' Essays 6. The French remaining in Canada, an Encourage- ment to Disaffections wn the British Colonies. If they prove a Check, that (Check of the most barbarous Nature— 2 / if the visionary danger of independence “in“our colonies is to be feared, nothing is more likely to render it substantial than the neighbourhood of for- eigners at enmity with the sovereign governments, capable of giving either aid,’ or an asylum, as the event shall require. Yet against even these disad- vantages, did Spain preserve almost ten provinces merely through their want of union; which, indeed, could never have taken place among the others, but I The aid Dr. Franklin alludes to must probably have consisted in early and full supplies of arms, officers, intelligence, and trade of export and of import, through the river St. Lawrence, on risks both public and private; in the encouragement of splendid promises and a great ally; in the passage from Canada to the back settlements being shut to the British forces; in the quiet of the great body of Indians; in the support of emissaries and discontented citizens; in loans and subsidies to Congress, in ways profitable to France; in a refuge to be granted them in case of defeat, in vacant lands, as settlers; in the probability of war commencing earlier between England and France, at the Gulf of St. Lawrence (when the shipping taken were rightfully addressed to Frenchmen) than in the present case. All this might have happened as soon as America’s distaste of England had exceeded the fear of the foreign nation; a circumstance frequently seen possible in history, and which the British ministers took care should not be wanting. This explanation would have been superfluous, had not the opinion been very general in England, that had not the French been removed from Canada, the revolt of America never would have taken place. Why, then, were the French not left in Canada at the peace of 1763? Or, since they were not left there, why was the American dispute begun? Yet, in one sense, perhaps this opinion is true; for kad the French been left in Canada, the English ministers would not only have sooner felt, but sooner have seen, the strange fatality of their plans. 2760] 59