1 .16101 323 T2o 2' 0 W .k. 13 EM, 8 WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1895 Mora Porrar worm% starrso.—The idea of the following song, it will be seen, is borrowed from the Irish E m igrant, so touchingly set to music end sung by Mr. Dempster. 'We are indebted for it to the Auburn humid, a correspondent of which paper bad it from the poet, Longfellow, at Cambridge, who said it was "by D ugarm e,"—a name with which we are not acquainted. Mr. L thought the verses enough to immortalize any poet. They certainly are very beautiful and pathetic, ersuistively conceived, end smoothly and effectively ex- , Lament of the 'Widowed Inebriate, rm thinking on thy smile, Mary— Thy blight and trusting smile— In the morning of our youth and love, .Ere sorrow came—or guile; When thine arms were twined about my neck, And mine eyes looked into thine, And the heart that throbbed for twi , aiorte, Was nestling close to mine I I see full many a smile. Mary, On young lips beaming bright; And many an eye of light and love Is flashing in my sight. But the smile is not for my poor heart, And the eye is strange to me, .And a loneliness comes o'er my soul When its memory turns to thee! I'm thinking on the night, Mary, The night Df grief and shame, When with drunken ravingli,:in my lips, To thee I homeward came; 0, the tear was in thine earnest eye, And thy bosom wildly heaved, Yet a Emile of love was on thy cheek. Though the heart was sorely grieved. Bat the smile soon left thy lips, Mary, And thine eye grew dim and sad; For the tempter lured my steps from thee, And the tempter drove me mad; From thy cheek the roses quickly tied, And thy ringing laugh was gone, Yet the heart still fondly, clung to me, And still kept trusting on. 0, my words were harsh t? thee, Mary, For the wine cop made me wildly, And I chid thee when thine eyes were sad, And I cursed thee when they smiled. God knows I loved thee then, But the fire was in brain, And the curse of drink was in my heart, To make my lave a bane. • Twits a pleasant home of ours, Mary, In the spring-time of our life, When 1 looked upon thy sunny face, And proudly called thee, wife— And 'twas pleasant when' our children played Before our cottage door; But the children sleep with thee, Mary, neer shall see them more. Thou'rt resting in the church yard, now, And no stone is at thy head ; Bat the sexton knows a drunkard); wife Bleeps in that lowly bed ; And he says the hand of God, Mazy, Will fall with crushing weight On the wretch who brought thy gentle life To its untimely fate. But he knows not of the broken heart I bear within my breast, Nor the heavy. Imo of vain remorse, That will not let me rest ; ' He knoWs not of the sleepless nights, When, dreaming of thy love, seem to see thy angel eyes Look coldly from above. I have raised the whie cup in my hand, And the wildest strains I've sung, Till with the laugh of drunkezimilth The echoing air has rung; But the pale and sorrowing face looked out From the glittering cup on me, And a trembling whisper I have heard That I fancied breathed by thee. Thou art slumbering in thy peacetnl grave'! And thy sleep is dreamless now, But the seal of an undying grief la on thy mourner's Brow, And my heart is chill as Malt For thejoys of life hies Bed, And I long to lay my aching breast With the cold and silent dead. Mrszzators.—The following letter is a perfect rid .dle to us. We will give six Old a quarter cents to any ` 1 ""' °dm will read it so that we or any one else as c"lopsehend it. The writer is either a high-pres sure transcendentalist, and has enveloped his ideas in ' l4 "'Nage andisentimentality of that class of crazy in dividuals ; or he has imposed upon the editor a chapter . of" mysteries," in which he has endeavored to hide the knowledge to be be conveyed under unmeaning and im- Ferfect sentences. We do not belieye that the author of the letter is a of our town, though it is dated from this place id he is, we•hope he will learn "that dimity covered' a andrimi e of sins," and hereafter look with a kinder eye 48tt the feette, foibles and follies of his neighbor'. He 'mold add much more td the character and reputation of Oda umn—(and areavill defend it against the world)— as well a interest the readers of the Newark Daily Ad smiler, biota:wring othersubjects, more worthy of poin ts: notice. Row the letter found its way-into the United State, Glaettes , we cannot( conceive. Will brother Chandler =Vidal Ccmeepoteleeee of the Netrask Uly Abe:timer.] 'Wafts. Thee is no need of going to Paris for them, In l this leaner. There is one of my neighbors, who hearing ble complain that others hare defrauded me in the Tian t'tf or quality of wood, libels himself, as the Chinese do . ......- . . ......... 1 . .•, ....:. .. , . .. THE ... .. . ~. . ... . ~ . „•., BRADFORD..."- .. '.. - :: E , .., .., ;.i. ,... ~.:.. .. .._...: .. . ... , •, their shops-no cheating done herd; then brings me one good cord, expecting that henceforward he any cheat me without limit. Accordingly, the very next supply, be brings an inferior kind, half decayed, under length, packed with great care to avoid a plenum, and charges about 25 per cent. above the market price. This, if it were not more than half common, would be a mystery. I know the ostrich is said to hide its want of brains in the sand, "end think its foolish body hidden too;" but this is done by a sort of instinct; that a man having reason, should do the same, is not easily accounted for. I suppose things are done more adroitly in Broad way and Wall street ; otherwise some of the pres ent dealers there would be soon displaced by men having more (short) wit than themselves. (N. B. AU such wit is short, and its profits not long.) The day of ac count will come, just as sure as this is God's universe, and not the devil's ; and this again is just as sure as that trees grow and dead substances decay : for this they do with no will of their own. Another mystery is Mr. B—, with a ,scheme of theology so precise as hardly to admit more than him self to heaven, and practice so ungodly as to render his own admission fearfully uncertain. How he has come to suppose that a true creed touching ; abstract points, where Revelation isnot clear, "the whole duty of man r and that debasing himself in the gratification of tow pas awn, is a venial sin, is beyond the province of natural philosophy to explain. I presume no British or American subject, would think of compounding for all manner of treasons and felonies, by an exhibition of superior knowledge in the laws, or be disappointed if the correctness of the theory were judged an aggravation of his crimes. This sad case of my neighbor leads me to the general remark, that the religion of the world is to a lamentable extent idolatry, either of doctrines or forms, and like all other idolatry, not at all incompatible with grievOus departures from the practice of righteousness. My next is a zealous hand at the reformation from Popery, and fierce for the abolition of southern slavery, while his wife would join him more heartily in a refor mation of temper, and his neighbors prefer an abolition of ill practices nearer home. Here this mystery is, that a thin with a Bible in his hand, should have so far mista ken the moral world, as to suppose it his duty to declaim against other men's fang in total negligence of his own. If such a case were salary I should not think it worth while to report it; but there seems in these days, a growing misapprehension of responsibilities and duties,: to the, no small damage of every good cause. lam no advocate for putting a light under a bushell but as eve ry light irradiates its own limited space, it should be used as an aid there, and not without some reason re, moved to a distant sphere. He that falls into the ditch, fur the want of wisdom or inclination to order his own steps, Will not succeed well as the general guide of man kind. C. S. A. TuwAmiu, Pa., July 5. ORATION, Delivered at Canton, July 41h, 1845, BY HENRY BOOTH, ESQ. [Published agreeably to request.] FELLOW CITIZENS :—The ordinary avoca tions of life are interrupted and the current of our feelings enlivened by the return of this anniversary, and every American heart beats with a prouder and a quicker pulse as he re calls to mind the events which are connected with this memorable day. We are now sixty nine years removed from the Revolution, and although I see here and there an aged man whose wintery locks tell me - that he, perhaps, can travel back through this period and by the force of his individual redollections, feel once mere the enthusiasm of those times; yet, with few exceptions among us, the events of the revolution are matters of history and tradition. We have heard the story from the lips of our fathers and our grandfathers, and felt our boy ish blood kindle at the names of Washington and La Fayette, of Bunker Hill, Saratoga and Yorktown. And we felt in our young hearts an enthusiasm that proved us not unworthy to be the sons of such fathers, and to enjoy the liberty we inherit. And we come together on this occasion, both old and young. to revive those recollections, to rekindle the fire of pat riotism and consecrate aIMW our hearts upiin the altar of freedom. It is a good-thing that there is one day in the course of the year sacred to national recol lections` ind interests; sosacred that the voice of party animosity will be hushed, and we shall'feel as Americans on American soil, as .sembled to celebrate an event which is the common interest of the nation and of the world. I. feel a sufficient security in the design of this meeting, that we shall not be disappointed in these expectations ; and though I would never consent to aid in a sacrifice on this day when the strange fire of party was to be mingled with the pure flame of patriotic devotion, still it gives me a pleasure to meet you on this oeca. sion which I cannot well express. After a long and severe political contest in which there was reason to fear that our country would be quite rent asunderby party violence, it is alike creditable to your patriotism and philanthropy that you meet together and bury, all subordi nate feelings and party bitterness, if any re mains, in oue absorbing national sentiment.— In this manner a most gratifying evidence will be given that while there may - be divisions On matters of less consequence, we are still one in sentiment. Americans all, with feelings that transcend. the narrow, limits, of party or geographical boundaries, and,comprehend the nation in their embrace. With such .a spirit 'we can welcome the return of this day with mutual joy and congratulation. - The commencement of the American Revo lution opened a new era in the history of man. Good and wise men of all countries watched its vicissitudes with the _deepest interest., It was a novel spectacle. The world had seen wars enough undertaken through an unbound ed lust of power—wars_between haughty. rival states, and wars between ambitious monarchs; but a war by a young. heroic. people in defence of liberty, was a spectacle of quite a different character. It had been a long time since the world had witnessed anything of the kind,; and PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA; BRADFORD COUNTY, PA, BY E. S REDARDLUS by DENUNCIATION FROM ANY.QtraItTIM." now when the instance occurred in...modern times, the most unbounded hopes were excited and the cause of civil liberty in every land was identified with the success of the American struggle. Never did men occupy more re sponsible positions than that body of delegates who were assembled at Philadelphia sixty-nine years ego to day ; and never did men more no. bly acquit themselves to their country and to posterity. The war had already begun. British aggression proceeding from insult and outrage to open violence had already shed the blood of American citizens. The news from Lazing. ton and Bunker Hill had sped through the country with the rapidity of lightning; the bells from every steeple in the land bad proclaimed dt ; the announcement had been made in Chun der vollies that the time had come when free. dom was to he bought on the field of battle at the price of blood. Patrick Henry. that ardent patriot and heart of flame had heard in his imagination the clanking of the chains upon the plains of Boston which had been forged by Lord North and the British ministry to fetter the limbs of his countrymen; and he-had an. nounced to the Virginia house of delegates-the last stern alternative for a freeman when his rights-are invaded by the hand of lawless pow. er. "We must fight," says he. " I repeat it, we must fighY; an appeal to arms and to the God of Hosts is all that is left us." It is doubtless a most solemn thing to worship the God- of Hosts on the field of.hattle, where the orisons that ascend are the rattle of musketry, the roar of cannon and the tramps of charging squadrons: and where the incense that rises is the reeking smoke of human slaughter. Ne vertheless it was in answer to such appea the that II ssing, of American liberty was granted arid there is no worship more acceptable than that which the patriot herb offers up to the God of Hosts on the battle field with his sword, when his country bids trim unsheath it in de fence of liberty. It is an appeal not to he made rashly, and for every slight cause, tint only for reasons the most weighty, and to avert the most positive and insufferable ca6mities.-- Our fathers had grounds most ample to justify their quarrel ; and if there ever was an occa sion when . it might be said that God himself marshalled the hosts to war, it was iii our re volution. During the spring of 1770, the quarrel be tween the colonies and the mother country had been rapidly approaching the decisive crisis. It had proceeded to a degree of bitterness that to the minds of reflecting men forbid the hope of a reconciliation. The British goveiinment had repeatedly rejected the petitions of the colonies, and turned a deaf ear to their remon strances ; and the monstrous doctrine of taxa tion without representation, which the elo quence of Burke had exploded, and lhe thun ders of Chatham had denounced in parliament, Lord North and his coadjutors had foolishly enough supposed might be preached to the rebels successfully in the field by the points of Hessian bayonets and_ the swords of hireling soldiery. In the early part of June, the sub ject of a separation from the parent country was brought before the Continental Congress in the forni of a resolution, and became the theme of long and earnest debate. The hands that had united the colonies for more than a century to the land of their nativity, were too strong to be hastily or rashly sundered. Their friends were in England. Their earliest asso ciations had taught them to look upon her in stitutions with a filial reverence and regard.— Iler glory had been theirs. They were proud of her past history and her great name. Con nected with England, they had shared her honors, and during the long, bloody wars with her haughty rival, they had contributed in no mean degree to increase those honors and en hance that renown for prowess that had made her formidable to her foes ; and they would still retain their connection as 'her children, hut never as her slaves. The thought of en tire independence might be tempting, might charm the imagination with the idea of future greatness ; but it was an untried state. They lingered fondly, and watched for every symp tom of relenting in her policy, and hesitated to cut loose from past associations and launch forth upon that destiny, that awaited them.— But the unseen hand ofyrovidence was order ing events ; the British ministry persisted in their infatuated policy. the wrongs and indig nities which the colonists had suffered, at length thoroughly alienated their minds, and they were prepared to advance _with alacrity in the direction which the tido of events had indicated. They were now ready to brave the power of the arm of England ; that arm which had been their glory and their pride. While the subject of a separation was under discussion in Congress, the most varied and conflicting emotions pervaded that body of distinguished men. There was the sagacious Franklin, Hancock and Adams, the illustrious father of an illustrious son ; there was the dis tinguished Jefferson and many others of calm. clear unde'rstandinoe and giant intellect, nerved to-the weighty and important duty of deciding their emitiiiy's destiny. •And never was .a question of greater consequence submitted to the consideration of tviser heads or more dis passionate judgments. At length on the 4th or July the irretraceable steps wea taken; the Continental Congress prettented - to the world a document characterigedboldness and truth. It became thenceforth the text-book of freedom. Ger fathers vindicated the senti ments that it contained in many a dangerous bread', and on many,a bloody field. It was startling to tyrants, hut it gave :new hope to the victims of • oppressien. Ii astonished the world with the bold assertion of troths thathad already existed foi ages', in the ktiowledge of every son of,Adam. On that day the Amyl : . can colonies stepped forwardinto the rank of nations, and the 6r - cum - stances under which we are now assembled vindierite the Wisdom that presided - peer the - coaacifs - of the Conti unlit' Congress.', ; • ' But pleasant as. these themes i - IndouttedlY are, and grateful as they must- eeter be to - an American tongue s yet-I shall pass, on to either considerations and premise that-Wo shall form but a very inadeqUate conesinia - tr-ottile-great- KIM ness of the event which we celebrate, without taking into 011 T view the' - magnitude of the country to which'ite blessings are extended.— Though it is to be presumed that there is no American but what has received at least some vague impression that this is a vast -country; yet few it is believe& have formed by compari; son with other countries, a correct idea of its magnitude, or of the importance which by its natural advantages it is destined to bold among ii the nations of the earth. We may state in general terms that our li its are defined by the most stupendous natural boundaries. W bile our states extend frOm from the lakes on the North to the Gulf on the South, our whole territory intersects the entire continent with if belt 1000 miles in breadth, and occupying more than one eighth of the circumference or of the globe. Our states and territories are spread out over all this mighty baffler that in terposes between two oceans. • While the last rays of twilight are retiring from the shores of the Atlantic, the descending sun still sheds down his beams over the broad West, where the Oregon spreads out its numerous forests and navigable rivers, the site of future cities, es we believe, destined at no distant d 4, to rival our own cities in the noise of busy multitudes and the opulence of their commerce. We may state that our territory is found by calcu lation to contain more than two aud a half mil. lions of square miles. But the mind labors and fails to grasp the subject when presented in such general forms. It is chiefly , by com parison that our conceptions of the magnitude of objects are rendered definite, and we are able to contemplate their relative size with-a degree of accuracy. Let us then compare our ' country with other large countries whichihave figured extensively in the history of the world, and thus endeavor to forM some just concep tion of that destiny for which we may reasona bly suppose she is designed. Hindostan is a va.t country, containing more than L20,000,- 000 of inhabitants; yet this extensive region, swarming with such countless multitudes, whose wealth and resources have so long tempted the cupidity of civilized nations, con tains less area than the t twenty-six states of this Union. China is an immense country. inhabited by more titan 200.000,000 of human beings, or nearly one fourth of the population of the whole globe. 'By its history it can trace back the line of Its princes and the records of ita illustrious achievements for more than 4000 years,: yeuChinats no larger than the United States proper. Palestine is a country which of all others has been chiefly instrumental in shaping the character of the human race ; for out of it has proceeded an influence which is destined to quicken and renovate the whole earth; yet Palestine is exceeded in extent by the three small states of Massachusetts, Con necticut and Rhode Island. England is a large country of a most interesting character. By the-supremacy of her acts and the enter- , prise of tier citizens, she has been acknowledg ed for centuries by European nations as mis- tress of the deep. NV herever wood can swim the breezes of heaven labor to waft the riches of her commerce; Her language is almost commensurate with the human race. It is heard in tones of authority on the shores of Asia ; it ascends in prayer from the western wilds of America and the islands of the Pacific. Her invincible arms have extended her con questa to every quarter of the habitable globe, so that to use the eloquent language of another, " her drum beat commencing with the rising sun and keeping company with the hours, en circles the whole earth with one continuous strain of the martial ditties of England." Yet England is equalled in extent by the two-bor. daring states of New York and Vermont.— France is a vast country, containing more titan 40,000.000 of inhabitants. Occupying a con spicuous- position among the nations of Eti rope ; her political convulsions have repeated. ly shaken that continent to its centre and 'de luged its fields with carnage ; yet France is no larger than the five contiguous states of New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Maryland. Italy ii another country of an illustrious antiquity ; for a long time the mis tress of the liberal arts, and whose - annals for a thousand years comprised the history of the known earth. Yet Italy is exceeded in extent by the Carolinas. Setting aside the empire of Russia. there is not a country in Europe whose dimensions you may not mark out on the map of the United States in territory equally de sirable for 'every advantage of soil and climate, 'equally well adapted to every Object of com merce, agriculture, and the arts. After these considerations we shall be better able to extend our thoughts so as to grasp in some measure the magnitude of these interests that were in volved in die result of the revolution. To have sundered the' yoke of two and a half mil lions of human beings, was an achievement which deserved to be published in every land, and to be voluble on the tongue of history un til the final termination of wars and rumors of wars.' But when we remember that if rested with our ancestors to decide not only their own destiny, but 81,36 to determine in what Condi tion their latest posterity should he horn ; that the color and complexion, of the,destiny of this and every succeeding generation depended up on the success of their swords, you will readi ly conceive., that the immediate results of the revolution are.swallowed. up in magnitude of' , its remote consequences. It was to he decided whether Apse immense multitudes which were to inhabit our Atlantic cities, to swarm along the binders of our' vast rivers, and move on with'still increasing numbers towards the Alle 7 ganies,-the Mississippiand the western moun tains, were to receive the gilt of- free constitu tions, and to be instructed in'the elenients of social order and happiness: or whether they Were to pass through the school of foreigit bon dage, into a more ' dreadful state or. rapine, anarchy and bleed. The population; of Chia country doublet once in about 25 years; so that it-requirea , :but a schoolboy calculation to discover. , that unless some destructive :were sonte.wasting pestilence. or some terrible Con. vniein' w of nature should sweep, off the human race by thousands,. the ~youth . now, entering upon the stage of - action will be at the full age GOODRICH & SON. of man,, he native of a country containing more than sixky millions of human beings. What a scene its here presented for the contemplation of the p hilanthropist, ilanthropist, involving every object and motive that can engage the solicuudy, af fect the interests and inflame the heart of man How w9uld the -patriotic bosom swell with emotion; could it be permitted to look forward Hopefully through the mist of half a century and betUild the American states with quadruple their present population, firmly united in adhe fence to, that constitution which has borne them safely through past dangers. and *minding forth the moet.virtuoue. the - first and purest nation on the face of the earth. But, fellow-citizens, it is not to indulge in sentiments of exultation alone that we are to: day assembled. I think von Will sustain me in the opinionthat the birth-day of an individu al is an ' p e . ra in life proper for self-scrutiny and for fornwng resolutions of future improvement. In like manner on this anniversary of the tra - -. lion's nativity, I may properly invite your at tention a while, to consider the dangers Which threaten us, and the guilt which we have in curred;lwitlt the design of suggesting motive! for caution and amendment. • The cirentn 7 stancesl of this country, though' in many re spects extremely gratifying. excite a pleasure not umningled with apprehension. From the assaults of foreign foes we have little to dread. An invading enemy would have to contend on a soil filled with the monuments of freedom. enriched with the blood of its defenders; with a people, who, animated with one soul, and inflamed with zeal for their laws and constitu- Woos. tvould arm in defence of all that in dear or venerable—their wives, their parents, their• children, the sanctuary of Goa and the sepul chres of their fathers. From external violence we hate nothing to fear ; but are we as secure from the coniequetices of our. own' folly, our vices and 'internal diacensions ? Have we no thing to apprehend • from those seeds of dis union which have been sown from year to year, almost ever since the formation of the government, and which though unnatural to the soil. continue to produce the poisonous fruits of discord, Congressional brawlings, and controversies between different states of the confedeiacy Has the constitution lost none of its sacredcharacter in the estimation of the American people ? Is the Union that charmed word that it : used to be ; and do we still regard tt as ! ,thing' of inestimable value? Or hive we come to consider it as a matter of cold calculation—a question of profit and loss, to be preserved or destroyed according as the one orithevther preponderates in our political bal ance! It is sufficient for me to suggest these questions for your consideration ; I shall de cline answering them for the present. But there is one sonrce of danger arising I from the extent of our- territory, and the char acter of that population which is so rapidly filling it up, that I. deem proper-for a special notice. I have already spoken of our vast ex tent of confitry as 'constituting the chief element of greatness. A nation's soil is the foun- dation of its prosperity -and its glory. It is the theatre of its achievements, the field of its industry, the source of its riches and nourish ment. In a sense it may be said that no coun try can hare too much soil : but when in con seqnenre of the diverse character of its inhabi tants settled over a, richly extended territory,the most opposite and discordant elements arebro't into contact in the legislative halls, the most deplorable consequences may result from such , unnatural connections. Let me for a Moment invite ,you to consider the character of that population which is so rapidly filling up the West. Western immigration at the present time is of T character altogether unique and without example in the past history. It is not a simultaneous movement of whole bodies of people carrying with thern their institutions, their laws and customs, such as was the case in ancient' times with the Goths, the Saxons, and at a later period with the Puritans of New England and the Quakers of Pennsylvania; hut hundreds and thousands of the oppressed and indigent of Europe, come over to us in 'simile families or as isolated individuals, without laws, without regulations to adopt' our laws, to be. come acquainted with our customs, and to be instructed in our liberty. This continual In flux of foreigners is the natural consequence of the abundance of our own land, and of the want. oppression.and over-population of the old world. We could not prevent it if we would, and it would be the most monstrous ingratitude for the blessings that we enjoy, the most cruel outrage to the rights of . humanity. for us to prevent it if we could. So long as we have a rood of unoccupied soil which contributes no thing to human comfort, and there remains yet one unfortunate victim of oppression in the, old world, starving for want of sustenance, we are bound by every consideration el humanity and justice to receive him. Is it objected that they are ignorant, vicious and degraded? - Then learn to behold in them -the victims tif tyranny, of suffering and want, such - as 'you - and your posterity might have been had not your fathers i seen fit to traverse the ocean and improve their fortunes, in the new world. And shall we who have had, the good ,(ortune to be born in_ this goodly heritage, say, ..enough have come o ver: let us close the gates. America from hencelorilt, ceases ,to be - the asylum of the poor - -and. the oppressed." Not on this day while the recol lections of '76 rtie fresh in our minds, shall we entertain such sentiments as.these. . America has been, and will continue to be the home of the exile, the couutry. 'where the oppressed and indigent of every land , shall find encourage ment and countenance. But tholigh thiseaie the plain, manifest duties of our iiittiation; and are eidorcid by - every motive of justice and humanity. yet there is much danger to be -ap. prehended from this, source. This heterogen. eons mass of beings from all nations,. of, every kiridred.andinttgue must be moulded by:timed can sentiment. informed in, the ,princtPles of American 'freedom and enlightened with our own intelligenee, , br..we may , expect the-most serious ealarnities.;. This danger. ir.moit mediate and threatening in the -Wea l ( should Jae tetnem.bered that our fatttle' Iniepr, rably wrapped up 'in the destiny of the west. Prom the nature ot our republican governmette. those multitudes which swarm in the valley of the Mississippi become our legislators, Sad unless they Mt tamed "by our civilization and arts, unless they are instructed in our liberty. -in the day when their social fabric, falls satins der, we too shall be engulfed in their ruin...* They must he assimilated to visor we shall be to them-. The danger arising to our large el. ties front their foreign population, -and the in fluence exerted over them by unprincipled demagogues. is too notorious that -I should dwell upon it in this connection. What then , i l . s ' the remedy for this evil? Is it to be sought in excluding all the unnaturalized population from the ballot box ? , Is .it desirable to draw an impassable line of distinction between the i llforeign and native born population of this country 1 Will you render the former more attached to our institutions and better citizens, by excluding them from all participation intim rights of freemen ? licit in the nature of things Unit men become better by being made the subjects of an exclusive legislation,- which effectually separate-them front the rest of the community. which stamps their estimate in society as an inferior grade of citizens,. not to he admitted to a participation of the common rights and privileges I But it may be said that it is not proposed to exclude them entirely, but only to require a previous residence "of twenty 1 one years. It is answered. that the difference is immaterial: The requirement of a previous residence of twenty-one years, so far as its ef , 1 feces upon the hopes and feelings of men are concerned, is equivalent to permanent exelu. I rum. No person arrived to the. age of man ! hood is very much affected in his conduct by an event which !may happen to him after the lapse of 21 years, whatever may bailie nature of that event. It is a period too long to affect either the desires . or the fears of men... The ' - emigrant will. care very little to be told that after a lapse of twenty-one years he may be I admitted to the rights of a freeman. Ile will feet that lie is not a freeman, and that here,. too, • as in Europe he is excluded from all participe , r tion in the power. that makes the laws; with this important difference, that while there the government was the prerogative of the sever ' eign or titled nobility or landed aristocracy and he stood on a footing of equality with his fellow. subjects. here he alone is excluded, while the mass of the citizens enjoy rights which make them altogether his superiors. The measure proposed would separate a body of citizens in our midst whose interests would be sdvetie not only in appearance, but in reality to the in. 'erects of the rest of' community, 'and who would zee no grounds in their own Mecum. stances for becoming attached to our govern. ment. They would breed and perpetuatces mob population, scorned by their fellow citi zens, with no sure basis for self-respect, and. possessing all that jealousy and hatred which , is natural to a subordinate and inferior caste. No. fellow-citizens, whatever may be the dan gers of our situation arising from this source, we shall never render our position more se cure by abating one jot or tittle from that liber al and generous policy which- has hitherto characterised America and made her the glory of the world. There is a noble necessity which constrains us whether we would or not, and forbids us to compromise the principles, which we have avowed. And in my mind -it is better far, to hazard the most imminenidan* ger in a generous and liberal course of policy, ! than to suffer ourselves under the influence of our apprehensions to infringe in the smallest particle upon the rights of men., Does any man then ask what remedy we propose ? . We answer that we know of only one ; and that is, to treat them in good faith as fellow citizens, and so far as lies in our power. efface from their minds all knowledge of the distinction-of native horn and strangers. . That a residence for a reasonable -perio should be required previous to an admission t elective franchise, in order that they may be ac customed to the laws and usages of the countryl is right and proper. But beyond this let u make no distinction. Let us remember that ou fathers were strangers, in a strange land, and b~jJJ that token f6el the laded obtations that reale on their sons to discharge the rites of hospitali ty, and he kind to the stranger! the more cape dally when he bears on his person and ,in hi , mind the dark traces of tyrrany and oppression • Let us treat them as fellow citizens in goo I faith, and if they are ignorant and degraded we shall thus take the surest course to elevate an improve them. What we want is to make the r l nail their children goottlitizens ; and it is it inn rule, that when we treat men according to whit they should be, we adopt_the safest and cures method to improve them and make them better And here permit me to add that no language if sufficiently severe In *characterise the conduct o those demagogues, to whatever party -'they' may , - belong, who study to create jealously between the foreign population and• our native eitizenC: Such conduct deserves and reedier; from every honest man the stroitgest indignation and co• tempt. I hate dwelt much, Fellow Citizens, o this subject because I felt much upon it, and unto Yeu Will pardon me ; that you will esteem it asubject not inappropriate to tile occasion a l l the day. • Though I Jo not desire to dwell upon theme* of an unpleasant nature, yet - I feel constrained to ask your attention to one other source of dangq. It has already peen suggested-4 refer to the growth of the spirit of faction. This is the peF culiar and alMost necessary evil of pepular go; ernments, and has proved fatal to all those t publics which have enirs,• - ed a trarsient existent at diffsreut intervals in the history of the weal .• In ancient times, this malignant !spirit accomplis e ed the overthrew of republicanism in Gre . Philip of Macedon, would never have BIXTEM • oil against the liberty of those proud states ' le i ;titled by; the treachery of their own factious tor, who conspired with him to ruin their con. try. This also prtidured the downfall of Rom .. While the citizens were united in attachment the state, her proud eagle iniversedythts.rem. bisondaries of the globe arid returned - with th spoils of other nations to &ditto the capita. B discord thricetroight - the enemy Within sight' [ere TOVIRTiI MGT.) 11 1..:5iti154 1 :401 3 411