Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
^uti
VOL. XXIII. NO. 24.
"NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1862.
PDDL1SOED WEEKLY. ON SATURDAT,
UUERICAN AKTI-SUYERV 80C1ETI,
PENNSYLVANIA ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY,
105 North-Tenth Sired, rhlladtlphla.
Loticrt fur ruiiillciilnn, 01 le-lntnic in any v?S '< "'
e.ll|..rl.ilr lint"! !li.-|..'li' r..-.li..nl-l le-.|.lr. -it.l. l.l'ITi
nr rue. .\..Tin>. .|. ls7..Sl>(ST.swiic.M" l""i-
ilbfnf^Of l' , :l,.-,l,l 1
^elections.
DR. HELLO TVS ON THE WAR.
j from [be address
r has developed i
If I were called on lo ay wnat
spots in our polilic.nl orgamisti"'
which the fiery
' ' '
betrayed, I sboui'i b
1 A want of fn national rcnrcr.cnu
bureaus, array, and ia all public plan's
ill, Srillirmt ciccutiocBbut as n ml;
d, heart- and will, are ool.npobl.
II iif lt)ii' , u. : i-.
gnrS.l abir.
of course
TLb best b
ndmir
l^t.-iiH" And tbi
I, (bo Slitve To
,g political life parly
eked tbi! beam, against even the special .i.linnfn:.- -
D tho S
ctban
nl, K.iL.-r
ml I i"f">
.king a
rim. I u
,..,,, through one great interesttbo ton
repr,-on>aii illowcd tlM'ir slnvcs-und tin
,- to pur, has" at nil limes, 1)> political bribes,
.Jcieul support (it the North lo overbalance the
political power ..f iho free Slates- Had there been
rar, a lav cry was already doomed to ilio, under
very acli.ui'of that ' V.n-.U un-.n winch lor seventy
ira had given it Id". I'or ill'-- GinsliUilion, in Hscll
vsidered and regarded ns b Federal document,
rlii' r pm-slavery "or nnli-slavory.
As Ibc federal power In to pass into the hands of
the majority, the Conslitniinn becomes favorable o
unfavorable to slavery, n.'tor.linf; lo Hi" character
tbnt majority. When the nation by its constitutional
representatives in anil-slavery, then Ihc Constitution
becomes *o,nnd not before. It did become to nt
hi,, ,1,,.. ion. To sustain that elc-iion. to uphold
1'reeioYnl bc-unic il>" fir.-t I most direct polic)
the free ami loyal States. That policy anticipated
no action on the subject of slavery. It was to '
care of itself. , ,,.,,,
I confess thru, fur on,-, 1 nie.inu-ly dc-ired tin
to take that course. I dreaded mi net nt an.
lion. It seemed in mi; to be identical Willi a St
ratsce, was present, to cheer and to animate by bold
"-.,.|.l'.! ,,. il,.' Imt.1--.tv of nntiotiH have statesmen
een railed lu I.-- p-rlc nuance of lumber dune- than
tore tho men who were- aummnoncd. by the Admin-
.slration they bad placed m power, i' legi-bii, fur tv
land rent and ton, by discord and a turned by Ira-
te ma1 blood. Tl,"v entered with bravo hearts nnd
resulted spirit., upon the (-relit work imposed upon
them wilhii[iM,i-| ,cd dcvuioii and tireless mdus-
try The Adminiidi-Miuii as ted lor inur hilldrcd
(hou^and men mid lu'.ir buinlr.d million of dcilnra,
,md Conyre^ | ,r,.n, |.i 1^ i'.'iv" il lire hundred t ,..i--and
men ai.d liv* linnl.-l iilli'>i. el dollars. The urmy
und navy were inciea^d. i,d laws enacted for lb.
orr;ani7ation and povernmcril el tin.' milltarj ami
naval force.-, and f,T ^ippli inr the pcovcrnment sill,
the needed jntain to carry on the war, nbo-o [Ujuiii-
li, nrnnuriiiun. stai tl.d and imiitved the world.
^tateMiien oi Iln: majority in bulb huunn id I on-
er i-m clearly sure tlmi alnv.ry was nut. only the cause
and tbo motive powor ol tbo rebellion, but that
ibc eeaeeb toil of iln f..nr imlliun of enforced fs-
(iuib unnhlvd ti-;,ison t-i lill ibe ranssH, feed and psv
ita armies. They would .piiekl. hirike at tho mall
onCBCiilinR tbo properlyor
a the
il was in iteclf a great act of ji
feding espresstd on the biibjecl oy oce oi inu unumi
and most eli'v.'ited ebanipiolis ol tbo war.
To tbi; majority of ollieers and men, ibe prodama-
licn was welcomed aa :t nolurnl eventone that was
cedain to follow Ibe eonlinuanco of the war, and was
th-reforo not a surprise to any one. It will bo
ncrpiicsced i H(n by those who feel little roloresl in
Ibis abatrnut questions of slavery or
~"!
"It servca 'cm right; liny have been
enough, and thBrrcsident has usbibitcd
and patience in withstanding pu lonj; iliu pressure nf
diiler.'nt parlies upon bim. It is a right act, per-
formed at tho:igbt lime, and will be sustained by
tho whole army
"
wcro the remarks of moat of those
I cooverstd with on tho subject. Ksox.
sarncd lotif;
CIU11LES SUHHER AS STATESMAN.
in the poli
alition between
Jackson, V .
that which ns Free ,-uilern bad split oil* from th.
Whig iis'-cadeney upon 11"' n.iiiiiniitiou of Len. fay
rPrc led Geo oS. Bo well n
false prelenso that it was an on pi edged one.
__
The
ibci'iiueiit calling ol a
1 feupb-'s (.'otivenLon, anil
.> nomination ut Ijoii. D.venJ fur liovcrnor, wn. a
ibuto to Ibe chariieter and inlluen.o of their r-,:a-
r of which bis frieoda have a right to feel
,.,-ou.d. For the first time in nur poli'ieiil history, a
pnrlv has boon organised and a State ticket iioun-
nnled for tho sob' purpose of d. f.aiin^ the reck'ctiori
of nn whois not a.-tate L.lii.r. nnd nt-var aspirid
. Gov. Andrew is ng;irdc-l with a I, -uli'y
lified by thu fewness of those who feel it : but
thcbittoruc-TH with whieh Mr. Sumner i-i hated insists
on the grjiliticnlinn of a canrnss, even though a
hopeh'sa one ; and. since there wai no .xislirif,' party
'
rbick this could I- .',it,.mpted without mamfesi
i(y, one was organiv. d lor ibe purpose. And it
best that this should be. Let ua have a census
ot the friends and the enemies of Mr. Sumner in the
Stnte which ho has so honored
!
I have asid that, while other Senators have shared
hih convictions, none has ceiucd SJ enjphn'.icalK-. s,..
eiiiinenllv.ns lie toeinhod\ and repr.. sent ibe growini;,
ricepening, Anli-Plavcry eentiment of the country.
None bus s,.",ii'.d so invariably to reali;
|,ubli. wrong is a puWk dangor-tbat irij
_
lb" humblest and n-.-nki-.-it i=, peril ') tin! wtll-Leiii nl
all. Others have seemed to regard ibc reeent ilevol
sith s
I i Buffers
icreed. There v
.arty under dure,
rn party under
iil'tvi uri-ini; -,-- mi ,'
ei,- r.citber of thorn in
ircatcucd with foruigo if
:itud t
cihiib to retain f, d;:al
crlaitj nbeut cither our
o support them, as our
..'..'
i I
],', ,|.,,|i,i,i Ktruet work', behind
.' ."|, r.d.el'b" n-mvbt burl sb-.I nnd hI,"11 int.,
il. bared l.OTOm.H of our d.'vuled sons, hauling for
their country und, r the old (lag. Cut tins measure,
denounced by the trnitor Brecalnndf
of a aeries ot acta loosing all bom
low of tbo land.
As tho rebellion d"V"K,].ed ,f gig-'i
n-. 'he rebel con literacy manileited i
jwer, the loyal mnS'-es whost msiu
. Inctions of statesmen, did r~'
Blavory was the vital and itnualli
bullion, and that it should be cni
! all the constitutional nnd
is noi so hiDornblu and open confession
there can be to secular occupation equal
dignity to that of n legislator and st
ihould be tfcn noblest ambition of our
men to Gil fteso atations. They ought t;
as ihey do in England, and even in tbr
(he man who allows private interests,
nc*s or any other rmin' ibi.n inoompeten, >, s..
bim from oceepiinf public -dbe at Ibe call of hi
low-men, corrupl!. "ibe publi! censcieneo and^rorg.':-,
the most fnered duty of a good cit
strange thing il is, nt a time like tin
I |";ilidi..i
Abolitionists were w.i
paliticnl imdcrboi ai
i it hah proved I
lendenoy to imjin
a.lAce* have ) Of.
:ir present poai
in a perleet quandar) of
dmouareorareiioteqcH!
utterl>
unknown, till they to
country at large, am
doubt whether these
'' A ti-e-jiid weakness la tie.' e^lranrdiuan abs"
of any machinery for tuing the re-ponsilulu
greai pnblieuiiitters. '! he cnstitulion of our Ul .,-.
Th a ->ur. r nf infinile weakness. 1 lie beads ol ile|
mem, hold ibeit r l.:es i ibe will of ibe Pre.-i-
No amount of public distrust, no vole of cen
moves them to lay down lieu; power. Tbo who."
sticks s
have bim. Tpu
long
Tbo wholo c ,otry w
negro Carbonoriom. by which
o be banded ami directedw;
lerils associated with it in our al
t is nut freedom, but the wan
noucrection ; and the educated
of tbo
ink tbat the p. I..
(hat alleged, tbat
hicb the credulous
a put to shame
in, or that immi
ie blacks asserted
I have any of the
rcicd imaginations.
b.i-auic 111';
p force o( Ibis, i
ilcd by tbecierei
ar powers of t
long Sburrill of the metropolitan '.'aunty, had been
born and reared in listen without imbilung some ol
its most cbcriolii'd " nutimis." Educated a Whig of
tbo school of John Quinoy Adams, he bad resisted
ardcnllynnd on Iln.- I.igl" st gruuiid- tbat annexation
of Texas to whichor rather to the spirit wbicb
'
ipelled and secured that annexationmay be
aoed nil our subseipient national trulls and woes.
When tbo Whig party in ltd* selected Oen. Taylor
lor it" ('residential candidate, and refused to endorse
gove
', n.gimi
p-l
Buchan
his I. '.bim
Ives ibe I 're
lis tbi
a Secretary, 1 ot
President cboos- f io
worked under Mr.
have thieves and traitors in
luntry could not help iteel!.
, when do amount of pnb-
hcad of department out of
|, r... ponsihility and care to
t and ublcat President, Our
o retire on the first espres-
i-cr.tho present annngoment
aciid an overwhelming negro
any theory bad prepared us to aaDapoB inon,
anaiii. proclaim emantipalion as mucb of you please,
youtflect it only ah you can give ll^sc v,lo uphold
davecy an argument nbi;h b:is lou eilges. Iintuc-
liate pruehimati.ui of einaneipati""
: "
of rebellion IhsIs in the South, ji
ipation att any other scbi
longer co.
wisbea, and if
heada ol departi
President was, 1
has nnv policy,
look with awnz.'inem
with Uie uiru,..-t i.'nne,
which u President nt
3. A [bird
i, of e
Ik represent!*
da :
insellorsfor, if
rse be no
of oilu'-s high and low,
nod Counties. Uisverj
pie at large
, jnalad'.. .
really know bow aolitary the
little the Cabinet represent or
ia a consulting body, we should
t at the autocratic position, ar*
nnd pity on tbe aolilude
I'niu-d Stales is placed.
, tb._- local distribution mndo
gradual eman-
Tba slaves will bold
till we have bold ol their masters,
This decree of emancipation, in rebel Stales, boni
of m.btar, .. -ccssitv, pruebiiuied L,y the rresident in
,be full weed* of war powers, is now the settled
in.l irrcl-calaolo law nf ibe nation, lu he -observed,
obeyed and enfureed " by army and navy and by tbe
voice of tbo nation. The enfurc.-meiu of this pro-
clamation will give peace nnd order, freedom ar
J
uniiy to a low .liKtrneii d tuuntn ; the failure
ecforce it w.U bring wilt, it diyord and anar.liy,
diasovercd Onion and a broken nation. The issu
arc clearly and distinctly drawn by this proclama-
tion between law. and order, and freedom an -
.,[ . ,i-., on ibe one bund, and anarchy, and
eo-d and flavor)' and a shivered and dishonored
Union ou the other. Freedom, humanily and reli-
gion tho unerring vui..v ol p'Hri..,ii-in. pronounce^ all
attempts to defeat tbe ,'nl.,r..,'ib.iit ol ibis proclama-
tion. decreLiog tbe freedom of all slaves in rebel
Stales as unpatriotic, as criminal, aye. and aa Ires-
.....-..,- i -j,, a- were ibe efforts to defeat the final
:d,.i,me-.t of tbo Declaration of the 4th July,
, Thu men who sought lo defeat the con
of that " proclamation of the universal
nation of man from tho thraldoi
, , m,
!,' id" yiolu'.ing (In- least tittle of the
t( eternal r- .ii''i'l". ba- theiein made a rui.
iatakethat nothing oltie caa he so importar
profitable as stern uprightnesssuch_ is tt
key-note of bis lofty and beneGcent cs
,._;bsafed fail
S-nale tin! iinal on ri In
fanhfiilly, so uobly
^r, with that
roomily strong body
mo time been diatin-
united in the Hufl'ulo
3 ftOI
n order to propitiaif; Slates
_, .ittle understood by tho peo-
l extent this policy is carried.
,-, u , u fth qualilica..cr...-.,.lllc-.i.-
required for the National olbeers. if tbo No.ttern,
the Southern, the Western, Ibc EoMOro Stales ate
only duly represented in the Cabinet or on (be
Supreme Punch, is inat'-rs nui that th; best men ic
tbo country arc wt aside and tbini-ralo persons pul
into these re.-pom dde positions Fiery btalo and
County baa its number of officers apporuootd
Wby
id dishonored graves, under the bh
id withering fires of outraged patrioti
,i patriotism burn us btigbsly now an
and tho men, " who," in the worda of ..
r, "emerge from ibeir gl.ion.1 na tho absdow
tall i, r
.'.n their country." tho men who pi
Elace.
Then
as so little I
exactness ; and Ibe last thing i
is Ibe best man for the vacni
country in the world whit
Why is it that tbe land resounds with the i
ured tread of a million ol armed men? Why
that tbe Republic trembles with ib echoes ot battle.
Why ia it that our bright waters at.' -ts.d and onr
orec'n fields redd,-.-d v, ,th in.i'.roal blood r Why is
S .bat -be young men of America, in the pride and
bloom of early manhood, are aummoned from homes,
r-om tbe mother* who borD
nd eituers who love them, to the GelUB of bl.'o.ly
rifethere lo do soldiers' duiies, b.nr soldiers
jrdens, and fill soldiers' graves? Why is it that
jnusands of tbo men nnd the women nt I'bnstian
,merica nro sorrowing with aching Hearts
---
jarful eyes, for the nbsent, tbe loved
"-'
tho heart of loyal A
d with aoxiely and
ntrv T
Tbe eriues against ibe peace oi the ouuntiy
"ifa of tbe nnUon are all, all *-
1 office:
inli,c-e >:
alio mg > thii
arty goes
out nnd another goee in. I with every Slate wen
fro.. ,,, 1:,; repr. Henied in Congress or Senate by an;
oersons all over the l-nioii whom it chose to send.
Tod Ibat all olbee, ,, filled a, all times without
the least reference to Stato or County, and with o
reference to competency. .
i. Tbe irrcspunsibb-ne.-s of tbe Cabinet to
nation hi "ins an irresponsible ness of bureaus
head:, of departments and ol" officials to heads of
Touubwhich is n uinrked feature of n moat terrible
weaknessrum,ing ibr-jiigh ibc civil und by
ending to the military
lost?
a thruhb
i fr the
thu
batoful d,
of his fellov
ofic
i slavery perpetual and
a Lunation nod rcfiUn
rjcjt Iirnpc-rly.nl health
ifii these appalling B
i ua are all the inflictions of slavery 11
,ntie eDbrt to foood a slaveboldiog e
tbat plunged tbe :
darkness ol civil
hands are drippit
s tho eonspi
onspiracy against the unity anu
jpublic. Slavery is the traitor
ion into the Gre nnd blood and
constitution;*! ri-jLU -vt-jJi r,
-bould r"iaeiiibei' ibe lutenfib- " skulking neutrals,
mid ibe sticklers for " rightful authority in 1.
ere joining in giving aid ao.l ..onifi.rt to Ibe tint
,d,i.-"l- iv ho now iniidli threaten,
,-
upon any a'
Wing mad- lu eyeeutc Ibc prccbiuiiiiinn ol Abrali,
I ii-,dn to 'hoist Ibe Ida, I: Hag,' and proclaim nr.
nl I'Mi-rniitintioii, to secure lis withdrawal or nrr^.
its i-.y-vulion
" I'liiru.ii-ui instinctively endorses
this proclamation of emuncipatioii ; treason in ever)
fibre of its being strie,:* with bloody bands tuibroti),
il. In tbe fiery and bloody struggles through which
thia proelamauon nn.si pass, struggles that will at.t
this nation lo lis pi-..|.;,uilcst depths, pnlnotism will
mark mid brand as trailers, .m, tbey not cowards,
I morn for the safely of thu slaves
than for tho blood of brave men
fighting the battles of tbe endangered country
more lor tbe perpetuity nf slavery in rebellion than
for the unity and perpetuiti nf ibe Republic.
try is lion ll'.c-i - n tbe- stonni naiesol
Darkness lowers and tempeals threalco.
are rising, and learning and breaking
around ua and over us with engulfing fury
"
amidst the gloom the star nt dut; '<-'- i'= "
-"
radiance over tin- dark and i in u bled writ. --. making
luminous our pathway. The duty or the hour is as
i, llliu lu the clear virinii r.t Inielbg.'nt p.", ', '-
though it wer.' written in letters ol ligbt on IM
bending are he* of the skies. Tbat duty IS, with
every L'um-eption of the brain, every throb of the
heart, every aspiration ol the aoul, by thought, by-
word nnd by deed,
" to observe, obey and cnb.ree
bo wise, far-seeing, patrioiie, liumane and Chr,,n "
lolicy ombotlied in tbe proeb
:
tbeWilmot Proviso. Mr. Sui
eally few but intellectually anil
of lioslonians who had for at
guished us " Couacieueo " in r.
" Cotton " Whigs, revolted nnd
movement i-,l,i.l, culminated it, ._.
support of Van llureii audi'. F. Adams. The cban,
ofbase of Sir. Webslor on tho 1th of March, 1851
tin' passage of the new compromise measures of that
year, including the Fugitive Shv- law , ibe practical
adkerence iber-lo of ibc Whig as well OS of the
[lemocratic ori'ani/ation, added strength to tbe ban .1
and ridiculed " third party," which at length became
able to dictate tenin. to Ibnt large minority of tbe
pfopleof Massacburetls which lunged in grasp pow.-r
til ,\- Stale, but could only do so by thl
Fr... Soil yule. The Constitution of that,
New England Stales, r-, purine nr, al.-ofsile mnjunty
to elect, no l,ov,;ro. was chosen at the eleC "
l-',U; but ibc coaliiinn aforesaid gave the dc .
.
and most of the Male olbeers to Ibe Heme rats, nnd
tli" United States Senator tu the Free Soilers. St
nf lb" Democrats lung refining to support Mr. .-
net, his election was barely elTccted. and Only ft
the n
trodden down.
,1 Ofjliati
ig hosts of liber
proclamalion, a
the qut-
courl-martial suspected pen
officers, than to go oa wiiuum. m .1
condition of ul I subordination, all order,
must have dUciplint
:up three months an
1 and properly charged
r, the President, b>
.. Tbirty-sevt-nth Congr.
^n tho fourth of -My, and at neon un tl
. dm longer^ assc-mbled lo enler upon the migl
'
ask imposed upunil by Ibc ualmnalperds. \ BCJ
hairs in both chambers v, villi impressed upon the
uind tbo gigantic proportions of tbe rebellion, ami
l,e fearful "magnitude ot the impending elruggle,
ind inspired tbe soul with something of awe 111 tbe
iretenco of events so transcendent. Few of the
biefa of slavery were present lu dominate, seduce
3i corrupt. Tbe eleni-ln-adcd, practical, dominating
llavistbe erratic, reckle-s, fdu-i.-rmg Toombsthe
a, complirhcd, timid, .-tiuiinus Huntertho eloqur"
1
puli-bed insincere lkiijmi.il. tbe pretentious, p.
nous Masonthe bold, mlmit. unscrupulous Slidell
the dark, cold, bitter Claythe genial, courteous,
fanatical Brown, ami ilieir conquers in conapiracy,
i sedition and treason, plotted their foul, dark and
; infernal work no b-ng.r in tbe 1 apilol of the nation.
Hut Breckinridge, the chosou el, id of incipient iren-
on, not lesa guilty than his absent compeers in crime,
vas present 10 cavil and criticize, to denounce the
lets of loyal patriotism en- lie slunk away to atrike
tt tbe heart of the country ibnt bad trusted and bon-
. ored bim. Thu chair of Douglas vvns vacant ; life-
long opponents guied sadly upon it, for Ibey grate-
s fully remembered tbat tbe closing hours of his
'ed life weru given to patriotism, lo adjuring
voted followers re .ling lo tbe lnton,andcru
of freedom
Godand all the ricople
shall cry,
" Amen." Tbo good nnd the just ia all
leads are, from thia hour, pledged to tbe struggle
now waging against anatocra. 1 and slavery oa Ibis
comment, and
" l.iberiy and Pni.m. now aad forever,
10 and inseparable," have found a new and true
ipoundcr. Every soldier's arm n |, all be nerved with
_)W energyevery heart endowed with fresh courage,
for the prayers of good men and of angela shall
strengthen bim and shield bis bead in the day ol
battle.
Unwilling to enjoy lb- good news alone, I roused
one and another, and read to ibc-m tbe proclamation.
On a cot near by lay the wasted form of an officer,
who sprang up and clapped bis bands for joy as be
beard the welcome news. I did mil nl lirst ncugtin-
333 for. to 20 or
Nebraska, bill, the Kansas
Lceomptoa fraud, continually swelled t
slave-traders uui
Drl.ans. bad be i.i^tcd on sitting there from da. o
day and making tbe freest and least 1 altering r.l.-
iVuia on tbe na.ur, ami ...nden.-o.-a of the .business
there transacted. Who then foresaw or imagined
lhat he would one day be Cbu.rnuin of the Umi
on I'ureb-n .MTairs.a leader ol tbe majority. 1
Posted counsellnr of the President . ell aught be
(Hy,in his recent noble oration in Faneu.l Hal , i"
r,.-|,oii-" lu th" Presid, id's proclamation ol freedom
"iUkt.ud lhat 1 have lived to see this day!
Tl,c brutal nssault w herewith slavery , through I,-
ruininli- Pio-'ks, K.-ilt and hdmomlsuli, replied t,
hl,e.vp"snreof" Ibe crimes and outrages h bio
marked her career and illustrated l,er_ character 11
tanaaa, was one of tbe inspirations ot ibc sp, ntc
rremonl canvass oi 111'"-', winch syticbroinic-d will
tbo close of his first term, and re due., d lu a <<-i"^>
the oppositioa to his
id deepened
_.. pervading the
iree Slates, unl.l the eh- (ion 0! Lincoln, the ; '
u f ih,- ,-,.,. mi. Stales, tu, d ultimately that of
the border slave- Stales also, completely transformed
the Senate, so that, (or the last two sessions, an-' "
portion of that preceding lle-m. Mr. .-uie,r baa I
[ ., majority in a bod. cheli he c-nlnred with sea
Iv ball "a tb-'icn .-oinpatriuts, and lias been aid'
sceure lb" adopiion ol imponant uie.asures where .
iormerly struggled inellectually to deteat those ol
his haugbiy and i.onte-u.piuous antagonists.
,,,.,,,. , !,', -',<, that be relurns the bale- or ; , cm v.
with ha wtis visiled in his days ol adversity _
lhat his intento condemnation of tho crime againat
humanity now culminating in r
ly ,hu 1.
President aidicipated
|. r, -i..,,. l i"ioi,"..l a lar-'e number of officers in the
no
-
ami t', -, ee--ion'oi" ibree Slates, on iho pro-
n,,l.ation ol it,- polity) when we seo how tbe
rreat -take who b b'-reigu naliotia bold in our allairs
,'. i,.,r.ur l'["Ugbt every Kurupean power
li t I 11 to tin- , uurl and it' became every day
,,,.,.,,-,-ntwb'it "".ant,.- and what remote uilere-ts
EtaM") lb '-' ' kdBi"" cf XU W
f
.,. ,-ai, hardly say 'ibe deli'., .anon was too Ion
Against all timorous enunsels be bad the courage-. .
seize Ibe moment: ami such was h,a posilion. and
,ueh Ibe felicity a,n-di,,g the nciio.i. that be Ua.
reidaeed gure'n nt in tbe good graces of mankind.
X .. .?_;_.... :^ .1.. .^e.^.nign than plenty 111 th.
fis wonderful whai
ed, and bow its ill oji
,,.],. t
11 of Southern si ic-ly, t
,, only -
Is rccoaslrM-
Mt and bealibful basis. Then now ufGnt-
t, (he old repulsions will cease, and, the
tbo r
n," say the Chi
power is, and bow ill .. -
mak.-s lit" mean. 111, -1 .be- s'.insbiie
\iucric:i bad lost mucb of ils nltra
1 ocraiiisi
nature in the people, aud Iho ii
which (raud and violence eneou
governors work at a geom.
ummer day atoms to repair ill
or war.
r , ,
A day which most of us dared
eat worth tbe dicadlul
,'.,!., ed Is. lie- g-"-'ll
t b-i[,e lo Sc
orth ii
Oc-
. and plotting bra
ill Btrike, and all men ol Alricni
faculty enough to find their
ed of the pro
should bo suddenly a
r.-t llioi
r'le'l '-du,
rfea
gigantic and fiendiah
harsh toward those
n and a vicious social
nl, ,-f treason. Ob the
uttu-rnnce bespeak hi~
At tbe outset of this war all prudent and w
menwhokiiow tbc-tcmbh- dangers uf anarchy wt
concerned thai the sirile should he carried on for the
defence oi ibe i.onstitutiun and the Lino. .
enforcement ol the laws ; and certainly tbat was the
oiilv rn.li.-v nn wbicb a President, a Uabiaet, a Cob-
.,y,lrn i '. "I the to to uphold aad ddentl the
f
T
',".
]:, ,, , airy nn tbe war. Moreover "
.,,'.',,,, ii, .v. ,-i.im nt was. made becau-e
rV-'ti'u",' li bad l*'l 1" nn "b.c-liuu unfavur.-lblc te
, r
'"-,
->-.. 1 al'ivem 11 was deemed lhat there ci
had fallen exhae
.. -ed it wasCol. Clark of th" L]l-t .Massachusetts
J
Itegiiiient. Alter incredible mar. lies, bard-luugb.
battles, aad miraculous escapes from death on the
fiuld, his regiment reduced in ibe fragment of what it
|
' '
unself prostrated b. im.e.asani lighting, bi-
lled nt ibe enmp of Gen. llurnside,
waiting the return of his wasted
rengtii. I had not m.l him since ibe battle of New-
ern, where be bore a most gallant pan, and where
many ol his hraveat officers and men fell by hia side.
He has since participated in all ibu great bailies of
ihe PeaiBsula, and more recently in those of Virginia,
and now he had scarcely a full company left- ^et
be rose up wilh all bis nout'd energy, nud, mapping
his hands, thanked tied for the proclamatinu.
'
would do more good than a dozen battles; wool
briuir to our side, not only tbe active aid of tho mi
,ndage, but secure tu ns IL.- ,-v mpatln- ; and
_.:__ ;- r...A_r n.-tqaj I
to bo close befoi
descent who bavu
of American law.
necessary lhat this measure
rkedbyany signal results on
. . rebel masters. The lore,; ol
,ue act is that u commits the country .0 tins |a-iiec
tbat it compels lie- innumerable- olbeers. civil, .milia-
ry, naval, of the Republic to range; tb-m,elv..s on be
Hone it cannot be undone by a new A.I ministration,
lor slavery n.erpowers tbe- disgust of the moral sen-
:imeBt only through ,u,meiu.,r,al usage. ' .-a :*
all,,!" it,-, crime and false pesiti on. The
_ .__ ailent joy v
I generous hearts, and ihene
to tho world.
It was well to delay the sin
iti! this edict could be put ot. uu... .......
surauce lo Ibe ship as 11 go, s plunging through I."
a with glad tidings In all people Happy are fit
)un" who find the pestilence eb.-ansed out 0! tne
earth" b-.avine open m them an bni.-.-t career, llappy
tic old yvbo"ee nature purified before- they depart.
D soV ^il,,!, 'l.e b'.bl tbe-tti back lo.hu,
world until von have charged their ear aud heart
with Ibis message .a < r spiritual slices, an-
nouutiag ibe meiiornlimi of our planet.
'\'.','i g','j'.'"i'u''"i'due. .-Ii-.e-. .,1 c'l.llc-.i nee."
Meantime that ill-fated, luiieh-injurcl race which
the 31tion respect, wdl lu,- ;-u,ewbat of the
deieo^ttSuredSr ages ia their bronzed eouo-
,:,;ine:. ot.ered m the wailing "I ibetr plaintive
music'a race tialiirully benevulent. joyous, docile,
industrious, and whose very im.enes sprang from
their great talent fur usefulness., wbicb, in a more
manage, will not ..nl., dety-l tl.e.r
^^J)-
iUeive them a rank ammig 11.1 ,ms.-Jv.ii,;/t
, Emerson, in Th* AW* ii^hly M
--
i
;
AND EASY VIRTUE.
1 speech at the Cooper 1
forcing bis proposilioa
ot Davis and bin coale.
and ihe- l.iw. l>coc
first condition of
solves right. Wo have reco'
false position, and planted
moral Jiupport of every nation :
,'. '.
0,- ancti'iis, loyiug aspiration tbnt
"i'-;","
" '.''
,', "-. ,,.'. 10, >.>uth sbuuld make haste
. , out '."lor l'."nii,-< ber once more docile to the
ii.ir.ol r-a-cm of Conscience, and of patricl.sm-
Mr. Sumner's second tern, expiring with the pre-
,1 1 ,,11-T, ... ,t w'i- ,1,-11' -'' 'h 1 those .'!,-" ,.'.,-',... ...
.,.,-ure-d in pulling
"rebukedW hi- co - a ,d n.or -I by .be ,-onside- f.rst condition of success
'.;,;,' 1',.
7,,. i,|,- -.vol, should makoadeape-
Buroiie. Besides, I attempla to elect an anti^umner Ug.Blatnro, on the ot ue 01
,
r 1 ([,-' rhii-.s 'ilo-'mioc .ill "--;' '"'""-
i,,,. I i[. oi-J .iture f.ilcet llll
;"
J:
^1
'
I
,",',',
p'i'c" yuar'tronti'yVcltUnm
arnty be the way inwhich llr. Van Puren
but it is cErlatnly not tbo course which
'nnd moral men w"ould recommend; it is
ni'iha course which society has pre-senbed. it Ims,
X be contrary, stamped such loose conduct with
, lr, Mrem.-e.at diaspprolmnon ; n re-eommcmli tidclil.
,o y^v. which, noVonly for the interest of the persons
themselves, and of their offspring, but more espe-
"
,y for tbe intere.U of society at large, _a. mn
tvocable, " bo
would a
irluyua ami Cbrisli;
,mend a did -nm c-nn
.^mcc'.h.Aia,^ out Mr. I',," fc'i" 1
the dUogrtemenl ojftrrtn hvtbawl <>i<i
S.iciety, made up
If.
^
- - - -AfsS
\^
v
^
, ,'inofoy'iTrreo "inn,nnd ibo woman a slave.
u hi probably suggest 'hnt the
'^^^
-JV. 1'. Ermirtg Pmi.
OS PBBNTJSS'S XA11RATIPE.
.-,., ..., other thi-wt. h;i his hnlf-ytar':
'
,-,.;ni...i/ ;.'."/ '" into "
Jnli-Slatery man.
Was.hsc.ton, Friday. Oct. 1 ,
13J12.
.
,:, .11 M r,r ,. ..1111 i - H'*;^
,.,- r t V ,11:: 1 H..IL-1, :,,, 1 ^V - ns .olIowB
V, r,,,,.- Tins nvilin.if iiilentlcd for mo, is
, | ,, ,..,,,1., ...
pleasure, is
^ACSwmt.V,..;'.m.
n .^bc^tbrfih
-.,' ;
h
.
'wr-w-
fir ss.u
.
^
"";,
v: . ..'. i - .- ''". "",;|
""r
:?:;, ;.i;is:.-.'v-n.i, c .i.,.-s?~rr'"?
:
;r
a 1...1, " ''' '"'
i%^
',;
at;-::'
;..;:!
luLwiiioTiIw"
:
"."''--;' '>' '-.'a'-'U 'V-
'''* ''''- '''
1
''>;"'
be- SlirpUi.
1 [ h.fite tell me what an il
neemphali.ally endorsed the v
I this . 'il-ieci, and could not concc;
s of Friends
, ,,na heard below. Some hoa,-.-
ih- ll,or w.r-' wiihoui much Irouhlc, displaced,
and in a few minutes the Guv Eawkes of the bnnk
stood in tho midst of the astonished Directors. His
story was very 1 111. pi- ami .-! might to rwnrd
;
An old
.Irani ran under I'.- bullion-room, the esi
which had become known to him, nnd hy
which he nn. 'In ha.e carried away enorm.
Inquiry was made, Nothing had been nbstraeled
nd the Directors rewarded the honesty and
A LAHGE assortment
;Vi>lTsce'?lbi.*ii'l hr (i-t 'sj
tt" Wust lUli-llM* nf'ii-I'leli
iALAMANl'Llt SA1 I---,
lONI-'ECTloNEflY - KEAIOVALv-Lcsiitui 1""^
vy
Ar Dora IEie Trek Leas T"If the
fnli'to'wnrd the south or townrdthe north, in the
ukce where the Ire-.- fall-th. there it shall be. (tccl.
si J I There is a sob. tun meaning crouched uml-r
this metaphor. Tbe trie will no. only lie as it falls;
it will uUo fall na it leans. And tho great question
which every one ought to bring home to bis own
hnson, without a moment's dslay. is this; What*
.fmy soull Does it, with all Its
towards God, or from him."J- J-
clearer and nuily of their anonymous correspondent-a working ( may.
"li .iliVi <->'J ^'IJ
*Vi,,'" w