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Worcester, Worcester County, Massachusetts
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A dramatic portrait of Aaron Burr as a rebellious, Caesar-like figure who attempted treason in America, tampering with leaders and defying laws, but ultimately failed; he now lives obscurely in New York.
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The following portrait of this once distinguished personage is copied from a work recently published. He now lives in obscurity in New York.
The Caesar of America—the most astonishing and dangerous man of his age; a man that infused his own rebellious and fiery spirit into every thing, material or immaterial, with which he came in contact; a man who went about working treason, tampering with the bravest and stoutest hearts of all our country—in the light of heaven, with an audacity unlike any thing ever seen before in the history of disaffection; setting our laws at defiance—mocked at our strength—and doing that, which he has now failed in it, has been called madness; yet for which all the talent, learning and power of the country were unable to punish him! A man that poured his spirit of revolt, like a flood of fire, into every heart that he came near—disturbing the oldest and most cautious of our veterans—one that seemed to put himself, life and name, into the power of every human creature that he approached; yet with all this seeming, was he never in the power of mortal man (as Wilkinson and Eaton can show.) a man that suffered the legal wisdom of the whole country to array itself against him,—without trembling—and then just put out—enough, of his own strength and no more, (wasting not a jot or tittle of his power,) to defeat and shame them: O, it was miraculous! and since the time of the Romans, there has never been a man upon this earth, so like Julius Caesar, as was Aaron Burr.—Why did not he succeed? is the question with me; not as it is with the deeper politicians of the age; why did he not attempt it? The plan is deeper than is known; his resources greater. Aaron Burr was never the man to hazard all for nothing; a step more would Mexico had been his! and then who would have stayed the conqueror? Where could you have entrenched yourselves? In no other place and by no other means than by encompassing yourselves round about by a wall of fire. You must have had swords passing forever about you—and artillery roaring night and day. Aye, one blow! and we who now laugh the threat to scorn, would have seen the President of the United States, the Congress, and all others in authority, driven into the Potomac. But enough.
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New York
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Portrait of Aaron Burr as the Caesar of America, a dangerous man who worked treason by infusing rebellion into others, defying laws and evading punishment despite failure; his deeper plan nearly succeeded, potentially conquering Mexico and driving U.S. leaders into the Potomac.