صور الصفحة
PDF
النشر الإلكتروني

Congress should establish a court for captures on land, such cases can come before it on appeal.

Letters from Franklin and Jay, dated late in September, show that a commission has been issued to Oswald, to treat with Commissioners of the Thirteen United States, by which some 275* obstacles were surmounted; and that Spain meditates an immoderate defalcation of our Western territory. All this intelligence, however, has come to us in obscure fragments. I commit it to you as to a member of Congress on whom secrecy is enjoined, and in this cypher as certainly unknown to all but official persons.

The enclosed Gazette will inform you of the good fortune of Captain Barry, of the Alliance frigate. It appears, from various letters from Europe, that the Jamaica fleet has suffered severely from privateers and the storm.

The Court at Trenton will finish their business this week, it is said. The Pennsylvanians allege that the cause is going hollow in their favor.

I have no letter from you by this post, which I impute to your visit to Williamsburg."

100

TO EDMUND RANDOLPH.

Philadelphia, December 24, 1782.

DEAR SIR,

Since my last, the Danae, a French frigate, has arrived from France, with money for the French army, and public despatches. A snow-storm drove her on shore in this Bay, where she was in danger

The key to this cypher has not been discovered.

of following the fate of one of the last frigates from France. The accident, as it turned out, only cost her all her masts. The despatches for Congress are from Mr. Franklin, Mr. Jay, and the Marquis de la Fayette, and come down to the fourteenth of October. They advise that the first commission issued to Mr. Oswald empowered him to treat with certain colonies, &c., which, being objected to, another issued, explicitly empowering him to treat with commissioners from the thirteen United States. The latter, of which a copy was enclosed, and which will be transmitted to the Executives, is grounded on the Act of Parliament, but is to continue in force no longer than July, 1783. It is, no doubt, on the whole, a source of very soothing expectations; but if we view, on the one side, the instability and insidiousness of the British Cabinet, and, on the other, the complication of interests and pretensions among the Allies, prudence calls upon us to temper our expectations with much distrust.

Mr. Adams concluded his Treaty of Amity and Commerce on the seventh of October, and had in hand one and a half million of florins out of the five millions, for which subscriptions had been opened. As this, however, was the sum subscribed in June last, it is no certain evidence of any other progress than that of the payments.

There are accounts, but neither official nor certain, that Madras had been taken by the combined arms of France and Hyder Ally. Three-fifths of Constantinople had been reduced to ashes by incendiaries, inspired with the desperate purpose by the public distresses, and a blind revenge against the Vizier,

who was regarded as the cause of them. The havoc suffered by the French and Spaniards in the attempt to storm Gibraltar, before its relief, appears to have been dreadful indeed. The loss on the English side, which amounted to about five hundred, is a proof that the effort was a bloody one.

Mr. Livingston has been prevailed on to hold his office for this winter. The election of a successor was within a moment of being made, when the practicability of retaining his services was discovered. The gentlemen in nomination were General Schuyler and Mr. Clymer. Mr. Read had been nominated, but withdrawn.

The deputation for Rhode Island is still here. A report that Maryland is receding, with respect to the object of their mission-and information, conveyed in a letter from Mr. Pendleton to me, that Virginia, on hearing of the unanimous refusal of Rhode Island, had repealed her accession, by disarming them of their most pointed argument-had produced great hesitation. They wait at present only for intelligence with respect to Maryland and Virginia, which was expected by yesterday's post. But the post is not even yet come. The inferences which Rhode Island will probably draw from Oswald's commission are another source of apprehension. If justice and honor, however, preside in her councils, she will feel as much the obligation of providing for the discharge of past engagements as for those which may be necessary in future. Our debts, at this moment, liquidated and unliquidated, cannot, I conceive, be less than forty millions of dollars. The interest, therefore, alone, is a very serious object; and I am

persuaded that, unless it be raised by some plan which will operate at the same time, and in due proportion, throughout the Union, neither its amount nor punctuality can be confided in. Besides the other obvious causes, a jealousy is already perceived among some States that others will eventually elude their share of the burden. The interest on the sum borrowed by Mr. Adams is now running, and soon will, if a part hath not already, become due; nor is there any fund in contemplation for its payment but that of the impost.

The French army are embarking for the West Indies. Count Rochambeau says, that, in case the war should be renewed against us, they will instantly return. Great efforts will, I fancy, be made on that theatre, unless arrested by peace. I need not give other intimations of secrecy on these points than the nature of them, and the use of the cypher.

TO EDMUND RANDOLPH.

Philadelphia, December 30, 1782.

DEAR SIR,

Your favor of the thirteenth instant arrived a few minutes after I sealed my last. That of the twentieth came duly to hand yesterday. The sensations excited in Mr. Jones and myself by the repeal of the law in favor of the impost were such as you anticipated. Previously to the receipt of your information, a letter from Mr. Pendleton to me had suspended the progress of the Deputies to Rhode Island.

Yours put an entire stop to the mission, until the plan can be extended to the case of Virginia. The letter from the Governor, of the same date with your last, gives a hope that our representations may regain her support to the impost, without further steps from Congress. Your doubt as to her power of revoking her accession would, I think, have been better founded, if she had not been virtually absolved by the definitive rejection of Rhode Island; although that rejection ought perhaps have been previously authenticated to her. I beg you to be circumstantial on this subject, especially as to the parties and motives which led to the repeal, and may oppose a reconsideration."

101

Mr. Jefferson arrived here on Friday last, and is industriously arming himself for the field of negotiation. The commission issued to Mr. Oswald impresses him with a hope that he may have nothing to do on his arrival but join in the celebrations of victory and peace. Congress, however, anxiously espouse the expediency of his hastening to his desti

nation.

General McDougall, Colonel Ogden, and Colonel Brooks, arrived yesterday on a mission from the army to Congress. The representations with which they are charged have not yet been handed in, but I am told they breathe a proper spirit, and are full of good sense. I presume they will furnish new topics in favor of the impost, which alone promises a chance of establishing that credit by which the inadequacy of taxation can be supplied.

The French fleet and army sailed a few days ago from Boston to the West Indies. A storm happened

« السابقةمتابعة »