imf lit all f. tS f " OE,rs oF e.,rB.v. c OKr-7re .him. wo.y roe ,OM .,.v0 . lot. e , r;B p00K. M$ IP III Jy A ! J, ier 111 I II fl I IK i( It I I 1 1 VEW SERIES. TaIand!shani In Congress. ye Speech for the Hour. - C L- VALANDIGHAM DE- f-VXtilS THE WAR DISUNION. fir "PEACE" tit we mjr liecomtruct It! ON CAN "STA1 UL1 lAl-IA XHW ENGLAND. 1 Statesman VIcits. C,Mnx Januan, 14, IS. J ?'Vdou- 1 ' -, with i uc d. J :inrv. wi;cti preeia.ius tuni iui I -... it'-'ior, and j -; - :ii:ixi:n. I st.ii.iM unon . . i - . i . . . . , i . j-r-i's'rc it. W'.C'Vir , ..'!...',. 117? i-"c - - fit t. .v'.'' nm. That '..v.. la jxj'.ities i not i:i thii'iZ : and 4.;ae- .:ce ir tied. !! 'ri.i I r. it . .1 l t: in :.: ! i I i i I p.e. net to t r. u lo-uay ?:i: ' s; much ' tn.y gar- ' v. lio ' . n it her i re t:r tise t s-ipport. . 1 Hil l ', I. e done ns I Co.dd h: 've. War r n ;t r..if. the Irion a viU. ();,r .1 : ii.r Wv-re tj 1. whipped !c i !V.lovs!i!p at the p.-.;rt '" y moii'-teroiis 1 ;rr. h. i! i war to e ' 1 aicri-t a ma-t- -:oh to f.t sw.-.-nment ; to sve icstic m eonrriest and r. : but a w:?r for Union ! W:s j :i tiiiis in:;. i-Was it ever thus ! Sir hwrorv wtl! ihu4..I !.... " 4-' 414 IH'.t'i lli.ll I '.y mx tiio-ii.--.in I y.-ais of folly j i--t;.ese;n every form an. I admin- rnnnent, theocratic, demo- ! al.i.-. oMig:irehie, despotic, and - -t --v.is reserved to American j ' p ; ! the niijcte-enth cer.tuvy v .i, r o i r;i t. -- il.- m-.,,,.l 1 .... 4i - 1 144. i 1. 1 : 4 4 .v : 1 ii it M'a!.' the most cost I v and ' :n its t cev. : !, 1 e ii- ... . 1 i t. a war of conn vt -.n.l us nthusiasin, li.- ir most ! ;:.me pa re. the utter ilisac- ' tl in England or America . , tv. w 11 in t i-w aa-i supplies p inal alone, "m the ;-e ::iesti. n of the 1 it T L I i I j continu- . -T'.r.:..n. and h " --j-y a-.d ftronglv ' .!. ir- 1811 . ?ai : ' ; tint there is a distinction in a stat.: 0,1" isuii itself. l nciple, sir, he acted after '-' '''t : li,t r.i ne knows but mv- '!'-;f that opposition. oi it,- character and. cor.se- ' t iinp.ji..';blo for m to l- vnmirv -vs ' i w.- 1 "e trnmusiiisui And again, in 1818: "But utter the war was declared, by the authority of the Government, I acquiesscd in what I could not prevent, and which it was impossible for me to arrest ; and I then fe!t it to be my duty to limit my e-fibrts to give such direction to the war as would, as far as jjossible, prevent the evils and dangers with which -;: WHO DON'T LIKE KECOX- i 11 threatened the country and it institu- tions. ! Sir, I adopt all this as my own position j and my defence ; though, perhaps, in a j c ivil war, I might fairly go further in op- my cenvie- turns, vote men and money tor this w;.r, I and I would not as a Kepresentative vo Sir, 1 was not taught ! """ m'-m- i meant t.iar, without op- position, the I 'resident ini-rht take all t! men an 1 ail the money he shoull de:n;;r. I. and then to hold hi;n to a stiict aeeoimt- ; r:tk yr.ttrutm ility before the peop! fxr t!ic irsulis. . Not bclievinjr the ?oIdk-r5 re-p-.)iis:lV i,r the war, or it purposes, or its conejii-.-n-: ces, I have never within id mv vote v. Iiere ; their setxrate iniei is:s were rond-n .1 lii.t 1 June d.-iii.i.MK -d frt.m tlie Iginning ! : in- ii-iu :.n i w:e miraeuoirs die .T- . . i .t r ' and a'.l, of law and Coiiiiti:tio:i, by th? i'nith, and i i seJciit a:.d ti!ej;e r ..;;u : tu.-ir re- honors. !r,:u' SU1,J ptiSL-tesii ariutury arn-.-is, tiir.t is ' sUf'peHsi"! i .'iitif c rji'ts, the i I.i- did it. ! ,-'-n '" ireedom of ;i.e. mails, of th- private d..i.l.t ! bouse, of t!.o pr-ss. :.nd of and ail t ' rl f ri . i1 f i ' .IT: ..-1 t. Wi i t'i;s ns,k.-. noi u P'-bHc U.wly and pnv.-.tc t:uht. ! -it. Hi-..;.. -. ....... .. th? w. r.-t despol't.is on .-.., in i.,r the t", eiitv tiiontii-: and I v. ill co:i.ii ! rel i.'e and d r i:.or- fiet:i to the lrst to .1.1: I.it i'.-. ( r-n, have :it 1 r.-bukrd th'-m. o tin.c I :i;-: va! n ! he-rd and hek-d. i'j t:ie recoiM an ior n,y jusiif:eatl;n. J And novv, sir. I r-.Oiir t . i- st:i: of J t!;e I'nio.i to- .:y. W'r.il is it.' Sir, twenty nv.-ntii- iuve ei,psed. but ine re- j Iw-'.lion is not c. u.-'re i out : its nn'it;;rv : ! powir lias not ! ( cents have not d not re-tord : ..r ' t.iinod : nor tli- 1 .-'iXtv. -I ill! I . - 7 ; O;: i.iive 1 ir.-f ti broken : t:' insur- !i-;"rsf.h 'i'l.e U.si--n is r tii' v ,n.::i:-.iL:n s.;ai:; 1 r.v-s enforce!. Ta nf. !' i:W:i !rc l, six be ; .;-.! il : a th' -asan 1 !::i'iiv'o and three hiui Ird tiioii--r bodi-s ninl.-d : and il -nit- flair is still near ; been exjr iitlt-d ; sand ies Iot ! to- inv :tie (' j tl'C l'etoipac a:.d the t i i . and t! ! i-d- ratv' I at lirst. govermi'.ent TH':;-h strousr'-r lii.'in Not a Sr ite has ben r-si-n-d, n::cl a ' r,n' nr'v F511" anv Stat;- !ia voluntarily ' IfPed to the l "oi. ;,. And r.a- anv--. or up i Uiiv been v ntin i'lii C'or.L'. to aWiNh ii d..n,..st;.";,4Ct;M. ; States, or the people in th.-'ir mo.-: imp.'issi- ned patriotism, coui.i U-stow ; as it er? And did not 1ik party ol the execu tive control the entire Fe.'.-ral fio em inent, every Siaie g..veriiinrnt. yery count', every city, town, and i'lage in the North and West.' Was it pitro.iage? All belonged to it. Was jt influence ? What more? Did not the school, the college, the church, the press, the secret orders, the municipality, the corporation, railroads, telegraphs, express companies. proportions of creatine l,ie voluntary assoi-iauou, an, ;iu it-.n n uid deveh:.incT fr:if..rr,:i1 i to the uinvfct ? Was it unanimity I . - . i .i . . ! i ;i ..: .1 i :. wrir- .-m.i h,at..rv- . -t'l -,,4-,i .Never was an .vnnnr.isinuion so supir- About five : .i'es-t hisi.j.lv failure of the ex- 1 mPn anc half a score of newspapers mad i:: the onposinon. as it enthusiasm! t -I 4 I .. T - .4 was fanatical Hiere :r' ;"r t ' that seii.n.l of politics j has "ot Wn !l,!riiing like it since the , ::: th.at when w, are at war, I Cnisades. Was it confidence ? Sir, the ''rrm.-ni I do not mean the Cx-: faitl1 01 tnc Pcot!e exci-eiied that of the a-'T.?, hut the Government is I patriarch. They gave up the Constitu- " ...man-i an-1 have, without re- j "n, law, right, and lilierty, all at your - v:cH v. -.iir.'vr of men and such ! demand for arbitr:uy power that the nv T i 1 t- ... 1. ..,4.1,. :i-'v aao snm, frrr-iilv ocnion mictni, :i-s ,u 1 .100110, o Hirir n 'i.-'sa.-v for the war, until j out m tbrec months and the Union r. Ik- had to the roo!"'. l- restored. Was credit needed? You ! t'Xk control of a country, young, vigorous. d inexhaustible in wealth and resources. ' ll h It I 1UU lflS '.I r 1 Ul h vioi- .inn- ... - - - - laid it down ' public debt, raid whoe "m a soeeeh on ' never been tanil-hed. good faith had Your gr-at 11:1- Speak "m" of the 1 tional loan bui.oie tauea miserao.j, as u c j deserveil to fail ; but the bankers and. . 4 k ' ... . mpre briiif s of 1 lil.adclpnia. Nt'W 1 orii . . . i .i. . . . ' . . r.C ,4.... ..r. anJ ISostor. lent vou more man uieir i-u- flatter, the rHit of withhold-! tire banking capital. And when that - , i.ie iiriu oi vv milium -n i .... . . tuuui ::! tailed too. vou lorce-i creu.t iv tieeiaiitiz - -re. t- and succful nroc- ' vour paper promises to p.iy, ah-al tender f the lirst. 1 lem-nci u o, u,uum 'th- .:.r. rlior all Vbt,. Was 'money wanted -Oly lords you cannot conquer America -i:hh..ldin ipp wuft a viv You hn.I ull the revenues of the United , And you have no conquered the South -V e.,u? i'ZZ i States, diminished indeed, but still in You never w.lL 'J; ' " t or.1v to'be what it his len i gold- The whole wealth of the country, ; things possible : much less under your au- n r- i .- . . r, Lrfitniinr lvv..r feet. l'ri- : spie s. But money you have cxpenued 4-j iTC in. i.j ruinuui- i 7 , ... wvason out very little - . . V" .... i "i i:n.'.t ;.nd b'.l i-oured out like .. i r4 in,.,.-!, iv.u miiniciTvii coriKHTLLious. iihu... i - i 4.14. .41-44 . 4 V. , 1 " I ' the State governments., all in their frenzy M v;,...,, mvi vou monev or means with reckless --.-..ii ...41. 4 4 .4 44 41 1 V'. j f." J --ilt- u e:.i. ..nvllmilitv. The trreat eastern citus T "-t knows that I was onn.- lent vou 15,0 O.t00 Cngiiss votM, i . . - . iho cum ot :!. .tr.Hij.uu. s.na next With ,no0,oo0 more in loans: an.l then, .Mr. 1 iKej. i .... -"' "7": , - i-yi -, : " liU ! . ... , .iin.,..Ai !-:. ...,- s-iKntion " Sir. thev have ! n,t.v and Roeakir? the fame SanCTUar. ' anoir.er pit I . ' . . . . . ,,M 1 .-4J.,. 444 1 tl4.1 I 1 . n 4- ..r .4 1444 -r 14. Il.ll. f ll.' ' i lirst, .v),w.,.i,;.-v., , r ,wj. ' u ' .m,mlr ,n- in th- C n v.,te ' next -90,COO.fM, and. m .lulr last, ivcnme mr -...o - - ...... - -. ' .$150,00,000 in Treasury .te.. : and th- 1 be war fc the I mon :-. m - our hands j d.r by cvd stnte or war. unlet My were , J -t t..- . EBENSBURG, PA. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 11, Secretary has issued also a " papr post age currency, in sums as low as five cents, limited in amount only by his dis cretion. Nay, more: already since the 4 th of July, 1861, this House has appro priated $2,000,000,000, almost every dol lar without debate, and without a record vote. A thousand millions have been expended since the lGth of April, 18G1 ; and public debt or liability of $1,500,000, 000 already incurred. And to support all this stU)endous outlay and indebted ness, a system of taxation, direct and in direct, has been inaugurated, the most enormous and unjit ever imposed upon any but u conquered people. 3lon:y ;.nd credit, -then, you have had in prodigal profusion. And were ni"n ; wanted? More than a million rushed to i arms! Seventy-five thousand fir?t, (and '. the country sUmmI aghast at the multitude,) ! t!i :i ei.'hty-tluve thousand more were !i :n.tnd -d; and three hundred and ten J thousand responded to the call. The j i'ii leiit next asked four hundred thou-j sand, :uA Congress, in its generous conn- dence. gave him five hundred thousand : ; and, not ta be outdone, he took six hun- dr.sl and thirt v-.evcn thous;inl. Il.ilfof .nrse i.ieiicn away in i.ie mT campaign : ' lied away in the first e.i.n lYcsHelit llemaiided thrif and le 1 l'esl ilemaiioe-I l!uf nun- t:r.-.t t-msan.i more tor tne w.ir. ant t:ien : i:r.-.rt-it yet another three v.i.n i:- i thou- i ; .:wk itr nine inciuiis. i:e i.-oneu nois ( ; 01 Aevxes have i-en outn-u.:! r.-i. .nl yi t .ictory stntugely follows the Stan Innls j I of it..- f From Great Bethel to Vkks- bu-g. battle has not been to t!i ? strorg. j x .. .. . . h.i n t'.llowed bv a Ciill for r.iore troops, ai:d v'tv timo so far thy have l"en pronrt tly fumishrd. From th' beginning the war .is been c.,ndi:i-teil a 1011I!- ;d c:;;iip.-tign, and it has b-.'.' n tlie folly of tI:o party in p .v r tli.it .hev hr.ve assumed thai numbers alone would win the tkdd in a con?, st not with b:uiot out with mu- t kft ;uil swor 1. But numbers you have . 1 ..' 4. .1 f Mlf ! ltri4Cf 1 4 .4..IF4 l 44 .4 444. 4.4 4 I I : 1 I 4 I 41I-. 4.44 ."4 bt ;t ::j poi::te I, best arm. !. S'l. and clad hovt of lra--e nu n, well "rgaiiied and a e'l ili.-i'iiir.ed, t.v r maiha,ed. .V Navv. :.!.'. not th - most formi lab!- nerhnps. ::t l!4e nn- uu.iieroUT, and the '''I -t in the world, '.j' :.!inort without a navv at gaoant an-1 1 ii 1 ilLiain-t a i 11. Twon- I million ivot.i", and everv nent ol .-.iiviith and fore- at command power. natron:e'i iofhirnee. una;:n:ty. entluisi- 4 ' - - asm, confidence credit, monev, men, an Army and a Navy the largest and the I noblest ever s -t in the field or afloat upon I the sa : with the suprt. almost servile, f everv State, county, and municipality j in the North, and West; with a Congress : swift to do the bidding of the Executive : without opposition anywhere at home. raid with an arbitrary power which nei ' tlier the Czar of Russia n r the Emiror 1 of Austria dare exercise: yet after nearly t.vo vears of more vigorous pros.-cution of i wni- th:!n ever recorded in hislory; after more skirmishes, com oats id battles than Alexander. Ca sar, or the first Na tHj'i'on ever foupht in imy five years of their military career, you have ulterty, sijnallv. disastrously I v. ill not sayiuo miniouslv failed to sulxlue. ten million "relicls," wh. ui you had taught the people of the North and est not only to hate but to de.-pis.. HetK is, tint i say : Yes, your fathers were rebels, or your trrandfathcrs. fe trho nOr bfn-r me on Can rt A '..- ditii'ii -'(' '' Hjf'i m, tir '.ie , - triwrte, ' i,ni-rtic i-tiitnh'ii) nj' titC trttit A'yM'Vc, rrhirU lir j'otituh'l, mis it r. M. And vet we, era-lied ourselves in rcl:llion, and who have, fostered and fraternized with every insurrection in the nineteenth ceiiturv everywhere throughout the globe, would" now, forsooth, make the word "rebel a reproach. Bcliels eertainly they are ; but all the persist.-nt and stu pendous efforts of the most gigantic war fare of m.xlem times have, through your incompetency and folly, availed nothing to ,'t' cut off' thoutrli thev liave i rusn i:iem . Ijec-n bv your blockade from all the world, and d-pendent only ujkju their own cour a -e ami resources. And vet they were to .--.. i i ...l-i i : ..: i... .,ti..r r it l.ii "t i :iiii s 41 1 n l .1' 4 1 iji ;i.v ; w.,ks. or thne months Mr, my ju - tg - , ......i., .... -ind cxnivs.sed trom i..e... ....... - , 4-.. I I 1 ll-4.1 I l,-Tt',-.1.4 - J I" 44. .1441 14 444-44. 4144444l(4444 . ff. . A- 1 1 j water. D-Jt, ,ll.t, Unrfw, .yl.:,r,. tc nrt ijir trrj:'tie vain the Hple gav. veu treasure and the se'Mier yieldeil up his life. Uigbt, tax, emancipate. let th said the gentleman from Maine Pll;lood and costly failure. The j separated by distance or vast natural ! 1787 Stronger yet than all 7 the pcr 1 resident confessed it oti the 2-2,1 of sr. I i.a n , r .i , . . ? 3 , . . "UJ lxr te.mber, solemnly, ofiiciallv. and under the broad seal of the United States. An.', he ha4 now repeated the confession." The priests and rabbis of abolition taught him that God would not prosper sucha cause. W.ar for the Union was abandoned ; war for the negro openly begun, and with stronger battalions than before. With what success ? Let the dead at Freder icksburg and Vicksburg answer. And now. sir, can this war continue? Whence the money to cany it on ? Where the men? Can you !mtow? From whom? Can von" tax more? Will the people near it : ait till you have col- lected what nainaly le-viefl. How manv , millions more of ' le:al tender" to-dav forty-seven pr cent below the par of gold can you tioat ? Will men enlist now ai any price Ah, sir, if is easier to die at home. I beg pardon: but I trust lam not 4,di-c)unigingenlistmeit." If I am, tlin first urrcst Lincoln, Stanton, and llaHerk, and some of vour other "eneral. and I will retract ? yes, I will recant. But ' run youlratt ajrain t Ask Aew Limland i New ork. Ask Mass;ichusett. nere are i ne n;ne nunUTii thousand: .V?K not UillO tj,e Aortliwcst. She: n.ougr.t you were in tannst. and pave - . J .. j you a.i, ai: more than yon demanded. ,4 .; , t i , r m j .1 . The fair, fjud bride cf yMer eve. Arid acd tire .ntid n:ntr'n grav, Saw the .ovel war.iors l.af. away. Anu deenie-l it sin to prieve.:' S:r, in blowl sh has atrnr-d f.,r her iMeduiity ; and now t lie re i moumin in ev iy hou.-e, and distress ;iil sadm ss in every heart. Shail she give vou anv More 1 ut ought tliii war to continue ? answer. NO ! Not a !tj ! Not i an hour! What then? Shall we separate ?! Ag:u.i 1 answer, no, n, no! ,n, now. sir, I corm to th ' hat then? raiide! mid 4 IT; '.1 mot sublime probkm of siatesm::nship from the litginniTsg? and to the IoJ of Heaven. iUumiiier of hearts and mind-, I would humbly appeal for some measure. at !ea-t. of lijiht and wisdom and strenirth t,i . vi,i,;re and reve:d the ila-k liiit lu.il- bio fiittiiv of this land. t xN TIU: l-Mon f.r rtlKsr. stvtks ijk m sronr.p ? now suau.it pf. iw.nk? the Noith and the .South, and no line ol And why not? Is it historicailv im- j latitude iqon which to separate ; and if pi.sslblc ? Sir, the fiequei.t civil wars and I ever a line of longitude shall be cstab coi.Hiets u-tween the States of Greece did ! lished, it will be east of the Mississippi not prevent their cordial union to resist the IV-rsian invasion : nor did even the ! thirty years IVIoponnesian war, rprlnging, i in art, from the abducti- n of sl.aves, :irnl embitti-red and disastrous as it was let Thucidides speak wholly destroy the fellowship of those States. The wise I Io nian? ended three years s.i.il war after many bloody battles, and much atrocity, by admitting the Slates of Italy to all the rights and privileges of I'omau citizenship the very object to secure which these States had taken up arms. The 1 .order wars between .Scotland and Eneland. running through centuries, del not prevent lino to the Ohio river, or from .Manhattan the final union, in pence an.l bv adjust- to the Ca::a las. ment, of the two kinirdoins im.ler one J And now, sir, i there any difference of monarch. Compromise 'did at last what j race here, so radical as to forbid re-union? ages of coercion and attempted conquest I not refer to the negro race, fctyled had failed to e fleet. England kept the. i now, in unctious otncial phrase by the (TOwn, while Scotland gave the kin- to ! 1 'resident, " Americans ot African de wear it : and the memories of Wallace j cent," Certainly, r, there ars two white and the Bruce of Bannocburn, became races in the l.mted Mates, both from the pari of the glories of British historv. I j same common stock, and yet so distinct pass bv the Union of Ireland with "Eng- f ne of them so peculiar that they up land a Union of force, which God and velop different forms of civdizalion, and iust men abhor ; and vet pivcisclv " tin? imght l said to belong, almost, to differ Union as it should lie" of the Abolition- J st types of mankind. But the boundary its of America. Sir, the rivalries cf the of these two races is not at all marked lunwsof York and Lancaster filled all j by the line which mvid-s the slave.ioldmg En dand with cruelty zu .daughter : yet winpromisw and inten.i irria-e iid.tl the strife at last, and the white "ruse and the -1 ivcm K1imii1o1 in onrv Who divanicil month before the death of Cromwell; that in two vears the te pie ol lamhin 1. I afj,T twenty 'wars of civil war end us.ir- i -.1 . - . ihI? And'who could hav.: fbr-toid in thc iKMnnnin- of 1S12, that within ... .... -t t -.n'O ve-ars. ainlin wcu.a u.' in rx.w ,,iv.na"elescrt islind. .i-.d the lV,rbons I L..4.i ...4.1 f...',.. tntrrv. -ntin,, A-A it ; but it is' a strange hi-torv. Or who then exteiltoamphew of Napo- , .. i.,i,.r .;u. tl... It.'OII. 1111114-11,4. 4 4.,..-- .4..., .-4.4. ... - - - , - i - . r ij an.l reiii r.n.pcror o. ..u.,i- s .... many riais an-i p..pie. oi.ee st-j.-iii.n-, have Ix-eome unittl in the course of ages thronrjli natural causes and without cn- quest T . I T .. . I .. ...... T. . .n.lni.A., oui i reiii'.ii.."". siui- iii-i.n . nation, wou.i, wnn great imaMimuv, re-."."- - . - itore the house of Stewart in the person Eiri, the vomnvxi d-'ce!it and there of its uiost worthless pri.u-e, whew father fore co;.angmn:ty of the great mas- o. . i..r.,.. ... K.l. .4.,,!. , the i-.-opV. Had th" Canadas lvn svt- 1863. Tribes is the exception ; these parted witnout actual war, and their subsequent history is not encouraging to secession. But when Moses, the greatest of all states men, would secure a distinct nationality and government to the Hebrews, he left Egypt and established his people in a dis tant country. In modern times, the Neitherlands, three centuries ago, won their independence by the sword ; but France and the English channel separated them from Spain. So did our Thirteen Colonies ; but the Atlantic ocean divorced us from England. So did Mexico, and and other Spanish colonies in America : but the same ocean divided them Xrom Spain. Cuba and the Car.adas still adhere to the parent Govcrement. And who. now, North or South, in Europe or America, looking into history, shall pre sumptiously say that because of ci il war j the iv-union of these Stales i impossible ? War, ind-t-d, while it lasts, is disunion, i and. if it lasts loti"- enonrdi. will lv finnl eternal separation first and anarch v und desiotism atterwnnl. II.hpb T wi-.i.M hastrn peace nor,-, to-dar. bv cver' Luno- i .n l: Are there nliv-icil rn:iv il.i-b r.n.W re-union ii'piTiCt.ibie ? None. Where 1. uiiivii 1 1 i J 'I .1 1.4 4'i. 1 4 I J - i I ; 4 1 u oth-r can st- lo not control, riers ur.ite : but mountains, dex-its, and .great bodies I 01 water ) 1 tivcawe; .vpprate a j eo le. Vast Crests origiiially, aiid the lakes now. !iso itmie u not verv i widely or wholly from the Canadas. '. though we sjeak. the same language, and I are similar in m: nneis, laws and ii.tltu- tions. Oiir chiet tiaig:b!c livers run ; fn-ai North to South. Most of our bays I and arms of the sea take the same direc ! tio!i. So do our rai.r:s of mountains. ! Natural causes all t' nl to Union, except :i5 between the Faci'sc cxast and the i country east ot the K cky mountains to ! the Atlantic. It is l' manifest dest'myV' M iiioti is empire. Henv, hitherto we have continuailj- extended our territory: ; and the Union with ii, .South an 1 West, ; Tlie Iouisiana purchase Florid.i, and ; Texas all attest. Wc passed desert and ' torost an-.I scaieU even tl K.vLy nnun ' tains, to extend the Union to the l'acific ; Sir, there is no natural boundary b twecn vallc 1 he AuegtiCiii-S are no longer a Highways asrvnJ them everv- barrier. where, and the railroad now climbs their summits and spans their chasms, or pene trates their rockiest sides. The electric telegraph follows, and, stretching its con necting wire along the cloud-, there miu des its vocal lightning with the fires cf heaven. But if disui.ioni'ds in the East .will force a separation of any of these States, and u boundary purely conventional, is at last to be marked out, it must and will bo i either trom Iike l.ne upon u.c snorcesi . .. a w .1 1.. j trom the no-siav.-noiaing .iun h r. 1 i to be the ge. graphical limit ot aisumon, ! then Mason iUiJ Dixcn's can never be t4.e i line. Next, sir ; do not the causes which, in j ueginniug, i.m-hi i .4 - - : ii.i to I . nion still t-xWt in their utmost lo-ce and thfir ex-j . ..-,i r w 1,-ir wi-ri ii'-v. I ....- . .4 , i tied ..ruinally by the Lng!.;h, tiny woa.d doubtless have loiiowcl the lor-n s of ' .i. ti. ; 4.. l,,n"..- Ni-it. a common i '' , J language, oiv-cT II..' strongest i-Hinenis which bind a people. Had we bven con- j tiguous to CJret Britain, either the cause hvhieh M to a K-panm woaid have i never existed, or else- bee n tpeed.ly re- . 1 1 . 1 . iiril.4-41-4P.il 44' A ,.-4411.1 1 . 4." "T 1114-4 4-4 . ."4. -. IT 4 ' -.mt iK?n n-un;tra as eiiiini una and ,. ..,, ,U. with these were 'similar at ba-t i-t a beahhy liti-v.i of th- l-odyqioliuc . ss. ntiaV.v dissimilar, maniK-i-s. h..d l?s, ' oHit'.nu. d, they lcame .wcrful ex'ii-nt-laws, re'i'ion, .ind institutions of :dl kinds, in; .t-e-ci. s of u-uon. TTe r.unwoeu .... . - ntitttf. Ilf4--n. cx.Pt M.e- II;" ctiinin. n eleienee a irm;... .in.l is r.am. - Hc. fin-l is name. i-. no ani-ng th ! perfic. Ulli 1 stitiition x IU-T VOL . 10 NO. 10. "j'j umuc u e-1 an incni. was a common interest. Variety of climate and soil, and therefore production, implying also extent of country, is not an eltiitnt of s-piixation, but, added to contiguity, becomes a part of the ligament of iatlrcst, and is ne ol its toughest strands. Va riety cf production is the parent of the earliest commerce and trade ; and thce, in their full development, are, sajs between foreign nations, hostages for peace ; an-i between States and people united, thev are the firmest bonds, of Union, Bat after all, the strongest of the many orig inal impelling causes to the Union, wai securing of domestic tranquillity. Th statesman cf 17S7 well knew that be tween thirteen independent but contiguous States without a natural boundarc, and with nothing to separate them except the machinery of similar gcvcrniiKnta. there must be a perpetual, in fact an t4ine pressible conflict" of jurisdiction a:.d h. intcrcst. which, there being no ether corn- " mon arbiter, could only be t rminalwl hr the conflict of the sword. And the statesmen of 1SC2 ought to know 'that two or more confederate govcrnment, made up of similar States, having no nat ural Imundary either, and separated enly by di:Tcreiit governments, cannot endure long together in p?ace, unless one or rr.ore cflhezibe cither too pusillanimous for rhairy, or too insignificsint to proveke it, or to wiikk to resist aggression. TLfsc, sir, alorg wi'di the Citabli-sh-mc-nt of justice, and the securing of the general welfare, and of the blessings of liberty to th-.rus.-l.es and their josterity, made up the causes and mo.ivs.s vhich impi l'e-1 our fathers to the Union at firtt. And now, sir, what one of tl em is wanting? What one diminished ? On the contrary many of them are stronger t eliv than in the beginning. Migration and intermarriage have strengthened the ti-s of consanguinty. Commerce, trade, and probietic-n. have immensely multi plied. Cotton, almost unknown here in 1TS7, is now the chief product and ex port of the country. It has set in motion three-fourths of the spindles of New Eng lnJ, nJ glvon .T1oi-mcnt. directly or remotely, to full half the shipping, trade, and commerce cf the United States. More than that : co'ton lias kept the eaee between England and America for thirty years ; and had the peop!e of the North lieen as wise and practical ns t he statesmen of Great Britains it would have maintained Union and ieac here. But we are beinjr taught in our first ctnturr and at our own est, the lessens which Eng'anel learned through the long and blonly cxperienee of t ight hundred years. We shall be wiser next time. Ict not - T.tcn be. king, but peace maker, and in-h- rit the bhssing. A common interest, then, still remains to us. Ami union for the con. mon da fence, at the ci.d of this war, taxed, in- 1 ... ..r- 1 ... , 1 - I . II - debt d, impoverished., exhausted, as both sections must be. an! with foreign fleet and armies around us, will be fifty-fold more essential tlian ever before. And finally, sir, without union, our domestic tranquility, must forever remain unset ihiL If it cannot be maintained within the Union, bow then outside of it, without and exodus or colonization of the pecj le of one sectie.n or the other to a distant country? Sir. I repeat that two go em inent so interlinked and bom d toge ther e very way by physical and social liga ments cam.o! cxii-t in pence without a common a: bitter. Will treaties bind us ! What Ix-lter treaty than the Constitution t What more se.lfmn more durable Shall we settle our disputes, then, by arbitra tion and coniprcmise. Si.-, let us arbi trate arid compromise now, i.iside of the Union. CYrtah ly it n id N? n.me as crsy. Ar.el row. sir, t- i ll th s- criminal cau ses and inoiivcs v. h:e-h imjocd to unirn at first, must add-d ce:tain artificial ligaments, wl.Ieh eighty years cf associa tion under a cummt-xi v'ovemraent liave mot fully develop, d. Ci.itf aaiCTrg therse are ca:iss. steam n.o.igr.tien, railroads. express companies, ti e p st olTice, the j n,v,spr , :, ss, a:,d temble regent j ol good and evil mixe,! -sp-.nt cf heUtli, ! and ve-t cobhn ii.r.neu it free. lue .- r. . - . . i-i gentlest ndi.ister of truth a:.d liberty: when enslaved, thc uppli"s! iasfruuH-nt f fulMliood and tyrmny 'he magnetic tele praph. All these ha multiplied the sperl or the qu.miity .f trade, travel, rrmmiuiiratiiiii. miirm'.ion. and intcr- course ofall kinds Ivtwtvn tle different v,,,...l-Viiim:l thus. - : vo uma a-trni-v.:-. .i...-.., ...v.. .. l cb.-ii-inble. Kirial. :.:. wntitic. until I oi.ai uaoi.'. K-iai. --.-ii-.o. i.iiwji - crr-.r. d r.nA mi-V- taimtxal : lb -ari 7'j '.'wf.j 1lr