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2 NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1856. Fo Jauxs eanes Shaan a, rite} tall and Bt in an alvaizn to President Pores and the vent 10 Moso Hall, expecting and wishing to Best torent wah pesoges as ro “ Dern fin oianenitn meh 2a es Siamnet of his Y fed LR against the South and slavery, ‘ten by myself: one, descriptive of an easay on | 982 in Kansas, and | he ( é “Religion, Considered as the Art of Life,” delivered Tegel warare agaie fre aon tn Kapaa, an dl the-gallent eenae” of ae secre commanded crueities by Theodore Parker, at Music Hull, Boston, on Sun- davery prosivis and fanatical views. todd ‘3 “he 8 4 Terburitles aud Semen at whieh shuddered @ay, the 14th inst., and the other, descriptive of a | He sald that there were four ‘much f conversational debate, or controversy, on the slave ba eyenginn Setna he question, at Mr. Parker’s residence, Exeter place, | about the so-called millenium. during the evening of that day, in which Messrs. | culture or developement of wisdom, or Carian ent Packer waco Se Aayuianih, 4 o0l0- Taine, (nekating Ge pouenen cess of beama}icn ional quists, on the part of the North, and your oorres- | Stresa’ ‘2d. Justice, or the rule which made | It ia my dut to nothing tenuate, finite. Te-asserted pondent the sole shampion on the part of the South, | men rm hd pen sei 7 gugh ie and the us oer ot Coe olin ea anet though young Alabama stood by, strong in moral | Powers. Affection, or power loving, went to ry and tnd ineletaal vigor, ready and able if pede tar = 55 and Penevolence. Ath. agai the fled ‘and eas i iia Teect the whole Bible, asd not do dep revi \s » 5 #o aid South Carolina in the conflict. Piety, or the power and habit of loving reof, I had m: ear charmed with soit and perzua- talect ty re These letters were originally designed for the | God, as an object ly. Charleston (8. C.) Courier; but, as they have un- | © expectedly expanded into dimensions, rather incon- | lettered venient for even that wide and capacious sheet and “ecainna, wore - ing, Se eas — ee “4 ” a whining velling were 80 | ism. Fin to be tion, ppc wig pose esr ssh a commonly mistaken for, or regarded as, that truly | My introduction and visit to Mr. Parker, at his | the subject was ta yi ‘Mr. eral circula my views, I prefer, and therefore | hallowed thing and noble je of the heart toa | own house, and controversy or debate with him | argue the scriptural lawfulness of slavery an; request, the publication of my accompanying letters | mercifal, loving and love-i Deity. Piety is | ond William Lloyd Garricon—with the lions of abo- | ther, with persons who rejected the authorit im your widely dispersed and influential journal, | Manifested by love of holiness and of infinite per- | \itioniem in their very den—I must reserve for, and | Bible. which (irrespective of its political or other merits, | fection in all its forms, and in susceptibility to the | make the staple of another letter. Mr. Garrison was occasionally harsh and severe— a gi » | beauty of holiness. No words are ingudéome or Ricuarp Yeapow. | I will not say rade—in his manner and hisremarks; | ment or demerits,) may truly be said to be an “epistle | ornate Sreagh to describe piety—to depict the a sage ‘ola usually { holine! Sr. Nicnouas Horen, in his discussion with me. f all ”, beauty of ‘88. known and read of ali men’ = ig lnge ne oN ture to be the art of New Yorx, Sept. 22, 1856. me, (8 the South Your compliance with my wish will be esteemed Be, ig the vegetavle powers of na- INTRODUCTION TO REV. THEODORE PARKER. and robbery, both of the slave and a favor, by yours, very respectfully, ‘ ture, 80 a3 to the earth with beauty, fri- | he Mus ting the North, I suppose,) in ; Bicann Ysapox, | grate and plenty; with flowors, and froita, with services ob Musio Hall having been concloded, | SOONG, Coe A oeateahiy aaa wr BE Fe seek lee i F E H re : i 4 iH i i i il if BE E i Hi A te al 3 E, i i in Es & He i z i F : 2 & St Ee nh uf ee ap i ibe i 3 ; il i if 5 4 E ; s Be iB if a 3 “e tis FR Bee & g g g z a Fe I ag He FF in ee E He on ry ue it afl ‘lett f | te E E 2 iy | : 3 i EB ; se i - £ Hl 4 3 g £ i i H 3 E HY z F F 5 z i is ; ; zB & z i) =a bee gee 5 ERs : Hl A FE ih iu 5 i i . E 3 i ; ; i A : rare | i i : i E k ‘ : ii} Ht 3 ; f i HE ie E ” and with “corn, and wine | 9% Darrated in my last letter, I lingered to get a baa much Sr. Nicgonas Horst, ana oil”, Secondly, mechanics he defined to be | good view of Mr. Parker; and, being offered an in- | staples, than they could be oeed and obtained | named Jack, (belonging to Dy father,) New York, Sept. 21, 1856. the art of invention or construction, fruitful in } troduction to him, I followed him into an spartment | for, under acon of free labor, which it was our | who had imbibed 0 J remained in Boston another Sunday, beyond | the creation or prodaction of cloth, the house, the ‘across the passage way, between that apartment and rod ship, the monument, the p; id, the catacomb, to my original intention, in order to hear Theodore | Saf inelike, Thirdly, be dsined politice av “the | the hall in which be had just @iscoursed, and was | presive and frand fea of justice. | only to the Hebrew and not to the Heathen slave,) Parker hold forth, at Music Hall, in a tirade~ not » art of State,” and called it “the necessity of man- | presented to him. He no soouer heard my name | I retorted by ceed. and h; sermon—against the South. I accordingly attended | kind,” but humorously remarked that its fame, do- than he said: “ Are you the gentleman thet I saw | Pocrisy on him and owe ‘the abolition pended very much on humsn caprice, and was mm mov that were, in fact, fon his ministration for chat purpose. The specious | ifected by the accident of» democratic or a Know | and heard speak at the Plymouth celebration in the supporters and encouragers of domestic slavery | not think “hard of his leaving him, as liberty waa hall was well filled, (galleries and area,) although | Nothing Governor. 1853?” 1 replied, “Yes, thejvery man, who, ‘with | in the South, by their consumption of Gousher sta- dear to every man,” and offering three hundred dol- not crowded, with an audience of both sexes; and TAS» Sees of sein. be Safined ta be the art | the weakest and feeblest voice, you had ever heard, and prodacte—that, were they in , they | lars for his wife, whom he had left behind, ‘among those present I observed one female Topaz | universal life. He also characterized it as the art | ¢ 0, south Carolina, 4 vig cease to consume our cotton, rice and sugar; | but tend pay Se and tines wan to use that Divine Power, which we call God, and to » dared to defend slavery on the | 54, were they to give this decisive manifestation of | letter “John Brown, or John Yeadon.” dis wife, » ghagsde petra gna tarp bonies | nse our spiritual instincts, s0 as to regulate society, sacred sail of Plymouth’.” At this he smiled, and { | theirsincerity, slavery in the Southern States would | however, who had been the dry nurse of most of my i a rad fh ie i HE Z i z é F E 5 ll eel Fy iy in the galleries. William Lloyd Garrison was seated | and effect the hi, developement, perfection added: “ At home, thought rath natural death ine very short time. This ar- } father’s children, including myself, declared that she eer. are the allotment of slave laborer. not on the saffron maid. On inquiry of scour. { happiness of the human race. Ourfacuities incline us |. ggg "y yen ei ae a bas am peal ponte Mr. Parker attempted most sophisticatly to ferred remaining witht her foster children; and | On seeing the quantity of work, exacted of free la- teous gentleman, named William C. Ford, a free soil- | *8 Daturally and instinctively to God, as wine in the a answer, a8 follows:—‘“I am ne more responsible for, | the faithful and attached Mauma did so remain, and | borers by the manager of bis Harlem farm, he told bs ¥ - . cellar does to delight. These are our spiritual | ‘light interchange of words, I told him I would like | oy 9 supporter of Southern slavery, by my purchase | died in my father’s possession and eervice. Several | him it was too severe, 50 severe that he not er—next me, on mty left, (who gave me mach in- | instincts. The end and aim of religion are to make | to have some conversation with him, and he there | and consumy of Southern m, rice and Jit ate Seeks Sasne, 8 Bop name man, (the formation about Mr. Parker,) I learned that Ebony | the most pertect man and woman, subjected to com- sugar, than | am responsible for and a supporter of and Topaz were perfectly re liberty to attend = mon wense, but- common sense, regulated by con- hs wadimceler di ogee ae See, se, 0) By Ruseign serfdom and by m hase | Harry Grant,) formerly a resident of Charleston, | Work, at the Hariem farm, the benevolent Southerr ; » | science and enlightened by genius, which is ancom- | house, Exeter place, after 7 o'clock, on the eveniog | ang consumption of , cr Ai nats of au-Prince, where he said he was planter juired what had beeome of him. “ He Parker's discourses, in his temple of declamation } mon common sense; and to serve God with ali our | of that day. this was that the casos were not analogous—that | secretary to the United States Consular, or unoffi- sick discharged,” was the reply. |“ 5 and equality; but that it was a liberty seldom exer- | powers. God furnishes the materials and the cir- THE VISIT TO THBODORE PARKER. Russian serfdom and oppression ded not on | cial agent, visited Charleston incog., and had an in- | discharge him because he is sick! the eised by them—Mr. Parker's form or mode of reli | Sumstances, and man, under the overraling Provi- | 4+ or nearthe appointed hour, I proceeded to Mr. | the culture or consumption of hemp for its existence | terview with me as a lawyer, on professional busi- dence of Diety, controls and directs them to human or coptinnance—that, were hem med at | ness. In the course of conversation I inquired after | “1 not,” was the response, The good gious belief and style of pulpit or rostrum oratory, purposes nd soma: Parker's, accompanied by. N. H.R. Dawson, Esq., | all, or blotted from the list of pe am products, | Jack, and Grant said he knew hie very well. | Samaritan ey ——_ the free being, I suppose, little suited to the taste of those —— There is a divinity, son of the late Lawrence E. Dawson, Esq., and a | this would not abate or influence Russian oppression, | and that he kept asailor boarding house at Port-au- | laborer, found him sick, wit money, in distress @escriptions of hnman jewelry. Mr. Parker | That shapes our ends, rough-hew them how we will. 1 tive of Charleston, but now a resident of Cahaba, | °F serfdom, one jot or tittle, Prince, and was doing well there. He added that | anduncared for, “ he patie Visited and took ; The religious element is the strongest of our spi- aqone fom * desk, on the = plat ritual gifts, and looks to eternity as well as time, as an form, whence the musicians, vocal and instruraen- | we are beings, having “the promise of the life that | there—a gentleman of high character and talent, their im ‘oppressor to be # part of there; but, while the Haytien authorities never in- tal, discourse eloquent music daring concerts or | now is and of that which is to come.” cultivated mind and refined taste—who is corres- | religion—a that, as for serfdom, it had been | terfered to return fugitive slaves to their owners, and oratorios, and behind which was a noble statue of There is no more mystery in hag. ye than in agri- nding with and writing a tery elegant series ee re and was fast disappearing from | perhaps would not have dared to do so publicly, |-f , “hed ectentalie repeaters caltare. | Magic, on the contrary, is the imaginary | Ponding ) , in spite of the hemp cul Between | they yet winked at their recaptare; and that, if Becteoven; exquisite composer of magnificent | srt to control nature—to trick Jehovah out of what | of letters for the. Dallas (Ala.) Gazette. On ar-| Southern staples and Southern slavery, on the other | wouldgive him a power of attorney for the purpose, symphonies”, There were numerous chairs on the | we are not entitled to, in hope or by work—and itis | riving at Mr. Parker's residence, we were po-| hand, there was an intimate connexion and de- he would replace jack in my father’s possession, in neither constrained b; nor controlled b; ndence, and neither could exist without the | @ ve time. I declined the offer, that platform, to the right and leftand at the back of a r y » Y | litely and cordially received by that gentle- oe ’ te Jerk had got his aie saying th - especial a ple, who, Hey ed Russians, were in lor ‘eed the government of Hayti did not e fugitive Dallas county, Alabams, and ® practising lawyer pression Fp their chains,and held loyalty | slaves from the United States to seok refu eic of the South where rises ice sd Rasueeple the speaker, few of which were oosupied. When | ®°the"impersonal power is what we call God or | man, and introduced by him to Mrs. P. and to! J then carried the war into the enemy's coun- | and that I would not have him back again for any | cotton are grown, the white man can nelther labor Mr. Parker rose from his seat to commence the | Holy Spirds and is t which is the object of hunan } several other ladies, and to several gentlemen | try—aye, even to the very gates of Cartha earthly consideration. Young Grant further ink. { nor live for six months inthe year, and the negro will services of the day, he stood some five feet ten } religious worship, whether that homage of the soul | whom we found assembled in the parlor or draw- | by ¢: ig the insincerity and hypocrisy of the formed me, that although slay nonsinally had no ——, exnept under the compulsion of s saaator. shes in his shoes, being rather of moderate stature, | be rendered by Peter,the Roman Catholic; John, ists in practically denying, while theoreti- | existence in Hayti, yet it was there practically, as stated that negroes were lazy. inches ew i + | the Protestant; Portia, Sally or Tabitha, Preabyte- | mg Toom. Among the ladies was Mrs. Garrison | caljy and ding, equal political and | all idle and vagabond pe: whom there were | 8nd would not work, save under the com of for one who has made such a noise or clatter.in the } rians; Jemima, the Qoakeress; Rebecca, the Jewess; | and among the gentlemen was the famous abolition- | social rights to the biack and colored race; and in- | not a few—not having any visible means of liveli- | slavery. Mr. Parker questioned this, and cee world, at least in the world of Boston,as he has — like. The — God een ohh the | ist, William Lloyd Garrison, and Mr. J. Z. Goodrich, perp men oo Cay praia send | ated Shell were saben ae deel abe aryny and sent to | cases ican, eae ie igen and of oro- done. His head was bald in front and at top, and he | creative power an: conservative and Mr. Willis. Mr. Parker assured me that the pre- lored legis) their , re compel labor, under | gTess Ui ‘ parts bol Legislatures, to clothe them the ermine of jas- | mitifary rule and rigor. He also stated that, although | contrary. [replied that this was probably due to was duly garnished with whiskérs and goatee, but | $100 bos nature in, and cod the rout.” ence of the gentlemen above named was entirely | tick and to place in thet hands theexecutive baton, | the lany promibited “the apolication of the las, yet slavery in Africa. 4 without the abominable and soup-loving moustache. | That, cbang’a toroogh a. and yet 2 ali the samo, accidental, (bis friends being accustomed to drop a other political offices ne mq ny end fee: wee yeapianas =e inflicted son the idle or re- 2a charged home, nam the he and a4 nen 4 tacles, t mine! Great in the earth as in th’ ethereal frame; social . ermore, to permit them daughters , on the plantations, by a bastinado, Island, an sen "Biage Lsbould judge tobe between forty. | Razmaibe sun rererbes a tbe breeaa wid tht he i nt reves the onarrence te thy | AUG ese, aa Partner, down both the dance of the | applied, nt as Turkey, tothe sole, but to their | ll, any, of introducing, oF a leat of ‘etait . ~ ” rough all exteat, J ballroom and the dance of life. Turning then point- | step of the foot.’ perpetuating do very South- five years and half a century. Mr. Garrison differs | Lives through ai life, tones tet were the very persons he would have selected | edly to the female portion of my auditory, | ssid: adverted to an interesting incident which had | ern States. Virginia, South . wot much in stature, but appears to be older than Sates a ‘ur #onl, informs our mortal part, and invited to meet me. “Ladies, are avy of you prepared to receive | recently to me, at Bos:on, to show the ome elgg epeenedty Mr. Parker. He, too, wears gold spectacles, is bald— | As tul. as pertect in a hwr as beart On being introduced to Mr. Goodrich, I said, with black or col persons, ag your re in | kindly and atfectionate relation between peice ea within ‘ ‘i ! ‘As fuli as perfect, in vile man that mourgs, p Spi matrimony and for life?’ To this Mr. Garrison | masters and Southern slaves. One night, at the | aud the was forced on them, by thé mo- balder than his friend and co-adjator in warfare | ‘4s the rapt verayh that auores and vurus— empreseement: “What, Peter Parley?” “ Not } tartly rejoined tbat such marriages would bear afa- | Revere House, I received a mysterious ‘looking | ther , for Der own seliah purposes and prof Nr Ae OO eg ene | Gstim be tetedr eectoons cat ogee, exact replied es amiinglys tnd ae parker in| Formed in the South between, the two races and i | By address, nod ‘ou Gpeniae i Wr ihe possence | Baten, then tho Solonae of Great Bitain.” On toe hind, and ears standing off from hishead. However Adagiae * se ypsud i formed me that his guest was Mr. Goodrich, former- | fF! gee ao eee: eee pe mony Boone F% i the octllued an " General conftdence and lively trast in the Divine responded: “Sir, I decline to discuss that question several freesoilers, I found that it c an | formation of the constitution of the United States, they may differ physically, and in their modus oper, power, wisdom, gooduess an perfection of God | !¥ and lately a member of Congress from Massachu- } with you, in this presence.” Mr. Parker then said: } admirable daguerreotype miniature and likeness of | Massachusetts, Rhode Island and t, and. andi, they are par nobile fratrum, in intense desire } stand high in’ the catalogue ot haman virtues, | sette; when I added: “ Ob, 1 remember now, Peter | “I suppose none of the ladies present, were they at | my head servant, Joe, # letter by the same mail ac- rion ytd New England, united with the Sete ike | ae meteee eet hin ths proseene wae af Tene ne Dahan bot meter weald any of toem accept, for | extensions towards his fisitom: ead mec and | Union, wat the year 1006, and, m the meautline tbe ution of Sout le hay eas hereaiter. ‘In his presence there is A em ac a is Ls) ‘ J ‘THE PRELIMINARY SERVICES. fuleomnat joy, and ‘at his right hand there are ples- WILLIAM LLOYD GABRISON. a husband, a man of eighty years.” I replied that, | signed bimeelf “Your affectionate and obedient | South, owning no ships, the z of Massachu- fal voluntary from a highly musical choir | 8ures forevermore.” Introductions being all over, I took my seat near | for obvious reasons, there was no analogy in the | servant, Joe Waites.” Mr. Parker said he was | ‘etts and Rhode Island, chiefly, and doubtless A besetifed voluatery from a igey It is the developement of nataral and general | Mr. Garrison, who immediately commenced a dis- | cafes. aware of the kindly relations often between ag im ves from Africa opened the exercises, Mr. Parker then a buman power that produces individasle, varyin i | cussion with me on the lawfulness, morality and ha- | p x may ary te Bg ng = gs eerie boee poem jy A bape Sothern money, at pK eran profit: and 333 " cing “ OF baracter snd pursuits, such as » Peter, = m ‘arker, ai my au ly, the Te; eM a8 EX¢ , and as no- , 5 » earthy oe Pelee ant a ae ba Hawk, Alexander, Vietoria, and the ‘ike; and cole | Banity of the institution of slavery, which we both | meliorations that Southern slavery” and Southera | thing to do with the ‘question under discussion. I | added, if they’ wished now to free the ‘descen ou, wae rh a be h the | Ieets and arranges men into vilages, tribes, planta- | conducted with great vigor and earnestness, and al- | slavery legislation had undergone since colon‘al | answered that I had merely narrated the incident as at ee whom they had ¢ “or bought’? the audience. After the einging of the hymn, he | tions, &e. most exclusively, for some time, Mr. Parker and | @#y'—adverting peeemiciy e substitution and | one that was deeply interesting to myself ana ir native Africa, and sold into slavery in the South, the least they could do would be to refund ~ a money, or, in other words, disgorga e 8 In proof of the treatment of the the Southern Stet niverted to the devout and fervent prayer to the Infinite The physical developement of man belot roper- actual enforcement of the penalty for murder- { might prove so te others; and I was willing to let yd ye mo in jn goat ef which } ly to clcitg? noe weal doctors of ehh body, | Sher gentlemen only occasionally putting in a | ing g slave, in Fgh the pecuniary mulct, ander | it pass, without further comment, for what it was imph ' at | skilled in the art of jucing and sustaiaiug strong, { word. ial legislation, for the same offence, the cheer- ra Rea yn pe Foe ag ES 2 healthy and Tanaeive human bodies. The Iris! THE PRO-SLAVERY AND ANTI-SLAVERY DEBATE. ing progress of missionary effort and Christianity The letter of Joe was dictated only, (for he can the times (rom this land of freedom, and concluded | Woman, with dirty hands and freckled arms, hand- | J pressed home on Mr. Garrison the scriptaral | #mong Southern slaves, and the improved humanity | neither read nor write,) not written by himself. My " ; aie inal | sister, in Charl rot ncerning it”. | fact, that, from a very small parative! with the final passage of the Lora’a Prayer. He oy od panes © Cone. Bon poath n argument, shewing that Jehovah himself not only Soeeee ee eee —< “You ah pein ag es tn wire Le of im acted African Pome Tg weer ones 4 ext read sever il passages from the sacred volume’ | rity, with the scholar in his library; and the former | sanctioned the pre-existing system of slavery, but | ern master ard bis slaves. On these heads gene- | he dictated it, and Peter J. Couturier, (your cor- | into the vast number of four millions, although the oh ms | Xe — yg te by oe ‘tht mt $? may produce, under due conformity to physiological | actually* ordained it among the Jews—his chosen | nerally, I found Mr. Parker disposed to be liberal, | res) 's ward,} undertook to write it”. I wrote | #lave trade bad ceased under the constitution of tha men gather grapes Of thorns oF age ord irat, | conditions, a higher type of progeny, in comparison, al i tien, wathertaing bnt Mr. Garrison, while avowing his entire sympathy | a long and affectionate reply to the letter of my | United States, in the year 1508; whereas in tha Hiven so every good tree Lringyth fureh good, fruity | Chan that of the man of letiers and feAzemens | Deple—ess perpetual institation, au! ing and | withand credence of the piteous and often false | faithfel servant, and here ia the account of the recep- | West Indies, and in Brazil, the slave trade had con- Wish s ecenage Seon etna eas ol Se ae Win America, as a geceral rule, few attaia emi- | Commanding them to make and to buy slaves of the | or exaggerated tales of fugitive slaves, was exceed- | tien of my reply by him, or of its being read to him, | tinued until the present ‘day, and there was am tree cannot bring — pn pan Pigs onan hence, who are boro to wealth; greatness is the | heathen that were round about them, as posses- | ingly hard of belief, and sceptical as to the truth of | in a recent letter ‘rom my sister :— * |immense decrease of the slave population im ll 4 a frai is hi van di = id aa growth of nature, and it depends mach on the right | gj 4 an inheritance for themselves and fer their | MY statements, not on the score of my veracity, but “T have just finished reading to Joe your letter to | those countries, so great was the waste there of RGRED eet TER goed Sees & Deeeceen ans oe of time and opportunity, whether one shall wear | “on ane 8p ine s ear pia te on the ground that I was an interested witness, | bim. I wish you could have seen the lok of perfect ‘| human lite, notwit & continuous freslz into the fire. Wherefore by = a ye shall = poke - qurtaenact pn lhe humanity, or the re- | ° hildren, or posterity, forever, and expressly recog- | whose testimony ought to be rejected, seemingly in | pleasure and delight his ebon face He mpply, by new importations African coast. aE eee ica ane uate | apectable-habiliments of the carpenter or the baker, | nized slaves as prope:ty, in the remarkable injanc- | total forgetfulness that his ebony pets were liable to } sends his love to master and mistress, and Miss | A\ much better their condition as slaves here, Thou Shalt love | OF the motley ones of the clown. There are odds, | tion, that where a Jewish master smote his siave, | be turned out of court on ayy the same excep | Eliza, and thanks you for your kind letter to him, ee Soe they. Let to Part, ative ail thy might. This is the fest | eelfculture, The New England States are great in | master should nos be punished, “Bee, use” says God, thy soul, and with it fore bo had been accustomed to free la- | He longs to see you all oncé more at home. He is and great commandment, And the second is iike | everything but in men: great in nature, greas ia art, | sno ig his money”; that Jehovah himself returned | O° foreigners, who mn a med to yi le hess two (ee oye ae le the | Visits, “few and far between! fas young “and old | eating aud vena toy a, Bossi, who, by Sener oF foreigner wanted the sentiment of heredi- oF urged the fact that the gifted Rverett (whom (i * ii., 32-40. 3 a » - perm: had “deal a a age ane. plrer ed “ Onward, Ouse Iny their shouiders to the wheel, and, by # strong payee 50, thes “she fled Sonal ee oe peg thee tary or customary attachment to the slave, which | Mr. Parker bad referred to as authority on some * Sod.at un 4 oth int ty fe 1 [ shewed the abo- Ap merncn lng ae lene pa | Eee ie wea enn is | Hogs, anrerr rb sade | hypo) an abort pense, | yay Sater rae Before entering on his regular discourse he made | 06 New England abod bore within her the little sanctuary of embryo life | oq° from tne sl in comparison with that which | address, a few since, before the Historical | all events, , to have & matter an appeal to the auditory in bebalf of sulfering and | our New England abode. that, by Sarai’s own doing, was to make Abram | they wore wont to wring ftom the hands and the | Society of New Fork, that God was, in’hiswiedom | of Moonshine, and in Connecticut to have been sa , , saying, inter alia, Absointe good is, in the order of Providence, the - Ishm: “ ° pepe Vengo can tee san battle, bat | end and purpose of life. The provisional means for } 4 ewan <s. pore — Fred pow soy 4 sweat of the free laborer. I also casually mentioned, { and providence, working out @ great problem by a! Sle ter * reir freedom and oar freedom” — } its sttalamaat are: 1.4 general power of self | hang” of her capricious and. t; ical mistresa; | 28 Pertinent to the discussion, that the sen- | the enslavement of the African race in this coantry; Saas thoes that the benevolent committee, for dia | Command. Strong will and unity of action are re- | 454 that Jehovah himself aula the thanders | ments of imported Northerners were often mis- | that the negro race in Africa was still in the saue wibution of donations and giftsanong the destitate ey to control and govern passions, when, | 414 solemnities of Sinai, placed slave property takenly seized upon, by Northern writers and — condition of ipernaes, yes pry’ and heathenism, in Kaneas, were ready to receive the same at War- | like a team of wild horses, they are drawing aud | inder the protection of the Decalogue, expressly | ¢h 08 80 index of Southern feeling and opinions. { in which it been found at the earlieat period inviti i 3, | tem to the right and left, and ing awa. “ ” For instance, Mrs. Stowe, in ing into her “Key | of recorded 3 that ail efforts to civilize and See eee tnicetee’ | fom t 1 eiimioatiey, | Sgsinst <“covetousness,” and impliedly against | {Uncle Toms Cauin,® from te Charleston (S.C) Govithe cntanctecath naka to the Bout and, when she her rt, iu id few ‘slaves it was purely accidental sedastty dient E f i z F H ren street Chapel; Christianize legislation. To guard against apprehended encreach- at bis house, at three @’cock, the ensuing afternoon, | from virtue and propriety Into vice and ori tand robbery. At’ the assertion, on my part, cle . nat fo aid, with purse or with hands, or by begging for This divergence resulta from instinctive passions ia } tac Jehovah was ibe first who exceuted the aditive Courier, my ropert of the teal of pap TA pd ee oe only successful ettem eee | ie 4} ‘Conotiation, hasnaeniah = money, to carry on the good work in Kansas, which | the young, and reflective caiculation in the old: Pas: | Blave law of the ible, Mr. Garrison exclaimed | Std bighly Feepectable tam ter ne cr eequitialy | been throogh ‘the puplinge at clavery in Avwericas | bill of rights, in which there was'a clense, similar to Ro aged wouks nat be Depeties the ages of eightcen and thirty years, and they rosa | “biaepbemy!” “What” said I, “blagpbemy sim- | Ne4 Gieregarded the. all Aa eae DE eae ne ce lie Taceer tae wiobeneatd | tat ta the, Declaration of Independence, emerting. ue DISCOURSE. the ages of eightcen ani ry years, yTOS9 | Hiy to quote the words of scripture!” He there- anes aw, 4 aii to the grog shop, the gaming table, and the haunts ply to.q ex] from our statute book, in South Carolina, | —— , and that were ‘The discourse was a written one, and the text was | of pollution. Ambition attacks the old or elderly, | "POD denied that it was scripture, or God's word, | the oolonial mulet for slavesmurder, and substituted | |, ° Our Saviour thos speaks, In Lake xii, v. 47, 48:—~ ‘among which were life, “ pod Selo the of forty and sixt : itis then | #24 even denied that Hogar was Abram’s slave at for it the death ity, (which vas acutually en- | “‘Ané that rervant, which knew bis lord's will, and pre- Judicial con- taken from Proverbs, IX., v.6.: ““Forsake the foolish | between the ages of Forty and sixty years: Ht ia then | all! 1 then went on and added the cumulative testi. | OF it, the, a et ag AAA Mf 1se3 on two white | PACES not bimeeif, sball be beatep with many stripes. ) designed and live; and goin the way of understanding.” I can- Umbition reaches its, highest point, and the | mony, or evidenee, of the New Testament to that of | 1.°* ‘at Walterborough, near Charleston, for killing, | AB, be "that Krew not and did commit thit ge worthy of the few do- fal and high: | fin ~ 2 oe : the Gid, and showed that both St. Pan! and St. Pe- 4 , . + I atripes, eball be besten with few etripes.” en De for oo not call it a sermon, bat it was a beauti ig than debauchery; it huge and clings to the ter nized slavery as an existing institution un- with wanton cruelty and shocking barbarity, a “A ‘servant will not be corrected by words, for nections there wse.0 magh of ‘als ly elaborated and finished essay on “Religion, consi- | old, like the fatal gairt, of Nessus, ‘Thlle passion | Ser the Roman ery “Cehere the master bad the | Poor rang nares, Spans thay #0 distigured ead though he understand be will not auewer."—Provorbe, | fen tn —— number vee dered as the Art of Life,” delivered with « clear, | commandh “ite immed ea mgt of the youngr of life and death over the slave,) and regn. | Mangied that be covld Rot, be iden tds still’ are | wbdhcld ns the eyes of the servants look unto the hand | Keen-eyed and porse loving yankees, took a curious sweet toned and musical voice. Mr. Parker's style ond pion s Gok ie tein nateep-down ie fe atee® it by a code for the conduct of | uaiscoyered,) and cites the speech of the late Col. | of their masters, aud as the eyes of a maiden unto we | but doubtless a well-ad course. A law was harncterieed as elegant end lished, | of 1 rar} * Let beware of bath” for both Christian slaves Christian masters, admit- Benjamin Faneuil Hunt, (one of the test jucy | band of her mistress; #0 our eyes wait upon the | ord our | passed, emancipating all slaves, thereafter to be born, Ef be characteriz gan Soceus q bquid fire.’ let mee a Christian masters into fall church fellowshio » cositon,) 1a Gh the | 604, uptil that he bave mercy upon us.” —Psaimexxit., | when they should arrive at the age of 25 but no ‘and his illustrations were forcible, beautifui and fetl- | wide is the rain which the Jug it car of ‘communion, and counselling Christian slaves to lawyers in his dayand generation,) in defence of the | °5’ law was eimaltaneously AY citons, althoagh semetimes, and not unfrequently, | ambition leaves in its bloody or ing track, and | Adetity and obtdience to, and against theft from isover, condemning the new and extolling the old | ‘Here is express authority, from both the Old and the | or ‘asponation af sania tes’ le. novel, humorous and quaint. In the beaatifal ina- terrible is the desolation, wi “ wine’ becomes @ | aq even against i inence to, Christian masters, a proof of South a Now, | New Testaments, for the correction or punishment of Keen sighted interest took advantage of the omis- guage of Scripture, “His tongue is as the pen of a mocker, and strong drink is raging”—‘when good and bad, and unbnffeting, as ‘‘thank- Col int was a Northern — in wy slaves. sion; and, alt! ha law was subsequently pace Raat a and “his words, fitly spoken, are like | the wine is red”; “when it giveth bis color in the worthy” conduct, and asa mode of the | fett#, bore the honored name of Faneuil, one o { The following extract, from & recent sumber of the ¥ or deportation of von Se Fee ea eee etecy At cand | ANG ‘an habe ates erPany ca tng | Goce of ou hale arhar inal sing” an tat | Meare Atanas at San of om. “nee | Re'snd Sikes ue cetptces ooo" | K's pened of Connectert o 5 A , 4 a pay rich iangiege, 1 could not but Toment, that so much a St. Paal, after converting the runaway slave tinguished Petigru, a native of South Carolina, IstesrerixG Ixciomyt —A Southern gentleman, « resi- — — care to their sia once over sensnal and selfish passions; avold | Gre.imus to Christianity, returned him to Phile- power, cnitivation and elegance of mind should be | youthful lusts, and that calculating ambition and | cn his Christion ma te, 4 himself for yet in his preeminence at the Charleston bar, the | dent of Charleston, & C., who bas been travelling at the ¥ J and profaned by their , Which too beset 4 - an tok wwe and associate of Col. Hunt, in their suc- | North for some time past, and who bas been stopping at misapplied, perverted and profa: ny devotioa | sordid covetousness, w! and his fatare good conduct and —— - : mae at to #0 bad a couse aa that which seems to have en- | master those of maturer years. 2. Knowledge | owner. In reply to this Mr. r ay last, received through Nisted bis whole soul and being. Mad or craay some | of right, giving tenderness and susceptibility Seales wot tore at ail, or anytuing tearoom, che anaes t cole © ») te whe Rog g y mteky ml my be opened it, call him; but there is too much method in his | to conscience. 3. Some obj of ial affec- a bired servant, on the ‘that he is spoken of fersionally assnmed, I really bel Betton chante canara | tn, remem fray Woncs| Grete ak Penh st Taner | Reyes ett, eh" | Be cyan matertaye ets of intellect, caltivated taste, rich imagination, varied | mes or woman ja sufficient. for ‘Choose, ae py By fh f a Laan Tnineky and anwise mission from Maasachneetts, ne | pasted by a letter to bie. “dear master.”” The reception ‘and extensive information, and rarepowers of both | then, some worthy object of love—search out objects an the Mobs wae GoutAleas thet of d newered | was waited on by Mr. James Rove and other native- | of this token was as unexyected as it was most agreeable. i J. | We are allowed the privtiege of extract or two ey a ek of chartty, and benevolence—practice that ice. Grace, whieh bed boon mined A ihaly born cues, oe took along with ap 3 ES Irom the betr ich wit bf fterenting me unable J meagre essed , rh blesseth giver more performed, or arising from or Corn Whitridge highly gentleman Masea- | **tociations. 10 be presu' Seemensh, ip may own lesguage and lasers | loved Gack ag¥in bat oaly for fore'e sake: Tvs: | %e0 10 the past. rie aoe chur ‘nd politely commanicsted to’ Me, | PSblah & “Key” to “Dred,” the same aa abe 44 wo {lons, from fallare of memory, ilegible notes, or other | education and elevation of the highest order—educa. | *¢@s oF any thing, pat that to mine | Hoar that a mob spirit was fast rising nits: | "Cocte Tom, ie order wo explain the messing of the no- causes, will be ‘mingled with theme of the | ton and elevation of tne heart, wich mates ;¥- 181 ao ionited that | Stoong a certain casa of our client, which would | Sity'nteuete west wane sates, and bow biter tne ' Ita was to show that the trae | the creature to that God who te 1 cut or eeit | it, Was absurd to suppose, that a hired servant, | Stn fesch. an. uncontrollable height, and advised | ‘aiter hate thelr masters —— Lainey go ‘were to effect the completo | and relishnen: meek some favorite purwult, other | Who bad a right to quit his owner's service at | Sim to leave the city, tendering their CHARLESTON, Sept. %, 1866. a “ ‘and moral developementot man | than that to whieh Dulagn 7 ee binds | will, should have been returned to his master, | residences thelr families to | + Daan Masran—t bave taken thie opportanity of ‘ery acme or pointof perfection, so fat as that | you. Let not the law IMimeetf ta bie | 02, ‘he, spastle, moder, the clecummancen and 8 | the of Mr. H., if hie sndden gyro rreiely warm go ere ere oa te o cap erreur ef appied me | far i, wt ee rae | f° yBtt,eew”Seal ted"a | Hest nae overt, ope, | it eshte eee ac es "ick‘of these powers, which God had bestowed on | the. sbelf in dust snd disuse, to moulder away, un- caeAtIy thom “the bowale ofthe saints were reteane, | ‘ken in dudgeon by Mr. Hoar, and he forthwith de- | 4's ibe faratgs Breiner Tut ‘im very gid yon ta Bin re pa tp ey ee ‘ach soa, aout ir ay Ay phys ol St nie bak ed,” Ly td that phen a ae Parenting to tne ing expulsion wi was meant teed, : Thear, that yon ake " totais trp a Lowe, wrater, and the die te of inoer monet, seeatiral tod hi deny but let him go out Tato the world moder cider, Me, Parker had alien shorter | 12 kindness sad respect. The, only mech 3 DAG Nees oath eines ALTE mecbanical moral, wi Al expand his heart anity in social in- | Sng more patent way of getting over the a faiiaive 2 * 8 f peld a vials Grove x lew subjected to human agency. The ultimatg Feeutt of fereoneee ven a fellow men. slet not the | Pea not quibble on the meaning of words, a0 ti snenile Them o BS a Messachusitte-born Batata and 1 sum'ag ne nstand of coun ne fever | —— snd developement Parsons was 10 be 8 Utopian realization to bid gold, or to hia other favorite objector par- peice let Oneone Setcrwns woh tes eiere bos ee ne Ihead,in the street, and ordered him off under | Satn'ke'erer saw ee tramp. Thy terrane ope tod nde bends oe pra, hatter ‘Mr. Fartet Of honsaa.erfecton and aman elcity, in which mf in Or in selfishness; but let all, of all | thee" “tho Megitimate brother: think-of Philemon, | balm ot tar and feathers, ne also doing aplenty (yon, Raovy cech servant hasbis | TG ware mistake here, OF 1 had misunderstood hier; ‘nor rumors of wars, Both of the anti-slavery disputanta, however, finally instances, the fart of Moenes Puthor Sanbod te sten, a moan effect eokce yeies wiltetin cor | sinves ts toe Caltee teaten 00 TB.80 ex thermore adopted a wholesale method of evading the force of ‘was that it was additional proof of forty bushela of rice by himself. “Masa Gendron | and Mr. Carey's computation had been adopted, in a “Poth thy bondmen, and thy bondmaids, which thoa ia aiieaekee went Fwpor pt boen gm Fs to Charenton, io ovtny a | 22 the complet of te comdensod congas of the treed seit have, sal ba ot the heathen that are round about Ps rbd | ae the pocatten eg ye i Oe ee the ere trace, ts the Henarn ef the fut au. you, of them al e buy men Imaide. bid myself, the f eurt ‘set, may be appropriately ated to this note: — Me , of the children of Southern climate and of the negro race— jours ameng fos, of thom, Suall Yo bey ‘and of thant We Adaptation, by nature and by the (od sm (aver souad | (hen Brithn cobiaies) was UY Duk chao, Weaee Pree milice that are with you, which they in your land: our soil and of our great it. I hope to | that period until the prohibition of the lave tn 1808, the sd vbey_ shall ‘be jou Eevee, Koa youl ake : flourishes, is healthy and Wis hele: Yor, even litle thom day'to | SH! vot exceed shout STAD.” OF he hee eanep sane aren the eritance Tyo inherit them for & possemion” they shall be Four bond. Lyf ah, a Giheatr ste coming home. -A1l the famnty io wal. goa all te J Fresh seblects, soa 1d nadine i€ Char ad wh is re par vale sue over paolo Wie rou Todevitews rer. malarious fre ‘gach thas | Servost 1°") Sacha your allectonsie aad oheaiemn creat. vember, have increnned ir hava ait’ nee rane et comely itis) fok |v. 4-46, , wi the white man to pasg p night there, ; SOE Wallea, Or lpi i; while 0 fp Byidigh Woot lntow there are nor t