c8 bi | Benjamin Franklin +760 the present, have produced any independency in Spain that could be supported. The same may be observed of France. And let it not be said that the neighbourhood of these to the seat of government has prevented a separation. While our strength at sea continues, the banks of the Ohio, in point of easy and expeditious conveyance of troops, are nearer to London than the remote parts of France and Spain to their respec- tive capitals, and much nearer than Connaught and Ulster were in the days of Queen Elizabeth. Nobody foretells the dissolution of the Russian monarchy from its extent; yet I will venture to say the eastern parts of it are already much more inaccessible from Petersburg than the country on the Mississippi 1S from London,—I mean, more men, in less time, might be conveyed to the latter than the former dis- tance. The rivers Oby, Jenessa, and Lena do not facilitate the communication half so well by their course, nor are they half so practicable as the Ameri- can rivers. To this I shall only add the observation of Machiavel, in his Prince: that a government sel- dom long preserves its dominion over those who are foreigners to it; who, on the other hand, fall with great ease, and continue inseparably annexed to the government of their own nation; which he proves by the fate of the English conquests in France. Yet with all these disadvantages, so difficult is it to over- turn an established government, that it was not without the assistance of France and England that the United Provinces supported themselves; which teaches us that—