s* /. . n arc Further particulars «f tlkiaie Confptraej a! Paris. an£ , Translated for the New-2'cri Gazette. t | lc Mr. M'Lean, Ma Suppoling that any information the late conspiracy at paris, will be pleasing to the readers of your gazette, I fend you a tranflatjon — of the principal point! of a declaration made by Georgk Grisel, captain of the 2d company of the 3d battalion of the 38th half brigade, to «< 5 tne Executive Directory on the 15th of l'loreal. This being the fjrft pkee that led to the disco very of the it was in consequence D f of it that Babceuf and others were arretted on eX[ the 20th of the fame month, and examineJ on he the 21 A. [See the New-York Gazette of Sa- dr< tnrday iaft.J «nl IN the firfl place, Grifel informs the Directory, that be had been initiated in the conspiracy for up- er wards of a month pad ; he then cxcufes himfelf ° for not hating made the discovery sooner; and a- 1 ' moug the reafoni he givei for the delay, the prin- eI -cripal one, he fays, was to obtain fufficient inform- r at ion *' of the extent and ramifications of the plot, an and a pcrfenal acquaintance with the chief confpir- ' ators." °? He then relates, that on one of the last days of 11 Germinal, he was met by one Meugmer, a taylor e by trade ! with whom he had been acquainted in '' I*B9. The man of (hears informed bim, he had ° been imprisoned fix months at Pleffis, on account, ss he said, of his patriotifin ; and he desired him to accompany him to the Geneva cofFee-houfe, 0 where he found a number of neighbour's friends a ex-prisoners like himfelf; and who at his inflance received him as one of the brotherhood.—Grifel, jjl however, not very well pleafejl with the " ultra- ' revolutionary conversations" of such patriots, re- t0 solved not to visit W em again. On the 2d inft. he was accosted near the Greve, #s by one of the fame Jacobin patriots, called Mo- w nfc»n ...vK—, 1.- of his friends.—ln the course/os conversation, he P' confidentially informed him of the existence of a " iecret committee of public fafety and of infurrec- '' tion ; and that the itlfarijeftion which he, the quoa- 1 dam belt-maker was ! was nigh at hand : "On this information," fays*Grifel, " I perceiv- w ed that an opportunity has offered of gloriously P' serving my country. I seized it, and thsrefore lR armed myfelf with dissimulation." The two patriots invited Grifel to the Temple 31 of Reason (for so they called the CofFee-houfe, known by the name of the Chineie Baths) where w he found a confufed affembly.of both sexes, whose 8 coßverfation, fengs, and four looks, recalled to a mind the dreadful reign of terror. His two mentors praised his Robefpierian zeal—, 0 his own discourse confirmed their assertions, and he c was soon surrounded and caressed by the whole a 1! groupe. A man who appeared to be one of their chiefs, P and whose name he afterwards found to be Darthe, j paid htm particular attention, and gave him /ome J of Baboeuf's pamphlets. that if he could procure this fellow's acquaintance, be might, * through him, acquire more information refpe&ing P the confutation. He proposed to compose a pam phlet with Jacobinical ttyle ; which being accept- v ed, he iinifhed it the fame evening, and to be di- v ftributed throughout the Republic. It confided of J' a preamble of Bor 10 articles, nnd an order for a the people to fall, without diflinftion, on the Di- v rectory and Bodies! He then read a Proclamation, which was to make n its appearai.ee (übfequent to the last-mentioned a piece, ordering the general pillage and slaughter of the rich—the aobledw'-the priests, and of all the au- 1 thorities—An amendment was added to this aft, c more terrible than all the relt—they were received by the conspirators with general applause. After wards appeared a lift of upwards of 60 Chiefs of f Infurreftion who were to aft in different places. In the course of the conversation, Grifel difcov- ' ered that Felix Pelletier procured the neeeffary funds, and that Drouet was to head the infurrec- ! tion. . 1 The Siying terminated at 7 P. M. when it was resolved :— 1. That the Committee of Infurreftion fhonld hold their next meeting at another house. » . 2. That Roffignol, Ger|nain, Mansard, Fay an, and himfelf (Grifel) should be a Military Com mittee, charged to prepare the military means of ' inforreftion, and to correspond with the Secret ' Commitiee, through Germain. This Committee ! fat on the 12th and 13th. ' Grifel concludes his declaration, by affirming that Drouet and Baboeuf visited each other daily, ' and that the latter frequently composed the speech- ) es the former was to deliver in the Council of 500 —delivered if to him the next day at the Coffee- ' House. It pleased Darthe (an ex-secretary of Jo 1 feph Lebon), who promised to have it printed, and ' desired him to call the next day for a few hundred ' copies, to distribute among the troops. The next day lie delivered him about one hund- 1 red copies of his pamphlet, and also fom-papers un der cover, which he made him hide in his bof&m, ' and desired him not to open it 'till he was at home and by himfelf. 011 opening it, he found it was ' a Brevet of secondary and military agent of the secret Committee of Public Safety and InfurreSion, with infiruftions at larga and information concerning the plans hi the Secret Committee, and of his duties. Grifel's duty at camp prevented him from feeing Darthe until the nth, when he sent a meflagede firing to fee him ; he accordingly went to his house, where not finding bim, lie was concluded by a per son who was there to another house, where he saw Darthe and four other perfons—Darthe immedi ately feid to him :—" Dear friend, the boar of re venge being at hand, and the Tocsin of Liberty | being about to- be rung, the Committee has thought proper to strengthen the zeal of the Chiefs of the Infurreftion by, admtiting them into its bosom to con.ert together the plan of exscution."—"Be hold,** continued he, "our worthy chiefs, who a. lone are acknowledged as such by every true patri ot ; wh« will feoo diieft irfurreftion; you . are not yet acquainted with them—welljU«o, Ba- 1 ccaf, ©ertrain, Bnaaarolte and D dnif.■; are fame others, but bui.oeis prevents tlu.r attend anee" Thev then embraced each other. Some time after, three other Conspirators, to wit, the ex-general Fayan, ex-generalßoffignol.and Mansard, a displaced officer, joined the Con pna CT Babceuf then read the aft of infurreftion, of which it was decided to print 6 0 ,°0 0 cop'es- for the Farmer's Weelly Museum. m« THE L4T PREACHER. " Tet did not the chief butler remember Joftfih, bu ed forgat him ," ! lc THIS was a moll unlucky instance of Hi irtnels inv of memory, and a ft range one too, for Jofcph had (' Jf expressly stipulated with the imprisoned bmler, that on he should recollect the favorable interpreter of bis c h| dream, and obtain from Pharoah an orcirr for Ms w. "Forget him ! I« it possible ? Did the chief but- ftu ler, as he filled the cup to Pharoah, taste the wine th« ■ so often, that it made him stupid or mad ? Was re the vine juice of Egypt ever mixed with poppy wa- fcl ter, that it might, like the fabled river of oblivion an drown memory and her tribes ? As I know of no wf ' ancient record, that alludes to this prafl.ee,and in trj ' the biography with which Moles has indulged us, of tVic chief butler not a syllable is said, concerning be t his debauchery, I believe that the supposition that ge he was a toper must be waved. We mull look a tb little deeper than the bottom of a glass, or even a ex J bottle to difcovet the fouree of a eourtier's ingra- th titude. la ' ' Let us look, therefore, once more into the book mi 1 of Genesis, and I trust, that so lucid an Hiltorian, rei ' as Moses, will shed light upon ihis sombre fubjeft. mi It appears Joseph, of an attcinpt upon the virtue of Potiphar's wife, was by the in- as ' ttigation of that harridan of antiquity, committed ch to prison. According/to the sacred text, this was co a State prison, a kind of Egyptian tSaflile, where, pc as we read, " The King's prisoners were bound " ot ' wher? meaner felons were excluded, and none were m '1 Kilt -»»«l -retainers to the nc ° palace, as had, by their carelessness or their critnes, w forfeited the royal favor. It is no great wonder Si then that a couple of who had such tli frequent temptations to cheat, as a butler and a ba- " " ker, should be put in ward. Light bread and four fu wine had been rendered in the palace, and theabuied ft palate of Pharoah was offended. Joseph, who had c< ingratiated himfelf with the chief goaler, was ap- ti pointed a fort of deputy or turnkey of the prison, di e and had the charge of these vety delinquents. d' One morning, " Behold they were fad and b "' e when interrogated concerning the cause of their ai * e gloom, they informed Joseph that they had dreamed o and there was no interpreter. The chief tutler then rt related that he had seen in a vision a clustered vine, t< of triple branches, whose gtapes he preffedinto the fc cup, and gave into the hand of Pharoah. Joseph, a I after comforting the ptifoner by familiarly explain- si ing his dream and promiling him reftoraiion to his w s post in the houfchold, pathetically befeeches-him q that he would in his prosperity reflect on his unjull- t ' e ly accufedfriend,, and mention him to his prince. f< " Think on me, fays the beautifully simple original, d t when it shall be well with thee, and (hew kinduefs I si ' pray thee, unto me, and make mention of me to o Pharoah, and bring me out of this house." This d ( was] surely an easy service ;an3 on the third day, b when Pharoah feafted his servants, when amid the t jollity of ail entertainment, the released butler flood ii )r at the elbow of his appeased sovereign, what a fa- 11 vorable moment tofuggell the propriety of loosing poor Joseph, who had been so unjuftiy bound. But I ce mark an obsequious, callous, courtly slave. Intent a alone upon his own prosperity, he is so bafy in fil- ( ling the ruddy cup for his king and for himfelf, that 1 u _ not a thought of him who has nothing to f drink, but his own tears and the waters of afflidfion. c A felfifh and ungrateful man, though he should out- a , r . live the oldest of the patriarchs, and allay she thitft f o £ of a lineage of Egyptian monarchs would not once j think of his benefactor, nor call to mind that vision- c v _ ary vine which he had fecn in adversity. No ; a 1 chief butler would have much a more lucrative em- 1 , c _ ployment than thinking upon the " Sorrowfulfigh- t ing of a prisoner." The chief butler did not rem«m- f as ber Joseph, but forgat him. t And are there not a thousand worldly rcafors for t lid 'hu forgetfulnefs ? Prudence f.iight vvhifper to the t butler as he walked through the prison gate, not to r lisp the name of Joseph, for possibly it might anger i in. Pharaoh, and then his favor would be withdrawn, t and the lutlerjhip ! «Besides, we (hould remember 1 that this dreamer-in prison was a very courtier in I ee the palace ; watchful enough of his own, and "deal- 1 ing out his promises as • liberally as his Jiquor." 1 np When Joseph had unravelled his entangled dreams, ( I ' and foretold that he (hould again have the keys of 1 I Pharaoh's beaufet and cellar, I dare affirm that the ( 3Q butler, vvith cringing complaisance, with low bows ( e _ and a perpetual smile, engaged upon his honor not j o merely to remember, but to remunerate his deliver- t nd er " was of a courtier.—And i ed 18 'g nor ant that his engagements, like " your < humble servant" at the t.ottom of a challenge, < |£ ] mean, if they have any meaning, nothing but death , /n . an d dellrudlion ?—Many are the promises ef the chief butlers, the Chefterfields, the smooth-tongued n'e men of the wotld. They hp them too— but so ;as c ty e ' w^ eJI l he day"»f peiformance arrives. ret nat even thcir owner can find them—mifiaid in fame ohf ure corner of mrmorv's eheft ! Will be ianded, n « N ' | G MORROW, from on board the Vchooner £xpedi- X tion r fe, St. Croix Rum&Sugar, er- For Sale by F. COPPINGER, aw ? 231 South Front-ftfeet. di- " BY AN A T IST, re- Res.dent at Mr. Oellers't Hotel, l\l miniatu re likenesses the A R E tak cnai'd executed in that elegant and delicate X -V. ttilc, which is 10 neeeffary to render a Miniature PiC to ture an intefefting jewel. Be- He will warrant a strong and indisputable refeln a< blance; and he takes the liberty to lay before the public tri- t ' l ' s plaeehismoft earned intention to deserve their p*. tronage by his best endeavors to please. ' 0U N. B. Specimen# are to be seen. 13a- May 11. j Philadelphia, T ' THURSDAY EVENING, August H- ot | « PUBLIC SCHOOLS. e ' — of No. VL cat , SOCIETY is formed for the general benefit of coi the individuals who.compose it. Eveiy arrange- P r( m«nt calculated 10 promote Ihe iritereL ot the com munitv, comes within the limit, of this acknow- >•» 1 ledged principle. Apply 'his to ehejubjeet of pub lie schools—it will be found on the mod minute fu i invefligatioto, that without the interposition of the I ftipreme power, in making public adrcjuate provifi- d ignorance, is a triend to oppression, unworthy the fa- notice and patronage of, every liberal man." e ng That principle of universal charity and benevo- d ut lence, for which the friends of man in all countries P nt are decided advocates—and which the people called il- Quakers, profefs to consider as the key (tone of So iat ciety, speaks with irrefutable emphasis on this occa to fion. Even that partial churity, which impels this in. denomination in a particular manner to provide so Jt- amply, so scrupulously for the youth of its own per rft suasion, lias no dividing line to separate it ftopt the ice genuine impulses of real patriotism, which embra m- ccji in the bonds of love, the whole family of man a kind. lam not in favor of regulations which (hall m- needlessly bear hard on any body or defeviption of ;b- men ; and if a provifocan be incorporated in a law m- for the establishment of public schools, which (hall ' exempt any particular description of people from [or the general tax for that purpose, without opetating he to the injury and deftru&ion of the fyltem, in the t« name of juftiee, let It take place ; but if not, (and ;er it is very much to be doubted, whether such exemp- < tions would not be radically mischievous,) there is 11 >er not a man of any denomination, who pofTefTcs teal in benevolence of heart, and a found undemanding of al- his own interest, and that of the public, who would r- hesitate to pay his full, legal proportion of such tax, ns, over and above what his volantary contribution may of be for tne support of local partial institutions. So the farfromThefepartial institutions, affording' any tuft ws objcdion to the general fyitem contended for, rhey w>t give inconteftible evidence of the superior ability of 1 er- their friends, to contribute to its support. And nd what is equally true, the latter system, in its operati- JUr on will enereafe that abibity ; for knowledge retiu - ge, ces the expenccs of government, in a ratio to its < a th colt, m.ere than a thousand fold. tl " E. Jfd « ( so From the COLUMBIAN CENTINEL res. 1 ' 111 COMMUNICATION. WHILE some of our pretended patriots, whose zeal has run-away with their memories and difcreti sdi. on ' -continually harping on the early aud im menlc fwnfices made by our French and Dutch al lies, in our revolution, and the avidity (hewn by them in acknowledging oar independence, and as- K"» fr ®m pure affedipn ;we fee the Convent!- on of France, on the one hand denying the fait, and imputing the word of motives to the friendfh-'p of Lewis XVI. and on the other hand, we behold ES "ew Dutch Republic, endeavouring to acqu t cate \ cmfelvef of the ;mputatiou :—For we fee in the 1 Pie . declaration of War, against Great-Britain, iuft if lued, and which is dated from the Hague, Mav 2 bHc 1 7 9 6 « th c following exculpatory and 'apologeucal - p ; paragraphs:-.. When England attested, by he force of arms, to fflbjjgate her American Co lonies, which (he had driven to a just ol i • S -»nd when the scourge of war extended her empires ; the States General of the United P-. : . viiicci were cartful to i-bfove a tirict neutrality They did hot fuffer Dutch vrffels to transport ».'» other commodities to" AriKiiui, those to thele unprece dented injustices, without however breaking with the kingdom of Great-Britain, was employed by their High Mightinefles. This mode confilled ia joining with all possible fpecd the alliance of the thr pe&fully interred inSr. Johri'sGharchy-y<.rd, Portf > mouth, according to his'own requell, confirmed by 1 a generous donation to the pool of the church. 1 This gentleman was# native of Hapau, Hefle ' Caflel, in Germany, aadjfor many yeais a resident at Demarara. The insalubrity of this warm cli j mate, induced a gradual decline ; from which he flattered liimfelf with relief by repairing to 1 nor thern situation. But, alas, he had tarried toolong amid the fervors cf the Indian lfles, to regain his heahh, by a happier temperature of air. He lias resided in the vicinity of this town about three months. 1= ■ _ The cxecutuia to the Uft will and tellament of . the deceased, return their mod grateful aeknow.'edg _ ments to the officers of the line who supported the B pall ; the refpeftable gentlemen inhabitants, whoat e tended the funeral ; and more especially to the fair elt part of the creation who honored the worthy dead, by a tribute of voluntary and uiuolicited ref s P c &* d — What though iji fereign climes, remote from home, The dying stranger gently links to reft ; !* Yet man's vast brotherhood (hall build his tomb, And the lorn pilgrim lodge on nature's breast. o In death it holiest fellpwfliip llivine; Life may divide ; but death cnites :he whole ; e Drawi round the world, one wide encircling line, 1. And girti all mankind in from pole to pole 1 Hence, equal tenants of the filen grave, ~ And fellow citizens iw death's domains ; Whatever country holds the eood, the brave, '' Shall chaunt the requiem o er their lov'd remains. v P a Auction Sales, g , Irom Leghorn, conlifting of the following articles. Florence Oil in cases 01 I* bottles, and flail" otf° ( e Cafiile Soap in^fes i- Tallow Candles n Anchovies * K 1]; Capers • jS 5 y Olives 1- Juniper Berries in bales Manna, Flaktj Ditto, in forts ; t> Almonds 'p Perrr.cfan Cheese Id. French Claret, is caflis 1 t Ditto, in bottles :ie Twine •j- Hair-Powder 1 . Pomatum. , The conditions of fa!e will be—all sums uy notes at 60 days: from 1000 dollars upward. in a P" o- proved end or fed notes at 90 and no days. 1 ; Edv/artl Fcx, Auctioned cr Aaguft o t