Page:An account of a voyage to establish a colony at Port Philip in Bass's Strait.djvu/136

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.

( 111 )

tic power of the civil government, nor the denunciations of the church, have been able to suppress or control. In 1803, this society, consisted only of twenty-five brethren; in 1804, their numbers have increased to one hundred. Several officers of the inquisition have been sent from Portugal, to suppress it, but without effect; and the presence of these spiritual jackalls, creates but little uneasiness, as they possess no temporal authority, and can only send the culprits to Europe upon proof of their guilt. The French republic, which seems to neglect no means of revolutionizing every part of the globe, and to which force and intrigue are indifferent in this pursuit, have not forgotten the Brasils, where their emissaries are sufficiently active in the cause of anarchy

and