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‘woud leave on the 20th, in the Humboldt, for New ‘have been lost, and « large amount of property de- etroyed. ‘To constant virtue. Iungary ! no more Danker, is announced. ‘The eteamship City of Pittsburg, from Philadelphia, e ber en proposed “ The Queen,” on whose fins havin; @, personal character, and career,he pronounced | ed by you ‘hourd for Liverpool, put into Cork, Ireland, on the 13th | Bigh ofles, peronal cturnctst. and conser de pronounced | schocls, your Market Hall, and several of your hospitals, sang it With great devction | all raised without an) and fervor, and at the close honored the toast with three | Proofs of the loft, times three cheer. After “The Health of Prince Al- | Perseverance of bert (loud applause)—Mr. Geach, M. P., who was obiig- | tlemen, to state that inno place of Engiand have the elements of your country’s greatness on more solid Last , short of coal, ‘The Defeat of the French Ministry on the Electoral Bil—The | ed by popular excitement to get on the table, to gratify Submarine Telezraph—The Hungcrien-Polish Ball-Kos- | those st the end of the room, gave, in afew words, “the | basis, displaying their activity; in no place I more confi. a 8 on Sultan of Turkey ani the ident ofthe United States’? | dently hoped to see that sympath: suth—Madame Kossuth—The Concert—Austria and the | in connection with the part they had taken in the res | ® Practical result, th Bberty. cries of “bear, hear.’ General Waituninax returned thanks for the United | your own history to ti flories to call men i hange in the position of things in France, ecticn of the bill. tion of thought is truly wonderful. tative was present. There were half « dozen fancy pom py ge ng ap ang IE scaroely 10 we rt direst one Mooney, and 4 sprinkling of waiforas | | fequireze,000 mov, and ighitymallione of forins when | {Dduetry Gen clock, accompanied by his lady. He was ushered | tbe*Pirit of freedom moved through the hall, and nearly | beneticis Goto the hall by six gentlemen with white wands, with | 4° representatives rose as one man, end lifting their | Works for employment, as they are glorivus in the bisto See redieh colors as rosettes, and, loudly and vehemently | Tight arms towards God. solemnly sald, We grant it— | ty of the developement of man's faculties, but requiring ele. eee een Cates Tolee with which Kossuth uttered these words produced | the fluctuations sphers fay, Petzne mad the snaeation of sing Ines, | powerful ect om he aeeombly) hun they spoke | feat Hama, ae wo a8 (0 rent “ d there they swore, a silent: jest, . waiting ‘whet further word might fall from my lips poy Pom reay ho ~—— “<i | Peper Dea al - And for myself—it was my duty to speak, but the gran | de jose who Wor rea oo benumbed my tongue. urning m Se eee tyenwe. sigh of adoration to the Almizhty Lord fut. | cisely the happy condition aud the Oe sis censeh seem, the Wangertens patetet end ia tered mn lips—and, bowing low before the majority | It ts this baris upon which ‘wife were subjected to the trouble of shaking hands | 0! ™¥ , (with nearly every individual in the room Taoby two, | itt the t rene ye wng i speechless, mut Like the enimals proceeding from Noah’s ark, they | D¢T™ paused fcr a room. I stood by the side of M’me Kossnth for more than half an hour. She has an intelligent face, with a ostriam charge d'affaires diately demand his passports, week is son is stone blin!. and bas three child fer American State Stocks. Messrs. Bell & Sons give | COUNT the quotations as followe:— ‘Woited States Six per Coat Bonds, 1°62. United Rates Six per Cent Bonds, 1968.. Waited States Six per Cent Stock, 1867-05. -10) a 105 Borton Giiy Five per Cemt Bonds, isi... 62 8 — end rights, should ever be associat ment has this week improved; and the prices received to-day show 02 advance to have taken place on prices * anti yesterday, The Bourse at Paris has become firmer. Sot: antiolpat OVATION OF KO The Splendid Reception of the Magyar inst. 01 olalism ; another at Birmingham on the same day, and | of nother a; the Hanover Square rooms, in Londo the other (wo will be published to-morrow morning. er-uasively th orter'e brea ake them ia bis erms ond « ive at Mrminghem when Kossu rived and by them he wae | erent exemples of the classical budly cheered Ly e ay A op ceyt pees} fg notle aime and k ae i amidst the cheers of the pec rests, to rutin pr on the mind to look aroun oy F Had as. | for rome other master than the ruins of vanished great. | {cre the im i ‘1 " q things (Hear, go tebe with noble self esteem a place in the grent family of ions; allow me, even in view of your greatness, to he Town Hall. ¥ seen voted to hint om various towns. As the que an t arrived, it was nrtanged thet the ad- | re Sees anculd not be fend. Kossuth said a few words in | to live fog) Tt waa then that my regards tarned | preciaim that I feel proud to be a Magyar. ecknowledgment. promising a Written answer to the ad- | With adm’ ite hat rem ‘The great hall in which the banquet was eptead—a | cbrerver cannot fail to mark in the histories of our past; we ed by ‘noble spartment—was quite full, with the exception, per- hither my sttention wes Grae by the fact that the fatal | strength |, of the side galleries, in which there ed to be | sickness of Kuropean statesmansl o * spare room. The tertainment was given, not by | bitious conquerere—the propensity to centralize every | Ard Slovack brethren against us. the corporation, but by inhabitants of the town associa power. and to govern the people like imbeciles, even | (Teer, hear , sate Zor the occasion, ‘The hall was appropriately decorated. | in their domertic concerns, is here. It has not yet | Upon us; still it would no On the paneis of the ea were miblaxoned the names | +tirpated the germ of municipal public, life, without | down: ‘of Count Batthyany, Count Louis Batthyany, Bem, Dem. | which— i ; Dineki, and various eminent Han, na. Along the | clation made net quite well understood on another & ion the plat front of the principal gallery Tee, teroribes, ja large let. | cocnsion= 1 mean thet, without, 0 municipal publle peo Den wae "ale ph J pg fe 4 tote, « e, Kosguth '’ At half past five o'clock, | life, jeve no practical freedom can ex! A Md motel d nentere nd was received with enthu: | for the lose of it an Wpinksterial responsibilities, all | Rursien diplomacy, which knew how to introduce tres. ncipal table | rarliemertary omnipotencies, are bat @ pitiful | ton intocur ranks : table Lord | tattivalent, But above all, higher was my atten- | to fall, combined with Russian arma Be} ; Mr, G. Dawson, M. | tiem fergibly drawn by the wonderful greatness of styled tobe only @ party fauaticived by me. Weil, OLE NO. 6972. ) TBLE SHEET. | ftpine cn "you, wercomsne | roomy tet every human thing, can nowhere ir. PR. ‘The Rev. Mr. V. faid grace at unusual length. I L OF THE ASIA’S MAILS. Aa weil cuidate red thanking fr e of freedom, and a prayer on PRADO LOI LAOLA ofthe ” NAL EUROPEAN INTEULIOENR, | “it 'wssenderiooa tot the proved of tne dinner | Jy would be appropriated to the Hungarian refugecs, The tickets were £1 each, and about sit down to ‘inner; eed me M ; and if te:tains ution of Kossuth, in England, | eee eee ree ae ce cat oe ote there oan be | tion of (way. 2 doubt but they will make a very sum out | (Hear, hear, eat Speech at Birmingham. | the cusinsax said that Mr. W.8,Landor had sent | yersties of fate can break but never bend. (Cheers ) Saneaean as long as I live, bear on . (Hear, hear ) And so has onored object of my ad- t; and so great was the tannia which I cherished in my bosom, that, lat the strange play of fate led me to your shore scarcely Overcome sowe awe in approaching cause I remembered that the harmon: wants the perspective of distance, and m: at the idea that the halo of glory with whi surrounded in my thoughts, would, perhaps, not stand to re-unit - the touch of reality, the more because I am well aware all ¢, has its own fragilities. I birth Know that every sogiety wh ich is hot 8 new ene, high wi " loesings sides its own bear also the burdens ae b> «eam pee fins of the past’and | know it to be almost a fatalistioal Nanannnnnn the following lines :— mer City of Pittsburg Short of Coal. But the friendly suils that waft a) { LATE FROM SOUTH AMERICA, Hin rhowas deem the prey ‘aed 4 . despot as thou—one sending forth des, die., de ‘The torturers of the north, 3d To fix upon his Caucasus once more The dem!-god who bore ‘To sad humanity Heaven's fire and light, Whereby should ite sh steamship Asia, Capt. Judkins, as stated rrived at Boston, at balf-past four o'clock on ernoon, in ten days and five hours, from Iler mails reached this city about half past Whose Jove-like brow gave yesterday afternoon. vs ipbal progress of Kossuth, in England, con- On moctals hese below. ginged to fill the columns of the English papers. He On which, half dead, yet rest a ‘The hopes of millions, and rest there alone. a Getines the ceduicus; nooe else then be ; N01 The President of the French Republic reviewed two Gan raise and set thera free. ‘Patwlions of the Gendarmerie Mobile, one battalion of ° hangs dig ors Hhered aus in health ! Anfuntry, and one of cavalry, on the 1ith inst, in the pod benef we no vessel yet hath ever borne; Champ de Mars, The President was very loudly cheered. Py cro eh mire bones mlb gaia In the eouthern districts of Austria, nearly all the le large rivors have overflowed their banks. Several lives Sites ot bie fe his Soh proctnnneced foul; Relenting Fate shall yield 4 * The Crown Princess of Bwaden was safely delivered of saddest loss deplore; @ daughter on the Slet ult. Bole guardian of the opprest. wonders by ‘The death of Mr. Matthias Attwood, the celebrated Kossuth, the true end brave |? 4 bal Queen,” and the company Our London Correspondence, Loxpox, Friday Evening, Nov. 14, 1851. Unilied States—The Elections in Portugal—Health of the | toration of Korsuth to King of Hanover—Stocks, §:c. oon Sipe I last wrote, there has not been any material | ‘The Crarmman then proposed the toast of the evening: “Our illustrious guest. Louis Koesuth.” The announced debate on the new ministerial Elec- Kossvrn then rose to address the meeting. The moment | that siastic in their men, but exhibiting it im the quieter way of waving | sted. This news was despatched from Paris ly the Submarine | thi KOSSUTH’3 SPEEOH. tthe Lord Mayor's banquet, not a single foreign represen- | the horrors of fate, ond manfully to fight the the 4s I now bow before you, (Kossuth moments, overpowered by his “In iront of Kossuth, who smiled and bowed, so | emotion, with which As I was thi sirs,so am I now (Hear.) I would thank | *#lor. feel, and as becomes the dignity ot your glorious land. | €trey h 1 x But the words fail me—they fail me not only from want | Wa pty however, he may reach New York as soon 86 | o¢ynowiedge of your language, bu: chiefly because 1 The German Journal of Frankfort, gonerally a well in. | \¢2timents are deep, and fervent, and true. (Cheers. > ~ My ‘The tongue of man is powerful enongh to render the | Pikington. the eli Gremed Journal, states tet Aecaie hat scene’ he | dens which the baman Iitetieat conesiver; bat in the | machine OF the Republic receives Kossuth oMolally, the | alm of true and deep sentiments it is but a weak inter. | was, Introcuee . . preter. ‘These are ine xpressible, like the endless glory of | Workshop of Watt, whose eteam-ongines blotted 2 that the American te, | the Onwnipotent, (Cheers ) But could I date to say werd “ distance” out of the dictionary. (Cheers) But eomntative ot Yieune Wil revere his T exanot voush something about my humble volt without becoming pre- | what 1 sost adtuire le that you Ware oF % Washington will imme- ham, Kossuth has been more ee of importanse to communi regreoniste. of Hanover is not expected to live over the | Postible to fatherland and to hy * ~ not then ar tie; . Teould not anticipate that it was Se gon and two daughters. There will probabis be are. | Potinen attieipate ert rere ts Reeak'way to the | fuse ah FRET choos of Orieansand the Count de Perle have | *feedom of thought im my vetive Inod; that ft we | snd om inhaling Chel: public spies te say Yaneds prrived th England who by applying to several special objects of asvociation, | ¢**’t forbear oe that the freedom of suc Saez an boom 0 change this week im the market | Which bas produced so many wonders in this glorious tion must be the pulsation of maakind 1M alle m weighed them down for five hundred year ‘ . ul Bearer, rivepee Oeat ave © ides’ ser + os political emancipation which transformed the close hall | (¢!f74 felicitas conselatur Maryland Five per Gent Bterling Bonds... Caueda Mix per Cent Bonde 1874 ‘The general tone of the stock markets on the conti- onelle the etubbornre: cessities and the exigencies of mo je thet it wae I who sho of my life, be the shield of protect! o jroud house of Hopeburg in bis SULH IN ENGLAND, | #02 that. seeing thie servicw one time be ev at Dirmingham—Another Great Speech, Another Speech in Mane’! Another twe large empires w many similer things could never troubled the prace of my mind. (Ohoers) I knew | la¥ dments, and public gratuiation-even the women who | ¢) ‘ere not able to get through the crowd begging most | ome one would lift them upto the ear, | #!l the piace which Providence has a-sigi to teuch bis fingers, and in tome cases succeeding great Architect above knows best wi to touch some big policemen’s or able-bodied of the meanest nail, and end: myself to become # feeble instru lily wp to ‘ low. the trai ire arm 35 o'elock. A num’ (Hear, hear ons were Waiting on latform at the 1 that book or those mournful a gentiem embied to present him with the addresses which bad | rer put for life, to be able to teach my mation how wees, and referring the parties also to the observations | *cnder of both hemispheres, the glorious Albiot the hoped to make in the course of the evening in | cheers ) Hither m attention was drawn by th I repeat the word, w the source of it. and because there, be entirely perfect, together with your institutions, in that every fibre of your nation, hich, on creation’s day, in your institut ut I found ublic spirit pervades Bir, like the spirit of God, read over the waves, I found it in the freedom you en- lorious, and great; but I Fyodgnh py’ ; but I foun mighty, an deca Loud cheers.) So was England the book of life which led me out of the fluctua- thoughts to unshakable It was to me the fire which with that iron perseverance which the ‘Yes, sir, I found E; heart and my soul wi ON KOSSUTH’S VOYAGE TO AMERICA. the seal of Rave over other lands and other seas, England AAA Ml-omen’d black wing’d Breeze ! miration of great objects breast panted England was In happier bonds the uations of the earth ; that is human, and every law in mankind’s history, that the past throws over 50 Rack not, O Boreal Breese, that laboring beset badow in the prorent and in the futuro that to Vitentirely the run must be mounted very high. But so much | must state with fervent j whole, the image whieh reality in Englan at every step such @ seal of greatness teeming with rich life, and so solid iu foundation, that it far surpasses even such expectations as were mine. in the midst of your great nation, strikes most the mind of the observer le that he macets in moral, material, and ‘ rocial respects, such elements of a continual pri He urges through tempestuous waves his way; fomande hacthcklon, aed thee sletaente “disping Sati & mighty, free, and cheerful activity, and this activity is 60 lively pervaded by the public spirit of the people, that however gigantic those triumphs of civilixation muy be Thy which Exgland has already proudly to show to the asto- Look to the star crown'd Genius of the West, a i red eg Graceinge tle dre ¥ , | —nevertheless, one feels by inatinct ail this to be but ©: that one only nation dared to save degree—a gigantic one to be sure, but still only a de- rity will have the lot to admire here, honor to dine in Birmixgham, surround- re inthe Town Tfall, which, like your free And the thing which, to what external assistance, are 80 spirit, self-confident foro You will allew y which I meet, to have Birmingham.’ (Lou Thave not the pretension to tell wu. It is one of your particular ‘William Hutton your own, and I to prove what I say, so you will alow me briefly to state the motives which make me look to your city with bat trust and that hope. (Ilear, hear.) ‘Tndustey 1s be was wy is legs, eve reon in the room stood up, | Chief element of greatness, welfare, power, an it. It Coral pill, as read by the Minister of the Interior, M. de | De ,/ne upoD his legs, every pereon. in the room stood up, | f industry whlch gives’ practical! value to science. in Whorigny, on the day of the opening of the National As- | beyond the walls of the building. Again and again the | Otber branches of employment, human faculty appears to pembiy, has rerulted in a defeat of the Ministry and re- | cheering was repented, the ladies being quite as enthu- | be a developin wer, but industry is a creating power: monstration of sympathy as the gentle- | “nd being so, it the most efficient locomotive of pro- (Hear) But industry, highly beneficial in itself, e rehiefs. Silence, at length, was ob | beccmer a pedestal to the public order of a country, Telegraph, which is now open. The despatch was received in | tained, when the illustrious Magyar proceeded to speak | snd. lasting source of public and private welfs Londen in helf an hour. as follows:— During the day I sent myself, by way of experiment, a Mr. Chairman, eden, and Sentlsmen Three years jon oy wee gy mang by espe position to entire Mereage of twenty words to Paris, for which I paid 136, | 98° yonder house of Austria, which had chiefly me to | Cia*ses, cannot fail to im} thank for not having been swept away by the revoluti that self esteem, that nol 44. The submarine line was thrown open yesterday at | SfVienna, in March, 1848, having, in return, answered | Proved dignity which is the mark of a free man, and the BWo'dock, to the public. This rapidity of the transmis- by the mcet foul, most sacrilegious conspiracy against | Tichest scurce of private and public virtues, chartered rights, freedom, and mational existence of oo pry bye et ppt Kod ade tae _ my native land—it became my share, being then cities e last stronghold of iberty, wben all arou Loa night, the Polish Hungarian ball was given at | D?ihe ministry, with undieguised truth tolay before the | them was feudal bondage. e Guildhall. I went there at an early hour to watch the | Parliament of Hun; the immense danger of our bleed. | Cid’ Almost nothing else but cor; ms of manufac- edi ‘The noble hal brilliantly illuminated. | ing fatherland. (Hear, hear) Having made the sketch, { ‘urers, independent im their situation, working at the . father i c ¢ aketoh, , 4 a ilgitel rasboracd sdbiead mas ‘he | Which, however dreadful, could be Dut * faint shadow | Size of their own domestic hearth, working for themselves jeolor was hung conspicuously over of the horrible reality, I proceeded to explain the alter. | —men whom we might characterise as small masters, @taircaee entrance leading to the Coneert room. Dancing | natives which our terrible destiny left to us, after the Jd Phys nem in wealth, but independent in their ommenced at nine o’cléck, and was going om briskly | failure of all our attempts to avert the evil Reluctant to oc} lon. resect the neck of the realm to the deadly snake which when T left at cme, this morning. As was tho case at | [incl at its very life, and anxious to bear up against | Of fereonal independence. ‘The developement of science ttle of | and wealth must have led, of course, to large, mighty, td | industricus establishments, where the secret powers once Would | Batureare made subservient to the creating power of and these mighty establishments are even as to every country, where a large is not onl; sm largely diffused, but also connecte: in jent condition of the manufacturers, t to the manufacturing man pride, and that sentiment of ict of the middle ages the And what were the cities of Cheers) 80 became industry the last stroog- old of political freedom, as it was precisely the means The solemnity of gesture and | large capital, therefore more subjected commerce, Being exposed to irmingham rose from t! jomen, { | time of Julius Cwsar; always a seat of industry, it be came the centre and the heart of Aitriet, bringing the combination of the lime, iron, and company deeply sympathised.) | Col of that district, im suitable forms to become th» «| Pardon me my emotion—the shadows of our martyrs | comman benefit of the world ; giving arms to those who shaning ove ig Er -} attire . passed, | gored before my eyes; I heard the millions of my native | had the lot to Gght fer their liberation, the pen to fix Srere lekroducea to hita, I observed tha: Mire Kanaford, | 884 once more shsutiog Wberty or death. (Uheere.) | th who is a most charming person, wore a Iarge cameo | 90. Penile broceh of the Hungarian chieftain ir he pre- ; gented {t to her or not I am not able to say. Kossuth | (2 MY undeserving person—no, you bai ing was in Londen, but feft thebell room about midnight. The whoie went off | Pleeding, the oppressed, but not broken, Hungary. | oo : ith éclet, though he must by this be weary of over | (Ober?) Twould thank you for the rayof hope waich Birminghem’s astonishing industrious euergy. pr 4 x od the sympathy of the English people casts on the night of | #4 admired the cryst Tt was confuently rumored that he would not leave | oUr fate. 1 would thamk you. gentlemen, warmly as I | work i glace industry Boguand to-day, postponing his departure to the 2 Per manufacturing ea of thinking men, the cable to the wandering so the fine neck chain to the fair beauties of ion the Crystal Palace, jo humaaity. The mest lost in a wenderment at , for the generous sympathy with which, | ‘he world. T saw wish adm! honored the | that wagniticent me the most magnificent I know Birmingham to be the T know that it jolie of the great rai os mingham which preceded, by its local exhibition, the idea of the world’s exhibition. (Cheers.) thet it ts Birmingham which gave, by the genius of its it) [know that xe used before the power-loom 1 know that here was the f i ry loaveto etat ot a steam—this omaiferous power of our ti fivnt te dlp, bas oven trom toy sacty youth, 1 bevy quly | tothe peculiar domestic. and independent character of rpiritually connected with Jiritannia (Hear, bear) | your lar 1 was yet young, sir, under rigoro us cireumstances, al- peg at ree oP + Pdidastisally, pte; ry : In Vortugal. the elections have turned out favorably | Tost, anti-didactically, preparing my soul for the duty | 2c of that etrongiy-felt spirit of independe anity, (ries of «Hear, | fteedom which makes your glory and Myself, the wandering son of ely diffused industry, so as to be almost an The character of me consider Birmingham as % wmr.”” rred Leou' bear ) heag.””) ‘The great things that have since occurred Leou'd | bear) | Mywlt. the wandering ah Of 8 thine y heart d with joy, because on seeing the Eng aporone “hould hare uupreeedented iafuense on ny | Mberty, and that the part of the world where such « life, capable of lending fron the indifference of pyramid of civilization stands cannot be doomed to be 105 aco | despondency to the cheerfulness of activity, and by | ‘he prey of Russian or Austrian despots. (Cheers) You : rity to self-confidence (hear), that the liberation of | Temember Paulus Amitiue whose trinmph by a whim of ple from those hereditary burthens that have | fate was placed between the tombe of hi the | Temember his quite Roman words—"Cladun donus med ne Wert, dhare anything inthe, ve rrivileges inte an open temple of common libe-ty: that | World able to co nrole a Msgyar for the misfortunes o ‘5 ths snetion Of the great principle of equellt ie dutics | fetberiand. here is the placr whera I would repeat the ‘ Md with the recsiless | Words of yonder Roman ron! (Hear,heat.) Butaias! (avd Gf'my humble Lame, or tbat it should be my lot to | Who would blame me for it ') even here where I am, aud of past ages with the present | *@ Furre unded as T am, still I so tiacs, could | éxile~ (Hear, hear)—and ali that L see carries back my memory to my down-trodden land. row takes deeper root in human breats than joys; one nd the home of the poor exi @ is, that the heart of man can feel the tensity of the love of home Aud. however strange it may appear to you, the roots of my live are not within myself, my individuality tlee of God, Tswear—fora mo. | forbed in this thought—Freedo:. and bined powers of the deepota of | (\heers.) able to overcome, by getting for | Sd trust my people bear t Speceh tn London, d&e., de. a0 gly a treitor in our own ranke—that it should be je —— faith =! ! my Ce-tiny tolead on Hungary in euch a contest, whic MRE DEE I Sirgen Gann ee pete recep: | Snlte of te momentary misfortanes, will still prove the | faith, this coufldemce, stands still fast, nelther troubled tion rpeaph of the Magyar statesman at Manchester | aach-blow to the bondage of fundality, theturning point | by the deluge of calumoies, nor broken b; which wap published in the New Yous Iena:v of Mon! | inthe future of at least one-haif the European continent, vt va my people took, ke one on Wednesday morning, the 12th | 4 cry of alarm to all nations to unite in the cause of free- 0 anes Wearing thet city for Suumaytam, rants to dcm seainst the union of absolutiem— (hear, hear) | then steht at the woes ef my people. also should be sod to reive my nation out of the narrow proportion | Age Bo Aw yp hd (liear, har) And bapd, how pations have learned dity; and it is lampossible net to fe patural eyetem will be brought, mytelf a homeless (Hear, hear.) Bor- must be an eail beunds What is the key of that boundless faith their plain, uapretend- fidence seldom to be met tn -what is the key of it--that this till, for the incar- 4 thelr hopes. (Cheers) Is it not then }Tovinelal vegetation to such a rank as would make | embcdied im myself? on | her an element indiapeneable to the triumph of civiliza- | Of millions of Magy are im my breast tion and liberty. and at last that I, the insignificant son | Sfow me. gentlemen, & sort of national relf-esteem in Chureday, the 13th, im reply to am address from the | of modest Hungary, should be honored with so much | that rrepect. % hetropolitam boroughs, We can only give in this mor- | notice from this glorious land. that such as. since Man- — of mankind—the people are everywhere highly » the great speech delivered gory Was a nation, no Hungarian, or perhaps any other oar aaa meen naherrrrs sr nogee was cver honored with. (eueers fw ‘and | to be the honored of humanity; they ave entered into my | ful sear of their genius, rise to the very KOSSUTH AT BIRMINGHAM. early dreams. (Loud cheers) The sphere of activity 8 aoe = = Newton, said, * Man is for! Kossuth kt Manchester at 11.95 A. M.,on Wednesday, | Which was then open tome was narrow as my faculties, | 10 UPPEOae! |e ’ le over we eo they are not the manifestations of th ve1ith tertant, Delayed by shaking of hands, by com; | (M4, modest as my condition. Ambion dnd you know the developement to which mankind it isnot given toman to choore bis position in | ir exiled in going on aceording to steady eternal laws world; but I know it is given to him honestly to | (Hear, bear ) The people—that mighty basis of the jonerable, noble, and good. Some few may be selected But they are exceptions, aml be- one selected few etand on the top of to hima | Dumapity,so they are not the basis of it. ‘The basis is je; they are steady amd lasting erefore, is that it is the instinet of the people vored to pre- | which is the true revelation of mankind's divine origin. ‘nt inthe | It is. therefore, was saying, that the peopi noble, and good. ian, that sort of rentiment may befits # British man, who, what- sonal merits, putemand with right— , nee im the idea to be cit Britain, still allow me to prostrate myrlf im suffering people; al at the people of Magyars can ar, bear)—so1 rested contented with the tea that | the pec t use to | belief. t nds Of Vrovidence to do some little good work, | Whety highly honoral or had for my teacher | © me, as to a fun ar. heat) It was the | bot be becoming which past that warmed the | eter be hs he pro- | Furceptible young heart to noble aims and instincts; but | bis greatert While, during eur holy struggle, we were orld. our enemies, wanting to cover es, told you the tale that we are in party, and this party fana- L feel proud at my country’ They stirred up by foul det war our Croat, Wallach, Serb, It did not suffice. The house of Austria poured all his forces wors.) We beat them ynasty was to atoop at the He thrust bis legions upon we. covld have been a match for them One thing children of straight ration upon the Anglo-Saxon race, this living | Cheering ) (Lowd | ® eluded from U triking | their erimes b: lance and coincidence of institutions which the | Hurgery but 1p. inherited from am- | fons to the fury of civil ich’ my bad pronun- | fect of the Canr (Ortes of “Bhame.") This caused us Hut etd we wore thank them for the word.” ran ey 100a8 b ite what Megzass, alge a) the Crsats, ‘allachs, Serbs, and Slo- vacks melted in one body, will ri under the standard of freedom and t. (Hear, a} And be sure they will. (Cheers.) Humanity, with its childish faith, bandage soon falls can be led for 4 moment, but the from its eyes, and it will be sheeted no more. And yet, though we are oppressed, they are and deceived. (Hear, hear) Afterwards the party turned out to be # nation, and a valiant one. But still they said, it is I who inspired it. Perhaps there might be some glory in inspiring such a nation, and to such @ degree. (Cheers.) But I cannot accept the praise. No; it is not I who inspired the Hungarian people—it was the Hungarian people who inspired me. (Loud cheers.) Whatever I thought, and still think— whatever I felt, and still fee!—is but a feeble pulsation of that heart which in the breast of my people beats. (Hear, bear.) The glory of battles is ascribed to the leaders, in history—theirs are the laurels of immor- tality. "And yet, on meeting the danger, they knew that, alive or dead, their name will upon. lips of the peeple for ever live. How different, how purer, is the light spread on the image of thousands of the people's sons, who, knowing that where they fall they will lay unknown, their names uphonored and unsung, but who, neverthe- less, animated by the love of freedom and fatherland, went on calmly, singing national anthems, against the batteries whose cross fire vomited death and destruction on them, and took them without firing a shot--(hear, hear)—they who fell, falling with the shout, ©: Hurrah for Hungary!’ (Great cheering ) And so they died by thou sands the unnsmeddemi.gods (More cheering.) Suchare the people of Hungary, . lear ) Still, they say it is I wno have inspired them. No; a thousand times no. Iti they who have inspired me. (Enthusiastic cheering.) Even the features of Cato partook of the impression of this dreariness. A shadow passed over the brow of Soc- rates on drinking the hemlock cup. With us, those who bebeld the nameless victims of the love of country, lying on the death field beneath Buda’s walls, met but theimpression of a smileon the frozen lips of the dead, and the dying answered those who would console but by the words, “ Never mind; Buda is ours. Hurrah for the fatherland |’ Bo they epoke and died. He who wit- nessed such scenes, not as an exception, but as a con- stent rule; be who saw the edolescent weep when told he was yet too young to die for his land; he who saw the sacrifices of spontaniety; he who beard what a fury spread over the people on hearing of the catastrophe; he who marked his behavior towards the victors, after all was lost; he who krows what sort of curse is mixed in the prayers of the Magyar, ard Kuows what sort of senti- ment is burning alike in the breast of the old and of the young, of the strong man and of the tender wife—and ever will be burning on, till the hour of national resur- rection strikes—he who is aware of all this, will surely bow before this people with respect, and will acknowledge with me, that such a people want not to be inspired, but that it is ap everlasting scurce of inspiration itself. (Great cheers ) This is the people of Hungary. (Cheers ) And for we, my cnly glory is, that this people found in myself the personification of their own sentiments. (Mear) This is all he can tell of himself, whom you sre honoring with so many tokens of your sympathy. Let me, therefore, hold the consoling faith, that in honoring me by your rympatby, you are to give your sympatby to the people of the Magyars. But let me ask, what can be the iicaning of this sympathy of the English people’ La it but a funeral feast, offered to the memory of a noble dead? God forbid! The po of England are the people of life; thelr. sympathy belongs to the life. ‘The hurrah which greeted me on your shores, the warm sincere cheering of the hundred thousands in your sireets, 60 nerous, and still so modest, so loud and so sincere, 80 nd still so orderly—I take for the trumpet sound of € the triumph of , Justice, and popular rights, To be nar deep is the sorrow which weighs on me. Itis, as I have said, the concentrated wo of millions: but do not think, f pray, this sorrow to be that of despondency, which knows nothing better than ho} —— No, this scrrew is such a ere as enlarges jorizon of hope and of perseverance, getting, like the Anteus of the fable, new strength from every fall Let me, therefore, assure you, gentlemen, that the People of Hungary have dently state that the people of England bave not spent their sympathy on a corpse. (Hear.) But, well may you ask, “What are the motives of this hope?” The first bacis of my hope is the Almighty himself— the God of Justice, who cannot grant a tasting victory to wickedness. History bas, to be sure, recorded the down- fall of mighty empires, of nations, to whom compared, we Megyarscan scarcely claim a name. But the fall of there nations was precisely the revelation of the eternal justice of God. They fell by their own crimes. Nations die but by” suicide. (Iear) That is not our case. Hungary is not the sacrifice of ita#wn crimes. In Austria, a woman vainly dreams that she can raise her blced stained child upon the ruins of liberty. Well she knew that God was not with her, but sve knew tha’ the Czar was with her; and what cares she for God, if only the Ozar be with ber! (Hear, hear.) But God i+ just, and will not it this atrocity. And look, do you not already see bis justice mark! She said that in the dominions of Hungary the house of Hapsburg abe future yet; let me confi- isd rule as he pleased ; and. to accomplish this sacri- legious plot, sabe called on the Czar tohelp her; and look, she is already in bondage to the Czar. Austria longed to be the sun, that diferent nations, like moons, sbould move around her, and now she has herself be- come en ebedient moon to a frail mortal. (Cheers) Let them rel _ the Czar—his hour will alse come.— (Cheers) The be nothing more than the blind victims of a single des- pot. The destiny of man is nobler—freedom's tun will abo rise upon Russis, and in the chcir of liberated humanity praise to Almighty God, the name even te the bor hy THapabi the M: he t the house of Hapsburg trust in the Czar. My peo) and myrelf, we trust ry God—(loud cheers)—and the anchor cf that faith is an unfalvering faith in the des- tinles of humanity, The realization of these destinies can have uo bates but in the people. However arrogant msy be the policy ef despots on the continent, the gra- clour Queen of these isles takes the destimies of the pro- pie for the end of government, the people also as the in- stument. Iam firmly convinced that every State is organized on & perverse system , and is doomed to be turned up Where a single individual or a single class pretends to be the broad basis of seciety. Toat man Teele againet God who believes that the glorious pyramid cf humanity exists only that th millions of Russians are not doomed to not be wanting, (Lond cheers) should staud at the to ¢ him off and hurl (Lowt cheers.) uropean continent— a single shower, and they will Dim to the dust. There let bi) Regard the greatest part of t Germeny Austria and Hungory; look at the indignities (fered to Rome and to Ni lately, with such generous Indiguation exposed- —lock atthe it French nation, whe: of three revclutions—giory outside a —beve all been sbeorbed in the mire of ceatralisstion; ord it must be manifest to every unprejudiced observer that such asi laws cf rature, apd that it is utterly Lmpossib!e for it to endure Besides, see these tyrants, how they have paid the people for being mercifai to them, when they might es, *intch Mr. Gladstone has hefatrest fruits freedom within (uation is unnatural, and contrary to the been but just; see how they have noth nething learned—(cheers)—and eco, om the thelr common suifer- her by a perfect soll- that we are om the eve of days whon the appressed nations on the continent sre about to hold the greatest court that was ever seen, ond that tefore their bar every artificial and every um 4 will be condeinned. My third emchor of hope ie the past history of sy q tation, our country bas reen many a storm, but the Maygar is alive. (cheers) There was @ time when one-balf of Hupgary was under Turkish domi- nien. end wher the other beif was ruled by the Bastos ard the Coraffos of old--the models, or rather, [should ray, the masters from which euch men as Maynau ere formed, There has been more than one bleoly leegue formed against Hungary in the history of the beure of Hispsburg. and stili the Mayyar is a! The houre of Hapeburg has, for three ceuvuries, excited ngeinet us open force, as well as all sorts of craft, it bes fomented our discords, it has opened our wounds, it bas undermined our national character, and sttl my nation bas pot perished The elogie conius which the house of Hapsburg has produced--the Em peror Joseph If --net the present blood retained child, Vrencis Josepb—- (cheers) —be bent ail the powers of his mind to Germanize Hungary. and melt the empire into one form: but my countrymen, though already weak ened by the preparatory mravures thet were adopted, (lid but renew ftaetrength as it rove out of the ordeal, 80 it wastwo years ago, when we were desiring nothing but prace— peace that the ant-like industry of the people might change the face of the country into « paradise— thin, when ¥e not only did not nuspect tres , but we did pot believe it when we should have believed it, fund were uupreparvd to meet the danger when it gathered ina frightful manner over our hends—we were attacked, you know bow. We were eeclaced from the whole world. Alas bandoned of the whole world Without friends, without ammunition, without money — ttl, we beat our unjust sseaileots—nay. we beat him so that he flew to mendicate to the Czar for his extistence, ¥lich be gave, but for which Austrie hu:l to poy all ber future, But who could think that the Hangarian im bes no future? Bven the wrongs by which it d did its future but insure. ‘the house by ite victory, and still more by the which it bad made of its victory. had drowsed centu- rhea of disturbance in fungary. ond by ite very fall my nation hi rented to Kurope that she is necessary to Burepe's +88 her glorious defence revenled tnat «he is {ull of vitality, While the house of Mapsburg hot caused dissatisfietion in every country in Kurope, from Fchleowig Holstein to Kome, and from Hesse to Con- et ntine ple my nation bas earned the reepect and esteem ef them all, and to hope for the dawn of their deliver- ance from our struggles. Could anybody think that the Megyat, the Germen, (he Bohemian. the Pole, the Bio. vac. the Dalmatian, the Serb, and even the Lombard andthe Veretian=that Lombardy which Austria beat wich iron clove, dares not touch—(cheers—that Venice which sheds tears of blood ashe looks on her deserted K alto— could anybody think that all these nations ars to be melted by ary alchemist in Vienna into one com- nop slavery’? (Obeers) Other and abler alchemists heve tried it before. Joseph LI. tried it, but all in vain; though he offered us the rights of conscience, and the literty of the serf; but Francis Joseph, thas blood. seined child, whet has he to offer’ THe hes offered to his nation shame abroad—oppremion at home— }eavy stamp duties consumption taxes—and ali those glorious inventions which drain the life eweat of « yrople, these are the gifts that he offers; ani when ibe people's murmers are heard et the Imperial palace do you know what the anewerle! The verde We are told the Meayara ar We know itwed (Cheats) But it is not one inter te m contented: it i our intention to ae# (hein Heat beat) These words give @ Roy t) the ray. ( fujore, The youce Of Mapsburg does not desire tv be MORNING EDITION----THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1851. loved, but tobe paid. Well, Hungary will pay all it owes, (Great cheering ) The people are, eed, mer- ciful and generous; will forgive much to their governors so long as their sense of morality is not wounded. But where faith has once been broken there is no power more to knit that broken tie. That is the case with Hungary, so that believe the rule of com- mon justice and common law is quite and enti im- . The house of Hapsburg has been brought back Hi es the Stuarts were in former times brought back to your country; but all faith was lost in their morality, and where are they now? (Cheers ) For reetored dynasties there is no future in Hungary. After ace We have had even monarchy has no future. But the house of Hapsburg has no future even beyond Hi . It is worn out, and that isa bad reason to ¢! further life. (Hear, hear.) Had the house of Hapeiing, in 1848, been just to nations it ruled, it might have a fature. But now the historical batis of tradition it has lost--the new era it has refused to accept. Howthen can ic continue to live? It had formerly oneartificial prop to its existence. Itsexistence was believed to be necessary for Ei against Russian preponderance. But where is that feeling now’ —Aus- tria has become the mere vanguard of Russian prepon- derance; its existence is therefore not only not neces- sary to Europe, but dangerous to Europe. The house of Hepa leans now for its existence on three things— ‘on loans, on bayonets, and on the Czar. But those loans must lead to inevitable bankruptcy. Her armies are composed of men who hate her as men hate th who have epiit the blood of their mother. And as to the Czar—-I hope that the Anglo-Saxon race will not allow the Czar to rule on the Upper Danube andon the Rhine. (Loud cheers) Let the house of Austria, proudly re- lyingon her ‘ayenets and the Ozar, trample upon op- pressed nations. I know that armies of-day are not the condiottieri of old. I know that light has spread, and that even bayonets think. (Hear, and loud cheers.) I know that ail the Czars of the world are but mere dust in the hand of God, and so I am sanguine enough to hope I shall yet live te see Buneeey, independent and free. (Cheers.) But there is still another ground of hope—the last, not the least, important of all. It is your sympathy, gentlemen—the sympathy which the generous people of England take in the fate of my country. (Cheers) It would be an insult to the people of England if I were to consider that sympathy as no- thing more than the passing emotion of noble hearts. Full welll know that the sympathy of the people of England is no idle thing. Mas the public mind of Eng- land evertakep any direction—basitever bent its sym- pathy to auy great object—it will carry it—it will have out of it scme practical result. (Loud cheers.) Tis firmness ef character—this untiring perseverance in every great end noble mind—is the true key of your country’s greatness; so I rely upon it confidently. (Cheers) What is it I rely upom as the practical result of the generous rympathy of England for my native land? jt me first of all see whether the Hungarian revolution be matter of praise er reproach it is a matter of fact that we have made no revolution. Take & man who, confiding in the protection of the law, is resting quietly in his house, and the night watch, in- stead of taking care that bis tranquillity sball not be disturbed, give the torch to an incendiary, and induces him, by false promires, to burn his house ana to murder him; and he, roused from his quiet rest, rushes out of his room to put out the fire, and preserve his life, and calls on the night watch to help him in his legitimate defence, and this big 2 night watch brings an armed guard with him, and, instead of defending the injured man, calls him a traitor and a conspirator, for daring to oppose the honest incendiary and the faithful murderer; (Langhter.) Nay, more, he joins the incendiary, a rushes on injured man with his armed guards, and the poor injured man. calling tegether his brethren and bis sone, beats down the incen , the murderer, the night wateb. and his guard. ere an unpre) diced man in the world who weuld charge the injured man with having committed an asseult on the legitimate au- thority ot the pight watch? (Cheers) Im this po- ong tketeh you bave the history of the Hungarian war. uit I beg not to be misunderstood, It is not the fear of the revolutionary reprosch whieh makes me ray this I am a map of justice. right, and Mberty; and will continue #0; and little dol care what names the enemies ofjustice, right, and liberty may call me, Your Hampdens and our Bydneys were alro called revolutionists in their BA day; aud so may God bleas me as I ne long for a hter fame their's, (Loud and prelonged cheer. br ing) Tobesure I take @ revolution for a very murtortune; but higbly I own that an oppressed people, seeing every other means of agzression fail, have a right to make @ revolution. (Loud cheers) Highly I own that my oppressed were in this very case—(re- Lewed cbeers)— but, ve it asa matter of fact, that in Hungary we had no revolution. The people of E: 4 may reduce the calumnies of tyrants and their satellites im this cor to their true nature. (Cheers) All the other gorstp about anarehy—about our bring licentious dem agoguet, weking to introduce confusion into peigh- boring Btates—abcut my keeping up my dictatorship in Hungary by a rystem of terrorism—all have the same consideration. (Cheers ) Though the reign of the house of Austria in Hungary was, for three centuries, a con- tirued ceries of perjury, and though it encroached inces- santly upon our rights, still we conserved, in our munici- pal institutions, some rbadow of constitutional liberty. And so the I soil was not the soil of —my nation had, and has still, neither the will nor the cecasion to siaure inthe movement of those new doctrines which disturb the sleep of the mighty of the earth. We struggled fe ar ae openly for our social rights, as those mighty reforms which have ded to preserve your country fro! those dread- cussions which never fail to arri rogres- ave RO fair course—we carried our reforms ling ourselves of the reforms which God given’ not we made, We knew how to be just to mau, Without regarding what tongue he speaka or in what church he prays; but the Hungarian people, be- aster of his fule, were moderate enough to re- terve his part to time. (Cheers.) With us there was nothing done by violent com metic: 0 equitable in- terest odden down, We generously spared even those whieh, though unjurt in their origin, were interlaced with the private fortunes of a whole class. There was with us no trace of anarchy, even in the midst of our war. In every part of Hungary which our victories | bicught back under our rule, order and security of prison and property were far greater than that of which the order making Austria can boast even now, (Cheers.) And this was not my merit, sir, but the people's. Strug- gling on different sides, often the storm of battle passed over one region, and sometimes it was not for weeks within the reach of my government; but the moral sense of the people, and their noble instincts, safeguarded order apd eecurity. (Cheers.) Very seldom { was in tho case to use commar. and. when so, it was not the people, but others. who required it. (Cheers) The greatert part of our army was composed of volunteers; the stock of my financial operation was made out of free offerings —oar cannon were cast out of bells, which the people offered in embarrarsing quantity. (Cheers) We defended our selves. but attacked nobody, and secret decigns were far | from the straight spirit ot my land, Austria «nd Russie took the neighboring Turkish province for a is of ope- retion sgainet ur; whele armies of them bave we thrown back cver their frontiers. We had but to follow. as we bad a right to do. and the theatre of war might have been brought home to Russia herrelf, But yet we etopped— We respected international rights, though towards our. selves nobody rerpected them Galicia was at one time entirely denuded of troops by Austria concentrating het forces Against us. I had but to throw a feeble force into that distr jet, and the flame of revolution would have been biown up among that heroic but unhappy people, But I took it for a erime to play with the blood ofmations, and L ecrupvicusly avoided to afford the slightest pretext to the ambitious views of the Autocrat of the North Vain effort to count 6 ity in thove quarters! (Loud cheers) They knew fnll well thet the by sired to flock, in thousands of thousand I we had already a thousand t ria, (Cheers.) The Onar krew fuil weil that the * of Poland. who fought so valiantiy in our raoks, ey amounted to four thousand men. But still he styled the Hurgarian struggle a Polish conspiracy, and obarged vs with plotting against the security of bis em- Weil, be raged at the idea that it was a Polish hero, ands in Transyl ious foot on Europe's neck, and not finding ® xt. he took it, sir, (Laughter and cheers ) Bo it was ungery. gentlemen, which the despots of Aus- tria ard Russia, and their numerous satellites, calumni- He wanted a pretext to set wax I dwelling upon these perticulars’ ‘The reason representations that, @ariog our part struggles, et bay py enovgh to meet that assistance from A which tiadily confess I hoped to meet; and, con ing the interests as weil as the position which this coun- try eo gloriously holds im the world, as also the known public rpirit of the people, I dare to ssy I was entitied to hope for. (Cheers) Unhappily the people as wel as the goverpment of Bogiand have not been weil in fortued bout the true nature of the Hungarian wat—it) high impertence to Europe, and to that Oriont, whieh in fo many respects enters into the dearest interests of Britannia, so as to be nearly fis Aciiiles’ heel. We were hermetically secluded and chieily so at the very time when our struggles grew to Karopean height; ro tither we were not in the ease to aiford the wonted expretations, or the effect of those we could give was paralysed by the adopted rules of diplomatic formality The people of England and public opinion here were not wont to be much eccupied with foreign affairs till now There m'gbt have been sufficient reasons for that. The opie of England has crown up from within, but it has lly grown up already. This great empire has no more toffear denger from within. Your fate is not p= nee | upon any mortal's whims. Here you are the masters your own fate. But, in respect to for relations, things are somewhat differ has its own conditions—every time has i i I confidently affirm that there ts pot a singie que your internal telaticns which outweighs in importance your external telations Nay, more: I am pereanded that all your reat internsi questions are dependent upon your foreign office. Danger can gather ovet Ragland only from abroad, De not object, geatiemen, that Albion in ite ineuviar porition, and with the self-confident kaow- ledge of its immense power, does but Inagh at the ambi- tion of all the emperors of the earth. I know that with the mighty trident in her porerfal |. even mote than of yore, to proclaim f your poets and never did, nor ever shall Lie at roud foot of a conqueror ” (Cherts) TE know all this ia very wei to aay that that glorio which we call the ess of Britannia. ia not bouts hors, Freedom, civilization—your Parlianent being the representative of whole pie of free trade your ¢ wil these wa eo mony @ Let bud one of Gace aitetios be out, and Brwquaia wii of far Aleppo, who beat down | ated as the feous of disorder and of anarchy. But why | is, that I bave to attribute to these calamaies and mis | PRICE TWO CENTS. not only be no more what she ir, but it will powerfull react even upon your internal questions. (Heer, ‘hot’ ‘The catastrophe of freedom abroad cannot fai to bring ‘about concussions which may seriowly endamger your own tranquillity—your own freedom, your own shapph- ness. To break Britannia itis not necessary to conquer these glorious walls. 2h your manans that Britennie not weigh so much in the world as it now weighs itannia would be broken. (Loud cheers.) The of God is over gays now stretched out, Om: may semble to see it, but nobody can stop it. And there are but two cases ible. ne is, that the mass’ of proaching ‘orents will $0000 entabilshed governme nts Europe one againstanother. In this case E: ‘can not be indifferent. Bhould the fate of Burope sided without England's vote, England would be a European power no more. And should, in this case, reaction aud despotism be ne viators on the continent, it were a1ot ect to see the Cossacks watering their horses in th\@ Thames {n order that England should no more be gress" glorious, and free; because the question will be not g) particular pointe--the question will be, what over Europe to rule—liberty or despotism ? Tiencw thee people of England in that case will not side with des- Pe m, but they wiil side with liberty; only I hum- ly wish that England should pronounce her will in ti that her silence may not be taken for irresolution or im difference. (Cheers.) The scond case is, that the strugsio may be not of States against States, but that the peopix: of Europe may make up accounts with their own rulers, and settle their own domestic affairs. What isit bu- manity expects in that care from England? It is thet England ¢ not only respect—that is out of doubt—- but shall make respected the principle of non-interfér- ence by foreign countries, and the Independent right of° every people to settle its own affairs, for that cannot alter the matter, should the Czar_once more be to violate the sovereign independence of nations. Ha-- manity expects from the people of England that it will shake the mighty trident, and shout out a powerful “stop!” (Cheers.) Be sure. gentlemen, that word, followed | up with the manly resclution to be a good as your word, | will suffice. It will cost you neither money nor bleod; but by it you will have saved the lives ‘of myriads, averted many a bloodshed, and given liberty to the world. (Loud cheers) A glorious misrion, a glorious calling— almost divine. big nat cheering.) The short moral of my lorg speech, gentleman, then is—(renewed cheers) ia, by her intervention in Hungary, has put her on the neck of Europe. As long as Huugary—as long as Italy will mot become free, that foot will rest om Europe's neck. Yet it will paes from the peck to the head, and there will be in Europe neither peace nor tranquillity, but a continual boiling up volcano, aud Hurope a great barrack and a great blood field. (Oheers ) ‘The cause of Hungary is the cause of ciril aud religious liberty. I am myself a Protestant (cheers), not by birth, but by conviction. But I declare that I w. struggle with equal enthusiasm for the rights of my Om tholie countrymen aa forthe Protestants, (Cheers) M prixeiple is that the Church should not meddle wi polities— (tremendous cheering)—and that governments ehould not meddle with religion. (Renewed cheers.) Even with regard to Church property. T differ trom the views of some reformers, for I hold all property to be sacred, and I would not deprive the Catholic Church of the property which our former kings have given her, while I would leave the Church to distribute it among her clergy as she pleased, Now, as to the meavs of ob- taining a practical resuit, I franbly confess that I look to patie ‘opinion as the means of benefitting my mative d and every country in Europe. And here, perhaps, I may make a remark ortwo relative to the resources of Hungery as an independent nation. Hungary has no ad | debts at all, because it isin no way obliged to share im | the debts of the houre of Hapsburg. We carried on the war by means of paper money; but the house of Haps- barg burnt the greater part of it. and we are quit of that debt. (Laughter and cheers) Hungary, iadependent and free, will be ricb in resources; because, if the princi- ples of social order bs diffused throughout Europe, Hun- gary will pot want to keep up large armies, and will have no great national expenditure. Hungery, by means of municipal institutions, is eceustomed to cheap govern- ment. With a surface of 4000 geographical square miles, a population of fifteen millions, and a rich soil, ebe is naturally rich. Her revenue amounts to £1,000,.000 annually, and ber salt mines are so productive that they cannot be consumed for one thousand years, if we should have all the nations of the world to eupply with salt. Besides, Hungary has large national estates. Whilst the house of Austria is very vearly bankrupt, Hungary has considerable re- sources. sige Fe will pay greater attention to the foreign aflairs of the country. by which means you will be able to regulate the direction of all your pubiic com- certs, My bumble request 1s, that you will be pleased in every meeting, whenever the question may arise, to remember that the question of Hungary is coanected with the victory of the principle of freedom in Europe and the principle of self-government; and, therefore, whether on the question of free trade or any other ques- Lion, t beg the People cf England to declare that every nation sbell have the regulation of her own domestic con- cerns (cheers) This is my humble prayer—that publio pe on which is now roused. not by ms, but by in- cident of my being the opportunity for the manifé of that principle, will be expressed still more stro fe I ask the peope of Birmingham, who, by political demonstration carried the Reform bill (cheers.) ged who have palvays supported the principles of erty, to give their sup) to my people. (Cheers. Members of that great Family of pipe & ‘eck brotherhocd is strengthened between us by commom suffering. My sufferings and the numberless woos of my unbappy land, entitle me to intreat you to pay atten- tiom to the feeble words which I address to you from the bottom of my own desolation. Take them asthe ery of oppressed humanity. crying out to you by my stuttering tongue. People of England, do not forget im thy happiness our sutfering—mind in thy freedom those who are oppressed—mind, in thy proud security. the dig- nity of otber countries—remember the fickleness of n fate-—remember that the wounds inflicted on the nations abroad are so many wounds inflicted on the principles of liberty, which are your boast, your glory, apd your bappiness—remember that with every troddeo nation # rampart of thy libarty falle—remember that there is a community in the destiny of humanity, be thankful for the freedom you enjoy, and lend your brethrep a helping hand for future, Rorruth then resumed his seat, amidst the most en- thusiastic cheering and waving of hate and haad- kerehiefs The meeting broke up about twelve o'clock. Very Lote from South Amert The Severn arrived at Southampton on the 13th inst, with the usua! menthly Brazil and Kio la Plate mails, Her dates were Buenos Ayres, Oct. 4; Montevideo, Oct, 4; Rio de Janeiro, Oct. 15; Bahia, Oct. 19; Pernambaco, Oct. 22. Accounts from Rio de Janeiro are entirely without subjects of local interest, the cniy topic there being the Kiver Plate question. Private advices, dated Ilo, the 1th ult.. give us the subjoined intelligence:-~* The fate of Oribe would a few days later be decided. Urquisa was in the neighborhood of Petras, and the enemy compelled successively to bandon his outposts, either without avy or after a faint resictance. Ure his victerious career, and with oalg although supported by infantry, o and artillery. On the éth, the Entre Rios general suo ceeded in opening « communication with the fort of Corro, which ceuscd # lively enthusiasm in Mente video Ou the 6th. he despatched General Medi 700 men, to Buseo, to preven: Oribe's retre: quetter. Surrcunded on ali sides, his position was com- fined to the limite of ab league, Oa t ning of the Cth, 1,500 infantry were to leave Montevideo to join Urquive,and there le awaited to give battle to Oribe. This jonction was expected to take place on the Tth, when Oribe would be compelied to surrender, hemmed in on all sides #8 he was by the allied forces * ‘Three treaties of alliance. limitation of territory, aad | ef peace, amity, and commerce, have been constuded | between this country and the Oriental republis of Uru- guay. Their principles have been agreed to by the re- | spective ecommirsioners Dabie advices. by the present mail, have miscarried. | Lettere frcm Pernambuco contain no political news. 1 eeenieistimmel | Meeting of the Democratic Republican | State Committee, | ‘This meeting took place at Tammany Ilall, om. Tuesday evening, and was numerously attended. I* | afforded a desirable opportunity for the interchange @ | congratulations upon the achievement of the recent vio | tory by the democratic party, The committee were al present. Two different ballots were bad for chairmem, On the firet, Mr Mann had eight votes; Mr. Seymour, | veven; and Mr. Oieco, one, Onthe second, Mr Mana had eight. and Mr. Seymour eight. At this stage of the preceedings, Mr Cagger proposed Mr. Jacob A. Lege elt as te vy cheirman, Mr. Cisco moved tl . pode be eppotinted Secretary, Which was carried. Mer. Murphy offered the following reolutions:— Kercived, That the democratic republican electors of the different Congressional dietricte, organized necord- ing to the act of July, 1851, are requested to meet im conventions ca the eighth day of January next, in thelr reepective districts, at euch place asthe county commit. tee where the district is composed of only one coumvy, tholl designate; and at sach place, where the district compored of more then one county, or of parte of differ. ent counties, as the chairman of the county committees comprising ft, or a majority of them, shall designate, for the purpose of electing a delegate to rey nt such dis~ trict in the next Democratic National Conventi and that the county committees call the mosting the election of delegates to such district conventions, In com- formity with the utages of che democratic party, as they shail deem proper Kesolved, That the delegates so elected meet at time and place as the Chairman and Secretary of meeting shall deeignate, for the purpose of electing State delegates to such National onvention. The votes tekon om these fesolu! ons wers—Ayes, ihé, and Noes, even. The committee in theit report recommended the t the district system in the election of delegates the Naltimore National Cenvention, and that the 8th of January next be fixed as the ‘of meeting for all the conventions in all the district# of the State, when the delegates will be appointed. The mew apportionment of the Btate into congressional districts la adopted as lnets of the district organization The electors for Pre- Yt, at the ensuing election, will ent made to each aes under the late © rk will be entit thitts five votes in the next Electoral College, being © hanef ene and of cone @ correspording aumber of delegaicete (he comreation,