colony, and whose amelioration or reformation all
legislative measures should have principally in view.
With those the immoderate use of spirituous liquors
is a long contracted disease, which it is perhaps
past the skill of legislation to cure. It is
like an old inveterate ulcer, whose roots have penetrated
into the seats of vitality, and are so intimately
interwoven with the very principles of existence, that
the knife cannot be applied to the extirpation of
the one, without occasioning the destruction of the
other. But though this gangrene can never be
entirely eradicated, the experience of late years
has shewn that it may be prevented from increasing,
and even considerably reduced. Drunkenness has
been observed to be less frequent since the unlimited
importation of spirits was permitted, even among that
class who were most addicted to this vice during the
long period when the importation was in a great measure
restricted, the price of liquor exorbitantly enhanced,
and the consequent difficulty of obtaining it much
more considerable. Great, therefore, as are the
present facilities to the indulgence of this propensity,
they should be still further extended, and this would
be effected by internal distillation; for although
the importation of spirits from other countries has
been for many years past subject to no restriction,
but the payment of a certain duty, which would be
equally levied on all spirits made in the colony,
still the expence of freight, insurance,
etc.
would be avoided, the price proportionably abated,
and the means of indulgence increased in the same
ratio.
The immediate effect of this free circulation of spirits
having been so beneficial, we may easily infer what
would be its remote consequences; and it is to these,
to the gradual developement of moral perfection, that
all laws which are framed with a reference to this
end, should be directed, and not to sudden and violent
reformations, which are seldom or never attended with
the desired results. It was, indeed, natural to
expect that this pernicious drug would be depreciated,
in the estimation of its consumers, in exact proportion
to its superabundance; and although the removal of
all restriction to the importation of spirits, might
in its immediate beneficial operation on the morals
of the existing generation, so long curtailed in the
use of them, and so long habituated to excess, whenever
occasion offered, have been a matter of serious speculation,
before this experiment was tried, its immediate result
has far out-stripped the expectations of its most sanguine
supporters. The present influence of this measure
having been so satisfactory, there cannot be a doubt
that the effect of internal distillation on the morality
of future generations will be still more salutary
and decisive. It is well known that in the countries
that are celebrated for the production of wines and
spirits, as France, Spain, Italy, etc. so great
is the sobriety of the people, that a drunken person