Page images
PDF
EPUB

above all the patriots of the soil, like the sun above the stars: while like the distant stars, which move behind the cold, slow, and changing moon, the wavering and timid dupes, hang lost in the beguiling charms of rebel-lion, behind the cold deriding and dark scenes of the changeable aristocrat, inviting the serpent and extending the whore of wrong, of debt, and of the effusion of innocent blood,

The foreign lawyer, foreign trader, and foreign preacher, and all cold aristocrats, are foreign and dis-tant strangers, hardly known to neighbouring farmers, idle rotten hearted rebels; they disdain to come to the help of the true Lord, but will help false lords of civil kings, and ruin their country. They are idle tiplers, and dupes of nonsense, pompous fools in the foreign interest of the serpent, on the toils of farmers, and foreign to common liberty; despising the labouring farmer, inviting the aristocratic king and yoke, and forming in. whoredom, in taxation, in wars, in slavery, and in all the sins of ruin, the devii's kingdom; the tending erection, and then destruction, on the ruins of the world, one great magnificent city, abandoning all others, the patriots and the fields, to overgrow in nature's wilds.

Which awful flames of dreadful sin and misery, are never checked; the virgin never retained; charity never bestowed, peace never restored; liberty never enjoyed; no good can ever flow, but with the media- ted humiliation of our heavenly king, through his reliev ing servants of republics, his noble actors of glory, the divine republican, the wise philosopher, the conquering hero. These are the patriotic merchants, the divine, preachers, the healing physicians, and farmers lawyers, who form the council of right. These are the expanders of liberty, through all Columbia... These overspread with farmers the western wilds, these are the compatriots of domestic, commerce, equally distributing, for the common happiness of all, the advantages of invention, of seas, and of soil, no other cover the ocean with reciprocal commerce, numerous shores with fine villages and docks, and the climes with people.

Domestic speculators, are always at home, be their persons in whatever country, Providence may please to

put them; but all foreign speculators, are in all the climes of the serpent, and never where their carcass dwells.

The cold and foreign physician, although he may not individually hate his afflicted patient, least his popularity be injured, but is he not a mighty publican, every where present, and no where known, found always exactly in the way of his patient's liberty, in the foreign cime, and fou drift, of the serpent's foreign commerce of lust and pride; an enemy collectively to himself, and all his country of people; aiding that foreign enemy, which most aids him to the great office of kings.

And the charming, lying, and foreign lawyer, another cold and far more distant stranger, every where heard of, but never known, yet always exactly in the way of his client's liberty, full of civi: liberty, always really hating all that loves him, and apparently loving: all that would hate him; having no love for the farmer's plow-jogging government, but loves the foreign clime of the serpent, where the foreign merchant is; not only,. individually picking up the crumbs of his client, to make his own poplars grow, and own puss swell, taking now and then, here and there, a whole farm, and a whole property, lingering law suits, and causing the innocent to quarrel, that fees shall flow, and his coffer grow, but collectively he is a mighty publican, in every company and parliament, babbling the law, to a complex darkness, carried forward, by the popular drift of the lust and pride of foreign commerce; an inveterate enemy to himself, and all his country of people; always a member of a very cunning aristocracy, forming an underhanded artful minority, against the wholesome and ge-neral union of his country's own government; in the love of the serpent, aiding that foreign enemy's aristocracy, which most aids him, on to the throne of calamity, in the time of that calamity, which his own rebellion makes. The only wind, on which the devil's king al-ways rides, is the dapes his beguiling rebels make.

And the high and mighty false priest, another cold, distant and foreign stranger; fou! hypocrite of the devil, unknown to christian honesty, unknown to the common:

audience, which attends the presence of his carcass ; but in the interest of the serpent's foreign clime, wraped in the cloak of his own clothing, exactly in his hearer's way, not only socially destroying their divine liberties, but defying the government of our divine king, hypocritically cloaked under his name, extending the partial kingdoms of the devil, for the conversion of souls, into bondage and bodies into merchandize; with the foreign pleader and trader; coagitant and popular liar; deceiving from the pulpit of eternal disgrace, the listening ear of the deluded sinner, indirectly to believe that commerce with the serpent, is no forbidden fruit; that the soul shall be forever damned, who fails to believe with the pulpit defamer, that there is more gain from the devil, than from God; while the foreign speculator to rob all from the farmer, and his own soul from himself, gains nothing but an insipid mass of luxurious,human sin, misery and nonsense, riding on the popular drift of lust, pride, and insignificance; a dreadful enemy to himself, and all his country of people; in rebellion a mighty publican, the principal effuser of all the innocent blood, that ever bled and flowed; complexing the words of Christ to the devil's darkness, the bible to never learn, harassing the christian with foul contradictions, cramping the conscience of the innocent, and forcing religion by tax, by the sword of calamity, and deriding with the sour face of hypocrisy; but thanks be to God, the divine philosopher, the hero of liberty, the great Washington of light, unshackled our yoke of darkness, and set our conscience free.

And what does the dreadful foreign merchant do, with the liberties of the farmer, after growing up to power himself, on the profits of his trade, the products of farmers; but turns a traitor to his farmer's govern ment, after building up in yon foreign clime, a national commercial enemy, on the profits of their prosperity the poor farmers, are then by him forsaken; and the haughty merchant carrying forward that popular pride, which aids him to aid the foreign clime, more rapidly to increase the great and pompous merchant, and the fast anchored aristocracy of Britain still greater; to forget all who first gave birth to his prosperity, and rising

L

above the reach of the farmer's politics, and in rebellion to his country's call, who built him up, defies his God and loves the devil of the cold and distant isle, so climbing to the throne of calamity; thus goes the avaricious speculator, grown so proud, he wants a permanent office commissioned by the serpent and there stay for life, but all is a lottery of vanity, for he cannot stay, kings are few, all cannot stay. But merchants remember the revolution, when you was gladly Washingtonians, for the British whore severely crushed you, when a very few only could be British servants, all the others slaves; rather than lie down in servitude, why not again remember the revolution, and turn round Washingtonians; why be vile turning and twisting luxurious tiplers, facing that present wind which blows the most gold? turn foreign aristocrat, because in his own country, he cannot gain rapidly beyond the same ratio of his domestics, as when aiding that foreign serpent, which most aids him to spill the blood of those, he so vilely forsaken; and these are the only thanks, which the farmers get for giving birth to the merchant's prosperity. Thanks be to the Almighty God of Heaven, that we have national honesty among us; that we have domestic traders, republican pleaders, divine preachers, healing physicians, and other actors of true light and true national glory, to soothe our troubles and save us; by acting and advocating the cause of a joyful country, in pursuit of glorious Columbian light and liberty, in opposition to the foreign world of darkness, for withholding our persons from its afflictions of foreign mercantile servitude.

The foreign pleader, trader and preacher, and others of false greatness, who are enemies to themselves and country, although nominally clothed in many professional robes; yet form but one false god-head of rotten voluptuous misery, on ruin seated, converting every thing into merchandise, democrats into dupes, virgins into whores, honest men into rogues, freemen into slaves, religion into aristocratical bulwarks for the props of kings; and clothing themselves and ardent sectaries in all the foul charms of inviting cunning, that human civility can invent for flattering dupes; great and small

rainers, all hands servants of rebellion, from his high and mighty kings, lords, admirals and spies, down to their petty agents of disgrace, secret placemen, pettyfoggers and fools, overwhelming in the devil's interest, awful crushing tyrants of overbearing yokes, of great stolen power; clandestinely and forever dividing God's earth, of otherwise united people, into king's dominions, and the great family of mankind into parties and tools, to garrison their arbitrary and forbidden bounds, against the invasion of each other's tame slaves, and themselves to be royal masters set apart, like cattle to work a great and mighty income, for the exalted magnificence of the devil's servants; the greatest of all rogues, eloaked under the most charming of all phrases possibly to be contrived by aristocratical cunning. Awful aristocrats the only world loader of snares and ruín, as much thicker than wise republicans, as rogues are thicker than christians, civil kings thicker than real Washingtons, and aristocratical miseries thicker than relieved republics. Then silence the aristocrat, and how pure is man; when the agricultural interest shall form the grand council of every vicinity, as well as the general compact of a united world; and the numberless democrats of the earth, unite from their enchantments of delusion, and obey at once their heavenly king, to help the Lord and pay the debt of civil nature, which was created only by rebellion, and blessed all be peace and love, in the universal interest of all the tillers of domestic equality.

No more can a farmer have foreign interest than ability to fly to the moon, unless strutting in delusion after office, or directly bribed, for his interest, if he did' but know it, and how to act for it, although ever so great, it is equally domestic, with the poorest hireling the earth affords labor for.

In all the ages of the world, except at the deluge, when the devil's kingdom mounted high on the seas of ravaged shores, in the foreign love of the publican interest, of the haughty cursers of the earth; the great will of the majority of all nations, was ever formed of farmer's love; for the republican lawyer and domestic merchant, acted always for them, that only common

« PreviousContinue »