Gazette of the United States. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY KVENING, AUGUST J. ORIGINAL POETRY. —No. [A tw days since we promised the public ome poetical pipers, original and elegant. 7 tlle favour c'f . 4he iin»a,rdei Spaript v Lord.; Ap>it d his hfii "i- |.ifht*i.'n.; pljyi, Rcfl-etrd frrtui hn iir»,difh'd fw-ird. Great '.4pac. nerve .he arm of aj;e, And jfui'! it fwift to Garc.ia's breast ; His pangs "lhall il my pangs afluage, His death fliall give, my country reft. \e powers, who thirll for human 1 Inod, this viAim at your shrine" AghaA the circling warrior* flood, Nor ccnld tie Chief's d«!jgn. " 'i is G AJtc.l A's-criiiifon ftrctm* t':;at'flows> 'f:s ■ZaMpoii hurls him to his Fate ; I 1* author of my country's wees Now links—the victim of ~y hate." - Fio.> G» rcia's Iwraft the fttel he drew, Aiul Iheith'U it deep. within his own ; " I tom?, ye God* of loft Peru !" He f J and dy'd, without a groan. * S.-e the Gazette .'Vir Friday, June 20- Fjt tie G.iz*Tra of tie Usitbd Svatis. Ame i\m Cfipress. The peaceable citizen catchts the patriotic fuiy—his bofcm burns with the outrages defenbed ; he is afliam.d and aflonifhed that finch tlii gs could have been done ; such enormities committed, and he never have heard of tbrm—his heart bleed for the fufFemgs of the injured ; he swears vengeance against their oppreflors Sr—l had not heard of that «« If rot yet murdered" fays the citizen " they mull be confined in the da(rtp glooms of a dungeon for more deliberate (laughter JLet us go and force the goal at d set the poor wretches at liberty." " For Gr'ti's ciies the Patriot, " what do you this alio is new to me ; who is there, in prison that is not legally and juftlv con fined—would you fct Hell locfe upon ua by opening the goal doors." Well then'" fays the citizen " their property has been wrelt ?d frpm . them by violence and plunder ; tfceir pCi fan have been ill-treated and shame- fully abused .by lawtefs powcC ; theii— '• Who ! Who ! What ! an' you talking about cvies the Patriot Who has been plu dered, ill treated and abused ; let me for Heaven's fake—" " Do you ask me these queftioi s, replies our moderated citi zen, alter telling me of opprefl] m and ty ranny ; of halters, racks and (hackles ! H'jvv can ihefe things be when no man is oppicllcd ; no man impr:foned ; no man's life, property or person in jeopardy j no man s estate taken by unlawful authority, or hi. perfou injured by the touch of vio lence—what do you mean ? '• I mian the rights of man, the una! e:>abJa, indescri bable rights of man are infrin. Ed—bis na tural equality destroyed—his towering fpitit retrained j his perfedlabili'ty impeded This is a!! i-onfenfe fays the citizen. Some are rich and forne poor, continues the pa triot ; some are great and some mean ; forne powerful and )<>i:;e weak ; f the citizens. LEVI HUUNGSVfORTH, Attefk Chairnan. JAMES MILNOR, Sec'ry. BY THIS DAY'S MAILS. BOSTON, AugiiS 6. Every true frien I to the foiid interells of the United States, will be anxious to keep bright the chain of frierdfhip between thein and Great Britain :~But every advocate of honor and hqnefty will detelt the thiev illi conduct of the commanders of the St. Albansand Clcopatria British ships •>{ war, in their late visits to the porta of the Uiiited States, and must /eduloufly wish the period at no great diftj.nce when they may be made to pay finart money for condud so dero gatory to the dignity of officers, and the hcnelty of men. The fu'fcriptions to the New Loan, were filled at the Baind, iuf<" r rim turn had been received of the comb.ntdfletts having put ta sea from Brclt—in consequence of which or ders were immediately iflued fur Sir Allan Gardner to join Lord St. Vii:cents (who had been driven from the. blockade off Brett by difa"!lr».us weather) with all the force in )'!y-vtomth and Portl'mouth, and purlued the enemy. These orders were so peremptory, and Inch d fpatch made in, rbeying 1 that Lord St. Vincents with his dig (hip, was It ft behind to repair a trifling injury sustain ed in the above gale, who however followed the next day. Capt. S informs us, that on the 13th June, in croJEng the Bay, he difcov. red a (hip of the line in a very disabled (late, accompanied bv another ship of the line, and a frigate ; and on the frit of July, fp.- ke the (hip slope, 18 days from Lisbon, bound to Boston, On the da\ of the Hope's failing intdigence had been received at Lis bon, that an adtioo had taken place between the Briti(h and combined fleets. The ifl'ue not known. Capt. S. is of opinion, from these cir cjmilan e'», that a balrle has been fought, and, indeed, ft is highly probable. | Three per cent, Co:;s June 10 at 64. AN APPRENTICE • WANTED, At (he Office of the Gazette ef the Un'ied States. July 6 Late FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE* EXTRACTS From Lcndbn Papers to June 10 received •at the Office, of the Gazette of the United States. LONDON,' June 9. The Hamburg Mail which became dire yefl'crday arrived in course. It hrii gs at) nflScittl account, in the Vienna Court G?- zotte«f the 24th ult. of the taking of Nice by the Au It runs, onwhich occasion iio pieces,of cannon and a considerable quan- Lfitjlof military flares fell into their hand*. I'h; Lme Gazette contains advices from Gcr.ba to the Bth iriflaut only, on which day the Eagliilt had begun to bombard it ; but an official account, publiflied at Milan, men tionft,Stj.otfi4r uufuccefsful sortie made by Mwna from.Gcnoa, on the 13th, in which, after a Hi.'.*p engagement, lie : was repulsed with the lust of lOo» men. I> intelligence from brought by the .Mail, under the-date of Ulni, is ojrfy two diys later than lliat contained in the j letter fi.un) Colonel Clinton, putjiflied in the Lot)4oh Gazette of Saturday lafl. No'af fiir of any importance had taken place in neighbourhood of Ulm 011 the 24th. We augur, the ntoft favourable consequences from the complete stop which has been put to the progress ot the ircmh arms in Germany. TRISTAM, By the Packci-boa: which brought the Mail of Sunday last, two meffengefS arrived. One of them, sent bv Mr. Arthur Paget, brought the news of [he furiendcr ef Savum on ihe 13111 uh. by capitulation. The garrifjn confided' of boo men. The capture of this important point on the RJyiera di advantageous to the linperialifts, as it allows them to dedicate lo adtive operations the corps of troops whitti were employed in that liege, and as the fortreli may, in c >fe the fortune of wnjj Haould change, flop 1 lie French as it has ftoppe.d the Itnperial ifts.-s-The latter in Aich an event would even be in a Ijtuation to make a longer refinance, as' *lieir allies being traders of the seas, the.y vvoulrf be contlantiy victualled, and could only he re duced by opeli force and by a regular firg£, which the nature nT the country would render . difficult and long. 1 The intelligence by thc'Hamburgh ' Mail has juftified the opinion which we gave last week and ihe hopes which we had conceiv ed, At the moment when the greater part of I ihe public prints, bdth F.aglifh and French, re j prefenteri General Melas as ignorant of the j plans of Bonaparte, and as wafting his time in i the Corhte 0} Nipe,'we did not helit-ate to prt -1 didt thai that General would have remained no longer there than-was necessary to secure the conquest of it. We fee that be did not ip fact lose i (tngle instant, for having taken Nice on the 11th, he on the following day lfcnt wing to Turin, and todk himfelf, two days af -1 teruards, the direction towards that city with Ms main body. Thus some days before the advanced Guard of the atmy ofVeftrve had got into the defile of 1 the Great St. Bernard, Gen. Melas was taking ( atftive meafurel foroppoling it. Whilehewas j himfelf marching to the Po, be caused the able ; General Vuckaffovicb to be re-inforced on the Telin, two the paflage of which the French army 1 mttfofcee befoie they could un dertake any thing All the Aultriin forces may co.nconjrate themselves there, with the exception of-the corps of the army which blockades Genoa, stud of that which- keeps Sll— in cheek on the.Var, and which may, in cafe of attack, retreat in fafety on the one hand under jhc Col de Fcneftre, and On the other On the excellent pofiilrn of the Roya. Bonaparte and Berihier wilj find on tht Po, and on the j Telin, fufficier.t rcliftar.ce, and the efforts 1 which they will make on that fide can give us , no serious alarm. The Chief Consul has himfelf • been fenlihly that he was not in a situation I with his corjis ot the army, conlifting at the utmost of twenty-five thoufarid men, to pene trate the double line of the P > and the Tanaro, leaving on his flanks garrisoned fortrefles, and being able only to advar.ee into plains, where j the inferiority of his cavalry would expose him to imminent danger. He has, therefore, at we fjtne time ago supposed he. would do, formed 1 the d;ligi> rl caultng the right ot the army of ! Moreau todefcend intultaly, and of making it fall, by the paffages.of Splugen, and the St.' 1 Gotbard, on the Milanefc.- We fee that it has been begun to carrv this plan into executi on, and tlm a llrong column, drawn from the t army of Moreau, was on its march across j Switzerland. Son*e-ijme will elapse before,it i-can arrive at the pafTagts of ihe Greater Alps, 1 and Generals Melas and Kray will have had I leisure to concert the operations which these j circumstances require. It was in order to pre vent all irruption of this kind that General | Melas hail polled such great forces, more than fiften,thoufand men, in the Italian Bailiwicks; and the mail informs us, that all the Garrisons | on the Po, the Adda, and the Mincio had re ceived oiders to proceed to reinforce them. This union of troops will, in the firft nao ment, place the Impei'ialifts in a lituation to maintain themselves in the Valteline, and to ; : keep the sources of the; Lech and the inn. As long as they fiiajl remain in paffefSon of these countries, we have n« apprehenfron that the circular invasion which Buonaparte wishes to make in Italy can be completely fuccefsful. I That could only happen in-tfoe cveHt of .his be -1 ing able to separate the ,Armics of Generals , Melasand Kiay. It is the |iu(inefs.of the lac— -1 ter to pievetu-it, and we may believe that he will nepieft nothing to effect that object. Fif teen days reft in the polition of Uim has rc- 1 tfefhed his' sirmv, and furnjfjied it with rein- j 1 lorcemfnts. He will not lose a moment in tak ng advantage v#er, at; infar rertion has broken out in cidevant Pro vence, whirft-may be «f serious consequen ces. Gen. Berthier has been under the ne c.elfity at fending a corps of 15,000 men aganill the insurgents. But as our court Gazette is Glent on the fubjacV, the tsuth ot it cannot be warranted oeforo the arrival .of the next poll. Supplement Extraordinary to tie court Gnirtle, " Lieutenant Cplonel C-iunt Paar, who is arrived here sis Courier from the Army of Italy, has brought the following account ct the farther happy success of o]ur military operations in that quarter : " According to accounts froin Bor digbiera, of the tith instant, the Geneial of Gavaliy caused the important polition near the Rosa to be entrenched, which had been couriered by the gloriou* exertions of out troops. At that period, Generals A.nefevieh and Gorupp already sent' Piquets towards Villa Franca and Mentone, took poffeflion ol Col de Brois and Sofpello, an j made a drmonftration again!} Martin' 4 Val le*. Tlie.etiemy flill occupied the Caflle of Ve.ntimiglia. | ' " "To reiider this Pofitian more secure, the General of Cavalry (according to fur ther accounts from Mentone, of the 12th) did not think.it frdvifeable to leave the enemy in pctTelli.on of. the Caltle ot" Ventirciiglia, and.therefore gave orders to General Latter man tftf.ike it by Storm. The Battalion of Weber Grenadiers was intended lor this expedition ; but when the enemy saw that preparations were making for bringing the fcallng ladders and other necessary imple ments, and that the battalion if' Grenadiers beloie..inentioned had arrived at the emi nence commanding the Caflle, the Garrison confining of fix officers and 100 Piivates, surrendered by Capitulation as prisoners of War, and were ponveyed back by way of Col di Tenda. " The impetuosity with which our troops ; advanced,'determined the enemy to retreat across the river Var, and precipitately to quit the town of Nice. Gen-ral Gorupp, wjio was close at their h;els hefitited ! ot to enter the town, >Oll which occaiion all the well-difpofrd inhabitants armed tliemfelves in crowds, and joined our Troops. " This fortunate event induced the Ge neral of Cavalry to order the works at the entrenchments ot the position near the Rpja to he continued, to make use of thetn in cafe of necellity, and to advance with the Troops under his command close to the River Var, and to detach the two G-nerals Kuefevich and Gorupp to Coni, by way of Col di Tenda, to reit force F. M. Lieut. Keim in Piedmdnt. '' On the 13th tile General of cavalry transferred his head quarters to Nice Ra tioning the Drigad- of Latterman in such a manner along the hanks of the Var, that a part of it was only a mile and a half distant from the bridge-head of that river, Which the enemy still occupied. Our troops took poffeflion of the village of Afpremont, and watched the bridge of Poufonej the remain der of this brigade and the corps of Field Marshal Lieut. Elfniiz were drawn up on this fide the ftpalj rjver Paglion. " The cifcumftance of the enemy's con tinuing to hold the ttrong- rallies of Monte Albo, and Villa Franca, the former with 300, the latter with 230 men did not pre vent the general of cavalry from advancing in this manner. He caused the tvro fsrts to be furrou ideti, and hopes are entertained that they will speedily furrtnder. " Tlie enemy's force on the ®ppofite banks of the river Var. is said yet to amount to between fight and ten :],oufand men, the reft of the corps attempted to relieve its brethren in arms blockad d at Genoa. " At Nice, the enemy left behind thrfm a. considerable number of lick and woun ed, a quantity of mi itary store». 19 metal and 91 brass cannon, 4 field pieces, and 450 calks of gun-powder and ammunition. •' With the corps blockading Genoa and Savona, nothing of importance has occur red. On the Bth in the morning, the En glish vice-admiral Lord Keith, began to fire ppon Genoa and-the fubntbs of St Pietro d'Areni, f-om several gallics and bomb ves sels, which he continued for leveral hours. " The raising batteries and other prepa rations for attacking Savona, arc.carried on with great zeal. " The general of cavalry has at the fame time sent the due details of all his undertak ings in the Riviera to the'period of his ad vancing to the river Var, with the different engagements that happened during that pe riod", and our loss. '• The general of cavalry intends to fol low the reinforcements sent to Field Marshal Lieut. Kcim, to l'iidmont, to be in the centre of the operations, and to make fych arrangements as circumfta<.ces Uiould re quire in differ.quarters ; the corps on the Var will meanwhile be commanded by Field Marshal Lieut, Elfnitz. « In-the pontics Of iU ImferUl Armv near Uim, no change had taken place, acrnr>L » * the reports received from General Kray/of'the «7th and 18th of RV.iy. -• " ,e «• Thi euemy. h-wejrer, has co D fide?»My r«. mforced h-,s trp ps, drawn ap on the I fiber £rs of the Danube, since they had bee , re; u'l" fed by our troops; the.r m»in force is concemra- V , e S. ,,iBN ° f {hr n:cr the r.ght binks of the Danube, f 9 , that one division only rema.nedat xVeim-nhorn. ! n crX q„ence of this, Gei.eral.Krjy has ordered the co.-« s ft', toned at Gunzhurg, under General Count Gui ay, and the Cavalry detached agiinft Mindel- ' heim, to advance, to be ready whenerer cir. curnftanc£3 (hould reijvir'e it 7> The Archduke Charles, is daily expelled he'e and a.ter his arrival again to take the comm.nci ps tNf Imperial Army i n he Empire Reinforcements at-c still to that ar my, whtch at present is eHirrnted at 120 ocq m f n,excl"Cv,>of ,h. .I ff rß „ t Volunteer corp. On Thursday lati, G.-nt.al P r ;„ce Schw.r ---z-nberg. accompanied l, v -hi* 1 ..t y . rr flay, and then set our for the ar ray in the Empire. Princ. John of Lcichten llcin is (till at Baden, and will not join thatar my before the expirrtion of so re weeks. Genera! Baron :U-ifthack, whose H-mle had lately been robbed <0 c confiderablc amount hat recovered a|! his property, execptitg f- me bank notes. The thirr was a servant whom hi had '.ifcharged, but who is now in cuflody. Hie intelligence eeived It e by the last' port, that in the neighbourhood of Slj>6i a a Turkilh Pr.nce had rilen against the Grand le.gnior, is cunVm-d from every quarter ■ The former is related to the latter. According to theJateft accounts, tr.e Prince hasi'oinWtte re el Pacha of V/iddin, Pafwan Oglo,, wit!, 1 f c ? r P s .° f 16,000 rnvri, cfflt.joiii?ly with whom he is fa d to.have taken of ihe t .wiw ct Adriarople, Sopbja, and PhHopopol: Oa that occation several severe engj w eie tought, in which -he Turks were generally de bated, Tie Grand Pe.gnior, und, r the pro mile Of great rewards, hs* ordered the Pacha o? ifc.ji'ade, _and others, to march «-ith all their tore s against the rebe's, and tomake themselves mailers ol their persons Our expea.tior. is r?i.ed, to lee 111 what manner tne Porre vri lb> trica-e Itlelf from thjs critical fixation, them .re 10, as it is .aid the two rebels aA under tiie in fluence of some foreign power. AUGSBURG, May at- 1 j C ii. C - or ' :> - 8 W ' ll ' C ' ) f)a ° penetrated r.car Mindelheim is commanded by General Van ; darnme. and amounts to about 10,000 men. Last night it wa. in th- wo ds behind I urkheim, thirty miles from Auglburr / The corps of prince R.ufa, i deed, amounts to i8 ( ooc men, but only 7000 sf them are lmperialifts, the reft are inhabi tants Oi Tyrol, who wiii notpafs 'he fron tiers. Pichegro is still here. Count Lchr faach remained at Dillingen y.rferdayl A train of Bavarian ammunition paired through here yesterday for Ulm. May 26. As Morean marches from the Danube, JUs h'» plan t p remove the war to Eastern Suab a, and in that cafe Auglburg will (till be in danger. The principle theatre of war, however, will be in Italy : by fending troops through Switzerland, into Italy, fi„t on sparte follows the fame plan as did prince Eugene in the year . 700, by fending lro pg to Italy from the Auilrian frontiers. the 13th the t'pg fuif~ —• y Kempt^-^s-T3&li; s ~e3~topay 12,000 fl to a bpdy cf"French troops, and tie i i'liop't See, 8000 ft..ri;is ; 011 the i sth, the City p.iid 15,00*, and the Bifhop*s S e 8000 fl >rins to »»- thee division of French troops ; and on the 17th, 100.000 livivs more were demiijd eci from tile City, .and 45,000 from the Bi lliop's See, but Ootli have lent D-puties to General More-u to complain of thd'c heavy contributions. ULM, May 23. Yesterday was a warm day. In tlie even ing of the 210 the French had withdrawn tram the A.clt and the Biauthal, near the vilage of fix above Ulm, across the Danube, afterwards destroying the. bridge, btu living a detachment to guard that post. Yelterday morning the Archduke Ferdinand .advanced, caused the bridge across the Danube to be restored in spite of the enemy's fire, crotTrd the Da nube, and carried at the point of the bay onet the village of Dolineiingen, cceupied by the enemy'wi;h seven pieces of cannon. Meanwhile the trend) were reinforced, and. fired up n the village with grapefliot and grenadoes. forcing the Aufiriansto evacuate it, and recrofs the Danube. This happened at ten o'clock in the evening. On both, fides the loss amounted to about 2000 men in killed and wounded ; ja nd a number of I horses. At Dctr.dfingen tlie, Auftrians I took a French hufpital. In this engage, I mei.t the Prince of Huhcnhjlie-Bartenftein j Captais of Mefzarbs Huzzars, had the misfortune of having his .leg fluttered by * (hot, just below the knee, which was to iiave heen amputated this day, but could rot be tfT-fted, as he was extremely weak, I The Prince is only 20 yesrsold. May 24. We lea- n that General Mtlas has de manded a reinforcement of 10,000 men, from the army in Germany, and that orders have already been given for their marqh The Eltflor of Bavaria has red'the deputation sent to him by the inhabitants v: Munich, that, even if Moreau should have Aiccerded in advancing to that capita) :t would have been -reatd with lenity, (ii is thought, through the mediation of fame foreign power,) juid th«; he, the Eledtpr would have been among the last in quitting the icijdence. • : BERNE, May 22. _ All those who formerly knew Buonaparte in Italy, agf-e that Ins manner of living and his whole behaviour are ft HI the fante as their wrre at that time, I,in that his health ap. ' pears to have iufFerrd Ly his voyages and thecan);agn iivE.yptand Syria. H is Cadaverously pale, and is loon fatigued by a little exertion. After the review at Iwu- ' V