BALEIGHgTREGISTEIt- if AND 6 Ours are the plans of fair delightful peace, -Unwarp'd hyoarty rage, to live like Brother. Thursday, November 12, 1807. North-Carolina State Gazette : JRM THE ENQJJIRIR. CURSORY REFLATIONS. At the close of the important trial fetich has so Ion? agitated our. city, r readers ma:y Very naturally call ,,non us to deliver our own opinions. To discharge this duty we once more take up the pen. ' The subject is complicated & ex tensive. We shall attempt to seize . , r.otnrPB Jt nresent them its leaning iccnuiw- i , in the form of cursory reflections. These reflections will naturally fcuch on three great portraits: that of Aaron Burr, The Chief Justice of the U- States, ! And General Wilkinson, TherP isnothinr which we have to tubmit to our rtaders, which may out very properly tall uauci vn thest heads T0i I: PORTRAIT OF AARON BURR. . Who noble endt by noble attain, fTbat man is great indeed ; Is tuch the greatness of the man Hvho stands before us i Is such the character of the transaction which liave been lately umumcu v,,v vorld ? Let u analyse both his ends & means to see what pretensions ihey t6l. ive him to the characttr which the poet has described. This trait uniformly marks his concur! and designs; that he nevet is contented with a lower seat, so lone as he can aspire to me nignesi. i The-rnines and riches of Mexico are tempting objects ; but sven the wealth , and splendor of the Mexican empire, , when viewed through the long .trad f water and wood which he woula have to pass, and the clangers which ft re to be encountered, are lost and eclipsed in the superior lustre of a throne, erected at New-Orleans, and stretching its sceptre over the Wes tern State. From evry thing which con collect, as well from his own declarations where he dared to unbo som himself, as the more unguarde i avowals of his les artful accompli ces, A. Burr must hate had three objects in view : To separate the Western from the Eastern States, To invade Mexico, or To effect a temporary settlement on the Ouachita. The first was the foremost in his hopes and first in the period of its attempted accomplishment. The se cond was but to turn into, a new course the very same means which he had collected, and the very pas sions which he should have excited for the attainment of the first. And the last was to have been at once tht asylum of his despairing ambition, . the germ of new schemes, where it 1 hush'd in grim repose, expects its evening's prt-y." Tke the principal points of the ev'u tnce as they havt been disclosed ('urine this examination, Sc see how tl ey bear us out in these conclusions, ! The examination ot Gen. baton V.efore he court, and in the presence ol the very man whom he arraigned at the bar, establishes the truth of his deposition beyond the shadsw of a doubt. " Let us wait to see Eaton confronted with A- Burr," was the former cry of Burr's friends. 44 Let us see what n,aton wm aare to say l.efore him, or whether Burr will , care to contradict him." Yet this important confrontation is over, and what is the issue of it ? W?e have setn Gen. Eaton standing in the very front of A. Burr, & under the flashes of that terrible eye, which, like Me dusa's head, was to have turned him into a stene : but we have seen Eaton rising with the spirit of conscious truth, Sc re-echoing the same charges against A. Burr without hesitation, and without the slightest alarm. We have seen A Burr writhing under the consciousness of his guilt, and his bleached countenance betraying the agitations of his soul. We have seen Eaton persecuted by the gjoss questions of legal ingenuity but we have seen him turning upon his as sailants, and bearing them down, with the consistency and truth f his story. After this who can doubt that Burr was just as discontented with his situation, and as sanguine and aspiring as Eaton had represented him 't that so long as he was doubt-1 purpose, he amused him with the tale of the Mexican project ; but af ter having thus felt the pulse of his virtue, after hdvin : thus attempted to ascertain how far his temper was lawless enough to acquiesce in this lawless scheme of plunder, arid be lieving at last that he was unprinci pled enough for his purpose', that h then began t open t him his favourite and grander scheme of ag grandizement. He spoke to him ot dismembering the Unieii, of the ease with which he could separate me Western from the Eastern States, & the splendors of a throne at Orleans. He did not reveal these ideas as if they mad just been hatched, or as if they would be lightly rennquisueu. Far from it. He dwelt upon his means He named individuals whom he had selected for his purposes, & he was nreoared to answer every ob jection which could be made to-their accomplishment, mter una, there sceptic enough to doubt that this man was at heart a traitor ? His interviews with Mr. Stoddert point to the same conclusion though with this material difference, that while he manifested the same dis contented spirit, and the same con tempt for the weakness of the admi nistration which he was afterwards forced to respect, and the same idle confidence in his own means and ta lents, he did not dare to assail Mr. Stndderfs ear with the details of his plans. Hi? did not designate New- Orleans as the point wnerc nc auvuiu make his attack ; he did not name the persons whom he had chosen for k: ..nmulirps. and he seemed to 1113 OV,UWUI"' 7 disclose his ideas not as if they were such as he meant t execute, but as those that might be successfully at tempted by some daring genius. The reason of this distinction is obvious. He knew that Mr. stoauerowas a man too much virtue, and ol too little means to become an accom I 111411 V ' Dliae. Gen. Eaton, on the contrary, was vounus he was doki, ne nu . 1 1 , i i shown a military turn, 8t his virtues had not vet been proved by Burr At Pittsburg, while he was on his route to the Western country, and under the hospitable roof of the ve nerable George Morgan, he displays the same bent of mind. In truth, wherever he goes, he is destined like the snail to leave his slime behind him. It would seem impossible for the mind of man, when seriously bent on any favourite idea, to pre vent its bursting forth in continued and indirect indications. Burr's mind was full of war, of arms, of military achievements, and the disunion of the States. And w hat were his con versations and conduct? They were precisely such as might have been expected from this disposition. He could not see a strong man, without rrmcwWine- him as a soldier, St wish ing that he had a thousand such fel- lows. His conversation witn me yovng Mr. Morgans before he reach ed their father's house, his conver sations at and atter dinner, breathe this predominant sptiit. The same plans haunt him at midnight, and he descends at eleven at night with the candle in hand to the chamber of old Mr. Morgan; for what? Mr, Mor gan's ardent virtue stopped his com munications, and prevents- us from having the full benefit of the disclo sure, but there is every reason to believe that his intention was to make the father an instrument in the ruin ot his son, and exact from him his 1 1 1hx1..1 j- v n consent that tnis nooic uimutu sun j should go along with him in his "ne farious" projects to tnc wcsi uui why chrinlil dwell unon sucn srf-nes as these : The whole air oi JllUUiU ' . . - his conversations at Morganza, and next morning at Washington, Was such as was calculated to draw down upon him the worst suspFcions of all the Morgans, and to mauce mem iu give the first information to govern ment oSLhis suspicious designs. The complaisant Mr. Julien Dupiestre, may indeed deny all these things. But what weight should be given to that, man's word or vigilance of ob servation, who has to oppose the li nked testimony of the Morgans, oi who upon being Hskecl whether Nev York might not be taken with 50G men,could complaisantly bow assent ? Let us proceed another step in the investigation of this evidence. Tht this wandering spirit is on Blanker hassett's island. Here it plays the same part ; at least if- we may cal culate the cause by its consequencest Three days after Burr leaves the island, Blannerhassett publishes the Querist. Two circumstances are here calculated to blend Mr. Burr with the guilt or folly of these wri tings, 1st. That Blannerhassett, the author, was the notorious accomplice of Burr ; and, 2dly, That the senti ments and very chain of arguments were so similar to those which a wit ness had a short time before heard from the lips of Col Burr; that up on being asked who he supposed to be the author, he very sagely replied that Burr had furnished the ideas, 8c that Blannerhassett had put them into style. j These writing3 speak for them selves. No man that reads tjie Que rist can mistake the disposition or design with which they were com posed Writings which display to the people beyond the Allegany, the ima ginary disadvantages of a union with the Atlantic States, which attempt to show them in how much better cenciiion they would be placed un der a government of their own, which persuade them that it is not only a natural right, but a right ingrafted upon the constitution to provide for their own dis inct welfare ; whoever can mistake the temper of such wri tings as these from such men, and at such a time, might as well pre tend to doubt whether the Declara tion of Independence or Common Sense were calculated to promote the revolution of America, No man can doubt them, and no one can pre tend to doubt but he who is an ac complice of Burr. And here it is not improper to give all the weight which they de serve, to Blanntrhassett's sincere St repeated declarations. From the complex and uncertain code of the law, these declarations may not be received in a court of justice to bear ap-ainst Burr, but common sense is unable to recognise savh an absurd distinction. There are sufficient rea sons to satisfy any man, that Burr and Blannerhassett were joint ac complices in a joint undertaking, k that however Burr may have im posed ipon the credulity of Blanner hassett in setting before him the ex tent ol' his mean, that he fairly re presented to him the nature of his plans. Let us then gather tnese plans from Blanner hassett's declarations, and what are thev ? Wherever he ventured to be the most frank, his schemes were oi "he grandest cna racter. It was not to settle the Ouachita land ; nor was it to carry conqutst to Mexico ; but it was to seize die treasures and arms of Orleans, and bv locking ud that mouth of the Mississippi, to produce a dissolution j u ot the tuion ana to establish an in . i - i dependent empire to the west -of -the Allegany. And to whom were these declarations made ? not to such men as Elijah Jones, not to men whom he knew not how to trust ; but to such as the Hendersons, and to them too not in the soortive sallies f his mind ; but in the solemnity of re tirement, and after he had previous ly exacted from them a pledge of se crecy. With all that childish gar rulity which has been ascribed to him,, the simple Blanneihassett could sometimes make distinctions. Tie was net as fortunate as Burr in al ways keeping himself concealed be hind the curtain, but like him he sometimes knew where to be silent. Like him, too, he sometimes mis II . i : j; j . i iook. nis man, as uc m m mc v.aac of the respectable Hendersons Combine with these circumstances Swaitwoui's declaration to Gen. W. that there must be sme seizing at j New-Orleans ; the discontented tem per of many of the inhabitants of that city ; their disposition for a change of government ; and the number of friends whom he had there enlisted : recollect the aspiring genius of the man, his desperate fortunes & vain hopes, that the commander in chief and the army would join in with him, and it is impossible to resist the. con viction that he would have seized New-Orleans if he could. What were his exact plans we know not ; Do not Bollman's confessions $he j but we may at least guess at some part, by which he might have steer ed his course. He might have sup posed that he had force enough to! descend to New-Orleans. He might have passed Fort Massac 8c the fort at Chickesaw Bluffs, without much opposition. When arrived at New- Orleans, he might have expected the aid of Wilkinson and army, and of many and perhaps most of the inha bitants of that city. His plan at this point is not to be mistaken. If his force was large, if the army were sincere in hi sup port, if the inhabitants of N. Orleans were prompt and explicit in their attachment, Burr w uld have unfurl ed the banners of rebellion ; he would have invited adherents from all quar ters ; he would have lavished the confiscated treasures of this city up on them, and perhaps he would have tried whether by locking up the mouth of the Mississippi, or restrict ing its navigation, he might not have forced the people of the upper coun try to have acquiesced in his usurpa tion. Such would probably have been his plan ; or if these things had not turned out so favourable to hi wishes, he would thsn have pro gressed with his other enterprize ; collected arms, provisions and adhe rents, and attacked Mexico through a sea-port, as Vera Cruz, r up the Red River. For he frequently con tended during his -trial that his boats were well fitted for going up the stream. If such were Burr's plans, was not Burr a traitor at heart ? " But he did not commit the overt act, he was no? guilty of levying war against the U States." Perhaps it mav be so. But even under this view of the subject, he saves his life at the expence of his reputation. He may stillconti nue to breatht upon the earth ; but what of that ? like Cain, he has a mark that lasts for ever. We shall hereafter enquire in our strictures on the conduct of the Chief Justice, whether the overt act of le vying war was committed at the mouth of Cumberland river. We certainly do not approve of the cri terion which the Chief Justice has laid down on the point. This mass of evidence is sufneient to convince us that the dismember ment of the Union was the first and favourite object of A. Burr, & that he never would have looked to the conqsest 6f Mexico, but in conse quence ot a fear that he should be disappointed; That object was the next nearest to his heart. The host of witness who were introduced hav , proved his attachment to the enter prize ; but " this was one," say his advocates, " which he would never haye meditated but from the pros pect of an approaching war with Spain ; and never would have exe cuted but in consequence of that war's taking place." In this we agree with his advo cates ; that if he had been disap pointed in seizing Orleans, and war hc-d been dtclared by the U. States against Spain, that he might then have attempted to. turn his prepara tions into that channel. Perhaps they will agree with us in this ; thai if he had such an enterprise in view, the tottering state of our affairs with Spain was calculated to advance that object, by enlisting recruits in his service. But in this we join issue with his advocates ; that if there had been no war from the U, States, ht himself would .have attempted to have waged it against Spain on his own account. His friends deny this position, and point to the settlement of the Ouachita as the ultimate ob ject of his preparations. This las? epithet indeed truly expresses our own opinion of his plans. Can any impartial man beli eve that he would have retired to the Ouachita until he had exhausted all his other plans ? ; Were his means adapted for agricul ture, or war ? Was his party com posed of families or young men I were tney possessed ot muskets Sc bayonets, or ploughshares and hoes ? Were they provided with seed corn or kiln dried meal ? But why carry our questions further ? Was the man who conducted them better calcula ted for a farmer or a commander ? Was the ardor of his desperate am bition to be sooner gratified in the peaceful harvests ol the field, or a midst i he din of arms St by mowing oft the heads of the Mexicans ? But if these presumptive reason, are not sufficient to remove every doubt, there are three direct facta which must be irresistible. Look at the declarations of Blannerhassett to Peter Taylor. Read the conversa tions f Comfort Tyler in Blanner hassett's Portico. Look at the tes. timony of Lemuel Henry, who proves that Robert A. New, Burr's intimate friend, and the only Virginian we are proud to say who was found un der Burr's banners, did. actually ridi cule the idea of an Ouachita settle ment ; said that it was a good idea to hold out to the world, and that it seemed to go down very well. The man who can resist this force of evidence, must have indeed inhe rited the soul of an ancient sceptic " And is the settlement of the? Ouachita completely out of the ques tion ? Did Mr. Burr never intend to visit his land? Why then did lie pay so much money to Col. Lynch fru it ?" To this we reply, that he did not pay much money to Col. Lynch, as appears from his evidence, even admitting that there was a perfectly tair contract between them ; and, se condly, that the veil which he pur chased for his other enterprizes was well worth the money which he paid for itand, thirdly, that had those enterprizes succeeded, he might ea- sily have repaid himself Trom the hanks of Orleans or the rnines of Mexico. We agree with nis advo cates in this, that Col. Burr would nave rcuicu 10 me uuacnita as an asylum, but not until all his other schemes had been blasted. Haw long he would have remained there is be yond our conjecture hut the proba bility is, that the Ouachita would have been a germ and not the gravo of his ambition ; and that being thus planted in the wilderness, between Mexico and Orleans, he would have called around him the most despe rate and enterprizing men from all quarters, and then struck such a blow as would have best suited his means and his wishes. Thanks tor the vigilance and energy of the go vernment which has so far defeated his machinations Here let us pause. We shall her after pursue this subject in reJatior to this man's means, to the conse quences which are likely to arise out of his conduct, and to the lessor which it should teach us. WILLIAM SHAW And THOMAS D. BURCH, ttAVING entered into Partnership. ! l unHer the Firm and Name of SHAW andBURCH, they wish to make itkncwra to their Friends and the Publ c, that they are now opening a very extensive and handsome Assorrment of Goods, suitable for the Season, selected with great Care, by one of the Partners, in New-York. This Firm having discovered, that tor carry on an active business, Cash is -absolutely necessary, they are therefore deter- mined to dispose of their Goods at reduced Prices for that necessary Article. Prices so far reduced, as to make Purchasers in terested in paying ready Money. Although the plan or mode of dointr bu siness which this Firm intend to pursue, is for Cash only, yet their Fr ends in Raleigh s and its vicinity, who may purchase to an considerable Amount, and whose Punc tuality can be relied on, will be thankfully furnished at three or foui Blonths Credit (if required) on the same Term, as if Cash were paid dawn. Raleigh, Nov. 1, 1807. N. B. As Goods, particularly those oC a fine Quality, are uniformly more or leas injured by being sent out for the inspection of private Families, and although it is 'the sincere desire of Shaw and Birch to oUUge, it will be with the utmst Teluctance that Articles of the above description will be sent cat. BOARDING. qpHE Subscriber informs those Gentlemen, Members of the General Assembly, af his acquaintance. & others, that he continues to occupy the same hu on Hillsborough Street that he did last Session, and. shall be glad to accommodate such of the Members of the Legislatuie, s may please to favor him wih rheir custom. MARK COOK. Raleigh? Oct. 28. STEUBEN'S Military Exercise 1, -.11 i Hi Mr 'I HI 1 3 ft 0 f I mi Wi ot Eaton's dispositions for his next noint vht:re we are able to fix President arr.p'y coc&rm this idea I I bo ioiu i irtursitfuirt, and asuds; the p