@he Huse. [For the Louisvile Journa'.] THE PARTING. BY AG S LEONARD, I've said a thousand times my heart, With all ii2 woe, might love no more — That Memory ne'er from life could pat. Nor Love Yotnov I koow the ashes gray But waited ere thoy sprung to uns Until thy hand should tune my heart To breathe forever thy dear name. ser haunt my soni’s dark shore, Yes. now I know the years that flad And left nty heart a lonsly thir But vanizhod that, from ashes ol A fairer bloom mizsht spring. If I might tell thee all I feel, And paint the rainbows in my heart, Then thou would’ t kaow for woe or I still am thine whers ere thou art? £ weal If T might pluck the fadeless bloom That blossoms in my life for thee, To light thy eavth lify's woary gloom I'd do it though t'were death tw me. If all the joys Uve tosi or known, Lt ali tho bliss I've opel sigur Be, Ii all the madduning rapture flown Were mine. I'D GIVE THEM ALL To THEE! If rose crowned earth and star gemmed sky, Their rarest treasures gave to me 4ud joy won'd come if I should die, — I'd them all and life to thee And quail the To Jet th i iz memories there dapart an wave, yie—alone lden grave.” v 3381 ush it locks my shaded hreagt— ! no 8.0:m2 may cruzh, i flower that breatues of peace and rest. #3 bloom 1 creep, 3 that shed a transi heautifn oh, the smiles of fate have flown, And I mnst say ** Farewell” to thee Musi husii-iny wrung heart's pleadin Par, 5 sind tu to misery! T'o memor) sheand day Fabs cold and ceuseless on my heart, away, thou art ? Across this pardng's bitter pain. JA meteor o'er my life's dark sky, $ Blossom i 1 Will be the u The mem ipped (ice. 3 done, SHisecllancons. ANTIWAR EPEECH oF IOX. TIO 11. SEYMOUR, Semocratic Candid ote Jor Guoernri of, Cun necticut at the City Halt. Hart) Tuesday Eceame, Feo, With, 18 & ! Ma. Ciarryax axp Frerrow-Crrzens f thank you for this Kind reception, and chearfally respond to your eall for remarks {rom The time has come when we K out and plainly dis should all of us speak cuss the guestions which these unhappy Neglect to do 1 do not mean to incur the penal'y of any such regret if 1 can help it. and therefore, pur- pose speaking at your meetings whenever it may be preper to do so. I helicve we have in public aflairs when the boldest Linguage will prove the best for the occasion and best for our country. We have got to deal with principalities and powers which need to be rebuked—and we have got to deal with men in power who should be told that there is a point beyond which for- bearance ceases to be a virtue. For the last eighteen months the pe ple of the free States, so called, have sufiered abuse at the hands of their rulers, 1t has now come the turn of the people to be heard. It has come their turn, not to render evil for evil, but to vindicate their rights under the Consti ution, and by so doing overwhe!m the men in au- thority who would abrogate those rights.— That is their mission, and it is a mission which 1 expeev to sce successfally accom- plished. You have come together. gentlemen, un- der somewhat better auspices than you have had to brast of in a long time. You have days have given biith to. this way bea suree of fature regret. reached a crisis to-day the restoration of that freedom of speech which was denied to you a year ago. q elections. And this privilege is not only to be restored to you, but it canuot be taken I wonld make oath to that.— Henceforth, my countrymen, never let or- away again. ders from headquartess,come in what shape they may—never let such orders prevent 3 ful- 5 of | orable to the ability and patriotisin of thea war for the Constitution and the Union. — {1 deny that it has been a war for either,-- om acserting'your right to discus 7, 23 you please. the af government. Fever! u | cussed on this occasion, i time is is due, in a great measure, to the late Auother thing: 1 had hoped the day of illegal arcests was over, But the rccent exhibition of the nailed hand, at the aty of Philadelphia, proves that the will is not so wanting to re store the reign of terror. That exhibition of despotic power should be the last. Or, if theday of illegal arrests should come \gain with its bolts and bars and shackles for freemen, let freemen solemrely protest against such high-handed measures, and take their protests to the ballot-boxes. And if the ballot should fail to correct such enor- witi s and preserve their liberties, then they may be driven to lok for some other rem- edy. Gentlemen, the bitter experiences of the past year have solved a new problem in our institutions. They have proved that the most dangerous of all experiments, under a form of government like ours, is that which aims (0 stifle the voice of a free people. — Such an (xperiment may be successful fora while, but it can’t Inst. their free thoughts, th y are driven to re flect more deeply than befne on the value of their liberties. Forbidlen to speak Their rights under the and again; the audacious insolence of the bad Constitution ara studied over over men in power, who would deprive them of those rights, is sternly set before their eyes; the heroic example of their Revolationary Fathers comes up befor: them; admonishing them that the price of liberty ig eternal vig- ilince and al at once the storm bursts forth, the soul asserts its independence, and the wronged, abused, insulted citizen is free azain, and pow: rful to assert, maintain and | defend his rights against the powers that be though backed by-a million of bayonets, — Such is the problem which has just now been i solved in our very midst, and such the les son which it finnishes to present and future { be rightfully coerced by force of arms. — BELLEFONTE, they could to save the Union, The part that Virginia took in those preceedings was a purely national one, as everybody could see. Though smarting from the effects of the John Brown raid, she, nevertheless, showed herself anxious to keep the peace, whatever might be said of others. But in vain. The Conference broke up without having accomplished anything; it was a failure. . And who, let me ask, are responsible for hat failure 2 Who prevented the confer- ence from adopting the measures which were The rame class of men who defeated the Critten- don bill. They defeatad the peace proposi- tion of the conference. Unfortunately for the country the delegates from the Free States appear to have been selected by Re- publican Governors on account of their krown hatred of these men to compromises of all kirds. Those who were sent from this State voted, with one exception against the peace measures of the confer- ence. That assembly, which for a bricf pe- riod had given us some hopes of preserving the Union, broke up in despair —and the brink of destruction seemed reached at last. Another failvre to restore harmony, and the ruin would be complete. Tt seemed to be pre-determined that there should be atother failure any way, and the gulf of perlition reached at last. Bat before I come to the last and worse phase of this question, a sin- gle word as to certain conservative opinions which began to prevail after the Administra- tion went into power. Shortly alter Mr. LinccIn was sworn into office the question began to be seriously de- buted as to whether a sovereign Sate could needed to prevent a fratricidal war ? [ am not going into the discussion of it at generations, Refl ction on the in‘quitous proceedings of the government which sup- pressed fice speech and a free press, and sought to punish ame for sazgesting peace 1 f] measures as a neans of saving the Un {i mn which we all had so mae at heart - the f result of their meditation on these thing | is a clear, convincing. unanswerable, power | | ful ad pafeedy erushing argament against } { the present Administration. There are many things that might be d's would per- | As you have cilled me out, gentle | men, let me netice some few of them which | 80 to strengthen the argament to which 1 | | { i | | | mit. have jast retired, You all know how of. | i . . + . . 1 ten it is remarked ~this war might have | : | { have been prevented —and the reasons usual-| Let ui look into | (17 given for such a remark. | this vi ! may do so without tir- ¢ how the cae stands. i be- of Saath waediately followed ing you, 1gin with the SHIN Carolina When this occurred, 14 became a seri Yuu ht j an army and navy ia your hinls, which her, lous water for the entire country, | { and (we Sates which | 1 some supp s:d shonld be launch] at once | More considera ¢ men! it They | chose to treat the act of disunion as a poiie_| | ust the South, ted on taking a diffi rent course. al rather than a military one—and dea] [with it accordingly. Of this number "Mr. Crittend:n, of K i nons for saving the was | : | entucky, whose resolu Unton preventing bloodshed ure farsibar to you all. and These resolutions were weceptanle to our consery- they had been aaupted. as they shou'd have been ad. ative clilzins generally, and if op’ed, as they might have been, there wou'd | (have been no war- the States wou'd have been united, and we should have gore on | again in a reer of peace and prosperiy [and happiness. The assertion of che Nor- thern opponcats of these resolutions, that “the South would not accep of thar, is dis-! proved by Gov. Bigler, of Pennsylvania, in| Ie has! men in Congress, at that time, whose names are [most obnoxio is to the North. were willing "to acaept of the compromise as a finality. — I 'Lhey did. indeed, claim that they were en-! [titled to something better; they Lelieved | they were entitled to the benefit of the de- i cision of the Supren ce Court in the Dreg | Scott case, giving them an equal share in | the territories. Nevertheless, for the sake of Peace, they would accept of the Critten- den bill, with the understanding that it !should be a final adjustment of the difficul- his able letter on this subject. shown us that the leading Southern was the state of the case when the bill came to a vote in Congress. Itis scarcely necces- sary to ask who defeated the bill? The Republicans went against it in a solid pha- lanx, and it was killed. They had it m their power to pass the bill, but they would not; they defeated it, and by so doing took on themselves the consegn neces which might | follow such a defeat. S me of them may have hesitated in the course they were tak- ing on that occasion ; but pressed on by ul- tras, who required ¢¢ blood letting,” the! « peace measures’’ were thrown overboard, and our country swept along toward the brink of ruin. But there is yet another chance to save the Union. Jnion and preventing bloodshed, whs the ¢ Peace Uonference” of March, 1861. That body came together some time carly in March; it was composed of representatives from the border States, and from the Mid: dle, Western and Northern States, The pro- ceeding ot this Conference were highly hon- Border State delegates. They did what ! no one more ably than by your worthy fel- I strument voled down every proposition of "in power at Washington, with the at solute ties between: the slave and free States. Such P¢« Put not your faith in Princes.” Let us see how that was thrown . . « away also. The next chance for saving this the present time. I only wish to remind you that such a question was raised and that the negative of it was. ably sustained by men of great worth and ability —and by low-citizen, Mr. Eaton. It wae proved be- yond controversy, that the founders of the Jonstitation never provided, nor intended to provide, for any such military schemes as are now on foot for the conquest of the Southern States. On the contrary it was shown that the founders ot that in- Never! the sort. All this was proved and more than 1 need vouble you with at ths time. Now what 1 mean (0 say is this, before 1 come to another matter— that these undeni- able proofs ef the true in‘ent and meaning of the Constitution on the subject of cocr- cion, or force, ought to Lave impressed men necessity for using great forbearance in their dealings with the Secseded States. while these consideratigns may have bad me weight with them- butthey were soon to give way for others. For a This biingsme to speak of ove chanet| nore, which, if it had been nightfully im proved, might have averted the horrors of | war. We shail see bow that was thrown away also and the Uni u dashed on the rocks It so happened that the whole question of This denial you will find sustained by al- most every leading act of the Administra- tion since the first blow was struck. From the moment troops were first ordered to Washington, in April, 1861 the Constitu- tion has scarcely been regarded at all by the men 1n power Some of their most zealous supporters more than half admit this. But, say they, the South having broken the Con- stitution, we are no lorger bound by ir. — This confession, if it amounts to anything at all, is a virtual impeachment of the Pres- ideat, who has taken an oath to support, maintain and defend the Constitution of the Uuited States. Nothing h~s occurred. that I know of, since he took the oath, to release him from its solemn obligations. I repeat it this has not been a war for the Constitution and the Union, but one fearfully destructive of both. Louk for a moment at the numer- ous violations of the Constitution, to which and tell me how much of that instrument is left, or how much nearer are we to resto- ring the Union than the day the battle cry first went forth ? Is it strange that the people of the South should hesitate about returning to a Government which is contin- ually striking dowu the dearest righis of the citizen 2 The moment the war power be- gan to make itself felt, State rights were set at neught. We had a daring illustration of this carly in the contest, when the Fede- ral authorities directed the seizure of tele- graphic dispatches —an order which ought to have been resisted by an appeal to the courts. But this is nothirg to what follow- ed, Next we had arbitr ry arrests, the search of houses and seizare of private pa- pers. without the authority of law : then came the suspension of the habeas corpus ; and lastly, martial law, which is no law at all, but the will of some despot, was extend- ed over a people remote from the theatre of war. And as if these things were no‘ enough to break down a free people, a bill is intros duced into Congress, which threatens to ‘take from them what little is left of their liberties. 1 refer to the Senate's military bill, for the organization of the malitin—a bill which if it should become a law, would annihilate State Sovereignty, and place our citizens at the feet of Executive power. If, follow citizens, the spirit of your patriotic fathers yet burns in your bosoms, your in- diguant remonstrance against these things should be loudly proclaimed. 1 shinuld be glad to say something of the arbitrary arrests, of the imprisenment of un- offending citizens in American Bastiles, a dark chapter m the history of this afflicted country ; but what I weald say of these outrages must be reserved for a future occa- ston. They wers borne in silence a long while, and the wonder is that they were borne as long us they were. It scemed for a while as if the people were dead, almosts to a sense of ther rights and 'iberties, and inca able of asserting cither. Bat they were [aroused at last, Bat, sir, we might have gone on in this way, regardless of the true condition of things, but for another act of supreme folly or someting ‘worse, ‘The people lay pros pe we have all been witnesses, in the past year, | | they came amorgst us, their sons and daugh- ters eame with them to be educated. brought hither their genius to be kindled | at our fires,” Ilere theirsyoung men marri- | led, anc with their northern wives returned | to the plantations to spend the rest of their days. And young men of the North went South also, and married there and grew to love, the good people of that country, who took them by the hand, and helpid them forward in the world. And let me tell you sir, that to-day there is probably a million south of the ¢ invidious line’ whose ances- tors are buried in your giave-yards, or whose grand-parents and brothers and sis- ters sre residing at the North. And your troops the kindred blood still trickling in their veins, are to be male the unwilling instra- ment. Is not this game of carrying into ef- fect a proclamation of the most uncalled-for Sir, T have no languaze to characterize it as it deserves, — Thank God New York has rebuked it ; Ohio has rebuked it ; New Jersey and Pennsyl- vania have rebuked it; Towa Wiscon- I'sin have rebuked it: and in less than two | months Connecticut will rebuke it m such tones of thunder as shall be heard from Maine to New Orleans, Bat there ie one other topic [ would no- tice befcre quitting this subject. These despotic acts of which I have spoken, and especially the last one, are justified on the ground of ¢ State necessiy.” The doc- trine of S ate necessiiy was admirably ex- posed and torn to pieces vears ago by the eloquent Senator from New Hampshire, and true patriot, the Hon. Franklin Pierce. since President of the United States. [ regret that [ have not his speech by me, that] might give you an extract from it, which would be more to the purpose than any- thing I can say. This plea of S-ate necessity, which is sometimes called the ** tyrants plea,” has no business in the atfiirs of freemen. Cer- tainly, it is a plea which never should be tolerated under a constitutional for of gov- entment. Where there is a written consti- tution, we must abide by that, or go staight to a despotism. The wan, therefore, in goverument affairs, who sets up such a plea as the one named, as an excuse for acts not sanctioned by law, violates his oath of of- fice ; and though he may have been wisled by bad adviscrs, cannot escape the con- sequences of such an act, I pass over the numerous infractions of the constitution, some of which I referred to only a few moments since, and take what, in some respects is the worst of al!) the Proe- lamation of Emancipation, and ask you to look at this as it is. [It presents us the mil i'ary necessity of the case. Sir, it was pre- cisely this kind of military necessity which dictated the employment of the *¢ merciless wrongs" to butcher your forefathers, This was justified by Lord Suffolk, in the British | Parlinment on the ground that the govern- "ment should employ all the that i+ God ant nature’ had put in its hands for { suppressmig the wicked rebellion. The m. | dignant reply of Lord Chatham is familiar to { « What idens,” 5 id the and barbarous character! and means every school boy. or war was destined to turn on ouc | trate in the dust, huggmg the chains that | *¢ great commoner.” «¢ the noble Lord may a: sii . point-—and that a fort in Charleston harbor. | bound them, cheated into the belief that this | have of God ard nature, [ know not, but By a concurrence of circumstances, Fort | | Sumpter became the point upon which the | But, | in com: arison with the wor h of the Union, and the direful evils which might follow a serions co lision in that quarter, the for was of little conscquence to anybody. A] coliision Letween the Suate and Federal troops, should, if possible, have been avoid- ed. All that was wanted was to gain time for reason to have its twin. The Govern- ment might go on with its blockade, but it should do nothing to provoke the shedding of blood. Now it was seen, and plainly seen, that sny attempt to reinforce Fort Sumpter would prove, the very crisis which some of the best men in the country wished to avoid, And this was not only seen, but the Federal authorities at the Cap- ital gave their pledge to Justice Campbell, of the Supreme Court of the United States, that no cuch attempt should be made to re- inforce Fort Sumpter ! In proof of this I refer you to the Judge's letter published in the Journal of Commerce and other papers some two months after the war broke out. The pledge 1 have just referred to had scarcely been made when measures were actually taken by the Federal authorities for doing what seemed to be the’ very thing which the Government had agreed not to do. A government flotilla was sent to Charleston harbor, somewhere between the 10th and 15th of April, 18¢€1--and sent there for what 7 It was sent there to accomplish a certain purpose—and that purpose was to draw the fire of Fort Moultrie, in occupa- tion of Southern troops, in order that the Federal authorities and the mén who were urging them to “blood letting,”’ might have the overt act they required to justify a dee- laration of war against the South. Their plan succeeded and we were pushed over the brink of suin, and plunged into the very vortex of horribly Cestructive, awful and ru- inous civil war the end of which no man can tell. Having done with occurrences which pre ceeded the war, let me briefly revert to what has singe taken place. The war haviog been inaugurated, we were told that it was to be very existence of the Union hinged. chastiscment was for their good and be giled by the falsehood that wai was not waged for the purpose interfering with the domestic institutions of the South, or the rights of the States, but for some other pur- pose : they might, I say, have gone on in of the 24th cf September. That opened their eyes and aroused their indignation, aud that it is which bas done much towards correcting public opinion as to the true char- acter and real purposes of the war. Bat, gentlemen, the Proclamation has not been exposed, as it should have been. Tt tas only Leen ocesionally denounced, when it should hawe been everywhere, often and loudly rebuked. I propes: saymg a few words about it before | take my seat. There are two features of it which are open to the severest condemnation. Ia the first place it encourages the blacks to rise and mar- der their masters. away from this' Now I do not apprehend there is any danger of such a rising of blacks except where the Federal arms may have penetrated on some day next week, or next month—but there is the damned license to initiate a series of atrocities at the South which, if once began, and it were possible they could become general, would convert that portion of our countrv into another San Domingo. Bat, sir there is another feature of it scarcely less revolting to my mind than the one just named, That feature is this ; Your soldiers, many of them from New England, worthy young men brought up under the droppings of the sancluary, and taught. I suppose, to love mercy and hate iniquity, these men formed into battalions and regi- ments and sent South to follow their lead- ers wherever ordercd, are forbidden by the Proclamation to interfere in cases of scrvile jiinsurreciion. In other words they are to ulation seek the destruction of the whites. — I do not believe tho trocps could refrain from interfering in such an emergency, but the barbaroys decice ts them is, * hands oft.” South.? Iu the better'days of the Republic, ——— th's way, waking any and every sacrifice | for the cause, as explained to thew, if jt] had not been for the Abolition proclamation | There is no getting! g 3 stand with folded arms whilst the black pop- | | this I do know, that sach sentiments as he | avowed, are cqually abhorrent to religron and humanity.”’ It was some plea of this sort that laid Wyoming in ashes, and at a later day. and in the memory of mot of us, promoted the massacre of Texan prisoners at the Alamo. And coming down to the case before us, it is the plea of the haters of the South who will be sati- fied with nothing less than its destraction, Itis from doctrines Lke these the people, without distinction of party, tarn away with undissembled horror and disgust, and seek, in the ranks of your political organization, the means of putting an end to such ultra- ism, and of inaugurating a new and better shall have some kind cf foun- dation in Gospel precepts. Tn no other way fellow citizens, can I account for the recent { victories in New York and other States.—- The mistakes, the errors, the follies and the worse than blunders of the Linco'n Admin {istration are by those victories signally re- buk-d or the ballot is a mere shaw, and the great events of no more consequence than the shifting sands of the d sert, But, fellow citizens, I have something more to say of this before T quit th's stand. (If ever there was u time to speak out and | speak plainly, now is that time—to-1 orrow { may betoo late, [ ask noone to be responsi- ble for anything I have said or for what else 1 may have to say. 1 stand here to give free utterance to my thoughts, on the present crisis in our national affsirs, without fear or favor of any man, and as God is my Judge, and not any worm of the dust, T mean to be true to my conyictions of what [ believe to be right in this matter, let the consequences be what they may. Now, my conviction is that these elections of which I have spo- i ken mean . something more than appears on “the face of electivn returns or in. the plat- forms of the tiiumphant party. They have "a deeper meaning stili—and if not, if T am mistaken in this—then [ have no business | Lere, and should take my leave of you forth- | with. Nay, if they have not a deeper and better meaning than is £5 be found in aay special endorsement of the war policy. you policy, whiet murch of Well now let ne ask, what is the his-' may close the map of the Union at once, for | tory of our relations with the people of the henceforth it will only be wanted to find the | grave of the republic. But they do mean something more, some- thing which should arouse us to a sense of present daties, and turn our thoughts in a new direction. I see in them the mission of the hour. These popular uprisings are not merely special in their charac er, but broad and general as the umversal air, and sweep, as the wings of the archangel, the vast ho- rizon of the mal-adwministration, and of hor- rible battle-fields. The trae meaning of this is tha: the people arc s'ck of this hor- rible fretricidal war, and demand that it should be speedily termmated. I avow my- self opposed to it, and ask for a cessation of hostilities. It is vain to protest against il- legal arrests and wicked proclamations, if you have got a war policy that justifies both. Tcannot for the life of me see how great wrongs are to be redressed, and the Union re-established, whilst measures are on foot which render it impossible to accomplish «i ther on the war plan. Now 1 an for re. dressing these wrongs, and do ng what can be done for Union cause. I am for getting back the Southern States by fair and hoan- orable means, if such a thing and [ hope for the best. them back as they were. 1 don’t want con- quered, blood-drenched Sates, with “their ruined homes, ana a weeping population to makea Union for m2? Such kind ofa Union woull he a mockery of the name.— The Union I desire is a union of hearts and of hands, such as our fathers gave us.— When the great Irishorator. E mand Birke took the part of America in 1775 he denoun ced the British policy which would destroy * The Plantations.” «My opmion,” said he, ¢* is mach more in favor of prudent man- agement, than of force ; the nse of force is but temporary. It may subdue for a mo- ment, bat it does not remove the necessity of subduing again. A further objection to force is, that you impair the object by you every endeavors to preserve it. The thing you fought for is not the thing you recover, but depreciate, sunk, wasted and consum- ed in the contest.” Anl then raising bis voice, till the old arches of Irish osk re- sounded’ to his trumpet tones, he ex liim- ed, in never-to-be-forgotten words— ¢ Noth- ing less wall satisfy me than wnoLE Amevi- cal” Apply these noble sentiments to the case before us, and we shall be at no loss what course to pursue. In the spirit of the great apostle of Constitutional liberty and of an enlightened humanity—if [ may dare to take hus laggua ze on my lips, 1 now say, nothing less will satisfy me than the Southern States. But T do not expect fo get them back as they were, by sacrificing hetacombs to the demon of Northern fanaticism, or in any such wag The voice of the people, speak® ing through their public servants and thro’ such journals and Christian yulpits, of which there are some few lufi—that voice demands something better than the exter mination of a kindred race. This is the true vox populi vox Dei of the hour —the only in terpretation we have had of it since the war began, and for one I give eur to its voice— for it 13 the voice of Peace and good will to man. lis demand is for peace, fraternity, brotherhood ; for a Union based oa the rights gnaranteed to us by our fathers, such a Union as the sword can never purchase, establish or maintain. Fellow-citizens, 1 will decrin you no lon- ger. Thereare a thousind things which the cris's demands should be said -and they may be said as we get further in the com- paign. Tam in for this eampaign--and 1 trust it may be a successful one. Yon have suflered much for opinions sake since the clash of arms was first heard, and have had some experience in the dak days which civ 1l war brings on one’s country. Some of you have been often reviled, persecuted and abused in your business, and in your peigh. horhoods—-and even threatened with vio- Isnce. But possessing your souls in pa- ticnee. you have risen above all this, and are now rewarded by a change of public opinicn which ! rings with it hope of better days. True, 1t is winter yet—lut spring, is not far off ! Our birds of song are silent now, There are no flowers blooming ; Yet life Veats in the frozen bough. And freedom’s spring is coming! And freedom’s tile comes up alway, Though we may stand in sorrow, And our good bark, aground to-day, Shall float again to-morrow ! KiLt ‘eum !-=The Tribune reports that at the caucus, in Hartford, the night before the Convention which nominated: Seymour met, the Hon, James Gallagher, of New Ha- ven‘ spoke of the arrests made by this tyr- annical administration, and in connection with the subject said : **We shall say to the Government, ¢ Lay hands on a citizen of Connecticut, and, by the gods, you shall die, or I will?’ He said. ‘“ A friend of mine asked me what [ would do. if Mar- shal Carr should undertake to arrest me. I gaid, ‘ I would kill him—damn him! I would kill him I" And I say to you, it one of these infamous whelps should attempt to arrest any of you, without due process of law, kill em. damn ‘em, kill ’em !" [Cries of * kill em, damn ’em, kill em !’’ all over the house.] be possible; whole gr eo 07” The negro-orator, Fred. Douglas, i gave a lecture or a speech at the Cooper In- stitate, New York, a few days azo, on the President's Prozlamation. Among other things he said : * Since the utterance of this proclamation 1 have grown taller, and felt whiter, and comb my hair with much less I diffisulty,” i i | Anil want to get! “Ly Eo THE COMPLETE OVERTHROW OF : PUBLIC LIBERTIES. This is the darkest hour since the outbreak of the rebellion. Congress, by the act pas- sed yesterday authorizing the President to suspend the writ of habeas corpus through- out the whole extent of the country, has coi- sama ed its series of measures for laying the country prostrate and helpless at the feet of one man. It was not enough that Mr. Lincoln has been invested with the purse and the sword ; that, with an immense pow er to raise or manufacture money, he has unrestricted command of the services ol eve- ry-able-bodied man of the country, Congress hay thought it cecessary to give the finish- ing stroke to its establishment of a military despotism by removing all checks on the abuse of the enormous m netary and milita- ry power with which they have clothed the President. VW hat assurance has the country that we will ever have another prosidintil ¢'ection 2 None whatever, except what may be found in the confidence, reasonable or unreasenable reposed in the rectitude and patriotism of Mr, Lincoln. If any person, in any part of the country, shall think it tos duty to resist unconstitutional encroac ments on the rights of ci izens, Mr. Line is authorized, by what purports to be a aw to snatch up that individual and fwwmurae him m one of the government bastiles long as he shall sce fie. and there is no pow er in the land to call hin to an account. -- He can send one of his countless provost. marshalls into the house of a Governor of state, or any other citizen, in the doad of night, drag him from his bed, hustle bia away under the cover of darkness, plungs him into a distant and unknown dungeon, and slow Wis friends to know no more of the whereabouts of his body than thay would of the habi-atien of Lis soul, if instead of imprisoning, the provost-marshall hal maidered him. With this tremendous po #- er over the liberty of every citiz'n whom he may suspect, or whom he may choose to imprison without suspecting, the President is as absolute a despot as the Saitan of Tur- key. All the guarantees of liberty are bro- ken down ; we all lie at the fect of one man dependent on his caprice for cvery hour's exemtion from a bastile. If he wills it, the state governments may continue in the dis- charge of their functions ; butif he wild it, every one of them that does not become his submissive and s bservient tool can be as ounce suspended by the imprisonment of ity officers. Considering the enormous powcr conferred on the President, by the finance and conscription bills. a reasonable jealousy would have erected additional safeguards agamst its abuse. Instead of that, Congress has thrown down all the barriers and left us absolutely without shelter in the greatest violence of the tempest. So far as the detestable act passed yestor- day is an act of indemnity to shield the President from the legal consequences of past excereises of arbitrary power, it is a eon sion that, his secretaries, provost-mar- shalls and other mivions have been acting in vinhuion of law, Itannuls all Jaws pas- sed by the State Leg.slatures for the protec- tion of their citizens against kidnapping : it provides fur taking all suits for damages out of the State courts and transferring them to the Federal tribunals, and before those tribunals-the fact that the injury complain- ed of was done under color of executive su- hority is declared to be a full and completa defense. Iteven inflicts penalties on por. sons coming before the courts for redress of juries, by declaring that if they are, not successtul the defendant shall recover dou- ble costs So that the agzrieved party must take the risk of this penalty for venturing to ascertain, in a court of justice, whether his OpPIESSOT Was or was not acting under the authority of the President. To this alarm- ing pass hare matters come, that not only does every citizen hold his liberty at the mercy of one wan, but heis liable to be pun- ished for inquiring whether the person ar- vesting him really possessed, or only falsely pretended to possess, that man's authority! The attempt to disguise the olious char- acter of this detestasle act by a sham pro- {vision 1 its second sections an insult 10 the intelligence of the people. The Scere- tary of State and the Secretary of War." so it reads. “are directed, as son as mey be practicable,” to furnish to ve Judges of the courts lists of the names of the parsons arrested, that they may be presented to a grand jury for indictment. And who is to judge of this practibility 2 Why the See- retaries themselves, or the President for them. They will furnish such lists when. ever it suits their pleasure, and not befor e There is not only no penalty for neglecting to do this altogether, but the main pur- pose of the act is to protect these officers, and all persons acting und r their directions against all legal penalties for all arrests wherever made, and all detentions in pris- on however long protracted. The ninety days during which Congress has now been in session are the last ninety days of American freedom. Our liberties had previously been curtailed and abridged by exceutive encroachments, but the courts remained open for redress of wrongs. But this Congress has rendered their overthrow complete, by first putting the purse and sword in the hands of the President, and then assaring him of complete impunity ic allabuses of thisenoimous, this dangerous, this tremend ms power, N.Y World of | Marek 304.