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THE NEW YORK HERALD. NEW YORK, SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 27, 1847. Pites wwe Conus, THE REV. HENRY GILES! DISCOURSE | feisarebronirfash rine ume dnethesiodac- fysnte'a'aitentara"aPeu af sutiaat | Hy Sve Menta ind tanshey ot petrine "| Bet netted atythed Tova treet "Bagh We | APP OE OS Sheer, torsandthemselves. An o! ON THE ry permease. Every where, but in Ireland, wit ih power and with promise. From the d: SPIRIT OF IRISH HISTORY; Mi somes the Fin bien J but seldom—and when it com f nature? Is this order of fatal and tual necossity ? | al and perpetual necossty 7 LEGISLATIVE PROCEEDINGS) nd the only necessity thot be jprings from misrule, ent, and disunion. Let there be buta uni peo: | ad it cannot be longer thus. Let divisions be abo- | f by wholy love of couvtry;—combined interests Senate, combined activity will issue io Apany, Fob. 26, 1847 ee possession. » wealth of capital—wealth of shill—wealth of indnstry-— people are more a ped then the Irish, through wealth of muscle. a uod affections Appeal successfully to or paralyzed le them es you pl Kevlgn ex sat ded fore: a ; commans Yeomanry, that indulgence coult have mada loyal @r | theic taxes, und that you can increase their loaf — on 1HR a, AMEND ite et paleating emong ihe ave made er | th perease thet : ot civilized humanity was filled wit! , carried bi y to the ranks of England's enemien, ¥ would gein power wit! eo . appeal Causes of Irish Distress Examined, c\iniisn{bome Deating with fencien und | end labor So thelt mackots, Amd abeorte wih whet s | %0 (eit @ontineate’ Show them thst: yet weald & ring magnanimous ions. Genius and glory had burst | solemn retribution the cot jueaces return wy ireland the giory that has deperted—that you AND SOME OF 178 RBMEDIBS INDICATED. SiSnoodoriight opon ibe world. The (Cudel ayatom cree | Sheet retewbution the consequences, Terma resirivog her vational harp, abd te kind t party names be lost in frishmen; re Rafa a bs rye ent pe $1 iis copreenion hed bees inp. | "Bie Sases agains | Rex elias seas aoee chler teate | ce daskate tha Ccnmias enacts fae tae further en, but bred courtesy yet remained; its violence | antry of Ire! were, om wit muesli 4 mn Daltvered tn the Sew York Tabernasle, On way’ reprened, but its hercic spirit had not been | aad-are, Catholic. ‘The laws, theretore, agaiust the | You woul! re-ope the doors ot her senate, ar Bil its | will the land of a common Gansilerdilan od tha sation \soranes ante Le ‘Tuesday Evening, February 23. | quenched. ‘he courage of the savage warrior had | Catholics, were so man’ ts interesis | courts wiih the eloquence of her statesmen But, to un. | mon heart ;—and then, Delis ooh | given way beforo the chivalry of the humaner soldier. | of the landlords themselves ; were, infact, #0 many turiffs | derstand « people, you must live with them; way. you nd,coronets be rent, ton, and other pardone ‘The cry of * uffering millions is wailing through the The deminion of superstitition, tov, had been broken. | against their wealth. Uncertainty of title distui in- | must have within you the life of their life. Aad without | A virtuous populace will ri while, of citizens, and to ref 5 and three thousond miles away, though itis, it | Buta rigid utilitarianism hed not yet taken its plac the soil withered under imperfect cultivation ; | this understanding of « people, you will vainly try to And stand, a wail of fire eround their much loved isle.” nations ; on * ..| The spectres of night had vanished, but dreams of the m of proprietors left the Laborers without pro ‘kK on their sentiment. You cannot work on that | The course of these ob: falls piereingly on our ears, and siflictingly onourhearts’ | wonderful and the lovely still hovered eround imagins. | tection, and the owners without profit, Only meugre pt You have a rympathy with their heart. You must | {ui topics ; but we w ‘The roar of ocean bas but borne it to our hearing with | tion, The earth was vot bare, nor the heavens empty. | harvests wero gathered from exhausted fields. Trade | fully appreciate their virtues ; you must have that also | if days which are gone h ‘s wilder energy. jt is the shriek of humanity out of the ‘The merchant and the money ehanger began to rule the | had no scope in impoverished citi Tho peasantry | in you which can penetrate the spirit of their vices. | days that are to come may cheer us with bright and g TELEGRAPHIC, the eame to the the Judiciary. No question was taken The Senate then took up the bill »ppointing commis- siouers to codify the la’ The bill wos debated at : lepgth, but no conclusions arrived at. city ; but Queen Mab was not yet dethroned. She had | were starviug, ond the gentry were poor. This gentry, | Herein has been the power of O' onnell It has not all | cious hopes. Ifa soil the most fertile hos borne. be depths of jts calamity. It is the sound of a mighty sorrow | Jai hor ihiey mpize in the greenwood shade, She had | poor but luxtrious, lived upon entates that. were, mise: | been in the geaius of the mman nor has st all been in the | s'arving peasantry ; if noble rivera have flowed unbur- | Assembly. thet rises above the war of elements, and comes fresh | yet her dancings in the moon-lit glen ; the practical hud | rably deteriora they were in pristine freshness ; | wrongs of the government. Mach of tho secret lies in | dened to the sea; if capacious harbors have been ruffled , ° if ini Feb 26, 1947. ternecs . Aw not banished the romantic, and the soul had her philoso- | and, doing nothing to enrich the coil, they would have | the profound insight which le has ever bad of the chax- | by no treighted keels ; if mines of wealth have sium- Avwarr, . nae pegs praca) nu hadoer . i aom Phy, as well es the soases., Columbus had opened new | from it the u'most rerts; ond. thence they ‘became im | acter of the people—the complate ile: people are starving, and starving even unto death. Food | worlds, and the old world hailes him asthe Mosce of the | debted, and thence they became ombarrased. To dig | ualure with theirs. Hi wor , thet at the best was wreteked, andybut rarely sbundant, is | seas. Dreams of sunny regions—of Edens in the shea they ad efor gaet i to Dees they were i Lng m4 Paste secs of & meas yd him, aud — co its errs RES ee 3 ne saliooes a now wanting altogether—existence which, with multi- | —@! Eldoradoes in the tracklesa hills, wafted longing | They begged pensions, places, sinecures ; aud no wor! ' of these hear is own heart keeps time. e | rivers are yet majestic, and will not always be a soli- Lirg I x—C R —We do fancies fro: and thoughts flew fast far | waeso unjust or mean which they were not willing to do | Irish wristocrat has po such unity with the people ,| tude. The broad and sheltered bay, that now mirrors 4IPE INSURANCE: PTAIN KATHBONE e tudes in Ireland, hed ever beens struggle, ia now denied ea oct koa erbeettert for gov era i govecument are Whe Gata te he has. scarcely an exteraci acquun'ance with | but the mountains and the heavens, may yet reflect tne | NOt recollect that we have, for the last six months, ‘upon the hardest terme, Famine stalks gawutly through | { earning started from le: Gaming, gormandizing, profanity, licen- He hes not the alfection of a native, end | snowy dropery of many a gallant ship; and the hills on | uttered a word about life insurance, according to our . became aristocratic distinctions. Honor there ‘# the impartiality of a stranger. His life is. @ sort | which now ti le ragged and dejected shepherd wanders, | wont. But the omission has not been from any change because fication of his | bered untouched in the sleeping earth, still | do not de | The Canal Bill was taken up, and was under consider. are res.stless ; for they | spuir for my country. The soil is theer Yet in its beauty, | ation the whole day to the hour of adjournment. jen sleop the lané ; hunger staggers by the wayside ; mortality | losophy peured forth her eloquent thoughtfui listened with enraptured dasolates the peasnat’s hearth ; and these poor homes | filing the earth with her music, aud Action wes delight which, bare before, werelyet contented, by « mysterious | ing maskind with rare enchantment, and religion wa: Poetry was and the man who shot nce for his birth. He woul! vot be an Irishman; | may yet yield up their treasures to the light. Nature ia | of opinien, touching the im ance of the dut; be au Englishman. He looks splonetically | not dead. Nature is not dead in the works of creation | part of thore who cannot rd to die; rather trooper ances- in the soul of man; nature ia not dead, but ever in its | we supposed that enough had been said ; but the 8 He then oauty covers and supports us. No foolish | death of a friend, and the discomfiture to others upon the Foil on which he hus bad dry up the kindly breast of earth, or con- | followed thereupon, leads us to renew our suggestions the misfortune to be hy bes had the still as of the clouds; or shut out the glory of | with more success, we hope, than to him who promised kreater misiortune to b yet survives: survives in her limitless | that he would see about it. And we have another incen- hot ¥o mach & pr sin her eternal youth; and the people, | tive in the statement that Captain Rathbone, who was than a patron; loon Gide burying oll brains with her soloma und proteucd dis- Visltation of Providence, Lesapparstieed (~" in wes sounding the depths of human 4 Baco: mourning end ruin. Multitudes are perishing : that ‘ect | jntelject, and calling from their ¢ the energies of admits neither ef doubt nor of dispute. Multitudes | endless progression Shakspeare ishiog * that is es certain ne it is terrible | beauiy, those wondrous c: Nt anes wot higuity what they are er where: the |the universal life of man impoverished, are not destroyed. No wrongs n_ his passage to Livesreal a few weeks since, fact is rtilt most horribl end mest appalling. Were | Spaniard—in soul, table éuties might have be areceiver, and ssidom a bestower. This opposition of no wars to render them ined an insurance of $5,000 upon his life—a sum the in the depths of an Afri wil. | sent forth amon, apensing blessings, taking the interior feeling between tho higher and the lower classes savage influence, they not very large, indeed, but whieh, with a litte other ersecution, iound their reward, in being | ia Ireland, is lamentably exemplified by a corresponding by those whom they served, and in bei contra t of external circumstanc Irish society is tested by those whom they governed. If any ons living antithesis, of which the peer and tho peasant ai thiok this tone exeggerated, then I ark him to look at | no fanciiul extremos. ‘Ihe peasant shows what priva- the memoirs of Sir Jonah Barrington, in which he may | tions life can endure; the peer with what indulgence it rudy bis leisure, the manners of Irish gentlemen in | can become a bu ‘Tho peasant works, but does the lastcentury. The picture, too, is painted by one of | not eat. The peer bat does not work.” ‘The food 3, DY one, mae shored all their partial of tho peasent is also th for claret, for pension: ; injured ; but yet not degraded, nor ruthlessly depraved. | From property, may do much for those who are dependent ; nay, a sum which in itself, may keep the wolf from the door, and enable one or two, with tee] economy, to live comfortably —Phila. U. 8. Gaxette, Feb, 27. he cheerful Distressing Occusrenck —Mr. J. R. Ackland temper, the affectionate tho hopeful | was found dead yesterday morning about day- enthusiasm that spri lastic from every sorrow ht, in the of Parker's Hotel. Mr. A. retired at = The hour now seems dark in Ireland, but the light is | late hour the evening before, and it is generelly sup- not quenched It is only for @ season obscured. The id made the fatal from the attic window of his nd broad—it rests heavily over the shiver height of forty-five or fifty feet from the is most di and it filled with | in a state of sleep or somnambulisi is ohi illy | dreadfully mangled and bruised, side, his arm, wrist and ulder it From a long escaped with the Liberty had begun to know her gathering courage to maintain them ims bad already lost jo the contest agains! | the: pataral justi Priests and princes bad ceased to be | comb: gods, and the people were fast rising to be men. Com-| Events rapidly proceeded to bring relief to Ireland, u merce had enlarged her boundaries; wealth had increased sanyo to bring freedom. Cornwaltia was captured at | crop ita eoterprise; independence had grown with industry ‘orktown, and America sprang into her glory, from 2 | sows not; The course of freedom went nobly onward Britain had volunteers arose in Ireland | the crop humbled Lesa end Hollend, after one of the most he- ith arms in their hands, demanded roic struggles in the history of patriotiam, had cast off nry Grattan gave their passions her yoke. While Europe was thus rejoiciog in spread- rtled from the apa | he hi jog grandeur, the fairest island on its we: border, ‘and the guilty were struck with fear with every means of prosperity and glory, lay like a of a prophet. Grattan called Ireland ruin at midnight, where pirates had assembled to divide of most sorvile degradation. He put their pluoder, in blasphemy and in blood. James ef | brave words into her mouth, and a new hope into her Scotland, the successor of his mother’s slayer, treated | heart, and although upon his own Lips the werds alter: | keepers. ‘The finest of t unfortunate Ireland with no gentler policy. Without | wards sunk into complaint, and the hope withered to | deserts of the most squalid misery. accusation of sedition or rebellion, he alienated six | despondency, he was not the less heroic on that account. | them in on rare occasions; and, aud for fertile or barren; for | The cloud may break in tempest; but atiline quert was held, and dict rendered in it makes none to the pea- | ty will come when the hurricane has spent i with the facts stated.—Norfelk Beacon, Feb. 25. jant, his lot iw still th and the storm h away. But no tempi Sc aap ee ee ee possibly, come ‘The cloud may dissolve in rain; | New York any New Haven Katroav.—A ve froshness, where it had only given gloom; | corps of engineers, under Mr. Anderson, formerly sea K ardor of the beams which it had connected with the Western Railroad in Massechusetts, fed by bring lightning: lightning are now in the city, locating the route of this important ‘The owners are in the sunshine on the gras road Its junction with the Hartford road will be in the revel in the vietnity of the railroad bridge, spar te think of the moral atmosphere ¢ s trom their owners, and colonized them with | Speaking at one time of Ireland, he asserts that she iso | midst of want. Suppose yourself'a guest on one of these now hange | Rock." The track will follow uj im the basin, his countrymen. The natives wandered on their own | nation ; speaking of her ugain, he says— [sat by hor | oceasions. ook around you on the scene! —the prince: | around and over Ireland. {tis not to continue. (ied is | und probably vasa directly on the towing path between soil, as strangers, and as vogabonds. cradle—I followed her hearse ;” but always, he was her | ly park without, and the ornamented hall within; slope, | in his universe, and guides tho nations in their way -— | the St, John's block and Dwight’s building.—New Haven dene in revenge and retribution, during the terrible it- | champion, and ho was her friend. Lowly ‘us she was, | woodland, garden, hill, daleand river, glowing in the | We will hold to our Koodly trust, and in the, strength of | Palladium, a0) f 1611. which occured in eign of this | when he entered upon life,he determined that she ahould | outward prospect; the inward view, that of kingly resi | that ournest trust—wo will drmly believe, that be has = je man’s son. Deadly passions mingled together in the strite, | not so remain. He caused her to arise august and ma | dence furnished for every refi ts slements in the hurricane, and the blood of reformer ic before her tyrants, bound as she was with their fet- | with adorned | rch blessings, yef, in store for ireland. Where Eccrestasttcat, Triau.—On the opening of the rors, statues, pictures,—replenished with | often we ean see nothing but evil, our gracious Father | court this morning, afier the reading of the pro- of Romanist swelled a common torrent was withtheirsack cloth. He called | whatever can delight the fancy or feast the | is Dd ig good: and we will so believe it now, | ceedings of yesterday, and sume other portant busi- jland, too, became convulsed with trouble. Charles | on to er might, and taught her the strength | sen ‘hink, then, of a tenant asantry | for sad, sillicted, mourning Ireland. Oh! land of my | ness being transacted, the arguments of counsel in the voted to ingratiate the Irish ; and, to aconsiderablo | that yet slumbered in her breast. fle we fearless | physically more plorable than the serfs of Turkey; | heart, of my fathers, and my birth! I will ever | cate were commenced by Hugh Davey F-vans, keq , on extent, he sueceeded. But their assistance availed the | accuser of herenemies. He dared the villains into open | and when you have thus thought, look calmly onthe as: | keep’ it in my thoughts, that God is looking dewn | tho part of the church, contending for ths conviction of and, ere his blood was well- | light th npled on her rights, and that battened on | sembly beiore you. Here, gathered at joyous night, isa | upon you with pity and with grace, and that he } the Rev accused, on all the charges made ogeinst ‘him. had Cromwell,of the iren | her mii He loved her with an enthusiasm that | throng of the nobie and the fair; men of gallant Dearing | willjeall you up more brightly from’ your culami- | No decision will be mado in the case to-dey, as the * It is not my pro: | on!ydeath covld quench. She was the nn of his | and women of surpassing beauty. Lights stream over | ty. The times, indeed, seem bad; but snatehig: w | ments of the counsel will most probably eccupy n if my power answered to tho task, to | soul, the devotion of his life. Mighty ta kh quence, | d it eastern stor @ its blessings. Plenty will come again ; aud humi- | whole of tho day’s session —Balt. Patriot, Feb. 25. draw @ complete moral portrait of Cromwell. 1 am | he was yet mightier in his patriotism. The effects of his lity, and gratitude, and mercy, and penitent ond softened f hi jon to Ireland ; und, in that uence are left in the history of his country ; and in hearts will come along with it. Peace will be establish: | exterminator. [| no | me, it would be vain, as it would be impertinent, to de- | music floats upon the perfumed air, and grace rules the | ed—confidence will come with peace—capital will follow | ur ; and, if | hod, en | scribe in my feeble words, the power of such speech as} mazesof the dance. When you recollect tne haggard | confidence—employ ment will increase with capital—edu- pendently of my inclina- | his. Speech that made the proudest quail. Speech that | country through which you passed to arrive at such a | cation will be + esired—knowledge will be diffused, and oer paiwent moralist approve, or whether he con- | shivered and prostrated the most able and the most ini- | mansion—whea you recollect the hovels whichaicken- | virtue will Frow, Pith knowledge. “Yet, even if these | Zu rcaraing hero 6? demn, the world slways enthrones will, and power, and and political | ed you on the way—th> sad faces that stared om you as | things should not soon be; if ali that is now anticipated | the above reward nd that which it enthrones, it worshipa. How you went along, that constantly your reveries | should long be hope deferred, and many a heart should TRE MA much in Cremwell was the honesty of a patriot ; how ormed | to grie'—-when you recollect the fever and the hunger | sicken in waiting for relief, yet | will not despond; | will that, as you travelled by them, appalled your very soul: | not despond for Ireland; | will not despond for humanity; | Lghtning, as beat all that you see in this vbode of grandeur appears un. | will entertain no doubt in the Agency which guides the d_stoic grandeur, he was | natural--it soems @ brilliant and yet an agonising vi- | world, and no mistrust inthe destiny whereunto the among evil, exalted, and | sion—an illusion by some evil gonius, powerful to | world moves. We cannot, in this condition of trial, look Jadsome fancy, which | delight—terrible to destroy. You cannot rec for the extinction of evil; but we may for its ameliora- RN ind He was of the | it with your ordinary associations, with your sent tion. ion; but we may hope | } it nd repiae harmony—it is incongruous—a rejoicing in an | for progres not presumption, the remotest shanty of it Wildest prairie { would net insult it sympa appraling to thom; @ am not kere to plead s cause; the ears woum! me are its burning edvecsies, aod my feeble stanuneringe ore the poorest Rieties bition : wh that are beating in theto hearts for the millions thet look tir gp aettarasy daha eet th la th Jprohans diceese i he ‘ erefore, @ yn the 1 willes vor | 07 site parties to t! MID to ravive eo whole qychun of ertseh tale Es onky's pert, | Sebscion corten ener blston whole, t te seek out whonce it has origiaated, and how it can be | eareer in Iraland show him to have boon most erwel. aod chi to trace some of its causes, end to indicate ARKET AGAINST THE WORD. “AT BEEF! FAT BEEF! The subscriber wishes to inform hie friends and the public in general, that he will offer for sale on Saturday next, the 27th in <nem raised by ‘Thomas Meade, Green ¥, Connecticut—two more raised by Mi ith Bolem, West Chester county. It has be by our beat judges, to be the best that has bee ale in New York for some years past. Also ‘a feast ina famine ship—e dance ina charnal | but faith; ith in prophecy— | mutton and veal, sold at stalis No. 13 and 14 Cen Of ite remodies. I must of courre confine myseli nh Cart bridal in a sepulchre—your heart becomes con- | faith in Providence, justified by history; for hi ribet: 4 Cente Market, to a fow striking points, not alone by the limits ot our in the wrong. , Your head giddy, your imegivation confused and | tne record of Providence, in the development of ag time, but the requiromants of the occasion The occe- ot each | rock political Europe with its tremendous earthquake. | sick : you look uy social chaos that bewilders y faith in prophecy, tified by prom: for pro- | sion is cbe whieh will not tolerate much thet admit+ ution, he wasthe man | Hoary’dynasties staggered to their foundation. Di and you turn from the whole with loathing and phecy has ever been a voice in the heerts of really of dispute, and one which requires all the com-| for w misnon of demruction. The Irish, on pid I d, and looked aghast. Che social system in Ireland is disjointed and defectiro. | God’ inspired ones, with the promise of butter cilfotion thet truth cen sanction. It will, therefore, be | accounts, were peculiarly to inau ught fresh desolation to Ireland | 1 tim | and better things. Sastained in the power of | 4 in aualysing enusos ia this leclure, and in spe-| were the jaduerenta of defeuted royalty hich w po ak und gibbet being goue through, this faith, whether I look before, or whether | | _ ci ing dies, to take as broad und common groupe | were not simply prelatists, YY an after p led to this horr of due gradation. | look after—there ncouragement—there iv good. In Mention an dun as, with my opinions, itis possible for me to teke. |i | offensive; but they were pep’ and that was | signalized Kilwarder, and by the 'y the: the retrospect, I behold but blanks—on inany a spot * “YOUR 4 Ana street, will be, also, my desire to give no candid or just mas | hideous iniquity. They were not only aliens eculion of the mmett. You all where tyrants had built their throm for eternity when offence ; aad, though such 4 man may dispute my posi | they wore worse than alions ; they wore outca: Near the Muse the | know the story of his heroism, and his love. You they dared in their pride and in their guilt to say, “We | —Nisw yOoRK rw 5 tions, | trust ihat Ne will have no complaint to make | doomed of prophocy—the seuled of anu Christ, ‘iihey | know how he sell iu the prime of a most manly’ autuce ure Gods, and who shall dostroy us!" Where uy NEW) LOWE ANDNE WABHUNSNNGS. egsinst my temper. The causes of Irish distress many | were the modern Cenaanites, and bo wos the modern ‘know how a true aod besntaful spirit laid her bro. | seems a gulph, which one Cannot pesto companion with | stition had muttered her midnight mysteries in the dark- Wiskon Oth soemenes har see eh ee find wholly in the chorecter of the people. On this | Joshua—the anviuted of the Lord, to deal judgment on | Ken heart upon his grave. Your own Washington Ir | the other. To fill up this wide interval, there is of heathendom, I tind but noisomo ruius; the screech ason,, betnhen.. bie tog?) we canwet eiford to enlarge ; and, thet it may not | che reprobate. And judgment he dealt with veugeunce— | ving has told you this io words of raiubow light; your | wanted active and enterprising midile clas e owl und the cry of the ruven. I trace the way of | N on Mouday, the Ist dey of March, Lew mm our way as ope il grant, tor the | with vengeance that knew no touch of mercy. isis track | own Irving, whose liberal genius loves the good of pt in the learned professuns social st over many a battlefield on which truth and | Bi To'clock, A. M., makiog her usual | ag /6 of argument, thet the charsoter of the people is as | in ireland muy be followed over ruins which yet every land, and when he gives their annals none can add reland (renin oly to the ownership of laud 'y were fought on which truvh and liberty | F k South Amboy, Perty Amboy, Bet i HE erg dngeag mores my ote esh We cactrace him as we do @ ravenous auii beauty 10 tue record. You of an exiled in Irela as not accumulated with capi victor I behold along that track the wrecks | ' Tu'ts, and (heleea, ving in} tho blotches where he lay to rest, or by the bloody fr 2 | Emmott among you. Shroud ments where he tore his prey. The Irish peasentry atili | tiesin secred sleep You g speek of this man with (hove vivid impressions which, o} in desth you bi given bim « p ail passions, terror alone cen leave. ‘hey ullude to him | Among the mighty spirits which have the most grievous veed of Ireland is the wi im the living vhraseology, which only can prompt, | land, [ will mention one who fn this sad period was pre | ty in occupation, Externally, Ireluod is fi which moves us nearly, und, therefore, moves us strong | eminent. Iullude to Curran, the glory of the Irish bar | for commerce; internally she is adm: 7 pi Tn eto him —not as if he wero # shacow i | Mostexalted in his oratory, ind most gel his use | manutactur Commeree and manuleoure: {liberty, he | industry has not risen to ambition ; and thence, @ freeman’s | in England men clim® from labor to a Ireland \men descend from aristocracy to thousand errors ond the prints of a thousan ond I see thi Meturning, wiilleave New York from the foot of Barclay street, at 2) o'clock, P.M. for ) Bruoswick, landisg as D | above ‘| sboat i034 o'clock b ward, ai advancing man—triumphant man - the light | usual or of heavenon his brow ; the fire of freedom in his eye ; | No B—4 ration of righteousness in his regenerated woul ; | ‘Me ¢waers there: nt destitution are the failure of the J J New Brunswick, 23d Feb ware, 1847. 125 Iw two centuries, but aa if he were an agen: | of it, he was ever what the true man would wish to be only train the people to skill and independen rend foot on of buried oppres+ions; and his New a . inn . hose of recent days. Stop a# you passa laborer on the road: | if hus power onabled him. the defender of liberty, the | Lieve the evil from the pressure of an excessive popula alted voice ile joriously aloud into the lofty THE PROPRIETORS of Steambours to. it is true, is side in trelaud Ask him to teil you of the ruin before | champion of the wronged. With « moral intelleci of the | tion The soil is the only source of lite, and out of thx | hullelujahs ot enlightened ond of: wncipated nations. | wishing Bells hang. wonldde walle pay 8 curious vegetable, and the people of irelond, who youon the hill. You will heer nim describe it in lan | widest grasp, be had an imagination of subtle delicacy | come many evils Oue of the worst ia, tbat of extreme ———_—— | Witeh,, Governor, iroa bort John Stevens, Worceert’ Tee fed upen it for generations, are nc Kunge far more postical and far more picturesquo than | and of gorgeous wealth. And this intellect, impulsive | competition. Every vacaut spol becomes Beto:va Craims.—The offivinl article, of which | veiler’Thvmas Powell, ke ,pand testers Ye heel Ratt or most provident of nation Teen but somewhat in manner, suca as this:— | with a superbuman fervor, aud tiis imagination, lyrical | deadly strife It lv generally given to that porsou who the following ts a translation, has recently been | "airoved styte of Bell Haug “and stroug, and of things, i 4 ‘Och, the euatle a'the Crogans, that Com. | ax the very soul of poetry, became in their union an en | offers the bighest price, and shouts the loudest promuve communicated to the Depar , by the charge ; “#rrated for one vear, by bi * y oe weil, the blaekguard, took away from them. But, muy | thnsiasm, that dured the lo'tiest heights and gained them | He soon flads out in his despair, thuthe has uniertaken Ne @ 0 st wi pa they di'-t Aight, while Oghtin’ wasin them, the poor | But, though souriug, it was not solitary. If it mounted | too much. ‘The landlord has spent no caph al un it; the | 'sMit4 of the United Sate Asta a fellows here's no strivin’ agin the devil -the | upward to the #kier, it was borne thither on the waplin | tenunt has none to spend; and ot the produce which is Loy eta age Adah a te and every body knows that Cromwel. | tions of all gearrous interests It carried others to ite | torn from ste savage Lukedness, the Dusk goes 10 the | rademmijicar my re ti ees a tary 18, 184i) | ‘was hand anc glove wid the ould bey; | owa proud ciimbings, and they for the moment traus | absent proprietor and to the established church The u y lhe, are not singul een but too often her View they are stra me! ix he was, a» shure as there's fis in the say, or | ported from the lower earth, burned with its electric fire, | soil deterorates ‘The landlord will not lower his de- 1A. M D-BRIGHAM,, Jr. Ey ba bodes mn in Vnere’s io malt where tue wagabone | and neene godlike in ite communicated lustre. How | i pads i) tenant cannot pay ose aad ta) ejected *| n Os tease i RTE Fi T SF skics above, or from the farm which the Braney’s | various is the eloquence in wnich that opnient spiri’ | Che landlord gives the place to another, wad the Tune , P = OW CH KUEN ON—The steamahy we thali put ascend to pese—the whitelivered thraitore— | wu:d expression! It is wit, rosdy and oxhaustics ; | toneut knows'uot where to Gud a shelter, ‘Though pre lien we captor npltogr nag | SOUTHEMNER. Capeain M. Berry, wilt a k their causes ‘are within the Which be made in the walls where | peeing as ihe pointed steel, or lambeat os a ray | law has driven him ont from hie familiar hearth, na. | t {60 law of May 1, 1642, that the pay Febiisiy. teal Peck slip, oa ry ordinar wiry, aod the intelli fe Square Cogan-—a bed in Heaveu to his soul—wer | of ligut; now pluyiul as a gleeful child, ard then | ture compels him to return. He will prowl around the | \{gntieane of tranefer of the pablie avbtin the Depart wil explainable. 1 sball epesk on causes of twi | ailled wid Mx fine darlnt sous, as strappia boys | mis hevous as a merry fond. It is humor in all qneer | miserable avode that gave his poverty « retuge—the hut | nar Kinguce at Brawccla, savy be slo ede: reeakt | Freight wall be re histerical, and one secial. And first, of the ina long summer's day. Och ! | avslogir shapes of oddity —in ali lights and bues | that gave his little ones a heme ; the roof that shielded | "iteclors of the treusury ut Atewerp, cheat Nivess all bills of lading a1 Ireiand has long been a courtry of agiation ra struh ; bud, Cogan was « | offantasy.{t is sarcasm which lashes its victim to despair | the mother of his children. He cannot reason— his blood | [ees tomselt or Nemuce » » Bruges, | Por treight or pas nts of discord have be in bi F heart goed to seo—my vardi, ay it | [tisspatuos which wrings the heart; which touches it | rushes back to ite fountain~ his whole nature in exci |“) Be. bea, the provisional titles is fers ctr aise pine. rosht out of your stomach, the black | in every herve, where agony is borne ; which searches | ted ; his brain is convulsed in dslivium ; he is mad in his owt day ia wi 1 the poor tev: wy gracdmother sa, = tbat be the sume small principalities arife was consta tuil and ple n \ ‘om and af it in every fold where th» smallest drop of grief can be | bouswiess distra and in his madness he slays, | 3°" Ay concedle, It is denunciation. And, here he is greatest verlyp his blameless successor. Hus former landlord + oad sialon atthe poisons tachiods anne of ull, How does he exhibit ‘the wrong door | is, possibly, a magistrate. This mugistrate hands bim lot, Wh. the diteriece cf tas How does w the transgressor his ways! | to the constable—the constable delivers him to the c quent) How does he display the tortures of an accusing con- | judge. After due forms of trial, the judge consigus hima whi reerss 0 he sickness of a guilty soul; the apathy of | to the executioner, and the executioner closes the tra: irtue of the law of December 24, 1916.— the damnation of remorse. And no matter, who | gedy. This is but one of a hundred, that vary litle in | (jy this deposite a rece:p! shall be delivered. for the pro- the wrong doer is, let him tremble, if Curran ie to’ paiut | plot or incident, ‘The scuffold is the stage, with which, | V0 thks Uap cod Sor payment, which shoul. be his deeds. Proud he may be in titles: boundless in and has been the best acquainted, and | Visions! § hg , hardened in the bronze of fashion i ¢ hus witnessed many a terrible drama— ~ FOu DELR sh — ihe lik Al JOHN JARDINE, Joseph Sampeou, taster, ir mediate despatch. Lt or jassege, having very good accommodations, yond at wharf, or to & MINTURN, 87 Routh st stockins efter—av there the inan’s vot born’d o: women, that cap stend sgainst « whelp of hell-—wnd av ch soil. England, previous ds, in order to obtain the detisitive ‘ Ith ; titles remainder of freight or passage, having very handsome of Williem the Conqueror, was # uy ould Nock iver had @ son, for it, bad his name ° a I tranefix him; wherever f ent, bloody, and monotonou: Who does In the rovided for by the fourth vod extensive atate accommodations, apply ou board at —— therefore, though, at the battle of Hastings was Oliver” ‘The cause of the Stuarts—that family, so arb sball rankle; and for the time, at in theso circumstances, rudely as I huve de- | royal decree of December 27. mtd, that rat wharf, oF efthe throne was changed, the integri faithless to their friends, aud 40 fatal to themselves, nex: ind before tho world, naked, bleeding, d them, the sources of enormous evils Pas. | Forel gectee O° December 27. MAM AAR ASAE AY SA lhe LT remained. ‘rela: de up of divad mate ireland the battle ground of faction. Again her nf despised-—to his species a thing of agora, | sions, the deepest and most lasting, wero kmdied and Saas Geb ne lonees the eeane, a FOR GUASGOW.—The New Tine—Kegular la States, when the myrmidons of Heory t green hills were sown with biood—sgain her pleasent | and to himself a thing of shame. Office shall no more me burning by crushing upon ther own | Orosisional t ee Packet—)st of April—The fine fast sailing Bre Tived upon its shore ve soul a ys were scorched with famine. The olics joined that wretched imbecile, Jame: je the protestants, with the persons interest proving those fa justification ef their rights protect him than rank. Is he a Judge, who sullies the purity of the bench with the malice of a partizan? His | th ermine shall not guard him from the advocate’s indigna- yark DAV CARR, 490 tons, Captain Joha Wright, bove, her egular day. OF passage. having excellent ,by ittivatlog them ia those sentiments that al but settlemauts in the ple among the nativ sho cov ld nt have b deposite docu eat hold in reverence. Education was not only but punished. ‘Trade was not advanced, but oom. Limerick im the South. The war —James hod fed. ond W. 4 The payment of the claims subjected to attachment or ly oard, foot of Roocevelt street t ; conquei tion— tribunal which he disgra Home industry was suppressed, and foreign | 9) h° WOUDHUGL sc Min : she would, like England, ha ‘The fortunes of Jumes receiv: | very lofliness, but make hi 4 Was forbidden, Aud, yetmen are tow won- shpoettion, can caly be mode of Brussels, and by the | Tne Ai Br bOICANN HARLEY Caney hole Ba, The spirit of Eogilsh nationalit in the north: | ous. Neither shall a villi tus work should still’ be fel hy, tis not | ublic debt. , PMALON = | Will succeed the Adain Carr, and sail on her regular day, the than it was in the princes of the Ne is work or the obscurity of his condition. he a| greatly over half acentury since any change for the bet | ” r. ere toth April. Tex? ed it with @ huughtiness, oftentimes with is A spy whom government pa; ‘a for perjury? Tho hireling | ter ev vielator of human faith a) fea wh humay navure? A wretch | fiity y #, and steeps hin feet in teers 7 | seen could an. But such a work does not pass What other effects than those which w: be expected? Discontent, that outli \per Birk Ads Glas end their permits immediately ou ods uot permitted in five days mast at rendered them fort je to every neig! CentRrat AMERIC ‘They were the most inordinatel: Jealous of y external interference with the concerns uf t Phe Diarvo de/a Mariana, BEB coe rire ne Mh inst., stat dvices ond. All Liverick did not go of te co t—cal- | provocution—anger, that survives the wrong —disorg: that city from the w be sent to the public srave, . dom, either of a recntur or a spiritual chi Even the women threw themsely face; stolid as may be his de- | zation, thet foll ervitude and misrule— ignorance, he 7th of January, @ WOODHULL & MINTURN, 87 South Keueratons they guarded Kogland with for that tim the city. Nor, did the city pleave the armor of his wicked. | deep end wid that bad legislation had long com oon declared cious with @ commends! revred up her retive institutions, and br Jatent ace But the at gatrenger ho still remained mwenced 1h Lrelumt 1 @ spirit ef cong tinued in a spirit of exclusion. Natios thos perpoiuated, eustained the spirit of wor aged on @ih a fiercences which nothing to mitigate. The ch ie(tains te of propery, of L berty in conflict am org themselves, united against the com. | and of conscience ; and ail thi gs seemed to sugur wel mon fow, and the end ef every maw struggle was io | for peace, tor unity, and fer happiness. Had the victors acd with a hero's couraro. He it be respected, and they Creased opp: aeaon to the people. Covetousness was nd. | been merciful with power, and generous wich suce adow of the reattold. He defender ey must have their ded to the other baser passions ; and rupacity inflamed | hed they been just, nay, hed they been wisely poutic, | ve chent over the dead body of another; and while the pire, and they waved Surrender, but vp terms, which compreher de! the of irelsnd. Limerick capitulated on the part o: all th irish Catholics The capitulation was but signed, wi y ind shake his miscreant spirit with fear, when it | peed, and thi had lost of avirtue Itisnot, how | that law made a the power of Currau’s eloquence, but the purpose | out of idleness—crim ich Las relation to this lecture it w: complication of ent {cannot hastily remove— idleness, | by the Republic of Guatemala, It will b it or @ necessity—poverty, coming | eur readers that the Indicador, of Vera Cr ind misery issuing from both, u nounced that host kes the hope | about bieaking out between th the wisdom of iy incorrect. The @ ber, containg a mi , Gen. Don Ratael C og on the disorde: dor, he states tha apected {rom withou confines, w. w maiked the conduct of her citi st rigid economy should be of the government, and that © GAKBICK, FOR LIVER- aby thie ship will please be on hart, foot of Some, with coward fe encouraging to ree, in the progress of j ond others with selfish plians s, that national instincts king the di ine of patronage. But Curran was | rection will gradually ameliorate national Aogorruptible. In 1798, he labored | ties. Tho Irish people, as one of the most vital trag- e They v ONFIDA from Havre —Ux vessel will th river et mast unavoidably borat 19 the pub fe the anarchy in whieh it hoped for gain. Defeated rebel: | Irelaud might hive been iranquilived, and her prosperity | victim ts expiring on tae gallows for whom yesterda; | ve fully reprosented, according to their numbers, their he et gronca LAE lion brought confiveetion; insurrection wes, therefore, age have commenced Was 8 ee of faction ; , wirh no hi to cheer his labor, h power aud their in ré must grow up in | FOR LIVE RPOOL—Packet ship GARRICK the harvest of adveuturers, roldists of fortune, or rather | +nd fection was true to ite Vilest instincts The legisia | gle# a# manfully to-day for one, who will be the victim | land, teo, a social unily. of will sail Monday, ist March ‘elock soldiera for furtune, gathered like wolves to the battle | ture thut followed this eveut, was intensely exclusive | of to-morrow. He , When honor wos rebel. | must learn to love, and not to ha y | Letter Begs will be ¢ veloc. ‘They were ready to giory in the strife and wo profit by | and it wes exclusively protestant. The whole power of was treason—he | must joia heart and hand to promo @ good of their ° oxpol- pe... versage opp y oa board, at palgane WF it. “Shey evjoyed the soit of the wretches whom they | the country was cy ot © pro estent party, and , Ww! to pity common country. They must have hope tor what is to ad | Ded . % South st. slaughtered ; and the work seemed as grest a pleasure | h@ whole property of the country was in the bands ol ® he was loyal to liberty--when even | come ; they must have pardon for what js passed. The Sow 6 retege om ‘The ROSCIUS, Capt. Eldridge, will sail as the packet of as tue recompense, Exhausted, however, in robbing the| protestant nciooree The Git ection then, of almost to die. The TF 1829 saw the | law 0: tenure m pged ; the tenant must 1. Tho gove st March Me aborigines, they sought rew excitement in drs; ouing Kemsen ia t ther the tosuction of Line d, and now he stands wit! F of his Hotline other | tected ; the lindlord #1 and equality of | he must be made to f iw history of Ireland has had three | his obligations, lik each has had a man fashioned for whment, and the puo ‘41, the parliament of Ireland contended id be punishment on purse Tex tho hen there arose the majestic spirit of | ant, and if he will not do justice .to his country, let | to concur with ail'that was claimed ho asserted, and | him pay severely for his disloyalty. “Relieve the land of | nications bet © achieved. In 1798, the liberty of | the horrible pressure that all in the amount of the impetuous voice of One another; sid tired of Sighting for plunder, wey be- | to annul its treaty,» treaty as solemn Gan, wt fast, to fight for precedence—so it continued to | records—a treaty made in the face tue period of Elizabeth, and though thet brought change | pledged the fi of nations. A, it did not bring improvement ; fer to the confl.ct of rece, | was followed by & code of law wes now added the conflict ‘uf religion. This age ol | ® ehame Upon the reign of N, Flizabeth, which was to Kurope the dawn of many | Made at one time] the cathelic hopes ; this #ge of Elizabeth, which was so adorned and | and which, when grestly so enriched with all that makes an transcendent tne meens of education, the age of Fiizabeth was only for Ireland a heavy end righis ol ciuzens Legislation, ¥ . less night’ ‘The government of El beth, which had so | disastrous Strange, indeed, it Rt were net Mf twere much glory for England gave no promise (0 Ireland. Ua com th | oe milion ler tha swey of Elaabeth, lrelend lay in tempest and | if were not, humen oature Were, iteelf, a Confounding de | ime event t =a ate mS . lusion. It was civastrous to the Protestant religion, | ciated 0 <u despair to resistance, and resistance was | Which it pretended 10 support; it was dissstrons the wa ob#ivate and frequent in Ireland to the rulers whom Eliza | imerests i) Logiead, =e y of privileg ily banishing the Bishop A packet line mn lablished between Amberes and the o ooly that, but it hich Would have been code ROVD & HINCK NA sp FOR BA istamus of ‘o oceans. There ted within a fow right. In 1829, but that liberty given with that sub: | them upon their own groen island, und | aball challonge s for ever asso. | the world to show a happier or « handsomer race—m , vot with that year or that event alone; nerous, OF Women more lovely. Ob ! that Y of Or ae] is connected with the in- - heat ae Tah aintonen ae yeh it promued to sh he etry le of half a century; it is not itiment of nationality. Jota nationality o: peth set above thon Resistaneo was | was disastrous to the party whose policy Mt sm@umed | it set teares in tne liberty. of try, but inthe | (y tod. prejuaice; buta ty" of brotherhood end $2) the popwiation, is round pembers, 11 yoors age, wes acy hOUSC ee #08 disastrous, also, lo ihe woappy poeple whose ener. | liberty of mon; and the tame o Besome wider | pesce. This would be fo A tho day of het reger | 130,000, comprising 7,000 000 famisiee; of these, 47,000. | ioge houses bur th | give it erusbed—bat, that the law of should | aad brighter, as freedom covers the earth, and a slave is | neration. ‘To th ud mong the pa- | 00 belong to 0,500,000 families, ouch possensiog landed | wot atterly feud—that some es idence be given tw | ot “nown in the world. TI et of our le | earih—thet even on earth crime dons not go unpanish. | sudject prevents ux with no on and mis | with sadness. od~ ii Was duasirout (0 He enactors. Maboan uever | Management; and the focial, to which we must vow | #0 green; yet the lot of day, Ue L SHIP BRUUKSOY FROM GLAD igvers will attend to receipt of goods Ail goods not permitted in. days property. ce taatiant bean Covered | Phe Utica Geseite says: Tuesday night was the children has been in teara | COMest nightot the season. Thermometers in this city MINTURN, 67 South st, arate hime! fom his fellows He con sever Driedy refer, prosents us with nothing better We ob- | ani blood. History, whos work at bi » | remedies 0. dag, te 25 don, below sure ot 7B. Be i gr Kberty wer Pompey upon | corve in the clructare of Irish pond t merely that | choly, has written her # Hunger bas | Wednesday. At Whitehall, says the Chronicle, the his country, wili cover his own dwelling with gloom ; | the elements of it istic. — | Mogered in hy in ner dwel eo a eee | nad the misery which he preperes for bis neighbor, will | Thees is, for instance, littie of @ cy and madness in her Nature hi below zero. | I tear lest it bo ob; 5 | Gl bis own besrt with grit. 0K was with (he wuthors | Yet there iy no country on ‘he curtn which so rerp @ Krent largess of Li cover ber plains, aud At Quebec on the 16th inet the thermometer was at raiog the fm stern to us, as it was to | of these evil laws—so sever must Le, while morel rig fod reverences ite mighty names The oid familie! the Lorn of plenty emptied on valos—but | 18 deg. below zero, and in some situations 22 deg. © 10 blame, Who have nmotions; you, | binds actions to eppropriate eons quences, while « God | Gwlic and Sw re successively stripped of their | Sorrow anda curse dabught on all. The ais | piscr Salon o neo.—A young lady named Pauline Johnson, o Eason k CO. of heaven blow upon her ng rchovl at Le Rey, Genesee co mysteriously | aiinson EOS f commited yout | of . aniates herds, but' to wely sires: | Ore on cacuttice Geverse the World vy principiee whieh | opepeanes & xcept those which at And to wolves | @ - ry ibbon, that i committed. Such was es | OO as immutebie as they are holy he possessions iateod had entury eshly—bui they ewell no | atiend to bear ber they were changed owner disappeared on U ring of the 8h ins - the rigor of the | which rpioe bas acquired, aud which wroog controied, |The arutocescy ia Lrelaud, , remained | ¢xil¢. ‘The glorious sea gids her ubout; tor ach y otnee “whieh time’ the hee ass eee | FR OEE PPY Irish, and | B, eoullcaion ; by penalies ; by ail modes vi uarsh re | Spertie one. education is distinct. Their feel uyon a virgin vaud. A face of no copaciues | peurance.-citiar, Y 4 | tie ire "Nu" nZer Nomen « feet,