p.' lull)" since our officers a:id foldierj *ie animated by this noble Stimulus, t!ie defence of that excellent Conltitu tion, which confers on them the right, freely to cleft for their President, the man whom they love and revere, and which confirms to them the pofleflian of Liberty and Proper;/. < RTCHMOKD, Nov. 12 Yesterday the General Aflrmb'y of this Commonwealth convened at the Capitol in thiv City, and a quorum of the House of Delegates being alfcmblfd, proceeded to the choice of a Speaker, when-John Wife, Esq. was elected, and to th.* chair, from whence he made his acknowledgments to the House for the honor conferred on him : After which, Charles Htr, Esq. was nomi nated and appointed Clerk. PHILADELPHIA, NOVEMBER 20. [FV om a lat>- London PaperJ THE ABBE SYEYES. 1 A It !i lingular how this man has hi therto escaped that fate to which his conduit, during the former part of the revolution, teemed to have inevitably consigned him. It lias Seen said, that he is devoted to the fyllcm of equality, and that in supporting those principles which he thinks mathematically true, he has fon itnntly kept alt>of from all parties, and has thus saved himfrlf from the deftruft ion in which they havtf all successively been involved. That the principles of the Abbe S>eyes are favourable to the system of equality is so far fruoi being the cafe that he has repeatedly deelaied himfelf the champion of monarchy. On the Kings return from Varennes a periodi cal paper was begun at Paris under the direction of Condor cct, BrifTot, and Athillc Duchatelet, entitled The Re publican. Syeyes engaged to defend the monarchical system against the attacks of the Republicans, which drew from Thomas Paine a letter to the Abbe, in which he agreed to enter the lifts with hint alone and unfuppoited, Paine declared that in defending Re publicanism, he did not mean to defend the Republic of Holland or Venice, Sy eyes replied, nor. did he mean to defend the Monarchies of Turkey ot of Eng land. The controversy was soon dropt. Th« cafe of the Abbe is by no means lingular. La Clas, author of the Sai ions Dangereufes and th« friend of Or.-" leaus hat long been io prison, where the government have availed themselves Ci of his talents ; he has thereby prolonged ha precarious exittence. The Abbe Syeyes has always affect ed the manners of a Cynic, but there is not a party with whom he hat not in- trigned : His arrogance during the firft aflemblv was extreme. He affeiSed to despise even the talents of Mirabeau but • he has lived to be the slave and the crea- ture of Robespierre. It is so fai from being true, that the Abbe's influence in the French govern ment, has lately been great, that the only tenure upon which he has long held his life, has been in unremitting labors in the service of the Committee of Pub- lie Safety. Robespierre knew hist alents, and en , gaged to save him, if he wonld labour In hi» service, without taking any {hare in the administration of affairs. The Abbe hat long been little more in Paris than a prisoner at large. By this Day's Mail. . BALTIMORE, Nov. 17. Arrived yesterday, the brig Rover, Capt; Smith, from Gibraltar, which place he left the Ift of October. Capt. Smith paflej, in the Gut, an Algerme cruiser (the only one out) which he law, two days after, captured and des troyed by two Portuguese veflek. He also informs us, that the Moors had sent out from Tangier and Sallee, their ro vers, to capture all vessels they met with, belonging to those nations that had no consul there to represent them. In con sequence of which, a Ragufan vefTel had beed captured and carried into Sallee. Thebrig Rover failed from Gibral tar in company with the snow Fair Kebe, Brown, Philadelphia; brig La vinia, Hobble, do. schooner Madison, Yetkey, do. At the time she left Gi braltar, there was great rejoicing by the : i'lench arillocrats, in confluence of news having arrived of the Dauphin Being crowned king. The arrival of Hood's fleet was hourly expetfted. Yesterday arrived, the French priva teer Marat. We are informed, that du ring her cruise, she took four ptizes— ;wi of which have arrived. ALEXANDRIA, Not. 13. [The floor, Betsey arrived here on Tuef- J«iy from D.ubadrvs—the following article is ixtra&.d from a paper brought by her.] Bridgk-Tows, Sept. 30. —Capt. Reed, late of the fchooffif Hope. who has returned here America, in forms, that on hisarnVal at Button in the above velfei, he deceived in dignity from the populace, whote firtt faliiutiou was the bettcwing on him a biuket of water, accjihparued with all the point epithets now in use in the Re publican world. They detained his veliel as American property, notwith (landing (he had been lega'iy condemned as a prize to one of our cruisers, and had been purchased by merchants of this town, who obtained for her a Bri ti(h regiltcr, and let her on charter to go the voyage. PROVIDENCE, (R. I.) Nov. 8. The Honourable General" Aflerhbly of this State, which met here last wreck, stands adjourned to the la It Monday in Jamjar/ next, then to meet at Eall Greenwich. A Return was made to the General AlTembly of the Number of votes in the several Towns, given in August last, for Representatives to Congress.— The Result is as follows : Benjamin Bourn, Esq. Pelcg Arnold, Efq, ' Francis Malbone, ,Elq. 19 11 Joseph Stanton, jun. Esq. 1178 BOSTON, .VMember 30. A R R TVED. Ships Atlantic, Delano, Hull, Nuacy, Follet, Liverpool; Barque Harriet &. fcli za, Slewman, Halifax; Brigs FuGleer, Ealterbrook, St. Helena ; Clarifla, Abra hams, I.ifbon ; Juno, Freeman, Gotten burgh ; Peregrine, Barker, Figuera; Schooners Nancy, Bishop, St. Michaels ; Rover, Drew, Gottenburgh ; Harmony, Lincoln, Demerar?. ; Freedom, Millet, Madeira ; Bctley, Fellows, Jamaica; Der borah, Higgins, Cape Frai.jois; Sloop Rhoda, Leavitt, St. Johns (N. B.) When the Katv left Hamburgh, there were near fifty American flags flying at that port; They had chiefly been to France. A fliip, a constant trader from London to Halifax, laden with goods to the amount £27,000 fteriing, has b?en captured by a French frigate, and sent into Cape Ann. She is expected rotlnd here every hour. Two Ihips and ,'everal brigs arrived yet lerday : one of the (hips is the Neptune, of this port, bound from Carolina to Eu rope ; having sprung a leak, put in here tc repair. The brig Hannah & Eliza of Charles town, has been cast away in a hurricane at Guadaloupe, and is loft. She had some sugars on board. \Y e ai ' e happy to hear that none of the crew are loft. Mr. Sa muel Prince was fspercargo of the brig. Captain Follet, arrived here from Hull, was boarded ii. the bay by a boat from the Thetis Britilh frigate of 31 guns. She was looking after French frigates. NEW-YORK, Nov. 18. Died on Wednefdav evening last, after a lingering illness, aged year* Mr. Ab raham Brevoort, eldest lor. of Henry Bre voort, late of this city, merchant; and cyi Friday evening his remains was intcrr'd in the Family Vault, in the eld Dutch Church Yard. On thfe 17th inftaat departed,tWlifc, at Philadelphia, it the tHrty-fccond yt» of bi» igc, Mr. John Swain*, btte>utftcr of the pubJHher of A« Paily AdwtffeT- He wms a map ohiWpejaed,. andui blemiihed integrity—of very c«|UmUc Ikeraryabilitiej'Modeft, %nd mailutip kg j; of gre*t induftrjr swd rod in e*«yrtfpe<3 a »ilu»Wr«»ewter edfo violent an agitation as that which has accompanied the different (hades and lhapes of the French revolution. The reformation of religion is one of those great events to which this revolution bears the greated similarity. But the reformation, modified by German phlegm, Was deliberate and regular in itsprogrefs: The French revolution, deeply t injured with French levity and fire, has pafled suddenly from form to form ; nor can it yet be conjedtured in what its devious course will terminate. In France the gradations from despot ism to limited monarchy ; from limited monarchy to republicanism ; from re publicanism to democracy ; and from democracy to anarchy ; have been ex tremely rapid ; so rapid indeed, that, in the mid It of all these changes, the form, if form it may be called, of anarchy a lone is seen; on a general view, as a fiery objett, whirled rapidly round and round, exhibits the appearance of a permanent circle. In this political whirlpool the fecial feelings have all been swallowed up and loft. The name of freedom has been proflituted to the molt oppressive and cruel purposes; a barbarous feroci ty has usurped the name of national courage the completed internal tyran ny has been disguised in the garb of re volutionary ardour ; and every popular leader has fallen a facrifice to popular fury. What the ultimate views of ROBESPIERRE with his creatures or aflbciates, were, or whether he had any fixed and determi nate plan at all, farth'er than the imme diate gratification of an intriguing and refllefs disposition, incapable of co-part nership or moderation, cannot yet be certainly known. Some have thought ! that it was his design to bring the Dau phin out of his confinement, and, in hjg person, to restore monarchy. But Ro befpievre was generally confidcred as a determined fanatic: nor could he hare any reasonable hope, ib the adual tem per of the nation, and under the new di vision of property, of being able to car ry that plan into execution. On the other hand, if he refle&ed at all on the inveterate pailion for liberty that had pervaded all France, and difcomfited so mjny attempts to restore monarchial go vernfner.t, he could not suppose that the French naiion would brook tyranny in the perf.n an upitart di&ator: a delator u.iaj uncd with the f;«lenduur of military aicliievcincnis, andMuilicd, in public opinion at leall, by that liitleiufs and chicane which are uicribed to the profefiioil of the Jaw, in every nation of Europe. Yet what shall we fay ? That this de magogue did, in fa&> meditate the de lign of controlling the National Con vention bv means of the Cortimittee of Public Safety, the Revolutionary Tri bunal, the armed force of the muniei palit), or, iu plain Eiiglith, the city of Paris, and by changing the democrat i cal oouilitutjon or tI»V army into a train of dependencies, at the head of which he was to place himfelf. As to the views and motive of Rpbcfpicrre, there would be uo end of conjecture : but, independently of these, the catailrophe that involved his fuU", with that.of his partizaus, is a moll copious fubjeft of refletrion moral and political. 1. A mong' the fcatilres that disfigure the French revolution, and confequendy the national chara&er of the French, from whose minds and tempers the revolution directly springs, is this, that, in their internal dificntions and contests, there is no gradation in punifhmenr, no mo deration in victory. Death is awarded to every crime, proved or fufpefted : the political partisan is to be appeased only by the death of his adversary. How many individuals, like poor Si mon who waited on the Dauphin, and several domestics of the late King aud Que.en, have fall™ facrifices, not to crimes, not to venial tranfgieflions, not to flight and unfounded suspicions, but to their very virtues. (To be Continued.) I- -; — 1: " The Editor of the Level of c " EurojW and North America, ever anxious t( I- to communicate to Europeans, who may be * O defiruus of fettling in this Continent,what- U ever may tend to inform them of the ad- c ( vantages they may find here, whether iu ' agriculture or in comrofcrce, ha« r!i« honor j 11 to acquaint the public, that he has nnde. ' (- taken the tranflaticn of a woik just publish ; cJ undei lhe title of A View of the Untui ' • , / 'j t * Virginia, Tomlinfon do. 4 Trial, Davis, Auxsayt 34 T^Mo^ i'i-. *-v . X*Srr:*s:-' . ."=*'. 4* A Goqd Preflman lyanted Immediately. ENQUIRE OF Steiner and Kamrmerer, No. 85, Race near Thjrd street. Nov. 10 t Dr. Loutherbourg, jun. So.w and Pupil to the CMrated Dr LoutherLourg of Londcn. HA S the honor of announcing to ibe Public, that he v. fhes to exert hit I alenti in AUnlatwke p„i NT ikg-Thole' that are inclined ,o avail them elve, 0/ Wuftvy, Will be atfm'ed cn, by fa. voting liim with their sddrerj. No- t73, South Setoi d-S:re*;t I»OV. 23. '