El 13 OVA Walk TOVANDA: arbag capnl 10, 1054. krlertelt THE STAGE DRIVER'S GOAT An old gray coat, with ample cape, hanging by th'e bar-room door, Aid as l e look upon its shape, 1-7 The past comes back to me Duct more*, Upon the smoky walls a crowd Of scenes before my vision float, And silently my soul is bowed t Before that old stage driver's coat. ill How many scenes of good and Are pictured to my vision clear, How many tones, in death so still, Again are ringing in my car, I see the coach with teeming load, re ; steam propelled the car or boat, And, king of all the dusty road, I hail the old stage driver's coat. I see the school boy as be takes His seat npoli, „ the cumbrous ear, And fancies, in the noise n makes, The fame be dreams of from afar, The bride upon her Wedding day, Leave those_who fondly'on her doat, Weeping, yetj4ful, borne away, Behind theold stage driver's. coat. But now a gloom is hanging o'er tThe rumbling of the groacing coach, The bride comes to her home once more, Yet feels no joy at the approach, After a few . short, happy years, The gpoiler came—his victim smote ; Ah! there are memories sad, and tears, litirred,by that old stage driver's coat. Relic of bygone days, thou haat - A voice that speaks to memory's ear; Thou telleituif a varied past, And we wilts rapt attention-hear, In, summer's storms,-in winter's snow; In cities ill , ar and lands-remote, hete'er We mind would backward go, It sees the old stage driver's coat. No mantle worn by sceptred prince, -Crimsoned and glittering witligold, Can rival, with its gorgeous tints. The greatness of this garment old, Although the at tint, by his skill, May pencil what the poet wrote, • One jcture 'will be dearer still, It is the old stage driver's coat. pIITB AT ST. LOUIS Speech on Friday, March 12. kinds—America and Despoti,m-Hungarian rty and the Catholic Church—lrddrul. SPEECH OF GOVERNOR KOSSUTH. !NTLEMEZi :—DOTN/g, my brief sojourn in your [table city,l have heard so, much about petty 1 matters, and puny party politics, interweaving ir spider webs with the cable of the great cause to Christian world, ithirtillumbly plead, and re so much heard about the hypocritical tactics NI imported from Austria to advcate the no. lune of Russo-Austrian despotihu in republi-, America, ariehiefl) in your city here, that in ' I. became longing fur the pure airchera the , mailing, as well as the melancholy drop of ram t the roaring of the thunder storm, as, well sigh of the gentle breeze, tell to the, appress id tneir tools, as well as the oppressed, that is a.Goil in heaven who rules the universe by al laws; the Almighty Father of humanity, (potent in 4(s wisdom, bountiful in His Omni!). ire ; just la His judgment and eternal in His the Lord who gave strength to the boy David .6oliah, who often makes out of human in lab efficient instrumentalities-to push forward :oinlition of mankind towards that destiny which mercilul will has assigned' to it—His will, lost which, neither the proud amLition of arro t despots, nor the artificial skill of their obsequi tools can Trevail—in Him I put my trust and 7.heell'uVon in my duties. Still 1 may be es ' for the slight weakness, that when pent up and then in the close air of obsolete politics, breast heaves with sorrow, and my heart • be sad. But when I have before me the peo sith its open heart, its unconquered soul and roes instinct, then I feel again that all is well, that God is with me. Gentlemen, you have pleased to bestow that consolation to my sad I thank you for it, gentlemen. I have seen • a storm. Adversities have never bent the mon of heart. Often have I stumbled up ie racks which impious vice threw 'into my hit the Almighty raised me with increased . . from every fall ; and heie 1 stand, though . sit.torn and persecuted, and a homeless (sails, unbroken and unbenl, feared by despots, Sand and persecuted by their satellites in my very ie! Oh, I thank thee, my God, for this hatred,. persecigirm, and this fear—They shoW too rly that the cause I plead is not ti ileastcause— there is lite in its present and, success itt its fu and that I am in the right way .to benefit, the toe, noble, and just, and great, to *lnch I demi my life; ,clad it there were no success in what! I ;tagedithey would neither fear r nol hate, nor astute me. I thank them for that persecution.; it imparts ' ho pe to my ,breast than all the kindness of friends could dO, and I give you mr Word , that bare the consciousness of having well merited 1 9 past the hatred and the ,fear of.-tyrants and uatruntente, so May God bless me, as f will all a moral man can do to merit lad hatred spa . fear still more. IV try ? Am 1 not standing tin the:banks of the Lis 1 1 , lrr, cheered, welcomed, sad supported, as l ien / stepped first upon your glorious shores! mance, anti the history of whst I , suflered, and lao,l il.d 4 had cast saMe halo of expectation ) 11 4 my name; the balder distance and lexpec fttivanished like a dream, and II go on wander .; 'rpm city to city, a plain common man, repots. ig talke r than . auracting , affmtiesp by the . gloom 4;4)1 cast by toils a n d .sufkfings around my: row ;arid etainissr.'ng uty bad FmAliall wish aralige leatatkia—bat 4:you seldom liFar taiClopposi.' - -. 1 ;1 0 1 4 .- -44::: . 1 -,,' rj :' -- -"I : .:,..- --::., =.'.: . - .:,..:,.. . ,:zi. ...:- :. '.:.1 - .'...:. '-. ." • 7 1: .. . . ... . ...“ '.. _.. ~ .... . ~. ~-.- , , 4; , ; „ . ,-.,,,.. r ;,,,,-: .:,74.:-;.-...... , ,, -..-... Y, .. - .7.17.,f ,!.;...1 , ........ii, ..1 . ~ •,..t...rr ••• , , Ite. , '' .. •' •• •, i!' :.• -'', i ' ' . ., ~. . . : . .. ~,,,,; ;. 4T47! , L.:; : :$ ' 1 ' - ii:.l i;;k kg . 1 .11:n.T.K11 I ..,7,,. .... ,-, .__,- .-• , . i . ~..y. .-. • . . - . - :•.---, .. ~ . . -. _ E ..• 1 T ..•••••• ... iiv ..._ . . . . .. . . , .:•:. .. •.... ~., .....:. . F.. • :,.. . rI ', ' 7.-- .'" '..- .*:"... :,, ''' :S. C-•,, , . 4: .'...''' . :' . 1. , . i - i- ' '.,' . - • . . ~ - . , -- ' . •. . . ;. 1.4 . . . .... _ • .. . . .. ~., •i i _ , . • .- . . . • t • -3 . .. 4ion, Icaiilith and irencuporisindutony and impious malignity, have . exhausted every- Risible Means to check that sympathy of the people which rose to the position of public 'opinion, the MOM powerful the more it is oppesed. And has , that sympathy 'subsided! has' it abated! is it checked! No, it rolls on swelling-as I progress: -.here 1 have again an imposing evidence before my eyes, here in St. Louie, my narnereke city, where so much, and that _so persevenutly, was done to prevent this evidence. Yes, it rolls on, swelling as 1 progress in my mi.., sion, and it wall Folio; (swelling till it , will finally isubmergei all endeavors to mislead the natural in- Plinations of treemen, to letter the energies of the nation, to stifle its spirits, and to check the growing aspirations of the peo,ple's straight noble heart. • Well, so much I dare take forsore, that when the first roaring of cannon echoes over the waves, an• nouncing to America that the great battle is engage ed which must decide what principle shall rule the world, £rbe►ty or'pespotism—there is no power, and .no resumed wisdom of stationary policy on earth capalte,to compel the people of this mighty Re public to remain an idle and indifferent spectator of that great struggle, where its own future also is to be decided; because, in the scale of that approach• ing strdggle, the destinies of the Christian world are to be weighed. So much T dare take for sure, And, indeed, it cannot otherwise coins, because that's an imperi ous necessity pf your country's position, and at the circumstance of the world. Let me briefly tell how matters - stand ; When the Emperor of Austria, beaten down in his sacrilegous attack by our victorious arms, pros trated himself at the lest of the Czar, mendicating his assistance, the Czar, about to commit the im• mense crime of violating the laws of nations, by his invasion in ilungary, issued a proclamation, in which he told the world that all the potentates must league %minst liberty, and they must all consider the rule of unlimited absolutism as a common cause; that he would help 'he:young tyrant of Aus tria in the hour of his need, but under the condition that alter Hatigaly had been crushed, upon the rti- ins of our national existence, the allied-clepota most go on tocrush the spirit of freedom every ere, and not only not make any concession to revolhtionary is Movemen , but not to stay still the dangerous ex ample of very constitutional government is abol iShed, and liberty blotted out entirely from the earth. That-war against liberty is now going on, and it is that infernal work of oppression, against which not only Hungary, but all the oppressed nations of the European continent, are about to rise. Well, can America remain an indifferent specta- for of this struggle'? Is it not a struggle in which Ameriza was almost equally interested as it was lot its own domestic war for independence? Yes, gentlemen, I make this comparison by design ; be• cause it is not less important to conserve this inde pendence than it was acquire it. And it is math ematically sure, that if all Europe becomes Cossack, because tined by the protectorate of the Czar, America cannot conserve its republican institutions, its union and its independence. lam told your country is invulnerable. But I say quite thel:contrary,fliat country is the most vulnerable, which can be approached at thousands and thousands of points from the sea. Since the steam engine works, the ocean is not a barrier—it is a highway—it is a door. You are vulnerable in your mercantile navy. You are morally vulnerable by a mete ptohibitive custom system, excluding you from the markets of Europe. You are vulner able by seeing your domestic discord stirred by for eign influence and, foreign gold. You are vulnera ble by seeing monarchies established in your neigh borhood, on the continent of America. ' You are vulnerable by seeing made out of the Island of Cu ba; a battery against the mouth of the and New Orleans. You are, in a word, vulnerable by a thousand ways, precisely because you have an immense territory, (the larger , a body is, the mote vulnerable points it bas,) and because your material interests make you, by their very diversity, dependent upon the cor.dition of the outward world But, again, I am told, " Well, if we are vulnera bleohe 'mote we are vulnerable, the more we must keep quiet,gtud not mix with foreign matters; we wilt quietlt grow—we will have, in a hundred years, a pi:Oblation of a hundred million, anti,then we will be strong enough not only to defy the - hos. tility of all the despots of the world, but also to dic tate our laws to the World, and will rule on earth." Oh, yes, lithe despots of the world had no brains inftheit heads, and permitted you, tranquilly, to grow ta such a power on earth. But there is the immense, there is the dangerous fallacy. Do you think that the unholy alliance.of the despots does not know that you would grow Mauch an immense: power s if not checked in time! and do i on take the despots for such fools as to quietly permit yow to grow to a giant republic, of a, hundred millions 1 II is quite-clear that they would in vain have mar dared nations—in vain doomed themselves and all their posterity to-eternal damnation ; the triumph of the3i ambition would be but short, and their des polio away but . a midsummer night's dream, if they I permitted you to become such a power on 'anti.— Be sure that they feelalteady; at present, alarm tfd at Your very existence, and bed already attacked you, Icing ago, had they had the poWer to do ao. They have not attacked you, becarise their pow et eras m Europe itself precarious,-threatened and controverted by - their own people and by wets ; but let them but abeemplish their foul design-Act 'all Elm/pa 'Cossplc, ,and you will see how their first step , will beymeit be, to fall, with the.con centrated power of all Europe, upon yourself, pre cisely because - else you would bedome a tepublle of zi hundred millions. , Could you believe that,the league of:despots mould endure ,this, .when. if be "came mortally afraid of the small example of a Hungarian repubpti '''rbiti4 a ut , tchat I have sail, and iiien ‘'Orridft,",is Ispe porxi for stbielparleiseti-you-let r hy yuur,in iii;; E'retlce; , .rtbktletc.o..gtew toa power so dattgetoOt • ------ :!I eill - :-. E A> -ti 1 i 4'42'4 ',.1!.i.1 ~f ~ ~ ,- ,: g yßrAsfitii.EVEßY :BATT/DAY AT : : T,O4AN:PAi 1 B441)4014 . )_. 010 ' 4: PA;, .°IW B. : 0 "f` ILESAIDLESS Or ,DEICIINc4TiCiIIi ‘ viebit. 404 QitA;ll*..:, 'to you, or that Which reveali itself in the 'symits , thies of the people, which, in its 'littoral instinct, is more circurfispec,t and more wise than all the short sighted calculation of antiquated Let me repeat to ytii hr plain English, what) l said „yesterday to a delegation of your zens, in French. • When the struAle is engaged about principles, indifference is uicide. Nay,' indifference possible, kecause indifference about the fate of that principle apou. which your national existence and all your future:este—that imlifb3rence is , so much as a passive submission to the opposite pririssiple— it is almsisteluivalent to an alliance with the PO. lie who is not for freedoms is against insellom.44 Thew is no third choice. The United States have arrived at the necessity td being a power Int earth. . Indifferentism for the cause st freedom—carelessness about how the des. pots dispose of the condition of the world—that to so much arnot to be a power on earth. And if the Crated States do not accept thlsposition Of a power on earth, well, then, they. have resigned - their- fu' tare, and to resign our own future is suicide. The people's instinct feels the weight of this truth —it feels the importance of circumstances—it feels the.anger of losing an irreparable Opportunity, and hence the fact never yet met in history, theta plain, common man—a poor homeless exile, becomes an object of such swelling sympathy, pilling on like a sea, in spite of all the passionate rage of my ens. mien, and all the Christian tolerance of the Rev. Father Jesuits, which they, in such - au evident man• ner, ahem to me. I hate said the word. So let Me, therefore, look to that spectre which I meet in my way. That is the second time since I am in the , ilnitefi States that I pronoMieed the 'Word. It_ is , tinser Co aiiiii. rise, by a few remarks, my reverend enemies, that I am aware of their hostility, and ready to meet! it openly, I make this advertisement by design heie, because it is *not my custom to }Mack fronei.behlnil or in the dark. Mine is not the famous doctrine, that the end sand ifies the means. I like to "met the enemy face to face—a lair field and fair arms— that's what I like. And in one thing more I will never imitate my reverend opponents. I will not indulge litany per. mini i sonaliiies, never act otherwise than be mg to a gentleman. If they choose to pursue a different courses let them do so, and let them leamAti fruits of such a coulee. ~ * My humble person I entirely submit to the good pleasure of their passion. If they tell you, gentle men, that I am no great man, they speak the truth. Nobody in the world can be more penetrated by that truth than 1 myself. • I have not an Inch of greatness in all my frame, that is sure. Nay, more:, I have not the slightest ambition to have been, to be, or to become anything more than a very . plain, a very common, but honest man. The warrant of that common quality—l have it here, in my con. science, and the tranquility of this inward judge no aspiration of vile calumny will ever succeed to trouble. Being' on good terms with my conscience, I don't much care to be on bad terms with Czars and Emperors, their obedient servants; or the rev. erend father Jesuits. Nay, if 1 were on good terms with them, I scarcely could remain on good minus with my conscience. So much for myself—now a few) words tolhe cause. No man in the world being - ,morepenetrated by the sentiment. of Christian toleranee—more attach ed to the principle of religious liberty, and more adverse to intolerance and sectarianism, than my. self and my people, besides half of my coentrymen being Rothan Catholics, and warmly attached to their religion, anh I claiming moral and material aid against the Czar of Russia, who is the moat bloody persecutor of Roman Catholics, so much that the present Pope, himself, before the Revolution, when he was yet more a High Priest than a Des _pot, an his capacity of an Italian sovereign, and cared more about spiritual than temporal business, openly and bitterly complained, in the councils of the Cardinals, against the bloody persecution which the -Roman Catholics have buffered from the Czar of Russia ; and, considering, at least, that I plead for republican principles, to which the Reverend Father Jesuits should be here warmly attached, if they are willing to have the reputation of good chi. zees, and not be traitors in your Republic, which affords to them not only the protection of its laws, but also the full enjoyment of all .the prifileges of your republican freedom. It is, indeed, a strange, striking fact, to see these reverend fathers hetet in a republic so warmly advocating the cause of despo. e item, and so pass:onately persecuting the cause 1 humbly plead, which, at the same time is the cailie of political freedom and religious liberty for numei• ous millions of Roman Catholics throughout Ea. 1. rope.' Somewhat acquainted with the terrible history of that order, I thought to find in the explanation of this striking fact in the historical, ambition of their standard idea, to which they in all ,times sacrificed eveiphing, and misused even the holiesi of all re ligion, as an instrumentality to that ambition,rso much so that the very existence of that order hiving become dangerous to the Romiri Catholiattligion, the Pope' himself, Clement 11V., with the consent and upon the advice of the : Council - ot Cars)itlehl, abolished the order of Jesuits, and - all the Catholic' sovereigns of the world, even these:known as the most attached to the Roman celbolirs, CRitt4; : as the hinge of Spain, or .Portugal , Louis XV, offrance, and even Maria Theresa, of Aostria, notlwithatand ing her boundless 'bigotry, expelled the; leirerend father Jesuits from• rill their ierilteififti: . New as theist - which Limnably plead are, the principles of national fieedom and national sovereignty, they are,- of course,- opposed-to the , , ' aiplution 01 everyone wholvould likw to 'rule the world, whereas 1 wish that every People' 6111111 rile itselt-1 thoun P trtdfiiid this theiry• • - t tpturtt passionate pum:cution : which ,1 1 1 4ter & ,Lonis, 1.. got bold -,of Nircuroatance may es'the matter Uiti I hold here in my hand the pri , • ,catatogue of the Society of Jesuits in the prOvi4e of Minot* u they term Yohr:State. ' Hereittliea that amongst the . thirty-five members Officiatitig in the College of the Father Jesuits, in St. Zoitis, there are not , less ;than eight Risreretiniyatheqesuite imported (rim, Austria. • -Now, Yflo the why I fin So porseenfoil , This plain foot tells the star) , of a *t amongst all that The teirerand gentlemen ot. pose to me, there are only two oonsidenttions 10 which the honor ef my cause, and of my natitint, forces me to' answer in a few remarks. They charge against me, that tay cause is hostile to the Roman Catholic religion, and to get; by this suggestion; the Irish citizens' Irksidflitir them for the support of Rosso-Austrian despotism, they charge me that I am no friend of Ireland. If there Would be, in this suggestion, the slight est shadow of truth, I wool& avow it highly and openly. I am man enough not abuse myself by hypocrisy. But, as that is not the case, I declare, before Geri. and this assemllage here, and,dedlare it with open and elevated brow, that both these charges are a vile calumny: At to the Catholic religion ! I, indeed; am a : Protestant not only by birth, but also by conviction; acd warmly penetrated bythii conviction,,l would delight to see this conviCtion' shared by the world. Bat before ail, I am mOrtelly opposed to intolerant man andt, sectarianism. I consider religion to be a matter of conscience which every matt has to ar range between God ankbimseli. And, therefore, I respect the religious conviction of every man. I claim religions liberty for myself and''my/ nation, and must, of course, respect in others that right claim for myself: There ie nettling in the world capable to arouse a greater.indignation in my breast than religions oppression sectarianism& intolerance. But, particularly, I respect the Catholioreligion as the religion of seven millions of my countrymen; to whom I am boundin Love, in friendship, in home recollections, in gratitude, and in brotherhood, with the most sacred del. And as to the cause of my Country, which I more particularly plead, I dare boldly say,—all the Jes uits in the world, and of all tires together have not a thousandth part so much right to say that they are„taithful representatives °Oho Catholic religion, as the Catholics of Hungary leave the right to say it. While the lather Jesuits indulged quietly in the comfort of their wealth and plotted ambitious views about how to rule the world . the Roman Catholics of Hungary, people and bishops and priests, took up 111 sword, and sacrifice 4 willingly life and blood %nd property for their religion: It is Hunga ry which protected Rome from St. Peter's church being transformed into a mostre a like Santa Sophia of Constantinople. Therefore I can boldly say, that that cause, which is the 'Osage of the Roman , Fuel°lic population in Hungary, has by ibis vedr;fam, a higher authority that it is not hostile to !hi true interests of the Ro man Catholics religion, thaw , the opposite opinion of all the reverend father Jesuits could outweigh. And I am prool to say that as in general it is a preeminent glory of my country to be attached to the principle of lull religious liberty, without any restriction for all to ally soli is the particular glory of my Roman Catholic erntrymen not to be sec ond to whosoeverin the lyorld, ion the one side in attachment to theitiown religion, and on the other aide in tolerance for other religions. The Austrian dynasty having beet!. gcntinnally encroaching upon the rigitiol Protestant- ism who were those who straggled in the first rank for our 'rights 7 OUr Roman Catholic countrymen ! It was a glorious sight, almost tinparelleled in his tory, but was also fully appreciated by the liungari- an Protestants. All of ue, man by man, would 'her saerifiyefile, and blood, and gold than to al. low that altair's breadth should be enkated from the religious liberty of our Roman Catholelergy- men Now, what position took the Roman Catholics of Hungary in our plat straggle ? There was not-on ly no difference between them and the Protestants, in their devotion for our country's freedom and dependence, but they, according to the importance of their number, took O's the struggle a very pre-em inent part. The ROman Catholic Bishops of Hun gary protestedagainst the; perjurious treachery of the dynasty ; many of them 'suffer even now for their devotion' to justice, libe i rty and right ; and who is the Jesuit who dares to( affirm that he is de- voted more to the Catholic religion than the Bishops of Hungary ? Our battalions were filled with Ro man Catholic volunteers: , Catholic priests led their faithful Sock to the battle . field ; our nation& con- Tendon, las cornposesl in - rnajority of Catholics.-- all the Catholic population,,Without any exception, consented• in and cheered autbasiastieally my bp ingelected Governor of Ilungiuy, though I am' a Protestant. 1 bad anal have their frienilsitip, their devotion, their support, find when I formed the first ministry of independent Hungary, not only a tall half of the new ministry 1 entrusted to Roman Ca tholics,. but especially I nominated a Roman Cath olic Bishop to' th e charge of a 'minister ot a public _ f 2 in. ,i.,, and all the, Pro t estants of my country hails the ntiminalken With applause.. Such is the ca of Hungary.. Who' dares now to charge ate that 'cause is hostile to tbe Roman Calcific re. ligioe l - - • But lam allied with Maned, with the Romans 'and Wijh theltaliatts ; •thne goes on the charge, and these cursed Italian& ale enenties to the Pope. l'es, but not th&Pope,,' the:lloi Priest 'of the Anibal; 'eatitcilie Church, lid to •the.,deip.otik erivereign of :Rome anil his.coiniuted temporal goveroment—ftbe worst of humarOuvention. Since when is'it a prin. biple of,the Roinen:Citfiblic religion, hat the Ro mans shctillti be . no.llepibitcamil arid that the iligh Priest of the Roman Chorch, shoulkkbe ,4 ..deapotic 'eciiereigti over: the ROlTUlti•nition I-aid in that ca. 'Paeitili . dttioTittl,t4lf • and obedient Servant to: . the CiiiiitliniXiit thitieyiatit enemy iniilkoody`perse. 430111 . /X,QI Roman i3altiblisign 1 Wiry,tilexziisi,the Roniens,(itord all . llitt , 44olblici,ut -Italians. are Ro- 111 lIM IttE4A. 600RICIL man Catholics,. and are so warmly attached to limit religion, that.when, in 1849, the -French republic sent an army against the Roman republiCto restore Abe Pope, not to his spiritual authority-because that was bynnobo dy contradicted, but to his temporal despolisin, ll / l e . whele danger could have been aver led by the Romani' by becoming Protestants. The Idea Watt 'proriotinceilin Rome, and not a single Itoisais itzceipted it. ' They preferred to struzule 'Without hope - of itibtoly—they preferred to bleed and to die rather thaisio abandon their faith. NoW, who can dare to insult the Roman Cattle tics of Hungary, - Crolia, Italy, Germany, Poland, France-4bn can dare to insult the thobsand of thousands of Roman citizens Of 'the Viiited.-tates —Senators, Govein - ors, Judgeemen of all public and private poshion*—Who can dare to insult them that they are hostile to their own religion, because they unite to support the cause which I plead And because they side with republican freedom, with civil and religionis liberty against Rosso-Aus• trian despotism 1 Who can dare to allirm that he represents the Catholic religion, if three millions of Roman Catho lics do not represent it I The Reverend Father Jes uits, perhaps. I take the liberty to Bay, in a te* words : They are that society Ivbicli element XIV , the high priest of the Roman Catholic Church, has abolished as dangerous to the Catholic religion ; they are those whom every Roman Catholic King has ex cluded horn his territories as dangerous to religion and social order-they are those the ascendancy of whom had always been a period of disaster and confusirin'to the Roman Catholic ehurch—they are those who now make an alliance, or rather a com pact with the Czar ot Russia, and who plead and support bete, in tree republican America, the cause ot Russian despotism, sie cause4f that Czar who is yet red With blood, and damue&-with the million curses of Roman Catholics, whom he Joined io abandon their religion, and torced by cruelty, by misericand by the lash, under which thousand and thousands of Roman Catholics uerished having been treated as the unfortunate Minsk Nuns were proven to have been''treated—to death. So much for the charge that the cause which I plead—the cause ofmillions of Roman Catholics— is hostile to the Roman Catholic religion. Should I be [timed for the future to unit''r into this topic once more, I will take the heart-revolting history of those who calumniate my cause, into my hands, and recal to the memory of patine opinion, the ter rible pages of blood, ambition, countless crimes and intolerance ; but I hope there will be no occasion for it. . Now as to Ireland. Where is a man on earth with uncorrupted soul and with liberal instincts in his heart Who, would not sympathise with poor un fortunate Ireland? - Wh9re is a man ; loving free dom and right, in whom the wrongs of green Erin would not stir the heart Who could forbear warmly to sympathise with the' fatherland of the Grattans, of O'Connells and of Wolfe Tones ?.J in deed, am not the man ; wherever is oppressioh and a people there is my love. But why do I not plead Erin's wrongs ? Am I asked ! My answer is: Am I not pleading the principle of liberty 1 Awl is the cause of freedom not the cause of Ireland I Let me tell yon, gentle men, that not always that man serves beat one cause who makes the-most of empty words. I see all the despots of the European continent united in a crusade sasaiwo tib^sy i there are two powers neutral, yet the positron of which may well decide lot or against despotism. These two pow ers are Great Britain and America. If the Almighty blessed my endeavors bitl could succeed to con.. tribute something, that!America, and by its influ ence over the public opinion of the people of Eng. laud, Great Britain itself should side with liberty, out 01 whatever consideration—oat of whatever in terest, against despotism, then, indeed I boldly de clare before God and men, that t have' achieved a greater benefit and done a better service to the fu ture of lielans!, than all who go about loudly crying about Erin's wrongs, and not doing any thing' for the triumph of that cause which is about to be de cided, and is the pause of all nations who ar3 op pressed, and of all who are, or will tor. tree. Whereas, if by uniting in the chorus of empty Words, I should contribute to alarm not only the government but also the people orEngland, and to force that government to side w ith despotism, in its decisive struggle against liberty to which that goy emirl eh', being as it is aristocratical, feels -but too much. inclined, then, indeed, I am sure I would do such a wrong to the future Ireland, which the sac rifices of my lile and torrents of blood and , the suf- 'finings of generations coo d not ezpiate. Be sure , therefore, gen t eaten, that every man who pleads for libertyilifeeds for IreLatui ; be.eure, that every. blow stricken or liberty is also stricken for Ireland ; be sure tharnot always the most noisy AM the - best friendsointhprielent activity is often better service than whatever allow of eloquent vrorria ' 'And so let meliope,that while it is sore that he ,who, irt.'for freedom is for Ireland, it also will - be found that-irish blood can never be against libetty Arid ittrto you all, gentlemen, Milne hope that hoiesrSer:the alvocams of: riespottsm may try to mieleid pablic'ciPinion in tree Ariterica, the tmeo rupted noble Mateo:4.ot the people will proveto the worldlhat it is not is vain, that the : down-trodden spiritOrliberty, raised he sign of 4fstress- to' arils you, anti that the 'Wrongerlatid the opprCesett can confitlently_appeal fur help, for justice and redress, to the free and pourerful republic e t A m e r i ca . tbetik you' 'gentlemen, for - >ttie -patience 'with Wiiiellyou hives listened, during this torrent of rain to my bail speech. , lt shows . . that -your sympathy is warm and ailicete.7.. or.ewhiet cannot be cooled down or wasl4l away by shower:4.. (Ile inetalocs cheeying.) - 4 ire. Veiee:ls, like a paivoi Iskates, With which i•an ttf ligiiily ovpr 'lie eni .feee korsitlf ou'ap et4i uary toads ~,.: MIZE TIZS accacr.—" I noticed," said Franklin, " a mechanic among, a number tif.others, at work on house erecting but a little - way:lmin our office, who always appeared to be in a merry humor, who bad a, kind, word and a chl4 -- ful smile fur every one he met. Let ilie - dat be givhr so cold, cloorny or str. less,.a happy smile danced likela sunbeam on his cheerful doimuinatice. Meeting him one morning laskedhlmto tell ntellte secret of his constant happy flow of spirits., !iNo secret, Doctor," he.re. plied; I have got one .tif_ihei bilist of wives, and when 1 - go to work, slutrilways has a kind iVord of encouragement forme, and when I go home she meets me with a Smile fluid a kiss, and then tea is sure to be ready, and she has done so many lititiga through the day to please me, that I cannot find it in my heart to speak an unkind word to anybody." What en influence then.histh woman over the heart to soften it and make it the fountain of cheerful and pure emotions! Speak gently, then; a happy mulls and a kind word - of greeting, after the toils of the day are over, costs noth4g, and go fat towards ma king a home fraipy ,and peaceful." Tire Eva or s Ban TEMPER.—A bad teinrer a curse to the possessit", and its influence is most deadly wherever if is Pend. It is allied to Marty r id be obliged to litie with one of a complaining temper. To heat one eternal round of com Paint and toormoricg, to have every pleasant thought J ,scare away by their evil cirit, is a sore trial. It , is. like the sting of a scorpion—a perpetual nettle, destroy ing your peace, rendering life a burden. Its influ ence is most deadly ; and the purest and sweetest atmosphere is contaminated into a deadly miasma 'wherever this evil genius prevails. It liars beets said truly, that while we ought not to let the bad tempter of others influence us, it wuu, 1 be as unrea sonable to spread a plaster of Spank flies upon the skin, and not expect it to draw, as to think of a f : milt' not 1317fiefillg because of bud temper of any tit its inmates.- . One string out of time will destroy the music of an instrument, otherwise perfect ; so if all the members of a church, neighborhood, and fami ly do not cultivate a kind and an alectionate tem per, there will be discord and every evil pork DISCOVERY AND USE OF A LCOII 01..—The fu/IoWiug curious account ol the first use made of alcoholic li quors, is tmnslaterYtrom a French work moiled Ld "Semour : An Arabian Chemist, in searching after a universal solvent, by means yf which he could transmute metals, was the first discoverer of alco hol, and the originator Of those spirituous liquors Which have entombed hecatombs of victims. It did not really issue horn the domain of eltruistry till tot girds the end of the .13th century, whim they began in Spain and Italy, - to sell the spirits of wine tinctured with certain herbs, as a powerful remedy in various diseases. Later still the Genoese ex tracted a spirituous liquiir from grain. Passing it off as a powerful specific, they sold it in small vials, at a lii2h price, under the name of aqua vi , e, water 1 of life, or eau de iiie. Till the end of the 1 th cen tury, it was considered but as a medicine. nd was sold only by the apothecaries. About that ime the thought was sugg - sled of famishing it tot miners, who labored in the mines of Hungary, as a preset.- 1 i against heat and damp. The custom almost at the same time was introduced into !rebind. O: I•. M'ORAL BICAUTY.—Wnat is heanty of nature, but a beauty clothed with moral associations? what abwo -hicbuet oesury - ot literature, poetry, fiction, and Melina arts, but a moral beauty which genius has bodied forth for the admiration of the world ? And what are those qualities of human character which are treasured up in the memory and heart of nations—the objects of universal reverence and ex ultation, the themes of celebration, of eloquence, and the festal song, the enshrined idols of admlra lion and love I Are they not patriotism, heroism, philanthropy, disinterestedness, magLarninaity,mar tyrdom f Evens bitter has its Sweet. Poverty brings go( d appetite, while hold . work makes you sleep and snore like a humming top. If-you live on cold po tatoes, just recollect that 'cold . potatoes are in no way related to the gout.. If an acquaintance cuts yod merely because you have fallen frbm purple to cor duroy, don't get in a passion about the nincoMpoop, but return thanks that the number of asses you are compelled to nod too, has been redaceiny ono. Ott." Sir," said one of riu•o with great dignity to the other, timing a dispute that had not been confined to words alone, "you have call ed me scoundrel arl'a liar, you have spit in my face, you have struck me to ice ; and I hope you will bat carry it any further," for if you do, you w ill arouse that sleeping Him in my breaA, and I cannot tell what may be the consequeaces !" Kr. the ChineSe seem to think dancing a use less fatigue. When Commodore Anson was at Can ton; the officers orthe Centurion had' .a bal wort some cowl holiday. While they were dancing, a Chinese, who iMeveyed the open i vi,,u; sail „ o fily to one of the Flirty, " Why don't you let yhur ter vauts do this 1 - 01. youT' Otii".`Otd Girt—" You see, my dear, that the earth turns on its owls all., and (ip revo. lutitln round the son each year." Yowl' Rerolcn -"Then pa, does Prince turttma Its 11‘16 %lien .t mak& its revelutient.r' (111 Grult—'• No my tics( turn'i 'on itsehayntrets. tfu'vresyr, peat's not a quer , . two in asttetto•rlY:' ti says tae cure feir *5.1,20 - ilea is to clist•hurge the Fervallt gni. s 'opinion, there is inviting Itk:e 110.,..2 a, ow hi Lzety the-nervous F•ysteel bev.m21,....., Women think they Want a iqty7 , i.•ta , i, hi! a 4) I.iet they need a iongtittee2 lueti:.;.tt: Hi a 'ioit;tt , ertleyki,,e 1.•. fear you ihied !Pi IN AS Li ikm.lee, f Theic i. itt.)4lUNitOlUVlio,le , rMiy.istn-.be a bct,ulat.:Wr is lIIe tau3u-ul MI .1=1113c.1.2.1 C 44 =I