TO.3SA .IT L'OU VERWUIE. 220 your letter. Occupied as I am, I must beg you tocome Residence. You will nl Gind there all the pleasures I would wish to wer Iuom you with, hut iyolu will find thr. kness of an honorable man, who de-ires nutlinig iut the iesm of the colony and .ouir own bappirinest. If Minulame aint, whom I hall have th.. greatest pleasure to bIecome united with, iould accompany you, I should he gratific-d; le has occasi'Jn Ibr hort.s, I will send her mine. Never, xal, will iou find a more sincere friend than myself With idene iu the Captain-General, and friendship toward all r him, you will enjoy tranquillity. "I cordially salute you, a t BRUNETI." I1ow here is a piece of consunlmate villany. This man, who Shimsel' Brunet, who calls himslf a man of honor, and Should have run any one through who should have thrown That honor th.- -lightest doubt.t, -tii man, who probably nt to church, and hard ma's and pron:l'-4-d Chri'tianity, or fo, at any rate, did not in [privat'- pi,.k pickets -r icut throats, Sman dclibitratily );ts down and emphlo.s his ingenuity in bricating a ti-u.l ol lies in ordir to ensnare to his ruin an anocent patri. t, the liberator ot' his country. Every word in is diaboli al '.ompo-ition is siele'.t.-d with a view to deceive. Sy imphi nation, iu'znl.. and direhr averment, the tissue of ijdehoods goes Iy rwar.d to its end. You are, you know, I- Meged to be le.s quick than might be wished. False, doubtless. hiow you may prove how false by ailing in concert with me. iame hither, and so convict your calumniators; let the Captain- ieneral see how earnest you are for the fI'rtherance of public imranquiilit." This is a desterous movement. To remind IbToussint that he wa, suspected wai to prepareo him for the foflered means of esxculpation. An innoi'rnt man, from a con- 'iousness of his inno:en(e, and a guilty man, in order to affect ;and display such consciousness, would alike be inclined to ac- .iept the expedient. Then for this honorable man, who does not