PUBLISHED WEDNESDAYS AND SATURDAYS BY JOHN FENNO, No. 41, BROAD-STREET, NEAR THE EXCHANGE, NEW-YORK., [No. 23, tf Vol. ll.j THE TABLET. No. CXXVII. (continuation.) " The multitude, in all countries, are patient to 0 Certain point." GOVERNMENT can never be so far redu ced to a science, as to render it proper for Legislators to a>■ all countries, art patient to a cer tain point. Tliey will generally bear, as much as ought to be borne by human uamre, before they reiufe obedience, and Hy to wars and inlnr reiitions for relief. There are tew or no revolts where the error has been principally on the iide of the opprefied. Perhaps fnuie circuinftances of difrcfpeCt or provocation may attend the oppo iition, but the fundamental maxims of a revolt ing people will gnin advocates in proportion as they arc difcufied. Clamors and (ufpicions may ori ginate in trifles, and often defcrve no notice.— But deliberate JifafieAion among the mass of the people, inuft be redrefled by the government, or will retl. ess itfelf. To cherilh the capriceofan individual, or com munity, is a ready way to incur ill will and con tempt. Opinions that have 110 reasonable foun dation will be transitory. They may (afely be clilputed- and moderately oppoled. 1 here can never be any danger in bringing them into pub lic examination. Nothing tries the merit of pub lic regulations better than to bring them to the test of an experiment. It they Iftrink from the trial, it is an evidence that they contain fomefaife jnaterials ; b,ut llill the clamor excited against a measure tinder contemplation is no furticient proof, that it will not turn out favorable in the experiment. There is an eflential difference in the sentiments of any people relative to a law, before and after it is put into execution. \Y hile a law is in agitation, athouland feelings and pre judices may give it too bad or too good a color ing ; but when it takes effeOi, it begins to bee.v nmined among the people, more upon the ground of its own merit, and will finally itand or fall, as its real'charaifter deierves. Ihe chief enquiry a legislator fhouid make, is, what the real jnterefts of the community require of him. Having aicer tainecl this point, he will do well to enquire whether the popular opinion will probably I'anc tiou he is abotit to adopt. If he finds the turrent of prejudice againll him, lie will, by tleg.ees, be able to reconcile the feelings of the WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1790. people to their true intei efts. It is a matter of a good deal oldifcretion to coutt eraift errors that may exist in society, against the public good ; but the difficulty of the talk will never deter a firm and virtuous legiflatorfrom making attempts. Moderation is compatible with finnnefs, and he will not, ii he be a prudent man, defeat his pur pose by ralhnefs, any mote than he will lose it by delay. Discretion is as much a public virtue as honelty or patriotifin ; but it can never be de creet to flatter people in their , • ejudices and faults, when it would promote their prosperity to lay them aside. TRANSLATED FOR THE GAZETTE OF THE UNITED STATES. ADDRESS of the NATIONAL ASSEMBLY to the PEOPLE of FRANCE. Fiskuart 11th, 1793. (CONTINUED) SUCH is onr work, people of hVance, or rather such is yours ; for we are but your organs, it is you who have enligliteued,' cncouraged and supported us inour labors. Whjr period can be compared with the present ? Wii an honora ble inheritance youare about trantmittingtopof terity ! Raised to rank of »icizeiis, admillible to every employment, enlightenedcenforsof the administration ! Although you are not the drpo fitories, you are certain that itverj' thing is done through you, and for you, who are equal in the fight of the law ; free to ast, to Ipeak, to write, accountable to no man, but only to die common will . what condition can be fairer ? Can there be a citizen, deserving that name, who dares cast a look behind, who would wiih to dig up the ru ins with which we are surrounded, to rebuild the former edifice ? But what has not been said ? Wh.it has not been done to weaken in you the impreiGon which so much good ought to produce ? W: have d:- jlroyej every thing, they fay : that means, that eve ry thing ought to be reettabli that it is attempted to take off its force by faying, that the ac counts will not be fettled. If this assertion is true, the non-as sumption is plainly unjust—For the burden is confeffedly unequal now, and the only reason for refufing to take this burden off some of the States, is the certain afluranee that they will be relieved from so much as (ball be found to exceed their (hare, when the accounts shall be lettled. But if the accounts are not to be fettled at all, the States, which are now overloaded, have no justice to expect but from the aflumption. It cannot be known with certainty which will be a ereditor, or which a debtor State, at present. It theaccounts (hould not be adjuftcd, ve e must remain in ignorance ; we ought therefore to exclude all consideration of the other claims* because it would be useless, and apply the principal of equali ty to the State debts.—The debts to be assumed arc either duly proportioned among the States, or they are not. If they are so proportioned, then it is certainly pdlitic, and not unjust, because it would be equal to afifume them. If they are now unduly pro portioned, it is even in terms against equality to leave them upon the States. If the war has made a random distribution of debts upon the States, it is best to make the amount which is to be left unsettled, as little as may be. For the probability is, that as you diminish the unsettled amounts, you make the inequalities less. This will serve as an answer to those also who fay, that supposing a fettle— rr.ent to take place two or three years hence, a State may be re lieved from a light burden of its own debt, and be obliged to bear, as its proportion of the assumed debt, one more weighty. For it is not certain that it will have in that cafe more to bear than its part, and if it Ihould turn out to be more, the balance may be known almost as soon as the intcreft will commence—The aller tion that the accounts will not be fettled, has been made with confidence. To judge how far we ought to guide ourconduft by it, it is enough to examine what States it corner from. Let the gentlemen who make it a{k their own hearts, let them look round and ask one another, whether their States are the more clamorous for their dues, or apprehensive of a fcttlement, which will expose their delinquency. In this place, where fadls arc known, this question will be an argument. But what ground is there for faying that the accounts will not be adjusted f This was positively engaged hy the former govern ment. It is improper for Congress to a6t as it Congress was not to'be truftcd. Commiflioners are employed in the business ? A motion to extend their time and powers has met with no opposi tion, and it is maturing into a law. Who will oppose it ? Not New-England ! we wifti it—we have pledged ourselves to support it ; you ought to believe us, when it is so easy to bring us to the test. I have myfelf moved rcfolutions —the belt I could devise— which I thought v*ould facilitate—would forcc a fcttlement. I [Whole No. 127.]