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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

several fruitless cflorls.


llr. Sumner bad h.lWrlo been known ratber as n
scholar und orator tbaii as a statesman. His dnt.
" '
e political views were not shared by one-fourtfi
. _ fcllow-cilixen, in the State, nor by one-tyven-
tieth of the people of the Union. Ot the legislator*
votes sent him to the Senate, n mnjunij uwe.1
,,h i (l,n-.- wbu r-gard,d anti-slavery
every form with abhorrence, These be made i
attempt to conciliate or cajole. No one was .;ith
deceived or bribed into his support, lie dei.recat.
no prejudice and plfc-aied no hostility, rbuse wl
elected bun knew exactly what to expect, and ba
" lappoinled. .
lertook bia seat in a Senate which bad
never boinre been so inlensely , all but iiniiniiiioush-
l,ru-lnvery and .iL-mi, L.: was u,-l,u, livi-l) r.-i-nr.l
'M- ; -'"',
''-' :
.-
; "'!'.''.. :
i-.':
:
';
,
ii
; "
,,,|^,-.,. io rding any tu-e. gusriintees to ' "~
slalery He had no other political object tbi
loihcek.scondli lu, -ripple, and ultimately I. .
ilirov., the Slave '1'otver. Profoundly convinced I'bat
slavery and liberty are incompatibletbat thl
slavsment of any mvieh s and inipius ibe rigb. , -.
all-be grappled' d.icctlv ami boldli with the liatclnl

m-titut.'.n," instead ot being . onttnt with resisting


.. , a-e
rc-"ion.-. Slavery, in Ins view, yvna not to be
rcprebiu.d and resisted nu-r;;l> becae
u of the demon .
illy so uolily resisted ; and that from Gi
to i'anama, from the St. John to the Pacitic, the
n bia daily course looks llr"
are '.Horace Greeley, n Tie Inilfjiendenl.
m'oinv-o^'l.
l
|l'i''-''rout't''--c,f '.las's and local legislnt
and take a step forward ir
anil univer '
'
l,.,b tl . :,l I,
onlrv.d tut
1ruitl.ll in
THE PRESIDENTS PROCLAMATION.
Is ao many arid forms which Stales incrnat them-
lives with, once in a century, if so olien, a poeiu
t and record occur. These are (be jets ot ihM.glu
Koallaire, w|,"ii, roused by danger or inspired by
the polilical b-ad-rs ,,t' the dny l-reak iln: el-e
. .i.i_ _^..,:_~r ^t nnB r.T,,i IopmI legislalioti,
,f catholic
Every step ia the hlslory of
i a sally ol" Hie human mind into ttic
| Las Ibe inleresi of g,niu9. and in
anecdotes. Liberty is a alow fruit.
_ like religion, for .licit p-riods, and in rare
conditions as if nwnitiu" a eulture ol the race "bicli
-ball make it organic and p-rmiinent. -neb moments
| expansion in modern bi-lnrv ivc-re the eonlessie..
nf Augsburg, tbo plantation ,.( America, the I'.ngli-,
i'o, 1 n..uw,'altbnl li.fi. Hi" io;ctarni,on of America!
i ,-!,. ,.- [ lcr.,.e In l"6. the Pre.-"', ..n,ar...pai,
slaves in tbe West Indies, the p -i : ;o cf Ibe It.
Pill, the repeal of tbe Corn l.iw". it" Jlagceiic
|
iiecati-Telegrnpb, though yet im|. -!. '. '." '"- '
'
"
ibe Homestead lull in the la-; t i,-ui. ar.J now
iiu'iitly. l're=ident Lincoln's prcclamat.on cu t^e
twentv-seeond ol September, TM.se are acts of grea
scope; working on a long future ami ,., permanent
inlereats, and honoring alike tbo-' "bo initiate so
those who receive them. These measures provoke
iny ioy, but are received into a sympathy so
.'. _
J
__ __:.... h.t mnrlil,,! '. r" e |V '! I" T rilld
WHOLE NO, 1,168.
msofihe mechanics, ttieenduraoee of farmers, the
tsiionatc conscieneo ol women, tho sympathy of
atant nations, all rally to ita support.
Of course, we are a-suming tbo firainess of the
,li, v thus declared. It musi nut be a paper procla-
alioo. We confide that Mr. Lincoln is in earnest,
id, ns he has been slow in making up his mind, bos
resisted tho importuaacy or parlies aad of o vents to
tbo latest tuomeat, he. will ho as absolute ill his
adhesion. Not only will bu repeat aad follow up
bis stroke, but tbe nation will add its irresistible
trength. If ibe ruler has duties, so has tbe citizen,
i times like those, when tbo nation is imperilled,
batman can, without sbtime. receive good news
-obi day todav, without giving good news of him-
self ? What right baa any one lo read in tho jour-
nals tidings of victories, il he has not bought ifiem
by his own valor, treasure, personal sacrifice, or by
good in his own department 1 nl. this
,vcd from our national honor, this heavy
, nlf tbe national heart, we shall not fear
ard tt> show our fne.s among mankind.
Wu (.ball cease to be hypocrites and pretenders hut
hat we have atyled our free in.Milutio.is will bo
'in' tho light of this event, the public distress bo-
lus to bo removed. Wbat if 'be brokers' quota-
onsshowonr Blocks d,;.,.rediied, and tbo g"ld dul-
ir cost- on" huudfd nudtw. iiivoovonconts t These
..1,1 ." [.Uautoui. r,.u cr lu
gained uul,.
1
intial value on tho twenty-
isepnaiibor. The eaus" nr disunion and
been reached, and begun lo be removed. r.very
man's house-lot and garden are relieved ol thu mala-
ria wbicb Ibu pureat winds and the strongest sun-
shine could not penetrate ami purge. I lis territory
of the Union shines lo-dny with a lustra which every
Furo] tea n emigrant can discern from Tar: a sign of
inmost security nnd permanence Is it feared that
taxes will check immigration i fW dcpaodB on
what tbe tasea are spent lor. It iL-y gOM lill op
Ibiayawaing Dismal Swamp .yl h^ngulple -I ar-
-ali-,.d hitherto sill tb" vn.M capabilities of this enn-
nent. then this taction, which makes the land
bolesomo nnd habitable, nnd will draw all men
..nto it, ia the best investment in which property-
bolder ever lodged bis earnings.
Whilst we have pointed "Ut 111" .-,pp,rl'in,'l,.;s, nl
e proclamation, it remains to bo said that the
President had no choice. Ho might loot wisllully
for what variety of courses lay open to bim ; every
Una but onn waa closed up with fire. This one, too,
bristled wilh danger, hat tLroogb it was tho sole
safety. The measure In has adopted was impera-
tive. It is wonderful to seo iho unseasonable ,,-nil-
ity of what is called iho Peace parti , ibrougli nil its
mtn-Ls, blinding Ib-ir .yes to t nam fealuro of the
uar-nauolv its luevilauleness. 1'liu war existed
Ion" before ibe cannonade of Suinicr, and could net
he postponed. It might have begun otherwise or
"Isenhcrc.butwnrwaa in the minds and bones ol
the cou.balaot.3 ; it was written on the iron leaf, and
you might as easily dodge gravtlatioa.
consonled to n peaceahlr
~"
y-second of
^ n of tbe rebels, tbe
,. .,.der States made pcacea-
01 ble secession saiblo lb. iaeatiablo temper of the
'
m Sou'h mado it impossible, and the slave* n the hot-
i" I r wtnrei.r 'b. t.or.k: might be, were n imes
j, .iol i c-l in i. ..I bo f >iv" 'be Confederacy
. . Thulium and Kicbmoud.and tbey
| ( i
~
t . Louis and ll.illitnoie
..ui these' and ttey'would havo insisted ot.
Wosbingtou. ti.yo then, WashiogWo, and the)
Lnvo tissnme.l tbe army ^and "
these, pliiladelpb' through
app.i-,.. , , that mnakind ai _
. At such times it appears
created lo greet the new event,
ntor, having ended tbo eompli-
:ies wilh which he conciliated
run over the superficial fitness
'ho measure ho urges, suddenly,
happy"''!"
._ .'Qlvedthe
loudly thus far ar
audience ia found
audience hitherto
last ho
encroach pou soil nubllully consecrated to _free
labor; it encroached because it was essential!;
vicious uniust, rapacious and l.alcliil. Others might
he -atiflied witb tin; re.- trie I ion or diminution of the
area which tins deadly I" pas might be authorized lo
blight ; he chose to lay tbe a.vo to the root ol the
tree and so be rid "I" us pestilential ellluvia forever.
I'uurteous and deiercnlial in bis mantiOrs, be ain-
ccrel, ile.ifcd to maintain the kind-'- personal rela-
tions widi those who .vera to be for years hi* daily
associate- and coworkers for tbe public good ; but
(ln t yv,a liaoLthlilv refused. Tbe Whigs naturally
r ,.s..,rd,.l bun 'is no who bud as-isted and priifitcd
, .... ..,i.,. r f il.,.,r i, art viti M as saebaset Is. and
eat of Webster, Evi
ats felt bound to a
urprised and overawed :
the heart of the as-sembl.
;iu ni.ssivc and naconeemed, at
rcl.i-d and kindled tbat they come loryvard,
a represeatativeof mankind, standing for
reme moderation with which the President
10 his design,bis long-ave.wed e.tpi'ctant
policy, as if ho chose to be strictly the cvccutivc ol
|,o best public sentiment of the country, wai
mly till it should
'
id that i
York, and Hnston.
l "till- batile-licid would have been nt
in that event as it is now. Tbo war
le, hut could not be avoided. I he war
i immense mischief, but brought with
e benefit of drawing n line, nnd rally
States to fix il impassablypr, -vein. ug
"tbe whole force of So e.n connection and inlluence
throughout tbe Nnrll. ir.uii disiraeiing uvcry city
-lib .li. confusion, deieelune- lhat force and
redocmg it toL.-iudfnUand in the progreu of 1.08-
,!
-infecting u"
-r
tbrc.gl,
the f'-tu, _ irnleadi u
. dictated (lu- conduct
of tbe Federal gov
by our foreign crit
Opponents ol tbe
n tbi
of o
ihilat
Cnl
the ci
abse: e of i eipl"
"indeed,
(
of tbe
in the government, froi
' alarming aspect
Jed exaaiiuallon inlo complair
],-,-t.l._- aduiuii-iration of peaalli .
..I,..,.,,, ..- and ir.erti.c-ssin llu- ctal-
b gene
nebow to get 3 manage-
u u, ^ueh u dreadful deficiency.
If anybody imagines ibis government is perishing
of red tape, tbey may abamlmi their fears. Iho
painled stripes on a barber's polo have as much sig-
nificance as most of tbe red tape against which I
have run. If all the rules and regulationa of the
government in all ils departments were rigidly en-
forced ; if every tape was blood-red nnd lightened lo
acity, I
a rule enforced ic-day and
pressed by (his oflicer and i
Other (having thu same du
dreadful contusion and obor
the departments.
Slavery, bold, proud, doiiiiaooritig, will, bate in its
heart scorn in ils eye, defiance in its mem, has pre-
nouneed against tie: existence of republican institu-
tions in America, m-ainsl lie- supremacy uf tbo gov-
ernment, tbe unitv and life ol the nation. Slavery,
baling IbeeliensLcd instiiuiions that lend lo secure
tho rights and enlarge the privilege* ol mnnkinil,
despising the toiling maS--e.s, ils iu.i.ImII-S and white
slaves, delung tbe government, its Const,!. it.cn. and
:,a laws, has openly pronou I itselt the mortal
,ad una,, pea sable enemy ol lb- He public. Slavery
.lands to-dav the only el.-arl. pronounced foe
muntry btis'on lb" globe. Therefore, every
-
.ipnke'ii, everv line written, every
keen- tbe breath of life, for a mc_. .
a-ainsl tbe exi-t,r,.,. and perpetuity ot democratic
nsiitutiunsagainst the dignity of the toiling mil-
ions "t Americaa-aiust iln- liberty, tho peaco, tbe
honor, tbe renown and tbo life of tbe nation. In
tbe lights of to-day tbnt Hash upou ua irom camp
and battle-field, the loyal ")c. Iiearl and brntn of
ieasees and t,.!s and i.'ali;, s lhat run death
ur.iv i-i mi: tu'c of mi; .evtios! The loyal
I plat
ctbe;
-ay.Ic
y despised by lhat
-which makes the
ound in so many of
H, fails to tbaw,diH-
l,csccntbyremem.
ic-rs. Itnt think of
t performed that
of tbe 22d
id eoforco" tl
....,diug"lhe Chief Magistrate, w
ima it with such men, nnd such men only,
a and declared opinioos, bail and welcome
,wdiug tbe ranks of thi
tbe point
i shall
" near It,,- n, II. "1
rtlng Pence and Frecdoi
, l.llot
ir party g.
Socially i
tho just sequel of his prior aels,-the firm
vhich he announces it, without inllation or
m._all these have be*pokea such favor to
tiiat, great as the popularity of the- President
has been, we arc beginning to flunk that we have
nndcresiitualed tbe c.pacit, and virtue which Ibc
Divine Providence- has made an inslrumentof beua_Ul
so vHBt. He has been permitted
Amen, a llu. a an; oilier American
entitle, I to ibe mo=l indulgent eon;
all tbat wo thought shortcoming
,',-erv delnv. lu Ibe c-.ylre 'in'"
part, call these endurnnee, wind
illuminated, oa they now a
:s. Tbe popular siat-iii-'d ol tbe
ar nt.toa.l m the impossibibt, ol
.. .ou could add," say they. " lo your
ireogllt Ibe whole unuv nl l-:gland. of l-'raiieo, and
,1 Austria, you could no. roe .ugh. million ol
people to come under ibis government against inn
willI "
This is an odd thing for tin laipl, ,broan, a
Frenchman, or an Austrian to say. who i-mcniiers
the Europe of tbe last seventy u-;i,,-tt." ci-l .mi
of Italy until IS'.'i-ol Poland, since liBJ-o
Francdor French Algiers-of Pri.isb l.e and, ami
Dritinb India. Hut. granting ihc t.ulb, rightly read
ftb"bisi.,r,cal aphonsm, flint "the people always
eoaqucr," it is lu b- noted tbat ia the boathe
..._?. A. r innd, and Ibe local laws, with
, ..ib1 system aot a democrat!.; but
autocratic eouipb.-Mon ; and those Stales
-down every year a mure hostile, and aggrt
,em^r,-.^n,.. instinct of self-preservation forced
Suites, the I
slavery, give thu s,
'hostile and aggressive
,cs instinct of eelf-preservali
ir. And the aim of the year on our
dby the aim oi lb" President s pro-
of Gimuii
\or io be tolerate
"vsxi-t
';;-';;,;.,,.-] .. -. r
ore-ut parties tbc-n just entering upon tbe carle
"
,,Joldccnv, vvu-ibei-eruc.ino,-w, c.u.,.: or ,.,,
;,. d..,,d,-.j mvi,-iioiis. Though Ins tibdiiy. b
luii-oments. bis pei-sonal worth, were undispule
was nt corded a pit r two of the
,siruiiiu.aiii i-ommittcaa, being reg;arded
much as he would have been in eome great
' Richmond or New
TI1E HRST SEVTS OF THE FB(lCU.yjrAT10.S.
At midnight, on the battle-field, I beard tbo sound
ol coming footsteps, nnd u voice- earneat, but almost
inaudible,'-
"'
i the distance. Nov
fpat
rimes and JWoun
eeing tho slaves 1
,-rv
,got the Pre idunt'a
jgel voices when they sang
, the" shepherds of .luden, tbnt voice rnng again and
a-ain through Ihc silent and slumbering camp- It
was once more tbe annuneintion of " Peace ou eartli
-good-will to aien I " Seizing the welcome mec-son-
ter and eagerly perusing ibc pre, bunation, 1 ened,
thank t.ud.itmre its light ale-ad ; there is hope for the
country: all hail tbe yn-wi.-e of freedomd
11..H11

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
.
^
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,dWdP,.b.|. . >". bim ,.b-.- ..-';


Wbon In rmdiul >l.-"-- " ' !" '' !',":,'',. ".,,,.,
ESS^xi's
ra.iB v
';-I' "i
'
'',,,' '; 1 ..In. .
Si?
K^r^-aS
ii , ,- ...1.5,-1, n (..ret- - i'b'red ii U.atl a
vlilling away (heir lel'.ire ' '" r- ' 1
b ,,,,.
"ihinkso. Hluuk I r.|.,T,l; 11 ",
'
: ;'" ,i
i
'^^ l,ir ^
^Ve^oV.d Tor one C"^'.^ j now thins. f r which I thank
. .v,
,
:'-i.
,,!l
-W/-''^^^
ndvanee io.nU.1. v,-,. win give t
^"A
1!"'?' h"
rt, and Ivtly In drengivo hlra
:<.ii, i v..-n.,v.
lehriellle
,.,. wilier
ill ..f nil knowledge, nil .........
since I luce mini.' IliCto oil'
one step further. There la t
.
,iiiii, .iv ii -jvi u- ..... ... i - '.;.[ ;
When Sir Samuel Uninlllcy propuscd to abolish
me punP-hmon, ..I ">al!l l-r ^l-lHNK .'* ';>'' It'f
,. 1 ..
1
I , ,1k. i:,..< oi i-:..i.-i.>". o..., f.nl... c'^i.
..il,,-.f ll,,,laivi,l 1,W<l.tal-.tl!1l t *
r.,, iniKi. i.ti.." '-..iil'l r..|"'./-r Hi- "linlc LTimmal li-v.
""
,1. Ih.i.1
' An.l ffl.. ii (1 lunrj.viis n-r>.r,n.v v,..l
.III,,. if.T '->. 'ill m.r.,, the HH..r> -f .In;
tV,cli-=U l:iw. T:..iinil. v i^wwt truly t.i M hi*
-
B
.UpVoi..J :;o.li..l-''.li*Mho"ll ^n,p..'.i'i
,.,,,,1,-r. ,1. i.ij-1 lib I.OKi-ls 1" h" Himivli i" 1 " >i-
;:'"'>,' ','"
'1;:,'K
h
b^
l.imlili n-iiiutoi ' " Wlit. ill pan* of-tr>D to tin: up-
^^l.ti!
,
.^^V,:v
,
:::;::.;,;;n^ r^
.Kvv.:." Tli..* W.-r1Ml.c.whnflntoil^^l.
l,,.ju,,,.,l,.,li..-v.-1lNiMl, t..i. i-, ii-.. fi;li l.i'h- '"'.
.Lllila-.-n,... t.,lil..,r,-.l i.l > unv..nc ? (nvn.ot,. I. it
list in i, 1 .-.f...rli"i> hi il'o l.irmoi-fl nri? mlmcvous, iiilflli
.,. n i i.oK.-rful nii.l liti.T.il.d.i !h'y .i-r-utut'' ;l "
"', " 1
,1 alr.-r.ml. <' "i"" c^inu-y. T'r.r.l.i. m> it no" ui"r-
I on fver I ilii-m in this ontivni^r : ffh,t. I [!
,., f M!l, fi ..1,.. ..I ..nr ,.o.nl t y. I. nut.' 1|" ".' ' *'
mt ..n.i S Wnt will, the nvopn.lio, of th, S ^.-^v.-k
TpdeVGoilVn ,.,,,-ill... Mlir....!-,
M|t,.l..i...v t
.-v,tli"ivll..-<. r ,i|^.l.-.lv. 1.-..r"MI,0 l-.o
,l,r,.otod by the l'r.-i.i.l.:..t of the I'nlled f
..... .1.,.,- 1.. ... .,.,. I hv |1, I'rer.ident, "".]
T hin".v'....l. c^tryil.iip closely
X "SS.a
1
^
10
.
^;rr"u,:n y^r-i
i I.mv ilii--' idu'Ii'v v.-'il' :'h-.ll I-." worked uut, and
;i,,\ h y , jubilv, come to God". ra0-n d pMpl.
him Kti;,t ihc Lord ordnincl
ipcctinclhi-.ip.'r-
A WAK HVMN.
,11,' I .ii.nl, Jl.'i Ifliii'iuiJ.
'.,.. i,i, oiir ii|.i-liiiulion,
1 i.k-n. IlikmM, 01' Thy ..[.j.-'nr
"I'lMit'ii'-UI itn.t 1 hchcld lllin
Indiaojv, Entiling lor
rnvriuiy"
Willi.-: f.
rovcmmcnt. L*-i hi'.',*".' "
'-^
liftv(i
^"Sv^Siferl
TV,".',;;,!
i...sb.
I
n
: ,., ?|u. W-S i Bsnuolbwir. It is no
.,;! ,,..., b lb"
"",;
'\","o(
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t
>^
r
4
111
^1
"-^"^'^i-irrXniSsy'SoS
!.:.'li'.e.w,...i.>..>.blb; " """
"'"
.l 1,'r.i
.
'
Tl,<
;;;;;.;
luni tutu > ""
from Sundny until
could
..i,i-li..l.
lV t:''iV,t^hr^;d^,o>
Liberty pin.cd upon tW
dqoOco U|,o .1-' ....
''I-"';'";"
,..". lb.
0 tbs .u.lo.-s ...-I il.t".\ "^
ir^Lr;;;:^.
^.lAboiii.
credit for .loinu, h,L
;
,.,i,o .r ta sP^
^
i ' f?r w :i
, ,; ;;:;.;.', , ; t i,i.-.
'',
,.. ':. ;-
. \,1 1 hnve ;ll"l in 'n> f""'
-'"" .'''' '':"'
,i"'
' ln
H.i
C
""','.'..,'v ci cant luor us: wo shnll
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iiu..i.ti'.r. k. -l,
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I/,. r,',!-'hV,Fi (kind nnd pvoloticcd iipplnuaO-
t".-i.il ri- II
H, r ,].-li..l,tl,:i
DCOIrJ, JOUlUIU. iiuu ...
.tctta. Thin nclglihorh
tmherat litis buried t
nd only Within ii few di
Mr. fulii
,..: ,i,-....tl.
?r lieru cjtploined lliu
on of tlio Presidot
mrosdinte tind pru
, and thon qlowa :
, ,,r.,t.ii.t -t Iiu;;-lil"i k
is ih.n,' lor IrfT'J This
:. niih tin.- Iilier.il liirimia
ii ii]k:t of tninneipiliiin ii
.ii,,,..: In- the
ot il.i MiU'.y.
..i tl,..'ri:.-lii-.
'',',' T..1UL- f.'.rtli tin- 't.o..p-, iiti.l ! '-'"''ih..) to t
, .:,,,..,.,(. It i not ,,:,,.,,- ot M.olHi-o,
,,i:: :|,v,|.,....r ot i.hibii.lin.i.y ; hot :, ..v inaoit:
,,.,. u,.t M,,.i.h.-. If tU.j ..- I- any v-'i-."" ,!i'l;."i
J... ;, 1 ii^vnlii.n lli!llJi-i/..)nrI..i/rr.il'..:'l'l
,'(,.,%('-'-' '*'" '/ '" '"-;"""-"-''-' "''.
re hut olio course now iK'love u_- >\?
u anei ptilion, nt liint i..h.]i'id ." ' ivur^iTT^.-
PBSHSYLVANIA STATE MEETING.
Tub Twcnty-ufih Annual Meting of the Peniwyi-
niaAuU^Uvery Society will bah^ld in Hortkultnral
Hull, West Cheater, on Saturday, the Mth inat,, at 10
o'cloclt, (..m. A full tttwodftnee of the membere oni
friends of the Society ia requested, while a cordial irm-
Utlion U extended to all othera faTorable to the cause,
out of the Statu, to be present and participate in
the proKBlings of 'he meellug.
The anti-slnrery movement ia prcsentinu IWclf id s
,ew aspect. It has reached a point in its progrest
whore nsw ohllB ationB ftre devolved upon those vrht
policy of
u l.-.i.i
rirnl ;jr..'l
..cw'and snliliiue n. 1 ii'.'j
The !: t. .lli.-n will hi-
[ 1, nl.-vaicd to lifi-'lil-, ...i
'
will I -
.,i|.|...,- , Wen
it leja tirduous, at
;in those which lin
C5. What these r,
naturnl subject o[ in
r:,.-lv..-
hrend me;
, . -^ ,- l..rl ,il.<n. oot orrivsl. Tbo 'l"'*"
wns
" ooiiir... ."I '" !'" ' 'I'";?- ,u t
T.u.lr.1 uiBbl."
-.J
lb-
,,'-r.'~; "w"
".
0,0 .... dsy lo ......l.io.M.-..
"'I'
...
'-"':' i
;
,ni
;,"."';;
i ;""r
s,"Sn..
m:";
'," "i.".i.J.."i...o.ii " '""'>'
nss tbo .Ds.v.r. '"Tln's rlgLt. ..von Ibo.
J,: Yankee;,."
' Hoiv mmiy have you on
,V^.b?=iH
',1 .[,;, | io Mer.Jinn mid placed in quarters
J..W K
o.d bsil fc Shll.b." Wb.rm.r ft. nu,
stopp.-d l'-'|.l.' ran
"
Mil. SUMSEffS CATTLE-SHOW SPEEOB-
, ,. .., .tim-r of the llsoipsldre County AtrrlcuKunil
i ij.ti Gestibiirk: 1 cannot
i |V.cd upon ihii hiM.itifn!
jow and hill.e.id, ...ntribnio
hile I was a youth in i-ullege.
o Aposiale,
Will, *'
t l.'.r
;ral oi my elafsmnt
lorn Cambridge we
'
..and arrived atAml
. refrCihcd ourselvc
the blood w
^rk.l ' I'iallilenn. ihou linat coi,:]i,erc,.
,,il] v.I he lic.J if.iin it"' apoi-tme e hicfs ...." --
-.,.1.:. l.lh,rti-, th., I,,,;.:...,.,.!.-,--! , aiidlheech,
rv will hi., her.r.1 round the globe.
elusion I oUlt Iho (olio wing sentiment
:
,n... y the Connecticut. Iltippy in its fertilitj
beauty ; happier
,d fnc
in Hi... l.'ul-
J ill i-- riVL-r '- Mlv.rivulJli.L- throil:--!. Hi ."''
, villi 1 ruer
^^ ^^ ( irK. ]mn, Illt|lt> , r, hK-b
,''-'
';,-., i-,. [ :.. I>, .ri,. LI. nl....vewe Blopt netr
-..]',[.: 1 ; |1,.. Kinporr-.r lulimi. '."-"i'
i for ho had once umln-atcu '.iiris-
imiti'.ih'irveH'liii.n beff-re he bl.,1 Mriielt il... la-
...epired Li l.i* hatred I i-i.ttani y, lie I.^Ue
f.j ...1...1, (pined from his side and then
i hut eonqnerod.'
lterprbc. Iho dutica ot
nro in tome reapects less ouorous
heretofore demanded our cnor-
t ohligfttiona are, will form a-
dry at the approaching meeting,
preiiiint to any that topics ot the
masting and obcer-inapiring character will be
eonaldered, ftnd that parties in all respects competent
will bo pment to give value lo their diacust
Jjyts Morr, P
J. Si. lIcKui, Cor. Scc'y.
,.( lit. ..II, V
llucky Major, whose
, wh- c-ldlj- enough indicativo of his office, tbt
was the Kcv thai unlocks Iho luyjlcry of our luture.
It is not eo much Submission as it is Sepftrntiou thai
is the pressing danger of thia present hour. This
turn eiplnius all ihiit has been incsplicblo in the
past yenr-s hiflory. Why liichmond was not tHken
last November, why it did not fall tlio last
Thy lien. MeClellan is eetticp ready to go i^.v. ..
.
.er quarters at thiu moment, U (ill clear in (ho light
of Major Keys incautious revOaKon. It nt leM*t
redeems Gen. McClellau from the charge of incapacity
lo form rt plan, if it bo (rue that all he has done and
lelt undone has hnd tlio definite objett of enhausting
nil wearying out the North, and bringing it to the
pint of accepting peace on any terms ho and -Mr.
lava can agree upon.
Wo haw faith to believe that this scheme, if it
*oro indeed entertained, has bceu defenied by iha
very policy of delay designed to ensure i
l)ad Itichuiond been taken last Kovembj
last May, it ia iu the nature of lhings that ..
opportunity of compromise might have been possible.
Rut the unbroken successes of Iho rebel artaa conse-
quent upon those delaysuDbroken except by the
,o indisputable victory of Rosuucranr. at l'errysville
-have put the rebels in a position to dictate and
at to sue for terms. Nothing hut tlio recognition of
their independence, can satisfy them now. and we
believe they would turn n, deal car to Bunnell and
Fernaudo Wood, if thov oflared them nny olher term
thnn these. Thus far the delays or our campaign
been the salvation of the country. Now. c
they will assume a very different aspecl. Tl.e.y
'
censa or the republic is nt an end. Nothing
invoitbut thaiesoiuto trying ontoftheFiesi-
;
B policy of emancipation. If the rebellion e*r,
not he put down with ihc assistance of the slaves
acl'ive, or passive even, 3nd the Southern country
setlled anew and lis society reorganized, then then-
nothing for it but to acknowledge the independence
,tl\."n1',.krnev. The reeoguition of that indepen-
dence by the Great Powers of Europe is imminent.
It impends over us Mid can he averted only by suc-
cesses on the soil of Ihe rebellion whieh shnll make
its overthrow no doubtful matter- And they must
bo had soon or they will arrive loo Into to prevent
he most serious foreign complications. The tal
ion ol the republic Ilea in the hands of the Prctid
H,. bag given the country a policylet bitii now (
it a man nblo and willing to carry it out.
believe that ho has the country behind him. That
Dickinson and Ilrowiison and Bancroft represent the
Democratic party more truly than Seymour, the
Woods and the Brookses. That Edward tverett
more filly represents what was honest in thB old
Whig parly than George Lout. What the countr;
croans for is action nud that speedy. What it drendi

at. than dcleat U delay. Is the long


.nd in nothing or worse than nothing
is iheThlood that has been poured out like water t
k like water into the ground, estorting from
caven no justice by iw exceeding hitter cry ! Alter
all this agony and bloody awent ia there to bo no
surrectioti i Awful are tho responsibilities of tho
men in whose hands, under God, are these issues oi
life and death. May their Strength ho even as therr
day!
,- time during several days following
.itcning of lh thirteenth day, iho feebly loyal rci'.lu-
liota read by Mr. WinUvrop were taken up to I ict. a
upon, in spite of veer atrong opposition. Rcr. Dr.
Mason, of Maryland, moved to lay them on tl i table.
Illi motion was rejected. The more encrceiic loyal
resolutions offered by Mr. Hoflroan were then ruled
upon and rejected. Rov. Mr. Home, of Now Jersey
(son of the late Bishop Dono, and lite bim always
favoring slavery), tried to tarn the current ot (eeline; by
proposing prayer. The President ottered eevcral Col-
vote was then taken on certain anil-loyal rcsolu-
prcaenced by Dr. Thmll.and thay were aegativeJ.
lur relolutiom presented by Uev. Mr. M. Atli ler
met with the simo fate. Rov. Dr. Qnwka hoped to
.p the li'Io of fit'linjf by nioiin? nn s.Jj.-.urnu.ont. and
rentening further amendments if the meeting did not
yield. Ho was voted down, and then Judge Chambers
left the bouso, apparently with 'ho expectation that his
absence would leave the Convention without a quorum,
i Iboa taken (about eleven o'clock p.m.1 by
tho resolutions were adopted by the fol-
lowing vote -. Clergymen, yen) 13, nny* T. Laymen,
On Friday. Ihe seventeenth and la day ef the Con-
,entioo. Bishop Mcflvnine, of Ohio, read ihe l'Mtoral
Letter of the r.iinops. From iho publithcd abtrnct of
Ibis document we learn that ll spoke o( the rebellion
crime'," and beitaned "strong con-
domnali.in " upon thuso elergymcu who hod taken up
jnin in it, but declared it not necessary to set
forth our own sins which bad brought upon u* Ibis
.amity, and made no mention at all ot slavery.
The cuureo ul the Episcopal Church in ihis Conven-
u has been aymmstilcal with her pa.t shntncful hbt-
ry in this country. Frale, airing with slavery, frum
commencement to the present time, like Iho uther
sis It has been even more vigilant and pen-blent
In they in ita efforts to prevent iulcr.erenco Bgainst
ot wicked system. Fewer of lu mrakra Umn of
.. .-. .,. (t h,. Roman f'itholh perhaps cicpted)
ir acted In i. h.iK
ii.th.i.ieh
in churchmen iu opposil
ily frowned down and c
astlcal bodies. The aol
orasing Iho llguro of
CAN THE HEP UELIC BE SA VESi ?
r ih in leriility "
GEh-ERALMlirtia tfEihlXQ TO TEE
COXXItADAXDbi.
[Tho followln
of couirehands -
I mvi; been requested to say
:ch uy Gen. MiroBEi. t
deeply interesting, I
valley. Since then
and abroad ; but I k
beauty. I have sect
ail! .lit
,-i.ll.ll- ..- --
sec the Yankees, and the
ent on They manifested a
ive Yankee General. Some of
,. people have published con
for I was a little annoy for i
to to ihe window to show my
C,,|.,n.f in charge, -. ..
eSel:,i.a.
" Tata your bead
idows of Lombard)'
:
ne and the Arno, and
ienry IV. called the t
words to you by
good man. Any avjod/nin-U
, o. ccnor. 1 r.....i.-et I.ini > ;ir.i.. Ii
ilo, k '..- v.hii.-, Ii he he n>nlW-ii. 1
, 1S sneh.. whether hei. .vh,'.. .,i i-l i-li.
ow lliat llmvu lalk..'.| I'.. ..I! ti.y i-..h!l",.:
..,.,. oil and seiic ; '"" '"' 'y
:' "-"; '.'"
?ene wliich I witne..-. J n >* U" neish-
' ,".
H , r
i...^.. ^.,T-na^^.-il In nnv kin-
fuller places
.,'! M,..ti-,-f..i ..I"' m. Idier-'. Bim k.ive not yet urn
,i.,. iv | ).,, Inn liln. are under inv [.roteetieti
guidance, and in whom 1 lukc deep i ,x,t, iV.lh
iv i-.t llle i fullv avnipntliii-e. 1 hnee. and ondtr-
'",':'
lU I ,.,.; ,; lr...| ,i, Hi.-.- luidst of .livery.
, , n K
'
, tueky, and know all about ,.. l\l,ile II,,.
... .,,, ...,"(..,.,.. I with It Hi:.! are pk.vi.iil.
, which you will lenity, there are .-.ivl many other
things which are not pleasant, and 1 (hint
in thonssoeia
iting i.ir any further i
landmen, it th
,n l.ii i I
.li.,niti-
,. U f ilii.i i.ei:-l,i...ili-.'-.l
ilten quoted, "Fort,
:w the good they h
,,t i,.| liberal npint. -
in. nl Ike ere ale,- 1 01 In-
,(,1,11,. U | il, L. bi-I ...nliii-,.
miMontesqule,-
,rke,l in kin:
country.
"I".-!.).-.
-\ hi..-:." rou;^
, u , live Yankee, lou have
i- ,t l.oil alone WH l-l'-'l' ,l '^
eiiu n:,.-ing
:l
(applause and laughter).
Kbile we iw-; ,,1o ed on uiit.sponsand here
for the first time learned,hat we were " >*
"^
rited fr ih.' i.rivi.i.- soldiers, the) v-.r,_ ..ent to
th prX of [viabaum. A. T.iloosa, I earned
rial we officers bail to go to 'lalladega Having
ta mjpo^ssion from . 1. Jor-lw.. " Aid to Gen
Iieauremrd who, permit me to say here lo-nighl.
and Ji. ma, h- raid .. .hm.i.hou, ,h,s country
i ,l,r- onlv mm wearing a i-.-eesh iinilonu that 1
l^'i re'.,ve.l the le:,,t" partiele of courtesy from
aincel have been w,lb tl.e.n, drew me aside era.*
Wl.,,1 in his name! "What is his name I )
Hi mime is I'ol .I'mluii, AfsiMant AdJul ant-General
Of Gen. Beauregard. That man budI given me a
letter to his brother at Mobile lo ass at mo it 1
needed food, lie nl So_ wro.e .to Gen. Jones, com-
mai.ilnnl Ihere, aulhor.^tig him to parol.
fertility but on oocoii
truth. But here In tl
there greater fertility
If the farmers of oi
. ,.,- ih. i
..[ ll.eil
bi,.lilu
,e,. shall U ...
shall serve bim with I
'["tiiink IbiH is true. 1 a .it cerhi
i;, , ime .i-.-i :-H I ir. em. all 1"'
al privilege, cannut be taken nwa.
.age and wicked the master may
praying in "lie "i' t
ir wluilo ll
God h
But It seems to mo that the
for you colored people ; a hi
v..h"i N.-..-I..1 .in.! .I" 1 '. n-'i.',, l
,i e. mis I'Uly one ii""'--'-
.,|, u , . ,ereenl- The
t,r. .km. iiu.nce ot tho ugi
] tin: head
""{:
my, find both
Where ii ihcrc a Iruer liberty T
t r country needed anvth'mg to
That nf 160(1 is uol yet prepared, and I go
c. Dlloon yc.n. ol .(,., ..." o.ilb..o Lo. Loo-
,o,.,,.d,,..
r
.-
;;S
~
q= ;5Vo
il pursuits, while Ik'- t" 1 "' '
j[. ,,,(,. ^^ M,
a should ponder
inruu^ii ,.j \- ii--....
God will bless your i
level than you have :
children may bee on'
["sUmws Hint in IS-''" Hi" four b.r|,-i: -t
v euunlry,
on/iiiK mm
,. .vitb tlmt letti
quarters of Gen. Jop.cs, who, by the way. is - "-
SadoYnukec. I extended my hand. Oe^.-No,
an^teA7m
a
^ro^d l^LZ
' Whiia the
"respect me. when the Adjutant handed me my
parole, and bid good byo. ' lon
^
a
f
"D"
,,i,,;,,l his liMid- 1 .Hid, ''No, sir, and bowed.
I went up the Alabama river. No accomtnoda-
ions for the officers, b.it we were told .that
were to be ireuf-d ns g.titU'inen. \' e knew
not to he disappointed. We "ore scut to ,.....-
degn in North,.', M.-iL.a.m,, .hlek is a very healthy
i;;,"',! r.riega.l. Illuioi.ian, who said: General
have you any Chicago men in your ci
sir we have ; the oiheers of ono
58th Illinois." . Ho said
; Indian Cien, S-:.i'.. )...-
uZmw'W'i
"*<"*>'
"re'fanS'b
nO^OOD. These ll,ures,
^^^i^r^lIliS..
rowncd, and yr'
""
1.,nile; I"..,-
[ ilon'tknow
iw.how deeply
obody will be willlon -
unelvea u>il.u gutdjSioo
opportuoitlea andKmve
,y ihe Republic, the great Amur!
Nation in its territorial integrity. The vicissitudes
of the last filleen months have made hope and fe.
alternate in all thinking minds. And even now,
be light of the late elections in Pennsylvania and
,e Western States, it docs not yet seem sure that
. ,;,,, ia worthy of salvation. 11 not worthy, it
maot be saved, for nations, like individuals M
-ork out their own salvation. It cannot and wOl
not be forced miraculously upon Ihe not, or e o or.
The ,uesiion ot. ivl.ieh that of life and death turns,
s whether more men in the Northern States love
.heir nationality holler than slavery 1 Whether they
choose to sink down into a second or third-rate
Power rather than Ibat slavery should go down and
black men have an even chance in the battle of life
ith white menl For this, wo apprehend, is the
ae statement of the case, all sophistries and lying
elusions put aside. We assume that it now clear
that either slavery is lo be destroyed or the Confede-
racy to ho recognized. Mr. John Van Baren baa been
well censured for what he said in Cooper Instiluto
the other day, nud we imagine that the loud curses
with whieh his statements have been received by the
Itepublicans were more than counterbalanced by the
deep ones bestowed on his frantic ingenuousness by
his own party. Truth is not a sate tb.ng to say,
alwavs-ns poor Maj. Key found when he let the cat
, nf tuTbag a* to the secret of the MeClellan delays
,he Po.oinac. We see interest is making to oblain
TDK EPISCOPAL OBURCB AJSD SLAVERY.
Church
Ac Church,
: but ' will v Ihi
i higher
tneir nigin-a. niy...-. ... -.-. -.-
God, is to do all they can foe the
he .....
id people in tho free Si
, Thia e:q.e
rou have a great work to dc
'oi re.-i.oii,,b,lny. The .vliol
your beleiil e.'it
Ihe deepest
'' rf
r;ro^r^v!C
d
uVn'
,
Vr
U
VorijuJlM^
wn crops ; you shall gather and tell
)'our industry fo
tho products ot j-i
you shall own you
lo feel that God i
r ..eie ..
.1,.. I:.,
icatiAe
ll,e ivhule
.randed vessel, anu an tue sn-eu^
red is put upon this rope to li
ily rope breaks, the vessel is lost
i,l kelp cull io belpy
idoleut and ncgli
'iiuelll -tl"-
, JU lived in
Chicago ; but I was compelled to leave there, be-
" "'
aa persecuteJ for my teniinjent.- 1
o wilb the AbolilionUis, and I could not
ir goveriiiiivnt because il was so e irrupt.
'
Vee sir," 1 responded, " you were no doubt com-
pelled to leave because you were gu, ly of .-o,e
'rime lor which you (eared an arrest (laughter).
,ked a special favor of Hint gentleman that h
i.i i .,i...i-o..i,li ,.- again and tieuible us by ti
Wo remaincS a week at Tnlli-l-.-a.
MJ of us were cor, fined in n room HO by 50
j-,.,-1 well .inlilaleil. bill setesli toldier, k:id
quartered there. It was a lively place In
you- our rations wen, a qui. H.-r ol ap.inndul mus.y
bacon and a piece of con. bread, said to be the
Southern Hiidiera
1
rations. We were soon sent to
Solum, where we were j.ui in charge of Col. Kent- If
Kent,
3 yearn ; and .
Dut gratifying = ..
iiilke.eslatislies, wlueh must a.
the content of the former, the
whieh to my mind are more
.hue agriculture was only an
developed. The plough 01 the
was lilde more than a pole with
which Iho earlb was scratched
1,1,.,,-, i-.-i :! y.-ara. Hnil leiiillli ol
;,..,,,.,. |, r ,,i[,r.iiluet.
'...,,. ! ... i v. .ilt'ii
E
But agriculture is
iinil Ike
you ..-
cannot >idYoc, .. .. .
cord is made, ll this persecutor oi me ...." i^
..ilieer, mils into mv bands, he shall sulior as
suffered, lie ulleiuplod lo torluro mo about my f
who, he said, bad been lakeii and hung as a spy,
their pupnrs could bu believed, lint 1 had pa]
in my pocket to givt Unit ihe lie wilb. ami Ibis is h
1 g.ii il.e pi,|-er: A lady was passing >" the sir
beneath Ike window, the bud passed several tin
Dtlore and had attracted the atleniion of ihe olbc
confined; some ef tl.eiu sugge-iled that she wai
Union lady. We tore oil one of ihe ciirlnins wb
huag in the hotel where we were iinprisiieeil, j
in la.',' let, .T.i wrote eft it with chalk, God b!
Ik., pri, r,,' friend." She nodded assent, i
bowed to us when wo showed it. hho went I
J.uiifi; com" I.",J yards dislant, and I sent a nt
.mplhrity. As
i are other aspects,
iloresting. In early
t most imperfectly
inoient busbundman
stick at the end by
other imph
, juperfleia! eh
t ,,liai, art, in a hie/
jt it is nl.-,, a science, wn.. ..
.1 .* na much as navigation or ailronoiny.
I,!, ledgevlue l-,,t help tlK farmer ;
an"ma
g
|
y
hysiol.,gi w',11 ji.l c.,...r..
;
...e. 1 ^
when v.
r,:gar,l agriculture in this hel. Ihal b > e '"
'r^^^-XiX; J
l
:'\,dhe
,
pu^
.., fail .1...
ler. It i
il.le 1,.
r. if n U
i:..,'diJ.i|i }><
, ,e idle, vile
nod your lnsThvF -
rivot eternally tlio
.- ,iii[.eeSded
e careful of your ch.il
iu industrious, cleanly
lion ot tke c
once. Bui innn.ni i' :1
d which is lollowed.
lb... stun
,,.,1 will la
._. ilaithtul, yo
ill tb.e.e ivliu I.e. la, are nianjutu
-.,i-,o.nnd suOer k> the dnvee'i uoad- . " -
your hands the r. leuii.g "I ""'- 1 ' -=**H-v>-r- per i-.f.-
'.H-rniiii you inoui-n eeutltnially- ll JoU fall. 1. lint
;i r,..,.liur,.-|,..i.aibiltt)- ii will be wkea you come tod,
lu |,.,-1 that the only ''
serving yourselves
allowed to slip.
And you, women,
ob.-.i'i.nlnni! ilntiioi at all
,,,,. , t and lid v. .i..|l.il.e all 'l.'.v. " iivev Mi), ..
have 11,em in tho best possible cnndWon, always think
inn and contriving t al.e thetu ekaiicr an. i
eoiniertable. Wkea y,m.' ku.;bil een.e, lemie Ir,...
II,.. l,ib,.,v.n..l la.ie.il... of the day, always l.i.i. i.e.
thing good and nice for his aupper, and .peakkiuJI
to hint for these little acid ol Tore and attention wi!
brine .'.iu happiness and joy.
,;,;,,,, ,., -..., .mi to ,v.-.,]:. i u..| ],il,.i
A :, ,V,
:.-. !. ami -:.i. i- <
; -.tf
1
,";
,,,.,!,, ,., .,.,b ikai i.iii have, that 1 could labor lit
:!:; .%.. > *>
^
'; ^-^^
eru ia lo ileal justly: secut.J, lo loio mete,
third, to walk humbly. First, justly -I shall ci
gelyou to do; an, duty lalth-'ully. L' ;;o
would'Vre beiier
l
TbitD
lm
s"uch a"bTuuderer. Dut Hit
fact remnias that, if slavery be preserved, tho repub
lie, One nud Indivisible, is at an end.
Now whether of these twain alternatives will the
North elect. The deadliest and most dangerous
mies of the nation are endeavoring to bring about
t sl'tlo o
f things which shall ensure the ccMislence
jf 'these two entities-slavery and tho republic.
Thw talk of conquest, but they mean surrender.
They babble of terms to be made at Tlichmoad, _but
in their beans they are maneuvering lor conditions
which could be imposed as well at Washington as
there. Could these despicable traitors have their
the Union might possibly be maintained and
slavery not merely be saved harmless, but bo made
ie"ensWe with the Union. It is likely that JefTer-
,n Davis would consent to rule over the thirty-four
States, if he could dictate the terms of the treaty.
he substituted for Mr. Lincoln till the end of
sis years, let tho Confederate debt bo assumed,
let all Ihe dropped officers, military and naval, be
restored, lot all negroes escaped during the
return
ibis country
designate thi
always succeeded ia
di^eussion and action upon the subject of slavery. n
very few of the clergy and a very few of the laity
hav-o from time to time attempted lo arouse the body,
in its Conventions, lo do or say something In aid of tho
llave And these persons succeeded only so tar as to
.-'t themselves stipmiiiized as troublera of Israel. The
peace of
" the Chureh," alike on Sundays
^^
B renialin-.f U"br.,l;.n b> any prole-at mb.ui" I
slavery It must be remembered that silence, in rela-
on lo a thing es.uWW.e'i. is support. Tho clergy and
itv ot this Church, for halt a century past, have
.cried no influence as real aad active in bt
.overy by refusing to say anything agai
North, as by buying, selling, and breeding
Lath.
Andnotcenvet.iiotevenibroUEhtheoppor-
tunily offered by the slaveholders' rebellion, has 11
nee been broken. How far this subject, keretol,-.:
carefully avoided, has now been touched, at
..rough what amount of opposition, we may read in
tho report of the Convention ju,t closed.
The General Coaveatloa of the Protestant Episcopal
Church, whieh is held triennially. met on tho 1st mat.,
I St. Joints Chapel in this city.
_
On tho Hrst day, after the reading of Morn ng
raver a sermon was preached by Bishop MeL ...=l;r}
1 Michigan- Ho bunted of the faithfulness of the
F.pi , ,, pB"l clergy, rejoicing that in their pulpits hero
1 no e.citing teachings relative to human nghU,
opjnininir tint" the Cliureli" muat conunue t... Le
t she has been, Iho great cense rvativ-e element in
the nation. Ho deplored the ' unhappy contest in
happy hou "of'tho last General Convention.
It is to be noted that the one chief difference between
the Convention of three years ago and the prenent ono
alavcholdiD- Hiihops,
clergymen and laymen, were received as Christian
eihren without objection from any ono, whde Ihu
ibp the persons in question, having bcconio rebels at
ell as slaveholders, chose to stay away.
Seats, however, were assigned for those abicni
fl/irtn.as ii they had been es peeled, and m callin f
,r representatives of thodioceses, those io the secede.
States were called, as well as the others.
The Convention proceeded n iih the sort of busines.
-[..in-H-v there. dibcu^ion whether or net any aliera
n was 'needed in the canons, the rubrics, and tin
hook of Common Prayer, when, on tho third day
Judge Bruno, arriving from the bsltle-uold of Ant,
e
n introduced a new subject, and created an miens
nation lie was iurpri-ed tliat 'here was no tpcec
action here to indicate that we were at war wit
rebels, and ho offered a resolution proposing
Individually cared, t .
,. slave : and Iho efforts uf theae tu nrouso action
ion to slavery have been slesd-
ruihed down in their ecclcsi-
of one ol their publishers, la
tlio slave from lhat worhl-
wuuiu bo had chosen as iho vignette
el the Prayer-Book, and the etrtillcalo
iven by one of their Bishops to that dis-
graced volume, have fitly symbollied tho whole Course
ol the Episcopal Church in this country. Not otea tho
culmination of slavery in rebellion can divert them
from their allegiance lo It. Fur its sake, indeed, many
of their most eminent men wish lo leave tho rcbolliua
iuelf uncensured. Tlio speech of individuals In this
lust General Convention more frequently favor, than
discouDte nances slavery. Their public action of every
sort, their resolutions and canons, their introductory
sermon and their concluding pastoral letter, nliko
ignore that subject. And all effort lo nronne thia
great representative body to aid in Iho attainment of
civil and religioua rlghla for millions of their country
men hitherto unjustly deprived of them seems to bo
regarded by the Convention at large, as well as by
, Qawke, as " the lugging > oi lilUoi dLr,y "eea-
Yhy was a storm of cicitcmcnt kindled by (he very-
it mention, In this Convention, of a subject which,
.... eighteen months past, has excited Iho toolings,
affected the Interests, and occupied the .bought* of tho
whole population of this hnd, more than any other
whatever': Why was all refcrenco to the tr-
ot a rebellion la this country so strenuously
dt Why was the very moderate tctolation
which tlrst mentioned ita resolution perfectly in har-
,oDy with tho customs and traditions of tho Church,
nd asking only prayer for the return of Union to
Church and Slate-laid ou the [able without oven the
of discussion upon its merits, by a vole of
more than two-lhirdeT And why was so large a poi-
nt tho seventeen days spent in steady resistance to
i successive movement in this direction: Can these
gs bo accounted for otherwise lhan by the fact
; tho rebellion is a slaveholders' rebellion! and that
cusioai of the Church to uphold slaveholders as
istiaus, and to throw its Influence oa tho side of tho
ilave 1'i.wer, hu.s becom
flier
land
ircly L
rs of Iho Episcopal Choi
. Tho i;l,u
llW.ll..-!-.
cetly c
r paid 1 Iho a
pre,.-, a fori )f pray for tho
matgote
amoved from those
rod by tho spirit
1 acta for his country
tnuli... lie think* fur km
shall r
. be pnl d and made
il.e lbro.,1 a I
,ur Senators apiece and twice as many Represent*,
ivea in the House for the same constituent numbers,
,ith absolute power of legislation for the whol,
,ation and we rather think our ' misguided brc-
ihren
"
might be wen back again. We cannot think
them as to suppose that they nould take
nnythin" less. Let the Seymour party in this Stale
aad the People's party in Massachusetts have Ihe
itrol of our poliey.and they can have all Ibis, and
re if Ihey want it. On no other terms would
they Velum foc on no 0,hcr could thej' bl"' lh
guarantees for want of which they have gone to !
with us. Freedom of speech, of the press and ol
pulpit must bu razeed to the pattern of Carolina
swell as industry remodelled in tho sf
s,or slavery will still be liable to be blas-
phemed 'and molested. They mast have all or noth-
"
i"nol from ambition, merely, but from necessity,
Tho lale elections hnve not A3 favorable a look as
c could desirethough they might have a much
,ore malign aspect. They are bad enough "
tho Na
over the rebel*. Varii
ciloment nud discussion aroused by
this resolution, and details of tho voto by which it was
laid ou the table, wifl be found in Tuc Sr.i-VD.uu, nf the
lltbir
u al with the rebels in arms, only lack
pluek and self-devotion. Bui, slil
1
from them the worst that is likely
pily, those traitors are not in the C
i, they do not control it-and this
affairs,
s
their
befal us. Hnp-
Cabinetat any
wful question
get there.
._... of Saturday, the fourth day, Judge
Cn^penter""of New-Jersey, renewed the contest by
ring a resolution requesting a new special form of
fet. An excited di-eu^.in mv rene.ve-I, aiel li-
ter resolulions were presenlcd, and o Committee w u
finally instructed to report respecting belli proposals
the following Thursday.
Oa Monday, the fifth day, Rev. Mr. Goodwin, of
I'onniVlvnnia, offered for mlopti'in Eomo new canons,
,i,o boid'os oi , o...i".i- ~"' " "'">':,
... ,., II,.: ..,, 0O.0 10 OppO^tlOD, OJO.Od
,1. . ; .! ... . . -I.... u" " '"< <<"
-=E^oo^:=:::k
Alter a prolonged debate, the proposed canons w
referred to tho Committee on canons.
Rev. Dr. Hawks, of this eily, a native ol Serth
I I mnwueoil " vasporolior. of our toulhern breth
',
l'hhhiv'Iii Ik" we .hould nut "lug io J1 ihell.-..
_irly questions of the day " during Iho diseuaaion of
Church mailers.
l of .
to the
clod with the Siato a
ays buhl loyally to tho ciablishcd governmeni to be
i pray lor tho President, the Governors, and all who
re in authority, and lo pray for tho success of their
whenever Hie government held it needful to
nsheath tho sword. If we remember rightly, very
iany of Ihe officers, and a large proportion of tho
ehsiil i-. in our army and navy, have been Episcopa-
ns. Hod tho government of the United States been
,iated will! force and arms by a rebellion one-tenth.
j magnitude of Ibis, of any power abroad or at homo
cept Ibo Slave Power, Tin Chvrch would have been
ited and cniplinlic, and prompt in ihe denunciation of
At present, scarcely rebellieii.ieoreely even seliism,
i 3 n ,.i-,. .eke bee rebukes, if they proceed from men so
|,,'|, red and uphold as Ihe Soolliern slaveholders.
a loiut thus conspicuous in the Episcopal Cburel,
nd, In less or grealcr measure, in all our Churches.
,u great, loading cede-las lie il bodies bavo pros-
d themselves to tie the bulwark of slavery. Tbo
....O
ionoftho country might, if it would, long sineo
have abolished slater)', by setting the rcapectability
and moral weight of a Church coooeclion In direct an-
tagonism to that system. They have chosen, inalcad,
iot only to shrink from such antagoniim, and tako
inciter in silence, but, when compelled loopcnocQon,
lo direct their rebuko against the reformer ralhcr than
Iho slaveholder. Tho natural result has lollowed.
Tho chain which they have helped bind upon the slavo
is now riveted upon their own necks ; and those bodies,
themselves corrupted, well nigh beyond remedy.
, have been wont to call themselves " tho talt of
the earth."
(Wo have received the following oolea from a cor-
ispondent whoso interest in this debate prompted
in, to attend closely at the sessions ;]
I have dropped in daily to witness [ho progress of Iho
omentum, and I can assure you many of Iho Delo-
ites have proved themselves apt scholars and bavo
.ado very creditable advancement. Bnch men as
udgc Chambers and Dr. Hawks, who bavo controlled
30 Episcopal Church for a quarter of a century, con-
tinued like the mole to burrow iu Hie dark and i.mLst
,ro is no light, and that tho Ban Is a dangerous insti-
iun. Dr. Ulson of Massachusetts was a mero iustru-
nt in their kinds and nothing more. Dr. Shtittuek
raa everything by turns and nothing long." Di-J.
Thrall and McAlisler of California made a mIntake at
iho oulbroik of tho rebellion and remained in tin
....... of gold (California) when they should have gone.
further Soulh ; but they were not nblu to, do much
Dr. Mead declined to voto for liii own rcolu-
r rather fur the re solutions of lite Committee o(
Nino of which he was chairman. Ilo in a casl-fron
very brittle. Rot. Dr. Unban IX-
sumed lie championship ol the Booth alter Dr. Good-
si,, bad floored Dr. Hawks ; but Dr. Vinton soon took
tho starch out of bis collar, and left him lo bile hU
thin lips when diey (ailed to answer bis ponderous
Day after day light shone in upon tho Convention
nd tho spirit ot rolorm seemed lo movo on iho great
deep of the bearls of honest mem Dr. Kandnll, a stitr
rvative who vote! ngaiaul Judje Brunol's reolu-
at-no out in a hold and eloquent nrgumunt in
of loyalty. Mr. wobui of Pennsylvania, a very
talkative man, a sari of Lay Bishop, gSTO up the idea.
of bespattering his Southern brethren with fulsomo
On Thursday, the
by appointment,
eventh day, the Convci
ionsj derail on ol the s o of I
praise, and turned the table- upon them
Convention odjourued. Kev. Lir. EBgby made
iration could give it. Bu
lhat even the Demoerali
l States are to bo reckoned
iuninerite triumphs. The
that of Philadelphia have
o deeply with their blood,
hey are willing to be made
i political tricksters would
.ju'try, and of the pending rebellion. Hon. Robert C.
Winlhrop, ol Msssachusetta, read tho Ion? series of
proposed by the Conituit.ee. Ron. Murray
Hoffman pointed out that the rebuke given in them to
the rebels was conditional and prospective, not positive
amendment- He wanted
position, not only before
the Soulh. but before tho world.
Earnest and eiciting debate on tho rebellion, the
if the Contention in regard W ll, nod the qu
rolontarj
i j mark their game.
ll,- ll ire th.li.Ta Wiinl.l il,,!, .iliellier cuuuiciu _ -- -
think our peril lies b I involuntary in their relation lo it, was continued fa
the side uf patriotism, and placed himself right o
me record. Mr. Ruggles, who bad boon a plia.
deputy In the hands Ol Judge Chambers, finally votcl
for the passage ot the resolutions from Iho Commiitcj
of Sine. , .
Aftcraaeeilouoi two week, tliv vote was^a e
SS-ISSSiMSm
hoik Ibo do.l Iron. M. L.l ^'"" ""\"
,"? '
"|",,C"
|, || ira we iv earne-l .njni] I.. .ml - -
-!"' t
' 1
t,
n
. ',',..' '.r.-ervaliw body in America has
Jien a very Uit awp la Iho right
^"^y^^
WATQUt
A ILKETOESB TigUnOEB is now the duty of every man
and woman throughout the North who loves nnd meani
lo stand by the great WW* of human liberty. Tyrants
South and knirea Nortli havu combined in desperate*
Mbeme to overthrow everything just and good in the
land, and to nubject the entire Norlh to the rule and
power of slavery. 3 .til ia tk*ir In-il eAanu, mid ibey
ary next, tlioj fail to set a formidable party organised
in the North find orrayed against the Administration,
their failure is Anal. nnd contempt and shame will bo
poured on them from every i|unrter ut the earth.
Prom now until Ih tot of January next, ttanfoM,
let tho frionoVol freedom .tand constant at their post.
Casting away Ml untimely criticism, I" them .tand
firm t.y the great pviiKiplo ,,f uiin*"ciptir.n, as oiniiici-
ntcd in the Prosi'lent'-i proclamation of September Md,
and elnlot far it tho full and cordial support of Otorj
upright and loyal eilisen. Let them patiently a
fflilhfully set forth to llio doubtrul, the timid and t
hostile the arguments and facts which must, now a
forcrer, make 1111 heocat, just nnd equal policy tin- b
far any nation, and, at a crista like the prcnent, wli
tlie " vilest synem of slavery that over anw the sut
is fighting for the mastery nver in, which render .ueh
a policy ibsoi/tli.y sKL'iasiUV for us. In these
two months and a half a world of work is to b,
nnd by tho united, hearty and courageous exertions of
all may U done ; and, if done, this terrible plague may
vet be stayed. Lot every good
"woman join in the heartiest and most unqualified sup-
port of the NMlonsl policy of freedom lo every
pressed, defrauded and eii.lavcd human being on
Hit. With such an ohjeci thus clearly seen to bi
National object, the favor of a just and righteous God
will come to ua and work with us, the confide no
our entiro people will bo renewed, tho flagging
wearied spirit*, of our armies will revive, the forces of
the rebellion will be weakened, and panic take
place of haughty pride nnd insolence in its ranks.
That which is now done by us haltingly, doubtfully,
he vend dent
flowing Si.
Lawrence. The view f1-4.rn this summit la
includes the White Slountah
and the Green Mountain* oi
tho NorMi-weit-tho latter including the summits o
smid'a Hump and Mansfield.
To-day wo are lo visit " Devil ffill."
[Hero tills lettor somewhat abruptly elo.es, mid m
further account has reached us from the mouutaii
and win. 1 helped to
This fr,
roasted on a stick
embrace* the summit which divides the
ag east into Connecticut river from those
Ih through Lake Champlai
Mm place
,t ih.y v I get a
-EJ./.n. ]
fely fro
., an impvJrivo, daring lei
and judgment. SohUIette.
..ry lasting impression upon
WHAT CONSTITUTES A QZitTLEJLAXt
TDK Rev. Dr. Bellows, in
and at 1 is -purposes, will
nilcdly and with a
with a ten-fold
ingle and
ing, and enc
the land.
Jehu C. Tucker
digham in Ohii
not only lahnr to convince the doubt-
ago the despondent; wo must stcadlly
ijehief making and troit'.roua spirits
uch oro to bo found In every quarter of
1 on and encouraged by aueli men as
tlie Woods In thla Slate. Jncl Parker,
nnd oihcra in Mnwoilikens, Vnllan-
. I'ttiit in Indiana, and the like, they
silh a vindictive and umcrnpuloui
ipple ibcnrovira nnd rifoitsof tho North,
to thwart the object of il
ally. Col. Key, lately said)
the real object of those wl
name of a hollow nnd spurioun Democracy, to bluck
the wheels of tho government and compel the Presi-
dent to abandon the position of his proclamation.
Mere or lets clearly avowed, this Is the unjusafionnWo
mofiuo and ebjtd ol all concerned in this work of oppo-
siliDu Disguised as it is in some cases under a poor
pretence of support of the President, while, in others,
as in tlie ease of the presiding nfllccr of
Out Wwfttttgtim Cortcspomlcucc.
WaSIIBOIOS, Oct, 2d, 1862.
rmy dnes not soon move, does not do any-
thing this Autumn, but quietly goes into Winter quar-
1 navy will do something. Of course it cannot
achieve any of those great triumphs which nro equiva-
. to a decisive victory upon the field of baltlo wlih-
Uio aid ol the army. But it will take cities while
army does nnthing. That Is, if the army contents
itself with doing nulliingIf Gen. McClellan believes
It for the best to gn Into Winter quarters. I suppose
that tho matter resta with Gen. McClellan. And if he
decides In favor of doing uolhing this Fall, wo are
bound to believe that in his opinion if wo altompt to
do anything wo Bhall be whipped. That is tho logic of
his opinion. But Secretary Welles does not mean to
let his Admirals lie Mle. They have been walling to
get fully ready, nnd they may have to wait a few
weeks longer still ; hut an attempt will soon bo made
10 take Charleston, Savannah and Mottle. Admiral
Dunnnt was here B week lo consult upon this very
i at the Navy Department, and he has returned
to Pnrl Itnval, or is about to return from New Vork.
It looks sometimes aa if the navy wan our only hope
Winter. The army ia inactiveperhaps it la tot
erous for it to move before Springand gold ii
ilng up out nl sight, or rathor government paper i:
depreciating so rapidly that it will
cent discourse at the
dlous distractions, be-
tweeni tlie Southern and Northern people, claiming for
the former the respect of the latter, or
"--
Iheir superiority as gentlemen. Theli
ind Bet, 'heir lelf-poMCiion and graet-tul man. en
wore instanced as evidence of their claim 10 the laurel
What is It that coMlUutcaamnn gentleman I Is
it tho attainments nffUnkd by study iu tho achnols or
claowRcTC 1 1^ It fortune inherited or acquired I Is it
the she, weight, form or color of Ihe individual I
Does it consist In the accident. 0! birth 1 Are thew co
gentlemen aivo those born of wealthy parents? Do
they grow only in tropical climntca t
If gentility consists In scholarly acquirements, tarn
the- North La in advance ot the South. II wealth is
.1., _..., i,..t the North takes tho lead. If physi^e
istinii, then the North la ahead. ;lf
I |-,.-ir.li :
-
i.d'H :! 1.
lm '> deciding
lliv Amerii-ae
li jU he iipbure
T.-.iirm.ui/.l.i
mill Ih.- irnlri'.ti-rii i-li"
hoi Mirii.uri uml ,li'!:ir,
ice guard lo Viri'lnl.l. i., (
mall III. I .
N-rll
. !!,.. probleu
Wo have been taught to believe that a gentlen
nn who i< Kcntle. Uo who is only elegant mo
p nn.l nothing more. Mere dignity may bo a ins
at covers a dunce.
Why ti aro ihe Suolherners small hands aud si
ot? We cannot account for the deformity unlei
1 part of the 1 ureo that reals upeti thoio who
,t week. Labor devclopoa tho physical orBaoltil
dolence cripples and deforms. Look a
bo t
md lire r....i 1
'
','].
;-,i..i
einr. failed Dcmo-
rind Lt'l.j liiilTi nu.l
d them aiminK ua
not be held to be
vould be a superb
been followed by
er"wlli lie an Adniihi-in.ilien
bo wiitelied. Cut ihe people
idem; and we who preienci
1 addressed tho President a'lain ai
"I.lem..fien.ecottb,
The !
To harp upon what is ]
would lie u.ele; tbo
r,.l Ihi, ei(Y he ili:.tin> tlj I
e of Fort
11 ih.' p.irt nf ih,' T ~ 1 1 L 1 ... . L .-'
I will here
1
'
g IrotH Bunie of my previous roiiorl*.
, nil. 'in ihe 1-jiIl ...( I-'ebruary, lo thi- I'm;/ J-hiv fori
lluullrio had been renrmi-il nnd pr-iily '-ttcnithi'Med
>oy by tin' i-r.-l.--H-. Many j.ih-it(iiI new l:md
hnttorie? (I.i-'ide a f r n 1 i 1 1 > 1-' I -.- nitti !i id ticencimttroct-
ed. Hulks, too. Iiav., been eujil; in Hie |irinei|.:il chin-
r tr-'u
lerii-i of Ihe Fcces-iionisu.
il Secretary licit and ni)
nlna ship of war for ll>,
;ed to employ ihe pusci
,mrl.!,rir. i-
on the n
rally l.-l -.I. Inn vr..|
jsr.1. Th
ieh desolited hnuielinld* all thn.iugh the
,|i,ii- with din..n-.'l vi-i.m and .br>-.lllins
word, could jo.ilv tell the story of this
ir Htlv praise lilni. nefloi-l in feeling, cul-
sle, noble in thought. 10 pur., and irue in
ill., child mi.'liL rv.d the record williout
,0 brave in defence of the right-to loving
It was in no light s|
... I li : :hti.ii; : In- whole
. : ! j 1, and ruin, ihe cuilt
i.-.r ihe hidier, v.-t <<: ihe
I iii-.n -imply Thruuith 1
I of* eareleunea tl
died n
...-.uiy.-i .,v
and fllmo of Ihe
.K.-i-m. ';
as u id*
ir l][, ihen died. And
cad lice. lo-da v. throuuh
-TlniiLl.oi.Ih.nt, i;,...l."
only at home, but iaih.- Ih Id. That it can be
Mid of him 'as ot (.jw oilivrj, t!e.n lie liv.-d in einip -u
"
ne; the men gatliered nbam him. ntfiht
listen i" tho n ible thbughls he would
"
thoughts that 1
the ci
He
id fresh,
. ,ly life into
id, indeed, us a lie. In -liming iu many
^iiramntu.
it is some relief
to know that tho navy means to do something. Win
is most to be feared l that the country will tire of tho
war before long, and that separation will come, with
tho emancipation proclamation nu utter failure. It is
to ho hoped that nobody is trusting in the idea Ihat the
proclamation will execute Itself, for It will not. Wo
need a vigorous. President and fighting Generals to exe-
cute it And he who supposes that the people will go
on patiently with the war, without suecessen which
imiso to end tho rebellion and tho war-expensca
lb it, ia wofully mistaken. The tiuio will
our Generals will not or our armies car
lories, tho people will refuse to go on so any longer,
e genuine patriot is to-day anxious lent that day is
preaching. To And fault ia not a pleasant vocatio
1 now after the President baa done so nobly, it
ry difficult
Theli
developed their physical power*, a
their bodies wero ao Well educated Iboy were 1
afflicted with foelilc feet and bau 1 . t"? delicate lo In
Ihe discus. Unfortunately fni tbo North wo hn.o 1
manv small hand* and fool, and they are usually maieu
with small head.,
The idea that delicate feet nnd hands aro marks of
bigh breeding and gentle blood ia advanced lor the
purpose ol degraJing labor. Those who will not work
their bread belore Iboy eat it, are like
neruicB. who had a mouth and 00 hands, and with
ml mouth made faces at those who did the work,
ockiug the hands that fed it.
Ged hai given I" each human being two hands and
ne mouth, plainly teaching the lesson that we nro to
work twieo as much as wo eat-in other worda that
wo should earn our bread by labor.
The Southern gentlemen (I) on whom tho Rev. Doe-
lavi-dies his cutiipliuicnts arc rebelatheir littlo
hands hevo been employed in shooting, slabbing and
itllugtlio throats ol our brothers, nous and fathers.
Thoy have poisoned wells, ol water, spriDkled arson
.. aul bnllhera t!> Ihe li:'. Ml,.-Held, ntld then b(
il,<-i.iai the pells.
rqiru-ent huell r. ditlncl ,1-1 the l.i(-lilll. ,(, 1-'
.:. ,. Se'.v V-n-k. i:, ml...'!. ,, l.-.,-.l..-'.-i.i'l--.rl.
,.' 11,1,0 Tlmdlilriclsl Id bj l'l!!llll. rc[,r.-.-.;.
1 'n.uliinlicailon id e:a,didn'..-s will learu the r.-...
. - i-ii.-t- ! .-linn--. ! ""il. II1..1-1-I11.1', li.iL- leave Ir.
.. il- yj.r.i f,,.,iil,,..il"u : o,..l li.i-.-ru- .l..iie U.I-. 1 n.ji
.., .,. r.|nr^:l. cn'mit t 'here may be such
... , rt ,i,diy r.lh-i.ri I'T delil.e.alii.n as will lead to a
.,.,., .,1 nil 1l1u.11.- n hi if- -I deeply lor their country in
ibis hour ot her trlhuloilon.
Very sincerely, yours,
iitoliOR Dlxeil'ilT.
iailing, 1 nest, verhallv, 1 nhmitllrl
) Our lull- Cabinet either Mint tuecor b., Sdnt by -lilj),
!' y.-lir, liehlini; Mu-ir way by the bii'lnrrie* (Increos
ill; 111 ulreliglh'dnilyl, or linn Major \..l-. ,.
unathill il. cull. I-'" in.L'. iiiijplii . by 1 . ihardmeot, nad
>y lirintjiny In ineielianl vi-;;.,elii, lielj i-g IlimaClf iciv-
it Wor !., Hie del.
tlon to refuso nil cooperation with the Administration,
in its Policy ol Liberty for All Men, is openly, daringly
and traitorously avowed, the motive and end aro alike
and the same vrilh them all. "To save slavery"!
Infamous workto which no European crowned head
dares to commit hiuisoli ; to which no aristocrat of
tho Old World will stoop so low, in the middle oi the
nineteenth century, as to lend li'
which 01
a, looks with una
empt. "Toeavoslnvei
uriarM, scholars, prolesi
i-miiidcd in
f both hci
, . i-ery [, n
:i,l llcnieci
eakablo at
:'-'! Fitting work, indeed, fur
irs, Ihe would-be magni
nnd, for this sublime a
.th ihe lowest an
s, tu engage
lulled purpose, to joi
unscrupulous tools of fiietion which our poor,
suffering land ia enrsed withal I "To savo sla'
Whu will stand lorlh, ranged undt
OES. SCOTT IN JJ'K OWN
u-hicli a-
-plitir.o:ly ii
iniewhat singular let-
n fact'
toward tho
Iu Hie fort, y lich, in 1 be b,o
BuAV.TPiiiov US fir. Aiv
..
1 t.enl . Il)-, croilj' tnptrlui )eiiociu
urther delay, tt'li
Word '.111
ir.nj, ,'( thr.-
I) Coaal
"
mill
,. ,],-
I.rrl :
hut link
Fort Sumler, with all his vcaicla.
back by enmotliing like a (nice
hen], eiiibraciug Charleston and
.iri-ri.l upon between the late Prrii-I-
prineipal J
a lussiog and a by-word In (he
Ltnd-i blot i kindrcd-
"My a
aU ti
1 in imminent danger of losing
.thing for want of action-act ion-action I Wl
now nearly UfiO.OOO troops on the Potomac. Per
1 1 have put down ".0,000 too large a number. Ii
army going to spend tho Winter under canvass
And what ia of atill more importance, ia it going at ouco
Winter quarters on (Ae Patomae !
10 President himself has been deeply exorcised
a this point. Ha wool to see Gen. McClellan for
sole purpose "I ascerialiiiiii.- the came for the sin-
gular delays of the army. lie was not satisfied, ia not
satisfied now, but who does uoi remember Ihe history
of the past aummer I The President has been accused
of interfering with Gen. MeClellan'u plansthe Presi-
dent a civilianMcClellan a military genius ! But the
Winter ia coming fast, and gold ishow high is tbo
premium I The President cannot afford to wait much
lunger, and leiH not, unless the Winter catches him at
10 buainess of making up his mind. Tbo wet weather
ay suddenly come Dn, and put the entire army in a
condition of enforced quiet for the Winter, and if ji
ihould be 10, Micro nro people who will not regret it.
The result of tho elections in Ohio and Indiana, and
in Pennsylvania, has greatly surprised nnd grieved tho
President, and I think a majority of
. 1 rations designed for Union soldiers, nnd wr
batteries.
Floyd, with his Munll boiM-:,. nt-ilo nulli-iis .if in
from the Treasury, and with hia small foot ran r.
from Fort TJonclton. The Southern people, with their
small hands, have stolen the earnings of four million of
menMicy have stolen children from cradles nnd
ielded the lash until the blood from tho quivering
flesh cried to Heaven lnr vengeance. Can a man be a
gentleman nnd a rebel and n tyrant? LaBttu, the
"
id small bands and looked like n gentleman
t the throali of innocent men when he met
and the temper of tho Gei
hellion, which they disclose, will help lo mutcu History.)
Gen. Winricld Scott, deminc his |>:iM fidelity 111 Ihe
Union and hi- .li-!|,-.-iii".i (" m.iinl nn it In; fori..', when
nn-.--..:.!-.-. di 'iteid'-d by ::-nii'' rr-.rri.i public uion-i. .uh-
.ii., in .'..-ll-dr-i-r.-n-e lb., 1. .11.. wine, m'-ii.'-.-.uid.i. which
he nukes public tliroupli J7..J .V.ifi.m.i! biW.ii-K.u-e
II.',. f .nil tr...l.n i'l'---l- 'I'.n- "I hiu 'ulih .I.TI.Ie-i [luwell
Or.Hllllirl Jrl.-.l. TlM>ll.p...li; bill V."V sliuuld 1 llV brill
tu know wliai i-s-l'i ci-idi.iii liuchniion and ei-bee re I my
Tnucey have tu /ay to them.
October OT. 1SS0. 1 emphatically called the attention
elUil're-id.:.' i- ihe m. 'i.) i-1-..^CJrrnOM in
ill the forts brl"-' > l"-.-|.'- u.".. i I - . -i
the -ouihern - t - . >'
icoln harbor. Oct. 31, I '-' ' '
Inry .1 War thai a circular saou
jf South Carolina, Klorida, l.ouii
uce lasted to the ml of that Ad-n.i
Tliisia tho call
ia tho true American, let his birthplace oe wnero i
may, who hears and joyfully accepts it. Let us nl
then, be vigilant; in tho proclamation we have th
touchstone of every man's temper ; it is the spear <
Ihe Angel which develops the ftimd, wherever tb
hateful and man-hating spirit cttiita. Let us ace tbi
nothing is lost through our inaction, or halting ; th(
no faithful rebuke ia wanting, no word of cheer nr
encouragement withheld, which we, each of us in h
lot, can give. And may Godas Be surely will-
defend tho Bight!
BEOltQB BANCROFT ON TBS CRISIS.
:, having been nominated to Con-
r tho Eighth Congregional District of New-
York on the Union ticket, in oppor-ition to the so-called
Democrats, writes the following loiter on the stale of
itry. It will thus be seen that he is ashamc
of tho party which he has supported nearly all his lih
'-
Tom,-, Of
the A nUiistra ,r thai tli r,- Cibiii,
ry badly nver the triumph of
Dcmoerals. Cut the President ia ns-
tounded. Be did not expect that the people of tli
three States mentioned would pronounce against hii
ao decidedly. It is a heavy blow upon him, and 1 m
afraid that he will not rend the moral of the elcctio:
results correctly. The truth ia, that the people ai
tired of the management uf tho war. All the spec!
pleading in tlie world will not hide this fact. I7ic w
' " is precisely because it h
1'i.i.f.i," fed.)
id all others, without a squadron of war
un'.l a ...ii-i.li.-rul'le .ii mi - pr-l'-ul Lo l-ike and
Mieiniiiiv Iiinnldiil'li' li.iii'--ri.-.. l.i-k.w l-.,tl Si inner.
i..-1'..re tiie e>hiusliiin of iK ^ub.-i .(,-iir-,- lirniil;'
preiiniiri'.e'l, l"r the change el eittuiiialane-..i.
:i.-lirr..|.|.- t.-. M.i.j. .Xii.l-i'-'.n. LnpL toiler III. ill
n-t-rl nn.l all tin- OLIiei- ..llieers "I the fori. 11 w,ll
,- lb- if .-lien. Ti.llcn, Chief ol Ihe Corps of fr e.-
[''
1
'!i..|\'..t'. ili;",'ri,"]/,' that ihij. Anderson be
uuted lo evneuati' I lie tort, .e luai; giillillilh hell
ill] and hi-J criipiilli-ilii, injn,.-.li.il.-ly vn pi, . jrin,'
l.lc- ii-.-.iut'.irioii'.ii ! take them lo Ne V.t-.
-.liili.v wcLlii;--. Ii.i-I ril.-ii.lily nn: reused in III.- Ij-I
i tV.Cimei j-, : In il,e >.,. ' n i. i '
, ii,,,:;... _\1r. Sumoer Blood, on
ltd blci. We have U.-il Cbul .-
.,
I ,. II.C ...J ... laid! SI
uii.Mi.o -.,.;i,,- -..,-,.- -i i -! .-
iuic L. ileionoa.. SI u . !-
ceomes of Chtirlcs Bin
ready reigns In the Caivu; !-?V O"'
ISTEKVIIIW Ol" IILE PdSSUIKSl ""1
bed in Xrtj V.i; k. t
ity (Wahhingron) Dec. 12. Ncit day I
per? "(Hilly ureud [lun lllL' ^ecrel.ary "1 War ihe same
i,.iv,vi-t., hli-ong garrlsuns in the Southern fori-.
In,,,-. ,ij Cliiirleidiii and I'.-n nn-ln harbor*, at once ;
hnie on Mobile Bay and the Missiiaippi, below
It waa nol till January a (whan Ihojirj! Con
ers rrom South Carolina withdrew! that the
s;on I luul aoLeitcd October 31 waa obtained t-
lih commanders nl the few Southern forts wl
ivsaulla. (Miij Anderson waa nut among tbi
i,l, d, being already struitly beleaguered.)
January II.To Lieut. Slemmer, commondir
Bi.oln Harbor :
The Ceucrnldn-Chlrf directs thai yon take in:
icrof the form fn Pensa<
,r .i..,i. papers
-o. .1.. ....
, I,.-., .i-.: li
Ikhirduin, the i .,
ized companies and I
pots arailablu for tin
c for me an cai
. -incipal "de-
he Secretary did not
I begged him tu pro-
with tho President,
i.llltriel. This act I
io are invoke to the perils that
country, and who pledge them-
be governed by loyalty 10 the
xt Congress will have befoi
[ unLj.-ci.'i Unit ever engaged '
A PEEP INTO [ PRIVATE LETTER.
printor's types have no ri
But s editi
,f The Ub^atoT. has sent to the temporary oc
,f this Editorial Chair a private letter giving
ottinga of that pleasant Grean Mountain pic-nil
.that can be the harm of printing a part of this
iVu expect, at any rate, to be turned out of ollh
iveek. So wc venture lo give the following fro
from
o Our Own Cnrrespondent."
Depi
It Is
.r plana lino orked
PKICUIM,
ice I parted with you, and I
report myself. Jlr. G

.." [This remark, wo


d sense.El. pro leia.] All
o a charm ; the weather has
con carried on so shamefully. Thei
ig but imbecility from tho commencement
ntil now, and the people are aick nigh un
;. And then there ia another fact: thepco
nti-slavcry yet by a great deal. But tho el
ot pronounce against the proclamation of
ionthey protest against imbecility, ngainfi
heating, ngainat the jobbing and cootrac
ear tin* aiupid censorship, the fn
and thi
ilh the war. Tho Prl
lug that ho was strong enough
n, Alexander Cuuimings :
""'
ftho w
11,1-1 .[id.lr.
nee the Convention that fi
et wo seem to await the day ol
methods of prepi
...king, aller the lavLh
Wt'j-A dearest to uo, toconti
ram divisiona and wo
i of unclouded pro
i uiiTtluv.w. It is lieoi
he North. Yet,
... Jrorn this city alone troops
constitute a formidable army, we are
lanifest at the polls our consent to a dn-
the country. Wo send men from every
thoy (how b the battle-
I.- I Ml I H.,1
.
,
,'l,.'i'-.-,nV-l !'-'" Mniilirle lo hold the
iri.i-.-r) iin-il"-i .muck."
And the Secretary, with animation, added ;
o Wo have n vuiicl of war (the Brooklyn) held in
ml !li[,
an many men could
not bo wilhdrawii Irooi thai (Mni-j.m, hut could he
taken from Xi-iv York. Nest, Mi.it it would then be
too late, as the souib Caruliua Cuieiii-doner.- would
Ihen have the fame in ilnir band., by first using and
then cutting tbi '
\ n, the v.-
urago, a asked to
n light only U
Amis
of other mi
t his mistal
crfectly I
been propitious
have look,
r has given pleasure ; and v,
the finest scenery in tho worl
My native town is beautiful beyond my power of d
view of the wholo While Mountain range and an U
menso reach Of intervening terrilory, dolled with
smiling farms, pretty villages, and ponds sot like mil
rora In surrounding hills. Wo are Full ot enUiusiasi
ever what we see, and our time paises delightfully.
The arrangements for friend G. to apeak in Ih
placu, kindly made by the minister nnd deacons of tl
Coojjregolioual Church, have been fully carried on
Ho spoke for two hours in his grand way on Sunda
ailernoon, after a brief introductory address fro
myself. The people were so impressed that they cried
out for more, and another mceiing was appointed for
Monday evening, when ho spoko again to a full house,
with ((rent power and unction, fairly taking the people
Tor twenty-llvo years his reputation here, as almost
everywhere else in New England, has been that of a
fanatic and an infidel i and I, as bis assoclato and
friend, have stood under Ihe same condemn,lion. Bui
tho people of this towu havu beard air. Garrison ; they
Though the people
It is hard tu say a
is Ihe simple truth that tho 1'r
the political disasters iu the V
carried on the war as to h
popular. Ho might at tbo ou
ground on the slavery queslio
thirds of tho people with h
uch all through tho Winter t
.cians quoted him as Ibt-ir frii
his very question, and the President was claimed dur-
ig Ihe entire session of Congress B3 thoir special
friend. But tho past cannot bo recalled, Tho Pi
icat, and ia dinposed lo do everything ii
power lo save Ihe nation. Ho can do it still, a
believe will do it. Let fighting Generals have comn
of our armies. Lot McClellan be encouraged to
'
piehmond before Winter sola in. Lot tbo rebellion bo
crushed before tho first day of nait Juno, and all
he welL Slavery will be finished loo. But If tl
t tho pro-slavery poli-
tho short-sighted di
with
peedy end of this
Btrile indefinitely.
;nt, the army, and
o gain peace by
The.
:-i v.
0 of t
a thirty
inr lnr generations. Quick, united
intjil ti, an early end.
Stnto of New York,
11 ring through Ihe .
K..rt San
light s.
"
handful of armed secessionists
ly bo permitted, that if the Sc-
ipunltc with you." (this order was signet! by AlJe-ic
"amp Lay.)
It was just before the surrender of the Pcr.iarela
Any Yard (January 1| that Lieut. Slemmer. calling
unon Com. An.i-ir.-n:.-. i.t.i.iiind ihe aid of some Jo
:.'nin,o E.,.i.u.!ii or I il'-r-r.-, [but no marine. ..I.:.-'-..
.dded 10 his lo aoldieri, mode up bi.1 numbers lo '
jien, with whom thii miritcrious officer lo -inc.-
held Fort Pit bens, ami [.erl'.niitd, working nifht and
day, on immense amount of labor in moui^m; guns,
keeping up o stron; guard, etc., etc.
K.irlv ii, January I rent-wed. in has bi-cti seen, my
r-ulii ilJU.itll to be .III..W..I lo [""! l-'T' l'l':t-;n:..
l,l iip.i.1,1 ilailn: lini,. wit. hut ill vaeilLili-jiT.. I ir.-t,
the President ' ihmivlit ii no tmii-i'iiii nt is made by the
l-nitcd Slate-], l-'rrrt ilellae will prnb:ildy not be nccu-
pied nor Port I'itkeie* aitai.'ke.l. In ta.e el" meveiuents
by the United Stiit-j, whieh will dnublle.-i lie made
known by the wn-e-f, M'elv will be eorre :[: .n.linj; I. nil
and the attempt lo reonforco will be usc-
IWlion friiiu n note mad..' by Aid-ih--..' imp
Lay, about Januar. 12, ..1 tlie President's reply to a
itss-iite from uie 1 Nell, It wa-1 iloiibttd wbelhvr It
ould be sale to Bind iMtnfijrcom.-nts in an unarmed
turner, and the want, as usual, f a sellable naval
i-^'.tl lln- lironklyn being long held in reserve at
.-..rlolk lor some i-.irp"--e niik..-..v.-ii to me. Finally,
after I had kept a Umh of :m .....oils in New lork
Harbor ready for -r.nue Unie-ad ili.-v weald iuve
1-- . I. --irli ir.'.-.'! !" I"- ..--llr-.l-.-.r I . I I > [ H '. T . 1 > t ^ I ' I ' ' '- ' ' ' '- '
and lo oecupy Fun Mcliae al.-i il.e Presided!, iihi.ul
-lanuori I-", pei-iiiilled Unit ihe s |i-el-.-ae llroeklyn
Bh.iuhl liai-e a J.Hiiel.- eonipaay, ai.i nun, Iruu, I- it Moo-
rno, Hampton ILnd-i ami nri.nl urn e Lieut. Slemmer in
Fort Piekeii-.bul without a aurplus man for the neigh-
boring fort, Mellae,
The Brooklyn, with I'.ipt V...):'-.!'^ rempriny iilnne
led theCh-ciftalie ic.i-1-.rl fiekeiw ab-ut January --
and, on the 2ih, President Buchan -
pjbllo engaged h
...i, i . ' ,. .
. i,^;. ii.ry *ii.- c ,in;e 1
. p. Ir/ Mil., .e.1, lb; It lai a:
;,. -.* - i -tl ,-k.f a :
ould now have becu in the potsesalo
attw, nnd not a baliary below them
ecled by tho secesalnniils ; conseqi
'ntftii H'-J uindiMiruetcd and free."
'f/ie samo day, December IS, 1 wre
' Llcut,-Gen. Ecotl bees tho President
HCI UIILJIIIi: Cil "h"i,J, "^ v-^,r...
'cdnaidav. Tlie funeral tikes place
vi.-i.-';, -/'. i.'- nl' V.i" Jiiaoircr.
Later reii rns modify
. li -t..:...-r :- ,1,: .:l.-r.li...i,-),
Il<pit.-!, ,.,,. NII-.-..-.H t., nine. I.i
1: I",' i.r-li...
iwnrli t|..-elcl t.y Mi- Ui-i.ai i
%'r'nmnioei ,.,].! tllin.lls-
!
:,:;:.
' ,;-'-
|,...-ii..,it.i
. lUI'l r.|l....|vll
Willi nr
mtly ihe i
i tbo following
UuionJ Aro we to devote all .mi i
curry nn tho war, and ih-.-ui;" tu il.i- pi'll t si-
u., and could not havu been avi.iileil.wn9 unnecessary
1,,-viin ry in the field, aiel limn I., oi.ri.ily at the polla a
i-.-mliiiiH. to faint and mii-eumb: Whin Ihe iiliirarelij
of tbo South begun the war by wn ly uiiiiliii.e our
,, . . yvbi.di was M'ii-].:i'-,.l uiily by ihe niblinie
nte nn.l .midi-rali'rii Willi whieti they hire iK-IVat
l.ii-iii.ii.iie.-imlil. an. I un-.tltain eoiil.inte. Miall
ow prncb *
,1; Tury
wl.uie
dim! Furl Piekeii-'.lo commit
iDiaiKlCapt.VwIsea'aconipai
iu nl tacked 4
1 iii'l'.r.i
iuwL ftlemmv
met of hosiillly
until Slari-h i
[. ..'.'.li.. 1.1
'en-at..la,
piinj; l-'net
, that t
1 min if
iiiai,a:.:-.-ii,'-nl prevail, wc may as well givi p first
1,1 truth in of Chrh
apprehension and
On Monday we spvn
lie tho remains of my
anl brother, and tho:
s compensation for y
n ihe radiance
joy
tit.it il.ig
igland, all the old he,
oing eagerly hi
vninf
let half oitiie
adopt them Tor our counsellors!
iat things, iu this time ol general
Vtail'leii.L'.i'--),
".iaturd-is ntylil, 1
ive 2S,Acnill. ft I'u- r Ma.iur Aii'lei'.i"0 hud g.ill.ntly
s,,i,l wi.i-lv thrown hi:, handlul of m
" ' ila Fori Sunili-r b-ar e llml. "H
(.arulu.a, (here iva-s ttreat ilin-t.-
i-Jeiij by Hiu fe--erttnry hack lo lb*.
11 IhDOt
slop -mother
dso of many, old and young,
whose, laces were once familiar to me. Then wo as-
eended n mountain, commanding a view of not only
Peacbam, but of an immense expanse of mountains and
valleys, foresta and farms, with here and tliero one ol
the beautiful little ponds so common ill New Uamp-
nhire and Vermont.
We rolled stones from tho lop, to hear them gc
crashing far down tho aide.
Yesterday vre sioud 011 the spot where I was born
the situ of a log cabin long since demolished. Wo tra
veiled over tho road which my boyish feet pressed 01
tho way to school. IVe wet
tolled in youth, and through
ilyuwolt. 1 looked
slept, Into the room
last, into the cellar
...for the South will achieve ils indepei
ilnvery will not bo overlhrown by any edict of
I'l-c-il.iii Lincoln.
1 with various persons llr. Lincoln
does not indicate very clearly that lie sees what
'
ing him and tho Administration before tin
rat that is a way peculiar to him. Ho oltcu talki
bo did not fully comprehend a question, wbei
is, that he ia calling for an argument from hi
So ho talked with the Chicago delegation, r
week aIterwnrds issued tho proclamation ol emar
lion, lie is thinking very hard just noie. Lot ua
It will be to good results.. Oh for audacious e*
ship! And by that I da not mean a b
who has pluck only. Pluck and brainswe must have
both. If used properly, the proclamation of emanci-
pation will aid us wonderlully ; hut if we use it as if
, wero ourselves afraid ol It.it will do us no good,
t, instead, n great deal of harm. Tho next month is
be an imporlaut one in tho history of tho war. If
ll.U'j ia done St will be a bad omen ol tho final result.
Harper's Ferry and above, and oicopt at t
Union go. Shall
It la una uf tho s
, n-.,w, thai an .11'"'. 1- 111:1"" "' l'tre iianu our it 1
" '
reign birth to stive their votes in the
y puny ut the fa^li-h aristocracy w
.,11 t.i e,r.|iir,iti"ii .ippre td lie .;. al In in.
m, with noble puriutism, placed tbeir
i service (! the government A
1 that their loans wero ofl'ercd
1
without any need! That the ^01
bought p.
p., 1 p-
'. ." ' UfcaBoutbCi
lir.t'ii.-lril,li.,n-i (..rail limn
ra thDcO expressions iv ell.
[Ttiai iuiui 1, ..-; 1 ne. ,-r !--.... mi.. 1
y ,',;,, :;ji"
','']',"'-';
'r,',Tv,-miooat ivLiiiogK
terminals with It.]
Hearing, however, of tho men
ir hu-diliti.-s on the part ol the
lie ihe erection of new batter...
.1 -,.,. I,,.. 1 nui a k'lin m-m.'u'l whta
-.i/.-.l-diuiu-! the I'r.-aie t.-on.emiuii nii-1 nn
brought the subject to the notice of the now Ad
tralion, when this nolo, dated March 14, to
Vodgea waa agreed upon, vii: "At tho first far
moment you will land with your company, "
Fort Pickens, and hold the same till furthoi
' -, in duplii
rleiach. -I ''llh.-'-i
, Toft Sow Vo'rk by two naval
.bout the middle of March,
Bubstituled, for twi
paroled by tho auih
diapntchfs taken from one ol tl
escape like treatment, forced to I
that city. Thus those authoritieE
make war upon Ihe United Stales
them of thu Navy Yard, Jan. \t.
Respectfully submitted.
Headmatiers of the Army, Washl
id already
third.
i ,. - .. Ti.!-. 1 I. ..Itettrl. anJ II
1. 1 :
utySir'tUnfoai'
"1 i'vaJe ^u?.!"*
1
" "
l ^'' 1
. , , , ,
,'
li; IMIIM, .'10 lo!B on ll:r !-(.ll- lirke! I- tlil-t , linl^ we
lilukiboivrong .idr Iijj.i: i . ftePT eelaiivM Con-
ure.-i api-ar 11. .tuii.1 ' ..'....1 1. "1
; ; ""V
."" ,!;
, r"."m"-' i',7v l'"' .'.. ' r'i.,-n, '1 ... ...al.ly
lu l'owi, the fit Itenrt. dilative- In ConKK-ss are all lie-
S'sss." :,:;:, v;;.:;..
,
:v[';
,
:.;;;
,
;;.;:t:^:
Foil Lsyr.iycttu) liy i.ii'hi iii-d..riiv. Tlie
|
L
|
,l
||
'
ij: |
' rL "
T|
'
i
". ."^
.I'uir-i^Vi'ri.^-'-i'lii taeV'.il.iri'" U niiks ate 10 vote, .rhleh
..ill .l! i.wuelv loiliii inr-j.irttr.
, ,
-Sut] ai,- ihe i-.-ni-ral i-t-.'ilii ...i' I lie l.l-.itebei tltflloan.
Tilt rul,.:l till..-!, ,."l ol ciiir-c I.,- i,ii;".'l by llitili.
||. t llitv-not arlpld 10 lie ' The pjnv lh.it gave ils
uvtrv villi' in r.-tl.tl V illan-lieliaiii. ui.il v.-liii-l, ll,is ren.iini.
aaitr'l ll,o. w,,. 1, I,,,, imidu ,i|.|..,7..i.t t.ili.^: ilie rebols
liavt rep-.if-JIv- ill.l 11. at iln.-i c-" "'.re all ngllt, but
lia,l no pane li,;l.h,J tlie hit- U nul hv,L n, ili.initli
tlltVbad? iVcl. (111 f, .,, llilll-:.:,'lll--.it.i,l,. Tilt ll-.-ni.-,-
traile ma--e5 do net. "e iro-t. int.in '> iiiicninigi! ine
..,,,-..!, bold m. I'll- I.e.-
M t,,.p.--,-' H11-- r'-I-n.
, ,,,-,, 101 Hi. .-..i.i.mi..
icrnlta may Insiantly
I. That orders may n
ri-un, Willi iilii|iln aiilipllu-, of a
. . ;.,i..'i, ! I, i f,v: ibles, 1
,ipi; ead. . That 000 or two
.ip|.,lt Ibo!
ink.-, fellow
uationid character, by coweriCKbejo.
:t which all the possible dep .u-inl ol
ity could uoi have avoided I Will th.-y (-
,ent Iu see the giivei-nnn-n; -. par.il) 'etl, nod It- pdiey
11 tinn-erl-'iin, ils 10 j.-opard tlie n.-r,tunilir,n > pub.i.
;redit,aud tu invite ilie intei-p,isitioii ol loieigo p.-
Aro nor merchants prepared to wean tberairjv
The r
l- L
.r-,liiiilnary to o baltloto a _
is, the whole nation will bo glad, always providing
at we are competent to thrash the rebels, and if tvi
liiiiit-i pr. [ii-cd to wean t:
.- el" the Chesapeake and II
a
1
;
;;:;;
l.-.-itliiniiy nl-o
''^o'rw.'.r.'i'.'l.^tll.lfi'Korl:,
.0 and I'. .1.1-.... >><! |..,ttieel,i.ly-
i'f;.;.;:""
, ,,rT hiii'lll
tbiJIi/v.V'i.e,'-'," !. tl . : 1 1 - . -
-
tmontlhnlibc Brook-
"' .liall give iiilriy iIm-u-j I '<
"froiultio/ht wur since Jol)-.
j with an ai
so where uur film
chamber where !
there my mother breathed hei
here I used
apples. Every alone on the old place looked familiar
the barns, wood-aled, garden, orchard, nil had a greol-
TLen we went to nn out-lying farm, which 1 remem-
'i7ie ilrpuilican 0! this
confidence Ibnt Gon. Hooker ia aoon to Do sent 1
mand the army on the Upper Potomac, and tin
IkClellnn will be brought down here to take th
now filled by Gon. Banks. I don
r
t know how much
truth there may be in this story. Tho letter
Kearney wluch has recently hcoo published
injured Gen. MoClollao. That letter waa bo sweeping
in its condemnation of Dearly all tho Generals
Army ol thu I'olomac that it fails 10 injure Gen. N*>
eifm 1
id tho p. 'wur of freedom 10 bleu.l them with ui
00 ii',iiiii,ality and broMitchuud, aud they ttavi
nl,, iKiv .! ; - :i.e general divlreta. hov
bave ii'-ith list ihey are received Into thu boson
nation, nnd form a part ol one great, real, living
r.ple.
Shall we =.url nrd li. thu-.e ot tliem who
""""
camp tlial there ii on Ameri.Mn puepl, ihat
Union la a sham I Mar eilv rightly declared ils s;
pathy with the gall mi v.:'reurii(i. when ho returned
from bin long captivity. What gave tlie chief lus
his services and hia rjurrowo tjeepl this, that h
fought aud budered lor a country and a peoplot And
following obituary
Liberly and Free Soil parties, and more recently as a
idical Republican, hia watchword was. " 1 i-eedmii lo
1 '
nnd he embraced every opportunity that offenfd
fitriking a blow at slavery and In ravor of tho Righta
]Hcd.' in Philadelphia, on Monday, Oct. utl, of wounds
.-.;", I at Ihe lultlu ,'t AlHI,-t.i"i. l.ee. vi-c 11 1- .<-...
J -
.
ompany F, Tweuty-eighlb Heglmeo^ 1'ennsylvania
'
i'-' 1!',t
l
[
''
1
-!'.'
'..r.l of the close ofonc of the truest. br.ive*t,
'
;.',! , . tl.iit l.a.v l-.-,n ...Iter-d up in tins great
, - ,.-: .,.. prctiniii ly.., -11 where .uffermg
1, tl,u M ,'. 'all. > -lb nn. ^^niy^
.. .11, ,. ,.u,..l.--l .11 I - l '-- 1 - "o ''" 'iinri'iut i><
""I',!' ,i- alttr tluUting =0 well and bravely to
Iraw forth Ihe chcen and inspire the hearts of ui
,.-.,U- _ltlli.li lb.- liul'l ui-.iir.iii-- d and uiiu'.ir..l-1-i
',,
r|| . ;.:,,, i,-,. ,.;.,..,.! ,i.l,-r.i!.l.-"h'--lb. ili-lgr.o
L ''
r ,.. in d.iya,.. aii-ii) without alleviation^,- wa
, ,.., ,..;, !l."v a veunu irit.i.1. who.e love hid over
'!,';,. all .!l,.atlcs;and
B
hau---"'
,,n bank tu the bt.icto ll|ai
ajnrlty I.. Oen. Wndiivti
.,1.1 mate up by el
There I? nothing new In this efleel of thu w
.'. uf lt-1 !, K-.-tral Stalei were cam. -"
,,ltrall-l- I. .-.iu=.. if Hi'' prt|'-,aibTi
1 ."
lN "l
.-:!:
i
:.
l.':';
^
1 , ";;.!:' 'J\u: . f,t "C
:
": Zir "',i'J
..aru of thoir (tab
li. -lv-cuaU 1: |r-...-t
llibilieavy
.. ..Ir. In Ih0
[,.].il,-lly liv Urn
lill, willlu siroiiKLT..ni|.h.i
tn'nt't'bt'di-i-il'ie--. ol Vall.iiirlleii-iiu. l-'''>,
bee, etc., would voliimerr in -
litpabliean t-nnlitaeiii. ol Mini
" 'Julfiw, etc. Mr. Colfax nl
injority by the viiliiiHeerii
Willi I
v.Sto-
low their soldiers a
Jr? Y. IXbu-ie.
IN THE FIELD.
STOSEWALL JACKSOS SiB3 IT, ASD 81QE1S POR
WOilE.
'.''
,
':".'?"''' ' ' '
'.ii.to lo llaoer.-.lown. tv.elv
,,11 a -treii.htr, when eve
luvine heart, whii li -uldini]
urn-Ion hii trienda and be
1 ,\u lull i-t the iwary juurn
orly falling 1
ed nod waited fi
miles across the
I step was a nai
, p0l(BM.T01_kU
rl J hi- helpers.
t to Uarrisburg,
f the friends, &
reached bla side and
,
",
!
'",V''i iV"
J "'"'"
ti';v;i,i. an , . " -
".v.
;.- ,,;-. ,, ! .,im.- ,
v
. ...
,
;,-
1l
. .
-
;
;,.:;..-\.
: \
uar'l- ' Laiepem retuttiilioL,
piiiccltancoujs
gqm*tum.t.
thoy should grow discontented, and Mn k'throw
oil their chains before their time-the "'"SI:
( .raterul wretches, who wero taken
ul fed all the y
Booths ibe will) oipbM
Tl.ii- -uill. Mo >r l-'iillni' i liin
1 )."M "-'"1
Corns l<> IbyUodelbut."
r f..wur >im..l- iiTxiu-lly un tlie Hill.
I Mil- str-mec rliOliehllnU >>'" I"""
.ehimh llcs'lgeiiu.c "<<>" ''["'
Comctolfi.yle.dlM [In,..-.
.in T.ntiietl ctilnic :
li. ii.uiilii.--il, old ago pssl.
lo thy r.wl in In-'"-"
ird hit native bells
hru.Ti- in llcli.il spell*.
l.-'wlth m-Tnii lir.iw.l.ccricl
Iho 'bore wltltewnliieV il-lc'
Iiv liod Ultimo.'
hunk God, tlinu wl.ii.iiu: l.mivp, mMi
,- ,- i^-:.Ut'i"v..k-.: .ve ll..- pule,
'luiul the. pood ship n ml re mil -ill.
t'oim 1" il.v t,J"-' '" Hi" 1 '.
F:nl grew II"'" lu-iling rhinn I
" Come lt> Illy lio'l ill In-t."
Doomed heavy un lb(J blast,
i row ilinl -en, n IT It heard
lull ili.ill-. ilic .-.i].lali.s .'Idle - li)
,0 .1'-ailiTW iihis;ln^iic>lil|,.
' Clue lolll-Hi'i'lfo liul-."
imotothyOedi.t la".'
IK In lite weedy caves,
of, hou>:ed,
[ii|,-n-ull-ii
..,,. in the week.'.iiide'r the lush." True,
might have bi.i. f..iiml ilif" who bad an n^f """'
of il than in,' factor. ,urls utile North. who flour-
ished in .ilk I brondcloib. wore gold chains, ami
crew Int and Iniy en en,- peek r '" rn "",l 1
.
vo n0
f
U
,t
of herring a weit.. Ha. it ibe represon.nlion of Ibe
people is lo be believed, of the young men and old
men of uiiifo.ler nnd nitfofous, ol iho present day
Ibeir fate wiih so terrible that the average lift - '
i.lun- man or woman, niter being put ml
field, was not ever eight years. .
A Catholic priest, one- day during Iho
Ml told lie si:.. ..s in n sermon, "that they were all
lo be free in twelve years, and tint I bey must begin |
lo prepare for liberty," etc. ... , .-n _n
I ;i- wildfire lb.) new. ran over the island, till all
id beard Ibe slory. Oh I it was touching - >"
o men and women report Iho tale
mm nflcr.
"Tho poor Simla" (suid ibe cil- or a pll.
.
.Idine the storil-'thc poor souls dul not know
iw lo count time they w.-ro so ignorant and de-
rad-d. Thev rushed "home when I hey hemd this
,} ,,-..,, mid into our pi.n, osclnimmc, ,
'->
,,,,.. oli ! .,..*. am we free in twelve yen;.. uml
,],,. ,ve told ihem, ' Ye*, it was so.' ibey asked witli
,,,,.; i.iv/iil,:,!,,,..,^.*!.."!!-.".
;elvo .yen,
honey?" and wbe.i I told them twelve Chnatiu is
alor they onlv Lnew how to measure ycan.^1)
i (hreo any*' festival at CbriatnlM
iVby,
nska questions
tile crooked, contemptibli.. ibin; that
PUTTING TDE OART BEFORE TUE HOUSE.
The old saw goes that " nn Irlihmun Is prlflRBed t"
j-I.--.iK iwiie." ami -' ''/;' '' '->:. Tl lt. |.rivilcg-.
n IKjO, eleven
I'd eboose n hon
With not a sou
a grot of [Kjace
!
by Brill's wave,
';;:>;
ore absoluto condemnation of them than tbo Biblo
ibibited. He wouliL lit-.' some of bis ,i U die...v lo
fose nil oatb and Le sunl i" ].n-"'i . ii w..,il.l no. I"
, r i,",,-,... be sni'l. and eliangt of air would do lh.ui
SILENT nOESUlf.
lie t poke rather of f ilent nnojes in religious ai
ie,H as of an impressive nnd beiieueisl cburnei.'r. I
id i,i,t think b" could rcroain tilent for two hours.
Ho ridiculed Ibe idea of holiness in brick? end
mrtur-sanetity in iron pillar*, nnd conind.-red iba.
jht he deelnred w,i a ji. s t pit Wl opokeii from tbe
eclurc-room as IWim tb- l.ni.el ; a, to bsiifc bein*; " (
", or. in a ph.ee of wor.-bij., I- ilioiJB lit nn individtml
tbould he fell lu his own trm.d..m m tbo mntlrr
Upon tho whole, tbe lecture, iboujih a mi're etiitcD,
nnd delivered with tbe cbarncienMie freedoin oi
oipression and in.l.-i...-r|,- ol iud-meiit peculiar to
tho lecturer, uvine-d r. .-peel nn.l ndnnrniion for the
clnracter of lieore..' ! -.. nd mruiy "I tW v-riiy ipb=
bn advocated ; but as ln< reganltd (.Jeorfie VoAsron
son to bo more of a prneticnl than doctrinal charm-
tir, ho did not touch much upon controversial poml
c| theolocy.
The leeiure e].,iu'd will, a short prnyer, an
doted willi a bencilietion.ibe audience keeping ihe
7ea(B.Brttlik Friend.
a r.rpsiring Iho sew-
1
TlIiiVUUTif.
Uurd psn'op: words,
Vctielili
Biinrlih
urely, jbnll lb. re li.k
lc, [|i..y walk tot hick lo llof
n.lnj; itrecl.
Ud down their bands, nnd wail.-l o"t '"' 'I'-l 1 '" 1
mns-'n. ob! inisaus, ti'.ehe Uliristninsl Uh! we
not lib dnt long, honeywe all 'cm dieall 'em work
dead gone 'foro dat. , .
The good owner, encm^ed Ihem, and thu bad
,,H, 1 iei,...Uellin;; ibeui o.U of the inland, or com-
,,,1111,1; more inieiijcly hnrd work, and tbingn wvtit
|,n npieirently iwial ""I'l 'he feeond day ut July,
18-18, when it was found a plot had bee,, coiirocled
for the general uprising "I ihe rlnves. Unit nigbl
Suiidiiv eyeiiin.- at !) u'i.l'.'.k- when iho V'.:o|ple were
,l..,,,.-,.ii,m, ,tb- nWecrif}-, tbe whob; people
verOBlMtlediir--'-
',][.....','-'!.
1.||-;.-.t- i-.jil-.ceiieh-sh'o-lls
Ind horns blown ; tigtml answered signnl, l.ll rem
iiouiitfi in-side m-I vill-j ih.-j ..>mu: pouring m, an<l
nlbering logell.er in groups or tbousai.ds,
:n-,b,^ t-: i-dil.- ^.yusol-t-liriBiiensteilo .
,,,, and !Ye.!crick,ted on ihe west, tinned ivii b
Ibeir
,nelietc,^, knives for cuUinf; cbiic, and fork.
,-MA.U-j cui--.iii.il tiui.'in- --'I' ivil.l, -telin-.us
- freewe e In-.--'' " l.maTu.'ipale, e
They lerrllied tbi- v.ln'e inbabiianls. -is did
old John Brown with his gnlla.it /i-i(i/-on the con-
ience-stricken lyrnnts of Virginia.
Believing thnt the ulavcs would
'
bl'r and nieto ou
THE DANISH WEST INVIE&
Tno-K who have kept up with the tide of pi
events dorm? Ibe last si- mnritha. will perhap
remember that vine lime ... the !-pne ""B * l *ted
in ihe public journals tbiii the government of J),
IkU addresMd ibe Cnhi it WiwhinglQO
officinlly, making ib-.-n. tbe oll-r of aa imlnm on
MUeir West India Ules for certain .onirabaniU ea cjip-
iiic from the session tyrants of the South: that
thty would rcfiuire them to give three years appren-
ticeship under their
" l'rovisional tiovcrnmeut. and
lo hrcaihe love's tendci
o bitten hy aion
u sillii.fi by a boufili t
li your fond win. to t
ur Uoor at daylight's do
hard hlttlniriit your no
ii hard knitting at your
Perlinnionenrlrcnrcs
Willie sympatby her
'III good to walk upon
ived.
i
. ... theyiind
to Ihem ns they had
poor, panic-stricken
harbor, and almost
j detail of
If ibe United Stales ahouli. .._
.
Ui~h .-.e.ri.in-Ht w.'ibl lr.'.ns|-.rl lb- in nl
- m Ihe Southern
,n.il liberiy.
;X| -Ip-v I
'.flcr a io
e roun.l (ii
the Danish roles.
-V'
followed in the
,1,,' public prims), n^eriing tbai the
\V.1-hi1n4t011 >">! accepted ibe pro-
wliitcs lied to the ships
hvirle.l them 10 sinking.
It would lake 10a l-.eig
the story ivs told lo me agi.11, ,,-, ^... .- r-
plo. The historian of that evei.il.il time, Kev. , obn
Knox who tells the story all on the side oftheplatd-
, ,-.. (Ei ,- said), has not told i
will c.ii-0 hia version of the
nrticle. Now lot me
" Tell the tnlo as 'nvos lold lo rue,"
L
Old lady who hnd lost nil her slave* ; by
"
ly whose father hud been ruined; by
inn, nluio!.! white, who liud th.re gnu. d
her freedom; by the rommsndunt of the tort nt
i:briMi.-njicd;andb) fiev. Mr l^bo.-. 'Le Ivpif opal
niiiihter ei FrederieL-t, .1 " In tho nieuihs of many
w itne^c* all thiri"s ' .'I ' - c'tabl^hed; ar.d these
persons, in dilTerent |..r' ,.f lb? i'b.nd. did not die-i-
erce in one mnlerial psiot in the
mHurrcclion.
The slaves mnreted -jp and no.
nig bidy v
a do tho people.
recital of thi
MR. 8PUKOE0N ON I1E0RQE FOX.
List night, tho 19th ult Mr. Spurgcon delivered
1 nddress. in ibe |..etur.-r,...,iii atni-bed to his 'I at..-r-
nnclo, on "The Life and Opinions, buying and Doings
of George Fos." He regretted that his numerous
ilions prcvcaled him from making ihe prepiirn-
whicli no interesting a subject demandeJ, but
nhould be make mistakes, he would not make them
wilfully; should he deliver a hasty judgment,
rcould not nllcel Ihe bun e ruble and gl-jruius dei.-l. :
lone d.pnrleil. bec.iii-e a future occasion he cou
rectify his orrora. (Jeorge Fox was amongst the
vary highest of the men of note who hud carved
their names on the rock of history, Dis opinions
-.ere atUl spoken through the S-'icIv be hud formed;
,ud beside.i esnildi=biijg that boeiety, he hid left a
nurvelloin literature, ^lanv 01 bis eonlemporaries
cave him ibe foulesi and uiosi .-caiulaloo* ehnrncier
(noy could invent ; but on the other hnnd liis^i
pics excused nil
AIABRYINQ Off HOMMEt: ISLAND.
rich time in jirrfmiiir.,; Ihi
runrrincu service here. Tbo cnuirabnnds who come
i large imnibers lo tho island, tcon beg10 to learn
the ways and cusloam of - ,.,l,.- ."o... f -m-. ol
- -dquiring about the lo'titatiou I mnrnago,
:d that they were not jiroperl, mainedj
that they were simply j'-i." 1 ' together at the will
mid pleasure of their masters, without regard lo
'-ir will or wish in tbe matter. While Ihey Sgrea
...y well, and live very happy, they somehow or
other think themselves to have begun wrong, and
iTdingly make up their minds to begin over again.
nyer-meoting io the con-
,vas .l.,t,r, bibe- and that of the w
nton. "Well, what can I do for yoi
eu, John turn.. I to Judv. and .lu.lv tuned a sby
look towanls John, and iben ihey bulb drew their
mouthB from car 10 ear, sbowu.g tb-.-ir line lectin 1
icated Iho question, mid John replied Bomethmg as
T-- Itchi ihem lu ihe tlr-!iime cnc.
Whether he tben shall crosi to thBP,
Or 1 lion p> thither, or II be
Sonej uiiil-my (wlni.yoyct ihnllsee
Eoch other, yet ocalDs
Ah.J'.y! wlieo willi ih
Forgivingly nt last ye greet]
Pal forlh thy Iw.f; lliou genile plane <
tJ.'t win.: undlreM lire i-u. il e.-ae.
Will, .-..[.hyri i nn.l nnlmy ruin
Tl.e>-J r.-..,iiL':..-r.-ii.tyon.
f. inti.r.ii. mi'l "in nnd :kle|>cnmblne
i,
-,(".''.'.
"".huinnri' heart (.1 mine!
tk- -nil, contain ihysclf end henr.
Dcecmber day) w-re hrii f a.i.l ehill
The wliuli.,fMii|.-li .i-r.-w.l.l ...]-!:
LIFE EVEItrtt'HEXE.
LifE everywhere! Tbe air is crowded with birda

;nutiful, tender. inlellig-)nt birds to whom life is a


song and a thrilling nniietviho anxiety of love.
The air is swarming wiih in. ecisthose little ani-
mated miracles. Tbe waters are peopled wilh innu-
merable formsfrom ii,,: luiiniilcul.-. so small that
one hundred and fifty million ol ihem would not
weijdi a grain, to tb- wind,:, si, h.r-.. tbi.til seems au
island as it sleeps upon tbe waves. The bed ot the
ru with polyp--, i.'.rp', eiar-fuhe*, and with
shell animalcules. 1 be rugged spm-; of Ihe reck is
fcarred bv the silent boring of oft creatures, and
blackened with countless muscles, barnacles ami lim-
"'
ovcrywhercl On tho earth, in tbo earth,
ij, creepitic. b.,rr.,ivn,g, boring leaping, run-
If the ttquiilen.'il i-oi-ilneM nl the wood tempt
auni'T into its eheikereil fhn-l--. we nr-) saint, .1
,. din of numcrons ibEtcts, the twiner of birds,
tho scrambling of trjiiirrvls, tho stnrlled rush ol"
unseen beasts, all telling how populous is Ihis seem-
ing solitude. It we pnuso before a ireo, or shrub, or
plant, our cursory and hnlf-ahstrneiid glance delects
a colony of various inhabitants. We plucks flower,
and in its blossom we see many a charming inseei
busy in its appointed lubor. We pick up a fallen
leaf, aad if nothing is visible 011 ii, there is probably
ice of no insect larva hidden in ils tissue, and
fits
development. The drop of dew upon
will probably contain ils animals, under
icroscope. Tbe same tuicro.-copo rovenls tbn.
the" blood-rain" puddink app-aiing on bread, and
awaking superstit io 03 lerrors, is nothing but a col-
.Vi:,,-
.,.,..,,-
AnniUB Hron Clocou,
LITERARY ANECDOTES.
,et:.l is told
C-imhili
^livcvtiscmcHts.
of Lbirle.i Mmtheivs, that, perat
old ccnllemaa, a family ftieud.ba drank le.'
mother without her finding out the cheat-
"Tub Gre.\t Vuui*b."Succcssfal
p
n great auihoriiv over ibe language of ibeir country.
1 ,>ivl-vV lrip(.v'^i.r..-.-iuu of tbe great vulgar," has . VFR
-
S clLLSAreymi .icH.tcebl-, an
become a part of finglish phraseology. Ai.-.r am ion l trta
"I'',.;
", ',',';',".
In
i
Fnx'ELOS,Lord l'etcrsborough.aller a visit to
!~',|",'ii''|"-."'>.
,
li".!' pi .'..^..'.'u'tr-'-"^ 01^= ,-
Feneloii.snid,
" He was cast in .1 parlieulnr monld,| M.'ri<ir.'iitj.ootii,..l(hi..^ij.J-v-
lection of
il.i. I tie- vast trsc's of enow which n
^n.ele nigbt owe their color to the nil
production of a minute plnut { F\
Tbev y ui-'bl which C
.clous rapidity
(rieeu* nicalis).
cheese, our bread,
vnll, t , and distigur.. _..
nolhinc but a collection of plants, fho many-
colored lire which aparkles on iho surfneo of a
Summer sen at night, n* the vessel plows her way,
which drips from the oars in lines of jewelled
I by nillious of 11.
how many of the
of dailies, wet-klie
juntry like
nders of 1 hon-
es that bestrew
paused for one
What does that mean!" TIow
here tho Danish Isles were, 01
r, or to what kind of climate 01
icntiag to expatiinte native-
mid like to
ill endeavor, Uy
talus twenty y
do si
,voka inquiry upon this subject
f a short sketch of the islands,
nnd their iition
The i-.l-.nds of the Caribbean sen belongin;,
Denmark are St, John'n, St. Thomas and 61, Croix.
St. John's is a very small island, lying a fei
distant from the others, nnd wus onco (and
be now if cultivated) famous l-r producing the best
coffee in the Western world. Si. Thomas has a re-
marl ahl- liarl.or. '1 be ii-lan-l is not ten miles long,
and less that eight in breadth. Bat
coa-st is a bay i.ln.o.t surrounded w
r,ii.
jettia' n
11 ilo'triii.
er used for
ol Butlv.
,s I could, else he
table, upon which ho wrote th.- orders for iheir pun-

nients threw hia inlslnnd cut of the window, ar.d,


: ,. Ibe, desper-.ie act, rushed to the wh.pping-post
id tore it up, and cast it inio ibe sea.
On a few estate descried by musters and mis-
es.es llu-v brok- int., ibe wine-cellars, and, dnnk-
. freelv, became eon.lilioned lite unlo miini >ou..e
en we 'have known in recent days, uiirlhlnl I
iechievous, nnd despoiled the furniture, and then
,i,red out all Ibe good old rum they could lay their
indson: for, said Ihcv, "rum puts the deln into
old man, so wo spill him on the groun*. and him
n't gat him any mo'." .;,-,. ,
In lie' meantime, a : II ve-fl hud been dis-
tebed to Folio Hi.oforu l.o.ly of Spaui.-ib -ehli-r-
,th lb, ir eiinnou. ivl... I arrived, and only waited
tho order of Gov. Von Scholten to firoupon^
"
unarmed iiias^vs, anil commence
Blaughter
iow tell them the
niful work of
,t , .-e there called, wh.u, "ash il.-.r feet
in tho clear waters, and lift their headB inlo tie
clouds fifteen hundred feet above. Tho city of Si
Thomas is buible.l upon ibrec 'purs of these moui
laina, which form an ainphiiheuire around tho hai
hor tho entrance to In. h from Ihe ocean is not ove
nixty yards wide. Ships of all nations lie at anchor
in ibis' beautiful bay. and an immense trad. ....
Chandisa is carried on from Ihe townthe ships
bringing all needed fabrics for the long chain ol
islands to this port, nnd Irom thence they are taken
in smaller boats or packets from St. Thomi
Forty 'miles due south from this port, four hours'
sad with a pleasant l.re.-e.and forty miles east ol
Porto Kico, lies ibe far-lamed isle ol at. Croix, or, as
we knew it Ion- n-i. r-'-.i.ta L 'r:: |.vho hna not heard
of Santa Crui rum I). This islnnd is twenty-four
miles Ion", nnd from three to nine in breadth far
less in territory that ihe smallest County in New
York; and yet it bus .. bisiorj of .Mouse and thrill-
ing interest, reaching back to ibe dnys of tho grand
old discoverer of worlds, who, according to Wneli-
in"ton Irvine, found even ils women more than
a match for his gallant cavaliers. But I do not pro-
pose to write ils history, nor to tell what a rich bone
of contention this " gem of the sea, ns it is now
christened, whb among the^ .juarrelling^
Europe dm
'
Von Scholten, who was evidently moved fay
principle of justice nnd humanity,
cnl poliev, restored ponr-
riding into ll,
of the island ,
cipation. immediate and unconditional, to nil the-
Danish West India Islands. He Iben sent his herald
to ihe west end; bat the multitude would
this " good news of great joy " from no one
Governor himself. Ko ho mounted his carnf
drove post Untile to Fredericksled, and ag.u
his proelnmntion of emancipation,
hour no slave's foot
'
i subordinalio:
iwd of thousands nt the cas
,:h troil the s.
> m there not eaaeled tbe horrors of St. fit
(using a cant prase) hero aad thereT Did these
.lauo ipaivd slaves murder their r
the wives, and lorture ibe children?
E
croon was slain, and ono only v
ordo, "the man for tho hour,"
u
plan of insu
Sol ono white
unded. John
bad laid this
shrewdly, sanely and secretly.
.nnrlained ot it till tbo
faults. Bven In in..-".^rAuues
ehnraelera have been givca of Georgi
V01.. Ilia cliaritetcr ha.l 1.,-n unliivorably discribct
by Lord alacaulae. but Lord Macaulay hid beei
always spiteful towards tbe Quakers, anil whei
rcferrin" to l'enn or Fox, he never lost an oppor-
tunity of saying son, -thing against them. There-
lore "they should tut- Lord Mm 11. day's remarks nyr
nhat they wore worth, and no more. Cnrlylo had
na well ns Mneaulay, given 1111 opinion of George
Fnx. Shrewd me.,, boll, ul ihem. but one would not
much respecting what they said on ihe subjeel
of religion. . .
Having read the hostile opi a ol Lord .M mania
v
the lecturer proceeded to sa) thai it was the easiesi
bine in tho world lo write slashing article., about
cople, and lo pick out little pieces of whit they
nd said ; any fool hi do that, and such conduct
vus nnworthv ol Lord Mucnula,. He next read the
emarks of Cnrlylo, who, ns a shrewd thinker, he
aid, was not to be excelled, but who had done
jerioua injur)' to religious faith in tho present
ttiry. He (Mr. Spurgcon) would
life of George Fox. He lived in a i
were in earnest, and somo went beyond
into lan.iiieisni. I'rophets were in every
,.f..|.!ii.Tv---.s ... I-: us pl.'ui.lul as Wnfl
lushes; but George Fox was one ol'^vi soberest
men in that strong.; time. Some ol hi, tiro loused
followers coniuiitled at tmiis ib-i' -lisgustoxijlim,
. nil. -I which he protested; but he could not
vent nil who were his followers from doing e-
thing that was outrageous. They should not Ihere-
lr confound ticotge Fox with his associates ; Ihey
should not lay Other men's sins nt his door ; they
should let him stand in his own ehocs. GeorgO Fox
was probably the best judge of ,= hat was his duty,
,n,l "ijti i.ur'o ago knew letter n hat God required
oi him llian ibev could know in the present day. il
be (Mr. Spurgcon) bad as much gr.ico ns George
Fo-c, wilh George Vio's lempei-aaietit, be might have
done the same thing 1 he nnrvel vncs-not thnt the
man wttB extravagant, hut ibut lie was not much
moreao Even in-irh life George Fol hid shown
the most lender spirit. 1'lnvs and games had no
charms for him; and, shocked nt tbe conduct ol
somo old men, he onee expressed a hope that when
he grew old God would prevent him Irom doii
ibey did. His parents had not tbo means ol c
him much education, bin be had ibe poiver lo
ot. a great number ol things. When he said
y
Mnssn, wo been linki.. _.
wees com' dis ebenin' to see whether yi
marry ub; wo is willin' to pay 11 right good
the iob; for it "ill ple'cse ,1- mighty w
joimd io.-e.hler from the hook ; fordo way de darkies
are brought togedder who we come from,
'eordin' to do riglit way."
iBawJobnwas evidctly expounding
.'er whi.h he bad been undying for sou," nine.
turned to Judy, who sat by, dr..ss. -d m ro.igli gi
ments, with her sleeves rolled up 10 her shoulders,
of blanker round her bead Judy urn
lauchinc away as hnrd na she could. Smdl" Jndy,
hut have vou 10 sac on Ibis subject T Judv put
, a sober face, straightened op. and spoke in
solemn earnest-" Bless my heart, it 1 don t link

I ns Sykes links on dis 'ere important suujiok,


,- both I. ceo a linkiii' le mailer n-bt -mart .
.._ -jw, bein' dat wo got here, wo comi
dis blessed ebening."
enough th.'i limit be married I
, llouy hand-book containing the lorn
doin" thiE, John nnd Judy went through ...
.lutions. Judy stripped her bend, pressed her
hand down over hr ln.,r, |..t * >: her Imnd, and
iben sn.onlbed her ha.t a.-.a-.a. fhe told John
~~
ready. John loolfl at b.m-eli. fixid his hau.
toned his coat, tied his s'^s. and it.en straightened
up, ns if all were ready- I came forward and toh
them 10 tnkc tbei: pb.'.s. II..-, JiJ not understand
rae, nnd 1 told Iben, (0 stand up. Judy
feet, and John was
-Oats ik ScoTL.isn.Lord F.libnnk mndo
happy retort on Dr. Johnson's definition of onis :
'
rain which in Luglund i- I'.'i.enilly given to horses
but in Scotland c;
,
.he pet .' "lea, said
be
" and where eke w ill you sec such horses and
-"'
mm?"
Mttrr.vKE om Born Sides.V0I1 aire BJ
day speaking warmly in praise of ih- pby;
Haller, in pretence of a pcr-on who was irinp
'
juso. "Ah, sir." said the person, "if M. Haller
ould speak of your works as you speak of hi".
Possibly we are bolh mistaken,'
1
replied Voltaire.
The PsotkbTaSI liui.-.u- -John Wilkes wot
ice asked hy a Roman Catholic gentleman, in '
arm dispute on religion,
' Where was your Church
before Luther?" "Did yon wash your face tint
ningl" inquired the foe
'
-
" Then, pray, where
washed r
MoXT.lIO.tE'l! I'LOt.
swhere in bis wrilings
plan of his, of rrnnslcrr-
cl.ii.il.
Alter
down and hegi
Judy, nnd whispered
Judy Inughed.
ssasaa
SirtrKIK.
Slistnj, BJIIU
,T. liillHEtJ. II C
1 : .w.,.v
ir face before
- Old Monlaign
. ..'hole eculences from
:u , njthors without acknowledgment, ihnt the
3 might blunder, be giving -|.|;-jcj/cj to Senccjl
Plutarcb, while ihey >-"-l the^ lot du-hc.'.I they l\euik-ntd
stood oj>, Judy threw her hend
grin. John became indignant at
,i'd lo her In be respecilul. but
afked Join if he would take Judy
le'.ntoo whom heibeaheldbytho right hand, to he
In- lawful and wedded wife. etc.. to which he replied.
' Wid de help oi doLoid.lw.il. Judy was not s
solemn 11s John -vus. When 1 asked her ,. _.
r ol,l take John Sikes, whom .-!.- held by the ngi
and lobeh-ronh lawful and weildioMunbari.i-
-heiiier she would" lo.e, honor and obey him, en
be bad net concluuVd her 'au-b. but made out
ay "Yes mnssa, I'll try." That answer did m
nit' John, 'and ho objected; so sho concluded to say,
Jobn'forgot the fee ; so Judy stepped up and asked
rhatwaa "de charge i " John then came up and
said he reckoned it was Ins business w " lend bilm.
John asked how moch I would charge. I told him 1
would charge him a shilling. He laughed n-1
ble-si-d bis heart.; for he "* peeled .1 would
more Ho reckoned he g-t her mighty cheap. He
had no money, for he bad not been paid lor bit-
work on "do fort"; hut Judy wns beiier oil ; sh,
had Ibe cash. She put her band inside the dress
nnd pulb-1 out a porleu.onnnie. 1 told hor
mind tbe pny 110,7. as 1 intended to give tho money
back to her ns a present. They went oil as happy
as liny two individuals I ever mnrried.-Un.ofc
T. IF. Conicay.
CONSKHIBKCES ABE Cacses.There
._ mnn in this life which is not the begil
long a chain of consequences, as thnt
lenco is high enough 10 give us a
id.Bobbes.
ithey, quoting this,
ebnin of con; equ. tic-s b
say that the chain of cnu
-Ancestkv." The
boast of but his illusli
Tboims Overbury,
belonging
^oiioirnt,
, like a potato-tho only good
under ground." The Duke ol
amid the I'roiid Duke, and ol whom
, T
wDe
"That
Fahh.-
should present
.de all through
k in bis carriage, 1
"
Ir. Mountnin, cbnplnin lo Chnrlcs 11..
day, by ihnt monarch, to whom he
certnin bishopric just then
-""
r^i;i-:si-ii v.-tami.i-ii^lm, N-. i'
1 ..[,,.-! '-. ! ' ,E- ,"*?,l ""^
Ii
l
f,^|i
t
Ihmm liij ic-1 E.enloj Clui.
1150.
BEST PIANOS
....
JlSfi;
SDRM'tJOtSkt ill .ii:
-jl/TItS. K. G. SATTKRIB liu n
B
E
bo had been siru. k by-
drawn his knife and c
tyrant slightly^ "Put up y_.
tnr
among the
tho XVth, SXV 1th nnd XVIIth c
ir have I time to sny light of the weird liorics,
,ed down, of Ihe fonrfol
deeds of iliiring of old LUiu-kl-urd and Uluebeard,
the two terrors of tba duyB of the buccaneers of the.
XVth century, whose great stone cnsllea are still
pointed out ns crowning the mountain peaks of bl-
I'rotn the
"
diked, christiani
nil render
discovery by
tho
:(iiii el 11 amid thi
deposited I
One fact of Ihcse isli
nnd thinkers, that aln
people who called themselves
thoy have been given ovei "-.--
Twenty years ago, so say the pcepl
island of St. Croix bad 11 population ol
to 30,000 Blaves, nnd d.OUU free while |
land wus divided into IL'ti .states, the .
prising 250 neres. ibe smallest but six. All of these
estates, except n very few on the steeps of Ihe monn-
tains, were cultivated in enue, for ranking sugar nod
The immense preponderance of the servile popula-
tion rendered ihe uimosi rigor in the management of
slaves i.cce.-sxr>- ; and 10 ibis day l!n< peopl" give the
[;'_,;," L
'
nn) |,
most horrible aceouiii.s ol cri.elti-- practiced upon
tho poor blncks. Hy and by. when we shall ropy the
laws of these ieles, dear reader, you will judge foi
yoursolf whether tbcae tales arc likely to be true 01
There Ore good henrts ovorv where: and oven here
in this almost den of demons, were found men tba
feared God and loved mercy. I cannot pause non
to tell of the long-sullering. palieut endurance, and
unfaltering faith ot the Moravian ministers, who, for
thirty years, strove to win their way among the
planiers and their people, nnd to touch them the
Protestant faith. It is n touching sight to look upon
their graves, some thirty in number, lying in a green,
shady glen of iho mountain, nerir the city of bt-
Tboiuns, each with a low marble block at the head,
and ihu name of the sleeper chiseled thereon,
tho grout palms wave their never-fading
and Ihe sea-bre
drooping branchL
At last their labors of lovo were crowned
success. Tbe court of Denmark wns moved. Chris-
tiuuu, tho wife of Christian, the King of Di
grew to have serious doubts ns io tho divine origin
of an institution ihnt cut oil men's limbs, gave 33
lashes on thu bare back, pinched them will, red-bot
irons, and hung or put them to lorluring deaths, for
loving liberty belter than slavery. Tbo Quakers ol
England, too, mov.d their i,'uien on thu subject, nnd
so it fell out ihnt Denmark, in 1M7, issued a decree
thai all tho slaves, born after that dato upon the
island, belonging to her crown, L-houbl be FllEE, and . .
that all persons held ns slaves nl that lime should assist Ihem
hnvo freedom in twelve years.
President Lincoln's pr.,. Initiation to take effect
the 1st of January, ISfiJ. will nut moro exaspei
tho sinvehol-hr ut .iouih 1' .rulina or old Kentucky
lhan did this edi-.t of king 1 hrisiiin of Denmark the and yoi
besotted, since hoi dors of the Danish Isles.
They swore resistance. But what could six thou- sago >
sand men, women und child...n do against Dtumnrk I could
Thoy finally agreed to keep quiet. "'Ihey would 1 Turning
not even tell the slaves ol iho good lime coming, lest \ " Will y
lood. Let ihem grant iba
jk no more." This man escaped from tl:
itb the Governor. The latter went to Copei
d gave himself up to his king, waa Hied for
ind acquitted.
nnd two others, (ibis I had Hem pnval
friends) came lo New York city, where they live
and died in obscurity, and paved awn; from amor,
unhonored and unknown. That which wool
made a hero in Italy or Hungary, made only
in the land of the tvrtmt and the home ..I
But what shall 1 say or tho resultt
Eleven years afler, there was peace and quiet in all
tho land. There were no patrols
"' "
tho pubf
the sli.v
tho puoiic Equares. Doors w
narcuy .oeked at night, and pistols and poignar-ls
longer slept under the pillow that supported the bead
of wife and husband or maid, n at night.
Nino public eel 1-hon-s, large, airy, and well
kept, were doing their work. Churches
with willing and devout worshippers,
population "onco the unpaid
filled
Tho rural
._ _.id a bank
from their small wages, they have
thousands. The) had Ibe.r moral
,, social societies, friendly societies,
all of which were working as well as could be
expected. Sixty nea 111 -engine;- were sendingup tbt-ir
of labor to heaven, an"
liangi- hi.n, because hi- m
jrim.i men would swear
----'
ould declnro upon the.
eorco Fox would only sny, " verily," nnd there was
n end of it. George lei could .always desl with
ther men's hearts, and sec them thoroughly, b-icii.ise
t- bad been prepared bi icmpi.iiion for his high and
noble mL-flion. One of the lirsl things he perceived
waa thnt huninn learning wns not necessary for reli
"ions teaching; and was there anything extra
ordinary to tbiltl No; because no man ould pre-
tend to make a minister, for thai whs l.csls work.
-
next said that human professinn did not make
.... Christians, nnd that was thu fact ; but for
testing thnt, George F'ox wius put in prison.
In other opinions ol George rox, 10 which the lec-
turer referred, he expressed his acquiescence, but
could not endorse the- doctrine thnt sinless pcrfecliou
is uttnitiHble, because bo had never met such 11
He approved generally ot the acts of Georgi
but in 1651 George l'ox did a thing in Lichfield
which he (Mr. Spurgcon) could not iusiify. because it
was n silly thing. Ho went to a meadow, took oil
his shoes and stockings, nnd, having ihem there,
entered Lichfield, crying out, "Woe to tho^ bloody
city ol Lichfield 1 " For so doing ho gi
PRINCE ALBERTS FARM.
,ce Albert's farm is situnled near Windsor
...l.r.ut .wen.,- miles S. W. of the
n- lbonsali-1 uvr.s, one hundred cl which ar-
..|w,.l.nd is wooded nn.l sown ,tl. -r..ln.r-l
,,.,,.,lre- l ..'re four .-.'nr-' i.h I"!"" 1 ""'
Ibe amid-.' land is sub-soiled -eery live or
Ihreo years with four enormously large Scotch hi"
-
'
iveii tandem; rotntion ol crops
us, without the Indi
Barley nnd oats ar
s ninth the SI
ushed in a mill drivei
1 and Aldcrney cows
Italia made of iron ; iron troughs ah .
it in each stall, with wast.-pipt 10 guii-c
behind them, and then..,' 10 msuare-shed, from which
,, is pumped into .arts similar to ours for watering
streets, and sprmkl-.d over the grass. Keeps
lull r-Nifolk and Hcrkshu-c pigs, peelers tort..
mount ol" ibeir taking on fat ; a- one ol the s
herds said, "A dale ol fat a dale
The pig-
eing lower
duels the liquid
saw peach, npric
pineapples, BtW
growth;
"-~ '
11 ,.ipe e
there were martyrs
testimony against the.r uiiii'i".""-
of Lichfield. Lord Mneaulay ubarged hllo W
..... Gripe, " does the island exnoi
_. much sugar and rum as il del in IttltiT" ^0
but tho people eat more at homo, till more ucres 1
corn 1111. 1 yams, and import two dollars lo one.
"Ab!"cxclaiins .Mr. Aristocrat, " do iho plantei
go lo church i-undu.s now. driven in Bi.t-horee
couches, mounted with silver and gold and precious
stones, wilh si.\ altc-nda, it slaves in livery, ns ir-
oned did!" Oh I no, my good friend; but the sli
that toiled under the whip on tho Sabbath day, thai
his masler and mlalrcss might thus ri
clean and comfortable suit, goes to mo
wife and little ones in his oui "Emnui
and praises God as a free
friends, one and all, the sun
found in any given quantity -. -
though it ho a (act not to le denied, that tho
while folks have grown pooler since they have had
lo pay a firBt-elass laborer IT cents a day.it is
equally n truth that tho 2li,00l) have grown richer.
Tim majorily has como up a litlle-
goao down a Utile.
does not kni-e. bow lo lake cat
black does.Mrt. .Frances D. OuS<
.villi bis
of human good is not
the reign of Dioeleiian
d that he wns bound 10 bear
tyrdoro in the hlpody city
ayubarged bunt-nib iude-
iso ho took oil his shoes nnd stockings,
and described bin. as a madman I hut there was no
indeeonoy in the net, which merely caused the tool-
of his feet and ihe saving ut his shoes. In the
rse of bis career t.eorgi' Pus was imprison--.! stel
ten black ami blue, hut the, never could kill him.
.... wrote against the fashion, of his day ; and le
(Mr. Spurgcon) would desire to read what he had
vr.i,-,, ifV-rc. was time to do so. He (Mr. SpuT-
eon) was not going lo advert lo the ladies' dreesi
\i .he pres-nt time ; but. referring to Ihe dress ol lh
lien, ho would ask, was there ever anything uioc.
absurd and preposterous than thu high bluet: hai I
After Borne further remarks on modern coatum"
M'
Spurgcon resumed nnd brought to a close his
tivo of tho life of Geo
applauded by Iho numurous nuuience iu w
- -- uddritsc'il (-.- !/'!' M' 'ii'i;/
to keep. In the gnnlen 1
1! plum trees trained espalier
'
ies and grapes, in till stages
latter finer than in countries to which
.uuigeuous. and ripo all the year round.
Melons will not grow in the open .air, but thoy have
very fine ones in frames Her Majesty must cer lain 1)
fare sumptuously everyday. There ar
to Iho garden alone.
Tail the g.-ntl.-ouiuly inanagi r ol the farm,
very iiilunnvion .lis, rid. 1 '-'so went 10
Queens sialt. >ai lluck.ngham Palace; ihey
would make- mere comfonable dwellings than two-
thirds ol the people ol 1 melon live in. English fur-
riers have found out that Ih- upper part ol the stall
ought to be lowest by two inches at least. There
nrv" in those stables ono hundred nnd sis horses.
Her Majesty
<?r?L
"
c,ha-ving been loudly
In addition to the foregoing,
furnished bv a correspondent "ho V
leeiure wi'li a tew 1.011= respecting
hnvu heon kindly
irE of Pope,Onu duy, ns Pope wns
... -t .in-" ihe
" Iliad," ho cniue lo a pns-
cither he nor bis Dssi-tuul could intcr-
, , , rrilll stood bv, in his humble garb,
)""
suggc.-.ted that, as he hnd some
itaneo with Greek, perhaps he could
"Try il, try ill" said Pope, wilh the
ho is encouraging a monkey to cnl red
s always glad lo see s
Tho lecluror said he
dier 11 Christian, but he ...-
I hrisi.au a -oilier ; he never cold rcc.cn. .1" the afo-
ot .,. Christian praying. " Forgive us ,,11/ lr,|f (.,iss
nnd tben nucmpiing to thrust a bay,. WW ^ mi
JUiD PKRSOXAI.
lie highly ndmireil the neat, becoming dress oflhi
females in the Society of Friends, and thought tba
the e.vlravagnnccs ot dress in prolcssing I. bnsimi
women jib much to le depfornl. lie on v "'
.-old chain, but coaii'lering 'hat, ofh -
young nien iv.ii.ld Le likely to he led '.-
bis example, be had put u away ; and it the join
men would milk- a similar sacnliec, ho ill 'g LI t-'
would fc.-l nil the belter for it. "Send your go
chains," said be, "to Ihe orphan asylum nt Urislol
they will be glad ol them.
1 '
!ly is partial lo greys, and may frequently
iving two in baud in l\ u.dsor Park. 1 be
Princess Alice drive- lour pomes, und is enid to be
an excellent hcrsewomnn. I saw thu eight cr.aiu-
lolorcd horses that draw l.-i Majesty at the tune ol
oc.-uin- or dissolving Paifoimeut. 1 heir harness is
0f,
.:
n
:
D
I...
1 K0|d mounted, cost S1O.000; and the
go cost 835,000 ninety years ago. Cor-
respondence of Philadelphia Ledger.
The Vault of tue Bank or Enqlasd.Tho Bant
of England Direclors had a terrible fright, two or
three weeks agonot on account of the lo.-.- ot their
wiiter-mnrked paper, bui Irom the summary inva-
sion of the bulliou-ruom ul the back. A corres-
pondent of tho Birmingham /:..>( tells the Story thus;
"The Directors received an anonymous letter,
.tim; that the- writer hsd the means of access to
their bullion-room. They treated the mailer as n
hoax and took no notice of the letter. Another
moro'urgent and spceihi letter foiled to rouse them.
\l Icnlli /),.- ire.V.T oif.-iv.V lo sir.-.-l then io th< hulU,
..,,, < >i h.-r tl,r
;i jfcuscl tu 'licit Tliey ther
column..ient'ed with their eurn-pondent Ihrougli tin
channel he had indicand, appointing some durk ant'
midnight hour for the rendeivous. *
li,. .-
ll of tl n.ysi.
ted lh<
,licd*ho,"l could tell
Jiow so," said Charles, " if I had hi
faith?" "Wbv, yes," said the witty cleric, "yoi
Majesty might sav (.. 1'iii M.-vmain, 4c I'lott removed
into thai &c." The chaplain succeeded.
Cimiovs REiiAjtii OK Vasitt.Frnnklin say
"
Most people dislike vault v in e.tturs, whnlevershn
they have of it themselves i but I give it fair quay
tor wherever I meet with it, being pers led that 11
is often productive of good In the possessor, -
others who are within his sphere of action .
iberefore iu many c;l=- -j it wculd not be altogether
ibsurd if a u.nii were to ifo.uk God for his rantiy,
inong tbe other comforts of life."
Losixa Tiiie.One night when Matthews was
cine to tho theatre ul Ediuburg. and was almost
00 late, he took a coach, nnd ordcryd the coachman
drive 10 the theatre. In going up the bill, the
lorses l-ruu- (in: J, 'he conch made no progress upon
,.hich-M-.tlhews remonstrated, saying, thai he should
,1 .0.. late, thai he should fo-e his nme The coach-
iiau coolly said. " Veur honor should reflect that I m
osinc; limo as weed's yorsoP."
Adah Smth.This distinguished philosopher
*as remarkable for absence oi mind. And as an
anecdote of ibis p.oiliariii it is related of mm, that
vim. one Sunday morning walked into his garden
Kirkcaldy, dressed in little more than h.s nigbi-
wn. he gra.lualli foil into a reverie. Irom which le-
d,d not awaken nil be found himself in the streets ol
Dunlermline, a town al least twelve miles off. lie.
had in reality trudged along the kings highway all
that distance in pursuit ,.t 11 certain train of ideas,
and he wns only stopped 11, his progress by the he L
of Dunfermline, which happened at that nmo lo I.
ringing the people 10 church. His .appearance in :
crowded chnreb. on .....nil rfonduy uioromg, 10 l.u
night-gown, is lelt lo the imagination ol the render.
Casmbals.Chnrles Lamb wriles to his friend
Manning to dissuade him from goinj
endeavors lo instil the fear of can
mind.
" Some say the Tmtnrs are cannibals, and
then conceive a fellow c.K- ,.) my friend, and lidding
the cool mcifom.y of m-mrd and v.necar. This
reminds one of tb Ivier rrydnev iriniih is saul to
have r-ivi-n to ih- llisb- 1- of New /-aland previous
his, departure, recuninending him to have regard
the minor ns well as to the .- grave -Iu!,-,s 01
his statioa-.o be gi,- n .0 h.-spitnl.ty-and, it. order
tbo tasl.s o! his native' CU.:S"S. "c-'.i io in
smoked little hoc >u ihe Laion-racl,-, and n
cold clergyman on tbe sideboard. "And as fol
'f, my lord," he concluded," all I cn^say is.that
., v.. your new parishioners do eat you
will disngreu wilh them."
A CoKTRAiT. Sydney Smilb, 1
upon tho folly of a scheme for erenli
lji)ayear, with the expectation ol the. .
wilh good and well-educated preachers, druwi
his ready wit ihu following pictures (if a mem
the "colleclion of sacred beggars. 1 hen
tore is drawn of a clergimun with J.130 pern
who combines all moral, physical and intellectual
advantages, a learned man. dedicating himself in-
, ii -eh to ih- care of Ins parish. "1 charm.ng^ mnn-
,crs and dign.Ged deportment, si* feet two inches
,ib Le: lull, proportioned, with a magnilieeiil
b '.
expressive oi nil the cardinal vi
, r __., ... _ n ..,i ,i ; asked
hi, will fall
of his poverty! But sub-
-i'l'iu't-
'
lor'liiu n average, ordinary, uninteresting
minister ; obese, dumpy, neither ,11-nntured nor good-
natured, neither learned nor ignorant, striding over
Wiles to church, with a second-rate wifedustv
and defojuetoentand four pi
,.,t eutecbisui and bread and
, een
inoneoftl.o-Cesh.:n,-llam-;.n.U.iphc 1.U--1.:-
nado on -Mount Ararat se.on after the *'"''''." '"
he waters-driving in the High street of Edmc
on; among all his pecuniary, saponaceous, olcagi-
wms pnrisbioners. Can nny mnn of comrnor
ay lhat all these outward circumstances of im
jl leligion have no bearing on religion itself.
V.TIVE WOMEN,
mm* WEsrov: cowuxi
M.
1 SOPHIA 1. ROSSEL will reopen h
pESNSYLVASIA 1 liM.M.t. '^^^at^Perkfoj
j" W. SUMitnLASD.
M,
MOSG THE PlNl-.s; Oil, SUUTII IN 6ECE3-
^hiltulctphis gdrti?ewttte.
STOVES, RANGES, LEIHGFI AND SCHUYLKILL
COAL, ETC.,
SO. 101 KCMHTU7IB sTICEET, l-IIIWDEU-m*-
InaiVin;-
I
Kf.NDEP.DIM. i JUSTICE, Importers .nd Dealers
DR1ZG MEDAL I
luol" , l.jrf-1 h-.-. 1-
arded in London, in IBS1, for bit
ml lie Te
1' L'ou.uiniiJincntsand it i.
:riumph, it such a
TONES i CO., ol the l'jeic.,1 "..e
I'^^'J^
Jt"(tU, alia npruil] ' n" - ;.;-
; JJf'JJJfJitllJ

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

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