TEE NEW ESULAND VS.S2ITiAL - SEW .YOU E. 1 . . VirEBSTEA'S SPEECH, Atiming the &tipsy:shed grteste at tee New England Celebration, ot New font, on Monday evening, the 23rd Mat , were Hon. DeIIEL WEB. SUM, and Mr. lictiwithie liritishiAlimater. We copy the beautiful and appropriate Speech iof Mr. Webiter, ea worthy of general peruall. Mi, Grinnell Intioduded the fallewing tote ',Vol Coertuution and the Crime, and their gresiDEFEND EIL."-. 'this sentiment was mcelved with warm spa planae, which broke forth and was prOlonced in trantilunui cheer{, when Ur. Webster rote to re. spond. He spots, as fol'ows . . MT. President end Genital:nee of tie New York New England 1-14,.....eti..:—Ye lima el New Eng. land! Ye broth:en in: the kindred tie! I have mama hero to night, tot WALOUt some incouveni . race, that .I might behold such a congtegstion , whore faces hear lineaments of a New England • origin, and whose heave heat with fall New Eng land pillars. I willinl b l oodse the sacrifice. Not a young men,—with in my veins not very • yoUng, buthank God, yet pretty rutty and freely fl: he Dame here to meet this great offshcot or the Piim Society in Mesaarnesetts,the Pllgnm Sety of New York. And, gentlemen, lit,nti begin what I hare to say, wh is but la. by tendering eve , o my thnaks foe the Invita tion extended to me end by rci•laccy re all, all sorts o: happiness Gentlrmen, thus bin been e siermy, a cold; a boieterent and Inclement day.— The ioreds have been harsh, and the akin., have been severe ; and. if we had no houses irleT our beads,—if we bad no si:stray ageing the anolem• al of the ettice,-11 we were wan and r eady w, —lf half al oe wren WEE. end bred, and to • deecend int, the rave,--tr we wore on the bleak Oast of nymputit, homeless, homeless% with no . thing over nor heads bet the heavelta and that Girl who nal above the beevens,...-rif we had die. IECII.I,Cd wives upon our arms. and bdnery end ahivermg children banging upon our altittr,- - Ze should so immeshing, and feel !something, or that scene which, in the Providence of God. was en acted at Plymouth co rho 22d day of Dreember, 1 xO. Thanks be to Almighty God, who, from. ths distresmJ eery condition, ties ranted us to a to ght cf prosperity and happiness which our ancestors neither cejoyed nor could have nutimpnted. — Would to God that when we carry one of _ end reflee.loullaock to that petted. we won td arm .ourrolvea with the mere meths which supported them to Oat eve of peril said expose ur. Would • to God that we may. pursers this resolution which they possessed, etronger than bars of brats or tree, 'that patienCe, .sivezeign o'er tranernMed ills," • and, above—all. thet faith, that religious faith, which, with is eve feet fixed upon heaven, tram. -, plea ail things crothlybeneram tie trionoptnnt feet ' Gentlemee, the caries of this world chimp.— West ancestors nave and felt we %hell no, feel. . The cad for tor Me severer velars el litm_were theirs.erhey were called upon for perseverance, atatinecce red labori-to eXercisc those anieame cter I virtues, the exerrate of which, before they c' l here, male them as they were, austere men• — • I . Things have changed. In the progress of society, the fashions of life, the habits of life, the auditions of human life hove all cnanged. Their merrier viruses we art not coded on, in every respect, to emulate or COM. menil,—or rather to emulate, for we should com mend them always when we consider the state of society in which they were demised. They bed that religious teem:writ, !het treat in Providence, that de' erminauon to o rxht actnd t o! seek, through every degree of toil d and • t a nd the honor of God and the preservation of bunion liberty, which we shell do well to cherish. In the progress or society It cosy he, Ind it is, true, that the milder virtues beineg taro especeslty to ice , They were great eufferent Vora Ini.e . eraneci nod their faith mod practice, as a cOlosequence, beenme rigid. It cony be hoped that, in the greaten spread of the benign ptinciples of Chriatanity• we have i improved upon the sentiments that prevneed wad them. Tony Vitra a:niched le particular :or.. o f public, worship ono religious lettel•,.. Na doubt they esteemed their religious teems tad the ob. !met-aces which they re artised to heal: borrowed t,-rn t h e autheac Word of Gad. It is true, I thank, that in the or-camas of isomaly, in ihe gene ra: advancement of . barman 'sentiment, we hod., what they do r tot a ioal to hove found, that a greater toltistit e • of eel mous opinion, a more Lath el•e fleeting !.Sward nti who profess! reverence-for • God, is not intonsistent nrit i h the religious liberty servals:they preferred. Will:tare, I thick, WithoOt any departure from the eitabiabed priers-pie of our fathers, a more enlarged volikrehroviiro Christian philanthrophy. • Ireteros in he the Aeat moth destint —the miss on which God has em rustedto es here on this At. lantio shore—to show that till secs and denom. ' tOnUous, that FM., reverence kir the authority •- of God and live ter Me veil, may he safely toler ated orianet p...jodee even to our rebel, er to our liberties. 17.'1,111 harts that them presiles at Ike heed of the Supreme Intl.:elate of the Bei. bed Stec., a 'Leman Gathol , e; sod ntimon cop• penes that too juncstore of the con try is tens -.rale, the salamis . r stion r.f justice lons iieartstrotss vile or seen:e, because the ChierJerg e of this United States ban been, and is an, ardent tither ant of the Boman Dithollti. religion. And so It is in every depertment of society With us. la - both Hooves of Congreasi in all de. i partmenth oL education we go on the idea that a mans religion is a matter entree burnish law . that It is 0 question to be nettled between Aim arid hie God, bean to he is responstble to twee but ha God for it., And" hem Is the great roliatteetion which Is sometime. overlooked—whiatt I sal a fraid is tow WO °tun oeerlooked. hach.'for lieu . ' teligieus ten:talent, ore nationtable to God. Ka ,ligim Is a communication between rose and lair muter; but when men come together to *ivies yomd when they I FM gOorrhillertt fur the proartmo 01 the rghts of el!, it becomes indirr.ersablo ten; this right of private j.,deceent shall tenor:se mos,- . tare, be re LitquitM cc( , tad tn.& raters:era to Ito . whole. Itellgiou mar exits ...sl,:e every man _may be left re-epee-elide only 10 God.. Bet twolety, civil role, and twit government tannet e sat while every Malkin responerlate to no Lady, but to hie own opinion.' . •.• And our New England anceators understood this qtr. well. Gentlemen, Miele is the canstilits • Ann which who adopted on board the! Majd twee, in November. 1020. What is It , . Thee- men honored God—profeseed to obey all bla cernrithed . menns—to live in his obedience. But they nor, - neverthelese, that, for the ereblishreent of a et vd polity Ter the greater security end reservation el their civil rights - and liberties, they agree that the laws end ordinreaces—mid. thank God, they pett in the word ••conMentionv,--ahey Bay, atter is. voting the uncoil of the Deity on their resointtan, s` those laws, and ordinances, and ottastilatiorts. established by thew whom we shall appoint to _ -enact them, we will. in all duo sohCallislort ant I o bedient..., eupport. ° ' The CollinituttOn is nut 1 long; but .1 !sleeker. a fel:ports sittocttop on their . , civil nbligatiorf. It Wits no doctrine of there, that civil shed:ace wee a matter el expel:en . • cy r— , amen the name of ahl . Ameo--We. whose names are stetter written • the loyal echjecui ri fent dread Onvereigri Lord, Rion Jaoce, I.• the Gran of God, ol Great Britain, France,and Inland, and . , Erna, defender of the Path, &e ~ haVtug undestak.. • en, for the glory of God and advancement of the Chstian faith, wad honor of our King and conntry, . It onyage to plant the first colony in the heathen perts of Virginia, do by there presents, solemnly and mutually, in the presence of God, and of ace • another, covenant and combine ourselves togeth. el. into a civil body politic, for our better ordering and preeervation, and furtherance of the ends n'enessid, sod by virtue hereof, to enact, tonsil tate, sod frame snob jest and equal laws, ordi• name, nets, ennethotions and offices, from time to time, as shall be thotight most meet and con , wit h nient for thegeneral good of fis sion ey : ohe'ont ich we promire all doe !subm and . • dienee." The right of a coons private judgment in root. ter. between the Creator nod himself, hod sobers. son end obedierets to the will oftho whole upon whomever respects civil polity and the adminis• trstion of sloth etfaire as coutfined the colony I , about to ti, email:abed—there ere the doetrines I emyoned in thet C institution. The topic might - be Interned, bet I prim from it. bandsmen, we aro noirlVO hundred and thirty veers from rust ereat event. There is the Nay Flower, (pointing in a mull! figure of a eh y, In croft:extol:aq the etrod before him) There is . . . line resemblance, bet a correct one oi the Nay Flower. Altos of New England there was in au qat timer, a ship that carried 545J11 tO toe ne. niaion of the Golden Fleece. There was a fltg . . .hip at the ballisol Actium which made Augustus • CM iar annii•ter of the world. in modern timers i there have been flag abtps which have carried Hawkins, and Howe ' Red Nelson on the other • continent. and which have carried Hull, Decatur, and SioNgart no itOs.te triumph' What are they . all,— Vitra are they ail in their chance of musette tinge , rams, men, to that little bark—the airy , . , Flower—which reached these earnestl rice, ma brethren cf New Eugland, that MayfloWer was a flower of perpetual bloom! (Cheers) It. vcr , , . dare wands the sultry blasts of summer, and the obilieg winds ofaututa. It wel defy all climate. i aud,all lime, and it will immintie to expand its pe. , tale to the weed, and exhale an hoer-living odor • and to fragrance, the ...latest syllatk, of recorded time ! - _ ' Brethren, ye of New England whom I have - . mime - vomit hundreds of miles to tree here to. night, let ale preset yon to one et the moat dual tingeished .or those wits rime over an the