r er« could n«t pierce. The hlgliell terms of res p?ift which could be ufcd, they owed to the Pre sent of the Unite! States. 'This, it might be laid, was leading- to adulation, but it was neverthe left true, whereas the efieace of flattery- is falfe hood and deception. Let gentlemen deny it. Let „ them fay that the country does not entertain these featiments. The yeas and uays, he said, would undoubtedly be taken, when the real friends of the President would be known. (Mr. Giles had said he rejoiced to fee the gentleman determined to go to his feat in Virginia, and did not regret his religna tion. His name will appear to that opinion. It was not present impreflions of the President's con dud, out the whole of his life which (lamped his ch»rafter. His country, the admiring World, and faithful Hirtory, were now the keepers of his fame and rvould keep it inviolate. We might refufe our fuffrages, and thereby separate ourselves from the general sentiment of mankind. We miy be lingu lar ; he will be illustrious. ~ If, said Mr. Ames in we address the President at all, it should be in a refpe&ful manner, for lo;h tefpeft is.infnlt in disguise. He hoped, therefore the motion be« fore them would be disagreed to, at»d that the eri giaal address would be adopted to be continued.]] JOR THE GAZETTE OFTH£ UNITED STATES. NEW THEATRE. The Comedy of the Child of Nature, performed on Friday last was received with the greatest applause, the vivacity of Mr. Moreton ir>the Count was natural and entertaining, Mr. Wignell and Mr. Warren forcibly impreflid the audience, and excited appropriate i'ym pathies, Mrs. Morris (hewed gaiety and spirit in the Marchioness, the Amanthis of Mrs. Merry was, alto gether, fafcinating in the extreme. Such a faithful por trait ol arch simplicity, tender emotion and filial affec tion we do not remember to have seen, (he never o'er fteps the modesty of nature, (lie leeks not £ y artifice to entrap applause, but while (he fitisfits tHe undcrftan ding her appeal is to the heart. Mr. Cooper played Albei to with much propriety and feeling, tho' a part so old was but ill suited to him, he being, aswe are informed, but 21 yeafs of age. This young mail, whole privatechara&er weubderliand to be unimpeachable, pofleffes all the retjuili'es of a firft rate perforner, but the acremonious and cruel attacks which have been made upon him in some of the pa pers, And which breathe rather the spirit of private malice than either of justice or candour, seem to have deprefled his spirits, and abated a little of his ardour, but he need not be alarmed, while he trulls himfelf to the protection of this geherous public, he has nothing to fear from malignant or designing men who, what ever be their motives, may attempt to undermine or dtherwife injure his reputation as an aitor. The play was succeeded by a ballet of which we lhall only fay that Mr. Byrne danced extremely welt, wish Mrs. Byrne had not danced nt all, indeed we hope for her o\vn fake as well as for the fen f-.tionsof the audience that (he may not appear again till (he can Ihew her very great talents to that advan tage which her present embarrassed situation pre cludes. The farce of animal magnetism played f®r the firft thne was truly laughable, and the principal parts were ■well ailed, we (hould be happy to be more particular in commendation if they hart been more perfect in them. _______ DRAMATICUS. F.r the Gazette or rm United Statis. Mr. Fenno, It hat been said often that Frenchmen have rob bed and mafiaered with better excuses than Ame ricauscan plead forjuflifying them as they do, with out the like temptations and in cold blood. I saw with approbation a paragraph in your paper con demning the plunder of pictures and other -outrages in Italy. A reply in the Aurora (hews a fouler spirit than even pi£lur« Healing., A jult censure on the outrages of a conqueror is termed abuse in the Aurora which is devoted to calumny on our ( own government. Excellent decency thai owes no thing-at home. The writer of the reply infills that the world will be benefited by the use the French will make of their colledion. Is this an apology ? It was the creed of the Jesuits that the end will fanftify the means. Surely Mr. Bache'9 correspondent has not turned Jesuit ? To levy contributions in money was ever considered one ef the rigid rights of war— But to war againd the arts and sciences was reserved fer the iafamy of the modern Vandal philosophers. To spare from pillage, Libraries, Pictures, Col leges and Altars was ever deemed a law of war. Conquerors prided themselves in afcrupulous obfer ■vation of it. What a suss their toad eaters In this country made because tTiey had charged their naval officers to forbear molesting some navigator or dif eoverer, whose name I forget. Yet by the bye our quakers and abolition focietics should remember tiiat the French ships destroyed the benevolent Sj erra Leone Settlement which the Euglifo had form ed in Africa. One might expect the French would rob chur ches, because their antichriftian calendar, their ap plause of atheists in their conventions, the perfec tions and murder of priests, &c. &c. have given the world fair warning. But their endless declama tion about the arts and sciences, would lead one to hope some protection for their maftcr-pieces, where ver their conquering arms might seize them. Alas ! this is frail rated ! and Americans are found base enough to jullify it, nay, pretend it is the lore of the arts and sciences that makes prize of the pic tures, statues and booksof Italy. Are these "fair daughters of the ikies'' to be woo'd only by ravilh- < i»g them ? Only sword in hand, and amidst the smoke of burning towns ? Delicate lovers, who j will not be refufed ! , Plainly and seriously, is any man blind to the ( tendency of making plunder or these rarities to de grade the arts and to barbarife men worse than for nserly—for these very things escaped deftrudtion by 1 the old Goths and Varidals. The feeble nations must renounce a property now ' no longer spared by conquerors, as a neighbor na- f tion might befeizej) with a piaure rags, aTid begin , or pursue a war merely to peur the colle&iens ef half a dozen nations and half a hundred cities into 1 the mufesm of Paris. Ridiculous as this passion < is, we find the French avow it, and our vandals ' applaud it. Naples, Florence, Parma, Modena, Turin and Rome, will in future dread to have ma- j . nufcripts, pifturcs and statues that will draw upon j them malfacr», plunder, snd what i» worse, igno- 1 wmy. The trephies of their abafetnerit sre to be - proudly displayed in the m life urn of Pans. A-id : this toe by the gentry'that proclaim fraternity to • the whole world. To pursue the idea before dated, - where will p.ftures hang fafely except in Gibral - tir. Uther European towers are more or less lia : Die to be taken. I In vain is it said, the mnfetim will exhibit in a : groupe the united glory of the aits. Suhjeaing I them to military outrage will degrade them dill > more. Princes, no matter from vanity 01 other motives, have been proud,of-Mm",jg them by their munificence. In future, they will be cau ttous. Not will the French ca(h supply what will 1 be withdrawn by other nations. For while every war may collell (mind the Aurora phrase) rare works of art, fifty waggon loads at a time, who will recotnrr.etid paying lor them. In one word, the poffl-ffiun of these things will be in future precarious, if not dangerous : the taste for them will decline, when ihcy are outraged, ex hibited in waggons, broken, (tamed and bloddy, through five hundred miles of country. The rage of war is thus embittered, by falling on rarities, which wete the pride of a nation, and are now wet or rotten in tents, or gone to drew the fides of the Alps with^their fragments, or to ionmortalife in France, the humble Hate of iheir farmer owners. | The pica that pictures were taken as a ransom for the territory, is pretty enough, an'l well becom ing the Aurora. Have not the neutral states yield ed pidtures by fear, as well as enemies by force The conquering French faints, it fcems, have a right to inherit the earth : and because they forbear to take pofleflion of their inheritance, they have a right to every thing betides. Implacable :nemies, fays the Aurora—And were not the French their enemies also ? The right of the conqueror goes far, it is allowed : but it has bounds. This use of the right, is a horrid abuse, and an injury to man kind, as tfell as the arts. The feelings of mankind will go with the conqueror, when he exposes his enemy to the extreme ot either misery or in-j dignity ; and accordingly, the currency of French principles will be opposed by the remembrance of French exactions. It is tmpoffible to Urip a coun try, arid profclyte it at the fame time -.-Miad that, Mr. B.iche. if the contagion of rapacious anarchy should ihus (top itfelf, the lovers of tranquility and the arts will fay—Amen. . New-Jersey, Dec. 13, 1796. N. B. If the word irata/ loldiers so ofFenfive to the writer in the Aurora and the diead of mafTacre suggested in this paragraph should seem too harsh, let him read the proclamation of the French gene lal Angeieau at Verona. He threatens to burn whole towns and kill evjry fcml if one Frenchman is killed. Gracious heaven, if a drop of enemy's blood is Ihed by the people , who fight for their hearths and their altais! Read Buonaparte's letter refpe&ing Pavia; and, reader, blulh up if you are ashamed of your indignation. Phtladelph ia, MONDAY DECEMBER J9, 1796, Return or Fotes .r' c -r S FOR t- .§ C ' 4 •f', » PRESIDENT 5 i i ,is H AND 1 -S < YFCE-PrtESrDENI ' • s o o New-Hampshire, 0' 6 » Massachusetts, 16 13 1 1 Khode-lfland, 4 4 Conneflicnt, 94 5 Vermont, New-Ynrk, 11 u New-Jersey/ 7! 7 Pennsylvania, 1 1 14 13 Delaware, 3! 3 Maryhnd, 7443 j Virginia, I no i.tj 3 1 Kentucky, T.nnefiee, j North-Carolina, I I 11 6 1 South-Carolina, TScorgia, Total, ~ - ~ T"':' Aurora lately defcarited on the cunning of the Yankees, but is silent on the defection ef the voters of Virginia and North-Carolina.—The Jacobin Buckjkim would not. stick to the Burr. E%tram de mocrats as are houeft, as fume of those who pin their faith on the sleeves of wicked leaders, may be, are dangerous in their principles, and unfit to be intruded with federal authority. They cenfureTear and hate our -conditution, or, as they will acknow ledge, several very important parts of it, and almost all it's admiilidration : its entire overthrow so far from dangerous, much less fatal, is only a new Ihuf flin£ of the pack of clrds, a new chance for the people to chtife a form of government, more pure, tree and amijble. This iilca is chirafterifticof the party, BDd it Ts nor unfair, nor exaggerated in the lead, for'thofe now charged with it, maintain witk-the ze »l of fee taries that fs