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8 NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER .19,. 1859. Comavone on glsowhoar: Wm Witherlee, Atwood, from Liverpool July 10 for i iy crate @ moment oven of this hour to bin in that the Hibyral gquree of fopent Mr. Webster’a, qrceahenar Conarang on Ship Wm Wiherive. Atwees fron Tnauguration of t'4e Webster | sce ene tee te te aoat | hela Ri ‘a iawrigeanpiea | {Ss daatitute on proper cecanlons of Ue moat go | erate opinion, leaves no Ship Boy Pale, from Bosiou for NOrleane, Bept 9, lat 81 26, did such noble justice to himsolf tho great sul ‘a6 woll be might, bat Bubtleties and Yoso. | als to the moral sentiments, or wanting, when id on wy eon Oh baad ieee to tae Statue a*, Boston, Of his eulogy. A short time before. the Tete tecbnicalltied of Coxs Uxtieton, and ateractod | Ye topic invites it, im-any of he wlorunsdie of a | | And obs my Sends Among thoge who, diforing from ) “si aun ahi spond Baber, from Rlo Sane, Sept, 4 our much honored friend, I Bow seer and translated volumes of reports from tle Normah magnificent rhetoric, ‘Who that heard it, or has read it, | him O@ toe 0 Aly * subject, have yet, with 26308 ton 63.40, and was company, on the — eS Dy disease, his all persuasive % French und Latin, A few years of practice fullowod in the | will ever forget the desolating energy of his denunciation | forge ot Ayer you, and re- Bars: Cores fof Balgen), from Darien. Sr America, a i ER NOTE his beaming eyo quenched, ad h | courts of New Hampshire, interrupted by bys sorvtca in | of the African slave trade, in the discourse at Plymoath; seocatirange allies you held! common, come up thin | 22, lat 11 min, lon 55%) ao ints te The Procesion “polled by the Stetm—The | of health in a foreign clive, a painful image and a | Congresses for two political terms, and we find him at the | or the splendor of the ayustrophe to Warren, in the frat | day 0 do, honor fmomory, there are aay who wup- | sght"ion soe, Scum: Unartestan foe: Barosiadsy if tad foreboding too soon fuVilisa dwalt upon my mind. | bar of the Supreme Court of the United Stator at Washing. | discourse on Bunker Mill; or that to tho monimoutat share ‘hat ho cheriabed 1 tenderly ‘than en 181 Jon TLIO sceara, from Rlo Janelro for York, Ans Ceremonies ‘¢erformed in Doere—Ora- But on the morning of the day when we were to pay tho | ton, inaugurating in.the Dartmouth College case, whatmay | and the survivors of the Revolution in the second; or tho } Rrert ideas of Nberty humanity and by ood—-that, tat 28.04 5, lon dl OO W, ten of the Hon. Edward last sad offices to our frivad, the 21 of July, with asad, | be called a new school of constitutional jurisprudence. | trumpet-tones of the speech placed in the lips of John | because he wat mpl hain we re bs one ‘Kedron, Farrell, from Rio Janeiro for NYork, Aug 2% j ‘Brerett, let me not say @ repiniyg, thought, that eo much talent,s0 | It would be a waste of time to ¢ of Wat great cate, Adams, in the culogy oa Adams and Joferfon; or tho | from the constitution an m; to which ked for | lat ls, lon 88 45. = oe age ea é &o, &. much learning, 80 mu¢‘h eloquence, so much wit, so much | or of Mr. Webster's connection is too freshly | eublime pororation of the speech on Foot's resotrition; or | the government Be pact vy sensible than aa Tanner, ‘from NYork for Buenos Ayres, ’ ca) wisdom, #0 much fore of intellect, 60 much Kindness of | remembored fn our tribunals, Sonovel at that time wore | the lyric fire of the imagery by which he illustrates ‘the | yourselves to the broader re and deeper sympathies Ri 39 30 W. Which unite us to our fellow creatures, as brethren of one ha ‘Am brig, with blue fly and white ball, was seen Aug ba 12888, lon A family and children of one Heavenly Father, believe me, bo Voreign Po ou do his met a grievous wrong. ¢ I yn the 1ith of Jul 1604, ‘@ young man from New 1th Win M Boas joel kate | Flye, Weaver, Bombays I ‘t wel Hainpebire arrived in Bost all but penniless and all Aux Cayns, Ang 26—In chr Mary @ Greenish, but iriendless,, He was twenty-two years of age and hl | fo Howon nese “dng, and won seen off Cape Haytien come to take the first stops In the career of life at tho | q#umgou (Fill, Kepta— Are N we Bmplfe, andall capital of New England. Three days after arriving in a at de ta reais’ +, for NOri and B Boston he presented himself, without letters of recommen- | Hodgdon, for NYork ges ity, Peet. jullien, dation, to Mr. Christopher Gore, then just returned from |" Honpeiux, Aug tonare! Minetien Privat, and Regulus, Fngiand after an official residence of some years, and so- Thempson, NCrieans. Tetted u place in his office as a clerk, His only introduc. |, BREMERiAv=N, AUg29—In the roads, Cerro Gordo, Ran+ Heart were taken from we, an engraved keues® Of im | the principles involved in it, taka member of the Court, | extent of the Beka empire; oF the almoet superaataral brought to me cl seom live in. after a cursory ins} mof the r o! case, OX. rror of his descri for cor wee 0 Tha statue of Danicl Webster ty Hiram Powers was ea ea tee casing had py the | pressed the, Spinien, that litte of tmportanca cont bo | argument in Kogpn’e trial, Then, how bright and fresh Wwragurated in Boston on Saturday, which was the 220th | prow, tho ‘well remembered coubeaunce was clothed with | urged in Uehal Hof tho plaintlet in error; but so firm is the dlescripslon of Niagara; how Dosutiful the ploture ot w@pive! aming of Boston. ve | | its we A hted up the Coa | the basis on which in thatand subsequentcases of a similar | the Morning in his private correspondence, which, as we! noceary fem sal Pe mawealve prepare’: | pgp panne ded teeenteion hovered over | character those principles wore established, that thoy | as his famitiar conversation, were enlivened by the per féons bud been made for a magnificent spectacle, A Pro | TT PALO Tull au if L were going not his funsral bat | form one of the best settled, ax they ure one of the most | yottal play of a joyous and Tortile imagination. In a word, Ression of military bodies, civic societies, the corporation, | his tramp. * Weep not for me,’ itscemod tosay, ‘ but | impor tant, portions of the consti maa lave of the Union. what tone ja all Woo. grand and X ating music OF, gue Inne ¢ other State officials, ve 2? : hile he dwelt amon t less import » and, at not jess novel were | guage is there whici not rd in some port of his Ber cctyoye anda wee s Dap anie spac ye ‘ne Py A ret Mibe leah; noyor while the | the principles involved itr the colobrated case of Gibbons | kpceches or writings; while reason, senso and truth com. ‘ety, and an immonse display was expected, but the con- | Or d‘eninit seemed to exhaust the dolicate frame; | and Ogden. ‘This case grew out of a grant by tho Stato of | pose the basis of the stain? Liké the sky above us, it ia Nmnovs storm compelled the managers to abandon this | Hove his living voice, | New York to the assiguces of Fukon of tho exclusive | sometimes serene and cloudless, and peace aud love shine Pt ato of th ‘aio “48 d the ceremonies were accord- aid tig ie ye ao heart will sueti right to navigate by steam the fivers, harbors and bays | out from its starry depths. ‘At other Umos the gatlant | tion was by a young man as little known to Mr. Sore 4 ‘Ski from Brake 28h, Jubllaum, Kimme, NYork; Hobenstaw hla aman ome a wouching, tough silent eloquence, as whea wo fol | of the Rmpire Stato. Tweuty.dve years. afterwards Mr. | streamers, im wild fantastic play, emorait, and ross, aad | himself, and who went to pronounce his, name, which he | yep, Lamike, Viiiadelphia (outs trom Beenokeveaye A ft gly Porformod in the Music Hall, These consisted of the | TTT Ey cama along those treets that bright mid- | Justice Wayne gave to Mr. tho creaivot having | orange, and fieecy white, sheet upward tram the horlaon, | cid so indistinctly a8 not to be heard. His slender figure, | duy'esince the above two Vessels. were erroneously” reported: striking countenance, large dark eye and massive brow, | arrived at Kremerhaven, fis general appearance indicating a delicate organizatio, Cowen, Sept 2—Arr Fulton (6), Cope, NYork (and proceeded ° Havre), lis manly carriage and modest demeanor, arrested atten- | for! Henan rs » Caps, Aug. oa Jobe M Mayo, Snow, Boston. Presovtation statue dy Professor Felton, a receptive o ia sacra in front of this capi- | inid down the broad comstitatiunal ground on whicl the | mingle ina flery canopy at the zenith, aud throw out address b; Fabeag hn. "nasa by Governor Banks, pape ate ng the solemn beat of grand pee vaviguble waters of the United States, every crook and | their flickering curtains over the heavens and the earth; aor Tincolm : ee eae (yelled. from, wailing Slarion aud { riverand lakeatd bay aud harbor inte country,” was for- | whiie at other times the mustering tinpest. piles his low: fend the oration fur thewccaslon by Hou. waward Everete | ited pum, "while the minute guns from yoner | ever rescued from the grasp of Slate wouypoly.” So fied | writ baltlements on tho sklew of tho, North a furtous ‘We give the leading portions of the latter, lawn responded to the passing bell from youder steeple, | the intention of the Legislature of New York to secure a | storm wind rushes forth from their blazing loo les, and YERETT'S ORATION. Tthen understood the sublime significance of the words, | rich pecuniary reward to the great perfeater of steamnayi- | voilied thunders give the sigual of the clem:utal war! be 6c Tiich Cheara pata inthe mouth of Cato, that the mind) | gation; xo mast have failed any attempt to compensate by | Tnotico, lastly, @ sort of Judicial dignity in Me, Web- After woicoming the vast crowd assembled, and referring | Toyated to tho foresight of posterity, ‘whoa doparting | money tho fnestimable achievement, | Monovieg could sors mode of ‘Featiug, public quesuont, whieh may be g nations erect the his i : yea, tho sublimer | not reward it; rilver and gold could not weigh down its | ascribed oO egree in which he w » la the pe appa a at baal puke Sed wo aed mS cael ‘han rie a, “death, were is | value. Small services are paid with monoy; targs ones | range of his studies and tho habits of his Iifo, tho jurist efebiee of hale Tinatelasls san, Mr. Brere py thy sting; olf grave, where is thy victory?” And thon, | with fame. Fulton had his roward when, attor twenty | with the statesman, None, T think, but a great statesman may fas we pasted’ the abodes of those whom he knew, and | years of unsuccessful experiment and hope deferred, he | could have performed Mr. Webster's part before the high "What thongh the dear and honored features and | honered and loved, and who had gone before; of Law- imade the passage to Albyny by steam; us Frankii: had | est tribunals of the land; none buta great law! or coil ‘person, on eich while living we never gazed with- | rence here on the left; of Proscott yonder on the right his reward when he saw the fibres of the cord whicu held | have sustained himself as he did on the floor of the Seaate, Pit tenderness or veneration, have been taken from | this home where Hancock lived and Washingtoa was re | his kite stiffening with the electricity which they lad | In fact, he rose to that elevation at which-the taw, in we—something of the loveliness, something of the majesty | ceived: this where Lafayette sojourned; this capitol | drawn from the thunder cloud; as Gullieo his when he | its highest conception, and in its versatile functions and ‘abides in the,portrait, the bust aud the statue. The Beart | where his own political course began, and oa which so | pointed his little tube to the heaveug and discovered the | agencics, as the psy Mediator between the state and the ‘Pereft of the hy inygor jnais turns to them, and cold aud | many patriotic memories are concentrated, I felt, notas | Medicean stars; as Columbus had his when he beheld | individual; the shield by which the weakucess of the sin- silent as they are, they strengthen and animate the | jf we were conducting another fratl and weary body to | trem the deck of his vessel a moving light on the shi man is protected from the violence and craft of his ‘eherished recollections of the Joved, the houored, aud the | the tomb, but as if we Were escorting a noble brother to | of bis new found world. That ono glowing, unutieral ows, and clothed for the defence of his rights with the fost. "Tho skill of the painter and scuiptor which thus | the congenial company of the departed great and good; | thrill of conseions success 18 two exquiRite to be alloyed ighty power of the mass; which watches, faithful gnar- gemes in -aid of the memory and imagination, is in ils | and I was ready myself to exclaim, “0 praclarum diem, | with bascr metal, The midnight vigiis, the aching eyes, ja, Over the life and property of the orphau in the Bighest degree, one of the rarest, a8 it is one of the inost | cum ad illud divinum animorun, concitium catumquc pro- | the fainting hopes turned at jast into one bewildering vc- | dic; spreads the wgis of the public peace alike over the ‘exquisite accomplishments within our attainment, and in | fsciscar, cumque ox hac turba et colluvione, discedam.”? stacy of triumph, cannot be repaid with gold. Tho great | crowded streets of great cities and the solitary pathways its perfestion us seldom witnessed as the perfection of * "THE PERIOD iN WICH MR. WEBSTER LAVED. ¢iscoverics, improvements and inventions which benetit | of the wilderness; which convoys the merchant and his ‘or of music. The plastic hand must be moved by | The period at which Mr. Webster came forward in life, | mankind can only be rewarded by oppusitioa, obloquy, | cargo in safety to and from the ends of the carth; pre- pei ethereal instinct as the eloqunt tips or tho ro- | and during which he played so distinguished # part, was | poverty and an undying name ! cribes the gentle humanities of civilization to contending sording pen. The number of those who, in the language | not one in which small men, dependent upon their own Alluding to Webster’s carver as a diplomatist, Mr. Ev sit8 Serene umpire of the clashing interests of of Michael Angelo, can discorn the finished statac in the | cxertions, are likely to rise tO a high place in public es- | rett ulluded at length to the Northeastern boundary qu: “ rated States, and moulds them all into one grand heart of the siapeless biock, and bid start into art. timation.’ The present generation of young men are | tion and the Ashburton treaty, and related the following | Unien. say Mr. Webster rose to an clevation at which Bfe, who are endowed with the exquisite gift of moulding | hardly aware off the yehemence of the storms that shook | circumstance:—The attempt to settle the controversy by a | all these attributes and functions of universal law—in ac- Ge’ right bronze or the Hifeloss marble into graceful, | the world at the time when Mr. Webster became old | reference te the King of the Nethorlands had failed. Tu | tion alternately executive, legislative aud jadicial; in form inspired confidence. His himble suit was he 6 ee Ted ffaned; he wea rohvad into tie ole, and had wom | Gerace cot Ar wifanenrene Pie there a weel fore Mr. Gore learned \, brig ‘Tiberius, x was Daniel Webster. His older brother-—older in | Dead, bept Sarr Victoria Reed, Preble, Richmond for years, but later in entering life+-(for whose educa ndon. Jon baniel, “while teacher St tho seademy at ‘Frye- | ,,RisWgne, Aug 90—Arr Omar Pacha, Torrey, Wyborg for burg, had drudged till midnight in the office of the Regis- cAMOUTS, Sept a-Arr Mury Bentley, Bentley, Haven, tor of Deeds), at that timo tanght a small school in Short | washington Butcher, Collins, dos street (now Kingston street), in Boston, and while he was ‘GLoucesten, bept 2—Sid 8'D Ryerson, Crosby, CardMf, tn attendance at ther commencement at Dartmouth, 2 ant yae, Rept Avr Barieh, Baxter, NYork. Gli Int, Autds 1804, to receive his degree, supplic place.’ At | ¢rat, vell, N that’school, at the age of ten, Twas then a pupil, and | H®.vorr, Aug 31~Arr Epaminondas, Brandt NYork, Havana, Sept 9—Arr steamship Granads ury, NYorls. there commenced a friendship which lasted, without in | MAG Yoh NCrieane); brig Bion Bradbury s enton. bo, terruption or chill, while his life lasted; of which, whil, | ship Tempest, Whitney, oun Wi mine lasts, the grateful recollection will never perish. | Johnson, NYork; 1ith, brig Marah! pAb. Fe New From that time forward I knew, Ihonored, I loved him | tehr 8 Mears, Richards, Brisol; 12h, I saw him at all seasons and on all occasions, in the flash tana Ron, aeieaas, 7 Heoa\ie, ae rage ot public triumphs—in the intimacy of the fireside—in the | 0h" Reed, Tampa and re ACA, i most unreserved interchauge of pergonal confidence; in Ke; It port Ith, bark Job tenson, Gardner, for NYork in @ health and in sickness, in sorrow and in joy; when earl) day or two, filing up fust, and others, honors began to wreath his brow, and iu after life throug) fxacta, Aug 8{—tn port bark ——~, Cobb, from and for most of the important scenes of his public career. Tsaw | NYork, 16g sell; schr Mary, of Kilzabeth City, NC from Aw him on occasivus that show the mauly streugth, aud what | Cares” hae, sold er Cargo, of tog tad guano for U is better, the manly weakness of the human heart; and I | Sates.” dvclare this day, in the presence of heaven aud of men, | TW xyoon, Sept2—Arr Robert Harding, Dyer, NOrleang, that I never heard from him the expression of a wish | Sid 2d, John ‘Bright, Cutting, NYork; shamrock, Doane, Phila- unbecoming a good citizen and # patriot—the utterance of | delpbla; Gulf Bueam, Higgins, NoOrleans. ‘Cid 24," Laura aword unworthy a gentleman aud a Christian; that I | Campbell, Reed, Boston and St John, NB. ever knew a wore generous spirit, a safer adviser, a | Butout 2d, Valent Jeck, NOrieahs, majes! essive forms, is not greater enough to form the first childish conceptions of the nature | this state of things, a8 the boundary had remained unset- | successively constitution, statute and decree—are mingled | warmer friend, , illver Moses, Otis, 4 the tegeo ‘who are abio, with equal majesi orine events iu progress at home and abroad. His recol- | tied for fifty-nine years, aud had been controverted for | into one harmonious, (emtne Pane ae vitalizing, Deo you ask me if he had faults? TI answer, he was a ua; Suatapan, Dunbar, do » and expressiveness, to make the spiritual essenc lections, he tells us in an autobiographical sketch, went | more than twenty; us negotiation and arbitration had | sublime system; brightest image on earth of that ineifable | man. He bad some of the faults of a lofty spirit, a geuial aes Sieve ping do. Be ‘tnent shades of thought and fecling,—sensible to the | pack to the year 1790—a year when the political system | shown that neither party was likely to convince the other; | sovereign energy which, with mingled power, wisdom | temperament, ana a warm and generous nature; Gardner, Port Php, : none of the faults of a grovelling, mean and malignant nature. He had especially the “* last infirmity of noble Sept jar brig mind,” and had no doubt raised an aspiring eye to the th, Johnson, Charleston; 9h, highest object of political ambition. But he did itia the | Fernandina; luth barks Yumuri, Lexggang, honest pride of a capacity equal to the station, and with a | Titus, Phiiedetphin. bid ith, bark Philenw, Da consciousness that he should reieet back the honor which brigs Karnak, Downkng, NYork; 8th, M if it conferred. le might say, wit ike, that “‘ he had no ut a arts but honest arte; and if he sought the highest honors | ,,MARSBLE, Aug Sl—Arr Charles Wiliam, Pendleton, Bali- of the State, he did ‘it by transcendant talent, laborious | Nyeweasrix, Sept 2—Ent out, Mary Alvina, Ames, for Provi+ service, and patriotic devotion to the public good. dence. Cid 24, Jon Bunyan, Nichols, NYOFE, Tt was not given to him, any more than to the other SUNDERLAND Sept 1-sk Aldanab, Bunker, Nort. members of the great triumvirate with whom his name is Fo or at eae | Cy rost, Thomas, Moul+ habitually associated, to attain the object of their ambi- TL fala Home, Jetrey, Philadelphia mind, through the eye aud the car, in the mysterious em- | of Continental Europe was about to plunge into a state of | and as in case of this Kind it is more important that a | and Jove, upholds and governs the universe. bodiment of the written and thespoken word. If Athens | frightful disintegration, while under the new constitution | public controversy should be settled than how it should Lhappened one bright starry night to be walking homo ber palmiest days had but one Pericles, she had also | the United States were commencing an unexampied career | be settled (of course within reagonubie limits), Mr. Web- | with him, at a late hour, from the capitol at Washington, Satene Phidine. of prosperity; Washington just entering upon the first | ster had from the first contempiated a conveutionai line. | after a skirmishing debate, in which he had been speak: ‘Nor are these beautiful and nobie arts, hy which the | Presidency of the new born republic; the reins of the old- | Such a line, and for the same reasons was anticipated in | ing, at no great length, but with much earnestness and face and the form of the departed are preserved to us est monarchy in Europe slipping, besmeared with blood, | Lord Ashburton’s instructions, and was accordiagiy | warmth, on the subject of the constitution as forming a ‘selling into the highest exercise a8 they do all the imita- | from the hands of the descendant of thirty geucratioas of | agreed upon by the two negotiators—a line convenieat | united government. ‘The planet Jupiter, shining with un- five and idealizing powers of the painter and the scuip- | kings. The fearful struggle between Frauce aud the allied | aud advantageous to both parties. usval brilliancy, was in full view. He paused as we de- tor;—the least instructive of our teachers. The portraits | Powers succeeded, which strained the resources of the | Such an adjustment, however, like that which had been | cendeed Capito! Til, and unconsctously pursuing the train and the statues of the honored dead kindle the generous | Fyropean governments to their utmost tension. Armies | proposed by the King of the Netherisuds, was extremely | of thought which be bad been enforcing in the Senate, ‘ambition of the youthful aspirant to fame. Thomistocies | und navies were arrayed against each other such ay the | distasteful to the people of Maine, who, stndiag on their pointed to the plunet aud snid:—“* Night unto night ould not sleep for the trophies in the Ceramicus; aud | civilized world bad never seen before, and wars waged | rights, adhered with the greatest tenacity to the showeth knowledge,’ take away the independent force, when the living Demosthenes, to whom you, sir, (Mr. Fol- | beyond all former experience. The storin passe over <i by the treaty of 1783, as the United Stave emanating from the band of the Supreme, which impels ton) have alluded bad ceased to speak, the stony tips re- | the Continent as a ternado passes through a forest, whea med it. AB the opposition of Maine bai pre- | that plavet onward, and it would plunge ip hideous ruin wrth to rebuke and exhort his degenerate couutrymen. »mes rolling and roaring from the clouds, aud pros- i (hat arrangement from taking effet; there is great | from those beautiful skies unto the sun; take away the ‘Wore than a hundred years have elapsed since the great | trates the growth of centuries in its path. Eugland, in | reason to suppose that it would have prevented the alop- | central attraction of the sun, and the attendant planet “Newton passed away; but from age to age his statue by | virtue of her imaular position, her naval power, and hor | tion of the conventional line agreed to by Mr. Wobster and | would shoot madty from its sphere; urged and restrained Roubillac, in the ante-chapel of Trinity College, will | free institutions, had more than any other foreign coun- | Lord Ashburton, but for the following circumsta: by the balanced forces, it wheels its eternal circles through, we distinctness tothe conceptions formed of him by | try, weathered the storm; but Russia saw the arctic eky ‘This was the discovery, the year before, by P | the heavens.’? . reds and thousands of ardent youthful spirits, | lighted with the flames of her old Muscovite capital; the | Sparks, in the archives of the Bureau of Forvign Attics, NE CONIEMPLATES A WORK ON THE CONSTITUTION. ‘Aled with roverenes for that transcendent intellect, which | shadowy Kaisers of the house of Hapsburg were com- | at Paris, of a copy of a small map of North America, by Tis reverence for the constitution led him to meditate a ‘from’the phenomena that sail within our limited ‘vision, | pelled to abdicate the crown of the Holy Roman Empire | D'Anville, published in 1746, on which a red line was | work in which the hitory of its formation and adoption @educed the imperial law by which the Sovereign Mind | and accept as a substitute that of Austria; Prussia, stag- | drawn, indicating a boundary between tao Uuited Stites | rhould be traced, its principles unfolded and explained, rules the entireuniverse. Wecan never look on the per- { gering from Jena, trembled on the verge of political au- | and Great Britain more favorable to the latter tian she | its analogies with other governments investigated, its son of Washington; but his serene and noble countenance, | pihilation; the other German States, Italy, Switzerland, | had horscif claimed it, By whom it was marked, or for | expansive fitness to promote the prosperity of the cou tuated by the peucil and the chisel, is familiar tofwe | Jloland, and the Spanish Peninsula were convulsed; | what purpose, did not appear, frum auy indication ou the | try for ages yet to come, developed and maintained. His greater multitudes than ever stood in his living presence, | Egypt overran; Constantinople and the East threatened; } map itself. There was ulso found, in the Bureau of Fo. | thoughts had long flowed in this channel. ‘The subject and will be thus fuuiliarto the latest generation. and in many of these States, institutions, laws, ideas and | reign Affairs, in a bound volume of officiat correspondence, | was not only the onc on which he had bestowed bis most What parent, as he conducts his son to Mount Auburn | manners were changed as effectually as dynasties. With | a letter from Dr. Fraukiin to the Qount de Vergennes, | earnest parliamentary efforts; but it formed the point of er to Bunker-biil, will not, as he pauses before their mouu- | the downfail of Napoleon a partial reconstruction of the | dated on the 6th of December—six days after the signa | reference of much of bis historical and miscellaneous mental statues, seek to heighten his reverence for virtue, | old forms took piace; but the political genius of the Con- | ture of the provisioual articles—stating that, iacompiuauce | reading. He was anxious to learn what the experience for patriotism, fer science, for learning, for devotion to { tinent of Europe was revolutionized, with the Count’s request, ani on @ map seat iim tur the | of mankind taught on the subject of governments, in any She public goo, as-he bids nim contmpiate tho form of | On this side of the Atlantic, the United States, though | purpose, he had marked, “with a stong red iiue, the | degree resembling our own, As our fathers, in forming that grave and venerable Winthrop, who left his pleasant | studying an impartial neutrality, were drawn at first to | limits of the United States, as settled in the preliminaries.” | the Confederation, and stil more the members of the Con- Dome in England to come and found # new republic in this | some extent into the outer circles of the terrific macl- dhe French archives hud been searched by Mr. C vention which framed the constitution—and especiall; wntrodden wilderness; of that ardent and intrepid Otis, | atrom ; but soon escaping they started upon a oureer of | ning’s agents ag long ago as 1827, but this nap rc | Washington—studied with diligence the organization of all who first struck out the spark of American Independence; | rational growth and developement, of which the world has | escaped their notice, or had vot been di d | the former compacts of goverument—thesy of the Nether- Of that noble Adams, its most eloquent champiou ou | witnessed no other example. Meantime, the Spanish and | by them of importance. The English aad Freach Switzerland, and ancient Greece~so Mr. Web- the floor of Congress; of that martyr Warren, who | the Portuguese Vice-royalties eouth of us, from Mexico to | mapa of this region differ from each other, and special attention to ail the former leagues and Iaid down his hie in its defence; of that self-taught | Cape Horn, asserted their independence, that the Castilian | it is kuown that the map used by the negotiators of the cies Of modern and ancient times, for lessons and Bowditch, who, without a guide, threaded the starry | empire on which the sun never set was dismembered, and | treaty of 178% was Mitchell’s large map of America, pub- gies of encouragement and warning to his country- mazes of the heavens; of that Story, heuored at | the golden chain was forever sundered, by which Colum. | lished under the official sanction of the Board of Trade in | men. He dweit much on the Amphiktyonic league of ome and abroad as one of the brightest luminaries of | bus had linked half his new found world to the throne of | 1754. D’Anville’s map was but eighteen inches square; | Grecee, one of the confederacies to which the framers of g od tion; but posterity will do them justice, and begins already rey ey ‘In rt barks Maraval, Gi to discharge the debt of respect and gratitude. Anobie | perio Ward, tor NYork few May; brigs I ing Bosion, mausoleum in honor of Clay, and his statuo by Hart are in Baal avout 6h: Windward, ct Nort, and, sehr “Adela, . rogress; the statue of Calhoun, b; wers, adorns the saltimore, for Turks Jalan 4 Court. House in Charleston, and a magniicent mona. Zaza, BeptS—Arr mee LI ney NYork, ment to his memory is in preparation; and we ounat ie present you this ple feliow-citizens, the statue ALEXANDRIA, Sept 18—Arr (vy tel) ship 8t Charles, Live Gt Webster in enduring bronze, on a pedestal of | CO ae ean alle 108" 9 lr i—, ip, Gan vans, y granite from his native State, the noble coun- P' ts NH. via Provincetown; tenance modelled from life at the meridian of his | bark Wyandolte, Hoy’, oneman oe Hadley, Aux Cayes, Handy, Handy, Baltimore days and his fame, and his person reproduced from Blinn, Rogers, ichmond, Mary, Sinith, Fredericksburg; H faithful recollection, by the oldest and most distinguished | Reeves, Shaw, Ale: He mn, well, Balusore; Sar of the living artists of the country. He sleeps by the mal- | J right, Smith; Geo 8 Jones, Crowell; John ie Plater, Q iniy, titudinous ocean, which he himself so much resembled, oat Mes spun epee mispenee ‘el ae in its mighty movement and its mighty repose; but his | hee lark. tom - cine) eral for three rom Stang eamate, monumental form shall henceforward stand sentry at the Hallet, Maina ; Kensington, Baker, Phi+ ea King, Barker; Ashland, Ulark, snd Jobm cl ; ing wo that syin- portals of the capitol; the right hand pointing to that syin- pee Orlenhs, xchre lero, Kben Lakemat 2, Key 1 of the Union on which the left reposes, and his impe- rial gaze directed, with the hopes of the country, to the | West Broadéeld, Fiak, Philadelphia; Piymouth doundless West. "Ina few short years we, whose eyes LoriOm® assiie 2 ie uae amann, have rested on his majestic person, whose ears have | yGALTIMORR: Rept 16 Art seers Cobre cai LS Are i drunk in the music of his clarion voice, shall have gone to Ostermann, men; Adelalie, W! ingale, fo Janeiro; our rest; but our children, for ages to come, as they dwell | Cui do; ‘Maria, Johnson, .N ork, Cheater, cr with awe-struck gaze upon the monumental bronze, shall timer Meredith, Brekine, Aspinw Boatos gay, O that we could have seen, O that we could haye ogee 3 S son, Mikaren rs ee ity een heurd the great original! pai ia ‘Iwo hundred and twenty-nine years ago, this day, | Sowette, Young, Guano our beloved city received from the General Court of | Island; Jas Mndiso the Colony the honored uame of Boston. On the | do; Astrea. Fine, Eastport; Focabe long roll of those whom she has welcomed to her nur- oe eae teemed wi - fh) i; Hrowess, peters ° the law, and by a felicity, of which I believe there is no | Ferdinand and Isabella. aud ou so smaiia scale the difference of the two bounda’ | the constitution often referred, and which is frequently | turing bosom is there a name which shines with a | © 4.- schon Kcolnoor (Hr), Blanchard, 4 ether example, admirably portrayed in marbie by his HIN CONTEMPORARIBS, ries would be but siigbt, and consequently open to mis- | spoken of as a species of federal government. Unhappily | brighter lustre than his? Seventy-two years ago, | sinikin, Providence; Hannab Martin, Siaight, NYork. ship gon? ‘What citizen of Boston, as he accompanies the Ict me not be thought, however, in this remark, | take. The letter of the Count Je Vergennes, trausmitung | for Greece, it had little claim to that character. Founded | this day, the constitution of the United States was | Arnoldflioninger ‘Rotterdam; schrs West Prussian), 5 tendered fo the acceptance of the people by George Wash | Denis’ Crowell, Soston; louise, fhutcber, do. ington. Who of ail the gifted and patriotic of the land, that | _ CHAKLEDION, sept —Sid schr Fleewwing, Wayne, New have adorned the interval, bas done more to unfold its | York. principles, assert its purity, and to promote its duration? Peni eaklr ed ag ese MR mr) iWisboro NB Here, then, under the cope of Heaven; here, on this ye rece le thbace tele, bere lovely eminence; here, beneath the walls of the capitol of ‘halan, New York; lath, brig Wappoo, Coombs, old Massachusetts; here, within the sight of those fair ; achr Enterprise, Baltimore. New England villages; here, in the near vicinity of the HaRTFORD, Sept. 16—Arr ereamee woe, Bates, New graves of those who planted the germs of all this palmy | ¥ JG Baldwin, Jones; ¥ 1, Miller, Hyan, atid A Bt growth; here, within the sound of sacred bells, we raise | bouglass,, Buckland, Sitsabetsport; Replune, Ho and this monument, with loving hearts, to the statesman, the | New York. “ patriot, the fellow-citizen, the neighbor, the friend. Long | NEW URLEANS, Sept 7—Arr (by tel ow Be rat tas appiamiee som Ra oe comet, | Sane Hyer BS may it je approach to ese hal of council; York. and, if Gays of trial and disastor should come, and the North Varolina, Foster, Liverpool; bier, . New originally on coufraternity of religious rites, it was e: panded in the lapse of time into a lose politicat associa tion, but was destitute of all the powers of an organized ly be | cflickent goverument, On thia subject Mr. Webster found a remark in Grote’s History of Greece, which struck him Stranger around our streets, guiding him trough our } to intimate that theee contemporaries at home were | 4 map to be marked, is not preserved, nor is the: Dusy thoroughtarcs, to our wharves crowded with vessels | second-rate men; far otherwise. It has sometimes | endorsementon the red:tine map to show that i which range every sea and gather the produce of every | seemed to me that, owing to the natural rence ap sent by the Count and marked by Franklin. elimate—up to the dome of this capitol, which commands | in which we hold ‘the leaders of the Revolutionary | ville’s map was pnblished iu 1746, and it woald su as lovely alandscape as can delight the eye or giadden | period—the heroic age of ‘the country—and those | unwarrantable to take for granted, iu & case of 8 the heart, will not as he cails his attention at last to the | of the constitutional age who brought out of chaos | portance, that, in the course of thirty y it could not | as being of extreme significance to the people of the United Matues of Franklin and ster, exclaim—‘Boston takes | this august system of confederate republicanism, we | have been marked with a red line for some other purpose, | States. Occasionally, says Grote, “there was a partial pride in her natural position, she rejoices in her beautiful | hardty do full’ justice to the third period in our poittical Pand by some other person. It would be uqualiy rash to | pretence for the imposing title, bestowed upon the Am- environs, she is grateful for her material prosperity; bat | history, which may be dated from about the time when | assume as certain, either that the map marked by Fraak- | phiktyonic league by Cicero, ‘Commuse Gracie Concilium,?’ richer than the merchandise stored in palatial warehouses, | Mr. Webster came into political life, and continued | lin dor the Gount de Vergennes was deposited by him in | but we should completely inisinterpret Grecian history, if grecner. than the slopes of sea-girt isiets, lovelier than this | through the first part of his career. The heroes and sages | the public archives; or, if so deposited, may not sull be | we regarded it as a federal council habitually directing, or encireing panorama of land aud sea, of fold and hamiet, | of theR evolutionary aud constitutional period were indeed | hid away among the sixty thousand maps contained ia | bubituaily obeyed.” “And now,” said Mr. Webster, of lake and stream, of garden and grove, is the memory | yone—Washington, Franklin, Greene, Hamilton, Morris, | hat depository? The official corresjmudence of M ’mes a paskage which ought to be written in levers ether sons, native and adopted; the character, services, | Jay, slept in their honored graves. John Adams, Jeifer: | waid, the British acgotiator, was retaiaed by the British | of gold over the door of the Capito!’ and of ever! and fame of those who have benefitted and adorned their | son, Carroll, though surviving, were withdrawn from | Minister in his own poasession, and does aot appear to | State Legisiature: ‘Had — th existed any pach Hi aay and generation. Our children, and the schools at { affairs. But Madison, who contributed so much tothe | have gone into the public archives, j “Commune Concilitm’”? of tolerable wisdom and patriot- | arm of flesh should fail, deubt not that the monumental | ory! which they are Ee our citizens ae oe servi x dey formation and adoption of the constitution, wasat the | ‘In‘the absence of all svidanice to connect Dr. Franklin's | sm, und had the tendencies of the Helteuic mind been | form peck i desosnd from, its pedestal, to — Pe the PHILADELPHIA, Sept 1—Arr ship Bather Bio se dered—t are our jewel ese our abidiug pl binet. John Ade Galla- ter the map, it jd ne tof justice, have | «ap ot atime Ah memes the It eopreant » front rant of the powil, am. womes lipe repent the cr: nero, ochre Geu M Novertson, Morrow, Kast Hasbor, TL; See eee elon X Bee eee ee eee ae a omnis reall Sean nesereonatene exon Mah Steen ae | isi ale tory wouid "Brebabiy Yave cea wrod; | Of the living volce—“Liberty and Union, now and 10%. Weiden, Emit, Roxbury; Karah Woodridge, Atkins, oslon, wks your long rows of quarried granite may crumbleto | Rutus King, Christopher Gore, Jeremiah Mason, Giles,.| and ABS presumes hae ee Marked, was | the Macedon! ings would have remained only as re- | ever, one and inseparable! ey roe pone iat! , UUst, the corm Guide in yonder villages ripening to the | Orig: 4 . Teas Pineiaas?, ony? | oy te udiguage of the treaty This point was urged in | :pectable neighbors, borrowing their civilization from ex, Aime Sekiomiay like the plains’ of strickew Lombardy a tow | Lowandle, Wedd Ce ech RiP SRBh Forsyth. Randolph, || debute, with great force, by Lord Brovghara, wito, a8 weil | Greece and exereking their’ military cuergies upon Baker, Beston; Suiige Tembey, Cottrell weeks ago, be kneaded into bloody clods by the maddis kiey, Pitkin, Grosvenor; on the bench of the Suprema | us Sir Robert Peel, liberally defended Mr. Webster from | Thracians and Ilyriaus, while united Hellas mighthave | MARITIME INTELLIGENCER. ‘Ikth—Arr bark Belle, Ryder, Boston; brigs Rifleman (Br), wheels of artillery; this populous city, like the old cities | Court; Marshall, Livingston, Story; at the bar, Dexter, | the charges which the opposition jouruais ia London had | tained her own territory agaiust the eonqueri sere eornerwnrerwnnrwwnnwerrrrrrre | Small, Rio Janeiro; Zeenymph (Iutch), Schep) Houerdanx. of Etruria and the Campagna Romana, may be dosolated | Emmet, Vinkney and Wirt, with many diatingnished men ‘| brought againet bim. f jRome.’”? A wise aad patriotic feder ALMANAG FOR KEW TOR—TUIS D. SAN FRANCISCO, Ang ao—Arr briga J B Gaboe Smith . by the pestiience which walketh in darkness—may decay | not at that time in the general government, of whom it is Information of this map was, in the progress of tho ne- | government would have preserved Greece from the Mace- | 50™ ai8Rs. 5 44) moon Rises, seve 10 21 ee ae Hatch, Noyo River; Zist, barks N 8 Per wrth the.layse of time—and the busy mart which now ; enough to name De Witt Clinton and Chancellor Kent. | gotiation, very properly communicated to Mr. Webster | donian phalanx and the Roman legious. SUN SETS... 6 04| sige wasn. veve 117 La 7 so sae pened ad wie, ne with the joyous din of trade become as louely and | The opinion prouounced of him, at the commencement | by Mr. Spark#. For the reasons slated, it cuili aot be | Proicxsional and official iabors engrossed Mr. Webster's | “pore op New Work, Bopromber 16, 1060, | borot io ‘th Tlebre in consequence of heavy sem breaking of iil as Carthage or Tyre, as Babylon or Nineveh, bat the | of his career by Mr. Lowndes, that “theSouth had not in | admitted ag proving anything. It was another piece of | time and left him no leisure for the execution of his medi- iw s Septe: . entrance; she comes in ballast), Sid Qth names of the great and’ good shall survive the desolation | Congress his superior nor the North his equal,” gavors in'| evidence of uncertain character, and Mr. Webster coutd | tated work on the constitution—a theme which, as ho ARRIVED. Lock, Victoria; Plyades (H Is M), de Courcy, Vancouver Isls and the ruin—the memory of the wise, the brave, the pa- | the form of expression of gectional partiality. If it had;:| have noassurance that the next day might not produce ; would have treated it, tracing it buck to its historical tea and; ships K F Willets, Gates, Sandwich I 7 Aurora, trictic shall never perish. Yes, Sparta is a wheatfleld; a | been said, that neither at the South or the North had any | seme otlrer may acrig f strong or strouger on the Ame ; Sylvia, fountains und for ward to its prophetic issues, seems to me, | ¢atgemehip Borussia (Ham), Trautman, Hamburg Sept land | Clough, Manila; Mayflower, Chattield, Puget Bou Bavarian prince hols court at the foot of the Acropolis; | public man risen more rapidly to a brilliant reputation, uo] rican side; whi shaK presently state, was soon d mplon th 'AM, with ree apd 887 aeonnd cabin’ and | Swagey: Wonolitu: Ys bark Foederm Aree, Mar the travelling virtuosodigs for marbles in the Roman Foram | one, I think, would have denied the justice of the remark, | done in London. in the wide range of its topics, to embrace higher and | steerage gers, to Kunbardt & Co. Arrived at Sandy SAVANNAH, Sept. 14—Arr steamships Florida,Crowell, New. and. beneath the ruing of the temple of Jupiter Capito- | He stood from the first the acknowledged equal of the | In this state of things he made the ouly use of it, which 1d. bi ry schra Maull, 3 We richer elements of thought for the American statesman | Hook at§ AM, and off the Batiery at 7:30 AM. 4th inst, olf | y, "0 and patriot than any other not directly connected with the | Start Point, in the ma Channel, saw Hamburg steamship Web ttt A New linus; but Lycurgus and Leonidas, and Miltiades and De- vet distinguished of his associates, In later years he | could be legitimately made, in communicating it to the | spiritual welfare of man. Hammonia; I 08, lon 35 08, saw ship Anna Decatur ALEM, Sept l6—Arr achr Kendrick Fish, Wail, Port Ewen. semhinad ond Gor: and Tully’ “still live’; and he atted with the successors of those I have aamed, with | Commissioners of the State of Maine and Massacuusotts, | msonrm DE OF THE THEMY—THR FUTURE OF THR UNION. (Gf Fortsmouth), Farsong, from Suuderland, Aug 16 for id WARRIAM, Sept 12—arr achrsT H Abbott, Smith, Balti Bull tives, ’and all the great and good shall live in tho | Benton, Burges, Edward Livingston, Hayne, McDuaie, | and to the Senate, as a picce wf coullicting evitones, enti: | What e'se i there, in the material aystem of the world, | firemen, henes for Bremen: lth, lai 48 47, lonrafs mae area TW Phars, Chavet kieaita | One eee Arig Clayton, Wilde, Storrs, our own Bates, | tled to consideration, likely to be urged as of oate and others who still survive; bat | tance by the opposite party if the discuss: admitted that he never sunk from the | newed, increasing the difficulties which al | £0 wonderful as this conceaiment of the Western hemi- sphere for ages behind the mighty veil of waters? How rT such a secret be keptfrom the foundation of the hear: of ages, while marbie and bronze shail endure; and | McLean when maible and bronze have perished, they ‘shall | Davis, ¢ “gti live” in memory, so long as men shall reverence | it wit’ Ser; iel, hence for Southampton and Havre; léth, lat 41 13 a ed ship E Greeley Cuuier, from Liverpool duly Si | DAVis 40; uh, Angler, Besse, do. opk: ith, at 2 AML lat 4118, ton 63, sayy” Hanbun be ly he Horuania, ex: D ot 4 love liberty! position which he assumed at the outset of his career, or | ed the question, thus furnishing new grounds for | world till the end of the fifteenth century? What go as- | Steamship ria, hence for Hambury aided ree Seas on ck. wasereea respon Hood second to any man in any part of the country. After | agreeing to the proposed conventional lias.” No uae, 1 | tonishing-as the concurrence, within. l 4 Laiapipetidehb a mgebcerd dl ten dds Bae AW med iid TNO eee oan ee Seven years, within a few weeks, have pased since he, | summing up the various important questions discussed in | think, acquainted with the history of the ors of the invention of printing, the dem A heap sep hiker ates der pga score Agron wien og whose statue we inaugurate to-day, was taken from us. | Webster's time, Mr. Everett proceeded. the state uf public opinian and feeling, svetem of the heavens, and this great world-discovery? | — Steamship De Soto, Bulluch, New Orleans 9th inst, and Ha- | bight bills on the Ox Cr fe ee The voice of respectiul and affectionate eulogy, which » IMS CARKER AS A @TATESMAN. but for this communication, it would have bi What se mysterious as the dissociation of the native tribos | vana 13th, with mdse and passengers, to Livingston, Crocheron ‘Umion Bark or Lonvon, ‘uttered. in this vicinity and city at the time, was prompt Such was the period in which Mr. Webster lived, such | if not impossibic, to procure the assent either of Ma: | of this continent from the civilized and civilizable races of | 4 Co. Sept 13, passed a lester i Fupposed to be the Gra- Baw oF Liverroon, ” ies echoedithroughout the country. The tribite paid to bis | were the associates with whom he acted, the questions | of the Senute to the treaty. men? Whatso remarkable in poiitioal history, as the ope- | da; same day, lat 25 30, lon 79 80, exchanged signals with an NATIONAL BaNk OF SCOTLAND, memory, bg friends, neighbors and fellow citizens was | with which he Lad to deal as statesman, jurist, the heal | ‘This would seem to be going as far as reason or honor- | ration of the influences, now in conflict, now in harmony, | AB bark, steering North, with painted ports.and red.and black | BeLrsst Banning Company, IRgLanp, responded to from the remotest corners of the republic | of an administration of tho government, and a public | required in reference to an unauthenticated document, | wider which the various ations of the Old World sont | gurkqucenme day. lat 28, lon 7944, exchanged signals with | In sure from £1 upwards ‘those who never gazed on his noble countenance or | speaker. Let us contemplate him for a moment in either | having none of the properties of legal evidence, not ex’ | their childven to occupy the New—great populations si- ‘Steamship Montgomery, Crocker, Savannah, Sept 15, with af TAYLOR BROTHERS, Ban! Astened to the deep meledy of his voice. This city, | capacity. i re Dited by the opposite party, aud of w natu: iently stating into existence; the wilderness of one cen- | mdse and passengers, to HI B Cromwell & Co, ' Encountered a 76 Wall street, N. which in carly manhood he chose for his home; his asso- ithout passing through the preliminary stage of the | outweighed by contradictory evidence of th varming in the next with millions; ascending the ale from SE to W after leaving Cape Hatteras. Sept | ——— 3 severe ms, crossing the mountains, struggling with a | 16. 60miles NE of Fryingpan Sh chr Manhasset, ¥ : Tid mate wih ava’ fa, mit rival | Pe aati Re Sotho att om Nae Pa | ents of foreign powers, bit ever’ onward, oa- | Charleston: 9 PM. off Cay ‘| TNFORMATION WANTED—OF ELIZA PENTONY NO- Sytem = GroMacta rear SUES ey colonial’ | Goer Reee eH ee eae ee || Ne fermmeriy ot conto iy iiseregon f ‘Steamship Nashville, Murray, Charleston, with mdse and wu be thankfully received by r brother, Robert Nolan, the fulness of time had come, what 30 majestic, | Passengers, to Spi , Tieston & Co. Thirsday, 2 PM, 3 | ol ear ae! Sai = living in New York. Addresa atnidet all its vicissitudes and all its ‘triais, as the Grand | pL Erving Pan, © eae steamship ‘Columbia; | Hobert Nolan, Galens, Tin ean ial Separation ;—mutually beneficial in its final result to both | fides, 8 PM. N of BaMferas, with steamship Jas Adger, both INFORMATION WANTED OF THD ciates in the honorable profession of which he rose to be | State Legislature, and elected to Congress in six yeare | kind, which was very soon done. Bat Mr the acknewleiged head; the law school of the neigh- | from the time of his admission to the Superior Court of | was, at the time, severely censured by Dering university speaking by the lips of one so well | New Hampshire, he was, on his drat eutrance intothe | tion pres in England, and was te " able to do justice to his legal pre-eminence; the college at | House of Representatives, placed by Mr. Speaker Clay on | and want of good {aith’ (and this charge has lately beca ges | the Committee of Foreign Affairs and tock rank forth- | revived in an exaborate aud elzeumstautial manner), which he was educated and whose chartes hhe had successfully maintained before the highest tribu- | with as one of the leading statesmen of the day. His first | not going with this map to Lord Asuburton mal of the country; with other bodies and other eulogists, | speech had reference to those famous Berlin and Milande- | abandoning the American claim, and o i at the bar, in the pulpit, and on the platform, througiout | crees and orders in Council, to which Thave already al- | the dyputed territory, more cven than sh tiaining in the school of chartered goverameut; and then. r a fever :. ‘ a 7 <ohinota t hence for Charleston. The N experienced heavy gales’ from OHN AGGETT. Ihe Union, in numbers greater I believe than have ever | Juded; and the impression produced by it was such as 10 | Great Britain, on the #:?ength of this eiugl jntice—the dread appea! to aims, tiat venerable Conti | Hatt is en i widow of Job former! er80} spoken on’any other similar occasion, except that of the | lead ‘the venerable Chief Justice Marshall, eighteen | ful evidence.’ ental Congress, the august. Declaration, tho birange aL: | OSM nee ee ere eee eveallg CIN, || Soar Ragland, She mey heat of expeaing. bee aaeeeeee death of Washington, joined with the almost unanimous | years afterwards, in writing to Mr. Justice Story, | Such a charge écarcely deserves an answer; but two | auce of the oldest monareby of Europe’ with thecimtant | Steamship Roanoke, Couch, Richmond, &c, with mise and | by applying to MERRILL & ABBOT, 62 South street ‘press of the eountry, in a pe horus of admiration of his | to say:—‘‘ At the time when this speech was deliver’ | things will occur to all impartial persons:—one, that the | rep: bic And Instiy, what 60 worthy, the admiration of | PA#seucers. to Ludiam & Helneken. 13g "PM, off Brigantine, eres talents, recognition of his patriotic services, and respect | ed I did not know Mr. Webster, but I was so mich } red line map, even hat it been proved to have boon | men auc angels as the appearance of him the expected — ip Jamestown, hence for Norfolk. RH. GORDON CAN SKE M. ZEWAY D. BY CALL- aid aiistcicns tr Kini accany : Struck with it that I did not hesitate then to state that | marked by Franklin (which itis not), would ba but ous | Lim the Horo, raised up to conduct te momento a a pzamnel G Glover Kellam, Boston, 3 days, in ballast, to | AD ingat the Post office and seotiing « femer imimmaaietely. 5 can be said that has not been better said before: | he was a very able man, and would become one of tho | piece of evidence to be weighed, with’ the words of tho | fict to its auspicious issue in the Confederation, the Uaion Hark Atlantic (Brem), Feldhusen, Bremen, July 20, with ISSING—CHARLES D. MERWIN, 15 YEARS OLD, & “awhat need be said now that seven added years in the po- | very first statesmen in America, perhaps the very, first.”’ | treaty, with all the other evidence in the cage, and espe- | the Constitution | ” | mdse and 231 passengers, to master 12th inst, off Georges feet 7 inches high ant complexion: bad cables seem “Aitical progress of the country, seven years of respectful | His mind at the very outset of his career had, by a kind | cially with the other maps; aud secondly, that such + VIEWS OF THR PRESENT. Shoals, saw Bremen bark Coriolan, from Bremen for NYork, ae pants, black silk vest, lizht bat, boots and blue neck apd affectionate recollection on’ the part of those who now | of instinct, soared from the principles which govern tae | course as itis pretended that Mr. W: on his person @ gold, watch and $22; left home om oeppay [the stage, hare confirmed his titte to the large | municipal relations of individuals, to those great ruies | pursued, could only be reas ee which, while he lived, he filledin the public mind? | which dictate the law of nations to independent States. | condition that the British go jo he yet bore a part in’ the councils of the Union, he | He tells us in a fragment of adiary kept while ho was a | or would undertake t produce, al shane the fate which, in all countries, and especially in | law student in Mr. Gore’s office, that he then read Vattol | cially all the maps in its posse: ul " pt gy? te roy and emi | through oe the — rape ee abate in after es there | American claim. rt nent pesition; whic no great mav in our history—not | was no subject which he discussed with greater pleasure, AS A PUBLIC SPEAKER. ances and temporary wanderings frot ec = Washineton himwelf— has ‘ever escaped ; which none can | and T mayadd with greater power than questious of tus | Ihad intended wo aay n few words on Me. Webster's | wiut he. decincd t wise’ and. sound’ pouiey, tsa tltogs pore tte: Case brite HO Ponae Mighi cat aos LOST A excapé, but those who? are too feeble to provoke opposi- | law of uations. transcendent ability a8 a public speaker on the great na- | fervid spirits who dwell exclus'vely in the present, and | Pye gale of faturday dragged both anchors into two fakes ee tion, tog obscure for je slousy. But now that he has rest- ‘The greatest parliamentary effort made by Mr. Webster | tional auniversaries, and the patriotic celebrations of the | make : ry r ree allowance for the gradual operation of mora! | water. Cutaway foremast, which, with the yards and main: | {CLEAR YELLOW COW, A SMALL €4 fir ygars in his hono.ted grave, what generous nature | was his second kpeech on Foot’s resolution; the question | country. But it would de impossible, within th limits of | iulineaces This was the cage tm reference to, the ‘grout | topmast, went over the side, when abe held. “Was towed cpio. | A. ‘offatte hora, white on ler belle comet aes of Re $s not pleaced to strew fiu¥ers onthe god’ What honora- | at issue beivg nothing less than this:—Is the constitution | afew paragraphs to do any kind of justice to sich efforts | sectional controversy, which now so sharply divides and. | the city Sunday. hurd to milk in the two forward tents and easy in those behind, Dle opponent, still faithful 69 principle, is mot willing that | of the United States a compact without a common umpira | as the discourse on the twenty-second December, at | £0 Violently agitate the country, fle Tiot only coat: | BEG Tremont, Wyman, Rondout for Portsmouth, strayed away on Thursday, 18th inet., trom. Wr 4 ought to hays | — This propbetic glance, not merely at the impending, but | well. Has had light westerly winds moat of the passage, | Ue quired of him, va | the distant future, this ‘reliance on the Culfiment of tho Trani experienced a heavy gale from BNE 10 NE Iatana | Whereatguw wil be UWkaktly oseiver by Sia amos Bae ue ls produce, | great wesign of Providence, iMlustrated through our whole | sound, July 9, with wine, Crocker, Wood & Go. = 1*4"4 | rents, at No. 4 East Eleventh street, videnee, andusps, | history, to lavish upon the people of this conutry the ac. | Brig Ceylon (Br), Dorr, Windsor, NS, 18 days, with plaster, p" 7 5 , orable to the | cumulated bicesings of allformer stages of human pro- | to D A Dewoit sk a i W atbeoter tii eoneOh saree Ba sores woe grcse, made him more tolerant of the tardy and irregular | | Ht!g Alamo, Ingalls, Machiasport, 18 days, with lumber, to | dress Mrs. G—r, room No. 161 Howard Hotel. ; aall in which he differed fro, wim should be referred,with- | between confederated sovereignties, or is ita goverameat | Plymouth; the speeches on the laying the corner stoneand | dently anticipated what the lapse of seven ye pe. Sehr Gipsy Ingalls, Kast Machias, 10 days. avenue, near Flatbush, A reasonable reward will be ‘out bitterners, to the impar. Mad arbitearacnt of time; and | of the people of the United States, sovercign within the | the completion of the Bunker Hill Monvment; the eulogy | decease hus with seed und is, inesaiiar oars the: woety Schr EE Tat, ag Es 4days, Re i ia a af omg Lifeson @hat all thatie respected a, vt loved ebould be cordiatly | sphere of its delegated powers, but reserving a great masa | op Adams and Jeflersun; tue character of mi; | acquired and vewly organized territories of the Union | Sehr Hurd, Pierce, Rockland, 4 days. J ‘ - MARE REEL. Se Femombered? What public 1 Wem, especially, who, with | of undelegated rights to the separate State goveram nis | the discourse on laying the foundation of the ¢ of | Would grow up into free States, but, in common with ail | Sehr Cora, Kelly. b Li THE EVENING OF THE 16TH ULT., brace the opiuious | the Capitol. What gravity Schr Laura M} at the Fost oflice, a roil of papers the contents of which are. x a8 ae, es a aE ¢ opt 6 Capito ( and significance in the wpics, | whic! . febster combatted in this speech, this is | what richness of illustration, what sound 0 7 great fa a Bilitg—who has {lt how hard it. 0 the Jarge not the time nor the place to engage in ‘an argum What clelevation of sentuucut, whit fervor in the patrioue | the comtry. He thought he waw that, Inthe operation, of | Scbt Rekene Happuch, Kelly, Glow poder ed LL IN 3 ie sate ce eiire ot all times, to n but those who believe that he maintained the true | appeals, what purity, vigor, and clearness in the style! the came Th wl ° en intdiigent and watchful, but im, wtive and not always | principles of the constitution, will probably agr tr neariy wil the statesmen of the last 3 of principle, | lieved that fr whatever diteronces of judgme wof men or measures, has | and the people? With those who e1 1 a be. Domne on his gw shoulderethe , wevy burden of responsi. ‘wr. ration; heb Schr Nelson Wel fno use , ry returai val tiroughiouy | fete Nelmon Wel Of no use to any one but the owner. Any person ng labor would witimately pi ‘ich. cp [REET AND ses which have produced this result in the | Schr Gertrude, Hawkins, Elizabethport for Salem, LOSE ON Ute inet. NEAR MOREY STREET AND’ n. , that With reference t the first-named of these almirable | Middle and Eastern States, it was visibl Sehr Almira, 4 Broadway, an tyory breast pin; also on nye oars thorougsly instrucid public; how’ Gilicult swometies to | gincedhat instrument wascommunicated tie Contivental | discourses, the elder President Adams declared. that | te Staes North of the cotton prowlag. teylons mane he ice | Bleap ae eee Tis. a ey a oI Te RRC TT ratisfy iis own judg.nent, is ‘not wi, Wag that the nobie gress soventy-two years ago this day, by George | “Burkeis no longer entitled t the praise—the most con- | clined to th n that there also, under ths fuflasnce | Steamer Boston, Sellew, Philadelphia. nae = qualities avd patriotic services of Wel wer ebould be how- ington, as President of the Federal Convention, no | sumimate orator of modern times; and it will, | of physteal aud economical causes, free labor would even- BELOW. orably recorded in fre book of the wuLtey’s remem. | greater service has been rendered to them than in tl 1 think, be admitted by any one who shail | tually be found most productive, and would. therefore bo | Ship Manhattan. WATCHES, JEWELRY, &C. Drance, ang is statueset uy in the Pan, Woon of her ilas- | livery of this speech, Well do I revoliect tho occasion | auentiely study them, that i Mr. Webster, with | lithiely estabiiebe Bark Milton, from Glasgow.—(Both by steamtug Jaoob Bell.) RRIVAT, EXTRAORDINARY.—WE HAVE JUST REL. trious sons? and the z POSTYGMOUS HONORS. battle of ne. It was truly what Wellington P s ‘eterloo, a conflict of giants, I pass ‘These posthyméus houprs lovingly paid 24 departed | and a half with Mr. Webster, at his request, ts al} Lis powers and all his attainments, had done nothing. WORE Te ; else but enrich the literature of the courtry with these | that the comple ‘ons, bearing in mind what all admit, SATLED. ceived from England a auperb set of solid sterling aiver,. solution of the mighty problem fteamships Arago, Havre; Marion, Charleston; Augwata,Sa- | Consisting of soup and gravy tureens, vegetable and sido~ fish knife, cheese scoop, knife resis, sugar tusks the prudence aad pa. | Yannah; Jamestown, Norfolk; and aglarge fleet of square rigged | dlshes, with cov a ug | performances, he would be allowed to have lived not un- | Which now eo gi worth, are amoug the compensations which a'ind Pro before this great effort; and he went over tom froma | worthily, nor in vain. When we consider that they were | trictism of the nd best in the land, is | Vessels shovel, salt spoons and table, dessert and tea forks and spoons, deyee Yeuchsafee for the unavoidable conticts Of judmen | very concise brief, the main topice of the speech which he | produced under the severe pressure of profersional and | beyond the deiogated powers of the goneral govern, | Wind N. : [nail numbering cee na canoes, neh piece te akira? and stove collisions of party, yhich make the Ryermen ca | had prepared for the following day. So calm and un'u- | official engagements, numerous and arduous enough to | ment; that it deponde, as tar as the States are concerned eeleh aoe! ind eugeaved with family coat of arma, crest, reer always arduous, even when pursued with the gre passioned was the jmemorandum,#o entirely was ho at | tark even his intellect, we are lost in admiration of the | on their independent lation, and that it is of all others Telegraph Marine Report. 4c. Thia truly fine plate comprised the entire dinner services: est success, generally precarious, sometimes de *tructive | case himself, that T wae tempted to think—absurdiy | affluence of bis mental resources, ip reference to which public o BANDY Hook” Sept 18, sunset—No vessels in sight, bound | formerly the property of an Engligh nobleman, and iy Of health and even life. It is ipppossible under 1 22° g0v- | enongh—that he was not suflciently aware of the muni. GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF STYLE AND MANN?R. neni will most powerfully’ jufluenc law; that | in. Wind NW; weather clear, cont twelve hundred pounds. Fhis wot is all fn fine order, ae. ernments to prevent the existence. ef party; not lee: ¥ , | tude of the occasion. But I soon perceived t In all the speeches, arguments, discourges and com | much in the taps hi t ood as the day it left the manufacturer's hands, having been, the f time, without iaw, is likely to ba | HIGHLANDS, Sept 18, sunser—No vessels in aight. Wind ww times tiged. This is the first instance we have Drovght about by degrees, and gradually doae and por. | NWs weather clear. in'which nny tate belonulng to Knglah Come famion, hag ed, ns in Missouri, at the present day, while nothin " ever been sent to the United States, thereby making ita rare: is to be hoped from external interference-whether of ne eocuemecns urloity. We wil-have the entire set on exhiniion on and sible that parties should be conducted with spi % vigor without more or legs injustice doue and su, Wre more or less gross upcharitableness avd bitter dena calmness was the repose of conscious power. , | net only ate bot sportive and full of dote; and as he told the Senate playfal) positions of every kind proceeding from Mr. Webster's | brought about by. lis or pen, there were certain general charac Woich T am unwilling to dismiss without a ps tion, Resides, with the utmost effort at impartiality, 18 | next day, be slept roundly that night on th aliusion. Each, of course, had its pecaliar movits, | bortation or rebuke; that in all human aff The US mail steamship Arago, Capt Lines, sailed yesterday | after Monday, teptember 19, and invite all to come and see it. not within the! competance of war frail capacities to dos" | dable assault of his gallant and accomplished aiversary. | according to the nature aid importance» of the sib. | by selfgoveruing communities extreme opinions | ™ornne for Southampton and Havre, with 125 passengers and HOY BARGER & DILLON, ory justice ar the time to a character of varied and towerin ¥ | So the great Condé slept on dhe eve af the bale of Roe Ject, and the degree of paing bestowed by Mr, Web | and extreme courses, on the one hand, general, | £619,388 in specie, hthehatdeanibadinoaitahe castle Breatness, engaged in an getive and respossible politica, | 80 Alexander slept on the eve of the battle of Arb t : ; | ster on the discussion; but I find some gencral quali | ly lead to extreme ‘opinions and extreme a ‘The steamship Arie OME D SL tig ree career. "The truth of big principles, the wiadom of his { and go they awoke to deeds of immoral fain, As tsaw | tics pervading them all. Ono of them i# the extreme | on the other ; and. that nothing will more ‘eoatri | the TOs (ak fr Wncaaplos cat avai te spots onto «__. MEDICAL. counsels, the value of his services must be seen in their tis fav ite ening, (if Tmay borrow an illustration from | sobricty of the tone, the pervading common sense, | bute to the earliest practicable relief of the country from 4th, fi 7, Heine aheghege since F OR fruits, nd the richest fruits are not those of | Wis favorite amusement) he was as unconcerned aud as free | dh» entire absence ef that extravagance aud over. | this most prolific source of conflict and e yin lat 48.47, Jon #7. ‘Bho must have gone on Anely since | AT EW DOORS EAST OF BROADWAY.—DR- tho “most rapid ‘growth, The ‘wisdom of ant | o spltit, a8 some here have oftey seen hun, wie @ ating | " tement, which are so apt Wo chtep. into. pol than to prevent its being introdueed into leaving this port. PELLET LIC alalabaahaebranaler best ines oper keer’ quity pronounced that no one was to be deem- | in his yh ‘4 4 a hazy ahore, gently rockiwg on sngues and the discourses on patriotic anni zations, he deprecated its being ailowed to find a place GrNoa, Aug 31—Tntelli from Cadiz of Aug %, reports ih. COOPER, 10 DOANE GIR inn Dae happy | until after death; not merely be. | the dranquil tide, dropping his line here and there, with | saries. His positions were taken strongiy, clearly | among the political issues of the day, North or Southy and | {hatte American bark Plymouth, Craven, from the notth for B, COOPER, 14 DUANE STERST, Hag F0e lae feause he was then first placed beyond the viissitades of | the Yarying fortune of the sport. | The net monilg he oldly; but without wordy amplitication, or one-sideit | seeking a platform on which honest’ and patriotic "men | {2eMediterranean, had putin there with serious 40% | Stay bo conesited: daly, from "8 ie the mucrcing tl doe te tee Haman fortune, but because then only the rival interests, | was "ke some mighty admiral, dark and tile. castay! mexes. You fee! that your understan ting is address: | might meet and stand, he thought he had found it, were | “er Sonneries before reported munk in Broad Souna, | evening, Sundays excepted nn in the discordant judgments, the hostile passions of cotem: | the lon. § Shadow of his frowning ters far over the ges | ed,on behalf of a reasonable proposition, which rests | our fathers did, in the Constitution. rR, WARD'S ONLY OFDION Gb DEOL IDET Poraries are, in ordinary cases, no longer concerned to | that ser'med to sink beneath Bim; bis brow! yendant ) neither on sentimental refluement or rhetorical exaggora | Itis true that, in interpreting tiie fundamental law on | Mmeee Faised between two sloops, aud would be brought to | T)R. WARDS ONLY OFFICE, 48 HROADWAY, NEXT question his merits. Horace, with gross aduiation, sung | streaming’ At the main, the staraand stripe. atthe fore, | This isthe caso even in speech ‘ike that on the | this subject a diversity of opinion betwoen the two sc r on tate ken a ; 1 4 Whalemen. iit 10 P. “ 4 to his smperial maater, Angustus, that he aloae of ths | the mizzen and the peak; and bearing down ‘ike atern | Grevk Revolution, where, in enlisting tho ail of ‘etassica! | tions of the Union presents iasIl. "This has ever bere tice. | _A letter from Cn Atm otbare Hustrom of NB, dao ull10 P.M. daily. ‘Treatment by mall and express, great of the earth ever received while living the full maed | pest upon b.'8 antagonist, with all bis cauvass +x men. ories and Christian sympathies, it was go difficult to | cage, first or last,in relation toev ‘ Helena, Aug 6, that he was on shore with his wife. The )R. RALPH 8 OFFICES—CORNER OF HOUSTON Al Sf praise, All the other great benefactors of mankind, | the wind, anu’ All his thunders roaring from is \ feat ®itin the Donsds Of Mioderiiba: 5 has divided the country. ILis the antatliag inehtert ct | Abin went outou a cruise in hare ofthe mate, and tok Roe | Tea eo dah create tee iE eae a toe the inventors of arts, the destroyers of monsters, the Ate 48 A JURIAT. Thia .Noderauion not only characteriaes Mr. Webster's | constitutions, written of unwritten: an evil to. be dealt | BbIRsverm ofl. This makes 600 Sble sp oll the IT bas taken in | Sundays excepted. etvitizers of States, found by experience that unpopularity | Mr, Webster's career was not less brilliant as (| parliamentary efforts, but is equally with in good faith, by prutent and enlightened min in | “Rnokem: Om Gailipagos Talands July 18, Dartmouth, Hangh- R. WATSON, MEMBER OF THE ROYAL COLLBG! was appeased by death alone. than as a statesraan. In fact he possessed in an euse. ut | dieoursce on popular and patriot hoth sections of the Union, seoking,as Washington sought, | ton’ Nie a0 ap: Mary Ann, Macy, Malapotsett, 110 ‘mp, Viet Of Surgeons, London, may be consulted at ide residency THE OBSEQUIE OF MR. CHOATE, degree a judicial mind. While performing an amount of all the isdudemente. to fareen tho pubile good, and giving expression to the patriotic | Mal Peakes, is, 78 ap this wens 5 + Virgl- | 189 Broome atreei, second block west of Broadway, from 8 As Our tely witnessed a moet beautiful in- | congressional and official labor sutflgent to fll the basi at y and always marked by the tre: . P Girdo June 16, Mary Brances, Rule, Warren, with 829 ap, | M-t09P. M. commygn sen8e of the poopie city has 7 stance of this reanimating power of death. A few | day and w task the strongest powers, he t xustait od Utopice, ta manly and structive strain of argue | Sveh, Thave reason to bolieye, we * pe _ | 230 wh, all told, ARI8 AND LONDON OFFICES OF DR, LARMOND, weeks ince ye followed foward the tomb tho Lifeless | with a giam’e strength the herculenn’ tails» rota } ment and reflection BN | tertained by Mr. Wetmter, aot certainty ahobe Beet exten: | sip loo, Batter roe Bottvcr ii Pp md Thwesday2 ND evening. Trewtagoe by ml and Om remains of our jamented Choate, Well may we gousy- " siou, AY the yery eommencemont of his legal studice, re Let WHOL be thouglit, however, tliat I, would repre- "lated to Win a winporary jopulariy ja any part of Ao | guly'¥a 808 Ot Shou 938 B, NNY MAY 80 for Liverpool, | M.. and Thursdays il Yevening. “Treatment by ma