II 11 N, Editor. 8. r. ILO, VOLUME Islett Vat*. Tun AROSITZOTI3. 37 33NR7 W. LONQICL.LOW All are Architects of Fate. Working in Om walls of Time; Some with massive deeds and great. El into with ornaments of rbymo. Nothing useless is or low; Each thing in its place is besl. And what seeing but Idle show: Strengthens and 'supports the rest For the structure that we raise, Time to with material filled; Our to days and yesterdays Ate the : blocks with which we build Truly abet* , and fashion these; Leave no yawning gaps between; Think not, because no map sees, duch things will remain unseen. In the elder days of Art, Builders wrought with greatest care Eseh minute an unseen part; For the Gods see everywhere. Lei us do our work as we H, • Both the unseen and the seen; •• Make the house where gods may dwell , ' Beautiut, ent to and clean. Else our lives are incomplete, Standing in these walls of Time, Broken stair ways, where the feet Sttinible an they seek to climb. II illd to-day, then strong and sure!, With a nun aid ample base; And ascending and securo Shall to-morrow find its place. Thus alone can we attain To those turrets, VI here the eye • Bees the world as one vast And one tounttless reach of sky liilP 31irillnuq. CANTATRICE, A TALE OF THE CREVASSE From the New York Tin.es Tho coast, as it has always been called since the set tlement of Louisiana, is that part of the . rich bottom of the Mississippi which commences with the ' first farm from tho Beline—say forte mile, below Now Orleans— and extends above the city one hundred and fifty. This belt of matchless soil is secured through out', its whole length by a Levee, or artificial embankment of solid earth thrown up at immense cost and labor. The Levee is from six to eight feet high, and sufficiently broad to furnish a beautiful way, where, in fine weather, the car riages of the opulent planters may be seen rolling swiftly along, as if in some gay procession. lyere this protec tive wall removed, the river, even in ordinary floods, would cover the coast eve'rywhe re to th depth of from two to ton feet, while in niany instanc it Would be far deeper, as the bottom uniformly slopes back, descending gradually from the batik like a glacis. This alluvial belt, by common consent deemed the most fertile on the globe, has long been converted into a girden, white i ll with cot ton, green with sugar mind, and gleaming blight with the golden apples of countless groves of ora n ge. The Levee is the great chain which has been forged by hu man art to defend it, nor does that strong defence at all times avail: for once every year its old enemy', the mighty river—loath to be robbed 'pl . so fair a pitiy—mus tors all his forces, and comes roaring, mad with the wrath of torrents from a hundred mountains, to re-assort his ancient reign. Ho assaults its chain of bastions with the thunder of all his waves. If the open attack be re pelled, he sets to work his insiduous under-mil:rents—a host of miners hnd eappers—that gnaw away into his heart. Then, perhaps, suddenly - the wall topples down —it breech is effected— a crevasse, or •.gap,'' occurs— and the headlong stream pours through with the hoarse, triumphant shout of a cataract, bearing a deluge of des truction to the blossoming fields for two or three hundred miles below. • Such calamities have frequently happened, but' the history of the coast has preserved none more horrible than that of May, in the present year—submerging, as it did, a large section of the island of New Orleans, end menacing the city of the Crescent itself with wreck and ruin. It was Sunday, not many years ago, whon a Stranger, whom wo shall call Peter Ellis, wandered forthlfrom the St. Charles to witness, with his own eyes, the approach es of that inundation, which then formed the staple of discussion among oil classes. He had another i ,object in strolling from his hotel, at the early hour of eight in the morning, as will very soon appear. Peter Ellis was about forty years of age, a noble figure, but proud, gloomy face, with a fore-head seamed by many and deep wrinkles, as if Fate had some time dealt him sharp blows, the wounds of which had healed over, leaving, hoWever, on his visage those enduring scars. 'His dress Was rich, after the fashion of the southern aristoirrity, hut worn negligent, and somewhat soiled with the stains if recent travel; for ho had, in truth, arrived only the evening. The etrangor passed groups of people, gathered on every corner, all engaged in earnest conversati o n; and sell here in the streets, as back yonder at the tavern, the crevasse, the crevasse, spoken in English, French, Span ishJ Italian, en patois—woe the topic that seemed to 1110. ttop hr.., every thought. Ho had.almost reached the old •baai , whore the water was Said to be rising With fearful rep' ity, when his ears were assailed by an incles i cribable noise which issued from a point a few rupiare i r to the left. "What infernal din is tilati Ie pandenioni loose?" asked Potor Ellis, interrogatinga litqe um, who chanced to be gliding by with a d smirk at his holiday finery, • "Morisieur is a stranger in the city?!' said the nun. bowing to the very knees EEO "Has hoard of tho Sunday dance on Congo' G, "Yes." "Never had the pleasure to see it?" “Na.,, "Then Monsieur will be delighted, charmed. se t e d with the apectacle," exclaimed the volatile P "''• onillUsiestically; adding, with another deq "but 1 beg Moneieurea pardon-for the ,remark—l be careful to respect the Africans. The Green 1 1 to them—is their theatre, I might say—and the 'Tient is under the strict surveillance of the police. "Does any body:else go there besides s negroes quired E.11i.„ abstractedly. "Oh! yes; every body attends some time or oth , the ladies who have had the serious misfortune their character, go always." The wrinkles on the brow of Peter l Ills grew black, as if darkened with the gloom of a thunder cloud. The tint answer of the Frenchman appeared to call hp the ghost dime horrid memory that had power to shake 'fary mucole of his frame. and with a scowl at his ea the 10. 4 interlocutor, he hurried onwards and entered -C Congo Green. This large, level square. dozen scree, ituated net fir from TGIF , •. , ERIE , , , . OBSERV ER . previous ium let trench eliciotts COI reef?" iichim son of bow. o will belonge *muse- MEI .r. and o logo the basin, was set apart by an ord the Sunday amusements of the A It is enclosed in strong iron railing same metal on each of 14e four ai l with many beautiful trees, acitterel irregular intervals, which gave it ti forest rather than a park. Although it was scarcely nine in the forenoon when Peter Ellis reached the drain, it w - already quite sup plied with dancers, and their sport rogreesed with infi nite spirit. The scene was such as to 'defy all attempts at description, by either pen or pen il. A huge negro, taller; and blacker. and'uglier, than any other, in the im mense concourse, had been chosen general director of the day. He was called, indifferen tly, ly, "King of Con go." or "King of the Wake." and ore on his head, as a crown, a great pyramid of printed paper boxes, fasten ed together. which had the effect of nearly doubling his natural height. This monarch and all his subjects ware tricked out in a manner so inconcei ably grotesque that it was impossible to behold them without laughter.— Hero was one furnished with hoofs There wont an- other brandishing enormous horns. A third clapped his wings, crowing like chanticleer. A fourth strutted maj estically. spreading behind him the !untoa of a peacock; while a fifth displayed the' tail o a monkey. Their sable features were decked with all t e colors or the rain• bow; and their necks, waists, ar s, angles, literally bristled with innumerable little bell_, diat jingled and chimed as they moved, like millions of fairy tongues. The dancers imitated the different cries of every ani mal described in natural history. TI ey crowded; barked, bellowed, neighed, hooted, bleated, a milled and howled, while, without ceasing, the little ,bell jingled and chim ed. And, as if this deafening din ere not sufficient to keep pace with theltrlwind of their passionate excite ment, they called in aid of all soi is of musical and un-musical instruments. The fiddle uttered its silvery laugh; the drum thundered; the trumpet roared; the fife squealed: while the boatman's hagle, like an angel of gladness, flung its winding notes into the sky; and still the little bells jingled and chimed. They increased the clamor by thumping pans, kettles, tubs, and empty barrels. They shuffled, waltzed, and flew the polka, but yet, over all the now evolution, the genuine Congo deuce maintained its undisputed pre-enNence. • It was the saturnalia of animal passion—the jubilee of joyous insinct. Every eye gleamed with rapture; every countenance was radiont with wild light. The whole burning heaving mass of - vitality was worked up to a height offeeling, intense as tho emotions of madness.— Even many of the spectators caught the contageous fury and joi led in the savage glen; but there was one behold er that gazed on the scone" with a grim look of tiorror, as if the happiness of others were a species of implied insult to him. "I must have been distracted to think of finding UER in such a place as this. lam distracted to harbor a hope of finding her at all!" murmered PeterlEllie to himself, as he threaded his way, painftilly, thfough the press, tvhisperii g malisons against Congo Green. ,At length the misanthrope gained the iron gate to wards the north, and Was in the act of going out, when a vision of the most extraordinary and dazzling beauty arrested his attention and chained his very feel to mho sod. This was a young girl habited in white, with a crimson zone around her bosom, secured by a massive cletsp of gold that lay opposite her heart like a star. Her head was bare, or only covered with its'own veil of ring lets, softer than silk and black as midnight. Her com plosion was dark, it is true, but it was the beautiful gold eu tint loft there by the wind mind the sun beam—this kissing her with fire, and that cooling the fire-tyith sighs. Peter Ellis was so unaccountably fascinated by the first sight, that he'did not remark for more than a min ute the companion in attendance on his angel, elf, or fairy, as his intoxicated fancy had spontaneously named her the instant her image flashed like lightning into his soul. At last, however, he w,forced to perceive that bh o had a companion and such a companion as filled him, not with jealousy, but with fear! This was an old m.in, hideously hunch-backed, with snow-white hair, piercing grey eyes, and a dirty shrivell ed face that wore the double expression of theft and mur der. 'He was muttering angry words in a low voice, while the girl's dark eyes were swimming in tears. "Oh! spare me that shame!" Ellis heard her entreat, "for heaven's sake spare me! I cannot go there." "Do as I bid you,. this moment," replied the old hunch • back, in a whisper at . otice sharp and hollow as if emit ting from the burn ing throat of a devil. "Go, or to-night —," the sentence was completed by ti gesture that made the very marrow creep in the spectator's bones. "1 will go," answered the girl, shuddering and tur ning deadly pale; and she opened the gate, and hurried on towards the centre of the sable crowd—the old mon ster following and eyeing her at a distance with his fiendish smile, while Peter Ellis, in spite of 'is pride vanity, and the Warning voice of reason, felt himself borne by an irresirtable impulse in the same direction. Presently the fascinated man heard, above all the tempest of tumult;the voice of a singer; but whether human or angelic he could not decide even in thought It was loud, sweet singing, and yet mil&and Wondrously winded, sweeping more octaves than that of the night ingale, sounding clearer and souring higher than the sky-larks, while its music was rich and' beautiful as e dream! , . The effect on the mad dancers was like magic.— Horn, drum, bugle and violin, were instantly silent.— The vast throng swayed to and fro. as "a sea tossed by the storm, and then gathered in a great circle around the voice, while one shout shook the Green like thunder— •"La Cantatricel The singer! The beautiful!" "It seems she is well known among the Africans of New Orleans," said Peter Ellis with a shudder. but stilt ho could not forbear pressing forwards till he gained a point in the circle of black faces whence he could again see the denting apparition. She sang., with the accompaniment of most appropri ate gestures, a merry bacchanal song, and the !Wooers cheered wiihshoute of laughter. At a signal from the old hunch-back, she took up a martial lyric, and every eye gleamed with the red light of battle. Then she trilled a mournful dirge—a wail of love and death; and a thousand ebon cheeks were wet with tears as with summer rain, while sobs and even shrieks resounded as at a funeral. In truth, she could not have selected a more impressible audience;' for the southern negroes have an insatiable passion for music, and sing them selves almost continually. At length she paused, and turning very pale, glanced beseechingly at the old hunch-beck. who frowned and waved a fierce iperirius gesture. She then drew from her bosom a larg open•inouth puree, and passing around the dusky circle, held out her hand for pennies, which were showetsd down with extreme liberality. When she came Hear Ellie. she glanced up in his face with her wild black eyes. wondering no.doubt at the presence of one so elegantly attired as he in such ,company. She started with surprise as he dropped a pica in her palm; it was a gold eagle. ..Monsieur had made g mistake." she said. in her soft, silvery tone. holding up the, glittering coin near his lace. • "No—keep It." he answered, Ins choking voice, and she felt another drop in her open paha. She hlushed ed as scarlet—for the last drop nu a tear of ere• The girl returned to her station in the human ring. and again glanced au imploring look at the 'old hunch back. Ho scowled as before and waived another angry gesture. She then took from thofolds of her dress two small gilt cloth:Vs, poised them an instant above her bead. then whirled them around her with a motion gracefully rapid as the Bight of wings. starting away in n dance so airy. buoyant and incredibly swift. ttiat she actually seemed to float like a sylph lu pure sunshine. But at that moment an event occurred to interrupt the general enjoyment. A dull,,booming noise was heard— the rush of a torrent of water; and a loud scream of terror arose:— I "The crevasse! The crevasse! The levee of the Basin,has broken! We shall all be drowned!" IMO° of the city for Hoene exclusively.— , has a gate of the es, ana is adorned Ihere *and there pit le- appearance of a The King of Congo tore otr hiccrown. and king and subjects alike attempted a grand charge towards the gates The flood came roaring after them, and in i three of four minutes overspread the green, but, fortunately, as yet to no considerable debt!). There were two persons ooly•in the crowd who did not fly—Peter Ellis and the poor singer. The former approached the girl with a fooling of strange interest "Why do you not fly, my pretty one?" he asked.— "Are you not afraid you will be drowned?" • Oh! God, I wish that I were!" she rejoined, with a look of such hopeless sorrow that it thrilled through his inmost heart in a pang keen as the wound of a dagger. "Than it seems you do -not like your present pro feseion?" Ellis inquired. I "Like it!" the girl exclaimed, in a tone with proved the very question itself to be torture. "Why, then do you not leave it?" •"Itionsieur. I have no other." She uttered the answer ih a voice indescredibly mournful, folded her hand on her bosom, and up to heaVen. "Has no ono proffered assistance to enable you to rise above your degraded condition?" 'Molly, very many," she replied, sadly. "Why, then, did you not accept such benevolent aid?" "Because Monsieur," faltered the girl, blushing deeply and letting her dark oyes fall to the ground. "1 would rather suffer his cruel harted than endure their' wicked lova." "His hewed? The hunch-back, you mean?" ""Yes." "Is he not your father?" "No, Monsieur, he brought me up ever since I was a little child, but he is not my father." “Where is the hunch beck now?” "Gone to his pawn-broker shop, beyond the basin.— He team it is overflowed." "Have you no mother?" "None in this world:" And ogain the darkeyed girl glanced through her tear towards heavon. "Do you ramomber your parents!" "I remember my mother. I have at least a faint maga of her. She had black eyes, such as mine, and a smile like an angel, it was so much sweeter than any 'starlight." Pater Ellis started as if to rush forward and seize iha gir}but immediately checked himself, murmuring—"No, it cannot bo!" and prociteded with his interogatione. "Do you recollect your mother's name!" He put the question in a tone grasping with dreadful earnestness,- "No, Monsieur, I knew her only WI mother." "What is your own name!" "They now call in. Cantatrice, but my mother did not so call me." "What did your molhor call you?" "Man•." Peter Ellis started as if Ito had been shot in the heart, but once more calmed himself and continued— "Have you any recollection of your father?" • m "No, Monsieur; but I havo a memory of my home ore they brought me to the city." "Can you describo it?" 1 "Oh! yes," she answered, clasping her small hands tightly across her forehead, as if to press the feeble images from their old dark niches in the brain. 'Then she added—'The pictures are dim, Monsieur, very dim and very beautiful—like deep dreams. There, I see it all In the sunny air now—the tall white house, with the stone chimney at each,end--the two great trees in the yard, with die big red painted gate before them; the blue lake beyond the gate; I can never forgot it for I slipped into it once, and was drawn Out half dead, by an old one eyed nogro. The face of Peter Ellis was pallid as that of a corpse, as he put the last question, in a voice hciarse as the rattle in a dying man's throat: "Have you any relic—a handerchiaf—a bit of cloth - ing.--anything left by your mother!" ' . have her miniature, Monsieur." "Where? Where?" "Here, in my bosom, close beside my heart.' "Let me see it!' cried Peter Ellis, leaping forth wild ly, and grasping the girl by the arm. She raised the miniaturety the slight silver chain and held it op befote his gleaming eyes. "It is she!--it is she!" he shouted,'and then caught the young , girl to his bosom, murmuring "Mary, oh! Mary—my daughter!" Let a half hour of the scene pass. It never should be profaned by iso poor a pen as mine! And yet I cannot end without recording one closing incident. When the find outburst of excitement was ovorthe glimmering doubt, the sure explanation—the question solved by the caress, and the gush of feeling that sweet ened and illuminated everything; when a sacred calm followed, deep as the sea, stable as the earth, and bright as the sun; when the arms of the two wero entwined more gently, as if no longer afraid of losing each other, then the girl said, in a seraph-like whisper—" Thank God! I have now two fathers—one here and another yonder!" and she pointed her Supra to the sky. And thrice happy are all the poor girls of the great city who can say as much. But alas: for the many orphans with out a father,. and a darker woe for the wretches that show Own no pity! CURIOSITIMI OT vita EARTH.—At the city , of Modena. in Italy, and about four miles around it ; wherever it is dug, whenever the workmen "My: at the distance of sixty-three feet. they come to a bed of chalk. which they bore with an augur five feet deep. They them withdraw from the pit before the augur is removed, and upon its extraction. the water burst up from the apperature with great violence, and quickly fills this new made wall, which continues full, aad Is affected by neither rains nor droughts. At the depth of fourteen feet are found the ruins of an ancient city. paved{ Streets, houses, doers, and pieces of mosaic. Under this is foUnd a soft oozy earth, made up of vegetables; and at' twenty-aix fpet deep, large trees entire, such as walnut trees, with the walnut sticking ou the stem, and their leaves and branch es in perfect preservation. At twenty-eight feet deep. a soft chalk is found. mixed with a vast quantity of sheik, and this bed is eleven feet deep. Under these. vegeta- Mee are found again with leaves and branches of trees as before, and thus alternately chalk and vegetable earth, to the depth of eizty.throo feet: • /114vx nu rum or.-. The editor of the Syracuse Re" collie has determined au paying some lady's board— which is the modern defirdtion of marriages. as soon as he gets ableas the following will show: Jupiter! How we do envy our young married Mods. when we look in the quiet enjoyment of their vat hap py are-sides. Wield and weathet-vandfundi=lerratit- Ong, we are bound to get '4utsTicedo f orthvdtti. SATURDAY MORNING,. SEPTEMBER 1, 1849. Mr ONWARD .1/3 I MINIZARIA4I irifnErZINDZINCIE. GREAT SPEECH OFISIR. COBDEN AT A MEETING HELD IN THE CITY OF LONDON, ON THE 23d OP JULY LAST. FOR TILE PURPOSE OF SYMPATHISING WITH THE NOBLE STRUGGLES OP THE HUNGARIANS. We could pot give our readers more acceptable read ing than the speech of WILLIAM CODDILS, the celebrated English economist. Portraying. as it does. the true state of the resources and physical abilities of Rimer's. It will dissipate the ides, sOprevalent in this cluantry. of the ex aggerated and stupendous military and financial condi tion of that empire. l l lThis speech has attracted the notice of the hired prate of Europe who seek to disparage the views therein set 60; and l nothing, that has yet been said in regard to the great Cruz& for liberty in the old world, has received TOM attention: Mr. Comm, was received with great cheering. He said—Mr. Obairmenland gentlemen, I think, after this demonatration to-lay, no paper will have the audacity to deny that the inhabitants of this great city are indifferent to the fete of Hungary, or favorable to the despote who are trying to fetter her independence. I I appear to-day. anxious to add my mite of sympathy to that which you are prepared to exprees for the Interests of Hungary. and I think it right to explain exactly what my sympathies are. and what my objOcts are in coming here. If I have one principle more than another firmly implanted in my mind, and which I think it is 'for the interest of this country, and of all other countries, to recognize. it is, that separate and independent countries should be allow ed to regulate their own alFeirs in tiler way that seems best to them, without the interference of any other for eign'power whatever.; .1 make no exception' to this rule. I Include in it the right of the Roulette. 1 include within the benefit of that principle, the poorest, the humblest, the 11103 t degraded coUununity;fpr it is.no answer to My principles to tell me, that certain countries are not in a condition to govern. themselves properly. Tho fact that a country is unable to govern itself properly, is no reason why you should go and govern it according to your own notions to What is proper. I come now to the question before as,—ithe osttleeki Hungarian independence. If this had been a quostiOn simply between Hungary and Austria, would it have bean necessary for us to have ap peared here to-daff o long as the Hungarians were left to settle their affairs with the government of Vienna, they were perfectly clpotont to do it, without the inter ference of the citizens f London. They have, I believe twice driven the Austran aimies frern ' their territories,' and to all intents and urposes, therefore, they stand now / in the position of an i i dependent nation. Bo far, they 1 have proved their pow Anstria. My bject in coming here to-day is to r to maintain their independene against' si protest against an arm d intervention, as unjust, as ini quitous. and as infamous as was ever perpetrated. I come here to protest eiainst the Russian horde's pour ing down upon the plains of Hungary. and I do it upon the principle that I haye already laid down. and as 1 would have protested against England sending an army to Hungary to fight oni l the other side. I come here to protest against foreigners being upon the Danube or the Theism at all. I have seen with some astonishment—for I was not in my place in the House of Comm -as on Bs turday, having had a fieree weeks Mvitation to accom pany your Lord Mayor in a pleasant excursion up the river—that Lord Palmerston .defended himself against some ridiculous and unjust attacks made upon him in the House of Lords, but that in his speech there is not a word of comment, or at grave rebuke, or the most mod erate disapprobation expressed upon the conduct of the Rnssians. But that i the whole question before us— Russian interference. I have told you that lam not for allowing the governm e t to aend Englishmen to fight the battles of Hungary against the Austrians. and I come hero to protest against Russia going to the assistance of Austria. We may be asked why we do not follow out this meeting by some measure for actively aiding the Hungarians. We corns hero, in the first place. to ex press our opinions e which will at all events show to the despots of tlie.north, Mint sofar as the- weight of these free opinions go. we throw them into the scale. and tell them that they may, ecloin on our hostility. and let them not believe those organs of the press who have been so properly denounced to-day, when they tell them that nay government in this country can possibly lend its aid to the cause of despotism. I belong to the peace party. though I cannot claim for myself the views which my friend who preceded' ru l e has expressed. I am afraid, however, if we teat his 'views by the New Testament. that he is right and I alai wrong: What lam bare to-day for, is to rouse the feels gad of the peace party In this country against the eggietutions of Aussie. We may be asked, bow can you bri g moral force to -bear on these armed despots? I will ea you. We can stop, the sup plies. Why, Russia caul carry on two campaigns be yond her owo frontiers without coming to western Europe for a loan: She never hiss 'done so. without being either subsidized by England, ' r borrowing money from Am sterdam. I tell you I h ve paid a visit there, and I assort that they cannot carry n two campaigns in Hungary without either borrowin money in western Europe or robbing the bank of St. etorsburgh. (A laugh; and a cry of "question.") That must be a Russian agent or spy, for this is a questiH. I know that the Russian party here and abroad, • ould rather that I should send against them a equadro non, than that 1 should to tell yon. I say. then' loan. In 1829, Russia was 'urkey; but after ono compaign, (Hope, of Amsterdam, and bor ftlearry on a war of two years uption here arose from the name 11 ,4 turit him out" ensued.) Per /amain% we may be able to eon s. 1 have told you that in 1829, trate, and having lost her fleet at obliged to borrow 40,000,000 flo. ilia war with Turkey. In 1931. nsurrection against Russia, if it intone° of Hope; of Amsterdam, Russia, could not have carried on that nine months' war. two campaigns without engaged in a war with 5 sho was obliged to go till row 49,001:1.000 florins it duration. (Some intorrp voice, and a loud cry oil haps, if the gentleman vort him to our principles Turkey being then pros t i Navarino, Russia was p) rine to carry on 'a tivo yel when the Poles rose in had not been for the assn The loan, I understand, was called in England the Pole murdering loan., Well, now, I want to know, can't we as a peace party, do something to 'prevent Russia or Aus tria raising h loan In western Europe again! The whole contest depends upon th r t. I havo told you they cannot carry on a war. without either robbing the Bank of St. Petersburgh or borrowin money abroad, There is no one in their own country from whom they can borrow; there Is not a citizen who can lend them a farthing. The Turners of the ! ankh of Russia exists because their di. plomatists, who are clever cunning men, invent false hoods which no one whoi t knows the real condition of the country would believe for a moment. They tall us that the Emperor has gold mines in Siberia. from which he can draw any possible amount of gold, and, that it Is a story which is beloved °iron by some honorable gentle menra in Threadneedle si eet. Now. I have been there. and I know 'what is the Ins ofthsse mines. 'The Rus sian government does not work those mine! itself. (In terruption. sod much confusion. with a cry of "turn him out.") If our friends will only be quiet. it will,ba im. possible for any 'single iUdividual to make a &Rabin". I em radon to bring out facia, net ently for the present meeting, but facts * which will be listenod to far elsewhere. I wish to straw the monstrous delusion that prevails airway the people of welter's Europe with regard to the resources of this power. I Russia does not week• an ounce of gold hereof?. but receives apex contort upon the worlt 4 ' tog of these mines by other/. And the_ratein of this of cavalry and a battery of Ca- Ifiro off the facts that I am about that Russia, cannot carry on gold is not more profitable than other branches of indus try. The Bunten government .derives I a revenue of £700,000 from these mines, while they raise ten times as much upon the exchoidaties upon spiiits, consumed by its wretched and degraded population. After the gold mine delusion is expelled, they tell you thtit the Emperor of Russia has a great amount of specie in the vaults of thelortreas of St. Petersburgh l Yes, there is& reserve of specie in the Bank of St. Po tersburgh; but it Ise reserve of £14,000,000 to meet a paper circulation of £40.000,000 or £50.000.000; and bear in mind that the present paper money of Russia was (piled to redeem other paper mo ney, which had been depreciated one-third, or one-fourth In value. the government having withdrawn the depre ciated paper at lOhd, paying oft its notes at 3s. 4d., but under a solemn pledge that there should be a reserve of specie in St. Petersburgh to pay these notes on demand, when they aro presented. Now the diplomatists and Minions of Ikussia have spread this 'report among the easy credulous, that because the Bank of Russia has £15,000,000 of specie on hand, the Russian nation is a Arealthy one. If it comes to a war, Russia must either come for a foreign loan, or rob the bank; a nd if the Em peror takes that money. lie takes what no more belongs to him, and what he has no more right to take, than if the Chancellor of the Exchequer came down to Tittead- Reedte street, and took the reserve oat of the vaults there. 'there are men hero present who know I am speaking the truth. I know it, because I have been on die spot, and mud° it my business to understand these things. I i should never have spoken thus of the poverty of Russia I if she had not violated a principle which every man who admires Hungariau fortitude and courage, and feels an interest in the cause of liberty and patriotism, is bound to further and uphold. Well, these are my moral means. by which I Invite the peace party to put down this system of leaning. Now wilt any one in the city of London dare to be a party to a loan to Russia, either directly or open 7 ly, or by agency and copartnership with any house in Amsterdam or Paris? Will any one dare, I say, come ' before the citizens of this free country and avow that he 1 has lent his money for the purpose of cutting the throats of the innocent people of Hungary? I have heard such 1 a project talked of. But let it only assume a shape, and 1 1 proms() you that we, the pence party, will have such a meeting as has not yet boon held in London. for the pur pose of denouncing the blood stained project—for the 1 purpose of pointing the linger ofscorn et the house of the individuals who would employ their money in such a manner—for the purpose of fixing an indelible 'stigma of infamy Upon the men who would lend their money to such a vile, unchristian and barbarous purpose. That is My du ral force. As for Austria. no one, I suppose, would !ever think of lending her money. Why, she has been a bankrupt twice within the last forty years, and none her paper money is at a discount of 15 to 16 per cent. Surely, then, no one woad think of lending her money. A. the peace party throughout the country. we will raise a crusade against the credit of every government that Is carrying on en unholy war. Don't let any one talk of Russian resources. It is the poorest and most beggarly country in Europe. It has not not a farthing. Last year there was au immense deficit in its income as compared with• its expenditure, and flaring the present financial year it will be far worse. Russia a strong political pow er? Why, thereis not so gigantic a political imposture in all Europe. They talk sometimes as if England and Englishmen were afraid of Russia, • Now. I wish to dis abuse all minds respecting my views •on this subject. I do not come hero to oppose the Russian advance into Hungary, because I think that in any conceivable turn of events, Russia ever can be dangeroua l to the existence or interests of England. If Russia should take a step that required England or any other great maratinni pow er like tho United States. to attack that Power. why we should fall like a thunderbolt upon her. , You won!. 'ti six months crumple that empire tip. or chive It into i dreary fastnesses' as i now crumple up this piece of pa per in my hand, Russia a powerful nation! I will tell you what she has: She has an army on paper without commissariat, a navy without sailors, and a military chest without a farthing in it. Why, gentlemen. how tong is it since we heard of the Russian invasion of Hun gary—since we were told that the hoards of Russians wore coniuk down like an avalanche of men upon the Hungarians. to exterminate them? It is four months ago. and where are they now? What progress have they made! I says nothing of the ultimate conlequences of the Russian invasion. I - do not shut my eyes to the peril that awaits the Hungarians. But if Russia hid been like England, with its resources of wealth, and with the commissariat such as awaited English 'armies, they would have gone through Hungary from one end to the other. Ido not speak of fighting the Hungarians, but merely of the difficulty of getting through thisl country for every ono knows that the difi'culty that the Russians have to encountre is the difficulty of carrying 'supplies. What stops them is the want of a commissariat, the want of honesty on the part of those who are intrusted with it, the difficulty of the roads, and the danger of attack by a hostile - population, and all this I trace to the undoubted poverty of the Russian government. The Russian gov eminent have been for the lest four years or fivo engag ed in making a railroad from Moscow to St. Petersburgh. , - The country is as level as this table. Ido not believe it '1 is finished at this time, and they wore obliged to go to a banker's quarterly to got the money to go on l with it. Russia a strong, a powerful and a rich country ! ' Don't believe any one who tolls you so in future. Refer them of me. Now, wo do not come hero to interfere witti for- oign countries, or to make a crusade against, foreign finaucee, until they have violated the principles of neu trality and the rights of independence, in which We claim to have an interest. Therefore it is that 1 proclaim these facts, and I dare the Russian agents to contradict them I sayngain; "atop the supplies," and do so not 'only in the interest of the Hungarians, but in the interest of the ' Russians themselves. Keep them at home; they have 1 abundant scope for their labor- imtheir own country, in 1 deepaing their rivers, in making railroads, in draining their morasses, and in elevating the condition of the peo• pie. This is whaVl want them to do, and not to enter upon a criminal crusade with an unoffending people, who aro their neighbors. It is, therefore; in the interests of civilization, humanity and peace, that' we men t Hero to day. (Tho honorable member resumed his seat amid prolonged cheering. REPUBLICANISM.—Not many years since, in al hand some mansion not a thousand miles from Cincinnati, it young lady. who has "high notions" of what constitutes respectability, expressed astonishment to her mother that a young lady of their acquaintance, of considerable wealth. should receive the attentionsir a young carpet': ter and joiner. I "lie is an upright and intelligent young man. I can see no objections," replied the mother. I "I don't care," returned the daughter, "31 would not be seen on the street with him." "Would you, ho ashamed to be seen with your father on the street?" ionnired the mother. , ""Why do you ask that. mother'!" "Because. I can well remember when he pushed a plane." was the mother's reply. She had her theta._ The **Plosions of Elope? a= be found ha Aopioso that yeti are not bye minute, too late for tke Con when yea ibsem you ure. • 27*The wet satterdetory eiridenee of 'u'isates ty. tivto heir of 'My broiling into • larryoi's o plunder. $1 50 ;TZIA . II, in Advance. THE T A company et New York having taken the initiatory steps towards uniting the Atlantic and Pacific by canali sation. via the river San Juan and Lake of Nicaragua. the British Consul at New York has given them notice that his government claims. in behalf of the king of Mosquito, the land granted them by Nicaragua. and also the navigation of the river. This claim, of coons our government will take no notice of. The history of this British claim Is as follows. and is of a piece with British prasumtion every whore. That govornenont, seeing that a canal must sooner or later be mad* between the two oceans, and that San Juan was the proper point it which to commence the iivot'x, instigated some British mer chants at Kingston, Jamaica, to fit out an ezpidition to that coast, to see what could be dono to get possession of the country. The vessel entered the harbor of San Juan, and in a fow days inveigled some of the stupid negroes and Indians on board, under promise of a few pounds of glass beads and a blow-out on grog. Ous of this cam patty. a big, burly negro, being apparently more stupid then any of his companions, was told by the merchants that ho must set himself up as king of the Mosquitoes. and claim the sovereignty of a part of the State of Ni caragua. They put a pair of red troweers on him.—an article of wearing apparel that he never dreamed of be. fore,—gavo him au old coat with a pair of opaulettes, and placed an Iron keg-hoop upon his hoad,—ubt much re sembling tho iron crown of Lombardy,—as en insignia of his authority. They thenre•christened the mud city of San Juan, calling it Gray Town, promised their ne gro mosquito plenty of grog if ho would swear to all the lies they chose to put into his mouth, and set sail for Kingston, The king of the Mosquitoes can neither write nor read, nor can he tell his right leg from his left one, unless he chalks it. Ile don't know who his father is, acid his father don't know who he is, and don't wish to. And if the English should try to find him again, of course they couldn't, for . his trowsers are all worn out by this time, and they have no other mark to tell him by.-- This king of the Mosquitoes, soon after this English hocus-poeusing,considering himself a gallinipper at least while his rum holds out, undertook to impose uPon soma American sailors who were boating logwood off to their vessel.' The captain said nothing for a few days; but one fine morning, coaxed the king on board his vessel. under promise of some grog, tied him up in the rigging, gave him twenty-five lashes, well laid on. and a bit of advice as to his future course in the treatment of Ameri can sailors. Such is the great king of the Mosquitoes. whom the British have set up as Lord Paramount in Ni caragua, and through whose authority they claim juris diction over the territory which the State of Nicaragua has solemnly guarranteed to a company of Americans. over which to construct atonal to unite the two oceans. John Bull is wide awake in looking out for Important points. He has now got Aden. Gibraltar. and the Ba hamas. But if he bullies us out of any thing on this continent. he is smarter then we 'believe him. to be.— Boston Olire Branch. CHARACTER There are weak-minded and feeble-bodied individuals who are never well, nod who never would be if they could. The doctor must call, the draught muatbe taken. and every friend moat tell them on pain of nations dis pleasure. that they look ill. and roust take great cars of theme elves. There are kindhearted souls, who can never be happy themselves unless they can make others so. Half a detest such as these in n village, and scores in a town. do more real good and fling around them more sunshine. than a hundred merely respectable inhabitants. 0. how I love to fall in with inch beings. There are tattling gadabouts, who can no more with hold from the whole neighborhood anything they may happen to know or hear, than a cackling hen that has J k i laid an egg. Be it true or false. let it be good or evil. theliMry must be told. Sorry 1 ant that the tribe of gad- ' abouts` a numerous one. There passionate persons , so hot and peppery. so . 1 78 truly combs ble, that a word will throw them in 4 blase. Whether the offence be small or great..intanded or acci dental. it is all olia; they are like loaded guns; they gootY when the least thingtuches the trigger. Of truck a one as this it cons aptly said;„-- -He carries in'his Nast a spark afire. That soy' fool niap \ i ‘ an into a name." There are thoughtful men wir remain at home and grow wise, and there are though ess wanderers who go ' abroad and comeback ignorant. is not what the eye sees, but what the mind reflects upon, that supplies us with wisdom. Thera oro persons who, acting from audAcn impulse. make use of such strong expressions upon trilling occa sions, that they find no suitable words for occur47of importance. They know nothing of the positive and compariative, but always make use of the superlative. \The squeaking of a mouse and the fall of a church spire would call forth tho same ejaculation. - There are busybodies whose,own business seems not to be of hall's° much importance to them as to the occu pation of them; those sift trifling matters to the bottom; Make much of little things, and do a plentiful deal of mis chief to all artound them. but every one dislikes them. • There narrow-minded mon. oy, and women too, who have humanity enough to :Abstain from upbraiding tho receiver of it. There aro grateful spirits, that, come good or ill. are always "singing of mercy." To them the heavans 'de clare the glory of God, and the earth is fall of the good ness of the Lord. A spirit, of this kind is worth a sea fall of sapphires."—Old Humphreys. ARGUMENT AGAINST EARLY MARRIAGES A writer in the National Intelligences notice, a com munication from the Richmond Republican, signed "W. W. Y." in which early marriages wore advocated. and presents "the other side of the picture," as followa:=-- "Says W. W. Y., *All know, or should know. the opinion of the good and wise Franklin neon this subject. who was a warn, advocate in its favor.' Perhaps Frank lin wus Philosophically right in his opinion, but facts go to prove that he was practically wrong. For instance. gentlemen 'all know, or should know,' that the children of very young parents are generally deficient In strength of body and mind, and commonly die young. 'All know or should know,' that Franklin was the fifteenth child of his father, and the eighth of his mother; and more st ill, he was the youngest child for fee successive gencrarions on his mothers side, from whom, more than' his father, lie inherited his eminent talent,. Fill. For. and Burke, were each the youngest child of their re spective families. Daniel Webster is the youngest by a second marriage; so also was Lord Bacon, whose father was fifty. and his mother •thirty-two years of age at his birth. Judge Story's mother was forty-four at his birth; Benjamin West was the tenth child of his parents; and Dr. Doddridge wail tho twentieth child by one father and mother. It is a proverb that *the yongest children are the smartest.' And why? evidently because the parents are mature in mind and body, and consequently transmit a higher order and mentality to their oSpriag. Dam the intelligent farmer expect a healthy and luxuriant crop when he seeds with dwarfish green corn or unripe pate. toes? And why not bring In requisition as much Wenn. and common sense to prepogate 'the human form as 'potatoes and cabbage?' Grant that sae mantagaa would obrists,lntnch of the vice and nee which is new almost unavoidable.' is not the e l eiegy worse than the disease if It be the means of bringing fete ex• Wanes a race of puny. ill-formed children. a majority of whom die before they arrive at matnrityf Uot the evil does not end here. Those who do live transmit their mushroom, constitution to their offspring. and thus-most effectually are the 'Migration of *slathers viiitinf efeir the children.' " ani• to for E NUMBER 16. 0 OCEANS