Page:The History of the American Indians.djvu/474

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462 A P P E N D I X..

to this new colony ; granting only, for eight years, an equal bounty with t?iat me gave to the bleak and barren fettlement of Nova Scotia, fhe would receive at the expiration of that period, in return for her favours, an abundant va riety of valuable raw materials, for employing a vafl multitude of her poor a.t home, as w.ell as luxurious productions, for her own confumption, and that of foreigners ; greatly increafe the public revenue , deftroy the fale of French wines, and tobacco, the chief finews of their (late -, render herfelf independent of foreign countries and make millions of people eafy and happy, on both fides of the broad water, by mutual induftry, and recipro cal offices of friendship.

If Great Britain thus wifely improves the natural advantages of North- America, me will foon reap fufficient fruit for her expences of cultivating it : but (he muft certainly be a lofer, in proportion to any unconftitutional attempt excited by falfe views, againft the natural rights and chartered pri vileges of the colonifts. We now and then fee the lamentable power ,that ill.iberal prejudices and felf-intereft obtain over gentlemen of learning, smd judgment, by transforming them from honed, wife men, into dan gerous political incendiaries. Whether the colonifts are large in their Britifh imports, or are forced to more domeftic frugality on account of the late fevere reftraints upon their trade, thefe fophifts declare them to be rivals in trade, and devote them to deftrucYion. The colonifts however generally proportion their expences to the annual income of their pofiefiions. If they gain but a little by trade, and labour, they fpend as little in luxuries. At the very worft, they can keep the wolf of want from their doors. They are fo happily fituated, as to have far lefs real demands for gold and filver than any other civilized, increafmg body, of ipeople. When they received thofe metals abroad by their Spanifli trade, they foon remitted them to Great Britain ; and they are now quite eafy, if (he chufes to ftrike her own pocket very hard, in order to hurt them. Our political phyficians prefcribe a ftrange fort of means and regimen to heal the wounds of the body politic , aflfuredly they will tear them open, and make them bleed frefii again, and more than ever. It is a pity, that before they thought of hunger and phle botomy for the fuppqfed unfound Americans, they had not duly confidered the folid rea r onings and unanfwerable arguments of the very worthy, upright patriot, John Dickenfon, Efq; and other American gentlemen, and the fpeeches and publications of forae patriots at home. Smollett's obfervations .arc alfo very pertinent " The natives of New-England acquired great glory

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