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National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28

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National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28
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Jtoiml tankit VOL. XXIlI. NO. 42. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1863. WHOLE NO. 1,186/-'- fly heard (loii.l cheers). Wo 1 SUtiottiU ^uti-flavmj ^tiiudatri.l^f^^ « about .. [fanl"; bul since Dm same rutins! regards na cnn Hie only practical .--llnNs of tin- Jhv Inr rescuing ihi slaved of intemperance, and for reclaiming lallei i, nnd has InMv adduced tin' ISildn in oj[T" ,r ery, to Icel Ihat " by il to bo dispraised is ni wnt, philanthropic cunt. Bui of nil cant I bull IMJBLIHHF.I) WEEKLY. ON 3AT0P.DAY. rYMEKICJU, ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY, PENNSYLVANIA ANTI-SLAVEHT EOC1ETY, IDS Xorih-Taith Strut, PhttadtlpMa. -..mlne-l ot the j.i|>or, should bo nddrossi inclosing subscription* ess Blfiiim ot tho pa N»» Veiir.." ny way 10 ,l,lr.--..l. 5c!octioii3. which ,1 wide EXTRACTS FROM THE SPEECHES, Lct ub recollect ibat President Lincoln, to far rom sharing ll.o s.inguinsry feeling exhibited by iolUi-eon Duvis, when In' bud learned of iho ques- innnblc dcalli of only nun rebel, iuimi'dinlcly issued irdcrs lo his Generals to cNeonte none wnhoot firsi .ivi,,^ biw infer ti-.-n [loud H..W.). Tun guiltless ih.crs l,ni.. 1...-. ii <:nl '.-If probably in tho infedc „t llie'l're. ,„l of D„ ,fier it« own lyi spread nod diinf'cru'j'i cant "i selfishness nnd irro- bgion (bciii-, bear). Deterred by no Bitch tnual*. iib these, wo are resolved lo nl'hrm throughout ibo land Ihe proposition wilh which I startedibat ft war, the horror* of which wo nil lumenl. having broken out between the Northern anil tin Southern Stnlee, the eympuihies of free England roust bo with llio Norlh rather Ihnn wilb 1 1m ticuili, because, with tbo auceefs of lbs Norlb, rnlher (bun with lluit ol ibo South is idcnlilicd (bo great cause of negro cmnnci- pntion Inpplnuso). And in affirming thin no wish Ten- simple principles >.l,i. h .-.,iitl.orn sympnihirerii are apt to, ovr-rW.b L"' which should be regarded iih Hxi.miiili. in all a-, .I.- of ra.glislimon. Those o\''oi,o |, tX,.'. 1 .l' n ;[' f.«n". - ("' d^eli upon (bo face of i\ ii,. i, il,. auction block and Teel nd bin. llirin over lo Die Ijigbe.^l bid- gold Itllo l-hnme I)—ibnl it ia nn a deny lo a. woman ibo rights of annuity (hear)—Lbm it is an nbomi- y lo declare ihnt a colored mfin bus ib u mhlrn ninn need respect (hear, i flog ft naked period of nearly tbirti years has olapted. It ia lbm Pardnnapalus win. hu-. r.j.ul .1 i-lii>'er.. from ihe lur- rilorc -jpeeialK RiH.-.'t (-. lliel .>nK refaoftbu Uniled SihIos [bear, hi'Jir). cinw lS.'d ilio quoaKon hiu been nl iastiii wb-iher nlaverv obould eMend ovor llie lorritoriesofDi. ' i.ii, i'uiifs wliieb nro not yrt formid inio nntusil t....Hil. -nl StnU'S. Tliia Delsbonat has been gniliy of llio infnmv of oxeluding flavery from all Ow n-rriloriei [ulH-or*] Again, ibc quca .ion ofenncedii.g (lie riglit nf noareh for (l,o «,ip|uea- Honoflboelnvolraib. ba. bee n at .-n.-nr.ro 1S23 botneen America, and England, and Mr. Lincoln has commilliid il" ii.fnuit of criming aueb cone. aaiODa fenecml. Wo bIh br.d Dial Mr. Lincoln baa com- milled the infmx -f prop.-ng >o eo(i.|-.i.-ato Die loynl ilnvtholdem lor ll.o loss of their properly m hlavoa. but bo linen bia right to - on ibu slaves of »»c iivornnienl [hear, he. n [itjiplausv]. ..nij...ii« Willi bia ., ft., II,.: ,flhaG«noralCon . ,. JUld add my Ihillofolli.re, i.. bh.iv .Hjinpalby nllh (bo N'orlb in ibis contest, nnd 1 tny ihnt aim has br~" lioaping coala of fin. upon our bead by hoc no a I'onfjronco of Ibo niomboru eo of 111" Kiii.ineipnli..n K.-...J- Ily was bold t i.-?(er.|..v afternoon nl Die Wliiilingi.ni Club. Mr. William -una, Ibo Chnlrmlo of Iho ioci- *!y, oreaided, and iimnn; iln> -i.i'l,-iniit present woro M, Victor Sediffileher, Under Minister of Marin,, in .nl Government (be lion Judge Birj-tb o bo i. nnngfir "mmii,-' berly lo three mill Ihnt whic Ibo prate lion of tbo govo brin^trlntoior^ cl"n™ ioomud ""'I'rr (ln-.ir mna era—Lbey Could no doeoiftlieyd Unarmed .,, wild rilkis in I n women and cbildron, to (he lall be murdered by thcee whoso nre linked wilb E tame onerp, Vo.ir wel omo of that aiaten ..„. pr..i.= to nity nnd God ! least, . wbut drwory .„.n,). Ne . i conclusion, ia ibis—that If you nr» per- b mere error, fl lliorougb de]uti..n ngair.sl I ihcae alnvcboklerBif lbey e'urr .y »;iy, (;.[! (" No, frionds, Bunded ovidonuc to tuppoae ttj will mnnumit Iheir slaves, then you n inB in tboso principleB nnd givs thi i.roughoul tbo land, and bough no are m. .a few, and nobody (laughter and cheers)- —still, if yon see iho picWs Hand to thei would ibink Ihcro waa an army bobind- inigbt bo an nnny of 500,000 behind—and tlomen. \uu are Die piekel.i (f a grcKl Em nrmy in this eounrr. (loud cliesra). Tbtac nro m] principles ou Die ^uKieit. .>...[ruin what 1 have heuri ,*ii say (Oiiighi, 1 Cellevo in.-; •— J"—- >'»—) if dJit "re. ^v them round lb, land, let tbem hayi suoli an echo nil' D.r....;ii tbu eouniry ibotnomnnii bis apnaea tan mi «»)' bmaer ibat Knglnr.d is il favorlof slavery (ebeer,). _No n„l lo ibo.yranoy n tbo t)ave- wner of (bo toudi (hear, boa ) N, allianco wilb ib" nnirdei"i^ psdiey of Ur. Jeflereo. Davw (hear, hear). No Alabaman to prey upon American commeree, for liieir Georg* Qnsnold 'out 10 feed our slarvii.g .i|...Tal»ea (Iks- l,.-:-.:j. nar wiihtbe L'.nte.l t'.ui-a l>v tbo eUvuholdet. "™-.lur. reciF niu,n No l,.,tdo mediation which ,.„l, s„r,.,r n,i,.--,,.(i.U .:;. ... (cheers). No jealous nnd fj.ii.iu. ".-Ii 10 .' 1 j 'mpover.te J. a .n(on (pto.raci handkerchief*). •)—ihat il ia an abomina- [.on lo line, imprison, llos. nod on ft ropetitlon of Iho act bang n man lor leiiehing sn..lh..T mini lo rend it... UiUI^ (hear, hern)—that it is hideous bias- iiliemy lo cite (bat Bible of a God of lovo in defenco of auoh ftbominftliona (hear, beer)—Ibat a confcdll- raoy of rnun figbtii,;; in order iq commit these nbomi- naiion- hbould l>.- riigrtnli'd an iTicngul in a porlen- (c.ub piracy rniber (ban in l.-giiiniaio wnrfate (cheers) —ihnt tbo conscience nnd heart of freu England can et.rner-an.no Die- ricTit J .main and extend tbese nbouiinationa (cheers)—and, lastly, na Iho rccogni- saJur. ibat lb" -inliy of t.r.-at Britain lontbea the very idea of »u n an indignity being odered 10 Ibe Royal Lady wo d. light to von. rate, as that ber pure, nly nnd nnlniml baud, wl.i.li wields only Iho f uf bio our the free, should ever bo eoniiiuii- by the kisa of noy nicy flK:,ir, el Civilil ueo applause.) a a calumny lo any that ibo founder! at the mi Iv.-puUie iij.h.l.l Die print i|.l..i ,,r slavery wo left ibeni, though il may be registied thai Ihcy did not take fileps I'.r its gradual abolition ' -- hoar). But then no idea mil entertained of l,g e-ll-.l. i-.-l to any ritnlea in i. hieh it did not lime cviJt. 'Ihev ilmujjbt (hey had ft tumor . __il with which, if let alone, would disappear nnd bo absorbed but lbey were wrong. They bad to deal with n malignant cancer that must either ow or bo eilirpatod (hear, bear). The longer it i* left untitirpnt.-J Iho greater mult ho Ihn pain ...iho body politic out of ivl.i.li it is cut (bear.Iiear). Slaver) i? etaciitinlly a ivn-l. tnl m w.-N aa_a wiekid slaves uoeduciiieil becauss if tlicy wero educnled, [l,r.y could not live io their neighborhood (hear, heat). They aro compelled, for fbc porpcie of nink- iheir labor profitable. (0 collect them io large sea uodec a an.nil numbur of overseer!. Ibis eihausia ihn aoil nnd lbey niusl go wcsiward and .utbward, carrying ll.vir pollui.nn villi ibein ..cry 1I...-I e...-v (.)l>.>: il. K.I""! Till- »lil ,...:i- :._.!..Il »l»v..f» tio alluwud to spread Aftir tbc has been advocated by ionic ot its most redoubtable cbitro- pions in the Lniicd .- »! Mr. Howell Cobb, Khoso ivork I have- hero, op-ni:n ol iho laborer liiui- fIf bocoioing eapilal in the hand-, of big master, nnd if thoirinleroMt.i becoming in Ihii tuannor identical. Now, then, is iho linio for you, worltin;; men, rjueh lids ul iter', 10 .'<pn'-e lour sympaD.y nitli mlborn SlBtee [cheers and hiugbter]. Remorn- ber this, however, when jon ecu such principles put forth : that even- la-h on Die Lnck of a negro slave the hostility tipnlo (eh.e xe}—bis Cabioi ) for nil .r.) ,„.» lam ur then (bear, bear). My Ifli United Blal ' religion and ri'l.' Si'e.:.I V pcii.o. rue >«"" ,„",, (r wed clieors). The media- Englund, and Lurojw. lo |.r...in,.ie -owners for Die h.s= "1" Ibcir .Uves jnciplu isEogbud and Ibo iends and allies in promoting r, ihraughout (ha world (cheorh). Enih tbo people and tho govoromont ate an deadly i. I H.-ainal ibo fr..cloiii Die human r»m as „„':,„. ,.crliv..i..i, Die ia.-.. ol th.seiirjh (cln ,,, ,,,,ur,e,n mee.il- ,! '^"^ '^ ™J*[ Z-fXlten™ any'friend of ^'^ °'» ,-,„„ .-,„,.-!, 1,.,,1-r 11,..t.«b.j .-, nut |.l.-l^..| ..i.-i ",", „,„ ,„ t|,nm. a*k tbem io name mio Ik.ct^.t.c Mt.^1- coml,. rn l-onfe.leiate ftate, . ,|„. flirt- r.t iho earth for "a ihuinsnd yearn (ch. |,„,-,,r. ihis .ImoriMin content .mo Anienoau has almocl.nti.l think more nnjt.Mli J.-i!l .y than iiDj.-r ui'in in Iho L'niied r-iateiit mi'l Dua nbu. Jui.-ri. -inn l"- " ponmu of the prena of this toi ,,,-, ...,,,(„ ]',.r'lLr I. liter ieeling in America og Eii.-lmrl. In ihei-amc Tina "rliclo from wh ..S >n .-n.i iimt now I Dull thia alillemunl i a people is n pre of earing about ilnvor)*. Air. Cajstua Clay rnid. they r , warned ftla . sllanily aeaii.sl thei e uny. There was ihs'tiouib eoleuii.ly pledged d by which it wae agreed lln hbould not eaist beyond n ceri ill tbo Southern* eaid Ibot eh t last lbey bad t with audi moderation .._ by President Lincoln. Qo has shrunk from ap. pealing lo the pa-iiion* of Die pie but nut ao the other aide. Piission has Leon Die very thing which Mr. Jcueraon Davis baa appealed to in every act of hia government [hear, hem Co in p nro Mr. Lincoln * proehiniation mil, that of -Mr. Davis, of which you have heart! to-night, which ibriiiloDa Iho tfciermina- of tho whole negro race b.oaupo ihoir freedom been proniiaed hy the I'roiidcnt [heiir. hoiirj- ,1 trust there nro many in ihis meeting "ho nj. to tho working clnafca. H bat- Ion- been my a to bo numbered among lli.we el-i-i.es, anil I rim, Pt,il-i of ua betwt encourage ihe spread of opprcesioa on ibe one class—to awalion loin r loolings on Ibe part oi Ibe other [cheers]. I any Ihnt nothing hut the aboli- " of slavery in all its forma—and thero arc many .r which it lurks yet under our own Fueial syn- n..lliing but that can truly reconcile Die mlcr- of the i-tuploior nnd empl..yeil [applause]. In naiuo of b-iiti, tbon, I call upon you. no longer io y, but in Solemn truth, lo osprcoa your hearty aympathy Tilth Iho North ia this alrugglo [loud ap- plaueol, ____^^_^^_ OliCE FHEE, ALWA I'S FREE. E recent decision in a slave ca=o at St. f.ouia is __ ..jportant that il ia worth while to understand il fully, and tbo prin:iplos involved ii Williams, a neyro. rnii lirooghl btfi criminal conn to be tried lor grand larceny nuei too- " .led. Tho law ol Missouri poniehts n slave guilly tbi-i crime by "hipping, tun to dCood (lurty-nino _..ipoa, while the fr.r mini id punished by iinpnson- ciilpiil bol'.-.n- proi.oimciug senteiire. L, .!.. « a-» brought ahowing Ibat Wdlimn-. win.-, real naniC ia UuuglftB, was three months ngo Iho stow of Major Tarailhill of Ibe rebel army. The counsel for Die oi ed Ibat bo wan not a free man bet UM (I.- mr Shvo an elaborate decision, pii.ting largely troiu thi ogal authorities. He reached this coneluaion ; From tbo hen )udj;mciit wbl-'- '"J tho government nnd tho Union. ,>„ch a speech will eifrt a helpfol inilu.ti.-.; in l.n.i.il.i and Great Drltain alike- Followed as il was by others equally decided in sxprcstion from men of publio character and posi- tioi. it mid they are an unmistakable declaration of thi favorable change which Die kinnncipallon procla- mation ia producing in our relations abioad.— THb. Iho French Provii Mnrsball. ofNov! rmicrai-L-i™ Prof. Bees for jiiil.lie raeeiliim, Die t:.;nii,tli.-iii,,ri « Joel, It will "bo so,,, .i'..l nrr.i.,.-. .1 i,;: .,i ..i,i i-1 . Will I- II yet grow ul of our ntef r.-a! I'.-,! o, but that tho nlwa, iremc. let, wi ,.!. Ovid, u awakone. dor of the H.at],,,,, which (1 ror.said before tbo in J put bo would robt ..hieh Jin J appeared in The Times .1 il bad been ,n?inuateil that the I'uni n.'Sr. , Sir. i. F. Selhr, Mr. W. Barnard, Rev. E. J. II Wilr.,,, Mr. n. J. Slack, Rev, 11. HA, Bar. D. Nimiuo, Rev. 1'. Gaat, lollon, ineumUnt of KUhurn, clo. nun, in opening iho praceedinga, (iiiid London were extremely glad lo see from Iho country ; and ho was turo II be glad to know that tbo Society waa satisfaclory Report of iho Eseculi Mr. Chesson, before reading Die report, said, loiters regretting (bo inutility r.f ihe wriiera to bo preBenl, nod [Bympulhiring cordially wilb Iho Sociely, had been received from Mr. John -ninri Mill, Professor NowiMii, Professor in io.H, Mr. Edward Misll.Col. Solway.Mr. A. Travelyn, Mr. W. Onrgreaveo, llr. Coninglism, M.P., Sir. Aleinnder, of Glasgow, clo. Mr. Alsxauder, in hia letler, aaid, (he government ol" President Lincoln hid d.-.i.o ovorything in iln power esccptono, nnd that was to recommend to Congress u measure, for tho eompulsorv nboliiion of slavery in tho loyal Stales from nnd afler (soy) thu 1st of Jan- uary iitil, on Ihe lermn ol toinpensalion embodied Mr. Cbcsson then read in tho i. rent j.r,-.l;iiuiiiiiii tbo following Report : n go.-,.ronj..ri(. or l"r,.,ni:.i. t.i.. ri. in Mioifller, or Jin any of Iheir agents (loud cheers). Tho Chairman Ihen said tho Conference would bo .ppy to receive remarks and suggeslione- Mr. Ii. Seott raid bediaagrecd with Mr. Alexander touching ilm scheme of compulsory emannipalion for tho loval Stalen, adv,:,ei.lein |!,al gentlumaii'a lel- De (llr. Scon) li.-heved Ire.idem Lincoln hud all Ibe Coralitulion allowed him lo do. If tho idem wcro to adopt Die polity recommended by Alexander he would bo overriding Ihe law, for he had no power to imrodu-.c enini.ul-.ory cman-'— in into tho loyal Stales (hear, hear). M. Victor ScbaUirr mo.cd the fcdlowtng re in ! "Tho General Commitlea adopts Iho Report of Executive., eipr.-.T.-s \i-. high sense of Iho vigorous id efficient manner in which lht> operations of the Society have boon carried on. observes wilh ihe doep- uatisfiiclion ihe cbarif in pntdio opinion upon Ihe , -stiom finding out ol ibo civil war in America, and requests tho Eiceutiv,' Committee to continue in tho discharge of their duties until it shall bo deemed expedient once mora lo call (ho General Committee together." ,ll« wisl.od r„,.linltv ,,, oipress bis Con- -co wVh the objects ol tl,'- Society. It was of .----ca Ihat England Bhould hhow jrih. Ho hoped that slavery icd thniu;hout America, for he lb- bir-bcS r, WZl Icoplnli t'... olive i.oi .,.11, io .J..I1IIH. mn'SSi'ttoS" Thoy at once li J lu.l ,iiUn.lllMI[l(M.,.lS ! n'm." ;ii.V',i.j ,iM. -.,'.. ... |.,,i.irh..-.Mo "'"J;';; ',".^ ,}*^ lucveVy'lrii-tl'l'/'l - r.nllyo., ned. ' oi vnilKiit lor Mi- ,i|.].e'.. men ol mlehi,:..-, .in.l f -, pr..-u.i.i 5' ot in lt>. ir . ..In.-: Uor7o'f Vl,r^"l''n. n (he iletioMlllno ...Dili i boundary but :,;;;;; ;;.,,, oi eeoni;m.n..d«docinr . free ninn, free by virtue of Ihe proclni Ifpo'vor or law liy which s man btl /..' 'II.M U V^ e-' [!',?VreJ 'il .0 "^i1," stabiisbed, and when iho people of a Stale bad lo leirrmine whothcr or not slavery ehou' IbeSoulhrrnohivulry pa-oj.,1 iwer tho peaceable citi- r Ibo boundary to ovorpo' n ol the North [l [obeen.]. 3, y should ejtiat ther ,.„ [loud cbi ,. [cheerai. Would ho worn hero [cheers]. Tho negro ia right although, Ihe body of John Bran ides the uiuio-pber North b ills, Iho Garibaldi at buck the Glibuot Then the Slav «re lorlknov ^^volJautar! ierlodrr^"llm.^ l |i°c B nT nor, again. If Judo 100 wilb the oatablisl a that it will do- :?;;; '.' "i''i,: *. the ck Clion of live Memboro of Congress who considered nnti-slavery men, by 8,O0l> votom ol * Orleans and Die vicinity, ihe prooc-cdingi of (bo i, Ibe virtual abolition of ulawry in West V a, ibo election of an tSmnnelnalloa Governor .. iwnrf, the appoi ni merit of mi U.-uanoipniioni-' S. Senator from Maryland—theso and many oil b) the Northern sympa(hi;.T.-i with iho Slave P.nc Thu eolisimeota of iho Unionists of Die j,.c,,l Stales bate not ceased > amalionot tbo l'naidi n.mi-jiie ihan uirer. It ia well known Ibat Ibe numerous era in (bo seceded Stales, in large m to nine.I lojat to ho Union, and s launch ""my have consequently bc-ou "): Mr. Robert Fer-u-ou. ul Lerliste, in seconding tho noiion, eaid Ihe Society hsd a re n [.reduced a saln- nry etleet on the public opinion ..i the country. Qo :on:idered (hey note groiitlv indclnwl (o Ibo work- up classea lor Ihe correct views Ihny entertained egarding the atruggle, and for lh.; firm manner it which they bad maintained (htm (loud cheers). Tho Rav. Dr. Burn* said he cordially agreed with ha sentiments of the previous speaker. Hu hod dccii much interested by the Report, ond ho hoped ;hal auecets inigbl attend tho operations ot '*-" " llr. William Shaen ngrecd wilb Mr. Scott in think- ing that Mr. Ale.tmi b.-r. in roec,iiim..-n>ling compulsory ;mnncipnlion foribelo.al Siaiea. bud unlirel '- apprehended ibo nature ot President Lincoln btildional position. 'Ibe l"f .--ul.nit had by hi shown his sincerity in behalf of einauiipvio Professor Bee,-ly commended Iho Sociely fcr Ihe livily it had di-plavel, and boro testimony to ibe deep interest ibe working eln-sesdiaplayed in behalf Henry Browne remarked that win mot grcnt efforts would no doubt b ever,'that ilie TrocfeTv"I.ad .hmo uio-.h lo increase .(To difEeultios ol am- ed...n.s which might be made. Mr. Edmond Benles -aid iho Sociely was success- fully accomplishing ibe purp.s.s for which it had been established, lis object was not only to vindi- cate Iho honor nnd consistency of our country ngainst roisrepresonlaiion. Imt nl.-n lo support the Emancipn- ii™ ].ohoy which ['resident Lincoln had adopted. Thoy bad been told that tho North waa fighiing for empire., and the South for independence; but Ibo rfjjrls of Iho Society had served to show that tho South una fighting for slavery, nnd iho North to put it down (cheers). Mr. J. MCariby -aid Ibu; strong parliamentary iLttnoscc would be used in favor of recognizing tho ni. nci pa lien pro> ..„.(„] :l per. and Virginia, and iheir uiimb.r hai been gcently diminished. Tet enough of them remain to swell ranks of tho EuianoipMiiini~l and Frvn Slato ty which is now organiiing ia all iho slsvoSiatcs. a inlerening to ohnorvc that ihe Cermnu L-iihi ran rgy, unliko Iho clergy of most ol ihe oibcr churches, have like-wife remained true ftnlislavory men. We Dnd in a Luihernn L-hunli paper nn inte. resting letter from (bo Rei. Mr. Esjgars, the pastor, of Iho Gorman Lutheran congregntion in Natnvilte, on ibis mlucct, which, coming Ir. i man who has ' ' Nashvillu from ihe firui beginning nf tho dencaV" M^Eg^rs^riles: ;«.: lor iho boa lUiy y, io >huo In lUcye 10 nccoin|ill.li In ("h out of ihe qe ed, and the very loi ongreEutlon, Iho113 Co'v'i'lo^ ,^ o of thoao Slates in which, it. ISfiil. indiilaie of tho Republican party, ow, there are resident citi'.eii'i who publicly mine at " abolilion of slavery is a duty," and ihnt " ihcro ill benoreluru of pence and prosperiiy until (ho foul spot of slavery is wiped out." Wo record ibis progress of polilic opinion as one of (ho eignilio.n.i „:™„ „i .i.„ ,: iKlune. nee tha uJt,i.c»m1oii.ywlil Ucoln. OalBiJOtc Esi'-oo iwV,cr ofPteiidcn 10 tiirl-ie.-! en. 1. Ipilluu of htl J- ." -' <'. J.. Li i.l -l-'-.ujry. ,1c ',-.?'*'% Ill" j'.'1 ••:. ".!-!• :< - ••'• ! ;;.!>. \- - - ... .id.-.: ,1.!!., Ir.nu Mr, W. Barnnr Eli, ar.d tea Rev. CUaries Stovel, iho rcsoluti, is iinauiJiJuslj adopted, lind tho Cmbrencc I, i.a'td with (he ordinai-i cciiipliment tu Ibu Cha NATURAL AS LIFE. remarkable fact that while (I a, ther in the N'orlb or 11. tho .10111b. vohemoolly hernia McClollau is our man—lhal wo have nobody worth a thought, isn't it ki.nl <.l them to keep u well a.lviyod ou that vilal poiotl Tha Herald and oilier BuymourilO orgnna a lime siuco mnde a great ado over » bisiory ul peninsular campaign by a Prusisi preted Mol'lollaii a gr.-a't General ofiicTir, which REAQTIOX IN ENGLAND. e liitlu ofeai \ slavery by judicial process. ,-alid (or Ihe lime being ils legal con- v™ mil be i.lwa.s Irec. Withr.gard .Itienn applicable 10 iho case Judge ibe |,.lb, wing passage Irom Vatiel, civil w 10 fore •aki, 01 of the Northe it slavery. M ,{ ho thioka that bia neighbore could sur 1 Lo tins any oilier ol.jer.1 in viow oiccpl id'niL' E'lrop.. with bno words." Such m\„«,Z,& ..-.fc »M,p.»l.bi,. lore untost a more wicked libel never „r.rd (cheers). Now, Mr, Caasiui Clay my foolish Diinga alioin (his country ,,, rl word or iwonboul his hiotor. iu'K.oniuckv—a slave State. Wh v England to bp educated ho looked aln and t once between (hat con back 10 his ownctatc hudo tbore'. When bo si one eidu of the Ohio mar on the other side eftw desoli .„ I,iiii=elf. I will see if I 01 ao far as 1 am concerned and ho cu -laee- ho had (cheers). And what Ho wcnl about Honlucki the most place in America, and witbbis life leelured again Kentucky;^ lificenl eullivi He adiff it did tho 1 e blacl gainst the white mnn [hear] eolared 10 be til" slave, the p.epci.j, u»™.- ihe while man. Ho was dc.-lnreil 1.. bo na to ua any movable property which the white man pos'C.-sed. Il was decided lhal Ilia while man had iho now, 1.1 lake the '.lack into any c-taie, pleased, and lo invuko ibo power of tho Omtcd Stales to preserve Dial chattel property lo biui [hearl. Then (bo N"erU, was brought face to laee wT.hVe monster *W; [el,...). The Free Sod .rose—President Lincoln was eleeled-aud ion was a pledge lhal the Iree soil of tha United Stnlea would never bo contaminated by [cheers]. It was a pledge that the e rM and v. Ci—Iho rofug uldm uid 1 t spot ,-cd thai wo may bo obllfitd, lr nt .^liine illld I...' llio la CH'-iIll, urRiDg them 10 fflvo to a prominent ond suinibl is lorrlcei; ond they u :l.,|llk',l H.lfli.t I..WI. .-..-. LI.ll|..U.:.l,!-l,I Itit.,) Kill ,|.4.,I(U-I.U '.ere 'l-l'-l Id. e-1 IO eO ri.i luell lili-l li-ltf--J ivorkinwhtcU Die i-.fumili.-e .'OM.nl lloportoiil asslsl- ,,.,-r irelll tie- Lo J.'ll ...01,1,1111. ol -.tn, [wo.101,Co .-.'I ".i,-;.ri.:„,i Jin-mrs. ,iliemro U nl.-.l J i.00 e-uuk.1 of cacti ud- dr; ;>lollieir .lo-llir-.l.r.n., .. nt.-j.it ei|.ci.i; ... Ill" -l-.i.ii. ral 1 At icked i 1, Hack.-. him, tbr.e of whom he killed, and bo « left for dead in bis Icctureroom. This man, n bus emancipate! overt slave uf hie, who has bi cut lo i,i> c-o for the mike of cmantipatieii. is the n: Voeut whom ..or gnat paper (a cry of" The Tim. and biases) says : " Casslus Ulay is [cheers]. If Should! I'ke the -ectpiuu .io..11, passed by flame „ur.-ouu.l".l wilt, D.e lire el lieedoui and Jell tin ,n.elf t„ death Kbcr-). Then came the prod. lion by which lWidcnt Lincoln pledged bimse lo the .-hu.,',. that l.r that pr,-.cl ition ho freea the slaves in (ho Stares in which bo baa no power, and doca not freo tbem in Ibe states over which be has power, I aay thin wb. re- I'roai.l.-nl Lincoln baa the power by tho rights of war he emancipates tho slaves; bul where the Stales an., loyal he has not iho power, nnd docs not emancipate them. Any one can sec (he pith of Iho proposition lie makes. He -.ropose. (hai iho slaves of tho rebid Males shall bo luiin.ipated by force, and that tho slaves of the „yal States shall he email, ipalcd by compentalion cheerai We arc told lhal 11ns jiruoliini.Hi.m means "lothing hill it is at Ihe same time „aid lllftt it ia the „sii,..iraio.ii of a servile wnr—that Ihe ulavca will ito <ft furusa and cut their mimiers' Diroats and in vuly woaraeinitUd to say, " '..cntlemen, by which .ieTwillyouslandT" [Cheera.l THE PROCLAMATION IN CANADA. DiGLOJiL pnpors in ibis city ropentacHy assert 11 icti of high position 3 and politics. Ihe resoluilonB and apeeebes referred almost exclusively ibis country, u»d eepe.iall; la the condition and ospeotd ot slavery 111 iho rebel Slates ua nllceled by - proclamali- PfOi.CsinieVs lcciure ns especially c ihs puhllo mind us 10 iho teal cauiei ol 10 salary every fropsnlal render ihnt tti« wir betneOQ ihe North sad tho c until J.ooe copies of the (ouriti edlilo polillcsilon, and ihey propose xo bcelo ouiioj tboiii l.y iei.Ju.K a oopi 10 over. lueou They havopri.ncl J chjo coles, u.eobeol iteccli 01 Sj-JtlolJ,, .11.J in „i.iii of Slra. Siuwe's address to ltd iw» topic* of Mr. 1711k.'. psmphlcl PwdruTifiQW, oud VW> copies of p.i ;, , , ..,.„. le 11-10,Ilm1. llir.i 5rtssl£*ood pfu'Jlmhil JpuraeH-.e a,,,-., ui.j nicies ol tended lu lllustr nelly r.th. lered lo tho S IXDJISB of this Tha Tribune, bynoiiea bo bvgones, aad to firant ibein their own or to ft similar eB«ct, if the toofederalei would ip iheir ellorla for a sepsrnlo political exist- ir." Mr. Webb further add-, ibat the identi- cal TVi&uaseonluininglbii proposition! dminintralion nnd " the Radicals " for nut him as ihoy ought. This European offi. lot waa iriumpbuully reprimod hero aa i whole controversy. Its author, wo now might fTitm tenia in <hc rei-t array I— mllli'rm'g'pa'n'i-'an' ol' 'I'^'w.-.KuvLZn^liiaBtt*,., We find lbs followiug paragraph in Th: Express elllii.g II office of ft London newspaper, where n may bo doubts the assertion. II thoy have London, wo are not surprised ir Ibo of the c. If wo bad! horo we should make precisely Ibe sumo disposition [ it—perhaps have it pained and glased for ils bol- ter preservation. It would be a greater curiosity here even than in London. Mr. Richard D. Webb is n man of great intelli- gence, ia specially eonver-ant with American Hllsirs and, being himself an editor, would bo presumed U on something of the leading journals ol ibis coon . That he should huva been p.-re led to believe absurd a story aa this is only to be t. plained by (be laet lhal bo. widi many other of the old Anti- Slavery people of Great Britain, had no heller de- ' -Se want of sympathy that has hitherto ng tbem for our K'ent and final slruggh Ihnogln h imiigi.o ,.|,a ,11, „..,,[ I,. Ml;., 1 do that Mr. Lini .y (bill AH. 1.1 ... . thai bis proolfto ol iho highest order of literary morn nor I ove. 'iia policy is one thai w.- mjg&l entirel ee. I admit lhal Mr. Lincoln is a rai eplilter, a bargee, an Bttomey. But, gentlemen, lbs -il-split. of b and tho tone of both wua friendly Ibe republic und hopeful of its future. be Chainnaa, Die lev Dr. Willis, stated Ibat tho eetiui- hud been delerri-d in order 10 welcome. too ,roolam«iion, nnd plftinly declared thai whatever might bo tbo result of the pending slregglu, their svinpathies were due to the National cause whose triumph insured ihe deairu.ioin ol slavery. Tho Rev. Dr. Burns, who moved tin) tiral resolution, spoke In and cordially expressed hia wishes for ihe Northern armies, si iiuporliint epeecb of Ibe meet made by the Hon. George^ Brown, widely ki if.ll/ kaowlcdgo nnd in Loud cheers. J Ibo heart of c ;mnncipation, though ber v carrying on stoutly ft war of une v.uipled magnitude Btiged to tho utmost of bis power in rccoiictlinu laws of bis country wilh Die laws ol God |. beer, Mr. BelcsfonI Hope, a gentleman ol large t.-ligo.u- profesaions.and the founder ot missionary instil u lions, baa eaid it ia a melancholy spectacle that Mr. Lincoln Bhould have been elided by the voice cf threv million of fcuple, nod Doit bis infamy will exceed that of Sardiuispalus i.r Belshaiiar [a laugh]. Let ua sec in what consult.-' tin mluiuy of rrosideut Lincoln. It w«fl in ibe vear lKU .1 the ,|uesLion of the abobtion of slavery in tho Disirict of Colutn- niight Brft&il guvornment and ngt because he rvcogni; 1D1 profit hci. ilh tho Slave Po s aucb by ourselves, regards n largo porlic loCeliurZcifunTtFrri. l,i-,I..|, 01 Hie [..'l.li.ml.r cuiu|..ufoi, ' 10 tci,.l.ol, r-|,.|l.liltirdl.'l'.r Alnerie.lli |,i. . ,.., ,.... 111 <:•-- if [IOIUS.Ij. " in tnenbd ierr/« fir ...-.- moofi bfch We have not doubl that said officer is sfiii in ibo bel service—Ihat ho went to Europe in behalf uf eir cause—snd lhal he was on full paynud on full duty when bo wrote Iho " history " in queslion.- Trt- __roachmenla nnd the 1 bouods to limit and "iv-i.oV.-nr" 5lii,i'coi„."rj.:..,.u,ill.o,pe-:lsll. In i.u.ees b...c or)-elamis on ilitlr grntllude. ...... lJh.,.-.,H,lvr.a. Hie lirrl.il l.i Hi" Cei.f.lry ! ... ... 11,0 p I^,„i.n|-st.[,..-i.,„..i.ioi. Hi. ......on, moo „„.,.„ii.A ilepoialiu-i lo Mil upon ar. AJJ1U.. lor llio ,.V,,,.L. el prese.,ll,.r 10 mm u .....UCn,u. exBftrJJniJ He ' Lieu apprreinll'.ii ..< lue l(l,|r-rl.,l,l stop fll.leli tool '.f-n lat ,1 l.i 1.1. joi-n rone. lit. IHelr -ine-.,i hope Ilm. ttir Uiui.n weald .peeOll. lr- n.-.o... J <ni 1'" l..i-i^..l ,.-i,.j,,-,- '.''" '.. ,,'. ," ouu'i'-.lol .,..o.-..i j.uiiemeu who ilflllll tnuolniliecitesmof iliclr lellow-coiioirymen uod 1I10. hai) every reason to 1.., uu=il.J n.nti "Itn ihe r.. t..-,.i...... »Le: h .. .1. II.V-- -.Me j I,. I.eNi ' Sir A-l-mij aod^lhc M t Z'':'. '' i'.-' " Le-'."'. » ::!-!•.•' '' - mc.f su-Jderily u~ol.e 10 e^n-ciudo..,! rl Ihe ue; II.. lh. slavery.it ia not true as regatdi hitherto been jealoua of tbo . ascendaDcy of slavery, aud h they could within constitution control tbem. It has suited to keep this distinction 001 of sighl, and to misrepre- sent IV Tribune would etrengihen lhal position. Bul bettor spirit is t- gmaing to show ilself. Some inllucntinl journals ol NORTHERN TREASON UEISUKED noiHo/ttsain'iO/'eMe. hnlfof alllrei s is, iadeed, a, 1 laws-nay. lor not d hopes, and Il is wholly nnd heartily on the aids of Ibe nnd ngainat the rebellion,' and ii ia so recognises thu anti-shivery character hieh tbo war Las derived from the proclamation Wo aee," aaya this clear-sighled observer, " ibat if bo noli, v "f the prc.-rnl g-.iierniiism at Washington ' . .1.- - .. ' ... i...„,..„ .,1 -.. _,H 1... =._.,„, viver; and our Leans go a (he God ol Dailies that ids of Abraham Lincoln, Very decidedly on th lei and purpose of tl is as anli-oLavtiry as era! aympail.i n a side of the Soulb." Rut Ihi a miaconccpiion of Ihe ehnrai war, declaring that England cr, nod that the moment she :" niilorilie£"ter (net to which ibis rhUe.onr appeal to Emancipation Society, leredec of ieiulai pr proiliici.ilfriefiJs r'l'.eel'iOi b, I.!, -nil,, . I,r Vime-',t. r. I. II. I'ott, miods Loglaud and Ireland hai ,l,.r"i,..,.d ibe real character of the struggln in a wo are oDgngod. and have labored wilh seal energv to impress their views upon tho mine ' countrymen. The progr.^s ol evenm ftmon 11 last the rroclamutioii ol lh.- 1st of Jam aided Ihem in tbeir work, and the resnlti ol iheir labora are beginning 10 bo seen in iho muoat '1 arc beiug bell nil over Ihe kingdoi ividenlly going on in iho public mm f'ubii, opii'.ion lb and if, as thero n people of G bend (ho ala(o of establishment of He- „-'..mm.n, iJ *l "; l ^'J 1 f. n ^ J;'J u"ourT the LrTi'"ii''go'i'-"ruui. ..t -ehniever they do will bo compelled lo cooform (0 their will. The his- lory of Eogiand is a bisiory of a sera:-.- of uruggl. between tha people as a whole and an aristocratic class. Tha revoluuon we are engaged in ia nothing more nor less than ih'ts, and it only needs that this he tboruuehl. underdood abusd 10 arouse on over- whelming feeling of aympathy for ibe North. bopo, the n thia country, and that the . defer,.: ivoil country JtJBy foul nnd willful slander- on our ud iutentionn, peraiatendy repeated, they have arrayed ngainsl ua our owa fellow-citixeoa, bound to ua by Die triple lies of oonaaoguinity, geo- graphical position find ccLuinereial interest. -- - w among us bo bate enough to forget nough i-"lru-t nn oligarchy of traitors Js. to civil liberty and human freedom, nlea from home find friends, for the de- ^ -..fety of all, wo long lor the liaie when gentlo peace shall again spread l.er wings over our land- bul we know no such blessing is possible while tho unjust and arbiirsry power of tho rebel eaders contronls and threatens ua. Draft, as the fox, cruel aa ibe tiger, thoy cried, no coercion," while preparing to sinI like Ihey proposed to tight ua beca' ( ' wbipfivoto one; and now __ Dully- « thoy said 1 " ; and promisu igaio the Misiia- (ho po-er Ihey dn'vo bol'om io Sontoern people, and they .M.-r^u'l'lllVl^^i'..-^ ,LlebDlioL. '^X^^X^tJ^^ meTil^ will We need Uh.t England should be our fri.nd, for, s Ihey would iovodo and destroy us wit cy. Absolutely assured of Ibese things, 1 sid thai any one could llnnk of paft« on able, ihi mercy ama.--. 1 any inniemot onirCiVrable iiieu When Iho power r^'eramea. IbCT will be ?r gr^t ditBcull;- j* ,„„.. differences iban belt oplo of the Korthun. and Soutliero pre iflui] nr Ireland. Hoping the time may speedily 1 life n th*e of ths a Ol
Transcript
Page 1: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28

Jtoiml tankitVOL. XXIlI. NO. 42. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1863. WHOLE NO. 1,186/-'-

fly heard (loii.l cheers). Wo 1

SUtiottiU ^uti-flavmj ^tiiudatri.l^f^^ « about ..

[fanl"; bul since Dm same rutins! regards na cnn

i Hie only practical .--llnNs of tin- Jhv Inr rescuing ihi

slaved of intemperance, and for reclaiming lallei

i, nnd has InMv adduced tin' ISildn in oj[T" ,r

ery, to Icel Ihat " by il to bo dispraised is ni

wnt, philanthropic cunt. Bui of nil cant I bull

IMJBLIHHF.I) WEEKLY. ON 3AT0P.DAY.

rYMEKICJU, ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY,

PENNSYLVANIA ANTI-SLAVEHT EOC1ETY,

IDS Xorih-Taith Strut, PhttadtlpMa.

-..mlne-l ot the j.i |>or, should bo nddrossi

inclosing subscription*

ess Blfiiim ot tho pa

N»» Veiir.."

ny way 10,l,lr.--..l.

5c!octioii3.

which ,1

wide

EXTRACTS FROM THE SPEECHES,

Lct ub recollect ibat President Lincoln, to far

rom sharing ll.o s.inguinsry feeling exhibited by

iolUi-eon Duvis, when In' bud learned of iho que s-

innnblc dcalli of only nun rebel, iuimi'dinlcly issued

irdcrs lo his Generals to cNeonte none wnhoot firsi

.ivi,,^ biw infer ti-.-n [loud H..W.). Tun guiltless

ih.crs l,ni.. 1...-. ii <:nl '.-If probably in tho

infedc

„t llie'l're. ,„l of D„

,fier it« own lyi

spread nod diinf'cru'j'i cant "i selfishness nnd irro-

bgion (bciii-, bear). Deterred by no Bitch tnual*. iib

these, wo are resolved lo nl'hrm throughout ibo land

Ihe proposition wilh which I started—ibat ft war,

the horror* of which wo nil lumenl. having broken

out between the Northern anil tin Southern Stnlee,

the eympuihies of free England roust bo with llio

Norlh rather Ihnn wilb 1 1m ticuili, because, with tbo

auceefs of lbs Norlb, rnlher (bun with lluit ol ibo

South is idcnlilicd (bo great cause of negro cmnnci-

pntion Inpplnuso). And in affirming thin no wish

Ten- simple principles >.l,i. h .-.,iitl.orn sympnihirerii

are apt to, ovr-rW.b L"' which should be regarded

iih Hxi.miiili. in all a-, .I.- of ra.glislimon. Those

o\''oi,o

|,

tX,.'.

1

.l' n ;['f.«n". - ("' d^eli upon (bo face of

i\ . ii,. i, , ri il,. auction block and Teel

nd bin. I llirin over lo Die Ijigbe.^l bid-

gold . Itllo l-hnme I)— ibnl it ia nn

a deny lo a. woman ibo rights of

annuity (hear)—Lbm it is an nbomi-

y lo declare ihnt a colored mfin bus

ib u mhlrn ninn need respect (hear,

i flog ft naked

period of nearly tbirti years has olapted. It ia lbm

Pardnnapalus win. hu-. r.j.ul .1 i-lii>'er.. from ihe lur-

rilorc -jpeeialK RiH.-.'t (-. lliel .>n K refaoftbu Uniled

SihIos [bear, hi'Jir). cinw lS.'d ilio quoaKon hiu

been nl iastiii wb-iher nlaverv obould eMend ovor

llie lorritoriesofDi. ' i.ii, I i'uiifs wliieb nro not yrt

formid inio nntusil t....Hil. -nl StnU'S. Tliia Delsbonat

has been gniliy of llio infnmv of oxeluding flavery

from all Ow n-rriloriei [ulH-or*] .Again, ibc quca

.ion ofenncedii.g (lie riglit nf noareh for (l,o «,ip|uea-

Honoflboelnvolraib. ba. bee n at .-n.-nr.ro 1S23

botneen America, and England, and Mr. Lincoln has

commilliid il" ii.fnuit of criming aueb cone. aaiODa

fenecml. Wo bIh br.d Dial Mr. Lincoln baa com-

milled the infmx -f prop.-ng >o eo(i.|-.i.-ato Die

loynl ilnvtholdem lor ll.o loss of their properly mhlavoa. but bo linen bia right to -

on ibu slaves of »»c

iivornnienl [hear, he.

n [itjiplausv].

. ..nij...ii«

Willi bia „

., ft., II,.:,flhaG« noralCon

. ,. JUld add myIhillofolli.re, i.. bh.iv .Hjinpalby nllh (bo

N'orlb in ibis contest, nnd 1 tny ihnt aim has br~"

lioaping coala of fin. upon our bead by hoc no

a I'onfjronco of Ibo niomborueo of 111" Kiii.ineipnli..n K.-...J-

Ily was bold t i.-?(er.|..v afternoon nl Die Wliiilingi.ni

Club. Mr. William E«-una, Ibo Chnlrmlo of Iho ioci-

*!y, oreaided, and iimnn; iln> j.'. -i.i'l, -iniit present woroM, Victor Sediffileher, Under Minister of Marin,, in

.nl Government ; (be lion Judge

Birj-tbo bo i. nnngfir

"mmii,-' berly lo three mill

Ihnt whic

Ibo prate lion of tbo govo

brin^trlntoior^ cl"n™ ioomud ""'I'rr

(ln-.ir mna era— Lbey Could no doeoiftlieyd

Unarmed.,, wild rilkis in I

n women and cbildron, to (he i

lall be murdered by thcee whoso

nre linked wilb E tame onerp,

Vo.ir wel omo of that aiaten ..„. pr..i.= tonity nnd God

! least,. wbut

drwory

..„.n,). Ne .

i conclusion, ia ibis— that If you nr» per-

i« b mere error, fl lliorougb de]uti..n ngair.sl

I ihcae alnvcboklerB— if lbey

i e'urr .y

»;iy, (;.[!

(" No,frionds,

Bundedovidonuc to tuppoae ttj

— will mnnumit Iheir slaves, then you ninB in tboso principleB nnd givs thi

• i.roughoul tbo land, and I bough no are m.

.a few, and nobody (laughter and cheers)-

—still, if yon see iho picWs Hand to thei

would ibink Ihcro waa an army bobind-

inigbt bo an nnny of 500,000 behind—andtlomen. \uu are Die piekel.i (f a grcKl Emnrmy in this eounrr. (loud cliesra). Tbtac nro m]

principles ou Die ^uKieit. .>... I [ruin what 1 have heuri

,*ii say (Oiiighi, 1 Cellevo in.-;•— J"—- >'»—)

if dJit "re. ^v them round lb, land, let tbem hayi

suoli an echo nil' D.r....;ii tbu eouniry ibotnomnnii

bis apnaea tan mi «»)' bmaer ibat Knglnr.d is il

favorlof slavery (ebeer,). _No n„l lo ibo.yranoy n

tbo t)ave- wner of (bo toudi (hear, boa )N,

allianco wilb ib" nnirdei"i^ psdiey of Ur. Jeflereo.

Davw (hear, hear). No Alabaman to prey upon

American commeree, for liieir Georg* Qnsnold

'out 10 feed our slarvii.g .i|...Tal»ea (Iks- l,.-:-.:j.

nar wiihtbe L'.nte.l t'.ui-a l>v tbo eUvuholdet.

"™-.lur. reciFniu,n No l,.,tdo mediation which

„ l ,.„l, s„r,.,r n,i,.--,,.(i.U .:;. ...

(cheers). No jealous nnd fj.ii.iu. ".-Ii 10 I

.' 1

j 'mpover.te J. a

.n(on (pto.raci

handkerchief*).

•)—ihat il ia an abomina-

[.on lo line, imprison, llos. nod on ft ropetitlon of Iho

act bang n man lor leiiehing sn..lh..T mini lo rend

it... UiUI^ (hear, hern)— that it is hideous bias-

iiliemy lo cite (bat Bible of a God of lovo in defenco

of auoh ftbominftliona (hear, beer)—Ibat a confcdll-

raoy of rnun figbtii,;; in order iq commit these nbomi-

naiion- hbould l>.- riigrtnli'd an iTicngul in a porlen-

(c.ub piracy rniber (ban in l.-giiiniaio wnrfate (cheers)

—ihnt tbo conscience nnd heart of freu England can

et.rner-an.no Die- ricTit J .main and extend tbese

nbouiinationa (cheers)—and, lastly, na Iho rccogni-

saJur. ibat lb" 1 -inliy of t.r.-at Britain lontbea the

very idea of »u n an indignity being odered 10 Ibe

Royal Lady wo d. light to von. rate, as that ber pure,

nly nnd nnlniml baud, wl.i.li wields only Iho

f uf bio our the free, should ever bo eoniiiuii-

by the kisa of noynicy flK :,ir, e l Civilil

ueo applause.)

a a calumny lo any that ibo founder! at the

, mi Iv.-puUie iij.h.l.l Die print i|.l..i ,,r slavery

wo left ibeni, though il may be regis tied thai

Ihcy did not take fileps I'.r its gradual abolition' -- hoar). But then no idea mil entertained

1

of

l,g e-ll-.l. i-.-l to any ritnlea in i. hieh it did not

t lime cviJt. 'Ihev ilmujjbt (hey had ft tumor

. __il with which, if let alone, would disappear

nnd bo absorbed ; but lbey were wrong. They bad

to deal with n malignant cancer that must either

ow or bo eilirpatod (hear, bear). The longer it

i* left untitirpnt.-J Iho greater mult ho Ihn pain

...iho body politic out of ivl.i.li it is cut (bear.Iiear).

Slaver) i? etaciitinlly a ivn-l. tnl m w.-N aa_a wiekid

slaves uoeduciiieil ibecauss if tlicy wero educnled,

[l,r.y could not live io their neighborhood (hear,

heat). They aro compelled, for fbc porpcie of nink-

iheir labor profitable. (0 collect them io large

sea uodec a an. nil numbur of overseer!. Ibis

eihausia ihn aoil nnd lbey niusl go wcsiward and

.utbward, carrying ll.vir pollui.nn villi ibein

..cry 1I...-I e...-v (.)l>.>: il.K.I""! Till- »lil

,...:i- :._.!.. Il »l»v..f» tio alluwud to spreadAftir tbc

has been

advocated by ionic ot its most redoubtable cbitro-

pions in the Lniicd .- »! Mr. Howell Cobb,

Khoso ivork I have- hero, op -ni:n ol iho laborer liiui-

f If bocoioing eapilal in the hand-, of big master, nnd

if thoirinleroMt.i becoming in Ihii tuannor identical.

Now, then, is iho linio for you, worltin;; men, rjueh

lids ul iter', 10 .'<pn'-e lour sympaD.y nitli

mlborn SlBtee [cheers and hiugbter]. Remorn-

ber this, however, when jon ecu such principles put

forth : that even- la-h on Die Lnck of a negro slave

the hostility

tipnlo (eh.e

xe}—bis Cabioi

) for

nil •

.r.)

,„.» lam

lu r then

(bear, bear). My Ifli

United Blal '

religion and

I ri'l.' Si' e.:. I V pcii.o. i rue >«"",„",, (r wed clieors). The media-

Englund, and Lurojw. lo |.r...in,.ie

-owners for Die h.s= "1" Ibcir .Uves

jnciplu is—Eogbud and Ibo

iends and allies in promoting

r, ihraughout n» (ha world (cheorh).

Enih tbo people and tho govoromont ate an deadly

i. I H.-ainal ibo fr..cloiii ...I Die human r»m as

„„':,„. ,.crliv..i..i, Die ia.-.. ol th.seiirjh (cln

,,, ,,,,ur,e,n „ mee.il- ,! '^"^ '^™J*[

Z-fXlten™ any'friend of^'^ °'»>

,-,„„ .-,„ ,.-!, 1,.,,1-r 11,..t.:. «b.j .-, nut |.l.-l^..| ..i.-i

.

",", „,„ ,„ t|,nm. i a*k tbem io name mio

Ik.ct^.t.c Mt.^1- coml,. rn l-onfe.leiate ftate, .

,|„. flirt- r.t iho earth for "a ihuinsnd yearn (ch.

|,„,-,,r. ihis .ImoriMin content .mo Anienoau has

almocl.nti.l 1 think more nnjt.Mli J.-i!l .y than

iiDj.-r ui'in in Iho L'niied r-iateiit mi'l Dua nbu.

Jui.-ri. -inn l"- " ponmu of the prena of this toi

,,,-, ...,,,(„ ]',.r'lLr I. liter ieeling in America og

Eii.-lmrl. In ihei-amc Tina "rliclo from wh..S >n .-n.i iimt now I Dull thia alillemunl i

'

a people is n pre

of earing about ilnvor)*. Air. Cajstua Clay

rnid. they r

, warned ftla .

sllanily aeaii.sl thei

e uny. There wasihs'tiouib eoleuii.ly pledged

d by which it wae agreed lln

hbould not eaist beyond n ceri

ill tbo Southern* eaid Ibot eh

t last lbey bad t

with audi moderation .._ .

by President Lincoln. Qo has shrunk from ap.

pealing lo the pa-iiion* of Die|

pie ;but nut ao the

other aide. Piission has Leon Die very thing which

Mr. Jcueraon Davis baa appealed to in every act of

hia government [hear, hem |Co in p nro Mr. Lincoln *

proehiniation mil, that of -Mr. Davis, of which you

have heart! to-night, which ibriiiloDa Iho tfciermina-

of tho whole negro race b.oaupo ihoir freedom

been proniiaed hy the I'roiidcnt [heiir. hoiirj-

,1 trust there nro many in ihis meeting "ho

nj. to tho working clnafca. H bat- Ion- been my

a to bo numbered among lli.we el-i-i.es, anil I

rim, Pt,il-i of ua

betwtencourage ihe spread of opprcesioa on ibe

one class—to awalion loin r loolings on Ibe part oi

Ibe other [cheers]. I any Ihnt nothing hut the aboli-"

of slavery in all its forma—and thero arc many

.r which it lurks yet under our own Fueial syn-

— n..lliing but that can truly reconcile Die mlcr-

of the i-tuploior nnd empl..yeil [applause]. In

naiuo of b-iiti, tbon, I call upon you. no longer io

y, but in Solemn truth, lo osprcoa your hearty

aympathy Tilth Iho North ia this alrugglo [loud ap-

plaueol, ____^^_^^_OliCE FHEE, ALWA I'S FREE.

E recent decision in a slave ca=o at St. f.ouia is

__ ..jportant that il ia worth while to understand il

fully, and tbo prin:iplos involved ii

Williams, a neyro. rnii lirooghl btfi

criminal conn to be tried lor grand larceny nuei too-".led. Tho law ol Missouri poniehts n slave guilly

tbi-i crime by "hipping, tun to dCood (lurty-nino

_..ipoa, while the fr.r mini id punished by iinpnson-

ciilpiil bol'.-.n- proi.oimciug senteiire. L, .!.. « a-»

brought ahowing Ibat Wdlimn-. win.-, real naniC ia

UuuglftB, was three months ngo Iho stow of Major

Tarailhill of Ibe rebel army. The counsel for Die

oi ed Ibat bo wan not a free man bet UM (I.- I mr

Shvo an elaborate decision, pii.ting largely troiu thi

ogal authorities. He reached this coneluaion ;

From tbo hen )udj;mciit wbl-'- ' " J

tho government nnd tho Union. ,>„ch a speech will

eifrt a helpfol inilu.ti.-.; in l.n.i.il.i and Great Drltain

alike- Followed as il was by others equally decided

in sxprcstion from men of publio character and posi-

tioi. it mid they are an unmistakable declaration of

thi favorable change which Die kinnncipallon procla-

mation ia producing in our relations abioad.— THb.

Iho French Provii

Mnrsball. ofNov!rmicrai-L-i™ ; Prof. Bees

for jiiil.lie raeeiliim,Die t:.;nii,tli.-iii,,ri «Joel, It will "bo so,,,

.i'..l nrr.i.,.-.

.1 i,;: .,i ..i,i

i-1 . Will I-

II yet grow ul of our

ntef r.-a! I'.-,!

o, but that tho nlwa,iremc. let, wi

,.!. Ovid,

I: u awakone.dor of the

H.at],,,,,

which (1

ror.said before tbo in

. . J put bo would robt

..hieh Jin J appeared in The Times.1 il bad been ,n?inuateil that the I'uni

n.'Sr.

, Sir.

i. F. Selhr, Mr. W. Barnard, Rev. E.

J. II Wilr.,,, Mr. n. J. Slack, Rev, 11.

HA, Bar. D. Nimiuo, Rev. 1'. Gaat,lollon, ineumUnt of KUhurn, clo.

nun, in opening iho praceedinga, (iiiid

ii London were extremely glad lo seefrom Iho country ; and ho was turo

II be glad to know that tbo Society waasatisfaclory

Report of iho EseculiMr. Chesson, before reading Die report, said, loiters

regretting (bo inutility r.f ihe wriiera to bo preBenl,

nod [Bympulhiring cordially wilb Iho Sociely, hadbeen received from Mr. John -ninri Mill, Professor

NowiMii, Professor i in io.H, Mr. Edward Misll.Col.Solway.Mr. A. Travelyn, Mr. W. Onrgreaveo, llr.

Coninglism, M.P., Sir. Aleinnder, of Glasgow, clo.

Mr. Alsxauder, in hia letler, aaid, (he government ol"

President Lincoln hid d.-.i.o ovorything in iln poweresccptono, nnd that was to recommend to Congress

u measure, for tho eompulsorv nboliiion of slavery in

tho loyal Stales from nnd afler (soy) thu 1st of Jan-

uary iitil, on Ihe lermn ol toinpensalion embodiedMr. Cbcsson then readin tho i. rent j.r,-.l;iiuiiiiiii

tbo following Report

:

n go.-,.ronj..ri(. or l"r,.,ni:.i. t.i.. ri. in Mioifller, orJin any of Iheir agents (loud cheers).Tho Chairman Ihen said tho Conference would bo

.ppy to receive remarks and suggeslione-

Mr. Ii. Seott raid bediaagrecd with Mr. Alexandertouching ilm scheme of compulsory emannipalion for

tho loval Stalen, adv,:,ei.le t | in |!,al gentlumaii'a lel-

De (llr. Scon) li.-heved Ire.idem Lincoln hudall Ibe Cora litu lion allowed him lo do. If tho

idem wcro to adopt Die polity recommended by

Alexander he would bo overriding Ihe law, for

he had no power to imrodu-.c enini.ul-.ory cman-'—in into tho loyal Stales (hear, hear).

M. Victor ScbaUirr mo.cd the fcdlowtng re

in ! "Tho General Commit lea adopts Iho Report of, Executive., eipr.-.T.-s \i-. high sense of Iho vigorous

. id efficient manner in which lht> operations of the

Society have boon carried on. observes wilh ihe doep-' uatisfiiclion ihe cbarif in pntdio opinion upon Ihe

,-stiom finding out ol ibo civil war in America, and

requests tho Eiceutiv,' Committee to continue in tho

discharge of their duties until it shall bo deemedexpedient once mora lo call (ho General Committeetogether." ,ll« wisl.od r„,.linltv ,,, oipress bis Con-

-co wVh the objects ol tl,'- Society. It was of

.----ca Ihat England Bhould hhowjrih. Ho hoped that slavery

icd thniu;hout America, for he

lb- bir-bcS

r, WZl

Icoplnli

t'... olive i.oi

.,.11, io .J..I1IIH.

mn'SSi'ttoS" Thoy at once li J lu.l,iiUn.lllMI[l(M.,.lS !

n'm."i

;ii.V',i.j

,

,iM. -.,'.. ... |.,,i.irh..-.Mo

"'"J;';;

1',".^ ,}*^

lucveVy'lrii-tl'l'/'l-

r.nllyo.,

ned.'

oi vnilKiit lor Mi- ,i|.].e'..

men ol mlehi,:..-, .in.l f-, pr..-u.i.i I.. 5' ot in lt>. ir .

..In.-:

Uor7o'f Vl,r^"l''n.'-

n (he iletioMlllno

...Dili I

i boundary ; but

:,;;;;; ;;.,,, oi eeoni;m.n..d«docinr . i

free ninn, free by virtue of Ihe proclni

Ifpo'vor or law liy which s man btl

/..'I„

.

' '

' i . i, !. .I

i II .M•-

'l ' -

U

| '

i'

" V^ e-' i[!',?VreJ 'il

.0"^i 1

1,"

stabiisbed, and when iho people of a Stale bad lo

leirrmine whothcr or not slavery ehou'

IbeSoulhrrnohivulry— pa-oj.,1

iwer tho peaceable citi-r Ibo boundary to ovorpo'

n ol the North [l

„ [obeen.]. 3,

y should ejtiat ther

,.„ [loud cbi ,.

[cheerai. Would ho worn hero

[cheers]. Tho negro ia right

although, Ihe body of John Branides the uiuio-pber

North b

ills, Iho Garibaldi

at buck the Glibuot

Then the Slav «re

lorlknov

^^volJautar!

ierlodrr^"llm.^l

|i°c

BnT

nor, again. If Judo100 wilb the oatablisl

a that it

will do-

:?;;;

'.'"i''i,:

*. the ck Clion of live Memboro of Congress whoconsidered nnti-slavery men, by 8,O0l> votom ol

* Orleans and Die vicinity, ihe prooc-cdingi of (bo

i, Ibe virtual abolition of ulawry in West Va, ibo election of an tSmnnelnalloa Governor

.. iwnrf, the appoi ni merit of mi U.-uanoipniioni-'

S. Senator from Maryland— theso and many oil

b) the Northern sympa(hi;.T.-i with iho Slave P.ncThu eolisimeota of iho Unionists of Die j,.c,,l

Stales bate not ceased >

amalionot tbo l'naidin.mi-jiie ihan uirer.

It ia well known Ibat Ibe numerousera in (bo seceded Stales, in large mto nine. I lojat to I ho Union, and s launch

""my have consequently bc-ou

"):Mr. Robert Fer-u-ou. ul Lerliste, in seconding tho

noiion, eaid Ihe Society hsd a I re n .I [.reduced a saln-

nry etleet on the public opinion ..i the country. Qo:on:idered (hey note groiitlv indclnwl (o Ibo work-

up classea lor Ihe correct views Ihny entertained

egarding the atruggle, and for lh.; firm manner it

which they bad maintained (htm (loud cheers).

Tho Rav. Dr. Burn* said he cordially agreed with

ha sentiments of the previous speaker. Hu hod

dccii much interested by the Report, ond ho hoped

;hal auecets inigbl attend tho operations ot'*-" "

llr. William Shaen ngrecd wilb Mr. Scott in think-

ing that Mr. Ale.tmi b.-r. in roec,iiim..-n>ling compulsory

;mnncipnlion foribelo.al Siaiea. bud unlirel '-

apprehended ibo nature ot President Lincoln

btildional position. 'Ibe l"f .--ul.nit had by hi

shown his sincerity in behalf of einauiipvio

Professor Bee,-ly commended Iho Sociely fcr Ihe

livily it had di-plavel, and boro testimony to ibe

deep interest ibe working eln-sesdiaplayed in behalf

. Henry Browne remarked that win

mot grcnt efforts would no doubt b

ever, 'that ilie Troc feTv" I .ad .hmo uio-.h lo increase .(To

difEeultios ol am- ed...n.s which might be made.Mr. Edmond Benles -aid iho Sociely was success-

fully accomplishing ibe purp.s.s for which it had

been established, lis object was not only to vindi-

cate Iho honor nnd consistency of our country ngainst

roisrepresonlaiion. Imt nl.-n lo support the Emancipn-ii™ ].ohoy which ['resident Lincoln had adopted.

Thoy bad been told that tho North waa fighiing for

empire., and the South for independence; but Ibo

rfjjrls of Iho Society had served to show that tho

South una fighting for slavery, nnd iho North to put

it down (cheers).

Mr. J. MCariby -aid Ibu; strong parliamentary

iLttnoscc would be used in favor of recognizing tho

ni. nci pa lien pro>

..„.(„]

:l per.

and Virginia, and iheir uiimb.r hai been gcentlydiminished. Tet enough of them remain to swell

ranks of tho EuianoipMiiini~l and Frvn Slatoty which is now organiiing ia all iho slsvoSiatcs.

a inlerening to ohnorvc that ihe Cermnu L-iihi ranrgy, unliko Iho clergy of most ol ihe oibcr

churches, have like-wife remained true ftnlislavory

men. We Dnd in a Luihernn L-hunli paper nn inte.

resting letter from (bo Rei. Mr. Esjgars, the pastor,

of Iho Gorman Lutheran congregntion in Natnvilte,

on ibis mlucct, which, coming Ir. i man who has' ' Nashvillu from ihe firui beginning nf tho

dencaV" M^Eg^rs^riles:

;«.:

lor iho boa lUiy y,

io >huo In lUcye10 nccoin|ill.li In I

("h out of ihe qeed, and the very loi

ongreEutlon, I ho 113

Co'v'i'lo^1,^

o of thoao Slates in which, it. ISfiil.

indiilaie of tho Republican party,

ow, there are resident citi'.eii'i who publicly mineat " abolilion of slavery is a duty," and ihnt " ihcro

ill benoreluru of pence and prosperiiy until (ho

foul spot of slavery is wiped out." Wo record ibis

progress of polilic opinion as one of (ho eignilio.n.i

„:™„ „i .i.„ ,: iKlune.

nee tha

u Jt,i.c»m 1oii.ywlil

Ucoln. OalBiJOtcEsi'-oo iwV,cr ofPteiidcne» 10 tiirl-ie.-! en. 1.

Ipilluu of htl J-." -' <'. J.. Li i.l -l-'-.ujry. ,1c

',-.?'*'% Ill" j'.' 1 ••:. ".!-!• :< - ••'• ! ;;.!>.

\- - - ... I .id.-.: , 1.!!., Ir.nu Mr, W. Barnnr

Eli, ar.d tea Rev. CUaries Stovel, iho rcsoluti,

is iinauiJiJuslj adopted, lind tho Cmbrencc I,

i.a'td with (he ordinai-i cciiipliment tu Ibu Cha

NATURAL AS LIFE.

remarkable fact that while (I

a, ther

in the N'orlb or 11. tho .10111b. vohemoolly hernia 1

McClollau is our man— lhal wo have nobody

worth a thought, isn't it ki.nl <.l them to keep u

well a.lviyod ou that vilal poiotl1

Tha Herald and oilier BuymourilO orgnna a

lime siuco mnde a great ado over » bisiory ul

peninsular campaign by a Prusisi

preted Mol'lollaii a gr.-a't GeneralofiicTir, which

REAQTIOX IN ENGLAND.

e liitlu ofeai

\ slavery by judicial process.

,-alid (or Ihe lime being ils legal con-

v™ mil be i.lwa.s Irec. Withr.gard

.Itienn applicable 10 iho case Judge

ibe |,. lb, wing passage Irom Vatiel,

civil w 10 fore

•aki, 01

of the Nor the

it slavery. M,{ ho thioka that bia neighbore could sur

1 Lo tins any oilier ol.jer.1 in viow oiccpl

id'niL' E'lrop.. with bno words." Suchm\„«,Z,& ..-.fc »M,p.»l.bi,.

lore untost a more wicked libel never

„r.rd (cheers). Now, Mr, Caasiui Clay

my foolish Diinga alioin (his country

,,, rl word or iwonboul his hiotor.

iu'K.oniuckv—a slave State. Whv England to bp educated ho looked aln

and tonce between (hat con

back 10 his ownctatc

hudo tbore'. When bo si

one eidu of the Ohio mar

on the other side eftw desoli

.„ I,iiii=elf. I will see if I 01

ao far as 1 am concerned ; and ho cu

-laee- ho had (cheers). And what <

Ho wcnl about Honlucki . the most

place in America, and witbbis life

leelured again

Kentucky;^

lificenl eullivi

Headiff

it did

tho 1

e blaclgainst the white mnn [hear]

eolared 10 be til" slave, the p.epci.j, u»™.-ihe while man. Ho was dc.-lnreil 1.. bo na

to ua any movable property which the white

man pos'C.-sed. Il was decided lhal Ilia while man

had iho now, 1- 1.1 lake the '.lack into any c-taie,

pleased, and lo invuko ibo power of tho Omtcd

Stales to preserve Dial chattel property lo biui

[hearl. Then (bo N"erU, was brought face to laee

wT.hVe monster *W; [el,...). The Free Sod

.rose—President Lincoln was eleeled-aud

ion was a pledge lhal the Iree soil of tha

United Stnlea would never bo contaminated by

[cheers]. It was a pledge that the e r ,.M

and v.

Ci— Iho rofug

uldmuid 1

t spot

,-cd thai wo may bo obllfitd, lr nt

.^liine illld I...' llio la CH'-iIll, t

urRiDg them 10 fflvo to

1 a prominent ond suinibl

is lorrlcei; ond they u

:l.,|llk',l H.lfli.t I..WI. .-..-. LI. .Ill|..U.:.l,!-l,I I tit.,) Kill

,|.4.,I(U-I.U '.ere 'l-l'-l Id. e-1 IO eO ri.i luell lili-l li-ltf--J

ivorkinwhtcU Die i-.fumili.-e .'OM.nl lloportoiil asslsl-

,,.,-r irelll tie- Lo J.'ll ...01,1,1111. ol I -.tn, [wo .101, Co .-.'I

".i,-;.ri.:„,i Jin-mrs. ,iliemro U nl.-.l J i.00 e-uuk.1 of cacti ud-

dr; ;>lollieir .lo-llir-.l.r.n., .. nt.-j.it ei|.ci.i; ... Ill" -l-.i.ii.

ral 1 Aticked i

1, Hack.-. I him, tbr.e of whom he killed, and bo «

left for dead in bis Icctureroom. This man, n

bus emancipate! overt slave uf hie, who has bi

cut lo i,i> c-o for the mike of cmantipatieii. is the n:

Voeut whom ..or gnat paper (a cry of" The Tim.

and biases) says : " Casslus Ulay is

[cheers]. If

Should! I'ke the -ectpiuu .io..11, passed by flame

„ur.-ouu.l".l wilt, D.e lire el lieedoui and Jell tin

,n.elf t„ death Kbcr-). Then came the prod.

lion by which lWidcnt Lincoln pledged bimse

lo the .-hu.,',. that l.r that pr,-.cl ition ho freea the

slaves in (ho Stares in which bo baa no power, and

doca not freo tbem in Ibe states over which be has

power, I aay thin wb. re- I'roai.l.-nl Lincoln baa the

power by tho rights of war he emancipates tho

slaves; bul where the Stales an., loyal he has not

iho power, nnd docs not emancipate them. Any one

can sec (he pith of Iho proposition lie makes. He

-.ropose. (hai iho slaves of tho rebid Males shall bo

luiin.ipated by force, and that tho slaves of the

„yal States shall he email, ipalcd by compentalion

cheerai We arc told lhal 11ns jiruoliini.Hi.m means

"lothing hill it is at Ihe same time „aid lllftt it ia the

„sii,..iraio.ii of a servile wnr— that Ihe ulavca will

ito <ft furusa and cut their mimiers' Diroats;and in

vuly woaraeinitUd to say, " '..cntlemen, by which

.ieTwillyouslandT" [Cheera.l

THE PROCLAMATION IN CANADA.

DiGLOJiL pnpors in ibis city ropentacHy assert 11

icti of high position

3 and politics. Ihe

resoluilonB and apeeebes referred almost exclusively

ibis country, u»d eepe.iall; la the condition and

ospeotd ot slavery 111 iho rebel Slates ua nllceled by

- proclamali-

PfOi.CsinieVs lcciure ns especially c

ihs puhllo mind us 10 iho teal cauiei ol

10 salary every fropsnlal render ihnt 1

tti« wir betneOQ ihe North sad tho

c until J.ooe copies of the (ouriti edlilo

polillcsilon, and ihey propose xo bceloouiioj tboiii l.y iei.Ju.K a oopi 10 over.

lueou They havopri.ncl J chjo coles,u.eobeol iteccli 01 Sj-JtlolJ,, .11.J in„i.iii of Slra. Siuwe's address to ltd

iw» topic* of Mr. 1711k.'. psmphlclPwdruTifiQW, oud VW> copies of p.i

;, , , ..,.„. le 11-10, Ilm 1. llir.i

5rtssl£*ood pfu'Jlmhil JpuraeH-.e

a,,,-., ui.j nicies ol tended lu lllustr

nelly 1

r.th.

lered lo tho S

IXDJISB of this11 Tha Tribune,

bynoiiea bo bvgones, aad to firant ibein their ownor to ft similar eB«ct, if the toofederalei would

ip iheir ellorla for a sepsrnlo political exist-

ir." ' Mr. Webb further add-, ibat the identi-

cal TVi&uaseonluininglbii proposition!

dminintralion nnd " the Radicals " for nut

him as ihoy ought. This European offi.

lot waa iriumpbuully reprimod hero aa

i whole controversy. Its author, wo nowmight fTitm tenia in <hc rei-t array I—

mllli'rm'g'pa'n'i-'an' ol' 'I'^'w.-.KuvLZn^liiaBtt*,., •

We find lbs followiug paragraph in Th: Express .-

elllii.g II

office of ft London newspaper, where n may bo

doubts the assertion. II thoy have

London, wo are not surprised

ir Ibo ;of the c. If wo bad!

horo we should make precisely Ibe sumo disposition

[ it—perhaps have it pained and glased for ils bol-

ter preservation. It would be a greater curiosity

here even than in London.

Mr. Richard D. Webb is n man of great intelli-

gence, ia specially eonver-ant with American Hllsirs

and, being himself an editor, would bo presumed U

on something of the leading journals ol ibis coon

. That he should huva been p.-re led to believe

absurd a story aa this is only to be t. plained by

(be laet lhal bo. widi many other of the old Anti-

Slavery people of Great Britain, had no heller de-

' -Se want of sympathy that has hitherto

ng tbem for our K'ent and final slruggh

rj Ihnogln h

imiigi.o ,.|,a

,11, „..,,[

I,. Ml;.,

1 do • that Mr. Lini.y (bill AH. 1.1

... . thai bis proolfto

ol iho highest order of literary morn,nor d« I ove.

'iia policy is one thai w.- mjg&l entirel

ee. I admit lhal Mr. Lincoln is a rai

eplilter, a bargee, an Bttomey. But, gentlemen, lbs

-il-split. of b

and tho tone of both wua friendly

. Ibe republic und hopeful of its future.

I be Chainnaa, Die lev Dr. Willis, stated Ibat tho

eetiui- hud been delerri-d in order 10 welcome. ' too

,roolam«iion, nnd plftinly declared thai whatever

might bo tbo result of the pending slregglu, their

svinpathies were due to the National cause whose

triumph insured ihe deairu.ioin ol slavery. Tho Rev.

Dr. Burns, who moved tin) tiral resolution, spoke In

and cordially expressed hia wishes for

ihe Northern armies,

si iiuporliint epeecb of Ibe meet

made by the Hon. George^ Brown, widely ki

if.ll/ 1

kaowlcdgo nnd in

Loud cheers.

J

Ibo heart of c

;mnncipation, though ber v

carrying on stoutly ft war of une v.uipled magnitude

Btiged to tho utmost of bis power in rccoiictlinu

laws of bis country wilh Die laws ol God |. beer,J

Mr. BelcsfonI Hope, a gentleman ol large t.-ligo.u-

profesaions.and the founder ot missionary instil

u

lions, baa eaid it ia a melancholy spectacle that Mr.

Lincoln Bhould have been elided by the voice cf

threv million of fcuple, nod Doit bis infamy will

exceed that of Sardiuispalus i.r Belshaiiar [a laugh].

Let ua sec in what consult.-' tin mluiuy of rrosideut

Lincoln. It w«fl in ibe vear lKU .1 the ,|uesLion

of the abobtion of slavery in tho Disirict of Colutn-

niight

Brft&il

guvornment and ngt

because he rvcogni;

1D1 profit hci.

ilh tho Slave Pos aucb by ourselves,

regards n largo porlic

loCeliurZcifunTtFrri.l,i-,I..|, 01 Hie [..'l.li.ml.r cuiu|..u foi, ' 10

tci,.l.ol, r-|,.|l.liltirdl.'l'.r Alnerie.lli |,i.

. ,.., ,.... 111 <:•-- if [IOIUS.Ij. "

1 in tnenbd ierr/« fir ...-.- moofi

bfch

We have not doubl that said officer is sfiii in ibo

bel service—Ihat ho went to Europe in behalf uf

eir cause—snd lhal he was on full paynud on full

duty when bo wrote Iho " history " in queslion.- Trt-

__roachmen la nnd the

1 bouods to limit and

"iv-i.oV.-nr",

5lii,i'coi„."rj.:..,.u,ill.o,pe-:lsll. In

i.u.ees b...c or)- 1 elamis on ilitlr grntllude.

...... 11 ,lJh.,.-.,H,lvr.a. I Hie lirrl.il l.i Hi" Cei.f.lry !... ... 11,0 p I

^,„i.n|-st.[,..-i.,„..i.ioi. Hi. ...... on, moo

„„.,.„ii.A 11 ilepoialiu-i lo Mil upon ar. AJJ1U.. lor llio

,.V,h,,.L. el prese.,ll,.r 10 mm u 1 .....UCn,u. exBftrJJniJ He '

Lieu apprreinll'.ii ..< lue l(l,|r-rl.,l,l stop fll.leli tool '.f-n

lat ,1 l.i 1.1. joi-n rone. lit. IHelr ,-ine-.,i hope Ilm. ttir

Uiui.n weald .peeOll. lr- n.-.o... J <ni 1'" l..i-i^..l ,.-i,.j,,-,-

'.''"'.. ,,'. ," ouu'i'-.lol .,..o.-..i j.uiiemeu who ilflllll

tnuolniliecitesmof iliclr lellow-coiioirymen;

uod 1I10.

hai) every reason to 1.., uu=il.J n.nti "Itn ihe r.. t ..-,.i......

»Le: h .. .1. II.V-- -.Me j I,. : I.eNi '.

Sir A-l-mij aod^lhc c£M

t

Z'':'.''

i'.-'

1

"Le-'."'. '- »

::!-!•.•' '' -mc.f su-Jderily u~ol.e 10 „ e^n-ciudo..,! rl Ihe ue; II..

Ilh.

slavery.it ia not true as regatdi

hitherto been jealoua of tbo .

ascendaDcy of slavery, aud h

they could within constitution

control tbem. It has suited 1

to keep this distinction 001 of sighl, and to misrepre-

sent IV Tribune would etrengihen lhal position.

Bul bettor spirit is t- gmaing to show ilself. Some— • inllucntinl journals ol

NORTHERN TREASON UEISUKED

noiHo/ttsain'iO/'eMe.

hnlfof alllrei

s is, iadeed, a, 1

laws-nay. lor not

d hopes, and

Il is wholly nnd heartily on the aids of Ibe

nnd ngainat the rebellion,' and ii ia so

recognises thu anti-shivery character

hieh tbo war Las derived from the proclamation

Wo aee," aaya this clear-sigh led observer, " ibat if

bo noli, v "f the prc.-rnl g-.iierniiism at Washington'

. . .1.- - .. ' ... i...„,..„ .,1 -.. _,H 1... =._.,„,

viver; and our Leans goa (he God ol Dailies that

ids of Abraham Lincoln,

Very decidedly on th

lei and purpose of tl

is as anli-oLavtiry as 1

era! aympail.i n a

side of the Soulb. " Rut Ihi

a miaconccpiion of Ihe ehnrai, war, declaring that England

cr, nod that the moment she :"

niilorilie£"ter(net to which ibis

rhUe.onr appeal to

Emancipation Society,

le re dec of ieiulai pr

proiliici.ilfriefiJs

r'l'.eel'iOi

b, I.!, -nil,, .

I,r Vim e-',t. 1

r. I. II. I'ott,

miodsLoglaud and Ireland hai

,l,.r"i,..,.d ibe real character of the struggln in a

wo are oDgngod. and have labored wilh seal

energv to impress their views upon tho mine' ' countrymen. The progr.^s ol evenm ftmon

11 last the rroclamutioii ol lh.- 1st of Jam

. aided Ihem in tbeir work, and the resnlti ol

iheir labora are beginning 10 bo seen in iho muoat

''1 arc beiug bell nil over Ihe kingdoi

ividenlly going on in iho public mmf'ubii, opii'.ion lb

and if, as thero n

people of Gbend (ho ala(o of

establishment of He - „-'..mm..

n,

iJ

*l";

l^'J1

f.n^ J;'J

u"ourT the LrTi'"ii''go'i'-"ruui. ..t 1 .-ehniever they do

will bo compelled lo cooform (0 their will. The his-

lory of Eogiand is a bisiory of a sera:-.- of uruggl.

between tha people as a whole and an aristocratic

class. Tha revoluuon we are engaged in ia nothing

more nor less than ih'ts, and it only needs that this

he tboruuehl. underdood abusd 10 arouse on over-

whelming feeling of aympathy for ibe North.

bopo, the

n thia country, and that the

. defer,.:

ivoil

country

JtJ . By foul nnd willful slander- on our

ud iutentionn, peraiatendy repeated, they

have arrayed ngainsl ua our owa fellow-citixeoa,

bound to ua by Die triple lies of oonaaoguinity, geo-

graphical position find ccLuinereial interest.

-- -w among us bo bate enough to forget

nough i-"lru-t nn oligarchy of traitors

Js. to civil liberty and human freedom,

nlea from home find friends, for the de-

^ -..fety of all, wo long lor the liaie when

gentlo peace shall again spread l.er wings over our

land- bul we know no such blessing is possible

while tho unjust and arbiirsry power of tho rebel

eaders contronls and threatens ua.

IDraft, as the fox, cruel aa ibe tiger, thoy cried,

no coercion," while preparing to sin I

like Ihey proposed to tight ua beca'

( ' wbipfivoto one; and now

__ Dully-

« thoy said

1 "; and promisu

igaio the Misiia-

(ho po-er Ihey dn'vo bol'om

io Sontoern people, and they

.M.-r^u'l'lllVl^^i'..-^ ,L -lebDlioL.

'^X^^X^tJ^^ meTil^ will We need Uh.t England should be our fri.nd, for,

s Ihey would iovodo and destroy us wit

cy. Absolutely assured of Ibese things, 1

sid thai any one could llnnk of paft« on

able, ihi

mercyama.--. 1

any

inniemot onirCiVrable iiieu When Iho power

r^'eramea. IbCT will be ?r gr^t ditBcull;- j*

,„„.. differences iban belt

oplo of the Korthun. and Soutliero pre

iflui] nr Ireland.

Hoping the time may speedily

1 life

n th*e of ths

a Ol

Page 2: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28

nUE.\DLT CRITICISM.

MdnlUbt...! ...„,w....... '» "•;,,„„. ,, „,',::,', i.,..i..„.«i .«»».;;I -,.1,1,1,1 Jii-ln-i' 1 1' "11. unil.-r Hit uii.*uiuiiu«

v |,.[,,„. ,,, [,,, ,

.. i.i i i in" i; ... .

., v 1 ic.i.iil ymtr fellow-citizen. . Al „. „ :,],v hunid, .Ti>'" Su-plno".""'

W.S.H--- ->-- M J .r r-',.-f,..-rnl.,..., W |ln[ „. H anJ ,

arc !bo .\bolilioniBla in

= —

-

_, , , Word it not so, we were not merely uf men yiu rousi ry -".,"

n„a , [arncd l0 it wilh somo an!

sftntiimnl 2luti-^iluvcni ^tiuiaauU L.i^bio, **. °r ^ h* most , ro[ . -,.ue i« «

, (uupd causo for n8toriielia,cnl

IlionUtla in giwcral.

A MHTEft 1)09 just been broughi

Sn whioh the follow tog scnlonco c

,-rticlo iu Ilils week's 5T»N0J,Bn h

H&y YORK, SATURDAY, FEOBOABV 26, 1

„rs win (f«j£U!

B,T?-~™V^'^^S'lS^oS No. IB

BlBSVlKGVBDrr,

ind the final vindication of llio Divino Lnn» could

o .undo tho Abolitionisls endure- for Ibo Inst

loft*,** -twtoftiidnf! Wh fttoUOMuld

-vo them to bear up and steer nfiUt onward, bating

jot of UCJWt or uopu, m [bo leclb of Tosos Ann«-

Rof^nlnnd'tdribB other lempwlH that bavo crossed

mrsoT Through nil thoaa evil day

iicd their cheerful hop>

daunted courage, and

ing day tbi

TBS OFFICE QP TUB A 00lITtOSLtT&

n*D lima nod (he urgent pre.a of «Mtw fa

,ftel numb» allowed of U, wo ehould Wenvwresscd to our most esteemed corresponds

SS^ ou, sen. of .be value of his lemony

„ to the way in which we bm dwtargid

torinl duties, and for tbe cheerful

ho took of Ibe probability of (hi BitaUo-

position of the only purely'

country

ind hopeful vii

eSlftvery pre96 ,D lb0

.mull diDlculiy and nclicany.

front those, or every other sheet,

"poliiiwi'or religious- It has no pat ly

a glorious victory

depart in peace,

or defend. It has no prospect of prefer-

r proftt from any possible success of its labors.

1( brilliant future, that towards which it looks

BBHornUlo longings, is a speedy i '" ,b:

»n»awod up in n bnppy death eoi.se..

It only prays to be porn.iltcd to

ler seeing the salvation of the

„„„„«a of such a sheet can hardly he

w „,:.i..»v -I .«"•- f";"""'; 1

;";'

,

„,., L ,„oro ll,..„ AH r r.:....li^ ^'" *"

. .'

-,l, n r 0(l,^= ,.r^ of tij.' Ol.imon th»t I

CoX«— "•»"»"" h ' ,'"'"'b"' D'

nad tlmt^o should accept of no, n»l

,„„«.( cf 0» •»»'«•»' "' *"

trust of wbiob opinion, we are happy to believe, our

Si Philadelphia friend give, .be average

C

'iW. ,'a.i . truly soy that if wo hav

and not from want of tbo b

their uu-

of the com-

tbe darkest hour that over gloomed

nd them- -And (bey will uiobt assuredly not do-

H ,,oud no™ that every sign in Hmvoh and on Earth lells

that the day is at bund. And it is nt band as Cod

reckons speed ; though it ...ay ho delayed by our

Bloth or Bin. We believe that tbo froelnmntion oi

the First of .Tatiuary will be n mighty instrument i

brineina about the abolitinn ol slavery. And th.

though «e think ibat it is by no means certain thai

slavery is not to have u season of prosperous •wioked-

ne, H such as it has novor yet seen, before the end

ily will, unless our armi!;s hinder it

1T speedy vielories, followed up by n very different

ifcrcomi-ut of tbo proclamation that, that Gen.

Banks is making, in tbe interest of Ibe masters, at

w Orleans. Tbo leaders of tbo Admiuislrnlioa

and of the Opposition ia England agree =" "

...^.iililiiv tl...->.q^'"l>- d^ire of the sue

North in reduein-, the South. Bonaparte as a^ready

„ul out hi. fcelora lo «o wbclhor Kngln..d will un.m

with him in liberating Collon from its durnUW). It

is only a queslion of litness of time nod not of pr.n-

iplfl Derby and Russell being nuthentio oracles.

How' much more dtfent and failure on our part will

make the lime fit for interposition? Tuat

ons togelhcr can break the blockade,

think cannot bo doubled. What follows T F:

four to five million of bales are wa.t.ng expi

tation. The Davis gover:

and forwnrding of tbesa

As cotton goes eastward;

westward. Within a ye

lion will How over tbo ei

ol tbe Confederacy

ill control tbo sale

as to keep up the pri

stream of gold will set

at least a thousand mil-

>n country. The finnni

placed on a specie bas

bonds bo above par in the slock markets of

Europe, if not of New York and Boston, too. Even

if nar ensue with tbe intruding Powers, it will bo

withdrawn from tbe eotlon country, and slavery will

batten on iu floeculcnl food, protected by Kronen, and

English cannon. Should we, on the other ba'

-- - bring Iho reln-1 Staii

Ihe feollnjp. of my correspondent any bo <"8 C

shared by others, I berg for a llltlo space In whJ

forth opposilo opinions. Certainly this is

lich AhoUlionwla shouhl spook the word

eneoucOKCmint and not Ihose of despair.

In Iho llr-t plnci', ' take inception to the tl

arilclc, •The Apony at Onafl." From this, ami (run.

the dlreet nslemcnts that follow, wo are compelled to

infer tbflt unlets some remorksblo and unlookcj for

step Is taken by Conire!) within ibo next Ihrce weeks,

we are a ruined people. To carry out the flgt.ro,

Nstlonnl death is belore uo. In a later statement, tbo

writer mdkes everything lurn upon tbo oronls of Ho

three or (our months. Now I, (or one, must pr|-

eaiost this mode of writing ns ooo more suited o

; the ImsKlnatlnn tlinn Hie reason. 1 eerlaiaif

hope, and expect, Hint our troops will

three months liavo obtained Important rlclorice, IIibJ

the President and his Cabinet will haTe growu ;

and energeiic, that mora traitorous and inei

Generols will have been ousted from comi

that the Peace Democrats will have found out that they

have made B great blunder, and that nbove all, AboU-

tiooists will cease lo give aid and comfort to tbo enemy,

and praise and admiration to llr. Jc-Berson Davis and

the untcrupuloua rufflmis that (.urrouod him. Ilut il

all these prophecies tiro fulfilled but very parlially,

shall lose no jot ol heart or hope. 1 know that history

is long lo the Diskinj, Nations nro noilhor saved nor

lost so easily.' It is by a long oourse of ovonU and

o. iin( n national fate is decided.

d p|jico,Idnftgreohiparl WHI. Iliirtpm-

I In this article, iu respect to the Ekccu-

Iter represents a portion, I would hops

in, o( Ibo Abolitionists, but of liiui and

them I would say that it would bo well If tbey pon-

dered tbe 13th and 17th verses of the Oil. of Matthew

ittomptlDg 10 judge tbo aelion of Mr. Lincoln and

Cabinet, aeon-ding t" the principles of the Anti

,. !-.->uueii''--i. iiicveuiumit the error ol pntlia s noi.

clolh into old gariuents, new wino into old boltoa. Ki

active member of the Anti-Slavery Society eould, with

out great dereliction of principle, bavo allowed himself

to bo placed in tho position of Mr, Lincoln or Jlr. Sow

ard. If be bad dene so, It Is a quosCcn tbot ocaiits ir

my mind of grate doubt, whether, en ifco wtslo, wi

should,

i uffjirj. and

d.trd of tho Anti-Slavery Society is that

n on tho ilount, and by that test have

ir country and its politician*. Weighed

:cs, Lincoln and Soward are undoubtedly

far less so than tho rersignys and tbo

gungo uttered by many Rood people in

i one point of viow is taken up by fer-

:mp!oy quite another in respect to their

proof not to be gnioaayed

Tho c '

lin on tbe part of truly patriotic Americans i

aars, Should no mora bo taken aujiltd ile li h

a should similar confessions on tbe part of ind

vldunls. When an eminent saint admits that " all ml

irs," no one dreams of impugning his person

ty ; and when pliilantbropiNt^ and roformei

o (heir counlry 110 081108 laden will, iniquity,"

ot that they consider tho statement as more

pllcnblo lo their own land than to olherj, but bee:

they feel that It Is their own national sins that espc-

ially demand their attention.

Fur thirty years Ibo Abolitionists have cheerfully

nd courageously labored in faith : let tbem not now,

nan extended am! very able addM

iplolneil to hii audience tho causes

nd tho probiblo rcsnlfs of this t

kilfnlly oxpofcd Ihe lalso pro'

oulated iu Ibat e< c for tl

Mr.Uowi

...ketcheu.1

illustrating the sggrcssivo chorncter o(

:y, gave Impressiro details of Ibo bsrbarous char-

of that institution, stated the reasons why slavery

ond freedom cnnnol permanently coexLit, enumerated

tbo steps towards freedom already accomplished by

the war, and thca made a vigorous statement of what

is, aud what should be. the relalioa of Great Britain lo

such a contest.

Applause repcalodly given during such a lecture,

and a vote of thanks to tho speaker after it, were mai-

lers of course !rom tho men of Paisley, who havu

ivpu-itvdly Bivoo substantial p:

the causo u( freedom, iu spin

their industry by failure o(

cottoo. But we have Ihe grei

that, at tho cIoeo of tho lecture, a meeting m mm,1 gentlemen took place in thn vestry nf the et.ui

if the chock glvei

io ordinary supply of

0m §ost(i« ffiovvwixnukiKc.

aid of tho proposi

Boston, Fob. 23. 1S6S.

past, Boston has been as quiet a

mac itsalf. There are rumors o

by Mr. Evorelt and his Iriend

. Peace Convention at LoulsvlUt

early si

o_ Cabinet "

it ninety days ot that Admiulslntion.

—Will id. S ( m(iT from Illinois ollow merdl

Mr. Blch»r4i00-Certainly,ion o! Mr. Howard—I interrupt tbo Senator,

o.liMla a MUl ..r ..!.>!,. Il ii !,.•! Cn-rson ol a Lr..-iL(f. [.. " i.i .1. lint lion of my o

and who lor lonjr y,-.in coojH.-riicd with the party to"

cl. ttK.,**osliirl'r- in IIIii.iih Kl'.'iijj. I rater, sir, to

.Cass; aud 1 feel it t" be .' ibity uj.-.n tin -.... i.i-i.

from mo to him, "ml doe t'. the counlrj-, to say

. it ij within mi knuwlcilBO that Gen, C\n, dunuythat iroublo'omo period lo which aUasiou has been

"e, Old all in hi* p.>niT. and malo every effort, to

os depended upon him, to induce President

Buchanan to relieve fort Sumter and lo tike memu rvi

-i.tect the aoi-i'rvini' : nt pr-'portv ili.'re.and lo pri-

ll,,. r.'bL']li.m ("ro.o i.r.i.im '.-in- li ii doe, sir, In

Com that I should make this observation.

-. Liifo—!!.. mowed his liuu,-«ty by reshjniosi

tin.

Butt! ., will

.0 right

I. Tho plot, no doubt, ia a good plot

tho friends of it, lor the present, t

and moreover, full of expectation

;

splto of Iho excellent plot, nod tho vory «ood frieods,

ry about it, that Mr. Everett, like

Hot-spur, always contrives to bo on the losing side.

Kven biB experience Willi Mr. Bell has not yet Uocht

bim to shun tho society ol traitors.

A pithy and spley address "To the Men of Color"

baa been Issued bore by lilliur Wright, whose aoti-

alsvcry ™al of twenty years ago you no doubt remem-

ber. Presenting himself to tbem as " not a colonita-

nay other sort ot know-no thiDg," be urges

lie all opportunities, however uograciomly of-

fered, of acquii'ioj a practical knowledge of tho military

Hb suggests Ibathal

bread, and adi

loko action for further eliciliog the scnti

tho townsmen on the American question. A booihiil-

, was appointed lo arrange for a public mooting, and

frame resolutions In bo then submitted lo discus.*!.™.

The i sme pap.'r gave information (received by tcle-

apb)of a great meeting held on tho 29tb ult.at St.

.orea-a Hall, llmdford, lo give tbo people of that

wn an opportunity of showing that Ihey haled

ivory with all their hearts, aad sympalhiwd with

resident Lincola's offorla to sweep away "tho cause

Our excellent (riend Mr. W. E. Forslor, ML P- for

rsdford, who presided, made a stirring address

showing how, in spile of the effort ofoivil and military

,n the United Ktalca to deal gently wllhslavery

lore compelling a|

directly antagonist!

in is that he forgois

s in their viuws—1<

1 If Mr. Stanton wi

s war Democrat, an,

lie now desires It

ory slave if nccess

ivory j.-.l

fully

il..

;anhav mgina.

ral and ncqui

doubt or cavil.

bio motive to (all short of it. We have endeavored

to look at all public events and public men in the

light, and with tbe eyes, that ft slave would regard

them who possessed tbo decree ol intelligence, notu-

nired, which we happen to have, What-

's slave wnuld rojnico nt, and in that

3 have rejoiced ; and where be would

Da„ueti«ely feel that his rights weie wickedly or

foolishly neglected or put in jeopardy, wc have fear-

lessly uplifted our voice in remonslrance, .n expostu-

lation in denunciation. And this wc bold lo be out

exact'and appointed duly, which wo are especially

sot to do, and unless we perform which oui

empty of all practical value, Looking »t

of public nflaira from thia standpoint, wa I

much to rejoice at in the steady grnvitnti

government to tbe only policy which could,

should, give it victory. As ft general thing we have

linst the faction striking

t of Ibe

Hotly crushed in Ibo process, tho

tould not be very different. Fo

hope of ibo proclamation if it c

clutches of Ihe Supremo Court (a d

were the Erst to point out), und none whatever of

- general confiscation of rebel property for th

enses of the war. Slavery remaining, it would

o a brief season, at least, of unexampled prosper.

Wo e till believe that through the agitation o:

Northern mind, and tho excilement and dianp

I of tho slaves, mid tbo determination of the

break up tbe cotton monopoly, slavery

come lo an end comparatively soon. But bow late

compared lo what might have been bad tbo heart

all men at tho bend of our civil nnd military affai

been in the Only remedy of our mischiefs I Wo w

yet hope tho best and do nil we canto make o

hope a fact. But wo must not forget Ihnt it Is yet

supposition, and how easily treachery, folly or -

pidily may wreck

some pcoplo to spcok

niuistriiti'-n as having been, aod conllouloj

i, I,,,. Bulling policy, butleotifco 1 era not ot

t opinion. It was only by a singolar and uolooked

ciinibiii.uion ot circumstances and parties tbat Mr.

Lincoln was elected. Tbu number of his oppor

immense and it.Huenllal. Immediately upoi

w ,,riii..i,. be found himself ovoc-Woied. by tbo

.1 on looked tor and terrible lo^ponsibilitici

II, ink it slrnoge, i.r, perbapt, unwise, that, in this

e of thiog*, be Blnmlil decide t-, f.illoa nnd not lead

national will. A man of immense genius, a Croui-

I a Bonaparte might have done otherwise, hut these

ihad whatever advantage may reside in a rovolu-

lary position, whereas it was tho simple duly of tbs

ndcan President Wmako iho avoidance of sneb r

ilion ono of his chief objects. That he has beet

it the Nation Ihrougl

ahutlicillat

ihoncomings,

to the judicial blindness which

a MeClellan, a proved incompo-

at the best,

procrnsti

could put a man

tent military pedi.

aDt conio.nt.ds, and Ibat more than once.and recall

man like Butler, tbe only one who has shown enpi

cltv to comprehend tbe situation, and courage to gra|

plowifhit! In view of all these thingo and mar

morc, especially tbe retaining in theCabinet as (inn

vital ra

its policy wc eould not devote ourselves

tinguisbing support of tbe Admimsti

still less, en tho other hand, could we c<

ourseivea, even by implication, to ll

of tho lih'bt of Search, the encouragement lo Umanci

nation in°thc Ilordcr States, and finally, tbo Proeln-

t least for II, ih ndvenlui

)t yet allowed to Ic

sword ianj he concludes with tho intims

heir psvt to bo reody, whenever n Joshu

o lead them lo tho promised land ot cuu

3 true, no doubt, as Wendell Phillips sail

that the United States uniform is n corti:

thus will bo, Korth as well

important stepping-stone in the upward u

colored friends. But they, hko tbo rest

must work out their own solvation,

which their friends can possibly give thee

help, and el

m that

With

1 wicicdm

t effect

iriflcd.ilill g-..illl! o

patlon meoling was

prncess was

ig after Ibis meeting, tho great Ba»a

' ' Exeter Hall, Londom

friends in various parts of Gi

Wkiog their part in

Dm .Nonr

®wk ^asftittStott *£otrfsi[nmdencc,

•Ilyti

the Eroaneipat

eful 1 d

H...L win. ok

e been proclnii

on ot President Lincoln

he smouldering o

,which is Interpol

of Ibe rebel ends

ootry. Eoglisl

snd the fvh.|..-

red by tl

jccounis of largo oodspiriud public tncclinp in

rious places, similar in their obaraclor ond objects

tho great Exeter Hall O-nnonstralloo. Oo Tuesday,

b. 3, a deputation ot the Committee of tbo Brilub

and Foreign Ami-Slavery Society, aod ot ils friends

and suppnrtcrs, bad on interview with Ibo American

Minister Hon. Charles Fr.mr.is Adams, for the purpose

of presenting a llinuto on tho American Crisis. Up-

wards of seventy gentlemen Iron, .lillerentparts of tho

'"-lutoof the Committee

,lnly boliovo. I must at tho same time :

ibat tho withdrawal of tho Border slave Stai

resistance o£ the army, the resignation of army

in mullitudes, flghiing in tho slreots ot Northern cilies,

snd tho fulBlnient of a variety of olhor prophecies,

havo nnt lollowed its proclamation. Whether they

wnuld all bavo done sn, had Mr. Lincoln acted at an

earlior period, it is Impossible lo say. At any rale, the

work is now done. Three million slaves are freed,

and men of oil creeds and classes and politics have

o"tnane'lpa"iion, and" jfr:'lI«Ll"5f 'Kentucky, on. whoso nod

wo seemed to hong so loni!, approves ot Iho proclama-

tion and lorotell* Hie triumph of that policy in Ihe next

The writer whom wo aro considering says, " Wo will

not deny ihe excellence of everybody's Intentions who

have had Ihe direction of this war, on our side, but we

ti.ink nobody can affirm Ibat Ihey have produced - -

en days prut thoro- has been

I the progress of enlistments

pcoplo of this State, but it is viuders

i» [.mKrvS-ing favorably. Our amii

to fear that things aro taking this d

lalely priulcd a string o( doggerel

at length the special characteristics

to the colored race, ond assumii

impossibility of negroes doing efft

vice. Perhaps it may live long eoo

cal exporieoee of tho cootrary.

Rev. Sloocura D. Conway gai

discourse in tho Music Hill,

o of Washington." IVb

•eclion, for it has

erscs, describing

lopulnrly imputed

;, therefrom, Iho

Vasuisotos, Peb. 21, lSli

Gov. CcuTis denies that lit has any agency in get

,p Iho new Seward party-tho party,! Union

omnromUo. Hii disclaimer should be received .

onftdonce M far ss he U concerned. It is a sing

act however th*t The Xa'.lwl Int'Ui'jtnctt P^rs

tbe 'stories about the now party arrangements right

Mr. Soword's oosc, and that, too. w

known that the two editors and part propi

Ibat journal aro very intimate with the Secretary of

Sentcu is and has always been a favored

InOmato friend of Secretary Sewai

eat at each other's table. Tlioy hob-

WtrittDg, Hi" junior editor of the concern, is ai

admirer and intimate friend of Ibo Secretary of

Now, it is not a little strange thittl.

which usually has a horror of all political — .

daily personal gossip, should intimaco thscMr.Sow

Churlow Weed, Gov. Cu " "

ng ogiinst Ihe rndicaLs.

itylo

alher than Intt-icinl, ai

anti-slavery uno at that, m

It matters Huh) what bo ooco diC

Seward was onc< a leader in antl-sl

rtuallv foixtold the war by Iho an

duclrioe of sn irrepressible conflict between slsvery

and liberty, and yet in view of it ho advised, nay, ear-

nestly exhorted, tho voters of tbe North to stand by

their anti-ilavory principles. Tnal is of liltlo conse-

quence now. The important question now is whether

Mr. Seword stands by his old doctrines to-day-is ho

an honest anii-slavery man at this hour! If bo is,

God bless him, and ho will bless him ond forgive his

Coogress is progressing very well with tho impor-

tant legislation of Iho country. The Democrats do nnt

like Ihe Idea of resorting to filibustering to prevent

onislallon, or rather tboy doro not resort to it. Thoy

ire determined to hare Ihe chanco of dcbitiog every-

Ihii.g, aad this Is fair enough. Hoasonablo dubato no-

body can object to. unless it bo within two or three

days of tbo close of Ihe session aod Congress.

There has not been . 0.00,1 dwpusiiion In Ihe House

to give Mr. Chase a fair chanco with his financial

policy. Too many of tho members are In the interest

of the bnnlis, and I fear that eomo nf them who pnss

for pretty good Republicans would hesilato some time

before giving their votes for a mcasuro which might

possibly injure Ibe country banks, oven if thoy wore

confident Ibat by giving suob vuto tbo government

would be greatly xtrengthoned, and tho country ot

largo benefitted. Men, especially members ofCongress,

are selfish. On Iho whole, however, tho majority In

Senate ond House havo acted genurously and patrioti-

cally this Winter. Avon.

b logother.

1 staid old journal,

mation that :iub|i"ilj

position and Ihe reas

hem the key which .

Considered ourt elvesi here given tl

explain it all. "We have <

t ,.prc,e..tii,-,not the llop.iblieau parly, not n

aiu-rieau nation, primarily, but the Auierieiin

and .( I,.k endeavored lo see with his Oycs,

with his heart, to consider iritis his judgj

posing bim to bo

wo are capable 01 "en

wero to be passed upon.

candidatt

KuiMieipal

urso of the d

10 of debate on America

raicwbat different fro

IMO.,1'

ntelligent and well-informed as

being, whenever facts or men

We bnvo no Presidential

scheme of domestic

ign policy to promote, no personal ambition:

gratify. All wo ask is justice to Ibe alave, which wc

beliov,- will bring will, it .ill.. iter good

that in tbo just proportion iu which it is rally and

righteously accorded. It is thia feeling, extending

far beyond the ranks of tho American

Society, though mainly issuing iberofrom s

ured sources, originally, that creates what n

briously stvlcd the Radical element in Cougi

in tbe country, and to which onr eneimeti 1

^ ^

the baled" iLdi, ,.ls, ot which sinners wo boast

being the chief, that ihe Piosideut owes Iba mi

Buonnrt he has bad in bis Anti-Slavery stops, if tboy

were not originally prompted by them. These car-

nest men, though not so purely and simply Anti-

Slavery as we aw. have been led to see how inex-

tricably slavery is bound up with nil ourfortm

tl ilnvi.-r>

:h followed Ihi

ch.LordRossell"lieve, in this coun

behalf ot either 01 1

jle But there wc

i a calamity to the

and that

ins before

I. In tbe

C desires n forcib

It It

:rrb:cid,-

Itself, and on those, tbo tiol

thoritativoly in judgment, vinon

tary nf State quit office, wo 1

have deno or loft undone.

Abolitionists should judge

gently as they may tho men who, in the fi.ee of great

oppo.itiot.andreproaeli.bo.hathomeai.dabroadl

dually performed tho work, for tho accomplishment

,f which our lile-hu.ii laburs hove b^" given,

corns to mo an ungracious und fault-find in.; spirit

T j,,.i..H Hie 111 out Ihe pr.iebnialiou lin* been iss

hat it will not bo carried out and that nothing

,eon done or is doing. Thork hall

., Ibe churn

Hially al

yesterday a vonootitled "Tho Vacant

atovor of tho ord

of gr.'imcjo might be

Washington, he judjed'

bioi. Ho was ia r

" Wn h, * thonltelllpt t.

baodoncd. IC

ancous nressuro, in a manor so

,lng his own legiiimate functions.

,ect lor his office could be rotainei

or tho people! And when, as

,nor of all

oblations o( public doty may

l'rosideot should -' , ' 1

popularly esteemed,

r of his Country. A crisis of* similar magni

e Und no man, in the stations of power and 1

adequate to tho work. Tho people havo n.)i

toe enough, and even Ibo best of their political leo

50r enough, to push tho reluctant Pros:

the steps needed for Iho nation's sit

power In the Cibinot. nt present tbe .

dde'nt is magnified by tho

csponsibiiiti.., 01 wim. <n ti<e ''";':;,".,l, relv ,.r. t : 10 V-rt fik i-luwn ill'.'

lin.lil'"- -'

Xenlhst oOi.e is lK.le.ed about it,the ..r.Mi.i'- 1

: „| in ,n ihe 1...IHH1.I .raditions of t

• ffils o-i "

gliilniltliiliia IfomyttfoMt.

1'oub leader of lael week contains somn suggestions

lich should bo turned at oneo to practical account

caking of tho macliioBLions or tho Copperhead De-

.crocy, you say -.•' Measures should bo planned and

rrled oui, and that speedily, to prevent lbii covori

ason from breaking out into open notion. * This

tho first duty that demands the attention of nvorj-

uo nnd loyai man. • • ' Bj--goi.es aboold bo by-

gones ; the best should bo made of tho means we ba'.-e.

Thu nation does uol mean to bo killed in open

nor yet lo be murdered by n?nosii.is from behind,

t Is the business of all having itslfl/it 0/ aehiul

or nfdiitd in-Iurncs to sco lo it that this crlmo Is

.ccomplished through their negligence or cow-

eao proposlllnns will hove commanded the prompt

,t of all joor readers. Bui this is not enough,

should be reduced to practice. Kow shall this

lo uccfpi ns jus' I'

confrnipomrif 0/ Sea-•--it city—which, m

lor/.—1 and Reprcseolali

:»" r...h.al.. bin I.,, u^.^.k. ...

--imlng 11

..leMi.-! -I

ovad b

bis fonnnl 11

,,,IiiIolI a««-.*teGov. Horgon, wer

Itepublican leaders were bold enough to say, in bis

plnco in tho Senate, what many of them say in private

respecting Ihe unworthiuets e( Mr. Seward, that func-

tionary might bo driven at once from Iho power which

ho misuses. One of these eminent gentlemen, being

asked why he did not stale tho fnots ia question in thn

Senate, replied that It he were to do so, not half a

dozen of his associates would support him. Fremont,

who was preseot, exclaimed in reply, " Ealf s dozen I

Three would bo suffieieot to make a revolution 1

"

Tho President seems as slow of apprehension

.. ol the liiui

j leave Fro

ory unji

not pressing Ihi

10 significant 1

ider such cireums lances, shnuld publish such an

ticlc in its editorial columns. It certainly proves

.tisfaetorily that some of Mr. Sowsrd's intimate

lends arc anxiously at work trying to get up a great

Conservative party which shall includo moderate Re-

ita—Abo1itin.ii.ii nnd

onists surely belong to

1 all tho patience nf h

this great measure sh

assuredly will, in the de

doing of tbe will of thorn

r

Why 1

1 tbo long

North'must rennunco all her former policy, mi

"roe press and freu discussion. That

lunrOiv. noil the cin-o of liberty «m:

icrien'li.r a century t" come. I ho]

may be Ibe end of ibis contest, such n

bo the result. I Irnst wo shall see nt Ihe

"lis slruegle, the pr-tiulu of Aiucne.. cnjnyin;

iit in mil- nt two h-r.-.it republics— .nileponden

ower For my own pari, before ihi- i.-nii-si boei.u.

rejeicrd in Ibe pro^irei-s of Ibe Uniied ?wtts of .\

ien" Tbe neon-hine: -u.ie -1 n ].e.rlo le-,:eii.|.-d Iron,

iu oan.e niieeat...v lis nui-ielvc', Jn'l pi.-ii'ssnl:/ laws

,Vt |.eMOi.,.l lihvrlv -imila.- to ..,ir ow„ ..„« :, B i,-llt n.

..,.,.,. r^ii.hnien might reniue. I nliouM neleeil

if at the end ..1 .ni-nevb "' al M tin.! lb.

pcjile deprive, 1 .,1 tli-ee biT.eiiio and privileges whit

dignify and adorn mankind."

The London Dttli, nUudiug to tho above, says:

" These word- are worthy of l, sti.tesiuni. win, in I

jin.jcr dajss.it ot tl.e l.et ..I I.Iilii-U-.-, J.in.iB l-..\ u

|v...',|te,l IU- t.io-e ..! t.i-.d..ni 0. ill t ill nun mm„»* „r Leb.r. TI100 ivb.inio ,-iiini.u-eii-i I.11- the 1

nv repi

yield

ougb tbo natural aud necessary luuccii

unii toliliers with II10 negroes!

1 occupying 100 much of your space, but

feel os if it wore only an act of justice to refer to so.

oral inquiries which seem certainly not put in thr

spirit of charily that hopoth, not merely all Ininj., be

anyfnino-.

Uur government, confuse matters ns wo maj', 1

"th nntbslnvory written on every banner,

sbiering of Fill-John Porter just ncco

I tho re signs lion nf other Generals ji

would seen, quite unnecessary, In additi

forebodings, to alarm the friends uf fr,

dom by any prophesying of Gen. HeClolian'

and that success in lb<

peace which is to round

ia hewn in pieces nnd giv

to this class of minds tbi

.,,",!, Iliv,

nu,l nidi an oi

placed fur bey,

Mr. Althnrpt

Queen, made a

arllami p..lllle:,l iniluvii

1 affile

.. . disgi

,nd tho reach of probnbilil

, who moved tho address in reply to tho

speech from which wo take Ihe follow-

3 that t

it tho banks w

Lincoln proclaimed

consigned to «lo

m. Bui Mr. Lin,

r|.u,Wj,l..

irosperily in ibo

in never bo bad until il

tho winds. And it is

have to look for the

nd how is it that they

have prevailed thus farin creating* public sentiment

to sustain the President aod been enabled loslrengtb-

en bis bunds, themselves t By blindly accepting his

every action or inaction, his every word or silence,

as the highest wisdom aud efficiency! Not at all,

It has been by tbe constnnl vigilance nf friendly

criticism, remonstrance and advice thai Iboy

done Ibe good work attributed to tbem by thcii

by the wholesome wounding of friends, it is that they

have slond between hitu and tho insidious counsels

nnd Ibo treasonous umlieo of bis enemies, and helped

him to bold each new position as bo advanced

to iu This work is by no means finished yet. Tbo

country is not yot saved, the slave is still in bis bonds.

Rebellion ia rampant ia thu from and Treason is

coucbaot in Ihe rear. Tho sword of tho open enemy

and tbe dagger of ibo sccrel assassin are both lifted

against the life of the Nation. A innro critical bni

than any she has yet passed through awaits her. (hear, bear).

And wo are lo aeo to it sbo docs not sacrifice tho Tns pnrasr*

Ilavo in Ihe ngnny of her struggle for life.

Our oxootleul Philadelphia I jrrc-pondent spenkt

of tbe cheerful viuws which be is constitutionally I yy

jKlined to take of events. We thank God that we |mi

" Ho eould understand that any

nielit I .« Ye be. 11 in. lined to join t

ory cll.irtSi but (mm the 1-1 ..I .Innu.-iry, ifnro U-t I hj.

jJmtwHnf Frrtdeui fo Ihe"

!Jr. /.ir.e.Jr,, mO tlii/mjlil iui;

(hear, hear). lit

President of a great federation of

any institution of Ihose Slates. Bi

Chief he bad a right to enoct any 01

bring nboul the dwtouilltur

ie reei.l-,li'l il-J rel-els i.elie.-i

proelomu'fc-—

, .t.lli'rr-l

ment icoidd haw uen-

iglit be raid that Mr.those over whom heho wero in his powerban admitted to fr,

ained literally will

He had no power[ Slates to act against

But as Comma oiler-i-

I consider tho present a much less " awful moment "

than any that preceded tho Emancipation,

tberoloro seo no impropriety in tho consideration

by Congress of the financial uffaii

only hnpe tho ni

As 11 for tho despairing wail ot Conway," I csn b

say, Thank God that ooly ono man could be found

faithless or so foolish ! What ! when wo have curried

iladel, shall wo surrender! When tbe great

could, In our most sanguine dreams have anticipated,

shall we then yield up all thai has boon nbtained at so

dreadful a co»t. with tho childish statement that when

havo lost nil self-respect, and manhood aod pneslu/e,

so must do, before submitting to notional dieolu.

1, wo could then fight our batde to greater adran-

„l.lele:ll

'

'siau

fully earrifd call for that procta

aadreiaed lo Wis baulhtrn Wjlt.

r flraiiii ond lo .Spoil, ns mil ; te

ly not twenty, would elapse before.( Spain would ho ire,- 1

i.uli.b.

,| ,n tl

_.. shining wnf human freed.

advocate a grcal

it, though possibly

1anil he was convinced

I of the people of Eng-

nny government Err"

and he'b.'.p. J probable, results of such a proclamatlo,

,-. Pa., bav

1. winch lie belie-e.i was 111

od.n-et ..i-ijiin of Ibo war,

-oudsens.: nod right leehnf

would always prevent

opting to"

oupiod ;hot when man with tho poouli

MlcClellan requests to be assigned to aclire service, ot

tbe very moment when tbo canal at Vicksburg re-

quires lo bo deepened, what shall be said of tho Coni-

idci-iii-Chief who leaves the request disregarded !

.mong the musical celebrities wo hnvo bad in Boa-

Ibis Winter ii Onmilln Urso, who deserves mention

only from her wonderful esecuiion on iho violin,

from the fact that she has given a good esamplo to

sex by achieving high eminence in a department

icrto monopolized by men. Notwithstanding her

youth, she stands in tlin same class with 01c Bull, Si-

and Vicu* Tempi, ibe- li.it violinisls wo bavo bad

.is country. Born in France, of Italiao pareotage,

showed iotenso deligbl in music when only Ave

3 old, and chose tho violin

ugh her special enjoyment of tho playing of Olc

. After receiving tho best musical training that

is oouldafford.she made tho lour of Germany wh{

only eight years old, giving concerts under Ihe dire

tion of her father, and surprising all by tho maturii

as well as tho skill oi her performance. She came

this eity more than leo years ogo, associated hersc

wilh the best performers we ever had hero (tho Gor-

ninnio Musical Society), and gained great celebr

tho cliilJ-vinli«..it. AU.r travelling through the

ri.ui.trv: n.ii.jiiii'liiiie. und delidiiing ihe levers c

sic everywboro. she married a musician in Nnsuvuie,

and sallied there. Tho war, by destroying

tho property of her Southern husband, has caused her

,in to give public performances, and she rcossumes,

for this purpose, the mvmo by which she first gained

distinction asaplajor.

anioll is Camilla's tlgure that she might still be

1 for a child by those who witness her perform-

Iho quiet dignity of ber demeanor. It is as needlul to

ear her. and a blind person would lose half

r0 that her cnncerls give. One novi

stereotyped, factitious omile, or that

as" in acknowledgment of applam

mi, der.it,.' lie

1 ..[![, erh.'.i J s nut beiiej .v.ini

"of Gov. Curtin

1 well-known fnt

II,..! -lippliu: ir,,r„ ilieir b-in.l._

,,, Albany i.-e..-|iinr, J..,, rriof ol

pKaHlenls and leirli.:-. li.-rl-e vV'.-vd.

in Lin,, . at i.r ii..: 1,1 ri :ie.- ui i.i; ''oi

lullo.vcd Ui ii "i-..' ii> "> ' '

i- re- I. i- even }'el wholly..-,.

1....,..,. has ....-ii gufior-

ii- <

liiui

nd i.t I.i. |.i,|,Mlahn in Penii-iyl.-

extended as I

lie inilnid-.. the r.ince -il

constituto tbo first class

Bccond comprises nil the

Thism allb

. orga ,

,vodo

politico! system such us ours, a po

ittoebos to each individual. Tho mnl'ons o( tho ma-

chine recoivo their impuleo and directum from ionu-

flblo unseen fnrcos. It Is thu right and duty of

Abolilioaista to make psrt of theso forces. If Ihey

Republican candidato for Governor in Pel

Covode is no( a Seward roan, but is a radiea

two ago, the friends of Gov. Curtin aunn

bud liually given bis consent lo run ng;

lornonhip ! It is idle to deny, therefoi

Curlin represents tho milk-and-water Republicanism

Pennsylvania, while Covode stands by

uothor sort— Ibe anti-slnv

d is said still 1< a frii o Geo.

bis loyalty ond grcal Ui

lary nbililics. 1 can suy eonfldently. however, thai I

President does nof havo faith iu SleClollan-s genor

slup ; nod since the day that General was remov

from the command ot the Army of Iho Potomac bo I

bad no more idea of calling bim back to bis old pit

than be bis of putting Fernando Wood nt tho head

odo of our armies, or appoioting Bon Wood Milils

Governor of ono of tho conquered States.

Mr. Seward bos a singular faculty of making friends

among all classes of people, and this may bo Iho soli

lienor cerlain diiHoultii.3 receding hi* conduct. Ci

of Ohio, a villainous delamer of Kow England, is Ii

worm personal friend and defender in Congress.

ioch greater than men Ih

tngol

Why Seward ia

is a queslion anffli

prnpusal of Into:

with that reply is

It is an opportunliy thoy should oi

at the right bond of power

answered by his patriotic an

Monsieur Drouyn do PHuyn'

in. Tho universal sympathy

,b pledge of oor country's II

"

io remark in pass ing, .that tbi pe-iii

Mr. Seward sent the French minlsi

Ho sound the depths and shnllo.vs

ns but poorly borno out by Mousie

ruent " tl»( It olnUM' tetmal as if Ifr.

D, and that nflor ho got there,

as quite willing be should tell Ibe rebels

lern people had no det.ro for vengeance

award hoped some lime or other to til

ith representatives Iruui rouil.orn Slates

, few mors words to odd on a subject

m sure, greatly mlsunilerslood. It is io

ia criticism employed In tho atli.alarery

journals respecting our government and Itstesmen.

My attention has been drawn to this subjBit by the

somewhat ludicrous surprise and constemaiion man-

ifested by foreigners when the same umpartag criti-

cism Is applied to f'irir governments and stttesmen.

Tho moral standard of ibe free States of the Corth is

probably higher than that of any coualry upon jartb i

Seward wished him to

which ningei-s, player s oflen

i-eiiilliiii t-

quietly graceful,

id an electric enei

Ida tor oudionce 1

o'reatblesj admiroUon. Sho shows tbn very highest

skill in elocution, triumphing over all mechanical dlf-

aouitiea with apparent ease, but Iho most charming

partol ber playing la tl.e production of pure, clear,

Blnifle tones, slow or quick, so soft and low as lo

rehire ihe stillest atteuii.m, and drawn out equably ic

n tsir-liku fineness. Iu this most difficult portion ol

and even the unskilled bearer may judge of its merit

by eeeing how intently she is watched by Iho musician!

oi the orchestra, when her eolo-ph.ying gives them ai

opportunity to look.

Tbe Glasgow Jlominn Jbunnd informs us of n gooc

work done by a gendemau of Boston, fong residcolanc

business in that city, Arthur F. Stoddard, Esq. The

relatives ol this gentleman have not distinguished

themselves by opposition Io slavery; but he, dm

bis residence la Glasgow, has repestedly given aotive

evidence of Ids real in that direction. Oo ibe istii alt.

Mr. Stoddord gave a lecturo 00 "The Civil War and

American Slavery" in the Free High Church ol Pais-

ley. Prov oat Campbell occupied tbe chair, aud on the

platform were numbers of tbo officials of tbe town, of

the BoTOrend clergy, and of tho neighboring gently,

sslblo :

ises. if tin

r-StJi

rather Ihe onli-slavory area ia

elude men ond dignities that used

"rect influence. Thoseom you appeal

; the

f jour renders. Forore or less, direct nnd indirect,

of acting directly upon Ihoso with whom weionlnct, aod who slond upon our level, Is «e-

;ed by nil ; but tint of influencing Ihoso abovo

a distance Irom us, is euppnscd to bn tho p-e-

nf a privileged few. This is a mistake. Pop.?rnmeni moves upon wheels that on' within

wheels. The humblest citi«n that will put his shoul-

of tl.es. s pon . fell. In a

There

impolci

e slmuM al eofniwhom chance, or tnvor, or mayhap merit, lias placed

in power. Tn say Uial [hoy aro men like nursclves is

loing soldo of them more than justice. The pcoplo

who aland arnund Iheai, advising, ndmonishing, en-

[rcaling, aro not or a class thai modesty should oblige

us to givo place to. Il any one doubts on this point,

let him go to .VasbioKtan or to llarrlsburg; lot him

measure the calibre of Mm men in place and ibe moral

elevation of tho people in the lobby. It bo do not

rclorn wilh another feeling (hnn that of profound

deference, his experience- will he- dilferent from that

of most whn have gone before bim.

It is not necessary, however, to go in person to

Washington or to Uarrisburg in order lo exert this

11 indirect influence." Dy most it con be done better

a now party while the war

is a success and tho South La beaten, tbo coi

rs will slink off to tho holes Irom which thoy

led. It will finish Uieni, and Mr. Lincoln

I a very respoclsblo chanco to bo his own sn

1 the Presidential chair- But If wo make

blunders and at lost ^tumble to ruin, tho compromiaon

ing, lor then tho Soulh will refuse 10 llsto n

na. Let the result bo as It may, it ia not

easy work lo form a non parly, founded

upon tho principles of Thurlow Weed, tbor-* <•

nough for sagacious anti-slavery men to

There was an animating passage in the debate

ho Senate a few days since. A Republican Sena'

iad been attacking Richardson of Illinois (and v<

properly) for bis sympathies with tho rebels, and

Buchanan and bis Cabinet came up foi

This was Ricbardsoo's opportunity, and bo

without leaving our regul r be la. Wo can do this;

ur representative,whom we can wrilo lo,

snd to wra ,

aod by all the

rally op n themselves lo

do his duty.

one c arnestly deoirtfna lo

cod IhlDH. bown. Individuate nn d fur

os to go directly 1 tho

hoir ro monstrances ond entrc Ilea. So mo lendingJricnds, d tbe Hicks lie l

rom 11a rrlsburg, whither ihey had g ono on an anti-

slavery e rraod. Their bus neaa, 1 is undoratoc-d, was

sage of an anfi-lmmigratiun law, Vostilo to Ibo freo

blacks, contomplated by tbo Copp crhead Democracy.

What auccess Ihey met with baa cot transpired, but I

learn that they caaio homo much i.ncouraged. This la

it ought lo be. Sects. If they nre good for anything,

good for just such purposr.-s as tb|s.

L few weeka ago, Wendell Ihlllips and otbera went_

Washington, his avowed purpose being lo give a

better anti-slavery shape and 1

,ved it s foUov

i« your Secretary of War today!

of those men who stood arrayed agains

fight of two years j^^ ;the private, cooilii

„! tin.! Admini-trMici. which you u> w

s of his Admiuistra

Lane, ol Kansas—Does not tbe Bonatm from

Fori Sumter and 10 tend forces lo bold the foru of

Li,iri,--L 'ii harbor!""

. Richardson— I do not expect that tho Senator

ergy t

. Thath 1 effort. Ill tl.e |..t.t.il-

preaslons of pi.

hatred drawn fr

b members of Ibo Cabmet-is attested by Iho strung Bi-

ll visit elicited from loyal

Land tbe bitter outburst of

indgiv. s a lectu

minds me 10 remark, Jn passing, Ihal ho won

lectured for ua three weeks ago hod wo been

procure a hall on the evening on which he was

command. " But it happened unfortunately Iha

considerable halt in thu city was engaged f

evening.

It was said at one time Ibis Winter that

Lloyd Garrison was intending a visit to the 1

Capital ; and some of ui wa.o honing il was Ir

f srlsl^SlftotVa^^^s^£SK^ !» Abolllionists from other people have been re

indonlna every act of Buchanan's AdndnijiraUoalaioved. Friendly cooperation with our fellowciuwna

Page 3: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28

;nil)" would i

—(111 lately impossible— is now invited. Opportuni-

ties—soclnl, moral and political— or promoting Ibe

cause are freely efl'orcd, nud It is the duly of Abolition-

iststo accept them. Mr. Garrison, like Mr. Phllllpi,

should -'go upon change," and bo won in tlio busy

haunts of men. Thnt is, be should, as mucli ns lio can

consistently with other duties, oiinglo with people of

ml classes nnd nil kinds, nnd color wherever he flnds

an open door. Though n uoiiTealslAnt, nnd by hli

peculiar views on that subject, disfranchised, he has

na goml n right nl Washington— there to counsel nnd

enlighten, to see nnd hi eicn—as nny other man, nnd it

would afford many friend* oi tho cnuao pleasure to

hear ot his feeling it bin duly to eierclso that right.

leribed cod disfranchised el asses, might also exert a

good influence by a visit to the sent of our national

government. Mr. Robert Purvis, lor instance, who

doclnred nt a recent public meeting that ho was

" proud of being an Americnn ci

not be a good thing tor Mr. Punton, and there—while gracefully acknowledging I

indebtedness lo the government for rights conceded—

i

mind them thai their duty to the prescribed class y

Ueks something of complete fulfilment!

Lai cretin Molt also— if tho atalo of har health we

not Buch as to prevent—would do noil to revisit a ol

where, on former occasions, ber labora wots attended

Willi auch evidences of success. If, when lira ruin

influence* lbe.ro were hostile, and surrounding circui

stances most inauspicious, her public discourses we

listened lo with deference nnd her private suggoatio

with respect, how much more would this bo iho ca

now when the whole aspect of tilings there has undc

gone n complete changel

In specifying the names of Mr. Purvis nnd Mrs. Mo

I would uot ho understood as implying any invidloi

comparison between them and others equally untitled

to represent the classes to which they respectively

nnd their name* arc the first to suggest themselves.

Perhaps, in candor, I ought to add tint 1 nltn think

them both peculiarly quslillcd by their endowments

for a work of this kind. Good people ollen undertake,

with a hearty good will, duties for which neither

nature nor grace lias fitted Bit

Tho" "of e ,ety. i t lay

and talent

avemont of onr friends ilnrins and Emily Robinson

the loss of their only child liy death. Wo now give

ace to an obituary sketch from a friend :

Sileu, O., Feb. 10, J803.

It Is my painful duty In record ono of those uiclan-

,oly bereavements that come sotnclimca upon happy

families like a thunderbolt from a clear sky. Death

lias rudely entered thu awcet home of Marina and Emily

Robinson, and laid Ida steru arrest on Girty. their dar-

ing daughter. She died on tho Olh Inst She was in

ood health a few dnys boforo her death. Never were

and parent. Wont with a more afloctiouato, loving and

jvcly daughter. It may truly be said of her that she

ever uttered an unkind word 10 any one. She was

.heir light, their life, their joy, their solace. Iler de-

parture has ninde earlh one angel less, and heaven one

,For her I mourn not. She has passed Irom a

to a higher sphere. She now has all the hnppi-

.er nature is capable of enjoying, nod Hint Is a

deal. But It is for her stricken parents my heart

s. Their lives wero bound up in her life. Ihnvo

. Bcen grief more poignant than theirs. Well may

they exclaim, in thu pathetic language nf tho weeping

poet, "Heboid nnd see if there he any sorrow com-

pared to our sorrow."- Their, is no* a house of mourn-

ing. Theirs is a grief that ninny years will not asauogo

pai u tin gi, finished nnd unfinished (for she bid fnir t(

become a proficient in that art), as Ihoy will daily set

them, hung where she placed them, will start afrotl

tho fountains of their sorrow. But blessed hope ! foi

nil those days ol bitter anguish there is a blissful cor

dinl in tho liumoi

integrity of Ur. Seward na they »**,£*£»pltir^ I

| ! f^VggrareVlIy

Uh;

t;r!'k'V:.

|

-I :r ,' - ,- .. L^'Jishon^

uY£**I™t\™'1.!""' "..V. " "^.aiurWnU

notice almost daily thai such enpperlieads^s Cox ul

\lZ' "'r.'nl'hn''. ViV.'.""^ "t"i .te'enu-.r'.iai- i« 'h-

, ,.. r3 .-i Fr..l Soward'i n-ilary as A->-

n tho spirit-land. A tl rlM blessed c

it possible) bo greatly

Ibis being my tnith i

1 would say to these sorrowing pare

oon, very soo

triumphant icy. "The heavier the cr

find it- Eternity Is 1 ng. Endless

purity, love, nnd lino ledge, is eca

loved o

satlon i

The True Church, by Theodore Tailor

Pear Tree, by Mrs. Hopklnaon ;The last

Hie 51. Wet'

by Julia Word Howe ;Ami

I'rof. Louis Agassis 1Periel.

by Henry M. Alden ;Revio

Mr. Till "

ic hears it Is plainly inferable that

,1 Washington a great waste ol good

it of good management. Lit the fob

ler the government called ono day at

insion, accompanied hy a. U-ric.l friend.

said he, " allow mo lo present to yoi

it.Mt.F. of .Mr.K-haaejpressei

nppy to bo the means of introduoini

ni.lent shook bands with Mr. P., ani

jc seated, took a seat himself. Then-

i you, sir," said Mi

F."'-l'hnvo nothing especial to say. I merely called t

pay my respects to you, and, as ono of tho million, t

nssure you of my hearty sympathy and support.

"My dear sir,' said the President, rising promptly-

liis face show log instant relief, and with bnth band

grasping tbot of his visitor, " I out very glad

you ; I am wry glad

I hi

iq celestial m

ta, hard aa I

ms, the brighter

progression in

atic. I ndd no

iniaiicipaii'-n ;.i-...imiti,.n." lt.,t She InMli-

cncliil.ion is I Mr. Seward in shrewd and dim

oi, .I probahly knows very well what ho n ni

though ni'body else does."

grading oE fiongww.

n tha Striate on tho 13th. tho bill granting a pension

the widow of Hie late Rev. Arlhur B. Foil.

20lh tho bill providing a lompoinry

itory of Arixonn was pnswd

,porled allowing Iho people ot Novidi

Nebraska and Colorado lo organic State government

••-'on. On thosiuiv

powerful spjeeh

thu North. [Wo

bopo'to find room for a part of It ne*t wccV.j On

Monday Mr. Wllloy (Un., Vit.) presented n resolution

from the Constitulional Convention of West Vuginia,

accepting the Constitution aa nmondod by Congress,

and also resolutions asking for an appropriation m com-

pensation for Iho emancipation of slaves in Wen Vir-

„lni«. Mr. Richardson (Don... 111.), on Iho same 4ay,

made tho heat reply he oould to tho speech delivered

by Mr. Wilson, on Saturday, but only succeeded in

gelling a Bound flagellation from tho Massachusetts

pasted. On the 1

day Mr. Wilson (Rep., Mas;

Under Iho

Irulie of the

The Darkened House,

! tho Old World, by

ud President Lincoln,

id Literary Notices.

!—onu of the best. In our opinlot

t Tti' jiWantfo o' published— will be found

i page.

Bio Music Ilall stage, in Uoato:

h Anti-Slsvorv Subscription Anniversary, may oi

tained by application lo Bobeot F- Wiulcut, 221

Washington Street. Ilea ton. Price, ono dollar.

OOyTBIBUTlOHS FOR WIS. aAGE.

i have receiv.vd, siuce last acknowledgment,lh(

followlog contribuliona in reaponse to tho appeal of

Mrs. Frances I>. Gage for clothing for the Freedmcn

under her cam at Pads Islnnd, S. C.

,f clothing from friends in New Bedford

I'-fumg' 1 men from volun-j

fruoi securing enuuyh while. in, .urn and work but

- ii. 1 a ..-.ill t'i ili.> Marksih.L- rabehnand he says in

j

" Aboli'ioi

nocrat, sensible

sre long pi

bo capital fail. .rs. They n,

rnvi... ami will r.ill-.iw wl.erevc

lead. They will stand by llx

inalily.— (Tiic/oo TW'iimt.

Issued an nrder from

N.groce may bo employed and

C):>. K.h NiMiini-.i.— Liin. Roaro-

)fCon B r

Asle.imslersou.|iiarti.-ri.

ill]. JMiil nunil-T "1 while

KrieuJfi in Ll"|i"'lnle, Ma-.-..

I^ancoater, Grant Co., Wis., 1"JJ

na who aend packages of clothing should Bend

ul inventory of the articles ; otherwise, they

1 to bo repacked here, the necessity nf guarding

the shipment of goods oonlrnband of war com-

pelling the government olfleials to refuse all packagi

FREEMASONRY, SOUTH AXD NORTD.

mraraLB, Mass., Fob. 10, 1KB:

ml of last evening is on nrti

cen received in Now York fi

rand Lodge "f Virginia n-eei

headed " Masonic," v

lint Ir i

viwri* u.i.U-

M.:- n- V,,rk, t

• aid and comLouis Agassii

.doptcd. On the 20th BieNatlonnl

Currency bill Ipreviously passed by tlio Senate)

passed, yeas 77, nays Ct. On tho 21st, the Post C

Reform bill was passed, 72 yess, BC nays. An an

.lent wm made, providing ibnt all soldiers in i

nd hospital shall receive and transport lelters fn

oatage. The Senate bill to prevent correspond

rlth iho rebels was also passed, it provides III

ey parson being a citiien of tho United Stnles

r.lhren..! i

-ien ..I n-il

, Mi- in.!.-.:

nityll

""'""aa'far'Ba

it docs go, it is significant."

• It ia significant," says 37w Jounia'.

Significant of what: Why did not Uc J,

oul and tell whnt it Is ifjni/loanJ oft I w

npinion. It is eilher thnt Ihc Masons of Virginia have

become friendly to tho North, or that tho New York

Masons have become /rirarfly lo the South. It

be the former, therefore it must be the latter.

,blo frif

o you, indeed. I Ihoa-jU you

icd that if some of our '

eitromoloft" know all

in.'iicli, they would have

Yorkin fact,

Ithruuglii'i

peas able I

Mr. Lincoln bad to [

bowels for tho unfoi

it is plain lhat between Radical nnd Conservative,

Presbyterian and Qoaker.Anti-Slnvery and Pro-Slavery,

the President must have been in tho loat eighteen

months preached to within an inch or hia lire. Prom

a ministering angel""

lave ;o fear

would in one respect have the advon

oilier people in their elforU to influenci

io sent of government : that ia In the nduvil

rcstedness of their motives. They don'

^TTant office, and everybody knows It. When they visi

.Yasbington they are not auspcclcd of coming for eithe

pla.ee or pelf. All they wont is that the governmer

should do its best possible for the country, and for a

the. people thereof. If thoy will only <

This ii

rcill their hon

In Ins flouJ" on Ihc lllth, the joi

ig e.t-Senalor Badger from the B

io Smithsonian Institution, foi- his

f Begon

ixpcll-

Wobare not described.

Ii the money furnished I

Be prices, nud to get Oidi

authorized t.

o?o found freo i

ljanl! in hospilals.

cording lo tho number

iion», brigades and inde-

longer." At hciid this ho looked upwcatch a gtimpie of a country where, he ki

bondage would end. Poor deijr I ,i,,. ,ter.i'l. unl.sufht, th.'i- ir.ili't-d wit.

1 tho r

w'lllTad"-'

found even

the >"otv nun >r I'

l-i.t,.- run," i„ . .,,: „,

y.aiT,;' man was n.lli... I

jl p.Tii.il''! ii-''- 'I '" ','1

k

.>!.] man weuM siihnili !"

dm-,, iii ulstery furthe s

IWff OuKif*.

Tilt "CosTBlnlvo" is t.'iATi ivi-.--The tlavohnlderlabout LouUrille, Ky., have for Borne timodedared thatthey would not perroll nny "laves to pa-i ihrough thatcite under protection ol tin !-' !-.: I |..-n:i- -. Dn ,-nur-diy last a collision with the Iroons, from Ibis cause,seemed for a time unavoidable. A number of negroes,

said 10 bo slaves of KentMCk.su'. uppe.-irlng in Bin liori

of a passing force, marching f.riv.ird, e-.rtaln clllunt,

wllbout any appesl to thu aitlliari- authorities, at-

The att:nipt,

Packages (the sender paying evpi-.H

c directed to Oliver Johnson, Anti-Slav

eokman street, Hew York.

rebel army, or win. have hc.-u employed, In any man-

ner, in Hie rebel service.

J l-rtir,. lb.."' I.i-l-.i..'ii.i- I.. ]...r .."!.-. wl,,,. iii-li nol

„„„ Hvrf iH in .1... ,-l.-l ....le, are ,li :!.. val, nr bar,

,.l,ildren or "ilicr near relatives in iho rebel armywho aro benetltled or ciainlalued by the labor of sucl

f Iho order direeti

tins Hit nf personowner, duly aulhciof Ibo troops In

Keotuckyinihelrcights." V\tDemocrat adds:

'Sovoral dava aiuce '.en. i.i-,h.i-.t gave orderd lo hia

subordinate ofucera fi.rliiililing iln-ni ti'-uii permitling

any negro ibvo belonging to Kirilucky to leave thu

Stale with them. They are posiiindy proliihu.-.l from

tfiUvonicUs of the Wlir.

that Vicksburg

s io the 11th,

Tho Washington i

withoul

a fori

of the

any oi

f the L-nltod

thy." The lotcat

n nnli«e limtilitK-.- ^---

ihington correspondent of 77i^ Iltralil sayi

m.ed lhat Gen. Daniel (Jllmann, of New Yor

nmnnd n. negro brigado In Louisiana, lie go

-e with a complete >ci of n-liiti- ..fnters i-jr ti-

lts Ihe rank and Die to bo raised fr-:ui ihc ce

,' A -.n .'I Vir,.-l'rL-r.i.k-nt Hamlin ia lo be 01

Colonels, and Bie villi ol Hie Vice Prc-nlerit

,],,hq V,M is aanl iu l.c fcr ihe purpose el nrranginif

be orjr.wiii.itio o nf UiiM*. regiments."

We trust the Si-nale « ill |.r..iu[.ili- .irillrm tlio Tvesi

.. llt:

„„,.ml ,...ti.,a ..i On. -Mm IV 1'helpsof Yermon

, „ M„i„r-l«oi-ral -I Bie Union Ann). It will b.

,,, t ,l Urn. I... r.iHig-ied a lewjnoinhs since, dls

^sied at the uictl,.-!-, lur pr.-m.-ulll^ ll.o war. II-

and with Bio intent to delcat the m-

"he govorumeot, shall, either directly or

ipeu any correapondeueo or intercoorse wit

ended rebel government, or any Individual

lyuipnlhizing, therewith, or shall counsel o

y. The " Knights ol Ihe (Joldcn t-ircle ore a

der, got up by Southern slaveholders, to pruerce,

i™i and jirrntluals slavery everywhere, whose mem-

•rs are sieom to bo/aita/ul lo perform all lhat. No

nubt but Gen. McClellan and Gen. Lee are both EYco-

lasons, if not belonging to tho " Koighls of tho Golden

Circle." It is said that many military officers of our

my helong to Iho latter secret order. Docs not this

:count for our failure in conquering thu rebels! Does

>t the reunion of tho Masons of Virginia, and New

York Indicate a secret conspiracy to destroy Iho Bo-

publican party, and put an cud In all nboliBon and

lorty in the country!

Most respectfully yourn, IaAJC Srcmsa.

NEW PUBLICATIONS.

^HBKsrosons-OE on the Present Gelations betweenIk. Ml., „i,.l tin- I.

I. i.r . « Sr.il.-. .,r America. Pp. 15J.

llJ-loi.l Llllle, Brown .VCo.

In this elegantly printed pamphlet we bavo a

ipundence upon^the Slaveholders' lteballion aod lac

lie, between an Engluli sod an Aniuneou Ian

Edwin M. Field, Esq., of 1-oodun. and Charles G-.

Loring, Esq., of DosUm. It ha) becu prioted by Iho

of gentlemen, who, haviqg aeeo it in manuscript,

.

I".

.p l n i ti llnll hu^;:n lru.,k :liter..liat.go of viuws,

lined by individuals on eilher side, possctsing

naive inl.irrni:i-r,

Capt. Robt

,(n il|i|ii-iint

1,0 Miisvk In

celleot tppoinlm

Ua»hingl.in

PERSONAL.

t G. Shaw, of Ibi Masschusells 2d

1 Colonel, and Capt. N. P. Uall.nvell, of

etta 20 th, Lieut.-Colon el oi Ibo Maviiacbi

new colored regiment. These are o:

Anolhi

encoura^

—for tli

i thnt t

Ltiona—moral, social nnd political

if tho government. In this city

there havo lately been orgnniied clubs and oilier asso-

ciations, the qualification of membership being uncon-

ditionnl loyalty; and tho object— the defeat of the rep-

tile plotters who are cooperating with Bio South for

Iho overBirow of the Union. Ono of those, called tho

" Onion League,'' though but a few weeks in existence,

and requiring Hie payment of S50 on ontranee-lho

admission fee being $25 and the annual ta. in advance

S26 more—already embraces upwards of 6UD mombors.

It Is coutcniplated to start similar organiialions— not

Bimilarly expensive, however— all over tho country,

In no olher way, it is believed, can tho enemy bo sue

cessfully dealt wilh. Thescclubi, or leagues, or what

over they may be called, will bring tho frienda of ihi

government acquainted with each other. They wil

tend to fuse inlo a" common mass those who are loyn

io Freedom, nnd to give them strength and efflcienci

Jor the work before them.

Tho Copperheads owe their present strength to th

completeness ol their orgaonations. They havo thei

dens in every ward of the city and every town in tb

country. An organised minority can do tho work of

majority when their opponents act without concer

The friends of Iho government, not anticipating a Qr

ia the rear, had made cu provision ogiinst such a eoi

Ungency. While they slept iho enemy sowed tare

Ihe cockatrice's egg was hatched, aod Icok what

brood ol reptiles! Their heads tuusl be bruised ;an

this can only he done b> organisation. Let the Ahol

tinnlsta, wbde they perform th.-lr whole duty to th

Societies to which they already I. rlcng. not withhold

lheir aid, by word and act, from the work of establish-

ing new organiialions ull over Ibe land.

Beforo closing allow me to say, for th

your renders bereawny, that wo are to I

city, on Monday evening, llnrch Bib, wh

long desired, a lecture from our old-timt

and ever faithful friend, TiiEonnnE D. Wkld. In his

letter fining the time uf hia coming, Mr. Weld,

charncterislic modesty, soys

:

" Lot mo suggest that a small hall, probably

ivant to attend. As I died out of the sptoWnj world

nearly thirty years ago, nnd before that never spoke

in Philadelphia, nor nearer to it than Pittsburg, and

dosen of familiar Irlcnds, a hall Ihirty feet by seventy

will doubtless give a wldo berth to each i

Our friend is mistaken. It will take a larger hall

than tbot 10 occommudale ull who will want to see nnd

nenr bim. For though it is "nenrly thirty years"

sinco he withdrew from tho stage as n public lecturer,

Ind blm which has preserve.]

probably start in a ah

Bayard Taylor, who

Mr. Cameron's depart

Secretary ofLcgati

i Major-

De will

i relievo

lays the Washington

he sUtecaent thai GeIhe Department of tt

n iiitiv,: 1 at. The opp.jd

t Is still unrelenting."

r of il.e -1st inst. eonta

tho length ol" time emphiyed;mil

IhoWlumn of" remarks" will be noted on what duty' by whom ampin) ,:J. Tti.it..- criipluivd by the ciigi-

iiili.r,,,! en tli-ir nppropri-ite rolls. Tticy will be pnvided wilh ololhing, to be deducted from their pay.

"

ibalance to be paid i.. ihe pir.-on employed, unless

belong lo a loyal mnaler, in which ease payment

., .!!.' Illicit, il-v

guiog on boats o" anger a'iur,.-.l I,ii .-111

,r.andGc.

a that he should liel.l tlu-ni

lb, wilh esemplary rigor, any dls-

dor.Lot those who uru wrorder* of Gen. Gi

,; i

ill l-

livery negro thus . i,.|. !•._...1 will r.celre a eerllfleale

from bis eui|i lover, veiling forth Iho fnet and nature

if bis employment, and ie. male (..- female negro will

aplain aa ollicer

"red out to mi

efuaedtoobeye

ness of Col. Danioll, of Bio

red regiment, who [.laced aI the day on duly, and put a

jicnant of the guard thu aai

f on Gen. Granger. These orders el Gen. Grangero Iho full sanction of Mnjor-Ge.i.-ral Wright."

lEnvrcEf of Lor.n, Ducso.— While the negroes in

nt nnd ill agents, they do not permit their loyalty

bo ehakeo. but cenntntitlv render lo.-l inip.irlant

o ol Ihia Is

In nn account of the Into operations in Eorwi'The rebels haio placed all sorts ol ob.lr

- "lay and river, but onr fores were not a» nru so.l

I. i.l reiorled to lheir old pnvince of [.lacing tor-

es in chains aorosj the rivers, until tbey weroinately informed by- two Intelligent pogroas, who

jumped from the cotton mid ...'.nn a.li.ire ia warn our" 'oops of their danger. Tl\r >/.i> -

.(...ioltrj uuf (Jin cruel

C-Jli'ia of th;tf il'jiljrrou.1 'iml in/.rii-if ni.i.Jii.ir.f. s/ioir-

i.j our tjji'tri !},• lin-s 'itl.icAtd lo (liu^ lur/mfass. Ourofficers removed two nt llic-jo .1. .iruetive., nnd In onu

them was five gallons of powder. The cnnlrabaads

id the rebels have pl.nite I iiunv more ..f larger site

further up Iho river. Une oi Bie torpedoes ill. cuiercd'

r oorlroopswos enclosed In a square wooden boi

id marked ' medical stores. 1 "

A MEStOFHELE Div—Kty Wat, Flo., fto. !.—Tho30th ol January was nind. meiii'.iral.lc lo the negro

.pulatlon of the island, by a gra-' -"

Zr of B.e c-p.oi.eo, Ibec.,,, f.he We...,l»

,„ i -wi.-i L-mWiit which recenily run thu rebel

',','. 1 ;", V„-l, t.ur^. He, wa.s .HCek.-d by the forli-

..'u,,,,. ..ii lied Uil.-r. an. I. alter n liri-k ...imion,,,!,,,,;.

..I,.,- ...k.r- 'lliii-iteii ol Ihe officers nnd crew

(.recaptured. All the ..the.sure said ,..l,„vc i:,,,.,^.

u , ibaioc iu 0l e confused, and His dilDeult 10 make

It having been freqnenlly reported toGen.Bosccraos

,!",.M l'—»l -n-oir line- dressed in

„- oniiorios, and il" r ""'> hllV1, "l'i"iared thus in bat-" r

, . ......, . , .i.e.-. .. .n i.

I.-•!,- ., .i - i

other irdial C

ntirely free from any prer-iij'-ing nalionnl prejudices

r ill-will which would unfavorably temper the dis-

ussion, might aid in the formation of correct opin-

nns upon the painful relations flubsisUng between the

icople of England and Iho peoplo of the loyal States

if America in reference to Ihe rebellion. Mr. Field's

,re brief, while those ol Mr. Luring comprise on

laborntc, though by no rneana an exhaustive, defence

if Iho United Stales in her efi'orta to put down the

n'n.wliue nn.mtour Ihii-S.

1

„1 treated iiccordingly-

Says the WiLshimriiui

Timrs: "H hi- b«« »

...^''r»:i -h, eacaped intj' l" J lines,

charges ngains''-'"1

ebelltoi is liko i

The widow of the late S .r Douglas has written

that she was about to

g extract is published:D married again. The falls*

Although I lire so quietly, tin

i talk about me. I have been disturbed by rumors

ist 1 am engaged. I hope you will think enough ol

; in patriotism, means to bo jo

the people ol the United States, but who, for the

of lima or inclination lo study closely iho queslio

issue, has forpaed his conclusions upon suporlk-Lvl

grouods ; while Iho loiter, wilh the ndranlagu of

Ihorough acquaintance with tho subject in oil its rar

ibearings, and tilled witli anxiety for tho honor nn

welfnre of hia couutry, plies his Iriend with nrgi

[its alike unanswered and unanswerable. Tha divi-

sion cannot fail to do good in England just in pi

-Bon as II finds renders. It is clear, however, tl

. Loring is no radical. Ilia views of slavery i

.so of a " conservative," who has not yet discovei

.I the Right way is the Safe way, and who drei

. consequences of immediate emancipation. It is

hoped that ho and the class to which bo beloi

II ere long get light upon this question.

nail, Montreal. The lion. Jos

all military men on this subji

mil plan m speedily a.lojiied

ihlu in this mailer. The iu.

dy lor this trouble

[,. Steele

.1 -dull L.L- dceUli-.l M i\.\.

r.: :.]..- ill cut of the N.ruin-:.! II. at the chare;iat he was in ihe t..il»ii

.yil in, liters 'oeilii-c.il, iv

are al,-nti.ie-ly lul.e. The.li^lli.iK.I o itti the diih,j,?l

lo, by thl- ..lis, llolji.l [,

tome other General who

Joseph N'^01^^,;;;'^',!",^;!^"

1

"^,!?*^^''.!X"t,'u-i

'•-'•<"' '''" coleinct prejudicial to good

-| i- nn-l oulilirv ili;ci[.liiie, In hiving tendered his

,,,.!,„! wlieu'i.i iron "1 the. lie.,,;-, on Ibe ground

.,, ],.. ,-egar.kd Hi" I'reslJcilH i:.ilnliel|..itien rrocl.1-

iitioii a-, iiie>|e- lie'"' ""'' uiicjiisiituiiuiial, and in eon-

i'.oieh and 3u„,„(,, ..colon

ifLviiii-iSrif UK

rricd i

•nt nnd truly specific

i-...|.: the ....hoed r.-(! i tilemi! i"g .,

.i..-.ninii.--|..ln.| officers In Co and i

i-te would iieniii re .lore lo ooi- rank:

I. it would lit well lui- allot' lliin-c.

eiui-1-r...i ... Ilnowioe up ejiltiwork

loo ...nili. a ', ii litre lln-y w III.'

in coiiiio.i with our iruops.— Cor. Ii

on tv sr i'.usr l.m.fci.i r .— taya the .:.

„', -,,..,., .j JVsf .*' ilajor John (Jan.

.„ nei.ui; "I thin post, with sever;

u. |,..,I elllldl-el,,-' il reeilllellt lier.l

.arched through Bio

;pl that a la-ly, belie. "o,

marching Ihrough th

s fnrn

Irlendly. They n

rrlng

ing. In the after n at

n

'™m" Iho?n joined by a

Beers andclti-

i were bounti-

fully furnished. Spec

people at any private

peremptorily disperse

and a.'JIho l"'Ovi

Tub Covral^^

.., etlecl

s oppi ured, nnd will he immediately

The Army and llie Ncsrocs,

EVIiiLTWIUSKE tiiv A u cur.'a- ''' :~'"''

'

l

'

i|

.'"!' '"'_y,

'\"-h, 'ni'll'-o I.1 . t<\,''h.irblHMT Uf frefdum. "-

i'.,-',ir.|:

. t'#eiol i.i.-i..olc'. lt> Mr. Adanii.

e out in St. Lawron

II R. Giddings, Aroe

lartments In that pi

in of the building near tin fire, and though awakened

quickly aa possible, before he could escape, be

icnsiblo from the efjecls ot tho vapor and smoke,

d was carried for safety lo another part of tho

itcl. Subsequently ho fully recovered from tho effects

Among the first who enrolled themsclrca in thu com-

iny now being recruited in New Bedford by Lieut,

race, was Ephrnim Dolany, a man but a few years

r.ec a alave on tho eastern shore of Maryland, The

I Nili-

'-.t. i:.-n

This rable

• l-i

t to purchase hit f

goollcmso ol Ibis city, r.

tcsdlly in his cuiplny i

.aio.iDt Ho l.m now dt

if discharging nn elder debt—

t

oppression in human Bbtifery.

And this—saya the Washing]!

Springfield RrpiMi

lielany has

avoring to

:d hiuiself b

will not

ilesa I c roops

lhat S'

*Tor:

" Wo haven't thorn

;oln. " Then why don't you

raft upon Now York !—raise

o should have bcen raised in

"Mr. Seymi

"Thai

he left a re

honored 'r

hind

torleal trlumph. a t Sill

j-nmUy. if

unniih' i

a good hea ng.

,nnd n

AlllCS. O

.nipliiocl

n Bie land for facts,

is the Tue SrastiiBD,

TunOberlin (0.) Kruu pft>'s

saying: "The very best jnurna

arguments, and incidents, com

Kntional AnB^lavery movemen

publiihed at New York. We recommend it with tl

fullest confidence." We are grnleful for such Coi

netidaiion, •iHHiiatuHiiuly bellowed, and only wish

might have the eikci to Increase- our circulation amoi

thoso who need B.e " facts, arguments and incidents "

embodied in our columns. We havo many gratifying

proofs that this psper is highly esteemed by its

generally, nnd wo venture to remind them that, in tho

present altered state of tho publii

ss Jills-, ult as it

(rQbicrlbo for it

itould dra.fl Seymour/" aascrta Butler. I will not

vouch for tho truth of this story, but I have heard it

from lips lhat rarely tell anything lhat Is not true, nnd

it aounda very liko Butler, and I rnusi ennfess not

unlike Mr. Lincoln.

The correspondent ol Vie Tribute, under date Turin,

Jan. 27, saya :

•• fiarlbaldi'a wound begins nt last to heal. Heks alrendv upon "mi. he... a.i.l tin, in n month ur

fully recover. Hut if Ins re. ..very is .low. it is, at

, t„ be oompli'tc. His biire.,„[is am isii-lied tli.it

tin- slid. test truce ot louieoe-is will remain. It Is

pr.-il.nble ih.it the li-.ii is t.. pay a visit to tnglaiei iu

' nring. unlets the s.e ti -.- ol B.e I'.illsll revuluiion

d route the spirit ..] lib.Tiy all over the Continent

vf Europe, me I give the Italians a fair dianno tor try-

ing once moro their good luck in nn attack upon

The following latter was addressed lomo short Brno

back by Garibaldi Iroui Caprern lo a young Russian

girl who bad sent bim her portrait:

llv Dr.a« Cut i.i. :Vou ask me furs

lor lin,.'fi. (he country of your I

iv as h-.rn..n tho l-inh.-, of the river

In- |, r ...-hum oil il.ul "II men are broth,

whether"- -

oxefialioa. Its seteii hundred

pages aro crowded with statistics, lucidly act forth

o following among other topics, vil : The Coas'

,ri Tho Smithsonian Institution ; Insanity am

Hospitals Tor tho Insane ; Ironclad War VeaaelsjTin

Eieeulivo Government of the United States ; Depart

of State, War, Navy, Treasury, Pust UIDce. Into

Judiciary; Congress; Excise Tan ; Tho Xtf

Tariff; Tho Growth of the States; Tho Census 'a

IBfiO; The Individual States and Territories; Kd-ica

tion In tho United States ; Religious Statistics of iV.

World ; Fureigu Countries, ote. Then wo bate n vcr.

careful Abstract of tlio Laws passed at tho ucjci

session of Ibo 311th nnd tbn first and sccoad aessioui t

the 37 tli Congress; a Record ol Important Events c

Ihe War from its commencement to tho end of 1W'

I a list of all the Battles (ought therein, tho plice

time of each, with tho number of kilted M I

oded on both aides— filling 80 closely printed

is ;American Obituaries for 1SSI and 1602

; Lis I c!

Books published in tho United States In 1882. Tbc"' ' brought down to the

wo hope It may become an established annual

iving eueli improvements freni year to year as

rlence may suggest

iT JlKitniis.—The co ,-e:'|.OI..l.nt

nn-. .111 . LlioU'l

JS'iSTiu.")

. -:.i-.Jr

brrded Wiit r :

id bravo net of Ihis Jlnjor was to

lis men break Intn tho quarters ol

ads, and steal their Christmas din-

tl bought with ilu-ir ISiBe earnings,

dent -."i tin' N.V. fir

The Fortress

:. i.,'-.i ,--. .»» "".liny pursued in South (.'.i"'

1

. .ranly upon farms, underbling those who have no other oct

. For months past

es.who wereuliaWaoved to Craney Illi

Jr. Brown. There i

n hundred, and, as

n.l under ihe iiiperinton.l-

Hi.- island in approached,

nient, and subjected neven- hundred persons merethe blacks escrci-.o tin- pri

an any other spectaolo the giant

They are comfortoblv lodged

supplied wilh food by BioKovci

.v>'-i

.11

Oi

..-. 1.

I.'

1

.,

: and.le lle-

-I..'..|.i

, ....mill,;

I ill [i 1,1,'.. 1

-h"ti,'.-'ii,'

i,t i.i.ii ,.i

Oor-A 1.

of

I'M SIM Tli

o,

It in ei lent lhat

il they bare iho wisdom to adapt them,

oumstances. Many ol Bieui will dn it.

rea.l> '-"• i'.'• -evlioo. where tlio

icr ai-niio. bus marlc the .Uvea .-oii-el..iis

•er. In the Vlciiu;> Meuiphi-, ami In

negroes at ieage-i |.y Bieir oil mMl.rs, on

,|ly saii-lactoiy. Gen- Hull's suggests lo

eel,lpr..i.|.ii.iaiion.lUat

e producla. A recei

rely eiiiraoi-.l ii

i Magnolia l-Uli

nNew Orleans gives

s as to thu ellect of

whom I not only find

er Inloi'

the Inrg

the sog.rniill like !X vt

in,. Thrg.,,. It.,

. I.osiu by

self, lleh.Ve.1.11

iuw and then you w

real many of tho

OI I d.Ol'lt

. looked as

numbers of slaves

i:.e.-lati

Craooy I ol

i confined fo that oecessitaluJ by cuoafort

iibness. A little spam time his been given ti

lacatiou ol coartc baskets lor larm ivork.ot v

mber are quick and skillful. Eicellent meehloiilol iimv.ig there bin, ks, ami ,.11 the dive I

oi [urniiric- plea-.'s them, nnd ahnnt a hundred

heeii nlca-ly pl-iieil up... ii the laud of a rebel

Gale, near by, who has nbiiiiilone-l his property :

ilblng but spade tho soil. Agri^

ind seeds will doubtless bo lur-

c'f

il bid) Wltlioi, '-&»)I

'"-,. !„„ | ,,.y

.cor told Ihetn ho ^M ",u , .1\l g ".'Hli io, ,..

must wail till the end o. ""., lll( , v w.V- all evidently

This was on Saturday night, a„ Vvutflit. they haddii-alislled. alonJ,..i mornIon •> - ''" r~i- '"'

drop cuui|. late, in the main pi- .. way of tn. -!.

quartern—and they .:o[iiui-n.:..| i..lliiv; ilio hell, and e.

kct.-d around the masiere house. The overseerscame lo quiet them, and have them go to work. Tha

e did not payilo- told iham,

refused to lut film

... ii till the overseerwith Ibe monoy. They were then

to their work al ..nice, singiiij Ihe

•inc, ' Marchlnit Un.' Ttils song la

ii the a lea of Norfoll

by thegoveri.cry uliccrt..!'

iiore iluu the.

waiting, and .

s, plowing mu

il the i

country ll.OUUatlO.DUQ paid lot

the product of lheir labor would be gres

Flint or lUiiBi.'i'.: I'm CLJ.n..\.- TheSouBiern IlrpiB-

lic of Columbus, Miss., has the following :

.'. OrnSiAVia.— We have men for a long time a di-' -ir slaves to be more indepei

ocnll a

to do as they plea

rthos

irlonliola.

Ihe Vi .lulu

.. hei-.lU-

"."

1 1 1 [ "It Li I

r Samind whioi notu

n the banks of tht

. thai the

s,tbea>

rmena tho fine gr.ipi i of l'"l)' and the splendid

the Immense field- ol your mil iv..- land. I aUeetiiio.ni. I)

mu, your forehead, GinmiLDi.

Says Ihe Washington correspondent of the Spring-

Hold JiVputdfom

"Tho fact is Eewanl II a sphins Nobody under. ,_ ,._ ..i. nrl , n r,t* bj.at irtenils. 1 know men In

.nd

Tint Losdon QuuiiBULV Review for Jam

cott .t Co. 'a Americnn Edition, 38 WnUcor

nins nine articles, with tho following tlth

nstitutoa for Working Hon; Constitutional Govern-

uenl in Rusain ; Sow Testament ; Tha Ticket of Leave

lystem ;South Kensington Museum and Loan ' Eihibi-

ion; Life of John Wilson; Thu Stanhope MiaceUanf.es;

'our Yenra of a Reforming Administration, The

kmerican Question, for this qoarter, la passed by

ivitliout a word ; n sign, perhaps, ot a reaction in

Jrlliib opinion from tho fierce rartiianshlp foe the

ioutu heretofore eshibited.

Machine for January (Amirican Bd

Sc-oti i Co., 33 Walker St.) opens .with".

Visit to tho Con/cdoralo Headquarters," b

an English Officer. It Is full of biltorneas nnd misr.

preaeotaBon toward tho Nortb, nod of apologies ft

Southern treason nnd rebellion. Tho olher articlesi

are—Caiionianu, Part XII.JProgress

China; Chronicles ot Curling lord—Salem Chapel—en

Thomas Trollopo's Italian Novels ; A

Sketch from Babylon ; Belligerent Rights at Sea, and

the Changes proposed in them.

The Aibtxva Montqlv for lUreh is a very good

number. Wo give a list of the articles : Christophc

North, by Joseph Dana Howard; "Choose yo this Da

Whom ye will Survo," by Oliver WoodeU Uolniea ;Tl

Horrors oi San Domingo, by John Weisa ; n Londt

i, by Nathaniel Hawthorne ; Tho Vagabonds, by

*by Mrs. h. Maria

•Ddsoh] tost,. nuns otitic

K- succeeded in reaching hi

•"': .-- !j"/.:r'r'„;

irying nl

__ KawEniijoute.lerate i

The pine v

vho lately de rted from the

rs, who are losing i

ftssrsaraa;

oviJi-d t. by g

city

Wra**—^^^E^iric^^^S^^^S,^^

, them. Thoy ni

day nnd night, n

parts unknown. The ire gelling limy and si

.- lie 1

, bad

it they a efutounythingbutThoy will not tou

l.ii.-gr-i.i

.I tho r-

faith in tho

aroen-bneks. The slaves here mike no -ecret ol their

I l'iev Mill about il a- a I- [-..*..,.'.: conelu-ion, and many

of the house servants hero ore under contract with

their old moslers lo receive pay Irom that time."

Rechditiso is Flomoi.—The correspondent of Iho

,-. V. Tu.ies, writing ir 1 ,m ii-Iiim. leb.T, says

:

Cul. James Monlgoinery. ol li.in-:n. is now In Ihi.

State, wilh authority t- .lr..1l all she I" .n-.-.-s 'I for

neii!

nry|le

L

nn!.

L

g'-m' i' "ii-'. w'.-sl, ..I- r„ 11..,™.™ said

bo several hundred blacka, and an nmcor Is here

prepared to take all that rvnmhi at Hi's place. Over

two hundred ot tho first regiment were taken Irnni hero

and St. Augustine, and there are uow teas than one

I, u, Mired. i'.l--l>..di...lmculefl, alio!

either on Fori Clinch or in tho ti.ua

Twelve fugitive si

hellim. ,.-l- ,

s for thu, ,„l ll'e.ln.

d their tn

stresses sustained them in It If this cou

,long thoy would not only ruin their Slav

lock of discipline. We believe lhat son:

tampered mill, '.'it no i in as yet irmeli

We call attention lo this, because we

duty, nod hope our wnroing will bo heedt

PnoPtiiTTios io kiue CoLotiEn Tnoofj.— We learn that

C-omt liuroii-sk, li.u applied to the Secretary of War,

for neniii-sio" I" ..rgaoite a r.-inient .,r n brigade ..!

'

aUolorc.l Virpo,..!,.. > lib lh, intention ol flghtl

traitor F-r. Vs. on their own soil. The ap pin

! ,.,-,nuiii-i ..iiioi- './-:. ''""H,

l,"

1

,

p

""'1|i

li

l.'

i; ii:

M"J i

'

lhat it Is

site es pt to escape. T«had been travelling sine

Incredible hardships and danger.. Ihey

company with two others, Irom a polr

l-.eelltV lolle. bo k I" '• ..rit"'. '".' ""

Sunlsy nuht lln-y -en: (iivd lip.".

....nerslli nnd .iiiployiin'Ol amongat Ihi

.roable'to support thi.|...clr.s. J ii.it.l

,1-hool Mr the instruction ot several young

I ,mlili-i-n, l.e|.I ti) a iree ..olorcd woman Di

;, „[,..v ,v..--J..-ii chanty near our barrack

was surprised to ".- Ie.lv tie ,e^

i oUOc ..hlldrcui-ni-

rr; '

,| ' J',-;. ".-::|

]

',- .'''av'"ll

!

r V-'is.C ^'tiers cauld rood quite well and some could cipher."

r>„-r n .o.eiw Pissrwn to rut Fleet.—Rear-Admiral

../t'JrWM'es.otlii-^-ireta,-;,,, ttieNaiy, lhat lie I,

iling up hiscceu.. ,

'^;Y'Xrl

'!:r,!,e

,i

l'rine,iig

1,

ll'"tW wlC££ Aliral 'Porter tried ,o

^Ui,twl, l

te,-oea,t.utianiltogetasmanyasheneeJed

topi Toe opposiuoQ ol Cupperhsads to the war, ind tho

IVIi-i, irn

-.. I1T

LofiLTi.—ilarfrctlbvro, Ttnn.

jitraordiuary. They oci(uie-ci-

_j olher.

i killed,

cliascd by bluodbounJs, and uoe

eluding the dogs by besmearing

-dung, aud thus destroying the, ._ _ i._n !- I.l, ,lo..l, -.-....is.-.l

il with b

.__. tha blac.s are do

cape. Thoj had aot heard

„u . said they know they should

escape to tho Yankees, thoogh I

sjimiul goti«5.

Tueudokb Weld i —The second lecturu

laturday (Saienth Difi aOeraoon,

t, p.m. Subject: "TftoCtmsplrWora

uriL-i-inti-'. .li-qulet or de i

Ir Ibe oporauoi. of tliat

, 3te millions ol lheir hi

proclaiming treed.. in '.•-• 'L

Isrtvcrtiseiucnts.

TriC full 111. '-.J an.J MllSl lil'llitl

. Tennessee,

,.,,. because ill ore were siuie good Union popie la 'those Stales who dad nol with W hive their slaiea

FUwUEtWELU,,

;

Page 4: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28

THE NEW LIBERTYIter our nithers hod \uafl lolliuv

_1i. lilts lisll Hint liunrt Sn ll.c >l .'»

«-hk-]._uic imT;

j,i,:

';;';'1i

:";,

l

,',r

i;,

,

.

,

i

,

l

!;'

l,i'i

I,:,,,,-. It

_a ,tillilm: ->i

coricctluR Hi

Doll, I profflic, therefore

Ynl ring again lhc freedom loll,

rjnill they reach the liondmnn'n cor.

Through pain tin" wrings Hie Ilk H|i:ir.

Anil ipiMni full of deadly slriTo,

1 sod. grow nil Willi .-riTHTOii I

cfr.Cnrrlck'j letter, nlghl

uimn

*<$ T'^KlW»Kaln,[(ycu

and nVnrnui ul It next

r iho Hod

SSLlglvo you i™ve«^

nuunnd rlclie.—wisdom ami health nro humUim-li tit., fill ..> I...M-1I I J in ,,,iiroe.u hr:,.llu lie K"_th=fer«r«Vniv ilrnr <:liil.l. mi.1.- !,. ....,1.7 nel,, rl, .1 „..

,„. ,..., [_„„.l i.,,c rhe -. t« '!t

:n«'I reuicmnor, he

..,„.„, ,..,.r 1...I. lind lll.,„,l vclir l-s.lli. I ^..ctll OUt ,

your ttuji. I H 111 . im 1 1 1pride "''' • J • Ti 1

1• t

.

( -nr 1mi- f'niti

mcnt, ibnt llioutwnris of oii'inlly intelligent »i

odinu.lde negro, s, without n rnvlL L lo cl t.niictissi

lilood in tti.-ir v.-ins, have h.cu Lorn, nml lived, n

died the slaves ill' men, whose it lie to domineer w

llits color of (heir skins 1 It must be cci.fcsi.ed, Ihoro

is something, Hint startlca ih,, l.r..in, and stirs the

Wood, in Ihr idea of a sensual, dniukeil, white beaM

,,f !L pli.i.tmion driver losing 'I"- ''i»h "I""1 lba b",c

.

„| Ig ius Snncho 1 Yd such might linvc been his

lot; nnd than, some worthy ole(Bymnn, taking it

iwiitWoV view "I poor Sam !>.''< w..ulrl prove, from

holy writ thai ho lind Ham lor hi* ancestor, who

„„ ntnri> ihoti.'h his fai In: r. Noah, was n while

roan— tba'i slaveholders were Hi" vicegerents of Ihe

Almighty, carrying out his iuM.iioiH, who crcalcd™_ .. „..(. :.,.„,,, .-jiiiori. Mijjur and Inbncco far

ithout cmpciisalion. ninl that til.'

ibo power of Ihu Crown, and Ii In nwdess for ibo.

id nnd rich nobles lo conical it. !n the Republic

Lincoln's prod mimi inn, coming bome_ to the

hearts of Ihu people, is i.minii'esl by them in Iheir

sovereign capacity : Jin-1 il is Ha idle for iho pulled-' 'iipoverL-iiod (lavis-mnaleta to dutlaru Ii in-

ns it would bo dnnf.rrous for n Muscovite

. disobey the will of bit niounrch. In ench

ihero is n royjil d. ctvt

niih tli'm .lillvT.-.,. ...

:>:::::

And penco a ndjoyn innd lorpflth

obedn nil pura licr foet "hull

ilfu of uln tie

niU Eh.

Tho Imsm rem by Unto

jrily Ihrougli ii roost

with tt).>iiri*w>T.iindi...TV

rojiiinl' r of lln- fi;:tn."

How u> n younf; a(JoorfiO W.Pmnllcy,Those who know ihu noblo

will therefore KOndar be* l: '

that

[( i ih,. |,...,|l

slavery nhn —Eee. Pm

while uiRn, ,

il'.-liiii.-ti.ke.lii tin, iliviifj iirrnniTi m-Hl, nnra-ly.

ling Iho negro williout hnuim, wdj hnpisily

died, by provcnling him, under Iho drcsd ofremedied, by pr.jveiilinj;

beverc ].iiTiiahiuont, from u.

menial fiiciilliee, whalever,

In put

Oh, Freedom iff

my hoy loilocp,

FaittcEaB-W. Hah

JOyATJUS SANCIIO.

forgery, conimillct

nlwaya npneared

np plied eyuipnlhy

of tliin very eloqi

history of Di

trend Dr. Wil

ne 27,1777, for

icipletl

inn. £''« perrons nppenr to hi

l„, t - ,ii" i- :','. for l he fine of t'r.

"... J.lm „..| Julms.in lind lfn.iliii.-.

e. x( rled bimwll tlrenuD-^ly lo

id cnllowa j nod Snotho thus nd-

of the London Morning Post .

I |,;: l,„7:..l( !"=..f-nllL> !'

io n.-i3h he ralf'lit nic-i wit"

m,jnt* have mi. a,ly l.tvii vr;, 1 ,„,,|,.. ..v, ,.!!.. M.lif-I..

tn c ,.u-f:'---u-i>,l :: >i

i.,!i! .ir.uM 10 '"."1 ""

joi Alii

it ami (he inddeisiblo 1

1

'"tVi-'i":. '"iiit iiiV.

Lrfi

>,

"v,ild

in.iiRi.il)-. m.,i <"« '!• i.'"'i

'"('"li'v.Vl'l,, II.'

lire; ""^^^^^In^ X ,™r cSnvlcrs' on Iho

,1,-cr, ..lilcli """'j ';';,.

,

;:

,

:;;','!J", !!-'r:', J i'iitHion 1

ni.J theK r

,;,f

',, .!: !..:,;. i..„ iimmlVsled, lo the pnlplt,

i^i/lH^itie (j.-j-l U,:,li"i'"l OIk-jiit's,

liohnlf ol a inanwlio ens formerly

fld Of Il..:.l,„.lv.ll tH ,1.-117-1 "If

Lvri.tr mi im,"- ,.'iv j-i-. '" "' M-j^i "";";"''';

:t,(i r.ila-ii'.ii Hut l" i-'-' ,i ;:", "1 ilio "isi oco. ub

jrti-a ]>r. Li -1,1, a-" ^ pKiitlmr. ^ ol. ]. papi l»i.

The l.uff.om r.', of whieh EmikIiO wriles. prob.nlily

refera to Sam.Fooie's i'iitu>.-," the Cozener-," in wlueh

il.i» sudm'i.'i" j-'ker lidieuk-d Dr. Dodd nnd biB

In ihe auegeation, uh lo " unequal diilinotionB

Saucho secma lo have been, more

,y,io ndvancu of ihe H^o. Dodd

wan ei.cule.l in 1777. Forgery wan punished with

dcfrtb in EoRlnn.l. lill lbli. Too .lenlbpeualty wa,

,hen abolished in M hu, two !«,-!, of forgery, and iu

all eases of forgeri, in Hie first year of Victoria, 1B37.

1m„.li,m- >i.,„ b.j \-.,iHi. -r-i.i <i'lmirer onheairicalf. and waa patr^ed hy David « arriek1

atone lime llw Hi.»nl.i " M ^cRe-ited of itilroduc

ing Sancho upon Hie Hag"-1.

"' ihe. eliaraeler^. oi

oSollo nnO Orwriuto; t,ui the project wita abnn-

doiied, on neeonn. -! his pecnli.ir .riiculalian. It is

stated, by Gorton, thai bnncho uelually niipeared in

those ..Imractors.

Who doca not remember will:

ibo wonder and deligbl of bia D

tlint ray&terioiia imp, iho

leel hsrleqiiiiiof Ibe air,l„. .-.

mocker in (he world, h, laii-l.e.l hick your laugh,

nhouled baek your about, nr,d , rl. .1 hiiek your erv

There are comiuoti|il..''.' rd,.,, «. jo-t as Hiere are (n

fewlcommonplaeel^,.|d„ i" U„ w. .rid. mid ihere are

twontrk i.-ihoes, ..miouil, lennirki.hle, S rniid ami

U-ai.liful eehoei. I" Hie vitii.ily ol" I'nn* them axial!

mi e.'hii wliieh not .inli r-|.e!>i» ihe siimu word ei*

iii„.» in rapid im-mjioii, but hn^ the trick of cbong-

,„.. Him lell'rS lo V. ffui.h lis., iriu-n ii-e to u very

oltiiwiiil i..ke. Call out Salmi !The e.-l.t. .ostniiUi'

L|„,V,i,i,: (IJeMbets hencol) The reply un-

il.,ul.Udlv i.rOLV. .Is Ironi ihe -liffi el" Borne old Bin-

,,er who. ..impelled lo do etcriir.1 pananeo in that

spot, is moved to ihia adjuration every lime bo hears

the mime of his tormentor.

A -onev eebo hauciis ihe libine elill- ft! i.th.-rwesel.

.Uk him who is Ibe fcnrpnma«lei <' l-ll"'Vl - f ' " ,,,J

you get for an nniwer, r:.,el ! Lsel ii ihu German

for BBU.ond Ihe burgoiuasier i« liijil.ly ieniiblu of Ihe

implied insoll. More lhi.ii onee he lui' ordeml Hie

echo lo hold iia toneue; l"H tl ri„ey mocker Is not

liable lo imprisonment, mid laughs nt the allempled

application of ihe gag-lnw.

Mountain echoes are olion verv Rrand. ih

voicea of 6ublerrm„an il.:(ii...iis. allii'g lr,nu the bol

lorn of the world,'1

in *l.«i Hie Arabs call ibem. Ou

of the very grand."' .^i-'s on ihe t,.j.nini;..."ee,

.

pictur.,-.iiie lake in "'«.- Bavarian Hi-hlonds. at n apo

where Ihe naked clifl rises on .ins tide to the h.i W ht

,.f five Iheu-an.l feet "bile the oilier tide is rh.lhed

wiih forest. The repon ,.l a p.jekei pialol fired here,

ia first returned, lain! and l.i. ,l"i,,n, ihe wooded aide,

and dies away. In n second more il is heard gather-

ing along the cliffs on the o'l.ei' side, like a gradual

roll of Ihuoder, increasing in volumo until it breaks

over your head in a ,l<: alanine, , rn^li. louder iban lb

l.niauVi.le of n ship of the line.

Eeboeii love to haunt caverns and grollos. Thei

is n large cavern in linlanfl, in whieh lba cries of s

animal thrown into it increase in volume and mult

ply lo such ft fearful i-Mem that men of the strongest

uerves have lurned pale lo hear them. The peasan try

believe the cavern lo he one ul I lie principal gateway;

plnce not menlionable to " ears Yiolite?' Olhe

toe- are ihe ret ideates ...1' (;oe.l pinJ happy eeh-e

live ia hnrmony Wilis the n'eiit .J

[.,.-i; ol' Xaiur,-

of thee is the eelel.rnted cave ol Fingal.

proportions nnd bcauliful dctnils of H« ca

m the eye, while the ear is enrapliired by Mi

,,f ,„. 1,m,i.mI ,„usie. "Li.l unnuptlly fill Hie

The crystal sounda of numberlesi

brenlhin^ ol (bo wim

of puniabnienls,

,.l hu I

philosopher

hieal accounts, Clinl-

man, «hop?e speclea

havu endeavored to

he human; and eueb

b n bunovolence amn, accounted 'God'To the harsh deQni

that lyrai

carried on the buauthor of this obi

day, bo woultl ha'

the gift of prescit

ioio Fuller, v

,,-nliariy his t

Image, though cut in ebony.

tioo of Ihe naturalist, oppi

legislative, were once added, but ibe abolition of tbo

- '- '— now swept away every i

inncho left a widow, nnd a

.uainess of a bookseller." Had the

I ..serial ion survived lo tbo pi

avo surrendered hi a pro tenan

o, while contemplating thi

i trade nnd slavery ; and bun-professing lo bo tjbrislinns, andin nrlicle of their political erted,

IbHl tlaterij is the corner stono of n/rei republic.

Mr. Joseph Jekyll. oue of SaDohoB biographers,

remarlia—" The displa) , which these writinga ex-

hibit of epistolary talent, rapid and just conception,

of mild patriotism, ami universal philanthropy

attracted the prok.non ol the great, and iho Inend-

shio of iho learned. The pocia were aludied, and

gvtsn imiiaied, with some suceesa—two piecci

e.iuotrueled lor ihe t-ta.;e--'.be llif.-rv ol uiusi

Jift.i-t-l' pnullfhed aud iledic.ted 10 ihe Pi

Royal-und painling wan so much within,. tbo

of ignntioa tiaiich.-iB judt Qieul uud criticism, that

aeverul arlisls pind g'.at deierenee to bia opinion."

We shall now trouble (be careless reader, and

jjrulily Ibe pbilanit,r,..pi-i ',., ]ir>p Ming another of

taucho'a letlera. Tv "

young man, whom

igling with the endeuco of

the multitudinoua waves striking against (ho son o-

of bawil, mako a BtratigO and ravishing

"™l°ilNc. nonsense ia now nnd then relished by

hoes aa well as by ihe wisest men. A few years

.0 Ibe !,.||ov."LUg incident centred in Halliuiore ilnr-

'g (he ncsaionol a religions eoiivenlion. An English

vl'Vpyomn—a Utile red-hHired, if God

his legs for the purpose i

pflech. Eoho camo to the rescue

rienda, and lie following amuaing

(,'u-flrjiN.i.i—- llr. Chairman."£',/;.;,—"Mr. Chairman."C.V/yv«Hiii—" 1 have Ibe door, Ml.

1

Atliv-" I ha.c Ihr lloor, air."

O'-r./vi""'!-" 1 -',. von la.-an to iioiill

AWh/-" Ho yon mea.li to insult mo?By this (ime Ihe whole audience was 1

Ibe enraged little t:,,gl..hu>nn it, pp..- 1d..v.n mi

jcm, uintiering anaiheinaa ayainst the ill-unuin.

il.li .-line

of his Amencai;ollo(]ny ensued

The interest ol the following slory oi

echovcrgcaon Iho tragic.

in .bcl.nlb.dr,.! ,:.n.irgt..|

There wan onu point "

sl.-bi.-si whisper utter.-,

I

i indiscreet

ie ini.nn.d

Sicily .

catbedral where (hi

cerlain eonl'.-rsional

... _jndreil and fifty f.et distani, could bo heard as

distinctly as if it bad been spoken aloud closo to the

listener's ear. Unc morning a haudHome young lady,

elegantly Btlired, entered Ihe fatal confessional. At

the Kiiiue iiisriint a gentleman eaiered ihe cathedral

and by chance took his station on the very apot which

stood in C'ltiueeliou nub ibe eonfessional.

Ho waa tho lady's buaband 1

Sho began with tbe .uuiinon-pla.-es of confeasioo.

She was too fond of balls, iheatres, dresa; was un-

charitable lowards ibe failings of her female trienda

ded.l.ulo.The husband si

iitlen. The fair penitent hat t

nhor mind. She eonfei-seJ it

igha. Tho husband lr

nothing morose

^ircbauieallyput

forehead. Leaving (ha cnlhedral.ho

waited for his wile at ibe door, saluting her whi '"

appeared with n wulent blow.

The ineident eaiifcd a deal oi sei.ndal in L.ir

and the unln. kt eonl.-sional was .eiuoved lo a

nlr-re there was It si d:ii,;,,:r ol us eieaiiug d,u

discord.

There is a magnificent echo in iho Bapliatry nt

Pisa. It requires ibree note., to call it out, but thu"

Ihreo it swells and prolong* and vanes until y

think you hear (hu ploying of a grand organ.

EMANQIPAT10S IN RUSSIA.

the: true onuncn.

Christ's cross abides through tcwl i

Then, looklnp- 'liroiigh the open dooWo ion- men kneeling on the floor;

r.ii.1'. i.:in-llf . he the dovllght 'li.nrr

Like -,' i.. the (oollsh i uv-.n;- Irlmm

Ho gnird, nnd said Iu

ai.i'.f ,,. I,.,

|,j,i. i.li,.im

i cobweb from a pane,

Tlie evil predentin Iheso da

lloih Oorl in lierive.i imp.

i

To i.rr.|,l,.t.> .-.lio utile tl.cl

,, mo.. I.

.,! ,l,evt,llose, throned looking hi

... :o fjaiocrad irrlme

Is the powlns time."

ij.X'l.tir Inys,Te.u orlukj iierchcd, arid pi

Dnlll Iho cold hencatli their ihrouls

Stny.li n,.,l|,.-u In lti.;ir m.llinv ni.tei.

Tlien, |, t n ling from the church, o renin

Shniliud ami lmll Ills faints ou

"The gales oflicnven, IhoScrli^.ru'

1 "

>;;•:. ;-;

I"fr'i.i,i

riok, for

Ihe West Indies. Ssncbo w

London. J«iij 18, 17ii. M,-,„i|,| [...vlijl; ne I".'.'- ••Tl'"

ProvldcDCe I was tho Ii

nnoeject. Uayyoullj

Hie rinlil pJtli'

'iluiv'.'iy ''.<:•

Oolug good. Vour

the ti-:n leiirs' deli.v gi

Alesandented t

„. -Iready about cighlj'-two

surfs are actually freed Irom ibe • o

mailers, and have thetelore rUeti

respullsible Mib.i'.-its •'< ibe e nip in

alaves of a few d,.ieii .1 Iti bilit

serf-etni

por I. nf I.

rol of Ihi

to tho rank ofiustcad of ihe

mgaTy^'faUed

elude tbe r..[',..-1e ..rr-.n-u..'[.p. t„ I, r, the .la

gra.e expire (Maieh i) the; wdi be lel'i in the e

tion of the rebels in our ? onthorn states, whoforewarned of the 1'reri.leiu's mieniioiis in September

lust, but brought the penalty "a (heir own heads in

January. A St, Petersburg leit.r, published in an

Engliah journal, gives the l.dlowing interesting smliadcs ol the progress of tbe emancipation mi.vcuien

in a part of thoempiroup to tbo first week ia Di

cumber:

,- J II'J 1H»J |,T-0,ii. Il ".Miiil !i|i|*,it

..s- 1, s.t si l-lllit. percent, ol IL. tiinlil

1- nrr.iiiKtelueals .villi ll.elr proprlttt

nen by a declaratiou which

the proclatnaiion of Emancipation is a

"XotLulbcr.Ofllvia.J

Whou, by Iho llRbt It

Tuen strnKt.i II- vnni*l

Atal left me slaii.liiii; ill

^Manlio AfonJ/ifiP./or Karat

.... Hookerilllo that one of bis first

acts, when placed i chief eoimnarnl of the Army of

Ihe Polomac, was lo ask in have George W. Smaller

placed upon his alafl.— Wilka'i Spirit of ihe Timtt.

icnlly from collegs.nnmod

riling y him ii.

SPURGEON.

republic.

ian tin

how ghastly il was. Now, on Ihe oilier hand, you

nro putting down slaver)"', "nil if you tueceeil, (he

wound will bo healed, and your republic will be

stronger, than ever. It is "oie iho aupnose.l interest

of Iho aristocratic cla»s to rupp.rt slavery, or, nl

least, lo palliate it. At all events, ihoy would prefer

dissolution of your Union, wllh slavery preserve!

i Iho South, lo a restoration of your power, with

:ry destroyed in (he Soulh."—Cor. of The Mdho-

^ilvevtijsctimite.

Lo.si.on, Jan. 2ls(, 18C3.f

LiST Monday we attended terrica nt Kpurgeou's

nrcat Tubercaele. Every teat ami aisle were tilled

nefnr- he entered. There ale senla for over 1,000

p-isoi,-, althougb s..'.'u(l to B,t i it is said maybogotLtAihA building. I do not doubt Ihnt over . ,000

vico.ull well-ilrcii-isil,

eraging equally with

...-ehes. 'Of'cour;.' n ; oi the biliiy

Tho shape of the ball ia about a double

cube, Ihu iolprior is oval, with two galleries com-

ifctely around Ibe room, even behind tho sj"™*;™" properliea nro perfect. ,t llij,

E

diii.

THE mSVBRECTIOX i-V POLAND.

i ports have

"THE GHhAT HVISG 1

; e c o it i>

nl paid for Mure Spnrgeon would preach in it

I,..,- ,

..„„. i.i ii. '!.-I

--.' t'-.

liimna are deaconed out hy Srpnrgeon Liiniielf, who

Funds willi his full figure lietore his audience, with

ily a aimple bni.isiir railing m rest upon.

In appcn.anee he is slant, weighing say 'JJS .».,

it a good height and figure, although very lull in

the face, a clear com[.le\i.,n ami dark chestnut"

[mail ball whispers. He looks like ng»-"l

doubt not he is one. In some i nielli si Itual I

be Hfembles Mr. II. W. Ilceeber, nlthongli less

ooiional. There is nothing at all approaching

ranting Fli le ilis vnii e is. powerful, sweet anil

ist, filling ever;- one with the (bought of

It is always gentle, vet strong am 1 ~1™uy appatcnl ellort- Bo is young, r

inra of ngo; aremarkablo reader, at

el elocution ,le,r,. uglily. Ho is graceful. I did

ee a tingle awkward gesture, lie spuke nhuiil

iour, Ihe wind, service oecupiedabouttwohours ;

tho remarka were esiemporaie-oos and weru reported

by a aicnographer. Tim audience all aang, and Iho

voluoio of sound aa it rolled up fr

voicea was solemn nnd imposing,!- ..

and powerful. The hearts of a inullilndo eceracd

ofing lieavenward. His prayers, which weri

-upplicntiiig. corsver.-alioual lone, were ft'rveii-

excellent. Bis prayed to QoJ. as n child would ask

Of n Islber ,lr..lhd .:

Uku..pi,v Poland

tie heeded by A DM)

days ago in Iho telegraphic news, muininry of the

Europa, which simply Mated that insurr

mnvomnniH were bn-aking oul in Poland.

olion reaebed ns before, and, on thai

t, have attracted but little attention.

i it proves to bo a wide-spread and wcll-

llusiian rule, and, perhaps still further,

. i,.„, i J ,nd. p.n J. ..,.... Theaccoanl-

h'l" tar re.e bed ih r.piisent ihe uii.no-

ui. fcanguinnry eontliois with the Itu;-

have taken pi in a i.uinb r of plates,

A number o'f llu-sians have 1..1:n tilled, among (hem

ne Colonel, nnd a Itusaiau General has been

ounded. Thu communicniioo bclween \\ nrsnw

ml St. Petersburg ban b.en interrupted. Tbo offi.

_ial paper of St. Foleraburg cbnrgcs Iho National

parly of Poland with having meditated a second

-nssacro of St. Partholom-w throughout tho king-

im, as not only in Warsaw, bnt in all the provin-

il towns, tho dclatchmeuia of (bo Russian (roops

ere timiiltancously attacked.

One Ihinjr is eertian. A very large porlion of Iho

Polish people must have keen in iho wscrot of con-

spiracy. An old r.ivoli.tioiii.i. well known from tbo

revolutions of IS-tS—Hen Miero- lacki— is at the

head of the movement. Tho insurgenln, moreover,

are undoubtedly c. peeling micrnr Lomiliu Pole, in

Galliciaand the Prusriaii Province ol Posen. It is

even highly probable that an unOerstaiiding existed

wllh (be revolutionary party of Hn.sia, ol which

Alexander Ecrzen. in Loudon, is ihe leader. Daly

anch a hope could givo lo even (he boldcal revolt

lionist tho courage to brave ibe rigor of Iho ltussm

Great and universal as the s; nipatby of the oiv

ii...l world with thu wrongs inflicted upon unhnpr

Poland is, the recent insurrection will be aline

unanimously regretted.

there is little, if at

i. avd OOsJolSB Pt.lKV oi

le, if any, hof

could c

i in the daily

prayed like n good

liie sincerity ol bia

and nraying aa

ear hie heart, be

which I think is

n that the :

what ,1 frecdomshowi

btsnrt. Afler opening hia prnye'

usual lor bis iletk and maitcrb ..,

sui.l, ns neorl) lis lean repent it,

H „|-, I lor w,,r,l, 'I- I .vrr.le it down" And now we would offer up

subject lo which wc havo not a

uiouih- .'-.Hi, God, we turn ou

ihniieii.lo the dreadful eonilict ol

o say ; but now Ibe voi-e

ight Wo pray Thea giv

otorioua Proclamation ot l.iP.rty. e.-hi.l. comes lo u

Irom across Ihe wal.ra. We had feared our biethre

Bondage nnd the lash can claim no sympathy froi

us. God fctoi ONif *r> ";"'"" ''-' jV..o-rt-yire ridor,,

to their arm;, and a spet.lv end to fearful Blrife. As

lovers of freedom, let us not belie our calling;now

ibat we know ibeir cause wo ca

tpetd them." At this point, it

prnyor, ho threw up bolb hands

ia til o momentary pauao, a deep, low,

dislinct •'Amen'' camo for ih from ci ,

tho house-, and nm.iv sn eie baibed in tears told how

truly thia prayer had mel (ho henrti

iboiisnml h.atersaad followera.

iward heaven.

Chnrles Dick,

ks at thoBritiah

id fashionable audience, ft

the i., ; n.'lit of Ihe Br.iisb Charitable Fund and at tl

m.Ui piRhtateoft.tentytranes (c-l] perlickt

The great humorist created -

Upon tbe vcrsnlilo coaductoi

BIGEEN&S READINGS.

Wi; have a now local c

s given reading- from 1

Embassy, before a full n-

tbe pence been maintainedser- r,nt;un would.have n.i.l. immense pi^, ,

lnlerial prosperity, hut nUo toward (be

a independence. The Austrian province- ... -

i has already n Polish Provisional Diet, whi,:n

might have become an important centra for (ha

political aspirnlions of Ihe entire nation. All l.u-

ropo baa bo far ndvam.-ed in civilisation that tbe

cmermination of miiionnliiies. esp,.-, ..illy if they are

powerful as ihe Poles, ia no-v ...unled nmoug (in

pomibiliiic-. Poland, of whose etislene-.- as n

lion even lba noble Kosciusco tlc«pinred, lind

resurrecliop. Thia now outbreak,

UNlVKItSAL IdDItAltV.-Tm

; grea'lv I'e' ..ill [ stpono tho re.'iliz:

A HARDSHELL SBHM'OJS.

irimilive oc hard-

Bev. J. H. Auorter, a Onion refugi

,ippi, gives the following aa a true report of

ion of a sermon bo beard from n primiliv -

bell li.iptist in lhat State. It waa a wat

n July, and the revec-iel gentleman look *. u» .».

ind vest, rolled up hia sleeves, and began :

" My Brolboriog and Sialera— I air a ignornnl mai

follorcd Ibe plow all icy life, and never rubbed agi

mug

(hank God for

ant.'f Well, P

Aa I a 3, I'm

decided imp res i

of tbo Paris papers,

.nd ihe Americans in

thti city bia presence ailoril.,! niinlloied sitli?lacti,.ti-

~.«-i nf"DnviJ(-'opper-Ho rea'd a dramatized abridgment

ingeniously Arranged by himself to

ly of i regular plot and ol the three

did notnelting into ti

fumbkil in Lord Cowley's great

ds, laughing when be hade

iars at, bis will. It may(he cfleol produced by this

performance upon the French editors;i

faking Le

Temps ns a fair sample :

Hi,.hill, ni'.i to ,. Ml, lint.. Ihe [-rend, nulilh- (olijcrr,

£,. T.-wi-!) "'in.! IL' l.ncl.ib -ii" i,',i.H..g- 11 is o ni,i!'.t

,.(W,ej.ii:7'i^, ''-.', ,,'!) <• "••Ji<- M-', -' '.'iJ £!, >r„-Mi

iTicaUniu!ora^V\s'«h\l

.'J"^ b ell-

rellel.in. ,u,,l us .. eon- !" ',"' p.evente.l lo u pr-at e.Me.-' public -ren

licok i, l.efori

diet, he do*.,y Ir.rr- 1i-

-Tho notice, hi the daili

ul to appoint George

on hie Staff, as an acknc

it of his report of the battle

f a personal interview

* - Wo ha..ml.l.-itoMr.

V ,J.... _ond; f.

I. f.-cilrj u? sill ,lli.-l,l;ilK.n. . .

1 Ol Ol' ION, 1 Until '

i.i culiUenu.l iitlei.lion i.illii,,.

^Brother Jonea roaponda ' Pnsaon,

ry Ihanklul, for yer very igno-

agin all high larnt fellers what

preacbea grammar and Greek tur a thousand dollars

a year. They prcn.hes. i.r the mou.-v , and Ihoy gits

it, and fhat'a nil they'll gil- They've got so high

larnt they contradicts ,-rcripier, whit plainly tells us

that tho aan tines and sets. They se j s it don t, but

that lha ycrth whirls round, like clay to tbe seal.

What ud cum of tho water iu ihe well* ef it did I

Wodent it all spill oul, and leave 'em dry, nad

where ed we be '1 I may say (o (hem, aa iho ear-

pent said uato David, much learning bntli made thee

" When I rirenclies, I uover takes a lex lill I goes

inii-T the pulpit ; th'-n 1 preaches a ph

what evea women con understand. 1

medernteo, but what ia given to mo u

hour, that I tei. Now I'm a cwine ter open iuu

bible, and tho first verso 1 sees, I'm a gwiue to lake

it for n tax. [Suiting tho action to the word, he

opened the Bible, and'e iiieu.ed lending and spell-

ing (.."elher-l Man is f-c-a r-f-u-l-l-v—fearfully and

w-o-n-J-c-r-l-u-l-l-y — wonderfully m-a-d-e — mad," Man ia fearfully and wonderfully made,

nouheed mad.] Well, it's a qunr tes, bul I sum hii

t gwino (o preach from it, and I'm a gwino lo do it.

In tbe fust place. I'll divide mj sarment inlo three

heads. Fust and f.remost, 1 show you that a rutin

ill-git mad. 2.1. Ihnt sometime he'll git leaiii'lly

id; and thirdly and lastly, when that's lots of

inga to vest and pesler bim, he'll git fearfully--'

inderfully mad. And in

u that good...:.t v.....ip

, r ication I'll ahowia gib) mad, for the posle

hTsseH, who wroto Iho (es, god mad, ntid

callad all men liars, nn'd cussed his enemies, wisbiu

'cm logo down quick into hell; nnd Xoah.^ lio got

lo, and cussed bia n:

runken maslers ni

Noah and David rep

l!n?.:'n'.l|,j

r

'l'l'

uellt-nce, llif co

Tbo religion ot the Frcnc

te lira led author.

Tho Slide says lhat " Dickens appeals more directly

i the heart than Balzac. General quealions touch

Im ; Ihe misery of the humble mo vea bim; btsalways

ideavors to combat some injustice, to van,

ime prejudice , his scalpel is nut that of lha a

list who distecls, but ol the physician who would

ire ; he in a great writer, an iv.illent man."

A Costhaois;

a prat.

i

i Pa,

e at P.M-

,t.g pru.ei

I pray.

that Ocn. Hooker desii

* .alley of 23u TribumI,-, Igai.nl ol" the great meof Antietuiu, reminda us .. _

had with Gen. Honker, which, in justice to Hooker

d (o Mr. Smalley, we feel it to bo our duty lo

;ilc. Tho General was laid up with his wound,

t on tho occasion referred lo, ho waa well enough

be bolstered iu a chair, and was engaged in wrii-

...' a ItJllor. Our conversation aoou turned to Ihe

battle of Aiitietam, when he referred with conaidcra,

bio enlhusiasm to what he chara.tcriietl aa iho won

derful account of the bntil- c .... L. the reporter foi

T/,,- JWbi.ii,' :. i- -.1 " a p.rlt, t tepr.-

marvel to mo how you writera can perform suet

tasks." I asked the Geaeral if ha know who thi

reporter of The Tribune was. " I saw him first upot

ihu battle-field," «ns bis reply. " I firat noticed bini

whon wo were in ibo hottest portion of Ihe fighl,

c.rly iu 'be morning. My ntlCtllion WBS then

in advance' nf my whole sn

in thu hottest of Ihe fire, nut

slrikine and sputtering nrot

be sal ga;ing on ibe stnte as steady aud aa undis-

turbed ns if be worn in a quiet theatre, looking at a

ecenu upon iho Blage.

In all the experience which I have had of war, 1

never aaw Ibe most experienced and veteran soldi ei

exhibit more tranquil lorlitudu and unshaken valoi

than was exhibited by tiiat young man. I waa con

cerned at ihe tieedlees rssk which he innied.atd told

one of my aids lo onler liim lo tho rear. PreWtly,

all my nida had loll me, ou oue service and nu\ther

whereupon, turning lo give an order, 1 lonnd ru oni

but thia young stranger at my side. I ihen fcked

him if ho woultl oblige i,,e by bearing a diirpatih to

tieu. McClellau. and hy acling as my aid until"

one of my slalf should come up. ilu code Oil

ireiful to your people, Qoti.Ipray. \ou bi

a great work tor your people. Let thy l.l..-.-.

it on do President of do Uuitcd Slalea, God,' and nid chains—chains uii our

m our people bound

nndTarried away. Some got mothers

couctris-s-soiue got f.iihars in foreign

Jeans bresa do Fresidcnt. Lay down wi

nigct-

llnlon army, God, 1 pray,

your people.

a foreign

Bresa

God Almigh.it go wi,l

Lead uj along

_. Jfaka us' good.

iDinie. Lord bo wid thsiu i;.™. ..™

Lord Almighty, make us wilbng to

Preiident of de United S(a(ea as much as i

who come hero (o break our chains,

_ , been bruised nnd dragged about.

he willing lo lay down our lives lor thosa v

lo break our chains. Let de war bt

iray God. Brens dem who havo just n

and come here. Brms us all and mo, do mi

ail Thy children, who ia not worthy (o bo

child. i„- Jesus sake. Amen.

Letui

pucbed

r boy Ham ;just like some

s their „,r ..r

ENGLAND AND SLAVER?.

i—Am I waka 1 or havo I sleep, and dream that

live in England? the country of Si

lo tho cily of (ho Lordmayor! I t

All round 1 hear praiso oi tl .

South, and spite given lo (be aide of lr. edem.

I leave my poor country, for (bat I

breathe - for lhat 1 was almost u slave ;an

hero is (ho samo 1 The noblo and iho richmnn.

eavan and tbe mylxdy ; tbe g.aiiltuans and thu

alel ; nil say " vivo " lha South;nnd the pi

ost itself ns free, oven that apeak for this v

havo learn your tongue, but more easy lha

"hero is your Christianity, your jnslico, you

J houeot. I nni a Frcuehmaos. Uelaa I a.

Let the prayer of one sad heart reach iuu, ohl gener-

ous and noblo Englishmans. Look I tba bollon cyei

of tbo millions of men oppressed nro fined upon you

";!se, (hen, onca more, and mnko joy (hu soul of (hi

ropl, s n> ei.rmol. to i.uhappviwho wait, in Iroui

le, (o hear iho deep roar ot (ho Eoglish li- -down (ho abamo and this deatroetton

'

robbers of men.—Accept, sir, th,

,llty«

ahtifiuia! lkcs. hv v. i> mod-

:w«.";.'r.V,'.o.. ' :j '''-''''-v''

!'" J

J r.}(

!-

1

,'„

;,"''^»

i™rl'StiL""."r^l%"W°^K^"..mklnlbliHnocl. J .e'i"7 iBlwilor Is «ll »lh»r»

TALK KITH MV [;

U[>l,

L3',7,

ll>'

r

."1''t'- w"m^1

*_ SPLENDID PBE3ESr.-Ei-crJi

L.yCt ^.ouM^hit"

eiulmlcliiUia ^rtvnlbtuma^

WSTOVES, RANGES, LEH1G1I AND KCllUVLIULL

GOAL, ETC.,

.\onia nnii sibeet, piiilaiieijiiia.

A CMKQB of Scwis.-Fin's, Jan. IT, 1863.- I7tB

Opinion Xati-jn 'h ol lb.-. Tl-1 insiaut gives "P^-; 1^-'

Pi.ow"a":

Add,J !'""

'

.lr:\'.: '^':

'"'iji.gCl " Thi:

document ia thus lit ly to p. ...luce an loip.essn.ti ,n

France onlv -ccot.d L. lba. wind. ,t has pr.duced ...

Gti'lutid. Th-: J/ioi..; ..:,,.- ,b„ .'.I' eply Mrs. fctowos

..pptal cuts ihe arit.iocratic delenilers of slavery in

Lnglsiid. hi ihe Iriuulence and falsehood ol lis

OoSce of the paper, it makes one admission how-

ever Ibe truth ui which cannut be ,]ue.-nor,ed, ai.n

that h, that ii the thing were lo be done over again.

a,»n, of Ihe aristocratic ladies who, eight years ago.

Di-ned (he "Appeal In Ihe Women ol Amurtca.

would biscaretijl lo keep iheir Humes oil iho paper.

•The seme bus great!, changed oinco then, says

Thi Tivux. No doubt of it. An inlclligenl and

conscientious Eneli.hman recently explamcd '"

hov Ihe scene had changed. "When Lady Pa..

6Ion Iho Counlcs' el -bitfis.-si.nre. nnd other ladies ol

the aristocratic clasa oignad ihu " Letter " ujinm.1

slaverj-, lial inititution was ibe volnsrabh) pom'

LaBOBKR.—The chief originator of Iho plan

of labor for tho Freed men of =outh Carolina, by

whiish land ia lo be allotted to ti..: negroes according:

to Ibosiie ot families, ci.., they becoming respoesi-

blo for Ibo raising of BulBcieni corn and p.ilaioea iur

thoir own tupporl, ., Mr. Fdward S, Philbrick, of

Brookline, Mats. Mr, Philbrick was studying at

Cambridgoin 1816, Is an engineer by profession, has

been engaged in survey in Use West, and was for

six years in charge ./ tb- repair ,|, parlmcnt on the

Doaton aud Worcealcr railroad. He came South in

March, with Iho first company oi leathers. His

mathematical talent., and pra, lie. I know ledge bo Inc.

brought hither, lo give them (o tbe work ol leading

these freedmen toward independence. He was

assigned to duly on St. Helena, ihe garden ol our

tea islands, and baa carried on tho plantations

under his charge with wise system. Ho allotted

coiton lands to the pc.ple, who L-.-came responsible,

a families ger.erall,, f-r their acre or acres. Us

ad a plan of each held regular I. laid out, with lha

ames of Ihose working each ploi inscribed in tb :

ame order directed each step of (he season a work,

ind hia aoecese, marked as it has been, wos only

what all who knew his proems expected. He' is now

engaged in collecting and cion.n,:, ai Beaufe-ir, tho

coit.sn mire.J In ibis de partmen I.

When the payment of the colored

delayed laid--

pBIZE MEDAL a

C"uSFLi.:l

:

lt.iM-:iiV KH'iuVAl-

;nmn. Mr. Philbrick rc-olved that

peop'lo should receive iheir will earned wages,

udvaacc-,1 Itoai his own means the amount due. which

tbo paymaster promptly disbursed. V\ ill tho bro-

kers believe what I am about to add 1 This money

lent waa solid cash, r-gardl.ss ol Ihe thirty-lhreo per

«nt. The colored people have a weakness f.,r bur.l

money, and thev should ha.c iti bc.idea, they get

cheated in sending hank-bills. 1 might tell what

Mr.Philhrictiniends to do in s-riaiu contingencies,

but havo probably ventured already far enougb.—

Cor. Otristian Liqaircr.

.,..i,.- ,.

- EWriEKUiNj; A JLeTlCL, ll

i,,.l..l :".\L,VM.VNlPKIl.SAl, I:-"!, ol

;

Q|i,N..i ihe MA'.i'.n;-.:!

i. .-.< [..will »cf

S!:;.'.™."fe-~^ ',»': I.: , -i.i '.-:....-.'.;•

"'."'.S'-,™': ;s. .',': r: ,i.'..'™."' £.Si^-^SbUoa'twii to"iK-r, nt' t»it tmiwu.1" 'oA »rikn»Miilp

t'-'' " '''"' ''

!'.',.:i:,'i .', 'T-tiiaim

a feeble operation of the _ .

us nh»t ia right, but given no wengU1

is a inures of constant tniiory,

CIS0 01 CO BC i.rt-it b* in- ukm till 11s< B.sJ.1, ». n> lli^l r-ll r-n bw »or ,tt»

alprineiple, which shows ",{2^J^t", ;.",-,, ,, ..i.i- -.in. ,r. i—ci irW

10 strength lo per lor to ii.l 'r/c.E».it.cr.^iii,i""'rV'i,>'-'''*ihi*».^™',i.


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