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pected abroad; your commerce is flourishing; you are the envy and terror of the nations of Europe; you have now peace abroad, and peace at home. But mind me, learn to respect yourselves; support your dignity; watch your enemies at home; watch your foreign enemies; preserve the uhion of your several states; preserve inviolate the constitution; discountenance all visionary projectors of alterations in that beautiful fabrick; lay your hands on it with caution; elevate men to public office, who are worthy of it, and worthy of you; old men for council, keep your striplings at home; let them learn to govern themselves, before they undertake to govern others. You are a great nation, you ought not to be represented by smock-faced youth and inexperienced boys. In your choice of candidates for office, it is not always those who want it most, who are the most fit; it is not every one who cries Lord, Lord, I have eaten and drunken in thy presence, that is fit to be put upon the list. If possible, keep peace with all nations, but if your rights are invaded, "don't give up the ship." Encourage agriculture, the mechanic arts, and domestic manufactures-they are the very heart-strings and sinews of the country. Discourage upstart officeseekers and demagogues; let them not so much as touch the springs of government. Let the first lessons you teach your children be those of subordination to the law, moral honesty, industry and economy. I would not have you trouble your heads much about polemics among divines; let them carry on their disputes among themselves; support the gospel, whenever you find it preached in its purity; but it should not be made a trade of. I am sorry that the Bostonians paid over eighteen thousand dollars to a divine British speculator,* because charity should begin at home, and because you had already been gulled enough by the British; and because the money would have done much good in our own country towards educating our poor ignorant children. And now, my countrymen, what I have to say in conclu

*The allusion is, probably, to the reverend Mr. Ward, who had collected large sums to aid in building a college at Serampore, ED.

sion, is, read, constantly read, the farewell address of your great political father, WASHINGTON; lead quiet and peaceable lives in all godliness and honesty, and so fare you well.

After I had finished my oration, I delivered the following toasts, accompanied by discharge of musket; but whether they were written or delivered in the modern style of toast-masters and toast-makers, I neither know nor care; it is sufficient for me that I felt them.

1. The day I celebrate-" Let this auspicious day be ever-sacred: no mourning, no misfortune happen on it; let it be marked for triumph and rejoicing."

2. The departed heroes and soldiers of the revolution— The fire of their flints has lighted their path to glory. They have got their discharge from the campaign of life and gone home. I long to join their company.

3. The British army who burnt Washington-Your stay was very short there, my lads, aye, and so it was at the siege of New-Orleans.

4. The memory of our beloved commodore Perry--Faith, that fellow was fit to fight any where; I was sorry when I heard that he was dead.

5. The Lords spiritual and temporal, who sat in judgement on the queen--I wish you well: but may it please your honours, how many mistresses had you in keeping at that time? Let him, who is without sin, cast the first stone.

6. George IV-I don't know but that you are a clever fellow; but faith, don't think you worth toasting, and so I will let you alone.

7. The British navy-Eternally singing "Britannia rules the waves"--come you here, my boys, and we'll show you how to fight between wind and water.

8. The last session of Congress-"Much ado about nothing"-which, by Yankee interpretation, is, “great cry and little wool."

9. The candidates for our next Congress-I wish we had enlisted a better company; some of them are not fit for a corporal's guard.

10. The Clergy-I wish they would all pursue the way to heaven, as well as to point it out, and not quarrel so much among themselves.

11. Our naval commanders--You fought gloriously in the late war, I wish I could shake hands with you before I die.

12. My country-"Good faith with all nations, tangling alliances with none."

13. Myself

"The soul's dark cottage battered and decayed,

Lets in new light through chink's, which time has made."

To conclude, I gave the following song to the old tune of Yankee doodle--that tune which was made by the British officers in derision of the Americans, and which has been sung and played by Yankees more than once, to the great mortification and dismay of the British armies. When I sung, my poor wife seemed for a moment to recollect the feelings of her youth; for in our hey-day time of life, I used to sing it to her for a courting song; and when I struck the chorus, she and my daughter were much agitated, and old and lame as they were, actually struck into a sort of double shuffle, such as we used to practise in the army: on account of their lameness they made but a sorry figure, you may be assured; but no matter, they are good souls, and were young once.

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They keep their eyes upon the gun,
And with their swords are handy.

I now gave a parting gun: we partook of our Indian pudding and partridge pie, thanked heaven for its blessings, and in due season retired to bed.

II. THE GALLANT YANKEE.

[Bellows Falls Intelligencer. Rockingham.]

"The better part of valour is discretion." FALSTAFF. At a time during the late war, when the British were expected to make an attack on New-London, several companies of militia were raised in that vicinity, and among the rest a company of exempts, or rather (as my old friend Roger would say) antiquities, who volunteered to repel the attack.

A revolutionary hero, who had borne the brunt of many a hard contested fight, was selected as their leader; he had held a corporal's command in " the times that tried men's souls ;"

"At the battle of Bunker, were Britons, dismayed,

"Found that Yankees could fight, though not bred to the trade," he received a wound in the thigh, of which he had never fully recovered.

"He

The "patriotic corps" assembled upon the very spot where it was supposed the enemy would attempt to land; the veteran corporal called his men to order; a hollow square was formed; he took his station in the centre, and thus addressed the "warlike band:" wished," he said, "to inspire his companions in arms with a proper love of country-he inveighed against the machinations of those designing men, who had sought to weaken the arm of government; he spoke of the manner in which his neighbours had given "aid and comfort" to our enemies. He then recounted his martial achievements in the "days of other years,”—he told of "the dangers he had passed." With enthusiasm he seemed to "fight his battles o'er again:" "He was," he said, "one of the first to face the enemy in the fields

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of Lexington in "75; on Bunker's heights, beside the gallant Warren, he taught the "proud ursurpers" that Yankees were born to be free; on the plains of Abraham he saw the brave Montgomery fall." "O what a fall was there, my countrymen;""in my presence," said he," at Trenton, nine hundred Hessians found that they had cotch'd a Tartar." "9 6 He then spoke of the blessings of our republican government; he would sacrifice his fortune and his life to support it; he exhorted his followers to fight" for God and their country"-" if you fall (said he) you fall gloriously;

"Sweet sleep the brave, who for their country die ;" though slumbering in the silent dust with Warren, Pike, and the other heroes who have gone before you, you will be ever remembered by your grateful countrymen ; your names will be inscribed in letters lasting as time, in the highest annals of fame, and the historic page will transmit to the latest posterity the record of your gallant exploits."

He then adverted to the disasters of our armies on the western frontier; he spoke of the treachery of a Hull at Malden, and the cowardice of a Dearborn at York; " and now,' ," he exclaimed, with all the ardour of youthful ambition, "now is the time to retrieve the character of the American arm n 199

At this moment, the invincibles of "old ocean's mistress," were seen riding majestic over the foaming billows of the Atlantic. "Behold," says the aged veteran, "the enemies of your country are before you; charge well your weapons of death; if they fall within your reach, "cry havoc, and let slip the dogs of war;" then my brave boys, retreat," and hobbling off, he added, "as I'm a little lame, I think I'll start now!"

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