The New York Herald Newspaper, July 19, 1856, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

‘ NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1856 show us his countenance, and all nature should be in | thrift, unequalled Hberality nndless resources; the | society and failure here and THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE PRESIDENCY, | Stars, “tuis’is'to tee tr revelry or festivity, which | pliant tool And submissive ‘vassal of the Vandal south, svoryre kd advocate tuners st exabhoat Se: ABD: ‘wou d be as much out of now as at a funeral. her to smite freedom to the dust, and getting no- | of chattel slavery as the remedy. one ‘The audience then joined in singing the favorite anti- | thing in return but scorn, ignominty, inault wud outrage of | mond says:— MOST ASTOUNDING REVELATIONS. | *¥ery sone — every kind. What loss of self-respect, what lack of “Until recently, the defence of slavery has labored un- ” “Come al) who glaim the freeman’s name.” principle, what hardness of heart, what blindness of | der great difficulties, because its applogints—for they neneennneed Mr. Gannison presel @ poetical effusion, which ono | mind, it indicates on the part of the people of the North | were merely apologists—took baif way grounds. Tuey Mg re ens anti-slavery wees 1 en oF 9 wr Lay! Ts init aclsiaiaied sonhes fF eteared of slavery fo site P maavery, al ot r: iti ad written @ occasion, and wi! |, he me in. sown wereby up the slavery prit n, t Southern Secessionists and Northern Abolition ) Pet vier (uy ‘appropriate introduction to the ¢: ‘fag aathe notch ¢ ta iyperiy ‘and transcendant | forms of slavery to be wrong, cod up the authori. | ours, when such’ rain as this has cleared off | of the ‘Muuntains, and fathomed the bane et? Disnnionists Rallying upon Jamey cikes of the day. ghee ‘and, casting it into the broad Atlantic, defy alt | ty of the Bible, ‘and of the pistory, practices and experi- | the surplurage, and left us nothing but heart, are the ga- eatern ji but T defy him to, discover 1b ’ tt was unanimously voted that the poem be printed waters thereof to wash out its bloody stains. Today I | ence of mankind, Human experience showing the unt- | thered exsence of the most radicalanti-slavery. You know | spirit of Washington anit Jefferson's adm et OY] ‘with the report of the proceedings of the a renew my accusation inst thé American constitution, | versal success of slave society, and the universal failure | when alconol freezes the useless matter goes into the ice, | want to carry the country back lo the policy of the Jurse (wv 0. Pp Bs ” Mr. Gamuuson then addressed the assembly as fol- | that i ts ‘a covenant with death and an agreement with | of tree society, was tuavailigg to thera, because they | and in the absolute centre of the congealed mass thore | adminssd ations of the government. They were, th 7 lows:— hell,” which ought to be annulled now and forever, To-day | were precluded from employing it, by admitting slavery | will be found one single drop, living as the concentrated | them, broad, gigantic steps towards the stamph yf tha su. . ones SPEECH OF WM. LLOYD GARRISON. 1 pronounce the American Union a league of despotism, to | in the abstract to be wrong. ‘the defause of mere negro | essence of all spirit. So with this meeting. We have | power at theprecent day. The very fis page of the Risto POWERFUL ARGUMENT IN BFHALF OF A GREAT] ytr, pagsipmer— The laud is rocking with an Unparallel- | perpetuate ‘which is a crime-agtlost our common huma. | slavery involved thom in still greater difiiculty, The | sloughed off’ the ‘and have nothing left but the | / the government ts a compromise, and the second % Une Fi INCREASE IN THE CASH VALUE OF NIGGERS, ed excitement, The conservative aud prudent admoni-h | nity and asin against God. To-day I aflirm the * higher | laws of all the Southern States justified the holding white | true spirit. (Cheers, gitive Slave law Washington's own administration; jit ‘with calmness and | law’? to be the rightful and paramount law of the land, | men in slavery, provided that through the mother they o man, Mr. , has a right to be surprised at | with reram we cume to the annepation Chairman, of Util tuage, and to ran no | to the subversion of every statute, agreement aud com: | were descended, however remotely, from a negro slave, | the present state of thugs. It is just what we have | sured slave lerrilory, and the admission of shave States. hazard of rashpess, 1 will not trust myself to the impulse | promise inimical to human freedom. ‘Tosday I stand | The bright mulattoes, according w their theory, were | attempted to bring about. My friend Soaeay wae telling No, we are rot Wegv/, imend Pillsbury. The gy The Richmond Enquirer Enlarges apon the | o¢ ihe moment, bututier only what in the quietade of my hat slavery has done. has stolen | of the antirlavery mofement is, that it never stops is and Warren, “The line of defence, however, is changed now, and | Texas, crushed Kansas, usu the government, left the | attacked. The only possible anti-slavery movement 11 weceder on pric. | wrongfully held in slavery, us, mornin, ‘nor ttudy I hay ed for this occasion. ciple, a revolutionist with Hancock, a1 Speech of Coven Whe, remy ena rat passed away since the bo id “In. | but upon a broader platform, with a lottier spirit, with bet- | the North is completely cornered, and dumb as an oyster, | Presidential chair empty. has she done? She hag | this country is au aggressive one. We are very emai reel depenaence *? was heard throughout all the colonies, aud | ter weapons, and & nobler object. “For the Lord | The South now maintains that slavery is right, natural | done just exactly what we have been tempting her to do— | numbers; we have got no wealth; we have got no pebi: the gauntlet of deflance was thrown down to the colossal } spake thus to me with artrong hand, and instructed me | and necessary. It shows that all divine, and almost all | that is, she has developed berself. The slave power had | opinion behind ue—the only thing that we can do Is, 1) @ The Disunion Nigger Worshippers, Pure and | power uf the mother country. A long and sanguinary that I should not walk in the way of this people, saying, | human, authority justides it, The South further charges the same power and the same wish; it is the eagle, single to fly at our enemy, and pick out bis Sim; Reject Fremont Struggle ensued, ending in the triumph of ‘rebellion say ye not a confideracy to all them to whom this peo | that the little experiment of free society in Western bu ery enterprise that has developed that wish into | eyes. (Applause.) We must carry om the bute ple, phe spend nae rales creel yyalty, of treason” over submission, and tHe for- | ple shall Ce @ contederacy; veither fear ye their fear, | rope hes been, from the beginning, a cruel failare, an . It is just what we expected, exactly. The furces | tl ae Pha ; each man singling out bis foe, and mation of @ government based upon compromix», aad | nor be afraid, Savctify the Lord of hosts himself; and | that symptoms of failure are abundant in oar North, | @t last are ranged face to face. Our friecds have not fightpg him. You iet whe South gain half the battle, sa cemented with blood. In all that pertains to muteriat | let him be your fe ind he shail be for a sanotuary.’? While it is far more obvious that negroes be slaves than | turned to the bright side of the matter to-day; but there | by allowwg her to begin the attack. Thero is no gai+ wealth, to augmentation of physical strength, vo extension Let the bow] of ‘Treason ! treason !”? go up from the | white-—for they are only @t to lahor. not to direct—yet | is merit in the republican party. It is this. It isthe first | lartry ip defence—no entbusiasin in it, uuu a man is CONSISTENT WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON | ot territory, to increase of po} , to internal isve- | throats of governments! mercenarics, designing kuaves | the principle of slavery is in itself right, aud does not de | sectional party ever organized in tbis country. It does | driven to bis own hear thetoue, and defends bis cradie AND WENDELL PHILLIPS. lopement, How vast is the contrast between that puriod | vascrupulous demagogues aud murderous oppressors ! | pend on diflereace of complexion. tterenge of race, of | not know its own face, and it calls itself national; but it | Jn a’ great coptesis, it is the minority attacks, if it, car- te hg and our own! Thirteen multiplied to thirty-one Staces— | It is music to my ears. 1 tear the masks from the faces | race, of lineage, of language, of habits and customs, all | isnot national—it is sectional. It is the North arrayed | ries the day. The defect of the present day is tha & &e. e three millions to twenty-eeven mullions of peop.:—s | of all these conspirators against justice and the right, and | tend to render the institution more natural ani durable, | against the South. Henry Wilson said to me, ‘We mugt | We are always crying ovt mercy—‘we don’t mean ? Cy " ke. limited boundary, to an extent of territory now reaciin: | reverl their hideous faces to the gaze loathing world | and although slaves bave been generally white, still the Eg every Northern State, in order to elect Fremont.” | and ‘beg ) our parcon; we only want to defend ube from the atlantic’to the Pacitic. Bat how aswunding a: | Their protession of patriotism i3 a he; “they that ar» Jed ] masters and slaves bave generally been of different na iven in imagination, he did not count upon a ei ritory over Were beyond.” Tsuspect every tha: been the decline of public virtue, the demoralization ot | of them are destroyed;”’ the treason which they falsely | tioual descent. Mosesd an aristot'e, the earliest histori | Southern State. It was a distinct recoguition of the | begiiir with an apoogy. Now, political party in Slavery Extension Beneficial to the North the entire country, the growth of the slave power, during | charge upon the incorraptible friends of treedom, they | ans, are both authorities in favor of the difference of race, | fact that the republican party is @ party of the Nortn, | this country bas commenceo its platiorm und its speeches {From the Richmond (Va.) Enqairer, a leaainj gouthers the same term! "Nine new slave States have been adde themselves openly commit. They are tories beyond all | but not of color.” edged against the South, Theodore Parker wanted to | with a lavieb eulogy of whe Union. It got down on jts ~~ democratic organ.’ . to the Union—half a million of slaves increased to four | of Revolutionary infamy; contomners of all human rights; | Ponder well the following extracts from a work pub now once where cisunion would begin. I will tell him; | knees first, and safi, “I beg pardon for being suspected Why does the North expose tho extension of slavery) | Milions—and all constitutional liberty Hes trodden in th» | scofters at the Declaration of Independence as +a blurred | lished in Virginia, entitled * Sociology; or, Free society + | just where that party divider. | That is a Northera party | of abolitionism.”” lack republicans, the «ministration What voeeible injury or joss can she sustain trom either | dust. We are a betrayed and ruined people; over us is and tatered parchmen';”’ advocates of * border rafflan’ | Failure,” by George Fitzhugh :-— against the Southern. I do not cail it an anti-slavery | paperé call our tricnds; and every one of Y em gets np the existe or the extension of slavery? What injury | “¢*potism incomparably more awfal and exactiug than | supremacy and universal slavery; revellers in corrup “Make the laboring man the slave of one man, instead | party; it has not risen to that yet. [tis a Northern party | “ud proves they are not blacker (ban auybody i» eee ie ee eee ener e a How docs | our iuthers ever knew; all the old landmarks are removed | tion, crime and blood. If such aro the leaders, what { of the slave of society, and he would be far be tter oi.” | agaibet the Southern. They made tho tirst litle bresch, | +teae of this, Wey ought to glory in it, aud way, “Thak advance the cuuse of either humanity, philanthropy or | Ot of the way; the waves of licentious usurpation and | must be the condition of the led? When the wicked are ) ‘Two hundred years of liberty have made white laborers ¢ first crack in the iveberg is visible; you will yet hear | God! you suspect me of being @ blick republican; I wae abolition to contine slavery to its peeent limita? In due, | Wild misrule break over all the land; and ‘the end i | exalted on every side, well may the land mourn and cre vanditti ’ ‘Free society has failed, aud that | it go, with a crack, through to the centre. Its first dis- | afraid that you would suspect me of being oniy a white ‘what earth!y provocation have wo given to the isms of | 2% a yrembie. # which 36 pot free must be substituted.” tinct recognition was Banks’ election. He was elected by | cue.’ (Cheers) They ought to he able tw blister the the North Jor 45 ing into a furious passion simply because ‘What is left to us as free, rational, accountable being:? | The preservation of the existing Union is the certain ‘Say the abolitionista:—' Man ought not to'bave pro- | Northern men—not a man trom the South votiag for him, | lips of that ealtor who, will tep Uscusans Southern edi. spam In one half of the country we may not deny ths right of | triumph of the slave power in whatever it may scok to | perty in man.”’ What a dreary, cold, bleak, inhospitable | That ie the vaive of thet party. I hail itas a sign—as a | tors cryipg out, like sterue’s starliug, ‘black republ- We wesert our equal igi wo, the com coe Avtivriey’ | property in mab, nor urge the duty of emaucipat.on, nor | accomplish, Within that charmed circle, onder that | world this woukl be, with auch’ a doctrine” carried into | great gulp. T did not Bope to see it for ten years; it has | car,”” decitres that be hus ‘uo coaccrn for, the black among them) would take these questions into calm and | ¢i culate un anti-slavery tract, nor arraign the slave code } sorcery spell, we shail find ourselves powerless. There ractice |*).... ‘Slavery has been too universal not to | come unexpectedly early. race, and reeks enly wo save the whites, Whatis our e : for its unequalled cruelty, nor attempt to enlighten the | are a thousand weightier reasons why the North should canned’ tha Hath lobe ested ia rive ca) sober re essary to bature, and man struggles in vain against Looked at in that light, the republican party is a great | merit? Ivis that we ba’ igre eee arene abent Teens 9 | derighted rondman, nor give the Bible to the destitat, | separate from the South, than oar revolutionary favuers | nature.’’..... “Free society is a failure. We slaveholders | gain. Locked at ip aby other, itis an absurcity. 1 will | traitors and inficels—that \s all the merit wo have whot all tis sound and fury, t semaae ant storms | BOF anterpret it on the elde of impartial liberty, nor ex’ | had \o secede frm the mother country. Here the lan- | say, you must recur to domestic slavery, tho oldest, the | tell you what I mean. "In 1776, iu 1745, had James Otis, | got. We toust hold that right. If you go up and atibe North means, We Othe tenet chaue, | Poge the most horri¢ burbarities, nor denounce the a: } guage of no rash spirit, no impatient soal, but of tho | best, and most common form of socialism.” and Joseph Warren, and John Adams agitated politically, | Cown history, aud want to fini woo Las done good w his ter, meas 6 and extent of the crimes aad offences with | OUrsed trate in human flesh, nor protest against 1 calm and dehberate Channing, while the quostiou of the “ Free society is @ monstrous abortion, and slavery the | through New England, in order to secure themselves seatg | age, find whom the ra-culs opposed and you will be sure which we stand charged as having committe: against bur | ®rogation of the sacred institution of marriage, nor re- | annexation of Texas was ponding before the country :— healthy, beautiful and natural being which they are | in the English House of Commons, we should have been | be did goud to his generauon, If you will show mea *) ia. 6 dade he ton sit, | monsirate against plundering the laborer of his wages, “To me it seems not only tha right, but the duty of the | tryiag ‘unconsciously to adopt. “The slaves are | under Victoria todey. But they went to Bunker Hill, | party that begin its platforia witnout an agology, I will ep pags wanaonpcerapelabe of proton weceatyind txcept t. the poril of lite or the certainty of imprison’ | free States, in case of the anu>\ation of Texas, to say to | governed fur better than the free laborers at the North | and here we are, "sow, the republican party. ts aah | Elguebe te teripted th tute, aad stall ing peateton: he philanthropy, to promote the prosperity of our common | mext. With more impunity may we arraign Popery in | the slaveholding States, ‘Wo reguri this act us the slisso- | are governed. Our negroes are not only better off as to | mitting just that mistake. It is agitating ior a po- | Walley said he did in Congress:—ao watter—he has earn- country. and to live in poace and amity with our neigh- | Rome, or autocracy in St. Botoreburg, fice vo face. lution of the Union.’ * * ® A pacitic division, in the | physical comfort than tree laborers, but ibeir moral con. | litical reault, when the times demand revolution, | ¢d hie parcon—be had a good word for Charies Sumner bors. ‘We a-c prepared to listen calmly to thoir list of I see before me a noble army of the friends of freedom, | first instance, seems to me to threaten Jess contention | dition is better.’ If Otis and Adams had thrown away the en- | in Faneuil Hall. (Chiers.) Whenever a y begins its grievances, and their charges of aggression and injustice who are entiled to constitutional protection, in the full | than a lingerivg, feverish dissolution of the Union, suct ‘* We do pot adopt the theory that Ham was the ances- | thusiasm of 1766 on agitation for the ballot, you would | piatiorm thus—'We go ior the abolition of slavery fret, againet the cath, provided the grievances are stated, exer 0 treedom of speech and of c: nscience, wherever | as must be expected under this fatal innovation. tor of the negro race. The Jewish slaves were not ne | never have beard of them; or all you would have heard | whether ibe Union survives it or net’’—iet that be the and the charges ‘are preferred in decent terms; ant wo | they stand on the American soil. On this anniversary of | one, then, I say that, earnestly as I depreeate the separa groes; and to confine thegustification of slavery to that | of them would have been that they were obscure fana. | front, the beginning, the very sharpest edge of their axe welt our national independence, let us, in imagination, tak. | tion of these States, and though this event would disao | race would be to weak Scriptural authority, and to | tics, arrested somewhere as traitors, and who died of jail | —I know they will peneuae. If they will begia with Mill endeavor io reply, after due deliberation, truthfully | (yi ine of march westward, and cater into the Terri | point most cherished hopes for my country, still T cout | love the whole weight of profane authority, for wo read | fever, They knew their time; they, read their epoch; | that—with the declare:iou that Mr Foss wanted the Me- Fe eF CUNY ainanta have been ¢o overcome by | Wry of Kansas, proclaiming the self evident truths" ot | submit to it more readily than to the reception of Texas | of no negro slavery im ancient times.’”:... “Savery, | they knew it did not ask for ballots, but for bullets, and | thodists to make—'We love the slave more than we iove a the Deciaration of Independence. Whatawairgus? Out into the confederacy. Ido not desire to share tho r black or white, is right and necessary.” ow therefore they went to Bunker Hili, Now, what the pre- | the Constitution’’—if they will let the South know it, that that they have, in great measure, lost the fuculty of 2 ack, ; he _ rage. imprisonment, assassination, death! Here is a por | sponsibility or to live under the laws of a government Nature bas made the weak in mind dr boly slaves.’ | sent time demands is not agitation about the Territories, | i# al Iwill ask. Why, if today you wilh-oply give mo berate and vontinuous speech, and only sputter und | TH? Mie re ie cade enacted for that Territory by the | adopting such a policy. If the South ix benton incor. | ..,.**The wise and virtuous, the brave, the strong in | We shall have asummer of talk, of agitation, It will be the despot cuptrol of Massachusetts, wit Gan w pawer Lor Will abo- stammer forth abusive epithets and b'asphemous interjec- ahs tions. paro: . Missouri banditd:— porating Texas with itself. as a new prop to slavery, it | mind and body, are born to command.’’....‘‘ Men are | just as if we took a strong cup of tea, and plun, it into | to turn its ming and beart for twelve the fit Paton on they will robably fad gegen cra rey Hany person shall entice, decoy, or carry away ou: | Would do well to insist on a division of the States.’.—Vo!. | not born entitled to equal rights. It would be far nearer | an ocean of warm water, and made » Kedar ep voy of | lich slavery ip three years. 1 will cal quite 80 ly a3 they at first supposed. | of this Territory, any slave belonging to another, with intent it. ?; 239. the truth to say, that some were born with saddles on | it. You take the Kansas outrage, or that upon Mr. Sum. ra and Representatives. 1 will tell thom tq busyithem. Possibly they may discover, as pacified children — do, | '0.deprive the owner thereof of the services of such slay if Dr. Channing could regard the Union as no longer | their backs, and others bo sted and spurred to ride them | ner, and dilute it into one thousand political speeches. | selves in getting up a convention for ge rnc) ie that in thwartiog their es of mischief wo haye | With intent toefiect or produce the freedom of such slave worthy of cortinuance, the government no longer deserv- | —and the riding docs them good. They need the reins, | and it is a homepathic dose of nothing. But if, imetead of | to bea sovereign independent State. I ‘will ~ up deen but promoting their real interests. shal be adjudged guilty of grand larceny, aud on eonviciion | ing of respect, much a contingency, what would hq not | the bit, andthe spur.”’....‘ Life and hberty are not ina: | doing 80, you were to take these two events, ‘and carry | Custom House deors, and write over tiem, “N8 Que enters ‘Meanwhile, eat tae Philauchropasta Wihve recovered | fercorloss than ten years,’ at hard labor | sy, were he now living, to urge an immediate diszo!n- | lienable.’’....‘‘ The Declaration of Todepeacence is ‘exu- | them to the people, and say, ‘The time bas come for | here unui the emancipation of the, waves /burew these their temper and their sh, (for now they fume and shall aid or assist in enticing, decoy- | tion of the Union, in view of the appaling strides of the er false, and uborescently fallacious.’ ’” Massachusetts to call her representatives home,” and be- | doors with a shout of welcome from ve mitten et Smear worse than Debnam, Uk Shales aoe rayor vending ottat tie | Slave power sines the annexation of Texas! assuredly, | Filly, read the following @ulogy npou ove of those | gin thet course of conduct which is to create a Northern | people.” (Loud cheers.) The momeit fast Jews roneb- ‘Moses or a young Dutchman,) meanwhile, we will sug- ing to another, with intent to pro- | upon his banner would be inscribed the motto under | marauders and bandits from tl th, who have over- | republic, those two events would bear fruit. They never | es Washington that Massachusetts ‘has’ b ja- i e sf gach Bers, or with inteat tode- | which we rafly to-day, ‘No umon with slave holders!’ | run Kansas with rapine and blood, as bestowed by the | will. They are fated to gradually slope down until they | tion, be sure some steps will be taken to get rid of slave- gest answers to our own interrogatories. prive the owner thereof of the services of such slave, he | and bale ‘aaune no effort of his voice or pen would be wanting to ef- | Richmond Examiner:— ‘are loet. is the way all things are lost. Events crowd | ry. ’ It is only the first step that cos bi aut og Rep adopernion cant diffuston over ‘a targe space te | Trace ieee iecis! Seve uapricied ai hard labor for | fect the separation. ’ Prt ane Nedaaa,* the faringe sf too fur Houth and | on uses fast shar they tare thle ellen Takcnshe bisory | tat ite Cheetos and the Winuhtone: toy’ en. Waa hare ‘tncrease their value. It 1s notorious that all ba tever | not less than ten years, ‘The passage of the Fugitive Slave Inw, snd the repeal | West, is the noblest type of mankind. In his person is | of the last five years, make a note of it, write it in abook, | not yet eacrificed their reputations—and take most care of that property which is most valuable. See. H. If any person shall print, write, introduce {nto, pat of the Missouri Compromise, elicited from the Rev. Dr. | revived all the chi aah peer oft the knights of | and then let an indifferent spectator read Macaulay's | once said, that when the flood és bigh:allothnidrify wood It is obvious, then, that the extension of slavery improves | '!8h or circulate, or cause to be ‘brought into, printed, written, | Wayland, late tof Brown University, a declara. | the middle ec. He is eq noble, but far more use- | account of the reign of James the Second, which | comes to the shore—have bowed what the condition of the slave. But what shall = roe) to | eg oem, or shell Koqwinely ait or asist in 1 ration oquelly emphatic and revolutionary : ful. He is the pioneer of a and honorable civiiza- | changed the face of English the Dat y Advertiser has takea off its ; those whose intense affection for the ts Mike that of | Scotty imo'ubee’ patel pampuiie, tapas ing within this | \Tyalue the Union as much as wny man. I would | tion, He is planting a master race—men like the Greeks | for paper, magazine, or circular, | oy dry \ ‘ ly sacrifice to it everything but truth and justice | and Romans—on a pew soil; not bu; up white men at | caulay’s. Moran ne eee ete eer thes Ons eevee, Le, | soctrine, Sdvice, or nuendo, esloulated to product « alsorder’ and tberty. "When Tmust surrender these, as the price | the shambles, to remove them trom alvety to-capital in | terrible Ky ly, dangerous, or rebellious disaffection among ves (1 of Union, ‘nion becomes at once a thing whic! to make them in a w generation: wes t capi a! Visiting him with death? All we can answer is) “Your | di ‘Terriwry, or to induce such alaves to from th er abhor. ‘To form a union for the sake of perpetuating op- | tal in Kansas.”” such as # E i : scheme is impracticable.’” After several centuries you | Vice of their masters, or to resist thelr authority, ing on to close go - - ~ is to make myself an easor. IT cannot Such is the spirit which we of’ the North are attempting | State. Had our fathers acted in the ranks ot Mr. nanan. Mr. Wint cannot tind % ae ares = Cooly g ere fp Darigeos fac der gay of felony, and ‘be puniahed by imprisonment at hard , for love liberty as Srech Sor aay neigh! to conciliate! Where is the Union? What is the Union’ | lar position, there would have beea no Rev The | bis heart w go to Faneuil Hall, aa, Mase: ye means as woul be necessary to brit ~ rege : ‘Sec. 12. If any free person, we ‘spank or writing, assert | To sacritice my liberty for the sake of union, is impossible. Charleston Mercury, ‘the people | lesson of the present time 1s, there will) | outraged on the floor of tbe Senute and Mr. Faves, of, Vi Taount of neers ‘population’; but | or maintain that persoriahave’ not the right to hold stives in | God made me free, and T cannot be in bondage to any | of the South and of the North have neve ‘been one peo- | ing to face the crisis. The fing. | giuistthloce his portion ts “moderate, **-consUecUotal ould not abolish slave: By rendering slaves | ‘bis Te: or shall introduce into this Territory, print.pu- | man.’ * * © Taking Christ, then, for my example, can ever make them so. All compro- | They are willing to holdon I asked ‘and report says that when the time comes, you will hear hes . me lish, write, clreulate, or canse to be introduced into this Ferri- | and striving to imbibe hie what wan 00 dhee atest) | of bok adn hemanedin : i he is, the omy (daphne spirit, can Ido otherwise thin up truces are in vain. the other day, Fremont. urdensome, er of little value, you might make | tory, any book, paper, pam, or clreular, eon. 4 A wi f A o take to my bosom ever: essed at d dowa trodden child the I adduce, on this occasion—to said he, “we shall rs | thing I should say would be this: Mr. poco: Greaney wegen meh ges Bhd ay lao he ho came ad mel OT olor Cthumanlty? Jesus Carin my master, Is hot ashamed t: | which volumes alith te udaeden® thaw’ tae hagsions | | liesce’”” Bo Re helen,” at Worcester, that he was very severe on Charles Frtn- he sinve’e treaamenh cma oonthion Tec eY nck | Meniehed by aprioument at hard labor fer aterm of noi leat | Call them brethren, and can I have any parsnarship in an | ness, the madness, and the criminality of attempting to Ide not know any thitg against xcept | cis Adame, when he sgoke of Jobn Quincy Adams as less = mi ‘become from excess of numbers, eman- than two years. attempt to trample them under foot? .e Union itsel’ | perpetuate an alliance so unnatural and monstrous be- | that the Boston ost tay: he once ate dog’s meat, and I | ‘the last of the Adamses’'—annibilating the son. Lf Me. aaa eeould not be resorted to, because their numbers | .. Fleeing from this doomed Territory, let us enter the na- | becomes to me am accursed thing, if I first steep it | tween principles and interests so utterly irreconcilable. | do rot wonder ev jemocratic. puppy that. | Winthrop votes tor Buchanan while a Massachi Ciratiem non render emancipation a dangerous, if nota | “onal capital, and speak our minds freely as to thisda- | in the tears and blood of thoee for whom Christ died.’ Tet us, then, to-day— as wild and chimerical, | (Laughter and applause.) But the qi what | Senator lies on his sick bea, the bert friend of the measure. yaabins bi hae nw ahd I the safeguards of personal liberty; ‘What other Union than this was framed by our fathers, | all suggestions, propositions, and contrivances for restrain’ | are his defects, but what are his merits? What bas be | of Winthrop that ever lived will have cause to lament ‘cannot ‘over this part of our subject without while bending over the prostrate body of the bleed: | or is now in existence? What ether Union will the South ) ing slavery within ita present mits, while Savana cap done to deserve, in this crisis, the contidence of that anti- | that the father of Robert Chaties Wint was not the prov “a ting that the Southerner likes his slave, not merel: ing Senator from Massachusetts, felle1 to the floor of the | consent to maintain? Our Southern masters and over. | stitutional protection tit it fifteen of the thirty-one slavery sentiment that has been thirty years in creating, | last of the Winthrops. (Prolonged cheering.) Whepa and oe because he is his most valuable pro} byt | Senate Chamber by ruffian blows, we shall be saluted by | seers have given us their terms. Listen to their lan | —rogister our pledge anew, before heaven and the world, | and which has got to grapple with a despotism stronger | Massachusetts man, and in & Massachusetts c more still Loe Pig depead cage ora pret ade the Virginia in the following terms:— guage, as uttered by the Alabama Democratic Conven | that we will do what in us lies to effect the eternal over- | than the world knows? Ihave mo doubt that if he says | held up by Massachusetts confidence, is so blind to’ most of uil because he is a slave—dependant on him and “These ar abolitionists in the Senate are getting | tion:— throw of this blood stained Union, that thus our enslaved | he is opposed to siavery, he is; that is, 1 de mt think bo spirit Mr his own day, co aorvilo tobe oustroll poly §, him. Northern men can understand the | Sboveth have been humored until they “That the State of Alabama, in the ment of thi. | countrymen may find a sure deliverance, and we may no | is a lier. I think he isan honest man to that extent. Bat | meuts of the government, hat for oftce, for succeed; pomertul influences of these latter sources of attachment, forget their position. ~ amt “nag? mage and <n Convention, will, and ought to Fesdet, even (ati a ~ ne woaoe be sarwersbte ie Sate Le Let us not fe a want & man whose na ite pledges bim 0 0 conaie revenge upon his rival, who took yp 40! ‘the 1 know that all the family affections procee: to be impudent to ‘ow, they are a low, | sort) to a disruption of every tie which bi er be irawy olf by any side issue in regard to Kansas, nor tent, systematic, determi ue with ve power | Senate, he can violate all the memoris af 2 ateg book learning, but as | Union, gry action of Congress upon the subject ef sin | deluded by the cry of * Liberty national slavery s¢c- | itself; for this election goes for Buchanan, from them. But why cite the family as an argument for | ™e®2, pn Ah cone oe pene Be utter!) de slavery to men who have resolved to break up the tummily | MCPD, torn.” ult they have been suffered to run to» | the E f : i ery in the District of Columbia, or in places subject t) | tional’’—seeing itis the existence of slavery in the South | Kansas to be conquered, but Mexico is ‘jurisdiction of Congress, incompatible with the satety. | whieh is the root of all our troubles, the cause of all our | Cuba annexed, and with these additional 5 : Hy g i = 3 nh i 3 i 3 I ie im orcer tocarry out their principles and to preserve wit > 's. The: i ithout 4 y must be lashed ito submis. | the domestic tranquillity, the rights and honor of th | dangers, the source of all our perils. Away, then, with | ivto the scale of the slave power, the whole nation will | her vocab: m hed ye eo jed_in quieting your consciences, b; an Sumner, in particular, ought to have nine-and | slavebolding States, or any act suppressing the slave | all nos'rumms, concessions, compromises, expedienta, | soon be in chains. “ pm om Tone). terion The thes satisfying you that slay porwr is beat for roy ed thirty early every morning. He isa great strapping fel. | trade between the slavi jing States, or any refusal. | traces, and the like. But one course is to be pursued— Now, 1 have great pepe.. Line Drcnnens witite least. were honest men, comparatively. eon Rae a any davations at hetanity or por, | 10%, abd could stand the cowhile beautifully. “Brook« | admit as a Sute any Territory heresier applying, be | one object aimed at, one blow struck:—The North must | I¢hink there is reat thet Buchanan will be eleded. || Gemocrats gone to reed, Bus Winthrop never evee want lanthropy, we are quite hopeful that in addressing our- | ‘shtened him, aud ‘at the first blow of the cane he bel- | cause ‘of the existence of slavery therein; or any ac | separate from the South, and organize her own institu. | | have no hope for Kansas. Howcan I have? Where are | dered into the democratic ranks until they became the aane Gt ui aasnaie we chal ales ven ” | lowed like a bull-calf.”” Prohibiting the introduction of slaves imto the Territorio- | tions on a sure basis—enabling eazh one of us exultingly | the bundred men who went from Why, they | refuge of all that was basest in the common sewers'el sue Mots Df negro. slavery extension as the Lowest aai | There is that biackguard Wilson, an ignorant Natick | of Utah and Now Mexico; or any act repealing or mate | (0 shout— went through Missouri, aud laid down their arms at the | country. (Applause) oe ‘scheme of phil at Possibly, too, we may | CoDbler, swaggering in excess of muscle, and absolutely | rially modi ying the laws mow iu ‘force for the recovery , the land for me, the land for me, feet of a mob. Fifty men from the of Worcester Yes, friends, it seems tome the main thiog is,’ js cagvalse oor atesie aed eaiee ater dante fora beating. Will not somebody take him in hand’ | of fugitive slaves. | Where every living soul is free; met with the ‘same fate. A thousand from the | while we recegniseevery genorous act, Wiile we to you a train of hay otylend ep f is another huge, red faced, sweating scoundrel, whou “That any snterference by Congress for the preventio: Where winter may come, where storms rave, town of Concord alone gone into the treasury of the Mis- | every noble word, while we seek to honor, with pny Leh he Be luctcud Sf relaxing | 80Me gentleman should kick’ and cuff until he'abates | of slavery in any of the Territories would be an inexen But no tyrant can lord it'o’er the slave. (Cheers.} | souri mob. Who wishes to breathe a word against the | rous magnanimity, every devoted cedenidag teem You now, by your lectures and your something of his impudent talk. sable and unconstitutional infringement on the rights o J. B. Swamy, Esq., of Newburyport, addressed the | earnestness of spirit that would to the succor and | politician, in this matter, we should writings, encourage wives to ‘maintain their equality, or Southern gentlemen must protect their own honor and | the South, which, it is the deliberate sense ot this Con | meeting ina very spirited and effective wmaaner. (We | protection of Kansas? But, atthe same time, let ua see if | our earnest testimony that nothing can be ‘therein, to desert their husbands: ‘and yet, with feelings. It is an idle mockery to challenge one of thear | vention, it would be the duty of the people of Alabam. | give a sketch of his remarks next week.) these men are acting wisely. If we are to aid the Mis- | that direction. It is only an experiment to educatemen sing tice, treat the ‘grass widows” or “fugitives scullions. It is equally useless to attempt to disgrace | to resist, even toa disruption of the ties that bind thi Before Mr. 8. bad finished his speech (it being 12 | *ourians, let us them the muskets, but not the men. | to something better and higher. Look at it! See mattimony?” with conkemys for ‘adopting your al- | ‘hem. They are insensible to shame, and can be brought | State to the Union! o'clock) a loud peal of bells commenced ringing from the | Fifty per cent of the muskets bought in New England are | Col Fremont gets the say the republican jour, vice. Why Dot make heroines of them Gaibe you ere to reason only by an application of cowhi¢e or gutta per- “That the restoration of the Missouri Compromise line by | neighboring churches, and a cannon planted in the cen. | to day in the bands of the Missourians. It is an expen- | nals, cannot he abvlish slavery?’ He does not ee ting and liovizing Burns? Their cases are alike in | CD® Let them once understand that for every vile word | Congress would be a great wrong, resistance 0 which tre of the square commenced {ts noisy saluto—all ia | sive Way of treating them. If you waut to send muskets, | ernment when he gels the Presidential chair. ‘Fiat tothe poarm I spoken against the South they will suffer so many stripes, | even to the extent of a disru; ot the Union, would b | honor of that union (') which binds Massachusetts to the | send them; box them up, and label them, ‘To the Mis- | mistake. The government is not office; the ‘But we will proceed to treat this subject in its true and and they will soon learn to behave themselves, like de- o hideous form of slavery, which compels her to see her | “uri mob of Lexington or Leavenworth.” But do not | is the slave power- eke. The The extension of sla: greaily benefits cept doge—they can never be gentlemen. of noblest sons stricken down by assassin blows, tor sit send them in the hands of men, to be surrendered at the | so calleé—what his name? (Great laughter.) —— . mgd 4 Forsaking the capital, we make an experiment of free | What party at the North dare meet this issue? Wil | ing the words of freedom, and which disables Srvt eummmonn,. teow too heath Wi sory aver mech ads: | seat basen’) Yee, Fimen.b ons drelaeneaaed 2 fending them, or redressing their wrongs and her | feat! It is not Yankee to be cheated thus!’ I hoped, ; ? " apart Tyner es 3 nay they may —s speech in Carolina, an are menaoed by tho Charleston | the republican party, oven to save Kansas? That part) | from when | United tates; i Ye. the’ slave forwer Sebied him. Poor down cumpetuiion, ie manw a ¥ yy ‘ more “ cope in the — style— avows its feality to the Union, come what may. Wha Co account of the deafening and (under the cir- | read thestory, that the men carried Quaker guns, and had | fellow ! he is the object of every man’s —even —, fDi o IAL, eee etm. | ‘Let ua deotare th public journals of our coun- | doeg i propase to do in lodavery im the Disvictof C. | cumstances) adeurd noiec, out officors, fir. Swascy gus. | tbe rea ones another way, but it seems they wore real | ton desplecs bie. “He te Dot President of the eels for its werksbone aod factories, It will enable tho | ¥Y that the question of slavery is not and shall not be | lumbia? Nothing | What as touching the abolition of th | pended bis remarks; and the meeting joined in singing | oes. (ld Concord, that sent those guns to the Missouri | States, but Caleb Cushing, who cannot be considered ams North to confine herself chiefly to light, easy, in-door | OPC® to discussion; that the system is too deep rooted | inter. slave trade? Nothing. What in reference t there | the hymn— mob, ¢id a glorious thing to-day, for she does not fire « | individval, but oniy an impersonation of rascality iteelf—. work, and to skilful occupations, which pay weil, whilet | SOBs Us, and must remain ver; that the very mo- | peal of the ive slave law ? Nothing. What, if Kanse Hark ! a voice from beaven proclaiming mueket nor @ bell. The muskets that met the Bri- | the essential servant of the siave power—a sort of . the slaves, on more fertile soils, are producing by bard | Ment any private individual attempts to lecture us upon | ‘es a conquered province, is admatted to the Union as @ sia | Comfort to the mourning slave. tish on Concord Greem did not fire to euch a day as this, | netic spirit that seeks its own, The slave power is the gor! aav-deor work (which best suits them), increased quan- | {ts evs ‘and immorality, and the necessity of putting | State? Nothing. Nothing, except to submit to it all, eo After a brief discussion, it was Glory to old Concord! She knows when to fire her mus- | ernment. The merchants of Bovton are the slave power tities of grain and raw materials to exchauge with her for | Means in operation to Secure ns from taem, in the same | dorse it all, and shoet, “ Oar glorious Union | it must any Voted, That when this meeting adjourns it be to meet | kets, and when to keep her powder for another time. | who want the profits of the government; the - morchatdise and manufactares of all kinds. Thus the ia. | Moment his tongue shall be cut out and cast upon the | shall be preserved’! The republican party has ony » | in the Grove, (Cheers.) I wish there were more such towns in Massa. | rers of New England aro the slave who want the greased value of the slaves will be shared by the North and | ne bill.’ geographical aversion to slavery. its morality on the [This was in consequence of tho more favorable as. | chusetts, that knew the crisis in which wo stand. That | profits of cotton, It is tho woalth of the country, A man the Sowh—the North, no doubt, gelting the larger share Next, with the “stars and stripes’ waving over our | subject is bounded by 36 dog, 30 Tin, north latitude, |) | pect of the weather—promising « bright and cloar after | bas the #mell of the old instinet that ‘nt the British, | paid to me in Boston atreets, ‘If you wore to thrash: All the whilo the negroes will be improving in treatm heads, we proceed to Georgia, to assert our constitutional | js a comploxional party, oxcluaively for white men—ne | moon.) tnd that the British sought frit in the days when they | Charles Sumner twenty times, You could ot rag him se Sadition. Northorners will extend oF wottie them. | Fight to speak our thoughts frecly; and the Georgia Con- | for all men, white or biack, Seo what ono of iw organ’ | Parken Priusmeny, being called for, came forward and | ventured to grapple with the Revolutionary spirit. I like | intoagentleman.”” You will ind hundreds of such men, selves alongside the #lavebolders, as they have done in Homaliet tells us, one and all— the Hartford Courant, says respecting its #piritand pur | was cordially greeted. [We are reluctantly obliged to | it. It shows that the blood that flowed from the wounds | walking the pavements of Boston, owning the wealth of Siecour, Kentucky, Virginia, and the whole South “The éry of the whole South should bo—Death, instant | pose — defer a prepared sketch of bis speech, which was - | on Concerd Green left the same character of bloed be- mdred thousand doliars. That is the slave power, Ite pte 2 wel tor ‘Ren Wf diverse cocupations and | deeth to the abolitionist, whenever or wherever they “Kepublicanisn is the white man’s party. It is nor | ed to with deep interest—until next week.) hind. 1 lke another thing. Of in Missouri, Mr. Swasey | just av much as the w of my uncle,” who heid the of may be caught on our soil.”’ because we feel any burning zeal in the olack man Adjourned to meet in the afternoon, tells us, they say that no Boston man shail be permitted | cane over Sumner’ biel and jet itdown with so much Pursuits 10 live near each other, in order to facilitate the | 'Fioally, we turn our steps to Louisiana, to prove the | cause that we resiat the progress of slavery in this cou. yi to vist Kansas. Very well. There were two Toston | force: that is the government, Now. pul Fremont iio of ts and odities. Northern rn 4 : y iN. interchange aye yard ll peg eam exact value of “our glorious Union,” and it is givea to us wy. Wolke the white man better than wedothe black | Caitea to order at pe * by Frances Jacsox, | John, Hancock and Sam Adama, that the British | ihe Presidential and if he endeavored to be an anti- " by the New Orleans True American, as follows — elieve the Caucasian variety of the haman specie 1 am glad Boston has earned the same | slavery President, % would break ochionsthowsakis, suit come, and get 'proitabio | , ‘We can assure the Bostonians, one and all. who bar» | superior to the negro variety ; and we would beoe | oe eee ee earn reputation 11 1866. Massachusetts was always a cantan: | tinued to be Pr Kinet ice givens Prater less pleasant, “however, by | ¢mbarked in the nefarious scheme of abolishing slavery | the best stock, and Gil this noble land of ours—thi “hildren of the famous dead. kerous State, and | hope she will be so in tae present re- | for the very elements of strength are on that vide Take this {be jealousies and suspicions which intermoddiing | S the South, that lashes will hereafter be spared the | broad country that the Almighty seems to have / Rev. Axpaxw T. Fow spoke, with much eloquence, of | volution. Men and women, et us earn that same reputa- | town of Framingham in which we are. You k ‘ 2 no backs of thelr emiasaries. Let thom send out their av providentially (!) preserved as @ blank sheet, upe | the value of the anti-slavery movement, asa test of | tion, that when liberty is cloven down, and oppression | who live here—tha' Jucation and of to Lovis'ana; they will never return to tell their suffer | which the Wokleat and loftiest thoughts, oaly, can» | every man’s principles and sympathies, a genuine and | seeks to gain an undivided triumph, the first obstacle she | town rule; that there bs vome score of iaunes hol abolitionists have excited. Whilst the North ts in every x ings, but they <ball ecplate their crime of interfering \u | properly inseribed—with the noblest race of humana be infallible discerner of the thoughts aud inteuts of his | finds in her way in 1856, as in 1776, sball be Massachu: that sort of respectability and position In the town, way directly benefitted by the extension of slavery, ft t equally and directly injured by the extension of cur 4omeatic instit ©: s m e ‘aren; @ itions by being burnod at the stake. ings possible, Color is not the trouble; thick lips « heart. For bimself, he said, he recognized every man as | setts. (Applause.) 1 have this criticism to make, Mr. | they may be cone town, " Sees cae contenae Guess catnone tres Coens liberty granted to us on our own | woolly bair are pot the ob) Ts ls, that the Cau: | strove Christan, of the contrary, jest in proportion ea | Chairman, Upon the republican party. Ireat to-day that | porteraaa it sew and’ theo you eet she secteol ot’ eo become rivals and competitors, and glut and depress the in our national capital, and throagl: | sian variety is intrinsically @ better breed, of bett | his sympathies are, or arc not, alive and active in the | the Canada Legislature (the lower branch) bad voted fity | town, by a spasm, out of their hands, it falls back old markets by increased supplion of manuiactures ant In vain shall we make out appeal to Ban | brain, bettor moral traits, better ty, every way | <anse of anti-elavery. He contended, earnertly, that no } thousand pounds to build a Parliament House, and that | The people rose up in the Know Nothing days, and by & other producté, which are usually made in free States aut ker Hill, and Lexington, and Concord; in rain shali we | than the Negro, or the Mongolian, or the Malay, or there heip or hope conld come to the country from any party, | the higher branch (answering to our Senate) had refused | «parm ot excitement took Massachusetts out of the bands gold in slave Sates. Nor do these now free States alfuri | boat that Revolutionary blood is flowing in our veins; io | American, If the negro race had the mental superiority, | or any political movement in it; that, in the present | the whole jabon Lyra te geome of the whigs, who ruled it, not becanse they knew how, $0 good employment and outlet to th intellectual yo ing | *# shall we point to the Declaration of indepen tence, or | we should consider the color. hair, or odor, matters of uo | Union, slavery, with all its at endant atrocities, must ne. | ment; and the Canadian, gov: at but because they could not help it, because they were fen and ladies of the North aa slave States, for choa> | % the provisions of the constitution, or to the commands } account. * * *. To our minds, the republican causo ix | cessarily triumph; Fremont por any other person. | lock to-day, because one branch will not vote the wealth of Massachusetts. It a sort of firm anchor gcbools soon produce such young mea and ladies ia | f God io the’ Bibie; in vain shall we plead our etura- } intrinsically aristocratic; i alms to save ihe country | nominated the wishes of the slave interest, could | priations for the reason that the other has been - | age, a dead weight power: they wore that power—they abundance at home. id " Uonal views on free soil, and ditavow all hostility tothe | tothe white man. * * *. The republicags mean tv lected; or, even if elected, could save ts from slavo. | Fat in tee for building. could pot help it. Well, when the Know Nothing apacta But, urge some, new slave States will give the South | Person oF loterests of the slaveholder; nothing remain. | preserve ali of this country that they Can from the post! | ry's despotic and descructive grasp. He honored true | | want the republican party to play here, if they hat was over, ane rou bad the Logivlature that has just ad. the control of the government. so much the better, so for our heads but bludgeons, nothing for our hearts but | lential presence of the black man.’ | manliness everywhere; he honored it in Charles Sumner; | #ny principle. Mr. Giddings moved in the journed, they did pot rule Massachusetts; it was the old ‘as she exerts that control to improve the condition | bowie knives, nothiag for oar necks but halters. This is far from being the feeling or language of all wh» | butif, by the blows which he received at the assassin | jreventatives that the retin bill should be whigs in new shapes. Gen. Devereaux and Mr. Lord of the North and the South, the master the slave. Aud yet, I reverently call the Gol of the oppressed to | are members of the republican party, but it indicates th | hands of the slave power, he and his supporters could | ped, because it included thousand were only olt whigs with new names; it wes the same Would to heaven we could’ see any prospect ahead of | Wituess, we have not in anything (rans the claim: | precise position occupied by the party. Witnes= the fo- | be driven out of this iniquitous Union, he should deem it | surrender of Margaret Garner, at Cincinnati. thing. As the Seotch ‘maniac told bie company, he bad fouthern ascendancy, for then, aut not til then, we | Of bleeding humanity, the daties of good citizens, thy | cibleexchusion of all the free colored citizens of the Nori” | s subject of thankfulness—though he desired no harm to | him down; but it was the duty of the repab a table sprend with variety of food: “but some- should entertain hopes of continued peace and aimity, | Ti@hte of patriots, or the obligations of Christians. We | from the soil of Kansas, by the free Stats settlors there | come to any one He felt exceedingly hopeful of the | in the House then and there to have voted the how or other,” said “it all taster of ” ‘upton and conser vatie * | have assailed no man unjustly or by violence; we have | in, in flagrant violation of the spirit and letter of the Cov | overthrow of the Union—| is spreading iatien bill down unless that item was stricken ow. | (Laughter.) It was the old party thet toot the lene ‘We have not a our points elaborately, because to ht the 7, of no siavel j we have been law tution of the United States, and as a cowardly co slavery and the Union cannot the light. A republican said to me, at the close of wil Maasach unless ae us they appear obviously true and wholly unanswerable. biting, in the highest sense of the term; wo hare not | cession to the infernal spirit of border ruffianiam | Ho Mr. Ganson calléd attention to the proposed work on | vices, “Why did Mr. Pillsbary not mention that Charles When the istns get through with their hysterie fits, ear: | Deen guilty of treason, nor plotted insurrection; we hare | can such « party successfully grapple with the slave pow | the fugitives in Canada, about to be published by Mrs. | Sumner would deny his obligation to put down dooic grins and spasmodic convulrions, and are quite | “ought only a peaceful aud voluntary emancipation o | er on any ixsue? Knox, of Boston. insurrection?”’ Said I, ‘Probably one Teatored to speech and hearing, we would like to have those in bond and we have vindicated Christianty as We mist separate, or lose our liberties. Slavery | ‘Wesprtt Prmnurs then took the stand and delivered | cause, while Mr. Sumner stands in that little quiet taik with them on various topics which we | the religion of Jom, humanity and love. the concentration of all forms of deapotiem in one. |) not effectually evade the responsibility. have but touched. Like spoilt children, will pee Let not those who defend the act of slaveholding, on | can bave ne more affivity with true republicanism thx has net Cppoeed, nor asked others wgppeee that they have been crying for poison instead of candy, | *"Y ¢, complain of any atrocities committed by the | death with life. Itis Lan eee doctrin: priation bills for the last five years. ‘and that both the refusal and the ng, which we gave | South, either upon her slaves or upon Northern freemen. | at which ancient toryism would we stood aghast. | to vote for them? Every one of them bas bad mixed up in them, ‘‘was all for their own good.” , Given her right to enslave in any case, and all that the | has long since discarded the Declaration of indepen’ it money for the return of fugitive slaves; and — slave system has brought forth ay follows. ence as ridiculous and untrue—as the prodnct of infidel: republican party allows the soverempent to Anti-Glavery Celebration of the Fourth of is neither wanton nor gratuitous in any of her cra ty, at war with the Bible, and the enemy of the Caristiv pays ite expenses, making adi July, 1856. but only faithful to her position and necessities. | religion. Hear what the North Carolina BibWical Record and bi all ita force to bear that means to perpetuate slavery, she does not go too fa, ’ of it-— {five the Tastn Serer, pace a simple abolition | axact 100 mach, | Her sleepless vigilance, unwearied p “iibr. Wayland bas taken Me. Jeteroen’e teBtel dogner fot say that they are sot Able to do . pistence bold determination , nightly patrols, | in the Declaration of Independence is motto, and 1 Mr. Cnarnwax—I was glad to hear the # of my | hot to check, at = , In accordance with the invitation of the managers of | her — vigilance Committees, her border ruitl halo of that false light has seemed to exclude trom h | friend Pillsbury, this morning, and alike taste which we | the expenses of CF tay in responsible for the return of fugitive sa the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, and notwithetand: | jeagues; her yokes, and and whips, field of vision God's revealed instructions on the in have just listened, from Mr. Foss. Ido not think it. That is a prac point; it is one ing the cous state of the weather—rain tailing | thumbscrews, " and’ branding |rons, and ‘bt tion of slavery. Indeed, the whole phalant of abolition. | do any setter work than to examine the positions of the | one territic in its operation; It tx one tha heavily during the time ofassembling—s large number of | hounds; her suppression of free oh and her bi. leaders have planted themselves upon that unte: © political movements of our day, As | said at the hall, | | the pocket. It is nothing abstract; it persons came together at Framingham, on the morning 0 | enactments; her outlawry of the free colored and wit | irrational sentiment of Mr. Jefferson as their stan. Bink we are to understand our friend Pillsbury's direc ery day force, which every man sees, the anniversary of National Independence, to spend th» | anti-slavery citizens of the North; her enforced menia | in their anti-slavery movements, both in this con. an | tion to let the republican party alone in the light of his | may be made to feel it. It is the day more in accor fance with those sentiments of humilia. | darkness, and moral degradation, and savage bart. in jand. They refer us to our declaration of nation. imple, and leave it ¢ as he dors. augh to do thie. The blood of the tion which the American people ought to feet, in view of | jem: her burning of slaves alive by a slow fire; renee ‘and not to the Bible. The declaration of Mr "fe" ter and cbeers.) ‘When I me ming thie. rohan » | their ekirts until they do it. They are fairly reap. [Abe uuer subjection o their national government, in | vassous of Keates, and sacking of ite villages, an ferson, that all men are created equal, is in iteelf bow | one who is now in this andiener, he said to me, ‘it | for all the evil of the government itself, all its departments, and of the entire Uni igno- | jugation of its population; her ten thousand tho false and without meaning. Wayland has evidently fu | ie very easy to criticise the work that other men do.’ ke it. They have no claim to be consider tminious service of the slave power which now rules th» | crimes and horrors, are ail, all necessary, if sho w: paken tbe great pletformn of Bible trath, and wheneve | That evggested me a word to aay to the aboliionice very party wntil itis done. | To do it would wideu the | man! conservs tive man ! prudent man! could not go to " perpetuate her terrible system of chattel servitude. + he quotes the Seri to support his false thenry 0 | aboot me—that mere eriticiem, merely undertakiny lo | breach between the North and the South, and so hasten | the Worcester meeting, held to consider the “pen ‘As the falling rain and wet grounds made it impossi- | must be perfidions to ail her engagements; false to «i | haman liberty, seldom fails to wrture and distor: thew | criticize and expose the wrong’ positions of politiciaus— | the dissolution of the Union or the abolition of slavery. | Charies Sumner. They sentto ask him: why wa ble to occupy the Grove, at the time of the arrival of | her oaths; full of bravado and Insolence; equally bev meaning.” becomes itmpudence, uething but impadence, unless we | I believe we are near it. Td you note the extracts | overseer of Harvard College—thought it 1@ com, the cars from Boston; Worcester, Milford and Mariboro’, | tal and cowardiy; reeking with pollution and violen Whar would have been the fate of the man wi ha. | ace to it that we cara the right to eriticise by unfaltering | Mr. Garrison road us this morning? Go back tothe revo: | mice his eminent official position | And the next rene the company proceeded to the Town Hall at Framing. | insatiable as death, and remorseless as the grave. si» | uttered euch language in ‘the times that trie! men’ | devotion and activity in our own field. 1 Shot 4 that no | iution, and you cannot Gnd an English new per | brought an account of honed | Cortieonian bas a ght to criticise Hevry Wilko or | AR FI ham Centre, conveyed thither in the cars of the | must rifle the public mails, subject every one true to | souls’? Now it is published with impunity ing of America, or an American 8p. cing | adoption of reeolutions that orceater apeal Boston and Worcester Railroad, which were kindiy | freedom on her soil to the “tender mercies” of Lynch | with complacency, and represents the epirit of t) whol |‘ uarles Srmner, until he feels he can honesily say, “Ido | of England, in euch a spirit as the press uses furnished for the purpose by the Superintendent of the | law, suspect every stranger of being an enemy in dix | South. are at tending to a milleery despot Th | ail Tean in the moral field.’ These men we Weng in | towards the North to-day. Union! If the language of Stone the Cot road. ise, proceed from one stage of villainy to another | Richmond Whig says:— their position, What our friends have told us is very | the Richmond press, and the South Carolina press, and | cheers.) I rejoice in ‘At 10% o'clock, the meeting was called to order by | tread beneath her fect all the principles of justice, » We are heartily sick and diewusted with the co ine | true. Ido not Know a greater harm than, I think, hae ¢ the speeches on the hoor of Congress, are to be taken as server what honest mon folt it Fraxcs Jacksow, who, on behalf of the Committec of | set at nought the law of the living God. She and mercenary hypocrites of Yankeedom. This war © | been done to the anti-slavery cause, even by the uae. | any index of the state of Southern feeling, urion will not | tavght bim that was, Arrangement, ropeers the following organization: — neither be eet ner pure, neither merciful nor mm 1+ enable ve to rid of them, or turn the tables uno | qualled merit, in one sense, of Charles Sumner. It will | be possible fifteen years. cannot bear us, and if | stir up the fey President—Wm. Lloyd Garrison. . nimous, neither enlightened nor civilizea. Her fertie | them, and render them a source Of profit instead of jead those who love him, nto blindness, I think, w | they continue this sort of , We cannot bear | ness to at ae os Vice Prosidente—Francis Jackson, Boston; B. L. Ca- | soil must gradually turn to ashes, her laborers be with Tt will enable as to in Our own—j | the bad influence of his political and civil positio, bor | them. It is impossible, by yg pee NF on , Worcester; Josiah Hayward, Salem; Charlies F. | out skill or industry, her subsistence little better than ee by many a » Tt will enaby no man who bas any self respect has a righ; to stay. op | used of a sister country. France never Eng- | When Kanens is beaten to the lovey, Framingham. that of pauperism. She must clothe herself with curses | to build up our country by the recapture of the miu ‘among his fellows, and call these men to account, wio | land when she hated her mort—England never criticised | now stirs the N pulse ‘wasted Secretaries—tamuel May, Jr., Leicestor; James M. W. | as with a garment, and plunge deeper and deeper of which we have been plundered. It wil! enable us \. | has not, by encrifice, by coutributions, by labor, by self | France when she despised her revs ce Gn Viewate prove . All Task ie welch Yerrington, Boston. i berbarity end ul it. There is no help for it. Toe | get nd of Yankee Presidents, and to preserve Ang’ | devotion, shown that, in his own flcld, tie is willing to | criticises Northern men and ‘Senators to-day. cena disted, ‘Kensal trodden ‘down tn Nees Finance Committee—J A. Howland, Sarnh H. | eteraal law of Divine retribution must be execate!: | Saxon freedom, by reviving the old connection with tw | cover all the ground he can. T always feel, except from | You cannot iol such things in the political discus- | Merico Ouba pF , ‘all, Lewis Ford, Pliny B. Southwick, Charles Brigham. | they who sow the wind must reap the whirlwind: G)! | mother countr: ‘Wao would notrather be ruled ov the lips of one whose labor recom nends him, that such | sious of howti stone Oa ey CS Grannis do & ‘mean . oon oe we The meeting neve ped, without @ dissenting voice, the | is not mocked with impunity, “0, give thanks unto | by a lady like Vie, than b; criticlem is very ungraceful. I warn you, therefore, that | de you that such a press erist and the Pod call the voll of his slaves eae’ aa? hg hove as their officers. the Lord; for he is for his merey endureth fu | teman that Yankee land can in af discussions with the political parties, in regard | et rire! Never; i muet either be put down or the Union gas caly oftgure; ho nover win Sanwa “4 Mr Garnieow said—My friends, we at Por opy to | ever: to Him that overthrew Pharaoh and bis bot iv | us, with the United States South, on one side, in co to their leading men, each of these discussions should bo | must le put down. It will not be forever, it will | it im ensence, You will never r , + 4 fey by the lowering clouds above us, and the rain that | the Red Sea; for His mercy endareth for ever. He turn | alliance with England, and Canada on the other, ¥ a memento to us of a better, more earnest, more thorough | not be borne long, it is impossible. country will be lower thas eee he tints whee Ins jnils around; but we are not peculiar in that respect, for | eth rivers into a wilderness, and the water aprings inte | speedity to bring these long prayed sbarpers to their | performance of our own ~ Lat it 4 spar in our My friend Mr. Pillsbury compared the nation, Tt beaten to the” dust; teu aes tere hourands, doubtless, in every part of the State, are sub- | dry ground: « fruitful land into barrenness, for the wick | sensos, by coufining them to the starving sol on which | sider, Lot no apectator have ft in his power to say—“Ho | beautifully, to the ruins of Tintern Abbey, 1 should then, ft never Wall revive, = Ph Nghe ct to Hike disaypotitnment. “Te "saene to me peculiarly | edne-s ot them thet dwell therein.” they were bora, and to Ube tin air wronud them,” sponds a great deal of empty broath—-that. i all he | rather except to his comparison of the anti-slavery move- | sion line the Revohnoms nen me ert Sm ppropriate, ; h ie on land is fast verging to civil Pot to think of oor alliance and union with such » Hf sneh things are done im the green tres, What wih be | spende—for the anti-slavery cause.” Tt ie ahigh position | ment to the ivy that so gracefolly covers crumbling Men will © “This is rant: God rel News Band btood and raping are riding rough shod over one | race of tyrants end barbarians | To think of ont gor done in the de that we take When we undertake to criticiae the men w | ruins. The antislavery movement conceals no ruins. | vern, the right will trismph.. Salto we ierthory. an e orth, With her free soil and free tabor, and fres inst More even than thie. The & rh organs now whom the country listens, and to whose vons-ientions | O, no! that is republicanism. I think tie republican men, know man: Varta for bert be’ 1 ny en tane te yap ropr ato that ata | tutions: with her wonderful enterprige, matchless aki!! right to enslave laboring people, wit nesty of parpose and rare fidelity on many occasious | party suite bis figure, that endeavors, the green and rennne fuee and balla Mm others « Dee on me and on an occaston like thie, thesun should refuge to | inventive genius, reminerative industry, admiral omplesional distin toms! They degary ive. | every man muat do justice. It was & congucrated hand | winding luvurinace of its lavish eulogy of the Union, to | of reform, we Luther “l!4, bet Wen’ down to tac gr he gra voy

Other pages from this issue: