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' '- • ' * .:.- - -:.N. -.-..•,...,,,,,:',-..::, 1 ..., ,, ,;. , ,... ~ .-.l'. ~.......,::,,. i +slim itier --‘,Diukst'l 7il,llellnogreirent i 7 ctrideratv°' ' - t.... 0 4 ugh *slant, di of: th e - au „, id, great geC, Nair Yozki, on .. au .7 ' ' ... .' .':111111114 -- -I' th'us spoke . i3rff 41, siza 4. i i ii 4l : l;z4 B elatidoenijlrlit, 4inir-y.4„pirta:7,traLiatokleety: —l Tes inff” /Li ....t." _they= • t There is, one act of - . the :British fetigint ,Lien Stands foremost's' an omen of peril ' — ' - gattmat tiniol=foremosi also • In-the flArelrsrlt%4'ta i tthese tht essi- •gittliaixddellAaldiav ~ .I),f course, • Il raid' ta that 'inconsiderate • • Proclamation in . Ain't name tli'Qdielir Wart 1 4 1 3140 8 6 1 ; Thloti;eigr ioanopgaii:(o- In egtzatitguith the national- . goVentimil:; 'bilelliterfrCriattn,i,'"ifelenutir*are difeabesifeliettreen.the tweequidpsulitti lifirettalealiritUonlif - equality Van not latt . intaltintlienatiOnal" goveenmengand the 4 2 0/ 101 40 1 td 14tailthtr:Wil .1101 a Moral absurdity, effenedvo to reason and -all • • proceeds iihillniikntho Tory of tti/31.1wcte..11ven lies" n' 'iontatif beurrviie - tkin; in4rapirZic in/ stags of saoh - a rebelilms, Ifaswerse than • nliundir thaterirdite.fllhe'npintrent - • Coif imilieen -:the ticr were imiirtluatiesuliv Only. afew months . .. • . throne' sbeen + kettofaed everywhere throughout the United . Blates t -. except. in Mel kinsmen. And ye4 - 44ametilately agar the Mine ". the ie scatault on 'Art Burster, befire 4.liti %Mita government had began to put for Tits strengt , tad trroikvithfint logg Ter tag &Heald eim'ifenlYiappainted 'mLWAar,irlicoraglitnomilki be at Lim, Toot onitin*ay - to' fond* the proolinna *it WailludikenlY launched. - I :1 doubt if any_well informed pernton who iiiallireDaaffrdlifitch of 2d klay,' 1864 recounting a conversation with the British minister; will vindtoste it-in point of'tigie. Clearly the alacrity of this con. lidiverailiohippy, for it bora an air of Abilancer.,, 4r-, at, lute, of,Deartloanetse to• wards an ally of kindred bleed engaged in iitio:taitintenantieroT its - treidletaisl• power against , an infamous pretension. _Unt it wu more unhappy'S till that the geed genius .rEngland - did not ,• save -ant historlo nation, linked with no many triumphs "of freqoas, Irma fatal step, which, under the guise of uneutrality," was a betrayal of civillsatibn Unit MRS 1 i4l.- Is 44091 i.: to exaggerate the coot quencn of tab precipitate, unfriendly and dinnunittlionatasienr. which-,has been, and ilaris, anovaillitwing - fonitiatif mischief ipt,34iird-4510 .fonts treriniia dada; Ant, in _What - It 'vconhaafes to rebel slave . "argon . tat - Bea &rutin British peril, and, ..secondly, in the iropedimeits to; whioh.lt takes from British subjects ready to make . Isuratptork: of slavery; all of which has Wen declared 'by • undoebted British au thority: Lord Chelmsford—of prefessional own ea Sir,Fredertr.k Thealger-ran ex- Idisiteolia,*kiser these words recently in Iztelt-lionts..of -Lords: ' o if-=the Southern Confederacy had not, been recognizta as a r4lilerent.. , power he agreed with his noble '' earned frienditord Biongtim] that, nuder_thest einem:innate, it any English man-41rue to fit Out a privateer for the pur potwof assistirtg the Bentham States against the harikari States, he would bk guilty of p --7- 771iiii - all Ca`viii Changed by the 'Queen's prielareation. ' For the rebel shire monger there istke recognition of his flag; for British subjectihere is the opportn zdty of trade. - , For the'rebel slave-monger there .Ik . fellowshipend equality. 1 Foram Britiskinbject. there is a new customer to whom he may lawfully sell Armstrong guns end other \warlike instruments of choicest 'British winkmanship, and Lord Palmerston tells us, even. ships of war too, to be used in behalf of Slavery. What was unlawful is zsuddenly. made lawful, while the ban is sken from an odious felony. i , -lit aewnlonist, superfluous to-add, that such a RR , . Rion, thus potent in its reach, must hen betas direct encourtgartent and overture to the rebellion- Slavery itself was exalted When barbarous pretoador a— battling to found a new power inv its hate ful niunie.r., Viktor:deo much ass single port on the occanwhae a prise could be carried for endemnattoo , --trere yet, in the face of 1 this essential.ditichmoy, swiftly acknowl- I edged Unman belligerents, whue es a con ' seqineb, their ;Irate Ships, crafting for pi:adults beltsdrof gluey, were aclnowl .lelgedia...runional ships, ißnowtot ,to equal 1 trivileges itith.the national Ships of the United . litasts. , This simple statemen't is 1 iritelegli;<;4lllinitito s a itY that =eh con ' ~ sneWwseiTri,', un enisity." There may 1 WM, been a *tens temptation to It, con inhales perhaps,'en imagined ea:molly, 1 .O.C.Witn‘anur... persons- there is strong izt tereptationt to slavery . 'tall,' B t soh a ooriention. Jo siavemongera, BA ng for slaz;3oo vindicated only al slavery As, well undertake bedeclare I oriented,' - .::bettreeti - Vight - and Wrong— , fbetweeri 4441and'irill:-;--with a anoeselon tollnittler of bagaintilghlif and then ll*! - V 11 ' 0 4440 4 ?"'neOliallY."- 3„liuthl Ogn ' the „ neat _.„ commencement Of ' luisepach,liewn there sul t s to which whin that _ -, - tuntintjuStifiable; and-predpgate act of Awillitisk`Givenrunint In issuing spree _ latisiln ' latlilabli led, 2 4- , Snninnii Ta• turns spur, near -the - conclusion, to the .SaunArapiwiant:sabresiti t the conooml 7 band4c4A4proolsiztation Ciationeession of the soteallal rights of bel- ligereney, or pussy, on the t ighseas to the itrateonfaderiteit -1 ;''-' ' :: :: --- ThstonbesslOnTofheiazi belllktriiiy is a letter of ` license from ` the ementlng pow'. yet telprezyzelartnnonger . cruiser, er rather, Ats thpeountertio of thoso powers,to the a Of kifery sta:miser: Without, snob •coantrulon _ the slavemonger emlsor would bean outlaw, witlino right to enter ,sisitelon4gli port.' Tha deolitratlou of Selliserellei Ono to him legal =Wane' and, admits' um to testify:by. flue and atillantl etiolt "competeneY be could Itslotti Aft i10ti,40.41 1 4 to bur arms OR 4110ooesti. Barka sententiously describes it att-im tobtarenediste treaty which puts rebels/a thrloti otitis law of nations." -t - ' Vie Anti= 4- , • ,:. - - ' ° til de af l titta eaabesilotomaj be letter I t ilin be aspeole : 'list; ll:elite Vomit imilaugeor stititte.'whlolt It onsferiu4uttiairen embryo toranntent- ofreebertamintutifers on as - nality-sith-establisled - governments; ' it , Terutsers.linfbl'insteid of pi d -opening to them boundless isi -- and in_ port, in that they ingopilmkandz..erin horgiltallty. t4stlegradstituktluttit Lutes& tuaaritileictraent, *MOW itt tree Abet ships treated oaan `io ships of rebetelarelnoU , taikl l / 4 4 o f o il ki r oitr: - voritrigaited in to feti lillant felony. Aid, • , ,u1 sktdilitarbsoci 'II4E6E; by letting /lasted with Wisp, a the; ithi Amax)* tessfesi re toff unbri; Trezttedritreflfroto tt: ` Thp ocean 18 'lb 012•11118 IiCCBIIIII it if Si& Shire it that it Vfl Vbt*.l. lon, Ad o r ' the cuero ll ,Ao_ .ty sf 1 ' var rian 6 41 lion T ‘O 7 .litkiill iiisAfflmPlo qui* J ilid of 44 absolutely deptutdentoufltolo 1 400 10 0 2 b`olUrPatirituPlIgNigOokTfbieiki -iiSstillibelllymneycannot estit:- . _ ; - ';'q -- 7 ' • --- .`:11 -1 . ! , Shereastitieletuftlitio oftioti! irblsitfitre:piterCf4. l l ll oislas that the rem bid Slarinnonitettakie !Id a single-port inte4bitik• milt . Amisetervatveske , est' .'• ~ Qs/ .sad secondly, t• r, : Amrstspowto, , l iwoudi • isisiowailigur - - - iitielatilumatizetiim Vilet - Imbiber of the BrAmb Win matt" tm. 9 01, arligitY - Irenigi ° Pilleise ~„-*: k 4 .: , .e‘.:,:.t:•:!::;.: _ . , ENS OM MN asysazr ~sz~~a.t-i-zs~,-~cca~~ land, Which is the naval base Mum *bra they pally forth on. their predatotz entitle - WithotiVonoe entering sport of the own pretended eivernment. These two ofacts" are different in char. oder; Thellrac attaches absolutely to the pretended power, rendering it Incompetemk to giscreme bisiligerent' jurisdiction on the ocean. pm second attachei to individual shiif,:ionicrinfthein 'partake: But these simple and unquestionable ;" feats " are the key to unlock the present ,quatlon.. From the reason of the cue.there can be no ocean. belligerent withont a port into -which it can take ha prizes. Any other ride 'would be absurd. -It will not be enough to 'call the sea, like tbe 'Flying Thitebni - ank the ocean belligerent must be able to touch theland, and gtit land its own. - Thin preeeetls Oa theta& of searfirei that "tiomethlng more than us lioilfirce is, essential io_the completeness of e - oaptine. According to the ;earlier tulep traniunntation of property cap so -compliahed by the "pernoctation" of the captured ship 'within the port of the bel; ligerent, or ea it wee called, deduaio infra • • • • 4 . * • • If a cruiser may at any time ~ irises, it is only because of some ex-. optional exigency in a particular ease and, not: according to any general rnle: The general rule declares that there can be. ms right to take a prise if there be no 'port into which it may be carried. The right Of captime and the right of trial are the itoniplemente of each other—through which fa harsh prerogative is supposed tote :rounded into.the proper form of chit:Used Warfare. Therefore, every ship and cargo burned .by the captor'', for the reason that . 114 had no port, testifies that they are without that vital sovereignty on the ocean Whloli is needed in the exorcise of the bel ligerent jurisdiction, end that they are not ocean boligerents in fact Nay more; all these bonfires of the sea cry out against 'eat power, which by a precipitate canoes elan of a alse belligerency furnished the torch. As well invest the rebellious rajahs of India,who have never tasted salt water, with this ocean prerogative, so that they too may rob and barn; as well constitute land-locked Poland, now in arms for lade penedece, an ocean ,belligerent; or enrol mountain Switzerland iu the same etas'; or join with Shakespeare in making in land Bohemia a country with hospitable - ports on the ocean. . To aggravate this concession of a false belligerency, the ships are all built, rigged, armed and manned in Great Britain. It is out of British oak and British iron that they are constructed; rigged with British ropes; made formidable with British arms; supplied with British gunners, end navi gated with British crews, so as to consti tute in all retipeets a British naval expedi tion. British - porta supply the .place of rebel elavemonger ports. British ports are open to them when their own are closed. British porta constitute their naval base of operations and supplies, furnishing every thing needful--except an officer—the ship's papers—and a court for the trial of the prizesi-each of which is essential to the legality of the expedition. And yet these same *kips, thus equipped in British ports and neirer teachings port of the pretended government, in 'rims() name they rob and burn—being *imply a rib taken out of the aide of England and contributed to a slays monger rebelllon—receive the farther pass port of belligerency from the British goy anament&hen in fact the belligerency does not exist. The whole proceeding, from the laying of the keel Itaaltritish dockyard to the bursting flames on the ocean, is i mockery of international law, and tin in sult to a , friendly power. * • e I know not the profile which have been secured by tho destruetion of American commerce • but I do know that the Treaty of Utrecht, crimson with the blood of slaves, is not so crimson as that reckless proclamation which gave to sla very a frantic life, and helped for a time, nay, still helps the demon, in 'the raga with which It battles against human rights. Such a ship, with the law of slavery on its deck, and with the flag of slavery at its mast head, sailing for slavery, burning for slavery, fighting for slavery, and knowing no other sovereignty than the pretended government of rebel slave mongers, can be nothing lees, in spirit and character, than 'a slave pirate and the enemy of the human race. Like produces , li ke, and the' pa rent power, which is slavery, must stamp iteelf Upon the ship, making it a floating offence to Nosyttl with no limit to an daoity-wild, outrageous, impious, a mon ster of the deep, to be hunted down by all who have not forgotten their duty alike to God and man. Meanwhile there is one simple not which Majolica of England cannot continue to refuse. That fatal concession of ocean bel ligerency, made in a moment of eclipse, when reason and humanity were obscured, must be annulled. - The blunder crime must be renounced, so that the slave pirates may no longer sail the see, burning, do stroying, robbing, with British license.— Then willtheypromptly disappear forever, aud with them will disappear the occasion of Wife between two great powers, who ought to be; If not 43 mother and child, at lust as brotiuthe among the nations. And may l God in his mercy help this:consmains- Bea PUBLIC, XOTIOES. A GRAND MASS MEETING of the Mutts et Um Delon will be hall at the ROME or 001,6 GUM? te the Third Ward, gluey Olt of NOBOAY V 1821.110. flopt. Itth. at Eatintat Omega sad I aallsh mak. in •1 I eddies* the muting. / - Szerder at the View* Committee. stlalt IWA BASSET FlI8T1VA1: will be kold et liHieSlLL%(loott tosethty ) SHOItbD&T. t et* Site at 10 ceeto:lt te. the goons& to Do .ppll . d to bl. Oberlin comma& n. tirL f. B. CLAWS. B.v. Dr. DE 'oast. Piot e. BI- WILLiOI,II... JA t. rEsatme Y. D. D., wed tabor dlettn a ntitittl speaker. will Mina Ito pecpte. a. Laa. Wot. Our, Mil L. W. !Panama, sad °thus, ealluond Oommlit.• of arra:gemertts. IFPOVITICAL droriczs. rE" , TUE I NION 1A f cum yEN -7103.—ne Ini,u tzetiotiva Comeltta, ter eprolfully roved the loyal chinos. of Ilttsbnogb and viodolty a oyez ndl hunter. on WSW: g3DAT, tent. ISM, fort, for the propose of ettondlng the Grand Mist thitornhoo to ba helothi tte altottoon of that do/. Moe Ono dey to ;ono cogratm, • a. N. nabWIN. Presidont. stave ST. fieretary. rellad N. U. L—A meittfag of the Piret iser We l(&DNgb.n7 11)14.) 11.11'00 LISVO be kelt et Inv, Bail