History of Westchester County, New York, Vol. I
"While they correspond with the other Colonies, call and dismiss "popular ,\ssemblies, make Resolves to bind the Conscit-nces of the rest "of Mankind, bully poor Printers, and exert with full force all their "other tribunitial powers, it is impossible to cnrb them. But .\rt some- " times goes farther than Force ; and, therefore, to trick them hand- "soniely, a Committee of Patricians was to be nominated ; and into their "hands was to be committed the Majesty of the People ; and the highest " trust was to be reposed in them by a mandate that they should take "care, quod rt!t>pnhlica non capitU iujuriam. The Tribunes, through the " want of good legerdemain in the senatorial order, perceived the finesse ; "and, yesterday, I was present at a granil division of the City; and, "there, I beheld my fellow -citizens very accurately counting all their
a people, at such a time, and under such circumstances as then existed, and which would probably continue to exist, might, also, sensibly or insensibly, weaken if where existed, that such an organization, among such it should not destroy all those bonds of recognized dependence, and loyalty, and love, which, hitherto, had so firmly bound the Colony to the Mother Country. But, notwithstanding the evident intentions of those among whom the thought of creating such a Committee had originated; notwithstanding the purposes for which it had been created included no such purpose; and notwithstanding a separation of the Colonies from the Mother Country had not yet become one of the questions of the day, that Committee of Correspondence in the City of New York, created and