flcfts difhonot also on his ftibje&a. Your Majesty, I am sure, will pardon this warmth. It is the eiTufidil of the fin-- cereft regard. The aitiiable part of the picture is not so much a lefTon of what you ought to be, as a prophecy what your Majesty will be." 'The hrit official account which Ge neral Kolcinfko feht to the Supreme Council, at Warsaw, of the battle of 6:h, is the most modest which has c v er been reported by a general under fimi , lnr cirfcumftances. 'i he general fays, " wc hive beeil at tacked by an enemy twice superior to us in . tillery : we iuitamcd a lots not so coiiiidef abfe with refpe& ,o the nuinbta- of killed and wonnried, as to the dtath of the two bravegenerals Grochcwfty and Wodzicki: we loft a!fo a few cannon. Vidiory was ahn>od "deJ*." 1 his firlt account was dated from Ij;s ttirnp near Moligoflez, June the 7th th d«y after the battle. Provincial accounts received at War law mention, that the Ruffians having lv.:;"raffed the Fmall town of Wlcozefcowa, the property of citizen Malachowflii, the iiiha'bitan'.s Were obliged to defend thimfeives, and at lalt Fucceeded in driv ing th em out ; but a few days after .a llrong party of Ruffian Coflacs ret urned arid committed the most horrid cruel- ties : they furrdunded the town and set fw to it, w.n'cfl was wholly consumed bf the Sari'ieS, from which' only one house and the Jewifo Synagogue escaped. Those harbai ians were feeft to push, with their pike.3, into the flames, the women and children, who endeavored to escape from therm Experience has shown the folly of putting soldiers into various coloured coats. Nothing- can eqaal the confufion of which the" motely garbs of the allies liave given rife. A curious ircftance oc curred at Aloft. While the English troops were buying their meat in the market, with ottly their fide arms, and in feemiug fafety, >a patrole of 6oC French horte, in grern uniform, rode into the town without oppofrtion, and drew up in the market place. They were rr.iitaken for a Heflian regiment of green horle, and when they began to cut down our troops, they called out, " Nous fommes Anglais." " Qui, An-' £tau / Fcutres!" waetheanfwer of the French; and at the fame inltan't a re giment of Austrian horse, in bine and red turn ups, emered the place, whom the Engliih miftofak for French, and turned from their real enemy to attack their friends. Ought not this to be a warning to our colonels not to indulge their foppery in drefling out their new corps in all th? colors ot the rainbow. 4Tranjlated for this Gazette. proclamation. Of 7/jomat Brijbane commanding for his Britannic Maj.Jy at St. Mara, J- 1 -drcuhaye and their dependencies* THii, slaves of the Quarter of Port au-Prince have begun to amend ; the flight of the two impojlors who led thsm airay, has opened their eyes ; and in- Head of the flatteiing profpedt which was presented them, they are left to behold only the greatelt and mod im minent danger. His Excellcncy M. "V\ llliamfon has perceived their retunj ■with that goodness which mud make them repent : he has promised them an amnesty and an oblivion of their past faults j and has fixed the condi tions in his Proclamation. That Pro clamation has been sent to me officially by him, with liberty to adopt, in the Quarter of St. Marc, whatever part of it may appear to me proper. Wishing thetefore, to fecorid his intentions, and his desire to save from the last miseries, those unfortunates, who doubtlefi are reproachable with error rather than any ciimiual machinations, I declare and or dain as follows : . Indulgence and Pardon are promised in the name of the King to those of the Infill gent slaves who will, at the Sum "mons which I shall give them, render themselves up to their mailers, and re commence their labours. Ipromife fo lemtily, that no mark of rebutment or diflatisfaaion shall be (hewn to them, and if any unJer such apprehensions, will come to me, I myfelf, will restore them to their matters, and 1 engage my honour that they shall be received with favor. Ail those who thus render themselves, and Will bring with them arms or am munition, shall receive, over and above, a pecuniary recompense as follows : F&r a mufltet in good repair with bayonet 33 A pair of pistols 24 15 A pound of powder or eatridgw ,6 IO A cutlass, poignard or sword A lance Finally I will admit a ccrtain riijrtl bcr of the iifft tvho shall Jsrefcnt them selves, into an armed corps which 1 am railing, and which will be entirely com posed of faithful (laves who by consent of their matters are to be maintained and paid by the Government, and will obtain their libei tj by a iervice of five years. ' Such are the propositions which are rtadtt to the Insurgent (laves, and Which hey have the power of acccpting du ring the term of . This delay is the time for clemency and tnercy ; that of vengeance will presently fuc cecd, if it (hould pass away without effect ; and no restraints will then be kept towards tliofe blind and infatuated enemies whom nothing will have been able to bring back to reafciri, and to the consideration of their real interefb. ilefleft then unhappy fla&sy.tfbd have been lo cruelly led all 1 ay, and ttfiu your eyes to the storm which 13 ready to fall Upon twii Consider that the means by which you have prolonged your state of rebel lion to the present time, are at an end* that your refouiccs for the procuring of arms and ammunition will be loon ex hausted: a rigid watchfulnefs now guards the whiles from the thefts that' you made of their arms in order to turn them again ft them. Relied above all that the Civil ConmiJJioners are 110 longer at hand to procure you those fuccefles, which served and palliated their avarice : the troops destined to oppose you will be no longer neutralised, disorganized and dispersed—that time is no more ; Polverel and Stinlhonax, have fled and betrayed you, as they had before be trayed the whites.—Can you have con ceived the senseless hope of refilling for any length of time with success, the troops of their Britannic and Catholic Majesties ? Behold all the European powers interested in attacking and de ftroyirig you : Behold the fate of the insurgent (laves of Surinam : Contem plate what is already that of the (laves of the Cape, even in the midst of "an apparent momentaiy fuecefs ; they pe rift in the (beets, and in the public places : famine, and the miseries infe- parable from a (late of war, cut them oft in a most (hocking manner—and seem by the depopulation which they occasion, to contend witH the arms of the Kings of Spain and England—The fame scourges await you : the time will come, and it is not far diilant, (and which without doubt many of you al ready realize,) when you will deplore your desertion. Remember that mo ment will not be flow, and that your repentence will then be of no avail.— See on the other hand the advantages whvfch are offered you, if you conform to the above proposals. It is sot you to reflect upon them, and make your elec tion. And you, whites, who are united with the slaves in their revolt; who fufr tain and encourage their rebellion, you no less iniferable vi&ims of the Civil Commiflldneri, contemplate the horrible abyls before you ; leflt'Ct that one fault bungs on another, that despair will not ftifie. repentance. Amnesty and perfect tranquility are equally offered you, if you consent to abjure your errors. The fate of those among you, who participated the par ticular favors of the Commissioners, ought to be An important lesson.—Some have 101 l their lives, others have aatcih panied them, and are without doubt abandoned by them as instruments no longer ufeful, and as dangerous evi dences of their wickedness. The most part have been left, *nd cxpofed Uo our resentment. Return then to wisdom, to reason and to justice.—A sincere furreflder will meet the indulgence of government upright and honett conduct will ensure you those favors which aiepromifcd on these conditions. Finally, I offer you peace—l demand it of you—that a blind reflifal of it on your part may not be the lignal for your deftru&ion. Thomas Brisbane, Commandant. Done at St. Marc's, the 7th Aug. 1794. For the Gazette of the United States. Mr Fenno, I CANNOT help congratulating the Public 011 the opening of the tioneering Campaign in your paper of Saturday. Whatever may be the emo luments attached to public office, abuse and calumny are always sure to be of the party.— Your correfpondeuts of course begin to depreciate merit that they cannot equal. They talk of unex pe&ed acquisitions of property to one of our tirft merchants who has carried on business and on the molt cstenfive Livres. Sous, scale in tlifs city for tlicfe twelve years past, and who of course had all the right to expect to acquire property - which can be derived from indultry and - perseverance in honorable labor and ap i plication to obtain it. Had he been - Without property doubtless it had been t a motive of equal reproach : To have 1 trusted public concerns with one who 1 had (hewn no care of his own, had been e surely deemed excej* ionabl?, and now that there is property it is qdite natural - to lelTen the merit of an indtfftiious pur i fui't of business by an idea of !udden - acqmfitiom So difficnlt it is to please - : ber of ships and u!"e{til hands. This is his bell eulogiiim, and though A. B. has the goodness to wish him among the - Insurgents, it is probable that he and i : all like him might be spared from the • city with less .chance of being milled i from it. ' I I also wilt), thai a man of refpe&nbili- 1 ■ ty and merit may be chosen, one able to ' 1 serve the public, and who has proved this by real service for these 15 years ' 1 pad, and I believe this will in all pro- ] bability be just as well done by our little « city member as by any of the tall gigan- ' tic figures that are opposed to him. ) I CIVI.S. j 1 I . PHILADELPHIA, I' ..■» 1 , 6- 5 . The following, fuppofid to have letn v/rittfi&by Mr. Braclenridge, is the Letter, to which, that in the ttvo loft numbers of this Gazette is an an swer. PITTSBURH, Aug. 8, 1794 Sir, , . I HAVE received no papers from you, your letter by the post id the firit that I have heard .from you. I take the oppor tunity to give you in return a summary of tlie prelent ffate of this country, with refpedt to the opposition that exists to the excise law. It has its origin not in any an tifrderal spirit, I alfure you. It is chiefly the principles and operations of the law itfelfj that renders it obnoxious. Be this as it may, the fadis are these ? Ihe opposition, which for some time shewed itfelf in the refoives.of committees, in representations to government,in masked attacks on ir.lignificant deputy excise of ficers, for cnly such would accept the ap pointment—did at length, On the appear ance ol the marshal in this country to l'erve procefles, break ont in an open and direift attack on the mfpetHor of the revenue himfelf, General Nevil. These circiim itances you will by this tinte have heard, from the General himfelf, and from the marshal Major Lenox. Subfequcnt to their departure from the country, notice was given of a meeting on the Monomjahela river, about eighteen miles from the town of Pittlburgh. Six delegates, of whom I was one, were sent from this town. Nothing material was done at this meeting, but the measure a greed upon of a more general meeting, on the 14th of August, near the fame place to take into view the present flute of af fairs of the country. Subl'cquent to this, the mstil was inter cepted, characters in Eittfburgh became obnoxious by letters found, in which sen timents Construed to evince a bias in favor of the excise law, were difepvered. In conf'equence of this, it was thought necefTary to'demand of the town that those persons should be delivered up, or expel hd, or any other obnoxious character that might re fide there : also, that the excife office ft ill kept in Pittlburgh, or said to be kept there, should be pulled down ; the house of Abraham Kirkpatrick, burnt 01 pulled down ; other houses also, that were the property of persons unfavorable to the cause. For this purpol'e, circular letters were sent to the battalions of the counties, SEPTEMBER 19, detachm-r.ts from which nv-t on Br?d dock's field, to the amount of at !eaft five thousand men, or. the jd of the .month. — It was dreaded, on the part of the town, hat from the rage of the people involving the town in the general odium of abetting the excise law, it would be laid in alheS.— And 1 aver that it would have been the ':afe, had it not been for the pron.pr and decisiVe refoluiioiio of the town, to march nut ant? meet them as brethren, and com ply with il! demands. 7 hi, had the effect, ■ lid the battalions marched into town rn the jd, an 1 during their delay there, and cantonment in tlje neighborhood, with a trilling exception (if a flight damage done to the property ot Abraham Kirk patrick, in the poffeflion of his tenant, which was afterwards compehfaied, he haved with ail the regularity and order of the French or American armies, in their march through a tf-wn during their revo lution with Great Britain. The town of Pittsburgh will fend de legates to tlie meeting' of the "14th in ft. —what the reftilt will be, I know not. fend tommiffio'ners to the Preiiderit with an addre's, p'-opcfing that lie fiiall delay any aftt-i..j>t to suppress this n.iiii I'eciitni, 11 :t wilt be ii led, until the meeting of Congiefs. This will be the <>bje£t, limply and alont, with all that labor to avert# civil war. On the part of the government, 1 would ear nestly pray a delay until futh address and cpmniiflionefß may- come forward. 1 1116 is my object in writing you this letter, tehich I delire you to communi cate either by the Gazette or otherwise. It will be said, this infurrc&ion can be easily suppressed ; it is but that of a part of four counties. Be allured, it is that of the greater pan ; and 1 am in duced to believe, the three Virginia counties, on" this iide the mountain, will fall in. The firft measure then will be, the organisation of a new government, comprehending the three Viiginia coun ties, and those of Pennsylvania, to the weflward, to what extent I know not. 1 his event, which I Contemplate with great pain, will be the result of the ne cessity of felf-defence. For this reafoil, I eartieftly and anxiously wilh that de lay on the part of government may give time to bring about, if practicable," good order and subordination. By the time the Congress meets, there may be a fa. vorable issue to the negociation, with regard to the navigation of the Miffifip pi, the weflern posts, &c. A suspension of the excise law, dining the Indian war, a measure I proposed in a publica tion three years ago, in Philadelphia, may, perhaps, fnftice. Being then 011 j an equaL footing with other parts of the i Union, if they fubmittu. to the law, j this country might also. I ant icipate all that-cstv .bejTaid with regard to example, &c. 'I may be rnif taken, but I am deciiive in opinion that the United States cannot effect the ope i ration of the i;:w in this country. It is ■ universally odious in the neighboring parts of all the neighboring liates, and | the militia under the law, in the hands ; of the President Cannot be called out to j reduce an opposition. The mid-land counties, I am persuaded, will not even fuffer the militia of more distant parts of the Union, to pass through them. But the excise law is a branch of the funding system, detested and abhorred by all the philosophic men, and the yeo manry of America, those who hold cer- I tificates excepted. There is a growling, ■lurking difeontent at this fyitem, that j is ready to burit out and discover itfulf j every where. 1 candidly and decidedly ! tell you, the chariot of government has been driven Jehu like as to the finances; like that of Phaston it has descended from the middle path, and is likely to burn uj> the Ame ican earth. Should an attempt be made to sup press t'hefe people, I am afraid the ques tion will not be, whether you will march to Pittsburgh, but whether they will inarch to Philadelphia, accumulat ing in their course, and fvvelling over the banks of the Sufquehaunah like a torrent, irrefiftable, and devouring in its progress. There can be no equality of contest, between the rage of a sorest, and the abundance, the indolence, and opulence of a city. If the• President j hair-evinced a prudent and approved de- I lay in the cafe of the British spoliations, j in the cafe of the Indian tribes ; much more humane and politic will it be to consult the internal peace of the govern ment, by avoiding force until every ! means of accommodation are found un- j availing. 1 depiore my personal Situa tion ; I deplore the Situation of this j country should a civil war ensue. An application to the Biitifh is spo ken of, which, may God avert. But what will hot despair produce ! Your most obedient Servant, &c. We hear that the President of the United States intends a&ing as com mander in qhief of the militia marching to the westward, and sets out to-mor row morning for the reiidczvcas at Car lille. The period of e!e<£\ioil is fact approach ing and our citizens appear still unmindfu of its importance. Petition and Remtdj ftrance is butj a l'econdary mode of encing measures—a proper/choice of mm is the anoft effectual, then let tliufe'Sj posed to preserve the principles of our con 1 ftitution in their purity, and pi:.; d rhj rights.from eticroachmem early t. , n .j, • atten ion to tpe fubjeef. Let them VC r to tin* ccndu& of their late repn: ! and determine whether they have or ha»i ' notified as good and faiihiul itrvants • ' whether their votes on important question. have been the result pi a w if;i to i.romoM j tire public weal, ir whether they hve i I bhfled by their own irUerol. J n ,- uir •none of men let them ftuti ti , great intertfi of the people, and above all, ill their chojce of. public icrvants, L-t them ffcarch for the honest man. Gen. Adv. Yesterday arrived in 19 days from St. Euftatitis, the schooner Eagle, Capt'. Logan, who informs that on the-12th 111 IK he i'poke the schooner Dolphin, Capt. Yearfley, out 22 days from Phils! delpliia bound to St, Marc's; lat 25. long. 67. Capt. Yearfley had on boaid ; the crew of the fchoontr Hannah, of Briltol, Rhode-Island, which had been overset by a heavy gale of wind on her paflage to St. Domingo, and the Capr. (Collins) drowned. The people had been 11 day» on the vessel's bottom, al most famifhed with hunger and third when they were fortunately relieved' by the humane exertions of Captain Y earfley. Ext raff of a letter foom an offir.er in Cot. Gurney't Battalion y date*. Sept. 25. " On Monday we encamped within one mile of Mrs. Miller's, and the next day, at 4 o'clock, pitched our teats at Downing's Town, where we remained oil Wednesday to refrefh the men, and about 1 o'clock were joined by Mjjor Fiihe.'s Battalion and Park of Artiiie ry, arid Captain Scott's Infantry. This morning we were joined by the Phila, delphia and Chester county Hoi fe, con fiding of 50, under the command of Captain M'Cle'.lan. We are now about 450, encamped near the Compa(s, 45 miles from Philadelphia. Q,i Sa.urduy we are to march through taricafter, and shall encamp near it and remain, in all probability, untii Monday' morning. " '/nail company of line Continen tal foldieis, with ten biafs pieces, pas sed us this day upwards. ►rorr Philadelphia County, Sept. 26, 1794.. At a meeting held at the vnd jw Lffh er'sin Gerpiantown, this day, the fol lowing gentlemen were named a com- the city of Philadelphia fcnd the county of Delaware, on a ticket* tor Senators, to reprefcnt the diftriil in the senate of tlieftate, viz. William Robinson, fen. George Fore pflugh, Alexander Martin, Thomas Dungan and, George Gray,; wlw aie requelted to attend -at the Bunch of Grapes, in I'hird-flreet, on Wtt' fday next, the 2d of Odlober, at 2 <>v : r;k in the afternoon.—Should a comnvuee from the city or county of Delaware be named, they are also requeued to at tend at that time. By order of'the meeting, Thomas Dungan, Chairman. Extradl of a letter from- a Clergyman in one of the WefUrrt Counties of thi« State, to his friend in this City, dated Sept. 3, 1794. - y " The fttuation of our country has beerty and Jiill is -very alarming, li'hat the ij- Jue will be, 1 cannot tell ; but I hope that peace and order niill be rejlored. The JlatHe rose Co tuddenly and Jpread Jo rapidly, that the people had not time to > \jUci : and the popular Jui-y rose Jo high thai a yerfnn was in danger, ij he Jpoke a word in oppojition to the prevailing Jentimeut. however, matters are otberwije now » the principal promoters oj the riot are conjiderably crejl- Jalleu. Men oj fenje and dfcernment be gin to Jpeak openly, and are determined to do their utmojl ~to Jave our country Jrom impending ruin, and to induce the people to accede to the terms propafed by the comnuj ijiotiers• i " The religious people amongjl us are \ferioufly engaged in prayer, that God would > interpose / a-td / cannot but hope, that the J plots of hell "Mill bh baffled, that theJlorm | will blow aver, and that the people will ! return to obedience to the laws." The above -was written by a very pious and very influential Prrjbyterian Clergy man, wko, as ".veil as Mr. Porter and bis brethren generally, have laboured to che rijh attachment to the government and fub miffian to the laws. And it is remarkable, within the sphere of their influence, order is bcfl prejerved and a riotous oppofttiott to the exrife mofl dfcouraged. ail the people, and I ibink moji of the miniflers, are dec dLilly opposed to the policy of an excise, yet the lattter, and the feriouspart of their congregations "with then:, are as much opposed to any other, than ccmflitu iional measures to effeEl its repeal. The most violent and fuccefsful incendiaries are a kind of lawless horde, if ho live in a fort of hunter slate like Indians, and whose numbers have been greatly augmented, -uiiih-.