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1 v x - r- ,... tit 77 : vv"- T s - v .4. , t i - is.-- . lilt FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 81 ; T -.' : T. r: 7 - r 11 11 - - , . amjmmmmmmmmmmmmamm -x. r ! j W t A ah ' J : . k occasion Ucochtr day tt) w t few remark oriUw subjtcr, pro p i-n article which fc copied r-cd Hins: W be pcniuUed to V r-;.,4tJfoor iiuUtutiora.ortxiwoc r r: of mn. nui it ie'cxi rd, ;be one W,riop omotf,t!H; otlr.to Tnistr.c . i-J i nujoritj cFihe otCT, indud "hift. fugitte EnftHhnd"rnnctnen: L ? .n-nt ibe cue tf trtnnjr were CSSw?; to.tcy .nd firm-, U cf a fKa ipaeraiitt tST Although ihe norid atone tic uocd ptrcipiee JibouRh the tiftti rrre cuu.idt red lert to xme m Uxor r-tu ect, Hbcnx' trie frJrndUu tv 'flu "" CTcJUcadtn iroulJ "be the rjMtierx of their cpptHioojif Ittmafiar fU-jtt, with a Jew vczorptioothrj lift rrx'd with noble ardour arxl per tefrf3ct ajw-t the caaie of dtapotntn. Tftta'e rireted aucceuhipj their re iAitct bu htm effifctual, tadit it but jutt lUt tbey hare aardcd to th i aft ia hutory 4iiiiior TB.oLomr or rwtTUtws Mt'V-iuuTcr Eab.t btl the,' cj-j&jlrA Oe ercr fortjtnoit M their uuUilit iLcy ha been of that hot of i-ite, truoai and pertore ring piriU which hit iktr timviret is thtt ceuntHnl tad toscsked efforts baa emancipated Bu rjpe, ue4tae worlJ, aod deitrojed tier iunT'Ix a. ccae trro!Ti the fate ol ai5trk,terj iixIifWaal itf society wn casccIWvo take an interest. and act his, lirt TaIerat.th profligate 4tid li-j bldq where tiucttd to the standard cf j ttirvKyVba was deemed the strode J -Tlebtpe of reward or inc uxt vi iil'BeBt iaj;e-itd una unwieldy putrtu ftijj w efcrj eovn'.ry. ; Itey vtert tie in fjpirUMt tu tlWir Impel orieara. t-xtr lit banrr'of l.ttrt free goTem- Zsr aaJ correct ntiocirl; Uimed toe bril- Lc pu'iti ,f lt?iuertud sjhI pore mer, r . iiaud to ictio-i by to other feeling- t'jaii utkc oi uct). 1 bey -Jiate triump&ed 6 tre f ( a ia ilt. V.tied xanV. broke t.Nr aaJ trid Jowa tbe tiep. coiinnna of .Irtwft B)ri.-! uhiv ftirj t'iyfA'eJ i iirrtJ ik'i mu mie now readjf titmnjica ir.j dctotr ibeir ia.MOciates in rciccti. : ! . . I .Itttx federal rurty a'kould oot'fbx'a mo farjrettiutr ofertlnoul of D)aaparie! : isrt,THtlU ACHIEVEMENT that' ntirs if the tictofy. i True there arej '.'.bcj4 w P0'' whose cal Ui "wx cautious policy placed I hem upon a fc-IiiJe j-wa-.d of aecnnu, where neither f.ory w disgrace, succcas of ? failure could KiktL. Someftheaeliare rone tofiT to decry the frd.-ral journals for caliiog pane 'a rubber, and inurderer nay, ? re dmiutd thue jvurrmlt, aa if the ty. ert by such roeaus to be propitiated. may now be Jorgiten if they can J i , ete a these men, fn if fee K'mit ed to join in liie gene icjc'Iitr i h ineri thty are I be -Uiwed to hone thev jeral-iubtlee now safe, and r kct w.tb more efucitney a. the aide : or I? is almost a pity to weaVen the 'W'wsco rj d:tgu&tod contempt th ucli an artiUe i this is cafcu "UJto excite, by aoy"-n;u:m or It i very ccfttin that no s rv w rr man d.K.tned to a uraighlj ack frl,r,(1 !he four vral, c a dungcou ct a itu-V madne s. ever uttered a 5:ctr iiKb r oJ oon5rt)se, or gavr; cn cot. arring, that,' in 'thh J; thof news or t;tUr,tnat;et, enit .thu singular prrxJucWtu an ex ;;nia tVmperati-iathc-subiect ia thii coanuyl Vwoliog to :;;wr.u 1011 too r(Vtd' TheyWtteirorig.n e Uonaparte vaa thev ill r?.. gaiter He 'b n& inorc. Os cf those parttegU composing a re awjority of the niVtoo, we prpl above artidel-the-ooe anx J ... -.f rnAr to tint we hae ftbhhtdt containing Jirrrs cx tT r.u,.u before exorcised. . f & L ki w v T" i other truglini, atalr struggUncfi to deprcts the; other to put it out of power, with th-avowed object .of puijicg liscu u a nce.pai:ie,. un fortunately, have aj . different opiai bnson.our f ireign. concern?, aa on ";he principles of civi government. 'AU this is. freely j admitted but ev very other position of the-writer is absurd and untenable , When such factious and splenetic authdrs write about a Frcnth subservience attach ing to 1 any portion of the people, to nine tenths' of the honest plant era, farmers and mechanics who form theli body of the nafiafl, they write what is idfe and nocictjical as well as false Thir writing can produce no effect j because ihe common sense of every ;rnao revolts at what they say., The oolyrrencb party.' in this country is that part of our people, and, thanlc,ed b? God, fhey are the. majority, who are not ao entirely devoted to the in terests of Britain as the party which arroantlv asperses them That there is a 13ritih influence pervading all classes ot our people;". 11 buttoo obvious; i jr reign in the bosomsof those who tbeniselves little suspect it The sternest Republican in the nation, he who despises -the cqirup tion of Britain a'nd.hateV her crimes ; who looks upqn her laws as . vicious, i and her commerce is cont minalicg ; this go-)d man, who boasts of his and his country's independence of all fo reign powers, will give you a dollar or two more for English broad cloth than for the same stuff oj domestic manufacture, though the raost-cuo-niDjg metier, 'were he ta1crd to it; could not tell you the difference be tween the m To this day, the ha bits of colonial dependence are not eradicated.. There are rvue8 with in our sigfit at this moment butlr of brkis imported ' from England, and there are good women, even in this district, who cannot sip their choco late or tea, in romforty unless they know thnt lMthicup and its contents hsvr been imported from England. Even in the Southern, country, repu ted the most democratic, that part of the country most ubuscd F-r its J uu xvrgiicim icarruen wnraiurciio is to this day called English bread, the best of nearly all the' fruits are ia'led English, &r. - In short Eng Ylizti and gsod have been; and are yet coiacrcu-St nontrnnus terms, wncn applied to fabrics of any kind, and even. when absurdly applied to the indigenous fruits of the soil. . It is plain thata British influence pervades the whole country, Yu may trtr.c it in splendid mansions, in the bell which announces your visit, the lamp which lights you along the passage, the carpet, on which you tread, the gbss and plate" from which you are served, and in . the brilliant mirrors which .reflect the company arrayed in Dritishjtuff of toitly fabric. In the firm house. and the cottage, you find it lurking in your crockery &.qucens- ware. Knives ana torxs, ana .an tne etcetera of housekeeping, down, to tbe'ehovel and tongs at the fire side. It u like the air we breathe, intangi ble and omnipresent. But bn many of dux leading citizens it has a more direct and palpable operation we mean'our lawyers and merchants. Out of a vcry extensive accldaintartce with them, ve have npt known more than half. a. dozen of each class who are net strongly .attached to British tosutuaons. ' The books read in our CoUeg.rt nay our very.Speiling-books jand "Kudimcnis : of pramrnari'm ipre9s us from infancy upvrarda with ideas of the supremacy .ofiBrmsnii teT3ture and science a feeling which ripens, into -almost certain-?: maturity U our 'pursuits r beeome eitherS legal I or. mercantile. - vynen we.comqioe with these' ..and a thousand 'etiierjeonr 8ideration3,the -identity of our laTo guagw'religibntrmanners, mat wftere,an tamence 13 so grcauy Tpf ourvchifc,.faicrfmelpamioUnt te!IyonaittbIppinr!ti6ft gmKiJpaaJhjricL .Mo. "Britajri.:tberefore.'hanunier ileratbddlitb:! co aooiicanOTfciceDr ne WiW"CaaMufouaSQ.ote Ji.f! r to us on the. other hand, any channel ihrpughVhich prance an influence over, this coiintrv in-anv degree to be compared wUh thc abi- quitoiis influence of Britain The assertion of such; an. influence, of ... ... -. , i such a party, is idle' it will not hear the" test bf examination Thcqnly French party in J this country is that which is less British in its feeling, than the 'small and comparatively in significant party!, one of whom has now the" Insolence to charge- this go vernment and this; whole people--to charge you, honest reader and your father, brothers, relations and friends with being' the minions of foreign despot. It is not that you are French partizans your ..bosoms burn, your cheeks glow with indignation at the aspersion put it is mat you are less British ; that you'support your gov ernmenfiTTa holy -war for the per sonal rights of every man in the na tioa; that you are' not ready to re joice because circumstances appear to'Mvor the arms of the' enemy in Europe, and to open to him a great cr facility ot annoy incus. Without goin'c .back to the days of our Revo lution. let us recur to the commence- ment ox uie, it evotuuou in rrance. Parties' then very indefinite, if dis. 1 tinguishable, among us,' began to se- parate .ana taxetneir grouna. n'i great majority of this People - hailed tjie dawn of the French Revolution as i .the precursor of a brilliant day, which was to diffuse over the benight ed region of France' that glorious light of freedom which we enjoyed': our hearts were with that People ; we the Republicans sympathized in their struggles we wisheel them success i n the . esublishraent "of a sister Republic. Then, too, arose me AntirGallican party, the enemies f . Fren:h - independence, who had the cunning toamalgamate themselves in the real Federal f arty, with whom they yet continue to be classed, who denounced vou as jacobins then, and Uvho have not yet forgotten the. name. These men bated liberty $ they hated France bcciusef they jhruggjed for freedom ; they (were the Antirjaco- : bins. In the Course of the Revolu j tion, the successive forms of govern ment of France; received the success ive hatred and hostility of the Fede ral nartv, until I Napoleon, becoming sovereign if notby choice - at .-.least f by consent of ihe Fi.opie,consummat. ed their hatred to France, because under ti auspices that nation flou-1 risnea,, ana unui recently, was auie successfully to baffle; the intrigues of Bnuin. , The Repuohcans, .on the other hand, findingthat the Revolu. tion, from which so much had been hoped, would result.in; merely. eata blishing-an imperial' government on the ruins - of the- old monarchy, ,he cameindifferent to France they did not hlte ' her as the Federalists did, but cared nothing about her they could ffeel no syinpathy ;foT4 her institutions, no love lor her ru ler, ; especially after his despotic abolition of the freedom of the; press France has no friends among us, un less '?e are friends of France who are not partizans fof , Brimin, who, will not hold ; feasts, fireA great guns and split our throats with huzzas that untain tnumpns vv c a:e oo uicuus of Napoleon r-jfee . never iiave,lceh. His outrages on the property1 of our countrymen ana tne ngruso our na tion; have Je'hinv obdxiouJUd; niok of 'those ;ia thrs country who had overlooked,')n the splendor and order of his reign, his encroachmcnts 6n clviViibertyButihisyre8iT and so jajr'tHe BpuShcaais far as we- knotnrat wepshall mourn Over the prostfatlonxif France at the fe'etof her enemUsof .Hritoib par Uodarly t and iurthe , ihii t wTie n 'Na-. noltfon-failal 'tneref fallV'a lereaCmaiiT Miniotisof France, do the. fafctionTcalll the Republicahs, thsf meo who gcude; their ploVighs and work thtnills, fur prrted tt, vi. not being advoeates of. 7? writers mean by the tint -phrase ol f French principlesabcut whlchv they rant so idly f lheymean, as we have shewn, the principles of inde pendence of England as oftall .oihef nations rthe prlndplc'whlchtWash'-' mgton bequeatnea as a legacy taenia countrymen ftne principles invatiaqiy maintained by the present admrmstra tion, its -supporters, ana same wnu uo not support it ana.opposea wimv vj. rulence by a small party, one of whom we say one of them, in jusdec to the whole tells us they have fought and bfed :iti this country, and done as much in their narrow sphereiisley could do to put down the French par- ty mat is, as wenave snewn,tne true American party from the commence ment of its Jacobinic career to this day. Which is as tnuch as tosay in plain English pshaw ! plain America we mean that they are opposed to the principles and progress of the French Revbludon - and its Jacobinic well wishers, and have continued- s ted fast in iheaith to this" day. True,v they tell us nothing no w about the hostility (hey displayed to -the"French nation when it assumed republican govern mentbut we have4 -.not -forgotten their"attcmpts'in- 9rand?$8ctak sides with t England amsahalre;- public ; nor have we f wcotten ho w 1 irritate a tne ieaersm;naT project, were' against the .Venerable John "A dams for overdfrido their rank hosti 1 uty. oan it oeisupposea sucn uimgs as these are IbYgptten ' " Could it?so1 soon be forgotten that they were s6 anxious to assist Britain m her object, that they raised an army of God knows how many ""regiments, without any possible object but that of co-opera tion wth Britain in a - war against , a nation struggling for freedom? France having discarded Hepublican govern ment, and chrisen'tts soveretgn,they rejoice now 't seeing her at theTfeet of a conqueror. In this they are coh- sistent. Cbniidering thepadcity of total; wan tof opporttrai ty of co-operation of this smalt' baud, coniprizing perhaps a 'fourth of those- w ho ; pass j unaer tne aenemtnauon ox reaerar istsJ their claim to ahare in tSeoverv throw of Napoleon is indeed ludicrous enough. Federalists are invoked to hug to their bosoms the- recollection that triey are of the party which has a rigfet toMe glory of having some i sharejj In the prostration P FraoVe Wfajv. ... v m a maguanirauua piriy ; vniiti amaw ----va.tTtuncaasiy-invJJ' . xr ac-sui' ing glory ! A party which avoVvs, RfSgJ f Utqrsak; pricnout any sort oi uisgutsci its ucvo-1 tion to tne cause 01 a ioreign--enemy, j and rapture at his successes b bast-1 ing of the glory pf having always en j tertamea similar sentiments, cc iougnt and bred to maintain them ! 1 j Visions of lorV, spire my ichingigh the writer Ts readyj texclaimwitl the poet Th,e brilliancy of fhs own exhilirating though ts 'apnea rsV in deed, to have transported him beyond J his way through a metaphor tmmedi-t ately" afterwards, when he speaks of toe aziivnu pi a puiria mats, nir tne i:. r j-wu. .i .-'-'? reaucr can the whole rali others ,ii .. . - cannot stop thanks for beyopd-ouf acleftbnvStt we will remarfci thjatUthedaye saw inose papers we naa w sKiK' oi idea that any ia iathis avW 'sutlif Barefaced attach meti't k attacliment IbVwe sa of devotion to the interests of tfreene M .V?fatitamme nis.meamngraineToiiwM stTuihsubnOsinffhirtir leu wnac is tne meaning I rir.ik V?:jlvfiTWWiW?4ii f that paragraph and seveMte fawdiir rfswha ??ed . in ; the piece,.- whicHfwe 1 fvirfae6hvink tpm&&mm?H:i touottce, heshaUhpiifit ; tmnddlmg? w.hatiswiioUylliV:-& . Mm?Ml cpmprebepsion UpbniKi Jastrrl v--ti rrir -v;. turn Congreshan:an:Yinis xts&ziKy&co&cs, tye do-pat vtyrreJI U M 0 knorri but frotilhc torpByia wtechi C 'i i (C-UUUy. WW- U.I 1UIC1UU -, f ( M ' I old iigaif iipdscnsi rr.cn tad' to 4 mQacrns . tnis vrjuine jnane t ay liogtcy aid tfjemiiiiiJa views-ihese coVaieendBcdev which Mart4 eiJlobt , pferrVduricCtheiFta denouiieedcll4hoiesj?ho werfeuawll beyond forgiveaejs3pfwdimi nH: r res, ji sccras, nave tummiwru -a.C" 1 . i jf0f?4 a cause btitop a dijrof so, 1 , 1 1 sceral jubilee tSeyare to t3 petoiit-f - J? ?' gecer vvtcrxhicb? achieved over 0n4rjbele?' rc-' creaht ieralistr 'mmk their peace;(fine fbr : , bai'''ihvtHii turnltheir conqueri rcaairi' those whchavedeSetterirtheu andhstelcll ' themj yyilt put t(tsSes j?ne r scrabe ofatrstW rTbusIy'wefidrew , how thev. cWfe....; ftem ' schooled mthis'Diueil: by a pedagogue, wlib , with iiooaia s one hand cc a roq in the cXher. uacl- Wjxaltv'ttkvardo idrindingto tbUIehhfpji mafkai ons6 mrRoantranct IdiVfjraceW ' tMpublicadcWe whu una euviexifeweycT-' iJUiou: rrtniYMniritirtr Tr tn. iNirt v r Hiif, . latese very luckless wiglVwhov refa-. sea or islwablefia rnelhip.1 , Bohaparte; beinr; d e throt e cL; . I.HH v r danger frpmFync. fcvtpcSs&l)- according tqr tb !:s?ip . pourro poaeo6?e;hay French inMueiijCe; ; .That tppicis dpie ; wim tprever.) ic sbanru iwriirvei oaears-deaJTened witfcan cternliicK ibhous clamor of'Fredcb tnittience. w a rtrxr a FrrY!Crv- .ffltExtion'-r VneSdjtMf jJi" u, ..tmirHUM perfbrmid iieeletRratf t4.?, -f ' ' ade:toVatf'idg'jis v: u tilbre'eoieIi , treIi5IcHooseiS itorcd fwjtv i -cp::for51t Z i O - ,i 1 " htf? T ) f J v . 1 3f. 1 - 1.-. K't .-' '.'Aii-M' :tv ft ; ' I;;:1 'Mr I! a 1 aiQta:o;tts- asccoilancy, the 1 i vfU-v 5busp3ruzMi5jtuj.Mintl,ewt!a'thiat at
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
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June 10, 1814, edition 1
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