VOL. VIII. THE JOURNAL. ,Terms—in Advance z • 0 nil my par ccitun, $l.OO Wage subscribers, 1/5 : TERMS OF ADVERTISING. - 9 - I square, 0(12 lines or less, 1 insertion, $0,50 " " " 3 insertions, 1,50 " every subsequent insertion, 25 gale and figure work,,per sq., 3 insertions, 3,00 Every subsequent irsertion, 50 I column, one year, 25,00 I column, six months, 15,00 Adisia:critors' or Executors' Notices, 2,00 Sheriff's Sales, per true, 1,50 Professional Cards not exceeding eight lines it;sered for .$5,00 per annum. CT All letters on business, to secure at tencion, should be addressed (post paid) to the Publisher. From the Independent. TES OLD TEAR 'MID TEM NEW.. One, like a faint old roan, Bat down by the way-tide *weary. "Firm his step as one who knows He is free where e'er he goes; Tot, withal, as light of spring As the arrow tram the string. impassioned eye had got Fire which the sun has not. Bilk to reel and gold to see, Fell his tresses fill! end free; Or. like morning mists that glide Sett ndown the mountain's side, Most deliciests 'twan to henr When his voice was thrilling clear Like a silver•hearted bell." An, with song and roundelay Came the New-Year down this way.. It was the last eve of December. The bells were chiming the hour of eleven as an old mut, loaning on the tent of a zrneeful youth. passed nut of the city into the open field= beyond. Very ♦enershle wits he. His crutwen mice was sad. his step filtering. He looked like one nn whom rare had pressed heavily. and Who vvaa weary •fthe tiigl. Beautiful as Apnlln, fresh tad Imporid aemnrnino. was the youth. He stand erect with majestic ease. and his lnig. fair hair. blown backward by the wind. fell upon the gray locks of kis cninpanion. They came to a rus tic seat by the way-side. " Shall we rest here. father 1" maid ha to the old mnn ; " time wane-z, and thou'sayest then ha•t much to tell me." "Ile. child : let itz ffn to the rock in the shadow of yonder forest. Thou art all impatient. I see. to commence th• reien. tut I have yet an hour al lotte4l me." Silently they rock on through the night till the amined. " Sit closer to me." said the old man. " and take my hand in thine. for the air is cold and my blood rims chill. Twelve moons azo I was as warm and rigorous as thou. "How differently 7 now look upon tha world ! Then I was fill] of dreams Ind high expectation; and unutterable longingi for its perfection to he et-P tained through ma. I said to myself, ' All my myriad predecessors have left it better than they found it, but its progress has been an slow that it is still full ofguilt and wretchedness and pain, and fees sighing and groaning amongst the spheres as if it were devoid of joy. I will work a mighty change. I will Baize upon its abuses with a powerful arm and demolish them. The strong; shall nn longer oppress the weak ; cun ning and •nalice shall not prevail over honesty and right ; neither shall Thera he war nor tumult any more. I will instruct the ignorant ; reclaim tit• vicious and so elevate the whole race that it shall he but one happy bother lined under the eye of Gnd. Then every natural beauty will appear un dimmed. There will he nothing to tsar the sublimity of the mountain, the loveliness of the valley, the grandeur St the ocean ; but the wide earth shall lend up ascriptions of praise that will find sweet entrance at the gate of • heaven !! "Haat thou not had such thoughts, ray son 1" i "Nay. father ; they were even now in my mind. llist thou tell me they era vainl" " Aye ! vainer than a dream. What if the snit and the rain should say of 11 seem ' Herein lies hidden a stately THE::'EOPLE'S '.JOURNAL COUDERSPORT POTTER COUNTY, PA., FEBRUARY 28, 1856 tree: Tt shall not have, like all other oaks, a thousand years for its develop ment, but we sacill tend it with unceas ing care, and a single day. shall suffice to display its lofty proportions.' Think you the germ would unfold more rapid ly the their schemes? " - Experience has• shown the that the world's growth is like that of the acorn. God's forces are revolutionary only in long periods. In the material world convulsions and upheavals are the exception, nut the rule. The coral is forming silently for ages in the deep. The desert sands encroach almostinsernibry upon the oasis. The river, little by little, deposits its sedi ment at its mouth. But, in the lapse of time, a rocky island rises from the waves ; the oasis disappears ;. and the stream, seeks a new outlet to the sea. It is so in the world of mind, with nations and with individuals. Each must develop himselfand work out hie (.le.t.iny according to this inherent laws of his being and you might sooner think to produce the perfect oak its a day, than bye single effm t, to change the.coustitution of things. and bring them up to the ideal standard. You have a wolk to do that nu previous year over had ; that no future year can accomplish. Be content to Sow, though ;Luther may reap and: gather into barns. - Take up the line of duty where it has been left, and, though• you cannot rear the full-grown tree, you can add another circle to its trunk, deck its boughs anew with foliage, and give it greater power ti wrestle w.th wind and storm. " Oh t• I seem to lee the years since the creation of man—a glorious pro cession—one after another falling into their appointed places—eat nest, hope ful, uutiring—cuutent to wet k upon the etude or the refitted mate:lels be fore them ; nothing daunted : though thu skies are dark ; - expectiluguu int; mediate results from their : toil ; but pressing steadily onward' with a calm trust, till, their mission ended, they return to the bosom of God.!" •' My lather ! I almort fear to join this princely company. I had looked for au much of present benefit and ra- ward." "Be strong, my son, and * heaven" will sustain thee. No year . ever wore so regdl a crown as thou wilt wear. All that went before thee have been laying the foundations of thy throne wide and deep. They wrought fur this hour, as thou must' fur that which will follow. There were never such high duties, such enlarged spheres of labor as are eraitingfor thee. Be not a theorist in them. Be a true and practical builder. "My predecessors and I had one err or of belief into which 1 tt ust nu coming year will fall. We looked around and saw the people suffering under the tyranny of their rulers. They were ignorant and degraded, and oftentimes on the brink of starve iron ; herding together like beasts rather than men. And we taid, We will give them republicanism and in telligence and cosimmt ; thus they shall be uplifted.' Mighty agents are these, and indispensable to mural progress, hut how utterly insufficient did we find them to stem the tide of human depravity and wrong. If a plant were growing to poisonous earth, light and warmth and moisture could not vitally curs ; they could only &inanimate its condition ; and so ail these influences of which 1 speak can assist man to rise, but cannot radically alter the corruption of his nature.. - Du you seek to intuse a purer principle. ShoW him that it is neither Ituerty nor learn ing nor luxury which will bring him into cominumun with the Divine ;- bJt love and meekness and charity, such as dwelt in the breast ofJesus. Teach himthat to be great is out to be widely knoWn ; and that he is the hero,,, how aver.humble his lot, who fulfills all the duties that devolve upon him, and puts bis confidence in God." • " 0 my father ! the burden is great. Canst thou not linger a while to help mar DEVOTED TO THE PRINCIPLES OF DFAIOCRACY, AND THE DISSEMINATION OF MORAL LITERATURE, AND NEWS. " Child, my moments are numbered. Thou must bear it alone. It will not all be grievous. A thousand joys are scattered along thy way. Many good ly seeds sown long ago shall in thy time bear - precious fruit. There aro noble souls, that in the conflict for truth and freedom. have been over borne, and' lie- now on the battle-field, wounded and bleeding, and faint unto death. It shall be for thee to raise them up and bind their brows with hays, while the shouting -multitude shall decree to them the victory, and write their nameia:nong the immortals. And there are those high in power, but full of selfishness and crime, whom thou shalt overtake with swift justice and fill with remorse and 'shame. Verily, thou . wilt have many cumpeu- sations." Thou comfortest me, my father ; but thy voice groWs feeble. Hast thou no last request to make !" "These is much, my ch.ld, which in the rush and hurry of my affairs I was compelled toleave undone. There are captives in dungeons whom I meant to have released. There are friends long estranged, whom I hoped to have recunciled.to each ot'aer. There are lovers separated by a cruel fate. whom I would have united , . There are lonely hearts 'yearning for an affection they have never known, which I designed to give them. . But thou wilt do it ; thou wilt do it !" Oh ! my father ! I can hardly hear thy words. Bless me ere thou depart est_" I . de bless thee, my son. May the Almighty light thy path. and make thee mare glorious than all who have preceded thee. May he give 'thee wisdom, find knowledge and . gladness, and bring thee, when thy coarse is run,'iuto his presence with rejoicing ! " List ! the . winds .wail.. The mid.- night stars beckon,. I' ga. Remember ! Farewell !" • DEAN: BROOKLYN, Doc. 31, 1855. A V/ROLSTIAN'S VIEW OF THE SLAVERY curEs:noN. DUTIES of du NORTH & of the SOUTH. A SE ItMON Preached in the Unitarian Church, Wash ing.on City, Jan. 26, 1856. BY MEN. H. D. COAT WAY, PASTOR First -Pius, then Peaceab!e.—James nt 17 It is now eight weeks, awl the Con gress of these States, called, as if in bitter irony, United. is still unorgani ized. Thole is reason enough for the grave apps ehension now pressing upon the mind of every patriot. Our young Hercules, just as his labors have arisen before him, and the nations looked on to see him stranee the Hydra here, and there unbar the flood of Reform toward manifold Augean stables, sud denly becomes paralyzed. Oh, son of Jove, last and strongest, what is this ! whither has thy noble promise fled • We meet here. my friends, on a common ground: Vat ied perceptions of the relations of that common ground to - human - welfare, separate us into different parties. We are also of di verse secii.►ns. I .do not think" the pulpit should he used to.asseil any of these, as such. I therefore shall not . , permit myself a doubt, as I touch this must sensitive subject, that you will - sympathize with me and with each other. .1 do se only because, in these troubled times, my heart burns to point you to the ancient landmarks of Right and Wrong, which, when seen, none can fail to acknoWledge ; for, like the objects of . the ear and eye, they are their own evidence. I shall not make any partisan statement; for I belong to no party ; but there is one phase of the present state of things which enters my pulpit whether 1 will or not. This are of the circle—not the arcs of the politician or economist —the pulpit cannot bei true to itself without interpreting. - Andl am con strained to believe it a mathematical certainty, that any arc of any circle, moral or geometric, being given, the others - May be discovered i.nd describ ed, And the radii traced to their con- • I shall waste no words on the dogma that such subjects are not proper to the • pulpit. Christ and Paul funnel them appropriate to their ministry. If mural questions shouhd not enter here, what- should I And if questions involving the happiness of - milliims, and the good relations of section with section, and man with man, through out the land, are nut moral. whit are 1 I: was the saddest day that ever dawned on the country. when this was madeeny Other than a moral question. In the day when it was made one. of national political issue, the wind was sown ; to-day we reap the whirlwind. It is exclusively a moral question, us' are all questioilS affecting humanity. It is nut a question of North and 'Sotith --Tthuse very terms should be banished; as unhealthy here. How completely do we find moral pet ceptiuna obscur ed, when here, in the noun of the Nineteenth Century, on a question involving more entirely than any other the just relations of men toward each other and toward G.rd, a great nation is geographically divided. Men with divine suuls must be lumped with the clod whereoli they tread, and certain princiules and ideas considered as ex-: elusively-pi oducts of certain sectiuns, as coffee' or cotton. Given a man's, longitude and latitude, and you may predict his views on Slavery, and nearly everything else ; as when.you know which way the wind blows, you may announce with certainty the 'po rition of the neas est, weather-vaues. But in the present stets of things, the political view hears its triumph of Doom. The old party watch-fires are but blackened earth and ashes ;. their lines have fallen in unpleasant places. A fearful disintegration has supervened the political mass. Let us hope. by the working vf a higher synthesis. Hitherto we have had ancestral cunt pacts and the political representation of negioes canvassed. Men have spo ken uf.what is "wise and expedient," lather than what is right. You need nut that any one should show you how this political treatment has miserably failed, even in objects. highei: than its own. Each party has come t;,rerard with its nostrum, declaring itself the original of Dr. Jacob Tuvrusend,whose pillS, and none others, were gelatine; each was to bring repose to the dis tracted paCieut; and soothe irritation by protOuader nationality. The in flaninamixiii has spread with every ad: ministration until. this ; and with this the very powers which enable inflam mation to spiced. seem nearly death, still. I doubt net it would be so with the - administration of any merely po litical party in the country. Let the people know, then, that this is the grand success Of the political treat ment of the Slavery question—every wiled of the Government stilled ! In this state of thitigs, it will not be the popular heart, but they who live by smothering that heart, who will withstand those - who now, when sal other' II:mum:Is fail, present the one path opened up before the country in the .Curisiian Law, First jiure, then peaceable. Every man knows how alone he gets peace. Priests may mumble over the souls of the depart ed, or beneath them, ilcquiescad in pace, but hu soul ever rested in peace until it had entered rt by . the path of phrity. And the gi eater is contained in the less ;_ each atom obeys the laws of the sphere. Nations began with individuals, and are now but collec tions of them, and must obey-the laws of individuals. With both, peace blos soms-duly on the stem of purity. This, then, will save us from any national peril: that . Conscience ;dealt be enthroned everywhere Absolute Mon arch. It must be allowed untraniniel ed action wherever iu any man it pro hibits slayeholding, and" wherever •in any man it does nut. Orly let Mee that feel livingthey-are and voting at . unity with their. best light of duty, and they demand no more, but areat . ease. When agitation is abroad, it is certain See Pierce's last message. that the lash of ConscienCe has been nosened somewhere. In Order to-secure this, we'are call ed to mutual concession—to the con cession of each moral sense to the other of all it claims—it being under stood that nothing can be claimed by 'either for political advantage; but only fronisneh a sense of the mu•al neces sity- of such a claim as shall never shrink., from. any: results whatever, which are needed to secure it. , lithe two. portions of the country cannot unite and feel at the same moment ready to face the Eternal Judge, with the full conviction that they are each completely true to God and to every man, white and black, bond. and free, on Earth, let them sink together be neath..the waters under the Earth, but never, never unite or relit lin united! We are calletFthe mere to 'this con cession because the error has been . with both sides, and is now. The men whose- consciences were first stirred on this subject have dwelt on the inhumanity of slaveholders, with- Out remembering to ask what= TUT were not alaveholders. For whatever the Federal Government sanctions or adlpts is of course by •complicity of all who are parties •to that Federal compact. As the people of Virginia didsiot derive • their power to hold slaves from-the Union, and-do not now, of course none of the rest ofthe States, or of the individuals of the Sates, are involved'in it. Tney aver indeed, its a high sense, concerned in all that con cerns their fellow-men ; but not other wise are they morally involved, than as they are in widow-burning in Hin dustan, or cannibalism in the Fejee Islands. Du we, ai Americans, take upon our consciences the . sins, as we may think them, of Great Britain or Japaa., because wo have treaties with these nations 1.- lit) England and France become responsible for one another's pnlicy,or assume each other's National Church, becauie, for a dif ferent object, they have formed an alliance ? The United States are but such an alliance- And as England and France have only a common re sponsibility for what is done in the war with Russia, so have the people of the free States only a 'responsibility for what is done by the Federal Union• as such. So we can only look upon the position of, the class of Anti-Slave ry men whose motto rs "No union with slareholders . ," as a blunder, occasioned by their not having union with their seal duty. Had they worked by the Christian principle, " First cast the beam out of thine own eye,, and so see• clearly to cast the mote out of thy brother's ;" had they not wasted their energies on Slavvry in the. South, but concentrated them on Slavery in the North, they would have put in a de mand which, so surely as God made man alike in Maine and California,' would have received the approval of every sincere soul from i `Maine to Cali fornia. This blunder hat had its antitheti cal' one in the South. And here, I may say", we must guard against our predjudices. As a Virginian, with no . tie of rel tionship northward, of the remotest kind, past or present, I feel . how easily I . might slide into a justi fication of my dear mother, the Suuth7 But the soul knows no. prejudices or sections, and must see all under the pure light of reason and conscience . The first error of the 'South has been an impatience in the discussion of this question, reminding calm men ofth6se unfortunate persons, met with in lunatic asylums, who speak ration ally on all topics until you touch that on- which they are deranged, when their insanity bursts wildly forth. This has caused them to put them selves in an attitude before the world which has- brought down its severest censure; and, feeling that this was not just what they deserved - -since they were at-least sincere—its has led them en to a still greater, rage against a judgment which, however unfair, was the result of their own mistaken Leg. It has precluded freedom of iiscussion even anions themselves; ! ^ "; n policy which no human brain or heart ever respected yet; The native sans of the South have again aril 'again sought to discuss it in their clins. vicinities, and 'hare as ofjen boat threatened and visited with and processes, though the privilegeis . cured them iu the Bill of Rights of. nearly every Southern State. The &Intl' has thus lost the confidence or maujof her own children, who On& that a freedom. exercised by Omit lordly ance.stors,. Washington, • Jefier.,, son, Henry, and by them transmittei, as.an eternal inheritance, is new de nied them by men who beside thous are Lilliputian.. Those who deny that. the full sunlight should play above and: beneath and around any subject, cats. never coavince any disinterested per sun tlit they are in the right. This , was true before Jesus said, "Whims; doeth right commix to the light," an& it lia4 been true ever since, and bill: be true to 411 etruity. What !Paulo" men,. including the Soutb,• say tee Christ's getting into a pafsion %victim, antagonist, or Plato's refusing to heai the other aide in an. argument! ' Blunder is of a prickly-pear growth —due leaf developed from another. Tuis impossibility of free speech in %hie .South has Preserved a.Ccide of Slave ry which is far bene6ll her osorak sense, but which cannot become la dead letter so lung as there are wisk .e4 and seifiitt melt iu the marl& Ai au evidence of this, it is a familiar fact tuat the int:wiled men termetk . • Negro•drivert" are held, with their famines, in semi/ by all classes of afx ciety in the Suttth ; yet no baiiness more entirely How is the Code to be reformed,. if it is a crime to hroaclithe subjects Take any Southern man, and ask him, if he believes that these blacks should. be so completely in the possession of; the whites that there should Ewen se curity to the marital relation ; du‘ . one man should have the power, if hi, wills, to saparate the families be ow 4, to any extent'? Ask him it he believes that immortal beings.should be reared. in brutal ignorance I (And these .who do otherwise break the laws.-.- Huw sadly suggestive is the fact tha. the only other peupte who forbid edu cation to amp ate the Yezeddis tn. Mesopotamia, who are tke only race uf Dovil-worshipers!) A Southessi man. will reply, Nu. And yet those laws remain there:. trained by Southerners m i t° are nu: men, to bear the cruellest fruits ; such as have aroused the open indignatiu.a. of the. world, and the secret iudigns_ . lie, of thousands of Southern hearit and shall continue it, until hunrie. souls, North and South, are father's** and nei divine instincts of justice an} pity flow out from nod's heart. Taus bUth 'sides, by their infra pre minis. need internal reform. But .cur reference new is to the great atoial_ responsibility pvessing, on each, cull growing out of our beiog ooe iusopls . 1 would tue pressure were heaviek 1,1 tois- country, wuece, by the "ver,c , Latui e ut the . representative systems... ad action aod influence of the al Governinect—tuvulvieg as 'they the hapintiess ui-misry,elevatiub degi auction, of women, sett children, everywhere—bye share hy, every Lox-papa:and voter, the raoraa respeusibility resting uu each pains is. tremendous. What ;Atka cent is : to r.ay, The North has nothing go with Slavery. Nut hing . tu de vtith. it... When the National Hag cauuut Rases over a slave in this District,, cur inatiyk Un.ted States Territory, who is not ea slave by Northern as well.as.Southene, conseutl Never was anyduty . pleiiei than theirs to attend to this see what it is which they, by their rep: resentatives, have : been pervitualis sanctioning and (weeding, t '4.• t i ers,, is need that the voice o,f t h e ends= prophet should be in every..rhreat.t . which stirs the free airsof Pree.Stateie crying to each maim this day, , for this matter belongeth unto dive 1 I alluded just now to these who* assailed the Southern institaniat 111111 • e NO. 41. ,