“ANASTABIB.” rWehwtrbe»rflSWa^«*^^ W* 9 ltytaAiK riitniltj«f Wfamiaf.B&nlmttf* Jade »pWsfcf-i uL i} yfttHU »ndi*iate[bUyiri>- - W MU«BUy'ffe«»* «K*ad*hiAi* . itt . 6ni'-i*mvii WMfeuMpi hearttailhßWgßjtmihkeiwdiJiiHh »0» Qs.hu kWlyipwtofed;* - irs deem.jApiKuiAsePriW l ***' WW'WiW-. mqoqi :« ; * Dwfc*i»tojK«»U«# fotmibifWii , HiMpwfy,^W»» ~1 ■ ■ Tflstertrj garment wasJlotatters lorq; , jl 0 neallh b« bad, nor weaUhyTKWdi■ CoaM Malm, To lifthirifttj) to Jfcn« uadtoftme? Tslshntok^l^^P^JwiW'lffoWw^ 1 - ■ Th« OTW?ringjwpq*B ,«f W*,(gMt wd j Not all4eAtW> of Ibo earth coda,bind. Tbs high aspirings tf bu' active blind. Am I,’ neaaid,bfa»ib»d byfloavcn’sdectee An ignorant hirtUng all toylife to.be 1 Moat I bo JW> _ Drove,noqmced, initfr ted, scorned from day to day? Was one'creatbd to nstxrp the sod, And forceiiftstAer nnropaid to tollt Did God make Atom Jord ..andme.rtoft Form Aim for wisdoip, and-raako me,a. tool 7 Shall wealth construct a.ladder.to fbe skin, And I fbrbiddeb e'erithe friiaA to rue 1 No! Boundless Wisdom-been in nature’s plan, Made all men ttnereigiu and made me. a men. Dor me the earth her.rich abondanoefyipids j For. nterich verdure ciofrrea. Ihe &rllle fields ; For ms the rain descends,'the river flows, The songsters warble, and the nphyr blows; For m* ml nature' spreads before toy.eyes A thousand beauties of a thousand dyes, • For me the planets In their courses toft And tempt Bom esrlh to heaven the inquiring soul J Science to me upveil* her beautooUsifece, And wisdom beckons to her Kind embrace; While earth, and heaven, and all things are combined To invite tbo stndy of the wondering mind. 1 will not yield to be' a powering slave j ril claim the freedom God so freely gave i Break all my chains, o’er every barrier rise. Scale fartie’shigh lowor.and grasp the glittering prise. 'Snd rise he did, despite the halo and pride Of high .born fops, end other fools beside; Poverty’s fetters now no more could bind The vigorous pinions of his active mind. With unknown labor, stop by step he rose, Grappled with want, and conquered ail his foes, TiU, fair revealed, in learning’s ranks he shone, ilia claims acknowledged, and hia.talents known. In vain did Envy from its native-place, With frightful hissings, lift its hideous dice; In vain did-Bigotry upon him frown, And stilted pedants.try to beat him down; Like a proud bird, he soared, until bis form Securely rested for above the storm. And then, with’ pity smiled upon the foes Who vainly tried bis progress to oppose. Thus the prond eagle to the mountain hies, When darts assaiiand dangers round him rise; Perches securely on someTefty peak, Smoothes his gay plumage, whets his mighty beak, There sits majestic and with piercing hen, Looks down conlemptnans on th’ abodes of men. And SO may all, with lofty thoughts inspired, By nature .gifted, and by genina fired, From want and darkness force their upward way, To thefpll (iilaze of intellectual day. Troubleaittay come, and threatening.clouds arise, Their path to darken, and I’ obscure the skies; Envy may sneer and try to pull them down, Slander may,bite qpd Jealousy may frown; But every foe before the mind must fall— Untiring labor will o’ercome them all, E’en as the axe, with many- a soundiog stroke With, crash tremendous, fells the proudest oak.” SELECT MISCELUM. AW affecting incident. Looking over the columns of this journal ] for ifae past fortnight, we light upon the fol lowing marine item: “ Bark Harvest arrived at this port yester day, in 43. days from Liverpool. Gapt. Crawford reports having experienced west erly winds during the whole passage. In a hurricane on the lllh insh.lat 40° 20 min. long 63° 30 min. thirteen steerage passen gers were washed overboard, in trying to get aft after the s|jip had broached to.” Short and to the point is the foregoing; no sympathy will it excite ; the terms in .which it is presented are 100 much like the tabular statements of the weekly bills of mortality to move the general heart to grief —the reader’ roads it and passes on to the next paragraph with simple indifference. But there are hearts to whom it will come like the knefl of the last hope—homes where it will fail like Egyptian night, crashing out all that is fair and beautiful in existence upon earth, and making s desert of despair, where erstwhile bloomed the fragrant flowers of hope. In conversation with Mr. Cass6ly,.of the office of the Commissioners of Emigration, he related the following case: The other day a portly gentleman of sixty years or thereabouts, whose face bore the in dex of his benevolent .heart, came into the office of the Commissioners. Following him was a neatly attired, good-looking Irish wo-j man of about thirty-five years of age. The old gentleman walked up to my desk, and striking a heavy gold-headed cane upon the floor with marked emphasis, demanded— “ Where are the Commissioners I I must see them immediately!’’ I replied that the Commissioners were not there, but if ho had business with them we could attend to it fdr'htm. With another rap or his cane upon the floor, he said : “ Well, Sir they ought to be here, then— thev ought to be here. What else do we want them for, if they can’t attend to their business ihemselves V’ I saw it would be vain for me to attempt in reason with him, no I let him proceed, his (-holer everv moment augmenting, and bis cane becoming more emphatic. “ Here is a.poor woman looking for her children, and I tyant you to find them for her; do you hear t I want you to find them (with.another rap.of,bis cane) immedi ately, Sir.” 7 “ What ship axe they Mining inT’.T asked. “ They have pome already, end she ckn’i find them ; ih« ship is already inpori,'? | " Turning to the woman, Isaid,‘‘mv flood' woman,.you should have informed ut;.before the ship .arrived, and then we hhVe s(: 110,1 -.{fitUa i(i» t If.,"*? '-to whea ipj-.'Cmy'Mi 'vv.v rtf ; - * s ; s; fiVea* ibraated'about lhem«hfßhfly>t You'tnurttfind tb»Bi,‘loy, ( *tona»,>dnd ; (nbt aittbow asking their tinaraes. liaay, ■Sir,iyou,i«jM< find" sthpm>{ j rm har ;ftietd ;'!l dtavaicomaibere without fee ofc reward to see justicedopeiher, and'she Andi then - We slick thundered: againsthirt! I had'eride*- ored to iba aa < pbtient with himaalcould, dwt aa-he ■ wassoi insanely vio(ent,!licould fee) obliged if ha "would > Wivdithe office,, and then! could, attend to.< the> woman's, business morereadily. This .staggetfed’- bind! J ( f I ieasetheoffice,” he, arid be poai. lively teemed about to-, choke, with! iodignn lion. He ‘ihreaieoed abd. vociferated for 'some time, bul'finally.iupon, being! threatened with arrest, left. 1 then learned that the wo, man had come all the , way from i Vermont, where* she had left a husband-and three ohilf drento.maet her olher litile ones from' thd old counUy. I ’ learned ■ that ■ the children’s nameswereJohn,Annie')andKate- .Whalen j aged respectivelyflS, H, ■ Of course they were readily found upon the manifest, but my heart almost turned to ice when 1 1 saw written against the name of each : "Wasied overboard .” J Fearing to shock iheqtoon mother with too sudden ft revelation of-her.;bereavement, I -asked her if she had bepn long expectiogber children. - . “ Oh,- yes, Sir, the husband -first .left fluid Ireland and came out,-and (oiled and scraped until'he aimed 'money enough for- mefeelf and the three childer that’* here, to come out wid. And, Sir, the parting the iwhich.hadheW himself inireserse* ( r*ftfl> tbe chnin aodhtoe away lhe prizeiyßpi ihn, mootcurictu pt^rtjof tjw entry.is. to QuMoformaht fijis ffiatlwbsjHffw bwogbtflut act 4 rat vcntwreff.hvwuch tiirJfaa ejjt -tci eheto in its disposal.:.-r~Wc*yS«fti : TbOnacripti - ... n-i w iirrgT'-'j; a rfi.i »ij ' Dr. FiuiHCWW used to sayinatriPh « 5 ; —. I'ltiiS u'f} oi oi .!,„t, j -Vi'Ml* • MWOBTnB ;' /V.'-Jjj acSl *** kfawfe 'WAir'atiaMt at; lurvJ» \U i-f.i't tv F4ii ’HAaifiP ’KtolMWOfapH 4tefflMtt«ypen ? 'jpoi looktghwilh %braW oft daring. J . in front of baUlg, .yfhsn ; swords were gleam (Mir; ■aqd,icW«igifll©Hnd,^ /^bo,%jr) aer^ ipeatauof the luxnrl Jutre-jpURg. tho mpuoiljO 4)iniaole,when,the ; yfM Ending jts oaks ficoßJ their reeky ingithem pteofr meal tip, t)re.,plsi&.;. .I.ha'yc iseentheSe thing* with ft swelling spjul, -knew i not,> that, recked. make* me tremble)ikea,«hilid. Xhpye’ujed lo bvaroOmc it wit unmanly nailed (prido jto. my &idr-J hftye ,aopgi)l.fpr moral courage in the leseone .of.philorepby— but it avails :me nothing—-at Ifia first low moaning of the distant cloud, my begirt,pittite and ; i Myin voluntary dread .of. thunder,; hap,. Us origin- iivan iocidcpMltat; occorredwfietf 1 ton child ofi ten>yearn. ,1 bad ® little cpu sin-rq,, girl:the «aroe age-ofmyself, who had been the .constant -oompanion of jny .chijd hood. Strange, itieit afterjheflapsß, of,plmpst a sooro years,'that countenance is sp famil iar to me- > I can .see the.brjght.yotipg .pic ture—her largeieyes, fiashingdike, e (»auljfnl gem; her free, locks streaming as, in-joy upon the rising gale, and her cheek 'glowing like; a ruby through a <,wreath of transparent show. - Her voice had the melody apd joy ousnesstof-abird’s, and when she hounded ovarthe Wooded hill or the frcsh-green, valley shouting a- glad answer to every vpice of na ture,and clasping her lillle hands in.the very eoslacy of . young-existence, she - looked as if - breaking-away dike n-freed nightingale from the earth, and going .off where .all things were beautiful and happy like her. it was a morning in the middle of August. The little girl hod been aomodaysat my fa ther’s - house, and .-she was now to -return home. Her path Jay across- thefields, apd [gladly became lhe companion of.-her walk. I never knew-a, summer morning more, beau tiful nnd istrll. Only one Hale cloud.,was: visible,-and that-seemed as.pure/and;while• and peaceful, as if it-had .been, the incense smoke of some burning-oensor of the skies. The leaves bucg silent -in the weodsfthetya ters of the bay had forgotten tbeirundula tioos, the flowers were bendingttheir,r r , heads as if dreaming of the,rainbow aud the dew, and the whole atmosphere was oC.sucn a soft and luxurious sweetness, that it seemed a aloud of roses scattered, down by the,hands of b Pari.ftom the far off; garden* of* Bub dise. The green earth-and blue-sea ware abroad In their boundlessness, and the peace ful shy bent .over and blessed them. .The little creature at my side «■ in a-delirium of happiness, and her clear sweet voice, came ringing upon -the air os .often ,as she., heard the tones of a favorite bird, or found some strange or lovely flower in her frolic wander ings. The unbroken and.almost supernatu ral tranquility of the day continued until nearly noon. Then, for the first time, the indications of an approaching tempest were manifest. Over the eummit .of a mountain dt (he distance of about a,mile, the folds of a dark cloud became suddenly visible, and, at the same instanti a hollow roar came down upon ihe-wiods as.if it bsd been, the sound of waves in a rocky-cavern. The-cloud rolled like a banner-fold upon the air, but still the atmosphere Was calm and the leaves as motionless as before; there was net-even -a quiver-upon (be sleeping Waters lo tell of the coming hurricane. To . escape the tempest was impossible. - as - the only resort we fled to an oak, that stood -at the foot of a (all rag ged precipice. Here we remained and,gazed almost-breathlessly upon the clouds, marshal ling themselves like bloody, giants in thesky. The thunder was not frequent, but every burst was *0 fearful that the young creature who stood by me, shut her eyes convulsively, clung with desperate strength to roy arm, and shrieked as if her heart-would .break. A few minutes and the'storm was upon us.—- During the height of its fury, the. little; girl lifted her finger towards the precipice, (hat lowered above us. I looked.up and-an ame thystine'flame was quivering upon its grey: peaks, and the-next moment the clouds open ed, the rooks tottered to their-foundation, a roar like the-groan of a-Universe .filled the. air, arid I felt myself blinded and thrown, I knew not whither; How long I remained insensible I cannot; teH5 but when conscious ness returned, (he violenceJof the tempest was abating, (be roar of the winds dying , in ibe tree tops, and the deep tones OMhe thunder coming in-fainter murmurs from the eastern hills. < .• , I arose, and locked trembling tod almost delirious around. She was dear idoi'pf rhy iKe *fet, grceti eartb. - AfiSl* a moment of rrreSolujioni I went up and tipimhen The Handkerchief- Ujiqn ’herneck «tts 'slight' MyreDt.'ahd a aibgfedark spot upon sqhTtold •share Thh-jWiHkray 6f deothhad jbceii.' At ‘firdl T claSped'hed to my bwW #fth a my df agony ; lildhai ,, dotwf ‘a«d g#sd ihto'hef Tadefi Slmbat jWrtt lingof^rmi^.-vHerliif(^h&ka fti&iu. . 'S -fl^H^.‘*Uflft fetoflfrft*j r :£?:?;* -.-. a ! . — Y f~* KTia.i-' ■-.' lilahiit gili l : _ 7i>av'r snag b( are: ?#»f|*Pf AmispAm& fowk Mife m> ipf : “4< ft «n?rf MHgnJSyOf: intent J^ng, (pfiSprifigii MM# toa# £ui,.,f .wpsroJwwjij -rtßfld : be re 3 and: • whereiiho.sunlit waters are .Daver brokea hy -iheßtOfm-breath.of Omnipotence. < j ■■,;•-■!'! ; My ireaders, wil (understand - why. 1 shrink jo'terror famMihe’ thunder. :■• Even the con* sciousoess of security is no relief ifear has aßsutned (tae> nature of 1 an instinct, ■ andseemsindeed v partoftny existence. ' ■;' ~ ,! " r T : . ; ThaMhe, 'GaJiJep was by ,opps : day Jp reoapt and r .aj>iuw, abundantly re .ceivgd hat, tljq. ijun ,isilvo,cen|erof,our .plan-; elEtfy dystem, and lhe-Eafth,.one j amopg sev eral orbs periodically revolving around the center, has ! been fCry widely credited, but not fully admitted., :We.have/epeatodly(met.aa aertions that yrhat tjhe Ipqujsjtiop cpndemped was, nol;Jhp abstract ..doplnge, .of. Copernicus andGahleohut the of the datter to base it-upon and .establish it by texts qf Scripture. Jn Wajker’s Biherni an Magazine we find a little translation of the sentence actually passed on Galileo by the Inquisitors, together .with hie abjuration there in.exhaled. The Magazine affirms (hat - this senteltce had imver.before-appeared in Eng lish save in a provincial.'newspaper, a-few yea W-before, anduhat the authenticity. and accuracy of the following-translation may be Telied-bn. •” : r r ' Sentence paisi&upon Galileo ty the Court of Innutrition: ■ ' ■ - Whertas; you, Galileo, son of tho -late Vioqent ; Galileo, of FlorenCe, being eevenly yea'is of age, had a charge brought against yeti in the year 1615, in thfs’boly office; that you held ds' true and erroheoua opinion held by many, tiamelyTftbt (he shn is'the center of the wbrld, and immovable. and that the earth mp»eiB''eveh dlurnal 'moßbtf ; alsojthat y ou- had certain scholars'into whom youinsillled the satpe doctrine; afso, that you bri 1 thispoinf with certain inathecnaiiciahs of Germany; also,, that you, pubUshe'd certain epiiilea, trea ling of thesolar spots, in which you explained' the same doctrine, as true, because you an swered to. the objections which, from tipie to time, were brought. against you, taken from the holy acip(ur.es,.by glossing oyer the said, scripture according to your own .senses and that afterward, when a copy of a writing, in the form of an epistle,, written ,by, you ton certain late scholar of yours, was presented to you. (it following the hypotheses of Coper nicus,) you stood up for, and cer tain propositions in it, which are against the true sense and authority of the holy scrip ture. t This holy tribunal, desiring,'.therefore, fo provide against Ihejhcdnveniences and mis chiefs, which have issued hence, and in creased, to the danger of pur holy faith; agreeable tp the mandate of Lord N and the very eminentdoctors, cardinals of this supreme.and universal inquisition, {wo.propo sitions respecting the'immobility of the; sun and the motion of the earth, were adopted and pronounced, as under: That'the suh is ib the center of the - work!, and immovable in respect'of local motion, is an sbjilrd proposition, false in philosophy, formally heretical, seeing it is expressly con trary to holy scripture. The earth is not the center of the World,’ nor immovable} but moVes, Oven with a diur nal motion is also ah absurd proposition, false, in philosophy, .theologically, is at least an error in Afith. . • But, whereas, w? thought fit in the interim to proceed gantly with you, it.was agreed up on in the holy,congregation held before !). N., on the 26th day of Eeburary, i6l^U ItM'ia^reMc^bf'^i^kfiinsstaldtMokiith&^Uta a wyr~>' fWtiD?’Bjyije¥ ,^PUßUSHfiaja=) Jr/ (^|f-M»Q}%a- .^SMF presence declared to be in (ha said hooky byvarious circumlocutions, fm ’’at #hltll w lihee sh Wnjdjf hah'OT mo tilths ' be hie 1 wjqfch'hath mirf ad- thf'WM lioly hafhe 6f our Lord Jeaus-Cbrist, and.of ‘hia.-mosfgid- Viouatmother.ihoewrblcwißdHVirgin'Mary, ■we, bythirCUr definitive Sentence, by Ihead-i yiebarid jbdgmentof oar most reverend, rratf ters of-fibly thedlogy, and thedoetortef both tows, our cbvifaseHors' respecting (ho canoe controverted' before usj -between ‘the 1 magnifi cent of both laws; FiCial bffieejOri.’the dab part,'arid-ypu Galileo'Galileh’defendahl, and'havingcoittMidd, as : abo andevery pother error,, and heresycoptrary to the Catholic Apopto)io Roman Ch'urcfi, .in o|fr presence, in that formula which is hereby exhibited, to you. But that your gtevioiis and pcrtiiiious er ror and transgression' may riot - remain 4 alto-' gelher unpunished, and' that yotf mayherenf-' ldr £ fie more cautious, serving as ah example to others,'\hirt they ihay abstainfroni like of fences; we decree tbCt the book' oflhe Dia logue of Galileobe’prohibited - hjt public'edict, and'we condemn' yourSClf to lbe prison df (bis holy office, to a time fir be limited by'bur dis-" cretion ; and we enjpin, under the title of sal utary pebance, that, .during three years to comp, you recite, once a week, the seven pe'n : ilei)tial, psalpis, reserving to .ourselves ibe ( power of moderating, changing,.o( taking away entirely, or in part, the aforesaid penal ties and penitencies. And so weßay, pronourice,and by our sen tence declare, enact, condemn, and reserve, by''ihis and every other belter mode of for mula by which of right we can and pug Kl. So we, the, tinderwriten Cardinals, pro nounce: P, CARDINAL .DE asculo, and others. , ROADSIDE CONFAB. “ And so, Squire, you don’t take your corinty paper 1” “No-, Major. I gel the city pa'pers on rduch better terms; and so I take a couple of them.” 1 “'But;'Squire, “these county papers prove great convenience to us. The more wo en courage them the better their editors can make them.” ii why I don’t know any convenience they are to me.” . "The fafra you sold last fall was adver tised. in one of them, and you thereby oh lainetj a customer. Did you not 7" “ Vary true, Major, but I paid three dol lars for it.” “ And mafle much more than three dollars by it. .Now,■"if your neighbors bad not maintained that press and kept it ready for use, you. would.have been without the means, of- advertising your farm. 1 saw d notice of your daughter’s -marriage io one .of those papers , did that cost anything ?” •? No, but—” And your brothers death was: published with a long obituary notice.” " Yes, but-—” “-And-the destruction of-your neighbor Brigg’s house by fire you -know was' exag gerated-till ’the authentic accounts of our newspaper set them right”. “Oh. true, but— “ And when your Cousin Splash was out for the Legislature, yop appeared much gralified'atlnan'ewspaper defence dost him nothing!" a “^es I 'yiw, a 6at ihSScr nifh'Tieiks for the readers,. They cause the 'people tdjlako ■pa pers',”’ i 'V ■ No* no, Squird drudge, not j£jjl arp like yqii,'. ypu,"'thb'day cpmej when'sbme ope. will )pj>g.eu|pgy ; dn y ( our;ii<§ ; m3 ,,an d ;',lh y - printer,. if jfl *$!»• />eayj.,blacfe.jne, aqd w^tb,#l.l your be the;«wie.ia- g&ejMoja pau par-,, ..■%op.r,,weal.th 11 liberslif?4anid such things f HU».»WhehiOf. hi}i buy caa be at'rwig^ ; inarkiOfiiywr:‘.t Poor hois wm. spoDging>an,"ahiiparyJ;-+-Go<»d ,,no,n i n 8' Squire. jwm, - *•& Slavery Extend**. 'The (bHowtngbiflife subjectof Slaveryis from mdWH-Mig ■>Wnss-tfs fihB»n. tfaugHW' ***** teds wd'Npa, f«i qertaiqly,- .of-, fporlpl !.. Jq.Jto ■mid»t,of thd, apparent ; a ,|}!Jl^aU wwg mm* Course, ; lbe l?iU Tor .ojf, .ftanpaa lgi;rHm;i,aa, : object Av#s iho solemn prptußiu'qn j erected thirty years ago, against the spread - ofalasery in thogo;regipqs... At 6 tin? (here was .not.a citizen .legiiimately iQ tut part -of. the jga'j?o|j, ia ve a,/ejTr intriguer*,,was, jdreatrung.ofsacb jl, measure ;,whenjiot not • single .individual face of the most strenuous opposiUdn fronf North and West, this bill was, suddeniy'pre sented to a. Congress, not elected in reference to it, pod forced, to, a ,passage, by oil. the ty; rannicql .arla known (olpgislaltop, andall the sinister influences within (be reach of an, uh scrupulous Executive. A .grosser violation of all the requirements of honor—rpfalli ha gafefiuarda and guarantees of republican'ispS was seldom, perpetrated. , This w.e shall show: and in the firs! place, jet-us remark, that,, the .-pretence by which the acl-was.carrlcd was, fraudulent s a false bood ou*e face of it, and ..designed-only as a (popular catch for the unreflecting. It pur* ported to,give the right of self-government to. the people.of the territories; but it did no such thing.; It.denied that right in the most important particulars, and mystified it, so in others as to render it worthless. . Nomi nally, conceding the. “ non-intervention*’'.of Congress in the local affairs of the territories, it yet intervene in every form in which ipi tervention .is possible.. It Imposes (ho Gov ernor and all other officers open them; it it proscribes the most unheard-of oaths to tha people; it restricts (he suffrages of actual citizens; it places in .the hands of the Presn den Una d his agents the power to mould, (ha fulijffo, character of .the community-; aqd it authorites noilegislalion which i» BOl.subjecJ, directly or indirectly, to control tha federal, government. The only non-intervention which ia established is the permission, to in troduce slavery into a district whore it was before forbidden, and tha transfer of the leg-, islative control, hitherto exorcised by the representatives of the whole people, to a bo. a dy of judgus appointed, by the executive. ,ll had no othev eqd, frpra the .beginning, and m that end it has succeeded.’’ " An open disregard of thewill of the con*, stituency is always a.grave offence ina pop*,, ular government, .but. how flagrant and un pardonable is it, when it is committed in fur*. theraoce of measures which look to theover* throw of popular liberty 1 Had the Zebras* - ka bill been comparatively unexceptionable, had it contemplated.some,great and useful, improvement or. reform there would even, then have existed no excuse, for the haste, the violence and the audacity with which it was pressed to o vote; but when we reflect that its principal object was, to repeal* salu tary ordinance against the diffusion of a pesti lent and lamentable evil, wo search, dictions-, ries in vain for words to express our feeling of the magnitude and malignity of the wrong.' “ Away, then, with the flimsy pre tea l (hat. slavery is banned by.what Mr. Webster cal led 11 the laws of Godby natural position and circt/mstanoes! These «ve admit, have much to do with the prevalence and strength, of the system,—but they are not omnipotent nor final, are only accessory, either, for it or against it, —and the will of man, his determination to abide by (lie perennial prin ciples ofi right, or surrender"them to a tern? porary and. short-sighted spirit of gain,—is what gives character ia - this respect to sooie-J ty. Nebraska and Kansas, will be slays. > States'if slaveholders go there, and this ia the long and the short of-the matter.; let.the : soil woo and. the climate smile encouragingly - upon whom it pleases. If the Americanpeo ple donotnow—on the instant rescue those lands to freedom, it is in vain that they will hereafter look to Nature or any. other influ ences for their salvation. ■ “ We’ are* indeed, so far from being per suaded that it is not ,mesnt to lake-slavery into our new territories, that we begin lo Sir lertain tho conviction, that the propagandists ' of the South, will not stop even Vith" thb ter-'' ritories. it is imputed to them.by author?-" lies entitled to fespect, (hat they cherish R policy which aims, not merely at Its estab- ' lisbment within the limits of all the 1 new states, but at |ho consolidation of it/byTor eign conquests.” “ We ’repeat, that Until ‘the sentiment of' slavery is driven back to its original-bburids ■ ■to the states to which'it legitimately belongs, the people of the North are vassals. Yet their ematicigalidri iS practicable if dot easy. They have oply to evince a determination' to -be free, and they ate free! They are' tOdJs card all past alliances, to ‘put ftside'all pre - sent Tears. ib dread ’no ’ future cbdlitlons, in ~ the sihMc'iidpe'of carrying lo h speedy vic tory a tuftbet inscribed with these devices: ! Tiiarl’dia'e'iL ol' the FooiTivfc Law— T(ih Restoration ' op tub MissocHiCoilpro- • more.Slave States^--No;nob b .Sla,vb Territories — Tub Homßstradfoh Tbbb 'Men on tiib Public Lanos.” « SoNNJf.tlo, youknow ,your letters.?” ■MyovSff, uveiof ’em?’ . . u Possible lur.What art they 1” ,' t '- ;ge and let ’or.rip,!” > >. ~ Smart;boy,; go. to ihß tub ; and wei^oni 1 ., A brain of such ■ fertility can’t bekept; lltoa moist.”, ~• ». • : ;>;rv,air i-i'iJ-: - ler Ll an4 j 1 » f* »/» ./*-'• iftow jiwmis I hed« gust feol y nial puJfejo«t>i fan . .watofc *»