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    Chapter 30 - Page 2

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    of use;
    and when the mischief was done, and they began to feel its consequences,
    or, what to them was the same thing, to fancy that the low price of oil
    in Europe was owing to the change of constitution at the Crater, they
    started up in convulsed and mercenary efforts to counteract the evil,
    referring all to money, and not manifesting any particular notions of
    principles concerning the manner in which it was used. As the cooler
    heads of the minority--perhaps we ought to say of the majority, for,
    oddly enough, the minority now actually ruled in Craterdom, by carrying
    out fully the principle of the sway of the majority--but, as the cooler
    heads of the colony well understood that nothing material was to follow
    from such spasmodic and ill-directed efforts, the merchants were not
    backed in their rising, and, as commonly happens with the slave, the
    shaking of their chains only bound them so much the tighter.

    At length the Rancocus returned from the voyage on which she had sailed
    just previously to the change in the constitution, and her owner
    announced his intention to go in her to America, the next trip, himself.
    His brothers, Heaton, Anne, their children, and, finally, Captain Betts,
    Friend Martha, and their issue, all, sooner or later, joined the party;
    a desire to visit the low shores of the Delaware once more, uniting with
    the mortification of the recent changes, to induce them all to wish to
    see the land of their fathers before they died. All the oil in the
    colony was purchased by Woolston, at rather favourable prices, the last
    quotations from abroad being low: the ex-governor disposed of most of
    his movables, in order to effect so large an operation. He also procured
    a glorious collection of shells, and some other light articles of the
    sort, filling the ship as full as she could be stowed. It was then that
    the necessity of having a second vessel became apparent, and Betts
    determined to withdraw his brig from the fishery, and to go to America
    in her. The whales had been driven off the original fishing-ground, and
    the pursuit was no longer as profitable as it had been, three fish
    having been taken formerly to one now; a circumstance the hierarchy of
    the Crater did not fail to ascribe to the changes in the constitution,
    while the journal attributed it to certain aristocratical tendencies

    which, as that paper averred, had crept into the management of the
    business.

    The vessels were loaded, the passengers disposing of as many of their
    movables as they could, and to good advantage, intending to lay in fresh
    supplies in Philadelphia, and using the funds thus obtained to procure a
    freight for the brig. At the end of a month, both vessels were ready;
    the different dwellings were transferred to new occupants,
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