11 . ~. 'IM1L() • • C 4: 1 .N..Z6 1Z 22 g.ii - . WEDS t DAI% MAY 28, 1847. Free Trade. • y r lSiine ! thou laborer in the human field, - To whose rude trey the all mortal things m tut yield ; Cutting.bll Ireinity in the proudest hour, Depnviiig str u ingth of &Ulna vaunted power— ; Mnong t hy. any doings, thou, o f NA; Hest done at least 'some service ,to the state ;" Mowing_ Prot c oon down, while Free Trade stands, The harbinger of gOod to distant lands ; And radiant memory 'paints, in rtolors warm, The last great deed in politics— Reform; Commercial liberty l—e magic 'stud - A plant Grit watered, even on Brr 'ish ground: And they who set it th4re alrei4 see The s helteringrancheit of a healthy tree Equaljprotection give 41 all who seek • Their bounteous shade,.—the powerful or weak. 75you—great league,and leinguera !—unto you Wiirgrateful eiimateroe pay a tribute due; While many foreign lands your worth proclaim,. Andluor example make them "highest aim• ;4e ji.ussia, thawing in ik icy. clime, Adopt the leadineapirit bf thetinie, Lossing theibeckles that her trade reatrained, And making lnilliona thrive where ruin veigned Even an autocrat can understand, This is, the cherished', welfare of hie land— The brightest boon for tillers of the soil, iample market fcrritheir ceaseless toil. And now Columbia, o'er the trackless semi. - I 'awls her spangled banner to the breeze ; R. jeets the trammels of her former laws, /.. Caine good effect by giving better cause. SI . !ter boundless fielthiaend forth the yellow grain, ' The useful cotton spreads 111*er ; many_a plain‘ we\ The former gives the British w • od, t The latter keeps his occupation •:.* ; . . 1 t Anifnovr the f roduct of his loom is wo ec i .•;n the soil that furnished him with corn, iNe Trade, more strong than diplomatic art, roites two nations:though so wide apart: Gorr. greater lustrit than a hundred wars. Wide "soli,ibg C..res conquers frowni , rs. too, that sunny southern clime, 4 To Free Trade's merry peal now adds her chime, Mating hartrioniotis as her owr sweet tongue, The jarring chords of commerce, long unstrung. I . 4ani-e awakening at the eleventh hour Ilegootto-nismsommereial freedom f s power. In her-gay capital behold a few, urtiltig old. notions, now adopt the new; l'hey meet to honor him who long has been rst If/ thc•lir Itl, a nobler leader seen, A pew4-fuf consereror—lo! a Cobden comes; ; :Ststeltinging trumpets nor loud-sounding drums l'isebinn his welcome to the little band .4 . to see with pride theattsatiger in their land.; 'They ball nti.'hercrof a hundred fights," Hut greit the .champion of a lihnusand 'rights. rt. ‘)!I Lihri . iy--:the 'captive(vKli . may nigh With threLo•live‘ wildiottt thee, wish to die ts,. fi:ttereel Commeie4stris4% to be frise , r • %Vat pms and die, et gain its libertY. • [From Noah's Sunday- Times.] GI ll'ashingtoa and Cea. Lee at Dinner ; or, a • ketolutiOnary Juke. The character of the 'great man. who is re membered as the father . of . his\ country, and whose meinory is cherished bY the entire world, is too well known to need description here. One of his chief - characteristics was W certam dignity which enabled him to preserve . his authority without any exhibition of supe nor austerity. He was firm to a degree, and as strict a' disriplinarian as Frederick the (:rear: w Zan t brutality or untalled-for severi• ry. We have rived his ,name itt juxtappsi bon with that ut Oen. Lee. This citficer be• as sece,(l - er from the British arrott, and, when brnuglit prisoner to this city by Harcourt, trea ird br the corninander-in-chief of the British as,a , deserter, until the measures adop ted h:j.utir people towprils Englishmen in their rusiqy rompelled his liberation on parole, ;Id fin-3h- his exchange, Lee had seen much "rvike, haring , held The rank of colonel in • l'omgal, and screed the king of Poland as an eainp---thusihowang the detestation of I\ tinny and love of sacred liberty. In .,- - *inclett by mu - cit association "with the world, 41 1enableil to profit by this instruction to the extent through the medium of a sterling r pst al etlutatior, it is somewhat singular Om he tisseti.Fetl /whimsical notions, and ec- eettrictstes of expression and conduct', which 'qfficell to make einemiee and crease dislike; 'mono those whose personal association hel vii - flied to encounter.: No one knew.betier i than he the chivalric requisites of a gentleman; 1 r• 0 gne understoosl the strict necessities of a riotous adherence to the orders of,his euperi- li, in all their shades, better than Lee ; and Y" , on mare than one , occasio • •- forgot the I "P'lellPs or his Station, and i suite n. • • • • those who Were his inferiors, but the great and, gatlman WssnmccroN ! The battle of Free _ tClid CoUrttouse, on the passage of the Bri fi'h milly from Philadelphia to this city. was - ilia! to Lee's reputation for a shoft period, he having had an altercation with Washington on the field , and aftervicarPs sending him a letter, ioicited in insulting terms, and expressing his Seller that Washington h‘as inflicted an injury ",Pall him. To say thi•t o l ehon d not hate 'een punished for his outra e, is , to • utter an 'Platen for which Mr" can ' ncigood found ••44le°,' a nd Yeti at tlii • , there cadre those „ l e t o did not scruple to rail the subsequent talon adopted.by Washington. lie summon ed Lee before a court-marttak and cleirged him alai disobedience of order,' and a xontealipt of his commander-in-chief/ The 14ntenc.0 'fl ecourt was; that Lee-be susplended from da'-' '? foe the term of one year. This result was roads known at White Plains, where Wash ington and his forced were encamped to watch . 411. • 1 . . . . ~ ( . • . 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