294 



causes, which in modern colonies have dispelled 

 national remembrances, without nobly filling 

 their place by others relative to the country 

 newly inhabited. This circumstance, we cannot 

 sufficiently repeat, exercises a great influence 

 over the situation of the colonists. In the 

 stormy times of a political regeneration, they 

 find themselves isolated, like a people who, re- 

 nouncing the study of it's annals, should cease 

 to derive lessons of wisdom from the misfor- 

 tunes of preceding ages. 



END OF VOL. II, 



W. Pople, Printer, 67, Chancery Lane, London. 



