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Extract from the Political Dispatch No. 6 of Citizen Fauchet Minister Plenipotentiary of the French Republic to the United States.
Scarce was the commotion known, when the Secretary of State came to my House. All his Countenance was grief He requested of me a private Conversation. It is all over, he said to me. A civil War is about to ravage our unhappy Country. Four Men, by their Talents, their Influence, and their Ennergy may Save it. But, Debtors of English Merchants, they will be deprived of their Liberty, if they take the Smallest Step. Could you lend them instantaneously Funds, Sufficient to Shelter them from English Persecution. This Enquiry astonished me much. It was impossible for me to make a Satisfactory Answer. You know my Want of Power and my defect of pecuniary means. I shall draw myself from the Affair by some common Place Remarks and by throwing myself on the pure and unalterable Principles of the Republic. I have never since heard of Propositions of this nature.
My Dearest Friend
Governor Martin, was civil enough to lend me Yesterday
Mr. Randolphs Statement of Faith as far as it is printed. The
foregoing Extract is the most material, as well as the most enigmatical Part of
it. It is advertised to be published next Fryday; but
I still doubt whether
The President is serene, healthy, in good Spirits and so is his Lady who with Mrs. Green who is again here send many Compliments and Expressions of great regard.
I have no Letter from you as yet.
The Passage in Fauchet's dispatch No. 10 which refers to R.G. is this.
16. In the mean time, although there was a certainty of having an Army, yet
it was necessary to assure themselves of Co operaters
among the Men whose Patriotic Reputations might influence their Party,
and whose Lukewarmness and Want of Energy in the existing Conjunctures might
compromise the Success of the Plans. Of all the Governors whose Duty it was to
appear at the head of the Requisitions, the Governor of
Pensilvania alone enjoyed the name of
Republican: his opinion of the Secretary of the Treasury and of his Systems was
known to be unfavourable. The Secretary of this
State possessed great Influence in the popular Society of
Philadelphia, which in its turn influenced those of other
states; of Course he merited Attention. It appears therefore that those Men
with others unknown to me, all having without doubt Randolph
at their head, were balancing to decide on their Party. Two or three days,
before the Proclamation was published, and of Course before the Cabinet had
resolved on its measures, Mr. Randolph came to see me, with an
Air of great Eagerness, and made to me the overtures of which I have given you
an Account in my No. 6. Thus with some Thousands of Dollars the Republic could
have decided on civil War, or on Peace. Thus the Consciences of the pretended
Patriots of
America have already their Prices. It is very true, that the
Certainty
I leave you to your own Reflections upon this which must be in Confidence till you hear further from your affectionate
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