MrilllH , J, I. ML HE-LJLIJBJBl.JVJLAgaKJbaO ill I 3 El I II 1 J I 3 t p i a - i a i VOLUME IX. TERMS. The "MOUNTAIN SENTINEL" is publish ed ever' Thursday morning, at One Dollar and Fifty Cents per annum, if paid in advance or within three months; after three mouths Two iiuliart will be charged. No subscription Trill, be taken for a shorter period than six months; and no paper -will be discontinued until all arrearages are fiJ. A failure to notify a diScontinuanc at the expira tion of the term subscribed fur, will be consid ered us a new engagement. B ADVERTISEMENTS will be inserted at the following rates: 50 cents per square for the first insertion; TO cents for two insertions; for three insertions ; and 25 cents per square Ur every subsequent insertion. A liberal reduc tion made to those who advertise by the year. All advertisements handed in must have the proper number of insertions marked thereon, or they will be published until forbidden, and charged in accordance with the above terms. BQAll letters and communications to insure attention must be post paid. A. J. 11IIEY. PARODIES. If a body see a body carrying off his wood. Shouldn't a body whnlr. : body, if a body could ? Germantown Emporium. If a body catch a body stealing his old rye, Shouldn't a body kick a body till he made him cry? Cincinnati Enquirer. If a body find a body in a body's bed, Shouldn't a body choke a body till a body's dead.' Camden City News. If a body spy a body creeping round his lot, Shouldn't a body treat a body to a load of shot? Warwick News. If a body catch a body stealing his ''Express," SLouldu't a body seize a body and try to get re dress ? Petersburg Express. If a body wants a body his store to patronize, Shouldu't a body pay a body cash to advertize ? Lynchlurj Express. If a body see a body appropriate his hat, Should a body lick a body, just for doing that ? Washington Daily Star. If a body sec a body kissing of his wife, And a body catch a body, should he take his life ? Boston Pathfinder. From the New York Herald. THOMAS FRANCIS IIEAGHES'S LECTURE, young Ireland, and the Irish Revolution ary Movement of 1S4S. Thomas Francis Meagher delivered a lecture iu Metropolitan Hall, on Friday evening May '-i7tb, before one of the most numerous auditor ies we have ever seen crowded into that Hall. Several regiments among them the Irish one attended in uniform, and the United States Mil itary Band, from Governor's Island, were sta tioned on the platform, and played several pieces of Irish music. The battered banners borne by the New York Volunteers in the Mexican cani I' ligu were planted on each side of the stage. 'ke proceeds of the lecture were for the benefit of the survivors of that galant regiment. Mr. Meagher was accompanied to the platform by an escort of citizens, comprising several Aldermen, General Sandford, General Hall, Colonel Bur nett, of the Vo!uutcer3, &c, He was mtr3duced to the audience by General Hall, and received with the greatest enthusiasm. Mr. Meagher then proceeded to deliver the following I.ECTCKE. Ladie? and Gejttlemen. The lecture has drawn to a close, but the duty I have anxiously and proudly accepted is not yet discharged. It isnow, within three days, just twelve months since, in the pursuit of the freedom I had lost with the stars and stripes' flying at the mizen peak, 1 came to anchor in the river that washes the left Bhore of your noble city. It will be to my memory a dark day, indeed, when I shall forget the crowd of faces, radiant with dcligh and- friendship, which pressed around me as I stood under a free roof once more, and beheld myself, as it were, at the gate of the great ave nue of life with a multitude of voices calling upon me to enter, and in triumph be conducted to the sanctuary which the arms, the wisdom, and beneficence of your fathers had opened to the children of less favored lands. Happy did I feel, that, for the congratulations of that day the honors then decreed me I could, to some extent, evince my gratitude in the dedication of an hour or so to the service of thoso whose Bears arc witnesses to the trcpidity and vigilance with which they stood by, and through the red waters carried, the ensigns of the republic. Happy do I feci, when gazing on this peopled Fpace so brilliant , and so vast the thought comes upon me that I may have set in motion the elements which repose in the higher regions of our nature, and that this hand, tremulous and unskilful as it is, may have drawn down from those regions one kindly ray at least, to illuminate the hearth and homestead of the men who were the guardians of those ensigns. Happy happy beyond the measure which the tongue can tell of shall I feel, if, with thissanic hand, I can smooth the pillow of the dying sol dier give, like Abercrombie in the sands of Egypt, to his quivering lip, the cup which shall eootbc the fever of his last breath ; or over his humble coffin, like the poet over the grave of Marcellus, strew the purple flowers. Who could look on, and not feel his heart give way at the spectacle of a glorious companion -.r.hip, stricken by want, disease and death a groupof stately trees, struck by tbeetorm, strip ped of the sheltering leaves, ami scared by the lightning, bending to every passing gust, and one by one sinking, wUh the shreds of their gay foliago and fragments of their brave limbs, in desolation to the earth t Who can read of a fine army even though that army be the foe of free dom, and, in Che fight, we ourselves should strike it to the heart who can read of such an army being cut to pieces or by plague or famine dis appearing from the earth, without comniisera .on without a thrill, a syllable, one tear of no ble pity ? If, then, to the stranger, though he come against us, our nature yields instinctively a gen erous measure of sympathy and succor, what should be the emotions, what the anxieties, what the actions, of those, who, in their milst, be hold the wreck of those young legions whose crimsoned swords flashed in the suu that shone up there upon the fortress of Cbepultepec, and so helped to clear out a new field for that adven turous activity, the spread of which neither the forest, nor the swamp, nor the mountain, nor the river, nor yet the covenants and intrigues, the contrivances and conspiracies of the crown ed families down there in Europe, nor their al lies here or elsewhere, can hamper, divert, nor for an hour withstand. But is it just, considerate, delicate of me to put thi3 question, when hardly a day passes w ithout a comrade falling in those crippled ranks, whose wounds, not less eloquent than those for which the friend of Caesar pleaded, cry out to you not for vengeance, but for love ? That you could be insensible to this fatality that you could thus behold one of the pillars of the State decay, and with its laurelled capital crumble to the dust, until nothing but the pedestal was left standing beside that stream of business, gaiety, and wealth, which threatens to efface this the latest record of your worth that you could be insensible to a fatality so striking, it would be most ungracious in me for a moment to im ply. You have not forgotten Washington, nor War ren, nor Montgomery, nor Jackson. That scene upon Breed's Hill ; that off fort Moultrie: that upon the Delaware ; that upon the snow-piled bastions of Quebec ; that at the Bayou Bienven ue, where the English columns were swamped before the fire which opened upon them from the cotton bales of Lousiana those scenes are no less visible to the memory of the republic, than to the eye of the stranger are those paint ings, which, in such noble proportions, decora ted the halls of Congress. Which being so, you will not forget the men, who, commissioned or non-commissioned, with or without epaulettes, in the corn fields and marshes at Los Tortales, and at the tower of Nueva Itanche,' and along the burning rocks, au'i inrougu tne woods and ravines that lay be tween them and their golden prize, gave proof that the spirit which broke the sword in the hands of Burgoyne and Cornwalls, was not laid to rest in the grave that overlooks the Potomac and passing which, by night or day, no craft fails to strike the minute bell but that it walks the earth, and shall be with the republic all days, even to the end of time. Would that it were my fortune to speak thus, in the land of my father's home, for men who, like those before me, wore scars in evidence of their courage, and the blood poured out by them, that so their country might be saved, and all the stains upon her ancient map and fame might be effaced ! But since this privilege is denied mc, since the foreign sentinel still keep3 watch upon her wall, and the flag, wet with the blood of Fitz gerald, Wolfe Tone, and Emmet, lies buried in the ivy of Bodenstown churchyard, and no fa voring breeze lifts the drooping folds, then glad am I to plead for t?iose, who, to the broth ers of my native land, are next akin, and whose blood with ours, in a thousand channels, is in separably mingled. And since, also, it is denied me to kiss the flag wet with the blood of those young nobles, tha Shadrach, Meschach, and Abednego of freedom, then let me embrace this, the sym bol of that citizenship, which, in the words ut tered on the steps of the Capitol, on the morn ing of the 4th of March, "Shall be an inviolable panoply for American rights, and invested with which the poorest laborer shall stand unabashed even in the presence of kings." Soldiers of Cerro Gordo! Soldiers of Contreras and Churubusco ! Far from your homes from the Hudson to Lake Tezuco you have borne this flag with honor. Romaine carried it in the left baud, when his right was shattered, and parted with it only when death struck it from his grasp. Lake seized it, and, waving it, wa3 shot down. And then another, and then another, until you struck it into the captured field. From the stormiest straits you have brought it back unin jured, save by those rents which have rendered it a s acred relic, and it is due to you that, be neath it you should nurse your failing strength. You should enjoy that peace which, in the words of the sacred book, is "like a clear heat upon herbs and a cloud of dew in the heat of the har vest" and so spend serenely the remainder of the days spared to you in the great storm that swept the base and summit of the Sierra Ma dro. May that flag never fail to find less eager champions than you have been, to shield it from disgrace, and bear it like a charmed robe, un hurt through the flames of war. May. that flag never loso one star ; but, as the Old Thirteen have multiplied in time, may others, no less brilliant, be added thereto ; and may the con stellation which first shone out through the tem pest and the lightnings, and has now become fix ed in the blue expanse of peace, on every sea, be seen; and may the nations, journeying, like flic Kings of old, to a nobler worship, be led to a new faith and destiny by the light it gives ! May it mount to where the Amazon leaps forth from its cradle in the Andes : may it be seen upon the rivers that wash the hidden treasures of Japan ; and, in the effulgence which it sheds, side by side with the ruder structures of your makiug, may the graces of life spring up; may literature and the arts flourish ; may the canvass become ineffaceably impressed with the great conceptions of your sons; and may the chisel and furnace contribute to the genius of America the fame of Phidias and Canova, a3 we have seen that genius immortalizing the beauty of Greece in her nakedness and chains, and, later still unveiling that famous production which fronts the White House, in which the features of nature are not only copied, but thelaws of nature, by the dumb charger, are obeyed! To this republic renouncing all foreign pow ers and potentates have I taken the oath of allegiance; and in the new sphere and citizen ship wLich is opened to mc here, do I trust to prove the sincerity with which that oath was taken, and my deep sense of the duties which, by that act, devolve upon me. " Faithful to the principles on which this com munity is framed ; faithful to the laws on which it proceeds and operates; faithful to the insti tutions which distribute the vitality whilst they secure the unity of the whole ; faithful, above all, to that noble system of public schools, which, in the illumination of the public mind, ensures the perpetuity of a condition of government and society, based upon intelligence and good sense, qualifying, in each succeeding generation, the ."WE GO WHSBE DEMOCRATIC PEISCIPrxS POINT THE EBENSBURC, TIIBRSDAI', JUNE 9, 18-53. entire body of citizens the yet more wisely to exercise their great faculties, diminishing the chances of the impostor, and in the end, eleva ting the democracy to the highest level instead of keeping it to the lowest the foe of bigotry, from . whatever pulpit it may descend, Or in whatever garb it may riot or play its maddening pranks the foe of tyranny in every clime, what ever be the motto or the mask under which it marches, or whatever be the ceremonies with which it is installed acting as you have acted true, as you have been true, crave soldiers ! liberal of my service to the republic, as you have been if that be necessary, liberal of my blood in the cause of the republic, as you have been; I trust that, if it be the will of Heaven to crown me with the white lilies and the silver crown of age, looking back upon a life well spent, I shall be able to say, with tho great foe of Cataline, the conspirator against the ltoman Common wealth "Reinpublicara defensi adolescens, non deseram senex." And why: should I not stand, with a proud love and courage, to this republic; herinterests, her laws, and institutions ? There is more than one good reason for so doing. It is not alone that I am grateful for the nroteetion .and th oiti.cn. ship insured to me ; it is not alone that I regard this form of government, and this condition of society, as the finest and most truthful expres sion of the national will, necessities, intellect and ambition, which anywhere exists ; but that I recognize in the stability of the republic a source of strength to other nations, and incen tive with them to a courageous emulation. Whilst this republic stands; augments her fortune ; proceeds upon her high'career; there is hope for the most abject, decrcpid and disa bled of mankind. As the thoughts of the great poet ; whether in words or marble, of the great artist ; sometimes waken the most drowsy souls into rapturous activity, so shall the example, the writteu, the spoken, and the living word of this grand nation, rouse the spirit of those -who now lie dumb and torpid in the shadow of the thrones that are moored in the full tide of mas sacre, and in which, as if in the hold of the pi rate ship, the plundered liberties of the people, bound and bleeding, are battered down. Austria ; the whole Germanic family, tongue tied; the llhine stagnant in her bed; Poland, still the Niobe of nations, and her stato and children cut up aud parcelled out among the robbers; Hungary, with the knife at her proud nd beauteous naci ; Italy, locked within her sculptured sepulchre, and a profane soldiery keeping watch upon it; France, grimacing in a masquerade, the glare of which bliuds men ' to the crimes of which it is the senseless and the reckle9 carnival ; Ireland, her people decaying and disappearing faster than the ruins even which a ruthless civilization ha3 yet left stand ing on the soil; where, where can the eye, that scans the history of this day, turn with joy; wit'aout grief, without vengeance, Vflthnot despair, unless it be to this great commonwealth, the power, the progress, the immensity of which are mapped out in those mighty waters of the great West, from which I came but yesterday? - Here, here glory be to Him on high ! here freedom stands upon a pedestal higher than the Alps her spear is lifted to the sun, the rays that flash from it shall descend descend through the blackest cloud and storm descend and pen etrate the deepest dungeon, and there wake up the oldest prisoner wake him un, not idly to gaze upon the hills and his home" afar off but wake him up to wrench the bars that hem him in, and with them slay the sentinel though he wear a crown, and be impiously hailed the an ointed of the Lord. 'Young Ireland" was so christened with a sneer. As in the days of Pitt and Walpole, it wa3 an atrocious crime to be a young man. But it mattered little about the mocking baptism. It was with the birth, the career, and the fate of this party they had to do. In the autumn of 1842 the first number of the Nation newspaper appeared. It was unnecessary to say a word descriptive of that journal the truth of which it was the oracle the genius that gushed from it as crystal waters from a golden fountain. Wherever, in any sphere or service, there beat an honest Irish heart, there that new testament of freedom woke vibrations which, even to that hour, had not ceased to play: there, if the in tellect of the wanderer has not been obscured if his heart has not been tainted with selfishness or scheming, have the memories . redeemed by that gospel, the virtues it enforced, the destiny it claimed lor Ireland, been eternally enthroned. Such was the effect abroad. At home it formed a new school of politicians, who sought, on the highest ground, and with the highest agencies, to work out the independence of their country. With what agonies ? First of all, by the invo cation of a pure, deep love of country a love flowing from a knowledge of all that was most noble in her annals a love that through all vi cissitudes, dark or brilliant, would be ever fresh, active, and abounding be to the cause e Ire land what the river is to the land, a source of beauty, fertility, and power equally true to the past, the present, aud the future reflecting in its depths the ruins of the buried age the green growth of the living day and the inex tinguishable light, the sun of freedom, which en compassed all. Hence it was that the long ar ray of all who had in days gone by, done good service to the old land soldiers, scholars, states men -all were given back to the worship of those who stood where they had stood in life, and were now, through this pious labor, made the inheritors of a recovered glory. Hence it was, that" from their uninscribed graves-from the prescription to which a pretentious pru dence, an intolerant loyalty, a base ingratitude, had consigned them the men who had risked all, dared all, lost all for Ireland ; who had fa ced the bayonet and gibbet of tle J)ioclesians of the English throne ; who had porured out their blood upon the field and scaffold, and dying with a sublime gentleness, had only asked of their country, in return for the love of life they gave her, that their epitaphs should not be writ ten, until she took up her place among the na tions. Hence it was these, the martyrs ,of the islands, were from their sepulchres summoned forth and the defamed were cononized. But this love was not to cling to the dead atone it was to embrace the living. Burying all those ran corous recollections of creed, and lineage, and calling, which had so long served bo fearfully to influence the faculties of the country, and so distract and render powerless the strength which Ehould have been combined burying all those WAT tiwBES THEY CEASE TO LEAS, WE CEASE TO FOLLOW.' rancorous recollections healing, purifyinc re uniting the disordered strength of the country . , , J? was t0 realiz5 the holy project of The obald .Wolfe Toncv And what was that project ? Let those who still would trade and thrive still makeCaoney and notoriety still would flourish by keeping alive, in the name of God, the vicious antipathies that had so long preyed upon" the heart, and paralyzed the vigor of his poor coun try, hearken to the text "Unite the whole peo ple of Ireland abolish the memory of past dis sensions substitute the common name of 'Irish man' in pUce of the denominations of Protest ant, Roman Catholic, and Dissenter." This was the project, this the instruction of Wolfe Tone This the project, this the great end to be accom plished, of the young writers and orators of the new school of Irish politics. Pantin" to sec this end accomplished this union, in politics and society of all creeds cemented this lovo made perfect did Thomas Davis utter these no ble aspirations : 'What matter that at different shrines .. We kneel unto one God What matter that at different times - Our fathers won the sod ? As Nubian rocks and Ethiop sand, Long drifting down the Nile, Euilt up old Egypt's fertile land For many a hundred mile So Pagan clans to Ireland came And clans of Christendom, Yet joined their wisdom and' their fame ' To build a nation from ; And oh! it were a gallant deed To show before mankind How every race, and every creed, .Might bo by love combined ; "Might be combined, yet not forget The fountains whence they rose, As filled by many a rivulet The stately Shannon flows." Nor did this love contract itself to the island it vivified ; to the cause it inspired. It wont ! forth into other lands. Wherever the firht for freedom was on foot, in spoke out a word of en couragement; a word of exultation. Seldom had t!cre burst upon the ear of the people a no j bier strain than that in which, to quote him once again, did Thomas Davis put forth his soul in theso lines: - - "See l; Russia preys on Poland, where Sobicski trcigned, r: - . And Austria on Italy the Roman eagle chained ; Bohemia, Servia, Hungary, within her clutches gasp, . . . And Ireland struggles 'gallantly in England's tlghtcTlTng-raBp-p ' " Oh ! would all these unite, or battle alone, Like Moor, Pushtani, or Cherkess ; they soon Would have their own! f That glorious noon, - God send it soon ! Hurrah ! for human freedom ! The effect of sph sentiments was, in 1813, to attract towards lrelariU the sympathies of every country that had a misrule to depose, or a bet ter couditiouabf laws to institute. This was evi dent, in a singular degree, from the tone and language of the German, the French, and the Italian papers, published in the liberal interest. Thus had "Young Ireland" a foreign policy;" thus did "Young Ireland" secure for their coun try, her cause, her struggle, her principles and hopes, a concurrence of solicitudes and activi ties amongst nations speaking various tongues, and having, it so seemed, habits, traditions,' and interests, widely irreconcilable. But the cause of freedom was everywhere the same; in every clime, elicited the like sentiment and passion. The fruition of it by all nations would eventuate in an unanimity of peace and good will, and a serene glory to the aggregate of humanity. ' But what of the "domestic policy?" What of that policy which provoked against theyoung nationalists of Ireland the hatred and the hoot ings of the bigoted, the knavish aud the "loy al;" the needy politician, the cunning and insa tiable hypocrite ? They sought to extinguish the feuds of former days; to drown in a stream, deeper than that of Lethe, the memories that had so long hurled off, like conflicting fragments, the strength which should h ave been in gener ous piety combined ; and were, therefore, de nounced as 'infidels" by every knave who drove his trade in Scripture and theology. Were so denounced because they claimed for all men and all time that equality before the law for which tneir fathers had prayed, and toiled, and bled. Were so denounced, because they were neither hypocrites nor bigots ; had more love than hatred; more truth than falsehood ; and to this hour are so denounced, because there is not amongst them a conscience flexible enough to perpetuate, , to" their own shame and damnation, a profitably oc'tv "popular" conversion. Tre mendous cheering. Mr. Meagher then pro ceeded to recapitulate the other leading points in the design and creed of 'Young Ireland," laying particular stress upon the efforts made by that party to place place the political movement on an intellectual basis. For this, he said, for this, striving to have the public mind enlightened, that so it could nokbe deceiv ed ; that so its excessive and reckless ciedulity might be corrected; that so it might be resolute, active, intrepid and aspiring ; for this, too, they were denounced as "infidels ;" so denounced by men who would keep the people in the dark, -that so they might keep them in their-grasp, and so use them as their cupidity prompted or their necessities requird. . But in the name of "infidel" they gloried. In the infamy which a loye of intelligence and truth incurred, it was just and virtuous to exult.. This, as every oth er calumnious name or menace, they flung back upon their accusers, as they do now. They facedihem as they do now, putting the ques tion, "Was this a crime?" Did they curse the man who would not barter the priceless jewel of his soul ? To win their smiles ; to win their honors; should their favorite be a slave ?" En thusiastic cheering. Mr. Meagher then glanced at the proceedings of the 'Irish Confederation" at their conduct in certain Parliamentary elections in the news paper, the tribune and the pamphlet. He in sisted that their true ground of quarrel with O' Connel, was their insisting, in the language of John Jlitchell 'that the national flag should be kept as haughtily flying in the face of the whig, as in that of the conservative administration." The inculcation of this bold and purest policy, became necessary in July, 1846, when Sir Robert Peel vacated the red box and the treasury bench, i and Lord Juhn Russell, with his stock company, took possession of the same. The immediate followers of O'Connell those especially in Dub linwere strongly addicted to the wbigs ; were inclined, as they said, to give them a lair trial. They were always so good to . Ireland ! That was, (Mr. Meagher exclaimed) they were always so good to those who played false to Ireland. "They would do everything to ameliorate her condition ! The meaning of which was, (said Mr. Meagher) the whigs would resuscitate the fortunes of sorao old place beggar. (Great laughter.) As for an insurrectionary movement, they did not contemplate it until early in the spring or lblS. Two great events conspired to bring this about the Irish famine and the French revolution of February. The famine had wrought a lied ions devastation. Not Egypt, when the darkness came upon the land; not the city of the Huly Temple, when the Roman cross d her wall; not Venice, when the Plague "-truck her, and she lay a blackened corpse upon the Adriatic; not the gardens and the vineyards of mo j-omnara, wlicn the steeds of the Scythin trampled through them ; not London, in tho days of which Do Foo and Linzard, on imperish able pages, have left us paintings as appalling as the "Judgement" of Angelo ; not in any of those climes and cities, in those their days of deepest dismay and tribulation, did a scone so terrible meet the eye of Heaven as thatwhich, in the land of his fathers, in such hideous color ing had been revealed. Finding the worst come their country all but gone her commerce gone, trade gone, credit gone all her interests, all her faculties, destroyed bankruptcy, desti tution, desolation, death death by tho minute, death by the million, utter ruin, utter annihila tion, coming upon her, and coming with speed, and the howl of the gale in the Tropics, they who had boon true to theisland, true to her in the face of all, the worst even the distrust and detestation of many amongst her own people, who had been "faithful to her frcedom""u9 they now are "faithful to her fall," they felt the time had come to make a bold attempt to cut adrift the dismantled craft, and, with the remnant of the crew and fortune, save her from the . royal pirate to which she had been lashed. John Mitch el was the first to step, on deck tho first to give the word the first to tako the fire tho first to fall. (Vehement applause) Tho events then shaking Europe to the cenrre, stimulated the new passion that spi-ung up. Thrones were everywhere tumbling.likc the idols of the heathen. Crowns were tossed about as though tb?y never liad been anointed ; and the people in their ir reverence so despised them, they would not pick the diamonds and the rubies from them. And, as though the angel of the Lord passed over them, before the Spirit of Freedom, the armies of the kings fell prostrate to the earth. It might have been a wild belief but men eager for the disenthralmcnt of their land might, in such a crisis, be pardoned the belief that tho people had but to strike one blow to prevail and tri umph. Mr. Meagher then introduced the name of Smith O'Brien, amid the most enthusiastic applause. He said that he knew of no man who had a larger heart for the people ; that he was as jealous for the freedom of Lis country as of his own honor; that he threw himself into the insurrectionary movement with Roman ear nestness and devotion. To do so he had no temptations save those which excite to virtue, arid to heroic goodness persuades and prompts thehonest conscience. Smith O'Brien was more sanguine of success than others were. He tho't that the people would turn out in masses, and that the Roman Catholic clergymen, if they did not head, would at all events not dishearten and restrain them. This was a fact which he (Mr. Meagher) kuew n'ot who would question. They did so in all the villages and towns where Smith O'Brien endeavored to rally and concentrate a body of. armed men. They did so especially on that occasion where Smith O'Brien, with a hand ful of ragged and half armed men, came sudden ly, and by the merest accident, into collison with the police. . But thcr were noble deviations from the course, which as a body, tho Roman Cath olic clergymen thought it advisable or expedient to pursue. There were many young curates throughout tho country in the Navan, in Wa terford, in Dublin, for instance fully prepared and prompt to throw themselves into tho move- -ment, to aid it and to bless it. Taking a bro4d view it was not incorrect to state that the bish ops and the parish priests were opposed to the movement, anuTt suppress it brought their im mense influence in the pulpit, and in the forum, and in the field, to operate. On the other hand, the curates of the Roman Catholic Church were, to a man, in favor of it. This he knew, that in one memorable instanco a young curate was marching to join O'Brien, with a body of brave fellows he had hastily collected and armed from the hardware stores of the village, when the par ish priest appeared, and with severe admoni tions dismissed tho good curate and his escort. Had the Catholic clergy, as a body, taken anoth -er course had they gone out, as the Sicilian priests went out as, if I mistake not, the arch bishops of Milan had done had they lifted up the cross in front of the insurgent ranks, there would have been a different story written. Who else were opposed to the movement ? The O' Connellites, almost to a man. In Waterford, the most vigorous of them were sworn in as "special constables," to put down the "Irish rebels." So, too, the Orange party, who tho't their church and aniversaries were in danger, and so buckled on their armour of righteousness, and pitched their tents under the lion an unicorn. So, too, the landlords, vho have lived upon the sweat and blood of the people, and now tremble lest tho grave would give up the dead, and the victims of their evictions and exactions swel ling the army of the poor would precipitate upon their heads, their houses, and their idle children, a crushing retribution. So too, the Castle folk, who had their opera glasses, their bouquets, their scented gloves of pinkor prim rose, their genteel servility, their handsome beggary, their illegible daughters, to protect and provide for. So too, the merchant, the tradesman, the railroad and every other specu lator all, in a word, who had any amount of money in the bank they believing that a whole sale depredation or a communistic distribution of property, was the o'ne thing contemplated, being beaten into this belief by the lurid scribes and scoundrels of the English press, who made the most of that terrible business of. the month ofjune, in Paris, to calumniate anu cry down, in Ireland, the cause of freedom and republican ism. Who, then, were for it ? None save tho SR 33. brave young mechanics of the cities and the towns, a few of the writers of the Dublin and provincial press, the Catholic curates, and a few of the peasantry, though the heart of all was in the right place. But with Hieiu the fatu- ' ine had done the worst. It had eaten even to the soul, and killed there the most vital of all instincts, that which prompts the poor worm to turn upon the foot which threatens its human life. "It was," they said, "thecternal destiny of the land, and Heaven's will be done !" Thus failed that movement in Ireland, in 1818. But nil failures arc not altogclLcr failnret. Let them hope that such wrecks give a bedding for .. the arch that is yet to span the waters dividing the Irish rnce from the promised land, in eight of which they have stood so long. During the delivery of thoso portions of the discourse where allusions were made to Lord Edward Fizgerald, Theobald Wolfe Tone, Robert ' Emmet, Thomas Davis, John Mitchell, Wm omitu u iirien, and other. Iribh patriots, the audience evinced the greatest enthusiasm, cheer--ing each name londly. Tho bold and frank language uted in reference to the Irish pricct hood, was as well received, and in that passage where the lecturer said thnt the priests had dis heartened and restrained the population, a voice cried out "They shall do it no more," a etnti ment which was Etrongly applauded. At the conclusion of Mr. Meagher's address the President came forward aud read the follow ing letter from Gen. Scott : Gentlemen I should be happy to hear Mr. Meagher's lecture, this evening, but fear I may not be able to be present. I return the tickets you were kind enough to send me, and beg that the small sum enclosed may be applied for the benefit of the sick and disabled amongmy brother soldiers, of the First Regiment of New York Volunteers. Very truly yours, , WINFIFLD SCOTT. Soon after tho reading of this communication, the immense assemblage dispersed. The BUTled Lawyer. At the last sitting of the Cork Assize. a case was brought beforo the Court, in whiclrthe principal witness for the defence was a tanner,? well-known in the surrounding country by -the poubriquct of 'Crazy Pat." . - Upon "Crazy lut" being called upon for bli evidence, the attorney for the prosecution exert ed to the utmost extent his knowledge of legal chicanery, in the endeavor to force the witnes into some slight inconsistency, upon which he might build a "point," but he was excessively annoyed to fin! that Crazy Pat's evidence was consistent throughout. Perceiving that acute questioning failed to an swer his purpose, the disciple of Coke and Black stone 'ctook himself to the oftentimes successful renounce of lawyers ridicule. "What did you say your name was?" he in quired, flippantly. "Folks call me Crazy Tat, but" "Crazy Tat, eh? A very euphonious title ; quite romantic, eh !" "Romantic or not sur, it wudn't be a Lad idea if the Parliament wud give it to yourself, an lave mc to chuse another." This caused a slight laugh in tho court room, and tho presiding judge peeped over his specta cles to the attorney, as much as to say "You have your match now." And what did you say your trade was?" con tinned the disconcerted barrister, with an angry look at tho witness. "I'm a tanner, sur." 'A tanner, eh ? And how long do you think it would take you to tan an ox hido ?" "Well, sur, since it sames to be very impor tant fur ye to know, it's myself that'll jist tell ye that's intircly owin to circumstances in tircly."' "Did you tan the hide of an ass ?" "An ass? No, sur; but if you'll jist step down the lane, after the Court, be jabcrs I'll give ye physical demonstration that I eud tan the hide of au ass in tho shortest end of three minutes." This unexpected 6harp reply of the witness brought forth roars of laughter, in which the Bench heartily joined ; whilst the baffled at(or ney, blushing to the eyes, hastily informed Crazy Pat that he was no longer required. Dutchman. Horrible Developments. A mosf terrible circumstance has been recent ly brjought to light. A few days since, a stran ger arrived in this city and took lodgings at the "Wm. Tell," a well known restaurant on Fifth street, kept by a man of the name of Diserns. During the night the cook of the establishment, either from an imaginary offence, or from the hopes of lucre, procured a hatchet and going to where tho stranger wag lying, struck him a blow with the sharp edge across the neck, nearly dis severing tho head from the body. Horrified, with what he had done, and not knowing how to conceal from the world the knowledge of this bloody act, he hit upon the expedient of cutting the body up into minu e pieces, aud dreadful to relate, actually made,soup of the fragments, which was served u to the customers J The cook 'has not been arrested. Since writing the above our reporter has as certained the murdered individual's name to be C. Turtle, and that he has a larg family somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean. Cincinnati Commercial. A Business Kan. The editor of the Sciota Gazette, formerly of Union county, makes a favorable notice of the enlargement and improvement of the Maryville Tribune, over which our friend Hamilton pre sides, and concludes by giving the editor the fol lowing touch of biography. He was busy. Success to Cornelius. Last summer ho was the busiest man in Union county. He built a house, planted an orchard, dug up a garden made stump speeches, visited the schools, pre sided at cold-water parties, whittled sharp Btieks to poke at some of the court house rats, castiga ted divers loafers, loudly admonished Punable of Mt Gilead, Stayman, of Delaware, and-sundry others, wrote editorials, set up type, joined, the shakers, (the ague sort,) surveyed land, read Blackstone, and nursed little Tom all the tizno ! -Wasn't he busy ? " ,