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tions, the real wants of men, unitedly form the great democratical pressure of love, towards each other. The neighbouring farmers of both parties, though enticed for the moment upon each others sword, still love each other in spite of the aristocrat to separate them; the democrat and dupe hitch their horses to the same post, they only differ knowing not for what; but they differ till truth unveils their prejudice and no longer, as soon as the democratical sword glitters in that light of truth which swells the bosom of patriots, all is union, for their real mutual wants begin to act. The divine wants of democratical men, so powerfully and mutually act on all men, that mankind are impelled into general society, as natural as gravitation to one common center, in spite of the aristocrat; but for the moment his foreign commerce only charms dupes, long enough for the devil to get on the throne, then all is vanity, the devil rides on wind, for nations will be at peace, and commerce will be free and domestic to all, otherwise than by the heavenly and mutual wants of democratical men, their presence to each other, would be as awfully offensive, as the coldest and most inveterate enemies.

Although the robbing civilian of foreign commerce, hatches up the cold and dejected slave and miser, as all China is jeopardized, who like the Hermit are clogs to action; yet the great reciprocal wheel of mutual wants, rolls around aloft and beneath all aristocratical obstructions, the farmer, the smith, the carpenter, the masou, the clothier, the miller, victualler and trader, all mutually and universally as in one neighbourhood, conform to the grand course of things, reciprocally one united one, conducing to life, all the convenience necessity invents, by which the great overrunning world from Noah, is mutually kept together.

Democratic man that obedient denizen, every where from the landing ark, has gone forward in the divine duty of inhabitancy, in spite of the civil pull back, of all the aristocratical adulterers, murderers, blasphemers and robbers, and formed from the father of beginning, the present great family of yet continuing victorious diviners.

The wise dissenting enterprisers, from the great democratical revolutions, from the yokes of oriental civilians, move westerly with the divine course of their leading brilliant sun, whether America before has been inhabited or not; yet all eastern dissention emanates western restoration, which returns real wisdom, in the real direction of the revolving globe, conquering orientally the deluded east. Thus goes the vicissitudes of the political world, apparently west but really east, the occidental republican of unfolding blessings, followed by the oriental aristocrat of usurping destruction, the fatigues and archives of the wise discoverer and valiant conqueror, afflicted and enjoyed by the indolent, wicked, disobedient civilian, which are the rewards of great and good men, from vile factious aristocrats; the great Noah, Moses, Columbus, and Washington, and all others the republican haters of bondage, by the wicked crowded from their corrupted homes of miserable slavery, in the pursuit of asylums of liberty, had all been ravaged by the aristocrats, and their posterity robbed of their father's patrimonial blessings, by subsequent devils close to their heels, stepping directly in their shoes and clothing, rotten hearts of iniquity, in their naines of glory, to become the royal robes of the devil.

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From the world's first inhabited seat of Noah, dissenting man, swarmed forth like bees, from their superabundant crowd of parental iniquity, continually sailing and moving, for wild uncultivated climes; obedient to the natural call of democracy, when immediately among whose newly erected enjoyments, the ungrateful aristocrat follow on from the grass in secret associations of paricidal weapons of ruin, and of all things the most mean, to usurp in the very name of the archives of glory, all their productions. Nothing can compare with the smooth and unfathomable depths of iniquity, to which the deep laid plans of foul aristocracy all lengths will go, to undermine the rights of the democrat, from the enjoyment of that liberty truly his own.

The foreign preacher, the foreign trader, the foreign pleader, and all foreign speculators of wrong, with arms wide open, grasp all wicked actors, foul deluders, cap-sheaf mischief makers of all worldly misery, con

verting to their own false happiness the wise man's inventions, the poor man's labour, in all the annals of the world, from the first magnificent city of waiters, to the new settlement of cultivating tillers.

Awful aristocrats, grasping every opportunity of the necessity, of all the flyers from bondage, to the uninhabited wilds, with already increased means, not only kick and cuff the righteous migrating republicans into war and trouble for their own ascension; but follow and rob them of their new prosperity and government, from inconvenience emburthened under the greatest of wants the dissenting colonist, who pulls up his native post, hazarding the distant wave and wilds in quest of new abodes, have nothing for defence, but depend on their wicked mother's land for things wanted in new beginning, the aristocrat takes the advantage of that necessity, and aggrandize in folly, on the ruin of all colonies destitute of patriotic valour.

The population of man, enforcing migration more rapid than invention, the genious discouraged by the aristocrat and those of flight; being not endowed with improvement for projecting at once the things really wanted; the necessity of things really needed, is the mother of their provision of the many not in the power of invention, but only to be supplied from a mother country.

The emigrant is dependant upon his native land, for every thing in life, even himself, his apparel, his beasts, his utensils; the woods afford no manufacturing artists, nor for years not even half the support of life, can be obtained; from wants thousands, yes millions expire not only in new countries, but in all, it has taken years to furnish Columbia its due name, and entire independence from her mother country; even in the modification of the article of iron, we much depend on iniquitous east, though of many other things it is the furthermost advanced; the new world is as much beholden to Europe, as her name has been held arbitrary, in fact it is utterly impossible that the Columbian wants, can ever be completely supplied within herself, but with the old world's correspondence, so long as that country exists; nor can the inhabitants of the eastern world,

subsist but with their continual dependance upon Columbia. Columbus was sent hence for no other purpose like Noah, than for the relief of a dreadful wicked world; the east not one hundredth part so easy as America can exist independent from each; the wants of the east from the west, are like old and helpless parents depending hourly on their children; rivers of blood for America have flown from scarlet east, through wants and caprice, the grand Columbian influence over Europe, is like the brilliant sun above the moon; the multitudinous humans perpetually increasing in wants, of almost endless multiplicities; mankind are of that nature never to be still, so long as the wilderness world holds forth its rural invitations of milk and honey, which never grows in yoked cities but on the buds of freeman's fields, where all is love.

Thus goes the world of nations, all dependant on each other, sooner or later, as the long gone ship from port must return or perish. There is nothing short of the universal connection of liberated man, all nations depend on each other as smiths on farmers, on clothiers, on carpenters, on masons, and they on smiths and on each other; all nations as mutually depend on each other, as individuals of the different neighbourhoods must.

Was there a type founder to every printer, and a furnace to every smith, an inconvenience attends the state of things, and many necessary things of the great democratic wheel of general life, cannot be produced in one single nation of the world, but different nations furnish different things, and some abounding in a superabundance of things really wanted elsewhere.

Columbia although can comfortably exist independent from all east, yet there is not one nation, or even a neighbourhood on the globe, but what has imperceptible interest, in the least and most distant vegetable or animal, even the insect and thistle are intended for some end in the great system of things; the louse keeps clean, the cat saves life, though inconsiderate man knows not what is made for him, he enjoys effects of causes incomprehensible; even one single individual of an element wanted in the system of things, deranges it

to ruin. A single thought of the Philadelphian, to be evaded from its exaction on Pekin is impossible, every thing of the system makes the one a complete one, and short of which perfection, there is nothing.

A universal correspondence of all nations, sooner or later is unavoidable, otherwise the sword of democracy is drawn to remove the aristocratical obstructions, the civilian must yield, when he has gone too far, the devil of parts is only bound for periods, the great democratical course of the world observes always its invariable principle, the changeable aristocrat only ravages more in old nations than in new.

There may be ten thousand conjured up plans of pretended government, really aristocracies, and numberless terms applied to their officers and parties of enchantment, and all are for no other purpose, than of the civilian for getting on the devil's throne of rebellion, for swaying in robbery not in rule, of the mouth of labour, that the greatness of the few shall become pompous in wealth, shamefully beyond their proper ratio, to be embarrassed with the extreme waste, lust and pride, of the black powers of this excessive world, with their own kind kicked down to be their waiters of disgrace, enslaved for that purpose, under the fictious names of republics, monarchies, orligarchies, and absolutions, and every thing they think of, the devil knows his own clothing better than I do; that of emperors, kings, queens, princes, dukes and fixed governors, no matter for names, all are civil kings, unless subjected to the suf frage of the poor, to frequent rotations from office. His majesty, his mighty highness, his noble lord, all downy clothing the devil's wrappers, civil covering, mighty honest names. How black the sin! because the Almighty being the fountain of all good, is distinguishable by terms applicable, civilians cover themselves in like phrases, that fools may think them like God, and how many millions and millions of deluded fools are there, who have forgot their true God, and really believe these little nasty fops of imbecility, to be their Almighty Gods? who to which belief, are trained up from new born youth, that they shall not depart from these sweet human worships, the pore, the defender of

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