· My mother and sister are well, and I have two charming little nephews-the eldest is already an excellent republican. . . In another Hand.--I snatch a little scrap of M.'s paper, to recal myself to your remembrance, and to remind you, my dear Sir, that we count the seasons for the fulfilment of your promise to your friends in this part of the world. All here remember you with those sentiments of respect and affection, and regret your loss with that unaffected concern to which you have such claim. We hope the period is not distant when those requests will cease. REMARKS ON THE EXPLANATION, LATELY PUB LISHED BY DR. PRIESTLEY, RESPECTING THE .. INTERCEPTED LETTERS OF HIS FRIEND AND DISCIPLE, John H. STONE. Introductory Address to the People of Birmingham. The factious disposition of Doctor Priestley; the feuds he excited in England; the violence to which his insolence roused some misguided men, and the melancholy consequences of those violences, must all be remembered by the People of Birmingham. As he, at last, left his country, in 'search, as he professed, only of security and repose, it might have been expected from a " Saint," that he would have forgotten the objects of his enmity, But oblivion of resentment is no article of the Seclarian Creed. No sooner had he set his foot on the shores of America, than he recommenced, a series of calumnies against his former neighbours and government, which, either in the form of paragraphs, ' R 3 letters, letters, or sermons, he has; till very lately, continued with little intermission. Those calumnies, I, as an Englishman, felt it my duty to repel. Unlearned as I was, I had never before ventured to commit my thoughts to the press; but fired with indignation, and knowing that I had truth on my side, I feared neither the shafts of ridicule, nor the dagger of malice. Success has attended my endeavours. In spite of the almost general prejudice which then existed against the British nation; in spite of the Doctor's experience in such warfare, and his vast superiority in point of abilities; in spite of myriads of virulent and lying newspapers and pamphlets, aided by the clamours of a numerous democratic faction; in spite of all these disadvantages, I have lived to see the truth of my statements, and the justice of my opinions respecting Priestley, fully and universally acknowledged. Assuredly the battle has not been unto the strong. The Goliath of Literature has fled from the sling of the shepherd's boy. Since a desire to defend you, the people of Bir, mingham, against the malignant aspersions of Doctor Priestley, was, in some degree, the cause of my first attempting to write, I am persuaded you will not think it unnatural, that I address to you this pamphlet, the intent of which is to prove, that this Apostle of Sedition, go where he will, into whatever country, and under whatever government, still carries with him the same hostility to all lawful power;. that he is still the admirer of the woeful revolution of France; that he still entertains against Great Britain, and her institutions, a hatred which neither time, nor distance, nor a conviction of his errors, nor the advance of age, can remove, diminish, or mollify; that he still wishes her revolutionized and ruined, and still indulges the wicked, though though delusive hope, of seeing his wishes accomplished. . WM. COBBETT. Bustleton, 12th Sep. 1798. REMARKS, &c. The intercepted letters of Stone were received in America by the June Packet. Their appearance, first in my Gazette, and successively in all the public papers in the United States, except those notoriously devoted to the cause of France, is a fact too well known to be mentioned here with any other view than that of introducing the following Note, Explanation, and Remarks. • To Mr. Cobbett, Philadelphia. .. . Doctor Priestley hopes Mr. Cobbett will do him the justice to insert the enclosed in his news'paper. • Northumberland, Sept. 4, 1798. SIR, I beg leave, through the channel of your paper, to give what satisfaction I can to many persons in this country, who seem to be alarmed at the publication of an intercepted letter, addressed to me by Mr. J. Stone at Paris, and inclosing ano" ther, which I was to transmit to M. B. P. (which ' means a member of the British parliament) at Kennebeck. They were first printed in England, ' with a view to render me obnoxious here. Whether they ought to have this effect, let any impar- Mr. ? Mr. John Stone was a member of my congrega.' $ tion at Hackney, and a zealous friend of the Ames rican and French revolutions, which sufficiently ? accounts for his corresponding with me. But ! I am not answerable for what be, or any other per! son, may think proper to write to me. The letter inclosed to me is for Mr. BENJAMIN • VAUGHAN, formerly a pupil of mine, and son to © Mr. Samuel Vaughan, who some time ago resi? ded in Philadelphia, He, like me, thought it ne cessary to leave England, and for some time is ? said to have assumed a feigned name. This he !! does not do here, and he is a man that any coun! try may be proud to possess ; haying, for ability, knowledge of almost every kind, and the most approved integrity, very few equals. He is well ? known to, and probably corresponds with, the PRE SIDENT, who will smile at the surmises that have been thrown out on the subject. He has fixed his residence at Kennebeck, because his family ! has large property there. If he or I had been a ? spy in the interest of France, we have made a very strange choice of situations in which to do ? miscḥief. " But trifleş light as air, *JOSEPH PRIESTLEY.' Before I begin my remarks, I must not forget to caution the reader against ascribing it to any respect which I entertain for Doctor Priestley, for whom I thus early take occasion to avow my most unquaļified contempt ; and this I do, lest, by inadvertence, I should let fall any thing resembling that affected civility, which has lessened the force of too too many well-meant publications, and which par- 10 takes too much of the cool, placid, Priestlean cant, to find an imitator in me, or in any man who feels a becoming zeal in the cause of his country, and who scorns to make a cowardly compromise with malice and with treason.* The Doctor begins his explanation by allowing, that the pnblicity of the intercepted letters has “alarmed many persons in America. He after, wards admits that he is suspected as “ a spy in the 56 service of France;" and, in consequence of this, he very obligingly comes forward a volunteer, to give what satisfaction he can on the subject; or, more properly speaking, he endeavours to remove the dangerous impression against himself, which he perceives the discovery has produced. . In what degree the people of the United States are alarmed, or ought in any case, to be alarmed, at the suspected treachery of a miserable though perverse old man, I shall not pretend to determine; but, if the reader will lend me his patience through a few pages, I pledge myself to prove, that whatever suspicion or alarms the intercepted letters were, in themselves, calculated to excite, it ought by no means to be diminished by the "satisfaction” which the Doctor has vainly attempted to give. ' But, before I enter on the explanation itself, I shall bestow a minute or two on an insinuation, with which the cunning Sectary has thought proper to preface it, respecting the motives from which the * “I love the bold uncompromising mind, ANTI-JACOBIN, No. 36. letters |