I tließritiflv army lias marched qufte through it; Sad the Engliih have used every policv of flattery, of terror, and severity, but nil in vain, and wovfe than in vain ; ail has confpii ed to make the people of New-jc !'ey foine of the moll brave and Jkilful to resist them. New-York, before the commencement of hos tilities,was supposed to be the moii luke warm of the middle States, in the opposition to the de signs of the Engliih. The Engliih armies have invaded it from Canada and from the ocean, and have long been in pofleffionof three.islands, New- York Island, Long-lfland, and Staten-lfland ; yet the relt of that Province has flood immoveable, through all the varieties of the fortune of war, for four years, and increases in zeal and unanimity every year. I think, therefore, there is not apoffibility, that any one of the Thirteen States ihould ever volun tarily revolt or fnbmit. The efforts and exertions of General Howe, in New-York, Loiig-Jlland, Staten-lfland, New-Jer sey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland, to obtain recruits; the vail expence that he put his pav-mafter to in appointing new corps of officers, even general officers: the pains they took to in iift men, among all the llragglers of those coun tries, and among many thousands of prisoners which they then had in their hands ; —all these jneafures obtaining buj three thousand fix hundred men, and very few of these Americans, accord ing to General Howe's own account,ihews, 1 think, to a demonstration, that no voluntary revolt or fubmiflion is ever to be apprehended. But even supposing Rhocle-Ifland ihould submit, what could this small colony of fifty thousand fouls do, in the midil of Maflachufetts, Connecticut, and New-Hampshire ? Supposing Delaware, thirty thousand fouls, ihould submit, what influence could it have upon the great States of New-Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia, among which it lies ? If Georgia, at the extremity of all, ihould sub mit, what influence could this little society of thirty thousand fouls have upon the two Caro linas and Virginia ? The colonies are at such vast distances from one another, and the country is so fortified every where, by rivers, mountains, and forefts, that the conqueftor fubmillion of one part has no influence upon the reft. I have the honor to be, See. JOHN ADAMS. MR. CALKOEN. E ROPE AN INTELLIGENCE. LONDON, August 12. The Britons of France, in whose country the city of Nantz lies, appear wifely to be as careful •t the rights of the Crown, as they are of the rights of the People; and to be as ready to support the former, as they are determined to maintain the latter. Carefully avoiding the wild chimeras of mo dern reformers, who would either abolish mon archy totally, or leave it a mere empty name, they think the prerogatives of the Crown not only com patible with the liberties of the people, but abso lutely netelfary to the preservation of those liber ties. They also take care, left certain revolutionists Ihould luffer themselves to be carried away by no tions of ambition, that they abliortlie idea of tak ing the crown from him who at present wears it, or from those upon whom the inheritance of it is entailed by law. A short extraift from the Nantz address will clearly (hew both their wisdom and their spirit:— The city of Nantz having had the advantage of being one of the firft in the kingdom, to raise its voice to claim and allcrt the unalienable rights of the people, feels itfelf bound to manifelt, in the molt striking manner, its attachment to the privileges which the National Allembly has so nobly and so courageoully aflerted. '< It therefore eagerly embraces this opportu nity to declare, that it adopts, and will moil: fted faft'ly adhere to, not only yourrefolution of the 17th of June, but to all those that followed it. " That the interest of the people ofthis coun try is inseparable from that of their Sovereign, and that they never will be able to (hake off the yoke under which they have 1b long groaned, but by giving the greatell vigour to the executive pow er, the citizens of Nantz 1 wear upon the Altar of "''eir Country, in the presence of the dreadful and common Judge both of Kings and Subjects, that they will maintain the Royal Authority be longing to the Crown, and will refill, to the ut most of their power, the attempts of those who may be daring enough to wiili to divide it with any body of men whatever. " Full of gratitude to a long line of Kings, who strove to break the chains made for man in mges of barbarism, and to reltore him to the dig nity of his nature— " Penetrated with the 1110 ft profound refpeft for the virtues of the beneficent Prince who has restored to France her National Aflemblies and *