Georgia republican & state intelligencer. (Savannah, Ga.) 1802-1805, October 30, 1802, Image 3

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From The MANCHESTER GAZETTE FRANCE. Can?t thcu, who berft with proud and Plain, Loc h hkh wrought link, in (Lverv's .chain, Cans’t mot', who cleans’d, with noble rage, I'hc A u can filch of many an a^?, Cans’t thou, who r c migh y vengeance hurl’d, Deifru-tcjn on thy foe—.he world, Yet bade the infuriate (laughter rrafe. 1 hen vanquifh’d ihfpots whin’d for peace, Can.dt thou, () 1* rang.'-, Lorn heights bice thsfe de- i feend, And v, i:ii each nerve unbrac’d, to Con apart?: bend*'! Was it for this th” w-rrievs re d - , And parahz’d valt hordes ol locs : For this aii prcdigal cf kfe, Lhey ruddd amici the bellowing (trip, And like the ceferrsh, burning breath, Where’er they ruIVJ they feattedd death *, Tor thi e , with many a canin'* wound. \ hy daring Cons have fit rev/ u the ground, And girt wi;ii ( noktnggore and bills ol ikin* Have gloried ;r their cause, and jnuru'u tnc oppref- chain ! ( When Hr it *in join’d th'* unjufl nrrav, And ! cr proud navy plough’d the La, Was it for this beneath the wave, jm'’- hy L-amen i'wund a watery rrave : For ’his, W'r.en all around was wreck, • j And mi'ig’ed horrors (fa il’d the deck, Whenflovt ly fettling towards their tat?, While the broad banners wav’d date, Was it for t!:is they t; Vive ta Notion* : cried, Scorx’J the fulvnikva a i, and to.c the o’cx y/halniinir! tide i Was it f. r :hk, the furrowJng she, lias Pen his oleeding boy expire, F< r this the matron fad aid pile, ILs told her lon’s ddaitrous ta!?, Vo r this the widow’ oft has p r tL, With tear*, the r.ur.lmg ‘o nor bread, Was it, to !:f: the ambitious sou 1 , Os one, above the law’s eontroul, That thus dire war left millions to deplore And the bioat) earth and lea were ting’d with hurt] in ! No !—rearkfi France {hall ne'er be found, . jb<ke tor huge brute on India’s ground, ‘lV.at thro’ the r inks impetuous sweeps, And loads toe stud wi'h mingled heaps, Jjut ye: each feene of carnage o’er, Obeys that coed he felt before .* No !—Fearlrfs France 0)a!l Fill ir.a’ntair, Those rights, which millions died to gain, And foor, though laurel wreaths her chains adorn, Shall show a grovelling world that chains me iiili per scorn! C/h h’r.rrce ! thine erCTget.c foul H jl never brook unjust contrc id, Will i ever crouch to (l ivery’s load, Nor bear ‘be onpreflor’s iron goad. Mft I b rar.ee, who bade her monarch fall, Wi!) ne’er before this Idu! crawl ! ’Vv i’l ne’er receive with abj.fii awe, A maitial despot’s will as low : No ! Ban.(la (ear ye friends of human kind, France to a glint’s arm unites a cowennor mind. w w> He who oVrwhe’ms his country’s foe, V ct lays his country’s freedom low, Ivluft fear though girt with guards ar.d (late, From each bold a. m the firoke of fare : And thou, usurping warrior, thou ! \ ‘Vo whom the weak, the timid bow, Tfton splendid CU.II F, whefe actions prove, J hat States may be undone by love. J J i hru foe to man, upheld by martial breath, Thy match is on a mine, thy every dream is death And when this meteor’s baleful ray?, Are lofr in freedom’s ardent hi. ze, Yes ! when indignant Fiance (hill rife, Her fc rm all nerve, aii fire her eyes, j And fronting e’en the bayonet’s fvvay, Shall Iwvep this impious scourge away, l her. vvic.ii degraded mien no more, Shall man his fellow man adore Then cA. r his powers final! principle preside, Wild the bright Far of Truth (hall prove his polar i £ u del EDWARD RUSH TON* L i v e n p o c l . FEDERAL INTOLERANCE. Trim the MERCURY. Mr BABCOCK. To convince the good people of this | iS'tr.tc of the intolerant spirit of the fe- 1 ceral party, in the reign cf terror, I ;ou will please to publish the fol follow ing paragraph ; It is now in my poiTeftlon, in the hand writingcf a men ileman who was a federal member of the Legiuature of Vermont, in Ofto her ’9B. 1 h’e truth of the paragraph has iince been verbally confirmed by several refpcftable members of the fame Legislature. *At Yergennes in Oft. 1798, the * Hon. John Allyn, and Judibn Can - 4 field, attended at the feliioji | 4 cf the LegiOature of Vermont. 4 Mr. Allyn, informed a number ot * the members, that it had been deter * mined by the federal party to turn * the Democrats out of office, and ad- viiea members to make thorougn ‘ work.—That the fame system would ‘ be purified by the other Ycates, and ‘ tliut it was the only found policy that could be adopted. Previous to this 4 time party spirit was not high in Ver -4 mont, and Democrats and Eederalifls 4 promifeuoufiy enjoyed the find offices 4 of the St ate.’ 1 rorn the fame authority we learn that his honor tarried at Vergennes ffi veral days ; that his exertions to per > ifi'lde nf -]•.o T p'Y-cbfMr/i 1 i.iou.L/v. J C/i litv. lv t .ilu 1 ill L to to xiicafu le, \crc unremilled. ] hat although many of the moderate Federalifrs thought the projedt unjufl: and intolerant ; yet being aflured by his honor that the salvation of the conn try depended on its success : that the federal adiuiniflratioi) had adopted the plan, and to give energy to the mea lures of the general government the state governments mud concur; they were Finally pci f jaded to acl in favor :of the measure. h lie confequ nce is I well known in Vermont. Every Re-j I publican in oirlee, from Judge of Court! | down to his worship the parish fuldicej ! was removed, and the offices all filled i | by federrhfls. The Editor of the Farmer 4 s Museum, 1 published a burlesque account of the death produced by tills political mania, and of the diseases by which thole deaths were effected : exhibiting the extrava gant joy, and indecent exultation of the federal party, cn the success of thi intolerant measure. Tins account was repn I)l*fhed in many of the federal pa pers, and read with indecent triumph oy the felt flyied friends’ of order in New- £ n land. To have re ndcre and th e picture perfecT, tlie writer fiiouid have reprefeuted the Connecticut Goliah, as the pclicical King of Terrors, brandifil ing the (‘word of extermination, and carrying disease and death a mono* the quiet and happy people of Vermont. Having lie ted the conduct of this honorable peribnage and its effects, and the authcrity on which the truth of the j fiatement refits, let us now ask our fel low-citizens if they can difeover the lead: jfhadow of relemblance between die political views of this great man, and his party in gB, and thole by which they are now afluated ? In ‘93 it was neceliary to strengthen the arm of the Executive. Standino armies was necdiary to quell infurrecli ons; Sedition laws to suppress the free dom of inquiry, and a manly difeuflion of the mea(fires of tiie government; & to render Executive influence unbound ed, the political opinions of every officer, under the State S: general government, nruft be in per fed harmony with thole of the JYefidenu In 1802, how flriking the contracl! i lave we not heard a great nfan bel I (owing cut Ids anathemas egainft the I Eoft-mafter General,for dilplacing Mr. | Wckottfrom the Foft-ofEce Litchfield : | ihe lame Mr. Wolcott, who was the j inveterate personal enemy of Mr. Gran j ger ; and if poilibie a greater enemy to 1 the present ad mini il rani on of our go vernmenr. The Preiidenc and admi -1 nix 1 ration unaided by a {landing army ar.d 1 edit ion law, and voluntarily de priving thcmleives of the immense exe cutive patronage enjoyed by the pre-! j evening auinieiitranon, are denounced j jas eppreffive and intolerant ; Why :i viiey have appointed 45 Republican! Pou-Mallers to 1050 Federal ; and have* thought it heft to bellow less than one fourth ot all the other otrices in the (J. Stater, on Republicans. The fame man and the fame party v* no m oS maintained that all others underthe general and Rate governments would be filled with wen who agreed in poptical opinions with thePrefident and ariminiftration, now contend that all offices iliali be held by the enemies of Mr. Jefterfon and the present auminb I liivition. Hus not the ftonc in the forehead de j ranged the brain of the political Giant, land the furious oppefers of the present |government r a government mild and j tolerant beyond example. DAVID. SAVANNAH, October 50, 1802. In our pa f ?er No 9, an omiffi on of the word “not” made the lentence direFtly contrary to its intention. It should read, “ His abusive remarks on Gen; Meriwether, it is not ours to repel: dec. This correction is all we find worth notice in yefterday 4 s Museum : for this we thank them. Ihe New-York Herald dates that it was Frederick Wolcott, r.v pc fit m after, not Oliver, that Was a canditate in Litch field. It may be. They are brothers. . - We learn that leaures on military law are to be given this winter at the Museum Cilice 1 ! 1 The Courant fays, the Democrats bo ill much of the increase of their strength in this town —true and with great propriety do they hoaft, to find that their strength has in ere a led til! it is equal to that of the Tories. In lpite ot federal falfhoods, mifireprequations and abu fie, they be ait, that 219 freemen, republicans, dare come forward in 00- polition to the nefarious plans of modern Tories, or Neon ! crop Eoyalifrs—l hey ocaft ttiat tcucral lies have in a r*reat i.l measure loft their c lib ft in this town — and rejoice in the profpeci before ilicm ; they boast that out of 23 44 new freemen” 15 voted for the republican candidate, which very plainly bespeaks the spirit of tiie times—they boall that had aii been permitted to take the freemen’s oath who offered themselves (and who we have reason to believe, were justly : and legally eniitlco to the Republi cans would, have earned their ticket lor! representatives. We have been told! for ftnnetime past, that instead of the! number of the republicans increasing. ! they were rapidly diminifiiin g—Vv 7 e | would afic whether our late eleftion is! a proof of it ? In vain will it be laid that the Federalists made no exertions those who saw them bringing the sick! | and lame from their beds in carriages, land dragging men from the prison to the poll, can witness, that the federal exertion was drawn out to the very A ,r\ rrej Hurt ford Mlcrcury . FRA.NLFORF, (K.) September 22. Extraft of a letter to the Fdftor, dated st. j Vincennes, 10th Sept. 1802, evening. ? f Fhe council with the Indians was opened this morning. The chiefs and many of the warriors of the Miami, Sauk, We a, Plan, j K ifhan, Patawatainic, Kicknpoo, and El-River nations, have come in, accom panied by about five hundred votin'*- men women and children. They arc,” I believe]! wdi disposed, and highly gratified with the I attention paid them fmee their arrival. The! views of government towards them are tru ly magnanimous* it is ardently wilhed to a melio-ate their lavage, barbarous (tare, and place them in the calc and enjoyment cf civi-l liztd life, 44 Ihe Indians nave been grossly imposed upon with regard to the United Spates” In a di unken frantic fit, they view us as old wo-| men ; in their cooler refieft.ve moments, aft plotting their defiruftion. Those fettled on ! tiie W auain ano \v iiite rivers, have since the * eitasiiihiiient of a government here, been | principally under the influence of the intend- J *m: of Indian affairs ; but thole on the Miflilip-1 pi, Ouimsconsin and Illinois rivers, and tlic! i-.-vCa, iu tc ceen ano are kill under the con iiojloi Brit;ln agents. Ttiat treacherous hypocritical nation has now rs engines spread ing delusion throughout theWcftern country. I he moft aftive measures have been taken to • rutlratc the afiembling or the Indians j per luaflons and present shave been difleminated with the molt vigilant induflry, and fome have been taught tn believe they were only invited here to be inhumanly butchered. The noted M'Kec, ihavtd, painted, fee. fee. has recently hi a a war dance witn tr.e Indians that live in our territory, a thing unprecedented in time of -eace. The Indians towards the Miffifipni iod the lakes, vific him annually, are load ’ft bac{i with presents, etc. and call him me bc-ficf men; and I will venture to predift, jfiatif the prayers cf old England prevail, p e Knife and t:ie tomahawk will ere long e nnce to us the energies of f Tec ret fervid jfionev. ! “However, I am in hopes a f *. will be effected—ltveral cnxu 1A -’ * * have occured v/itlun a few da,s. , very favorable impressions on cue u ~■ Indians. ‘1 he negoci itions lb ft *, x f pleasing prolpect, and there is no all the objects for which the meetui n,., been caiied, will be fully obtained,” Frankjord, September 23. Tlic newlpapers of tiie ieaport Fir*, nifii daily evidences of the Bankrupt principles of the late adnvniilrataion upon an examination of 453 c.dcs :Y Bankruptcy-—in our maritime citivq there are found only 72 persons ever fto pefted cr republican principles ! —And there are among them, to a certainty, 211 Engliih agents or Engldli j> >\ mers • ‘ r evolutionary loncf j Toe re-- mainderare equivocal—-and yet it was tms bankrupt interest that forced upon us the B'itijh treaty,the Barh;.ry tiibuLe lUid ad the at Hi c°u on connefited wirii t!ie ocean, to which we have been fub je^; | Mr. Hading?, in reply to the Attorney j General, lays he hid no intention of xtahin j “ (in erroneous reprefentathnf and beys leave Ito r.i.v tne Attornev-General, lc vvhetht r he 1 has never hid a Life imprcfilon upon his | mind, r. lating to certain ftfts and tranl’tc- I uons ? \ve tr-ink luch ingenuous wkno.v ----j iedgement entitled to candor, and think finch jan open to be prefi rred, to the j Uii:c whiipers of Hinder, without any a tie npc !to collect tiie evil to which We mav have ! given occasion. (Chron. M A R I N E LIS T. E N T E R E D. Ship Alexander, It!bury, London, Schooner Polly, Smith, Stoninn.m. CLE A R E D. AVi ■* ‘T\.df f n ‘*■* s* 4 Y _/. 7 r * u T > 1 thor. t y ji//jhoGfiy i\ l \ r S10H j Brig, Betsey fifi Peggy, Durhc, BatFmrc, Schooner, Icpsham, Kerri son, St. Dunn o, Schooner, Kitty, Penney St, /lu^stue. , cUSTOM HOU SE. hours, from fi before •?, A. I A \_J to ~ before 2, T. M. i Savannah, 15 th October, 180:, >hwniW^i \t~m i>.■— ■ -/a. W O* On Wednesday next, November at ■ dclock , will be sold, &i T. M. Woodh-id late Auction Store, Boltom’s wo art, ta reset c > c y ii.e attention 01 a’js a> Country f? T T P O f>T I’VV-ir,,, i..U lv J I \.J\) iJ •>. CONSISTING CF TIIE FOLLOWING ARTICLE, N I Z. 30 doz. men’s and women's plain coron hfte. 8 doz. men’s white and black fiilc do. Silk Gioves, 5 doz. women's white Zz flefli colored g’oves, ‘ grecches Patterns, 5 doz. fiik and worked, 1 doz. cot on night caps, Checks, to pieces 3-4 and 7-8 wide linen, 30 pieces 7-8 wide cotton and linen, 10 pieces 9-0 wide striped cottons Irish Liner-?, 39 pieces 4-4 wi !e, Table Napkins, 4 dozer, 38 diaper table cloths, 7-4, 3-4, S-iO, 1 piece huckaback, Coat Patterns, 14 cults 2 yams each cf fuperfine cloth and cassimere, 8 do. 6 do* do. cadi ner, different corns Wailtco.it Patterns, 12 fine printed Marfeiiies quiltin^, 24 do. mus liner, 1 India & corded dimity, and embrbiJere \ 5 tamboured marseilfts, Coat Buttons, 12 setts falhionab’e F.incy gilt and pi xtd, quantity of ft wing iilk and twill, Mu si ins, 5 pieces tambour cnlonade muslin, 4 do. j a pined, jaconet and book do. HATS, 3 doz. men’s best black beavers* 1 p- , .7‘- , do '. ( d °o cnlp unj :r, 3 do. Cutiufen s ana youth’s, different colors ALSO , 40 boxes mould candles, 40 do. chocolate, 30 do. soap ; with r. variety cf ether articles . A N D. 20 hhts. firft proof Rum, at a credit of four i Months. I J- P. WILLIAMSON, Amt'r* October 30.