The New York Herald Newspaper, November 18, 1854, Page 2

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Curselvea.” The same solid facts grated upon his | lize it—we apply te it the red hot with which wich islands the comedy ‘been enacted in / entrusted safely through difficulties AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. | ears in New York. “We can pubis the Eagliah ands the betes ase om. Texas. The Americans A ghar hos a call for an- | pac appa ted BNE ade gabe oe eames author's works with security,” ssid the geutiewen | four language be bitter and corrosive, it is be | nexation, and if resistance be made to it, it pill be fiom interpal dissension, sometimes from a ag pare BR | of tne trade, acd having 00 conyright vo vay, the came its the echo of thohricis of vllatod wom, | immediately pressed. ‘The naval foraey’of Fraaon gressior—and ho Low Tellnquinbes his ardaoue fits American / inducement is twofold.” Nov, itis agerious ques the moans of aged mea dying uader the rod, and | end England at precent in the Pi miguf op- the foll epjoy ment of the popularity justly earned [uwrreR NO. IL) | tion whether American taste wouid continue to be the clanking of the chaias to the sounds of which | pete serious obstacles to it. The ican agents by bis merits, In the eloquent po faves delivered és Lonpon, Oct. 23, 1854. | gone geomet wag oe seo Agere oe conte farm our most loyal friends, are tracs- | are be pl Ce. fact, but they Coen on the ay bene cam a be to the inhabitants of Kingston in tne course of his z % publishers ceasec force Epglish works upon porte » ja. almest al ition of the European Powers. | attent Amerivan-view of our European re- recent tour, two reasous are assigned In oar last letter we sbowed conclusively that not |‘ Toricen readers; for, as the market is atocked | Ina foreign land we have commenced an open | Mr. Severance, in his anawer te the protest lations, Men who to this momeat, bowerel, are in-' step which has cecasioned such rid _ withstanding American publishers had done every- | by the publister, demand is regulated and taste warfare words, in anticipation of an active | consuls of Peg'and avd France edt use of the fol sensible to the scope of our ’s ation inthe general regret. In t t pl thing in their power to cramp the energies 0? Ame- , influenced. ‘Yhe ant’ or we have here described cou- pt a : ad | je tae “The Engl = and the French | enisting hele oad men appetite of the real Qeoeral, ‘Tedipenced x coer ricam authors, America had a literature. This is Saued ge ee te gel ig on get te writ: [Oued 43 call—it F by bell rnd | won Bek cence te paioy'he ay ts ofp more pepagiscunce vy ar, mee Wao cen, eapposs, Chat ‘i « ings before the public, and, through the kindness | noun u ¢ matins 6 great féte o! | nations, Can th ft bjected to | Austria can bea , Proven by the high reputation gained for Amerioaa ' of's friend, procured funds enough to defray his ex | caemetion cf th peoples commen aie for the | the customa pig pigs” due United | Co A gers Pita s 2 ie zeae “pier tiem; men who can ‘alk of ‘a secure aud honora- snthors in England, and the increased demand for penses to England. In London he soon found a | Rus-ien pation. This volee will not coase to re- | States,) which consumes forty millions of dollars of | ble yony oe Lord Aberdeen dosa), us the exe only by remsiving in present Pasion and in the their works, ia now the result of denyingto publisher for hia works, the first <f which found |,soped until tt is changed inte a ¢ocsin or a canticle | French productions, and one buadred millions of | aim and achievement of the war,and asy(as Lord J. | second place, he has ved at the conclusion that, the author the right of property in his intellectual puscharers for three editions in twelve months. | of triampb. | dollara of English manufactures? In presence of | Rus:e)l did late’y) that the Italians batter be | in the colovy over which he presides, there area few he result here was, that English literary labor | Distant as we are from you, we are kindred, | these great interests, which would affect the war, | quiet, and then might get better treatment factiovs inhabitants with w the recolle-tioa of productions, and upon whom doesit icflictthe great- being free to every pilferer in Amorics, this autaor ir brothera, your friends. We have recon- | it cannot be su) that France would insist oa | from Austria; men like these,so bound together asto | ancient dissensions survive to an extent est injury? was criven to make his reputation in a foreign coun- | aed the Buselans pT are peed West, wno | the small advantage of Jmporting into the Sand. | club their political and moral ineapact'y, are not in come degree, impede the eugcess of his efforts fa The Athenewm, in its remarks cn the decision of | "y. Now, however, the evil developes itself on | had confounded you with the governmeat of St. | wich Islands s few millions of dollars of silics, wines, aly to-grenwine, strong and brave by reading or | the common good, ‘The first of these reasons may the House of Lords, wakes the following comments; | Dov) sides of the Atlantic: the Ipira'e will | Peteraburg. | &o., at a duty of 500 per cent, stizulated by the | knowing apythirg whatever. Still, it may be well | be regarded se involving some censure upon the : » * | not publish the works of the author in his | The Poles have offered the hand to usin our | Scone ob IRAE * that they shouid how they have compromised | mother country, but ita _jostice caunot be de- ‘This last-reversal of judgment was made at one own country, nor will the Ameriean take the riak of | character of Russians. Such is also the sense of the | this is reduced in the eyes of the American | the honor of their country, and dimmed tue bright | nied. We know not there is, im either @’clock on Tuesday, in the House of Lords—a re- his own countryman’s unknown talent, inasmuch as | words that we have addressed to them—suoh is the | agent to a Calculation of profits and lossee. He | fame of their ages regard both to political and | of the houses of Parlioment, a competent versal which, among other things, in effect, upsets | he can have the celebrated Englishman's upon the character of our alliance with them. They have ap- to ignore the motives of honor which should | military conduct. » | eentative ot the feelings and interests of our all » deniriadl nd before aix e’clook | same reasonable terms. Here, then, the author is re- | preciated our love for the Russian people. On your | defend the Sandwich Islands « t_ American cu- | exception of the out-and-out absolutism of the dark- | colonial posseesicus. Nor is this to be at, American cop) rights—al duced to the merest dependant in the publisher's | side understand it also, and love ne Polea—be- | piaity. France, moaiend, the United States | est of the alavs States,were hea:tily with us in eym- | for there are few whom ability and circumstances that day tho printers in London were engaged in | hands, who will centrate the strength of his trade | cause they are Poles. | have guaranteed the independence of those islands. | patby so lately as last winter, now (many of them) | have ocmbined to qualify for such an office, From reprinting chesp editions of American works | just in that point where labor is cheapest. | What do the Poles ask? | It would be to prove false to this cogegement, and | cannot be that we are in earnest in the | mercantile men, an accurate view of im: Messrs. Law é& Co., alarmed for their property in Recipe Lf sa Phase (3 arty moanaienanes | <a Pap nriger Poland, which will be free to oom (3 abuse ee, Li Pee) % ans F on st Pa, rocking iy, Aa —— affecting Lecoret i all cy anc 704 ~ lenies the author ful mental la- jerate i Rassias from auto- | obterve it, ice own interests, Baltic, and overloo] ulsers eonal ected; profeesional politicians ‘Bunny Memories of Foreign Lands,’ rushed to their | bors, is the compensation which certain publishers | cracy, without allowing iteelf to be absorbed by her, | to make use of its Secendancy over a weak-minded oak wether ia she woe not at thelr command the for printers to order a cheap edition; they found thom | in America are willing—avting from the force of The federal nvion is hes, recbamey,weich is most | Prince, smd over authorities to corrupt, to en- | Britannia ruies the waves, when eaten soval investigation; and as to those who have them- engaged on @ cheap edition for another house. i pacers make English authors, provided it be | opposite to the uniformity of a despotic central- force an offer of what it promised not to The | sure. They point to our armies occupying Tar! selves in coloniat administra- (Meoars. Geo. Routeledge & Co.) By aid, h. , left to their generosity. They will acknowledge the | zation. | American journals, if pod fo simnaais agian’ 8 and lettin; Turks take care of the Danube and tion, the ore rare ia whioh, eB 0.) By aid, however, of justice of the author's claims, bat resis$ ali legal pro- | ‘The present annexationof Poland to Rassis is an | similar manouvre, would say with the usual rough: | drive beck the Russians from the Exincipalition, after their return. they make their knowledge avail- the Messrs. Clowes, Mr. Low hopes to forestall the | tection being. extended to these claims. Here the | absurdity—a work of brutal force. After twenty- nees of their candor, that it would not be seizing a | and ask, ‘Call you this helping of your da ?”’ | able for the public service. The last mentioned reprinters, and we cannot but trust that he gill suc. tradesman, by his own act, permits right to fore it- | three years of pereacution the government dare not | fe but swindling the owner out of it. point to our diplomat opening the fact is explained by the circumstance ceed, seeing that he hsd already embarked capital S¢!f upon ccnscience; but, in the next breath, | displace a single regiment in all Poland without | Honesty be placed sbove all other considers: for Austria to occupy the Principalities, and that—under a system now, as we hope, forever in the of 7 P firmly demands that everything shall be left to tie _ semding another in its place. tiops, and nations are subject to this law as well as | looking another way while her generals insult the | abolished—the dependenciesof the crown were re- production of the work, in the belief that his icta‘es of hia own generous impulses. He would | These forced unions only porpetneta baisat, and | individuals. liberator cf the Porte, and resent the expecta | garded asso many hospitals for decayed Property was protected by law. The mails will car | seem to forget that, in a knowledging the right | time works no change. Are Hungary or Lombardy | _ It is evident, moreover, that at present public opi: | tion that they should believe us in earnest on ans 0 preci alan was looked ana Ty out bad news to America. This decision puts an | while denying the protection which should follow, | Austrian? nion ip the United States, if it be faithfully repre- | behalf of Turkey against her despotic neighbu: Lord Grey, by ado) ag sounder a rs. “ | he gives a double license to the pirate who sets the The only Baltic provinces which accommodate | s‘nted by the rs, is on the govern: | The news of cur action in the Crimea has reached | :uie—ard bestowing the most valuable prize at the end toall negotiation between the au‘hors of that | law of trade at defiance. For instance, the Mosars. themselves to the Holsteino Mongol government of } ment Aaleodt Uy tas cttoumimanses im which Eu. | the United States by this time; be | disposal idoat Country and the publishers here. Mr. Bentley, we Lippeneat, Grumbo & Co., of Philadelphia, seldom | Petersburg arm their children out of devotion, in de- |. rope Snda itself placed to aggrandize iteelf and fish | seen whether the general persuasion there believe, has just con:luded a treaty wita Mr. Pres- | OF never pubiish the works of an English au:hor | fence of the Greek Orthodox church—with the Lu- | for territory in troubled waters. It is announced facts. cott, the historian, for his ‘Philip the Second,’ at | without paying for them; at tLe same time the sin- | theran Bibie in their pockets. that a tr has just been executed with the Presi. | it does not, we must remember what advantage . ‘ 4 i : | guler anomaly of their being among those whose | _ If we Ruse‘ans will not understand the necessity | dext of the Dominician republic, for the cession to | bave given to the oreaturee ot the Czar, who have | self to ro small credit, and justly cites, in his work . & thousand pounds a volume. The same is now | money figures at Wastington to prevent tha pas- | of the restoration cf Poland, Poland will no; the | the United States of Samana. ‘This territory com- | made foo sees their time to enlist all the national | on colonial policy, this signal proof of disinterest- waste paper. The Amevican historian is now im the | sage of an international copyright, presenta itself. | lees separate from us, or els® she will be separated | mords the Spanish Antilles, and more especially | credu! i a a game position as regacds Englund as the English | We would like to hear tre leading members of tris | from Rus-ia by others; and then she will becoms not, Porto Rico; and as the deeigns of the United States | tbe scepticism and pid Berta ours; and aur Minis- If there are to be found in Canada itself indi- ply to heart re 2 tit ey firm explain the reasons for their singuler course, | independent, but furcign to us. on Cuba and Porto Rico have been acknowledged | ers cught to take it » in any event, | vicuals who have looked forward with plessare to author is ag regar ane sonal _ | They agree that it is right to be honest, bat they The question between Poland and Russia is a | ino) Senate, the acquisition of Samana, if it is | that they have igre our affairs as to leave us | the retirement of Lord Elgin, wwe can only rey that, We give Mrs. Stowe’s work only as an illustration rather encou:age dishonesty by decliving to place | family questicn—not one of foreign interventio , would have an. incontestable importance | only an alternative of grace, even in the eyes of | forming, as certal do, a midoant jor ) & very nty others that might beenumerated. That Dy restraint on the pilferer. w, we are half in. | We ought to settle it for ourselves, and that without | and sigmification. The affair of Greytown is another | friendly observers. The is between the dete- | minority, they have not been able to mak» their dis- ar aaa ute attract the pirate’s ia clined to believe that centralization may become | arme. indication of the tendencysof ‘incon to avail | ricration of our naval and military forces, or the ‘atisfackion jarceptible om this side of the Atlant c. * ihre ar an actual bleasing to the area of its action, nor can | For itis not the Russian people that you defend | themselves of European embarrassments for the | hypocrisy of the national tongue. Happy is it for fecepting, wever, a8 we are bound to do, the tex cenary gaze, and fall a victim to his fleecing sys- anything more certain of producing it befound than | in Poland. The Russian people, at the first hour of | purpose of SSretnsy themselves. And now the | tine. Brittons if the worthbiessness (in comparison prone the Governor General, we must assams tem. Another Londen journal remarks, ‘“ About ae Pave pte ewe Nee ey ace of nanos! | ite Fereis en will deny yon sae will curse yonr | bapa ol alpaca a os berm | ples beet a) oe their pep ec ba memerg igor mings = ee cEBTR. @ absence ¢ prot jon to property only | victories. You suttain there the pretensions of the 18 is & Comp! iment e ey of | assigned as 8 poss! cause of our ition: | am Dt ge, who 7, neverthe- three weeks ipa baie a, & br ae hastens the end, but, as fur as publishing and =¢ | Czar—of that Czar who leaves the halt of Russia in | the illustrious founders of independence, who ioe _ but even that true solution involves deep aliisncat lees under aspecies of monomania, which consists Mrs. Stowe’s travel ein . country, an a 6 title thorship is concerned, why may not New York or | a state of serfdom, who takes nine recruits out of a | always been opvosed to the extension of the wove- the uation which permits itself to be so governed. in the belief that all the sufferings which they en- of “Banny Memories of Foreign Lands,” and Lord Philadeipbia become the foons of this centralization? | thousand, who permits the officers to strike the sol- | reignty of the United States beyond the shores of Let it not be thought that we value American | dure, or imagine they endure, and ail the St. Leonards had hardly finished his view of the Already are the people of those cities evincing a | diers, the agents of the police to beat the bourgeois, | the American continent. The unscrupulous avidity | cpinion too much, or succumb to it too easily. It pointments which they mect with in this unoe in the House of Lords, before printers were en, CUltivated taste for the fine arts; is it right, then, | and all who are not peasanta to beat those who are | which it baie forms a striking contrast with what will sppear presently that we do not, and why. The | world are attributable to the presence of Lord Elgin nse tha * Be Seni * that they should be‘driven, for the gratifzation of peasants. Know, then, that in defending him you | {8 passing in the o!4 countries, where the Weatern impressions of any well-informed people, outaide the | in Cerada.” We have at home examples of mental gaged upon cheap editions for some publishers. A that taste, io foreign countries? Yot it is ao now, | sustain all the scourges of Russia; that in fighting | Powers are arming without any ambitious arriér- | pale of conflict, would be valuable; and thosejof the | aberration e0 closely paralle| that we have little cheap edition by Mess's. Roateledge was iustantly and will cremain thus receiving its supplieg as long | for him you fight for seigno'ial rights, for rods, | pensée for the defence of the weak and the triumph Americans are more valuable than most others, bé- | difficulty in crediting the assertion; and if it were annousced; but su speedily ad Messrs. Low taken gg Congress neglects its duties. No country on the | slavery, organized theft by the empioy¢s, and the | of justice. | cause they have moe reason than most people to | possible that the ey the few could be cured up the oballenge, and more speedily, has their book — giobe possesses such splendid opportunities for be- | spoliations made in open day by the Boy ards. “SRRASARERRITIR 127 OLD | know what political liberty is, and bow it is to be | withont injury to the interests of the many, we before the pubic. The trade, it-is ssid, having adve coming the artistic and intellectual centre; but her | Poland bas eoteee enough from Russia, Even | The Annexation Propensities of the United achieved, secured, and guarded. They know this, as | could almost wish that a governor of a different regard to vested rights, and tuking into considera. own people, by the most short-sighted policy, have had she been guilty of errore, she has long ago ex- States. 8 nation which bas won and preserved democratic | character from Sir Edmurd Head were likely to sae ‘ion the shortness ot time the legttimate pnblisher thrown every possible obstacle inthe way. They plated them. Her children under age have been [From the Lodnon Post, Nov. 1.] republicanism for itself; and they show that they | ceed to the administration of the Province. had to escape from a heavy loss, sapported him have suflere the Interests of a trade to openly vio- carried off, ber women thrown into prison, her de- | , There is no enbject on which we, asa government, now it by the extension of their criticism from | In the mesterly speech to which we are adver’- well.” By this it is shown to what miserable traits Jato the laws of literary and artistic progress; so | fenders have perished in Siberia, her friends are dis- | bave teken greater pains, have bestowed ourselves tho small achievements of the preseat cam- | ing, Lord Higin takes a brief review of the leading honestly imslined mea ere diiven to protect their we] founded but ese encoursged in our coun- wed all over the surface of the globe, her trophiss | more anxiously, have made greater sacrifices, than paign to the doubt(ol intent and bearings | events whicn have occurred during his administra- property from the viiest system of pilfering, merely try; and the same short-sighted policy will ere long Tave been carricd to Petersburg. They have not | 0 that of Keeping on good terms with the United Gf those which are to come. They not only ask | tiou. At one period, civil war appeared to be immi- F euse government withholds an act of justice to produce the eame retarding effect on the publisher’s even left her a past. States. One would think thas a disagreement—a what our fieets and armies bave done, but | nent—at another, armed interference on the part of the rights of authors. Anything but anartnor may {nterest, unicas he seek spent Topislation to protect No! On the Polish soll grow laurels for Russian | difference even—was a thing impossible to stand. -what the British nation means to do when the | tte mother-ccuntry was apprehended, and «ymoa- Olaim a right to bis labors; he, poor wretch, has uo him against the chesp labor of London. warriors, It is full of the tears of women, of the | No sooner dees such 8 case arise than our diplomatic whole Turkish empire is laid naked under the hands | thisers from the United states were at all times hts. | As tatters now stand, we would advise the Ame- blocd of men shed by your fathers—perhaps by | CO©rpS is ransacked for a clever and able man, with | of the allies. Will France and England minister to | fully prepared to turn either contingency to their ug, to illustrate the blighting and centralizing | yi thor tosend a copy of his M3, to Lond yourrelves. On the borders of the Vistala, near | American prepossions, who is sent out with strict her wounds, or cut her to pieces? The Americans | advantage. Through these perils the coloay has of this sanctloued pluude:ing, give a tew Spas nie of the eatablioved auenctes} nholby ee ike cemeteries of Praga and of Volga, there is no | instructions to make things plessact. As Amerioa— ask what we mean to do when Italy and Hungary | passed in safety, be:ause Poth Engiand and transactions of ove bouse in this city. Messrs. Geo. corporating, (a contemptible expedient,) a chapter | military glory for you. Tue only possible glory for | #t least that part of America called the United States rise up, by means of this very war, against our virtual | Ameriea have learned to respect a people enjoying Routeledge & Co. were first to seize the advantages or two of English writing, and publishing it inad- you in Poland is the glory of reconciliation anda li. | —-i8 largely productive of sons with an ene present coadjutor, Austria. Lord John Russell said, | free institutions, ani knowing how rightfully to use offered by the late dovision of the House of Lo:ds, yance, may gain some advantage over the pirate, auce! for other people’s gocds, ani as our goods happen some months since, that nothing would iadace us to | them.” Tne Imprrial Parilament, by placing the of riating American works as free- property. by fearing lest he may Woche fingers with the | Wkat you‘have to do—how you should eet your- | 98 yet to lie somewhat near them, the c2se now re- | act against Poland, Hungary aed Italy, in sach a | Clergy Reserves at the disposal of nd provincial Rushing into the aia:kes with the works of Cooper Engiisn material, will wait in distreas for the origi. selves to work—you will learn when the time will | CW’ with consicerable frequency, and matters are | caee; but then, he has since shown that he does not | Legiglature, and, by entrusting the sams boty with and others, they son flooded it with cheap reprinta, pg} es it appears ia America. Among those agen- havecome. Our couneels shall not fail you. But | wade up between England and the United States understand the case of Italy at least, by saying that | the reconstruc'ion of the colonial constituttoa, has regardless of the interests or feelings of the honest cies we ctin single out the Messrs, Low & Som of | in awaiting these events, understand truth of | very cleverly—very wisely, no doubt; but, the Italians might obtain boons from ‘Austria they | evinced its confidence that the power which has . Again, according to their own state- Ludgate Hill, as being the most respectable, respon- | our words, and by all that you hold sacred, swear | tO shortsighted mortals, very much to the advan- | wonld wait and be quiet; as if the Italians wanted | been given will rot be misemployed; and to the re- Iaent, they have printed and thrown on the market gible, ard prompt in their transactions with Ameri- never to carry arms against Poland. tage of the latter. Contrary, no doubt, to the | anything of Austria but to depart out of their bor- | suits produced by Lord Kigin’s administeatioa, this Bo less than 20,000 copies of the “Lamplighter,” at can authors. Wespeak after some experience with | _ It is not the Czar who exacts this osth of you; it | Wishes and expectations of the originators of these | dere. Seeing these things, it is no wonder if the | conficence ia principally to be attributed. Nor haa ome alee per copy; 45,000 at 1s. 64.; 20,000 at English publishers. AN AMERICAN AUTHOR. is the popular conscience—the remorse of the peo- | Schemes, but ratber in accordance with general ex- | Americans aek what our diplomacy and foreign a the material progrees cf the province been less satix- 0 the Qs. 6d.; and 70,000 at 3s. Gd.; and of “Sunny Memo- ncsiiadn ey mse os merase le. And thongh you sbould perish for this cause, | Perience of human nature, and very much inas | tion pcrtend; and it will do us no harm to ec factory. Toe public revenue, which in 1846 smount- rles,"” $5,000 copies at 1s.6d. Now, when we ioform The Voice of Russian Democracy. Lise blood will be Jered —yod will have fallen ex. | Cordacce with [bret itera en States qnestion. ed to about “£100,000, has since been trebled— its re- the ‘reader that the Mess, Routeiedge, in these cs snow Tum SOCIETY OF RUSSIAN LinenaLs 7o | Plutory victims to the freedom of Poland—a freedom | Dature, the effect of is line of conduct has been, | We. will undertake, Bey to SnaWe ie | ‘Stcizeesi tans wiptcmsicraepek 7 Sad ee bees chy ae cases, acting upon prin iple, make no compensation (us Rod SontenEGN POL to be sbared ia common with Russia; the commence. | 20t to create a reeponse TOC regio) mony | American questions thus far. Tarkey is safe | creased with a rapidity to which, exept in the tothe author, his sense of justics cannot but be i BRIAN : ment of the free association of all the Slavonians in | With the measure dealt to them—not to raite a ‘ca’ | enough, as far as Hogland is concerred. There is | Australian States, no parallel oun be found. awakened to ‘the evi influence this state of things Broruens:—At last the Czar has succeeded in united and fede:ated republic. me ca’ thee” sort of feeling—but the reverse. All but one mind in England as to the support of the | is, moreover, to be éx.ected that the Reci- must‘carry with it, The Messrs. Routeledge have bringi i the effect of our gifts on the United States isto Turkishempire. We have no desire to meddle in proet treaty recently concluded with the re character for enterprise similar to that of es rtnac ee Laan asin thet? 1 * The above document has an historic interest from its | Tralee their appetite—to extend it in other direo- the internal aiministration of the Porte; aad we ited Btates will, before msty. years have passe?, Harpers in our awn country; but however much ereigns, fearing their people More having been extensively circulated in Warsaw in March | tious—to sharpen their teeth, widen their jaws, and — ghall be wide awake, when the time comes for the | augment,*to an extent which cannot vt wo may respect enterprise, regulated and governed than all other enemies, have endeavored to hold last, in the Rufsian language, and also secrotly distri- | incresee their impudence. The comfort of this | eyacnstion of Turkey, to see that nobody else does. | be estimated, the commercial prosperity already 00 by honest considerations, when it becomes seckless back—have made every concersion—but he has ney- buted amon, a gate without the fovernment be- | ig, that it is @ symptom which will lead to the As for the cangerous Austrian neighbor—tac Porie | pre-eminect. It is not surpricing that Lord Kigin, the rights and property of othersitis adangerous —erthe es succeeded in provoking them to strife. BiB dale lA as been translated for us by «Ken- | core of tte diseases We canvct contiene to | hes its own express treaty with Austris, and is quitting the scene of hie labors and bis triumphs, ~ tucky gentleman. ‘i i | r element, and is apt to subvert the various interests , cc ad achala natal OOP Ek, * | make treaties for the purpose of admitting Amcri- | »;awerable for its own fortunes, as far asthe terms | should cast a longing lingering look behind, and with which it com's in contact. Again, with this vast H¢ bas bad no consideration for Russian blood. Atineundion OF tha GaluRwioh Wise: cans to a share in onr colonial fisheries, and allow of | cf that treaty yo. Further tban that, no harm to | anticipate the possible arrival of a period at which amount of American literary labor at the free digyo | We Russians and Poles, refugees on a foreign {From the Paris Constitutionnel, Oct. 81.) their leymg Dands on the last rich jewel of a friend- | Ts) key will be permi:ted. Blow as we are toturn | he may again assume the daties which he has so sal of these publishers, they bold!y assure the poor soil, shed tears at the accoun’ of those exocbitan © The American jourpala announce the proximate | 1y State b:canse that State happens to have fallen, | 0.1 » mezely incapable Ministry, there can be no | well discharged. Sbould this hope be realized, Eagli-h writer that his works are no loner valuable ‘ epnexation of the Sandwich Islands to tue Unitei | ‘orevgn evil government, into a condition from | ccuot that any Cabinet would fall to ruins in to them; but, to supply what they consider a neces- punt a sae ee ae a bee a ane area S:otes. It is even said that a treaty bas been exe- | Which it is at this moment struggling to extricate | » moment, which should conceive of such a gary pretext, and to stiract purchesers of their pi-- °f Our soldiers, consigned by thousands to a useless cured between the King of that archipelago aud | iteelf. We shall not recognise another new b-unda- | thing sa releasing Tarkey from the Czar merely | approach rated works, they ostcntatiously pay Sir E. Bulver death. the Presidet of the United States, ani that all | *y line favorable to tke United wey ts order thst | to bard over any part of her to Austria, And, | to the practical lesson which is to be drawa from Lytton twenty thousaud pounds for the right of To perish for a just canse is noble. Itisfor this | that is wantirg to complete it ts its ratification by | be of their sloops of war may, on the mere per- | satothe Freuch alliance, our American brethren | the euccess cf Lord Grey’s nomination. It cannot Publishing his works in a cheap form, for the space 444+ courage, boldnes’, devotion and love are im. ‘be legislative powers of the two couctries—for the | sepal will of the captain, or wore still, on the in- | should remember that the allisnes of the people of | be hoped that, in sll cases, abllitics eq al to those of Of tem years. ‘This is held to be the necessary policy Be, g Surdwichers have also their parliament. Are we to | fliuctious of the government, burn a rising town of Fy gland ia with the people of Fraace, the war being | Lord Elgin wili be placed at the disposal of minis- by which a system of piracy is conserved. {3 not {lautedin the human heart. But to perish useless- ;,card this statement as anytting more than the | the last importence to us, snd to all commercial | ¢gually popular in both countries, It isthe French, | ters; but strong encou agement is held out to ths centralization in ita most blighting form? If it ' ly fora caprice of the Czar is @ melancholy fate. expression of hopes easily mistaken for the realty, | Europe, especially and distinctly under our protec: a;dnot the English people, who are coacerned | appointment of thcee who have disticgu'sbed them- be not, we would in a'l seriousness ask the reader to the whole world sympathises with the Turke—uot OF is it that the old projects of annexation have | on; and having so burnt it— having, on the small- with the political tendencies of the French Em- | selves in the vocation most anslogcus to that of point us toa canse more positive. Will Mr. Carey assumed the form of cousistency, aad have passed | €*t provocation, been guilty, in the most scandalous peror, Hs position is no business of ours. It is | colonial administrators. It may often happen that will scarcely be pombe for a second n to equal in utility that which is now g its close. We have already adverted analyze those ical workings of the more pro. out of partiality, but because their cause is just. {rom the domain of speculation into that of facts? | #¢ ruffianly manrer, this cowardly action, | with the scople of France that we have todo, and | able men are obtained from other professions, but tective ryntem he so strenuously advocates? In this They are attacked, and they have aright to defend | We are not in a position t> solve this question; | tbat he should be, after an inquiry, reinstated in there {3 no reason whatever to doubt their aims and | experiexce derived from political omployment at case; which is a single ilinatration of fifty others, 60 | themselves. but we msy say, with the popalar proverb: “‘Thore | his ccmmand. So many and such grave actions | feelings in regard to this war being as honest and | home most necessarily be the best qualification for far as authors are concerned, everything iseacrificed | 44 our poor soldiers pour out their blood by tor- | #20 smoke without fire.” If euch frequent men- | bave occupied us lately that it is likely that this as elevated as oor own. One word more on this | similar duties in distant colonies. The sa'ariea are, te the interests of one writer, horctofure extrava- tion is made of annexation it is because it isin tie | Passage of arms may have been forgotten by many procesacf American criticism. In attempting to | unfortunately, for the most part fixed at too law « gaatly paid for his light and genial labors. The | rents; they fight courageously, they strew the earth natural order of things. If it has not been alresdy | Of our readers. We will run over the facts for their Fretsh the despotisms of Europe, ani to mark the | scale to attract the most d tinguished talent; but same result bas followed in America, and is illustra- with their corpses, and nobody except us grieves at accomplished, we may rest satisfied that it soon | benefit. Greytown is, or rather was, a ristog strug- movements of opposing forces, America should re- | where, as in the case before us, the remanération ted by the system adhered to by the Messrs. Huzper, their fate—nobody appreciates their bravery. | wil be. ‘ ging port in Cential America, inhabied by & member, as nobocy in Bare forgets, that she has | is adequate, administrative ability of the bighest ‘What the effect of this is in centralizi the publish- The occupation of California, and the commercial | ™1xed race of the usual stamp, and placed entirely bean in herown eye which cannot but impair | order maysafely be made an indispensable ing powor and destroying a well regulated system _ The Czar seyshe defends the orthodox church. | developement which Sen Francisco has taken in| #00 absolutely under our protection. At thissta- the clearness ard correctness of her vision. How | With ms year, and with each extension of respon- ‘trade, will be it to the reader at first sight. But it is not attacked; andiftheSaltan oppressesit, consequence of the working of the gold mines, have | ticn Commander Hollize, on board the American great the imperfection of vision is, is shown | sible goveriment, the importance of this test will Seomer r phase o the system is, that it enables the why, then, has the Ozar not raised his voice on the augmented the interest which the United States | slocp-of-war Cyare, thought proper to demaad an Die sympathies farming, when alienated from | increa:e; and, in justice to the mother country as i eo Ozar! ‘Mesirs. to print a vast amount of Eng- subje t since 1828? ea inthe Hawaiian archipelago, and at the | €Xtravagant sum from the five hundred inhabitants | [inglard her ne- | well as to the colonies, it must not be ish works at ermerk Firice of labor and material, ‘The lot of the Christians, says the Czar, is a hard Sema time, Steir aneanh Goth ne it In estab- | —& sum which it was impcasible they should raise, pro slavery that America has sympathy with Prsrammncsesdterenantnrt: ‘we-th ; sad throw them onthe American market to the one in Turkey. We have never heard it said that lishing themselves on the Pacific, the citizens | 9d which was demanded on futile grounds. irresponsible Autocrat who rules over a nstion | The Commercial Importance of the St. Law= prejudice of Americandabor, which must be reduced the Christians in that country are more oppressed of the Union naturally thought of beneiitting | Failing naturally in cbtaining a sum which | of slaves. It ia through’ her negro slavery that rence. te the same menial level wish that of London,or than ths peasants are with us, more particularly by the vicinage of this sea to extend their | the imhsbitants, poor people, did- not pos- | America has degenerated in political om, 80 [From the London Gazette, Oct. 31.] eatirely destroyed. Notwithstanding this, thesame thove bestowed by the Czar in serfage tothe nobles. relations with tle countries to which it af. | fess, Ccmmancer Hollios jadiciously removed 4g to become less qualified for political criticiam as | The great lakes of Canada aud the river St. Law house, having a branch in America, may pudlish Had henot better eommence by freeing the serfs at forded access: aa for instance | Australis, pod ms ee ks cae ie ioe time goes on ts in no spirie of reorimination— fae ig nn eee rie —— ape ibii ome ey are ol 6 Or jox church, ant hina eaus steam - . iu for We CUnsi view ol wi Treason- mar Pies oe, Hiitein Chery while, Aooding She y oe nad dapess: ett Pe, 0 - com: | down the town—not a very difficult matter, as it able, on the face of things, to be found serious fanlt | great advantages for commercial commanivation here wie, Americas... In Sn hp fond je ha a ae nag Peas eeticts, Road these sels sar be was moatly wood. An act more cruel, gross, and | with—itisin no spirit of :eciimination, then, but in with distant couvtries. It is the northern em- they r will th ct the rights of No! the Czar defends no cause—he has no high easily multiplied. Now the Sandqich Islacds, situ- Boe teas be argu nd that the pubiic are bene- principle in view. He is only guided by his pride, ated half way between America and Caina, form | Piratical was never performed. We have made our simple friendliness, that we would indicate to the | bvuchure of the St. Lawrence which has thrown dis- fitted by the publisher's dishonesty, but as yet we and itis to this pride that he sacrifices your blood. too convenient a station to be neglected by | }monstrance, and we receive for answer we know American republic that there are more modes of | credit upon its capabilities tor jeiptes elerey have no evidence to warrant any such conclusion, Yours, say we, not bis! He is too careful of it. Have | American commerce. There already exiets @ | Dot what in words, but in deed, the Tesppolatment political despotism than one. One is autocracy, | img the upper districts which it drains, and for We mistake public character when we suppose it yon ever seen him before ranks? Yes, you* company which performs the service between | of Commancer Hol ary fit heen temporarily ‘or deapotic government at home; and against this | Commerce as well as the water of which it should be to see the publishers’ power pre-eminent, and Dave reen him on the parade ground, but not on San Francisco acd the Sandwich Islands.’ It | Suspended by the Ai ty during an inquiry; rd much else, the Americans have recorded a | the natural outlet. Hitherto it bas been iq astate of ne author enriched at the expense of twenty the field of battle. has just increased its materiel by two new steamers, | and nct his pane only, but his mission practical and immortal protest. Ano:her is terri- bah Loe iedaacin Fpeg en ida, whilst ite It is he who bas commenced the war. Let it fall By-and-bye, the line instead of terminating at this | oMce more t> thes-ene of his iniquity. This is tris] aggreesion—encroachment on the national | rival Miaatssi pi, is naturally navigable H ers. ; p But a few days ago, the proof sheets of a work by then upon his head alone. Let it puta limit tothe archipelago will only touch thee on its ay. Tue | Boing a little wo far, and, we think, rust opemtre existence of ps populations. Of the two kinds | to itseourcer. The opening elso of an artificiat American author were sent to a friend in London, stagnation of cur industry. China Bea isthe object towards whicn those hardy | ¢yts of our government to the true meaning of that of oppression, this ust is perbaps the more bar- | stitute from Albany to Buflalo, nearly twenty years forsale. ‘The author's name was well known, his After 1812 came the 20th of December. aeventurers are ‘anesting their views In the mean. | &fthe United States, to the feeling that springs up barous, and the more vulgar, if it be not the more | before the improvement of the St. Lawrence was un- previous works having circulated extensively; and, What will come after 1854? while the regular arrival of a steamer st the Sand- | in moments of eer ti tothe rapacity, the injus- mischievous of the two; and this fa the beset- | derteken, bas, with the concurrent advactages of F the supposed protection heretofore existing, Shall we be so supine as to permit an opportunity wich Islands meiztais American influence muci | tice, the bad faith of its policy—to the insults with | ting ein ard snore of the Americans. Their gov- | greater population and wealth, caused a te: Mesersaarray, Bentley, Low, or Blackett and Hurst, like the present tp eacane, Patch will wot again more surely than the appearance st distant iater- | Which i: treats us when it thinks oor gee are fall. | err ment, it ust be remembered, is themselves. By diversion of Western trado from its Proper c ‘would bave been glad to have availed themselves spcedily present itself? Shall we not know how to vals of a ship of war. Nor is this Greytown ,atory a slay evidencs “4 their government, they foe per negro slavery; | This great river—which for commer.ial purposes of his mt work st three bundred pounds or profit by the storm invoked by the Czar against The Archipelago is, moreover, peopled by a great | tbe licerse whicu America permiis Lereclr, o* Of | and on account of this institution, its waste and | may be said to commence in Lake Saperior, the ta. As matters now stood, and under that Eimselt? number of Azericans. fhe government of the | the indulgence which she allows her appetites. jijicit needs, they 7 plovge into further and further | largest body of fresh water on the globe—leaves tue free intercourse which both governments sustained | We live in hope—we have faith in the fatare ! | ccuntry viriually belongs to them, for it is in the | (Ve smnounced the other day that the United States agenessicn ou the rights of nations, Enough! Let | valuabie mines Rie the coasts of that iniands sea, at the of their literary men, not oneof those | Look at Poland! Hardly has the news of the war | hands of the missionaries of their nation. Amongst fiad mace another Seta a e ak tovards Cuba. | them ponder their own tendency to hehe gy wita | and deacending t! rh six de; of latitude, em- respectable houses could make an offer. “If I publish , reached her when abe again raises her head, and , the !atter there was only one who took in serious | She hes chtained the cession of a Port Samana, ad- the Czar, their own conduct in regard to Cuba, | bracing um extraord! nt of coast, aud a it ta respect tothe anthor’s rights, as my feelings | pants for the first opportunity to viudicute her rights part the confidentisl functions which were entrust- | Mmitably eituated in the Island of San Domingo. She their own ceclaratiors akout taking possession, to | fresh water eek he the Haron archipelago, which would prompt metodo,” said Mr. Biackett,“‘the pi- | avd her liberties. ed to him by te sovereign (f Hawaii, Pbia was | hav, at the same time, arranged with the Republic | the exclusion of ali cthers, of the whole of the | 14 only eurpaseed by the astonishing one’ at ite : rate will supersede me with an edition at the mere | What will you do when the people of Poland'take | Dr. Judd, the Minister of Finance. Notwitustand- | which rominslly poseeeses that part of the isiand, | great west:rn continent (no: to say of both). If , mouth, penetrates the fruit zone of Onio, price of ink and paper, and my edition will layon the | up srms? ing his Amer‘csn origin, he was general'y regarded | for the dominion in her own hands. Shebas,inshort, such be real'y their intentions, their sympathy with | western New York, and western Cauada—the gac- shelf.” After several unsuccessful attempts to in- | Your fate is the worst of all. Your comrades in’ asthe firmest support of Hawaiian iudependence, made bereelf a stronghold avd barbor in the finest the Czar may be lees unnatural than at first sight | den of North America for the variety avd ex:ellence duce a reepectable publisher to take itin nand, it was | Turkey are soldiers; and you who are in Polaad, are | and sfter paving vainiy wied to gain him over ta of those ‘+lands—close to Cubs - close to Porto Rico. | ypyesrs, If such be not their intentions, they taust | «f its products, and the seat of a commerce to which offered to the moat energetic pirate, who, at first, you satisfied to be only executioners? Your victo- their c:use, the annexation'sts have intrigued Such is the sequel of her late attempts on the spanich | +. ,udiate, by thelr choice of their representatives, | m0 Hmit can be assigned. From Laks Erie thia amiled at what he was to consider the ef ries will over you with opprobrium—you will have | to remove him. ‘They succeeded Inst year in| s¥eeument. The probability ts that this boldness | th: men who have dared to say it for them, and who | great outlet takes a course aimost in a direct line frontery of the American author who, under the to blush for your courage. The blood of neiga- | getting bim replaced by one of their psrtizans, ef proceedjcg will have, nites 5 6 good —— Tt | is we must chserve, have not as yet been called to | to the Atlantic ocean, uscending to the same laté- resent free plundering system, should expectany- bors can never be washed away. Beware, then, ies: | Mr. Allen, formerly coveul of the United States, | “il, te Tepe, open the eves of our government, and 9, xcconnt. The last advices from the United | tude from which it took its depa:ture on the north- Ring for his works in ‘eogland, He had no objection you merit once more the name of Cain, It may res} On the accession of the latter to power, it was gen. | \neuce them to take a sharper tone with the United | ~-ates do declare that Presideut Pierce and his goy- | erm shores of Lake Superior. Tho lake aud river to examining it, nor to publishing it, but, being upon you forever, exally considered that annexation was decided upoa, | 5'1¢* than bas been lately neld— to «xplain to them | eminent will be in « minority In the next Congress. | tradeof North America is extremely comprebeasiva, i common i wt t ‘We know well that it will not be of your own will | and the representatives of France and England ut | ‘tinctly bow fur we will suffer them to go, an: and ray , and Gemands more of the qeegig. hy ena howtos len, ath him that you merch against the Poles. Bat it is time the Sandvrish Talavds formally entered # protest | % t Ic:rd of rem onstrance we will bo prepared + hg | Stability of the Institutions of Canada—Lord | stuention, to examine, if the hope that he might be that you should baves will of your own. D» you | against all projects of annexation. Mr. Severance, | '{ thes exceed the line, een gm sre persaaded, i+ | KlgineHis Friends and ents. ‘The St. Lawrence, a3 the outlet of one moved to make some for it. In this the think; then, that it will be eaay fo prevent thoussnds | ccmmfssioner trem the Uuited States, drew up an | *l! ttatisnecdtul. America is going somewhat tuo | [From the London Chronicle, Nov. 3). vince, bas been left behiad hy the smatler ‘ot. mistaken, for the pi- | of men in arms from having a good understanding | «rswer, which contained some c ever special plead: |, #8t,vnd requires to be checkes, che ked simply b | We observed acme time ago that the stability of | ‘he outlet for many States, But now that, by our guthor’s friend was 1 ee eee) eee e | ing in favor of avnexatioc, but which algo adwitted | * * ™, strong statement of facts, culoulstedtobring | ¢,padinn tnstitutions was being subjected to an or- | mproved policy, the transit of ths St, Lawrence nas alias 6 te a eee ceptmerons heart, |" Onvone occasion when, the new administration of that the governmert at Washiag'on Lind received no | ‘¢7 {© Reso". Am a Power, shi is unwieldy; and | (eal of unueual severity. — A combination of parties | been made free to all who inhabit its shores—eome oy cee oun Sor. fRe'privitege of the crown domaine was introduced, the peasants in cvartures on this subject. +89 jucee of her own intereste, is quite acowasibe | i. \)e new Assembly defeated the Ministry which | 4,000,000 in number—the trade of the valley of the sing in KEL) his ‘alow pirgtea. Att ‘the Poland revolted (this was the case in nearly all the , Tis was about the Ist of September, 1853. Since | 1 9eon, provided it be fairly and weil pu‘. In sil | }ud sor some years administered the affairs of the | St. Lawrence, without national distiaction, with ‘time he honestly assured the helder of the | provinces), and the troops were ordered out. The that time the question of annexation has made con- colony with r and success. A new Cabinet was | Britain, with the Lower British provinces, the West re present doin; in ali her condact at Grey- 5 P thas it be advisable to accept his offer, | pessants would not disperse, and the general gave sicerable progress. The newspapers of the country | ni peeree popnineo. a “Medes, she es formed, embracing mem! Sra Cente Jodia islands, and the roe be the trade of ibers wi g00n load. The soldiers executed ‘his order, have been gained over, and the adhesion of the par- bad jus'ified the conclusion that they woul yam SS Yi on res se ed a it hed been given to intimidate the Hamentary authorities has brea acquired—that r to blanco is a coniha aeaiae ae bard Sand | bie, driteoce utter abandonment of principle, to act Bag cect actos ‘we cannot but acknowledge the insurgents; but the people were not intimidated. any, the consent of the majority of the members has cath ee ghbcrhood in vee mete We ai | barmouiously together, | when couattentional nee of the pirate’s assertion. We Then the general made a to the colonel to been cecured. In afdition to this, the former rt onan. curiosity and interest to her ven coheked the country, portance, w! had long wit peed with- | Thos commanded, the soldiers took atm, but did not minority has become strong. The European popsla- were about to be brought serene ttaee the nen p nahi eient “ide his fire. Astonished, the general himself advanced, and tion and the population of mixed blood, by ‘au. | it that position. urder discasaion ‘a view to Anal pot: sary instead of breakivg over the straightforward gave the word—fire. The soldiers lowered their og ot their information, their activity and And ee able and experienced Governor- Falesot his ted syatem of purl . Wita the | arms snd remained immoveabie. their wealth, exercise in the Archipelago a prepou | American View of the European Waratter | “eneral ish America was absut to "quit the rule applicabie to America, what chance is | Weil, what do you suppose was done to those sol- deratirg irfluence. The conqueror and the civillzer Relations with Russia. post which he had so long and eo abie occupied. It flere for rs to spring up and enrich thelr | diere? Abeolntely nothing. The commandants were | of the Sendwich Islands, the founder of the present {From the London News, Ost. 31.] Low appears that the change has been one of men, country's 7 None, we answer. Let us | 0 much alarmed at this affsir that they let it pass dynasty, Kamehameba L., who attra:ted there tha | We have published more tran one letter, stnce | but not of mencures, and that the recently formed give-amother instance which came under our obser- | im silenc e Korcpeans, for the purpo%e of profitiog by their in. | the war began, on the policy of the Czar in the | aéministration is pledged to carry out the policy of vation searcely two years ago, in illustration of | There example of what may do. dusty, was too sirong to fear them. He was ex- | United States, at present, and on former occasione | that which prececed it. To the country at largé, what American authors have to straggie : | _ But to ab-tain is not all you can do, The tremely jealous of the independence of his kingdv3a. | when the movements of liberalism, or the dangers | therefore, the change js of little importance, and it | cent inthe same period. The merchaats of Lower A man, who ed contributed lars to the | hour is come for you to side with the masses in Rus- He never for sn instant would have eater: | of deepotism, in Karope, msde it convenient that | wut rest with the individuals principally concerned | Oerada biases the Goversmens Isoting for ae aobpatee and ticdical literature of the da and | sia, as did in 1851 the army of Poland for iteeif. tained sn-idea of alienating it. Bat the Ame- | the attention of the Americans should be engrossed | to decide how far their present professions are re- | mbny years to cons! ot a ship canal t> connect the aarp taleat bed boot acknowledged by competent | We approach a great epoch, ricam race, invasive im its tendencies, multiplied | by their own fecuiar difficulty. Our correspon. | conctirable with the principies of whioa they were | St. Lawrence with Leke Champlxin—e canal whieh Philadelphia witn two | Let it not be said, toat in a moment co soiemn | ard ccncentrated in ite hands all the resonrces and | dents cffvred cvidence of the very curious fast that, | formerly the champions, Another ground of appre- the Provincial governwout ia 1848 found himself in ‘ _. tobe called for,” ids 7 ment, ther | and terribl ou have been without fraternal nearly all the power of the country. The present | for a lorg comee of years, a pro-sinvery outbreak ia | beosion is removed by ‘he intelligence which we | to be called for,” and which the Board wae ots cones tolatate msc Paslne, | pe i ‘s ' successor cf ‘he conqueror, Kamehamolia, has } the United Beates bow been co-incident in time with yesterday published. The present Governor-Gen- of Tr: Montreal has repeat to be ‘to whom he submitted bis MAS. examined and We forace a danger that menaces you. We | neither the boldnees nor the genius of his pregeni- | every revolutionary movement in Karope; and since | ers/, «ithough bia resignation bas been accepted by | essential to the prorperity ot tue olty. Lf vessels of be ‘them ; but the invariable rep!y to his soli- | with ‘0 pieserve you from acrime. Have confi- | tor, He ia not in a condition to resist the torrent, | the Cxar's flattering attentlors to Senator Douglas, | her Mejesty, will retain for a while the reins of | 3,600 barrels burthen were allowed to compete freely ’ ae i a 4 e. al:hough his pride and his interests are opposed to | who got the Nebraska bill carried, aud to Dr. Cott | power, in the hope of being able to secure for hig | by way of the Bt. Lawrence—as they could do by the scans tor an offer breil te enya a hk Rnesia of the futnre that soenks to you— annexstion. There exist no doud to ets ds man’ who informs the American public that the | success¢r an exemption from those anxieties whica | aid of such a canal—against the small veesels of 700 Pe erp k ig ee rieka. Publishing new | Rossla, fies one young, condemned to matism on powrrful elemonts of resistaase—a numerous aad | British barborians cannot stand thelr groundagainst | Dave Cistarbed his own administration. We may | barrels barthen by wey of the Erte Oanal, tue bulk of names is to run greet bast: for | the mative nally ana whore voios resomuds in exile popn'er party who wou's sustain (ve King if he rb | vhs bly Husalam army, tbe case has Decome more | corft ety aaticlyate that, nnder Lis able auspice tre great fraffic on she latter canal woal) iaevicabiy a a ‘i a la’ the Russia of the martyrs, of the mines of Siberia, fused to sacrifice the antional indepencence, Bar | end more clesr to all good eyes on both sides of th | the cuusues « neion @hicn have been adverted | be ¢rawn through the St. Law: es to the manifest gpa large gales. We in ght epee to es and of casemates—tre ‘Rassia of Pestels,and of the Americans pave the tolent of makivg 3) mucn | Atlantic. to gilepeedily be disposed of, and that to Sir Rd- | a¢ventsgo of the poople of Canada, The resaite our nam a ‘ak power, bat even then it j Mouravieffs, of Ryleiff's and of Bostovjeffs—tre Ras fare around sien? that pwd ty fle ber voice of tie | = Thrre is now ge | ey to 809 wnd to ey mnt! Heaa will be lefs the easy task of governing & i ans Rasen ; os Soeaee Wan eis ~ ? * 4 ‘the organs be- nastesof the people; they have made the king be- | ou thiematter, We beve had cur tangh, aod our | uma ott tog popuiavion. : ke z ications o! nfl i an would doubtful if, we seoured pee ne we See an, hecae e bi Howe that he wold remain trolated tn tala oppodt frends iy the Uri'ed Biates Nave sutt Lhe are few Br Bian atatesmen whose position | connecting the st. Lawrence and Late Crsaplain ser Lis moment moce enrisbis than tirat of Loct | would exert over (he shipwemis of tho Wass. Pho Sercted, aban unuanalty early ege, as the | Pre Coral te the moat formi abl) comvetitor with ertoe fore of te most important colont's sub. | the Bt. Lasrence toe the teads of the West. ject 'o the Bistish crown, ne haa coedactcatao pro | The average acvusl amount of ta@ber duties paid at the Denglasses acd the 0 e there ore wiser mea anc by! | sopbere than # De points pat olla May oso ty it Neal ia err jour cry of grief, your hatred, your call tion to the measure tf he should thiak of astem + jn ‘oriterss taey write more for- | for vengeance againet fing penne. We de- | ing if. mes ie - | And it lished names; | nource to the world the dark of your govera nd Setar rahi tate wake 9 more security mest; we aro w living reproach to if, we stigmas Fryer; thi videdt hat snuck wou't be & wepued to recommesce om th LL EE EE Eo Oe

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