;'Otrittge , 4 : : : ol)liztst, Vallti.Ur, tine of democratic Polit y. Has the - doe- , trines of the oppoiition prevailed, the MWsis- 1 sippi river would no is be in tbe possession of France of-England; 1 The Slates of Louisian a, Missouri, Arkansan, lowa, ltild the Territo ries of 'Nebraska, kausas, and ' Minnesota, would not be ours, but t eotnp!Ose a part Of •a ~ , ,jealous; if-not a hostile power; ' Then,. iellab - _ • . itants would not-eujOy the blisiinos of a !free 14 . ptto w -ortiziatis6F CONlNEeuctrr: government • .aud-who, at this day, will dare This is my firstTtisit to the New England I to.say that this measure of ithe democracy • States, and' I should do-injustice to -my feel-, was unwise, or who Would tts.k: to hav4 4(S MO were I! not to express to ydh the gratifi- I many flourishing S,:t'ates 'driven out of": the cation exciteci.bvihe frank hospitably of the! Union, 1 . ',. • • .peoPle,.and by .ilitvitieuceit of •general: pros- I ~- 1, . ;,„ ' I;uring the administration! of Mr. Madison perityand o.otnfort Which I ha:; e , me t a l' es . . ery 1 the great issue was One of war' with.Enghtnd. p9int. _'lour coupiry,.naterally rugged, has I When that insuleht power claimed the light : yielded to th ineuences of industry and .art, I to search : Amelic,an ivessels on the high Teas, tuntililta exterior is beautiful and its produc- 1 1 and press Ainericaulcitizensinto the ranks of ti6tis abundant: Your • maniifitcturitor es- i her servile urtny,'-the great heart of• the; nit '.l.!,;ialtinents,,itgreat variety; the evid'etices !'ion repelled the. indivnitv. !The enemitis -of tat,::.- a . • - -s . ,ti .. , • the democratic partY; in the :main, sure a!-- -oriiadustry, are ~,,'..-d intotsp e rsed w ith tha i schOol-house, the church, •and th e asylum,, gainst the declaration of war. Seine of whom e Olems ocintelligence, - religion, and shad- I went EU far as to inent in ytineowitStatb, at tyi 1 - - • . ; Hartford, tO•plot resistance,!if not treastin.— must, beg you .to believe that '' l l havtf , ),But war came and tventitiid . who will!, say • conic amongst' von in no spirit . of vanity. I I now that it.was notlthe true policy. of: this . do' not believe Lean -tell Vou anything Wftieli nation to have it ! dbrits progress. and 'l6ut: tied hare not h e ard, before, or tell it better.—,l sequences. it honored our . ilag, elevated' our • 'Mil presence is rather to - manifest the: . de d.p 1 char:Utter. as a walikg peopl, fixed more [firm soli:64lllde which the democracy 6f the old 1 ly the position of to govern m ent as one of li:CYstone feel for the fate. of their brethren 01'1 the'laotily cf nations; and settled great ; - iules Colinectical, just now engaged in a ' terrible lof nations:l intertaitti•se and comity, which in. Strangle With the.eotunion enemy. I would i now, i t .-a_speeted by -al. ~ . . ,- . , itidithe demortmey if I had the power._ I I The I . ititiods of theadministration of Mr. il;0F.0. - 2,ertiiiLly persuade. you -to join that I Monroe and the yoUtiger Adatu. , were not so ., party and maintain 1:0-... principles.. :-• I remarkable for partizan i s stres Arid ,great re, i , . 1• " am; be:sides, persuaded that Intercou \ r 1 suits. .. Loder the fyitaer, . the Territory of- otitis kind; between. the people of the - several i Florida, n o w a Siate,,tva l .: acquired.. Gant:nil St: es' our ,social and poi serdiim f tits. to exercise: it must valuta- I J:tek'soa 'was the twit President,.and• during „, cnee upon ~ , ry mati' and re- 11:s teitn the quesiiin of a tiationii bank was lotions. Its - et,l' , ..lia temieney is to imnOve 1 the goiat issue. lbe opposition held; thr.t. ertO a r nd pii.jutlice, and to unite us.,in bonds !such an institution was ii,dispeable tO t_l: ofiniperishable fraternity. Why sbotddit be i business of the cotiqu,_tli:lt we IthiSt.:ll:Vii:. btfierwi.se !, l'he''ilmnnarr line dividing la great regulator of the currency, of eri eha n .. - the:States do not mark7thelitutts of a. people Fig ! .-o._ aud i'alues. 8..1., WLeU fume Panic attempt itrangeN toeachother; nor are they liitria i . ed le :ciliate the, Iptilitics or the country, saints or deep chti's.ms, :la.:they may net' ll . ' be !Jackt•tin detertni.,ned Ito i eiti 1:q 0 it ; and it hen passed. We are:: mainly the '.decendants of I its aloptialiceS Lad secured :the passagu .lof 'tt• thai same parentage; heirs to a common In- 1 re-charter through ICongtess, that 'man' of lieritanEe, aetuated lii similar :notices and i iron will put his heel on it. The sem:a:hit?! impu,ses, and protected by the smile general I produced by the. act_ was aivful. The. cry of laws., . - ' •__ .! \ .I rnin, and tyranny was 'heard in ,all parts of ' .. . .4 am gratified to - find so many of the dent- I theland.. Old v.-onien and political hypoch.- t.ct'ats of Connecticut in council on. this be- I tnitiriaesowere in- hYsteriesl 17:tie. commit- .asliOii. It is the 'tight of freemen. It isa_J tees %vele seen wending their way to the atirished feature o our republican system , I White House to'reinonstrate and init,loe. .. that has niad,e su di enure. ellinz ton . ether , l 1.14 all theycoul d,-,- kret'fidin the Old Illero P 1 .• - proper and necessary. ,The,elective franchise' l i was , a firm declaration of ! - wholesoine truthlz. - , the medium of self-g6yernment, makes each , toticaiag the futureitrade and commute-a and _ Citizen a component part bf the government; i eurreuey•of the country, evincing a. foresight Feted with iiriOleges and pierogatives, and .1 on hil part which I have :vier regarded . ;ms elothedlwithrelspi - insitalities. It is not ouiy t , m o re 'wonderful thaii-Lis.aehievemeirts on the tour privilege, to vote, but it is your ".luty to:rtield'of •buttie. Bat now the hank iz; rar;:ed ;in do; so, and to understand, as ta r .as practica- !iobsoi`ote idea ; its former •advocate.s• concede ble, the consequences of the suffrage -you are' the wisdom of the policy - Jhat terminated its about to cast..--.!' - i existence. Many 'pther .. .xreat things. were •. As an advocate,of 114,deincteratic party, I i done by J:fekson.: ,Whe,:iithe french Itesita set out writethis gencral.propo:sition, that the . ; Led to pay, J itekt•cd - said ',i` by the Eteuali," _bast interasts'of the nation require the aseen !rind the Money came. Wiwi' a sovereign daney of itts principles a:rJ, .pOlicy,. ant the ! State, dissatisfied With 41e: revenue !laws, entire prostration of the 'nondescript, upposi- ;-threatened resistance; the Isaine potent 1:: - Voice . thin, The deinoeratie- party. is not only tliel-prOdited I , eace. Under !the autitinist'iation oldest, but. it is The pa re:, t and,,,thettiost pa- ',; of Mr. Van Buren,', the .4.l.ititreastiry - Was a triotic pnlitial . organization that has' ever (realing is..,ove. The pure and sword' were existed in the country. It i, the of:lir:tarty ; nute, , . of alarm. But this!issue has been ,;et.- .-tioiv inexistence, timintaiuizig,.:.principles and 1 tied ii; ourfavor. The institution has Vro'rk a pplicy applicable to all parts of the Ultion.l-ed.welh and the sword hits been onleily, I. The scene before us is a s.:iiitiful ill str:ltion i. - : - In 1510 our °Po:t oents attained Power -,':V i LTWai: ~tlicits-, SP /ECU, • Delivered by EX-GOVERNOR BIGLER, at Staniford'anci 'Hartford, Corn. of its nationality. One of your guests on this ecciasion, Cal. Orr ; • is from. South Carolina, ioiOriginal State on the soutlern boundary , . • AuOther, Senator Seller, is. from California, the youngest mem_ber-of the family, on the shores Of the Pacific, distant three thousand • miles or mure: and myself ; from --the- Key stone of the Arch, -- --Avlser the Lleclaration. of • Indepeudenc,e iias adopted, and the Constitu tionffratuefl and 'yet, our principles aid doc trines are in perfect harmony .on every topio ; - indhave been enthusiastically eiduraced by . the . clemocracy of New England. t. pas ..struggles, though oceasioually suffering de 4cat„ in the end its policy has - been svaiued bT experience and popular will. I oppo sing party, by Whatever name known; . has been as adiformly ix•rong. :Whatever they did _when in power had to be undone ; what ever they. objected to bas . proved to be and proper Sur the country. Now we com mon sense peOple think that, for these rea son!! alone, the dethoeratic party is entitled to theoonfidenceand patronage of the peo ple.', We never employ tire mechanic:: or ar tist the second time, who . has cuined the:bus .'irieaS the and • the rule is just as ., as ll good when applied to tile. science of govera meat. These:gentlemen Lave always-failed. They did so in mY State, and in y.uur state, and:m• the,. whole nation ; and now ..they ill have iheLliidness 'to ask ;in other 'opportuni ty. :The lesson's of - experience . dre not : to be trifled with in this.-way. 13 . 0t . for_the evidence of sotne of these asser tioaSr. .Tliotnasjelierson was the author of our faith, arid our first leader. lie' had a great struggle with Alexander ilandlion,.the able: leader of the *leral partr at the . mo li the government Wafirst shaped.. The .latter -was the advpnate of a. system ‘to limited monarchy .; he a President t 9 r life,and senators for life, aud7otber lea ' tures o:.'itsistent with a powerful central sys tem he maintained that the Briiisb Govern-. ,ment presente&tiie besv,tnedel the world had ever seen; but the views or Ootrerson prevail; ed, and hence our present reptesentative, Sys; Party lines 'were ,not clearly drawn', ;Itaw'ever, uutil Adams.. benatne . Prosident.-- His.eleetiGa was catriumpli of the enemies of _Jeffersoulan ci - einocraey. The acts,ef Isis a d tu i t stration were the alum and -sedi4cin larva. LtndPrthe fornaer i it required fourteen veatsprobatip to become a citizen . of :the United iitates,,and mid& the hate), a . . citiietrwas liable to be laLed, or banished, front the count:l, for words s i :trkt! ;against thepresident and other offleers ''tile guy oninient- Under .this feature citizens'. trout Boles aounty, now the Gibraltar of democra tyin Pennsylvania, were .piinished. •But. 16141:.1.5tr. Jeffer.,on came into the Presiden tial''Oht4r, these laws Were repealed. • Were in . 4oitenee at . time, some of,, the preseriVAinetnies' of 'the deMonntti6 . . ?Oily would dan4el-.of the penalty; • linder.4iilie administration:the :great. contest wai)o','irittreuee tit) the acquisition Of thfiTerrituiy:.4:l.:Katisiatt. oppoiition. deri 4 . 3 u511 1 A40..1W 1 i4 46 °.4 5 a t r9 4 i g a l witgl• ef,therlie money / fluid. a rec lessextettge4 - she our goveitunent...- The _Prow. teenfie4 c .:WiCtikah of this kind;- and the .17. i- • truth, sad : even efie pulpit; enheed •the notes of alarm. But the fu retinae Was Made, and. whO . can count the..vulus of this sivele sfea once more. Corning in :tarouzir a ki - mi of politkal pbreuzy,th.'v had a long progratronc tail liand.Whatdid theY d>'l Contraryc'to , . their pledges they-attempted 'to fasten eiroth; er bank upon the cOunt:ry. -.They did pass a .bankrupit act, which in the,:sliort space:of one year wit ? ed out. Imndrcd4 of millions of bone_* was then repiialed, in accordance -with the indignant Voice of the traioni • The issnes on the questionof the tariff ; so. promi nent at that.tin - _ , , blaVe l an been settles in ae .cordince with democratic policy. The next great issue was the 1 annexation of Test.. Tine-measure was suPpo rted b 1 the SeMocra cy, and resisted by snot of the opposition.-- - -1 But who, arnonmithern bow,will.say .. th'4t Tex as ought not to be ours!? - Who regrets her admission into the Union, save only a few fa natics? The oppwitiVit said war with Mexi-. co would follow, cad' it did follow', This wit, the only hit,they, hilid made. for 4 long time.. War did comatenee by the act' of Mexico, and-what then I Why . the Opposi tion press again teemed -with d e ntlo , ;_.iati on; * a a- inst. the President iind his party. The . war wag denounced as unjhst and aggresSive on our part. The rostrian and the pulpit. again relived the alarm, and joined in defaming the government. -.. EvenHmerribers of Congress * l ent so far as to say ,hat American Soldiers, in Mexico should be - 4.i x elevated with Aduady bands - to hospitable graves." But the great heart Of the nation initiated in unison- with the . r , overntnnt, and Sta"te after Stat l corn t 0 • Iprivy after comp fly; gild mail- after umn - ten I deted. their services to President.-- The pee I tack. Was a priaud on e, and.ristotiutled, Gre4 :. i li . 1 • • 1 , ..; • - 1 n,aim and ot x r ,,. A lou s powers. The. -wat .: I was a 'trier anti a brilliant l.•ne r and peace was. I made on our tams.. 'llad The polick: of the . opposition prevailed,, - Tex is, long ere this, -, would have been fOrded into an alliance With England or France; and California, the rich est State in the Union, so - wondeLful in; he'r part growth,' sfud Ipromist for • the; future, - would-still be an integral part of the degra ded republic of-MexicO,-and be inhabited only - . , .by au:ignorant .and 'imbecile - people. lad': the detnoc.rany no :other claim to the favor of .1 the people, this .40icyetrient . ttleue ,should Se-:. 1 cure them Inant.years of, aseeadari j ey . and rule. ,But all .the oldisSues have `ben set- : tied in favor of the democracy.. Indeed, - had 3 it-been Abe. avo wed, pUrpose 'of the opPositioa .1 to be .uniformily ,'vviong on every question,. whether of foreigurelitrons of domestic. con cern, of peace or war,. they could: ...net...have. succeeded, so well. - Of nil: the measures they ever proposed there is not now a' vestige of, one.to - be found:in-the policy of ill. Country. One by one„ - in tiara, their 'hobbies '}lave fall-1 en at ,the, „baud Of time ; 'been . discardedby ' 'the -peopie, mai , -shotidoned .hy.their authors: it-will be so with. those now pewiinO. . Not i only . are 'their- hObbien One, but some of .the :i old parties are gone tibio. It was the sag,a,c ions Webster who wr+te, that after 1852 the '.;: 4, (arty would existin:history...only, .and- i Ire ,bave the vetrification of-his: prediOtioa.. !,1 -.Xol ...fellow-A l ,i tizertS, what . - L-wish',., in • .ini-.1 .press upon youi. mitids is this :.Th4..in this tang bistorh . , *044 - =ay.: Bn' importatitsl :.epoch,-.there , - vet • was a .. time -arfien Ahil • - demoOratio pa . y Aceopied a noblerisosition 'than - just no - „. There paver; was' Ia - tinaii• t m he c4 t e tat " ion, n ; tl it a n i d 6 l.! t w h h e e pesce n its.iscituaenipdmpe4edcy..swoefs, WEEKLY 3OURNAL--:EVOTED TO POLITICS, NE 'S, LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, SCIENCE, I iA,ND MUMMY. , . am - "quite sere I - have never seen the day I when I was so proud of my huMble member ship with it. = En a .distinct sttluggle - for the constitutional lights of the States, and the fights of the Citizen! of each.-Suite, the vir tues-of this old parts are best reflected. My friend, Senator Weller, says, that the old op-,1 position , party was only intend d to perform thoiliee of a - •br,ake ou the track. When democratic hvomotion got ted high, the op , answered for a brake. I I have' coul : pared it to a dead Weight. one . skills of I prt'gress. N'i* . e. are rapidly approachiMY a Presider', fiat contest whichwill inVolv . ervital issues.- 1 The democracy will b% - 4arraved on one side, and the c'ombined element of' fituataeisin-and bigotry on the other. Black fiepubliettuisin alias abolitionism, will tionipo4e one wing of the-enemy and know-nothingisin the other; and notwithstanding the striking dissimilar ity- in the character of these j organizations, and the doctrines they hold, predict their United action against us in rtbe Northern States. -lint' I not witnessed this humiliating union 'in my own - state, and did I not see ev idorces of it in yours, 1 - in o it-tW hasitate to ex press this-opinion. But as %vas the 'street in Pennsylvania, soltrust - it will prove in Con necticut, and, that a large 'minber_of the best men of the Old 11 hig party . kvill, 'by such means, Ini induced to juin the democracy. . • , ;N o w, let us analyze the ele'nent..s of these two-parties for a Inomeat, am: see how far ' their tillioil wilt Le consistent. with 'decency -and, common sstiset The Abolitionists we'd :ivies: the exi4etr i :•iou of slavery ; ' they .cutild sever the rdiackles of the Slag' ; they would ..1%.e 'i'm e-reater -political and social rights J . atl oppoi utilities ;- and this-4g. would Cu because they S:il - it. is 11:11rialli) and yliilitli. tilTOpii.t. 1: 1 .1e r(now-notitingsi 'on 'the other.' 1 .1..11..1, s..a"k tu-ma:lie hirtlr4,l;te' - - had religious 4.. belief a test ,for civil ollice,ata nit these .ptin piple.s would - disfranchise the 'foreign-Imm a=id Catholii; Citizen. They ?Would humiliate this large elass of white - eitiz4is by 'sinking thent below . , the condition of their, tiCiglibors. The latter Move in - daiknessi andereey, -- ---s -wnilst the Abolitionests act MI daylight, pro nitligatin:r their sentiments ci-er where with pis:Full:lr 'boldness.- .Who woad venture to predict ttiatthese two parties . .itild fraternizl imagine them in juNtairoSition. , With a shade of white ou one side, and a shade of black Ontlie other. The-.onej seeking the el-. ovation of the colored man, and 'the other eoncerited exceedingly for the, humiliation of white: people. The iiitimph lUf abolitionistnl is the tiiuuiph of tlit , _,colored Trace. The tri--i timpli of know:nothing,isin is -olves the deg, i redation of'a large class of vc ate citizens i : But, effensive as 'the spectal.de may seem, you are.'bonitd to- witness it.i . I witnesseclit in Pennsvl% - ania in 185-1, Midi again in 1855. At-the efeaion in the hate' year, each of these',wail's presented theii candidate for cimil commissitmer, a Know-Inothing and.nn Abolitionit. or Republieau,set that each. voter might'espress his pectiliar ' hews. Bat, on i the &V eve of et:lion, the l aders withdrew the nnmes 'of thew gentlemen . and presented another in H their steal; .the willing etn'oedi '-- Meat of ail 'the isms, and the tea=s of electors found- them-dves in a. .position where they had to take the whole dose' er melting, The Iforeign•.born or Catholic al.' litionist or re- I publican could net . retied his cli-isiltql i views without, at the. same Itittie, etalorsinti'' i the doctrines of the know-hOthings, .Which I were intended to prescribe illiin front civil i t Pince.: The know-nothing, on the other-baud however national his views, c=ould not declare his principles without speaktlig in a voice for* abolitionism also. s - The' result of this Shame less -attempt to prostitute th ballot-boi was 1 a dernot',latie triumph. A large element of th dissoNing Whig party 4crultt pot 'stand : dissolving th whole! dose at one time;land. they: came ove. to our ranks.; .and I l ideipbt not such will te-the result in Connectiteut. -', Alit let :us kook- at these p:rtiei separately, and inquire-what good thing each would do fur the coitntry.: And we' s i hould not neg lect to no , t ice that they are the two , parties neringt Mi;ch Washington, I 'lib wonderful , ~. - , . forei , ight, ;admonished the - -peo4le in ' , kis fare well-address; For one is a -ecre.ts:ot'net.y, to accPmPish:politicnl or prirtil.vin ends,and the other is clearly geographic:ll in its-or:iiiiza tion. Reind'thei,address fora yourselves, and see how striking , the application. First, then comes the Befell:x:1n 'or abOition party. It is- (Ili tainly much older, if lot much . better A-snotV •inemts I.: an i ts etappeer. - Its - , are asso ciafed with: my earliest ice° leutitMs of Intuit -leaf_ Affairs.' It has ta:e.ntdilligent in its latri4ntatiouS over the evils! of slavery ; and 11'1W-hewn - Mid the unhappy ondition 'of the `colored rnce in this countryffor along_ time; i brit. has long failed to pre s tint, for .the con-1 sideration of the 'people, e ther a legal or 1 practical= remedy. When ) ressed to answer the question, the' most lani4tienr-will admit, that as eitiz:ens of a free Strite, they -have no. legal right to interfere with i the institution ; that it is 'the. - clear constilimional right of each State to have it or not ; nor 'will - , they .claim that the,States have failed . to _claim this right.. : When the Constitution .was adopted, all' the States, save 'one, - embraced slasery.;, Now - we have fifteen slave and Six teen.free States. Conneetieitt and 'Pennsyl vania have abolished it: Yirginia and Mtu yland have ; retained it. The people of the latter StateS have no proper right to complain lo•ainist the action of those of the former:, and rs vice.veriu, Nor Will it do to say that con- Statit -mid hitteeNlenunciation by the people of OneState.sigaiust the institutions of a tether is' no -interference ; barren ti, it is of pratical results; it, is stilt .fruitful of !ill - ,feeling. The 'certain tendeocy bi which to alienate the , feelings ;of the-people or the several State;s, and, at thegatne time, 'defeat the end in view. 1 !'Were the. people of Pennsylvania to ilidalge in- unkind critici sms on = yOur- institutions, I; 1 atn.sure the only tendency would be to force' I you to Cherish them the' more closely.' Such has been die only effect of politiod abolition- . ;loth. When-southeru inen,withOlity at their head, started the ColonizatiimSociety, -what did the, abOlitioni§ta di)? :Did they second the, Lnoveknent I . By no i meana. ' .Nothing would satisfy "them but immediate and yn ,cunditienal . emancipation. j , •Their Jw,turers commenced .to the people,and their colportettrii . tret*Sent into 1.411 ' -parta„:44 the Union' With inflammatory .dcicumento,. to no comOlisli,tbis end. :. i l'he . consequence( wad, -that the :' to' lather° . pecTla 1 became.:aar-med and receded, from : the positloa they -had tak ph., - .llia 'opportunities 4 4.1te..-aleves were leatrieted,i' thew education pegleauxi:aud the southern - *pie constrained to adhere to 'their oonetithtionat right . to hal'e the institution 'Satt - crse, 3itsqu ellanitzt Cottittit; Venn'a, Cliarsha r, °ruing, !Elan 1, 1650. • • with increuseal tenacity.. So. much for the 'folly of interfertng without - a propetright to do :se. But fltippose no constitutional -obsta cle intervene 4, or that the South .should agree to innti.:ipate . the slaves at a certain period, providd they were taken away or maintained, that could be done? I Who 'would erhplo . 4 clothe, and feed these . helpless :beings? How many - would r M aSSaal LI tt S 'take ? How inauy would Ohio take ? • How many would 4 , ennstilvania , and C - Ounecticut take.? Not ?.nuss But if they Could be brought Norkb, in . what particular will their condition - 64 improved? Will they live !better I Wijl they have:better ideas oreiv- Ilization. and Christianity? Will .•theY be elevated intiSe scale - of moral being? The !;answer to alli tlieSt: questions is, .to. 4 certain extent s -furnished in the pitablo condition •of the free blacks: True,,, ltere are those who Would be wifling tv give. the negro equal so cial, and political condition with the :AnglO saxon ; but I ntu not one of those, and .have no patience -..eveti to. discuss this' otrevi v t , idea. • What then should Ihese abolitionists Htio ? Wity,:irThud their own business.: That is ge w era ily ipso-14a61e. •Many get • rich in _ that way. They Are. not accountable in any 'way . ro [ the fivrongs of slavery. . Nor should people of New England forget that they had-an :igency in propagating the inAitu tion.. Thetrrdelegates in the convention that !nude the pr scut constitution, cousetited to the cur:tine:Mee of the slave trade. Prior to that bell_ this- disgraceful traffic had - been by the States of Virginiri, Maryland, end North' Carolina. All the -New Engladd . States voted for the clause con tinuing the •rat - le up to 1803, whjlst. Virginia and lielawarii voted,aertinst it. It. was this trade that lirBt propagated the institution and regulated ill growth. For the increase du ring that leng- period, the New England States are ialgely.respo . nsible,-e , nd..thie fact should at least constrain them to etntritabb; view of this;vexed question.. The . extent of - the in , tituthin is not to be measured by, the territory ovlr which it may' . spread, but by the number lof beings in .biondage. Were I a -citizen of lillilSllo3 7 . I S11.0111(1 ..vote .irgainst slavery; but! in doing so,. I would ' , trot feel that 1. - was 14ssening the number of slaves, or doing them h specialkindeess. . Nor wonld the restore:don of the: southern slaves to the condition of their ancestors in Africa better their condition. The change would reduce there to the low state of barbarism, and the aceovontd_ be an outrage upon he inanity.' But my object is only to suggest these idelis,...to elaborate them.. , 1 have no dectrimOto preseni . -n this . ! point of the .subject. . I imly - wish those whofire e6nstant ly exereiseJlon the question; t•r point out the remedy 't, to tell us what can. be done.— Nor would s dissolution of the . Union free the slaves..? The': southern States , would go together, and of course retain the institution, - so lung as ii, t might be the pleasnre . at the people, • . . . , • . . The fugitive slave laW is °one of. the' favor ite hobbies ° Of the Republican party, and I :desire to Call your attention to the inevitable consequeuces of their doetrieei,for a niOnlelir This' is a qiieslion of olsrying or . dimbeyine• the letter of the constitutiou, and. the Reptil7-. licans, or Abulitiunists, iii the main favor re sistence.. ? t rite constitution declares, that "'no persoulheld to service or labor in one State, midir the laws thereof, escaping into another, shell, it: consequence Of any law o. regulation•Oerein; tie, discharged frump such service or Irib ,r, butt shall be delivered up on claim of IV) party .to whore such service ce labor may be due..". These are. very ;explieit terms.. They furnish, a distinct guarantee to the•eilizenu of the slave-holdin g 'States, that the fugitive should be returned, and 'made it the clear dtjty of .Congsess to devise means to carry out the goaditiun. The Union is the offspring . of.. the constitution. Time, two are ireeparatale; The forper could not survive the destrnetiou of. the latter. Nor can the constitution be maintaiued in part, sad .dis a•egarde.td iq j part. It must be respected as a" wjerie. ° Tl4ose who resist the -leiter , of any part -iif .th etcoustitution, virtually repudiate 11 the whole .MI4 :those who do this; rebel against both races, and of maukind generally. 'Those wito exclaim agaiust.tbe law with so much veheinenee, should remember that it is the creature. of the - Constitutiou,.und Whilst it unty not b 4: perfect, it is net probable that it will o inotie than return all the fugitive; were it to o lest, it would no be what the consti tution'inteialed.: The law of 1793, though very similar to that now in existence, excited but little resistance at the 'time. It pitSseu the Senatewithout.a, division,. and receik.d t 5 out of 30 votes in the Hoare of Repre reutativesil - Massitchus.etts east 6 votes fur it, l and one against it.. But now Other councils prevail, and every man who says this part of ,thc constitution must be carried out, is de ,nouneed a .” negro-driver." ' ' • ' . . But I mirst speak of the question of slavery 1 in the terr4ories• This has long been a . topiel of angry eimttoveriy in Congress: The ques i tion was rdg,ulated -in what was known as the NurthWesteru Territory, by the ordinance Of. 1787, a kied•of eoinpliet between the people of the Territory, the" State of Virginia, and • the Uui teal States under - the first confederacy. In the LO'frisiana Territory •it .was disposed of . by the ;adoption of what , is faMiliarly known as tler . Missouri Compromise—an act of Congrestdeclaring that slavery' shOuld not extend north of 36. degrees 30 mitintes.-,--- When Testis was trequired,' the question was disposed oe, in the same- way. The acquisi,- sition of nay territory from 'Mexico, -at the close of tie war, presented the question again. All effort waiv . inade'to dispose of the controversy by:extending the Missouri line to the Pacific ',Oecau,,hat the propviitiou was. rejected, amid mainly by the votes- of the North..Thineeessity far some. Other mode of adjusttint;waS thus preienta' The - party now eouiplainio,,cr-most of the Nebriska law, - contributed toithe creation of. this,Pectissity by their 1444 to the Ilissouri line. There seemed to lie no altertuntive left but to . refer the who:o .4 ue4ion to the-people of the.terri -torie,s. . Oily, Casa; Webster, and others rec ognized. this pdliey in the compromise acts of 1850, and kola for this principle that the democrotio4tarty are now contending--the bil;nd doctrine of, non•irlierseutiMi by 'con.: gr'ess,antr the right of the people in the ter ritoriee-to deCidc,the:queiltion for. themselves, Non the liritOphi "of _self-gevernment. - Ai a candidate'Oefoie:, the 'people, I . maintained , thia'doethrie';l thought it sound in theory, and that . itleauld. net:&Win practice, "-think 40 still. Withimt stopping' to' inquire hOW faeCongiees.might legally . interfere. I was corsinced 014 It was wise ' for . Congress to . forbear: The !Principle of non-iuterVention, or popular sovereignty in thenterritnilesiis in beautiful haruMny with. our whole republi can .sstetn. ',Tae inherent ..right , of c sert o government, and the capacity to:` 'exreises . :that right, are Mot i determined by geogarph kat lines. .A tinsels none the, les , icompetent because he resides in a- territory, nor, are his •l reserved rightslunder the constitution less.--- Many of yeirrlici)ghbors and mine have gone to the territories. Are they less qualified to. judge of their Own in rests than whenthey were citizens of Conn4tieut and Penns •lva nia 1..- Certainl , not l Is it reasonable in us to insist on the right to-select and. reghlate the domestic institutions under whiCh k lips° eri. • men arc to live? Suppose the inenlCoMpOS- But who originated•thiS new scheme, .and ing this meeting : had determined te , -gif, to what is its nature ? It is', an old enemy in! Kansas, would : l.:they Consent that tiles:al:who -ai new garb,'one,whose long cars - the lion' remain in Counenticut, -through their reprZi: skin does not 'entirelyi.!eonceal, as. it gee sentatives iu Cengress,.:should decide !their t about te • scare people. The. leading spirit local policy on any great. question; I,l.The 1 in getting it. up aro the same who denounced' proposition seems. absurd. , The question' is I the democratic candidate, in 1852, as..a 'big.; -, • admittedly one for the disposition of a r . .-over- ! wed Protcsiratit„ and, ntteruPted.to prove it•bY eigu State, and so it ft li ou Id be for the tionle r a certificate signed by whig Catholics of NO of a territory. i, When the people of a territo I Hampshire ; the'satne who circulated tha.faf ry become a State, their 'will' is to lie oibuip- i motui pictorial biography of Gen.- Scott,%theii., meat. Why Should it be restridneed-nring ! candidate, displaying him iu, the - Midst o the ezistance Of the territorial government I raw Irishmen, listening to- their complaints!, il Why not permit: the full: power el! the peo- and administering to their 'wants, ;and all I plc, under the ; constitution, to operateatlonde* this to show that hewasagencrous man, Who It will do : its Work in. the Imaci anyhow. , 1 But i would not neglect the poor troddeu-down this whole questien is:Anagnilied by the, op- ! foreigner. It was the candidate of these position with the view to ;political capiial— ; : know nothing leaders who travelled the court speak oi. the action ! of Congress as! de: II try in the last Presidential contest to- win th' termiumg the policy of the people of thh ter 7 - ! the votes of foreign born citizens - ,by :ridien ritury forever.! That is iTot the case. I the 1 lons LWaddle about the ' rich - ,lrish brOgue people of a State imar.ehange their - polic y V rand the '"iireet Getman - accent.' -It- w I 1 as often as LIMY please. : Connecticut had the! their candidate who proposed to interpolats restitution of:-.sinVery. She could, have it' u4w pl:tuk , in the platfe In, to!theetteut ;:na, again; and .ntil)oWer on earth thire'interfere. I any spemes of ittuaatilty musteringin tlni:, .inst t.. 0 with any lothe State, - Kan3as,'.or i :truly ter one yeurShotild have the.,,iight of anrether territory coming into the.;UniOn as i suffrage.. -- - Not,vithstanding ; Gen. , s4.ott'l a fiee State; ein afterward establish slivery, , identity with the Catholic chatel4:. thel • a and vice- -ve.r.ta. I Congressional cant* at ii,:now nothings voted for ' him i ,:and tbey most, therefor's, can-Only-operate :hiring the I would have done se . luid the Pope. been' hi, territorial prOatiOn; •nnd the whole coutro- 1 daily companion. -But Scott was not elected. very is :redtteed to this one point; his the IThese much eourted people voted as Allereq people of a St to can do its they i*.aieloti a i fore, some for the whin-candidate, thus vindtr question of • oinestic - policy, shall',tl+y be ; 'eating theinselves`agaiustthe charge Of elan!-', St permitted to ' .lo so while a territory.; The ' nishness now so freely made. But a 'change democratic ti . rte say yes'' The isms - sib- no, came over the views of their former admirer,. aud on this the issue is made. -But it is did- the 'know-nothings. .The foreign accent 14 i ligeutiv.a.S.serteid that the. Kansas laiiilegis- its cliartni, and the group of Irish with *horn. hues slavery Into the. territory. That its not. : Scott had : mingled, as well: as the chure: , true! I' :The nio'rds are explicit -: that it its the, with which le was identified; have been Lion k• tree intent land meaning of 'this act not to verted into hideous Int:asters, to alarm .th . legislate :41ayery into any, State or terfitory, - weak and*ignorant; and hence know-notlk nor to exclude it theretiorM, but to leave .the 1 ingistn, •.• • -- ' : - .• fl people thereet perfectly free to form anreg- 1. But is it nor unjust to defranei man ulate their dOMestie. institutions in thec own 1 because of the place of his birth ice could way, subject lonly to 'the eenstitetionpf the i not Irelp it. Geography is init understood in United Stitt." -Under this provisioit it is 1 the pre-existant . state.. Birth a:standard NT ,true Kausas'May beeorrie Al slave Sta le. It ; I idfide 1 Wlty the idea is.onty ,worthyor ii,;', might have. ble COI:LW such-in: the cud, 1.3 'mat- i ieule.• Birth is not a virtue; it-Is nn'aceidet t ter what Congress might do in the.pre iism. l or eireumstnnee. It may be a good thing :!,o Specia.: actiMi, as in the case :of thh Missouri be born in.:this favored country, but it would line, if constitutional, would be •bindi l ng on be Letter 'were it a matter of choice. ,It. ,is the people ofithe territory '- but the•.sli]aekles 1 the:virtue-Of the anita7.l.'-' The• buffalo ,'-:ills would fall' off, so . soon as . they become oiState. the catarnohnt have it. The Indian, and Oa The: laws oflnature will more certai nty,shape negro have it. Tiger-tail the - Indian Chief, .the policy of the 'State than the bias of can:beast a better : title to it than the - . old4t. Congreqs. If the climate and soil invjite the of the knoW nothings. It m a y he a t:,;-0 (i 1,... institution,.4 Will be difficult to keep pt out. 1 send toPolitical bankrupts to set up a - stand If they ate against it, no agency MI Con- I ard of political virtue, which, equalizes 'tile ir r cAs can mni - stain it. ,For one, lam Oiling meanest with the bust; by which Mr. ills • - to leave - therquestion with the r eople, and would .out rank .TohnWt`;sley, .and' Pened : it 'regard the4estion as finally settled In that F irt.old . .would, be preferred to_ LafaYette.q 7 , way. .. .. . L.l - I3ut holiest men would repudiate the idea:l---- - •-•---.- ...A niiilrizeti . With ir Ti' - ',' by :a highe- tn _ I But demobrats are charged With lineon i *.istancy for having, at. one tune, favor4,l the Missouri lino .; I. have already given 4,sufft i $ ., cient answer to this allegation by showing that the Abolitionists forced the tide,.ssits f for a new Mode of adjustment- B.it how stands the cast on the other 5i,1;... ?, ‘'ir;srier ful cousistaut 1 When James . Lin man, your &Hato in 1820, voted fur the iftssou ti live, this pany burnt hire in elligy. I,Whea Isaac Toucey, in 185%4. voted for its ;repeal, they served iiirri in the same way.: ' The 'Re publicans in, Congre.ss struggled fOr .two months two wakes Mr. Banks SpilakOr, be cause he is opposed to slavery, and fin. this they claim ,the thanks of anti-. Livery men in all parts:Of the country. Within two days thereafter, these gentlemen turned nround and elected' Gen. Callum, of Terne.tsee, a -slavehole.er, their Clerk—and for dill they claim the thanks of the other side. tit you are told that the territory of Kansas lois been invaded bY people of Mis.sobri, and the voice of th 4 bona fide citizen has been . 51110 bored. It is uite lettr to my mind that e Icesses were indul ed at the election ; that the bal lot box has been abused that meti have voted iho had no right to vote. Bitter con flict, if not actual violence, was .the Certain consequence i of the circumstances' surround lug the orpnization. The attempt tip cram' fl u: , territories, on the one hand, and the couuterb eting efforts on the otLer,i could scarcely fail' to 164 to abuse of the rlght 4:;;t* suffrage. But this is not fatal to the 'theory of the law, nor to i;..s ultimate working. All i sides are being pledged to the protec ion of the ballot box in future-- i sent,herb inen as well as northern—and I thitlk If may be safe ly assutned:that the next elect* %still be ._a fill. one. ,That uncontrolled and '= unawed, the voice of bona fide citizens of the trritory will be expressed. If the _free State; .party are in the majority, as is Sio—conlidiannally claimed, they will elect the 'next legature and ;tepeal the' objectionable laws, and] shape the policy'of the territory to suit theMselves. I shall now speak of the know-nothing or e., ganization;."` This is a party of bad Iprinci ple:s and worse practices. They propirse to make birtl4lace and -religious :. belief ;a test for civil othce, and to acceruplish We end through thle agency of secret and oafs{--bound societies. ;jAr. least such is their- plan .of ope __.. ii'- • - -.agi.st.., ----- -- •:-.-- -- , .. rations in Ty State. They profess to ibelieve right to do this?. Thatei'vil rights are iltv.!., that our institutions are in danger from the *acted as the rights qr.:property'? •- That'd* influence Of foreign born citizens abd the binatons to destroy' prtveleges conferted `dap= powei of the Catholic church. The, i ii /fight on them .by the constitution, arti.a ~ infamittis- - , under alai motto; that ' Americana ,- must as : c or o,i n 4 locs, 40.„nteal away good rule America.' They _complain of, great evils chattiest* that pothing can have a more fa tind then dteriuice to practice diem 1. Thoy. -Cal etfect utoit" the itdiocatek:ot:aivil t 4 411P. claim to be peeu i fitly American, l:tuti main- io us l lib erty i n ot h er countries, than the rec i ? twin doctriiaes - stinctly anti-A erio.ane — ognition of intolerant: doctrinei -in this' -= Mafessinkkieep .concern for the tability of &mit a step would be a triumph of nionarbby , our republican institutions; they; make war and intolerance the world over. Do they -aot on the not lest characteristics of iourl whole know •th . at the surest way to endanger till re - - i system, civil rights and religious '',freedom.-- publi4, is to *esker). and demoralize thecfm- Deprecating :secret rend clannisWatclrn eents e ti tution ,. b y di sregiu di ng i ts 4 ',l : iiiiratios in others. they have adopted s. ' Discarding, in term ff bitter. r ho_'p racti c e that it it best• Means of defence against- 1 , lie theinselve very ddangers , whiab they pretend to 'dread! nom. jelaiOstn in ' Matters of religion, igidn, they If they have us ttonsiderod these things, ,they have detertnined to try itapoiities. 'Profess- -, u l o iii' ern i 44 0 0 -nothings. ~ ,What. .Sour' ev,-, , ing peculiar reverence for the name 4u Wash- .erament has agre sd', da l 4 !nnit; . par4r, ~..7 L O ingtoo, w w have cha a plan Of political if t h e I s is sas-wrong e it S•bui &tilt, an -is o4anizatiOn. agaiiuti;*hich that'good min . bot i maso n far changing them ; but as l'' ng . , g simonished the people . , as titey exist, their obligations' must , be 0 v• Alarmed about the power of the Catholic , , ved.. No can 4 ustives to the -. manor here . , , church acconling to the census, we have in, this country 'about -800 Oath°ite priests, to over 26,000 protestant ministers thirty of the latter to one of the former.— There ts - surelie. no cause of alarm in such - 4 statv,a of facts, 'nor can - there he any •-sinceriti , in the - pretension. According to the same census, ; we have twenty three natives to onfi foreign - bunt Citizen: Is this startling C,au't twentyAliree Yankees take care of otni Irishman or Declimani But I deny the premises and •the Conclusions. Our InAtititi Lions are in danger froni •no such We have more to fear froth eiements louge in the country than the much deeded foreigni aey will.estimate the man' by . a higher staff. dard, the haid, the•heart, the soul. They will never con3ent,to look behind the swarldliilg clothed, or pry into the consciences: ineti to fix the tests for political preferment. Bat how aro these strange : dogmas to carried into practical effect.? It is .propOed'. l to change the'censtitatieu , and Laws so as Ito • fix' a religious . test for office I The very step iiisueh a scheme is . a union of • chiul,th •and State, in which a profession of thenFlatr lisped religion will be necessary to ' elevation. If one class of professing c istrans be proscribed will,not another 'soon follOW, u.util the infidel spirit of the.-country will PO dominatei The scenes of the sixteenth 'cen - wry, in Earope, so shocking to litnani44, should admonish:us against, the idea of pfziks ecutiou. _Our ancestors were refugees, friirti. religious oppressiOu. When- Rodger... Wfll iatus,•Lord Baltimore, - and - Penn agreed upon .terms Of religious tolerance r ilit was the second advent of `good will to man.; kind.' It 'was the greatest uiph.of tianity sinee.the da.,ys• of Constantine- - But let 115 look at this sui , jent• iri anether . aspect. hold that the know-nothing dOe-, trines are illegal and onjost.. We fixed.' tbe conditions upon wltich•the people of 'caber countries, of . every, 'religious . denomination,' could become citizens-equal - with- i oursels, and their e.onapliance hinds Our' government. and people for ever.' We have allured thOilti by our boasted declarations ' that in this:land of liberty' each could worship God aceoding to the dictates of his - own conscience, - and • that 'none should molest him Or 'Make • M i na afraid ; and thus'attrticted, many came from every -country •Protesiant and Some have felled the .forest and - CultiVated the soil ;'others)iave built ,our.railroad4 and canali ; others have become- miners, mann-- faetueril, merchants, and .I:net:bank - al; andla feiv have devoted themselves to the 'Profwts".•l ions and the aria.. In. all .these relations - 4if tliki have added to the growth and pros 7 perety . of the country,. They:have couuzhu ted..to-, the treasury. in peace, aniZavo..asti4- ed us 'to fight in times of War. .-And now fit is propos.al to proseribe-and .degrailet' . .t4m to answer Unjust and "icifish-ends gar& the covenants of the constituwi. ga.v it never oceured to the advooates,7it .1110: 1 1vr nothingism, that we have-no moral Nor tritioo 10, liiintig -.10, • Itake away, even b y law, -rig that have ~ ii been conferred by - the - 'constitution. Meal •t ;Os prospective in However .effect; and they oa ily, are legitimate. However Much we may ' tinfr as to thestc.theV would furnish no just I - • cause of complaint, and involve no bad faith, I Let me not be misunderstood. `I am the - lib- I vocaie of no class Or 'sect of Teeple, _Thee ;-;:-... , ' 'democratic party never" has recesmised;.-and - ''k- : ! ). .,A,., [never will sanction the demand of any cliaa " - ;:i 1 : lor scot, ataue,h, for office or honor. We-but . I maintain the constitutional right of all, - for I the sake of all ; for the native :and foreiga.„ t born—the Protestant arid Catholib—leaving each individual citizen to depend Upon his own merits for office and honor This is the _ demooratic'doctrihe 09 the - subject. Every,. , man can vote as he may please; - He 'is. ,not , oblidged to vote for a - Catholic or - foreigner -- No man should vote fora bad man of either' ' " class. lint it is the indiscritninateproscrip - -- , _ tion of_these. classes.by.combination or. ; law:, to - which we object. There are many remi- - nisences in our pest history to render die idea. distasteful. In all the past struggles of the . • country the &reign born and native, theProt& estaus and Cathelis; =stood or fell together.— They did so when the Declaration- of 'tide , . pendenee was'aclopti - 4 lied when, the eve ti was made. They did so on eveiY. hat- -. ' tic-tield of the revolutionary. war ; in the war-. of 1812, and in the war with Mexico. The.., recollection of all these things excites aver- -: i Ison to the proposed prolicription. - -Every , . . page of our past history speaks against it;. Front the shades of Mount. Vernon, where' ,, sleep- the ashes of Washington, - ',who:helped.' . . to wake these covenants,. comes up .sait ridnio- : ration against t'a-3r Violation,. From _the-, Lheights where .Montgomery fellfrom the . Igrnss. covered' grave of Lafayette=from Ile , -, silent resticg places of the chivalrous - Kasai- - r usko and De Calla—is heard " a remonstrance against a violation of the faith on which the . battles of the revolution Averts - fought. • In- . ' • deed, from every . source of moral - and politi- - - cat truth comes a frown—an indignant (coin .- -upon this scheme - of treachery and oppres- .: - • sion. ' . - The evil tendencies of secret societies fn. - - oat:re-partizan earls, are too obvious to re- -- - 1 qiiire iiiscussion. - Washington has aptly. : desciibed them as the - means by which can-`..; ,ring men May usurp the power of the. trophf,,. . and gain unworthy rule. They are itteee , ,- . .. sisteut with the AMericau character. We boast 'of freedom of speech and - liberty of the press. If evils exist, moral and - political, ' which require reform;\ let us make it a dity-. - light 'business, and not go- about it like ta.- thief in, the night. No practice could have a more demoralizing influence upon the clans- ' acter of our people, nor be better: calculated' to corrupt the ballot box, and to erabitterthe - channels of social and political intercourse.--,-- - - The Whole tendency is vicious; and the institu tion will speedily meet what it merits—the . universal contempt of all honorable and pat-_ oriotic Men. • - - _--- - . '-----:- - ' ' And now, fellow-citizens, in conclusion, t__ would persuade ybu that the surest way to pe'rpetuate our republican government, artd, - its inestimable blessings' of peace, prosperity, and happiness, is to maintain„with. unyielding- - •• firmness, the letter- T end spirit of the -con stitution ; and by cherishirigi: . . - . those liberal notions of puhlic policy which have uniformly distinguished the career - ' of the dernocraticr -, party.. And when did a - people multiply - aid , advance in - the elements of nationalgreatness• • with such wonderful.; rapidity! - Itas, not: .‘• ,more tban the lifetime of, a very old man,.. ..:. .since the members of our family of sovereign States numbered but thirteen and the pop _illation - of the whole fell . below that, how,. , counted for - one of a, family Of thirty-one; The -' end of the present century, in this ratio, Will- - • see the States doubled and the - popu . lafnu- - -; - trebled. . The constitution gave us a happy; union of. States, and under the` auipicm. of ~ both the nstion - has so prospered ; to perpet- : - uate and hand these vast blessing&, i ' n'to.' Otir•SUQeeZSOrS. This is a grave duty; finii,ltr , .' my humble opinion, can only be-safely.:: tills ,- charged by asserting and maintaining , the "- 'constitutional rights of the States in their sovereign Capacity.; by thei etfople.of one i e Scats forialaring to interfere with the hastity.- •i , dons ot those - of another ;AT: - trilintataint '-'•s those great.idds of civil rind religious jibe4y, , :' found at the very basis of our whole : soni4 and political system ; by avoiding - theOreatiO : la _. ,ot geographical parties, so suggestive of sep- . aration ; and by leaving the peopleiaf .:endh, State; under the direction of Heaven; ruiti-tha' - - restraints Ur the constitution, to - 'select 'add... regulate as, they may please, fnose merely:, local institutions under"which they choose, t 0 .4 live, and for the good or evil of-which they and they only„-ritust account. These princi,-, ploy and practices settled by the-people - of all _ - r sections of the country, and I-slienld..*eotiro_ -, fideiat in the belief that the future Off-.Otir. r,w....., -- public is to cover matt l y einturiea'a I:olitcy_ ':progress: prosperity and '-prog; • ,• _ _- ~ . - ~„ No GLOOII AT At omr,--Aboie. there should lie no , gloom at - home f l, shadows of daik, disconten(and.-weeting4lAz 4 ,' fulness shoeld never- - the throwing• their large black sh apes, f uner.- ail palls, r over the happy young spirits; ther. ,ed. tliere. 'Cloyyoux 410 .. uw. sbau, 'leaven and eve!y - intrite angel Plere.- you will; you shell - sit On.a throne and be the - presiding ,lietraieheld. : - ;deity,, Oh 1 faithful wife, what privileges, what tressures,"greater, purcr thou thite I • -.,- ; Au . d . •let, Lim ,114.sband atrire. to fotgethia-,;4, Cues as lie winds - around tbe long ktarrey, street alid-hetiolds'the soft: light ill - wining., , litslittle parlor;` spreading its preCipui ;beams` : an,the ;red - Palk* before IL' The tight' ,d,:eb.eer.less, , and . the December gust. Unto% wi* tho. - warn skirts of his .- old tfiretoos,tip* - snatches, with rad e . hind and wailual ti'the rusty' hit that:ha - a verialiiii), mall A. leaf. - been Pitea_iett , .. --- pentquted; - • - 4 • . lin has, bora(' ...with- Aisany , itiOntad, ,tkomaPi. many a' 3 ° l 4.merclvencl nerve42 l 4iitself dfi an energy se :desperate ;*h etiAi frame ty_td. sp!ita are Waiktified . and depreilied; 194401 1 ff.; tViirnbs' ache'with weariness ; his " ta u pe thrik with the pain•bent eanwl bpa taiii*CYCer scant application ; ha , scarcely.knows tow Ao meet his wife with a pleasant. mile, orilk doaa :obeirfally to their little 1 / 2 0 47 0 1 41 #'''' provided with:so - much care. l'l3ut the door iiapeied. eStetOottitire4 l l hastily off. sweet end, lta tonne : are: so t'apd ' glad ; `tu , lade like a winged ange4 flieta light into his bos. am and pestles againstvhii heart. .*Siiiii4l4 , ;':OirW.fo , ,' i