Man is the glory, jest, and riddle of the world.Pope.
Incredible transition! the people who, seven years ago, deemed
every earthly good, every other consideration, as worthless, when
placed in competition with liberty, that heaven-born blessing, that
zest of all others; the people, who, actuated by this noble ardor of
patriotism, rose superior to every weakness of humanity, and shone
with such dazzling lustre amidst the greatest difficulties; who,
emulous of eclipsing each other in the glorious assertion of the
dignity of human nature, courted every danger, and were ever ready,
when necessary, to lay down their lives at the altar of liberty: I say
the people, who exhibited so lately a spectacle, that commanded the
admiration, and drew the plaudits of the most distant nations, are now
reversing the picture, are now lost to every noble principle, are
about to sacrifice that inestimable jewel liberty, to the genius of
despotism. A golden phantom held out to them, by the crafty and
aspiring despots among themselves, is alluring them into the fangs of
arbitrary power; and so great is their infatuation, that it seems, as
if nothing short of the reality of misery necessarily attendant on
slavery, will rouse them from their false confidence, or convince them
of the direful deception: but then alas! it will be too late, the
chains of despotism will be fast rivetted and all escape
precluded.
For years past, the harpies of power have been industriously
inculcating the idea that all our difficulties proceed from the
impotency of Congress, and have at length succeeded to give to this
sentiment almost universal currency and belief: the devastations,
losses and burthens occasioned by the late war; the excessive
importations of foreign merchandise and luxuries, which have drained
the country of its specie and involved it in debt, are all overlooked,
and the inadequacy of the powers of the present confederation is
erroneously supposed to be the only cause of our difficulties; hence
persons of every description are revelling in the anticipation of the
halcyon days, consequent on the establishment of the new
constitution.—What gross deception and fatal delusion! Although very
considerable benefit might be derived from strengthening the hands of
Congress, so as to enable them to regulate commerce, and counteract
the adverse restrictions of other nations, which would meet with the
concurrence of all persons; yet this benefit, is accompanied in the
new constitution with the scourge of despotic power, that will render
the citizens of America tenants at will of every species of property,
of every enjoyment, and make them the meer drudges of government. The
gilded bait conceals corrosives that will eat up their whole
substance.