r IITH'i. GREAT SPEECH . uts.3 4 .xittsto...To THE PEOPLE OP, lIE VOTED .E.TATP: antz 2m. Yon Dlmmt. . On Thuisday:evening last, the Municipal Din - now of the city of lie* York, to the illustrious ,dovernor of fine " t l • 00 place. Every prep aeration bad been made, to make ii the most nutguifieent banquet which ever took place.— , jilis honor Mayer KIIMILAN,D, presided, A great •number of diatingnished gentlemen, from vari einsoparts Ofthe country, were prevent as invited &Ws, and lettere were read from Mr. Webster, •Mr, Clay, Me: Cass, and nnmerans other official dignitaries of the land. A number of clergy -men-were also pretsent. After the guests trete seated, Mayor Gl Nee -1.1113 And GM. Kossuin entered the room.— . After the storm of applause that followed their •• entrance had partly subsided, Ald. Soon for mally. introduced to tho company the City's Onest,lnettirossurn, Governor of Ilungnry. Arland of applause followed this introduction, . which heing.stilled Tee. lir. Itrrlit79e offered np the following Prayer Almighty and bountiful Giver of all good, wL• look to Thee for thy blessing upon these gifts • f thine band, and upon this oce,inn of not. hap. .yry meeting. We tile-s Thee f4r our country. • We bless Thee for the plenty which thou di:l•4 . shitwer upon it.. We Idols thee for o/r Ithertle, rind, above all, Ave Moms then for tlim,knowled,re of, Thyself, through les. Chri , t thy Soh. h. • which oar plenty is made &blessing, and our lib• arty. secured through the intelligeme of our pro. • ple....We earnestly pray Thee, 0 0,1, tho de l'ender of the helpless, and th e liberator ofitie , e. ."-. 4 410 are . bound, that thott. - wonldst extend like blessings throughout all lanili—every where Ibreo the Might of the tyrant, .aud let these who ate oppressed gb free. Prepare the nations. ti God, to receive : this great gift. from thiim bend, which Vs know from thy holy Word it is Thy blessed :• Purpose to bestow. And now, 0 God, wewould 'thank Thee, that Thou 'wouldit. from among the children or men vsloe up tame whom Th., Thy Providence, wouldst make and fit to ie., - lights and elareples and deliverers to the world. We thank Thee for 'him Thy servant, who us • Omen! with•ats at thin. time. and coo pray- Thee r . thittihott Wouldst guide him, and direct him. n L.l pi.rEfr,*a laiinotnil strengthen him for the gr...et destiny' to which we trust that Tholi hest called hint, ; .,-Ice thank Then that we are perinitt.d • welcome him; and we hope the teAtithouy Ut ibis united natiOnMay go irp note Thee, abd through- Mat all the . World, atvii.tall the cruelties of ty. rway, and against nit the nonsequeuces of hood.. ,;,age. We s3l: , these blessings fur Christ's Sa o, compthy then turnentliteir attention to : - ` . .thiMitablcs before them, to which they did 11.01. plojistieo. After the tables had .been cleared. • Major. Kingsland called to order, anti requested .. the Vice President to read the lettera whirl had ..-been received by the Committee on Itaidatto us. •''-i-Theletters having been read, the tyor gore the first regalia.totrati• MS I'resUleni of the United State, '' This waare.vpunded to by three cheers, and .. . , - dank.standing: : ". _ • . The' Mayor then delivered a most eloquent .v . •-? .addieter, and concluded witht. • , • !--., Gagner', I give goo - • . . Wormier-Betrayed but not subdued. tier .-call for , help is -but the echo of our appeal ..... '-agaufst the 'lron trend of the oppressor. /; ~.. - , , ....:-.•.---;.. AL Kemal,"who, - we might to have mention .: - .'""ed,eiilide.firet entrance was . receire'd by the •compauy.etanding," and with much clapping of , • hands, now rose; and anti from a manuscript the following speech:— . \ .'" • ICOSSIITIPS . smelt. sly; Inretaining";ll my most humble thanks -,--:' .for - the honor you did me by your rerst, and Iu _ . ' ilte'benefit of cnupliag my namemith that cause .Whlch is the :sacred aim of my life, I confess to •-• be aneverwheltneri with emotion by all it woo .;,,-.•_, raypietligious lot to experience since I am out ~,. . - your glorious shores, that, nnahlo . to Grid words •, 1 .r.,- . . to express tetyfeelinge, medal:towing that all the --, ..-itletuor I meet with. has the higher, meaning of ''..?-••!' Priactipltteil'at once beg leave to fall back to "Any duties 'Which are the lasting topics of my .„"" • refleetions; my. sorrows and my hopes. I talc I the present occasion for is highly important op -Martunity.- I take it for ouch as will probably decide about the et:cease or failure of my visit, • . lag the United States. I must therefdre hum • bly embrace your indulgence . fur a pretty lone, plain, and in no rase eloquent deeeloperuent of : my bumble views to the bentfit of that canoe which the' citizens of New York, and you, per ,- tienlarly, ,gattlemeta, honer with generous sycp• _ • , ' 'Whaiil consider the sympathy of the people ,'• ;•••: . i . ,iofehtf - United States for the cause of II ungsry. ...SO generally diffused aedg be almost - a:liven.% . and aoresolutely pronounced us teen pronounec these feelfngs which are intended to he tot ' ".• lowest by noble anti great deeds, I would feel in ; "alined to take your noble stud -generous aid for 'i the restoration of my native land to its sorer ,' alga ind'ependence, already as granted in prin , ' ciple; and;for me nothing left to do but to enter Into a negatiation about the arrangement of the details, were my Confident Ipmes not cheeked by .that Idea of - non-interference in foreign, 1 chiefly-European, affairs, which, acOording to 1 Abe numerous testimonials of 'your moot di.tie ' - - galshed esilititionsrwe are told to be one of the • -ruling and lasting principles of the policy of the ; . •.. • '' United .States..... -I _highly respect durce thes of this conviction, -", gentlemen- - . This eouree is your religious at . taelnitentito the doctrines of those great men WI.IO . .. - highly pined to all posterity their wisdom by •; I bequeatlimg to yea_ the immortal -work of the constitution which, aided by the unparalleled benefits' of nature, has raised you..in the short period of seventy-five yeas., from the precarious " .position "of an infot people, to the.protligieus - etreagth:ef a giant , nation. The beneficial re ' ;,' • salts of the wisdom, of tho founders of your ereat . - ..Iternabliomon - see in a happy reality. What would be the consequences of n departure from that warden you are not sure of. It isitherefore . natural that you feet an instinctive fear to touch . even With improving hands, the dear legacy of .those greet men. , • And as to year. glorious Constitution, 'all ho. ' • inanity Can only Irish, in the COMMOU iutcrest of menkind,•that 'you and your posterity May • yet long °matters , this religions attachment to its • -", : fordamentedpriuciples, which by no means ex• , . elude dthrorepotnint nod progress; and that every • -cltizetn"of 'Jim great Union, thanisfully aoknowl .. edging Ihrlinalesise benefits of this Conatitution, ' ~. may, .eieifinibe moment:vet the most passion , .. - it'it.fre;irtitation,rever forget to love that COOMIL. t4tiOn toned thalathe momentary passion of his ..: .heart, or thesegetisticallntcrest of the passing .„.,..e,hastr..... May envy citizen of your glorious collo ,lrel.P.,ls.try' ferever remember that n partial discomfort ' a'afis Omer in' a large, - sure and comfortable' luiiiier,' may be well:amended without br,eaking the knit:elation of Wand that among all possible ' ;,, means of getting rid of that corner's partial d is -• olinfort, the worst Weald be to burn down the . himse with Cur own hands. • , . - Brit while, i thes rielmowledge the wisdom of - . 'your attachment to the fundamental doctrines , ~, ' .. of thafouitslers of your united Republik, I beg' t.. .leave with equal frankness, to state that, in my opinion; there can he .. scarcely anything more dangerous" to the progressive development of - - , arbelever nation, than to take for a basis that . which a tione;—to take for a. principle that • whichisbni the convenience'of the psalms sit .- . • mailett-"-40 take for substantial that which is but eiteddeutal, or take for a constitutional doctrine • '. that Which was but the momentary exigency of administrative policy. ;Such a course of action Would be like to that,. when a healthy mid would !Ouse to take substantial food, because, when be was tine * * laboring.under weakness of Mont . soh, his physician ordered him a Revere diet to keep. The consequence would be consumption Lot li:hemp:pose, gentlemen, that yonderdoc- Wee of non-Interference was really bequeathed ' .. to yo4b7 your Washington—and that itwas not, I.wIIItTOTO to YOU afterwards,—and lOtM• Ott!, . suppose that your Washington impar such a meanintto yonder. reimposed dootri e,—which ' . were equivalent to the words of Cal ---"Am I 'my brother's keeper"—which supposition would • be of nurse a sacrilege. lint suppose all this. 'And I believe that, even under such suppositions, re:lay-be entitled to ask—is the dross which Well guitedthe child, still convenient to tie -• full grown man—nay to a giant, which' you are? Would It not be ridiculous to lay the giant in the chat's •crodle, and to sing him to sleep by • .liit those times of the foundation of the lini ted'fltates, you were nn infant people, and the large dress of your then comparatively not large traitor", hong 'lase onyour puerile limbs.— Lea those , times yei. , haef,k•of course, no wiser thing to do - but to grow—to grow and to grow., Bat new you ere so fat grown that there is no foreign power on earth - from which you have anything to fear for yam , own oxistence,-Lfor. I your own security. This being your present con-i, dition,:fon hare entered into the seconder/dims of political existence - , the destination of which ' is not only to exist foryonrself exclusively, but .to exist as a member of the great human family ' Of nations - hiving the right to all claims which -.. are due from that finally towards. every ono •of ifs full grown members, hut also engaged to er r. . eery daty.which that groat family Lis the right .',-.7 , t0 claim fronthvery one of its full down memo . . • ••• 'A ziktlon to in the cibistoi, either L L 'n aocopanitioti Ireakomor, or by.cloice Ana policy; Is Japan find Clhina, it'br Milli these . nel'eragney, ender Dr. Francis, tolive a life se cluded from the world, indifferent to the doc trine!) of mankind, in which it cannot or will not hose sm. , s hare; but then it must also be pro. mind to become also excluded from the bettefita ~f progress, civilization, and national inter course. Stich a nation may well say ; "i don't care about the fate of whatever other nations in the world." But I am sure no citizen of the United States has, or ever will have, the with to pee thin coun try degraded to the rotting vegetation of Para guay, or the mummy existence of Japan or Chi na: The feeling of self-dignity, and' the ex pansive finality of that enterprizing spirit, which arc congenial to freemen, would revolt against the very idea of each a degrading national cap tivity. :But, if there were even a will to live qvuch a inummy life, there were no possibility to do 40 The very ezLtence of your great country, the principles upon which it is founded, its geo graphical positiou, its present state of civiliza tion. and all its moral and material interests, would lead on Soar people not only to maintain Ihot incessantly, more and more to develop° your int itercuurse wff li the world. Then, of co rse, being in no many respects linked to the w orld, you can have neither the will, nor be inl the position to remain indifferent to the con.litio of that entrant world you are in en ninny res ono counoata.l with And if you Cannot r allia ' indifferent, 80 you must feel TeBolBB , l put }'mu own self-consistent' weight into ill , t balance in which•tho fate and condition of tht world is weighed. In u word, the, glorious Republic of the Uni ted Stolen must feel resolved to lie a power on' earth—, t•..,0r ninotig the nations: or else it arlf wid be doomed to ooatinual decoy, end ..00n Y rea4n to be groat, glorious and free. ou o a power ou earth. You most he a power On re earth. So, of course, you must also unhesitatingly arerpt all the tio tu r ato o ngegne, ors of thin °mutton You cannot allow that any power 11.11/11PS, should dispose of the fate of that prrat lamily 01 utankhri of which you ere 61.1011 a promiugut niotober; or glue you +tumid resign your proud position, end resign your still prouder future, uud be D powpr on earth no more. ,Tlios. I hope, I have so'Lisaly shown, that, ehor L! cvon that doctrine non-interference - inference hose hero estoblished by the founders of your Repo that which trouid bane been very eon- OUa . w.,uld not he convetti• ent to!your nanollool. It is as beautiful word of Montesquieu that re publics arc to he foutoled on virtue. And yo -4 know that Virtue, it, houctioned by our Christian is but the enrolls, esercise of a ptinc4- ple--Thou shalt do to others, us thou desirelst! ethers to do to thee." go, I am confident, that I it were sufficient for roe to illy simply--for the decision of the ~ Uedlivl I halo the honor now to treat—op. his Vlrlooan feChugs of your gen ie rt.-public:lu heurtr, unti l the consistency of ' principles. Rut still I beg leave to mention also in material respects, some cSseatini differences between your percent condilion and that of yore. Then your infant Republic, l l composed of thir teen states, ivac Metro:led to the borders of the Atlantic. Now your giant Republic spreads to the Loaf of tiro, the • Pacific. awl your terri tory i 6 a world. Your- right hand reaches Eu rope over the wares, while your left hand rv.ch, en over tote Pacific, the East of Asia ; and then in the midst of two great continents, there you stand, in proud immensity, a world yonself! Then you were a small people of three and a. half millions. Now you are u mighty nation of twentydour millions. Ant more than nineteen millions nut of these twenty four are mattered over yonder immense territory, the richest in the world, employed in the cultivation of the roil— that honorable occupation, which in every age, has proved to be the most baexlinustible, the most unfaltering bourse of public welfare, and of private happiness -4S also the most uairavering l olly of tho lore of freedom, the most -faithful presurrer of all those straight, noble and gen , crows mow - oasts which the constant motor, - ' tiokt with ever-yonng, ever-great,ever•heueficial Nature imparts to Om. Add to this considera tion, that thin it:or:nen, agricultural interest, - which, deriving large markets and affording nt the sante time n milt bond basin, wins, to your manufacturing industry, nod to your commerce, has developed in, such alt immense proportion, nukes such .IL boundless difference between the infant Republic of the lime of Wash ington and your present giant Republic ;• that though you limy very well he attached to your ntigioal constitutional principles, because the prinsiplas of liberty are everlastingly the same; but in respect to thh exigencies of your policy, it is impassible not F lo tecl that, if you are to be regulated in your policy by interest, then' your country has other interests to-flny than it hod, then ; had if ever you are to he reeulmed in your poliey. by the higher consideration of prin ciples, thou you at i ... a Toady strong enough to feel that the time h 9 c me to do to. And 1, ;tending her before you to plead the cause of oppressed mhanity,—Presolutely de clare that there {nay perhaps never again come a time whell the eleodr, oof your policy to the high level of priori es identified with liberty, 1,,, Gould prove either m re glorious to yon, or morn beneficial to hurahni y; because we in Europe are appearantly on he ero, of that day when either the hopes nr ; e feare• of oppressed na tions will he crushed or a long time. Having stated no Cs the difference of the oita ation, I heg leave no in state that it is entire ly an unfounded soot) sition, that- the doctrine of non-interference i . foreign matters had been to the people of the United States, by your great Washington, he, rivalled to be a couititu tional principle to you No . that is not the Fir .141 y. it rothingto non-interference, or. other tettions, to ynu. never even recommended difference, to the fate of He has only recommend- el neutrality, and tht e is a mighty difference between these two id . Neutrality is no idea hich has reference to a state of war between t o belligerent powers, and it is this case which Washington contem plated when be, in his F ewe!! Address, ad vised the people of the Unit d.States not to en ter into entangling alliances. Let quarrelling powers, let quarrelling nations, war; you cent eider your own concerns, wed let foreigdpoiere quairel about ambitious topies,,or scanty, par ticular in tere.ts. Neutrality Is a matter of con venience—not of principle. . but coca tie neutr..lity has reference ton state of war between belligerent powers, the:pronciple of non-interference boo, an the contrary, refer ence to the sovereign right of c riations to dispose of their own domestic concerns. Therefore these two ideas of neutrality and non-interference are two entirely different ideas, having reference to (leo entirely different mat ters The sovereign right of . ii4lat ver nation to dis pose of itself, to alter its itisti whom, to change the form of its own goveinm at, is a common public law of nations, common n all, and, there fore, put under the common g araotee of all. This sovereign right of rue nation to die .pose of itself, you, the poop e of the United States most recognize, becalm it is a common ' law of mankind, in which.'bei g a common law of mankind, every nation is eq ally interested. ' You must recognise it, secondly, because the very existence of your great republic, no also the independmico of every nation, rests upon this basis—recta upon this ground. If that sovereign right of nations wore noel:m=7i pub lic law of mankind, then your own independent existence would be CO :matter of right, but only a matter of fact, which might be subject to whatever time, to whatever chances of power still of violence. And where is the citixen of the United State. who wocild not feel-revolted at the idea, that the existence of this great republic is not a righte ous, nor a lawful one, but only a mere accident, a mere matter of fact ° If it were so, you were not entitled to ih.'! scam the protection of God for your great coon- try, because the protection of Old cannot, with• out sacrilege, he invoked but in behalf of jut- dee and right. You had no right to look to the sympathy of mahkind fur yourself, because you would profess an abrogation of the laws of hu manity, upon which is founded your own lade pendeffee, your own existence. Now, gentlemen, if these be principles of cam mondaw—of that law which God him given to ell, and to every nation of humanity—if the fa tuity to dispose of itself is the common, lawful righted (leery nation—then the interference with 'this common law of all humanity—the violent act of hindering, by armed forces, &nation from exercising that sovereign right, must be consid ered as a violation of that common patio law upon which your very existence rests, and which, being in common law of ell humanity, is by God himself placed under the safeguard of all humanity—because it la God ! himself who commands os to love oar neighbors as we love oureelves, and to do towards others ai we desire others to 110 toward ourselves. Upon this point you. tannot remain indiffer ent. Yoe may well re sin neutral to every war between two.' belligerent nations, but you cannot remain indifferent to the violation-of the common law of humanity. That indifference Washington has never taught you. I defy any man to ehow me, out of the eleven volumes of Washington's writings, a !tingle word to that ef fect. lle recommended neutrality in the CB4O of foreign wore, but be never recommended Indif ference to the violation of the common laws of humanity by .interference of foreign powers with the eoverign right of nations to dispose of themselves. - ! And he could not lime recommended this in diff.irenee without nearing to be wise as be wee, because there Is, , without justice, no witidoo) x i , on earth :' Ile eOuld . not have recommend ear . it, Inconsistent, be muse it was this', to mon_ law of mankind which your !weathers inkoked, before God and mankind, when they preciaimed your independ, tate. It was bin htmselr, your great Washing., to, who not only accepted, 'bat-asked agate and sgnin'foreign etcleforelgo: help for the' . ,„ support of that common law of manlind in re- ernment spoke in 1827, fulfilled onalarger Male spent to-your own independence. than they were meant, that "the obro/utirm Knowledge and instruction are en universally &rape will not be oppeasmi until every reitige of spread amongst the enlightened people of the human freedom had lwen obliterated corn hem" Unitid States; the history of your country is i And oh' do not rely too fondly upon your such a household science at the most lonely j power. It is great, to he sure. You have not hearths of your remotest settlements, that it !to fear whatever a single power on earth; but may be sufficient for me to refer, in that I look to history. Ancient Rome has fallen, and respect, to the instructions am.) correspondence mighty empires have vanished from earth. Let between Washington and the Minister at Paris, I not the enemies of freedom grow too strong. —the equally immortal FltaraxidaL-the modest V'ictnriouti over Europe, am!. then united, they man with the proud epitaph which tells the ! would be too strong even fur you: And be sure, world that he wrested the lightning from Ilea. I they hate you with an infernal hatred. They yen, and the sceptre from the tyrant'n hands. I must hate you even more than me. They eon- This I have proved, I believe, that Washing- !eider yen n, their most dengerous opponent, ton never bequeathed to you the prinvp:e of Almolittism cannot tranquilly sleep while the re non-interference against the violation of theses , - ! publicno princifilvillas such a mighty repfesent ereign right of nations to dispose-of themselves, ative as your country is. and to regulate their own institutions; hot he Yes, gentlemen, it was the fear from the pni taught you only neutrality in - teepee; to the litical reaction of absolutistic principles, which wars of foreign nations. I i nduce d y o u r great statesmen—Abet principle I will go further. And I state that even tint • which they professed fir Central and Southern doctrine of nentrality he taught and tirquenthe'l Iniericrt, not to extend to Europe also, soil lip to you, not as a constitutional minciPle a last no means the publicly avowed feeble ntotives ing regulation for all future time, huVonly as a : Every monifeetntion of your public life out of matter of temporary policy. I refer in that re• ' thu g s tune', shoss's that I tau xi s tat to soy no, -- npect to the very words of hie Farewell Address. j Enrope's n-trios , were, about 1823, in /inch a de- There he states esplicity, that "it is ynnr policy graded situation that indeed you intuit have felt to steer clear of permanent alliances with any antinos not to come into nay political contact portion of the foreign world." Them are his i with that pestilential atmosphere of Europe, very words. Policy is the word, and you know when, as Mr. Clay said in ISIS, in his ' , preen policy is net the science of principles, not ore, shout the emancipation of South Auteric,k. "Paris igencies: and that principles are of course, by a i was transferred o. si (recand powerful notion, never to he noontime I Rnrnearcely hes, within a year later. the to exigmeies. The exigencies are passing 00., Greek nation came in it, contort lone important like the bubblee of a rain but the nation is ! standing, which gave,mt more that thn ipirit of mortal; it must conaider the future else, and nil freedom is waking agoin, nod at omen you nate only the egotistical conifers of the positing hoar d01..' your principle of political indiff e renc e It must.be aware that to an immortal notion , ' for Eimer,: Y.itt knots how your Clsys and nothing can he of higher importancyolion im I your 11 rilto-, evoke. an if really they were mortal principles. 4i,..ukir.g for toy very else You know how your I will go yet further, and state I lint even Ili,. eitasto urieJ in behalf of tint stenegle for nio policy of neutrality Washington taught yon, teg ,sty, io that part of Europe, whieli m :Dorn as n permanent role, hut a, a tetripornry con- Visa Ilinigiryi v s .. wh et . Ni„ o ,t vouienee. ' fell. yon know what spirit pervaded Slit- United I prove it again by referring to the very words ' of his farewell Address, when he, in reterenee to his policy of neutrality, explicitly sap, that , "with hies (Washington) a predominant motive hen been to endeavor to gain time to your country to settle and mature its inatitutionn, and to pro gresss, without interruption to that degree strength and contingency which is nece,i'ary to glen it the command of its own fortune," These are highly memorable word., gentle men —llene I take toy ground; nod foisting a glance of admiration over your glorious land. I confidently ask you, gentlemen are your insti static. nettled and matured, or are they not! Are 7., or urn yon hut , come to that tlegree ; ef strength and cutwinfeney to he the whiter of your own fattens.? . Oh, my God: how I thank thite for having mien Itoe the glorions view of thin coonirs', geentnevo islet+ answers th i s quention for me! Yes, you hose attained that degree of strength and consistency, when your lOSoferltitlfile re it ef mankind may well. claim yuur brotherly, pointing hand. And I here stand before you—to plead the enuse of these teen fortunate brethree --the of cause humanity. 1 way summed or I may foil lint 1 will go on, pleading with that faith of ulartyra, by which moutitiains were mooed, and may kliepleese you. perhaps; still 1 will say wit: I.l.llber—•••ltuy lf , od help me, I run e:. One word more to prove the' Pl eshingt on never attached to his doctrine of neutrality more than the tense of ttotpurary policy. I refer to one of his letters, written to Lafayette, wherein he says:—let us only hare (woo ' l ean of pone, and our country will come to such e degree of power and wealth that we will be able in a rruse, to defy whatever power ou earth.:' • ••Ina itisteauat!" Now in the mune of eter nal truth, and by all that et oo r.-'l met deer to man; —einee the history of mankind in recorded. there lama been no cerise More just than the obese of Hungary! Nerve wed there a people without the ',firmed reason more ascrili,riottely, More trenclierouely, and by fouler nseatoa, at tacked than Hungary! Never bee oriole, corset ambition, despotism and violence, in a more nicked manner,. united to crush down freed.m. and the very life—than against Ilungery! Ne , ter vat a country more Mortally offended then Hungary is: All year allfferinge, all your com plaint., which, with so much right, drove your forefathers to take up arms, are but plight griev ance in comparisnn with those Immemie, deep wound:. out of which the been of Hungary bleeds: If the canoe of my people is not sufficient ly just to insure the protectien of toil, and the carport of good-willing moo—rheas there is no just cause and TM jueltee on earth. Then the blood of no new Abel will more towards Heaven. The genius of charity, Christian love mid just ice will mourninglytly the Earth; a heavy cur, will upon morality fall,—depressed men despair, and only the Cains of humemity walk prettily, with impious brow n about the rains of Lite.ey on Earth. I have shown, gentlemen, that Washington has never bequeathed to hie country. the doc trine of notearing about the violati,in'of inter national law,—has not be.p.tentited,theedoettemo of indifferentism to his countrymen: first' chits neutrality. I have shown that these two tame are essentially different. I hero shown that even the doctrine efnentrality he never intrud ed to recommend to his countrymen no a laatMe constitutional principle, but only as a measure of temporary policy advisable until the Caked Suites should progress in strength and consist ency, to which end he judged twenty yearn to be sufficient,—after which he Mins& declared to be resolved to reponse any just cause. Now allow me briefly to conelder how your policy has been deeolored in the course of tine, with respect to the principle of riondisterventien in foreign countries. I will only recall to your memory the message of President Monroe, when he clearly slots that the United Staten would take up arms to protect the American Spanish Coloniee, now free Republice, should the no.colled Holy (ra re unholy)Alliarice make - an attempt either to aid Spain to redUce the new .tnierican Rents line to their ancient colonial etate, or to compel. them to adopt political eystems more cenforana • ble to the policy and elites of that Alliance I entreat you to mach well, gentlemen, mss talc the forced introduction of Monarchical Oaten, meats, but in general the interferenre of foreign powers in the contest for indtpendenee of the Spanish Colonies, wan declared sufficient motive for the United States to protect the wituralright of those nations to dispose of themselves. I beg leave to desire you to remember that this declaration of Provident Monroe woo mat only approved and confirmed by the people or. the United States, oit that Grecl /truceoo tied/ joined Si,, Untied Stater in the declaration of this. decieiou and this policy. t further recall to your memory the instruc tions given in 1524 to year Envoys to the Ceti geese of ilisnami, Richard Anderson and lobe Sergeant, where it is clearly elated that the Uni ted States would have opposed, with their whole force, the interference of Continental Powers with that struggle for independence. It is true, that this declaration to go even t% war, to protect the Independence of foreigni States against foreign interference, was not on' ly restricted to the continent of . .atnerice, but President Monroe declare. in kit meeengethat the United States can have 114 concern in European struggles, being distant and imparts- ted from Europa by the great Atlantic ocean. but I beg lease to rmiark that chit iodide, ence to European concern, is again a nuttier, note, principle hat of temporary rciproeo —the , motives of which have, by the lapse of time, en tirely disappeared--so much that the balance ,even turned to the opposite side. President Monroe mention. distance en a mo tive of the-above stated distinction. Well, since the prodigious developement of your Fulton'. glorious inveution, distance Is blotted out of the dictionary—or rather replaced by the word Distance ie no more calculated by miles, but by hours. And beingeo, Europe is of course less distant from yen than the greater part of ttio American continent, yea; even nearer than per haps some parte of your own territory. President Monroe', seeond motive is, thatyon are eeparated by the Atlantic. Now at the pre- - sent time, and in the present rendition of navi gation,. the Atlantio is no separation, but rather :a connecting benefit, the :facilibtting coerce which bringatlie interests of Europe home to you, connecting you with it with every tie of moral as well as material intercede. It is chiefly in New York that I feel tmlbeeti to freak De, because New York is by innumera ble Hee connected with Martine, more connected than several parte of- Europe It la the agricultural intermit of this great country, which chiefly wants an outlet, and o market. Now it Is far more Eurtipe than the Atherican continent to which you hare to look, in that respect. Thie very circumstance cannot allow you to remain indifferent to the fate of freedom on the,European :continent, because, be cure, gentlemen, and let me have apOken this chiefly to the gentlemen of trade, should Abso lutism gain ground in Europe, it will—it must, make every Pliettible obstacle to the conirnercial intercourse oft. republican America, becnuee commercial int/re°urea is the most powerful coo fice of principlez; and be sure the victory of - Absolutiein on the European continent will in no quarter have more injurious national coneequen cee, than in the vast extent of your agricultural - 'and commercial interests. • Then why not prevent it—while yet there in a poesibility• to do so with none, or compare tively small Sacrifices, rather than to abide that fatal catastrophe, and to mourn the immense emeriti ees it would then east. Even in political considerations now-a-days, , You have stronger motives to feel interestMl in the fate of Europe, than even in the fat e of the 'oenteal or southern parts of America. What ever may happen in the institutions of these parts,, you are too powerful to see your own in ! etitutions affected by it. But let Europe be come so abeoliffilitical,—ae without the rentorae tiatit.Of Hattgaty to Ate independence, nod the • liberation of Italy: so eteongly connected with Buitgary, to be mire it will—and your ! children '.ill see those wands;' which your National USIS. u I have shown you how Wuratinctott . 3 dna trum of prdft et neutrality ill your foreign rela tions has by-slid Ly ehonged into the deelara too itroppose, h all your forrer, nhaohttinyi cal Europe, in interferiog with the independ ence or repubrirran institution:4 of Central mud :Swab., America I have shown you why this ranly terolOriror tea wit cr.tesoled then to En ope I hare ,hewn you the further 44i:went:es bower° your present errusenience and that of the time of Prirriderit Monrot -duo I wrsimporlant than those between Niourrre's nod Washington' s Iliac I Part one mighty .I , lren-liCe TitSt still CO/IMM, I unite. Ihat Ord your population has, since IMstiree'r lime, nearly doubled. I herieve. at least iuoreased by mdlious. And what sort of men ate there rr, 1110 f only notice li •rru Audriertir No! lioropenti etaigranto they rare. teen, who, though enireue of the rui tel State., are Icy the moot .1.14 tie, or oi.l - 1111,1,1 to Ettrope'r fate That in rew.itleration wet tby of the reihootion of pier el , uheo wan, wiw after enhe retlee• tiou, out.ti agree with ale. that in your pre.tent ootaliiian your are Ili net ao much intereottal in the fate,l Europe,no p rather~ your rae!, twenty e tthryervo , to, declared Iltereotoeo inter, sled In the late ur I'velfet 1111.1 Soother!, Anteriew TA reolly vo it v.. The unexampled, tin tueo , o. j•rbdigiotil oympothy for the cativo uf toy Country, able!) I 000 the Statev, prove• that i• I 5 Vonrornoral inter ferebre with his Turlti•b cuptivity of the lover of Ilunpry, ;quotes that it IN AO And Ibis ilevelopentrut, rather than rhungr in your for eign pokey, to not even Inure an inotinouvo rhulliiion of publii• opinion, whioh he Culled by otol by to nupitrt a .111V01100 10 your National titterunnuit p•PU , y: the d[reotieu it:already irn porteil, the bomb. thr people iv uh-euily 00 000 NCI principle of the policy of iho 00, eminent. Imre ngood. I irate n mom declaim vl thority. n rely upo raymg Co. It is the flee .:f of the Fre4itleut hi the United Slate, lire Excellency. Nlihard Fillmnre. communica ted to the Conext• a a ft, days aro; th e r e I read the paragraph—" The deep iuterem which We !eel in the :Tread af liberal arM the chtablirldnent of free govertimen,, and the sympathy with whieLt we tritne44 every strilgelc opresyinn, forth; that 're rhouhf he ohhh , (erene to it releve n crlorh (A 4 wool arm of fire. okrd t, slifir fccf.lie senr..r.enc urea rep , rs• theaptre of freedom in n.!l . tt rattntry " Now, gentitmen, here is the gronod which I take for my earnest endeavor. to benefit the caithe .of Hungary. I have only respectfully to a pn nople which the public opinion of the pedlar of the bniteil Stan, reankarly tiro (eons. n.tl the Hoc, runteot of the Unitroyait,vice, with the full oeutiment of ito reeponsibilthr, to- Clarea to your Congreno to be a ruling prtheiple of Your National Oovernincut ; is that princi ple newt to he serial.? Indeed I omits. that it would be the most lotherttheut outrage to• words your great people, and your Notional Government, to entertain the offending opinion, that what the people of the United States, and its national Hothrument, In each a solemn diplw tootle toaontr, profeme to lit Ai ruling principle of you, pulley, ohould not be meant to be bat a joke about the MOM :memi intereithi of hu• inanity. Got that I ximuld feel the int p ertioantt arrolvator td• think ; therefore I PRI, the principle of your loom e. I hod it es titiliehal, with., any interferroca, and I can, in the min, of c.ipremsed In/Mauity to elnam the natural, utiavuidatile, practical eon- .r.lur.rie,el of your ovtu freely chosen Goveru• meat policy, which von hate vowed to the while world, the right to claim the realization of tho s e expression, which your so•treign pee ple of the United tqatti hare elloven out ..f poor torn accord, to mote in,the bosons of toy ca on. try men and of topproosed humanity. You will eittOtt, me, gentlemen; fot having dwelt so long strout that principle of non interferenre with European nteaeuree, but I hare found this rock thrown in toy way when I 'poke of what I hum bly re,pievt from the Putted State, 1 hole been chit:ea to have the orrogance to change yonr evicting policy. and otx in one .perch, I ..r to,ut, cannot cahoott the whole mighty com . pte, o ae f toy ntieston. I chairie for the prevent op, portunity to aerrlope my views about thdt fon. tianiecial principle of not oaring about Ettrupte au concerto.; otot havlng.. shown not threroti• rally, hut practically, that it itta Iniatak• to think that you had, at whatever time, ,Mucha polio ati ‘ i , thtering•hown that 'Mould von ever have rit• te rained .itch a polio., you had abandoned it :by much, at 1e..4:01., I hope to have achieved 'kip humble requests to your. oiler/tit, .yllifotthy may still lo• opposed by I don't know what other hot that ul9ertion I will never noire inert --antto iuterfere with European ,omoorn• this objection is divFoved of, and forever, I hit, It reomitis now to investigate, that having professed not to no indifferent to the cantor of European freedom. is the cause of Hungary such as to hove just claims to your incline and aperetive stood:ince and support It is. gen proto,this 1 Jo not now intend t o enter mt o an explanation of the particulars of ear .o.ruggle, which I. had the honor to direct, no the chosen Chief - hiagistrote of my native armor —it is highly gratifying to one to see the e 01 ilungsry ie—excepting sortie ridieulous representations of It wlll---correctly understood here. I will only state nine fact, and that is that our tudenvoriugs for. independence were eru s bed down by the armed interference of a foreign despotic power--the principle of all evil o earth—Russia. and elating this fact I will not again intrude upon you with my own views, bat recall to your mentury the doctrines total, .linked by your own statesmen. Firstly: Again return td your great Washington. Ile eye iu one of his letters to Lafayette, "My policies are pins mind rumple: I think every nation hoe a right to establish that form of merriment un der which it conceives it can live moth happy, and that no governments ought to interfere with the Internal concerns of another." Here I take my ground—l take my ground upon a principle of Washington—ft proteirle, and on doctrine Of temporary poliey, calculated for the first SO years of your infancy. Russia has interfered With the internal concerns of Hun gary, and by doing us has violated the policies of the United States, established an a lasting principle by Washingtei himself. It ts n last mg principle—l would invoke in my support the t:pinion of every statesmminf the United States, ofi every party, of every time. Bet to nave time, I come from • the first President of the United Staten at ooze to the last, rind recall to your memory this word of the present Annual -Mes sage o His Excellency President Fillmore:— "Let every people cheese for itself, and make and alter its political lnatitutionn to suit its own condition and convenience." Hero again 1 take my ground upon thin principle established by Washington—making the basis of your own ex istence, and professed and acknowledged by your very present Government, only to show that-I am aware of the policy and political opin ion of your present Government also. I beg leave to quote your present Secretary of State, Mr. Webster's statement, who, in his epeech on the Greek question, speaks so: "The low of natant, maintains that in extreme caves, resist ance in lawful, and that one nation has no right to interfere in the affairs, of another." Well, that precisely in the ground upon which we Hungarians stand. lint I may perhaps meet the objection—l am sorry to say I have met it already—" Well, we own that it hoe been violet . ed by Russia in the ease of Hungary, but after all what is Hungary to no? Let every - people take care; of itself; what is that to us?" 8o some speak: it is the old doctrine of private egotism, "every one for himself nod tiod'for I will answer the objection not by my own hum ble views but again by the Words of Mr. Webster, who, in his alluded-to speech on the Greek question, b44ing professed the sovereign right of every nation to dispose of its own °womy, to be a law of nations—thus is going on "But it. L may he asked what in all that to us? The (mem- toins is easily, answered We are one of the fa lion, and we as a nation have precisely the sake Interest. to Internationals law no 4 private has in the law of his conntry!. Sou ene,yontlemun. I load again a good a - tkuiritY,,tio Tin* The principle *Welt yo • - ~, • • . • • ...... honorable Secretary of State professes It ft prim- 1 That objection seem. to me like at if so mil of the Anstrian Emp t die. i Subsequently we en , ciple of eternal truth. No man ,can disavow it t body would nay, • 'lf the vault of Heaven brew • I tered with this empire iato the German Corded ' -no political party can disav o w. Them lam ; dawn what will we de" - My newer ie, al. , end. of 1805. but lijoirgary, as well as Lora in the happy condition to address toy bumble iit will not break clown" even so I answer-but hardy and Venice, not making part of thriAus % prayers in that respect, not to a party but to , your declaratide will he respected-Rosen will 'e nen Empire, remained, again separated, and the whole people of the United Scars, which I • not interfere-you will have no occasion for war; l• ere not entered into GM ; nonfeffewer.. The will go on to do en long a+ 1 heve no reason to ' you will have prevented war. Be sure Ru.sia la s which I eucceetled to carry in 1845, tiiii, of !contemplate any party oppueite or indifferent to 1 would twice, thrice consider to provoke against , cau e, nothing alter in thatelia, ehartered con my conetryie canoe, I.ecause else of course I itself, besidee the rooted fury of notions-besides , dttleie or Hungary. We trunatarmed the pea would have to address throne who are friends, I th e legions o f Republic. France, also the Eng- ! souls into freeholdere , free prop - len - Ire, elm!. , I and not those who are either indifferent or nn - Ike Lino an d t h e star ...retied.] Faglo of ivhrd f. idol ircutilltrances. We Corniced, the ! tagenietie. But it map he from sumo quarters America. Please to consider the fact that you. I political eiriiegee of artete t eracyaby" the nom 1 rowed: ••Well, we acknowledge the justice of I tented to England. have made already such a mon liber4; of the Irian. people: we Ise political, [ the: principle of every nation ' s sovereign right i declaration not to admit any umerference of the 1 repre.etiten to the people for the, legislature: -we acknowledge it to lie a law of nations That i European :A Mtolutistienl pewere, In the offers I transformed s oar municipel curporeein. intn. lin foreign power has a right in interfere in the lof the formerly Spanish Ciao.. o f Ame ri ca I democratic CoVaratanne; iritrothiceilequality in ' atfaars of another. and we are determined to 1 a :11 hey this declaration hreught you to a war' . rights and net 11, and heater' the law, i!p.r the; respect this cerulean law of noinkind, but if nth- j Quite the eentreryi it Ilan prevented war-en it 1 whole, people a hashed the immunity fro. tax, ern do not respect that law it 1 / 1 not our ho•inren I w i omil be innur cane also. Let me, berefere 1 lion t•f the nobili Y . , tenured equal reltgieue lih. 11, meadle with them," Let Inc .newer by ne 1 mosta humhly entreat you, gentlemen-let me I eery tr. all, +ricer.. liberty of the. peen and of !Haualyein. ••Every nation h. the name intereet ; ern rent you on Mae ecreeio n by the means of e s eocietten proride, for public gaatuitous Au it the international Career, an a minty. individ- , publicity-the people or 0.• roi ,, .iStltel to be i struction for the who e people, of every contra onl has in the... elf hts country . •' That is all I pletned to give ~rich practical diYection to i ts i eine and of whstevertangue: but , iu injuring, \ 1 neknowle/Igril principle of the Untied States - I geld... eymparhy for /111.gary, no to arrange , in oar tray the eighty of \he King. , We replaced unewea t eotiv every L et.. ie, i n rcepeet to in- ! tneation and pan such rceolutio. here and ' ear awn nrinteentical ennefflution by a demo , ternational Caw„rtecately in the ne m, retention j there, nail in every ponnitile place of lb. great I erotic eunetitution founde4.upon nearly unieer , e e it prie e te individual la in reepeat to the laws I Union. an I took the liberty to mention shore I vol a s of the whole eXople-of whatever of his country. j Why not do ora I beg leave to reiterate what I , religion, at. whatever hatigue.a All the, were, to a committee i a, you nee, internal relat. L ich did in no a p 3 p . o S e e ell ' te r' C l e 'V ehould in Cuba n way interfere with onti i. i leginn ito the King, vi d W . e , i t e in where r, ~p , i t o t ih t e . condition i l t a i rz o fi ,, f a h p i :i T e l t , t , Li t ti r d y i -, I , b ,f A.l l3 t ‘ h i, e ,n ho o n re o 7 M s :: Is it only that he has himself n e t In v i o l a t e t h e I revolution n em ., n revolint o n from the inbabi• land Were serried lawfully in peacakil legielitioe, I law ' er ie it that sn far no to in his power he ! tents of Cubs theniselvee , end whatever Earn- I with the eftnetion of the King j a .heold eleo prevent othern from viiilattrie the law' : peas Inner ehould vend down a nom to 'ap e° , j Ihmalee thin, there wan oar oilier widen Suppose yon .or I hlt a wicked men i a about to (Spam ag tie, this revolutioe, weal!' you admit ; ea , eare i e a ; w e ~,,,,, ear.r„eria n om ad b y , reli=to murder your neighbor, or to Miro his thin foret Co intervention in a foreign ...try • r,„ at ., / vr ,ii. which h n a t he eep a aaa „a ny hint,, will yeti wrap yourself in your own viral I mm coetident there iv net one in the United ' tt,aar,..ett according tit tenth lea,. null mot. lawfalnese, aniline., •• I don't rob-don't i Stat.. who would not °pp°, thin intervention , a • r 1 : , ...nee /or nine.; ete hot we eon by long expert murder- deaf but what othern do in i on then wh e t is the difference het... tbia aUI, ' ~,,,„ j i,„, aii, renj.nsilsility is au empty s veil, iny hueitirse. I airt (tom brother's keeper I ; poseh ea, at: e d The cene of !Ineptly 7 I, there !ii,,,iii, a co•peeetiou e innot really he reeßtm • al 4., and . notpathise wait • taut . I not 01.1 eblitetel to i a different,. tis primeale7 No. a hen what . .. I la a ' help hint that it" snip not he ' , W.I.', raw dared, ,The &Grim, ie lint Citha in et Fix days din ! tialir al p ee o ur of the dynntr.suocciled to cis learn was the re.nin whY the taco • - v r ,,,, 1 1 , j urn ,n t ,, a . ' er lY , h n iy „ t N iii ,, o ,, ie e st of tl y ian o. of s, v n li , e . , at „. ./.1 1 tames ta. New I-irk, iiii "/ t he Peri "f liniigarY ' creed/epee our liberty. S., no replaced the lloaras the I il r luni.9 et eight.. .lays diet:lnge That in all ; ( a c etate ,' ha al tn i, te ,„ t h e , m ply ~,,,,ibility 1 p 1,110,, of the United States, I etii •nee . hat , nod whe would einem that the policy of each a or ii Ilaartl hy the individual reeponeibility elf weiii.l be the damned motile of the Pharisee.' revel, free and glorious, nation an the United ; I Suttee ehall lie regulated by h men-aial the King eeneented to it. I myself of old, who thanked 14.1 that they were not . Sour. nail not l'• ; re.. named by him alinister t of elle Treasury: That . . lithe. were 11.Ssumur was not conient to go , arterial.. 'lo all but preeieely here woe the rah. The Ifs trading it. the hall of the temple. hot I Allow me to remitrk that there i, an lieut., e t rum cet I not beer the eleathat 1 would not he he.l ,I ri ven o ut the, who were trailing there i math ii. Mutt whirl. the French li•gation in the ; give to his ...Yonne). dtsponl the life into of N e w, what the duty of an inilividital is in United Stat. erpreesed to your llnverunient. ilk ley pop.: lie tat not eontented with the $l, : `ee , in. the I•twa •if hie country, the neve iluty ' eit a id e ee l, „r 57111 October past, which I re 0 :AM. OM IN., 101 Which we genereu.ly uproar. Ile.:, natl. , , ill realeaff• to international law lee, to . 1 01,1 e. • ••amenca 01 elmely connected , imeil to hint aearly. He would have Isis bends I lad e doty has tin other limit, Lot only the pow - with Eitrope, being only seperated from the lot i in ie. pia•kete, and he could not bear the idea 'I cr by Udell it. I/f eatteae, it cum. be eared, . t er hy n distance ecareely exceeding eialit il, n' 1 Hem hiastitiold never mime lie at liberty to di.sp o oto el th a t the Repaid. of ii.ll, Marino, or the Prince j jouniey, LT one of the most iturinetant of gar 1 witlnott any calomel of our Leave army, and to ;of Meracree sdinuld nail. the Uri. of li,pi, 111 real inten.yts-the interest of i . ouitnerce. lilie ; crush del. the spira ,•r freedom in the world I his sinitaisio. annoyonce. It Woo rancid.. I maim. of Amen.. and Euroji 1., rat this any , Teendore, he reaerted to the MAW outrage°. when the Print, of eled ene refused t o rimog• lao dependent upon one another,-that the effect • enniquency, end attnehed ton by art., and by a 1 nine the gitterem cut of Louis Philippe--hut "to lof any . event prosperous nr otherwise, lieppeta I felee report of n victory whicnnever Wan won, : winini rowel , ia given, much will 1 . 0 ',twirl" from I in: on one eide of the Atlantic. an inotiediamay I leaned a preelaination doctoring that Hungary i' hie s ," hey,. the Lord. And every coutlition hits t felt en the tither aide The reault of Ihl. o j ,Lull not more exist- the[ it, Independence, inc to m o nly it.eriality, be. al, ma own dune-. end munity of intereets, catnmereiel, piditicel c a n: - t.l ; teorunitution, me very existent. in aboliehed, any ~1.0, i...in the r ~,,iiiii,ii 1-, In. a I , llWer oft 1 10,41, hetWeeti Europe and Anita-tea -of Man , met it ehell be melted, like u farm or fold, into .. arch loin the a..ty to consider Limeell tie a pore I freieueuay and rapidity ef inter..., holy. a. tee ...ion Entine°. To this we anewereta lof the executive power of Illaielfilid rallrli t.l i awl. is that it licCOLls, ii. ddlicult In point Gill ' .• (holt -halt f1. , 1 rant. tyrant, but an will," ate 1 , re-Met:yin the low or nations. et'oe, a thoneand• I the geographi.l degree where Attie:leen pie. j we beninlied bine and iimued the Declaration of fold tree 1n hum:al:ly ebould there nibode tilt I elti.4 teristitette and Europe... poi; Arm y ti c n, I nn,- , nor holeamelete.e So you see. gentlemen, that inorth he to tilaintion the !awe of ItumanitY j in te tines out the h. lalsere American ed.- 1 there It a Very great differeehe between. you. Woe, a thoueindfold one to hunomity, elowlid I ineree legins end Europe. eatenier e e tr.rtni. end corn -it ii in our fn., i • ! even thane who are e + mit:lay to they are free I eiaitl, Where nine lie -aid as beg.: t.t. tern,- i ati.m. oee abet oieiter ditrorene, 1., aneierat pier i. not feel intereeted•ii /be maintenance of the 14w.• ~,,,k th e a l e . ethi e h er e i n the 4.,, , nd,,,,, a 1 1 , 1 . n , 1;1 , -1., ,, e . 11%111 , 1 . 2r , ~.y . t . ,, , : , . .1,...1:1. . .1,, .1 . ?1 , i ‘ 1 :1 1 . ... : r , t ;/, , , ,L1 ,!. or maltion.l--twenu.” the; am lawn-Int one in I Europe end in Aturrire " The -.owl meanie , .h.a.....7:-, alreat, re,nr....:•: wh,o wriont ~ satest.,nr 1,, (~,,,, •,,,,,, n t ) in-lner jatcretra elauld de- I ..j c h I l eg cane to 111 0 111i141 lia+ reference 1,, 1 ',..,.11,.,_.,,,.;;;;,.;:., , m7 7 7, 1 „1:',; • ::;;;;;:qt7MM;;T:? - ;;;T m .':i m !: 7; sire it Woe to humanity if every deelot a , hr I rolonterclal inter,. flier, lons, in latter tittle-. . i.%,..,,,1,,, nc•cr2d,•edth 0,... thin, nt.,..; oar Itads i world may dere 4 , trample ilavirs the lame or ha' , a doctrine end. into the , :ode of intertintional ; atajaa",a,'aj d aaaaata e r e,'a:',,a7alat i a i laaaa i t ail, ;a n a 1:L. 1 , 5 :7,54r; ' namely and no free nitiott arisee to make! re• I lie which ho Oren a t orietrely to the eolnrner. I 1,,....1,nnt, ,I..:a.et i1....1..D1 and ullcowne.• Os It; w, erected those IR., l'eolde of the United ellia•n, j ~.1 litter...l op nntione I. to their intleprial- i iaria,;`,T..;,,,,,,,1!,-, -7,:;:ii,,,,,,..,t',1,-,,,t,,,,,,;1^,,,,-„1,77„. 1,.....ny Prpecis that yo ti ur ginrioll. re..1 , 1k , en, The ietiie•t despot of the Warld his t ; oar, Awl .., a oeren pee, Tier, listeanat dee, malt 0 Will prove tO the World, then republics are fi huh ' faculty to el ..Ill,ld )(air conttneree from whate j :1 is';',.f.';;',!'',":„.7 s!:!,;.;;',:;;;::'",'4::1"",',',,.`07;;',::: .. wine -it expects to ....• you the guerilian ler let it tdea,ll? 1,1 du eo Ile iii" only to or , 1t..t,pen,,,1-a tnnsh f n t.wer. Iltco , ii. clone with Me eremet : any.,, tt bl,:clple , and your commereo i, ,hnt I tr:2,-^,'",,",.,M.f.'4'..,',..Y.,,',,..:7,.,"7,7..7,..rt'innT'11=n7t!'-',.:; la the b... of huinenity • Well, I will come to 1.1101 po•eible oluecion , tee or down trodtlen Venice, lileening Lenilayrdji : a ii . .. - .. , - .....-: , .... , . ,, ...:,n!-0.T . ,....rk.. , ,ti.:1,..i,9, , r ), , ,ti . i. , n , 0r I to e he rehe •• Ana arc r:ght in pxtr pr . ifle, t•r if Inv 4 wore•oppreneed btu reentore Illineery i a i t a, r .t aaajalaasaa 7,' - ; ,:aaaa i a., • ejti,i a riaaraaai n atie t a t a , ', ;„ t or •• it, is jam end poi h a re mu- spear. j rine , to eh... ill the A entrain tyrant's yoke, e n Ir, wrn : i. , ..l. 1.,..,.. I a-n In thin ser, Ite, 7 arzth.n or i,',• ,:nee -•,.0 ~, , e,cn•t a•lc.l won tl,c eharaw of hnvert, rOl In; Ind .hut ,ther. all IS, clam ag , t., or t, faryoureoui • eerily • they 'Anil. Thu tyrant believe. to have the ; ;',',`,,,,,!;,',, i , , a; re , ', heat -, „ a tea a ny ~, t re: we cennot forni-h you with atom., we cahoot 1 right from Mott very eminent to exclude your i eaata . itaaa m o , ait jaa. t ia , e t ajlzare o th ;., l7 ; agt.e a l t eanfi i arat:az t light your bettlee for you." There is the rule j e netsieeee wal s th e ne m , n ui,,, , ...hi ni r .t,, ,• •caln in the cranth in, la darn-. nr :Its Who can eVtotly tell what w0u..1 have been the 1 N en, thi a i. no n j uori a ta -,,, raent,heta doyen. flT l "7 : "U;;..rn % hii ,l r" fll " Zl. l .r ' rra ' riiT.7t7.+lsiittiT, inn" of oar ow. ,ern Le fat' indePeildeorie• , rion ef ty ran. enduing ynor interest-ye. e ',WI -a 01 rr r former ,rare lit-. egunrlng !none thlric , thnimb your einiutry Pr. In a f.tr heppier pat- ; otar , iamer e ign independence. The Faked Spain ; a t i t a;it-e i ,a;.::; ; ‘ , Y:; ; ll. , c ; t. , .. , n t, tiLt , i i; m „ai rm , .. ;;;;; t m e ne .,,- I graphical poeition than we peer I langoronos. h a ro ant al 413 i regarded thing, from this poi. 1 , time h e ... , a.. s e thai th• eeeron al the fm- I shoal. I Francs have given each an ,111.41 Cr to of ~,,, I f m „,l In a nun . „t aj a ay eeeta mi ni ._ , t0 , 1 ; :iy. ; ;.... , ..;::; : i , t, rx ,.. t,n i r; t e - en th eo ;, imott : =vaz,,%..r ; i pair fere( where in I 77 '' and 1: Si, iti7'"ail of ter of the• United Stat. in S e e. dated. ••Aln , i ' ..e......!;.e . ii,eim •ir iii. IN:stit. ia the tan t e,- erieling to your aid a then of shirt, ,1,01 0100 ' 'bid. Jon. ''', l';' 2! "• •• thee. wool.' "to the cam. i .',..,!.-i7•V,...",72",.41-'i1!':=:".!."....'t1:-.';:nr,illienjnhri.n'Vf !ef war. and auxiliary ...era end 2, iiii" mil - between See. aril the Speninh %melte. 0 ,, !, ! ~.....,,, ,I c,. - Out,' ,I_,-, to ,3,11.7 , 11.1 , , ittdro r - 1 ISl '‘• "ii a loan " '''''''''" till hen. A " .l . ni.'" lie United ::rater h ''''' f! ''''y ed . 05101 '' I 't t i.!" - '! ' :: , "e''' s r. ' "''.• Z7,7:.7.',T gtr-, T . h ,rr 1 .:,,n,1:il ' what in far more than all Ow". does it not eh". 1 both pun.. the hoopitality of their per. eiel , ,1,„7.,„,, .. ~,,,.,," a, i „„ ~,,a , ,,„,,,,';1 0. ,„„,„0 e, ,,„, ; that Franca resolved with all its power to .. , _e moir e end Lave allowed Wen ent, of both to I aaaaitetatiltaaalaaia.aaawaTataa),-;;.,,,,,,,„ti%.,:,..= po”• , the caner of Yrwir indereud""re • Y." I procure oithi. their jurie , lietiun. in the way ;•I , the ..,1,1,13 ,•,/, or th .c..untr l . in lap 1...0e and Ilw. perhaps, I may be told that Fr a nce ,I,.lthia not lawful • trade, an,' eopplie, which stilted the r I i t ;aj;jej:ltiaaaa a, , , , , %lij i ta t aaait= aLt:.a . lnala a ed ta ilha r el ali , of love fie freedom. hot ""' of h tree I In co...ea.:nee '' N me, gentlemen, OM ii the priii• j va.t. thnt 1.0111. in1rt.....,1 nit Ito. rtl4l/1\01. , e 14 the ,Knelled. Wen, let it he , but let me el,. aek • f o r which humenity etrpect, 1%0.} our own ntel • i ; a•aat t aaat • aa , a4;a•aaina t iiii , i. , t , in „ e , J. ;,. zazie ro, gt e ..n c t . te r; ghatl the reuse of nid e . limas -hatre I -I , i for rulttkitni'm binefit to • ..n niatnt,by yeti ' /no., tll ea.. laa, 11/Ij th..ntert,enee watt t;1i7,,...r...n.ta , n mare ellieient in the deettniey of matikied than ! „ t net anh e ee r a w ~,,,,e, ,which In c rehtte te r ,. : v•en , ::. , , : :: . ; ,... , .i . v ;: i ; v : ,. :a r „ u. , . : •• • . , 4. 7, ,..., , ir ~.. e n x . , ~ „4 . , ,,, m , .., ~..„ ~, frre•lolit. Prior. Ph , a j , tett.e. and law+ r et ire t, draw from your country whatever el. ' h eina th......t0ie lay.-.1 7 2 ; 1er.., the Flu= .0...,.. L . , - af huneeotto ' rernapn I will It, t,,IJ (ha: IA ' ply of "PPre'aion again rat th ew nation,, hu , fir ' ',. ...: ,.. 1 '' , ' rre7i...-a n t.' , Z.:7„: ` ,', i ''. ' , ...!';','"i'.::Z.....","';'..,' -,,pr. is ee far (rein AM,. a But IN me a.it , 1. I lid, to whir. to buy the mean, ref detatia. !om la meentel ,, nedi , tariaorly, tar, the nee:natl. Vane% Awieei". in GI" LIM, of s .t eunii . s "intii 7 n m i .' i That we, net the p ri nciple of your Waehington; i iii , l aia',ah' e 'ar t a i a,,a,a l at r a . h,f e e t aa e Ma t ll'a d t arri ane siat te ?, a ha di'leant fro , . Loran" to! day Mau Franc" w ''. t when ii , 'peal, .r harmony , friendly iatercouree ! .I ' h aiatc , , Lehaava t z ; .!• ,„ !..:l; l ej . . , in e rn eetze t, e, , ihg . tz b, l 7 l eg. from Atuerica Ite , NIIY three' ”are ago' II". i-aml of pee.. he always [eke. euro to speak of 1 te „,,j'r 0 1,..,,',. wat, to natrna!'o'f' Earn,. • , whetter ' ever. 1 most solemnly declare that it k not .1' 1 nations and not of goverement•-etill less nun y• Inn he to • mate eLre.ele „ yien a‘rainat their tiorernmrnta . intention to rely literally np o u this eanntple It reline who Frifi.itt...l netiens hr foreign nun 4 I aa „ nataaaaa i na , t ; ea. ,, t..t. : . t r.a , ,. . , trfz•M1:g . .. i .v. , .... 4 . ,_ I 4 not my wish to entangle the United Sam. in .... aloe en red wird a nation with ail it• n.tity s 1 r,. , ,,, , , , ,. , , , , , , , t ,. .,e ,, t , ...., , ,, , i . ;! . ..te :17 d u ., 7 , f0r ' aet o t=l . 7. z l , t r, ^ i r . t0r . ..r,,0r to engage your great nee rile to .end out riches, 4.,U1d at lrocd, of yOUr political a :turn,. I ~,:,„.c.,....,.... x . ;i....t.'l'iliati statje: J =e; imprint. armies anJ fl ee. to re.tare Iliingery to its en m I aezt net ' he ja.„,,.. 1 naa nail yen I en, e e e r y 1 , , I ma m . 7,7, ,.. amr‘mom;, , ,a _ mmm.a,;m , mrtm7. ~, m ,, , , , , : : ibmr ,.. lll,,m;m, twira i.•krend , re , t;"t at. P... 11 .. ^ .- , 1 ; Pet that the yierd nation le retailer,' by the ward i 7 - ,..`,.. t..- goo- i„.';,;;,, .„, ~,','„ ,„,„,..rc,-, „e,„ 1 ,, i „:„..eolemely declare that I hare never entertain v ,,,,,,, t j,..,1,,,,,,,. I ', ara b', .„, kh t h a I n,h r r: ;, , , , , , towtorls 1n7..1.. t . hn t : nitea Are:. r: v v , r.,,,- ''clinch expectation, , such bop., and here I eenta ; plltl/IC I , ptnion of the people of the United State. I 3;' . ..f,,,.,,,,,1 Itt,.,4:llil t n , ‘ If U ll, ',, TTle ' ttcl.out siten'a , 1 to the ainetical point. coneemite of 1,11 o•n riehtm, .honi,l hiehly and ' aattacaaaaateaaiiffy,Weefere,aata I g i t a tt e a r ,aa h e allai,ene tat aa,lr e aa I The spirit or ev il in Enna+ , ie•the ...err mine ! re..ilutely .I,lare that the ' , reale oi ,h e a mts • • ,y, '0 ~,,- , t,...,,..,,, ~,.,„..,. ,„,,,„,,,,, I spent of Roaieu aleel u Mem lii a ion Int. .I+,l. Old carry hal trade awl eon , ien .. it. e ,r• i ::' , ..i , :-i: :: • g , , : ,: ..! ,. t ., .t . t ~ , . .•::- , t ;.,, ,T 7. ,,. ..., ,, .., : :, :5 . ,., : i. z:. 7 , r y a , 4 the .1 mane holdnear, of e v er y ( , rte ty, tont. tare.-o! ,nor roorrae with whale r, natton, to- 1p .•Ai : - .r, , , , ..:w1„ , .. ,. .. t ...., li atm 1i i,.., .... , iti,.. I in t runn i e rap, n apprememan mien+, and t.i ...eleii ; that n 111 , ot at reinlnticla 42.61114 it. err..., I a t tr a aj a aaz ta b t ala t ana a a ty lattaa , a.at t e „; iaa t‘a t a ataaa ; , , i ,at, • down It --rte To 'hie Moloch of ulnlction ha. oe rot qt , •l Mint the people of the 4 nited Sian, j ~., ...Inn, then thcro I,one humble 1./011 sr...f• : fallen a Net.. my poor satin land. II la IL, !et pr.... with e •on lea. I rewn ern G.teernatera, t.• i aaa'a t ',l 7 :a t a ° 4",,aa i a , ; t a: t t „ it a t atia t aa!,,aail t ata t p a 'a a a with which alnntelemhert threaten+ . the Preece j provide for ih. protection oryeur teal: I it.iientea• Wcrolcvn. 11. i w. , u1•1 rnth-er ,t.rvu M.. rn reruhlic4n. trio nu•elan intervelitien in Ilee• • i um ea ,, t aie nt t h at yen , „,,,,e,„,, aneeretheat t j r , , ,, , a t aya:e at O ; Ta ;,, ay t a. ,,, ea..e . • , • , ..i . e . n .„;d ut.4., LtiL e r,4ett.ar e i, . ;. _ ,, gore which gaearned Pt.' , 1 , 1 , wiler e enii"" do ' sense puha.. NM.. ea pronounced, wilt jade. , I ' 0 ,7,1a,"';',,,,1`a,"a:.'„',",',;', i 'a t a.',..% 5 i ';',, i ,"a'a ° o,,ra7,l",",,Ya Reno' and gait ealle lemeritY to Noonan 4 ereat. • a enn e eni e n t in au nerve yufur iinal (mean in ! 'Venom-. money,. i .... m e , nroia nt ....1. , Lila to cevah ihtwn ‘II *he erniearor, f•r freolitn And' the ej„ ter it end to 1„„1, 1,, r ~,,,,,, „,,„. 1 , • f r :,..,1. , ...., y , t , t 1 , , , , !witt=0 , - , .. :,, , , N•h nr , :n..r u r el za, .. a; n j oily l‘t " e rriliwid Th . d ' e r d * ii '" " r " - ,•t .tion fort whirl, wrwild not fort, the any of , t.....';,ir ,: Pr law, ' 1 bilm I.kt.i 3 /11 iawfui The. iut. pr.'. continent nee lenne,l nr e inat the ariatien ' „e e i nn + rncrien to . tch abroceitan, f ward., I '1,..,„1:7•72,... , • ;',..,;; . , ,, !,;;,;L.„ , .. -. ...j: , 2,7 . 1, - 7,thlT . of the wirl.l Thy ... a rtantfer of ~,, The ~r ', am .. amm , m . m , mammmn ,„ mm , ‘ ,„„ mmmmaam a „, 1 ,, m i : ,, m, I ~0..., ~ ,,,, ,, ,,,, , o ~, 0., o. ~ . .5 r,..,,,, __, 00r., or nhe rand rnet.r of Non'in Lb . . , the Eiie.'neart e ". - hr. lit lecitae. or repaldie'an iltenity. only to I 7,1;;T'„..:.;:',`,.7,-..%;'iZ-0,..,":.t0i1,!:::;,1,4,.,,hrj:: on, is, on the ere or it new revolution It Is not , .., ,1.,1., r ., co , 0 -1,, n. t,„ h o „,„ ,),,,,,,, , ~.,..., .„ ~,,,,.., . 0 0 ,,,,,.. iNar r., , r ~,, ,, , 7, ne r ,,,ro tr y to he intfiafed in the Penn.. , prerat.l Id a , ~r s at e e n, r. rani I )ilft the Near of an aa 1 I7';';','a,"'ea.":.,t'at, • i a";,..!,":; • ~m7cm' ; ;;;.„;",:4!:;,m ` ;`,;":„:, tie. of the Enrolees .1,..,,,,,„, I , h e awore 1.1. el , l•rtag Place (or the viral fam( or 3 nor ra, .I.' 111. lA.', $. • , VI, 0 1% ,1, nrrna3nlto',ltt .r.+l7z lb.' aitpitatehNo ritotingeneY I , l• Pei , " • loath; 1 be:irre ye. giorioue contstry ehouhl 1d.,7.:ae.,:7;;,;,',1,;,:::Vu'i,;!::1'...1.;i1kWi`e•-:eatTw..l.;‘..nr find eut by the French Cenetitution imelf, pre .n 1. :,,, te t her ,. ( r .. e ly naurr the et. speug'.l hit, • • emeioit; I ...ea.-. ie. cuarwaranalt t l , rv,eu th , . WU..., ~‘ 4 new Pr...ad...1 el - action f o r the neat •prine mm. , ,,r 11.,,rty with ell Mi. cungenntl prinelple, ':i'i',:.,'",n."17ntt':.',,54r.,:ir.:1t'a.",:.,..,.nt,tirtr.t41...z.....:\ Sol., ,uppene that the ambitien of Leine Nor, ' at m „„ j tetn a,. ~,,,,ef depeed ent o n wher, er r ,.. ! oc a Tete t a 1 a. ,..,...ima aiil.; : e t . aaartllaLlnl:aat eri o b V=l,..n ;,....../111rared by Runian , rout aid, anotte . e p ee . o f thy gl.Ol, unite. or the kir gn Is I I'.Z l eg h t t t ,", n . ~..a : , ,'•:',:, IC. .. r .lt,n ant •rrr'o,owlo: his time, ;which I Reareely"helieee, i sod hop 1 ,,,, , etna ,,,,,,, • Th e vbird e t a , ot ton 1.... wah,cl. I had ilc. hcoot 1., nolatel \ and a'atch Imoo I'l loll l 'ha' (1 "-lr‘l .ill ll‘l ts peaceful ib ' luii ""• 7 "`' h ' bumble w - tvlies, gcnth•tnen, i, the reCogoilion .4 . ' ' • aim would melt etottlentea the frietels of Repot, I the , tatate . heettata ~r it „og.u . r oar . ri,,,,,,.. \ lie. Fra n ce, of ....Me the final no of Il se urn : ttyclatrAtion of independenre proclaime " t.,l'rnd!l '''''''''"'‘ l l '''" ll ''''•" recal lll'jd'rnrh tem.! , from rt." , • Sa i nal"can '''"l'' or t,,,, .he inetea anmee tptowwh im . . ... •.. .. the arth t par wl equal lotion i that a revelation will follow. if not 'precede th., , nevelt to Italy or if there is it,, peaceful 'dil -1 that iu Promo, but a ravrlntion, then every tosn knows that whenever the bent of France twits up, the pult.tion ix telt throughout Europe, nail oppressed nat.., once more rile, and Russia again interferes_ INow I hombly ask, with the view of the., cis. `gain before my eyes, Call It be couventent to sorb it Reset power as thin Republic, to wait the very outbreak and then only to discuss and decide what direction yea will he willing to take in your foreign policy' it may come again, al iin der too InstlErtoddent, at a laic hete, when agent. I were rent to sec how matter, Stood in Hungary, Russia interference .and tren•m achieve whit the liapsborg dynasty failed to achtleve. You know the nil worde, “while tome delintre. By I moth= fell " So I respi l / 4 1fitily entreat the peo pie of the E 6;1,1 States in time, to espresso Its will an to what cow, It FrilhON mho roamed by its National Government In the rule of the up preaching throb I have mentioned. aiktoll most ' confidently hope that three is only one retiree possible, consistent with the above recorded principles. If you acknowledge the right of every notion to alter its institutions nod govern- , ' went—if you acknowledge the interference or I foreign powers in that sovereign right to be a violation of the law of notions, as you really d o If you are- forbidden to remain indifferent to this violation of international law. an your Pres dent openly professes that yon are, then there is tin other course possible than not to interfere in that sovereign right of nations, but alert not to admit whatever other powers to Interfere. But you will, perhaps, object toe that is no much an to go to war. I answer, no—that is to much as to prevent war. What is wanted to that effect? It is wanted, that being aware of the precarious condition of Europe, your Nation al Government should no soon as possible rend instructions to your Minister at London, to de clare to the Englihh Government that the Uni ted States, acknowledging the sovereign right ad every nation to dispose of •its own domestic concerns, have resolved not to interfere, but also not to let interferawhatever foreign power with thin sovereign right, in order to repress the epteit of freedom In any country. Como quontly, to invite the Cabinet of St. James to unite with the United States in this policy, and to declare that the United States are resolved to act conjointly with England in that decision in the cane of thatapproeching crisis on the Eu ropean continent, which it in imposiible not to foresee. If the citizens of the U. States instead of honoring me with the offers of their hospi tality, would be pleased to express this their . will, by passing convenient resointions, and rat ifying them to their National Government—if the people by all constitutiona: means—if the independent press would hasten to repress the public opinion in a similar sense—it in cense., quence of this, the National Government would instruct its Minister in England accordingly, and bye convenient commonication to Congress, give on an it Is wont to dq publicity to this his step, I am entirely sure that you would find the People of Great Britain heartily joining this di rection of pPlioy—nobody in the world could feel especially offended by it, and no existing relation would he broken or injured , and still the interference of Russia in the restoration of Hungary to its independence (formally declared in 1849) prevented—Russian arrogance and pre ponderance checked, and the oppressed nations of Europe soon become free. There. may he Rome over anxious men who perhaps would say, "But if ouch a declaration of your Government will not be respected, and Russia still does in terfere, theiljoci would be obliged by this prowl .one declaration to go to war, and you don't de- - , sire to Imo ear." • • ~,i, ii the laws of nature end natal - de GA entitle (liens The political existence of your glonotis republic In f. outdo! upon thin principle. atom Mtn Itglit My nathin stands'upou thin greutel, and there in 04 nir,king resemblance het wren your cause tel that of my cetintry tin the 411. of July, li - :i., John Adaossispeke thus in your Congress, ..ink or 'twins, line or die. aurviek, or perish, I ant for .thin dectintion - in t h n beginning we aimed not at i dependence, but there ,e 2s davinity which shape our ,eitil• ' \ Mese noble worth were in my el on be i I Jai A pri l ,is n o, t , I to „,,ii the dee I %tic!, e 4 Ilidc pendenee in the National Assemb • f Bengal:, . \ Our condition won the siune.and it li lu lobo' , dilierence I dare nay ibis in favor n \ . irrirtitc. Your country was before this ‘li'd 4 i' 1... m SA nell.onnvinting, independent State.`Tvgarr was. Through the lapse Of n amt... \ fr.. through every vicinnitude of thin' long tek t el, while nations •aninheil and empires fell, tht ..kr consisting independence of 11u 0gtry W., Ti V. dinputed but recognised by all Ate powers ,iti, the earth, etoctioned by treaties Mistle with th Hapsburg Itynanty, when this dynasty, by the\i free will of toy nation, and by h hiltheral part wits invested with the kingly crown of qungsTY Evii n more. this independence of Ilungalivraa ac knowledged to make is part of the intern tional law of Europe. and was guaranteed not on by the foreign Enrapean governments, such as 0 at Britain, but also by several of those, when et constitutional states, which belonged former to the German, end, after its dissolution, to the\ Austrian Empire. This independent condition of Hungary is clearly defined in one of our fun damental laws of ITUI, in these Words: "Ilan• gary in a free and independent kingdom, having it, ownself consintent existence andconntitlition, \ and not nubjent to any other nation or country in the world." This, therefore, wan our anciert right. We were not dependent upon, nor a Tout of, the Austrian Empire, as your country was dependent upon England. It was clearly ilefiitril that we were to Austria nothing lost good neigh borhood, nal the only tie between us and At m ' • trio wan, that we elected, to be our kings, the' sante dynasty which were also the sovereigns of Austria, and occupied the same line of heredi tary succession of our kings; but by accept ing this our forefathers, with thS consent of the king, again declared that though she accepte t the dynasty to be our hereditary kings, all the oth er franchiees, rights and laws of the naticiti shall remain its full power unit intact, and out , . country shall be governed like other dominions of that dynasty, but according to our constitu- , .. .. . ..... . . tionally established authorities. We would not belong to the Austrian Empire, because that Empire did not exist while Hun gary did already nearly 200 years exist, and ex ist some two hundred and eighty year. under the government of that liapshurgian dynasty.' The Austrian Empire, as you know. was only established in MC, when the itheninh Confed eracy of Napoleon struck the death-blow of the German Empire, of which Ftricis 11. of Aus tria was not hereditary, but eleeted. Emperor. •That Hungary had belonged to the German Em pire, that is a thing that nor man in the world ever imagined yet. It iv only now, when the liapaburgian tyrant professes , the intention to melt Hungary into the German Confederation ; hot you know this intention to be in so striking opposition to the. European &Min law, that Eng land and France solemnly peotested against thin intention, which Pinot carried out even to-day. The German Empire having died, its late Em peror Francis, also king of Hungary, es tablinhed the Austrian Empire in 1806, but even in test fundamental character of the nevi. established Austrian empire, ho solemnly declared that Magary and its annexed provin-. Ott are not intended, and will not make a part . ~ i .1t ,t ..'ut It, 1,51. •tlr I b... out • ac 4 Trust tlts n ma 4.r atm y mat hactl.le , Ambrt\tu .1.11 , 4 \ '• litt.rmt A. LI, ant tt .1.4. JaN,I, 51,. Imam, ~ Into. N. llt eatu tn at, ; It • llnrrtNlValu, \ li, U. Mt ttiat It. na,..., 1 Thlt t.thr ttiat...ticsuracAte Luttnuau, sr tutr , sr alai M. Its It.h atattulcut.lot. tittru• \ In It. It , , . atul avaltit,, al rtnalrl au natru 14,...11 11, at.u.pt I, i mar Ito tua.ttlen a,, 0t...-Int amptt ... t 111 11 14.1NI.1.1 1 .1. I: . : 1. 1 tn. uf druit I oil \ . la• ay Ptltuatt I' , \ Delaware Itutu Safety bisarazu •t, doltatt, ' \ . -........ ; g kFFICE; NOl.. II Itoo - II .iiE 1,4 Fra ' N r CII .. 4. 11244 ~ rt.., Pila.lttpll ' I . .." 1 , 0,11.A.,1.—i1t thlagg. stcrykul4 , t 0 ,.. eel, t o_ • .rty. Itt Inwo an‘l ettantrr, irt•stro,l t, u.tutat t t t a,,c, t.., Cra. wall. luatNt tato ur pt... .nt tn• , Nt" ..o. 1 .,,,,,, ..- 1 1t , t\ntto ttutt.rt ~ ., 11 awl 1 , 14.,...1.t... tut . ..act:l or. Nastxl,rt. ut.4., ..,1 ..,, , ~,,,,,,,, iLt, u s Ml, ma t al *tr .'.., /.,14.111. Tr , 1.P. 1 .7.11, -- 3 1 .0. . 0 -' , , C , ' , ly• ' ' {tacrturtt.s 11, 11 agits,...4t1rt..N4 vat, t'sn I 1...... ... %tit, Liao, un rit , .rx at. 4 liktc.+o, t , — ..., , ,T - , 'L.r• . 11.1....,,,...!—..0.. pl. ii. ;.al, I.ltekt.:l el_.t...,thlar. Jahn Ct. ,7 " i i LV't! ' " .l l.. d " r ' tta ' r n l b ll l rltl. ' .V,n. l-' . ' . ‘ ;,li t '''`,lltt fl I" I Ilattft'4,..,tt, r. ./ . tat Seam, Itrn.. k,. ilt - ,..-i,, Y.z... C. . i ti? , :;;;llita h g,l,!'7l,9, - ..:,'•,",..t:v,, 1 47:7k-1-.11:1V1 ~ Cliarlt4 Ne11r.....1t : Juktuttn. nut. II -, tr. B..Thurna ~ '' j' iTtt-7 . ~. ' l't . l r t r it . . ' l r t . D. -r. m 0.,.. . , 1 Juba T. /4.. tau. 41milt.. AltatUr, Vret.tlent. Tut , . 1...11tt 1 aunt. .I.titru U. COlb•N, 24.1.11 , 14,T. bural..l tott,..tf I t. a 1,11,1.11: tioer,..or 0,- iotlr• it. luaus,. ta,...1 yius, - a •ir. ii pit, l e , r.tarru my turn thaal. m ay. mn. ,r Lee ions., •11, ant ..,,,, anam .r It, .41.1 a ta. .m.r...1 ot ` alld It ram. moat \ et : m Man, .4•• ainier akeltrolmsl m erkile to i, : =1: 1 ;; '" 1. ~ memmil that it well is ;bent:Nil e sempt I. m..., ama.l te map 1,, And .t tam,. to my nap! then Mal milli,. of drat, It'an ...anr. ~.1 the PIIII4. I'llle, numMe marl calk ua 1.1 mt.ithumat.. Eli 01,11.1 with-gram Prima* to Mr ere.. latra t .” nimme. •N.uiretated hy rtnr a dolt., l• +,•n .. .ti..... dial, m m . a a ne . \t {1 all m , moi,y ifm m ama , t o o n era , .I.ma I, T1T112,1.113f GI th. prr t er at Mem I mai r.imi Mr it niehlMlanalmat atmeld I be a. baerT ...am me), ma. s Form Vornmithmr t rourimot aim Unitml maim. e ram. pm of tbr frmi retort... of en• a...Mr...am amt.,* nal tr. 1ie....1,1 the maul c.a.-Mil frmaloon a ..I 1nd...m.1 e nro ot Ila, I.. dmir.to mein,, ern , rinv-I. to,. to roma. -re It li b ,e hat....M t mem Mai,. to my mnamee t 1 l. ao. c r ,e ~,,..... I cut v,,•• my oattv. Rommel . Ira ring toa I r. aill:e a,I I .I..trrien ern tier Metier. ...., lame:lama. for her m e e II watt I m so ,lent "ir 'our 11 mittmlon aim, wh, • for rout girtiOaar rnetatti . e. .•k, , n tba hur. ot your um.d. be also ailed Mt Mee, an arm, Mr. I bare dom.\ rocs tom ot \no IterIIMILI We,. I (111 I.• 'mar 'home a \ pour p.mrcuut , mil m but imu eourot noon 1:13.1 the [mom. of • imam . Kurt, m a khe worrl tirr name , et imp, and wit, , Demure Tam bmk me Mr the reme.mintatter or 1131. ',Muriel* ot Ishart i whirl. i1..1 Imo &rem, to lammier Um menereei tmn.Hl ot hunimitr : and It la a riorloim.eleht me • 11,11... nee, Mmorfol tormle. came torte lo Mme trite ~.. n a ammin. lb, minemor of neres n 111 . r. e.,-.......i. emiolr., mile ler talmim fern. Your ma. Vr7.7 my meters " m i liii l :7VlgPl:t h p, '" V, T u ' urt a ll tp x ~,. lima teaniaring to time tor the en of bola viler), I , . b 1 141 : 1 . 1. ,... y . 0ra . i..... L e n„ . h . ex al tl;n r, e•- ,... n o ri n „ tt, ,, itr ,, k .... nll r tat . , irlilad,. to your curmi.er aa • tokrei of tied. Mt them Li \ a It \ fmmlato on iamb. Irmo.. three 1. remelt. like eiau to el Its worth and to lawmen IM cans, T 's s peech wan repeatedly interrUpte by the apple se,of the company, and when th great \,. Magya 4nmed his . sent, the enure coca any robe to at feet, and gave three hearty cher! k fee the epeNtar and the tense he hod ea elk. I unitly actvel s itel. \thl fjUitsr and rose and said: , • ' Ota .curis:\ {le have heard from the lip, of the p , eettimi +timer of Hungary his humble quo . We ha 'VI heard his three distinct risonos ono I ris aim to put to you the ques c two i ail the thr e\ propositions, stibmittell by lie i • rntor of Ito6gary, stand ne the res. °lunette f his meetinNLoud cries of "Aye, aye—Put th 1 Ge I en, ia there a cen teary opinion it this hod 2 Van, let it be heard.. .[No resPouse I thank in 'God that ouch is \ the font , tote d \ given by ,the fret atmembly in this country \ unno thetopeit, upon the pniyersof \ dow: I Try. [Greet applause.] \ Id, rid responded Other toasts‘.7 to, when the 'Ale) 11 ttf‘ \ sixth reg ular toast.. fano\ \ The lira.—T h e V oice af\reedom - 1 ,-It whispers hope tt, ,reaped, in than, der . 7 ilefiance‘at the tY MM. \ s \ Acter the toast had en rend, 'says the Ter , 6,rine,\ Mr. 11. J: ReSUON of \llO A', Y. 7, rs... ~ tore to'rep:y. having bee app\int4 to thl ,\ . office hy \ the CortUnnee, w en, \hat \ was iti aatonishnient of 'y at \ seem; CA ; Wf...vu .4' t'lte C' i reeo who lasi, , Spring insuuntiol penlivatorge, Kin al with hen t urge , staid tug up and endow e Tacit heart. This intrusion 't rese t ed \ h the • , company, who loudly called Tor Mr. &mond. ~ The Chairman announced th\t. Mr. syinOp i d , . had. been appointed\ to speak but et kl ci‘ Co , Webb kept standing glad did noyit dow riot\ refrain from trying to ;peak, till \a mamb of the Committee of Arrangement, came upend` obliged him to take bin seat, when\ Mr. Itank. nom tj went on with hip remarks :--' . ‘, - \ \ We here.no epees for Mr.:. Raymond's elo quent speech. Poring Ma renuirke, twf stated, -- , that the prier \under his control would accept the exposition of nations) nd of M. h:ossuth. (Cheers, nedr, members of the press, — Answer 50 too On the reading of the dent t\. at, Mr. Webb, of the Courier and Enquirer; t.h the floor again amid reit, of "no, CO,' "ti:dUtrzt " but on the iuterporition of the Meyer, end Re y - mo r, ,d, 55, permitted to proceed, at.delcA from writt, ,peech, but was r..„on intevo tett with In ; -c1 end ,from., end compelled to Ikes L. lie puLitstted his speooh the next roorititig his nun paper. \ Speeches were else made by Rev. Dr. Bet \ laws, Roe. Dr. Chapin, and Rey. Pc. LethU.es end' others, and the compeny broke up at two o'clock, A. M. nd natitnal duty, 1 , •ries . from the 4r ell—we say !INSURANCE Equitable Fire Insurance Company; of London. • ri ill IS Cornr,aby insures ;ig.:inllt loss by fire op 1•6i.1.... Qt..•,. nsrot. tint pao , Landitat. POLL in- , A 4 -, w. WOW. A,:t: a , SI . • &ID, r r., f of lois. N LOAN FUND LIFE INSURANCE OF LoNbuN. o . onirany Insure- Li: en Le/IVef'llllll3 n-rw wf 13 and n t n-urs.n Ihn /.. 11 NI A /i!1 it Ca., re.2l.llnir • kittsbiu - gt Life Im'scu - auce CoMpaary. t.UNPANY 1;3. nworporateil in ll 1- s r ,, tone,. weette lers,ter, Cl. Art:, 10,4 i b.. ...neeutte-ti btu...ea., a ....petal .ef it(l,Mte. t.eßeat due , b tmeth 04 lio 2 Jo:ol..ite , —lt Ileatt...l he. Joint itexk e.,ean thy rest. ' arr ee o: -thlnl ‘Las. Inter r hl- tut eel (,e,tatene•e t. e.ut,FMteteu Lott: liner than bee ra.Not seent ek :taupe., Mutual rad:, Ate lb. tnutee t eee.e. neleertett bro ther r.hv71...., le , 'ei r. el eat the utn• letin , tele beette e tb e cet , neteeneel tuna/F..1,e; that •yttserti of an,rnaer, and theTte.M.Al.ool 04 1,14.1Futett of the .Inlnt te.o.et, alppartnerta. Litesertor the'tsesksting, e . it ens,ran., en lite, In eet,ette-herin., the- 11,1, xi!, rialtos, tes tae... treetieene. trleeetele, ie.-v:elite , tete of talsreete,tittir tee urn owes rte tee e.4e.t. re.; at le et...beech, or upon [Lot partiee arri,in set s tleo of :4 . C., or at the. t Setion ot the stuntrel.• • - tre.thlrut . • - httAto..l 31,1wiken, 1 hp. Vrositleutz .Intserlt h. 1...Pch, - .rrre.tarch LAI I A. (3 , 111 , u, hp.h.rtpry. —Lzharntit..: \ Jpmpt 11044, I.rxh. ,ht _.Dilworth. Itattanel 3.leClurkt . ths. V , ht. 1 IthDhs. 11trn. 1311:11,1 t.t !low. attrr Vort. at r l tut - r: John thajtlP.r. CA.hitu of Iltitth; 31A1,1ht tag., Whoktutletthwer. \ wLL • lion. A Si. A. T. Mt ealncnt. Is.. 31- ..I,..ment. Drool,. 51. Is.. "IL ti p t 11rIngtott, Si. ,13 -, rothrtto arnth.l wort h. )1. Putsthtltl strott. 11.1p.rt put th r. 31. h., 11,11. rntIs ..urt1. ptrept, 'h,. • It n,. M..K. dicagral, 1.1,n1 {Jr. lAlw, , rtt. .111 U.. day. .t 12 OM. ti 1,1 the Con 11,1). lAurtl, mr4(.. itI:IAA,S C. A. 1,1.11,,N. Vor , r. Western Insurance Company of Pittsburgh. g I APIT AL $300,000. It. MILLER, Ja • ) F. M. Gonlo,SA-retArt. V 1 .". . ,4'- fr l 'l!"::llj'fr'V ' ec A tt lTd!ltt h".llbana,;;:FAxmAnPtels4l Zy.pA wy oinreoe arvell knovA 11.• mbonity. xnl h dLrulont ‘, by • prompit....l.l , lllArAli:y to mAiimmt thr elsAract,r 1,111,h th, a.Atan,sl. pmiocti. thAk. *h.) inottp..!. • D1.P.,..10.—fte1.1.4 31 jr.. J. NV. littler, 'Wm. on, C. I tA.....u. NicJi..l:. ales EllvAetheo. \ Jan....Aellumwl LiPri.AAL, tad ll'. IL \ kktAil, IN, ,le.r,bg.uw at efAtut & 'Co. up etair,) 1u4,11,, FIRE IIiSUILATi(*E• I.:;p3IPAlk! Y. ESIGNFt.. 1:111y fur the t•afc , r classes of vrt,rt,.l,pie cArdt4L, :01 , 1 strotaft uperi tn . uttliumr.rtan. Otwort. 14 rat St , ontry mu; n Law.. Aul=o•rwre. of A. A. I A I:1.1 t; Actuar3 - , era • Orieani Ins - um:Lee Cprriprtil3`„ 1 1:1 , ,V, • CAPITAL, 51.60,000. • . Sim ii d in nr,rdnnr, h.tvrc,tcr Lox of lA, Stith I.aateg ts. with th• r....514,1a.4 t la. al 11.1. 0144 - 1 i their ur Aarnt an i• in. debt, ao.l..aft.ty. o. :‘ la.:, : , .,3•• tar., • , .. . , I • 1/111,..•. b.: 4 - 1111f:eta et- l'lo , l.raQh. ' ee2. 7 • • A. , 1- Al,lllr 11. A*l-1,.. , 1 Franklin Fire Iniurance CO. cf klailad'a. i,' iitEcTiAts . ..(I'ries 'l. Bomekei-, Geo. W. 11v:harsh , . Thblllart, Morte,i I, 1..., 4,7004.. ..ner,..1,101,,1, E. 1b.., iatnuel Grant. 1 1 4,111, 14,V13,. J•ntdo,,K.Nnltl.. 31,r1 - 1, Pallame.t, (MA:ILE, I. CA-tiCKER, franileut. i en•abis 0. flasc•ra. f l eer•htzy. or l g: L e ' ,lTui: ' :i•W 't .l ' ..e ' r ' 2, ' ,., 4 , ' ; 1 1! ' r:, U ,V,T1•7;!;;% " :,1 an .l. rule. sA b.w ae n.r.t etari, , ut %ill, eeuril.,y. ! ' lll ' e r3 C - ,tbi d u,, h•r'e re•efle,l • 1,-.. ee,,,,,ent fuot4 ' It .4, eat, the 1;a14 , 41 • , 14 l'ree.t l t. l, -.....1f , ., In. -1- . 1,1 4 •,,, I . l Plt- fintweein in LW, toottred, scsetx , I`4.le , Cututoll,.. J• 11 1 1 .rf I, f-Iel• ,1 1 111 - Ilzh a:rtesine il.m. Ant n( ..lomenil,fr, ... v.,. 1 .. 1 1 , 1... it'A l , k 4 EF,"4;;:::.... s i 1,212,70. II then- ~,e bbr..\, • ier l .l nt II 1 1 11.. 111er •\ 1.1• 1 e be , 1 4•••• ..I , ,,,fiffon 1. , ,,, 11,1,11,4 Thte,ar,l 1,111,,• 1....,..... 1, hr.. :bret, 1.1-riTl4 . Irriantel, el thu f, I,' .4 1,,, r•,,,, b, /t.. 11 e.• ‘1.1•1; etallty au.l Me „..„,...L. L.L. L ... L . L ., ~ ~,.,,,,,,,,,,,111-eleptbe, i.,1.1),%1.1,1t1!, A ectil. . - 1 .. -.• ~, /., corner et t1,(111•1 MR/ al FS/ ''i. LaEtirL4tce Co., Philid'a , ' 'BUItt;Ii„ W. 11. DAVIS,— N 1,44,, .N,,,,,d3 Liberty abr.., , . ni pere,w, re , ialn. it) the ,x, .IN, be r..urd &Lay, ryt Ow , V;11.1.110i rm.= 42 1, ..; , 11 , 4, 1 ,1,ere-nl-1 heves vubniataballbto promp N •11•1‘ tbn bticciples and 1 .b forms Trultietlbzi .tartly mairtintm.— e. tunttnel fdr Ms. - \ _ ' told Penn Mutual Lift,\ A U ENT IN ft,( vier J. fine,. Jr.. ror 14.0 twit, r,croo , o I•nr, part .4 the foqa 11 to 1, no.l A C,...."k0 {l. if,llll. 4t:“.“. o'llll.,.thon no r at.loo.l.l.ll'..unola:ors Lopot“.• id LtOl_Loutaotov, auJ Cap/1.1.44.k over 8....k.k•C011.1,.. 1.1,Lf.a.111,1,1 riot 1•44.10,r.0t0 Jou. Zl.. • ldar\ 1e \ Fire, and Inland T Inaniance.• rr111 , ; 1116 ixmaio Company of Jtuaary l atd their mare., na tlais city ‘ r% ' . 7' Zr .d T: " ttl; a ,11 I;l:7eilo;,firlj ucn \ Art., al . Auk. 'C V - 1 . ...Nita,. 1 trn t h 172:1 I orown, , , \ U ' lloan. 1 Catourl F. I'n s,, 1 Morttel \ \, i. Azo4n Piliaborgh Lve InsuranceConilsatiy. CAPITAL, 8100400. \ OFFICE, NO. T 5 FOURTII STREEI\ - ov.victus: S \ Vim pr , t1.21..:=;1 . 1,Linf... =terj—C. A. (11.., frA7SNI anot.r PAM' I ........________,___ - The Human Body lAEA b,rspire,- -, clo SAYS NAVURE.; to hate a 'healthy ,rip•_ kJ Deere:fee; end peter... alt. d. , uet eu t.rire., aro Ifahle to the riret dlvostlng, ...it, 1.b.,...e...., Nes ..h....r.' Kali. 1 ;briniest Sate ra bee. a rive prevlavatv.a.'ittri at the it to• month... atel re•fteur We :In, itlVit.F it (115 LOS o MI itilAnt'S. oivy. Felt Rheumy at.l - 13area ate fen cat, heahel. . ea Ibe Re eve, am et leiat 7 1 - the iravea ;II N. lurk kw ;rho Oe it It. each eavvea m a t ena.°lt trefiitia.—as ale , . la ihyo v. tilotehre, i'reetlet or kify ether . 1 . , ...1heeee... The read.,..e_e.otaxl that this is no ufel.a...; pens.[ ho.ero... onetv. t will prose. I analaeuva. - I.•rate It :east eist.l7 penman red - of sore hew:. mom Ires.•.val e , •oz bear..L • Boy it or the tauter In satin IC aunt I would rioter. selli b e c e , l , l , l: ,h oe tb....fila , o , re t y . ftee , s, 1 kve k et 1 , ...:1 1 ... ail , l , vet. ill hod I..L ' inot 01.11ja cure, etTa . T.fer.:;2ll ' l;Va r t ' el l '" casi bow obi, ad Oh*, anyotty.efahte,l I.hl. an, or the Atmore.. r.tanii,toft.thee..r.4,%ll,,thait t l h . le t. tl : . nau et ea mote Ida Datotra U ste r- roit kite ' . ',", ! ' L .' aittlVZ '''"° l .--ara: er It t] of WW. JAChI , OI, oral agent 11l l'atetlueh.. Died of' , W Dada " • ----. Pearly White Teeth, and Pure 'Breath, to be had for 28 eeble.--Nreona who hay...fther. sot; bench.. LIZ asourtel‘thid if their breath to .e.er.no Peat.; their teeth &tailed, daft er yell., andei.ertfeted will. tartar. that a .1.1 teat ho x of Joeks . -trete, .11 , ...th i'arte will wake the teeth aa 'elate as moor. aud the. Lreatt aireifermarly W , Boldood. only at JeCilliON'it,re, 24u Llbort, et., head al \ \ A Scientific Llair Tozii, Restorer and Beans '. Itlere—Teutt I:ollik. :,Iti reek Thce, who have wad 1t0... Coral thdr 11.;.gurer. kf., 1...e..11.tit.,:fti...—. these who hae ree. We ... , Ure . reee.-e'the 1 011 ,, ft4 aldillee—t, will for.; the hair to •ee. Cava , vette-Lea* nature,ntetehet Ear to erosi etep s c.:•4l. 51.11, 'cur/ „ I \l. 01'410(1[1UL wed make helot. re, 0...,:ty h,f; grew dark. Foe reue.nts. the hair not end silk,, ...O.", raa eveseel lbw—lt Mate, it troll hre3lll,ll, ....; p e It er.. It ~ itt. •rd, the voL ea at emutkal.=\)..l. attrii:hit—AlLlCle tar the % lee %ld eel; at IVM. JACheOh'e atcre, it'l, LlLerty etreet!. lof It .eo, l'ithiberat.. s er-37 V , . %awe. L.UcriiiK. lillll. ' 4 I OtS ' ES . Solution of Jet, a Liquid Hainan 11A11 . 3.04 for the chat:glue ....; s 1411.1„ r , a • 1..,1.71}, Ituir t t , i• title. iirallit. 4.4 Matti ...t LI,T. 1 . 0 • to, ...JAW,. l'iirte Ze! orb:, .h.l it . .. \ • ~ 8,-,11‘., 1i 31 ..1at.ha1g".... , ...LAL.vt, \ trtat, Leveler 18 - rcd s pyr,. ‘ ) u.re \ ' BSc LI LIN WlirrE.—Eadies are can. - 1\ tk,.,,,, BSc ies,... tire 01•Ithik"11 t.r•lnak,il.titifiik. 5-Ley see no , ' a tri,:htlull, ta.futi....e; ft to . Ir.e eklid ;or - ewer:, \ rough. how talej , ltuit, Ana uti.t'iy Ohio at ware. eller a na. l htel•ev - dt.iiala! Jr , ' a i oda... millittititliit . 1,10 .4 , 1au11tr...4 1.141 , . Lave pr. asetv a I.evatifid reatoa , le artiele.vehiet. Imel ea! Janelfhpanteh hilt. At tde. \ .. `.l \ le lerheU, it...et:. tels 4 port, let ell daps, 1.... qu0....r 5 i.... - ..1 it LT-belts to thank/1e a taettirst, hoolth,, et. \ 1.1•141. • 4,1.1 . , lait, white' al thf. Nave Wet actlca e... eo,. Oa the elita,nettnr 11 ',Alma r - ,,aeth. \ 1,4 , the .1 itetr C i t. Jaeki:Oh. ~..v4Litateta oth-, .t. oval. eatable,* Mi., lOS ante. \ - '''‘ \,,,, gtv Iropb enlc 21=123