i: .a* of aiy of rti? fubjeSj belonging to bis Maje&y, to or for tite difpvjki of per fjns relider.t iti Frartce, u ndcr the power , of the persons wh» exerpife the present Government hi J i Mice, and for preferring the produce of such property to the Indi ridual owners thereof. The question was put and carried. PLYMOUTH, January 22. „ Yetterday the French celebrated at Mill Prison, as a civic fete, the anniversary of . the execution of Louis XVI. The pro -ceflion went round the square of the prison, formed a circle, and then sung the Mar feiilois Hymn, Ca ira, &c. They then began to ihout, threw their capj in the air, took a civic oath, and put a red cap upon j a pole. | NATfONAL CONVENTION, Tuesday, Jan.'ji. The Jacobins of Paris came to the Con vention, and made a speech »n the anniver ' fary of the death of Louis the tyrant. ' Re presentatives of a free people,' said the ora- I tor, ' this day is the anniversary of the legal death of a tyrant. So grand a day, which recalls to Republican fouls an a ntiagasdae* were undermined, and matches were prepared through the whole town to r , , bi ™ * the habitations ; v but our brave vo lunteers flew on ail fides and snatched up the mat« lies, defpifmg danger, with ihoft admi ► rable courage. u the mal contents spread a rumour that the army of the Republic had been defeated at Worms. The enemy at tempted to make a movement, but the Repub licans loon recovered their position. Worms [ is at present ours, where we have found im mense magazines of corn, leather, and cloth. " In common wars, after fuccefles so nu merous, peace has been fought for and ob i tamed. The wars of kings only san guinary tournaments, the expences of which were defrayed by the people, while tyrants insolently aflumed all the pomp to them selves: but in a war for freedom, there is j but one means, that of exterminating def- j pots. When the horror of tyranny, and the inftin#.of freedom, have armed the brave, they will only Iheathe the sword by dictating peace. The coalition has harnessed twenty one nations to the corps of defpoti'm, the inhabitants of which still are {lumbering : the people of England, Scotland, Ireland, Holland, Hanover, Brunfwick, Hefle, Prus sia, the Imperialists, Auftrians, Hungarians, Bohemians, Belgians, Ruffians, Piedmontefe, j Sardinians, Parmesans, Florentines, Romans, j Neapolitans and Spaniards. To enumerate ; them is but to give a lift of the vanquiflied. " What campaign was ever more glorious, j presenting as it does, the Spaniards and the j English flying from Toulon, the Pruflians beaten at the Mozelle, the repaf- ' ling the Rhine, and the Dutch chaced from Dunkirk ?' " Some voices however, already are heard declaiming on the advantages of What man of understanding, what lincere patriot will dare to mention peace, without dreading to compromise freedom ? Who then will speak of peace ? Those who hope to adjourn the counter revolution for fb\ne months or some years by giving foreign na tions and tyrants time to breathe, their people, provision their magazines; and recruit their armies.—Who is it that calls i for peace ? Brunfwick, Cobourg, Pitt, Hood, and Ricardos. The deceit is too grofe, for it is our cowardly enemies themselves who mduUrioufly difieminate this opinion, and have the folly to hepe it will prevail. " Let our popular societies seize every means of developing the crimes of the Bri tilh government, and of proving that its minifier has familiarized national despotism, and in a pompous manner has substantiated the royal tyranny. It is the forms of this < government, which you ought to destroy." LONDON, February 7. The French are making altonifhing ex ertions to fit out their navy ; and fgr this purpose, every seaman in France is'put in a Hate of requilitfon ! Letters from the Continent, by the Flanders mail of yesterday, bring the in teresting intelligence, that the French have re-occupied the important heights of Op. penheim, and have pufted their advanced posts within two leagues of Mentz. On the other hand, the army of 32,000 men, intended for the siege of Fort Louis, has polled itfelf before Manheim. They .have brought up the heavy artillery jfod pontoons, and batteries aieerefted, not only for the purpose of bombardiug the town, but of covering their paflage over the Rhine. The accounts of the demolition of Fort Louis, ate true only in part. Two bas tions, or rather diftinft forts, looking to ward Alsace, having been completely de stroyed ; but the French entered the toivn withaftonilhing intrepidity, and werethere in time to cut off the fuffees which led to the powder magazine and the other works. Our Letters from Basle, in Switzerland, dated Jan. 30, fay, that aFrench gentle man had arrived there, in ten days from Nantz, who states, that at the time he Ift that place, there cxifted not the smallest trace of the army of the Royalists. I For the Gazette of the United States. Mr. Fenno, , To , brin S about a war, the ground must be taken carefully. The people are irri tated, but decidedly opposed to hostile ineafures. Those who hunger and third; X" b ecause they will hunger and thrrft nil there is one, have a plain game to play To irritate the people more and m ° re ' r tlme or an y relaxation on the part of Great Britain ftiould be likely to ? ' e the genial rage, it must be heated by some new fuel. It must be established as a rule, that a man's patriotism is to be meaiured by his fury. To ad against the general movement is hard work, like row ing agatnft a strong current: But to go as the public is going, and to persuade them o go alter, to find tliem angry, and to exafpmte thsm up to a pitch to ast as s well as threaten violent things, Is aot the 0 mod difficult thing in the world. From words to blows is but one stage iti pafTion. What was attempted la(t summer ? War. What is iu train at this moment ? Look ! at the refolws of our factious Societies} [ at the style of certain newspapers. There is another place where the mod outrage ' ous language has been used. Let our pru ' dent thinking men examine the whole of this way of proceeding, and doubt, if they possibly can, that some persons, whom it is n