
|
the same, the water was now quiet, and its surface as tranquil as
|
|
that of the oil had been the evening before. At night again, when
|
|
oil was put upon it, the water resum'd its irregular motions, rising
|
|
in high waves almost to the surface of the oil, but without
|
|
disturbing the smooth level of that surface. And this was repeated
|
|
every day during the voyage.
|
|
|
|
Since my arrival in America, I have repeated the experiment
|
|
frequently thus. I have put a pack-thread round a tumbler, with
|
|
strings of the same, from each side, meeting above it in a knot at
|
|
about a foot distance from the top of the tumbler. Then putting in
|
|
as much water as would fill about one third part of the tumbler, I
|
|
lifted it up by the knot, and swung it to and fro in the air; when
|
|
the water appeared to keep its place in the tumbler as steadily as if
|
|
it had been ice. -- But pouring gently in upon the water about as
|
|
much oil, and then again swinging it in the air as before, the
|
|
tranquility before possessed by the water, was transferred to the
|
|
surface of the oil, and the water under it was agitated with the same
|
|
commotions as at sea.
|
|
|
|
I have shewn this experiment to a number of ingenious persons.
|
|
Those who are but slightly acquainted with the principles of
|
|
hydrostatics, &c. are apt to fancy immediately that they understand
|
|
it, and readily attempt to explain it; but their explanations have
|
|
been different, and to me not very intelligible. -- Others more
|
|
deeply skill'd in those principles, seem to wonder at it, and promise
|
|
to consider it. And I think it is worth considering: For a new
|
|
appearance, if it cannot be explain'd by our old principles, may
|
|
afford us new ones, of use perhaps in explaining some other obscure
|
|
parts of natural knowledge. _I am, &c._
|
|
|
|
"I LOOK'D ROUND FOR GOD'S JUDGMENTS"
|
|
|
|
_To Jared Ingersoll_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir Philada. Dec. 11. 1762
|
|
|
|
I thank you for your kind Congratulations. It gives me
|
|
Pleasure to hear from an old Friend, it will give me much more to see
|
|
him. I hope therefore nothing will prevent the Journey you propose
|
|
for next Summer, and the Favour you intend me of a Visit. I believe
|
|
I must make a Journey early in the Spring, to Virginia, but purpose
|
|
being back again before the hot Weather. You will be kind enough to
|
|
let me know beforehand what time you expect to be here, that I may
|
|
not be out of the way; for that would mortify me exceedingly.
|
|
|
|
I should be glad to know what it is that distinguishes
|
|
Connecticut Religion from common Religion: Communicate, if you
|
|
please, some of those particulars that you think will amuse me as a
|
|
Virtuoso. When I travelled in Flanders I thought of your excessively
|
|
strict Observation of Sunday; and that a Man could hardly travel on
|
|
that day among you upon his lawful Occasions, without Hazard of
|
|
Punishment; while where I was, every one travell'd, if he pleas'd, or
|
|
diverted himself any other way; and in the Afternoon both high and
|
|
low went to the Play or the Opera, where there was plenty of Singing,
|
|
Fiddling and Dancing. I look'd round for God's Judgments but saw no
|
|
Signs of them. The Cities were well built and full of Inhabitants,
|
|
the Markets fill'd with Plenty, the People well favour'd and well
|
|
clothed; the Fields well till'd; the Cattle fat and strong; the
|
|
Fences, Houses and Windows all in Repair; and _no Old Tenor_ anywhere
|
|
in the Country; which would almost make one suspect, that the Deity
|
|
is not so angry at that Offence as a New England Justice.
|
|
|
|
I left our Friend Mr. Jackson well. And I had the great
|
|
Happiness of finding my little Family well when I came home; and my
|
|
Friends as cordial and more numerous than ever. May every Prosperity
|
|
attend you and yours. I am Dear Friend, Yours affectionately
|
|
|
|
"THE ARTS DELIGHT TO TRAVEL WESTWARD"
|
|
|
|
_To Mary Stevenson_
|
|
|
|
My dear Polley Philada. March 25. 1763
|
|
|
|
Your pleasing Favour of Nov. 11 is now before me. It found me
|
|
as you suppos'd it would, happy with my American Friends and Family
|
|
about me; and it made me more happy in showing me that I am not yet
|
|
forgotten by the dear Friends I left in England. And indeed why
|
|
should I fear they will ever forget me, when I feel so strongly that
|
|
I shall ever remember them!
|
|
|
|
I sympathise with you sincerely in your Grief at the Separation
|
|
from your old Friend, Miss Pitt. The Reflection that she is going to
|
|
be more happy when she leaves you, might comfort you, if the Case was
|
|
likely to be so circumstanc'd; but when the Country and Company she
|
|
has been educated in, and those she is removing to, are compared, one
|
|
cannot possibly expect it.
|
|
|
|
I sympathize with you no less in your Joys. But it is not
|
|
merely on your Account that I rejoice at the Recovery of your dear
|
|
Dolly's Health. I love that dear good Girl myself, and I love her
|
|
other Friends. I am therefore made happy by what must contribute so
|
|
much to the Happiness of them all. Remember me to her, and to every
|
|
one of that worthy and amiable Family most affectionately.
|
|
|
|
Remember me in the same manner to your and my good Doctor and
|
|
Mrs. Hawkesworth. You have lately, you tell me, had the Pleasure of
|
|
spending three Days with them at Mr. Stanley's. It was a sweet
|
|
Society! (Remember me also to Mr. and Mrs. Stanley, and to Miss
|
|
Arlond) -- I too, once partook of that same Pleasure, and can
|
|
therefore feel what you must have felt. Of all the enviable Things
|
|
England has, I envy it most its People. Why should that petty
|
|
Island, which compar'd to America is but like a stepping Stone in a
|
|
Brook, scarce enough of it above Water to keep one's Shoes dry; why,
|
|
I say, should that little Island, enjoy in almost every
|
|
Neighbourhood, more sensible, virtuous and elegant Minds, than we can
|
|
collect in ranging 100 Leagues of our vast Forests. But, 'tis said,
|
|
the Arts delight to travel Westward. You have effectually defended
|
|
us in this glorious War, and in time you will improve us. After the
|
|
first Cares for the Necessaries of Life are over, we shall come to
|
|
think of the Embellishments. Already some of our young Geniuses
|
|
begin to lisp Attempts at Painting, Poetry and Musick. We have a
|
|
young Painter now studying at Rome: Some Specimens of our Poetry I
|
|
send you, which if Dr. Hawkesworth's fine Taste cannot approve, his
|
|
good Heart will at least excuse. The Manuscript Piece is by a young
|
|
Friend of mine, and was occasion'd by the Loss of one of his Friends,
|
|
who lately made a Voyage to Antigua to settle some Affairs previous
|
|
to an intended Marriage with an amiable young Lady here; but
|
|
unfortunately died there. I send it you, because the Author is a
|
|
great Admirer of Mr. Stanley's musical Compositions, and has adapted
|
|
this Piece to an Air in the 6th Concerto of that Gentleman, the
|
|
sweetly solemn Movement of which he is quite in Raptures with. He
|
|
has attempted to compose a Recitativo for it; but not being able to
|
|
satisfy himself in the Bass, wishes I could get it supply'd. If Mr.
|
|
Stanley would condescend to do that for him, thro' your Intercession,
|
|
he would esteem it as one of the highest Honours, and it would make
|
|
him excessively happy. You will say that a Recitativo can be but a
|
|
poor Specimen of our Music. 'Tis the best and all I have at present;
|
|
but you may see better hereafter.
|
|
|
|
I hope Mr. Ralph's Affairs are mended since you wrote. I know
|
|
he had some Expectations when I came away, from a Hand that could
|
|
help him. He has Merit, and one would think ought not to be so
|
|
unfortunate.
|
|
|
|
I do not wonder at the Behaviour you mention of Dr. Smith
|
|
towards me, for I have long since known him thoroughly. I made that
|
|
Man my Enemy by doing him too much Kindness. Tis the honestest Way
|
|
of acquiring an Enemy. And since 'tis convenient to have at least
|
|
one Enemy, who by his Readiness to revile one on all Occasions may
|
|
make one careful of one's Conduct, I shall keep him an Enemy for that
|
|
purpose; and shall observe your good Mother's Advice, never again to
|
|
receive him as a Friend. She once admir'd the benevolent Spirit
|
|
breath'd in his Sermons. She will now see the Justness of the Lines
|
|
your Laureat Whitehead addresses to his Poets, and which I now
|
|
address to her,
|
|
|
|
Full many a _peevish, envious, slanderous_ Elf, Is, -- in his Works,
|
|
-- Benevolence itself. For all Mankind -- unknown -- his Bosom
|
|
heaves; He only injures those with whom he lives. Read then the Man:
|
|
-- does _Truth_ his Actions guide, Exempt from _Petulance_, exempt
|
|
from _Pride_? To social Duties does his Heart attend, As Son, as
|
|
Father, Husband, Brother, _Friend_? _Do those who know him love
|
|
him?_ -- If they do, You've _my_ Permission: you may love him too.
|
|
|
|
Nothing can please me more than to see your philosophical
|
|
Improvements when you have Leisure to communicate them to me. I
|
|
still owe you a long Letter on that Subject, which I shall pay.
|
|
|
|
I am vex'd with Mr. James that he has been so dilatory in Mr.
|
|
Maddison's Armonica. I was unlucky in both the Workmen that I
|
|
permitted to undertake making those Instruments. The first was
|
|
fanciful, and never could work to the purpose, because he was ever
|
|
conceiving some new Improvement that answer'd no End: the other, I
|
|
doubt, is absolutely idle. I have recommended a Number to him from
|
|
hence, but must stop my hand.
|
|
|
|
Adieu, my dear Polly, and believe me as ever, with the
|
|
sincerest Esteem and Regard, Your truly affectionate Friend, and
|
|
humble Servant
|
|
|
|
My Love to Mrs. Tickell and Mrs. Rooke, and to Pitty when you
|
|
write to her. Mrs. Franklin and Sally desire to be affectionately
|
|
remembr'd to you.
|
|
|
|
P.S. I find the printed Poetry I intended to enclose will be
|
|
too bulky to send per the Packet: I shall send it by a Ship that goes
|
|
shortly from hence.
|
|
|
|
"THE NATURAL CAPACITIES OF THE BLACK RACE"
|
|
|
|
_To John Waring_
|
|
|
|
Reverend and dear Sir, Philada. Dec. 17. 1763
|
|
|
|
Being but just return'd home from a Tour thro' the northern Colonies,
|
|
that has employ'd the whole Summer, my Time at present is so taken up that I
|
|
cannot now write fully in answer to the Letters I have receiv'd from you, but
|
|
purpose to do it shortly. This is chiefly to acquaint you, that I have
|
|
visited the Negro School here in Company with the Revd. Mr. Sturgeon and
|
|
some others; and had the Children thoroughly examin'd. They appear'd all to
|
|
have made considerable Progress in Reading for the Time they had respectively
|
|
been in the School, and most of them answer'd readily and well the Questions
|
|
of the Catechism; they behav'd very orderly, showd a proper Respect and ready
|
|
Obedience to the Mistress, and seem'd very attentive to, and a good deal
|
|
affected by, a serious Exhortation with which Mr. Sturgeon concluded our
|
|
Visit. I was on the whole much pleas'd, and from what I then saw, have
|
|
conceiv'd a higher Opinion of the natural Capacities of the black Race, than
|
|
I had ever before entertained. Their Apprehension seems as quick, their
|
|
Memory as strong, and their Docility in every Respect equal to that of white
|
|
Children. You will wonder perhaps that I should ever doubt it, and I will
|
|
not undertake to justify all my Prejudices, nor to account for them. I
|
|
immediately advanc'd the two Guineas you mention'd, for the Mistress, and Mr.
|
|
Sturgeon will therefore draw on you for 7 pounds 18 shillings. only, which
|
|
makes up the half Year's Salary of Ten Pounds. Be pleased to present my best
|
|
Respects to the Associates, and believe me, with sincere Esteem Dear Sir,
|
|
Your most obedient Servant
|
|
|
|
"LIKE A MORNING FOG BEFORE THE RISING SUN"
|
|
|
|
_To William Strahan_
|
|
|
|
Dear Straney Philada. Dec. 19. 1763.
|
|
|
|
I have before me your Favours of July 16, and Augt. 18. which is the
|
|
latest. It vexes me excessively to see that Parker and Mecom are so much in
|
|
Arrear with you. What is due from Parker is safe, and will be paid, I think
|
|
with Interest; for he is a Man as honest as he is industrious and frugal, and
|
|
has withal some Estate: his Backwardness has been owing to his bad Partners
|
|
only, of whom he is now nearly quit. But as to Mecom, he seems so dejected
|
|
and spiritless, that I fear little will be got of him. He has dropt his
|
|
Paper, on which he built his last Hopes. I doubt I shall lose 200 pounds by
|
|
him myself, but am taking Steps to save what I can for you; of which more
|
|
fully in my next.
|
|
|
|
Now I am return'd from my long Journeys which have consum'd the
|
|
whole Summer, I shall apply myself to such a Settlement of all my
|
|
Affairs, as will enable me to do what your Friendship so warmly
|
|
urges. I have a great Opinion of your Wisdom (Madeira apart;) and am
|
|
apt enough to think that what you seem so clear in, and are so
|
|
earnest about, must be right. Tho' I own, that I sometimes suspect,
|
|
my Love to England and my Friends there seduces me a little, and
|
|
makes _my own_ middling Reasons for going over; appear very good
|
|
ones. We shall see in a little Time how Things will turn out.
|
|
|
|
Blessings on your Heart for the Feast of Politicks you gave me
|
|
in your last. I could by no other means have obtain'd so clear a
|
|
View of the present State of your public Affairs as by your Letter.
|
|
Most of your Observations appear to me extreamly judicious,
|
|
strikingly clear and true. I only differ from you in some of the
|
|
melancholly Apprehensions you express concerning Consequences; and to
|
|
comfort you (at the same time flattering my own Vanity,) let me
|
|
remind you, that I have sometimes been in the right in such Cases,
|
|
when you happen'd to be in the wrong; as I can prove upon you out of
|
|
this very Letter of yours. Call to mind your former Fears for the
|
|
King of Prussia, and remember my telling you that the Man's Abilities
|
|
were more than equal to all the Force of his Enemies, and that he
|
|
would finally extricate himself, and triumph. This, by the Account
|
|
you give me from Major Beckwith, is fully verified. You now fear for
|
|
our virtuous young King, that the Faction forming will overpower him,
|
|
and render his Reign uncomfortable. On the contrary, I am of
|
|
Opinion, that his Virtue, and the Consciousness of his sincere
|
|
Intentions to make his People happy, will give him Firmness and
|
|
Steadiness in his Measures, and in the Support of the honest Friends
|
|
he has chosen to serve him; and when that Firmness is fully
|
|
perceiv'd, Faction will dissolve and be dissipated like a Morning Fog
|
|
before the rising Sun, leaving the rest of the Day clear, with a Sky
|
|
serene and cloudless. Such, after a few of the first Years, will be
|
|
the future Course of his Majesty's Reign, which I predict will be
|
|
happy and truly glorious. Your Fears for the Nation too, appear to
|
|
me as little founded. A new War I cannot yet see Reason to
|
|
apprehend. The Peace I think will long continue, and your Nation be
|
|
as happy as they deserve to be, that is, as happy as their moderate
|
|
Share of Virtue will allow them to be: Happier than that, no outward
|
|
Circumstances can make a Nation any more than a private Man. And as
|
|
to their Quantity of Virtue, I think it bids fair for Increasing; if
|
|
the old Saying be true, as it certainly is,
|
|
|
|
Ad Exemplum Regis, &c.
|
|
|
|
My Love to Mrs. Strahan and your Children in which my Wife and
|
|
Daughter join with Your ever affectionate Friend
|
|
|
|
P.S. The western Indians about Fort Detroit now sue for Peace,
|
|
having lost a great Number of their best Warriors in their vain
|
|
Attempt to reduce that Fortress; and being at length assur'd by a
|
|
Belt from the French Commander in the Ilinois Country, that a Peace
|
|
is concluded between England and France, that he must evacuate the
|
|
Country and deliver up his Forts, and can no longer supply or support
|
|
them. It is thought this will draw on a general Peace. I am only
|
|
afraid it will be concluded before these Barbarians have sufficiently
|
|
smarted for their perfidious breaking the last.
|
|
|
|
The Governor of Detroit, Major Gladwin, has granted them a
|
|
Cessation of Arms, till the General's Pleasure is known.
|
|
|
|
"AN AMBASSADOR TO THE COUNTRY MOB"
|
|
|
|
_To John Fothergill_
|
|
|
|
Dear Doctor, Philada. March 14. 1764.
|
|
|
|
I received your Favour of the 10th. of Decemr. It was a great
|
|
deal for one to write, whose Time is so little his own. By the way,
|
|
_When do you intend to live?_ i.e. to enjoy Life. When will you
|
|
retire to your Villa, give your self Repose, delight in Viewing the
|
|
Operations of Nature in the vegetable Creation, assist her in her
|
|
Works, get your ingenious Friends at times about you, make them happy
|
|
with your Conversation, and enjoy theirs; or, if alone, amuse
|
|
yourself with your Books and elegant Collections? To be hurried
|
|
about perpetually from one sick Chamber to another, is not Living.
|
|
Do you please yourself with the Fancy that you are doing Good? You
|
|
are mistaken. Half the Lives you save are not worth saving, as being
|
|
useless; and almost the other Half ought not to be sav'd, as being
|
|
mischievous. Does your Conscience never hint to you the Impiety of
|
|
being in constant Warfare against the Plans of Providence? Disease
|
|
was intended as the Punishment of Intemperance, Sloth, and other
|
|
Vices; and the Example of that Punishment was intended to promote and
|
|
strengthen the opposite Virtues. But here you step in officiously
|
|
with your Art, disappoint those wise Intentions of Nature, and make
|
|
Men safe in their Excesses. Whereby you seem to me to be of just the
|
|
same Service to Society as some favourite first Minister, who out of
|
|
the great Benevolence of his Heart should procure Pardons for all
|
|
Criminals that apply'd to him. Only think of the Consequences!
|
|
|
|
You tell me the Quakers are charged on your side the Water with
|
|
being by their Aggressions the Cause of this War. Would you believe
|
|
it, that they are charg'd here, not with offending the Indians, and
|
|
thereby provoking the War, but with gaining their Friendship by
|
|
Presents, supplying them privately with Arms and Ammunition, and
|
|
engaging them to fall upon and murder the poor white People on the
|
|
Frontiers? Would you think it possible that Thousands even here
|
|
should be made to believe this, and many Hundreds of them be raised
|
|
in Arms, not only to kill some converted Indians supposed to be under
|
|
the Quakers Protection, but to punish the Quakers who were supposed
|
|
to give that Protection? Would you think these People audacious
|
|
enough to avow such Designs in a public Declaration sent to the
|
|
Governor? Would you imagine that innocent Quakers, Men of Fortune
|
|
and Character, should think it necessary to fly for Safety out of
|
|
Philadelphia into the Jersies, fearing the Violence of such armed
|
|
Mobs, and confiding little in the Power _or Inclination_ of the
|
|
Government to protect them? And would you imagine that strong
|
|
Suspicions now prevail, that those Mobs, after committing 20
|
|
barbarous Murders, hitherto unpunish'd, are privately tamper'd with
|
|
to be made Instruments of Government, to awe the Assembly into
|
|
Proprietary Measures? And yet all this has happen'd within a few
|
|
Weeks past!
|
|
|
|
More Wonders! You know I don't love the Proprietary, and that
|
|
he does not love me. Our totally different Tempers forbid it. You
|
|
might therefore expect, that the late new Appointment of one of his
|
|
Family, would find me ready for Opposition. And yet when his Nephew
|
|
arriv'd our Governor, I consider'd Government as Government, paid him
|
|
all Respect, gave him on all Occasions my best Advice, promoted in
|
|
the Assembly a ready Compliance with everything he propos'd or
|
|
recommended; and when those daring Rioters, encourag'd by the general
|
|
Approbation of the Populace, treated his Proclamations with Contempt,
|
|
I drew my Pen in the Cause, wrote a Pamphlet (that I have sent you)
|
|
to render the Rioters unpopular; promoted an Association to support
|
|
the Authority of the Government and defend the Governor by taking
|
|
Arms, sign'd it first myself, and was followed by several Hundreds,
|
|
who took Arms accordingly; the Governor offer'd me the Command of
|
|
them, but I chose to carry a Musket, and strengthen his Authority by
|
|
setting an Example of Obedience to his Orders. And, would you think
|
|
it, this Proprietary Governor did me the Honour, on an Alarm, to run
|
|
to my House at Midnight, with his Counsellors at his Heels, for
|
|
Advice, and made it his Head Quarters for some time: And within four
|
|
and twenty Hours, your old Friend was a common Soldier, a Counsellor,
|
|
a kind of Dictator, an Ambassador to the Country Mob, and on their
|
|
Returning home, _Nobody_, again. All this has happened in a few
|
|
Weeks!
|
|
|
|
More Wonders! The Assembly receiv'd a Governor of the
|
|
Proprietary Family with open Arms, address'd him with sincere
|
|
Expressions of Kindness and Respect, open'd their Purses to him, and
|
|
presented him with Six Hundred Pounds; made a Riot Act and prepar'd a
|
|
Militia Bill immediately at his Instance; granted Supplies and did
|
|
every thing that he requested, and promis'd themselves great
|
|
Happiness under his Administration. But suddenly, his dropping all
|
|
Enquiry after the Murderers, and his answering the Deputies of the
|
|
Rioters privately and refusing the Presence of the Assembly who were
|
|
equally concern'd in the Matters contain'd in their Remonstrance,
|
|
brings him under Suspicion; his Insulting the Assembly without the
|
|
least Provocation, by charging them with Disloyalty and with making
|
|
_an Infringement on the King's Prerogatives_, only because they had
|
|
presumed to name in a Bill offered for his Assent, a trifling Officer
|
|
(somewhat like one of your Toll-Gatherers at a Turn pike) without
|
|
consulting him; and his refusing several of their Bills, or proposing
|
|
Amendments needlessly disgusting; these Things bring him and his
|
|
Government into sudden Contempt; all Regard for him in the Assembly
|
|
is lost; all Hopes of Happiness under a Proprietary Government are at
|
|
an End; it has now scarce Authority enough left to keep the common
|
|
Peace; and was another Mob to come against him, I question whether,
|
|
tho' a Dozen Men were sufficient, one could find so many in
|
|
Philadelphia, willing to rescue him or his Attorney-General, I won't
|
|
say from Hanging, but from any common Insult. All this, too, has
|
|
happened in a few Weeks!
|
|
|
|
In fine, every thing seems in this Country, once the Land of
|
|
Peace and Order, to be running fast into Anarchy and Confusion. Our
|
|
only Hopes are, that the Crown will see the Necessity of taking the
|
|
Government into its own Hands, without which we shall soon have no
|
|
Government at all.
|
|
|
|
Your civil Dissensions at home give us here great Concern. But
|
|
we hope there is Virtue enough in your great Nation to support a good
|
|
Prince in the Execution of Good Government, and the Exercise of his
|
|
just Prerogatives, against all the Attempts of Unreasonable Faction.
|
|
|
|
I have been already too long. Adieu, my dear Friend, and
|
|
believe me ever Yours affectionately
|
|
|
|
"SO SELFISH IS THE HUMAN MIND!"
|
|
|
|
_To Peter Collinson_
|
|
|
|
Dear Friend, Philada. April 30. 1764
|
|
|
|
I have before me your kind Notices of Feb. 3. and Feb. 10.
|
|
Those you enclos'd for our Friend Bartram, were carefully deliver'd.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I have not yet seen the Squib you mention against your People,
|
|
in the Supplement to the Magazine; but I think it impossible they
|
|
should be worse us'd there than they have lately been here; where
|
|
sundry inflammatory Pamphlets are printed and spread about to excite
|
|
a mad armed Mob to massacre them. And it is my Opinion they are
|
|
still in some Danger, more than they themselves seem to apprehend, as
|
|
our Government has neither Goodwill nor Authority enough to protect
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
By the enclos'd Papers you will see that we are all to pieces
|
|
again; and the general Wish seems to be a King's Government. If that
|
|
is not to be obtain'd, many talk of quitting the Province, and among
|
|
them your old Friend, who is tired of these Contentions, and longs
|
|
for philosophic Ease and Leisure.
|
|
|
|
I suppose by this Time the Wisdom of your Parliament has
|
|
determin'd in the Points you mention, of Trade, Duties, Troops and
|
|
Fortifications in America. Our Opinions or Inclinations, if they had
|
|
been known, would perhaps have weigh'd but little among you. We are
|
|
in your Hands as Clay in the Hands of the Potter; and so in one more
|
|
Particular than is generally consider'd: for as the Potter cannot
|
|
waste or spoil his Clay without injuring himself; so I think there is
|
|
scarce anything you can do that may be hurtful to us, but what will
|
|
be as much or more so to you. This must be our chief Security; for
|
|
Interest with you we have but little: The West Indians vastly
|
|
outweigh us of the Northern Colonies. What we get above a
|
|
Subsistence, we lay out with you for your Manufactures. Therefore
|
|
what you get from us in Taxes you must lose in Trade. The Cat can
|
|
yield but her Skin. And as you must have the whole Hide, if you
|
|
first cut Thongs out of it, 'tis at your own Expence. The same in
|
|
regard to our Trade with the foreign West India Islands: If you
|
|
restrain it in any Degree, you restrain in the same Proportion our
|
|
Power of making Remittances to you, and of course our Demand for your
|
|
Goods; for you will not clothe us out of Charity, tho' to receive 100
|
|
per Cent for it, in Heaven. In time perhaps Mankind may be wise
|
|
enough to let Trade take its own Course, find its own Channels, and
|
|
regulate its own Proportions, &c. At present, most of the Edicts of
|
|
Princes, Placaerts, Laws and Ordinances of Kingdoms and States, for
|
|
that purpose, prove political Blunders. The Advantages they produce
|
|
not being _general_ for the Commonwealth; but _particular_, to
|
|
private Persons or Bodies in the State who procur'd them, and _at the
|
|
Expence of the rest of the People_. Does no body see, that if you
|
|
confine us in America to your own Sugar Islands for that Commodity,
|
|
it must raise the Price of it upon you in England? Just so much as
|
|
the Price advances, so much is every Englishman tax'd to the West
|
|
Indians. Apropos. Now we are on the Subject of Trade and
|
|
Manufactures, let me tell you a Piece of News, that though it might
|
|
displease a very respectable Body among you, the Button-makers, will
|
|
be agreable to yourself as a Virtuoso: It is, that we have discover'd
|
|
a Beach in a Bay several Miles round, the Pebbles of which are all in
|
|
the Form of Buttons, whence it is called _Button-mold Bay_; where
|
|
thousands of Tons may be had for fetching; and as the Sea washes down
|
|
the slaty Cliff, more are continually manufacturing out of the
|
|
Fragments by the Surge. I send you a Specimen of Coat, Wastecoat and
|
|
Sleeve Buttons; just as Nature has turn'd them. But I think I must
|
|
not mention the Place, lest some Englishman get a Patent for this
|
|
_Button-mine_, as one did for the _Coal mine_ at Louisburgh, and by
|
|
neither suffering others to work it, nor working it himself, deprive
|
|
us of the Advantage God and Nature seem to have intended us. As we
|
|
have now got Buttons, 'tis something towards our Cloathing; and who
|
|
knows but in time we may find out where to get Cloth? for as to our
|
|
being always supply'd by you, 'tis a Folly to expect it. Only
|
|
consider _the Rate of our Increase_, and tell me if you can increase
|
|
your Wooll in that Proportion, and where, in your little Island you
|
|
can feed the Sheep. Nature has put Bounds to your Abilities, tho'
|
|
none to your Desires. Britain would, if she could, manufacture and
|
|
trade for all the World; England for all Britain; London for all
|
|
England; and every Londoner for all London. So selfish is the human
|
|
Mind! But 'tis well there is One above that rules these Matters with
|
|
a more equal Hand. He that is pleas'd to feed the Ravens, will
|
|
undoubtedly take care to prevent a Monopoly of the Carrion. Adieu,
|
|
my dear Friend, and believe me ever Yours most affectionately
|
|
|
|
"GO CONSTANTLY TO CHURCH WHOEVER PREACHES"
|
|
|
|
_To Sarah Franklin_
|
|
|
|
Reedy Island Nov. 8. 1764 My dear Sally, 7 at Night.
|
|
|
|
We got down here just at Sunset, having taken in more live
|
|
Stock at Newcastle with some other things we wanted. Our good
|
|
Friends Mr. Galloway, Mr. Wharton, and Mr. James came with me in the
|
|
Ship from Chester to Newcastle, and went ashore there. It was kind
|
|
to favour me with their good Company as far as they could. The
|
|
affectionate Leave taken of me by so many Friends at Chester was very
|
|
endearing. God bless them, and all Pennsylvania.
|
|
|
|
My dear Child, the natural Prudence and goodness of heart that
|
|
God has blessed you with, make it less necessary for me to be
|
|
particular in giving you Advice; I shall therefore only say, that the
|
|
more attentively dutiful and tender you are towards your good Mama,
|
|
the more you will recommend your self to me; But why shou'd I mention
|
|
_me_, when you have so much higher a Promise in the Commandment, that
|
|
such a conduct will recommend you to the favour of God. You know I
|
|
have many Enemies (all indeed on the Public Account, for I cannot
|
|
recollect that I have in a private Capacity given just cause of
|
|
offence to any one whatever) yet they are Enemies and very bitter
|
|
ones, and you must expect their Enmity will extend in some degree to
|
|
you, so that your slightest Indiscretions will be magnified into
|
|
crimes, in order the more sensibly to wound and afflict me. It is
|
|
therefore the more necessary for you to be extreamly circumspect in
|
|
all your Behaviour that no Advantage may be given to their
|
|
Malevolence. Go constantly to Church whoever preaches. The Acts of
|
|
Devotion in the common Prayer Book, are your principal Business
|
|
there; and if properly attended to, will do more towards mending the
|
|
Heart than Sermons generally can do. For they were composed by Men
|
|
of much greater Piety and Wisdom, than our common Composers of
|
|
Sermons can pretend to be. And therefore I wish you wou'd never miss
|
|
the Prayer Days. Yet I do not mean that you shou'd despise Sermons
|
|
even of the Preachers you dislike, for the Discourse is often much
|
|
better than the Man, as sweet and clear Waters come to us thro' very
|
|
dirty Earth. I am the more particular on this Head, as you seem'd to
|
|
express a little before I came away some Inclination to leave our
|
|
Church, which I wou'd not have you do.
|
|
|
|
For the rest I would only recommend to you in my Absence to
|
|
acquire those useful Accomplishments Arithmetick, and Book-keeping.
|
|
This you might do with Ease, if you wou'd resolve not to see Company
|
|
on the Hours you set apart for those Studies. I think you should and
|
|
every Body should if they could, have certain days or hours to [ ]
|
|
She cannot be spoke with: but will be glad to see you at such a time.
|
|
|
|
We expect to be at Sea to morrow if this Wind holds, after
|
|
which I shall have no opportunity of Writing to you till I arrive (if
|
|
it pleases God that I do arrive) in England. I pray that _his_
|
|
Blessing may attend you which is of more worth than a Thousand of
|
|
mine, though they are never wanting. Give my Love to your Brother
|
|
and Sister, as I cannot now write to them; and remember me
|
|
affectionately to the young Ladies your Friends, and to our good
|
|
Neighbours. I am, my dear Sally, Your ever Affectionate Father
|
|
|
|
THE OLD SONGS VERSUS MODERN MUSIC
|
|
|
|
_To Lord Kames_
|
|
|
|
My dear Lord Cravenstreet, London, June 2. 1765.
|
|
|
|
I receiv'd with great Pleasure your friendly Letter by Mr.
|
|
Alexander, which I should have answer'd sooner by some other
|
|
Conveyance, if I had understood that his Stay here was like to be so
|
|
long. I value myself extreamly on the Continuance of your Regard,
|
|
which I hope hereafter better to deserve by more punctual Returns in
|
|
the Correspondence you honour me with.
|
|
|
|
You require my History from the time I set Sail for America. I left
|
|
England about the End of August 1762, in Company with Ten Sail of Merchant
|
|
Ships under Convoy of a Man of War. We had a pleasant Passage to Madeira, an
|
|
Island and Colony belonging to Portugal, where we were kindly receiv'd and
|
|
entertain'd, our Nation being then in high Honour with them, on Account of
|
|
the Protection it was at that time affording their Mother Country from the
|
|
united Invasions of France and Spain. 'Tis a fertile Island, and the
|
|
different Heights and Situations among its Mountains, afford such different
|
|
Temperaments of Air, that all the Fruits of Northern and Southern Countries
|
|
are produc'd there, Corn, Grapes, Apples, Peaches, Oranges, Lemons,
|
|
Plantains, Bananas, &c. Here we furnish'd ourselves with fresh Provisions
|
|
and Refreshments of all kinds, and after a few Days proceeded on our Voyage,
|
|
running Southward till we got into the Trade Winds, and then with them
|
|
Westward till we drew near the Coast of America. The Weather was so
|
|
favourable, that there were few Days in which we could not visit from Ship to
|
|
Ship, dining with each other and on board the Man of War, which made the time
|
|
pass agreably, much more so than when one goes in a single Ship, for this was
|
|
like travelling in a moving Village, with all one's Neighbours about one. On
|
|
the first of November, I arriv'd safe and well at my own House, after an
|
|
Absence of near Six Years, found my Wife and Daughter well, the latter grown
|
|
quite a Woman, with many amiable Accomplishments acquir'd in my Absence, and
|
|
my Friends as hearty and affectionate as ever, with whom my House was fill'd
|
|
for many Days, to congratulate me on my Return. I had been chosen yearly
|
|
during my Absence to represent the City of Philadelphia in our Provincial
|
|
Assembly, and on my Appearance in the House they voted me 3000 pounds
|
|
Sterling for my Services in England and their Thanks delivered by the
|
|
Speaker. In February following my Son arriv'd, with my new Daughter, for,
|
|
with my Consent and Approbation he married soon after I left England, a very
|
|
agreable West India Lady, with whom he is very happy. I accompanied him into
|
|
his Government, where he met with the kindest Reception from the People of
|
|
all Ranks, and has lived with them ever since in the greatest Harmony. A
|
|
River only parts that Province and ours, and his Residence is within 17 Miles
|
|
of me, so that we frequently see each other. In the Spring of 1763 I set out
|
|
on a Tour thro' all the Northern Colonies, to inspect and regulate the Post
|
|
Offices in the several Provinces. In this Journey I spent the Summer,
|
|
travelled about 1600 Miles, and did not get home 'till the Beginning of
|
|
November. The Assembly sitting thro' the following Winter, and warm Disputes
|
|
arising between them and the Governor I became wholly engag'd in public
|
|
Affairs: For besides my Duty as an Assemblyman, I had another Trust to
|
|
execute, that of being one of the Commissioners appointed by Law to dispose
|
|
of the publick Money appropriated to the Raising and Paying an Army to act
|
|
against the Indians and defend the Frontiers. And then in December we had
|
|
two Insurrections of the back Inhabitants of our Province, by whom 20 poor
|
|
Indians were murdered that had from the first Settlement of the Province
|
|
lived among us and under the Protection of our Government. This gave me a
|
|
good deal of Employment, for as the Rioters threatned farther Mischief, and
|
|
their Actions seem'd to be approv'd by an encreasing Party, I wrote a
|
|
Pamphlet entitled a _Narrative_, &c. (which I think I sent you,) to
|
|
strengthen the Hands of our weak Government, by rendring the Proceedings of
|
|
the Rioters unpopular and odious. This had a good Effect; and afterwards
|
|
when a great Body of them with Arms march'd towards the Capital in Defiance
|
|
of the Government, with an avowed Resolution to put to death 140 Indian
|
|
Converts then under its Protection, I form'd an Association at the Governor's
|
|
Request, for his and their Defence, we having no Militia. Near 1000 of the
|
|
Citizens accordingly took Arms; Governor Penn made my House for some time his
|
|
Head Quarters, and did every thing by my Advice, so that for about 48 Hours I
|
|
was a very great Man, as I had been once some Years before in a time of
|
|
publick Danger; but the fighting Face we put on, and the Reasonings we us'd
|
|
with the Insurgents (for I went at the Request of the Governor and Council
|
|
with three others to meet and discourse them) having turn'd them back, and
|
|
restor'd Quiet to the City, I became a less Man than ever: for I had by these
|
|
Transactions made myself many Enemies among the Populace; and the Governor
|
|
(with whose Family our publick Disputes had long plac'd me in an unfriendly
|
|
Light, and the Services I had lately render'd him not being of the kind that
|
|
make a Man acceptable) thinking it a favourable Opportunity, join'd the whole
|
|
Weight of the Proprietary Interest to get me out of the Assembly, which was
|
|
accordingly effected at the last Election, by a Majority of about 25 in 4000
|
|
Voters. The House however, when they met in October, approv'd of the
|
|
Resolutions taken while I was Speaker, of petitioning the Crown for a Change
|
|
of Government, and requested me to return to England to prosecute that
|
|
Petition; which Service I accordingly undertook, and embark'd the Beginning
|
|
of November last, being accompany'd to the Ship, 16 Miles, by a Cavalcade of
|
|
three Hundred of my Friends, who fill'd our Sails with their good Wishes, and
|
|
I arrived in 30 Days at London. Here I have been ever since engag'd in that
|
|
and other Public Affairs relating to America, which are like to continue some
|
|
time longer upon my hands; but I promise you, that when I am quit of these, I
|
|
will engage in no other; and that as soon as I have recover'd the Ease and
|
|
Leisure I hope for, the Task you require of me, of finishing my _Art of
|
|
Virtue_ shall be perform'd: In the mean time I must request you would excuse
|
|
me on this Consideration, that the Powers of the Mind are posess'd by
|
|
different Men in different Degrees, and that every one cannot, like Lord
|
|
Kaims, intermix literary Pursuits and important Business, without Prejudice
|
|
to either.
|
|
|
|
I send you herewith two or three other Pamphlets of my Writing
|
|
on our political Affairs during my short Residence in America; but I
|
|
do not insist on your reading them, for I know you employ all your
|
|
time to some use Purpose.
|
|
|
|
In my Passage to America, I read your excellent Work, the
|
|
Elements of Criticism, in which I found great Entertainment, much to
|
|
admire, and nothing to reprove. I only wish'd you had examin'd more
|
|
fully the Subject of Music, and demonstrated that the Pleasure
|
|
Artists feel in hearing much of that compos'd in the modern Taste, is
|
|
not the natural Pleasure arising from Melody or Harmony of Sounds,
|
|
but of the same kind with the Pleasure we feel on seeing the
|
|
surprizing Feats of Tumblers and Rope Dancers, who execute difficult
|
|
Things. For my part, I take this to be really the Case and suppose
|
|
it the Reason why those who being unpractis'd in Music, and therefore
|
|
unacquainted with those Difficulties, have little or no Pleasure in
|
|
hearing this Music. Many Pieces of it are mere Compositions of
|
|
Tricks. I have sometimes at a Concert attended by a common Audience
|
|
plac'd myself so as to see all their Faces, and observ'd no Signs of
|
|
Pleasure in them during the Performance of much that was admir'd by
|
|
the Performers themselves; while a plain old Scottish Tune, which
|
|
they disdain'd and could scarcely be prevail'd on to play, gave
|
|
manifest and general Delight. Give me leave on this Occasion to
|
|
extend a little the Sense of your Position, That "Melody and Harmony
|
|
are separately agreable, and in Union delightful;" and to give it as
|
|
my Opinion, that the Reason why the Scotch Tunes have liv'd so long,
|
|
and will probably live forever (if they escape being stifled in
|
|
modern affected Ornament) is merely this, that they are really
|
|
Compositions of Melody and Harmony united, or rather that their
|
|
Melody is Harmony. I mean the simple Tunes sung by a single Voice.
|
|
As this will appear paradoxical I must explain my Meaning. In common
|
|
Acceptation indeed, only an agreable _Succession_ of Sounds is called
|
|
_Melody_, and only the _Co-existence_ of agreeing Sounds, _Harmony_.
|
|
But since the Memory is capable of retaining for some Moments a
|
|
perfect Idea of the Pitch of a past Sound, so as to compare with it
|
|
the Pitch of a succeeding Sound, and judge truly of their Agreement
|
|
or Disagreement, there may and does arise from thence a Sense of
|
|
Harmony between present and past Sounds, equally pleasing with that
|
|
between two present Sounds. Now the Construction of the old Scotch
|
|
Tunes is this, that almost every succeeding _emphatical_ Note, is a
|
|
Third, a Fifth, an Octave, or in short some Note that is in Concord
|
|
with the preceding Note. Thirds are chiefly used, which are very
|
|
pleasing Concords. I use the Word _emphatical_, to distinguish those
|
|
Notes which have a Stress laid on them in Singing the Tune, from the
|
|
lighter connecting Notes, that serve merely, like Grammar Articles,
|
|
to tack the others together. That we have a most perfect Idea of a
|
|
Sound just past, I might appeal to all acquainted with Music, who
|
|
know how easy it is to repeat a Sound in the same Pitch with one just
|
|
heard. In Tuning an Instrument, a good Ear can as easily determine
|
|
that two Strings are in Unison, by sounding them separately, as by
|
|
sounding them together; their Disagreement is also as easily, I
|
|
believe I may say more easily and better distinguish'd, when sounded
|
|
separately; for when sounded together, tho' you know by the Beating
|
|
that one is higher than the other, you cannot tell which it is.
|
|
Farther, when we consider by whom these ancient Tunes were composed,
|
|
and how they were first performed, we shall see that such harmonical
|
|
Succession of Sounds was natural and even necessary in their
|
|
Construction. They were compos'd by the Minstrels of those days, to
|
|
be plaid on the Harp accompany'd by the Voice. The Harp was strung
|
|
with Wire, and had no Contrivance like that in the modern
|
|
Harpsichord, by which the Sound of a preceding Note could be stopt
|
|
the Moment a succeeding Note began. To avoid _actual_ Discord it was
|
|
therefore necessary that the succeeding emphatic Note should be a
|
|
Chord with the preceding, as their Sounds must exist at the same
|
|
time. Hence arose that Beauty in those Tunes that has so long
|
|
pleas'd, and will please for ever, tho' Men scarce know why. That
|
|
they were originally compos'd for the Harp, and of the most simple
|
|
kind, I mean a Harp without any Half Notes but those in the natural
|
|
Scale, and with no more than two Octaves of Strings from C. to C. I
|
|
conjecture from another Circumstance, which is, that not one of those
|
|
Tunes really ancient has a single artificial Half Note in it; and
|
|
that in Tunes where it was most convenient for the Voice, to use the
|
|
middle Notes of the Harp, and place the Key in F. there the B. which
|
|
if used should be a B flat, is always omitted by passing over it with
|
|
a Third. The Connoisseurs in modern Music will say I have no Taste,
|
|
but I cannot help adding, that I believe our Ancestors in hearing a
|
|
good Song, distinctly articulated, sung to one of those Tunes and
|
|
accompanied by the Harp, felt more real Pleasure than is communicated
|
|
by the generality of modern Operas, exclusive of that arising from
|
|
the Scenery and Dancing. Most Tunes of late Composition, not having
|
|
the natural Harmony united with their Melody, have recourse to the
|
|
artificial Harmony of a Bass and other accompanying Parts. This
|
|
Support, in my Opinion, the old Tunes do not need, and are rather
|
|
confus'd than aided by it. Whoever has heard James Oswald play them
|
|
on his Violoncello, will be less inclin'd to dispute this with me. I
|
|
have more than once seen Tears of Pleasure in the Eyes of his
|
|
Auditors; and yet I think even his Playing those Tunes would please
|
|
more, if he gave them less modern Ornament.
|
|
|
|
My Son, when we parted, desired me to present his affectionate
|
|
Respects to you, Lady Kaims, and your amiable Children; be so good
|
|
with those to accept mine, and believe me, with sincerest Esteem, My
|
|
dear Lord, Your Lordship's most obedient and most humble Servant
|
|
|
|
P.S. I do promise myself the Pleasure of seeing you and my
|
|
other Friends in Scotland before I return to America.
|
|
|
|
"WE MIGHT AS WELL HAVE HINDER'D THE SUNS SETTING"
|
|
|
|
To Charles Thomson
|
|
|
|
Dear Friend London July 11th: 1765 I am extreemly obliged by
|
|
your kind Letters of Aprill 12th. and 14th. and thank you for the
|
|
Intelligence they Contain.
|
|
|
|
The Outrages continueally commited by those misguided people,
|
|
will doubtless tend to Convince all the Considerate on your side of
|
|
the Water of the Weakness of our present Government and the Necessity
|
|
of a Change. I am sure it will contribute towards hastening that
|
|
Change here so that upon the whole, Good will be brought out of Evil:
|
|
but yet I Greive to hear of such horrid Disorders.
|
|
|
|
The Letters and Accounts boasted of from the Proprietor of his
|
|
being Sure of retaining the Government, as well as those of the Sums
|
|
offered for it which the People will be obliged to pay, &c. are all
|
|
idle Tales, fit only for Knaves to propagate and Fools to believe.
|
|
|
|
A Little Time will dissipate all the smoke they can raise to
|
|
conceal the real State of Things. The unsettled State of the
|
|
Ministry ever since the Parliament rose, has stop'd all Proceeding in
|
|
Publick Affairs and ours amongst the Rest; but Change being now made
|
|
we shall immidiately proceed, and with the Greater Chearfulness as
|
|
some we had reason to Doubt of are removed, and some perticular
|
|
Friends are put in Place.
|
|
|
|
What you mention of the Lower Counties is undoubtedly right.
|
|
Had they ever sent their Laws home as they ought to have done, that
|
|
iniquitous one of priority of Payment to Reseidents would undoubtedly
|
|
have been Repeald. But the End of all these things is neigh, at
|
|
Least it seems to be so.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The spicking of the Guns was an audacious Peice of Villainy, by
|
|
whomsoever done, it Shows the Necessity of a regular enclos'd Place
|
|
of Defence, with a Constant Guard to take Care of what belongs to it,
|
|
which, when the Country can afford it, will I hope be provided.
|
|
|
|
Depend upon it my good Neighbour, I took every Step in my
|
|
Power, to prevent the Passing of the Stamp Act; no body could be more
|
|
concern'd in Interest than my self to oppose it, sincerely and
|
|
Heartily. But the Tide was, too strong against us. The Nation was
|
|
provok'd by American Claims of Independance, and all Parties join'd
|
|
in resolveing by this Act to Settle the Point.
|
|
|
|
We might as well have hinder'd the Suns setting. That we could
|
|
not do. But since 'tis down, my Friend, and it may be long before it
|
|
rises again, Let us make as good a Night of it as we can. We may
|
|
still Light Candles. Frugallity and Industry will go a great way
|
|
towards indemnifying us. Idleness and Pride Tax with a heavier Hand
|
|
then Kings and Parliaments; If we can get rid of the former we may
|
|
easily bear the Latter.
|
|
|
|
My best Respects to Mrs. Thompson. Adieu my Dear Friend and
|
|
beleive me ever Yours affectionately
|
|
|
|
Excuse my Man John's miserable Clerkship.
|
|
|
|
"A PRETTY GOOD SORT OF A WORLD"
|
|
|
|
_To Jane Mecom_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sister London, March 1. 1766
|
|
|
|
I acknowledge the Receipt of your kind Letters of Nov. 12. and
|
|
Dec. 20. the latter per Mr. Williams. I condole with you on the
|
|
Death of your Husband, who was I believe a truly affectionate one to
|
|
you, and fully sensible of your Merit. It is not true that I have
|
|
bought any Estate here. I have indeed had some thoughts of
|
|
re-purchasing the little one in Northamptonshire that was our
|
|
Grandfather's, and had been many Generations in the Family, but was
|
|
sold by our Uncle Thomas's only Child Mrs. Fisher, the same that left
|
|
you the Legacy. However I shall not do it unless I determine to
|
|
remain in England, which I have not yet done.
|
|
|
|
As to the Reports you mention that are spread to my
|
|
Disadvantage, I give myself as little Concern about them as possible.
|
|
I have often met with such Treatment from People that I was all the
|
|
while endeavouring to serve. At other times I have been extoll'd
|
|
extravagantly when I have had little or no Merit. These are the
|
|
Operations of Nature. It sometimes is cloudy, it rains, it hails;
|
|
again 'tis clear and pleasant, and the Sun shines on us. Take one
|
|
thing with another, and the World is a pretty good sort of a World;
|
|
and 'tis our Duty to make the best of it and be thankful. One's true
|
|
Happiness depends more upon one's own Judgement of one's self, on a
|
|
Consciousness of Rectitude in Action and Intention, and in the
|
|
Approbation of those few who judge impartially, than upon the
|
|
Applause of the unthinking undiscerning Multitude, who are apt to cry
|
|
Hosanna today, and tomorrow, Crucify him. I see in the Papers that
|
|
your Governor, Mr. Barnard, has been hardly thought of, and a little
|
|
unkindly treated, as if he was a favourer of the Stamp Act: Yet it
|
|
appears by his Letters to Government here, which have been read in
|
|
Parliament, that he has wrote warmly in favour of the Province and
|
|
against that Act, both before it pass'd and since; and so did your
|
|
Lieutenant Governor to my certain Knowledge, tho' the Mob have pull'd
|
|
down his House. Surely the N. England People, when they are rightly
|
|
inform'd, will do Justice to those Gentlemen, and think of them as
|
|
they deserve.
|
|
|
|
Pray remember me kindly to Cousin Williams, and let him know
|
|
that I am very sensible of his Kindness to you, and that I am not
|
|
forgetful of any thing that may concern his Interest or his Pleasure,
|
|
tho' I have not yet wrote to him. I shall endeavour to make that
|
|
Omission up to him as soon as possible.
|
|
|
|
I sent you some things by your Friend Capt. Freeman, which I
|
|
shall be glad to hear came safe to hand, and that they were
|
|
acceptable from Your affectionate Brother
|
|
|
|
My Love to your Children.
|
|
|
|
P.S. I congratulate you and my Countrymen on the Repeal of the
|
|
Stamp Act. I send you a few of the Cards on which I wrote my
|
|
Messages during the Time, it was debated here whether it might not be
|
|
proper to reduce the Colonies to Obedience by Force of Arms: The
|
|
Moral is, that the Colonies might be ruined, but that Britain would
|
|
thereby be maimed.
|
|
|
|
`I NEVER WAS PROUDER OF ANY DRESS IN MY LIFE''
|
|
|
|
_To Deborah Franklin_
|
|
|
|
My dear Child, London, April 6. 1766.
|
|
|
|
As the Stamp Act is at length repeal'd, I am willing you should
|
|
have a new Gown, which you may suppose I did not send sooner, as I
|
|
knew you would not like to be finer than your Neighbours, unless in a
|
|
Gown of your own Spinning. Had the Trade between the two Countries
|
|
totally ceas'd, it was a Comfort to me to recollect that I had once
|
|
been cloth'd from Head to Foot in Woollen and Linnen of my Wife's
|
|
Manufacture, that I never was prouder of any Dress in my Life, and
|
|
that she and her Daughter might do it again if it was necessary. I
|
|
told the Parliament that it was my Opinion, before the old Cloaths of
|
|
the Americans were worn out, they might have new ones of their own
|
|
making. And indeed if they had all as many old Clothes as your old
|
|
Man has, that would not be very unlikely; for I think you and George
|
|
reckon'd when I was last at home, at least 20 pair of old Breeches.
|
|
Joking apart, I have sent you a fine Piece of Pompador Sattin, 14
|
|
Yards cost 11_s._ per Yard. A Silk Negligee and Petticoat of
|
|
brocaded Lutestring for my dear Sally, with 2 Doz. Gloves, 4 Bottles
|
|
of Lavender Water, and two little Reels. The Reels are to screw on
|
|
the Edge of a Table, when she would wind Silk or Thread, the Skein is
|
|
to be put over them, and winds better than if held in two Hands.
|
|
There is also an Ivory Knob to each, to which she may with a Bit of
|
|
Silk Cord hang a Pinhook to fasten her plain Work to like the Hooks
|
|
on her Weight. I send you also Lace for two Lappet Caps, 3 Ells of
|
|
Cambrick (the Cambrick by Mr. Yates) 3 Damask Table Cloths, a Piece
|
|
of Crimson Morin for Curtains, with Tassels, Line and Binding. A
|
|
large true Turky Carpet cost 10 Guineas, for the Dining Parlour.
|
|
Some oil'd Silk; and a Gimcrack Corkscrew which you must get some
|
|
Brother Gimcrack to show you the Use of. In the Chest is a Parcel of
|
|
Books for my Friend Mr. Coleman, and another for Cousin Colbert.
|
|
Pray did he receive those I sent him before? I send you also a Box
|
|
with three fine Cheeses. Perhaps a Bit of them may be left when I
|
|
come home. Mrs. Stevenson has been very diligent and serviceable in
|
|
getting these things together for you, and presents her best
|
|
Respects, as does her Daughter, to both you and Sally. There are too
|
|
Boxes included in your Bill of Lading for Billy.
|
|
|
|
I received your kind Letter of Feb. 20. It gives me great
|
|
Pleasure to hear that our good old Friend Mrs. Smith is on the
|
|
Recovery. I hope she has yet many happy Years to live. My Love to
|
|
her.
|
|
|
|
I fear, from the Account you give of Brother Peter that he
|
|
cannot hold it long. If it should please God that he leaves us
|
|
before my Return; I would have the Post Office remain under the
|
|
Management of their Son, till Mr. Foxcroft and I agree how to settle
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
There are some Droll Prints in the Box, which were given me by
|
|
the Painter; and being sent when I was not at home, were pack'd up
|
|
without my Knowledge. I think he was wrong to put in Lord Bute, who
|
|
had nothing to do with the Stamp Act. But it is the Fashion here to
|
|
abuse that Nobleman as the Author of all Mischief. I send you a few
|
|
Bush Beans, a new Sort for your Garden. I shall write to my Friends
|
|
per Packet, that goes next Saturday. I am very well, and hope this
|
|
will find you and Sally so with all our Relations and Friends, to
|
|
whom my Love. I am, as ever, Your affectionate Husband,
|
|
|
|
P.S. A Young Man, by name Joseph Wharton, came to me the other
|
|
day, said he had been sick and was in distress for Money, and beg'd
|
|
me to take a Draft on his Brother at Philadelphia for Twelve Guineas.
|
|
I did not remember or know him, but could refuse nothing to the Name
|
|
of my Friend. So I let him have the Money, and enclose his Bill.
|
|
You will present it for Payment.
|
|
|
|
"A BRAZEN WALL ROUND ENGLAND FOR ITS ETERNAL SECURITY"
|
|
|
|
_To Cadwalader Evans_
|
|
|
|
LONDON, May 9, 1766.
|
|
Dear Sir: -- I received your kind letter of March 3, and thank
|
|
you for the Intelligence and Hints it contained. I wonder at the
|
|
Complaint you mentioned. I always considered writing to the Speaker
|
|
as writing to the Committee. But if it is more to their Satisfaction
|
|
that I should write to them jointly, it shall be done for the future.
|
|
|
|
My private Opinion concerning a union in Parliament between the
|
|
two Countries, is, that it would be best for the Whole. But I think
|
|
it will never be done. For tho' I believe that if we had no more
|
|
Representatives than Scotland has, we should be sufficiently strong
|
|
in the House to prevent, as they do for Scotland, any thing ever
|
|
passing to our disadvantage; yet we are not able at present to
|
|
furnish and maintain such a Number, and when we are more able we
|
|
shall be less willing than we are now. The Parliament here do at
|
|
present think too highly of themselves to admit Representatives from
|
|
us if we should ask it; and when they will be desirous of granting
|
|
it, we shall think too highly of ourselves to accept of it. It would
|
|
certainly contribute to the strength of the whole, if Ireland and all
|
|
the Dominions were united and consolidated under one Common Council
|
|
for general Purposes, each retaining its particular Council or
|
|
Parliament for its domestic Concerns. But this should have been more
|
|
early provided for. -- In the Infancy of our foreign Establishments,
|
|
it was neglected, or was not thought of. And now, the Affair is
|
|
nearly in the Situation of Friar Bacon's Project of making a brazen
|
|
Wall round England for its eternal Security. His Servant Friar
|
|
Bungey slept while the brazen Head, which was to dictate how it might
|
|
be done, said _Time is_, and _Time was_. He only wak'd to hear it
|
|
say, _Time is past_. An explosion followed that tumbled their House
|
|
about the Conjuror's Ears.
|
|
|
|
I hope with you, that my being here at this Juncture has been
|
|
of some Service to the Colonies. I am sure I have spared no Pains.
|
|
And as to our particular Affair, I am not in the least doubtful of
|
|
obtaining what we so justly desire if we continue to desire it: tho'
|
|
the late confus'd State of Affairs on both sides the Water, have
|
|
delay'd our Proceeding. With great esteem, I am, Dear Friend, Yours
|
|
affectionately,
|
|
|
|
"DIRT . . . WILL NOT LONG ADHERE TO POLISH'D MARBLE"
|
|
|
|
_To Joseph Galloway_
|
|
|
|
Dear Friend, London, Nov. 8: 1766
|
|
|
|
I received your kind Letter of Sept. the 22d. and from another
|
|
Friend a Copy of that lying Essay in which I am represented as the
|
|
Author of the Stamp Act, and you as concern'd in it. The Answer you
|
|
mention is not yet come to hand. Your Consolation, my Friend, and
|
|
mine, under these Abuses, must be, _that we do not deserve them_.
|
|
But what can console the Writers and Promoters of such infamously
|
|
false Accusations, if they should ever come themselves to a Sense of
|
|
that Malice of their Hearts, and that Stupidity of their Heads, which
|
|
by these Papers they have manifested and exposed to all the World.
|
|
Dunces often write Satyrs on themselves, when they think all the
|
|
while that they are mocking their Neighbours. Let us, as we ever
|
|
have done, uniformly endeavour the Service of our Country, according
|
|
to the best of our Judgment and Abilities, and Time will do us
|
|
Justice. Dirt thrown on a Mud-Wall may stick and incorporate; but it
|
|
will not long adhere to polish'd Marble. I can now only add that I
|
|
am, with Sincerest Esteem and Affection, Yours,
|
|
|
|
The Town begins to fill, and the Parliament sits down next
|
|
week.
|
|
|
|
"TRAVELLING IS ONE WAY OF LENGTHENING LIFE"
|
|
|
|
_To Mary Stevenson_
|
|
|
|
Dear Polly Paris, Sept. 14. 1767
|
|
|
|
I am always pleas'd with a Letter from you, and I flatter
|
|
myself you may be sometimes pleas'd in receiving one from me, tho' it
|
|
should be of little Importance, such as this, which is to consist of
|
|
a few occasional Remarks made here and in my Journey hither.
|
|
|
|
Soon after I left you in that agreable Society at Bromley, I
|
|
took the Resolution of making a Trip with Sir John Pringle into
|
|
France. We set out the 28th past. All the way to Dover we were
|
|
furnished with Post Chaises hung so as to lean forward, the Top
|
|
coming down over one's Eyes, like a Hood, as if to prevent one's
|
|
seeing the Country, which being one of my great Pleasures, I was
|
|
engag'd in perpetual Disputes with the Innkeepers, Hostlers and
|
|
Postillions about getting the Straps taken up a Hole or two before,
|
|
and let down as much behind, they insisting that the Chaise leaning
|
|
forward was an Ease to the Horses, and that the contrary would kill
|
|
them. I suppose the Chaise leaning forward looks to them like a
|
|
Willingness to go forward; and that its hanging back shows a
|
|
Reluctance. They added other Reasons that were no Reasons at all,
|
|
and made me, as upon a 100 other Occasions, almost wish that Mankind
|
|
had never been endow'd with a reasoning Faculty, since they know so
|
|
little how to make use of it, and so often mislead themselves by it;
|
|
and that they had been furnish'd with a good sensible Instinct
|
|
instead of it.
|
|
|
|
At Dover the next Morning we embark'd for Calais with a Number
|
|
of Passengers who had never been before at Sea. They would
|
|
previously make a hearty Breakfast, because if the Wind should fail,
|
|
we might not get over till Supper-time. Doubtless they thought that
|
|
when they had paid for their Breakfast they had a Right to it, and
|
|
that when they had swallowed it they were sure of it. But they had
|
|
scarce been out half an Hour before the Sea laid Claim to it, and
|
|
they were oblig'd to deliver it up. So it seems there are
|
|
Uncertainties even beyond those between the Cup and the Lip. If ever
|
|
you go to sea, take my Advice, and live sparingly a Day or two before
|
|
hand. The Sickness, if any, will be the lighter and sooner over. We
|
|
got to Calais that Evening.
|
|
|
|
Various Impositions we suffer'd from Boat-men, Porters, &c. on
|
|
both Sides the Water. I know not which are most rapacious, the
|
|
English or French; but the latter have, with their Knavery the most
|
|
Politeness.
|
|
|
|
The Roads we found equally good with ours in England, in some
|
|
Places pav'd with smooth Stone like our new Streets for many Miles
|
|
together, and Rows of Trees on each Side and yet there are no
|
|
Turnpikes. But then the poor Peasants complain'd to us grievously,
|
|
that they were oblig'd to work upon the Roads full two Months in the
|
|
Year without being paid for their Labour: Whether this is Truth, or
|
|
whether, like Englishmen, they grumble Cause or no Cause, I have not
|
|
yet been able fully to inform myself.
|
|
|
|
The Women we saw at Calais, on the Road, at Bouloigne and in
|
|
the Inns and Villages, were generally of dark Complexions; but
|
|
arriving at Abbeville we found a sudden Change, a Multitude both of
|
|
Women and Men in that Place appearing remarkably fair. Whether this
|
|
is owing to a small Colony of Spinners, Woolcombers and Weavers, &c.
|
|
brought hither from Holland with the Woollen Manufacture about 60
|
|
Years ago; or to their being less expos'd to the Sun than in other
|
|
Places, their Business keeping them much within Doors, I know not.
|
|
Perhaps as in some other Cases, different Causes may club in
|
|
producing the Effect, but the Effect itself is certain. Never was I
|
|
in a Place of greater Industry, Wheels and Looms going in every
|
|
House. As soon as we left Abbeville the Swarthiness return'd. I
|
|
speak generally, for here are some fair Women at Paris, who I think
|
|
are not whiten'd by Art. As to Rouge, they don't pretend to imitate
|
|
Nature in laying it on. There is no gradual Diminution of the Colour
|
|
from the full Bloom in the Middle of the Cheek to the faint Tint near
|
|
the Sides, nor does it show itself differently in different Faces. I
|
|
have not had the Honour of being at any Lady's Toylette to see how it
|
|
is laid on, but I fancy I can tell you how it is or may be done: Cut
|
|
a Hole of 3 Inches Diameter in a Piece of Paper, place it on the Side
|
|
of your Face in such a Manner as that the Top of the Hole may be just
|
|
under your Eye; then with a Brush dipt in the Colour paint Face and
|
|
Paper together; so when the Paper is taken off there will remain a
|
|
round Patch of Red exactly the Form of the Hole. This is the Mode,
|
|
from the Actresses on the Stage upwards thro' all Ranks of Ladies to
|
|
the Princesses of the Blood, but it stops there, the Queen not using
|
|
it, having in the Serenity, Complacence and Benignity that shine so
|
|
eminently in or rather through her Countenance, sufficient Beauty,
|
|
tho' now an old Woman, to do extreamly well without it.
|
|
|
|
You see I speak of the Queen as if I had seen her, and so I
|
|
have; for you must know I have been at Court. We went to Versailles
|
|
last Sunday, and had the Honour of being presented to the King, he
|
|
spoke to both of us very graciously and chearfully, is a handsome
|
|
Man, has a very lively Look, and appears younger than he is. In the
|
|
Evening we were at the _Grand Couvert_, where the Family sup in
|
|
Publick. The Form of their sitting at the Table was this:
|
|
(Illustration omitted) The Table as you see was half a Hollow Square,
|
|
the Service Gold. When either made a Sign for Drink, the Word was
|
|
given by one of the Waiters, _A boire pour le Roy_, or _A boire pour
|
|
la Reine_, &c. then two Persons within the Square approach'd, one
|
|
with Wine the other with Water in Caraffes, each drank a little Glass
|
|
of what they brought, and then put both the Caraffes with a Glass on
|
|
a Salver and presented it. Their Distance from each other was such
|
|
as that other Chairs might have been plac'd between any two of them.
|
|
An Officer of the Court brought us up thro' the Croud of Spectators,
|
|
and plac'd Sir John so as to stand between the King and Madame
|
|
Adelaide, and me between the Queen and Madame Victoire. The King
|
|
talk'd a good deal to Sir John, asking many Questions about our Royal
|
|
Family; and did me too the Honour of taking some Notice of me; that's
|
|
saying enough, for I would not have you think me so much pleas'd with
|
|
this King and Queen as to have a Whit less Regard than I us'd to have
|
|
for ours. No Frenchman shall go beyond me in thinking my own King
|
|
and Queen the very best in the World and the most amiable.
|
|
|
|
Versailles has had infinite Sums laid out in Building it and
|
|
Supplying it with Water: Some say the Expence exceeded 80 Millions
|
|
Sterling. The Range of Building is immense, the Garden Front most
|
|
magnificent all of hewn Stone, the Number of Statues, Figures, Urns,
|
|
&c in Marble and Bronze of exquisite Workmanship is beyond
|
|
Conception. But the Waterworks are out of Repair, and so is great
|
|
Part of the Front next the Town, looking with its shabby half Brick
|
|
Walls and broken Windows not much better than the Houses in Durham
|
|
Yard. There is, in short, both at Versailles and Paris, a prodigious
|
|
Mixture of Magnificence and Negligence, with every kind of Elegance
|
|
except that of Cleanliness, and what we call _Tidyness_. Tho' I must
|
|
do Paris the Justice to say, that in two Points of Cleanliness they
|
|
exceed us. The Water they drink, tho' from the River, they render as
|
|
pure as that of the best Spring, by filtring it thro' Cisterns fill'd
|
|
with Sand; and the Streets by constant Sweeping are fit to walk in
|
|
tho' there is no pav'd foot Path. Accordingly many well dress'd
|
|
People are constantly seen walking in them. The Crouds of Coaches
|
|
and Chairs for that Reason is not so great; Men as well as Women
|
|
carry Umbrellas in their Hands, which they extend in case of Rain or
|
|
two much Sun; and a Man with an Umbrella not taking up more than 3
|
|
foot square or 9 square feet of the Street, when if in a Coach he
|
|
would take up 240 square feet, you can easily conceive that tho' the
|
|
Streets here are narrower they may be much less encumber'd. They are
|
|
extreamly well pav'd, and the Stones being generally Cubes, when worn
|
|
on one Side may be turn'd and become new.
|
|
|
|
The Civilities we every where receive give us the strongest
|
|
Impressions of the French Politeness. It seems to be a Point settled
|
|
here universally that Strangers are to be treated with Respect, and
|
|
one has just the same Deference shewn one here by being a Stranger as
|
|
in England by being a Lady. The Custom House Officers at Port St.
|
|
Denis, as we enter'd Paris, were about to seize 2 Doz. of excellent
|
|
Bourdeaux Wine given us at Boulogne, and which we brought with us;
|
|
but as soon as they found we were Strangers, it was immediately
|
|
remitted on that Account. At the Church of Notre Dame, when we went
|
|
to see a magnificent Illumination with Figures &c. for the deceas'd
|
|
Dauphiness, we found an immense Croud who were kept out by Guards;
|
|
but the Officer being told that we were Strangers from England, he
|
|
immediately admitted us, accompanied and show'd us every thing. Why
|
|
don't we practise this Urbanity to Frenchmen? Why should they be
|
|
allow'd to out-do us in any thing?
|
|
|
|
Here is an Exhibition of Paintings, &c. like ours in London, to
|
|
which Multitudes flock daily. I am not Connoisseur enough to judge
|
|
which has most Merit. Every Night, Sundays not excepted here are
|
|
Plays or Operas; and tho' the Weather has been hot, and the Houses
|
|
full, one is not incommoded by the Heat so much as with us in Winter.
|
|
They must have some Way of changing the Air that we are not
|
|
acquainted with. I shall enquire into it.
|
|
|
|
Travelling is one Way of lengthening Life, at least in
|
|
Appearance. It is but a Fortnight since we left London; but the
|
|
Variety of Scenes we have gone through makes it seem equal to Six
|
|
Months living in one Place. Perhaps I have suffered a greater Change
|
|
too in my own Person than I could have done in Six Years at home. I
|
|
had not been here Six Days before my Taylor and Peruquier had
|
|
transform'd me into a Frenchman. Only think what a Figure I make in
|
|
a little Bag Wig and naked Ears! They told me I was become 20 Years
|
|
younger, and look'd very galante; so being in Paris where the Mode is
|
|
to be sacredly follow'd, I was once very near making Love to my
|
|
Friend's Wife.
|
|
|
|
This Letter shall cost you a Shilling, and you may think it
|
|
cheap when you consider that it has cost me at least 50 Guineas to
|
|
get into the Situation that enables me to write it. Besides, I
|
|
might, if I had staid at home, have won perhaps two shillings of you
|
|
at Cribbidge. By the Way, now I mention Cards, let me tell you that
|
|
Quadrille is quite out of Fashion here, and English Whisk all the
|
|
Mode, at Paris and the Court.
|
|
|
|
And pray look upon it as no small Matter, that surrounded as I
|
|
am by the Glories of this World and Amusements of all Sorts, I
|
|
remember you and Dolly and all the dear good Folks at Bromley. 'Tis
|
|
true I can't help it, but must and ever shall remember you all with
|
|
Pleasure. Need I add that I am particularly, my dear good Friend
|
|
Yours most affectionately
|
|
|
|
"CONDEMN'D TO LIVE TOGETHER AND TEASE ONE ANOTHER"
|
|
|
|
_To Margaret Stevenson_
|
|
|
|
Dear Madam Tuesday, Nov. 3 at Noon I breakfasted abroad this
|
|
Morning and Nanny tells me that Mr. West call'd while I was out, and
|
|
left word that you did not intend to come home till Sunday next, and
|
|
that you expected me then, to come and fetch you; that Mr. West also
|
|
desired I would dine at his House that Day: I know not whether Nanny
|
|
is right in all this, as she has but an indifferent Memory But it
|
|
seems strange to me that you should think of staying so long. People
|
|
must have great Confidence in their own Agreableness that can suppose
|
|
themselves not to become tiresome Guests at the End of Three Days at
|
|
farthest. I did not imagine you had been so conceited. My Advice to
|
|
you is, to return with the Stage to-morrow. And if it is proposed
|
|
that we dine there on Sunday, I shall wait on Mr. and Mrs. West with
|
|
Pleasure on that day, taking you with me. But however I pray you not
|
|
to understand that I so want you at home as not to do very well
|
|
without you. Every thing goes on smoothly, and the House very quiet;
|
|
and very clean too, without my saying a Word about it. I am willing
|
|
to allow that the Arrangements you made before you went may have
|
|
contributed something towards the good Order and Comfort in which we
|
|
go on; but yet you are really mistaken in your Fancy that I should,
|
|
by your Absence, become more sensible of your Usefulness to me, and
|
|
the Necessity of having you always near me; for in Truth I find such
|
|
a Satisfaction in being a little more my own Master, going any where
|
|
and doing any thing just when and how I please without the Advice or
|
|
Controul of any body's Wisdom but my own small as it is, that I value
|
|
my own Liberty above all the Advantage of others Services, and begin
|
|
to think I should be still happier if Nanny and the Cat would follow
|
|
their Mistress, and leave me to the Enjoyment of an empty House, in
|
|
which I should never be disturb'd by Questions of Whether I intend to
|
|
dine at home, and what I would have for Dinner; or by a Mewing
|
|
Request to be let in or let out. This Happiness however is perhaps
|
|
too great to be conferr'd on any but Saints and holy Hermits.
|
|
Sinners like me I might have said US, are condemn'd to live together
|
|
and tease one another, so concluding you will be sentenc'd to come
|
|
home tomorrow, I add no more but that I am as ever Your affectionate
|
|
Friend and humble Servant
|
|
|
|
My best Compliments to Mr. and Mrs. West.
|
|
|
|
1767
|
|
|
|
"A COLLECTION FOR YOU OF ALL THE PAST PARINGS OF MY NAILS"
|
|
|
|
_To Jane Mecom_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sister London, Dec. 24. 1767
|
|
|
|
I have received yours of Oct. 23. and condole with you most
|
|
affectionately in the Affliction you must have suffered by the Loss
|
|
of so valuable and so amiable a Child. The longer we live we are
|
|
expos'd to more of these Strokes of Providence: but tho' we consider
|
|
them as such, and know it is our Duty to submit to the Divine Will,
|
|
yet when it comes to our Turn to bear what so many Millions before us
|
|
have borne, and so many Millions after us must bear, we are apt to
|
|
think our Case particularly hard, Consolations however kindly
|
|
administred seldom afford us any Relief, Natural Affections will have
|
|
their Course, and Time proves our best Comforter. This I have
|
|
experienc'd myself. And as I know your good Sense has suggested to
|
|
you long before this time, every Argument, Motive and Circumstance
|
|
that can tend in any degree to relieve your Grief, I will not by
|
|
repeating them renew it. I am pleas'd to find that in your Troubles
|
|
you do not overlook the Mercies of God, and that you consider as such
|
|
the Children that are still spar'd to you. This is a right Temper of
|
|
Mind, and must be acceptable to that beneficent Being, who is in
|
|
various Ways continually showring down his Blessings upon many, that
|
|
receive them as things of course, and feel no grateful Sentiments
|
|
arising in their Hearts on the Enjoyment of them.
|
|
|
|
You desire me to send you all the political Pieces I have been
|
|
the Author of. I have never kept them. They were most of them
|
|
written occasionally for transient Purposes, and having done their
|
|
Business, they die and are forgotten. I could as easily make a
|
|
Collection for you of all the past Parings of my Nails. But I will
|
|
send you what I write hereafter; and I now enclose you the last Piece
|
|
of mine that is printed. I wrote it at a Friend's House in the
|
|
Country who is of the Treasury, if possible to do some Service to the
|
|
Treasury, by putting a little out of Countenance the Practice of
|
|
encouraging Smugglers in buying their Commodities. But I suppose it
|
|
did very little.
|
|
|
|
Probably the Gentleman has called on you with the small Sum I
|
|
mention'd; if not, I would not that you should call upon him for it;
|
|
and therefore do not give you his Name.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Stevenson is glad to learn that the Things she sent you
|
|
were suitable and pleas'd. You mention that you should write for
|
|
more per Capt. Freeman. We suppose you did not then know, that your
|
|
People would resolve to wear no more Millenery. He is not yet
|
|
arriv'd. Pray are those Resolutions like to be steadily stuck to?
|
|
|
|
My Love to Jenny, and all our Relations and Friends, and
|
|
believe me ever Your affectionate Brother
|
|
|
|
"I AM TOO MUCH OF AN AMERICAN"
|
|
|
|
_To William Franklin_
|
|
|
|
DEAR SON, _London, Jan. 9, 1768.
|
|
|
|
We have had so many alarms of changes which did not take place,
|
|
that just when I wrote it was thought the ministry would stand their
|
|
ground. However immediately after the talk was renewed, and it soon
|
|
appeared the Sunday changes were actually settled. Mr. Conway
|
|
resigns and Lord Weymouth takes his place. Lord Gower is made
|
|
president of the council in the room of Lord Northington. Lord
|
|
Shelburne is stript of the America business which is given to Lord
|
|
Hillsborough as Secretary of State for America, a new distinct
|
|
department. Lord Sandwich 'tis said comes into the Post Office in
|
|
his place. Several of the Bedford party are now to come in. How
|
|
these changes may affect us a little time will show. Little at
|
|
present is thought of but elections which gives me hopes that nothing
|
|
will be done against America this session, though the Boston gazette
|
|
had occasioned some heats and the Boston resolutions a prodigious
|
|
clamour. I have endeavoured to palliate matters for them as well as
|
|
I can: I send you my manuscript of one paper, though I think you take
|
|
the Chronicle. The editor of that paper one Jones seems a
|
|
Grenvillian, or is very cautious as you will see, by his corrections
|
|
and omissions. He has drawn the teeth and pared the nails of my
|
|
paper, so that it can neither scratch nor bite. It seems only to paw
|
|
and mumble. I send you also two other late pieces of mine. There is
|
|
another which I cannot find.
|
|
|
|
I am told there has been a talk of getting me appointed under
|
|
secretary to Lord Hillsborough; but with little likelihood as it is a
|
|
settled point here that I am too much of an American.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I am in very good health, thanks to God: your affectionate
|
|
father,
|
|
|
|
FOSSILS
|
|
|
|
_To Jean Chappe d'Auteroche_
|
|
|
|
Sir London, Jan. 31. 1768
|
|
|
|
I sent you sometime since, directed to the Care of M. Molini, a
|
|
Bookseller near the Quay des Augustins a Tooth that I mention'd to
|
|
you when I had the Pleasure of meeting with you at the Marquis de
|
|
Courtanvaux's. It was found near the River Ohio in America, about
|
|
200 Leagues below Fort du Quesne, at what is called the Great Licking
|
|
Place, where the Earth has a Saltish Taste that is agreable to the
|
|
Buffaloes and Deer, who come there at certain Seasons in great
|
|
Numbers to lick the same. At this place have been found the
|
|
Skeletons of near 30 large Animals suppos'd to be Elephants, several
|
|
Tusks like those of Elephants, being found with those Grinder Teeth.
|
|
Four of these Grinders were sent me by the Gentleman who brought them
|
|
from the Ohio to New York, together with 4 Tusks, one of which is 6
|
|
Feet long and in the thickest Part near 6 Inches Diameter, and also
|
|
one of the Vertebrae. My Lord Shelbourn receiv'd at the same time 3
|
|
or four others with a Jaw Bone and one or two Grinders remaining in
|
|
it. Some of Our Naturalists here, however, contend, that these are
|
|
not the Grinders of Elephants but of some carnivorous Animal unknown,
|
|
because such Knobs or Prominances on the Face of the Tooth are not to
|
|
be found on those of Elephants, and only, as they say, on those of
|
|
carnivorous Animals. But it appears to me that Animals capable of
|
|
carrying such large and heavy Tusks, must themselves be large
|
|
Creatures, too bulky to have the Activity necessary for pursuing and
|
|
taking Prey; and therefore I am enclin'd to think those Knobs are
|
|
only a small Variety, Animals of the same kind and Name often
|
|
differing more materially, and that those Knobs might be as useful to
|
|
grind the small Branches of Trees, as to chaw Flesh. However I
|
|
should be glad to have your Opinion, and to know from you whether
|
|
any of the kind have been found in Siberia. With great Esteem and
|
|
Respect, I am Sir, Your most obedient humble Servant
|
|
|
|
CANAL DEPTHS AND SHIP MOVEMENT
|
|
|
|
_To John Pringle_
|
|
|
|
_SIR, Craven-street, May_ 10, 1768.
|
|
|
|
You may remember that when we were travelling together in
|
|
_Holland_, you remarked that the track-schuyt in one of the stages
|
|
went slower than usual, and enquired of the boatman, what might be
|
|
the reason; who answered, that it had been a dry season, and the
|
|
water in the canal was low. On being again asked if it was so low as
|
|
that the boat touch'd the muddy bottom; he said, no, not so low as
|
|
that, but so low as to make it harder for the horse to draw the boat.
|
|
We neither of us at first could conceive that if there was water
|
|
enough for the boat to swim clear of the bottom, its being deeper
|
|
would make any difference; but as the man affirmed it seriously as a
|
|
thing well known among them; and as the punctuality required in their
|
|
stages, was likely to make such difference, if any there were, more
|
|
readily observed by them, than by other watermen who did not pass so
|
|
regularly and constantly backwards and forwards in the same track; I
|
|
began to apprehend there might be something in it, and attempted to
|
|
account for it from this consideration, that the boat in proceeding
|
|
along along the canal, must in every boat's length of her course,
|
|
move out of her way a body of water, equal in bulk to the room her
|
|
bottom took up in the water; that the water so moved, must pass on
|
|
each side of her and under her bottom to get behind her; that if the
|
|
passage under her bottom was straitened by the shallows, more of that
|
|
water must pass by her sides, and with a swifter motion, which would
|
|
retard her, as moving the contrary way; or that the water becoming
|
|
lower behind the boat than before, she was pressed back by the weight
|
|
of its difference in height, and her motion retarded by having that
|
|
weight constantly to overcome. But as it is often lost time to
|
|
attempt accounting for uncertain facts, I determined to make an
|
|
experiment of this when I should have convenient time and
|
|
opportunity.
|
|
|
|
After our return to _England_, as often as I happened to be on
|
|
the _Thames_, I enquired of our watermen whether they were sensible
|
|
of any difference in rowing over shallow or deep water. I found them
|
|
all agreeing in the fact, that there was a very great difference, but
|
|
they differed widely in expressing the quantity of the difference;
|
|
some supposing it was equal to a mile in six, others to a mile in
|
|
three, &c. As I did not recollect to have met with any mention of
|
|
this matter in our philosophical books, and conceiving that if the
|
|
difference should really be great, it might be an object of
|
|
consideration in the many projects now on foot for digging new
|
|
navigable canals in this island, I lately put my design of making the
|
|
experiment in execution, in the following manner.
|
|
|
|
I provided a trough of plained boards fourteen feet long, six
|
|
inches wide and six inches deep, in the clear, filled with water
|
|
within half an inch of the edge, to represent a canal. I had a loose
|
|
board of nearly the same length and breadth, that being put into the
|
|
water might be sunk to any depth, and fixed by little wedges where I
|
|
would chuse to have it stay, in order to make different depths of
|
|
water, leaving the surface at the same height with regard to the
|
|
sides of the trough. I had a little boat in form of a lighter or
|
|
boat of burthen, six inches long, two inches and a quarter wide, and
|
|
one inch and a quarter deep. When swimming, it drew one inch water.
|
|
To give motion to the boat, I fixed one end of a long silk thread to
|
|
its bow, just even with the water's edge, the other end passed over a
|
|
well-made brass pully, of about an inch diameter, turning freely on a
|
|
small axis; and a shilling was the weight. Then placing the boat at
|
|
one end of the trough, the weight would draw it through the water to
|
|
the other.
|
|
|
|
Not having a watch that shows seconds, in order to measure the
|
|
time taken up by the boat in passing from end to end, I counted as
|
|
fast as I could count to ten repeatedly, keeping an account of the
|
|
number of tens on my fingers. And as much as possible to correct any
|
|
little inequalities in my counting, I repeated the experiment a
|
|
number of times at each depth of water, that I might take the medium.
|
|
-- And the following are the results.
|
|
|
|
Water 1 1/2 inches deep. 2 inches. 4 1/2 inches.
|
|
1st exp. - - - - 100 - - - 94 - - - 79
|
|
2 - - - - - - 104 - - - 93 - - - 78
|
|
3 - - - - - - 104 - - - 91 - - - 77
|
|
4 - - - - - - 106 - - - 87 - - - 79
|
|
5 - - - - - - 100 - - - 88 - - - 79
|
|
6 - - - - - - 99 - - - 86 - - - 80
|
|
7 - - - - - - 100 - - - 90 - - - 79
|
|
8 - - - - - - 100 - - - 88 - - - 81
|
|
_____ _____ _____
|
|
813 717 632
|
|
_____ _____ _____
|
|
|
|
Medium 101 Medium 89 Medium 79
|
|
|
|
I made many other experiments, but the above are those in which
|
|
I was most exact; and they serve sufficiently to show that the
|
|
difference is considerable. Between the deepest and shallowest it
|
|
appears to be somewhat more than one fifth. So that supposing large
|
|
canals and boats and depths of water to bear the same proportions,
|
|
and that four men or horses would draw a boat in deep water four
|
|
leagues in four hours, it would require five to draw the same boat in
|
|
the same time as far in shallow water; or four would require five
|
|
hours.
|
|
|
|
Whether this difference is of consequence enough to justify a
|
|
greater expence in deepening canals, is a matter of calculation,
|
|
which our ingenious engineers in that way will readily determine. _I
|
|
am, &c._
|
|
|
|
COLD AIR BATHS
|
|
|
|
_To Jacques Barbeu-Dubourg_
|
|
|
|
_London, July_ 28, 1768.
|
|
|
|
I greatly approve the epithet, which you give in your letter of
|
|
the 8th of June, to the new method of treating the small-pox, which
|
|
you call the tonic or bracing method. I will take occasion from it,
|
|
to mention a practice to which I have accustomed myself. You know
|
|
the cold bath has long been in vogue here as a tonic; but the shock
|
|
of the cold water has always appeared to me, generally speaking, as
|
|
too violent: and I have found it much more agreeable to my
|
|
constitution, to bathe in another element, I mean, cold air. With
|
|
this view I rise early almost every morning, and sit in my chamber,
|
|
without any clothes whatever, half an hour or an hour, according to
|
|
the season, either reading or writing. This practice is not in the
|
|
least painful, but on the contrary, agreeable; and if I return to bed
|
|
afterwards, before I dress myself, as sometimes happens, I make a
|
|
supplement to my night's rest, of one or two hours of the most
|
|
pleasing sleep that can be imagined. I find no ill consequences
|
|
whatever resulting from it, and that at least it does not injure my
|
|
health, if it does not in fact contribute much to its preservation.
|
|
I shall therefore call it for the future a bracing or tonic bath.
|
|
|
|
"THE USEFULNESS OF AN ODD HALF OF A PAIR OF SCISSARS"
|
|
|
|
_To John Alleyne_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir, You made an Apology to me for not acquainting me
|
|
sooner with your Marriage. I ought now to make an Apology to you for
|
|
delaying so long the Answer to your Letter. It was mislaid or hid
|
|
among my Papers, and much Business put it out of my Mind, or
|
|
prevented my looking for it and writing when I thought of it. So
|
|
this Account between us if you please may stand balanced.
|
|
|
|
I assure you it gave me great Pleasure to hear you were
|
|
married, and into a Family of Reputation. This I learnt from the
|
|
Public Papers. The Character you give me of your Bride, (as it
|
|
includes every Qualification that in the married State conduces to
|
|
mutual Happiness) is an Addition to that Pleasure. Had you consulted
|
|
me, as a Friend, on the Occasion, Youth on both sides I should not
|
|
have thought any Objection. Indeed from the Matches that have fallen
|
|
under my Observation, I am rather inclined to think that early ones
|
|
stand the best Chance for Happiness. The Tempers and Habits of young
|
|
People are not yet become so stiff and uncomplying as when more
|
|
advanced in Life, they form more easily to each other, and thence
|
|
many Occasions of Disgust are removed. And if Youth has less of that
|
|
Prudence that is necessary to manage a Family, yet the Parents and
|
|
elder Friends of young married Persons are generally at hand to
|
|
afford their Advice, which amply supplies that Defect; and by early
|
|
Marriage, Youth is sooner form'd to regular and useful Life, and
|
|
possibly some of those Accidents Habits or Connections that might
|
|
have injured either the Constitution or the Reputation, or both, are
|
|
thereby happily prevented. Particular Circumstances of particular
|
|
Persons may possibly sometimes make it prudent to delay entering into
|
|
that State, but in general when Nature has render'd our Bodies fit
|
|
for it, the Presumption is in Nature's Favour, that she has not
|
|
judg'd amiss in making us desire it. Late Marriages are often
|
|
attended too with this farther Inconvenience, that there is not the
|
|
same Chance the Parents shall live to see their offspring educated.
|
|
_Late Children_, says the Spanish Proverb, _are early Orphans_: A
|
|
melancholly Reflection to those whose Case it may be! With us in N.
|
|
America, Marriages are generally in the Morning of Life, our Children
|
|
are therefore educated and settled in the World by Noon, and thus our
|
|
Business being done, we have an Afternoon and Evening of chearful
|
|
Leisure to our selves, such as your Friend at present enjoys. By
|
|
these early Marriages we are blest with more Children, and from the
|
|
Mode among us founded in Nature of every Mother suckling and nursing
|
|
her own Child, more of them are raised. Thence the swift Progress of
|
|
Population among us unparallel'd in Europe. In fine, I am glad you
|
|
are married, and congratulate you cordially upon it. You are now
|
|
more in the way of becoming a useful Citizen; and you have escap'd
|
|
the unnatural State of _Celibacy for Life_, the Fate of many here who
|
|
never intended it, but who having too long postpon'd the Change of
|
|
their Condition, find at length that 'tis too late to think of it,
|
|
and So live all their Lives in a Situation that greatly lessens a
|
|
Man's Value: An odd Volume of a Set of Books, you know, is not worth
|
|
its proportion of the Set; and what think you of the Usefulness of an
|
|
odd Half of a Pair of Scissars? It cannot well cut any thing. It
|
|
may possibly serve to scrape a Trencher.
|
|
|
|
Pray make my Compliments and best Wishes acceptable to your
|
|
Spouse. I am old and heavy, and grow a little indolent, or I should
|
|
ere this have presented them in Person. I shall make but small Use
|
|
of the old Man's Privilege, that of giving Advice to younger Friends.
|
|
Treat your Wife always with Respect. It will procure Respect to you,
|
|
not from her only, but from all that observe it. Never use a
|
|
slighting Expression to her even in jest; for Slights in Jest after
|
|
frequent bandyings, are apt to end in angry earnest. Be studious in
|
|
your Profession, and you will be learned. Be industrious and frugal,
|
|
and you will be rich. Be sober and temperate and you will be
|
|
healthy. Be in general virtuous, and you will be happy. At least
|
|
you will by such Conduct stand the best Chance for such Consequences.
|
|
I pray God to bless you both, being ever Your truly affectionate
|
|
Friend
|
|
|
|
August 9, 1768
|
|
|
|
"GOD GOVERNS; AND HE IS GOOD"
|
|
|
|
_To Mary Stevenson_
|
|
|
|
Dear Polley Oct. 28. 1768
|
|
|
|
I did not receive your Letter of the 26th till I came home late
|
|
last Night, too late to answer it by the Return of that Post.
|
|
|
|
I see very clearly the Unhappiness of your Situation, and that
|
|
it does not arise from any Fault in you. I pity you most sincerely:
|
|
I should not, however, have thought of giving you Advice on this
|
|
Occasion if you had not requested it, believing as I do, that your
|
|
own good Sense is more than sufficient to direct you in every Point
|
|
of Duty to others or yourself. If then I should advise you to any
|
|
thing that may be contrary to your own Opinion, do not imagine that I
|
|
shall condemn you if you do not follow such Advice. I shall only
|
|
think that from a better Acquaintance with Circumstances you form a
|
|
better Judgment of what is fit for you to do.
|
|
|
|
Now I conceive with you that your Aunt, both from her Affection
|
|
to you and from the long Habit of having you with her, would really
|
|
be miserable without you. Her Temper perhaps was never of the best,
|
|
and when that is the Case, Age seldom mends it. Much of her
|
|
Unhappiness must arise from thence. And since wrong Turns of the
|
|
Mind when confirm'd by Time, are almost as little in our Power to
|
|
cure, as those of the Body, I think with you that her Case is a
|
|
compassionable one. If she had, though by her own Imprudence,
|
|
brought on herself any grievous Sickness, I know you would think it
|
|
your Duty to attend and nurse her with filial Tenderness, even were
|
|
your own Health to be endangered by it: Your Apprehension therefore
|
|
is right, that it may be your Duty to live with her, tho'
|
|
inconsistent with your Happiness and your Interest; but this can only
|
|
mean present Interest and present Happiness; for I think your future,
|
|
greater and more lasting Interest and Happiness will arise from the
|
|
Reflection that you have done your Duty, and from the high Rank you
|
|
will ever hold in the Esteem of all that know you, for having
|
|
persevered in doing that Duty under so many and great
|
|
Discouragements. My Advice then must be, that you return to her as
|
|
soon as the Time you propos'd for your Visit is expir'd; and that you
|
|
continue by every means in your Power to make the Remainder of her
|
|
Days as comfortable to her as possible. Invent Amusements for her;
|
|
be pleas'd when she accepts of them, and patient when she perhaps
|
|
peevishly rejects them. I know this is hard, but I think you are
|
|
equal to it; not from any Servility in your Temper, but from abundant
|
|
Goodness. In the mean time all your Friends, sensible of your
|
|
present uncomfortable Situation, should endeavour to ease your
|
|
Burthen, by acting in Concert with you, to give her as many
|
|
Opportunities as possible of enjoying the Pleasures of Society, for
|
|
your sake: Nothing is more apt to sour the Temper of aged People than
|
|
the Apprehension that they are neglected, and they are extremely apt
|
|
to entertain such Suspicions. It was therefore that I did propose
|
|
asking her to be of our late Party: but your Mother disliking it, the
|
|
Motion was dropt, as some others have been by my too great Easiness,
|
|
contrary to my Judgment. Not but that I was sensible her being with
|
|
us might have lessen'd our Pleasure, but I hoped it might have
|
|
prevented you some Pain. In fine, nothing can contribute to true
|
|
Happiness that is inconsistent with Duty; nor can a Course of Action
|
|
conformable to it, be finally without an ample Reward. For, God
|
|
governs; and he is _good._ I pray him to direct you: And indeed you
|
|
will never be without his Direction, if you humbly ask it, and show
|
|
yourself always ready to obey it. Farewell, _my_ dear Friend, and
|
|
believe me ever sincerely and affectionately _yours_
|
|
|
|
My Love to Dolly, Miss Blount, Dr. and Mrs. Hawkesworth, Miss
|
|
Henckell &c. &c. I much commend Dolly for inviting your Aunt into
|
|
the Country; you see how perfectly that agrees with my Notions. The
|
|
next Day after you went, she sent the Servant for Nancy, ordering him
|
|
to take a Place for her in the Stage; and Nancy has been there ever
|
|
since.
|
|
|
|
"AT PRESENT I ALMOST DESPAIR"
|
|
|
|
_To ------------_
|
|
|
|
DEAR SIR, _London, Nov._ 28, 1768. I received your obliging
|
|
favour of the 12th instant. Your sentiments of the importance of the
|
|
present dispute between Great Britain and the colonies, appear to me
|
|
extremely just. There is nothing I wish for more than to see it
|
|
amicably and equitably settled.
|
|
|
|
But Providence will bring about its own ends by its own means;
|
|
and if it intends the downfal of a nation, that nation will be so
|
|
blinded by its pride, and other passions, as not to see its danger,
|
|
or how its fall may be prevented.
|
|
|
|
Being born and bred in one of the countries, and having lived
|
|
long and made many agreeable connexions of friendship in the other, I
|
|
wish all prosperity to both; but I have talked, and written so much
|
|
and so long on the subject, that my acquaintance are weary of
|
|
hearing, and the public of reading any more of it, which begins to
|
|
make me weary of talking and writing; especially as I do not find
|
|
that I have gained any point, in either country, except that of
|
|
rendering myself suspected, by my impartiality; in England, of being
|
|
too much an American, and in America of being too much an Englishman.
|
|
Your opinion, however, weighs with me, and encourages me to try one
|
|
effort more, in a full, though concise statement of facts,
|
|
accompanied with arguments drawn from those facts; to be published
|
|
about the meeting of parliament, after the holidays.
|
|
|
|
If any good may be done I shall rejoice; but at present I
|
|
almost despair.
|
|
|
|
Have you ever seen the barometer so low as of late? The 22d
|
|
instant mine was at 28, 41, and yet the weather fine and fair. With
|
|
sincere esteem, I am, dear friend, yours affectionately,
|
|
|
|
LEARNING TO SWIM
|
|
|
|
_To Oliver Neave_
|
|
|
|
_Dear SIR_, I cannot be of opinion with you that 'tis too late
|
|
in life for you to learn to swim. The river near the bottom of your
|
|
garden affords you a most convenient place for the purpose. And as
|
|
your new employment requires your being often on the water, of which
|
|
you have such a dread, I think you would do well to make the trial;
|
|
nothing being so likely to remove those apprehensions as the
|
|
consciousness of an ability to swim to the shore, in case of an
|
|
accident, or of supporting yourself in the water till a boat could
|
|
come to take you up.
|
|
|
|
I do not know how far corks or bladders may be useful in
|
|
learning to swim, having never seen much trial of them. Possibly
|
|
they may be of service in supporting the body while you are learning
|
|
what is called the stroke, or that manner of drawing in and striking
|
|
out the hands and feet that is necessary to produce progressive
|
|
motion. But you will be no swimmer till you can place some
|
|
confidence in the power of the water to support you; I would
|
|
therefore advise the acquiring that confidence in the first place;
|
|
especially as I have known several who by a little of the practice
|
|
necessary for that purpose, have insensibly acquired the stroke,
|
|
taught as it were by nature.
|
|
|
|
The practice I mean is this. Chusing a place where the water
|
|
deepens gradually, walk coolly into it till it is up to your breast,
|
|
then turn round, your face to the shore, and throw an egg into the
|
|
water between you and the shore. It will sink to the bottom, and be
|
|
easily seen there, as your water is clear. It must lie in water so
|
|
deep as that you cannot reach it to take it up but by diving for it.
|
|
To encourage yourself in undertaking to do this, reflect that your
|
|
progress will be from deeper to shallower water, and that at any time
|
|
you may by bringing your legs under you and standing on the bottom,
|
|
raise your head far above the water. Then plunge under it with your
|
|
eyes open, throwing yourself towards the egg, and endeavouring by the
|
|
action of your hands and feet against the water to get forward till
|
|
within reach of it. In this attempt you will find, that the water
|
|
buoys you up against your inclination; that it is not so easy a thing
|
|
to sink as you imagined; that you cannot, but by active force, get
|
|
down to the egg. Thus you feel the power of the water to support
|
|
you, and learn to confide in that power; while your endeavours to
|
|
overcome it and to reach the egg, teach you the manner of acting on
|
|
the water with your feet and hands, which action is afterwards used
|
|
in swimming to support your head higher above water, or to go forward
|
|
through it.
|
|
|
|
I would the more earnestly press you to the trial of this
|
|
method, because, though I think I satisfyed you that your body is
|
|
lighter than water, and that you might float in it a long time with
|
|
your mouth free for breathing, if you would put yourself in a proper
|
|
posture, and would be still and forbear struggling; yet till you have
|
|
obtained this experimental confidence in the water, I cannot depend
|
|
on your having the necessary presence of mind to recollect that
|
|
posture and the directions I gave you relating to it. The surprize
|
|
may put all out of your mind. For though we value ourselves on being
|
|
reasonable knowing creatures, reason and knowledge seem on such
|
|
occasions to be of little use to us; and the brutes to whom we allow
|
|
scarce a glimmering of either, appear to have the advantage of us.
|
|
|
|
I will, however, take this opportunity of repeating those
|
|
particulars to you, which I mentioned in our last conversation, as by
|
|
perusing them at your leisure, you may possibly imprint them so in
|
|
your memory as on occasion to be of some use to you.
|
|
|
|
1. That though the legs, arms and head, of a human body, being
|
|
solid parts, are specifically something heavier than fresh water, yet
|
|
the trunk, particularly the upper part from its hollowness, is so
|
|
much lighter than water, as that the whole of the body taken together
|
|
is too light to sink wholly under water, but some part will remain
|
|
above, untill the lungs become filled with water, which happens from
|
|
drawing water into them instead of air, when a person in the fright
|
|
attempts breathing while the mouth and nostrils are under water.
|
|
|
|
2. That the legs and arms are specifically lighter than
|
|
salt-water, and will be supported by it, so that a human body would
|
|
not sink in salt-water, though the lungs were filled as above, but
|
|
from the greater specific gravity of the head.
|
|
|
|
3. That therefore a person throwing himself on his back in
|
|
salt-water, and extending his arms, may easily lie so as to keep his
|
|
mouth and nostrils free for breathing; and by a small motion of his
|
|
hands may prevent turning, if he should perceive any tendency to it.
|
|
|
|
4. That in fresh water, if a man throws himself on his back,
|
|
near the surface, he cannot long continue in that situation but by
|
|
proper action of his hands on the water. If he uses no such action,
|
|
the legs and lower part of the body will gradually sink till he comes
|
|
into an upright position, in which he will continue suspended, the
|
|
hollow of the breast keeping the head uppermost.
|
|
|
|
5. But if in this erect position, the head is kept upright
|
|
above the shoulders, as when we stand on the ground, the immersion
|
|
will, by the weight of that part of the head that is out of water,
|
|
reach above the mouth and nostrils, perhaps a little above the eyes,
|
|
so that a man cannot long remain suspended in water with his head in
|
|
that position.
|
|
|
|
6. The body continuing suspended as before, and upright, if the
|
|
head be leaned quite back, so that the face looks upwards, all the
|
|
back part of the head being then under water, and its weight
|
|
consequently in a great measure supported by it, the face will remain
|
|
above water quite free for breathing, will rise an inch higher every
|
|
inspiration, and sink as much every expiration, but never so low as
|
|
that the water may come over the mouth.
|
|
|
|
7. If therefore a person unacquainted with swimming, and
|
|
falling accidentally into the water, could have presence of mind
|
|
sufficient to avoid struggling and plunging, and to let the body take
|
|
this natural position, he might continue long safe from drowning till
|
|
perhaps help would come. For as to the cloathes, their additional
|
|
weight while immersed is very inconsiderable, the water supporting
|
|
it; though when he comes out of the water, he would find them very
|
|
heavy indeed.
|
|
|
|
But, as I said before, I would not advise you or any one to
|
|
depend on having this presence of mind on such an occasion, but learn
|
|
fairly to swim; as I wish all men were taught to do in their youth;
|
|
they would, on many occurrences, be the safer for having that skill,
|
|
and on many more the happier, as freer from painful apprehensions of
|
|
danger, to say nothing of the enjoyment in so delightful and
|
|
wholesome an exercise. Soldiers particularly should, methinks, all
|
|
be taught to swim; it might be of frequent use either in surprising
|
|
an enemy, or saving themselves. And if I had now boys to educate, I
|
|
should prefer those schools (other things being equal) where an
|
|
opportunity was afforded for acquiring so advantageous an art, which
|
|
once learnt is never forgotten. _I am, Sir, &c._
|
|
|
|
before 1769
|
|
|
|
"A RECEIPT FOR MAKING PARMESAN CHEESE"
|
|
|
|
_To John Bartram_
|
|
|
|
Dear Friend, London July 9, 1769
|
|
|
|
It is with great Pleasure I understand by your Favour of April
|
|
10. that you continue to enjoy so good a Share of Health. I hope it
|
|
will long continue. And altho' it may not now be suitable for you to
|
|
make such wide Excursions as heretofore, you may yet be very useful
|
|
to your Country and to Mankind, if you sit down quietly at home,
|
|
digest the Knowledge you have acquired, compile and publish the many
|
|
Observations you have made, and point out the Advantages that may be
|
|
drawn from the whole, in publick Undertakings or particular private
|
|
Practice. It is true many People are fond of Accounts of old
|
|
Buildings, Monuments, &c. but there is a Number who would be much
|
|
better pleas'd with such Accounts as you could afford them: And for
|
|
one I confess that if I could find in any Italian Travels a Receipt
|
|
for making Parmesan Cheese, it would give me more Satisfaction than a
|
|
Transcript of any Inscription from any old Stone whatever.
|
|
|
|
I suppose Mr. Michael Collinson, or Dr. Fothergill have written
|
|
to you what may be necessary for your Information relating to your
|
|
Affairs here. I imagine there is no doubt but the King's Bounty to
|
|
you will be continued; and that it will be proper for you to continue
|
|
sending now and then a few such curious Seeds as you can procure to
|
|
keep up your Claim. And now I mention Seeds, I wish you would send
|
|
me a few of such as are least common, to the Value of a Guinea, which
|
|
Mr. Foxcroft will pay you for me. They are for a particular Friend
|
|
who is very curious. If in any thing I can serve you here, command
|
|
freely Your affectionate Friend
|
|
|
|
P.S. Pray let me know whether you have had sent you any of the
|
|
Seeds of the Rhubarb describ'd in the enclos'd Prints. It is said to
|
|
be of the true kind. If you have it not, I can procure some Seeds
|
|
for you.
|
|
|
|
"AFFAIRS ARE PERHAPS BELOW NOTICE"
|
|
|
|
_To George Whitefield_
|
|
|
|
I am under continued apprehensions that we may have bad news
|
|
from America. The sending soldiers to Boston always appeared to me a
|
|
dangerous step; they could do no good, they might occasion mischief.
|
|
When I consider the warm resentment of a people who think themselves
|
|
injured and oppressed, and the common insolence of the soldiery, who
|
|
are taught to consider that people as in rebellion, I cannot but fear
|
|
the consequences of bringing them together. It seems like setting up
|
|
a smith's forge in a magazine of gunpowder. I _see_ with you that
|
|
our affairs are not well managed by our rulers here below; I wish I
|
|
could _believe_ with you, that they are well attended to by those
|
|
above: I rather suspect, from certain circumstances, that though the
|
|
general government of the universe is well administered, our
|
|
particular little affairs are perhaps below notice, and left to take
|
|
the chance of human prudence or imprudence, as either may happen to
|
|
be uppermost. It is, however, an uncomfortable thought, and I leave
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
before September 2, 1769
|
|
|
|
"WHOEVER SCRUPLES CHEATING THE KING WILL CERTAINLY NOT WRONG
|
|
HIS NEIGHBOUR"
|
|
|
|
_To Mary Stevenson_
|
|
|
|
Saturday Evening, Sept 2. 1769 Just come home from a Venison
|
|
Feast, where I have drank more than a Philosopher ought, I find my
|
|
dear Polly's chearful chatty Letter that exhilarates me more than all
|
|
the Wine.
|
|
|
|
Your good Mother says there is no Occasion for any Intercession
|
|
of mine in your behalf. She is sensible that she is more in fault
|
|
than her Daughter. She received an affectionate tender Letter from
|
|
you, and she has not answered it, tho' she intended to do it; but her
|
|
Head, not her Heart, has been bad, and unfitted her for Writing. She
|
|
owns that she is not so good a Subject as you are, and that she is
|
|
more unwilling to pay Tribute to Cesar, and has less Objection to
|
|
Smuggling; but 'tis not, she says, mere Selfishness or Avarice; 'tis
|
|
rather an honest Resentment at the Waste of those Taxes in Pensions,
|
|
Salaries, Perquisites, Contracts and other Emoluments for the Benefit
|
|
of People she does not love, and who do not deserve such Advantages,
|
|
because -- I suppose because they are not of her Party. Present my
|
|
Respects to your good Landlord and his Family: I honour them for
|
|
their consciencious Aversion to illicit Trading. There are those in
|
|
the World who would not wrong a Neighbour, but make no Scruple of
|
|
cheating the King. The Reverse however does not hold; for whoever
|
|
scruples cheating the King will certainly not wrong his Neighbour.
|
|
You ought not to wish yourself an Enthusiast: They have indeed their
|
|
imaginary Satisfactions and Pleasures; but those are often ballanc'd
|
|
by imaginary Pains and Mortifications. You can continue to be a good
|
|
Girl, and thereby lay a solid Foundation for expected future
|
|
Happiness, without the Enthusiasm that may perhaps be necessary to
|
|
some others. As those Beings who have a good sensible Instinct, have
|
|
no need of Reason; so those who have Reason to regulate their
|
|
Actions, have no Occasion for Enthusiasm. However there are certain
|
|
Circumstances in Life sometimes, wherein 'tis perhaps best not to
|
|
hearken to Reason. For instance; Possibly, if the Truth were known,
|
|
I have Reason to be jealous of this same insinuating handsome young
|
|
Physician: But as it flatters more my Vanity, and therefore gives me
|
|
more Pleasure to suppose you were in Spirits on Account of my safe
|
|
Return, I shall turn a deaf Ear to Reason in this Case, as I have
|
|
done with Success in twenty others. But I am sure you will always
|
|
give me Reason enough to continue ever Your affectionate Friend
|
|
|
|
Our Love to Mrs. Tickell. We all long for your Return: Your
|
|
Dolly was well last Tuesday, the Girls were there on a Visit to her:
|
|
I mean at Bromley. Adieu.
|
|
|
|
No Time now to give you any Account of my French Journey.
|
|
|
|
"THE TRUE SOURCES OF WEALTH AND PLENTY"
|
|
|
|
_To Timothy Folger_
|
|
|
|
Loving Kinsman, London, Sept. 29. 1769
|
|
|
|
Since my Return from abroad, where I spent part of the Summer,
|
|
I have received your Favours of June 10 and July 26. The Treasury
|
|
Board is still under Adjournment, the Lords and Secretaries chiefly
|
|
in the Country; but as soon as they meet again, you may depend on my
|
|
making the Application you desire.
|
|
|
|
I shall enquire concerning the Affair of your two Townships
|
|
settled under Massachusetts Grants, and let you know my Sentiments as
|
|
soon as I can get proper Information. I should imagine that whatever
|
|
may be determin'd here of the Massachusetts Rights to the
|
|
Jurisdiction, the private Property of Settlers must remain secure.
|
|
In general I have no great Opinion of Applications to be made here in
|
|
such Cases. It is so much the Practice to draw Matters into Length,
|
|
put the Parties to immense Charge, and tire them out with Delays,
|
|
that I would never come from America hither with any Affair I could
|
|
possibly settle there.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Stevenson sends her Love, and thanks you for remembring
|
|
her. She is vex'd to hear that the Box of Spermaceti Candles is
|
|
seiz'd; and says, if ever she sees you again, she will put you in a
|
|
way of making Reprisals. You know she is a Smuggler upon Principle;
|
|
and she does not consider how averse you are to every thing of the
|
|
kind. I thank you for your kind Intention. Your Son grows a fine
|
|
Youth; he is so obliging as to be with us a little when he has
|
|
Holidays; and Temple is not the only one of the Family that is fond
|
|
of his Company.
|
|
|
|
It gives me great Pleasure to hear that our People are steady
|
|
in their Resolutions of Non Importation, and in the Promoting of
|
|
Industry among themselves. They will soon be sensible of the Benefit
|
|
of such Conduct, tho' the Acts should never be repeal'd to their full
|
|
Satisfaction. For their Earth and their Sea, the true Sources of
|
|
Wealth and Plenty, will go on producing; and if they receive the
|
|
annual Increase, and do not waste it as heretofore in the Gewgaws of
|
|
this Country, but employ their spare time in manufacturing
|
|
Necessaries for themselves, they must soon be out of debt, they must
|
|
soon be easy and comfortable in their circumstances, and even
|
|
wealthy. I have been told, that in some of our County Courts
|
|
heretofore, there were every quarter several hundred actions of debt,
|
|
in which the people were sued by Shopkeepers for money due for
|
|
British _goods_ (as they are called, but in fact _evils_). What a
|
|
loss of time this must occasion to the people, besides the expense.
|
|
And how can Freeman bear the thought of subjecting themselves to the
|
|
hazard of being deprived of their personal liberty at the caprice of
|
|
every petty trader, for the paltry vanity of tricking out himself and
|
|
family in the flimsy manufactures of Britain, when they might by
|
|
their own industry and ingenuity, appear in _good substantial
|
|
honourable homespun_! Could our folks but see what numbers of
|
|
Merchants, and even Shopkeepers here, make great estates by American
|
|
folly; how many shops of A, B, C and Co. with wares for _exportation
|
|
to the Colonies_, maintain, each shop three or four partners and
|
|
their families, every one with his country-house and equipage, where
|
|
they live like Princes on the sweat of our brows; pretending indeed,
|
|
_sometimes_, to wish well to our Privileges, but on the present
|
|
important occasion _few_ of them affording us any assistance: I am
|
|
persuaded that indignation would supply our want of prudence, we
|
|
should disdain the thraldom we have so long been held in by this
|
|
mischievous commerce, reject it for ever, and seek our resources
|
|
where God and Nature have placed them WITHIN OUR SELVES.
|
|
|
|
Your Merchants, on the other hand, have shown a noble
|
|
_disinterestedness_ and _love to their country_, unexampled among
|
|
Traders in any other age or nation, and which does them infinite
|
|
honour all over Europe. The corrupted part indeed of this people
|
|
_here_ can scarce believe such virtue possible. But perseverance
|
|
will convince them, that there is still in the world such a thing as
|
|
public spirit. I hope that, if the oppressive Acts are not repealed
|
|
this winter, your Stocks, that us'd to be employed in the British
|
|
Trade, will be turned to the employment of Manufactures among
|
|
yourselves: For notwithstanding the former general opinion that
|
|
manufactures were impracticable in America, on account of the
|
|
dearness of labour, experience shows, in the success of the
|
|
manufactures of paper and stockings in Pennsylvania, and of womens
|
|
shoes _at Lynn_ in your province, that labour is only dear _from the
|
|
want of_ CONSTANT _employment_; (he who is often out of work
|
|
requiring necessarily as much for the time he does work, as will
|
|
maintain him when he does not work:) and that where we do not
|
|
_interrupt that employment_ by importations, _the cheapness of our
|
|
provisions_ gives us such advantage over the Manufacturers in
|
|
Britain, that (especially in bulky goods, whose freight would be
|
|
considerable) _we may always_ UNDERWORK THEM.
|
|
|
|
"I HOPE HOWEVER THAT THIS MAY ALL PROVE FALSE PROPHECY"
|
|
|
|
_To William Strahan_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir, Craven Street, Nov. 29. 69
|
|
|
|
Being just return'd to Town from a little Excursion I find
|
|
yours of the 22d, containing a Number of Queries that would require a
|
|
Pamphlet to answer them fully. You however desire only brief
|
|
Answers, which I shall endeavour to give you. Previous to your
|
|
Queries, You tell me, that "you apprehend his Majesty's Servants have
|
|
now in Contemplation; 1st. to releive the Colonists from the Taxes
|
|
complained of: and 2dly to preserve the Honour, the Dignity, and the
|
|
Supremacy of the British Legislature over all his Majesty's
|
|
Dominions." I hope your Information is good, and that what you
|
|
suppose to be in Contemplation will be carried into Execution, by
|
|
repealing _all the Laws_ that have been made for raising a Revenue in
|
|
America by Authority of Parliament, without the consent of the People
|
|
there. The _Honour_ and _Dignity_ of the British Legislature will
|
|
not be hurt by such an Act of Justice and Wisdom: The wisest Councils
|
|
are liable to be misled, especially in Matters remote from their
|
|
Inspection. It is the persisting in an Error, not the Correcting it
|
|
that lessens the Honour of any Man or body of Men. The _Supremacy_
|
|
of that Legislature, I believe will be best preserv'd by making a
|
|
very sparing use of it, never but for the Evident Good of the
|
|
Colonies themselves, or of the whole British Empire; never for the
|
|
Partial Advantage of Britain to their Prejudice; by such Prudent
|
|
Conduct I imagine that Supremacy may be gradually strengthened and in
|
|
time fully Established; but otherwise I apprehend it will be
|
|
disputed, and lost in the Dispute. At present the Colonies consent
|
|
and Submit to it for the regulation of General Commerce: But a
|
|
Submission to Acts of Parliament was no part of their original
|
|
Constitution. Our former Kings Governed their Colonies, as they
|
|
Governed their Dominions in France, without the Participation of
|
|
British Parliaments. The Parliament of England never presum'd to
|
|
interfere with that prerogative till the Time of the Great Rebellion,
|
|
when they usurp'd the Government of all the King's other Dominions,
|
|
Ireland, Scotland &c. The Colonies that held for the King, they
|
|
conquered by Force of Arms, and Governed afterward as Conquered
|
|
Countries. But New England having not oppos'd the Parliament, was
|
|
considered and treated as a Sister Kingdom in Amity with England; as
|
|
appears by the Journals, Mar. 10. 1642.
|
|
|
|
Your first Question is, 1. "Will not a Repeal of all the Duties
|
|
(that on Tea excepted, which was before paid here on Exportation, and
|
|
of Course no new Imposition) fully satisfy the Colonists?"
|
|
|
|
I think not.
|
|
|
|
"2 Your Reasons for that Opinion?"
|
|
|
|
Because it is not _the Sum_ paid in that Duty on Tea that is
|
|
Complain'd of as a Burthen, but the Principle of the Act express'd in
|
|
the Preamble, viz. that those Duties were laid for the Better Support
|
|
of Government and the Administration of Justice in the Colonies.
|
|
This the Colonists think _unnecessary, unjust_, and _dangerous_ to
|
|
their Most Important Rights. _Unnecessary_, because in all the
|
|
Colonies (two or three new ones excepted) Government and the
|
|
Administration of Justice were and always had been well supported
|
|
without any Charge to Britain; _Unjust_ as it made such Colonies
|
|
liable to pay such Charge for other Colonies, in which they had no
|
|
Concern or Interest; _dangerous_, as such a Mode of raising Money for
|
|
these Purposes, tended to render their Assemblies useless: For if a
|
|
Revenue could be rais'd in the Colonies for all the purposes of
|
|
Government, by Act of Parliament, without Grants from the People
|
|
there, Governors, who do not generally love Assemblies, would never
|
|
call them, they would be laid aside; and when nothing Should depend
|
|
upon the People's good will to Government, their Rights would be
|
|
trampled on, they would be treated with Contempt. Another Reason why
|
|
I think they would not be satisfy'd with such a partial repeal, is,
|
|
that their Agreements not to import till the Repeal takes place,
|
|
include the whole, which shows that they object to the whole; and
|
|
those Agreements will continue binding on them if the whole is not
|
|
repealed.
|
|
|
|
"3. Do you think the only effectual Way of composing the
|
|
present Differences, is, to put the Americans precisely in the
|
|
Situation they were in before the passing of the late Stamp Act?"
|
|
|
|
I think so.
|
|
|
|
"4. Your Reasons for that Opinion?"
|
|
|
|
Other Methods have been tryed. They have been rebuked in angry
|
|
Letters. Their Petitions have been refused or rejected by
|
|
Parliament. They have been threatened with the Punishments of
|
|
Treason by Resolves of both Houses. Their Assemblies have been
|
|
dissolv'd, and Troops have been sent among them; but all these Ways
|
|
have only exasperated their Minds and widen'd the Breach; their
|
|
Agreements to use no more British Manufactures have been
|
|
Strengthen'd, and these Measures instead of composing Differences and
|
|
promoting a good Correspondence, have almost annihilated your
|
|
Commerce with those Countries, and greatly endanger'd the National
|
|
Peace and general Welfare.
|
|
|
|
"5. If this last Method is deemed by the Legislature and his
|
|
Majisty's Ministers to be repugnant to their Duty as Guardians of the
|
|
just Rights of the Crown, and of their Fellow Subjects, can you
|
|
suggest any other Way of terminating these Disputes, consistent with
|
|
the Ideas of Justice and propriety conceived by the Kings Subjects on
|
|
both Sides the Atlantick?"
|
|
|
|
A. I do not see how that method can be deemed repugnant _to the
|
|
Rights of the Crown._ If the Americans are put into their former
|
|
Situation, it must be by an Act of Parliament, in the Passing of
|
|
which by the King the Rights of the Crown are exercised not
|
|
infringed. It is indifferent to the Crown whether the Aids received
|
|
from America are Granted by Parliament here, or by the Assemblies
|
|
there, provided the Quantum be the same; and it is my Opinion more
|
|
will generally be Granted there Voluntarily than can ever be exacted
|
|
and collected from thence by Authority of parliament. As to the
|
|
rights of _Fellow Subjects_ (I suppose you mean the People of
|
|
Britain) I cannot conceive how they will be infringed by that method.
|
|
They will still enjoy the Right of Granting their own money; and may
|
|
still, if it pleases them, keep up their Claim to the Right of
|
|
granting ours; a Right they can never exercise properly, for want of
|
|
a sufficient Knowledge of us, our Circumstances and Abilities (to say
|
|
nothing of the little likelihood there is that we should ever submit
|
|
to it) therefore a Right that can be of no good use to them. And we
|
|
shall continue to enjoy, _in fact_, the Right of granting our own
|
|
Money; with the Opinion now universally prevailing among us that we
|
|
are free Subjects of the King, and that _Fellow Subjects_ of one Part
|
|
of his Dominions are not Sovereign over _Fellow Subjects_ in any
|
|
other Part. If the Subjects on the different Sides of the Atlantic,
|
|
have different and opposite Ideas of Justice or Propriety, no one
|
|
Method can possibly be consistent with both. The best will be to let
|
|
each enjoy their own Opinions, without disturbing them when they do
|
|
not interfere with the common Good.
|
|
|
|
"6. And if this Method were actually followed do you not think
|
|
it would encourage the Violent and Factious Part of the Colonists to
|
|
aim at still farther Concessions from the Mother Country?"
|
|
|
|
A. I do not think it would. There may be a few among them that
|
|
deserve the Name of factious and Violent, as there are in all
|
|
Countries, but these would have little influence if the great
|
|
Majority of Sober reasonable People were satisfy'd. If any Colony
|
|
should happen to think that some of your regulations of Trade are
|
|
inconvenient to the general Interest of the Empire, or prejudicial to
|
|
them without being beneficial to you, they will state these Matters
|
|
to the Parliament in Petitions as heretofore, but will, I believe,
|
|
take no violent steps to obtain, what they may hope for in time from
|
|
the Wisdom of Government here. I know of nothing else they can have
|
|
in View. The Notion that prevails here of their being desirous of
|
|
setting up a Kingdom or Common Wealth of their own, is to my certain
|
|
Knowledge entirely groundless. I therefore think that on a total
|
|
Repeal of all Duties laid expressly for the purpose of raising a
|
|
Revenue on the People of America, without their Consent, the present
|
|
Uneasiness would subside; the Agreements not to import would be
|
|
dissolved, and the Commerce flourish as heretofore. And I am
|
|
confirm'd in this Sentiment by all the Letters I have received from
|
|
America, and by the Opinion of all the Sensible People who have
|
|
lately come from thence, Crown Officers excepted. I know indeed that
|
|
the people of Boston are grievously offended by the Quartering of
|
|
Troops among them, as they think, contrary to Law; and are very angry
|
|
with the Board of Commissioners to have calumniated them to
|
|
Government; but as I suppose withdrawing of those Troops may be a
|
|
Consequence of Reconciliating Measures taking Place; and that the
|
|
Commission also will either be dissolv'd if found useless, or fill'd
|
|
with more temporate and prudent Men if still deemed useful and
|
|
necessary, I do not imagine these Particulars will prevent a return
|
|
of the Harmony so much to be wished.
|
|
|
|
"7. If they are relieved in Part only, what do you, as a
|
|
reasonable and dispassionate Man, and an equal Friend to both sides,
|
|
imagine will be the probable Consequence?"
|
|
|
|
A. I imagine that repealing the offensive Duties in part will
|
|
answer no End to this Country; the Commerce will remain obstructed,
|
|
and the Americans go on with their Schemes of Frugality, Industry and
|
|
Manufactures, to their own great Advantage. How much that may tend
|
|
to the prejudice of Britain I cannot say; perhaps not so much as some
|
|
apprehend, since she may in time find New Markets. But I think (if
|
|
the Union of the two Countries continues to subsist) it will not hurt
|
|
the _general_ interest; for whatever Wealth Britain loses by the
|
|
Failure of its Trade with the Colonies, America will gain; and the
|
|
Crown will receive equal Aids from its Subjects upon the whole, if
|
|
not greater.
|
|
|
|
And now I have answered your Questions as to what _may be_ in
|
|
my Opinion the Consequences of this or that _supposed_ Measure, I
|
|
will go a little farther, and tell you what I fear is more likely to
|
|
come to pass _in Reality._
|
|
|
|
I apprehend, that the Ministry, at least the American part of
|
|
it, being fully persuaded of the Right of Parliament, think it ought
|
|
to be enforc'd whatever may be the Consequences; and at the same time
|
|
do not believe there is even now any Abatement of the Trade between
|
|
the two Countries on account of these Disputes; or that if there is,
|
|
it is small and cannot long Continue; they are assured by the Crown
|
|
officers in America that Manufactures are impossible there; that the
|
|
Discontented are few, and Persons of little Consequence; that almost
|
|
all the People of Property and Importance are satisfyd, and disposed
|
|
to submit quietly to the Taxing-Power of Parliament; and that if the
|
|
Revenue Acts are continued, those Duties only that are called
|
|
anti-commercial being repealed, and others perhaps laid in their
|
|
stead, that Power will ere long be patiently submitted to, and the
|
|
Agreements not to import be broken when they are found to produce no
|
|
Change of Measures here. From these and similar Misinformations,
|
|
which seem to be credited, I think it likely that no thorough redress
|
|
of Grievances will be afforded to America this Session. This may
|
|
inflame Matters still more in that Country; farther rash Measures
|
|
there may create more Resentment here, that may Produce not merely
|
|
ill-advis'd and useless Dissolutions of their Assemblies, as last
|
|
Year; but Attempts to Dissolve their Constitutions; more Troops may
|
|
be sent over, which will create more Uneasiness; to justify the
|
|
Measures of Government your Ministerial Writers will revile the
|
|
Americans in your Newspapers, as they have already began to do,
|
|
treating them as Miscreants, Rogues, Dastards, Rebels, &c. which will
|
|
tend farther to alienate the Minds of the People here from them, and
|
|
diminish their Affections to this Country. Possibly too, some of
|
|
their warm patriots may be distracted enough to expose themselves by
|
|
some mad Action, to be sent for Hither, and Government here be
|
|
indiscreet enough to Hang them on the Act of H. 8. Mutual
|
|
Provocations will thus go on to complete the Separation; and instead
|
|
of that cordial Affection that once and so long existed, and that
|
|
Harmony so suitable to the Circumstances, and so Necessary to the
|
|
Happiness, Strength Safety and Welfare of both Countries; an
|
|
implacable Malice and Mutual Hatred, (such as we now see subsisting
|
|
between the Spaniards and Portuguese, the Genoese and Corsicans, from
|
|
the same Original Misconduct in the Superior Government) will take
|
|
place; the Sameness of Nation, the Similarity of Religion, Manners
|
|
and Language not in the least Preventing in our Case, more than it
|
|
did in theirs. I hope however that this may all prove false
|
|
Prophecy: And that you and I may live to see as sincere and Perfect a
|
|
friendship establish'd between our respective Countries as has so
|
|
many years Subsisted between Mr. Strahan and his truly affectionate
|
|
Friend
|
|
|
|
"IF WE ARE STEADY AND PERSEVERE IN OUR RESOLUTIONS"
|
|
|
|
_To [Charles Thomson]_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir London March 18th. 1770
|
|
|
|
Your very judicious Letter of Novemr. 26th. being communicated
|
|
by me to some Member of Parliament, was handed about among them, so
|
|
that it was sometime before I got it again into my Hands. It had due
|
|
Weight with several, and was of considerable Use. You will see that
|
|
I printed it at length in the London Chronicle with the Merchants'
|
|
Letter. When the American Affairs came to be debated in the House of
|
|
Commons, the Majority, notwithstanding all the Weight of ministerial
|
|
Influence, was only 62 for continuing the whole last Act; and would
|
|
not have been so large, nay, I think the Repeal would have been
|
|
carried, but that the Ministry were persuaded by Governor Bernard and
|
|
some lying Letters said to be from Boston, that the Associations not
|
|
to import were all breaking to Pieces, that America was in the
|
|
greatest Distress for Want of the Goods, that we could not possibly
|
|
subsist any longer without them, and must of course submit to any
|
|
Terms Parliament should think fit to impose upon us. This with the
|
|
idle Notion of the Dignity and Sovereignty of Parliament, which they
|
|
are so fond of, and imagine will be endanger'd by any farther
|
|
Concessions, prevailed I know with many to vote with the Ministry,
|
|
who otherwise, on Account of the Commerce, wish to see the Difference
|
|
accommodated. But though both the Duke of Grafton and Lord North
|
|
were and are in my Opinion rather inclined to satisfy us, yet the
|
|
Bedford Party are so violent against us, and so prevalent in the
|
|
Council, that more moderate Measures could not take Place. This
|
|
Party never speak of us but with evident Malice; Rebels and Traitors
|
|
are the best Names they can afford us, and I believe they only wish
|
|
for a colourable Pretence and Occasion of ordering the Souldiers to
|
|
make a Massacre among us.
|
|
|
|
On the other Hand the Rockingham and Shelburne People, with
|
|
Lord Chatham's Friends, are disposed to favour us if they were again
|
|
in Power, which at present they are not like to be; tho' they, too,
|
|
would be for keeping up the Claim of parliamentary Sovereignty, but
|
|
without exercising it in any Mode of Taxation. Besides these, we
|
|
have for sincere Friends and Wellwishers the Body of Dissenters,
|
|
generally, throughout England, with many others, not to mention
|
|
Ireland and all the rest of Europe, who from various Motives join in
|
|
applauding the Spirit of Liberty, with which we have claimed and
|
|
insisted on our Privileges, and wish us Success, but whose Suffrage
|
|
cannot have much Weight in our Affairs.
|
|
|
|
The Merchants here were at length prevailed on to present a
|
|
Petition, but they moved slowly, and some of them I thought
|
|
reluctantly; perhaps from a Despair of Success, the City not being
|
|
much in favour with the Court at present. The manufacturing Towns
|
|
absolutely refused to move at all; some pretending to be offended
|
|
with our attempting to manufacture for ourselves; others saying that
|
|
they had Employment enough, and that our Trade was of little
|
|
Importance to them, whether we continued or refused it. Those who
|
|
began a little to feel the Effects of our forbearing to purchase,
|
|
were persuaded to be quiet by the ministerial People; who gave out
|
|
that certain Advices were receiv'd of our beginning to break our
|
|
Agreements; of our Attempts to manufacture proving all abortive and
|
|
ruining the Undertakers; of our Distress for Want of Goods, and
|
|
Dissentions among ourselves, which promised the total Defeat of all
|
|
such Kind of Combinations, and the Prevention of them for the future,
|
|
if the Government were not urged imprudently to repeal the Duties.
|
|
But now that it appears from late and authentic Accounts, that
|
|
Agreements continue in full Force, that a Ship is actually return'd
|
|
from Boston to Bristol with Nails and Glass, (Articles that were
|
|
thought of the utmost Necessity,) and that the Ships that were
|
|
waiting here for the Determination of Parliament, are actually
|
|
returning to North America in thier Ballast; the Tone of the
|
|
Manufacturers begins to change, and there is no doubt, that if we are
|
|
steady and persevere in our Resolutions, these People will soon begin
|
|
a Clamor that much Pains has hitherto been used to stifle.
|
|
|
|
In short, it appears to me, that if we do not now persist in
|
|
this Measure till it has had its full Effect, it can never again be
|
|
used on any future Occasion with the least prospect of Success, and
|
|
that if we do persist another year, we shall never afterwards have
|
|
occasion to use it. With sincere regards I am, Dear Sir, Your
|
|
obedient Servant,
|
|
|
|
"I SHOULD THINK YOU A FORTUNE SUFFICIENT FOR ME WITHOUT A
|
|
SHILLING"
|
|
|
|
_To Mary Stevenson_
|
|
|
|
Dear Polly Thursday May 31. 70 I receiv'd your Letter early
|
|
this Morning, and as I am so engag'd that I cannot see you when you
|
|
come to-day, I write this Line just to say, That I am sure you are a
|
|
much better Judge in this Affair of your own than I can possibly be;
|
|
in that Confidence it was that I forbore giving my Advice when you
|
|
mention'd it to me, and not from any Disapprobation. My Concern
|
|
(equal to any Father's) for your Happiness, makes me write this, lest
|
|
having more Regard for my Opinion than you ought, and imagining it
|
|
against the Proposal because I did not immediately advise accepting
|
|
it, you should let that weigh any thing in your Deliberations. I
|
|
assure you that no Objection has occur'd to me; his Person you see,
|
|
his Temper and his Understanding you can judge of, his Character for
|
|
any thing I have ever heard is unblemished; his Profession, with that
|
|
Skill in it he is suppos'd to have, will be sufficient to support a
|
|
Family; and therefore considering the Fortune you have in your Hands,
|
|
(tho' any future Expectation from your Aunt should be disappointed) I
|
|
do not see but that the Agreement may be a rational one on both
|
|
sides. I see your Delicacy; and your Humility too; for you fancy
|
|
that if you do not prove a great Fortune you will not be belov'd; but
|
|
I am sure that were I in his Situation in every respect, knowing you
|
|
so well as I do, and esteeming you so highly, I should think you a
|
|
Fortune sufficient for me without a Shilling. Having thus more
|
|
explicitly than before, given my Opinion, I leave the rest to your
|
|
sound Judgment, of which no one has a greater Share; and shall not be
|
|
too inquisitive after your particular Reasons, your Doubts, your
|
|
Fears, &c. For I shall be confident whether you accept or refuse,
|
|
that you do right. I only wish you may do what will most contribute
|
|
to your Happiness, and of course to mine; being ever, my dear Friend,
|
|
Yours most affectionately
|
|
|
|
Don't be angry with me for supposing your Determination not
|
|
quite so fix'd as you fancy it.
|
|
|
|
"THE SOLE LEGISLATOR OF HIS AMERICAN SUBJECTS"
|
|
|
|
_To Samuel Cooper_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir, London, June 8. 1770
|
|
|
|
I received duly your Favour of March 28. With this I send you
|
|
two Speeches in Parliament on our Affairs by a Member that you know.
|
|
The Repeal of the whole late Act would undoubtedly have been a
|
|
prudent Measure, and I have reason to believe that Lord North was for
|
|
it, but some of the other Ministers could not be brought to agree to
|
|
it. So the Duty on Tea, with that obnoxious Preamble, remains to
|
|
continue the Dispute. But I think the next Session will hardly pass
|
|
over without repealing them; for the Parliament must finally comply
|
|
with the Sense of the Nation. As to the Standing Army kept up among
|
|
us in time of Peace, without the Consent of our Assemblies, I am
|
|
clearly of Opinion that it is not agreable to the Constitution.
|
|
Should the King by the Aid of his Parliaments in Ireland and the
|
|
Colonies, raise an Army and bring it into England, quartering it here
|
|
in time of Peace without the Consent of the Parliament of Great
|
|
Britain, I am persuaded he would soon be told that he had no Right so
|
|
to do, and the Nation would ring with Clamours against it. I own
|
|
that I see no Difference in the Cases. And while we continue so many
|
|
distinct and separate States, our having the same Head or Sovereign,
|
|
the King, will not justify such an Invasion of the separate Right of
|
|
each State to be consulted on the Establishment of whatever Force is
|
|
proposed to be kept up within its Limits, and to give or refuse its
|
|
Consent as shall appear most for the Public Good of that State. That
|
|
the Colonies originally were constituted distinct States, and
|
|
intended to be continued such, is clear to me from a thorough
|
|
Consideration of their original Charters, and the whole Conduct of
|
|
the Crown and Nation towards them until the Restoration. Since that
|
|
Period, the Parliament here has usurp'd an Authority of making Laws
|
|
for them, which before it had not. We have for some time submitted
|
|
to that Usurpation, partly thro' Ignorance and Inattention, and
|
|
partly from our Weakness and Inability to contend. I hope when our
|
|
Rights are better understood here, we shall, by a prudent and proper
|
|
Conduct be able to obtain from the Equity of this Nation a
|
|
Restoration of them. And in the mean time I could wish that such
|
|
Expressions as, _The supreme Authority of Parliament_; _The
|
|
Subordinacy of our Assemblies to the Parliament_ and the like (which
|
|
in Reality mean nothing if our Assemblies with the King have a true
|
|
Legislative Authority) I say, I could wish that such Expressions were
|
|
no more seen in our publick Pieces. They are too strong for
|
|
Compliment, and tend to confirm a Claim of Subjects in one Part of
|
|
the King's Dominions to be Sovereigns over their Fellow-Subjects in
|
|
another Part of his Dominions; when in truth they have no such Right,
|
|
and their Claim is founded only on Usurpation, the several States
|
|
having equal Rights and Liberties, and being only connected, as
|
|
England and Scotland were before the Union, by having one common
|
|
Sovereign, the King. This kind of Doctrine the Lords and Commons
|
|
here would deem little less than Treason against what they think
|
|
their Share of the Sovereignty over the Colonies. To me those Bodies
|
|
seem to have been long encroaching on the Rights of their and our
|
|
Sovereign, assuming too much of his Authority, and betraying his
|
|
Interests. By our Constitutions he is, with his Plantation
|
|
Parliaments, the sole Legislator of his American Subjects, and in
|
|
that Capacity is and ought to be free to exercise his own Judgment
|
|
unrestrain'd and unlimited by his Parliament here. And our
|
|
Parliaments have Right to grant him Aids without the Consent of this
|
|
Parliament, a Circumstance which, by the way begins to give it some
|
|
Jealousy. Let us therefore hold fast our Loyalty to our King (who
|
|
has the best Disposition towards us, and has a Family-Interest in our
|
|
Prosperity) as that steady Loyalty is the most probable Means of
|
|
securing us from the arbitrary Power of a corrupt Parliament, that
|
|
does not like us, and conceives itself to have an Interest in keeping
|
|
us down and fleecing us. If they should urge the _Inconvenience_ of
|
|
an Empire's being divided into so many separate States, and from
|
|
thence conclude that we are not so divided; I would answer, that an
|
|
Inconvenience proves nothing but itself. England and Scotland were
|
|
once separate States, under the same King. The Inconvenience found
|
|
in their being separate States, did not prove that the Parliament of
|
|
England had a Right to govern Scotland. A formal Union was thought
|
|
necessary, and England was an hundred Years soliciting it, before she
|
|
could bring it about. If Great Britain now thinks such an Union
|
|
necessary with us, let her propose her Terms, and we may consider of
|
|
them. Were the general Sentiments of this Nation to be consulted in
|
|
the Case, I should hope the Terms, whether practicable or not, would
|
|
at least be equitable: for I think that except among those with whom
|
|
the Spirit of Toryism prevails, the popular Inclination here is, to
|
|
wish us well, and that we may preserve our Liberties.
|
|
|
|
I unbosom my self thus to you in Confidence of your Prudence,
|
|
and wishing to have your Sentiments on the Subject in Return.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Pownall, I suppose, will acquaint you with the Event of his
|
|
Motions, and therefore I say nothing more of them, than that he
|
|
appears very sincere in his Endeavours to serve us; on which Account
|
|
I some time since republish'd with Pleasure the parting Addresses to
|
|
him of your Assembly, with some previous Remarks, to his Honour as
|
|
well as in Justification of our People.
|
|
|
|
I hope that before this time those detestable Murderers have
|
|
quitted your Province, and that the Spirit of Industry and Frugality
|
|
continues and increases. With sincerest Esteem and Affection, I am,
|
|
Dear Sir, Your most obedient and most humble Servant
|
|
|
|
P.S. Just before the last Session of Parliament commenced a
|
|
Friend of mine, who had Connections with some of the Ministry, wrote
|
|
me a Letter purposely to draw from me my Sentiments in Writing on the
|
|
then State of Affairs. I wrote a pretty free Answer, which I know
|
|
was immediately communicated and a good deal handed about among them.
|
|
For your _private Amusement_ I send you Copies. I wish you may be
|
|
able to read them, as they are very badly written by a very
|
|
blundering Clerk.
|
|
|
|
"HITHERTO MADE NO ATTEMPT UPON MY VIRTUE"
|
|
|
|
_To Mary Stevenson Hewson_
|
|
|
|
Dear Polly, London, July 18. 1770
|
|
|
|
Yours of the 15th. informing me of your agreable Journey and
|
|
safe Arrival at Hexham gave me great Pleasure, and would make your
|
|
good Mother happy if I knew how to convey it to her; but 'tis such an
|
|
out-of-the-way Place she is gone to, and the Name so out of my Head,
|
|
that the Good News must wait her Return. Enclos'd I send you a
|
|
Letter which came before she went, and, supposing it from my Daughter
|
|
Bache, she would have me open and read it to her, so you see if there
|
|
had been any Intrigue between the Gentleman and you, how all would
|
|
have been discovered. Your Mother went away on Friday last, taking
|
|
with her Sally and Temple, trusting me alone with Nanny, who indeed
|
|
has hitherto made no Attempt upon my Virtue. Neither Dolly nor
|
|
Barwell, nor any other good Female Soul of your Friends or mine have
|
|
been nigh me, nor offered me the least Consolation by Letter in my
|
|
present lonesome State. I hear the Post-man's Bell, so can only add
|
|
my affectionate Respects to Mr. Hewson, and best Wishes of perpetual
|
|
Happiness for you both. I am, as ever, my dear good Girl, Your
|
|
affectionate Friend
|
|
|
|
"HAVE YOU THEN GOT NE'ER A GRANDMOTHER?"
|
|
|
|
_To Deborah Franklin_
|
|
|
|
My dear Child, London, Oct. 3. 1770
|
|
|
|
I received your kind Letter of Aug. 16. which gave me a great
|
|
deal of Satisfaction. I am glad your little Grandson recovered so
|
|
soon of his Illness, as I see you are quite in Love with him, and
|
|
your Happiness wrapt up in his; since your whole long Letter is made
|
|
up of the History of his pretty Actions. It was very prudently done
|
|
of you not to interfere when his Mother thought fit to correct him;
|
|
which pleases me the more, as I feared, from your Fondness of him,
|
|
that he would be too much humoured, and perhaps spoiled. There is a
|
|
Story of two little Boys in the Street; one was crying bitterly; the
|
|
other came to him to ask what was the Matter? I have been, says he,
|
|
for a pennyworth of Vinegar, and I have broke the Glass and spilt the
|
|
Vinegar, and my Mother will whip me. _No, she won't whip you_ says
|
|
the other. Indeed she will, says he. _What,_ says the other, _have
|
|
you then got ne'er a Grandmother?_
|
|
|
|
I am sorry I did not send one of my Books to Mr. Rhodes, since
|
|
he was desirous of seeing it. My Love to him, and to all enquiring
|
|
Friends. Mrs. West was here to day, and desired me to mention her
|
|
Love to you. Mr. Strahan and Family are all well, always enquire how
|
|
you all do, and send their Love. Mrs Stevenson is at present in the
|
|
Country. But Polly sends her Love to you and Mrs Bache and the young
|
|
Gentleman. My Love to all. I am, as ever, Your affectionate Husband
|
|
|
|
``THIS WORLD IS THE TRUE HELL''
|
|
|
|
_To Jane Mecom_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sister London Dec. 30. 1770
|
|
|
|
This Ship staying longer than was expected, gives me an
|
|
Opportunity of writing to you which I thought I must have miss'd when
|
|
I desir'd Cousin Williams to excuse me to you. I received your kind
|
|
Letter of Sept. 25 by the young Gentlemen, who, by their discreet
|
|
Behaviour have recommended themselves very much to me and many of my
|
|
Acquaintance. Josiah has attained his Heart's Desire of being under
|
|
the Tuition of Mr. Stanley, who, tho, he had long left off Teaching,
|
|
kindly undertook at my Request to instruct him, and is much pleased
|
|
with his Quickness of Apprehension and the Progress he makes; and
|
|
Jonathan appears a very valuable young Man, sober, regular, and
|
|
inclin'd to Industry and Frugality, which are promising Signs of
|
|
Success in Business: I am very happy in their Company.
|
|
|
|
As to the Rumour you mention (which was, as Josiah tells me, that I
|
|
had been depriv'd of my Place in the Post Office on Account of a letter I
|
|
wrote to Philadelphia) it might have this Foundation, that some of the
|
|
Ministry had been displeas'd at my Writing such Letters, and there were
|
|
really some Thoughts among them of shewing that Displeasure in that manner.
|
|
But I had some Friends too, who unrequested by me advis'd the contrary. And
|
|
my Enemies were forc'd to content themselves with abusing me plentifully in
|
|
the Newspapers, and endeavouring to provoke me to resign. In this they are
|
|
not likely to succeed, I being deficient in that Christian Virtue of
|
|
Resignation. If they would have my Office, they must take it -- I have heard
|
|
of some great Man, whose Rule it was with regard to Offices, _Never to ask
|
|
for them_, and _never to refuse them_: To which I have always added in my own
|
|
Practice, _Never to resign them._ As I told my Friends, I rose to that office
|
|
thro' a long Course of Service in the inferior Degrees of it: Before my time,
|
|
thro' bad Management, it never produced the Salary annex'd to it; and when I
|
|
receivd it, no Salary was to be allow'd if the office did not produce it.
|
|
During the first four Years it was so far from defraying itself, that it
|
|
became 950 pounds Sterling in debt to me and my Collegue. I had been chiefly
|
|
instrumental in bringing it to its present flourishing State, and therefore
|
|
thought I had some kind of Right to it. I had hitherto executed the Duties
|
|
of it faithfully, and to the perfect Satisfaction of my Superiors, which I
|
|
thought was all that should be expected of me on that Account. As to the
|
|
Letters complain'd of, it was true I did write them, and they were written in
|
|
Compliance with another Duty, that to my Country. A Duty quite Distinct from
|
|
that of Postmaster. My Conduct in this respect was exactly similar with that
|
|
I held on a similar Occasion but a few Years ago, when the then Ministry were
|
|
ready to hug me for the Assistance I afforded them in repealing a former
|
|
Revenue Act. My Sentiments were still the same, that no such Acts should be
|
|
made here for America; or, if made should as soon as possible be repealed;
|
|
and I thought it should not be expected of me, to change my Political
|
|
Opinions every time his Majesty thought fit to change his Ministers. This
|
|
was my Language on the Occasion; and I have lately heard, that tho I was
|
|
thought much to blame, it being understood that every Man who holds an Office
|
|
should act with the Ministry whether agreable or not to his own Judgment, yet
|
|
in consideration of the goodness of my private Character (as they are pleas'd
|
|
to compliment me) the office was not to be taken from me. Possibly they may
|
|
still change their Minds, and remove me; but no Apprehension of that sort,
|
|
will, I trust, make the least Alteration in my Political Conduct. My rule in
|
|
which I have always found Satisfaction, is, Never to turn asside in Publick
|
|
Affairs thro' Views of private Interest; but to go strait forward in doing
|
|
what appears to me right at the time, leaving the Consequences with
|
|
Providence. What in my younger Days enabled me more easily to walk upright,
|
|
was, that I had a Trade; and that I could live upon a little; and thence
|
|
(never having had views of making a Fortune) I was free from Avarice, and
|
|
contented with the plentiful Supplies my business afforded me. And now it is
|
|
still more easy for me to preserve my Freedom and Integrity, when I consider,
|
|
that I am almost at the End of my Journey, and therefore need less to
|
|
complete the Expence of it; and that what I now possess thro' the Blessing of
|
|
God may with tolerable Oeconomy, be sufficient for me (great Misfortunes
|
|
excepted) tho' I should add nothing more to it by any Office or Employment
|
|
whatsoever.
|
|
|
|
I send you by this Opportunity the 2 Books you wrote for. They
|
|
cost 3_s._ a piece. When I was first in London, about 45 Years
|
|
since, I knew a person who had an Opinion something like your
|
|
Author's -- Her Name was _Ilive_, a Printer's Widow. She dy'd soon
|
|
after I left England, and by her Will oblig'd her son to deliver
|
|
publickly in Salter's Hall a Solemn Discourse, the purport of which
|
|
was to prove, that this World is the true Hell or Place of Punishment
|
|
for the Spirits who had transgress'd in a better State, and were sent
|
|
here to suffer for their sins in Animals of all Sorts. It is long
|
|
since I saw the Discourse, which was printed. I think a good deal of
|
|
Scripture was cited in it, and that the Supposition was, that tho' we
|
|
now remember'd nothing of such pre-existent State; yet after Death we
|
|
might recollect it, and remember the Punishments we had suffer'd, so
|
|
as to be the better for them; and others who had not yet offended,
|
|
might now behold and be warn'd by our Sufferings. In fact we see
|
|
here that every lower Animal has its Enemy with proper Inclinations,
|
|
Faculties and Weapons, to terrify, wound and destroy it; and that
|
|
Men, who are uppermost, are Devils to one another; So that on the
|
|
establish'd Doctrine of the Goodness and Justice of the great
|
|
Creator, this apparent State of general and systematical Mischief,
|
|
seem'd to demand some such Supposition as Mrs. Ilives, to account for
|
|
it consistent with the Honour of the Diety. But our reasoning Powers
|
|
when employ'd about what may have been before our Existence here, or
|
|
shall be after it, cannot go far for want of History and Facts:
|
|
Revelation only can give us the necessary Information, and that (in
|
|
the first of these Points especially) has been very sparingly
|
|
afforded us.
|
|
|
|
I hope you continue to correspond with your Friends at
|
|
Philadelphia, or else I shall think there has been some Miff between
|
|
you; which indeed, to confess the Truth, I was a little afraid, from
|
|
some Instances of others, might possibly happen, and that prevented
|
|
my ever urging you to make such a visit especially as I think there
|
|
is rather an overquantity of Touchwood in your Constitution. My Love
|
|
to your Children, and believe me ever, Your affectionate Brother
|
|
|
|
Let none of my Letters go out of your Hands.
|
|
|
|
HOW RAINDROPS GROW
|
|
|
|
_To Thomas Percival_
|
|
|
|
On my return to London I found your favour, of the sixteenth of
|
|
May (1771). I wish I could, as you desire, give you a better
|
|
explanation of the phaenomenon in question, since you seem not quite
|
|
satisfied with your own; but I think we want more and a greater
|
|
variety of experiments in different circumstances, to enable us to
|
|
form a thoroughly satisfactory hypothesis. Not that I make the least
|
|
doubt of the facts already related, as I know both Lord Charles
|
|
Cavendish, and Dr. Heberden to be very accurate experimenters: but I
|
|
wish to know the event of the trials proposed in your six queries;
|
|
and also, whether in the same place where the lower vessel receives
|
|
nearly twice the quantity of water that is received by the upper, a
|
|
third vessel placed at half the height will receive a quantity
|
|
proportionable. I will however endeavour to explain to you what
|
|
occurred to me, when I first heard of the fact.
|
|
|
|
I suppose, it will be generally allowed, on a little
|
|
consideration of the subject, that scarce any drop of water was, when
|
|
it began to fall from the clouds, of a magnitude equal to that it has
|
|
acquired, when it arrives at the earth; the same of the several
|
|
pieces of hail; because they are often so large and weighty, that we
|
|
cannot conceive a possibility of their being suspended in the air,
|
|
and remaining at rest there, for any time, how small soever; nor do
|
|
we conceive any means of forming them so large, before they set out
|
|
to fall. It seems then, that each beginning drop, and particle of
|
|
hail, receives continual addition in its progress downwards. This
|
|
may be several ways: by the union of numbers in their course, so that
|
|
what was at first only a descending mist, becomes a shower; or by
|
|
each particle in its descent through air that contains a great
|
|
quantity of dissolved water, striking against, attaching to itself,
|
|
and carrying down with it, such particles of that dissolved water, as
|
|
happen to be in its way; or attracting to itself such as do not lie
|
|
directly in its course, by its different state with regard either to
|
|
common or electric fire; or by all these causes united.
|
|
|
|
In the first case, by the uniting of numbers, larger drops
|
|
might be made, but the quantity falling in the same space would be
|
|
the same at all heights; unless, as you mention, the whole should be
|
|
contracted in falling, the lines described by all the drops
|
|
converging, so that what set out to fall from a cloud of many
|
|
thousand acres, should reach the earth in perhaps a third of that
|
|
extent, of which I somewhat doubt. In the other cases we have two
|
|
experiments.
|
|
|
|
|
|
1. A dry glass bottle, filled with very cold water, in a warm
|
|
day, will presently collect from the seemingly dry air that surrounds
|
|
it, a quantity of water that shall cover its surface and run down its
|
|
sides, which perhaps is done by the power wherewith the cold water
|
|
attracts the fluid, common fire that had been united with the
|
|
dissolved water in the air, and drawing that fire through the glass
|
|
into itself, leaves the water on the outside.
|
|
|
|
2. An electrified body left in a room for some time, will be
|
|
more covered with dust than other bodies in the same room not
|
|
electrified, which dust seems to be attracted from the circumambient
|
|
air.
|
|
|
|
Now we know that the rain, even in our hottest days, comes from
|
|
a very cold region. Its falling sometimes in the form of ice, shews
|
|
this clearly; and perhaps even the rain is snow or ice when it first
|
|
moves downwards, though thawed in falling: And we know that the drops
|
|
of rain are often electrified: But those causes of addition to each
|
|
drop of water, or piece of hail, one would think could not long
|
|
continue to produce the same effect; since the air, through which the
|
|
drops fall, must soon be stript of its previously dissolved water, so
|
|
as to be no longer capable of augmenting them. Indeed very heavy
|
|
showers, of either, are never of long continuance; but moderate rains
|
|
often continue so long as to puzzle this hypothesis: So that upon the
|
|
whole I think, as I intimated before, that we are yet hardly ripe for
|
|
making one.
|
|
|
|
June? 1771
|
|
|
|
"AN ADVENTURE TO GAIN FORBIDDEN KNOWLEDGE"
|
|
|
|
_To Jane Mecom_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sister, London, July 17. 1771
|
|
|
|
I have received your kind Letter of May 10. You seem so
|
|
sensible of your Error in so hastily suspecting me, that I am now in
|
|
my turn sorry I took Notice of it. Let us then suppose that Accompt
|
|
ballanced and settled, and think no more of it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In some former Letter I believe I mention'd the Price of the
|
|
Books, which I have now forgotten: But I think it was 3_s._ each. To
|
|
be sure there are Objections to the Doctrine of Pre-existence: But it
|
|
seems to have been invented with a good Intention, to save the Honour
|
|
of the Deity, which was thought to be injured by the Supposition of
|
|
his bringing Creatures into the World to be miserable, without any
|
|
previous misbehaviour of theirs to deserve it. This, however, is
|
|
perhaps an officious Supporting of the Ark, without being call'd to
|
|
such Service. Where he has thought fit to draw a Veil, our
|
|
Attempting to remove it may be deem'd at least an offensive
|
|
Impertinence. And we shall probably succeed little better in such an
|
|
Adventure to gain forbidden Knowledge, than our first Parents did
|
|
when they ate the Apple.
|
|
|
|
I meant no more by saying Mankind were Devils to one another
|
|
than that being in general superior to the Malice of the other
|
|
Creatures, they were not so much tormented by them as by themselves.
|
|
Upon the whole I am much disposed to like the World as I find it, and
|
|
to doubt my own Judgment as to what would mend it. I see so much
|
|
Wisdom in what I understand of its Creation and Government, that I
|
|
suspect equal Wisdom may be in what I do not understand. And thence
|
|
have perhaps as much Trust in God as the most pious Christian.
|
|
|
|
I am very happy that a good Understanding continues between you
|
|
and the Philadelphia Folks. Our Father, who was a very wise man,
|
|
us'd to say, nothing was more common than for those who lov'd one
|
|
another at a distance, to find many Causes of Dislike when they came
|
|
together; and therefore he did not approve of Visits to Relations in
|
|
distant Places, which could not well be short enough for them to part
|
|
good Friends. I saw a Proof of it, in the Disgusts between him and
|
|
his Brother Benjamin; and tho' I was a Child I still remember how
|
|
affectionate their Correspondence was while they were separated, and
|
|
the Disputes and Misunderstandings they had when they came to live
|
|
some time together in the same House. But you have been more
|
|
prudent, and restrain'd that "Aptness" you say you have "to interfere
|
|
in other People's oeconomical Affairs by putting in a Word now and
|
|
then unasked." And so all's well that ends well.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I thought you had mentioned in one of your Letters a Desire to
|
|
have Spectacles of some sort sent you; but I cannot now find such a
|
|
Letter. However I send you a Pair of every Size of Glasses from 1 to
|
|
13. To suit yourself, take out a Pair at a time, and hold one of the
|
|
Glasses first against one Eye, and then against the other, looking on
|
|
some small Print. If the first Pair suits neither Eye, put them up
|
|
again before you open a second. Thus you will keep them from mixing.
|
|
By trying and comparing at your Leisure, you may find those that are
|
|
best for you, which you cannot well do in a Shop, where for want of
|
|
Time and Care, People often take such as strain their Eyes and hurt
|
|
them. I advise your trying each of your Eyes separately, because few
|
|
Peoples Eyes are Fellows, and almost every body in reading or working
|
|
uses one Eye principally, the other being dimmer or perhaps fitter
|
|
for distant Objects; and thence it happens that the Spectacles whose
|
|
Glasses are Fellows suit sometimes that Eye which before was not used
|
|
tho' they do not suit the other. When you have suited your self,
|
|
keep the higher Numbers for future Use as your Eyes may grow older;
|
|
and oblige your Friends with the others.
|
|
|
|
I was lately at Sheffield and Birmingham, where I bought a few
|
|
plated Things which I send you as Tokens, viz. A Pair of Sauceboats,
|
|
a Pair of flat Candlesticks, and a Saucepan, lined with Silver.
|
|
Please to accept of them. I have had one of the latter in constant
|
|
Use 12 Years, and the Silver still holds. But Tinning is soon gone.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Stevenson and Mrs. Hewson present their Compliments, the
|
|
latter has a fine Son. Sally Franklin sends her Duty to you. I
|
|
wonder you have not heard of her till lately. She has lived with me
|
|
these 5 Years, a very good Girl, now near 16. She is Great
|
|
Grandaughter of our Father's Brother John, who was a Dyer at Banbury
|
|
in Oxfordshire, where our Father learnt that Trade of him, and where
|
|
our Grandfather Thomas lies buried: I saw his Gravestone. Sally's
|
|
Father, John's Grandson, is now living at Lutterworth in
|
|
Leicestershire, where he follows the same Business, his Father too
|
|
being bred a Dyer, as was our Uncle Benjamin. He is a Widower, and
|
|
Sally his only Child. These two are the only Descendants of our
|
|
Grandfather Thomas now remaining in England that retain that Name of
|
|
_Franklin_. The Walkers are descended of John by a Daughter that I
|
|
have seen, lately deceased. Sally and Cousin Williams's Children,
|
|
and Henry Walker who now attends Josiah are Relations in the same
|
|
degree to one another and to your and my Grandchildren, viz
|
|
|
|
Thomas Franklin of Ecton in N.hamptonshire born 1598
|
|
|
|
1 John F. 1 Josiah F.
|
|
Banbury
|
|
|
|
2 Anne W. 2 Thomas F. 2 Anne Harris 2 Jane Mecom 2 B.F. Banbury
|
|
3 Hannah 3 Thomas F. 3 Grace Williams 3 B. Mecom 3 S.B. Walker Lutterworth
|
|
4 Henry W. 4 Sally F. 4 Jonathan or 4 his Children 4 B.F.B. Josiah Williams
|
|
|
|
What is this Relation called? Is it third Cousins? Having
|
|
mentioned so many Dyers in our Family, I will now it's in my Mind
|
|
request of you a full and particular Receipt for Dying Worsted of
|
|
that beautiful Red, which you learnt of our Mother. And also a
|
|
Receipt for making Crown Soap. Let it be very exact in the smallest
|
|
Particulars. Enclos'd I send you a Receipt for making soft Soap in
|
|
the Sun.
|
|
|
|
I have never seen any young Men from America that acquir'd by
|
|
their Behaviour here more general Esteem than those you recommended
|
|
to me. Josiah has stuck close to his musical Studies, and still
|
|
continues them. Jonathan has been diligent in Business for his
|
|
Friends as well as himself, obliging to every body, tender of his
|
|
Brother, not fond of the expensive Amusements of the Place, regular
|
|
in his Hours, and spending what Leisure Hours he had in the Study of
|
|
Mathematics. He goes home to settle in Business, and I think there
|
|
is great Probability of his doing well. With best Wishes for you and
|
|
all yours, I am ever, Your affectionate Brother I have mislaid the
|
|
Soap Receipt but will send it when I find it.
|
|
|
|
"WHAT SORT OF HUSBANDS WOULD BE FITTEST"
|
|
|
|
_To Anna Mordaunt Shipley_
|
|
|
|
Dear Madam, London, Aug. 13. 1771
|
|
|
|
This is just to let you know that we arriv'd safe and well in
|
|
Marlborough Street about Six, where I deliver'd up my Charge.
|
|
|
|
The above seems too short for a Letter; so I will lengthen it
|
|
by a little Account of our Journey. The first Stage we were rather
|
|
pensive. I tried several Topics of Conversation, but none of them
|
|
would hold. But after Breakfast, we began to recover Spirits, and
|
|
had a good deal of Chat. Will you hear some of it? We talk'd of her
|
|
Brother, and she wish'd he was married. And don't you wish your
|
|
Sisters married too? Yes. All but Emily; I would not have her
|
|
married. Why? Because I can't spare her, I can't part with her.
|
|
The rest may marry as soon as they please, so they do but get good
|
|
Husbands. We then took upon us to consider for 'em what sort of
|
|
Husbands would be fittest for every one of them. We began with
|
|
Georgiana. She thought a Country Gentleman, that lov'd Travelling
|
|
and would take her with him, that lov'd Books and would hear her read
|
|
to him; I added, that had a good Estate and was a Member of
|
|
Parliament and lov'd to see an Experiment now and then. This she
|
|
agreed to; so we set him down for Georgiana, and went on to Betsy.
|
|
Betsy, says I, seems of a sweet mild Temper, and if we should give
|
|
her a Country Squire, and he should happen to be of a rough,
|
|
passionate Turn, and be angry now and then, it might break her Heart.
|
|
O, none of 'em must be so; for then they would not be good Husbands.
|
|
To make sure of this Point, however, for Betsey, shall we give her a
|
|
Bishop? O no, that won't do. They all declare against the Church,
|
|
and against the Army; not one of them will marry either a Clergyman
|
|
or an Officer; that they are resolv'd upon. What can be their reason
|
|
for that? Why you know, that when a Clergyman or an Officer dies,
|
|
the Income goes with 'em; and then what is there to maintain the
|
|
Family? there's the Point. Then suppose we give her a good, honest,
|
|
sensible City Merchant, who will love her dearly and is very rich? I
|
|
don't know but that may do. We proceeded to Emily, her dear Emily, I
|
|
was afraid we should hardly find any thing good enough for Emily; but
|
|
at last, after first settling that, if she did marry, Kitty was to
|
|
live a good deal with her; we agreed that as Emily was very handsome
|
|
we might expect an Earl for her: So having fix'd her, as I thought, a
|
|
Countess, we went on to Anna-Maria. She, says Kitty, should have a
|
|
rich Man that has a large Family and a great many things to take care
|
|
of; for she is very good at managing, helps my Mama very much, can
|
|
look over Bills, and order all sorts of Family Business. Very well;
|
|
and as there is a Grace and Dignity in her Manner that would become
|
|
the Station, what do you think of giving her a Duke? O no! I'll
|
|
have the Duke for Emily. You may give the Earl to Anna-Maria if you
|
|
please: But Emily shall have the Duke. I contested this Matter some
|
|
time; but at length was forc'd to give up the point, leave Emily in
|
|
Possession of the Duke, and content myself with the Earl for Anna
|
|
Maria. And now what shall we do for Kitty? We have forgot her, all
|
|
this Time. Well, and what will you do for her? I suppose that tho'
|
|
the rest have resolv'd against the Army, she may not yet have made so
|
|
rash a Resolution. Yes, but she has: Unless, now, an old one, an old
|
|
General that has done fighting, and is rich, such a one as General
|
|
Rufane; I like him a good deal; You must know I like an old Man,
|
|
indeed I do: And some how or other all the old Men take to me, all
|
|
that come to our House like me better than my other Sisters: I go to
|
|
'em and ask 'em how they do, and they like it mightily; and the Maids
|
|
take notice of it, and say when they see an old Man come, there's a
|
|
Friend of yours, Miss Kitty. But then as you like an old General,
|
|
hadn't you better take him while he's a young Officer, and let him
|
|
grow old upon your Hands, because then, you'll like him better and
|
|
better every Year as he grows older and older. No, that won't do.
|
|
He must be an old Man of 70 or 80, and take me when I am about 30:
|
|
And then you know I may be a rich young Widow. We din'd at Staines,
|
|
she was Mrs. Shipley, cut up the Chicken pretty handily (with a
|
|
little Direction) and help'd me in a very womanly Manner. Now, says
|
|
she, when I commended her, my Father never likes to see me or
|
|
Georgiana carve, because we do it, he says, so badly: But how should
|
|
we learn if we never try? We drank good Papa and Mama's Health, and
|
|
the Health's of the Dutchess, the Countess, the Merchant's Lady, the
|
|
Country Gentlewoman, and our Welsh Brother. This brought their
|
|
Affairs again under Consideration. I doubt, says she, we have not
|
|
done right for Betsey. I don't think a Merchant will do for her.
|
|
She is much inclin'd to be a fine Gentlewoman; and is indeed already
|
|
more of the fine Gentlewoman, I think, than any of my other Sisters;
|
|
and therefore she shall be a Vice Countess.
|
|
|
|
Thus we chatted on, and she was very entertaining quite to
|
|
Town.
|
|
|
|
I have now made my Letter as much too long as it was at first
|
|
too short. The Bishop would think it too trifling, therefore don't
|
|
show it him. I am afraid too that you will think it so, and have a
|
|
good mind not to send it. Only it tells you Kitty is well at School,
|
|
and for that I let it go. My Love to the whole amiable Family, best
|
|
Respects to the Bishop, and 1000 Thanks for all your Kindnesses, and
|
|
for the happy Days I enjoy'd at Twyford. With the greatest Esteem
|
|
and Respect, I am, Madam, Your most obedient humble Servant
|
|
|
|
"COMPAR'D TO THESE PEOPLE EVERY INDIAN IS A GENTLEMAN"
|
|
|
|
_To Joshua Babcock_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir, London, Jan. 13. 1772
|
|
|
|
It was with great Pleasure I learnt by Mr. Marchant, that you
|
|
and Mrs. Babcock and all your good Family continue well and happy. I
|
|
hope I shall find you all in the same State when I next come your
|
|
Way, and take Shelter as often heretofore under your hospitable Roof.
|
|
The Colonel, I am told, continues an active and able Farmer, the most
|
|
honourable of all Employments, in my Opinion as being the most useful
|
|
in itself, and rendring the Man most independent. My Namesake, his
|
|
Son, will soon I hope be able to drive the Plough for him.
|
|
|
|
I have lately made a Tour thro' Ireland and Scotland. In these
|
|
Countries a small Part of the Society are Landlords, great Noblemen
|
|
and Gentlemen, extreamly opulent, living in the highest Affluence and
|
|
Magnificence: The Bulk of the People Tenants, extreamly poor, living
|
|
in the most sordid Wretchedness in dirty Hovels of Mud and Straw, and
|
|
cloathed only in Rags. I thought often of the Happiness of New
|
|
England, where every Man is a Freeholder, has a Vote in publick
|
|
Affairs, lives in a tidy warm House, has plenty of good Food and
|
|
Fewel, with whole Cloaths from Head to Foot, the Manufactury perhaps
|
|
of his own Family. Long may they continue in this Situation! But if
|
|
they should ever envy the _Trade_ of these Countries, I can put them
|
|
in a Way to obtain a Share of it. Let them with three fourths of the
|
|
People of Ireland, live the Year round on Potatoes and Butter milk,
|
|
without Shirts, then may their Merchants export Beef, Butter and
|
|
Linnen. Let them with the Generality of the Common People of
|
|
Scotland go Barefoot, then may they make large Exports in Shoes and
|
|
Stockings: And if they will be content to wear Rags like the Spinners
|
|
and Weavers of England, they may make Cloths and Stuffs for all Parts
|
|
of the World. Farther, if my Countrymen should ever wish for the
|
|
Honour of having among them a Gentry enormously wealthy, let them
|
|
sell their Farms and pay rack'd Rents; the Scale of the Landlords
|
|
will rise as that of the Tenants is depress'd who will soon become
|
|
poor, tattered, dirty, and abject in Spirit. Had I never been in the
|
|
American Colonies, but was to form my Judgment of Civil Society by
|
|
what I have lately seen, I should never advise a Nation of Savages to
|
|
admit of Civilisation: For I assure you, that in the Possession and
|
|
Enjoyment of the various Comforts of Life, compar'd to these People
|
|
every Indian is a Gentleman: And the Effect of this kind of Civil
|
|
Society seems only to be, the depressing Multitudes below the Savage
|
|
State that a few may be rais'd above it. My best Wishes attend you
|
|
and yours, being ever with great Esteem, Dear Sir, Your most obedient
|
|
and most humble Servant
|
|
|
|
ON THE WRITINGS OF ZOROASTER
|
|
|
|
_To Ezra Stiles_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir, London, Jany. 13. 1772
|
|
|
|
I receiv'd your Favour by Mr. Marchant, who appears a very
|
|
worthy Gentleman, and I shall not fail to render him every Service in
|
|
my Power.
|
|
|
|
There is lately published in Paris, a Work intitled
|
|
_Zendavesta_, or the Writings of _Zoroaster_, containing the
|
|
Theological, Philosophical and Moral Ideas of that Legislator, and
|
|
the Ceremonies of Religious Worship that he establish'd. Translated
|
|
from the original Zend. In two Vols. 4to. Near half the Work is an
|
|
Account of the Translator's Travels in India, and his Residence among
|
|
the Parses during several Years to learn their Languages. I have
|
|
cast my Eye over the Religious Part; it seems to contain a nice
|
|
Morality, mix'd with abundance of Prayers, Ceremonies, and
|
|
Observations. If you desire to have it, I will procure it for you.
|
|
They say there is no doubt of its being a genuine Translation of the
|
|
Books at present deem'd sacred as the Writings of Zoroaster by his
|
|
Followers; but perhaps some of them are of later Date tho' ascrib'd
|
|
to him: For to me there seems too great a Quantity and Variety of
|
|
Ceremonies and Prayers to be directed at once by one Man. In the
|
|
Romish Church they have increas'd gradually in a Course of Ages to
|
|
their present Bulk. Those who added new Ones from time to time found
|
|
it necessary to give them Authority by Pretences of their Antiquity.
|
|
The Books of Moses, indeed, if all written by him, which some doubt,
|
|
are an Exception to this Observation. With great Esteem, I am ever,
|
|
Dear Sir, Your affectionate Friend and humble Servant
|
|
|
|
P.S. Since writing the above, Mr. Marchant, understanding you
|
|
are curious on the Subject of the Eastern ancient Religions,
|
|
concludes to send you the Book.
|
|
|
|
"SUPPRESS'D BY THE LEGISLATURE"
|
|
|
|
_To Anthony Benezet_
|
|
|
|
Dear Friend, London, Augt 22. 1772
|
|
|
|
I made a little Extract from yours of April 27. of the Number
|
|
of Slaves imported and perishing, with some close Remarks on the
|
|
Hypocrisy of this Country which encourages such a detestable Commerce
|
|
by Laws, for promoting the Guinea Trade, while it piqu'd itself on
|
|
its Virtue Love of Liberty, and the Equity of its Courts in setting
|
|
free a single Negro. This was inserted in the London Chronicle of
|
|
the 20th of June last. I thank you for the Virginia Address, which I
|
|
shall also publish with some Remarks. I am glad to hear that the
|
|
Disposition against keeping Negroes grows more general in North
|
|
America. Several Pieces have been lately printed here against the
|
|
Practice, and I hope in time it will be taken into Consideration and
|
|
suppress'd by the Legislature. Your Labours have already been
|
|
attended with great Effects. I hope therefore you and your Friends
|
|
will be encouraged to proceed. My hearty Wishes of Success attend
|
|
you, being ever, my dear Friend, Yours most affectionately
|
|
|
|
"RIVERS ARE UNGOVERNABLE THINGS"
|
|
|
|
_To Samuel Rhoads_
|
|
|
|
Dear Friend, London, Augt. 22. 1772
|
|
|
|
I think I before acknowledg'd your Favour of Feb. 29. I have
|
|
since received that of May 30. I am glad my Canal Papers were
|
|
agreable to you. If any Work of that kind is set on foot in America,
|
|
I think it would be saving Money to engage by a handsome Salary an
|
|
Engineer from hence who has been accustomed to such Business. The
|
|
many Canals on foot here under different great Masters, are daily
|
|
raising a number of Pupils in the Art, some of whom may want Employ
|
|
hereafter; and a single Mistake thro' Inexperience, in such important
|
|
Works, may cost much more than the Expence of Salary to an ingenious
|
|
young Man already well acquainted with both Principles and Practice.
|
|
This the Irish have learnt at a dear Rate in the first Attempt of
|
|
their great Canal, and now are endeavouring to get Smeaton to come
|
|
and rectify their Errors. With regard to your Question, whether it
|
|
is best to make the Skuylkill a part of the Navigation to the back
|
|
Country, or whether the Difficulty, of that River, subject to all the
|
|
Inconveniencies of Floods, Ice, &c will not be greater than the
|
|
Expence of Digging, Locks, &c. I can only say, that here they look
|
|
on the _constant Practicability_ of a Navigation, allowing Boats to
|
|
pass and repass at all Times and Seasons, without Hindrance, to be a
|
|
Point of the greatest Importance, and therefore they seldom or ever
|
|
use a River where it can be avoided. Locks in Rivers are subject to
|
|
many more Accidents than those in still-water Canals; and the
|
|
Carrying-away a few Locks by Freshes or Ice, not only creates a great
|
|
Expence, but interrupts Business for a long time till Repairs are
|
|
made; which may soon be destroyed again; and thus the Carrying-on a
|
|
Course of Business by such a Navigation be discouraged, as subject to
|
|
frequent Interruptions: The Toll too must be higher to pay for such
|
|
Repairs. Rivers are ungovernable Things, especially in Hilly
|
|
Countries: Canals are quiet and very manageable: Therefore they are
|
|
often carried on here by the Sides of Rivers, only on Ground above
|
|
the Reach of Floods, no other Use being made of the Rivers than to
|
|
supply occasionally the Waste of Water in the Canals. I warmly wish
|
|
Success to every Attempt for Improvement of our dear Country; and am
|
|
with sincere Esteem, Yours most affectionately
|
|
|
|
I congratulate you on the Change of our American Minister. The
|
|
present has more favourable Dispositions towards us than his
|
|
Predecessor.
|
|
|
|
"MORAL OR PRUDENTIAL ALGEBRA"
|
|
|
|
_To Joseph Priestley_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir, London Sept. 19. 1772
|
|
|
|
In the Affair of so much Importance to you, wherein you ask my
|
|
Advice, I cannot for want of sufficient Premises, advise you _what_
|
|
to determine, but if you please I will tell you _how_. When these
|
|
difficult Cases occur, they are difficult chiefly because while we
|
|
have them under Consideration all the Reasons _pro_ and _con_ are not
|
|
present to the Mind at the same time; but sometimes one Set present
|
|
themselves, and at other times another, the first being out of Sight.
|
|
Hence the various Purposes or Inclinations that alternately prevail,
|
|
and the Uncertainty that perplexes us. To get over this, my Way is,
|
|
to divide half a Sheet of Paper by a Line into two Columns, writing
|
|
over the one _Pro_, and over the other _Con_. Then during three or
|
|
four Days Consideration I put down under the different Heads short
|
|
Hints of the different Motives that at different Times occur to me
|
|
for or against the Measure. When I have thus got them all together
|
|
in one View, I endeavour to estimate their respective Weights; and
|
|
where I find two, one on each side, that seem equal, I strike them
|
|
both out: If I find a Reason _pro_ equal to some two Reasons _con_, I
|
|
strike out the three. If I judge some two Reasons _con_ equal to
|
|
some three Reasons _pro_, I strike out the five; and thus proceeding
|
|
I find at length where the Ballance lies; and if after a Day or two
|
|
of farther Consideration nothing new that is of Importance occurs on
|
|
either side, I come to a Determination accordingly. And tho' the
|
|
Weight of Reasons cannot be taken with the Precision of Algebraic
|
|
Quantities, yet when each is thus considered separately and
|
|
comparatively, and the whole lies before me, I think I can judge
|
|
better, and am less likely to make a rash Step; and in fact I have
|
|
found great Advantage from this kind of Equation, in what may be
|
|
called _Moral_ or _Prudential Algebra._ Wishing sincerely that you
|
|
may determine for the best, I am ever, my dear Friend, Yours most
|
|
affectionately
|
|
|
|
"ALAS! POOR MUNGO!"
|
|
|
|
_To Georgiana Shipley_
|
|
|
|
Dear Miss, London, Sept. 26. 1772
|
|
|
|
I lament with you most sincerely the unfortunate End of poor
|
|
_Mungo_: Few Squirrels were better accomplish'd; for he had had a
|
|
good Education, had travell'd far, and seen much of the World. As he
|
|
had the Honour of being for his Virtues your Favourite, he should not
|
|
go like common Skuggs without an Elegy or an Epitaph. Let us give
|
|
him one in the monumental Stile and Measure, which being neither
|
|
Prose nor Verse, is perhaps the properest for Grief; since to use
|
|
common Language would look as if we were not affected, and to make
|
|
Rhimes would seem Trifling in Sorrow.
|
|
|
|
Alas! poor _Mungo_! Happy wert thou, hadst thou known Thy own
|
|
Felicity! Remote from the fierce Bald-Eagle, Tyrant of thy native
|
|
Woods, Thou hadst nought to fear from his piercing Talons; Nor from
|
|
the murdering Gun Of the thoughtless Sportsman. Safe in thy wired
|
|
Castle, Grimalkin never could annoy thee. Daily wert thou fed with
|
|
the choicest Viands By the fair Hand Of an indulgent Mistress. But,
|
|
discontented, thou wouldst have more Freedom. Too soon, alas! didst
|
|
thou obtain it, And, wandering, Fell by the merciless Fangs, Of
|
|
wanton, cruel Ranger. Learn hence, ye who blindly wish more Liberty,
|
|
Whether Subjects, Sons, Squirrels or Daughters, That apparent
|
|
_Restraint_ may be real _Protection_, Yielding Peace, Plenty, and
|
|
Security.
|
|
|
|
You see how much more decent and proper this broken Stile,
|
|
interrupted as it were with Sighs, is for the Occasion, than if one
|
|
were to say, by way of Epitaph,
|
|
|
|
Here Skugg
|
|
Lies snug
|
|
As a Bug
|
|
In a Rug.
|
|
|
|
And yet perhaps there are People in the World of so little
|
|
Feeling as to think, _that_ would be a good-enough Epitaph for our
|
|
poor Mungo!
|
|
|
|
If you wish it, I shall procure another to succeed him. But
|
|
perhaps you will now chuse some other Amusement. Remember me
|
|
respectfully to all the [ ] good Family; and believe me ever, Your
|
|
affectionate Friend
|
|
|
|
September 26, 1772
|
|
|
|
"THE INCREASE OF RELIGIOUS AS WELL AS CIVIL LIBERTY"
|
|
|
|
_To William Marshall_
|
|
|
|
Reverend Sir, London, Feb. 14. 1773
|
|
|
|
I duly received your respected Letter of Oct. 30, and am very
|
|
sensible of the Propriety and Equity of the Act passed to indulge
|
|
your Friends in their Scruples relating to the Mode of Taking an Oath
|
|
which you plead for so ably by numerous Reasons. That Act with
|
|
others has now been some time laid before his Majesty in Council. I
|
|
have not yet heard of any Objection to it; but if such should arise,
|
|
I shall do my utmost to remove them, and obtain the Royal Assent.
|
|
Believe me, Reverend Sir, to have the warmest Wishes for the Increase
|
|
of Religious as well as Civil Liberty thro'out the World; and that I
|
|
am, with great Regard, Your must obedient humble Servant
|
|
|
|
"STOOP! STOOP!"
|
|
|
|
_To Samuel Mather_
|
|
|
|
Reverend Sir, London, July 7. 1773.
|
|
|
|
By a Line of the 4th. past, I acknowledged the Receipt of your
|
|
Favour of March 18. and sent you with it two Pamphlets. I now add
|
|
another, a spirited Address to the Bishops who opposed the
|
|
Dissenter's Petition. It is written by a Dissenting Minister at
|
|
York. There is preserv'd at the End of it a little fugitive Piece of
|
|
mine, written on the same Occasion.
|
|
|
|
I perused your Tracts with Pleasure. I see you inherit all the
|
|
various Learning of your famous Ancestors Cotton and Increase Mather
|
|
both of whom I remember. The Father, Increase, I once when a Boy,
|
|
heard preach at the Old South, for Mr. Pemberton, and remember his
|
|
mentioning the Death of "that wicked old Persecutor of God's People
|
|
Lewis the XIV." of which News had just been received, but which
|
|
proved premature. I was some years afterwards at his House at the
|
|
Northend, on some Errand to him, and remember him sitting in an easy
|
|
Chair apparently very old and feeble. But Cotton I remember in the
|
|
Vigour of his Preaching and Usefulness. And particularly in the Year
|
|
1723, now half a Century since, I had reason to remember, as I still
|
|
do a Piece of Advice he gave me. I had been some time with him in
|
|
his Study, where he condescended to entertain me, a very Youth, with
|
|
some pleasant and instructive Conversation. As I was taking my Leave
|
|
he accompany'd me thro' a narrow Passage at which I did not enter,
|
|
and which had a Beam across it lower than my Head. He continued
|
|
Talking which occasion'd me to keep my Face partly towards him as I
|
|
retired, when he suddenly cry'd out, Stoop! Stoop! Not immediately
|
|
understanding what he meant, I hit my Head hard against the Beam. He
|
|
then added, _Let this be a Caution to you not always to hold your
|
|
Head so high; Stoop, young Man, stoop -- as you go through the World
|
|
-- and you'll miss many hard Thumps._ This was a way of hammering
|
|
Instruction into one's Head: And it was so far effectual, that I have
|
|
ever since remember'd it, tho' I have not always been able to
|
|
practise it. By the way, permit me to ask if you are the Son or
|
|
Nephew of that Gentleman? for having lived so many Years far from New
|
|
England, I have lost the Knowledge of some Family Connections.
|
|
|
|
You have made the most of your Argument to prove that America
|
|
might be known to the Ancients. The Inhabitants being totally
|
|
ignorant of the use of Iron, looks, however, as if the Intercourse
|
|
could never have been very considerable; and that if they are
|
|
Descendants of our Adam, they left the Family before the time of
|
|
Tubalcain. There is another Discovery of it claimed by the
|
|
Norwegians, which you have not mentioned, unless it be under the
|
|
Words "of old viewed and observed" Page 7. About 25 Years since,
|
|
Professor Kalm, a learned Swede, was with us in Pensilvania. He
|
|
contended that America was discovered by their Northern People long
|
|
before the Time of Columbus, which I doubting, he drew up and gave me
|
|
sometime after a Note of those Discoveries which I send you enclos'd.
|
|
It is his own Hand writing, and his own English very intelligible for
|
|
the time he had been among us. The Circumstances give the Account
|
|
great Appearance of Authenticity. And if one may judge by the
|
|
Description of the Winter, the Country they visited should be
|
|
southward of New England, supposing no Change since that time of the
|
|
Climate. But if it be true as Krantz and I think other Historians
|
|
tell us, that old Greenland once inhabited and populous, is now
|
|
render'd uninhabitable by Ice, it should seem that the almost
|
|
perpetual northern Winter has gained ground to the Southward, and if
|
|
so, perhaps more northern Countries might anciently have had Vines
|
|
than can bear them in these Days. The Remarks you have added, on the
|
|
late Proceedings against America, are very just and judicious: and I
|
|
cannot at all see any Impropriety in your making them tho' a Minister
|
|
of the Gospel. This Kingdom is a good deal indebted for its
|
|
Liberties to the Publick Spirit of its ancient Clergy, who join'd
|
|
with the Barons in obtaining Magna Charta, and join'd heartily in
|
|
forming Curses of Excommunication against the Infringers of it.
|
|
There is no doubt but the Claim of Parliament of Authority to make
|
|
Laws _binding on the Colonists in all Cases whatsoever_, includes an
|
|
Authority to change our Religious Constitution, and establish Popery
|
|
or Mahometanism if they please in its Stead: but, as you intimate
|
|
_Power_ does not infer _Right_; and as the Right is nothing and the
|
|
_Power_ (by our Increase) continually diminishing, the one will soon
|
|
be as insignificant as the other. You seem only to have made a small
|
|
Mistake in supposing they modestly avoided to declare they had a
|
|
Right, the words of the Act being that they have, and of _right_
|
|
ought to have full Power, &c.
|
|
|
|
Your Suspicion that "sundry others, besides Govr Bernard had
|
|
written hither their Opinions and Counsels, encouraging the late
|
|
Measures, to the Prejudice of our Country, which have been too much
|
|
heeded and follow'd" is I apprehend but too well founded. You call
|
|
them "_traitorous_ Individuals" whence I collect, that you suppose
|
|
them of our own country. There was among the twelve Apostles one
|
|
Traitor who betrayed with a Kiss. It should be no Wonder therefore
|
|
if among so many Thousand true Patriots as New England contains there
|
|
should be found even Twelve Judases, ready to betray their Country
|
|
for a few paltry Pieces of Silver. Their _Ends_, as well as their
|
|
_Views_, ought to be similar. But all these Oppressions evidently
|
|
work for our Good. Providence seems by every Means intent on making
|
|
us a great People. May our Virtues publick and private grow with us,
|
|
and be durable, that Liberty Civil and Religious, may be secur'd to
|
|
our Posterity, and to all from every Part of the old World that take
|
|
Refuge among us.
|
|
|
|
I have distributed the Copies of your Piece as you desired. I
|
|
cannot apprehend they can give just Cause of Offence.
|
|
|
|
Your Theological Tracts in which you discover your great
|
|
Reading, are rather more out of my Walk, and therefore I shall say
|
|
little of them. That on the Lord's Prayer I read with most
|
|
Attention, having once myself considered a little the same Subject,
|
|
and attempted a Version of the Prayer which I thought less
|
|
exceptionable. I have found it among my old Papers, and send it you
|
|
only to show an Instance of the same Frankness in laying myself open
|
|
to you, which you say you have used with regard to me. With great
|
|
Esteem and my best Wishes for a long Continuance of your Usefulness,
|
|
I am, Reverend Sir, Your most obedient humble Servant
|
|
|
|
CAUSES OF COLDS
|
|
|
|
_To Benjamin Rush_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir, London, July 14. 1773.
|
|
|
|
I received your Favour of May 1. with the Pamphlet for which I
|
|
am obliged to you. It is well written. I hope in time that the
|
|
Friends to Liberty and Humanity will get the better of a Practice
|
|
that has so long disgrac'd our Nation and Religion.
|
|
|
|
A few Days after I receiv'd your Packet for M. Dubourg, I had
|
|
an Opportunity of forwarding it to him by M. Poissonnier, a Physician
|
|
of Paris, who kindly undertook to deliver it. M. Dubourg has been
|
|
translating my Book into French. It is nearly printed, and he tells
|
|
me he purposes a Copy for you.
|
|
|
|
I shall communicate your judicious Remark relating to Air
|
|
transpir'd by Patients in putrid Diseases to my Friend Dr. Priestly.
|
|
I hope that after having discover'd the Benefit of fresh and cool Air
|
|
apply'd to the _Sick_, People will begin to suspect that possibly it
|
|
may do no Harm to the _Well._ I have not seen Dr. Cullen's Book: But
|
|
am glad to hear that he speaks of Catarrhs or Colds _by Contagion._ I
|
|
have long been satisfy'd from Observation, that besides the general
|
|
Colds now termed _Influenza's_, which may possibly spread by
|
|
Contagion as well as by a particular Quality of the Air, People often
|
|
catch Cold from one another when shut up together in small close
|
|
Rooms, Coaches, &c. and when sitting near and conversing so as to
|
|
breathe in each others Transpiration, the Disorder being in a certain
|
|
State. I think too that it is the frowzy corrupt Air from animal
|
|
Substances, and the perspired Matter from our Bodies, which, being
|
|
long confin'd in Beds not lately used, and Clothes not lately worne,
|
|
and Books long shut up in close Rooms, obtains that kind of Putridity
|
|
which infects us, and occasions the Colds observed upon sleeping in,
|
|
wearing, or turning over, such Beds, Clothes or Books, and not their
|
|
Coldness or Dampness. From these Causes, but more from _too full
|
|
Living_ with too _little Exercise_, proceed in my Opinion most of the
|
|
Disorders which for 100 Years past the English have called _Colds._
|
|
As to Dr. Cullen's Cold or Catarrh _a frigore_, I question whether
|
|
such an one ever existed. Travelling in our severe Winters, I have
|
|
suffered Cold sometimes to an Extremity only short of Freezing, but
|
|
this did not make me _catch Cold._ And for Moisture, I have been in
|
|
the River every Evening two or three Hours for a Fortnight together,
|
|
when one would suppose I might imbibe enough of it to _take Cold_ if
|
|
Humidity could give it; but no such Effect followed: Boys never get
|
|
Cold by Swimming. Nor are People at Sea, or who live at Bermudas, or
|
|
St. Helena, where the Air must be ever moist, from the Dashing and
|
|
Breaking of Waves against their Rocks on all sides, more subject to
|
|
Colds than those who inhabit Parts of a Continent where the Air is
|
|
dryest. Dampness may indeed assist in producing Putridity, and those
|
|
Miasms which infect us with the Disorder we call a Cold, but of
|
|
itself can never by a little Addition of Moisture hurt a Body filled
|
|
with watry Fluids from Head to foot.
|
|
|
|
I hope our Friend's Marriage will prove a happy one. Mr. and
|
|
Mrs. West complain that they never hear from him. Perhaps I have as
|
|
much reason to complain of him. But I forgive him because I often
|
|
need the same kind of Forgiveness. With great Esteem and sincere
|
|
Wishes for your Welfare, I am, Sir, Your most obedient humble Servant
|
|
|
|
"I'LL BE HANGED IF THIS IS NOT SOME OF YOUR AMERICAN JOKES UPON
|
|
US"
|
|
|
|
_To William Franklin_
|
|
|
|
DEAR SON, _London, October_ 6, 1773.
|
|
|
|
I wrote to you on the 1st of last month, since which I have
|
|
received yours of July 29, from New York.
|
|
|
|
I know not what letters of mine governor H. could mean, as
|
|
advising the people to insist on their independency. But whatever
|
|
they were, I suppose he has sent copies of them hither, having heard
|
|
some whisperings about them. I shall however, be able at any time,
|
|
to justify every thing I have written; the purport being uniformly
|
|
this, that they should carefully avoid all tumults and every violent
|
|
measure, and content themselves with verbally keeping up their
|
|
claims, and holding forth their rights whenever occasion requires;
|
|
secure, that from the growing importance of America, those claims
|
|
will ere long be attended to, and acknowledged. From a long and
|
|
thorough consideration of the subject, I am indeed of opinion, that
|
|
the parliament has no right to make any law whatever, binding on the
|
|
colonies. That the king, and not the king, lords, and commons
|
|
collectively, is their sovereign; and that the king with their
|
|
respective parliaments, is their only legislator. I know your
|
|
sentiments differ from mine on these subjects. You are a thorough
|
|
government man, which I do not wonder at, nor do I aim at converting
|
|
you. I only wish you to act uprightly and steadily, avoiding that
|
|
duplicity, which in Hutchinson, adds contempt to indignation. If you
|
|
can promote the prosperity of your people, and leave them happier
|
|
than you found them, whatever your political principles are, your
|
|
memory will be honored.
|
|
|
|
I have written two pieces here lately for the Public
|
|
Advertiser, on American affairs, designed to expose the conduct of
|
|
this country towards the colonies, in a short, comprehensive, and
|
|
striking view, and stated therefore in out-of-the-way forms, as most
|
|
likely to take the general attention. The first was called, _Rules
|
|
by which a great empire may be reduced to a small one_; the second,
|
|
_An Edict of the king of Prussia._ I sent you one of the first, but
|
|
could not get enough of the second to spare you one, though my clerk
|
|
went the next morning to the printer's, and wherever they were sold.
|
|
They were all gone but two. In my own mind I preferred the first, as
|
|
a composition for the quantity and variety of the matter contained,
|
|
and a kind of spirited ending of each paragraph. But I find that
|
|
others here generally prefer the second. I am not suspected as the
|
|
author, except by one or two friends; and have heard the latter
|
|
spoken of in the highest terms as the keenest and severest piece that
|
|
has appeared here a long time. Lord Mansfield I hear said of it,
|
|
that it _was very_ ABLE _and very_ ARTFUL indeed; and would do
|
|
mischief by giving here a bad impression of the measures of
|
|
government; and in the colonies, by encouraging them in their
|
|
contumacy. It is reprinted in the Chronicle, where you will see it,
|
|
but stripped of all the capitalling and italicing, that intimate the
|
|
allusions and marks the emphasis of written discourses, to bring them
|
|
as near as possible to those spoken: printing such a piece all in one
|
|
even small character, seems to me like repeating one of Whitfield's
|
|
sermons in the monotony of a school-boy. What made it the more
|
|
noticed here was, that people in reading it, were, as the phrase is,
|
|
_taken in_, till they had got half through it, and imagined it a real
|
|
edict, to which mistake I suppose the king of Prussia's _character_
|
|
must have contributed. I was down at lord Le Despencer's when the
|
|
post brought that day's papers. Mr. Whitehead was there too (Paul
|
|
Whitehead, the author of Manners) who runs early through all the
|
|
papers, and tells the company what he finds remarkable. He had them
|
|
in another room, and we were chatting in the breakfast parlour, when
|
|
he came running into us, out of breath, with the paper in his hand.
|
|
Here! says he, here's news for ye! _Here's the king of Prussia,
|
|
claiming a right to this kingdom!_ All stared, and I as much as any
|
|
body; and he went on to read it. When he had read two or three
|
|
paragraphs, a gentleman present said, _Damn his impudence, I dare
|
|
say, we shall hear by next post that he is upon his march with one
|
|
hundred thousand men to back this._ Whitehead, who is very shrewd,
|
|
soon after began to smoke it, and looking in my face said, _I'll be
|
|
hanged if this is not some of your American jokes upon us._ The
|
|
reading went on, and ended with abundance of laughing, and a general
|
|
verdict that it was a fair hit: and the piece was cut out of the
|
|
paper and preserved in my lord's collection.
|
|
|
|
I don't wonder that Hutchinson should be dejected. It must be
|
|
an uncomfortable thing to live among people who he is conscious
|
|
universally detest him. Yet I fancy he will not have leave to come
|
|
home, both because they know not well what to do with him, and
|
|
because they do not very well like his conduct.
|
|
|
|
I am ever your affectionate father,
|
|
|
|
TRANSFER PRINTS ON TILES
|
|
|
|
_To Peter P. Burdett_
|
|
|
|
Sir, London, Nov. 3, 1773. I was much pleased with the
|
|
Specimens you so kindly sent me, of your new Art of Engraving. That
|
|
on the China is admirable. No one would suppose it any thing but
|
|
Painting. I hope you meet with all the Encouragement you merit, and
|
|
that the Invention will be, (what Inventions seldom are) profitable
|
|
to the Inventor.
|
|
|
|
I know not who (now we speak of Inventions) pretends to that of
|
|
Copper-Plate Engravings for Earthen-Ware, and am not disposed to
|
|
contest the Honor of it with any body, as the Improvement in taking
|
|
Impressions not directly from the Plate but from printed Paper,
|
|
applicable by that means to other than flat Forms, is far beyond my
|
|
first Idea. But I have reason to apprehend I might have given the
|
|
Hint on which that Improvement was made. For more than twenty years
|
|
since, I wrote to Dr. Mitchell from America, proposing to him the
|
|
printing of square Tiles for ornamenting Chimnies, from Copper
|
|
Plates, describing the Manner in which I thought it might be done,
|
|
and advising the Borrowing from the Bookseller, the Plates that had
|
|
been used in a thin Folio, called _Moral Virtue delineated_, for the
|
|
Purpose. As the Dutch Delphware Tiles were much used in America,
|
|
which are only or chiefly Scripture Histories, wretchedly scrawled, I
|
|
wished to have those moral Prints, (which were originally taken from
|
|
Horace's poetical Figures) introduced on Tiles, which being about our
|
|
Chimneys, and constantly in the Eyes of Children when by the
|
|
Fire-side, might give Parents an Opportunity, in explaining them, to
|
|
impress moral Sentiments; and I gave Expectations of great Demand for
|
|
them if executed. Dr. Mitchell wrote to me in Answer, that he had
|
|
communicated my Scheme to several of the principal Artists in the
|
|
Earthen Way about London, who rejected it as impracticable: And it
|
|
was not till some years after that I first saw an enamelled snuff-Box
|
|
which I was sure was a Copper-plate, tho' the Curvature of the Form
|
|
made me wonder how the Impression was taken.
|
|
|
|
I understand the China Work in Philadelphia is declined by the
|
|
first Owners. Whether any others will take it up and continue it, I
|
|
know not.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Banks is at present engaged in preparing to publish the
|
|
Botanical Discoveries of his Voyage. He employs 10 Engravers for the
|
|
Plates, in which he is very curious, so as not to be quite satisfied
|
|
in some Cases with the Expression given by either the Graver,
|
|
Etching, or Metzotinto, particularly where there is a Wooliness or a
|
|
Multitude of small Points or a Leaf. I sent him the largest of the
|
|
Specimens you sent containing a Number of Sprigs. I have not seen
|
|
him since, to know whether your Manner would not suit some of his
|
|
Plants, better than the more common Methods. With great Esteem, I
|
|
am, Sir, Your most obedient humble Servant,
|
|
|
|
OIL ON WATER
|
|
|
|
_To William Brownrigg_
|
|
|
|
Dear Sir, London, Nov. 7, 1773.
|
|
|
|
Our Correspondence might be carried on for a Century with very
|
|
few Letters, if you were as apt to procrastinate as myself. Tho' an
|
|
habitual Sinner, I am now quite ashamed to observe, that this is to
|
|
be an Answer to your Favour of January last.
|
|
|
|
I suppose Mrs. Brownrigg did not succeed in making the Parmesan
|
|
Cheese, since we have heard nothing of it. But as a Philosophess,
|
|
she will not be discouraged by one or two Failures. Perhaps some
|
|
Circumstance is omitted in the Receipt, which by a little more
|
|
Experience she may discover. The foreign Gentleman, who had learnt
|
|
in England to like boiled Plumbpudding, and carried home a Receipt
|
|
for making it, wondered to see it brought to his Table in the Form of
|
|
a Soup. The Cook declar'd he had exactly followed the Receipt. And
|
|
when that came to be examined, a small, but important Circumstance
|
|
appeared to have been omitted. There was no Mention of the Bag.
|
|
|
|
I am concerned that you had not, and I fear you have not yet
|
|
found time to prepare your excellent Papers for Publication. By
|
|
omitting it so long, you are wanting to the World, and to your own
|
|
Honour.
|
|
|
|
I thank you for the Remarks of your learned Friend at Carlisle.
|
|
I had when a Youth, read and smiled at Pliny's Account of a Practice
|
|
among the Seamen of his Time, to still the Waves in a Storm by
|
|
pouring Oil into the Sea: which he mentions, as well as the Use of
|
|
Oil by the Divers. But the stilling a Tempest by throwing Vinegar
|
|
into the Air had escaped me. I think with your Friend, that it has
|
|
been of late too much the Mode to slight the Learning of the
|
|
Ancients. The Learned too, are apt to slight too much the Knowledge
|
|
of the Vulgar. The cooling by Evaporation was long an Instance of
|
|
the latter. This Art of smoothing the Waves with Oil, is an Instance
|
|
of both.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps you may not dislike to have an Account of all I have
|
|
heard, and learnt and done in this Way. Take it, if you please, as
|
|
follows.
|
|
|
|
In 1757 being at Sea in a Fleet of 96 Sail bound against
|
|
Louisbourg, I observed the Wakes of two of the Ships to be remarkably
|
|
smooth, while all the others were ruffled by the Wind, which blew
|
|
fresh. Being puzzled with this differing Appearance I at last
|
|
pointed it out to our Captain, and asked him the meaning of it? "The
|
|
Cooks, says he, have I suppose, been just emptying their greasy Water
|
|
thro' the Scuppers, which has greased the Sides of those Ships a
|
|
little;" and this Answer he gave me with an Air of some little
|
|
Contempt, as to a Person ignorant of what every Body else knew. In
|
|
my own Mind I at first slighted his Solution, tho' I was not able to
|
|
think of another. But recollecting what I had formerly read in
|
|
Pliny, I resolved to make some Experiment of the Effect of Oil on
|
|
Water when I should have Opportunity.
|
|
|
|
Afterwards being again at Sea in 1762, I first observed the
|
|
wonderful Quietness of Oil on agitated Water in the swinging Glass
|
|
Lamp I made to hang up in the Cabin, as described in my printed
|
|
Papers, page 438 of the fourth Edition. This I was continually
|
|
looking at and considering, as an Appearance to me inexplicable. An
|
|
old Sea Captain, then a Passenger with me, thought little of it,
|
|
supposing it an Effect of the same kind with that of Oil put on Water
|
|
to smooth it, which he said was a Practice of the Bermudians when
|
|
they would strike Fish which they could not see if the surface of the
|
|
Water was ruffled by the Wind. This Practice I had never before
|
|
heard of, and was obliged to him for the Information, though I
|
|
thought him mistaken as to the sameness of the Experiment, the
|
|
Operations being different; as well as the Effects. In one Case, the
|
|
Water is smooth till the Oil is put on, and then becomes agitated.
|
|
In the other it is agitated before the Oil is applied, and then
|
|
becomes smooth. The same Gentleman told me he had heard it was a
|
|
Practice with the Fishermen of Lisbon when about to return into the
|
|
River, (if they saw before them too great a Surff upon the Bar, which
|
|
they apprehended might fill their Boats in passing) to empty a Bottle
|
|
or two of oil into the Sea, which would suppress the Breakers and
|
|
allow them to pass safely: a Confirmation of this I have not since
|
|
had an Opportunity of obtaining. But discoursing of it with another
|
|
Person, who had often been in the Mediterranean, I was informed that
|
|
the Divers there, who when under Water in their Business, need Light,
|
|
which the curling of the Surface interrupts, by the Refractions of so
|
|
many little Waves, they let a small Quantity of Oil now and then out
|
|
of their Mouths, which rising to the Surface smooths it, and permits
|
|
the Light to come down to them. All these Informations I at times
|
|
revolved in my Mind, and wondered to find no mention of them in our
|
|
Books of Experimental Philosophy.
|
|
|
|
At length being at Clapham, where there is, on the Common, a
|
|
large Pond, which I observed to be one Day very rough with the Wind,
|
|
I fetched out a Cruet of Oil, and dropt a little of it on the Water.
|
|
I saw it spread itself with surprising Swiftness upon the Surface,
|
|
but the Effect of smoothing the Waves was not produced; for I had
|
|
applied it first on the Leeward Side of the Pond where the Waves were
|
|
largest, and the Wind drove my Oil back upon the Shore. I then went
|
|
to the Windward Side, where they began to form; and there the Oil
|
|
tho' not more than a Tea Spoonful produced an instant Calm, over a
|
|
Space several yards square, which spread amazingly, and extended
|
|
itself gradually till it reached the Lee Side, making all that
|
|
Quarter of the Pond, perhaps half an Acre, as smooth as a Looking
|
|
Glass.
|
|
|
|
After this, I contrived to take with me, whenever I went into
|
|
the Country, a little Oil in the upper hollow joint of my bamboo
|
|
Cane, with which I might repeat the Experiment as Opportunity should
|
|
offer; and I found it constantly to succeed.
|
|
|
|
In these Experiments, one Circumstance struck me with
|
|
particular Surprize. This was the sudden, wide and forcible
|
|
Spreading of a Drop of Oil on the Face of the Water, which I do not
|
|
know that any body has hitherto considered. If a Drop of Oil is put
|
|
on a polished Marble Table, or on a Looking Glass that lies
|
|
horizontally; the Drop remains in its Place, spreading very little.
|
|
But when put on Water it spreads instantly many feet round, becoming
|
|
so thin as to produce the prismatic Colours, for a considerable
|
|
Space, and beyond them so much thinner as to be invisible except in
|
|
its Effect of smoothing the Waves at a much greater Distance. It
|
|
seems as if a mutual Repulsion between its Particles took Place as
|
|
soon as it touched the Water, and a Repulsion so strong as to act on
|
|
other Bodies swimming on the Surface, as Straws, Leaves, Chips, &c.
|
|
forcing them to recede every way from the Drop, as from a Center,
|
|
leaving a large clear Space. The Quantity of this Force, and the
|
|
Distance to which it will operate, I have not yet ascertained, but I
|
|
think it a curious Enquiry, and I wish to understand whence it
|
|
arises.
|
|
|
|
In our Journey to the North when we had the Pleasure of seeing
|
|
you at Ormathwaite, we visited Mr. Smeaton near Leeds. Being about
|
|
to shew him the smoothing Experiment on a little Pond near his House,
|
|
an ingenious Pupil of his, Mr. Jessop, then present, told us of an
|
|
odd Appearance on that Pond, which had lately occurred to him. He
|
|
was about to clean a little Cup in which he kept Oil, and he threw
|
|
upon the Water some Flies that had been drowned in the Oil. These
|
|
Flies presently began to move, and turned round on the Water very
|
|
rapidly, as if they were vigorously alive, tho' on Examination he
|
|
found they were not so. I immediately concluded that the Motion was
|
|
occasioned by the Power of the Repulsion abovementioned, and that the
|
|
Oil issuing gradually from the spungy Body of the Fly continued the
|
|
Motion. He found some more Flies drowned in Oil, with which the
|
|
Experiment was repeated before us; and to show that it was not any
|
|
Effect of Life recovered by the Flies, I imitated it by little bits
|
|
of oiled Chip, and Paper cut in the form of a Comma, of this size
|
|
(symbol omitted) when the Stream of repelling Particles issuing from
|
|
the Point, made the Comma turn round the contrary way. This is not a
|
|
Chamber Experiment; for it cannot well be repeated in a Bowl or Dish
|
|
of Water on a Table. A considerable Surface of Water is necessary to
|
|
give Room for the Expansion of a small Quantity of Oil. In a Dish of
|
|
Water if the smallest Drop of Oil be let fall in the Middle, the
|
|
whole Surface is presently covered with a thin greasy Film proceeding
|
|
from the Drop; but as soon as that Film has reached the Sides of the
|
|
Dish, no more will issue from the Drop, but it remains in the Form of
|
|
Oil, the Sides of the Dish putting a Stop to its Dissipation by
|
|
prohibiting the farther Expansion of the Film.
|
|
|
|
Our Friend Sir J. Pringle being soon after in Scotland, learnt
|
|
there that those employed in the Herring Fishery, could at a Distance
|
|
see where the Shoals of Herrings were, by the smoothness of the Water
|
|
over them, which might be occasioned possibly, he thought, by some
|
|
Oiliness proceeding from their Bodies.
|
|
|
|
A Gentleman from Rhode-island told me, it had been remarked
|
|
that the Harbour of Newport was ever smooth while any Whaling Vessels
|
|
were in it; which probably arose from hence, that the Blubber which
|
|
they sometimes bring loose in the Hold, or the Leakage of their
|
|
Barrels, might afford some Oil to mix with that Water which from time
|
|
to time they pump out to keep the Vessel free, and that same Oil
|
|
might spread over the surface of the Water in the Harbour, and
|
|
prevent the forming of any Waves.
|
|
|
|
This Prevention I would thus endeavour to explain.
|
|
|
|
There seems to be no natural Repulsion between Water and Air,
|
|
such as to keep them from coming into Contact with each other. Hence
|
|
we find a Quantity of Air in Water, and if we extract it by means of
|
|
the Air-pump; the same Water again exposed to the Air, will soon
|
|
imbibe an equal Quantity.
|
|
|
|
Therefore Air in Motion, which is Wind, in passing over the
|
|
smooth Surface of Water, may rub, as it were, upon that Surface, and
|
|
raise it into Wrinkles, which if the Wind continues are the elements
|
|
of future Waves.
|
|
|
|
The smallest Wave once raised does not immediately subside and
|
|
leave the neighbouring Water quiet; but in subsiding raises nearly as
|
|
much of the Water next to it, the Friction of its Parts making little
|
|
Difference. Thus a Stone dropt in a Pool raises first a single Wave
|
|
round itself, and leaves it by sinking to the Bottom; but that first
|
|
Wave subsiding raises a second, the second a third, and so on in
|
|
Circles to a great Extent.
|
|
|
|
A small Power continually operating will produce a great
|
|
Action. A Finger applied to a weighty suspended Bell, can at first
|
|
move it but little; if repeatedly applied, tho' with no greater
|
|
Strength, the Motion increases till the Bell swings to its utmost
|
|
Height and with a Force that cannot be resisted by the whole Strength
|
|
of the Arm and Body. Thus the small first-raised Waves, being
|
|
continually acted upon by the Wind are, (tho' the Wind does not
|
|
increase in Strength) continually increased in Magnitude, rising
|
|
higher and extending their Bases, so as to include a vast Mass of
|
|
Water in each Wave, which in its Motion acts with great Violence.
|
|
|
|
But if there be a mutual Repulsion between the Particles of
|
|
Oil, and no Attraction between Oil and Water, Oil dropt on Water will
|
|
not be held together by Adhesion to the Spot whereon it falls, it
|
|
will not be imbibed by the Water, it will be at Liberty to expand
|
|
itself, and it will spread on a Surface that besides being smooth to
|
|
the most perfect degree of Polish, prevents, perhaps by repelling the
|
|
Oil, all immediate Contact, keeping it at a minute Distance from
|
|
itself; and the Expansion will continue, till the mutual Repulsion
|
|
between the Particles of the Oil, is weakened and reduced to nothing
|
|
by their Distance.
|
|
|
|
Now I imagine that the Wind blowing over Water thus covered
|
|
with a Film of Oil, cannot easily catch upon it so as to raise the
|
|
first Wrinkles, but slides over it, and leaves it smooth as it finds
|
|
it. It moves a little the Oil, indeed, which being between it and
|
|
the water serves it to slide with, and prevents Friction as Oil does
|
|
between those Parts of a Machine that would otherwise rub hard
|
|
together. Hence the Oil dropt on the Windward Side of a Pond
|
|
proceeds gradually to Leeward, as may be seen by the smoothness it
|
|
carries with it, quite to the opposite Side. For the Wind being thus
|
|
prevented from raising the first Wrinkles that I call the Elements of
|
|
Waves, cannot produce Waves, which are to be made by continually
|
|
acting upon and enlarging those Elements, and thus the whole Pond is
|
|
calmed.
|
|
|
|
Totally therefore we might supress the Waves in any required
|
|
Place, if we could come at the Windward Place where they take their
|
|
Rise. This in the Ocean can seldom if ever be done. But perhaps
|
|
something may be done on particular Occasions, to moderate the
|
|
Violence of the Waves, when we are in the midst of them, and prevent
|
|
their Breaking where that would be inconvenient.
|
|
|
|
For when the Wind blows fresh, there are continually rising on
|
|
the Back of every great Wave, a number of small ones, which roughen
|
|
its Surface, and give the Wind Hold, as it were, to push it with
|
|
greater Force. This Hold is diminished by preventing the Generation
|
|
of those small ones. And possibly too, when a Wave's Surface is
|
|
oiled, the Wind in passing over it, may rather in some degree press
|
|
it down, and contribute to prevent its rising again, instead of
|
|
promoting it.
|
|
|
|
This as a mere Conjecture would have little weight, if the
|
|
apparent Effects of pouring Oil into the Midst of Waves, were not
|
|
considerable, and as yet not otherwise accounted for.
|
|
|
|
When the Wind blows so fresh, as that the Waves are not
|
|
sufficiently quick in obeying its Impulse, their Tops being thinner
|
|
and lighter are pushed forward, broken and turned over in a white
|
|
Foam. Common Waves lift a Vessel without entring it, but these when
|
|
large sometimes break above and pour over it, doing great Damage.
|
|
|
|
That this Effect might in any degree be prevented, or the
|
|
height and violence of Waves in the Sea moderated, we had no certain
|
|
Account, Pliny's Authority for the Practice of Seamen in his time
|
|
being slighted. But discoursing lately on this Subject with his
|
|
Excellency Count Bentinck of Holland, his Son the Honble. Capt.
|
|
Bentinck, and the learned Professor Allemand, (to all whom I showed
|
|
the Experiment of smoothing in a Windy Day the large Piece of Water
|
|
at the Head of the Green Park) a Letter was mentioned which had been
|
|
received by the Count from Batavia, relating to the saving of a Dutch
|
|
Ship in a Storm, by pouring Oil into the Sea. I much desired to see
|
|
that Letter, and a Copy of it was promised me, which I afterwards
|
|
received. It is as follows.
|
|
|
|
Extrait d'une Lettre de Mr. Tengnagel a Mr. le Comte de
|
|
Bentinck, ecrite de Batavia le 15 Janvier 1770. Pres des Isles
|
|
Paulus et Amsterdam nous essuiames un orage, qui n'eut rien d'assez
|
|
particulier pour vous etre marque, si non que notre Capitaine se
|
|
trouva oblige en _tournant sous le vent_, de verser de l'huile contre
|
|
la haute mer, pour empecher les vagues de se briser contre le navire,
|
|
ce qui reussit a nous conserver et a ete d'un tres bon effet: comme
|
|
il n'en versa qu'une petite quantite a la fois, la Compagnie doit
|
|
peutetre son vaisseau a six demi-ahmes d'huile d'olive: j'ai ete
|
|
present quand cela s'est fait, et je ne vous aurois pas entretenu de
|
|
cette circonstance, si ce n'etoit que nous avons trouve les gens ici
|
|
si prevenus contre l'experience, que les officiers du bord ni moi
|
|
n'avons fait aucune difficulte de donner un certificat de la verite
|
|
sur ce chapitre.
|
|
|
|
On this Occasion I mentioned to Capt. Bentinck, a thought which
|
|
had occurred to me in reading the Voyages of our late
|
|
Circumnavigators, particularly where Accounts are given of pleasant
|
|
and fertile Islands which they much desired to land upon, when
|
|
Sickness made it more necessary, but could not effect a Landing thro'
|
|
a violent Surff breaking on the Shore, which rendered it
|
|
impracticable. My Idea was, that possibly by sailing to and fro at
|
|
some Distance from such Lee Shore, continually pouring Oil into the
|
|
Sea, the Waves might be so much depressed and lessened before they
|
|
reached the Shore, as to abate the Height and Violence of the Surff
|
|
and permit a Landing, which in such Circumstances was a Point of
|
|
sufficient Importance to justify the Expence of Oil that might be
|
|
requisite for the purpose. That Gentleman, who is ever ready to
|
|
promote what may be of publick Utility, (tho' his own ingenious
|
|
Inventions have not always met with the Countenance they merited) was
|
|
so obliging as to invite me to Portsmouth, where an Opportunity would
|
|
probably offer, in the course of a few Days, of making the Experiment
|
|
on some of the Shores about Spithead, in which he kindly proposed to
|
|
accompany me, and to give Assistance with such Boats as might be
|
|
necessary. Accordingly, about the middle of October last, I went
|
|
with some Friends, to Portsmouth; and a Day of Wind happening, which
|
|
made a Lee-Shore between Haslar Hospital and the Point near
|
|
Jillkecker; we went from the Centaur with the Longboat and Barge
|
|
towards that Shore. Our Disposition was this; the Longboat anchored
|
|
about a 1/4 of a Mile from the Shore, part of the Company were landed
|
|
behind the Point, (a Place more sheltered from the Sea) who came
|
|
round and placed themselves opposite to the Longboat, where they
|
|
might observe the Surff, and note if any Change occurred in it upon
|
|
using the Oil: Another Party in the Barge plied to Windward of the
|
|
Longboat, as far from her as she was from the Shore, making Trips of
|
|
about half a Mile each, pouring Oil continually out of a large Stone
|
|
Bottle, thro' a Hole in the Cork somewhat bigger than a Goose Quill.
|
|
The Experiment had not in the main Point the Success we wished; for
|
|
no material Difference was observed in the Height or Force of the
|
|
Surff upon the Shore: But those who were in the Longboat could
|
|
observe a Tract of smoothed Water the whole Length of the Distance in
|
|
which the Barge poured the Oil, and gradually spreading in Breadth
|
|
towards the Longboat; I call it smoothed, not that it was laid level,
|
|
but because tho' the Swell continued, its Surface was not roughened
|
|
by the Wrinkles or smaller Waves before-mentioned, and none, or very
|
|
few White-caps (or Waves whose Tops turn over in Foam) appeared in
|
|
that whole Space, tho' to windward and leeward of it there were
|
|
plenty; and a Wherry that came round the Point under Sail in her way
|
|
to Portsmouth, seemed to turn into that Tract of choice, and to use
|
|
it from End to End as a Piece of Turnpike Road.
|
|
|
|
It may be of Use to relate the Circumstances even of an
|
|
Experiment that does not succeed, since they may give Hints of
|
|
Amendment in future Trials: It is therefore I have been thus
|
|
particular. I shall only add what I apprehend may have been the
|
|
Reason of our Disappointment.
|
|
|
|
I conceive that the Operation of Oil on Water, is first to
|
|
prevent the raising new Waves by the Wind, and secondly, to prevent
|
|
its pushing those before raised with such Force, and consequently
|
|
their Continuance of the same repeated Height, as they would have
|
|
done, if their Surface were not oiled. But Oil will not prevent
|
|
Waves being raised by another Power, by a Stone, for Instance,
|
|
falling into a still Pool; for they then rise by the mechanical
|
|
Impulse of the Stone, which the Greasiness on the surrounding Water
|
|
cannot lessen or prevent, as it can prevent the Winds catching the
|
|
Surface and raising it into Waves. Now Waves once raised, whether by
|
|
the Wind or any other Power, have the same mechanical Operation, by
|
|
which they continue to rise and fall, as a Pendulum will continue to
|
|
swing, a long Time after the Force ceases to act by which the Motion
|
|
was first produced. That Motion will however cease in time, but time
|
|
is necessary. Therefore tho' Oil spread on an agitated Sea, may
|
|
weaken the Push of the Wind on those Waves whose Surfaces are covered
|
|
by it, and so by receiving less fresh Impulse, they may gradually
|
|
subside; yet a considerable Time, or a Distance thro' which they will
|
|
take time to move may be necessary to make the Effect sensible on any
|
|
Shore in a Diminution of the Surff. For we know that when Wind
|
|
ceases suddenly, the Waves it has raised do not as suddenly subside,
|
|
but settle gradually and are not quite down till long after the Wind
|
|
has ceased. So tho' we should by oiling them take off the Effect of
|
|
Wind on Waves already raised, it is not to be expected that those
|
|
Waves should be instantly levelled. The Motion they have received
|
|
will for some time continue: and if the Shore is not far distant,
|
|
they arrive there so soon that their Effect upon it will not be
|
|
visibly diminished. Possibly therefore, if we had began our
|
|
Operations at a greater Distance, the Effect might have been more
|
|
sensible. And perhaps we did not pour Oil in sufficient Quantity.
|
|
Future Experiments may determine this.
|
|
|
|
After my Thanks to Capt. Bentinck, for the chearful and ready
|
|
Aids he gave me, I ought not to omit mentioning Mr. Banks, Dr.
|
|
Solander, General Carnac, and Dr. Blagdon, who all assisted at the
|
|
Experiment, during that blustring unpleasant Day, with a Patience and
|
|
Activity that could only be inspired by a Zeal for the Improvement of
|
|
Knowledge, such especially as might possibly be of use to Men in
|
|
Situations of Distress.
|
|
|
|
I would wish you to communicate this to your ingenious Friend
|
|
Mr. Farish, with my Respects; and believe me to be, with sincere
|
|
Esteem, Dear Sir, Your most obedient humble Servant.
|
|
|
|
"NOTHING CAN BE FARTHER FROM THE TRUTH"
|
|
|
|
_To Josiah Tucker_
|
|
|
|
Reverend Sir, London, Feb. 12, 1774.
|
|
|
|
Being informed by a Friend that some severe Strictures on my
|
|
Conduct and Character had appeared in a new Book published under your
|
|
respectable Name, I purchased and read it. After thanking you
|
|
sincerely for those Parts of it that are so instructive on Points of
|
|
great Importance to the common Interests of mankind, permit me to
|
|
complain, that if by the description you give in Page 180, 181, of a
|
|
certain American Patriot, whom you say you need not name, you do, as
|
|
is supposed, mean myself, nothing can be farther from the truth than
|
|
your assertion, that I applied or used any interest directly or
|
|
indirectly to be appointed one of the Stamp Officers for America; I
|
|
certainly never expressed a Wish of the kind to any person whatever,
|
|
much less was I, as you say, "more than ordinary assiduous on this
|
|
Head." I have heretofore seen in the Newspapers, Insinuations of the
|
|
same Import, naming me expressly; but being without the name of the
|
|
Writer, I took no Notice of them. I know not whether they were
|
|
yours, or were only your Authority for your present charge. But now
|
|
that they have the Weight of your Name and dignified Character, I am
|
|
more sensible of the injury. And I beg leave to request that you
|
|
would reconsider the Grounds on which you have ventured to publish an
|
|
Accusation that, if believed, must prejudice me extremely in the
|
|
opinion of good Men, especially in my own country, whence I was sent
|
|
expressly to oppose the imposition of that Tax. If on such
|
|
reconsideration and Enquiry you find as I am persuaded you will, that
|
|
you have been imposed upon by false Reports, or have too lightly
|
|
given credit to Hearsays in a matter that concerns another's
|
|
Reputation, I flatter myself that your Equity will induce you to do
|
|
me Justice, by retracting that Accusation. In Confidence of this, I
|
|
am with great Esteem, Reverend Sir, Your most obedient and most
|
|
humble Servant,
|
|
|
|
"MY SUPPOSED APPLICATION TO MR. GRENVILLE"
|
|
|
|
_To Josiah Tucker_
|
|
|
|
Reverend Sir, London, Feb. 26, 1774.
|
|
|
|
I thank you for the Frankness with which you have communicated
|
|
to me the Particulars of the Information you had received relating to
|
|
my supposed Application to Mr. Grenville for a Place in the American
|
|
Stamp-Office. As I deny that either your former or later
|
|
Informations are true, it seems incumbent on me for your Satisfaction
|
|
to relate all the Circumstances fairly to you that could possibly
|
|
give rise to such Mistakes.
|
|
|
|
Some Days after the Stamp-Act was passed, to which I had given
|
|
all the Opposition I could with Mr. Grenville, I received a Note from
|
|
Mr. Wheatly, his Secretary, desiring to see me the next morning. I
|
|
waited upon him accordingly, and found with him several other Colony
|
|
Agents. He acquainted us that Mr. Grenville was desirous to make the
|
|
Execution of the Act as little inconvenient and disagreeable to the
|
|
Americans as possible, and therefore did not think of sending Stamp
|
|
Officers from hence, but wished to have discreet and reputable
|
|
Persons appointed in each Province from among the Inhabitants, such
|
|
as would be acceptable to them, for as they were to pay the Tax, he
|
|
thought Strangers should not have the Emoluments. Mr. Wheatly
|
|
therefore wished us to name for our respective Colonies, informing us
|
|
that Mr. Grenville would be obliged to us for pointing out to him
|
|
honest and responsible Men, and would pay great regard to our
|
|
Nominations. By this plausible and apparently candid Declaration, we
|
|
were drawn in to nominate, and I named for our Province Mr. Hughes,
|
|
saying at the same time that I knew not whether he would accept of
|
|
it, but if he did I was sure he would execute the Office faithfully.
|
|
I soon after had notice of his appointment. We none of us, I
|
|
believe, foresaw or imagined, that this Compliance with the request
|
|
of the Minister, would or could have been called an _Application_ of
|
|
ours, and adduced as a Proof of our _Approbation_ of the Act we had
|
|
been opposing; otherwise I think few of us would have named at all, I
|
|
am sure I should not. This I assure you and can prove to you by
|
|
living Evidence, is a true account of the Transaction in question,
|
|
which if you compare with that you have been induced to give of it in
|
|
your Book, I am persuaded you will see a _Difference_ that is far
|
|
from being "a Distinction above your Comprehension."
|
|
|
|
Permit me farther to remark, that your Expression of being "no
|
|
_positive Proofs_ of my having solicited to obtain such a place _for
|
|
myself_," implies that there are nevertheless some _circumstantial_
|
|
Proofs sufficient at least to support a Suspicion; the latter Part
|
|
however of the same Sentence, which says, "there are sufficient
|
|
Evidence still existing of my having _applied for it_ in favour of
|
|
another Person," must I apprehend, if credited, destroy that
|
|
Suspicion, and be considered as _positive_ Proof of the contrary; for
|
|
if I had Interest enough with Mr. Grenville to obtain that Place for
|
|
another, is it likely that it would have been refused me had I asked
|
|
it for myself?
|
|
|
|
There is another Circumstance which I would offer to your
|
|
candid Consideration. You describe me as "changing Sides, and
|
|
appearing at the Bar of the House of Commons to cry down the very
|
|
Measure I had espoused, and direct the Storm that was falling upon
|
|
that Minister." As this must have been after my supposed solicitation
|
|
of the Favour for myself or my Friend; and as Mr. Grenville and Mr.
|
|
Wheatly were both in the House at the Time, and both asked me
|
|
Questions, can it be conceived that offended as they must have been
|
|
with such a Conduct in me, neither of them should put me in mind of
|
|
this my sudden Changing of Sides, or remark it to the House, or
|
|
reproach me with it, or require my Reasons for it? and yet all the
|
|
Members then present know that not a Syllable of the kind fell from
|
|
either of them, or from any of their Party.
|
|
|
|
I persuade myself that by this time you begin to suspect you
|
|
may have been misled by your Informers. I do not ask who they are,
|
|
because I do not wish to have particular Motives for disliking
|
|
People, who in general may deserve my Respect. They, too, may have
|
|
drawn _Consequences_ beyond the Information they received from
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|
others, and hearing the Office had been _given_ to a Person of my
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|
Nomination, might as naturally suppose I _had sollicited it_; as Dr.
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|
Tucker, hearing I had _sollicited it_, might _"conclude"_ it was for
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|
myself.
|
|
|
|
I desire you to believe that I take kindly, as I ought, your
|
|
freely mentioning to me "that it has long appeared to you that I much
|
|
exceeded the Bounds of Morality in the Methods I pursued for the
|
|
Advancement of the supposed Interests of America." I am sensible
|
|
there is a good deal of Truth in the Adage, that _our Sins and our
|
|
Debts are always more than we take them to be_; and tho' I cannot at
|
|
present on Examination of my Conscience charge myself with any
|
|
Immorality of that kind, it becomes me to suspect that what has _long
|
|
appeared_ to you may have some Foundation. You are so good as to
|
|
add, that "if it can be proved you have unjustly suspected me, you
|
|
shall have a Satisfaction in acknowledging the Error." It is often a
|
|
hard thing to _prove_ that Suspicions are unjust, even when we know
|
|
what they are; and harder when we are unacquainted with them. I must
|
|
presume therefore that in mentioning them, you had an Intention of
|
|
communicating the Grounds of them to me, if I should request it,
|
|
which I now do, and, I assure you, with a sincere Desire and Design
|
|
of amending what you may show me to have been wrong in my conduct,
|
|
and to thank you for the Admonition. In your Writings I _appear_ a
|
|
bad Man; but if I am such, and you can thus help me to become _in
|
|
reality_ a good one, I shall esteem it more than a sufficient
|
|
Reparation, to Reverend Sir, Your most obedient humble Servant
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|
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|
FLAME ON NEW JERSEY RIVERS
|
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|
|
_To Joseph Priestley_
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|
|
|
Dear Sir, Craven Street, April 10, 1774.
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|
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|
In compliance with your request, I have endeavoured to
|
|
recollect the circumstances of the American experiments I formerly
|
|
mentioned to you, of raising a flame on the surface of some waters
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|
there.
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|
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|
When I passed through New Jersey in 1764, I heard it several
|
|
times mentioned, that by applying a lighted candle near the surface
|
|
of some of their rivers, a sudden flame would catch and spread on the
|
|
water, continuing to burn for near half a minute. But the accounts I
|
|
received were so imperfect that I could form no guess at the cause of
|
|
such an effect, and rather doubted the truth of it. I had no
|
|
opportunity of seeing the experiment; but calling to see a friend who
|
|
happened to be just returned home from making it himself, I learned
|
|
from him the manner of it; which was to choose a shallow place, where
|
|
the bottom could be reached by a walking-stick, and was muddy; the
|
|
mud was first to be stirred with the stick, and when a number of
|
|
small bubbles began to arise from it, the candle was applied. The
|
|
flame was so sudden and so strong, that it catched his ruffle and
|
|
spoiled it, as I saw. New-Jersey having many pine-trees in different
|
|
parts of it, I then imagined that something like a volatile oil of
|
|
turpentine might be mixed with the waters from a pine-swamp, but this
|
|
supposition did not quite satisfy me. I mentioned the fact to some
|
|
philosophical friends on my return to England, but it was not much
|
|
attended to. I suppose I was thought a little too credulous.
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|
|
|
In 1765, the Reverend Dr. Chandler received a letter from Dr.
|
|
Finley, President of the College in that province, relating the same
|
|
experiment. It was read at the Royal Society, Nov. 21. of that year,
|
|
but not printed in the Transactions; perhaps because it was thought
|
|
too strange to be true, and some ridicule might be apprehended if any
|
|
member should attempt to repeat it in order to ascertain or refute
|
|
it. The following is a copy of that account.
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|
|
|
"A worthy gentleman, who lives at a few miles distance,
|
|
informed me that in a certain small cove of a mill-pond, near his
|
|
house, he was surprized to see the surface of the water blaze like
|
|
inflamed spirits. I soon after went to the place, and made the
|
|
experiment with the same success. The bottom of the creek was muddy,
|
|
and when stirred up, so as to cause a considerable curl on the
|
|
surface, and a lighted candle held within two or three inches of it,
|
|
the whole surface was in a blaze, as instantly as the vapour of warm
|
|
inflammable spirits, and continued, when strongly agitated, for the
|
|
space of several seconds. It was at first imagined to be peculiar to
|
|
that place; but upon trial it was soon found, that such a bottom in
|
|
other places exhibited the same phenomenon. The discovery was
|
|
accidentally made by one belonging to the mill."
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|
|
|
I have tried the experiment twice here in England, but without
|
|
success. The first was in a slow running water with a muddy bottom.
|
|
The second in a stagnant water at the bottom a deep ditch. Being
|
|
some time employed in stirring this water, I ascribed an intermitting
|
|
fever, which seized me a few days after, to my breathing too much of
|
|
that foul air which I stirred up from the bottom, and which I could
|
|
not avoid while I stooped in endeavouring to kindle it. -- The
|
|
discoveries you have lately made of the manner in which inflammable
|
|
air is in some cases produced, may throw light on this experiment,
|
|
and explain its succeeding in some cases, and not in others. With
|
|
the highest esteem and respect, I am, Dear Sir, Your most obedient
|
|
humble servant,
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|
|
"YOU ARE NOW MY ENEMY"
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|
|
|
_To William Strahan_
|
|
|
|
Mr. Strahan, Philada. July 5. 1775
|
|
|
|
You are a Member of Parliament, and one of that Majority which
|
|
has doomed my Country to Destruction. You have begun to burn our
|
|
Towns, and murder our People. Look upon your Hands! They are
|
|
stained with the Blood of your Relations! You and I were long
|
|
Friends: You are now my Enemy, and I am, Yours,
|
|
|
|
"THIS IS A HARDER NUT TO CRACK THAN THEY IMAGINED"
|
|
|
|
_To [Joseph Priestley]_
|
|
|
|
Dear Friend, _Philadelphia_, 7_th July_, 1775.
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|
|
|
The Congress met at a time when all minds were so exasperated
|
|
by the perfidy of General Gage, and his attack on the country people,
|
|
that propositions of attempting an accommodation were not much
|
|
relished; and it has been with difficulty that we have carried
|
|
another humble petition to the crown, to give Britain one more
|
|
chance, one opportunity more of recovering the friendship of the
|
|
colonies; which however I think she has not sense enough to embrace,
|
|
and so I conclude she has lost them for ever.
|
|
|
|
She has begun to burn our seaport towns; secure, I suppose,
|
|
that we shall never be able to return the outrage in kind. She may
|
|
doubtless destroy them all; but if she wishes to recover our
|
|
commerce, are these the probable means? She must certainly be
|
|
distracted; for no tradesman out of Bedlam ever thought of encreasing
|
|
the number of his customers by knocking them on the head; or of
|
|
enabling them to pay their debts by burning their houses.
|
|
|
|
If she wishes to have us subjects and that we should submit to
|
|
her as our compound sovereign, she is now giving us such miserable
|
|
specimens of her government, that we shall ever detest and avoid it,
|
|
as a complication of robbery, murder, famine, fire and pestilence.
|
|
|
|
You will have heard before this reaches you, of the treacherous
|
|
conduct to the remaining people in Boston, in detaining their
|
|
_goods_, after stipulating to let them go out with their _effects_;
|
|
on pretence that merchants goods were not effects; -- the defeat of a
|
|
great body of his troops by the country people at Lexington; some
|
|
other small advantages gained in skirmishes with their troops; and
|
|
the action at Bunker's-hill, in which they were twice repulsed, and
|
|
the third time gained a dear victory. Enough has happened, one would
|
|
think, to convince your ministers that the Americans will fight, and
|
|
that this is a harder nut to crack than they imagined.
|
|
|
|
We have not yet applied to any foreign power for assistance;
|
|
nor offered our commerce for their friendship. Perhaps we never may:
|
|
Yet it is natural to think of it if we are pressed.
|
|
|
|
We have now an army on our establishment which still holds
|
|
yours besieged.
|
|
|
|
My time was never more fully employed. In the morning at 6, I
|
|
am at the committee of safety, appointed by the assembly to put the
|
|
province in a state of defence; which committee holds till near 9,
|
|
when I am at the congress, and that sits till after 4 in the
|
|
afternoon. Both these bodies proceed with the greatest unanimity,
|
|
and their meetings are well attended. It will scarce be credited in
|
|
Britain that men can be as diligent with us from zeal for the public
|
|
good, as with you for thousands per annum. -- Such is the difference
|
|
between uncorrupted new states, and corrupted old ones.
|
|
|
|
Great frugality and great industry are now become fashionable
|
|
here: Gentlemen who used to entertain with two or three courses,
|
|
pride themselves now in treating with simple beef and pudding. By
|
|
these means, and the stoppage of our consumptive trade with Britain,
|
|
we shall be better able to pay our voluntary taxes for the support of
|
|
our troops. Our savings in the article of trade amount to near five
|
|
million sterling per annum.
|
|
|
|
I shall communicate your letter to Mr. Winthrop, but the camp
|
|
is at Cambridge, and he has as little leisure for philosophy as
|
|
myself. * * * Believe me ever, with sincere esteem, my dear friend,
|
|
Yours most affectionately.
|
|
|
|
"THERE IS NO LITTLE ENEMY"
|
|
|
|
_To David Hartley_
|
|
|
|
_Philadelphia, Oct._ 3, 1775.
|
|
|
|
I wish as ardently as you can do for peace, and should rejoice
|
|
exceedingly in co-operating with you to that end. But every ship
|
|
from Britain brings some intelligence of new measures that tend more
|
|
and more to exasperate; and it seems to me that until you have found
|
|
by dear experience the reducing us by force impracticable, you will
|
|
think of nothing fair and reasonable. -- We have as yet resolved
|
|
only on defensive measures. If you would recall your forces and stay
|
|
at home, we should meditate nothing to injure you. A little time so
|
|
given for cooling on both sides would have excellent effects. But
|
|
you will goad and provoke us. You despise us too much; and you are
|
|
insensible of the Italian adage, that _there is no little enemy_. --
|
|
I am persuaded the body of the British people are our friends; but
|
|
they are changeable, and by your lying Gazettes may soon be made our
|
|
enemies. Our respect for them will proportionally diminish; and I
|
|
see clearly we are on the high road to mutual enmity, hatred, and
|
|
detestation. A separation will of course be inevitable. -- 'Tis a
|
|
million of pities so fair a plan as we have hitherto been engaged in
|
|
for increasing strength and empire with _public felicity_, should be
|
|
destroyed by the mangling hands of a few blundering ministers. It
|
|
will not be destroyed: God will protect and prosper it: You will only
|
|
exclude yourselves from any share in it. -- We hear that more ships
|
|
and troops are coming out. We know you may do us a great deal of
|
|
mischief, but we are determined to bear it patiently as long as we
|
|
can; but if you flatter yourselves with beating us into submission,
|
|
you know neither the people nor the _country_.
|
|
|
|
The congress is still sitting, and will wait the result of
|
|
their _last_ petition.
|
|
|
|
-1785
|
|
.
|