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the office of Columbia; and continued it British America, amidst calamity, and there stay and the calamity forever. These are the foul hearted foreign lawyers, foreign priests, foreign merchants; that cannot so little love office, as to obtain it by honest means of patriotism; to live retired, or await their fit and honest turns, from the farmer's franchise of union, where all is peace. But the avaricious must be masters of man, and climb upon the throne by delusion, great commercial masters aristocrats must be, and make their countrymen slaves: while all who are servants of liberty, are aiding the farmer's independence, and country's cause. But those who plead peace for office, and want war to stay there, are the serpent's rebellious servants of robbery.

In the world of course came hunters, smiths, farmers and all the makers of the things of necessity, of course their rights to govern them, are really their own. Then follows the lying aristocrat, false preachers, and all foreign speculators of commercial rebellion, and usurped the oldest right to govern; and next the divine philosophers, republican emancipators, and heroic conquerors, and all domestic theorists, for restoring those rights, and mediating an ascending country of freedom.

The general name of the two great perpetual parties of the world, which include all men of all description, are the democrat and aristocrat; the terms applied to local parties, are as numerous as the stars; as aristocrats think cunning, for carrying their false royal points; and republicans think proper, for the support of their country.

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The hunters, farmers and mechanics undeceived, are the patriotic democrats of the world; and even of all professions, would be democrats, was there no aristocrats; but a part of which, will be republicans. America, came hunters, domestic merchants, smiths, farmers and physicians, who were followed as the country prospered, by the aristocratic lawyer, false preacher, and foreign merchant, deluders and ravagers of the Columbian's rights; and all was war and confusion all the years of America; till the revolution brought Columbia thirty years of temporary peace, the only peace ever enjoyed. Hence, the necessity of mediators, thus

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the republican servants, were inserted between the parts gone astray, and the great democratical whole; such as divine philosophers, and conquering Washingtons; these cover the seas with sailors, and the climes with patriots.

All the speculations of the grand world's theatre, whether pleading, trading, preaching, healing, conquer-` ing, teaching or emancipating, consists in either domestic, or foreign commerce; the one, divine, and the other, civil, the one, the varying lies of the devil; the other, the common law of God. Civil commerce which is foreign, wants all the world and keeps nothing; while domestic commerce, wants ali to enjoy the world equally, and has every thing. That is, the devil which is civil nature, has nothing and wants all, while God of divine nature, has all, and wants nothing.

And all the social actors of the world's stage, have all their moral minds, actuated collectively, from either a civil or divine impulse, which last, puts in action the hand of labour, by which all cultivation is produced; which the former tends to destroy, the tiller's soul, forms the patriot of nature, but the civil minds of commodities, invites the foreigner of wrong; the moveables of traffic, are foreign to the fixidity of the soil.

The fixed agriculturalists, are manufacturers most humble servants, and only guardian parent of all commerce. Domestic commerce, covers the sea with sails, and the climes with people. While foreign commerce, is a proud and haughty master; and agriculture her awful slave; manufacturers her yoked tools; destroying all innocence, leaving but one devil, one ship, and one city, the soil to up grow in wilds. The aristocrat is forever the enemy of man, he never acts in his maker's cause; whose dupes are clogs to society; but the republicans, are the victorious workers of freedom.

The great subject of contention, between the aristocrat and democrat, in other words between man and man collectively; and the great cause of all the wars of the world, are which shall excel, commerce, or agriculture; and one, or the other, have ever ruled, there is no balancing them; but they keep wavering, when one is up, the other is down, when agriculture rises

above the ravages of commerce, she liberates man in the glory of republican liberty, for off goes the king's yoke; but when foreign commerce rises ravager and endeavours to govern, over goes to ruin the republic, and on to the throne, climbs the aristocratical king of slavery.

Of these two interests of foreign commerce, and domestic agriculture, the one is lust and pride gone to excess, the other humiliation and union; the speculator proud and the farmer humble; foreign commerce carried on by vile speculators, including every kind of influential rebels, foul with commercial avarice, and foreign to his national rights, foreign to the liberties of the common whole, who are mostly farmers, are those foreign physicians, foreign lawyers, foreign traders, and foreign preachers, and every other flattering charming publican, who runs at large, aiding not the will of the majority of farmers; who always ought to be the will, unless the devil rules. For haughty speculators cannot govern themselves, because all want to be kings; want to excel each other by their speculation, their rivalship, interest, and caprice, all confusion, all want to be royal masters; and shall the foreign commercial aristocrats delude Columbia ? shall speculators have a king in America? or shall republican charity revolt from their overwhelming fury, and preserve the liberty of the Columbian farmer? The republican lawyer, domestic merchant, mechanic and farmer, says no.

Speculators have no regard for speculators, much more the farmer; for speculation is speculation, from the least horse jockey, to the greatest magnificent king. All kings are foreign speculators, or they would never be kings. Foreign speculation is carried on in all shapes and notions, ever so great, and dreadful wicked.

The British high and mighty king, and noble lords, so called for speculation sake, and all their admirals, false priests and spies, the greatest speculators in their turn, of the commercial world, aided and assisted, by their cold brother speculators, not only of America, but of all rebellious Europe, just as their royal interest pleases, and keep them royal. That in case of the down fall of the devils, of the fast anchorded hell of folly, mighty British lords and nobles, can flee to the continents, or

to any country wherein is planted, the royal civility of the falling isle; to be sheltered, in the English language, law and consanguinity; dear descendants of iniquity, bound in perpetual allegiance, to falling fragments; meerly import Parliament across the wide Atlantic, and blessed be the Guelphs.

It must be a mighty pity, that the old king Louis 16th, of France, had not a French language, law and shelter, more extensively on the carpet of Columbia; to soothe those royal minds, who so much lament his loss, as to publish every week what a nice man he was, because he was a king, their great sort of folks; at the same time despise those who acted, to save his head from the guillotine, and render poor Louis, a transatlantic paradise. But the great commercial rival, of the fast anchored isle, lost his head in spite of republicans to save it, and when Louis went down, Bonaparte went up to speculate on his, and other king's crumbs. But foreign speculators, are so fond of speculations, to keep as well as to get, that small rogues combined against the greater, and poor Bona failed, to be mighty great, although his cause was as good, as the cause of a robber is to rob from robbers. And whose cause would be glcrious good, had he distributed the prey, among those poor slaves of Europe, from whom it had been robbed, by aristocratic cunning, and now at last, Louis the 18th and suit, take their turn.

All speculators of foreign rebellion of any country, whether in America or elsewhere, are the servants of the devil, and supporters of civil kings, who support them, on the earnings of farmers, continuing to increase their monopoly of the property, money and means, of those who labor, and make all things, till if possible, all become civil things, human lords, empty nobles, or some other false royal rank, along the lower gradation of devils. At any rate so powerful, as to degenerate the common people to merchandise, destitute of every thing, all aristocratical speculators, are foreign to common freedom, foreign to the liberty of those who labor, aiding that foreign enemy, which destroys their abet

tors.

Foreign commerce, is like fire, a charming sweet servant, but a miserable hard master; and can no more regulate itself than flaming fire.

Foreign speculation, consists in nothing else, than to excel its opponent, by the rivalship of present interest or caprice; and goes on to excess and fury, like fire in dry leaves, till it bursts from the extreme of commerce. Because it cannot regulate itself, it is compelled to turn awful cinderer, directly against itself. Speculation runs among its civil actors of delusion, when let loose, like fire in powder.

Those ungovernable fools of folly, as much want restraining by the tillers government, for preventing excess, or checking foreign avarice from going too far, and too fast, as fire must be restrained to the chimney by the hearth; and the regularly required fuel, put on to feed it, as the farmer's commodities, are required by a regularly gaged government, to feed the foul avarice of foreign commerce. A farmer's government, is a prohibitory line, extended between the oppressor, and country; and is like the hearth, a fender to the house, against the flames of the chimney. A country of political parties, in furnishing commodities for foreign commerce, is like a house divided against itself, in furnishing fuel for the fire, or the house from its dreadful flames; and it is much better, for the fire all to go out, as it did at the revolution, and strike anew, than let the fury of flames consume us, house and all, to ruin.

The deadly influence of commercial Britain, is now overwhelming agricultural Columbia; as a house already in the flames, is hard to extinguish; against which united we stand, but divide we fall back to the same yoke; out of which our glorious Washington, once helped us. United, we stand like a rock, against all the serpents of delusion, for union is the farmer's government; and all the crazy foreign commerce of aristocracy, can never ravage us, no easier, than a crazy man, can excel the wise in invention.

Like the nearest stars of the sky, quickly obeying harmoniously, the unchangeable course of the rapid, brilliant sun, true patriots, quickly obey uniformly their grand king, that unchangeable mediator, who shines

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