. W. MOME, J. m ai r ri nx , liaMors•#,-,Prap'ir Motes •. . YEAR•IN :ADVANCE etVII YEAR IN 3 'MONTHS I 25 V.YEAR IN 0 . DO 150 I YEAR IN 9 DO t YEAR IN 12 DO 2 00 - a: i, ~ .-:; EU 0r. 7 411 . ,0 paper will be sent to those who, :., .w,infiadvance after the expiration of the ,tir, , : me paidfor. ' -;':: '. 'OrAll letters on lntsiness connected, i,"'• it lathe office, to receive attention, must be , •,. st paid.. ' ' 4 'i..,' . ~.. . ! t . iJr , : ._ DI PLOMATIC . RELATIONS AUSTRIA. • SPEECH OF N:" CASS, i • .Delive,Senatered - in ' the ,nctte of the gaited --States,Janunry'ath,jBso, on lowing "-no ark'ts, . "Resplved, Thai' th.e Committee on, or: cign Relations be, ' instructed `Co inquire . ' into the - expediency of suspending diple. =tie' relatiOns with' AuSfria." eD 2 • The:reSolution.having been read-- j Mr. CASS, oflllichigan,arose, and ad dressed' the,Senate as follo ws; Mr: President:" I do ntitknow that this resolution will be opposed. It is one ofin. quiry onlycliot oftietion.F .- But as I.should notliave introduced it, bad I not intende ' • to ask the opinion of the Senate upon the • iubjeet,,w,hatever may be the report of the Committee;on •POreign Relations, and as the . measure is not an usual one, I deem it proper-briefly to state the reasons which have induced me to propose it. • . The intercourse subsisting between the independent nations of the . world, where not regulated by special Conventional 'ar rangements, is regulated by each for itself, subject to the established principles of the Ityw of nations. The great improvement in the mechanical arts, and the general progress of the age, united to that spirit of enterprise, commercial and scientific, which was never more active in itself nor more usefully 'employed than now, have given increased energy to this intercourse, and, having in effect bro!--en down the barriers of space which separated nations, have opened each to the business end knowledge of all. Epsa; lion. /Ana. MI II of I. • film. ffEM body utd be 11111 CM MI UM This general intercommunication, espe4 cially among the nations of Christendom, creates a community of interest, and, in some measure, feeling, which becomes a bond, however slight, uniting them to gether into one great political family. Tho internal agitations or external dangers which threaten one cannot be indifferent to the other members of this wide-spread community. • The age is an inquiring and an observing"one ; and the facility and ra pidity of communication, among the proud est triumphs of human knowidge, come powerfully in aid of this disposition to judge and approve or censure passing events, as their character and circumstances may justify. This public opinion, imbodied the press in the daily journal it pours fourth, is bourne through the civilized world, pronouncing the' judgment Of..the present day; and anticipating that of pos terity. There are none so high as to be beyond its censure—none so low as not to be encouraged by its approbation. The frontiers of a. country may be armed at its approach. But it will pass them. It may be checked, but it cannot be stopped. It is stronger than the bayonet—more vigi lant than the suspicions of despotism. The diplomatic relations subsisting be tween two countries are maintained only by political agents, such as ambassadors, ministers, or charges, reciprocally sent for that purpose. At the commencement of this government we had but few of these functionaries, and those we hail \vele con fined to the principal Europ.: , n euurt . They have Leen grailuilly ;!-Pd in number, till twcnty-seven ofthc'm are now authorized by the statute book to be em ployed. Still there are important. coun tries, even in Europe, where no American representative has ever been sent, and oth ers, among which is Austria, where they have' been cent hut recently. In some ca- Ses; '(and Indeed they are not few,) this interchange of diplotnatic agents is rather a matter of courtesy than of positive utili ty, either commercial or political. After a treaty of commerce is formed, or after it is ascertained that a satisfactory one Can.' not be fornied, the relations between us and some of,' those countries would go on, as indeed they have. gone on, with nothing to interrupt their harniony and good un derstanding beettifse the points . or contact are low and eiPosed 'to few difficultie4.— Seat is our'condition with , respect to Aus tria' which has but one port (that of Trieste) where ,we have any commerce worthy of the name, the annual value of which I find is 'about $1,700,000. The aneient Queen of the Adriatic still lookS•otit upon the mi.' ters ; but she is herself a'inelaneholy spec tacle—heeprosperitylaving departed with her independence: The iron rule of Aus tria has loft to Venice little but the remem brance ,of her former and the oppreSsiVe sense of her 'present degra dation: :I3ut 'in these ports; and wherever else, if anywhere, they may, be, : necessary, consuls;, perform. the,. commercial functions--their positions not being at all affeeted by tinji"Clitinge of diphiniatic fele lions short of re 'state 'of war. rill PI e of t for C,- the ents f , ! f A { ear Edi- New OWD ribu" and II f the Ilish. as- El OEM Presi• group West, ngrets her of giber. extra Ins to • Club. ith the •clrpez: f John • r, and opiels of of Bar. not from in a new le of the • y -early R Y/ us Five •,1850t, bartain's 'and two Monthly r Taylor 4000 pa is bf4oo , , st num ar 180, thdr 'with tied,•gi*. n's 14 ) 0. second ; entittea Ido not pretend-to say, by this glance at our intercourse with _Austria, that. I,pro. pose:this measure on the ground that an Austrian representative is unnecessary at the'eouit'or Vienna." I trust; if we carry it to its practical result, that we shall be in financed by' much higher. considerations. ftlitttle•lto this topic merely to show that a jgeat act or- P0 6 900l duty, may,hs : pa rfor,- oid wit _out the sacrifice _of Itny,national terest - got; ,dties the Interittp * ;lib -.diplettiatie in terrain re's give ti ny liause ofvfretiewahere is ba obliption • igiAlAjohorcofiti44 1 1 3 114: , Pittier , is#Age question of courtesy or convenience; and a emern izej'atid ul),' wilt b.er, • ,04 4: tt: ICVMWEIStat SEPOZZAMa Weekly Pripor, will be publiolifid at ing low n^+~•. .. _'~l . '~_. x,Tr,a,,c'R.he,l!RrYaA•rgrw+.vv~rn.w,.. m , ...',. ~ ' "i ‘Ki'... .i'D'Y'.'.74l:l4 }':!.1t.7.. Itr 4 . "...4:(1.`;;i . : '' 't ....! . ~...., VW" ti.":' .., :'; ~.., . .j :,, ' v'' 1..re•c i : , ,.,:. ..,,,,...:.;":„.-.:. 1 . .!;. ,. -:, ' TT - cr.'. .', - Pr!" 7:1 7 .4.., : ti_. T.:: ~ ,f . .i,i "fli' in ftirt , ' , 1 4. '':` :f . 4.';' '''' ' , '.'''' •( , (1 ',.,..- ~ ~.:;,.., t!t li, .... 11, ,, „., i , i ~. .: , 3 ... . 5 . ,.......: .......... '.",ti . 1 1 .* , . ...,,, .. t . ~. , , . . •• . . , , • ....... ..,, • , r , . ~`- r•i ~1 '' t. , . ',.W. , '... .11 -ii 1. .r. ;AA IA .1.;‘6 , 1 , 1 fii l''.'•"(.l i'lilll' '; , : 1 %-("'T f 1 - i:r s c.;:;_..., ir: - , '' . l -:".! . .?I': . ;, et..."-Gryi' :', .. '''' 7' 4 .'1:•• • '- '. ~ ', ..... , ~, . is , , .', ~,' ~.1 I ....:- .- -' 6.- i F.,5 - ---..:" ' • t ...,, •.,.'. •":; f 7 . ~, ~, ' . • • . ' ' . .. -1,. ..,- , 0' -.-, . , • ~ • , ~. . . , ,1 . /- -------:'- e * ''. PA ~.; . .-,-.F. ---.,..- -....- y '• . . .ti• , • -' "" . • •-• % -'-7-.'-'.--- A --, 1". - ' l--±- i= ' , - ":70 . , , . ', , ' . . * ~...:,.. \.- , - ---.-- -.-,.--4, : ii,,:.„-i. O Ll tt r , ' I' ' , 4 k t '7 - Z l2l-7- 1 . . , ;,...... : :,:' i'.•:' . - . , . • V, f54.'---.. _ • . . .., ..1 41- - ,-.-I'''l. ' e J., ...-- ~... .' O. A WEEKLY PAPER: DEVOTED TO LITERATUdtL, APRICULTURE;4IORALITY, AND , } 4 OREIGN . AND'DOMESTIC INTEtLIGENCE. une • considerable portion of tit issions of Eu rope aro maintained from feelings of ami ty, arising out of affinity of kindred governments, and of an indisposition to ex hibit what is there considered a mark 'of disrespect for a court, however limited the spherp of its authority, by excluding it 'from the family of sovereigns associated by diplomatic representations. The eighteenth century was prolific in . the personal mem oirs of active diplomatists ; and no Ameri can can peruse them without being ama zed .at,the utter insignificance of the topics which engaged their attention, ,and which were swelled into consequence by the pas sions and interests of the retainers of cor rupt courts. They are subjects beneath contempt; and their influence upon the fate of nations is buried with the men who game them a facticious importance. Ho who rises from the perusal of one of these records or human follies can no longer wonder at the remark of a Swedish states man, that it took very little wisdom to go vern the world—iis the world was then go verned. But, sir, while I maintain that the cessa tion of diplomatic intercourse with Austria, would give the government of that coun try no just cause of oflence, I do not seek to deny or conceal, that the motives for the adoption of this measure will be unaccept able and peculiarly abnoxious to the feel ings of a power proverbially haughty in the days of its prosperity, and rendered more susceptible by recent events, which have destroyed much of its ancient prestige, and compelled it to call for Russian aid in the perilous circumstances where the noble efforts of I-Jung,ary to assert her just rights, had placed the oppressor. On the contra the course I propoSe would lose half its value, were tiny doubts to rest upon the mo tives that dictate it. And certainly, wore they not open to the day, I shinild not look for that cordial approbation which I now anticipate from the American people, fbr this first effort to rebuke, by an expression of public opipion, through an established government, in the name of a great repub lic, atrocious acts of despotism by which human liberty and life has been sacrificed undercircumstancesof audacious contempt for the rights of mankind, and the senti ments of the civilized world, withottt a par allel, even in ;this ago of warfare, between the oppressor and the oppressed. I say Vt4is first effort, for though the principle of public disapprobation in situa tions not very dissimilar, may be traced in the proceedings of.ut least one of the rep resentative bodies of Europe, I do not rec ollect that any formal act has been adopt ed, rendering the censure more signal and enduring. If we take the first step in this noble cause, where physical force, with its flagitious abuse, if not conquered, may be ultimately restrained by moral considem.- ations, we shall add to the value or the lesson of '76, already so important to the world, and destined to become far more so, by furnishing one.guaranty more for the preservation of human rights, where they exist, and for their recovery where they are lost. . Mr. President : Ido not mistake the true position of my country, nor do I seek to exaggerate her importance by these sug gestions. 'I am perfectly aware, that what ever we may do or say, the immediate march of Austria will be onward in the course of Despotism, with a step feebler or firmer, as •resistance may appear near or remote, till she is stayed by one of those upheavings of the 'people, which is as sure to come, as that man longs for free dom, and longs to strike the blow which shall make itbis: Pride is blind and pow, er tenacious ; and Austria's pride and pow- ; er, though they may quail before the signs , of the times—before barricades andfrater.l 9tizatio2l, by which streets are made for• tresses and armies revolutionists, new and mighty , engines in popular warkire—will hold out in their citadel till the last extre mity. ~13ut many old things aro passing away'; and Austrian despotism will passe. way its turn. Its bulwarks will be sha ken by the rushing.of mighty winds—by the,' voice of the world, whenever its indig nant expressipn is not restrained by the kindred Sympathies of arbitrary 'power.. ' I 'desire; Sir, not to be misunderstood. • I do.nbt , mean that in 'all the revolutionary struggles which political contests bring on, it ,%yould be expedient for . other govern thents.to,express. their feelings of interest or 'sympathy: I think they should not', for there are obvitius considerations which forbid such action, and the value 'of this 1044 of. moral interposition would be (4. tpinished by its too frequent rectitrprice. It shOuld be reserved for' great, events— events 'Marked by great crimes' and op: pression on the one side, and great exer tions: and ; misfortunes , on, the other,' and under. circtimStance.s which, carry with them the sympathies of the..world,—like the Partition •OfPolalidttrid the subjugation of Hungary:- We can' 'offer -pbblic con gratulations, .as viie , rhavo done, .to people crowned by success in. ,their struggle for freedom, . Ye,eatt offer . ctur_recognition of theli;indepeiadence to others,, as. we have Actie,4lille . Yet the eflhrt'Wad' I•Flaiiii . we nyinptithonly fir; the fortunatol A- 4 4,, is &wins - less sacred dearrbef .o4ttse it is. Pr41,5400-,1131)4?4,4iu5t Py.,the 1 foot of power? 'Let the noble sentiments Of-Washington, in his spirit-stirring reply to the French minister, answer these ques tions; "Born in a land of liberty,, my anx ious. recollections, my sympathetic feel ings, and my beSt wishes, aro irresistibly excited, whensoever, in any country, I see an oppressed nation unfurl the banners of freedom.", I freely' confess that I shall hail the day with pleasure when this government, re flecting the true sentiments of the people, shall express its sympathy for struggling millions, seeking, in circumstances of per il and oppression, that liberty which was given to them by God, but has been wres ted from them by man. Ido not see any danger to the true independence of nations by such a course; and indeed I am by no means certain that the free interchange of public views in this solemn manner would not go far towards checking the progress of oppression and the tendency of war.— Why, sir, the very discussion in high Oa ces and free places—and here is one of them—even when discussion is followed by no act—is itself a greats clement of retrib utive justice to punish it when an atrocious deed is done, and a great element of mor al power to restrain it when such a deed is contemplated. I claim for our country no exemption from the decrees of these high tribunals ; and when wo are guilty of a tithe of the oppression and cruelty which have made the Austrian name a name of reproach through the world, I hope we shall receive, as we shall well merit, the reprobation of mankind. I anticipate with confidence the cordial support of the distinguished senator from Kentucky in this effort. I will not doubt it; though I urn afraid, from a somewhat playful remark he made the other day, that he is a more zealous disciple of the stand still school than he was some years since, when he proved himself the noble advo cate of South American and Grecian free dom. I have' just renewed my recollec tion of what the honorable senator said and did upon those memorable occasions ; tl.ough, indeed, both the one and the other wore deeply imprinted upon my memory, as they are yet upon the hearts of his coun trymen. Among the many splendid efforts, both as an orator and, a statesman, by which he will go down to posterity. honor- C 4 and applauded, there arc none. higher or holier than these : "1 have 'no commiseration for princes," was his characteristic declaration. "My sympathies are reserved for the great mass of Mankind.' "Self-government is the natural government of man." "It ought to animate us," he said upon another occasion, "to desire the redemp tion of the minds and bodies of unborn millions from the brutalizing eflbcts of a system whose tendency is to stifle the fa culties of the soul, and to degrade a man to the level of the beasts." "Everywhere," he says at another time, "the interest in the Grecian cause is felt with the deepest intensity, expressed in ev ery form, and increase with every new day and passing hour ;" and he puts an em phatic question emphatically, which I re peat to him, and to every one, it there is any one who hesitates to keep "on a line," RS Mr. Canning said; with the opinions of his countrymen : "And are the represen tatives of the people alone to b insulated from the common moral atmosphere of the world?" . These sentiments have no con nection with ,the recognition of indepen dence, nor is their expression claimed as the right or the consequence of a mere po litical act. They belong to inan, wherev er he may be placed The honorable senater describes in bur ning words the cruelties of Spanish a: - ;d Turkish warfare ; and in Murillo we have the very prototype of Haynau ; and recent Austrian enormities may be read in the enormities powerfully portrayed almost thirty' yeaas ago ; and this apostrophe comes to dose the recapitulation : "Arc we so mean, so base, so' #spicable,: that we may not attempt to express,Our horror and Otte indignation nt the most brutal, and atrocious war that ever stained the earth or.shocked high heaven V' And I, tun happy, also, •to anticipate the cordial ce-operation of the distinguished senator i from MaSsachusetts, who, upon recent,occdsion, 'expressed his syinpatby for . 'down-trodden Hungary, sand his ab horrence ef.despotic, Sway", in a strain of indignant, 'eloquence, which would have done honor, to the older Pitt, in ths:bright eat,dayS of his intellect. ' "We have' had all our sympathies much interested," he truly said, "in the Hungarian eirert for lib erty. We hays all wept at its failure.-- We thought saw ,a More rational. hope of establishing independence in Hubgary thait in any other part Of, Europe Where the question has been in agitation, within the last twelve months; _but despotic power from abroad has intervened to suppress it." And the hendrable senator, in scathing .terms' ,which will tough l y. cord in the hearts Of all his,: conntrymen,, rebukes ,the sinn,Emperpr for his- insolent'. -dem,and Of the fugitives ; who had sought range:within the,Turkish,frentier,: , • • "!Geri'detn' en;.' ; (he says,) ,thereiSsOrne -'"4,iips_eit earth 'greater than *EirbiteO•sr or - fAespotie'POwer.:.,. The jightning tis qower ;and tho whirlwind,line,nlpoWer; ' and the earthqnake has' its . power ; •but. Clearfield,' Pa., January 25111350. there is something aniong men !more ea ' pable. i of shaking despotic power than lightmng, whirlwind or earthquake.— ' That is the threatened indignation of the whole civilized world." "The whole world will be the tribunal to try him, [the Russian Emperor,] and he must appear before it, and hold up his hand and plead, and abide its judgment." "Nor let him, nor let any ono imagine, that mere force on subdue the general sentiment of mankind ; it is much more likely to extend that sentiment, and to destroy that power which he most desires to establish and,secure." "And now, gentlemen, let us do our part ; let us understand the position in which we stand, as the great republic of the world,. at the most interesting era of the world ; let us consider the mission and the destiny which Providence.seems to have designed us for; and let us take care of our own conduct, that, with irre proachable hands and hearts, void of of fence, we may stand up, whenever and wherever called upon, and, with a yoke not to be disregarded, say, This shall not be done—at least not without our pro. test." These were noble words, and nobly spoken ; and Im who does not feel his blood course more rapidly through his veins as he reads them, has little in common with the freemen of this broad land. Well was the honorable senator saluted with "tre mendous chcerings," for he. spoke to the hearts of his auditors when he said: "For my part, at this moment, I feel more in dignant at recent events connected with Hungary than at all those which have pas-, sed in her struggle for liberty. I see that the Emperor of Russia demands ofTurkey that the, noble Kossuth and his companions shall be given up, and I see that this de mand is made in derision of the law of riti tions." Ikre comes another epistle in the story a this flagitious abuse of power. Kossutb, the Washington of Hungary, is ono of thoSe men whose great qualities arc bro . 't out by perilous times. He learned to hate oppression in an Austrian dungeon, where, while he lost his health ; he learned also to prize the value of liberty, and in the soli tude of his cell to devote himself to her cause ; and nobly did he fulfil himself his mission, till domestic treachery and Russian power prostrated the hopes of freedom, and he was driven to seek shelter from the ven geance of Christian powers within the do minion of the successor of the impostor of Mecca. And then was exhibited that con temptuous disregard of the feelings of the world, so poweililly described by the sen ator from Massachusetts, in the demand upon an independent nation that the expa triated leader, with his little band of faith ful followers, should be surrendered to the enemies of his country, a holocaust upon the altar of despotism. The civilized world watched with anxious suspense the pro gress and issue of this demand—as inso lent as it was wicked—upon the Turkish government. It is twelve years since I saw the present Sultan then a lad, sitting by the side of his father, the great Qsmau ; lis reformer, crossing IL Bosphorus in a splendid calque, surrounded with all the imposing pageantry of eastern mag,nifi , ecnce. Little did I then anticipate that tho lovers of freedom through the world would ever lee& to the heir of the Otomans to save Christian patriots from the fangs of Christian monarchs. We do not know the threats that were menaced, nor the in ducements offered ;' but both the one and the other were no' doubt proportioned to the intensity of the passions to be glutted by the surrender of the victims. But the ef fort was vain. The Divan, faithfull to the traditions of Eastern hospitality, if not to the obligations of the law of nations, firmly refused the delivery of the fugitives, and thus spared another "deluge of blood," to use the words of the great Roman histori an, in this sad drama of a nation's over throw. The latest accounts We have from the East inform us that this extraordinary contest between Russian arrogance and Turkish inflexibility was yetgoing, on with no prospect of an amicable solution oithe question ; this wanton violation of the most sacred 'rights may yet furnish 'a pretext for the march of another Russian army, and of another attempt to drive the Turks from Europe' and, to seize ConstantinOple. The Maheinettin has shown himself a better Chrikian than the RuSsian, and has won the approbation of an' 'enlightened age.- Success be with hiM in such a warfare But, sir,' with their powerful sympathies for human , suffering; the people of this country,, though ardently attached 'to the Principles °National liberty, are no'politierd ,prepagandists. They do not undertake to judge What forms of government .tire best adapted to the Condition Of the 'ether na tions oldie carth,'aud, least of all, to at ,teniPt 'the establishment elsewhere of their ovy'n. To Maintain that practical freedom cannot lie 'enjoyed under a ,censtitutienal 'monarchy; Would . be to contradict our. Own obseivation and the.experienCe' of some of the . most ;enlightened .natkins''of the earth. 'We:kno* that a reptiblie best for US, and ,t)ifiFccOrd* - 71100 it. r. ''Let '',thoSd . wliO' be liove, ficsf 'for theiWeoiq j any other , pd• Wei.. But betiven Number 31. . governments like these, and the despotism which overshadows, over Whelms, I may say, Some of the fairest portiOns,of the Old World,---Where power is the. only rule of right for the' governors, hmtobedieace the only resource for the governed—there is a difference as marked .and as wide as is the difference in their . 'effects upon the character, and progreSs, and prosperity of man. The former, when they fulfil their legitimate duties,- commend themselves to our good wishes.and respect. There is no American, true to the political faith of our fathers, who does not.' sincerely ( desire the renovation of the latter, and the restora tion of the oppressed masses to ,the rights and dignity of human nature._ Here is an empire of freemen; separa ted by the broad Atlantic from the con tests of force and opinion, which seem to succeed each other like waves of the o cean in the mighty changes going 7on in Europe—twenty millions of people enjoy ing a Measure ofprosperity which God, in liisTrovidence, has granted to no other na tion of the earth. With no interest to warp their judgment; with neither preju dice nor animosity to . excite them; and with a public opinion as free as the air they breathe, they can survey these events as dispassionately as is compatible with that natural sympathy for the oppressed which is implanted in the human breast. Think you not, sir, that their voice, sent from these distant shores, would cheer the -unfortunate onward in their work—would encourage them while bearing their evils to bear them bravely as men who hope— and when driven to resist by a pressure no longer to bo borne, to exert themselves as men who peril all upon the effort? But where no demonstration of interest on the. part ofa government is called for by cir cumstances, a sound public opinion is rea dy to proclaim its sentiments, and no re serve is imposed upon their expression.— It is common to this country, and to' eve ry country where liberal institutions pre vail, and it is as powerful and es power fully exerted in France and in England as in the United States. Its effects may not be immediate or immediately visible. But they ere sure to come, and to come in ; power.' Its 2 voicc is louder than the boom ing of cannon; and it, is heard on the very confines of civilization.. Our declaration of independence has laid the foundation of mightier changes in the world than any event since the spirit Of the. Crusades pre; cipitated Europe. upon Asia with zealous but mistaken views of religious duty. Tho very last packet has brought us the London Times of December 7, which contains an address to Lord John Russell and to Lord Palmerston from eighty-three members of the English House of Lords and Commons, requesting the interference of the British Government to endeavor to restrain that of Austria from further butch ery; for that, in plain worth, is the design of tho' Movement. I beg leave to read this paper, which, though drawn with some reserve, the better probably to attain the object, leaves no doubt of the opinion of' the signers respecting the condition of Hungary and the character of the events which placed her there: " We, the undersigned, desire to express to your lordships, and through your lord ships to the rest of her Majesty's confi dential servants, the deep interest which we have taken in the contest which has been recently carried on between the Hungarian nation and the Emperor of Austria. Not less deep is the interest which we now take in the final settlement ofthe question at issue between them, & in the permanent pacification of that great country. Sincerely attached to the lib erties of our own country, the final es tablishment of which is due to the suc- cesful termination of struggles annla- goes to those which have been made frm time to time in Hungary—with equal sincerity desirous of maintaining the peace of Europe—we are fully sensible of the great importance that the settle ment of the questions nt issue should be effected in a manner and upon terms sat isfactory to the Hungarian nation; not only hr the sake of Hungary herself, but because we apprehend that a settlement unsatisfactory to the country will sow the seed of renewed discontent, may lead to fresh local disturbaticca, and, by the local disturbance of So large an element of the European system, may endanger the tranquillity of the whole. ."The objects of the undersigned are, internal liberty, national independence, European peace. For the attainment of objects, we trust the court of Vien 'haswill bear in mind that the satisfaction 'rind contentment of Hungary : will afford the greatest . aecurity: Considering, how 'ever, the Means by which the authority ''Of the House . of itapsburg has• been' re established, the undersigned are Of.opin ion that the occasion permits, even if it 6 does not call .for, the interlicntion Of Greta ',Britain in counselling the . Austrian gov ernMent respecting the exercise' of its re ',stored execunvepewer. With respect to 6 t he• mode and • opportunity;of interfering, 6. the 'undersigned !Offer no stiecift6 ()Pinion; 6 f . bafwe hope' that her Majesty's . geverti. iftant 'shrink - frorn , suggesting to Three- Austria, -that,'! since:! republican eFrtinee has . abolished.ctipital panishinent S I I ER IFFSt--SA I. 'V cisme of n 11 ri I ,of tett Filents.' NOUN/ out r:"T i tja us 1. o-Cum ton..gionl—ot,clqutEripld espo•ted la 1, fp:, 3 tnonths::'' s he' borough of r"' ' 1 6 '• , , : - ...tir,ogry . 1 do: l• 12 month. #., ' 7 vu -2,d0 , 3 Months c . , • . 2do 6 stiOnth; 8 (Al 2 do 12 months * 10 00 9 do •3 months . • - 1 6OD 3 do 3 do 5 do 6 do 10 do 10 do 6 monthg 12 monair.' . • • or half a Column, 6 months or half a column. 12 Months or one column, 6 months or one column, 12 nip.nthfi .. Books, Jobs and Blanks • Of every description, piloted In die. very best style, and on the shortest notice, ca the . COUNTRY DOL•' GAR Once. . ••:• . • • • • •'* • -.`••• 4 " for 'political offences, it:will not be 'to allow u.contrast to - he drawn unfairo-m -' ble to the clemency of monarchical Ott:: ' ernment." • ;, Signed by 83 members, Peer; and corn. moners. _ The allusion "to the ?newts by which the • authority.qf the :Elbuse • of Hapsburg: has - been re-established," • and to . the occa. szon„ if not the duty of intervcnticyz by Great Britain.. is., significant enough, of the deep feeling of : indignntion at the cry. cities of the Austrian government, and of the anxiety among the English Impale that they should .6e pievented. We also, do. sire the same result for tho ftiturei'butwo believe that that result would be best by the world's censure of the . past. What then, sir, are the circumstanced in, the conduct of the Austrian governinenf which have brought.down upon it the rep; robation of the civilized world? .The tory of the Hungarian effort, and its rabic result; are, too recent and wide. spread, and have awakened too, deep an -interest in our whole country, to render-a detailed review necessary upon this occa sion. I shall - merely glance at some of the more prominent facts, lint,. enough to give the true character of one of the most atrocious politicaLacts moderii:timeS. Hungary was an independent - nation, having no political 'connexion at, all with Austria, except: in the : person of. the soya. reign, who was - conirrion to both: Tho reigning Austrian:ft - tinily:was called to the Hungarian throne by election, sonie three centuries ago; and we are told by a''stand ard review—a high and neutral authoritY —that "the pedigree of their immunities, during that long space, continued. unim paired." Tho compact between the Hun . - garian people 'and their monarch declaies, that "Hungary is a country free. and iiide pendent in her entire system-oflegialation and government ; that she ,any not stibjeet to any other . pcople,. or ,arty bin that she shank! "vivo her own separate existence and her .own constitution; and should be governedad by kings - crowned a cording !oher national laws and customs'." This article the Austrian Emperor swore to preserve, as all his Tredecessors'.had done; and us late us the 11th' &April, 1848, he solemnly renewed lii.4.adliesion to it, .with the guarahtee of a ministry, re sponsible to the Dietifthat plan,. of Eng lish origin, by which EarOpean iticians seek to reconcile'the dogma-ofthe personal independence of the sovereign with the direction of public affairs - in con formity with the will of'the nation.. ThiS waa the constitution of Hungary, and thin; was it secured. It guarantied national - in.- dependence, Hungarian laws and offieere, and Hungarian administration of tlie -af fairs of the country. In these days of the violation of the most sacred rights, there has . been no_ violation more signal or a. tro6i6Us than the annihilation of the ihts of this high-spirited people, once thebttl wark of Dhristendorn. A charte octrOjeil, the work of an Austrian cabinet, 'slruck down their liberties at one stroke, and left them (as a kindred expedient—kindred-in its objects, though not in its form—left our &tilers) no choice but submission or resist : a lice. These chartes netroyee are becorning quite fitshionable in the world of arbitrary power, awakened fro'm its long slumber by the thunder of pOpular indignation and particularly since the restoration Of' the Bourbons—that family which was the ve ry impersonation of the doctrine•of the di vine right of kings; and they mark signifi cantly the utter contempt for the sove reignty of the people, which is engraved upon the hearts of all the lovers of the good old times, when there were but two classes in the world—those born to gov ern, and those horn to be- governed. We first heard of them es the foundation of national freedom, when the declaration of rights proposed by the provisional govern. ment of France, on the overthrow of:Na polcon, was presented to Louis .XVlll'for Ida solemn adhesion.. 'lle rejected this act of popular power, holding .on to 'his divine right; butns the restotafon would have been place. ,in hazard without some security for the liberties of the Ft ench.peo ple, 'this plan Of a citarte octroycc was re sorted to—a charter granted by the sove reign, emanating frombis gracious benev olence, and giving to the nation certain rights, not becauseit.was entitled to_claim them, but because he was kindly disposed to limit his own hereditary autlio*Y, and to allow his beloved people to.bo a little -less oppressed .than they, had been in the good old days of arbitrary, power. And. this is a charte.mtroyee, by which, when the fears of kings prompt them to concessions to popular movements, their right is reserved for future use, and the sovereignty of:the _Teeple . 'ffaa.d4a ll Y rebuked and denied . , , The leSsenw-- precious to be lost, aii44 16 71 0 ' States have followed."" -- man right as the may di). .W* t by - 4z , in .tef r 900 , 12 00 12 00 20 00 20 00 30 00'