object. But I hope you have one for this also.
You know what a wicked use has been made of the French
negotiation; and particularly, the X. Y. Z. dish,
cooked up by ------ , where the swindlers are made
to appear as the French government. Art and industry
combined, have certainly wrought out of this business
a wonderful effect on the people. Yet they have
been astonished more than they have understood it,
and now that Gerry’s correspondence comes out,
clearing the French government of that turpitude,
and showing them ’sincere in their dispositions
for peace, not wishing us to break the British treaty,
and willing to arrange a liberal one with us,’
the people will be disposed to suspect they have been
duped. But these communications are too voluminous
for them, and beyond their reach. A recapitulation
is now wanting of the whole story, stating every thing
according to what we may now suppose to have been
the truth, short, simple, and levelled to every capacity.
Nobody in America can do it so well as yourself, in
the same character of the father of your country,
or any form you like better, and so concise, as, omitting
nothing material, may yet be printed in handbills,
of which we could print and disperse ten or twelve
thousand copies under letter covers, through all the
United States, by the members of Congress when they
return home. If the understanding of the people
could be rallied to the truth on this subject, by
exposing the dupery practised on them, there are so
many other things about to bear on them favorably for
the resurrection of their republican spirit, that a
reduction of the administration to constitutional
principles cannot fail to be the effect. These
are the alien and sedition laws, the vexations of the
stamp-act, the disgusting particularities of the direct
tax, the additional army without an enemy, and recruiting
officers lounging at every Court-House to decoy the
laborer from his plough, a navy of fifty ships, five
millions to be raised to build it, on the usurious
interest of eight per cent., the perseverance in war
on our part, when the French government shows such
an anxious desire to keep at peace with us, taxes
often millions now paid by four millions of people,
and yet a necessity, in a year or two, of raising
five millions more for annual expenses. These
things will immediately be bearing on the public mind,
and if it remain not still blinded by a supposed necessity,
for the purposes of maintaining our independence and
defending our country, they will set things to rights.
I hope you will undertake this statement. If any
body else had possessed your happy talent for this
kind of recapitulation, I would have been the last
to disturb you with the application; but it will really
be rendering our country a service greater than it
is in the power of any other individual to render.
To save you the trouble of hunting the several documents
from which this statement is to be taken, I have collected
them here completely, and enclose them to you.