cgasettg* P f/I.L A DEL P HI A, WF-DNLiSDAV KVENJNG, fftPTEMBtR For the Gazette of the United Stats.6. t-IR. FEN NO, THERE is a certain c'afs of people in *ur country, who term therrtfelves " exclu sive patriots''*—" true republicans." Some of thefs men are perpetually railing at the mcafures of our general government, and abuling thole characters which have been felefted by the citizens of the United State> to fill the higheil ofaces. These people have oftea talked of B itifii influence and British gold. They have, on ail becafmns, pt'oteftcS that a fhamcfnl prediledion sot . the British government has infliienced the conduft of the officers of the United' Stales, From the account which these exclusive patriots give of themselves, and of the men cntrufted by the people, one would fuppofc that none ed perpetual scenes of riot and debauchery • God forbid that I (hould ever hear this fail v of a fuccefTorof Wm. Penn, but were I t< > be told this, I ihould shun this man ami hi 1 party. PLAIN TRUTH. £ • ■ [ rh'.s writer might, to evident advantage, hav extended the implication of his fubjedt to evir J country where th«re is a degree of lreedom whicj - , enables fad ion to exalt its clamorous throat. Lool e to England, and what a ciifgufting piSare of I u 1 mm def* vity and de' afement do her exclusive pa t iot plefcnt to thp sickened fight ! £xamine inn the anions of her Ra; üblican facles and in the highways, ag-infl the cor = , ruj)t aitminift ration, their designs againlt p'lhlicl: 1 be'lJf, and their attempt? on the conllitution 1 Pu-fue them into their private walks,and you ihul j firtd them i'.eots and knaves—drunkards, deb&u t chees, gamblers, atheifls, diiturhcrs of th« publii peac, Jnd violator* of all law, human and divine s Turftyourcyo- to that other land, called «f-li I hcrty, where evory thing i» sophisticated,"and ftofh ing is any fonger reevgnifed by its right name— where all th-; diftinotions between virtue and vice honesty and villai' y, *are cor.fr undsd, obfeured and obliterated—where anarchy with the endow ments of Mohammed's angel, employs them to ; t purpefe wh-r&ly the revcrfc—Look at this' ghaitlj . den of human monsters, and furvev the !ou'.l aae , : forward champion! of liberty ! Read the life ol I Orleans, the history of a Sicycs a Barras, or aRq WcColerre— Continual fcc'Bcs of riot, debauchery afld i,Eliminations ef the most brutal kind, difgufl t j the f.nfes, antt draw down involuntary curs t or | | th: fa-r Goddess herfisM; in whefo name, by impi ous profanstion, lueh .munllrtiii enormities have ' been perpetrated ' The norm* iuict 7.Hit talis, held in veneration by the goalikefages and heroes of every age, from early days of Greece, and through the eventful xra of the Roman Republic, down to o*r own : rime; this invigorating watchword, this name of fweet< ft found, tranfmi::*] vrith/acred zeal irom l.ytargus to Solon, and from iolua to the Bruti and the Cat»« of Rome, and thence through later ; g-< j • comes, inthefe lucter day., Wlfgritt.ully.'from tht mouths of excluHve patriots, a mere nc.Ntn indeed —O ! 1 iberty how haft thou been sported with ! thy naine in the mouths of Cannibals, and th« guardian (hip of thy temple cntrufted to thydeai iieft foes! tan rude Ignorance hear thy illuminat ing torch through thj,«!ark rtfllms of Gothic dul tlefs ? O ! GoJdef, ! be c»er preftnt with thy A nierican republic, i;i thy true and defined form'; and-let not not unbound, J liberty or unbounded def potifm, twafad extremes whicb meet, bear down 'with torrent-like force, all the Corinthian pillars of a society, apparently deftinedfer the lift refuge of pure, wholesome and temperate liberty.] [The following elahorate production from the pen of B/nj. F. Bache, who maybe jtiftly called the •' glafsof fafhitrti and th • mould of form" to all the fec'udary printers of the is p«blilh ed a- currcborative of the afTertion that a verycon fidera 1 le decree of weaknefc i 4 a ncceflary recjuifite to form an ohftinate and malicious adherent to the government-hating faflion. I will vraturt to affcrt that th»ie is not a vulgar pedagogue in the State, who would not ferule a boy, that, ftould offer a coinpofiti.'ii couchej in such vulgar, empty and unmeaoiog terms. Yet this autlior is the great oracle of fadion. Dark, dark. indeA). iholl be the ißTelleAj of tthoje vota riis who can be beholden to such el for the leadingarticle* of their faith. 1 befeerh th*e, t'tar Bache, if thou beareft any ldfre caufe of liberty and equality, to r"for! to some abler engine, than thine own bunghng 6ft,. or that frowning (bade by which thy cause has so long obumbrated, will finally iarten it entirely out of exigence.] To THE NjrirK jIMiKICAN. IT is neither from the force of your ar guments, nor a diminution on my fide of the pleasure of confuting them, that, my answers have been rather dilatory for some tifie past. Circumstances of a private na ture may ftiil continue to male our corrJpon dence to but you IViay reft aiiured that I will perform my promise, and that your letters to the Chevalier d'YrujotfiH be duly answered. The objeft of your last, is to prove " that the arming on the part of the Spaniards was not merely for the purpoft;of felf-defence." To this end you think you find in Mr. Blount's letter the refutation of every thing the minister has advanced in his correspon dence ; you fay that it is absolutely itnpof fible during the interval between the firft of December and the 27th of February, when the Chevalier d'YYujo the firft notice to the Secretary of State of the intended ex pedition, there ihould have been fufficient time to examine and 3gree 'upon the plan to fend the fame to Canadn, and to raifi the forces v'-hich he supposed to have'marched towards towards the lakes. To this I an swer that / cannot Jelk-oe flint this project was communicated to the Brit if !i minister the firft of December for the firft time ; this is an arlitrcry choice of dates, upon which it is easy to build plausible argument;, and I will add, there are powerful reasons to in duce me to believe that the firft idea of this expedition was conceived for a feng tirac previous to the epftch 1011 have tho't proper to select. I will not fay that the fi.n ori 1 J gloated »a Philadelphia.. tn the month of 1 November such an attempt was - : a ken of at Montreal, and if the governor oP : Canada was the author of this project, Mn a Lifton arid his aflociates, might easily have i' r received their imlruftions in tiirte to co-ope rate on their pirt. An expedition of this 1 ■ft nature has long been a familiar idea in that • ]d British po(Te!Fion. When Miranda escaped a from the Spanifli colonies, whether from h- fentment or vanity, he not only suggested e- this plan to federal very refpeftable people 1 t( > in the United States, but also laid it before ft the cabinet of St. James in England ; and 1 in it is probjble that being in-pofleflion of thele ] data, the court of London gave orders, as ; id soon as the war had been declared, to its a- 1 "3 j gents here and in Canada, to endeavour to 1 Id i carry the plan into effefl. From Blount's 1 in t letter, it evidently appear!! that the expedi- t 'fe 1 1 ion had beea in contemplation long before ' of ; .Chilho!m was' for while Blount 1 ie i on the one handj was of oplhion, that Chif be, holm would return through Carolina to mix 1 among the Indians, he allures on the other, 1 li- that a person had already gone to England to t 'ft , hurry the business : this letter, with equa? 1 of evidence, that the firft design of this expedi- i |g tion was of a long standing, as there had f 1 ; been time enough to form a plan, whence 1 of ; probably originated the movements denoun- r it. ced by the Spanilli Minister, and afterwards f i-; to alter it to another more vast and exten- 1 ; five. The expreflirns of Blount leave ijo t id j room to doubt of this wheo, speaking to ) 0 Carey, he fays, " that the plan tv'tll be on a v is { more extensive f ale than was at flrjl intended." t | These circumstances prove even to demon re j ftration, Mr. Native American, (hat the arbi- v y | trary choice of dates, upon which you want to \ £ | found an argument has«not the lea ft weight, r j and that Blount's letter, under which .you f j. endeavour to fhclter yourfelf, of pre- v :o fen ting to your friends me3ns of defence, h totally cocfounds and destroys them. You f; J j afterwards proceed to cenfnre the Spanish y 1 ■ minister for his observations on the speech e ; r of a member of Cangrtfs, who, he fays, is o r | generally jenown to be the of admin > nid ration ; and to enforce this censure, yon f || bring to your afliftance, that it is consider- o ed in England as a high breach of privilege to si l c criminate a member of the Hcrnfe of Com- n :. mons for what he utters in rliament ; you likewif* fay that it it declared in the confti- d tution of the United States, that no mem- ii her of ekltr houfefball be quejlioned for any ei 1, fpeeeh of debate made therein any other place : tl but thl* is to be nnderftood merely as it res- 1 a peels the refponfihility. If the members of ti >, Parliament or Congress, have the liberty of / speech, the public likewise have a right, if both herein a in England, to form an opi- ft f nion ttpon their opinions. I will agree with I 1 you, that the minj,fter of Spain has deviated tl. n in this as to the point of form, But he has bi e certainly been very in point of fa 3. It To fay that Mr. William Smith was not the a y organ of the will of administration, and that having entered Trinidad with drums beat- if ing and colours flying, of Mr? Pickering ol " having fought in the glorious cause of A- ra . merican independence, and of British hu manly in the eonrfe of our war." All these teftimonie3 you aflert are presented 1 to fedwee the minds of the ignorant ; but, Mr. Native Amer(can, can you deny the truth of all these assertions ? And can you on . give the name of feduflioo to the reprefen- hr ■ tation of fafts, as notorious as they are un- at just, and the exposition of the duplicity of th a nation, rn whose minister Mr. Pickering I ' put fnch blind , American people judge of the defender of St Mr. LMon, and of the secretary of slate, ou when he dares to consider the just rernem- or brancc of this conduft lile a snare to seduce fui ar.d inflame the minds of the ignorant. 1 cu VERUS. in '7 he foljo w;ngparticular/ refptclirtg the lajl mo- ou merits of Louis XI. are extraHed fro/n a we colleflion of notes found aniongfl the papers of pu the refpeßable bnt unfortunate Maleejhrbes, thi one thethree council f rity. • " When Dcf-ze had fmtftied his defence, e he read it to us. I never heard any thi% more pathetic. Tr«ncli« and I were mov is ed to tears. The King said, «*. mvfl f u p it prtjs it—l do not served both my throne my life, and I • never repented I did. i " It was I &ho firft him of the - decree of death palled against him : he was in the dark—his back turned to a lamp plac i ed on trie chimney—his elbows leauing on • the table—his fa<;e covered with his hands. The noile I made started him from his medi tation—he looked at me—rose and said, For two hours I have endeavoured to recoiled, , if in the whole course of my reign, I have de ■ served from my fubjeSs the lea ft reproach, and i I swear to you, Mr. de Malfherbts, in all [ the truth of my heart, as a men going to appear i before God, that I have ever 'and ctn/lantly wil -I{J the happinrfs of the people and never formed a wish of the leaf} injury to them." - Remarks of the French Editor. And thia is the last tyrant of the French! This is the sanguinary despot whose blood it was necelTary to spill as the price of liber ty ! Ah ! tether fay, he was their last fa ther : and iu hirn what a father have they not 101 l ! Nevertheless, an impious horde daily in sult his memory j but the homage of all Europe and the majority of the French of all parties revenge his manes from the_ at tacks of the unjust and patricidal gang ; his bjood has rebounded on their beads ; and their countenances bear the blasting marks of disgrace. The son of St. Louis is in Heaven, where his pure and celestial fdul implores of the Almighty that forgivenefs of his enemies, which he befeeched for them in his last prayers on earth. The monsters (hudder with rage, when they thus percdve us speak the language of posterity. But, if they have had the power to tear him from , our luve and divide the spoils, they cannot ravish from his manes the tribute of our tears. Annal£s Universelles. NEW-YORK, September 25. Sailed from Bermuda Sept. loth, 1797, on board the febooner Lucy, Loudon Bai ley, mailer, for New York; on the 14th, at 2 P. M. was called up and told that there was a schooner cloCe on board of us. I had no sooner got on deck than the Jeter, j hailed us from whence ? we answered from St. Thomas's ; he ordered us to hoist out . our boat immediately and come, on board 1 or that he would fire into us ; in the con- 1 fufion and having a heavy boat it wasdifß- ; cult to get up tackles ; took up Come time, j in which he hailed us several times with 1 threats for our delay; after having got „ out the boat, capt. Bailey and two hands* weht on board ; the people were- instantly I put ifi irons and the boat sent back with < three of their crew, who proved to be ' Frenchmen ; they immediately took com- a mand of the teffel, and the privateer order- * ed them to (leer S. by W. for that night ; J, the people who were sent on board behaved 2 with decency'towards us all that night, and « the privateer kept'clofe by us. In the ! morning following sent her teat on board, and ordered me on board with all my pa pers ; he then ordered the people who were on board to come with me, and left the r crew who came on board in their room $, on my arrival 011 board of the priva'teer, c< was ordered into the cock-pit or the place where the capt. kept, who received me po- _ litely and allied if I was the owner of that (chpoiler ; I told him that I was the super cargo of her; he then told me that Iyas a 11 gobd prize* and it was his orders to carry '' in every vciTel to or from English ports : he. then told me to be c and is! with hitii and tell him what I had on board, which I did re fpetling the cargo, and as I fpeke French 'ij we entered into a familiar discourse, when he told me that although I w ( ns a lawful prize, yet he would let me go upon conditions. s The conditions he proposed were, that he r ' Ihould have a calk of- rum, a barrel of sugar " and a calk of w>ater—underft'anding that I had if viral turtle that I fhottld fend him g', two of them—but by begring with him* k n» sr.J leiu s hi,,; of my miifcrtttne} l,y be'n> z ~, ftipwreclceJ but a ft.-*- moHtfis ago a ':.d loft J my ail, be wis (atisfied with a demijohn of ?, ruin and fifty wt. of sugar, with two of the ig heayicil rartle, a cask of water, & c . we v- having ualy one iremaining ; then he told P~ that 1 ir.ilit tike the men on board ~j wUm he had-as prisoners, which I could :e not deny, although I told him J was fliort iy ' of water and provisions ; he told me that I 10 j woul.l be daily meeting with 'velfels who e_i < wop »' give us a supply ; I thin enquired :o j the name of the privateer and his name, g i which he give me in writing, certifying in j that he had viiitcd me and put to many pri i, , foners on board. ■ The privateer's name he called I.'Efpicgle, captain's name Le Ear ry> from Porto Rico ; he then let me go. on board again, and ordered his people to J. come back, and sent the male of the {Era is Andromache with ei;Sff men or. board, and told us that we might go, but when I came !, ( to examine "th; they had plundered i- : every thing that they ccftlil % their hands >t j upon, 200 dollars in cash, and to the amount yj of iOo dollars *in different other articles; e but to do the capt. justice I believe it was i, unknown to him, for he sent me back a is new coat whichfthey had taken, but altho' •- I told his lieutenant of the loss of my mo a ney, he told the mate of the /hip that it I was more than his life was worth to make' them return it, so was glad to get quit of h themfo. Friday 15th, 'spoke the /hip Eli 1, za, capt.*Neal, from Plymouth (Eng.) bound to Charleston, 49 days out. We hoisted out our boat, and the mate of the i> (hip who was on board with four hands - went on board of her, the capt. let him have I a hundred weight of bread and part of a s harrel of pork in paying him all the money s he hap, which was three fourths of a dol t Jar; it was. very lucky for us, as we must t have been in diftrtfs had we not got that a ample.supply. Capt. Barry told me that - there was a sloop and a trig cruifmg on e the coatt from Porto Rico, and it would 1 be likely I would fall in with them, there s .fore he had given me the certificate of hav > in PT visited me ; he had taken three prizes, - and said he wanted only ohe'more then he I should return to port. GEORGE BROWN. S No fubje&s are more interesting in a free - commercial country, than that of bauk -1 ruptcy and | imprisonment for debt. The . difficulty of framing a fyftcm of laws that - shall do justice to creditors without fub > jesting unfortunate debtors to wnnecefTary ' r igor, is an obstacle that has not yet been - surmounted. But" laws for this purpose i ought to exist, and a humane legislator can '/ oot quietly negleft to frame them. In a free country, it is a maxim that no - .Tiari should be permitted to redress his own 1 Wrong*. It is the prerogative of the body politic to punifli Why then do the tar.-s permit imprisonment for debt ? ; This imprisonment is to be vindicate*! 1 only on one of these principles—either as . the means of iecuring the person of the . debtor, that he may riot leave, the country , and evade the laws—or as punifhmfent for fraudulent con^utS —or a ccrr.pul/ion todif . close seCreted property. In all which cases, ! wh « n proved, imprisonment for debt is f doubtless juftiiinble. But I contend," that this species of pp. : nifhment, in the two last cases, should not be left to the will, caprice or revengeful , passions of the creditor. The cases of frauds should be proved to a court of justice, and the length of imprisonment {hould be defin ed by law—or fixed by the of the court. If appears to be a great defeft in our laws to leave it in the power of a creditor »o this species of punishment at his pleasure. Even where the debtor r has been really guilty of unfair conduit, the creditor ought not to pronounce his fentence—:t is permitting an individual-to exercise a right that belongs to the legisla ture, and giving very improper latitude ta human paflions and frailty. But when the debtor has not been guilty of frauds or unfair dealings, it is not only hard, but extremely unjust, that he Ihouhl be in the power of a mercdefs creditor. The law should never p •irrit one man to give another undeserved pain, or to deprive Jiis family and his country of his services. * The inuocent {hould be legally diftin gll ifiled from the guilty. The puuiflmient oi the guilty {hould be defined and limired by law, and the innocent {hould not fnffer at all. These things are not well ordered in our country. The laws are deficient and ought to be amended. [Minerva.'] Eank of North America, September Btb, 1797. 0 M Mon days", will be fcrved on. the Pay. ers;.,-'nd the like Notices on every Monday, ,tiH fh- further ordrrjof the t'L-eilors—Perfon- wi