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July 24th 1839, continued.  
1839
July 24th, continued.  


sustain their hopes of success. The writer say is in boasted by their party that the ...... had advised shown to hold on to his laws, and by no means to give them up, and that these shall be sustained by the forces of the Unites States and the Cherokee people shall be compelled to submit. The writer will be slow to yield absent to these things, but as the assertions are made in argument, to sustain the feasibility of the course of the men in question, they deem it morer the general should know it. The  ........, posibly to the mind of the write, the statements often made, and the arguments often respond on the late emigrants, to induce them to remove thicher. There they were ti have peace- a government of their own choices- to make and to enjoy the benefits of their own laws without interruption, and without control; and there those of the people who had previously resided in that country, were ready to receive their hethren and to do all in their power to realize the hopes which these declarations were justly calculated to produce. It had never been hinted to the late emigrants, that among the promises and assurance, they were to be reduced to a state of vassalage, to an undefined despotism. The writer remind the general that the well knows the late emigrants are not in that country by their own procurement, but in conformity with the mandate of the United States government. But they have nevertheless come in peace, and peacefulness has characterized every heart of their conduct in the movement which has brought them neither. They declare that the trails and suffering a privations they have endured, cannot be readily estimated: that
sustain their hopes of success. The writer say is in boasted by their party that the ...... had advised shown to hold on to his laws, and by no means to give them up, and that these shall be sustained by the forces of the Unites States and the Cherokee people shall be compelled to submit. The writer will be slow to yield absent to these things, but as the assertions are made in argument, to sustain the feasibility of the course of the men in question, they deem it morer the general should know it. The  ........, posibly to the mind of the write, the statements often made, and the arguments often respond on the late emigrants, to induce them to remove thicher. There they were ti have peace- a government of their own choices- to make and to enjoy the benefits of their own laws without interruption, and without control; and there those of the people who had previously resided in that country, were ready to receive their hethren and to do all in their power to realize the hopes which these declarations were justly calculated to produce. It had never been hinted to the late emigrants, that among the promises and assurance, they were to be reduced to a state of vassalage, to an undefined despotism. The writer remind the general that the well knows the late emigrants are not in that country by their own procurement, but in conformity with the mandate of the United States government. But they have nevertheless come in peace, and peacefulness has characterized every heart of their conduct in the movement which has brought them neither. They declare that the trails and suffering a privations they have endured, cannot be readily estimated: that

Latest revision as of 13:30, 19 April 2020

1839 July 24th, continued.

sustain their hopes of success. The writer say is in boasted by their party that the ...... had advised shown to hold on to his laws, and by no means to give them up, and that these shall be sustained by the forces of the Unites States and the Cherokee people shall be compelled to submit. The writer will be slow to yield absent to these things, but as the assertions are made in argument, to sustain the feasibility of the course of the men in question, they deem it morer the general should know it. The ........, posibly to the mind of the write, the statements often made, and the arguments often respond on the late emigrants, to induce them to remove thicher. There they were ti have peace- a government of their own choices- to make and to enjoy the benefits of their own laws without interruption, and without control; and there those of the people who had previously resided in that country, were ready to receive their hethren and to do all in their power to realize the hopes which these declarations were justly calculated to produce. It had never been hinted to the late emigrants, that among the promises and assurance, they were to be reduced to a state of vassalage, to an undefined despotism. The writer remind the general that the well knows the late emigrants are not in that country by their own procurement, but in conformity with the mandate of the United States government. But they have nevertheless come in peace, and peacefulness has characterized every heart of their conduct in the movement which has brought them neither. They declare that the trails and suffering a privations they have endured, cannot be readily estimated: that