J. V-,v J of his animosity to Frn*"e*, t**nu'd have difcovercd that however humiliating It might be to wait for a foreign l>£tc, to atlift the interpretation of an a& depending on the national authority alone, yet in the cafe of a treaty, tfhich is as much the treaty of a foreign nation, as it is ours ; and in which foreign duties and rights are as much involv ed v as ours, the sense of though to be learnt from the treaty itfeJf, is to be e qually learned by both parties to it. Neither of them can have a right more than tfryc other, to fay what a particular article means \ and where there h equality without a judge con futation k as cotjfiftent; with dignity as it is conducive to harmony and friendjhip, let Vattel however be heard on the ftibjeft. ** The third general maxim, or principle, on the fubjeft of interpretation [of Treaties] is i ii That neither the one nor the other of the in -4* t ere fled or contracting pou-crs has a right to in~ lerpretiht ad or treaty qt its pleasure. For it li you are at liberty to give my promise what sense you please, you will have the power of obliging me to db Whatever you have a mind, contrary to my 'intention, " and bevond my real engagement: and re -44 ciprocaJlv, Jf l am allowed to explain my pro %t mifes as J pkafe, I may render them yain and U * Ivftve, h giving them a si*f e W te different from 44 that in which they were prefenled to yon, and in * which you nrnjl have taken them in accepting 44 them:'' Vat. B. II- c. vii. §• 265. The writer ought to have been particular ly sensible of the improbability that a precipi tate and cxparte decision of the question arif -ing under the guaranty, could have beenjn tended by the proclamation. He had but just gone through his undertaking, to prove that the article of guaranty like the reft of the treaty is defenfive, not offenfive. He had ex amined his books and retailed his quotations, to shew that the criterion between the two kinds of war is the ciromittance of priority in the attack. . He could'not therefore but know, that according to his own principles, the question whether the United States, were under an.obligation or not to take part in the war, was a quejlion offa£t whether the firft at* tack was made by France or her enemies. And to decide a question ol fact, as well as, of principle, without waiting sot such repre sentations and proofs, as the absent and in terested party might have to produce would have been a proceeding contrary to the or dinary maxims of justice, and requiring cir cumstances of a very peculiar nature, to war rant' it, towards any nation. Towards a na tion which could verify her claim to more than bare justice by our own reiterated and formal and which must in her present fmgular and interesting situation have a peculiar sensibility to marks of our friend (hip or alienation, the impropriety of such a proceeding would be infinitely increas ed, and in the fame proportion the improba bility of its having taken place. There are yeafohs of another fort which K'Quld have been a bar to such a proceeding. It would have been as impolitic as it would have been unfair and unkind- If France meant not to insist on the gar ran tyj the metifure, without g ving any pre sent advantage, would have deprived the 'United States of afuttire claim which may be of importance to their fafety. It would have inspired France with jealousies of a secret bi as in this country toward some of her ene mies, which might have left in her breast a spirit of contempt and revenge of which the effects rtiight be felt in various ways. It must in particular have tended to inspire her with a disinclination to feed our commerce with those important advantages which it al ready enjoys, and those more important ones, which it anxiously contemplates. The nation that consumes more of the fruits of our foil than any other nation in the world, and flip-" plies the only foreign raw material of exten five use in the United States would not be unnecefTarily p< ovoked by those who under stand the , public interest, and make it their study, as it is their interest to advance it. I am aware that the common-place remaik will be interposed, that, " commercial privi leges are not worth having, when not fecurcd by mutual interest; and never worth purchasing, bccaufe they will grow of themselves oat ol a mutual interest." Prudent men, who do not fuffer their reason to be misled by their preju dices will view the fubjeft in a juftcr light. They will rtfle£V, that if commercial privileges are not worth purehafing, they are worth hav ing without purchase ; that in the commerce of a great na'ion, there are valuable privileges which may be granted or not granted, or grant ed either to this or that country, without any fenfibJc influence on the interest of the nation itfelf ; that the friendly or unfriendly disposi tion of a country, is always an article of mo mtnt in the calculations of a comprehensive in terest I that fomr Sacrifices of interest will be made to other motives; by nations *s well as bv individuals, though not with the fame fre quency, or in the fame pioportions that more of a diiinterefted conduit or of a coiiaufi found ed on liberal views of interest, prevails in some nations than in others, that as far as can be seen of the influence of the revolution on the genius ' and the policy of France; particularly with "re gard to the Unttcd States, everv thing is 10 be hoped by the, latter on this fubj'6l, which one country can reafrrtiabjy hope from another. In this point of view a greater error could ndt have been committed than in a step, that might have turned the present disposition of France to open her commerce to us as far as a liberal tion of her interest would permit, and her fjiendfhip towards us, and confidence in our fritndfhip towards her, could prompt, into a disposition to, shut it as closely us as the united motives of interest, of distrust, and of ill-will, coul,d urge her. On the fuppoikion that France might intend to claim the guaranty, a hasty and haifh reftfal before we were alked, on a ground that accu'ed her of being the aggrr{Tor in the war against e *ery power in the catalogue of her enemies, and ;n a enfis all her fcnfibility must be alive ».>w/ids ihe Uni'id Siau t, woulfl taavc given e- Very puffiole lirratafltfn'to a 4V, as ie minding all concerned, that as the United States were at prace (thpt state not affiftcd by foreign wars, and only to be changed by the legislative authority of the country) the laws of peace were still obligatory and would be en forced, and the inference is so obvious and f In 1793, I A year rendered (acred to National prosperity By the extin&iou of Religious Divisions, The foundation of'this was laid, JAt the expence of aflocFared Individuals, Unaided by Parliamentary Grants,' By Sir John Newport, Bart, Chairman of their Committee, Mr. Lemuel Cox, a Native of Boiton, Architect. LISBON, June 24. SQine of your pajiers talk of a fleet from this country, .WJiich is to join Lord Howe, at Portsmouth.— It is true, that there are'a few good veflels here, which have been late ly, in some measure, prepared for sea ; but they are, at present, with out stores, and have 110 c half their complement of meri. Lad week they went over the Bar, and had a mock engagement, biit soon return ed ; the bowsprit of one of them war carried away. PARI S, June 22. The wits again begin to ridicble the new conltituiion. Some call it the constitution of Bentabole ; others the extempore constitution ; another calls it a Table of Matter. Danton compares it to the thunder, which is occasioned by clouds of anarchy heaped upon one another ; and on a central battery, wbitfft fires in all directions npon' the afflatus. It is reported, that 40Revolution ary Females, of tHe w Society of Fra ternity, presented themselves on the 18th inft. at the Club of Corde liers, to engage them to ifl'ue a re quest to the feiftions, to order all the Women at Paris to join them, Sunday next, in the Champ de Mars, to swear the death of intriguers, to guard Paris, and march against the rebels of La Vendee. 542 NATIONAL CONVENTION TUESDAT, July 2. Deputies from the Department of Core-d'Or appeared at tbe bar, and (aid, "We are French Moun taineers. Your long djfcuffioiH tir« us and all France. You have, how ever, inade amends by giving us a constitution, and liberty triumphs. We profefs obedience to your de crees." On the proposition of Lacroix, the following decree was palled :— " The National Convention pro visionally suspends the payment of all salaries to those who live in the diftri 25th May, 1793. J SPANISH STATE PAPER. Proclamation of Gen. Ricandbs, com manding the Spanish Array againfl France. - THE army over which the Kinpr ha been pleased to give me the command doe* not enter France with boftile inten tions. His Majesty, a conftant'friend o the French monarchy and nations, onlj ptopofcs himfelf to deliver her from tk< horrid depotifm with, which she .is op prefTed and tyrannized by an unlawful, usurping, and unruled assembly, who after having fubverced and trod upon rc ligion, laws, and the fafety of public aw individual property, after having com mitted and ordained, in cold blood, thi mod unheard-of murders ot» the moll re fpe&able and innocent pcrfons, have fil led the meafureof their iniquities*by (htd ding the blood of their lawful and well meaning sovereign. ,For these reasons, the king 6rders mt to declare, as I do declare in his name that all good Frenchmen who, abhorring the erroneous and perverse maxims that have produced, and are productive of ar overthrow, as fatal as it is disastrous, (hal declare themselves to be attached to then monaich, will find in his majesty everj kind of protection and support ; that the troopk whom I have the honor to com mand, shall obfetve the most fcrupuloui discipline, and shall in no manner attach the fafety nor property of any body Tiiat the speediest justice (hall be done tc every Frenchman, who (hall make a well founded complaint against any individua whatever of the Spanish army, and that the troops shall pay ready money foi whatevei is fold or furnifhed to them On the contrary, all those wfl be perfe cted who persevering in Jalfe principles or deluded by the attra&fon of an illufor) liberty, shall fide with the pietended Nati onal Convention, and a& against the