t , .., _ ... ..... ` - . . 0 ) • , t ... . , : , - 3 'j :' ' ,e ‘ 1 ,, , i , . _. , . • r ' _ 1 _ zpaz Callan% Coale sing that good old Sonvtgain." Democratic Thunder. NVlts up boyi while we are singing, Don't you hear the Banjo ringing, relate to you a story Full o f DeClOCratiC glory! - o poor Whigs why do you feel so badly, o poor Whigs why do you feel co badly, o poor Coons what snakes you wonder, This is Democratic Thunder: • • Now for Pmuct put on your armor, - The friend of Laboring 3fan and Farmer, and tell the Whigs a tale of wonder, With good old Democratic Thunder! c.) poor Whigs, &e. Who is Pierce! and who was Polk, Sirs? Mind you, Miga, it is no joke, Sirs, Pierce and Dig, they stand before you fall of Democratic Glory. 0 poor Whigs, &c. liirongh from Maine way down to Texas, Will the Coons try bard to vex us, Yet where they have on the trees sot, We'll nothing leave but a dirty greese spot. 0 poor whigs, &e. We are going with a shout sirs, Coons from oar land to drive out., sirs, Caleb and skin 'em too remember, Fora feast next November. 0 poor Whigs, &e. We rill make the whole land ring, airs, With oat song for Pierce and King; sirs, And well woricand clear our nation, From every Whig abomination. G r oor Whigs, &c.. , 8:e the Coons try hard to dissemble, All the tars with which they tremble, For they know our nomination. Csn whip all Federalist creation. 0 poor Whig,i, &e. Shout ye Democrats like thunder, Telt that ammo old tale of wonder; Come relate that same old story, Tull of Democratic glory. 6 poor tnles, Demonits then all remember, The mat day or-next November, Oar thunder rolls our lightning's flashing, And the Coons are ripe for thrashing ! 0 poor whigs, &c. Thus let ns raise n great commotion, 19M!MEI Like urge our soil from Whig corruption 0 poor %digs, ite. ,Xra:TEmnina. Progress of Railway Spied. When George Stephenson constructed the twit hvolnotive eng,ine, men-who called them. selves-"practical," contended that the smooth w*ls would run round, or slip, on the equal ly smooth iron rails, without moving the ear riat,e.\ But the wheels actually did Lite, And Stlphenson then said to his friends thrit there was no limit to the speed of such an en. provided the work could be made to mod. 'Dub was in 1811 . A few yelrs later, a Writer who declared himself friendly to the use of locomotive en tines,strongly protested against'extrarimant expectations. of the enthusiastic spectdatist," that' engines would be seen travelling'at the ate of if:, 16, 18, 30 miles an hour," and add ed that 'nothing could do more harm towards their general adoption and improvement than the promulgation of such nonsense." This was in 1125. When the Liverpool and Manchester rail. way hill was introduced, Mr.'-Stephenson was ermined en its merits before a Committee of Commons, and the promoters of that project gravely warned him that if he talked of a. loeo motive going at a greater rate. than 10 miles in hour, he would spat a cross on the concern.' Even that rate of speed was considered so out of the way, that one person asked if 3lr. Ste.' phenson was a foreigner, and another hinted doubts of his sanity. This was io 1828. The Liverpool and 31am:heater railway was opened, and a speed of thirty miles an hour rra obtained, which rather settled the gees. tine of Mr. Stephenson's sanity. This wasin 1830. The other day on the London and Birmirg hun. es well as the Great Western railway, a rate of travelling at the speed of 65 miles au hosr was accomplished. The express traindi, on these lines run at the rate of newly 50 miles m hour, stoppage included. r. Bruno ell es- . Itts that, , without any risk, the progress of travelling on-the Great Western line will sr- dre at a speed of a mile a minute. We Say r , feinr , b of the yet greater speed which is prom! by the atmospheric mode of locomotion. Tons, than, about thirty years 'ago, it was doobted whether locomotives could run at all Open iron railways; twenty-years ago, the idea i Oftheir canning at a greater speed than ten lan hour was scoffed at as chimerical : fif est years ago, the unexpected rate of thirty Vies au hour was considered a wonder,which §sa . effort of practical science could surpass ; .^. now a speed of nearly fifty miles au hour h daily tole, while the rate of a mile Llama u.s it promised, and in some special instances ioidanity been exceeded. his - singular that the three -great feats se tomplished by practical - science in our time I hr — lightning by gas, crossing the Atlantic by steam in ten days, and rapid travelling by tie.satne motive power on railways, have, one 144 nil, been denounced as utterly impractica. h 1 "philosophers," who actually knew ktilio: of the subjects upon which they Wee. agids a comment on this article, 1-notieed ent in the periodical press, that a few rone a train of cans, without passengers, : 'le run from Poughkeepsie to.Peekski 11, L, distance thirty.two miles, in thirty min a...:Lais is the greatest - speed for -thafin !, , ,temee,ever reached in the United Statea„l Achertiser. IQ .l?t oodhsct, the great French Socialist, it has been set at liberty, on the condition' tk,e'' !tore for the United States. Prue the Warerir stairseins. ; 1 One year had dragged its slow length away . THE i ' since , "%coder° a departure for the • land o SACRIFICED • TILEAS gold, and strange as it may seem, Louisa hoc I no word of him since ho left Neve York. Wiif • on • -,,' • • what anxiety she watched for every arrive True Wealth• Gartered for Gold. - "From California," and bent het eager steps . I to tho post eillee,in hopes of a letter from hina nr t. al. siowras s 1 • and with what disappointment she returnee , • Imagine yourself; dear reader, gazi from her beefless errands, wowill leave to the one of the loveliest valleys that can be foung uponnd fruitful imagination of the reader. Suffice it in this or any other State. Through its to any, that' in this to her, long interval, in ; een- which she had not heard from him, she had of.l tre a beautiful, deer; river majestically winds) way, its bread bosom'sparkling in the_rays f ten doubted that ho had reached his destinal tion, but that he had perished ini the way, and the morning sun like a vast river of molten siti th'eb again hope would predominate, and when ver. Beautiful farms of gentle rolling lands, she looked forward to the two long years that dotted by neat, tidy farm houses,. and numer. ens herds, beautiful groves majestic forests, were vet to elapse ere ho had promised to re turn, tvith what heart-felt anxiety would she and the ragged hill are seen as •far as tho eye svish to have 1 en reach; in short, all that tend to multiply i, Flit swifter round tholwheels of Time, the 'beautiful, portray the romantic; or excite And bring the welcome day"- tho poetic, are beast° the open glade, the dense - . , ' -: id t thicket, the smooth :rolling brooklet, the ma- But won all nevaxiety,old Time cou o t Da n, befol jestie river, and the pearly cascades; the smooth i f% edl.l from `week followed week , and monthi meadow,. and the zig tag, almost towering followed = 0 : 1 : 7, e ...1 mountain. 1 i month, and still she had not heard In this lovely valley, in the neat white cot- word from him- . tags upon the immediate bank of the river, to About this tim little. Willie was eid talt i e h n e a n itt theyight, whose spacious lawns in front, its with amtd malignant fever , which toun b eaut if u l s h a d e trees, and ample grohnds et . most skill or . _tn physicians , and I o had been tending back, betokened the eonmetenee and given up to di e Ohiht hart it Was for that die. Oh! th* * lc e o w l independence of its owner, was Louisa 31— young mother °' think t partingd 'all day l born, reared and, odudated, gentle as the falling dear boy, whose tiny feet keptmelee dews, and kind as the wooing dove. At the sr° und flowers;th° sot carpeted . room, like a butterfly p,. ago of eighteen she, was married to a yoen,g amonghersad h - 1 making music for eart, neighboring farmer, whose father had departed On g 6, d c w e e ntnog the r h ' he lonely hours. That he should this life about two years previous, leaving him"valley of death" so early, with e hi: sweet face and rosy smiles, and all a handsome property, with bright prospects and ~, „sections that had made him so the hope of happiness in the companionship the gentle an of her whom he had Chosen to accompany him dearfond . mother ' sheart , wasa thought to afon d in .the 't journey of life.'. Upon Louisa our more than sh e _could. that And then, too, friend had centered his, affections and hopes,must this when she remembered that she bear . ' and he loved her with an ardor and devoted- great s° alone, sorrow and that Theodore was tg that was blind to her faults, ness his fi t b and hi s mr ee j riorant in that far off 'land, that . ra ern hand of disease and tions were returned with that fervor for which) was perishing 4 the slow . d , thanmiable Louisa was so well qualified. must soon be laid in the cold, coldgroun ,er , Surrounded by all the comforts of competence heart would almost break, and she could find the first two years of their -waded lives passed consolation only ith thought hat:theLord I happily away, during which time Louisa had I te rs the wind to the shorn iamb,' and that given birth to a bright, curley-headed cherub Hei m ' `gathers the lambs in hip arms and carries , hem'n his bosom ' • - of a boy, adding strength to the l . chord thatt ho u r ls bound them to love. • Upon this link of true Thelastwhenshemust take came at teal affection Louisa ideated with herwhole a farewell look into those little . blue eyes, that mu ' • I had so often flashed with joy in the light of soul, and in its happiness she lived, moved, and had her beim,approvingsmile.ltmidnightwhen 1 her d' Time passed on, and each sriceee mg day he died. As the low tolling bell in the dome hat brought with it increased happiness in the ofthevillagechurch, glittering in the beams. . . . I A of the pale moon, sounded the midnight hour, 'household circle of the amiable and good u- .. isa. But alas! a chan,ge came over the happi- his accompaniedtitlsspint o th passing sound God.Day:Mo e n& and week ness of her dream. The cry of Gold! Gold!! to rho throne/ she watched him Ji th the , sad Gold!!! was reverberated fropi old Yuba 's hills an S t ervek ' B th e t he was fading away. Daily in Upper California, and the. Multitude fromknowledge hisch lc h. d 3 paler, his eye brighter, Maine's far-off hills to the savannahs of.ribri- ee s g r ownd till the-gentle da, from the Atianties studded ebast, to the . . and that lovely form waste , 11 Pacific's northern shore, catching up the shout 'Pint burst its frail risen house and soared to Lono P lon she wept over the heard it re-echoed from the old worlds bound. immortality.. s' g.. . . . . less realms! The old man who had toiled at little _ cold lifeless body, while her sae tnongnts y to.the land where her Theodore the forge _until the frosts of ago bad settled ,s wi l a t " w a anderer, while no consolation came upon his brow dropped the sledge beside the fromthe fond vision save the remembrance of rinaires anvil, and bidding adieu to all the fond his 1"e. '' ' -' - -'-' 'dreaded or the chance for gold. • 7 - no - weaver at his - rne inueral came—thevisite to the loom, the mechanist at his lathe, the miller at re sting Piece of the desd—und the fond meth his hopper, the carpenterat his bench, the print er saw the little boy conveyed to its cold rest. ter at his' stand, and the farmer at his plough lug place. They buried him where--I caught the passing sound, and the shuttle ' !ceased its busy clatter,• the lathe its hum, the A brooklet ran with lucid swell, millstone its liasy round, the plane its toil, And wakened on the eveningair and 'The shady grove almig, the type its elicit, and all bent their course to _ fled or liquid song; the new El Dorado. The young husband of 9. Where moonbeams lay in silvery sheen • Louisa was one amongthe number who were Upon its in wave, seized - with a burning desire to visit the gold Or quivered in the diamond drips-- region. The ample property he possessed Th. looked meagre and unimportant in comparison e wreath of gems it gave with the of told tales of imMense wealth to be tiponWhose banks of verdant hue, accumulated, in that land of Wealth, and he re- In floral beauty bright, solved to arrange his affairs and start for the They strangely thought no step but hers golden shore. tVith all his wealth and core- Would tempt - the bully night. . potence, he longed for mores and the wild dream. Wh ere , like som e ascetic, throned of boundless wealth urged him on. -He made Upon a moss-grown teat, his arrangements, severed the ties of love that Sho sat in the sluulows of the wood, bound the soul of Louisa to his OM; and de- Its little =form to greet. parted from the house of his l youth to sojourn * * *• * * * * in a strange land; promising, at as the only bairn to the wounded heart, that in three years. It was in the spring of the year. The sweet Ile - Were were fast bursting the buds, filling the least he would return and lay the trophies : of a'perfume;;The bright' sunshine had.] his toils at her feet. • ! • - lair: with , Is .. . loosed the rills, and musically they wounotbeir How many thousands, thus possessing ran- wa y through the radient. meadows - and green Mice, idols of food . an d s, mothers, have become groves, and warblers of variegated plumage 1 and devoted sisters, _ dissatisfied made vocal the forest shade 3. It was th chisel when they thenght of the rapidity with which Aof a beautiful day; the glorious-sun was sink.] frtnnee were made in; the bnd of gold, 1113 " ing beneath the horizon in a halo of golden forsaken them all. regaidless of the eers to 1 'light, and the warm breath, of spring filmic lo bo risked, the sufferings: tope endured, and the 1 iden with the aroma or many flowers, 1 " - .e hardships and privationa attendant upon the' wafted to the senses with ravishing delight.-- , voyage. Alas !how did the fond,l Yin Lou--° - g --ti. lln a neatly furnished roOm, in the neat white l isa plead with her husband not to kayo his / cottage von the bank cif the riier, on a bed.of home and besought him by their mutual sic - knees and suffering . , 14y- the wasted form of i plighled Yews, and the love he bore his.first la handsome young girl. : Sparc° twenty sum. born, not to tear himself away (rem them, nnd mots had left their. . impress" upon her brow, wander amid the peril of suchl a an u n d ertaking. vet there were tracts of Buffering and care leg-' She urged epee him the possibility that their : . " ,1 e murmured to. the , 'parting might'be final; and though she might _ ibly Written there " hope and cherish thefend expectatkin of " Alai .dear sister, sh watcher by her bedside, it is three years ago return, and dwell with inte.nse anxiety uP• 614 morning since Theodore left us; and the' on their happy resunion, yet perhapa, she might he 'promised to write to me often,' yet I never never see him more. ; '' ' have heard from him; and did he not promise ," HOW many ionely'grares," said she may !that if alive, he should meet me again just 3 be seen along the whole route to, the golden 1 'years from the morning ho started! Alas Ifear, land; hew many l sleep among.the coral groves lam shall newer see hi m mere on emt h , s . ,_,, of the sleep ocean, whodelast , moments were " Don't give•up in despair," rejoined the ma uncheered by the loving nalnistry of wife or ter; "the bun IS bat sinking to rest, and ere relative, and but the fond remembrance of fa- 1,,,e day closes perhap,s he .will. be with us." miller faces at home cheered on their pathway 1 `ll "Ali; no! it is one week agd yesterday since to the tomb. But he was deaf to all her fond entreaties. the last steamer arrived, Which would give him in The phantom"of wealth and luxury which had more th raised-at his bidding, overshadowed all those home, and 3 - et he has not come." time enough to have reached his Hardly- had the echo of the last repeated tears, and bidding her adieu, he swift lbcomo words of the sufferer died away, ere the distant live and the noble stormier conveyed him far fumbling of acarriage attractisi the attention from friends and home towards the iiesiredint. of rho ,occepants of the cottage. Nearer and ren- .'' ' 1 - nearer it came, till it reached the gate in front Shall we picture to the minal of the reader of the lawn, where it stopped, and a man bear. the anguish of that fend *lie 9 nd.tnether when of a large portmanteau, wound up the gravel. she found herself alone ? Oar pen is inatle t,,,A ly walk, toward the cottage door. That man quote to the task. Often when the sen ""'` was Te. Hi entered the house, and palmed to'other lands, leMring he starry train was to " rule the - night," and' the , pie moon was -met by the father of Louisa, who infermed him of the dangerous state in which she lay. shedding her soft brilliaoev , over the valley,hill , i 1 Rushins past the old man, he entered the room and mountain, and the flowerLs l wore breathing: , whom is was confined, and the words" Lints, forth their.frugranee to the night, which canto 1, 3 ,11 an d .4 Theodore," accompanied by sobs, wafted to the sense upon toe. gentle breath ef I alone broke the stillness of the Beene. ' evening, and rho,music ofithelailvery gushil i.s With thatlast word, the spirit of the gentle fountain's murmur bleadid and ii° ' 4l°li t wi th ! Louisa-passed into another world, and only the the sours end thoughte, would' she sit v the - • s . I cold lifeless form of herhe had loved. open casenteid, with her ,carly'headol boy ""'„...lness,—whom.lie lad, cruetly left alonefor m the sleep in' her lap; and, ker. , thoughti w _ in l A ' ee n r, [sake or gathering dross, remained r t e the al way to the'car, As westinidie ip her bou—w-- 'most-ravin g -Theodore. He had deserd them, the image of her Theodore, end the thought i i and. his loved boy, with.early, waving locks, that he too might be gafing jupon that star, , dimpled cheek, and fond playfulnes, ;no t gone twinkling in, its pristine loveliness, away OP in down to the cold tomb, and he had not been the blue _arch of iliiaven;L-thci same atar, 'that by/ to close his eyes in death. - Her Whom he in days gone, hallowed ty the:memory ot his bad sworn to cheriSh, he had left alone to love,they had watched together---sent a thrill I struggle with thssorrows, cares and troubles of joy to her aching heart.' ;And: then. again, i „ rig .. . re,. to gather chaff. "G old!. geld! ! what the thought would intrude that he perhaps, like i hest tholt doner be.would exclaim,in the ago many others, bad died, and gone to his last i I ay of his spirit.. - "Thou bast severed the fond' resting place 'without a kihdly hand to smooth s ;,,,,,_ 'ties thaehound Me to life; and now mock me, hiii dying pillow, and wenrYl with. "these con- -" 1 with th_y glittering, 'being laugh! ' Tryst, lieting emotions, she would seek vellefiutll thou ; for ir I hadat been•bere they would not ter. - 1 IgittaatirV tl6 _VIDIfg#A. iltto Mitztvithairc, X.gsFlTtattore, ZdaTam XV3 , • have died+-iny darling Willie, and my anal Louisa, M I She wasmy own, my -idol one,. - I loved her as an angel might ; , AO when she died my day my kn,. Was robed with the shadeh of night; Like to the star, the evoningistar, That breaks in beauty o'er the glade, She.shed an influence afar, ' T u Lll death madeadoall her bcatity,fado. " Lo awarding to lierrequest beside little Willie, upon the banks ,ol - the murmuring stream, and all daylong, and ibros the silent night; when the star's' and pile thou's' translucent rays light uP to surround ing landscape, munnurs a requiem by their last resting . place, while a beat white - fence enejeses the spot whero repose the Sacrificed Treas. ures,'S or the True Wealth that was bartered for dross—Gold! ..,1 Pecan 'Mo N. Y. Itecomer,. t-' . , , The little Boy Who ilidiil say ,". Thank- You'!" "-What sorkof boys could_ : itey have been sisterr said Frank. "Rude and Ignorant and thoughtless, II suppose," continued the little fellow, in a highly condemnatorY tone.- . "Nbtao fast, 'rank; lion not sure that they were any of these, except, indeed, thoughtless, no very utiponimon fault in little boys," said Julia, smiling significantly. : 1 . ~. " Well, please tell um about them sister." " Yes; so'llvill; and you may hold this skein l of silk for me to wind, while i talk, • You re member what a grand 'sleigh .rule papa,and I had a short time ago, returning from L.-.:—.. Quite soon alter we started, as w a varo as cendin,g some long hills,where ourgood Light foot was obliged to slaeltim his', pace a little, we 'saw-befOre - us a boy -some" ten . or twelve. years old perhaps, toiling Slowly through the snow, with a heavy basket on his arm, ..Ptipa stopped, when ha camel up With him, and said, pleasantly, 4 Where are* you oding: this cold morning, my little lad?" . "To b ld.-----; two or three miles further," was the'rePiy: , . • "Wouldn't yeti like to -ridor asked papa, 1" I am.going near the village and will take you 1 willingly; Jump in my boy, under this warm Ibuffalo, where Jack Frost can't find you; why, Ihe's - been pinching your ears already." .' .. I So we,mado room-for the boy, . eind-put his., basket away securely, and drove on pg,ein.- _ln . ' a little while we came to the villaw ; and'pa,: pa said to the, boy, "Tell 'tne,where you - live Johnny, and I'll mite you home. l l .",In the red house nest to the - blacksmith's,' la* Johnny. So we drove up to the red house; • (whichlt was somewhat out of our, sours-to do,) and - Johnny sprang out., while :papa basket an his arm. The boy buried forward a Ii ad the heavy t l to gate, toying, "I gnats fat eel!. %Yonder how I came so quick; but not - lona word - of thanks for the favor of the 'ride - nor oven a 'Good morning' .to us." - j - :- .: .".. • . "Why, sister," said Frank, f what.axery-rude . boy!" • _- ' --: '• - "I felt sorryr. replied Julia, quietly, ,"thatl e should be ao negligent df a very.simple.du 'v. Ido not think his -ignorance nor forget "ulne.ss any excuse." .i , _1 - • -' ' "Nor I either," returned!Frank„ with spirit; ho doesn't deserve ever to rido!again." After a few minutes, Franks indignation had rite spentitselt; and he exclaimed; "Now, some more, sister ; yeti havn't told I pie all, have you ;" • I "Only one more now, Frank. !Them was a little boy workinm. very busily in the :play oem, upon a kite. When the frame was ready be found that he had no paper; sb he. went to i . lie library to ask his mother for some.' All paper was in the 'writing desk,' and this lit e boy's sister was very busy indeed, writing letters. - Her brother lingered.atliter side un villing to disturb, her, yet wishing very much t Indlylt him, e, what as h 9 a u t t ro ' h u h a e g . h t : v s a h t paper.h n e t e eL ta d just An d n B o s h t l e i ode- ;looked :h t k o d 7 l o w ls u a lt s p here; and when he expected she would' say; Run away now, I can't ho hinder a moment,' ho smiled pleasantly, instead, d asked ; him I ler,pen piles opened the desk, searChed through I a id I Several piles of paper for the particular kind, Ifind gave her little brother a generous suPply. Then she took her, own .knife, knife, arid somothed i pie frame fOr him, and ,helped pat it together A 1 in a - neater end -stronger manner. The boy i Was delighted,,and said his sister could make; better.kites than any , body else he was sure i et, after all,lie ran hack to the' ,play. robin, I. ithont saying.!thank you."; ~ - Frank bad dropped his head; his face leaked unusually flushbdoltere came a bad knot in ', ilie silk Just then, on which his 'eyes, were fist-1 ned.so earnestly, one would havtisupposed he I, sputed to disintangle the threadlby the mere) Power of his gaze. When, at length, it was 1 quite straightened, and all nicely wound; Itilia 1 , kissed hint, and said in her own loving voice, I dh- I.thank youony little brother for holding the ' silk forme." ,_ . :„,- •.- , . j _i mThere was something at Frank's heart that ade the brighteoloron his cheekburn bright er and " deeper still; bat as ho caught Julia's easant smite, he said, +know wt o yen Mean; Sister. Try me,' now, and, see after this,' if II do not always remember to say 'ithank-. you; Whenever I ouglikter, ', I tr The Sam' referred to in the following ilenip (from the Knickerbocker Ter May) was viciforously . piotis black coachman in the sei 1. , vice .of a placid member of the Society of Friends : . - I Sam' said the old . gentleman; why doee , Thee make an much noise iu praydr? Doesn't, thee know that the Almighty is not far off, • but nigh onto thee ;_ neither is he 'deaf, that he :tn'tiot hear? lie.can hear thee tis well when thee whispers its when thee roar 4 - ' Massa Doctor," replied Sam full of cenfid denee in his' superior theological lore, You read de Scriptera with no kind ob Lion' ' • • . . How So Sam V Why, yew don't forget, 'pears!tO me - how Asap; der,: plain es kin be, Hollered be. dy Mune V _ ' I • - • - -The DoetOr gave up St u n in great despair, for there was no answeringthat argument.? , IlarrisEss.—A crust of bread, pitcher of Water and Jove, 'there' is:happiness for you, whether the day be rainy, or sunny s : js the haart,that undies the ole,wfic t her r thieye.resis upon 4 Potato pateli or a trower r oirden. Heart ' makes bomb precious , ; and it'is the only thing' that can: , ." • ' -, ' . , • A l uz - Itzwr,-,-A'inan turned his , doOrClately; Inxtluso would; hOuse rent. ~A strikiug Proof of feegon. • . . (so in proportion:ais man Was kept inignorance Tient ie:Mita.' 'An infant _at war with igiast 1 !was he farther. removed front a correct under- parent! how could . licipa even find d plaee standing of the nature of his Creator, and, the heart? Withal l.that reekte.ss intrepidity' "looking through a 1 glinis darkly," saw seated elturiniteriAtic of It holtnen .'and. the times, the': . 1 on the throne of Heaven-a monster, in - all the entered - .the. - unequal, contest for Bight, •atii attribute's: of Vengeance and terror. Ills feeble that Gad who will st juSticti.Vindicated; !bless 1 mind mink' .not comprehend the :doctrines posed His omnipotent p:aver and taught him by his, ministers and rulers. Mid in to those. who stregglekrelyin on. Him f.,t -' proportion aatheywere incomprehensible they *W., : - ' . ' - g , - - .. , • ' rrth tilled iris'iris'mind with gloomy inid'fettiftil appre- The fointh day of Yuri, , gave 'birth .6; •hensioni. -In his view, the thrones land pow. the Declaration of Amerimin Independerce, era of earth were nearly allied to - those of Om- and 'as we ihall presently see, ought - tubers; nipotenee,*and to resist the one w'as to ':en- guided as mai of the most important epeeist. counter all the vindictive judgments Of both: iii the history of thOWOrld...l :Welutotu of bit'. Man then was not What Man now la. - :_lie waS one other.. birthday :of 'equal imporhincii - -tit possessed, 'tot tfue,lof 'all then - 01nel Pervert!, Man :end his deathly, and, if, indeed there Lo of mindandreasort that God ever gave, but one, itl Wait 'that: . whieltdinted on thebirtl, those poWers were . distempered and - deStreyed of: the Saleprlof mankind. .. His was isacrifi-, Iby •King.eraft; till: he was bound a slave in cial*mission. Air the' good . of the race,l6.ullevi -1 hateful and corroding chains.' TIM. - light of ate his : Week and. Misty liini from a fallen state.,, i star-eyed &deuce never illumined - hisjerver. The day you pow-Celebrate Saw the. 'amities tednmul,l - to invigorate hie intelleet,., expand of fendalisiejtripped free t off She mind-sut his.GOd-like peweri, -Mid perfectLhisheing.— incubus that had preyed upon his nature tillit Pure Religion, founded - on just and, reasona- had robbed hitt of . everything-assimilating to blo conceptions of Nature, •never threw the imago : after Which ,ho was created: On amend him its; light of sustaining faith; but, in that . dar, trntlia'and, great Principles' were pre. place of: *that, ,welt horrible , superstitions, Claimed; whicii,When uttered, shook, the World vague r and undefined conceptions of.. Nature's and stintledthe 'nations of the earth as with, truths, and Man's natural and unlimited rights. an eartlimmice'sl . fliree. 1 . I - Thousands : of years had .rolled away since ' . • "With all the sirength tbsi atadnesi--- ; • Sian' had asked of God a King—a reqbeat that -. • Leeds the weak." ' .. . Wad granted out of Punishment for the idn'ef up rose those giant minds; with one.desperato . asking if, ~ The primeval freedom of the race struggle, rent the chain that had bolted the was, at that time, thrown away, and that, too, world fast to the• thrones of Vyrants,:and `in for the 'purpose of gratifying that spirit of all the glorY,greathess, power and majesty of Hero-worship so natural to the untutored un- God-like man, they rose triumphant over MI derstandiiig. A King was given him;and the oppOshi,g barriers: - '. ,:, .• - superstitious spirit of the ago clothed him sit would be impessible, my.friends r .to esti with immortality, Arid with Diiee Right.--i Mato. the immeasurable .importance that at ,POinf ftuit period all the.pernicious doctrines taches to that event, and the beneficent conass of kingly sovereignty .had been everywhere . quences that form its legitimate results.- Its taright and carefully studied. What : wonder, bearing upon the destiny of_ thistiatior,Msl then, that after such education had been im- the.. influences that have sprung from it, ins's. pressed for centuries--after it had been" the: be familiar "-is, you as the hietory of your Minn reughly. clothed. upon with -the sanctity of try:, -The worldhas never setti such another . time and:custoiii•—• after it had become censer spectacle aa. the past sevenif-six. years have crated by all the reverence men - hold' forthe presented in this nation.' Anierien in its growth I j past,-and hint shaped itself into . every, depart- and.greatness, seem more a fable than truth. meat of civil polity—l say what wonder that Its magic progress.seems rather the work or after all this, it- should have enslaved the world superhuman agency, and God:only, knowe,-M. and held, man bound to the altar of its power, what . point that ' progress s will , culminate. submissive in aft his nature? Thus yeas man Americans live *century-sin a day,'zied having ; situated previous to - our Revolution. He solved the. peat -problem :of Governuient-- ; understood nothing. of his own inherent pow.' having demonstrated the. power and great'ne.4s ers--tho great idea of the equality of the race of Man, they have elucidated thonature and riever diveltin the speculations oven of visionary substance of his rights, and established them 1 theorists. 1. AS he was taught by his religion. all on a basis that can never tumble. , to worship an unseen God, so was lie. aught . Let - us here inquire what has been the effect Ito reverence 3foriareliS-as . comnaissioned of of- -Our Revolution.on-the-world: No -sooner . God, and Menarchy as the legitimate govern;; had England acknowledged onr independence, meet, ordained by God; to be everyWheret re- than the noble-hearted Frenchmen, mho had cognized en earth. "•.. • ' .• : left their ,homes to fight our battles, returned o -- . titer circarnstanees aided powerfully to to their sine-clad .hilts,'panting- , to partake, in keep him in-submniasion; blurope was, the pa-their own country, of the'emol drau,ght . front rent country of „chilization; For centuries-the, fouetains of :Liberty. . Their generous Feud:disci had influenced all her polity—had hefirtaswelled with enthusiastic emotion, and been the controlling power' in' her her - ,legiala- they rushed, ..headlong to the bloody encothi.: lion, in all, her theory of 'rights, audit) all her !ter. Public opinion, which should be - pure 1 science of : government: .Her states were all ! and kealthy Alt_spcla a time, ran• wild ;• the na-. parcelled originally,**nridlield. by this slavish tion was tuflifuated,,and -all eStablished order tenure., That- doctrine, vested in the head of .was IMMO ellen the surflitio of the bloody cur the nation the 'exclusive 'dcianinion and owner. refit thit flowed through • thestreets'of.:,hur ship of the whole soil; and even ea the Al- :capital. - The impassioned eloquence of Yet mighty is sovereign of the 11 11i 1 1Clit0;althj allows mand ,- Loilvet,ond!Mirubeau, thundered front his subjeets,.Men,, to live thereon, so was the the Tribune, roused the nation to blood.aed - King, or lord, sovereign of all his dominions, massacre in pursuit of Liberty - and Indephd and granted them out to his subjects as re- Mice:. SO great and.suTepieg was the effor wards for fidelity to his person and interests, that when the kingdom.shook teits centre and . and fur :great achievements in his service.— l the Throne was tumbled.. from the _windows Such principles thoroughly indoctrinated, tend-1 of the Palace RoYal, the same elocpuMee that ed strongly to lower Man in his own estima- 1 , moved the resistless tidocoubl not stay it in . tion, and cause him to yield up all his rights.—' time to save the head of a throneless lEing.::-. • or' rather,. to regard hinutelf. as - having - no I The histerEof that period in Eurcipe is a MS-. "On tbo hod of the free . - rights further than the will of the sovereign"torywrittedi in blood, and siglis s and tears.—: . Ant tbo home of tb '9 imare,"- might dispense them. to hiM.- And-suchievon, The people of .Franee were illy prepared-for and that 'shen it sinks down behind our west- 1 he, dared not- regard es rigida, but as. privi, so sudden ri,transition; and when Europabans ; ern hills, and, goes to light up other climes,' a 1 klies '4 41 1114n by the great power, for which died in arms a,guinst the. great Napoleon, and, pall of sadness . veils. its blazing face. .1 he must pour out his eau! in thankfulness and to reStore'MOnerchV to Fratice, he seated hints adoration: j-- -- - . - Seventy-six years ago; andltbhis nation, now Such was the condition of man's estate sev.- I for hislcMintr •• and - his Crown.. The, world. ga s the most pciwerful on earth, was comparative now stretch-, er,t 2 ,, , ...ii_ s years eget •bnit, previous to that time ' zed with die and apprehension . .. The fires ly an: infant. Her settlements, ing away from ocean ;to ocean . and froth the la way had been preparing for the ',civet events - of Liberty were. stnothered; but not - qUenehed. that. followed. •Religious: discus- They burned ;still • the gilded surf.aco neases of perpetual frosts, to Zhu .".land of the I high regions of Abe- Nardi ; tiering in - the fast- 1 sion had 'weakened the . hold of- the Throne of of - Royalty, working - a way, even -under the orange and the : vine,7 wherej , flowers forever I England upon the affectiona of her pooplmond throf es of _distant 3 1onfiretis..'NThe mine was -- bloom and the rosy .air of .spring forever fens 1 the inhuman intolerance that existed between -laid, end_fouryeari ago it exploded at the foot the earth, Were hut feW, feeble and sickly cot-! diTerent.seets hastened a revolution of public of the throne of Lome`Phillippe; carrying . ter:: 1 onies, dependent as a child upon its parent, sentiment. in that country,, by inclining men to ror to the heart of emery Europeantiower. - and like a ehittl,howed• down in spirit and in 'strength:, Those lofty and unconqueratile en. 1 inquire Why- they had . not ;a - right 'co enjoenjoy, France, bmve,generotis,mercurial France,Wait ,1 ), whatever. opinion they pleased •to hold: -in !again free. - .But misfortunes sometimes btide be': previous times Cromwell'had.seized the reins 1 the breve—Liberty was trampled under feet er,gies, which, when loosed, 1 could, ne'ee. of government in the name of Religion—'i Re- Iby the daring usurpations of Louis Napoleon .. I tamed, - were unknoWn te exist, for, like dia.. 1 I ful children, we had never lived:Or movedsaVe 1 9..g . i'"/ ", was the hstfie - e. 1 4 72. 0f his invincible 1 but se true.. as justice lives in' the attributeirof in the the fostering, , palo of -Mother England. ; area - siaes.Wheu therrusited "o'er the field of I . God so trues will *Unit : wearied •.nation ;rise t slaughter,: Carrying. victory* . on "the mints :noain: . - -..,-..p., ~ ,s, ~ .:• . IThe-Dhine. of the _King,and his sinless nature, !their sabres. : The .inciiseretions of Charles, I•• -Poland, bravo end. patrietie•Poland,ded. on • I had never been inestiened, and our duty. as 1 folle%yed by-the des - ions, deeepth•e, and disas- j_by-her Rescinsco; whose - sonfwas fired 'by a gond ribbjects, to yield 'a passhe obedience to of lames; disquieted the Whole 1 spark of: ourßevolution, waS l donme4 foitee ". his* will and Comma.nas, was • everywhere *re. i tr°ds Pelle)" I people, and;prepared the Wayrevelution.-- s S I her flag of Hope tumble front lb e blazilig fem.. eeived and: acknouledged. - At . that time the 3 Religimiscouvulsieris, in . which. the state , lie. I parts of Warsaw; ..dperstlyed in the- pumet. whole world was sleeping that fatal sleep into came invelved,..drove....to : the sheres,.of ...the 1 blood of the nation. , - Butthouglilllation- • which king craft throivs . .thir .subjects of its American continent men who Chose exile only j linty of Poland was lest • iri:the contest her . tihWer. .So fatal is it in its Consequences so thit their rigli ta• of conscience.;could he seen -1 governmentoverthrowm the 'heart oe ler pee. stupefying 'Rion the nature Oftnan, that when bi t e •-ef 'all'!red. They , brok . e away from - all the 'fond r l6. l.ploswas•-..krt, and:Will. Jiro; to Vindiente .its Orme the spell* is on him, it robs 1 latiena Of theirfather-Innd--incMi all those as-; wrongs, and heap woes onthe. hand that Emote poWer.- to reasen—like a Sampson ..in the - lap . us ,p awor , as: an 1 seeiritions around.whickthe heart tilin,,,.ost—lett . . .- -, •-.., • r ',.. •., .-,- ~ ~, 7 . , '-• ' of Delilah, he. sinks, away liehied,swith usint mid ; danger in ‘. ad. 1-: Andilintgair)r, ter°, bravo- as the desert-Il i infant, and falls an easy re,.y to whateverpow- 1 Plent.Y. t i pa n nu . • I j a n h a d. t h e n . ne i.ei. 1 refine, !ind . plaiite . din this wilderness world ti-, On, rose instrength: and.demanded her *free. ler moves . d . 1 las!atationlOr-theiriiosterity. Ali, those were Idoni ss Sho fought till . her star of- Hapt.•went . leninedliiSstrenglkinit *as led 'about like 4 smiled lion, passive becausii his .nature 'was linen of noble mould ! Those were hearts thatl down in blood. She was crush ed bat not con- - . broken, subdued—in 'fact, destroyed, No-, feared only the . wrath of. God; for to - oppease 1 quered.,l. Her eldets arein exile,.her.fields aro where in tub world could there be found an I t, . which they ,saw descending supon, the I desolate,-aed.-her • villageouninhabited . . ;Her . tha illustration cif.their lather,land, they offere d even 'reserreetion morn will come .when the trine " nit Man clothed ;head, of wiiiimi . tho:oonsoioosaoss of his own dignity .1 their fives n sacrifice u pon the' altar, of their ptit...of I freedom • shall sound' throughout ' En-. - and groatnessnan foe in spirit,- untamed' i n I. Wilt.- -MM . can cimtemplate their diameter, ,ropo--wh en kings shall be. -powerless.' Wert bew, Land In.ot feel , the deepest 'admiration. - starred 1 force their.: bloody mandates, and "when*Free- nature, and standing forth great mid free, Iwithin him? ,_ IVere they boldl .Theybowed ,doni's God : shall rear . -his•empire on the ruins I ins. to no MOnarch but Iris - God, and aeknowl, inoro terrors than , a theitand battle• fleids.l of European despotism.. •': , . - '. 1. ..- •.. - 4. edging nu Sovereign bbt his Creator. Everyi i The ivildernesS, the sae,,, / ,: ea and wild:beast-a; ...,.•,In Ireland the 'great struggle of thopeoplo • !'resortedart that'eurining ingenuity cindd "invent, Was ,f ett ,,;,. (disease; deatk.Starvatien, ► all, -. all could riet'an :, roused the sternest sympathies of every Amer., to 'V kings . iiticaurtiere;ll-o . pal themi. hut, cutting asunder those .ties that f ican heart, No•reuntry*cin. the fact, [W.:the the spirit of inquiry and to load upon the mind !Mk the affections ofe i nr nature together, they globe hai suffered-more ivrongonore injustiee i. this incubus Of obedience to " the powers that; - s i n -. launched on the rolling wave—,- ... ~, , ~, •• i nadmore Misery than 'unfortunate Ireland.— - ofl be." And well had they succeeded. _The : "iviii, botirio snibiu, a nd sou oorbe24,t! . I Sootirged . ;by the mereiless hand of. EngliA • disobedience, in consequences and idpriner- 1 f 1 plOvas.ranked above till other - sins that Could IWO tici ::(rd - More, thee, have ruling l araCteria-iliings t her..sons htive,heen earried.;into exile, j be, eominitted, and its-fearful judgments, reek- licS of the men from'whoni tliefetlieri of our 1 her lands irapaverished, and her.,:peoplo,dis t oned - without measure,ss sure to fall e. on th • • I Itevolution.deseended.. -They were medwlioniitresSed.' , Faminerpestiletice and plamun%have . Fiee . - i aunty head.. Ignorance, as . prolbund as nod- persecution ! had driven 110 exile—men school-'swept over her-. tily,her fields have ome a Ii nightlinrkneSi.seitkidOver mind everywhe re , led hi all they icisBitudes nc life,.mee accustom- !Fhernal -house... Ftve.years sinee,lookingbiek and loaded it' doWn with 'the 'dads Supersti- !I'd tO greet sacriffees , and Ithe indat liaznrciouS , ltipen her king.lost. "netionalitV, she • resolved *- :. tions . Which benighted Ideas ;•beget; sMan ., •is 1 naturally a-devotionals lunderta.kino.- 1 _ Persecution retitle thernbigati; j.that i t iabealdberecovereit,:-,..14 the hand of • being,,espeetaity,..in his ~exile...- Misfortunes:. and 1 gleonty . , solitudes I,England:Wila it takertatvity,andlong,anddark, 1 uncultivated and rude estate, and this attribute ' made them ,supe r atiti o n s amt,rolialit on super. 'And drear had been her night of mpuming. -'. .. • of his nature Was seized Upon and tortured to ; ' , Mau agency; consta9t !danger: Made. UMW - 21ITCItELL 'AV4 O- te,.,iiiii, - vai - tiaperic of ini deformity.;_- Mi . ' the . li - wpiciittered by the 1 bold, adventurous; and reckless;_ but atioViiand. 'mortoity, isi•Brite,,,,,4,-,-314.ielimit and others, • mouthsof - those lie regarded inferior only to! beyond 'al - Vtlie . Perfeet equality of their eendi - ', l namesthat,Will enriekthe!S e roll o f fame, with . . theangels—as.ministera direct fromtbe.court . l-trion, with its community opt' sympathy and in-. the Peeltirittion'Of 'AtueriCrin Rigida as their • of. ~Heavenhe heard thunde re d , th e anathe.:!terest,.gaVelolool correct nations of tnq equal-* polar-stare lied on 3 the* generous-hearted the :on mettS ' ' of .Ged'asiraili. o f its of the meek arid the natural rights of man, 'eotintrytnentostrike fer.lteland,their. eciuntry [ - . guilty heads, i those whoshinild" dire , ici rebel =against thelThey mere. ready for any eacrifice - in defense and their,rights:' BruVely they .fought, in the rpoviers of earth, Which were said to be indairi- I of' their opinions; - their! litieqf. or ' e Prlgktexice, .faiii Of : iitioni,. and nobly theY illustrated i ed of I' • kavem . - The Kinl l Could- d o n o wren ,,, Land their rights , f o r, , th f reg ar d6d - ,theio as, theiiilevetiOn to Libeily;lly sitfferiig.,battiali- Was- a'maxim . taught- 1 him from's: bis - mother 7 s 1111 worth living for, and iflost, they . - would not Mont fret - till eine; and kindiptkruilfnatisavend • li ~ " it wasinfusedinto hiSnatitta end under'.l..§orYive A•heir!iran. ~, Wie-110,a•A 'Often, Wtt heon-: th , all; OhaaochitiOns 140.. t, eluSter.itiound and ' standingthrongltevery 'avenue of edneational , temp tang the 4evelittiOn t - heett. led aerionilir , { elieei th4ntliwriV. - cr . - .21ife,,i.. Noble",inibt !: the Prejudiees-.he up full :bent tO. l belieyelito regard it lis a reeklesSedventure cifreekleisa frenienthiancoif „their deeds .. sind..ilooni . ! .Will suckpernieioue ilectrinesdoetrines',.that m.: :thenovho were • driVen. to a point WheretheylliVe: MAO heerts - .Of their.eenntrynien; lithe tared and deatioied the ..t ai n d; an 4 t,,nildv e d ; resolved.tosidt.theieliyes dearly, as , possible, 1 SyrnehultieS of patriettialreyer the Wold r . andi ,the person. , , , ' _, _ . ~ : ..„ ~,, ~ [rather than the doliberate e eenvietion entertain-1W the:Suturei tnent . :feerfulle - will it' avenge A' s 'isdi s h l i co 161 3 euchiiiihneoitethe Viete; led of EMI" triutivh itudits ultimate and cone : n. 1 their - wtongi. - : Creelted..nt.ltome, harpeOple, ~:. . ~ ... . . . NEw 3111.1 - ono, July 5, 1852 Bot--In accordance with the expressed Avish of a large portion of our citizens, we respect fully solicit the publicatin of the Oration'ile livered by you, in this plate; en the "3dof July. • Youth , Q.-PRATT, „ •1, P. F.-DADGER, 31.-nuanrri, i S. LITTLE, . b. B. LITTLE,. t.:'II:ARDLNG, if., •-• RILAS ALDRICiIi To E B.'ctt,tsl4 Esq. 1 • _ MoviaosE,4uiy,lo,' 1852. GaNi•timEN=-Your . note of ;the sth' instant Was received. ' The ()ration which yen request for-publica. thin, was prepared,"as you are aware, on, .but two or 1 throodaya . notice, and, in the midst'ef buainesS cares. , "Under - suchi circumstances, I should 'feel - ullyat liberty to decline your r• .questydid I not recognize it as coming : from those whom 1 cannot suspecCof insincerity, or as . wiShing,te tender me a, mere.formality." I have no time' to revise it. for the public, eye, and you '-must . therefore take it with its load of im_perfectious & - - Ilueakin,g you,gentlemen, - fOr your kind at. JentionS, - I atu truly your friend, • l'E. B. Crust. Messrs. Plum Bunartv, and others. M FRlMins-=Responsive to your invitation, I meet you hero to-day. I look around .and, behold en every, side those, smile-lit faces that, speaking, the unmistakable language of the soul, tell me of free, full, and 'beundinghoPes, of happy and perelMnce iixiiectaint-licarts. • I . can but see that, for the time at least; you have banished each corroding care, each-thought 'that might tear the clustering joys of a day asunder, audience a licerated..tyound to fret land- bleed,'_ and, roil the puret current of the . present hour. 'Tis well; my friends, that you. are thus happy.; It beconses.the day, the occa sion, the event you Are hero to commemorate, that gladness--the Starlight of our existence, the oasis in tho!world-Wdd - desert of life-;-the sun that, shining but a feeble hour; lights- up the pathway. of long years; and scatters all the glories that - deck lifc's journey, around-the al tarof.the Soul-4 say ills fitting the occasion - 1 flint Stich a star, that such a Sun, should _now lieam awhihi ort-you. I joy irb . your gladness, ,I,hopo- with- your hopes--thci - Ortson that goes Swelling - upwards .from your; iheartrof hearts, tn ecti - respondik.a . cadences from mind._ Shall I ask whit cause ha,4 - tnoved you to asSemble , here to-day? and Why I see these 1 unmistakable endemics - of happiness around I me? Shall Igo further, and .risk what pur , pose von have - -in view, What object to serve, by laying aside, as-of :limaller necouritd all the business of 'life, and meeting here to- .gother ? - Tell IN.-what - impulse-- has. -thus.l moved you ;Ali, I need not ask. Time in its gliding course, has Again .brought round the great Sabbath of Atnericandfidependeneo: tho morning sun, that gilded year eastern hills, ushered in the natal day 'of American nation ality ; it looked down and smiled all. over this land of bravo and , tree heart', and. waked to life again the active, remembrahco of a nation's God-blessed 'struggle. That, sun, in, all its course, as it goes eirelin,g round the world, lights. none other such land as this. It shines on all below, but methinks it brighter gluws sob out of hien ,apr9_ntid ~~~ia~~z~e_ CDTEetlan.