LONDON, Nov, I f TRI A .I. COMOEMN ATI ON AND EXECU TION OF BRISSOT. AHd the other arretted Deputies. The following are tlie chargcs against Brif fot and liis accomplices, contained in the of Accusation presented to the ' atioiial Con vention by A mar, in the nam.- of the Commit nee of General Safety : ' Briltot, Agent to the Ponce under Kings, diforaccd on account ot his bale intrigues un tier the ancient government <>r Vigi'Mce of the Commons of Paris, in the beginning o! the Revolution, through the cred't of La Fayette, has for i Song time past prostituted h,s pun and his public duty in favour of that General wh..fe lcfignatioO he reprel'ented as a public calamity, and has at all times fliswn himfelf an enemy to the popular Societies. He went to the Jocobins to prepare the ruin of the Colonies, to bring forward the day ot the Chamn de Mars, where the be a patriots mere affaflinated by older of l-a Fayette, and *, r>r--ach up war with a view to dsOroy the tiu 't infant liberty of the nation. At the 1 egiflative ffemhly he coalesced with Condorcet and th» Girondirts, who only contrived to gain the favour of the People on occasions of fmsll importance, with a view to • abandon them on great ones. The Court made use of their influence to f ] lare war at a mwment when the armies and th,■ fortified places were in a state of abfolate want, or entvulleil to traitor* choftn by a per il,re.' Kill.?. 'rhev piotefled N»r onne, the Mintfler, whom ail France acctifed of the mea- Cures tak-n to render this war fatal to liberty ; and in their Journals they calumniated the Pa rrots who had thtf coma-re to refi't them. Thev defended DiettiiVh, convicted] of be- < in,r an accomplice with I a Fayette, and of ha vine offered to give up Straifcourg ; and while th ' CbVrfs of that faction protected the con foira'ors and traitorous Generals, the patriotic soldiers were profcrihed, and the volunteers of Par's frnt to he butchered. Purine the "irae we were surrounded by the fctdl'ite«of despots, when the court was going t r .., Pn ,l 1 (. irate? of France to their., act. r ha vi; canfed the intrepid defenders of Liberty to "he nmrdtred at Paris, Briflot and his accnm p]ice« did all thev could to the ge iierous efforts of the people, and to save the tviant During and after the unhappy insurrec tion of the -oth of Aug lift, they endeavoured to prevent the abdication of Louis the Xv I. and to preserve to him the crow . In 'he night of the /oth ot A .ri£uft t Petion, shot tip in the Thmileries, consulted with the satellites of tyrant, the plan to nisflacred the people, 3ud»ave orders to Martlet,commander of the national guards, to l er tbe people come in and then to cannonade them in the rear. A few diys before Genfotme and Verpniaud cn rrnc.-ed t" defend Louis XV(. on condition that the three Mini'ters, Roland, 'and Scr*. van \v< re recall d. I Petionand La Sonrce man'? ufi? oF all their ) mean to fend .he fedo »n-« from Paris Briflst, . KeHaint af«s R-yver, arcoi.'ir Jto the letters found in the T I.ufl'u ries, gave J,iid advice ta the Tyrant, and in defiance of the '.aws, they dared to solicit places in tht inißry. under a promise to extend the deflrufiive authorities o< the defpat. , . , The prrjeft to overturn the fouauation of the Republic, and to murder the friends of li berty, was put in prafiice in the legislative al f-mb!y, by BrilTot, in hid infiduons harangue on the 20th July 1792, oppoHng tl.e abdication of the throne We have feea Briilot and Ins accomplices Republicans under monarchy, and Ro-ahfts under'he Uepublic ; always constant in their dtftgns to ruin the i rench nation, and to abandon it ro its enemies. At the time the hypocritical tyrant, Louis the XVI. came into the ffembly to accuse tlie people, whole mal facre he had prepared, Vergniaud like a trut acronv lice of the tyrant, told him, " that thr affembij held it to be one of their moli fscrer dutirs, to maintain ail con ituted authorities, and c nfequently that of royalty. When the attorney general, Radcrer, came to announce with the accent of grief, that the ei izens in inforrefiior, hid taken the rrfolutioi, not to (eparate till the . ITemMy had pronoun c d the forfeiture of the Crewn, Vrelidtnt Vergniaud silenced the zpplaul'es from the gal lories by telling them, that they violated the law, in obftru&injc the freedom ot opinion,and he told Raderer, thai the afl'anbly was going to take into immediate coniideration, thepro pola: which he, Vergniaud, had made, ! to liberate Mandat, who wis arretted for having given orders to fire on the people ; or in the^event that that commander was no more, to fend a deputation of twelve Girondist Mem bers, authoril'ed to choose his fucctfl'or, in or der bv this means to ktep the public force at the of that roifchievous funiStion. !n 1 hat memorable fitting ot the loth of An gi.ft [he Girondist chiefs, Vergniaud, Gua det, and Genfonne, took by turns the Chair, and went to the galleries to slacken the energy of she people, and to lave Royalty, under the fhie'd of the pretended Cocllitution. I hey spoke ot nothing but obedience to the confti ruri'rtial Laws, to these Citizens that came to the iiarto protect their newly acquired .Liber- t Y* When the Municipality came to invite the Afliml>!y to fend tiie proces-verbal of the great operations of tneictkof iugufl, in or der to prevent the calcnuiits of the enemies of liliertv, Gusdet interrupted the members who made that demand, by making a motion to recommend anew to the Magi ftrates the execu tion of the laws. He blamed the council of the Commune for having confined Petion in his own house ; though they did it in order to rendu it impuffible for that impostor to make even li.furreaion subservient to afi againC li- V/fcen a deputation from the suburb St. An- rji'liwp» tb* fivir affliction of en the mode of teaching the Deaf", or Surd the widows and children maffacied o.i .list •iiy, the jcrfidio... Cadet cool.y anfeettd them. "'i hat tiic Cembly hoped to rettore public tranquillity and Wt reign ot the la«s. Vereniaud, >» the name of the txtraord.na. ry commili.rm, riirei'led by that laition, pro pofid the iufueulion of 'l' e Ki "?> w ' lu h , ' detl toned bv tin? prop e, as a limple con erv torv jot of royalty : ami 1 tmed .greatly affec ted' at the evenis uh'-ch had fcwed the c> uuU>* and operated tlr; ruiilof the tyrants, > e up.. poled CfyiVdiln'a molioii, tending to cxdlll,e f.-otn the Coi. vent Mi the members ot both the l.rf iila-iv- and ConlH'i ent Aflembhes : a .cl with the lime cunning he prevail ed the regil tersof the Civil l.ili f.oui being deptilited on the able , Ouadet willed to have a Gorernor named to the foil of the laic King, whom he c a.led the 1 riuce Royal. !Sr ; ,ffot ai <1 h:i accomplices al ways affected to invoke the literal execution ct the con'.litutiou, while the people in the nanic of the martvrs who lell befoie the v aMe «1 tht " hnil!tries,"demanded t..e compile overthrow of tin tyrant. . Vimmau ! oppnf:d this demand, laying, that the people -f "l'a-is were W a ftftiftn of the Empire, and affeifed tooppofe i' ill this manner re the Department* tie likevvile rcfifttd the p.-i lon made i»y the commons to put the 'yrant under anett. He uled all his effort. wirh B.if- lot, Petionand Manuel, to get Louis XV i. con fined in the Luxem ourg, from whence itwould have been easier for him to eicape, than out ol the l ower of the Temple. x Oeufotmc and Gauclct had the fervidly to puMiih.at different limes, that Louis XVI had commanded the Swift not to lire upon the peo- ple.—From that time, the leaders of the Giron di s. (Departmeut of Bourdeaux), compelled to praiie the events o 7 the 10th of August, con tinued, notwithstanding, to undermine the Re« pu'dic. lhev published the fever eft satires a of thr? king of the 1" reiich." '•>'< hile Brunfwick was preparing to decide the fate of the Trench nation by the force of arms, Carra in the fameJoi.rn.il him as a great c«mn>nnder, the g'eatefl politician, the mofk ; amiable Prime in Europe, formed to be the rc fiorer of liberty in a 1 nations.- I'e published, 1 that the D&ke, 6n J.is arrival at Paris, would go to ihe jacobins & put on thf red cap, in or der to toflrefl tlx- pd»pie i'l favour ot this f-tcl lite of tyrants. Finally, Carra was so audacious as to pro pole openly to the jaCobius, for the. Dulce of Yoi k to he King of the French. From these and many other fa&s too'tedious to mention, there refoits, that (arra and his aflociates were iniquitous and deep difleniblers, pensioned bv Kngiand, Pruflia, and Holland, to Enable a Prince of that family wnich rules over theft countries, to obtain the crown of France. This lame Carra, together with Si lery-, the diihotiortfd confident of a contemptible Prince, was sent by the then reigning fa&ian to Du mourier. to compleat that fre&ifen which saved the almost ruined army of the Prufiian delpot. Dumourier cam* fwddeuly to Paris to concert with Briffot, Petioo, Guadet, Genfonne, and Carra, the pcrfidicn expedition into the Anf trian Netherlands, which he undertook when I the Pruflun army wafting away by contagious disorders, wa* peaceably retiring—while the French army was burning with indignation at the inaction in which tliey were kept It was not the fault »f this tV&ion, if the mo tion « ♦<*« ma'le by ( arra to receive Brunlwtck at Pari , was not real zed. He mediated in the beginning of September r 79a, to deliver up fhis city w thout means of defence, by flying beyond the river Loire, with the I.egiflative Afiembly, with the Executive Council, and with the captive King. lie was fupprted in it by Roland, Claviere, and l e Brun, the crea tures and iuftruments of Briffot and his accom pices. # L I But these perfidious Ministers, having been J threatened by one of their colleagues to be der- I nounred to the people, it was then that Carra and Sillrry were sent to Dumourier, to autfco rife this General to negociate with Frederick William to enable this I'rincc to get out of the kingdom, orv condition that he Ihould leave the Netherlands without the fufficien? means of de f.nce, and delivered them up to the numerous and triumphant armies of FTance. 1 he calumnious harrangues that were made in the tribunes, were prepared, or fanCtior.ed at Rohiid's, or in the niCciiiigs ihat were held at Valaze's and Pecion's. I l|"ey proposed to mr render the Convention with a Pretorian guard, under the name of Departmental Force, which was to be the balls of their foederal system. In the 1 .egiflative Aliembly they mentioned a flight beyond the Loire, with the Aflemb y, the Executive Council, the Royal Family, and the public treafur?. Kerfaiut, at his return from Sedan, dnred to propose this projeA to the Ex ecutive Council; and it was iupported by Ro land, Claviere, and i.c Bruft, the creator* and iaftruments of Briffot. ') hi fadion (trove to put off the judgment of the tyrant by impeding the dif utiion. They appointed acommiflion of twenty f< ur members to examine the papers found in the Thuilleries, in the guilt of which some of these members were implicated ; and they endeavoured, in concert with Roland, to conceal those which tended to discover their tranfa&ion with the 1 ourt They voted for the appeal to the people, wh>ch would have been a germ oi civil war, and afterwards wanted a respite to the judgment. They inceflahtly repeated, that the Conven tion could do bo £ood,and that it was not free. JUIH,* inr« These declamations milled the department, and induced tliem to form a coalition, which was near being fatal to lrance. I hey patronized an incivic piece, entitled, L'ami des l.ois. On the 14th of January, Barbarous and his friends had given orders to the battalion ot Marfeillois, to iurround the Convention. On the aoth, Viladi wrote to the other De puties- To-morrow in arms to the Convents ou-* he is a coward who does not appear there. Brillot, tfrer the condemnation of l.ouis C a pet, censured the Convention, and threatened France with the vengeance of European kings. When it was his object to bring or. war, lie fj'ukc in an opposite sense, and treated the dov nfall of all thronts, and the conquest of the universe, as the (port of the French nation. Be. ing the "rgan of the Diplomatic committee, campofed aTniotl entirely of the fame facSion, he proposed war suddenly agaiuft England, Hol land, and all the powers that had not then de clared themselves. This fi&ion a<£ted in coalition with perfidious Generals, particularly with Dumouricr, Gen fonnet held a daily correspondence with him : Peticn was his friend. He avowed hinifelf the Counsellor of the Orleans party, and had con nexion with Sillery and his wife. After the revolt of Dumouricr, Vergniaud, Gaudet, Brifl'ot and Genfonne, wiflied to jufti fy his conduct to the committee ol General De fence. afl'erting that the denunciations made againll him by the Jacobins and the Mountain were the caßie of his conduit; and that Du mourier was the prote&or of the found part ef the Convention.-.'! his was the party of which Petion, Brillot, Vergniaud, &c. were the chief and orators. When Dumourier wis declared a traitor by the Convention, Briffot, in th- Patriote Fran coife, as well as other writers, who were hi 9 accomplices, praised him, in defiance of the law. As members of the committee of Gene ral Defence, they ought to have given infor mation relative to the preparations tkat were nuking in I.a Vendee. The Convention, how ever, was not made acquainted with them till the war became htii.us. They armed the Sections where arifiocracy reigned, agiinlt thoie where public spirit was triumphant. Thcv affeiSted to beli«ve that a plot was mo,. (Jitased hy the Republicans again.l the National Convention, for the purpose of nlming the Comnvfiion of Twelve, who, in an arbitrary manner, iniprifoned the Magi I'rates of the People, and made war against the Patriots. linard developed the views of the confpira- Cf, when lie used this atrocious expreflion : " The aftonilhed traveller will leek on what banks of the Seine Paris once flood. " The 1 onvemion dilfo'.ved the commifiion, which however, returned its fur.&ions ou its own au thority. and continued to ail. The Mion, by the addrefles which it sent to the departments armed them againtl Pans and the Ctlftytintfoii, '1 he death of nunioers of Patriots ill the fouthem Departments, and particularly at Marseilles, where they per'ftied on-the fcaffold, was the consequence of fhofe fatai divisions in the convention, of which they Were the authors. The deletion of Mtrfcll les soon produced that of Lyons. Fhis impor tant city became the fentral point ol the coun ter..revolution in the sooth. Ihe Republican Municipality was dispersed by the rebelt,'and good citizeiis were miflacred. Every pur.ilh ment that cruelty couid devise to cncreale the torments of death was put in execution. The jdmiiiiilrjiive bodies were leagued partly with I.yons, and partly with foreign ariilocrats, and with the emigrants dispersed through the Swiss Canton^. The Cabii.et of I.ondon afforded life ai'l energy tcr this rebellious league. Its pretext, was the anarchy thai reigned at Paris ; its lea ders, the traitorous deputies of the convention. \vhiUl they made tjiis powerful divcrfion in favour of the tyrant* united ag3inll us, l.a Ven dee continued to drink the blood ot the Patri ots Carra and Dochael were sent to this Depart ment in quality of deputies from the National Convention. Carra publicly exhorted the a-lminiftrators ol the Maine and Loire to fend troops against Paris. Both these deputies were at the fame time conncdtcd with the generals of the com bined armies. Couftard sent alio as a commiffionor, carried his treafon&bh: projefls to iuch a length, as e ven to furnilh supplies of provilion» and (lores to the rebels- Ihe mifion of the parties ol this f?(Sion sent to different parts of the Republic, was marked by tiiniUr traitoreus measures. Perhsps the column of Republican power would ere this, have measured its length upon the ground, if the coiifpirators had preserved much longer their inordinate power On th« lOth of August the foundation of the column was laid, on of May, tt was prefcrved | from deflruupre,the colleague of RrilTot, in the publication of the Patriot Francaifr, printed at Caen several long.*, which invited, in a form manner, the Citizens of Caen to arm them (elves with poignards, far the pnipofe of tab bing three Deputies of the Convention, who were p»imed out by name. Briffot fled with a lie added to his other crimes. Had he gone to Switzerland, as ft© f. fe palTport Hated, it would-have been lor tne purpose of excising a new enemy againlt France. . „ Cabaud St. Etienr.e, Robeecpi, Durrat, and Antiboul, carried the torch of sedition into tne Department of l.e gard and the neighbour ing departments. Biroteau, Rouger, snd Ko la nd, projcited their terrible plo.s m Lyons where they poured the ample It ream ol Patrio tic blood, by attaching to the friends of their country, the appellation as anarchists and mon- opolizer!. c , M Toulon these endeavours were luccetstu., and Toulonis now in the hands of the Engiifli, The fame lot was refeiveu for Bourdeaux ami Marfcilles. The reigning fa&ion had nuidtf fonie overtures to Lord Hood, whale fleet they expo&ed. The entire execution of the conspi racy in the South waited only for the junction of the Marfeillefe and Lyor.tfes which was prevented by the vi&ory pained by the Uepub lican army which produced the redu&ion of MarfeiUe . The measures of the conlpiratsrs were exactly iimilar to that of the enemies of Franca, and parricalarly of the Englito. I heir writing p'e and others, by virtue of » pow er us attorney, or by peifooal application. December T 1. d Notice is hereby given, That the fubfciiber has been duly ap pointed Administratrix on the estate r.f his Excellency John Hancock, Esq. late of Boston, in tlie county of Suffolk, deceased, ;>nd has taken opon that trust, by giving bond-; as the law direfls—and -A 1 pcrfons in. terefted, aie defirtd to take notice accord ingly DOROTHY HANCOCK. Boston, Nov. 13, 1793. Take Notice. ALL persons who have anvdemands against the Estate of His late Excellency JOHN" HANCOCK, Esq. deceased, are requefied ti> exhibit the fame to the Snbfcriher, Attorney to the Administratrix of said Estate : And all persons who {land indebted to laid Estate, a t- e rcouelted to fettle with him immediately; a> the Aa of Limitation of Actions, which is m take place on the firft day of Deccmbei next, will otherwise render it neceiTary for him 10 com mence luits igainlt thein. JOSEPH MAY, Attort-ey to the Adininiftrati ix. B"fton,Nov. 1793 N. B The Printers throughout this Com pionwealth, are requifted to infeit ttii-. in their refpeftive newspapers, and forwa: d their ac counts for tlie Tame, to J- M ALL persons having any demand agairft the Estate and Etfeft* ot Mis. MARY SINDREY, widow, late of Frankford, Ox. ford town (hip, in the State of Pennfylvama, deceased; are desired to produce their ac counts to JftCOB I.esHEK and (in Frankford, aforel'uid,) Executors and Ad miniftratois of the above in Older for feillr ment. And whoever is indebted to (aid Ef 'tate, &.c. are requested to mak- payment to the aforetaid Adininiftrators, on ot'befeie tlic 16th of March, 1794, or tlicy will be dealt with according to law. Frankfoit', Dec. it) JUST PUBLISHED, And to be filJ by Thomas Dobfon, Price three eighths of a DoSar, " An Enquiry into the principle* and . tendency of certain public measures." January 16 tWtf dtw