AGRICULTURE WITH CHEMISTRY. 213 



The reformers, and their views of reforming, fall un- 

 der some one or other of the following heads. 



The manoeuvres or plans of one political party to 



supplant another. 



< 



The intentions of the worthless and desperate to over- 

 throw, in tote, the form of government, religion, laws, 

 and present scheme of society of this country, and to 

 substitute in its stead the French scheme of society, 

 which has already been exhibited on the theatre of 

 Paris, and in other parts of that unfortunate and distract- 

 ed kingdom. 



There is another set of reformers, who are worthy and 

 upright men, who view with regret the glorious and un- 

 equalled government of Britain slowly overturning, by the 

 abuses and corruptions, which, proceeding from avarice 

 and politically mercantile venality, now deluge this 

 nation. These good and worthy people, like the daugh- 

 ters of ISRAEL, " with their harps hung on the willows of 

 " Babylon, weeping over their beloved Jerusalem," have 

 bewailed, in too strong and unguarded terms, the state 



of 



