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HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN JACOBINS, &c.
WHEN the Jacobins of Paris sent forth their missi∣onaries of insurrection and anarchy, their profess∣ed object was to enlighten the ignorant and unchain the enslaved. There was somehitng preposterous in the idea of Frenchmen giving liberty to the world; but, had it been possible for men in their senses to be∣lieve, that a club of distracted Monsieurs, who knew not the meaning of the word liberty, were calcu∣lated for this arduous task and were serious in their professions, such credulous persons must have been at once undeceived, when they observed, that the newly-enlightened missionaries were dispatched to those countries alone where the greatest degree of civil liberty was already to be found. Had the Propa∣gande at Paris been sincere in their professions, why were not their envoys directed towards Russia and Turkey, instead of England, America, and other free states? The fact is, Brissot and his philanthropic colleagues wanted to draw as many foreign nations as possible within the vortex of their own savage