Jhrurik from the' iafolent triumph o£ their enemies, and from the exultation of arif tocrgcy, difgiljfed by a maik of lamenta tion and horror. Thus did all the princi ples and'all the friends of the revolution fuffei: from the wickedness of a' few indi viduals. In vain was it fald that those who fiiffered were guilty ;—it was an fwertd that a prison was as sacred as an altar, and that he who could violate a pri son, is capable of betraying his country." Thus far Thomas Paine.' It was not enough for them, however, thus to second the views of Pitt, and to furjlifh him with the rrteans of alarming and maddening the people of England .in to a war. They mud do the fame service to the Stadtholdtr, and to the aristocracy of .iiollatird. !' Cambon said to Abbem, (the Dutch banker* a patriotic refugee at Paris) "You have no church laiifk to c'onfifeate in Hol land las w'e found in Flinders —when we get to" Afflfterdam we must make a revo lution of Portfolios!" Mull not such language teach Holland, and was it not wotth the Stadtholder an army ? jThe war which their abfurditics and crim«s provoked his is it 3 conchiift beer, every- where p«tkied by their incapacity, and the diftraftions which they have crra ted.' P A defencclefs frontier and a ■dilcon tented people seemed to invite the inv.inon of Spain ; her opulent and unarmed co lonies prefented-an easy prey to our marine —to Lo.iifiana which had been fold to the SpaoKb eemrr-ivc ieemed tw ow conquest as a- repartition ; -the Dutch colonies in In - dia might-have been enabled to* throw off the yoke of Holland; and on the Conti nent, a powerful Prince, the MithridatCs of India, vanquifted but not destroyed, animatcdwith an implacable animosity to the English name, needed only the ap pearance of a French force, again to take up'arms against the objects of his heredi tary detestation. " In Europe too there are circumstan ces, of which statesmen of a daring and comprchenfive genius might have improv ed. The obstinate ignorance of jacobinism, ruined against the rock of Sardinia, that fleet under Truguet, which, if it had appeared in tlie Archipelago, would have emboldened the Porte again to arm against Ruflia; to support Poland; to attempt the re-c*ptare of the Crimea ; and would thus have lighted a flame in the east of Europe which all the efforts of our ene mies would have been, scarce able to extin- guifh. " The Weft-India colonies of our ene mies Would have been fnfficiently annoyed by an improvement in the internal regimen of our own islands." This alludes, we presume, to the scheme for emancipating and arrfling their (laves, which wis-agitated about nine months ago. " Sometime ago Bueot proposed a law, that every deputy should give an account of his fortune, and of the additions which he had made to it during the constituent Affe-mbly, the Legislative AfTembly, and the Convention. Had such a law been pafied, when it came to my turn I mud have anfwe're^ —nothing. It is thus that I would refute'the calumniator who called me the ally of Pift.—An incorruptible character, evidenced by this honorable po verty?, is the only patrimony I (hall be queath to my children. This proposition of Buzot yas, however, evaded by the Anarchils ; and indeed, such an enquiry would have proved embarrafiing to them. Fibre A'Eglantine, in tlie lowest state of indigence before the maflacres of Septem ber, how came he to acquire a larded es tate of 12/300 livres a year, and how does he support his hotel, his carriage and his fervanta are the sudden for tunes of Panis, of Sergent, and of so many others of the afiafiinating commune of Pa ris ? How (hall we account for the large estates lately purchased in the name of the father-ii.-law of Danton ?" He concludes in these words, « Anarchlfts, robbers, you may now strike—l have done my duty, I have spok en truths ufeful to my country, and they will survive me!" From the General' Admertipr. WE in our last made mention of the return of General Galbaud from Canada to Nevt-York: He called upon the French ConfuV in'that city for a parage to France, and was ordered accordingly on board t!>e Perdrix a'(loop of war about' to fail, mount ing 20 guns. This he refufed under the pretext that (he was leaky. The public > 1 .. A*» ... has feci One J»art of ths , coVrefpondence between Gatbaud and HaUterive on .this fubjeft, and aifo a letter from the former to the Minifte'r here ; we, are enabled to . lay before our readers the whole corres pondence, which follows. First mftoelr of the Cpnfcl to Galbaud 13th December. Sir, 1 will, this moment give you an ordf] ior going on boaid the Perdrix,. Where th( Republic will furnjlh you even' thing.ne cefi'ury for your fuhfiftence. t\s to your pafl'age, I will conjidcr on the me..'l 3of Sending you tu-Fraocc in the manner rail eonfonant to the weifareof liie Republic. Sccond answer, 23d-DecetiiLei'. ■ The Confiil of the Republic requires Galhauil to g>6 ahd f.t ior the order of the civil authority, ai>ci 10 rid th£ confukte Motifs ct the outrageous pofle with- '.vhieu he is attended*. Thi ! answer New-York 2jth Dcccflaber . i"O3, the 2d year of the-Frcncb - Re public one ana indiv!f:b'e. Hauterive to Pußlifti your letter ~d diejuftifieation of your rr.enacng viti* vim thitik , pro per. Fublitlt all";).: "i r-'tctate to you the order o£ ern : 'iori jii board the Perdrix v.-Ksre t'u ,blic a(Tnres you a subsistence yr ; itt /u jroaching depar ture of the ver . .-hut' o» to carry you to France, c-'.on; lie takes no on motives as those you imput.' to me, nor does be change hii determinations, thro' SK3 dpty is to (end y#u to Jfanoc, and ygurs to pay deference to the direction or the authority .which tlje.Re public has placed here.. Had,you always followed this principle I ftiould not have the trouble of a-.ifwering your infultiog requifitiou. caprice, A copy. Philadelphia 24th, Dec. 1793. The 2d year of the French Republic. The Miniftcr of the French Republic to. Gilbnud. Since the Englifhhave dilHained iq you, a; in Duraouricr, ycur frknd aud patron, the traitors wfaofe trcafan has leen oF lo great advantage to them, the cotaful of the Republic will appoint you a veijel on board of which' you wJJI -be recelvwj and condu&cd to France where yon wouW have long fioce arrived, but for .your ab fnrd reb«lion : , terminated by jrAu; dijlard Philadelphia, 24th Dec. 1793. The Minister to Conscience. The Consul of the Republic will ap point yon a vefiel, on board of which vovl will be received as a acferter and carried to Francei ' All the papers which you demand of me, you will find in the hands of your judges. [7'be Letters of Guile ud, have already appeared.'], For the Gjzmtts of the United States, Mr. Fenno, Be pleased t6' republifh the following very fmgular paragraph taken from your paper of the 31ft of December, 1793, with the accompanying remarks. " A letter published in a morning pa per from a member of Congrcfs, to some merchant in Peterfburgh, Virginia, men tions the agency of Great Britain in mak ing the truce between Portugal and Al giers. It is but justice to declare, that fubfequeut information has been received from higher authority than the one alluded to, declaring that the truce was made without the intervention of that nation, &by the agency of a person who has had no initru&ions from that power for a consider able period, and whose appointment has long been fuperceded." The origin, design and tendency of this qprnmunication being too obvious to i>o miftahen, the writer of the letter feels himfelf conltrained to observe, tlv? it would It more than jiifticf to Great Britain', and lefrlban jvftke to the United States, to declare, thai subsequent information •' has been received from higher authority, than the one alluded to, declaring that the truce I was made without the intervention cfthat hation, and by HU -agency 6? a person, who had no inftruftio.-is from that power for a confi4erab}e-time> arid wfiofe appoint ment lists long since been fuperceded." Because he conceives fucli a declaration 'would bfc palpably untrue. T*he fubjequent infarpiation, that is, the iirfdrmation bf the latest dates, from the riioft authentic and iliredV channel, confirifrs the -intelligenct given in the letter to the merchants of Peterftmrgh, and suggests further-, that Qreat Britalh is the gukrantee for the due perfortnaace of the truce, and had exerted herfelf in Portugal to prevent that nation from furnilhing a convoy to the defcnce lass Apt'tican vefiels in her ports. ft is iiicomprehenfible, that Great Bri taia (hould- guarantee the tnice, without foa* agency in making it, or at le'all with-, out having an agent oh the spot to an twcrfor the guarantee. This Day the new.built Episcopal Church entitled, CHRIST's CHURCH, in Anri-ftreet, will be opened for the So lemn Worihip of Almighty God: Pfay ers to begin at ten o'clock. :baud. PHILADELPHIA, JANUARY 2. Yesterday being New Year's Day-— Members of both Houses of Gongrefr— lipids of DepaiTftlfnts—Foreign Misif ters—Members of the Society of the Cincinnati—Officers of the Militia, Bcc. waited on The President of the United States, to offer him the Compliments of the Season. ■~f. of Repub- HAUTERIVE- giTnet. GENET. Jan. 2d. i 794. NEW-YORK, January i We hear that nearly fifty fail of mer chantmen, belonging to this city and the Southward, which ought to ' have ar rived from France in the qourfe of the hit Autumn are yet absent; the eonje&ureis that they are detained by an embargo. There can ke Kttte doubt an the mind ofiny unprejudiced citizen, taking into consideration recent communications, bat dot the United States would at this mo ment, have been experiencing all the hor rors of war, had not the Proclamation o{ neutrality been issued at the crisis at it " v '■ 4&f k Jt onde * t con i ratv^ate, i t ) ie no < ) ~ figmiif.{£»-£i>, upon their late acquisition of Jhp*'nt the articles of liberty, republicanism, fcjence and mbrals. He would rejoice too, in the powerful, ittflacncial, anJpufiingfriends, which their neutrality has acquired, if it were _ not upon retard, " that thefriettdfhip of the ■zvo' Jdis nimilyagainjl Cod. He is, moreover, -iipare, that the old flerj may be recollcSed . upin the present ecatfon and appl'\.l to their dfadvantage, that the fame daj Herod and Pilate are mad; friends, when virtue was to It crujhed in their nominal" master, who probably, never saw a theatre in his lijt , tho's he was- often in the temple and habitually en gaged .in his miniflcrial duties. With rif peel to the comparative morala anjrejpefla(iifity of those clergy, who have fgntd the petition againfl vice and immoral ity, or those who have noti he has only to re marl ; thai " much may befaid on both fides." He w'tjhes, however, to abferve to Euri pides, and some other puffing cvrrefpondents ; thai upon a certain occajion during the war, when some 'important quejlion divided the northern ami southern members of Congress, Dpt tf the loiter, exultingly observed to the prcfent Judge P—rs, then e Delagate from Pennsylvania, that after dinner * they would " count noses" with their antagonifls ; on which Mr. P— very readily answered, I fuppnfe so, my friend ; but I e.xpeß you mean red noses. At D- A. J *. * This was in days of yore, when Con greft fat tarly and late ; held fffi ons the afternoon and did lufmefs for nothing. . _ . $y~'The Stockholders in the Bank of the iTnited States, residing in the'city of Philadelphia, and its neighbourhood, are requefled to meet at -the City-Tavern, this evening, at 6 o'clock, on business re lative to'tjie ensiling election for Directors. January 2. . PRICE OF STOCKS. Ph iLAftEi,PHiA, 2, 1794- 6 per cSntfi, 1 ~ifg to I,o Wetr read Snd rt&fred.' Mn Chdi, aftA" fw.e iirtto< e bferv ;\ • A few cases .Ghampaigiie Wine f MADEIRA) Jrn pipc», bOgltujads and cask?, - fO"R SALF. BY k _ JOJ&I No.' in, Suutfc'From-iiffcti aEWffi- N Q'% J CEi BEING Mvr :f\ fame ihould be le-Z vle ; I, the futiici iber, «y that all powcui ami !rtf.ejr*ot aviornev, o(