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My Dearest friend
I wrote you last Week and inclosed an order for 600. Let me know when you receive it.
Although the Weather is the most beautiful I ever knew in December, the Time seems longer to me, than ever any time did in America. The Business of Congress this Session is Dulness, Flatness and Insipidity itself.
Mr. Cranch went off, on Fryday for Washington as he intended to go to Anapolis. I gave him a Letter to Mr. Carrol of Carrolton.
I have been much engaged in Reading the Tryals of Muir, Margarot, Wat, Downie, and Walker.
Mr. Walker of
Manchester appears to have been very ill used by the Church
Party: but he was honourably acquitted. The
others, I suppose could not be held guiltless, according to the Laws of
Scotland, and
England. The severity however of their Sentences may excite
rather than suppress discontent and Mutiny. Selfcreated Societies, must be
circumspect. It is very easy for them to transgress the Boundaries of Law, and
as soon as they do they become unlawful assemblies, seditious Societies,
mischievous Conventions, pernicious Associations, dangerous and destructive
Combinations and as many such hard appellations as you choose to give them.
I think I will read Swedenbourgs Works. I dare say they are as entertaining as The Pilgrims Progress or Robinson Crusoe or the Seven Champions. Any Thing that shows a strong and strange Imagination and is neither melancholly nor stark mad, is amuzing. I fear the Atheistical and Theistical Philosophers lately turned Politicians, will drive the common People into Receptacles of Visionaries, Enluminees, illuminees &c. &c. For the Common People will undoubtedly insist upon the Risque of being damned rather than give up the hope of being saved in a future State. The People will have a Life to come, and so will I.
I sent you an History of Geneva.
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