. ' , foes to t human rights we must' bate both, but .ttatitf . !.Atituerves and has our contempt. t " - • "f that you have ealled atteiltica to • - .•the extreMetimprobabilify that the returns of the so catied'eteetion in Frahre for the establioh z-..,,; Xient of absolutism are authentic. it is - a sub - Aid en which I designed offering some retied. - 'Alone: • I go farther than you do—d. do not be : Beta the reports of the result. are entitled to !-,- -.- : lay:credit, whatever. There is no proof worth -,-'. - - --One moments attention that even one million of -..--..', votes were cast altogether: . It Is said that the - .1 - ::affirmative voices were tipwarlie of 7;000,000 ..Opposed to th a quarters of a . Million in the f. 3 . . 'negative. T• usurpation began dri a midnight tiu, '''.. - . ..'.",.coneplracy an was consumated in a deliberate ',: •-• massacre of th usands of innocent and minis : - ..pisetlog eitiser. The pretended election for • - ialoonfirmation \ was throughout a ecorct ' pro ,- heeding, and can it be doubted that the con :"-Sidtators and the murderers would forge votes; '.when exposers and punishment would be im e 7 - . ;_poosible? Suppose a coremune or department wire - returned as having given 100,000 votes which-contained less than that number of in • 'habitants, who is, to •gaineay the trate of that •,"'" return! Who would Aare to question it in pet :, :"_sate! or who cMild, now that the press is de stroyed, and, freedom of speech proscribed, corn `, ---:.- plain in public!, Thesis insults of despotism by 1 - .. Tretended appeals to popular sanction, are al -meat ea bid Its crimes. The policy of represent -:lnge very large mete to have taken place, and to . • - • - . ,; -- here'tabriaated a respectable minority vote is - • - ::: - .. , .evident.„ - .The very consenting to vote aoltll, is 1 #l l:l :o",7iledglitlelia. of the right of the tAitTor va..y.,.tarreaaVtie4wtople,his . violatiim of their I '. -- feherteted rights: The tine test of the consent i ~. --.., of Ike french people to the change cannot het "-- '•-•,- - 0 0Mitted untif the terror in'Spirei hr the street I 1 - .? t ', mass PTO and - the summary kidnapping and 1 , Z !up:ii'' ^s hall hment . of' citizeial to the penal coloniev, -- 1 '• -- -, hal! are subsided: If the French people re ,.. . -- . Main ti peace and contentment ander the yoke .'f' 'ofot Napoleon, os long as they ~lid under II ,:ihet tittltion of 1048, • and with a press e -- ..ftitt t discuss' his actions , then there will be . - . .s ::":.•resso to believe them participants in the de ..' '.atryeeeti 1 -of their own liberties, Said unworthy '...=: - "...ret coed i as incapable of.enjoying freedom. '•TO-day.a very numOritus body or Irishmen :"..' :reciiiilialtinatire nod 'the_ neighbored" of this -. - -..". i. ally; iced-.upon-the President to petition him '.:. Xottat vette for the release of Smith O'Brien 'inicidi assoeiates in exile. The prohibility is te , :that five continence this easiness in earnest, -`-the English government reply with an earn .. i' , ,......ext and Mitring appeal to release three millions .12 . :--.'or more of men in the United States whose fate ~... .., Meat least as hard se Smith O'Brien's.; and who ~;have committed no political crimes . :::,..,-.,.: The Committee on Agriculture have conclud .::-.-: ed tareport a bill far the establishment of en . :"....tgricultaral bureau. This onbject will undergo - ,a long discussion and involves' many Important 1 "''...„:,:questions. - - The chief 'argument against it a - ill „...,...„. be the danger and Idtpolicy of increasing the • : ~; volt power of the "federal grivernment, by in- vesting it, with functions that can as well be ~....- -, , e- : Cireirolited by the State. It is my 'opinion that ~.• :: -;r"O;dspartmentat Washington could dri.so much ' roinerd.s entiouraging agriculture in Peensylva ... ~ i t t ... ....,:. Als properly regulated insulation under the . ..',.....:-Btits adminbatration. s • ....,..,, The . advocates of tbe'conteating claimants to • :':• the discovering of chloroform—Dr. C. T. Jack c son and Mr. Morton of Boston, are having a : : •-.- - very warm time before Col.' Bissell's special . • committee. Jackpots hat been generally fenced . ....el - todee the true' aiscoverer,l hot Morton has - ..._ , laid i'obtini in doe form before Congress, and - , . „asks a donation'of -. 4'8'0,000 in acknowledgment '''.. sutereward thereof. , 'The Committee will re . e . t...:, - ..:.,.. pectin. favor' f Morton's right to the discovery, `-"'bat ." not to the !Midi. They give him-glory but - . - "4 , # -.. ',rut Meisel: - .' J rstcs. =II ;I! . (I3; s 7:iBUK , GH GAZEq'TE C-40 TUESDAY MORNING, JAN. 27, 1852. 1:02r.REA.13.12VG NATTER , WILL BE F 3 MVP IZACIT G.E" OF MS PAPAW. ing at 10 o'clock. • The meeting held yesterday was cf rho :noel, gratifying charactei; The Ladies was forward •••• '•wlth theirizatztral aid, with a heartiness which _ • • showed that their zeal in the. came was of the genuine 40 doubts of the soarers of the " fLadita',Festiral tanisbed from oar mind, when Wilittneisse4 the acene at the meeting yester , - • - • :GCS: Kossrit will receive the address of the LOCI{ at the 2d Presbyterian Church, on Thurs .' .... ..-- • c",.-day.elteinoon, at o'clock. Madame Kossuth, : - ...letaaame.;Pcdskey, and other members of Gov. Kassa th'it eisite. are expected to he present.— • • This occasion will be one of the mostinteresting any which has taken place since the arrival of the noble exile. ' Let there be i good meeting this morning.— .• The gentlemen are pressing to be permitted to assool en — ou; bat we feel confident there }ill?be • •' i the church fob. the sterner r°° I IComnrra'e Paocrromcs To-Dar.—At eleve n o'clock, this .morning, Gov. Kossniti will visit - Alkali %Voris of Messrs. Bennet, Berry Co., of Bast Birmingham, where the workmen hate contributed material'aid, and trill address r; hhrt on .the occasion. On his return, he' will receive the Congratulations and EU bllBl3 tin! sym pithy of, the people of Birmingham, at the :,At 8 o'clock, he will receive the ad iqr;'stirs:twat the Clergy, at the Cumberland Presby tiziksfehureli, on 6th atteet Xbe Horsteth Festival At the Maeonia Hall, eitt.443:silii*ort, was in all rsspecta oae of ;hellos! Imprisalve eosnee evert, witnessed in Pittsburgh... The large hall Wan filled to the at- an - enthasinatic audience. Goy. ilroi• ^V1,3E40400 'SS he only can epeak.' The deep .4„:4/41140111-I.S'nf hi. manner was in perfect keep ,:7:e need say nothing of hie ,?:,:-„:"itpitesli , tt. report of which we giro, and which wilfread—other than to say that we , l'ektiisin it to be equal to any,that he has yet de. cliningport ion hill attract especial both slam - theAtl - t* and • • an mat- with a cordial neponse in every );. • 4.. t-ind libend 4eArt. • • • e - At the °loss of his address the nom Ewan' ( of liftia'szehus ette, the bearer of an ialitsttna.to . f.ior. So's:nub front the Legislature GovernOr *tilt • • s e,,to visa the capital, . -waa introdunad to hlat„ Iu presenting the les igtll4tM Of the Legislature and the letter ot' the AiTerear, Mr If. addressed the illustrious exile araiii of " s "P alln og eloquence, which ur?nittirttina repeated bursts of applause from lhe delighted and highly excited .audience. It a scene of moral ImbliMity, take it all to• . - ...'getherioXOftedieg anything we ire! witneesecL . "pheneponse of 9or; Kossuth, ithe r erits deeply beautifuL 'There stood . N., l !!silt"l chief under the folds of American on - the threshold of the MissiesipP I valley, tang- the , aerial eg et old ttielnuuls and' lips 'et her elo qUar,:k - Iptiaen!AtiTe in ths presence of a mut : ,: re4a4en-Uf Western. Pennsylvanians. '-It was 'antie fell , 7 throe who witseseed. it can never forget. ME Ire.iipeecli;,eith,r+telr of Gov. IrslerPl?lie, It °f°o'i Pr?onedinie• , , • ',l :--, . - cam .`, '- • ~ .11.8., VITO ' T.: —,ocg 40 tthhthious slanders ...kr ,m,erop no pare= Is Ibis der ha* carp t - ;meted nod bolls dreol , there is amiable,. rtrh•ti ) ' ItleePtiene a t a 1,414.66 it hu bon swede! th a t th i , Mato of tiorontor Ea= was amble:seta to me. al tgonte—letCrtoikr.o.. r and nPired en litordlosta - arpotedituto kittn , Joule f their table; era trietrhul Mt eamtadned to oontvleth f 'ott this to the privets Re • zoterret the Gerethar, the allele nt this Aar a N .folis.exel es tb*octlanti emgitts tbo =lt* of timr ,.., aler.ilifilmth"ere Asa; tia titterer, and most welartut ~‘ teats, I sued dole.seaki, Out from ertmt I hate Lured rime am:om of the Plitobtritt Ciao:elite% 1 ea rat LAI', trieteth'or Overran Komth sad tau emu, , CY , ttatAltd a *ay naseheotts,.tro.c.nr rtgdtattie end limetlipsdOos SIM Car . , Odettte. ,!,• ...".d thatet ,nth thep taken la the ay of d o , o , or g c.,it,, , ,, ,-,io to fahUl the ditties uldgael them. tdtea UM, he,* lil l ' 6 . ol, ),4lorippodu.a..uu t,„ , , -. ,` '.. • ' KOSSUTH IN PfitSBURGH PROCEEDINGS OF SIONDAY • Long before three o'clock yesterday afternooii, the Masonic Hall was crowded with ladies and gentlemen, anxious to afford substantial aid to the canoe of Hungary, and to listen to the burning eloquence flowing from the lips of Lou is Kossuth, her illustrious Governor. The stage was appropriately decorated with the flags of Hungary, Turkey nod the United Stales, and a large orchestra, composed of twenty.six musi cians, who had all kindly volunteered their ser vices,. under the able direction of Henry Sieber, Esq , was in attendance. At three o'clock, Lis Excellency, Governor Louis Koasuth, and the members of his suite entered the apartment, and were received with every demonstration of respect and honor. I). N. White, Esq., appeared on the stage, and announced tho following list of officers: PVCSIDENT—A. W. Loomis. Vice PE.F.SMENTI: Ron. John B. Guthrie, :Mayor of the city of Pittsburgh. Hon. 11. S. Fleming, Mayor of the city of Al legheny. Geo. Joseph Markle, of Westmoreland county. Chart. Avery, Esq., of Allegheny. Samuel Marshall, Esq., of Butler County. E. D. Gar.ram, Esq., of Pittsburgh. Dr. J. R. Speer. .‘ Theo. Utubstaelter Esq., .• A. J. Loyd, Esq. Dr. J. Reich°lm .• c it Loomis, Elm„ .rorries Dunlop, Eaq , IL Nixon, Eaq , ClisALAIN—Rev,Mr. Paesavant. The otfimertrabon e .o&med, took their seats on the stags,emidstrentlipptAlestrei - - B.N White, lieu., waitilat hatable/4*M geckoes! to stale that ad executive committee hoped the [ethos nod gentlemen present would retielee Governor hoseutli,..when he appeared on the crags , , in the Berne manner es he had been welcomed at the Congressional Banquet in Weehington namely, by simply riaing Governor hoesuth then appeared on the mond when the whole audience rose, but were not rati fied with this mark of respect, giving cheer al ter cheer for their ilinstricmguest The orchentro then played the 'Marseilles Hymn' with flue etleetat the close of which May or Guthrie introduced Koeouth tollr, Loomis Aftercordially Asking the hod of the dim triotie Ilinigarimio-gr. Loomis said: i Participating in the universal sentiment of kindness to your:wool:4 respect for your char acter, end somiration,,of your eenoces in the cause of freedom end humanity, re hid you a sincere, a cordial, nod enthusiastic welcome Politicians of all parties, sectarians of tort one denominations, phbothropists of all Mee se,. happily , and joyfully unite atil barinnnith in this epontanaous, demonstration Too Pillars of Hercules are poet, the lofty Alleghenies hare been sormounted, and now you stand, for the first _time, in the very en trance to the greotYalley of the Miseitsippi Barer° yon are imiltiplied eviden t eea of industry, of euterrnze, and prosperity, The hand of toil nod the spirit of likierl hose gathered around the moulderitis ?Man ot Fort Duquesne the ele meets ref power., the evidences of • wealth, and the means of.4eictire Before you lies a region of wonderful awl eurpitheing interest In the aggregefe - rrni-ill versity Of happiness, proeperi ty mid promitb, the world cannot produce its 'lll 2/i ' l 1 n ' l re i ” r ]; L'b r .".7. 7 ' k p arallel.iutttut incs•tite mac h . hernit govern - was the inthrpreter, not only of Irish sentiment', meet. the most fro. combined with .usgular no but of too the feelings of all oppressed humanity, vantages ot suit, - of climate , and of commerce, i base given to i eujormenr of life. realities 1 when .° lauff never surpassed by the truths of biatory, "nevi-es - see • trnoi o etreeteet clan nod rarely equalled in the creatione of fiction. No, gentlemen; it it, not for that reason I say , Though, in the c • .haractere and helots of Glom that I hope, when the oppressed nations of Ea- ~,., ~,, ~,.. er ,„, th .„,„,,,,,,,,,,,,i e ,„ h , ~ . who dwell in that extraordinary volley, you , rope strike once more the blow, they will not We ere gre " red fee , i. arid to say wia,„_.aganos, 1 will Ml:tides." -Ana some things , to cenourr and I situp half way, and will not sacrifice t h.,, ( more teeters, we require noto ly to Debt for us condemn: yen will find many to lore.. I admire,t o untimely generosity; but I say this, because Telt 0 away the prrsztre al liairslaritild, and I A nowily epirit of independence , en indomitable they have ti ll too cruelly paid for the lemon, that etenn ,,, in ti,e, on,, iznee of tow ~,,,, Le. will love of liberty are leaning texas in the characi with termite there is no faith, so there shall he :rumble it wins on ", , a, 0. , i, ,,,,,,,, , , , i5 t i e ir n „ ii ti , , , ter. They bow aubtaisarcly before the power of no tratisaction with them raper in tis. ban/ No. I claim the sasisteuance the Almighty, but hofore coop other, unless it Gentlemen, it te not on &moue& of all those ~ f the Lir of Nail ins,—eibli h aideblisti .1 the has meowed front the people . Y, routs nal' C/..iinia that I say. Huoirary's cans o in 'Coen, e .,, tht „t• avers 00t ,,,, to thep , ac a h a „,,„ , L , tyranny are mnijmwu .among them I"P- 4 PF B worth y of the Support of cree p rnecti of ohne cooreros— egoinsi ibut Ilogrant Bola rim orcsmon they will never taibmit They w il t jetogdom on earth : my claim is founded upon riy foreign interference, to riils` trtedom, mils , sooner eurrender existence than li berty, Many Hie fake, that it is In Hungary where, by the pendent... and cell gosernmeetef the Europeto a battle tielifhaa afforded sanguinary evidence most etziking violation of the taro of unused', Continent, whirr ncw lies oecrifieed a bleeding that they aro inseneible to fear. Among such a Cled.wisreitrempled down those principles aeo n ei ,, in .. . p eo pl e yon win find sompathies in iterated]) which rests the very exietence of the Interco. And, , n „ e i ~„1,,, „„....,;„„_„h, e h with your feelings; a•piratloaa dolightgel to your dence of colleen on earth; end therefore if the I. indeed consider tin lie a sacred one, beceuio it heart:- law of nation is not rtottored to Ira fall value ':lee eon . ni all 0 ppr,l natio,. and of all The offlthaef the west owe their origin arid- that, Where it WWI [rumpled down by sacrill who wilt yet have to foi l Pfc . o ho of the much om - pr eir m d or o, . . . used el- - gious vlblence, thiti will, lee iyao Petwricy to nes-, 1 ,...,.„. i i ..., r , . t _, tt „, , ,, , ,, ..,, iiiii i i. I mot •- ! ' • to tie gekapolleen of Wens' indepeniencoNoo.veas •ie ow - _od i •-' ' ` +I . ~ crniii iv , MM.; i•lv,i. , .. A r- _ q, . __ — eisoisivrootowit , ewe itgain „, eeeey pengia I if the Allitnett dinasty Yi.ot G ni.ty rriishe I 1.1144eef: ch.); Tent34d biorg — • e en item moi that dare• to apf eel to the right of p riori lepeni. It ' ' , 7 I ' e '''''' Irlie"rsd from I 'reign icon' •io mysterie. of nature, improvement Wae scarcely I unite and self-bete 11 tato." ple, ' n ' will playfully d. r ce e of it. halt ' lic ''''' .te and put iyronts oldie powerless le iortom by tbona perceptible Now the brief period eltotted 2a recognlted to be inmoloble on earth, the life of men behold* more of progress and oodee th e ge oreetee o f t h e i to fi ghnto , t , of nil 1 tttleee to Austria the u•ltoe will been.. free, imprevement than the lengtheted dare epoch - mankind, there. Jr no n og , no l awgiver on ~,,e th. an i intend of beine employed to felt, Hres, sated to the patriarch, ,• more: no nation eta LaOTO he the matter of Ils I r'."l or s'.l"enw " t flnintri°' will t '' ''' ' tne no Once old goverements were seldom subverted own destiny, and oppreesion in • new form, an- imp irtant ingredient of German ludependenc•— or new ones established, etahilitr and Jarmo-n heistil of in history, kill rule the wort I German lthen Y tad , at the e nnt - metntitin of 'were Inscribed upon the exieting order , things ye, oppress i on , aa , a , a tea. , I I title gismos result of a new and •eeci aqui iszotthe preyailing symeme of governmout Now, „ a ioi t_ n in i , . 1, .. , 7 c .F , .. emen . etrergle in Hunger; limning. idiom. al il mount under the magic ndloence of our liberal Insure- tin ' nia ' t,en n . d,,,, r ‘ t an t a : a 7; , 1 i ''.. .ngr. 1 i ] the ,Leek or the French, end the mei ioue It tie recorded the era of conrgru'er.:t:Li:o7";:'lrtse7 - ;1k7 P ,:, " ; ' ,; :t r m l w 'ui.. 2"P'4e ' m w°l b- 'h ‘l'n oil dope, new organizitions of government, with all the appliances of oligbtened freedom and retro r ded eeor Many a m ournful issi.e of emote-eat/el Thus, w h o „,.,, and th ose w h o r e ,,.. t o t, hired liberty, epring into being like the Goddees domestic et . , e ainet 1 s op ~, p ~ a 1 o r:rtzt,.l,:;,..rbtfroyiphzr—Lhio.,l„.e.i.hsOgar. I ll a t : j r e t t h i : i d , of wisdom from the teaming born of Almighty But the new doctrine that g P o r i e ; ' ,7 : i t hetn ,i ' , ' Jove. world have a right to tntefere with every attempt wo e o, cla t„,i fence—rtes, who eat ~,,,,, ee ;o Other stars mil soon arme tit our political firmament to run their destined emirate &rotted I d n ooi r e e e n i i i ntn g i n 'rn a n t m i t i ' 'tr• home and to re place their own eon lition, the dreadful pro :res. of the the great ceritral lu.ninary of ennatitutional . nue ,. foe . of . go r ce n , T a t eLeie diterrtne'i ihnt onechteeoos result.. of Busmen interference it. freedom. Other States, now covered by prime of it country, nelth r :r ' the will nor no;htehe."wwW""l linoriry nil on lerstond Gl'l well the imp or sal f,reete, will, ere limy, become the free and the vex cave mina , e , , a,:, ! , . c r. 1 . , Pinto of my ettatith and the weight of my Mitt iii happy abodes of the oppres s ed of every clime came every o„„seion' i: u s ' o ' re e i ' l ' ia:ilicil ‘ b 'Y' ' t ' " '''' "'"'re'''' that p•mr ""g''" m e' ' "'• Here is emphatically the great and glorious Crar,ami but under the guarantee of the Y he once under the protection of the lime Bonneted pennon- B inner. sr is h silel with unparere'ed sy Lop.thy. "Temple of Liberty " Reared by the toils.adono- rile of absolutism , raised to the poeinee of nn 1 „ oe ,„ e ,,, ,] , , ed by the genius, enriched by the acquisition]. of •.- arhtter In th e croon cf the Anther. , of Rneete ir ' ;..ilet or r ii7tli7n. ofn l'il..tffemrentdeTtmhortrths,eof"dri'f'. the votaries, of freedom, it ig,end ever will be, the this doetrine is one mare dangeroustoh -- t object of our devoted affection . With us, liberty— than anything that the worl d has "Marn , , feeent Mete, from Sweden down to Bortego , :rid the love of Its enjoyment-4a not regarded mere/7 Formed th ere was a hope that " yet teen 1 Italy Who could have intagined that having as a sentiment, a principle, a logical deduction, might Formerly with the death of a °Pr""l'n I this ''""'" of LnrePe with too', here ' m free an aPProPiate tint' in ...eternal o r der o f thitt Fc• with the favorable opportunity t o . ° s l bre " oß r' h or 1 "Pn e "cnn i Am'ri i 'n. I n i hehi tole' the elje"mh yoke In future no p en ho e remotes bee but an instinct, a apontaneoue, resistless and . I that, pun], egotesticiiiiy, ha , nip own C , Untel'r overwhelming guidon The Amerman citizen „eeilom and indettendoce te e , by rte „-e ' d:u " '-n"'' which ..her e", to hth one eneh"7. -'I expects to feel in his daily experience the mita- In Hungary, declared inconvisient wit h rrln i. i i t. I potting P ict To be sore I (cisadvan th pronto pie of uotierfereme, bechuse p e ritten in once of liberty, of order, of protection, and sub mote of absolututm on earth and ordination, as certainly thl the garnet influence like la to a . , t h e c"cr.c,, o f the eternxl Lowe of !lonise and o f ~ro•e rod, of the great huminery• of !leaven He would re like hell— . rote toed „nob supre me eta.. n t ,t e • .. ..cit.. —because without thin pruniple there Is Ws In gard its subrereion as great a calamity es the `. , °...” ....' . ''r t depen knee of Oaten, ou earth, and without emirs mum yield the destruction of the Son iniepenileocr. no freedom. no goternment within, that „mgt. liberty oa a l imn , p„ ea o Now, indeed. there are mvn, strange ( tong. fiat I a•lv. vie this priori le cot ow an exchusiee ins presence; law,ao•active controlling tutinenee, In the world, and "not to wonder atthing, purt , Cge for ray own country, but asp Low of equality, a palpable potential exietence Tbro' so an Old rule of classical wisdom.. But even I, Nations, as e OntnrtiOn benefit to ell humanity all the orgamlatiorta of this widely extended ceecithmet i ta the school of 'whe re in. not to be bed, if it shonlil be my lot to suoceed in tine nation, those vital elements run a consoles, easily surprieeo ny stooge thungs,eould not for my miemou, I would feel entitled t o th e cony', 4:0112Vt, giving security, protection, and prosper. bear to be astontabed when, pith the slew of bon that I here more effectively scree d I I Ito ity en millions of independeat gad contented these alarming facts before the eyed of this ranee of freedom ..1 earth, thou if (were going freemen, Beneath its gorgeous ianopy sus a world, I first heard my bumble claims contra- on with no army of Gotta taillica heroes, from divinity enthroned initho hearts and affection, dieted by telling rue that the cause of Hungary' I lend t.+ land to 0 roeleito republican limitioinotts of more than twenty Millions of people. Her was not worthy of much consideration, became, Let interferon° Its choked, lel' nation, be simple majesty come:lands the admiration of after all, it is only the naves of one onuetry. come—as they ought to emitters of their he— the world. Before her influence crowns, and I have reed in history that the ®ime were I own fate, an I rey mltin the r e agi. pewee of thrones, and aceptree will ultimately disappear wont to say that Italy Is like the artichoke— your glorious evample Republican Institutions from the earth, at the eound of her woke kings [The Governor refer. to th e European !tenth I ly will spread es the light of the min from the cline and tyrants quake and tremble. Yielding to the Artichoke-)—it most be e4ten leaf Dyfed Let Ay I el, gentlemen, though the cause ht my Impulse of her silent, but nugmenti og imrdr , me tell those who don't core about the violation I crimitry were, In Itself, worthy of your generous we fondly hope, and devoutly pray ,that, in of nations In Hungary beefing° it is but in Hun sympathy, Anil it I. not upon the net-row ground God's own goad time, despotism may flee from gary—let roe tell them thot the freedom and in of one country's; Cantle. that I ash your goner the habitation, of the oppressed, nod men him. dependence of the world is like the artichoke— ma opport Itly frrotted is broad mt ‘ the world, self, arty where aeeerting his dignity and his not even the jaws of despotism eau swallow it at because it is the ground of eternal frineiplee, rights, may, amid the acclamations of political Once, but only leaf by lest; but he who Is per- of international low, common to all humanity redemption, attain his legitimate destiny witted to dispose of the leaves of the artichoke, ,n;ttlirt,clitir,:sityle.n.l,iyarr,,groottlyt pe:iusite,„ibash.urznpar,n..aeffhilireng,, To all these scene, you have received a cordmi le the master to dispose of the whole welcome. The voice 'of this republic d And, do you know, gentlemen, with what ar- has plared my bumble self in ihe ei - .olar pied the chains of your captivity, and restored you to gumeut Chet strange depreciation of the cause of Bon of being able to claim for the mime I rep. freedom, Her flag delighted your el e i on on a Hungary is supported by my opponents ° They resent, a univeranlity which le not restricted by , foreign there; her batteries gave you protection say, I myself eonfess ray otiose to he that of the geographical limits of territotlea, or by the across a distant Be, Delighted nod happy in one country only, because there ii, in coy Tletea moral Hittite of nntionallties I preach pried. the enjoyment of each i nat i tot i ono an d bi eee i nge, an ostentation of non-interferenoe, which provea plea ludispenaable to the indopendeme of um we sympathlee with the aaporationt and effects of that I have no intention to benefit other no. Lome and 'the crusedc ef thews yritielpl e . I freedom in every land. Whims, and whermer lions, because I will leave them abandoned to preach not spinet Auetria, which has no Ito al the devoted patriot ar i ses .d asserts tha f i ghts their oppressor. Now, indeed, I may he per- Ity by itself, but againet the principle of evil, sad di gn i ty of man, we hail him a , o brother, milted to ask, ts there no truth In the world Russia. I con append to my political course, and cheer him onward in hie career sure enough not to be distorted into a mock- since my departure from Turkey nay, to my r In the struggles of your patriotic people for esy' suggotlone in Turkey, which I honor and lose liberty, the hopes mid the sympathies of this Retssia is the principle of evil upon earth —that I have always dismissed Austria in a nation mingled with their offotre. Thanks to Al- The assurance to have the support of the Czar, few words, as a dead body Thioli motes only by mighty God, the Crescentsad t h e o wit e too d lu te In that work of oppression makes every petty Russian galvanism. I have dismissed that Awl the pillar and the cloud of old, between the des. tyrant bold, and the assurance to have to meet trio we hove twice crushed lu the field, and will pots of tbenorth and the favored of the Lord . Rawls either directly or in Ids satellites, make. crush easily a third timo, now her independence We eympatlize sincerely and deeply with the every oppressed nation depressed in 'pint, nod in evil is gone I have then:demi her an a few sorrows and Sufferings of your afflicted country. desponding In hope to resist oppression liccoa. worth, to attack the Russian despotism, that Onebra., norisurrireei that will never quail at folly, because it has to calculate not only the common enemy of [Gingery, and of All mankind, the approach, of despotism one trompet voice that forces of Its owe oppressor, but also in add, whiph has nothing left in Europe but Its enemies willnever tremble before the inaolvence ofpowee Hon, the force. of Russia, ready to support ev and its toole--not even worthy to be clessed any You now enjoy the powerful and cordial pro- cry despot who cannotanoceed to beat down the longer na ate mere acoomplices, tendon of a republic that can securely defy the I spirit of freedom in his own country by hie o wn No man, therefore, on the Pretext Of hie be world. Her pewee at home and abroad is shun- force log connected with or member of a different peo timidly adequate to : the protection of her pried- This certainty of Russian old is dem:sive In ple--a German, Italian, Pole, Frenchman—nor plea and the astetyld her rights the .cafe of events—not as if the Case were on the green(' of the isompreheneire nature of phitanthropist, who feels Proceed on ypur , mission under the eagle of rely powerful for himself, bat because be is universal sympathies toe largo to embrace text her constitution. Speak freely, speak confidingly pOwerful MI a rear guard as a erupport We than a whole continent—r2o one, on the pretext to her people—the voice Of freedom is musloln bare fought the Emperor of Austria we have that he is a unieemel thisle ears the heraldof liberty is sacred in their beaten him, crashed blm to the earth, till he but interested In civil and religious liberty, only not gained with- can refuse to ' grant hia aymnathlea especially to eyes. Their instincts and impulses yield to the flew to the.foot of the Czar, mendleating hie aid , when he can vindicate it for at least all Europe, Influencefperomiloo, but not to the terror of Our victories were, of Course, the out sacrifice on our part. You know that on, the canes of Hungary; because It is the air- Yon have received honors never before so- the beide geld It isnot only the vanquished who cumatantial privilege of that cause to epitomize ' , corded to any man unconnected , with ourhistory have to mown over a loss. You knew thatyour . I rothers !fife fact, i were, for Instance, a , and our struggle for freedom. These and all brave Duquesne (Freya lost In one action more Pole, a German, or Italian , egotistically patri- the indication. around yon proclaim a profound than half their men. Now if, after a , victory otic, and &azimut only to gerve Poland, Germany Russia, their only mai -1 end pervading interest and sympathy iniyour reined et such a mice, when the enemy is de_ or Italy, I could not more rhadill attain my ob- I person, your efforte, your principles, your dee- foaled bat the vic tor himself also weakened, fa- jeer, than by attacking tiny, and your country. tigued, and exhated, Rattle steps in with a etalstial enemy. We lore liberty sad ardently desire its; darn• fresh force, well provided with every means of What would Ike petty princes oGerietany, in ' ethatbrOughout the world. Before God &adman War; thatcircumetance of course must turn the 1848, here, been without Prossiif and what we' earlessly and earnestly Proclaim oor feel- scale, though that force be not absolutely form- was Prussia, when her Capitol was in the hande loge abd • Syrnpoithies. No league of tyranny— idable in bra Herein. lies the reason why of the tropic, without the aert o i n t y - of the no combination of d espotism—no concentration Russia is dreaded so much. It is not powerful Cur's su yeti, which Imported baldness to the of power—no, not ttie world In arms, can re. in itself: "It cannot send more than 2513,00° ging of rustle, to butcher the people of Her strain whatever expeeSion of trympathy s or de- men *creel the frontier, and never had mere lin o which hetie— iii , l - not bare dared to die with. te 'natio:int action; the Maui= people may than 100,000 men assembled on one battle field,i, out the rt.lianc• en his ion-hi-law, the ambitious '.'. - '.',.-.. , :.:.-2;‘L';:,.... , -. , ..: , : . :',.... ..... - i:. - ..' , .: , !7:,. - : , :1 , ,' , ":.. , , :':,.•i'....',..:-:-:'•.,..-:.,,:.:',,-,f:.r,',..,,-- deem apprOpriate to their interests, their power, their position, and their principles. The speech of Mr. Loomis was received with loud applause and at its close; the orchestra played the "star spangled banner.- Governor Kossuth then delivered the following truly eloquent snd beautiful address, during the progress of which, he was frequently intvrupt ed by the strongest evidences of the sympathy, esteem and admiration of his audience. Bta: The instructive and highly Interesting information, which your kindness afforded me, about the peculiar character of that new world of wonderful and surpassing interest, In the very entrance of which I now eland, impresses my mind with a presentiment of unlocked for end unexpected events. Since I am in the United Stales, I always felt a kind of magnetic attraction towards the West. It was no if my guardian angel whis pered into my ears that there, thew is the place where the hopes of my bleeding country will he . realised, and the anxiety of my heart relieved. It was a sort of unconscious instinct. It was like a ray shooting up to the horizon from the yet unseen-sun. You, Mr, have shown me the eon in the full majesty of its lustre and of its waving Smiles. I humbly thank you for it.' You have transformed the instinct of my heart into a conscious conviction of my mind.. And here, upon the very threshold of that West, I bow with admiring awe, hut Ms , ' with joy, before it, like as the flee Worshipping Climbers of old Per sia hewed before the rising nun, as the source of light and life. Indeed, sir, it is a great and joyful view to see, ai you were pleased to say, politicians of all parties, sectarians of various denominatisns, philanthropists of all classes, uniting in the spontaneous, demonstration of sympathy for a Icause which a humble, unpretwiolmg stranger pleads. I, for my humble sell, itco—with thank- I ful acknowledgement of the bounty of frost. dance—in that fact, the revelation of the truth that, like as the, magmitio fluid pervades the whole universe, so there is a ecatiment which, independent of party affections and bubbling jwinu, perrinlatiliks brotet of all humanity. AnkAlatit;la r r - thto OviCefireedom, jostler and , riAL"titeohord of frcedom pusses through the hearts of all Siankind, aurewhoevor touches ' it elicits a amanita harmony. The harmony is I in the chord in in him who booties it. Them is no skill in that:breeze whioh aerrs through the :Bohan 144; and still a s eat harmony i bonds forth froilelta vibrations . hat harmony of sympathy wlleh rmeet is the oat decisive i i proof, gentlemen, that the cause hich I plead ! is indeen the olizise of lilttrtr, the Tore of which sparkles In the-in - Cast of all humanity. And indeed so it la. Allow me to tali) Ulla for the topic of my address. the cause of 4stagary, ~c ore it not iruni,h ately conarcted with the cause, of Europe—nay, I dare say with the cauee of freedom on earth —the cause of flungary,.were, In itself wor thy or your conntvy'e protection, and the operative erapaihy of, all generous men on earth. And in making this claim, I intend not to sup port it by the harpies. of my people, or by the heart.revolting perjury of the treacherous dy nasty of • Iriiy people hare bravely fought, hut we often meet with heroism in his tory. My cotnntrihas experienced the-fug per jury of kings; other nations hare often expe rienced the name.. Oar brateit bled on the scaffold for freedoin's sake; but that is the And -fate of freedozieeittraggle not oroWned.by suc cess Tyrannies ore always cruel when they have the powei to be so ; It is only the people which knows to be generous in victory fir, let me rather toy, it to the people which WON gen erous—far the future I hope it will he j.t. I hope this, not, became there Is a deep truth in those words of the poet, who, though he thought but of his dear "green Erin" which he loved as If It were '' EBBE . . . . with t h i n f orce it ill formidable as' , rear guard. fe t tling Leach and with fall weight upon a nation when it i 3 exhume toil by its very victories. • You have conquered Mexicoswith a handful of -v -your brave men,and a glorious deed it was But But suppose that after you had defeated your own enemy, your ergot cents, exhausted by victo ry, would have to met tat the very evening of a hard battle day, ale sr, froth hpet of only 100, NO well disciplined , well provided men : what would have been the, fate of your gallant army which entered the c ity of Montezuma? That is the condi [ton of the Europeancoral- neat. That is thy key of Roast. preponder ance. Now be plf seed to consider the practical development of consequences. Russia, in vio lation of the lan of nations, interfered iu such a manner in iluz,gary, when we were elbausten by our very victories, and had no time and no meant torepair our losses. And Russia has sent in support of its fresh army, the still more dan gerous power of its diplomacy,—of which 'will.' ask the liberty to say sornethiug hereafter.— Well, by this interference we weoe trodden down, and Austria was restored—not to its independent position—that is lost forever—hat to a position of a tyrant at home, obedient to the wink of bin master abroad. What Wa.s the consequence! Relying upon the precedent established by Rus sia, the Ring of Naplet, the fleet of the Queen of Spain, and, above all, degraded France, inter fered in Rome, and Oho glorious Republican struggle of Rome, wor,Oty of the brightest days of the Eternal eity's blistery, was crushed. The Emperor of Austria, rind the King of Prussia,— both ambitious, both relying on Russian aid— were both quarrelling about who should rule over Germany. Some German papers rasied it cry about the horror of a battle of brothers,— whereas it would have been beta quarrel of am bitious tyrants, out of which Germany might hsve issued n free nation, officered from both. .. • . heron: ilZey drew the *won', of °mime they went to tho Czar for permission rAud eitriee. Tho Czar told them Al Warsaw: iil forbid you to quarrel; and i'l ordor you to ' unite for the reconstruction of the German con federacy of 1814, without the slightest addition of whatever Constitutional element. *Sou, both Austria and Prussia. are :ordored a t 4 'wend your annieu to Hesse Cassel, to interfere nit its iln ittetitio concerns, and crust• dow-Why nor buyo nets, the lawful reniatance of tlahneople, against i the praiseworthy undertaking of tho dhand Duke to tear to pieces the sworn ficuillitution of the land. And, as to Sehlrartig qlolsteiti, which dared to claim it, national right of inidspend• cone, the German Confederacy having dared to countenance the rebellion. ahail, for punithnion I. now hare to do the contrary, and Will have to request Austria to scud an army against Solties• wig flolcsioin, because I want the whole of Den mark, with all len appurtenance!, coneernil iiu its integrity, on a satrapy for ray servant and nephew, who has to inherit the Danish domini ons " So ordered the Czar; and RD it WWI done. And after-It was done, the Caar again, ordered the withdrawal of the pageantry of .the Consti tution, wlech the Emperor of Austria had prom ised iu the hour of need, to tho At:Orion En, fire. Wall, it was withdrawn.- Ilie Cale of course, does net Itke the ward “Chastitution ' in his satrapies, even if it he not integodad even to become a reality. And whet `elidy palmier trivement was crushed, eteryirtr of free dom withdrawn, the scaffolds uf pry and Italy tolerated with, blood, the rim tilled with martYre, the extlealdriven fro' ',.every nay lam no the European, Coutiectit and, Germany n-doced to a notation worse than w hen the Un holy Alliance woo at the full-. tille:,—then the Clar wrote an nutocraph letter to rattle Nnpule- i oh, the perjured President of Fret:dee, and or ; I dared him to strike the death blow to the French j aripahlie, assuring him of his Imperial grace i nod benevolent support And lents Napotecn i obedient to that pprer which eeni3iis Uncle to ! St. Helena, struck the blow ,'' That it the c'.orlit;on of Europe , now And every oppres.don, every sacrilege , l evidently to be traced to tpe common POIIIM, of evil, so Brut orerwheltnieg preponderance of Rosa., icopos,d upon Europe by It interference to Hun F 2.7 And what is thst I humbly hitioceb the people of the United &tatoo to du for tar people la it that you Amalfi fight Austria for as No' a thoutotitl times ' Czar! What would the petty despots of Italy I Be tore, gentlemen, CO soon as Russia has Hence is theyope in obedient entrap of the have been without Aust..! Am' what was i achteved the triumph of ah.lutisucal principles Czar, the sangoinary persecutor of Catholics in o A r tif i l:; r h y e , n i r, h ,, e r ,,, ri r, r , m , i armies, , pitcheddriren f b r ‘ o t m t le t: . e ,, s e e3 t o u : d t , h l e ti El k u .4 l-o , e ,r e , s p n o c . o d e , i m tn . e t n , t , , t a h n e d ; re on t s t e t , l e tla p w t e n d ! lheta • o th f e th P i o t lig,: reh roii . n t r ... . H g en th ce ei lnt r ;2 e .l ee ith. High tie lrie a s m t! so demoralized that nothing hot the treatiherons to ex.'u le the commerce of America from Eu- I thority, opposing every movement for liberty, dtrobedience of a General prevented our armies rope, by a prohibitory system of custom dunee and supportTg the cans of despotism on earth. ,from extiugutslAng, in Vern. and 0 mutt, the i lt will do it • it must do it Firstly, because In thisenorruty,erdightenedCattiolice themselves decrepit absolutism of the Ilapshttree - , What ' commerce is the I econiothe of principle. That Wee c , eaely brit that ambitious power which it p revented me from afterwards crushing-IC Th, is mote can yet than what a gentleman of New , was • Pope wh\hael been foremost to euppreas, f Rusetrin despetierni—the tutervention of • I i t k so ilo 'tient!, told—that ••the nova rain,* i hot which, with reptile like vitality had writh- Russ.. Always, and everywhere, each off,' et f donors,." A b0w1... <AM not for &stogie led from under thheel that bruised it, and me m traceable up to the test cause of evil ' —in • in .n % eet rule Europe with security, if Europe ceeded tewreathi itsolfagain andagainaround which it Is the characteristic of this volcanic remained in commercial Intereenree with repel, I the neck of Cathol istn,, for whom the Meentl ensle (which by its portentous sign impreeee- leen ame-tee And secondly, Rue.. will ex I coop of that power bed always been a period of the hearts and minds of men against the, will) elude r ur rulet from Europe, because (mod disaster and conlnsioti .bit that all other causes of political t arerah- let ale great valley of the nest mark It) because The Rem. Catholim , of Hungary, Poland, tt, sorbed. to lir immensely developing agriculture is the I Italy, Germany, France, understood this thor- Absolutism has understood end fleelarefl that i moot dengerous rompetitnr to Burman wheat or 1 mighty. Is it possible that the Roman Catholics its repose iv impossible, whilst a free Press and . fret in the nierkets of Europe . Either you 'of this Republic ohould tens understand it?— free institutions to exist any when. At this must be excluded from the trade with Europe, and that amongst them sm;vemeet should gain time there is:no free Press on the cont. at of ler Rt.-in cons it tied a market for its -urn ground opposite to the asptione of freedom, -Europe; and except the pr....s condo tine of lt Is IL ink, gentlemen , toy a esintinentel pro- and beneficial but to the CLIC-,..the oppressor of Belgium and Switzerland, nu free institutions ; hiltior, ..y.tein, Which most he the first logical their- religion! is it not clews to them why from the:Went. eaelw.rd France, A e si tte ; ie .. f, t Bushman preponderance—only think; good men, Catholics, like ',AM./ and Flo e. Prossta, ore the three chief Proennsithoes I the wheat, the micro, the Cotten and the tot-ac- WENTZ and Getawayt incurred the ' lensure of the of the rise Belgium, Sardlnta, Swititelait 1 ,n t f the United States, eau oiled from Europe 1 Roman Court , why the af-chbishop of Vrtris, sod the rest of Germany, trembling ;in the coo fora rife le of Sear..' Milne 1. dreadful rates- felled himself in opposition to its policy,—and of nbsorption , Turkey on the eve of a batite trot lie is talking .at yolir grow:ng prosperity in why the majority of the Rem. Catholic Clergy for life and death against the traditionni Nino, , int. peropt enve" of Italy, of Romagna, and of Rome itself, are of ittetnee, bequeathed by Peter, and ,f t antal , A n d when may this happen, you are perhaps rhosule to the temporal authenty of th Pope. out by the triumphal arch or Ponlon to wdetio to ask rte • Ilitbin a year — within a and sympathise with Metzler to general , that Catherine, in the Eton te, say ing--1 oo here tat.' -huge year, gv nil. int n '—because if within a I of 17 Conspiratore, recently arrested for co pir way to l'oestantinor le ' ' , site!. year, the ,leagrie of despots IS not •hat-; ing in favor of the Republic, agtinst Artstri 16 Former)) the altsoltitiot poweeo I/ Ihered et oit dlasitelt r-11, Within a Tear, Iltlng try en. litre priests belonging to the humbler order', ef least to the principle of logo., ict teittio t rin mit Pa 1,04. otetnence the fight for her hunts. , the clergy They nee, m fact, • opposed to tt elide of the no called •filtnne right • t lii , e 1.1 , ill b tire. el, eh t•, t foie-dent to a nrask wan. I union of to and enmitis! authority, whir , my dynastiee, win. they a Imeato I 1 y nave- I lo oin n.t Itusati Ifreporelerence, elefoluta.m, on. 1 degrades a religious conviction into a policy note and the scaffold no superter to • see) rigid. der the protectorate of Resole, whit be coneoli- , eubtervient to despotism. They are opposed to to every law ti's filer And provided th filer ita doted for a Inee while by inaMinflishing the par. 1 persecu t ion and intolerance; and regard with pie was reepeeted, they doll not care Oft. the , town of Europe within a yeer . Principles eo n ahliorrtnce the unnatural league with all op regulation of domestic institutems,—.ll, r del o ly he bet i.e.( by prtnetples—absointism by preenng despotisms. not entitrieliet the derelepernent at 1,... f4' iii rt pollee. fostituneno—unright eette Intel* I The. are indeed things which every Cotholic, stitutional tooreirchies, by which alloa infe. till' 14r re he the lowa 'f riationa—tkepettems hymn! 1 bonne only at heart the interest of his reltglon, otherwise Incomprelienalble attachment to mob mil reli g io n , 'Mori ) Thie to the ranee which I ought, with deep sorrow, to view, and sat allow archies was eot,,ervb I But now lb . d..p )i- I „d,'.• r ~r It to not the casji, or, riou go r y I himself to be abused as a tool by individuals have thrown away even the pruicipl. of .1 ) L. a. .1 diL ois s ours —tt is the wfieldle flt has a 1 who take the word "religion" but to screen their heal leettimery and they hare 1.1,40 9 1 a, Ili, , dot, reff natl. ns alf.elute and ex so des. pnvate ambitien with:.and whose motto is— only rule of their poliry, the prinesi r.• to rap ~,,,,.m i -let the world groan in chains when we but rule pre. free tustifittoha and con.titittionni :I , , II ii tignry ottl-1 have !men too enntent, if I under the shadow of the Eagle of Russia." eminent evere whet} . . Awl whoever 1+ J • ..nlog Ito ii ia, i I tsar eiterfered, to off., deeenetvely ' fishy lam sorry to have thus to .peat them Bet them in that off, reel design Is e, I. mfte to 11, fief ...,,,,,J,,, n \ itgrian otstrune et of Vs op- [MCC to lb it, was a necessity If it be indeed league, t twitch he ho4to ...lifer Io 1 Ism 1e pr. -.toe Now ft+ it i.", 6,1 for some bettead true that amongst the Roman Catholics an dp an enemy of the s' exiled • ilivng right or fly eel. , peer, se. he+ ireplantel in my breast the I position le got up against my Muse, let them nestle'', corn;—:Ley dim t cane I', r tn., j ir,.. c into. on II at the litileprodrece of Eel-opened I remember•thet in opposing me they oppose the dell he lir tot talent, to Gen inittimitime .. cone the Ind,ji tole., i f !lung ,r ) vingh it, eta only t tndepentlence and freedom of millions of Hun elolatimiel l osertiti t ent e Thos ,i cea e fi, ii 1... iI la timbre!) ...red fat the Ile-kart, anal ran o gore. Catholics. the independence and free legtlimale pest...oiler In the tree, of 1 rawer iho Sur.,, ot the Kremlin and in the great Ilan 1 Mini of Catholic Italy, Catholic belief Germany, Ilelry of Itourlou. ens repolstel no" et je. ti I of Su 6.orge , and Catholic France, and in opposing me they by the de- a ode Louts :Napoleon, tuf mo-t , Fee th i s ; net ere, in which, as I had the lion I are supporting the Czar, the moat bloody enemy melon°. of all usurp., wee succour. tr. fl '.y .r to state, you yourselves are MO vitally Inter lof their religion ,—they ere doing the business them to :murder, parric dant, the Froof hR. I Potcd. Irl• .1 twit chore from yon to fight our bit of Russian diplomacy public., and the t tax gent an auteeraph ILI. rto I ir.s. for 111/ 1,57.1, to the nations of Europe, I Gentlemen, here I will end. If the canoe lon mistletoe bum of Repudiate it and ofd au . I ,rn inuig Istia. r ha...inn weight Leek, In the shish I represent were not of a higher duty, Aust. 4—Lefler ne the num ,t• it...,.. n0t0 to o .. • r • , -t h., to t'wrill aate! from Sweden across , and if the heart of the people of ,the United di'iglite to honor—hoe al, conipleverot I low I.•dat nel te dunge aft I tenni Hungary to Tor States were not more moved by principles and with its pito 1,,,, and i,l rare Cara '.Pil Tho filed mile- Iby liberty thee to require the moving power of Wad—war of extermination ageinst free in p. woo to steps hereto, is the independence of 1 petty intereste, I would mention that while the sttintione overyw ere and the est ato tili in en, r f Ilongere and to thia is mote I some rittlieten I nctory cf ahsoluttsm is about to exclede Amer alisolettswe tinder be preteeti et ~1 the Iz o t... 1 eel for the:neerionr) prop...inns, and free 1 hen's agriculture and industry from the market ri V is the prince; le win., in Eur o p e , go.• on , e minerre with yon, sod the pronunciation of lof Europe, the victory of freedom Open. it tin' developing with the most ranfol, most dere Vie ,hr Law of Natter., supported by the authority ' them. Hungary' alone ion market of *13,000,- 1 progress Mill too United State:, eon the lie of - aur glorious pe-ciou of n ••power on earth .•" GOO a year for cotton, and the pregnant Leers toil Stolen look no indiflerentir ,and ore Nan co il toll Is at, the raft mac be left to our own care, laity for Pon. 10,000 mile. of railroad, connect of freedom become ley htighi-hod, tat by re. • o ; un,l to Om, chnie ts which I expounded in my i ed with the oppressed condition of its own iron manilool ,•ky - C. they lank on ic.litiert otay wi .... hat Iterrisloire en , 1 donne my any in I 'mike would afford an immense field of enter. hecause erventr se ra + ago it was!. wt, 1 r•trio. I Log'otro • I, at tirmingharn I pine to the industry peculiar to Pennsylvania appropriate to th . etroehtfilhond, net to cure abolit Well I ani erne red "that if you proclaim I Bat with you, such arguments are not requir- European matters • the right of evert nation to regahate its own du I ed, and I hare spoken too longalnady. I most Lot it not be miareprennifd Th e 010..11 1 - I,l , glif 1-1 ne, r n in he a roman on law of cations , I humbly thank yowfor your generoussympsthy. Ilene. powers leagued n o th e jrnomple rot blot. nil formgn interference a stolatit,n of this law, i I most humbly thank you, particularly for the ling out free institutions from the eerth, bare tii., yonr protestation will not he rfsoected by manner in which this Festival—ever to be re 'already gene so far an to settle a plan of time per I;uose, I membered by me—wax arranged. Indeed, more tition of Europe upon the ban. of of • eelotiem If I hail the honor to hen cloven of the Unit , than enough of holier was. pentonmyself, though It is known end pohltely reported shit Be., I e I hairy I w ai f,' h as , a h ig h, 0p,,,,,, o r; I never neglected to pray, "don'tmind my hum .. decided to incorporate Turkey, aid to rid, tine power and postiton of tht. great Republic I ble self ; lam not worthy of any personal re- I/fret•quart 're of it's earth from Constnntiniiple and 111.1,11 et le: such a fl o ul t enter Into my golds; and I feel humbled, not gladdened in ft find th tt, tot get the with. e. neent of les tee , . he ‘rt inclined ofionl I he inined to take f o r as I n I receiving them; letre me be ungarded o let me, greets aly to Aflam e isolgture and the 'alt upont thin counter • honor, if a foreigner ;be unlionored, let me be nnfeasted,—but re- Rhenish provinces to France' nod the re•t It .13,1 In Noonan, euch a doubt Cenci.. 1 member and help bleeding Hungary." May I Germany to Pruael I tie,s of our power i• the curesr guar.:it( e of our ' he attacked, calumniated and trampled in the The Czar, acting like the Pcrotan Kings of old power- 1 fu' tof it, is less ',f i t I dust—that Is all the same. Hungary's cause when they sent garment+ of honor to *ln rs . ti n . I ~, if, ...it 0-, re-f est To. declass inn I will rll4 Le ices just, leis improtaut, lees war gar , . dogs to l i , " eillit'M of a few prey or, -robe lor ii .ore a vete front Sweeten down t thy el' your sympathy So nothing to me, noth of kluedetes Is their stir q .sa Tucker MI / 1 1,1.411 `"soon neat move.. with ' ing for me, but all for Hungary, for Freedom Aud oh'Almighty father of hum trot, o• Ir ii giel tn 2 iii tig,) ,11, ~,11 , t II ungar e (e nd You have adopted in this Festival, this peso there as pettier oil earth to roar thi, r: e,rafli wet, les. oe. 111.1 not. all Itio.e bettor, well In ' Gcal course It Was Hungary you invited, to wintiolation of human, an -1 national rich, of ,wa, ILat tin re + 1 / 1 ..1.1 opportunity afford I nit down to the Longue of your Ballston. 1 freed. i. and indepeugenee ' -though th. re is . „.f 1., in, ti, 1, 1 p r .., len, I Moil, oil 111/A1111 . 4 tint generanty. 13e thanked--a thousaed timer , Republic powerful enough t o di e ~_a Repel.. y. L t ,r,.1 ..y will avail thortmelve• of this bp , thenl.eil for it May your . generous eiample be founded up. the rery petnett les Iv' If Is the 1. peroifois i.. so t , of it I fi r oil . ..eatery fah ' followed may the Assam/Won of Friends of fl,Ol, rollret., have l 'it under An ineterst e , fis o e , r , er ~. tft , ei , i e u e , lesion i', the,; ,Iliareeney --or which tilts Feetival is the first, I hen h at ~,,,re,t• is r a k a of nue, a on a breed extensive hasis—epread over the I Gentlemen I hoes de. II e`ehsf , " Ins , 1 " ,, Z rat i,A tr 001 ad , he reteeigled le it "To this I ear ;II if.; May you have given the start to that the cull.t.on ,f Fuieape hut it was need ...-e ft 11,11 yim w,i , hs set„ tight ii sate ithole hurled !I:peace...al 'nett 111 At P•ery dollar 'spent in kindly t, show that though there ltoi n Busmen tee t o 01 ,1 „t oo wit :, ~ !es, t i ne ea. ynal', ega f e e t intended but unprofitable demmetratione, is a ritintel ~y es the public , frit . o 111 tr. rout. 11. 1 , 1....., ...ill a ' y tr , • . if Tr ti the rot Cato the I a dollar lost for Hungary. 'And if eyour gener -1 ear, •• WI the Roo , an trot tier is i ^Me . , , ~,,j , „ ~.., I j i,,,,, 0 i, , ~a , p,,,.. if yon take.' our, as wril as practical example, he followed I tonged to the ritlantle Peiple of free a 'nonce tfewere, ere 1 t I. het ' i ' V:rt r e mm ,l ' f ' rou ' t y l . c , n iii ' ti r' d " R " . r i , ,o . e h n t h p ' " re; e a r, r d m e i ri l ,, l f c 4, 7 Itt:thht theo wh l i:h * % n ' Arit th ao . l . l, m ,, the t ti . P- rn . Teed i'i 7t late'iliterl-dly and by en I ten viulens • all , wi'l 1.. chocked as I rem proteeten o n respect I will prove tree, what tome ten—mat it re \ in me meil and ....h.0.. libeet,l Mum for the rep,,.. ~.i.without hsconc t . g.,, to - war 111 est I snl I fled America energetic and generous, of aleoilutiem be tram Ind out of Elroy and 1.,.. th orc a ~,,thc , , a ,,,,,,, a w h ic h yoo ~,,y. Inc it is gigantic and free by mere deliberate p.p. Mali in by dipl .m tee 1.11 I, Toot prole•tation—a sanction powerful I Governor Nagai:lth concluded his speech, and pt r.uestn en! gel I. the way Inn.. be w.f., 4 . „ , 'lire. 'f war, and vet no wee at all Tbot Into trnmt. , , , I , . rin,,..,,,,,rn by ;,,,,‘,,.,, ~,,, i „,,,,0 , ,, r, ,;;Il ; , , t, , ,„ ; , ,, , ,,,,w. nt . ( ~ , ,,g re, ,, ,, sat down amidst tremanthdis applause. The cr. ~ • the' the intervention of re resign rower hennas i 4 .' 3 " Ifk,'.-1'.9,......_,..,_,....0.0...,_,..,.!YA1111...ta1j.,.....1,,ftyte1yy• ti'SECATITI7I-1 Ani her! I Haim nereursien se fise se -Tia:,,,,,,,,,,,ri........... . bETTS. - F;ti,....,7„rx,,,,,,1=1,0, „,,,,rr„. 1„,. rft 5e . 7 . ...fe , , , ,, , . iii 7 fits es the interfering or in The If m WIT Irwin amid iMr Pees= lle, i . who live by i reu, vie. artr ol r. fed et a ore,.. , , 1. , ~,,,T,',' , ',..1 : ',,;', 1 T ', " 4 " :1 ,: 7, : ;', 1 a I s n ., ' ,. L . !dent, I have the honor to inform yen, and this levet.. greater renew,. t o lice ,Ile-, :co.. nt,..1 , . o o 'ray '•: t li, g rah. h., aco , n o, rn I ," ' fare, :nesting, dint there is now in this hall. as -.- ' ''' '''''' ' r ' re '" " wrr ' F "` b ' Fil:te'n ' ,::Er—i::: o e ' h h ' e l :: ,• r e r cf):— charged L e e r l' e lan withe o r f from a th e e pPitio easing o Brim i,s Stare to d : t h o y f I sag other power tete eVer gone ' """ '''' ' l ' """-”:" eh " ' lla r ra ''''''' nit ial the tan ,fN it ons Governer Louie Kossuth, to visit titlllit, Iby facts, but by 0; -in[ re•perting This ~,,,i , a „„„' 1,,, „,„ffi a ,,,,,, ; k,,,,,,,, i I 1 ,;(' (,rite"—not , ti : e .r . .r . i i— ;,.. l e ; i: r , l_b : :: : - y ..: : ::" 1b .r, 7 1 ,: r .h 1s r I ::::_,:', p. l they i l , : .r. , l , 1 ,,1 h 5.. ' .::: , ' ' ' ,, t , , I ~',,1,r: ..; :. , ' ::: ' , : ' , , ,,, ; ::: , r , ::::: , 1,:" . 1 : :; L i '' t, ,: ' ., , , 1 , : h„, ' .. ' : n r :: ) 1., 1::: :: 15' ,... 'r f :!' : '1 ,r,,,. 1:1- 7 ::! ..o l ::::: p : e l ,,,„ d r i t " Ph er ' l' : : : ' ‘ t. ' t i ta l t n ;e fi n i e r' efa ß ble and honored Commouwealth.— , I: b f . re , 1 1 d i t . a:: o u e t e. A l n , glTbi:o...yycon;apten;tibssiwnt: to 'more.. the world with ^belief In a .treeeth , she hes net. than I. try to ore,. e or effet e tali, in on 21 , 111C11 e1t,041 in n abroad, are fault I I Mr. Chairman, if it, be in arder,`l would desire ' that etteuth ~, :;;;i;‘,;,.4",:;',,; ; ",“: 1, ; ,, ',: ;,•,;;;c ;,,,,,,,,i ' ;;;;,,, __ et j. ~f. ..,,, cries.!-hip re ,re i now have nu opportunity of hcaringthe croden -1 Brilliant saloons of f teotnattng boltee, a. well c r r ' 'l' °r° der . Rut fT". w' b n3 i Geis of that ombase s itdor • the Hon. Erastes ;es elarntees areeeastly department. of Ito, ' ''''''" '`'`°""' ' nh ' flur °" n '"-- - N mo prurriple.. r moot en sides eourforlf In bee in ` 11 “ 0 ""' r e a d (APPlshee.) . \ , ' "' T ' he th e P e l :r m i; ' . Y ervire money , at the diope,i „o mend friends'op wlte a newer which collate, the \ The Hon Ernemes Hopkins, rising amidst the all other diplomatists In (1..t.1.1 1117111,1,04 has C ',..''' " r N , "‘,.. n ,.' • no . , ,I", ma Y w e ll wu hdr‘' chero of the ...thence mid. only been exeeptionelly wool But every Ito. - ,"'" ''''''''''' r. ;. r''''''' P ' rfl . ‘ l "h`'"' r'''''ort Mr 1 , „ vide Aft ' h s ua' - e um 1 sian 411,1 freatioi. in whom rer.fidence 14 , ''''. t " w '''' l ' ill ' erea Ime"hl r ." I h " d i i i eee d, 1 ,,,,,, „:e this — ,,e, e , e ,:::,,, , e ; dt " a I t h t aied rr l y - „.,,d. 1,,, ~,,,,,,,,,,,,, ~.„,„,,,,. ;,,,,, ;;;, ~,,,,,,,,,,, ; , th ere is yet s tni 1 l'e position—that of tieing ii , ‘0, , ,r,„ ~,,,, ~,,,, ion, ;,,,,,,, ~,,, , ;;;„0 „ . ~,,,;;;;; iie,ilie- fr-and . r enienv—ilii•refore permitt t n g tare to Obtrude\ awn your \ atienficia. It was,. Their tr \ 1,0,0 o lpmels, yce them how i t, h . ::v h e ., r ; v t p :,, r , i7 m t e l 1 , i n:1 0 f:: ( 1 1 trl,lllc recall 1,71.13.17.11,Cnie,ur1:Lr...74 1 r i . i . i p tl ,, e ,l e gv d 4;: itii c I.:too:, hyo in z y re. er i p z ec trp t s e t, ti w o ; a„ : i ‘ w a i l e : n , ei. 1 . C .c a b M i1,...., :: to ettain thf ir point Gent W yc h e . r, to stn I , SF+ 14.01.1 I enforee the respect to your protesta• relied en, end they urileretan.l every fa , . tile r „,,,, ~,, ~,,,,,,,,,,, ~,,,,, ;1;‘ ,,,,,,. ;,;,„, ;,,,, ~,,,,,,, thin wdlieut getting voile country in the wont' ; pulling ~,1 6 ,,i , i , „," ;,;;; ;;,,,,,„ -:„. i;;;;; „ ,, , ,;;;;; , , ;;;, oh'igalt nto ...fon your protestediffo kg nor '' mingle the t e ngrw e eleilorio of the cititiros of 1,...,1 p..pe. to. I lope those who that, .n . , Prlnciples, but he., the "Ohl Day '•,state," to Gm. Kossuth with , 1 In :thseintinoplb, that Fr i ent ,„, rt .. ~,,,r of ,:::::.;::,...,,:,,,,,,,,.,,.,..,„:„.,:,11,,,11,n,:,,,,,,,,,,.„..r,:ii:::,,,::,,,,,::::,r.,,h0;0.?:i.rith.1ri0ntryhtp,i05d,h,-;ttrtibi:::: :,I ap th ii e l ,, t i h t e t.:,: e th, e is n 6 p , ,i , o 47. of y. :l , le 4 gh . eny re C u dit \ y .oh. c o a a p e . I di,0 , ,.0.,0 •1,111, worthy of more close Intense message. alto iSCl not than was ...towel upon it till now from lin. dil ect • lea—because there - will bo ler.: the meet vdreadful hit wto 11:e independence Qf Perm e end by oppreeng nie vino, the Colted Stete. : ,, hein all w d e, el t i ll o O t Orri t t: o:zi o t r h you, love, Ittlt" wham s in Constantinople, where Russia will turn ai t iril ' II ''''''". he f ". r ` ell irll ' dl"l7 " mm dillkuirilrl 'i i ant of office, It does not 'lt„ •k him it [Tremendourt\Ap ioi of mien they nano g li, eati.note.l but by 1 plause..) Turning to Kossuth the eloquent u praises him rather, 111:14 spreads We rum o r at harts; him in its fa!, and it is sure tint for- bea d e d " a d ale .' I sign influent.al di! diniats will turn rout for it a :I:nh'i:mbriad—' Itbil'aY;iallml :7eatl:::::ikniaal: i it'cl:(747th'ijodu"aCrsa,u—aclofamjildwiresechledthsabtytiibtolspEr:gi the lintel frond vines When, on the ether sod, h a ere. sitter ne wneenne in his poellinn end patience, and 011111 must claim your indulgence for some furl her iemerks lam told that the I n the Accompanying packnge, covering Ruita likes him to cootinue in office, it attacksa il'or'anr„,hatic a in the un i t e d states acc 0 ,.. ; resolro of th e Legislature to visit their capitol I'"eff Ite my vlews lam gladto he able to say I dUrlng their present erosion Lim with the grove. , estentatio. publteor 1,,,,,,, hales ~,,,, , thnnyn ~,, man ..„,,,, , sin s that in geoterel it is net CO I have warm friend. The resolve it in fad, no leati than in He terms end kind ',oriels among., the Rem. Cetho. "te the carne and •Oeholf of asp , ople of !has Corn pear. to Mils, oral 10,, tint a lways II i • man The reliant Gen shields, Mr. I ^ N'''"if 6 ' wlthrn c appenre to love flogmmu diplomacy to lire here aeibtreotmrcwer•liff.y l ! i k e t t: k; s":li rite Senator fromLoi s 1 ani, the worm burrowingLk.th,mol . jeee,t:anh,;;,;l,,,,onf ‘t.il:ni. j,dgiGnd come out In broad day lisle, it 'wraith', I;, the - at 1"1 " orm, "d ones other of m y kindest left ~,,,,,„ ~ b.... ~this„, eight ;,,,,,,,,, 40 ,,,,, f rival Is are R.I. l'athelics, and from NeW kis:ructions never to ellow her to 1.. , directly ' tiefeudeol by the pro, Ilea would iced to de, C erk rap to whatever place. mnooes of Rona. etholice lie, se univerently, en generally slier. co sum rind forth, exposure With regard no led ‘n lie summon . I. P'"I'T t'u''''..” on me, herself, she went. siknen—the mienor or the ''' whoever else lin* c"'"ld it b e ii th errimal grate. But her neon, devote niontlia of rehem- Is nay reuse not-the eau, f freedom! And Is freedom er,:.e, in, ce:,, n ,n, st e.. t . a b a t ( r .. t ri ii ,e x , : , : h‘ r e e et ne to II w oe h ;oo n pr t e ep r e L p r i e 7 , l :i it tw i ° b uil 4 1 he li ; ,ii 10g, ,i, l a:: . a . ny o . 8 g o s ni t s o e r e quired , .r to t o t. nan0!.,0“,,h, popularizes , 0 p: ,, , : Dente, to get up da.cfird, or the ITV ItUlt, of iu;;;;.;;;;‘,7 view wh;c1;;;;;i0 her i p e olky, ~,,,,;;;;, I rotantry to more Roman Cetholle than Italy, ilefightil In doing so through epperently oppo,,efl to the eleepoGe Goverument of the Pope and therefore Imenspeeted agree, No is Russia powerful by an Remy held ready depot, With; I the epirituel authotitiee of the Pope° .. hostile i " I °. Rnmeitself• An ,l is Italy—is Rona not m Rome, while it remains etrongly attached to As for myself I am a Proteetlint ndt only by ass rearguard to support needy powerful by its num leucy over the European continent; powerful by having pushed ether des Binh but by convic•ion, and no Indo can be more warmly attached to rebel.. convictions pats Into extremetien where they have hot all in dependent vitality, and could not extricate them i t tha ta n li l les a olc l i tf t e i ii v ae no nff M ord eri e L d o to f m m e hm o p ,that oar t e m u i r - mil discretion into the iron grant, of the Cvir, ' selves but by throwing themeelms at pleasure rul nee of severer trial in that respect, end it is no but above rill, Rtiveia is powerful hf its =rarer ' merit of "''''''" but a simple necessity, ' I I I I did dirlenmeY But this Colossus, mantic iss it rap k ars to be Lunt enrich ntlrel'ii:z.""tal'''''.%vicrrtionllcot°:'ll';";"l - It • —the idol i claim liberty of conscience for myself, and what -with froer of brays lint test of el," I claim for myself, I am of course ready to rn- n may be overtumen—easily overturned from its , ', ev p er ert I rel whem.oever else. I therefore respect us couviction I resect the con fragile pedestal, Vile glorinue'Repubile of the N tenon of Roman C a tholics, and w ill never for- United States opposes to it, With resolute rim get that It is the religion of nearly half of my lode, the Low of Nations, and does not abarelon . countrymen now, who have cordially co-opera. principled.before "accomplished eritninel furls " 1 fed in the cause of my cranttry'e independence. The mournful condition of Hungary relents to ' I Will never forget that it IS the religion of Po. be pointed out by providence in the United I hrl, of all Italy, of half 'lemony, of the great- States as an opportunity to save mankind from ' est parts of Fran. and Ireland, whose hearts Rosa l ie without any sacrificer' at all; whereas 1 for the greatest part are with me,—and the this opportunity lost—l nay it with the lupins. i reel of whom, on reflection, must be- with oUme lion of prophecy—there are many bare In this : because they must Aldo with civil and re l Hell who will yet ace the day when the United I hherty . States shall yet hereto wrestle for life and death 1 lint if I were a Catholic, I would nee with with all Europe absorbed by RUlrela i even more pain then, as the steeple meaner of 1 know where 1 eland, gentlemen, I know 1 civil and religions liberty, I ma' rtee_papery your power end the indomitable, heron spirit of proetituted by obedience to the Czar, the relent yeur people. It is not with the mention to less persecutor of Catholicism, who forced' the create apprehension that I coy this. the people United Greek Catholice, In the polish Provinoes, I of the United States fear nobody on earth. I by every imaginable cruelty, to abjure theircon. know It may be that Russia, even after having pectin with Rome, and carried out at a !ar i l absorbed Europe, will not dare to attack direct. greater expenditure of human life than Ferdi- i ly the United States. But It may be that It will nand and Isabella, or Louis Xlirth, the moot dar e e v e n natithis. S isome domestic diseension may etupendous proselytism which violence has yit comon lute against It—the passion I achieved of particular interest may cause some momentary I Certainly more than 100,000 human beings had discord. RUelia will footer it, by its secret di -'died of misery, or under the lash, in the manner plomacy, to which nothing is soared on earth; I in which theunfortunate Alineknuns were proven and when irritation comes to the pad, and the I to have died, before he terrified these unhappy 1 ties of affection become for a moment loose, then I millions into a mthmiselon against which their l perhaps Russia may step in, in a moment of in- I I consciences revolted. Yet with this man, red , tenor Wane'', from Which not the greatest with blood, and damned with the million canes' nations are exempt Rusts will begin by "di- o of their creligioniats, have the men of that . tido," and will perhaps come to "Impera." All order which rules Popery, now mode an alliance, this may happen. I can say neither yes nor nor lor rather a compact of nubmission, like that but One thing / ant tam and that to Russia ooh which evil doers, according to the supertittion Of and will attack you ln•your moot vital interests, put ages, made with the evil spirit . A peeuliar character of that order is the ambition to rule and can hint you mortally, without even resort-1 lag to war. . 1 the world; hence its alliance with tbe Czar.— The Honorable .gentleman then 'banded, j amidst, lend cheers, the sealed package nelcis ilot the invitation to Ger. Kosenth;and proceed , , , e d l7 3 avi r l i g with i ' w' this eitupleXtnnoincomMit d ell,- ered to you tho doeumenta intrusted , to m'y charge, I must be considernihm having ex,haust. \ of my official functions \ \ \ 1 Fetjelr, having had the i honeM of Introdusing the resolve to the Legialatnre of \lllassachusette, , and. witnessing . with plemittre the inanimous I and instant concurrence of her 4004tepresentais I tires, 1 will venture to odd a few words beyond\ the record ; only such words, however, . Vi's isms , not fail In ho conson.mat with the outlinenia and I hearts of Ler people. Tko people of illnesachasette wo d Illef) you accept this net of her constituted au °riffs., as no unmeaning compliment. Neter, in rhildr) as on independent Stale—with one Sin to Iliac trions exception (M. de La Fayette) has Alms chuiotts tendered such a mark of respect any others than the Chief Magistrates of thesarni ' ted States. And even, in this present instance, mach she admires' your patriotism, your eloquenci s your outiring.dovoteduess and seal--deeply as\ the is moved by your plaintive appeals and sup plications in behalf of your DITIIO and oppres. eed land—greatly as she is =wised at the inex pressible elasticity with which you rise frets un der the heel' of oppression, with fortitude in. creased under sufferings, and with assurance growing etronger as darknesi grows deeper— still it is not one or all these qualities combined that con lead her to.ewerve from her dignity as • free and Independent State to the mere war. ship of a man: I But It is because she views you as the advo rate road providential representative of certain Brest principles whiob constitute her own vital ity as a State—because she dews you as Ate ' representative of lionise tights and freedom i n ' another and far distant land—it is because eh* views you as the rightful bat exiled Governor . I of a people whose long past history,, and whose I recent deeds show her to be worthy of come better future than that' f Suasion tyranny and Austrian oppression, that she seeks to welcome you to her borders;—that aho leeks thus to attest to a gasbag world that tote 'taws of freedom sh'p4 not insensible, and that to the opprenion of tyrants she is not Indifferent. well, air, that your , feet have not yet pressed the soil of Massachusetts. It, is well mat ydu landed elsewhere—that you have sur veyed the most prosperous portion of our At. imago coast; that you have surmounted the for addible Alleghenies aid planted your feei. on the.coufines of this great milley. It to well that y ou oiototi . comprehend its vast **tent—that you should Boit down : theee mighty' .Streattls, and pouf survey these mighty valleys, that when your ho a become 'expended by these means, and gratified by . the free institutions which adorn and Wee them—that theiianti -not till tine, • should yon turn your footseps to the epot wl American liberty lisiLits birth. Its embryo slurabered in the ,00k of (hoe lust/ ions sad highly accomplished puritan ev when, with Religion for their tinilninla, ti seifoot on the ftnel of Plymouth, and CDCO terea the stern rigors of ,L Nrw Eurnuul wilt Their first' born child was fayndoe Eiitnewrij, their Second was Pl:pular rrti.c.i. %In wl Words rim the History of Any ceintannwenith so gloriously eintilAro,,,l, thon‘ thi words, and in the orilOr is •liieli I hive them RgLIOINN, F:Dresilfori, rAktl..4! litre, sir, is a tricolor L,. 0, ...,1,1' Sot preeminently curb, is the ron,r.t nt setts: Otte word only nerd be added to Lying do her history to the present beer, and it is lost corollary of the former—l 1711,111 Per,tririt, I the men elpiety surveys hoe her b her people --count, their we :Ith—hella;i, a or fact added tee the'proet age. /seen the right,..l.l.,rga , i-re te, tiered." I hare told Sir, that !tfas,chnset-s is t. bhth place of American totter., When the you have seen the toll Fr Ito, k;';.' , % wideb fills these vast Tallies, and strend.e.;4.lterself or. these mighty mountains, COMP t:. oar Zietie no 'try, so retired (Corn the totm.Ol'owl carted lions oP the old world, and we. a.ll An, y o the cradle I,A: %AN rimk,el to tp..:gs of ch quenoe which while they toothed heire,r,,.a.w, kened a . VIVA& eon/moll. to • nurture au defence. • Come, Sir, and w+ ehoW 'wid son the has spo where the fire:-baptiental blood or iho.revoiiiCer Tr sprinkled: upon her coast...l+l, f. d 's's:head , t o comp ground where Wasltioglott . first tin sh`tathed his sword in her ds rcne..—at the for. tifiCations which Le first erected f., hir'en. trenehment. ' .F ro l the wintlE4s and lslcs,oies ,-r the Leg s islative Halls WOO'S this itirttation riostottisl, these sp t o can I.e sleets Come, hen, and st...nd amid oho, hollowed ,seenes—grire upon- them-14,de, t o th,4,'',..i.,,,,, eloOuen6e ti I it stedls through etrry iolise and breaks up e ry fd,totain of year s , m; l --drink with us of the e tiron well spr;urs'Af Anussiesti Liberty, and y u will fuel the, 14: , gushing and pore l \ ' AIL sir, in it • ot.titting thrt yore fast pit.: grrmagninthin 'eo tinent r should i, iis such ta \ plass—that art pita aloirork for the oil siiorl,i , your parting aft shit iiil tie to drink arthese most hallowed fountain of the 1,.,w7 Sir, Massachusetts w N - ' weleo-no ye._ Si,. is the dexceadant of illations e.r.iles who Oen tug from the oppression of tbe oil world, sought freedom in themert. As rar'exilr;, yoursAL her own history—filial piety bids her weleotne you. ilereelf the first in legal resitilsoce to 'ilf;gal acts—in constitutional resist:net , to iiioritistitn tionol tyranny—bow Can she do otherwise than to welcome those who follow in her ontsteps - Prospered, almost ithout pr.-c0d...1 os rho has boon, tinder 'the -macs o(14; I I Provi,, donee, she con give bt t Is poor 'noconet ni' her stewardship, unless he inetitutiows Si' U.-Union, f Education, of Phila thropy ott,i ri r Freedom ,e. n afford meet reliable instinct:on to all w reek to found new states, or, like. yourselL \ tot\ wive and regenerate throe tit., arc old. I eak of her institutions 0; to clots. I mean er distinct muilieipolittes. There Is no sentrallzation there. Distributed into 32;: cities and townships. it is in these. by her literally democratl assemblages, that her government is chiefly car ied on. No central goo 't semi:lights and potroni es our four thouSon4 public schools. No central g. •'t jeviesnur tares to fill her cur: fers and fee her .parasites 131 ch team pro ' rides for itee) , levies its orro tires, oal•itiotto'i ' its own schools, establishes its own municipal regulations, and each and all of these tt;ts is independent of $, ry other. TI.- cause of Ed ucation and of Pre dm is thus reposed in the hearts and hands of ho People. Ifiso.?lrl, did I say! No sir; it is bas -- ''' '. hands of the people. t TLion know no rep,,,, I aitOstactivo, vigorous bThe aggregate recd ur little democratic times larger thate_t_lms Sir, we have r . , - Fin system I hove seer giforerrimirtir, and the' The "seat of goeernm, elmetis' e save as it St people. 'l' he governs governtncut is caste e-1 'troy it, you cannot ti. Skit it, it Cods yen. Li mild nod gentle is it' fdl of Ito existence. II have thou detailed and of the present con; 1 seeks to welcome you an . . Come, then, -to bor ' truth of what f have c. tested by our instituti of your hospilaltality. of her million souls. —of that - State which thbse glorious rerainizet so eloquently referred tt dbe first,t• the State Li•gis•.,torts M tis come, after it hail been cad \lone le wen. and L witnt be wished. Sir, I th - tolayour Cent trionwealkfor the boner it liesiesolved upon the eV,* of my 00 40[17,11nd I thus you foe moving thseerevolotinu s; I thank you \ for the, trouble you hive taken inyeu r long j. oy tc, deliver them tome, and I ltintih.)oll for t e el . _ognent manner in which they • wire delive rs Dyyoor words I bare airmsly a foretaste of rho\ \ heart cheering entl"oul stitlet eCtuesoshiel will meet mu on mi ;,suit, nod from which I trout to take away. nil the inspiration =Mote they so abundantly furnish. Sir, I will corr,o to Massachusetts. (cheers,) awl 1 will thud: son ... I to take charge of the written at Sner to these res olutions which I foe! Vint my thityand my gra,. ,ifude require me to' ive. (Lend nod long come tiaued applnts,"!..) . , . ‘E.I,D. Gartam, Esq., announced to the Prosi- dent, that the Committee Ivo! rcluestmibins to . present for the considerntion non action of the • meeting, two resoluticr's supposed to- tie-in AC -1 eardatice with the sectimente not onlY of Av e r l present. but of this wh • ole ectonstaity.; .We l',l heard not only with delight the soul veining ',Li ' osinence of the illustrione.,adv, t t e of hoses, liberty, but bad on this, ac on other ricnnsion, `heard with a proper cunoicti.'n of their /nun d nese the arguments in favor of Intervention for Non-Intervention. We had heard fruit, the 40 of the meMenger of the intelligent Stse of Massachusetts, the assurance thou in thie \ gtest I 'cum, the sober, coweideratc, Tem:lent, and tu, t apid sone of the pilgrim - exiles i,f the ill,! 'icy StXte, underatood and correctly Or precicted tho right, the duty, and the ; true inter,' contrail.. They not only understood of ed the\missiott of the Governor of !Ice represeetative of the riglie \ of Core dons, bol \ theYalso understool the tr: of our own country, which had,in the, Hon of Indhpendento clearly ret\iorth of nations which deepots heel disig gLer , American liberty 'again, h*f epol tho heights oßo9toa, from the, • stone of. the comment. of 'llisokes \ Her voice, hear in 'the volley of el eissippi mingled with the hold 'bears '% 4\ Hungarian Indepeudeuee had Ent,peci pition,Uttered• by Ea.. nth hiensel.. we, verherating•imong ourlestern h:lle, • pie desire that the voi ..c \ of thro Airgi shottichhe heard in unison ,For the inn pond luatrnstion of the pneßre herrylinc; rile dcsirh to speak out theAr wishes I Will. \ • • Oaths momentous gocition t \o , L f Ls! ' for non-intervention, it hal c••n , •ht • \ the People's\will m ight ne orrn.• 'the impulse b excited! felling ler,: though 'Americans L were Impel- Sr, their attaehtnent No the rights of mX, ant, yet 'they war et rending :id 3 t p opie. Yea, sir, At enirrantin seta.t.. w old count the Cent, tint they si . .ilii.t h \ thin do dreadful as * surrender of';irit nor • Alike of natiOna honor slid el t linty. \ They would first e tore sticy.ns and thiM to ahead. Ina ono of citli , nation they wordd : deelar than in tin onu'v, the' reason having biNI: aHec*lis .the cleareeheonvictions of lb.'s. minds_ ing with thi`tettlibgrof their h4e t a, they Sputa expect \the Government to oXi\ to their kilt. And thti. beli4ing, the ! commis g, .ncting tic::: • der the aitoorit'l reposed !in then by ! the lee, \ , pie -of Allekhenfeounty; had inssimed him to` \ subtfall the allow! ' resolutions" \:. . • I ‘• \_ '. Resolved, '4lat sir ether it be tee •Itity stet \ „ ' . ''• \ Interest an a rrOple t support, ard•to stot ,,.. o:ic s \ \ —to support o fin of iSlatore an"' ( sf • N 'ores \ • God, promnigisi• the ations ' \ • our Declaratiewo Veleferdetsc' question,tonquestion, lltoknrop . Soi .should be sought by Amer-mats \ , .mere inapnlce of syrnieutheti\ : generousi nor of indigantion,l but with minds unclouded by i tuenced by Tear: With calm di schisms ihtuld weigh the ' gat intervention for non interne tit can be adduced, the nrgnme s 'then decide sedeity to God an quire—they should dccide,!not e selfish seeprity and interests of t I but, in vie* of the enduring tate nal.obligatlns of the nation. • Resolved, hat in our opinici COWS when d y and interest de States to snpp rt and to aid of It the right of a nation to atablisl form: f government, es to ite i'l , bsek caleuinte d ea efleet their : Ll nee* To thane whit differ With we say let ets reason 'together ise . • A , \ \` \ \ \ , s:. \ \ ‘..,.-,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers