The New York Herald Newspaper, December 5, 1859, Page 10

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CEMBER 5, 1859.—TRIPLE SHEET. 10 NEW ‘yoRK HERALD, MONDAY, DE W YORK HERALD, MONDA®, ie RTE PUA ts deepest, aiagenee MARITIME INTELLIGENCE, | 30% cp wheres furntet yn win oan I a. of A svi veil alles . > journ. oved | this thhyg, at instantly and optnly setting iteolf | inthe government and. laws, an ‘on the May 14, spoke Fortune, Lester, witb jibboom und 7 W DEC a asnais Tor aayouraia’, The event of | sgairs Gedy man tat opposes this iniquity | united with highest endiemg eee ae een pon ant gir having piched hen ol wht ying toa seeks to Suk oid have Dy ‘now significance if wa adjourn. | shai! exrely'bo pu to death.” The State not only tolerates | part of the-snflerer. iy of his tal apd deauh there fara, and very bude Ann bees the day wo" ‘ be insctnitely post | the, iniquity, but enthrones it as righteeusnces, estab- | balms them; but at the hour of his tr ot in bls far part, tna leaking. © + A Dumber of other ships He closed by movil’ thas the mouon Vrshes it with the savetion of law and condemns tho viola- | are few bardy enough to ane & Ver hatlucina- 4 letter from (apt Cornell, of bark Eliza, NB ened srronn (of Newburyport) opposed the ‘ten of the } ton of whe law fanctioning the iniquity to the same pe- | yor, atleast wiuoUt Na een ae or functiciam. Mezatabique Chanel, 5 1 hang koa WObeLop acs = 6 4 yr depre- | nalty that God Almi the iniquity g » , ' and = ETFO net nae akould.retvct | God Uoolares thet “He” Aah man end selle | ‘TheFe aro lew dhibare willing admits sound Sains a vied guten BPOKOM) does gates SY soutitutual acuon of a gister State. To sad | him, or if he We found iu bis hands, he shall surely be put | rigblfuiness of conduct in getting himselfagainst unjust Or Ship United Staten, Biauchara trou London (Deal Sept) for bay Tk ery man had been joducod, throu, a | to death.” The State declares that he Gist hoe Law| an a Sogo ‘or our world, een . Ino 28 W. (tad sieth deena. Kov 1s to the law, and thereby peatleman from Malden bas claimed that this is not a po- litical question, But what days ago that we ‘torian and writer, ‘and whose talents have nd bis country, else ia it? Tt was only 8 rd of the death of the eminent his- Washington Irving, who has doue than a thousaad John Browns, Teflected honor upon his State ‘but mobody proposed to take avy Do- ight practice shall be carried inte perpetual establishment as a system, 60 that not only the stolen beings shall be consi- dered his lawful and sacred property, but their children and their children’s children shall be stolen and brandea for ever as property from the birth. God says, “Thou shalt not make merchandise of thy brother man.” The State says, “Thou shalt make merchandise of thy bro- ther,” and such merchandise is the moet sacred of all fow case of Brown, there is a fulse tice of his death,’ In the ‘ cin reckless disregard of | property, and if thy brother be guilty of a si Hoa boa Yastcos has exposed Winsclf to its severe retriba- | Rot colcUrod like thine own, has Do rights that white men wien. ‘The gentleman from the sentiment which has before his gallows to the cross. I the Ta tonor John Brown aud bis acts it and bolily. He acknowledged that ‘Wo speak at & meeting ‘he may perbaps repeat deen oxpressed, likening House is disposed should do so waniully hhe was warm, but he was onetitution. Mr. Wxstwortt from Newburyport. was re Brown, but he ‘the House would strike out the reason Mr. Grirrix (of Malden) replied to Mr, Spofford. He said that it was not bere that treason was tui tleman’s services were wanted in South Carolina. Mr. G. read from a morning paper the resolution in reference to @Soutbern confederacy adopted by the Mr. G. had his senti- deeds, but the Legisla- akan Sa. Bin Ree Ty wae irae tage that State. He thought greater field for his great ments upon. tare was not the place to ere them. Ihe was to make a speech any tender footed Christians on this subject they had bet- tor stay away from the meeting. Mr. TuckeR (of Boston) condemned Brown’ Solty and ied ‘his rash madness. The gentleman from Tremont Temple w-night, speaking for the Union and (of Lowell) congratulated the House 0 4 go able # protector as the gentleman Anat the Union had #0, able a pr oa at ig to approve all that was right in the con due Pir heldid not thiok it wise to adjourn. He hoped and then reject Malden has been announced king. The gen- are bound to respect; be cannot and shall not be, like thy- self, a citizen, nor under any protection for his ee asa man, of the laws that protect thee. God says, “ shalt not deliver unto his master the servant that has escaped from bis master unto thee. He shall dwell with thee, even among you in that place which he shall choose, in one of thy gates whore it iketh him best; thou shalt not oppress him.” The State says, “Thou sbalt oppress hun; thou shalt deliver him up, thou shalt refuse bim aid avd shelter; thou shalt not permit him to awell among you; if thou do not deliver him thou shalt suffer the penalty, and if thon aid the fugitive or interfere to ot him thou art @ criminal, and if thou entice him to his freedom thou shalt be hanged for treason.”” The iniquity is ten thoveand times worse thus concentrated, commanded and perpetuated in law than it was, or ever could be, as naked ndividval cruelty and crime without law, and without the provision of its perpetual sanction and increase. And the and the He ne obligation iy God and man, upon every man, to sot jislature of Dimees agnines ig ten thousand times greater wheu hu- that there might there a | man law thus commands and perpetuates what God has talents. is evening, and if .here "8 wicked forbidden, than it could be where no law-enthroned and protected the villainy. Two crimes in this case require Oj ition instead of two forms of crime ; and the second the vastest, most atrocious, most terribie. For God hath publicly and solemnly expelled fram sanction and fellowship the throne of iniquity that frameth mis- chief by a law. Now, aman has rigen up to fling God’s protest in the face of such a State, and to put,the protest: Prepared the are Maide ‘aceable surrender of Anthony | into action. God evidently an, by mtg any) He was restored by the United | years of discipline, of ‘prayer, of instruction in His word, States at the mouth of the cannon. The ‘blood of Batchel- | for such a protest, for such a work, teaching him reliance Gor still stains tho walls of the Court Heuse, The articles | solely on God, Having taken His’ own time and his His in the Southern press are mild compared with the rav- | ow! y, God, who seeth the end from the of the Northern papers. aes shed nothing except to destroy the peace of the country. The gentleman from Lowell speaks of Brown and his seventeen foliowers, but knows that Brown would unless he was certain of He knows that Brown not have attempted bis mot insane as he was said to be. madness. He hoped the te * ender. ‘All the ravings have ithout. matter the House to appropriate ‘The amendment to adjourn at one o’clock was lost. ‘The motion to strike out the reason for adjourning was earried by a vote of 104 to 31. The House refused to order the yeas and nays on the motion to adjourn, and it was lost bya yote of 6 to 141, JOHN BROWN SERMONS LAST NIGHT. SERMON BY DR. CHEEVER. “gE MABTYR'S DEATH AND THE MARTYR’S TRI- ‘UMPH.” ‘The Church of the Puritans was filled last evening, not. withstanding the inclemency of the weather, it having been announced in the public papers that Dr. Cheever ‘would deliver a discourse on “The Martyr’s Death and ‘the Martyr’s Triumph,” or, in other words, the execution It was reported on reliable authority ‘that Mrs. Brown was present, and occupied a seat in the ody of the church. After the preliminary devotional exercises, consisting of singing and reading of the Scrip. ‘ares, Dr. Cheever offered up a prayer, in which he asked ‘that God would cast down all human constitutions and Jews that opposed His blessed word, and.that the fearful tragedy, the mournful crime, that had been committed in ‘the name of law last week would be thankfully ‘received, ‘and that the people everywhere would receive the teach. ings of the Bible in regard to that event. Another hymn ‘was sung, and the reverend gentleman then proceeded to ‘deliver his discourse, taking for his text the 27th and 28th verses of the 10th chapter of Matthew—“ What I tell you in darkness that speak ye in the light, and what ye hear im the ear that preach ye on the housetop. And fear not ‘them which kill the body and are not able to kill the soul; rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and He said:— Nearly two hundred and fifty years ago, in the end of this Present stormy winter month, a little frail Vessel was tossing on the waves of the Atlantic near the New Eag- In the cabin of that vessel, before she touched the land, a great covenant of principle was grew out of their church covenant, “gs the Lord’s free people, to walk in all itis ways, made known or to be made known to them, according to their They into a of John Brown. ody in hell.” Jand coast. wansacted, wh Dest endeavors formed themsel body politic, « whateve God’s Word and their ow ing, would permit them to disu bee it thon of a righteo cabin of covenant, of freedom among men by Peter Brov by the compact in that enact, constitute and frame such just and equa! laws as should be thought most meet and con- Yenient for the general good,” promising all due sub- mission and obedience thereto; just and equal laws, the foundation of whose authority ‘aud tho determination of | their justice was the Word of God; and due submission and obedience, that is, just £0 far, and so far only, as nees, under its teach- of unrighteousne: Nberty. 6 Mayflower who too! ‘ad in so doing laif the foundations of a State d, was named It is now nearly two hundred aad fitty tha: signature, and what ama er it might cost them.’ bin 1 coni render. Out of the right the few men in upon themselves allegiance to wld be indeflaitely ‘Mr. Brats (of Weymouth) opposed an adjournment. He was willing to vote with y to Brown’s family. Brrox (of Salem) moved the previous question, and was The motion for indefinite postponement was ruled out of law grew that constitu ing changes ac- | and not’as man seeth, takes this trained sorvant and drives him openly against such wickedness, such a State, such laws. It is no more singular that God should do this by His povidenmes than that He hath done it in His word. If John Milton were on carth he would show you that as clearly as God ever sent Ehud against Eglon and his tyran- ny, 80 clearly, and much more, was John Brown com- missioned against this tyranny of slavery, and against the State and the laws that uphold it. And though the man might mistake as to the manner and method of the pro- test, yet that it is God’s protest is as true as that it isGod’s providence. And the id of instrument that God has taken for thie work is a most plain and sacred indication that it is from Him; plain and sacred, along with and in the light of His requisitions of men to act as “gapmen’’in vindication of His violated !aw, when a whole land seems given up to such violation. God’s thoughts are not as our thoughts, neither are His ways as our ways. The very lowest expounders of all the race of apologists for sin, the ex remest defenders of the iniquity of slavery as right- eousness must acknowledge that God has permitted a Christian man to fling this defiance, in God's name, against both the slavery and the State that sustains it. Obedience to God’s law instead of man’s, obedience to God’s law against man’s, is a Christain work when man’s law is against God's, Now, it is no wonder that God should take a Christian to do this work. And if any evidences of the preeence of His spirit can be relied upon with the indivi- dual doing this work, certainly we have those evidences: For many Riroghl the man had walked with God; he had trained up his family in God’s fear; he had maintained the family alter, and all the sanctities, the instruction, the careful observant discipline of a household piety. He bad been a manof strict, known, undoubted integrity, He was a man whose conscientious sense of right and wrong was as a flame of fire, where in common men it was merely a spark in sluggish embers. Hig sensitivences to injustice was extreme—injustice against others; the iron entered into his own soul. He was accustomed, with grave steadfastness and holy principle, to rebuke profane- ness and wickedness in high or low. He learned from a child the sacredness and dignity of human nature, under whatever skin, and as an old man on the verge of eternity could say, with the simplicity of a child and the majesty of an angel, “I am yet too young to understond that God is any respecter of persons.” He had long been a student of God’s word. He made it the man of his counsel, and sought the guidance of God’s spirit in pondering its sacred pages. He seems to have been familiar with every part of it, but by God’s own peculiar guidance of his mind and Peper ng mutagen with the fire of its benevo- Jence against oppression, and itssacred sympathy in be- half of the oppressed. weeds pow ‘and practical charities abounded towards the poor and needy. 2 course this of years in the practive of such virtues man of God, even if his profession of religion had not been known and read of all. “For by their fruita ye shall know them, for men donot gather grapes of thorns, nor figa of thitles; but every good tree bringeth forth good fruit, while a Corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit.” He ‘was a man of prayer. He walked with God even amidst surrounding violence. He was once, it is said, early in life, that is, at the beginning of his Christian career, des- tined to the ministry; and there is nothing that we know of in his life, amsidat the pursuits to which he was turned aside from such preparation and such a vocation, incon- sistent with the baptism of God’s spiri for the ministra- tion of the Gospel. On the contrary, in one great point of fitness for that work, he seems to have bean always in creasing in the knowledge of the word of God, ina reveren- tial submission to it, in a sense and living experience of it as fire and power, for thus God evidently was training him. Now with these ‘developements of character, these pos- sessions of grace, under theso many years of’ discipline, this specimen of God's fireworks ig suddenly touched intoa flame, and rises out of obscurity into a light that fills the whole atmosphere ani turns the eyes of the spectators of a whole nation to scan the spectacle. This man of God breaks out in the most daring venture against the most consolidated, remors » powerful, all- conquering system of iniquity, that any civilized country ever saw or endured; breaks out in an act, that while some declare by God's Word to be the venture of a man | in God’s bebalf, doing God's work against the vastest of human crimes, others declare to be the act of @ madman; others the hallucination of a good man; others the crime of a man possessed with adevil. But amidst the out break he is the same man that he ever has been, and after the conflict, amidst his wounds, amidst his enemies, e0us the that world! ‘his Western continent | overpowered, apparently uusuccessiul, he is as calm and lions than in that little compaay there | confident as ever in Godaud in the justice and sacredness e men; but millious se diverse in character from | of the cause he has undertaken. And after the disastrous theirs, 20° lit ‘ated and instructed by their | failure of his enterprise, in his prison, through all the example, so disobedient, Indeed, to the supreme Divive | mockery of his trial aud’ sentence, and in all his wi law to ®hich they promised a sole eternal loyalty, that in the middle of this third century after t Janged, a lineal descendant of Peter Brown 1) is publicly hanged for car that Mayflower compact, just and equal laws, obsdie Supreme, and disobedience to man’s aathority, if requir- law’ forbidden; e on which this Christian hero, img aught that God for this is th thie remarkable man, bas It is as plain as day. fe the iniquity & sin against defiance of neeses. which John Brown, trusti obeying God rather than man—gath his life, and threw himself, in bebaif of the enslaved, and against the enslaving government and law, even’ unto death. Two great pastages in God's Word shone beiore him like a star, occupied bis being like presiding angele, Tike flames of fire, like a chariot of flame, in which at Jength, his whole hature occupied with their fulfilment, he ascended from the scaffold to the great cloud of wit. One of these passages was from the New Testa ‘Remember them that are in bonds, as bound wit 2°?” The other from the Old, ‘If thoa forbear to de iver them that are drawn unto doath, and those that are yeady to be slain; if thou gayest, Behold we knew it not; doth not He that pondereth the heart codsider it, and He that keepeth thy goul, doth not He know it? and shail not fay tho eS UD, Tying into effeet the principl that covenant of obed' and his Wor to God bas in his eptured his Ii It cannot slavery, in law and { in He render to every man according to his works?” tween these grand outstanding testimonies of God’s will and man’s duty there rose, attendant upon John Brown's and deepening the impression, a handred witnesses, with holy and benevolent ui ances, amidst which, from Jesus Christ, the Lord a: the faithful witness, ‘whose name is called the Word of God, came to the heart of the man of id the great words, ‘Inasmuch as ye have done it unto ‘one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it un- %w me; and, inasmuch as ye have not done it unto one of conscience other angelic giver of them ail, dup his strength speeches, letters—in all his intercourse with men—in all ower | bis deportment, he is the same man as before—the same and | Christian man, confiding . He is still sen walking jes of | with God, and’ God does not desert bim. Nay, the evi ce to e presence and power of God's t brighten and increase, till the tractive, wonderful. He 5; superhuman simplicity, dignity, calmness and dopth Ng; & restraint, an absence of all rhetoric, ostenta- tion and false emotion; a transparency of character, a profound thoughtfulness, a peace of mind, a trust in God, quite impossible to be assumed in snch a position, at such an hour—quite impossible, indeed, ever under such cir- cumstances to be palmed off, and credit gained for them, by a self-deluded man, or & wicked man and impostor. Alter the battle is over—after this mighty crime, as some call it, for which he is sentenced to death—in the soiled and tattered garments bathed in blood, chained, reviled, ; be appears greater than ever, more ‘manifestly the Christain hero, in pos. session of the spirit of love and power and of a sound mind. And thus daily he is seen preparing for death, and daily God is with him. If there can be any evidences of this they are granted. There were those, even in the presence of the Saviour, beholding his marvellous works, that declared that he cast out devils by Beclzebub, the prince of the devils; and our blessed Lord said that if they bad called the master of the house Beelzebub much. more would they them of his household. Now, methinks none but such blasphemers could deny the evidences of John Brown’s Christian character since his overthrow. Manifestly God was with him—with him to the end—with him, maintaining hia contidence in tbe justice of his cause and the righteousness of his effort,even unto death—tho righteousness of the very act for which he was to die. God h him edenstaining as to enable him tofee! and to say that he willingly gave himself to the eentence of the law, counting it a privilege to be permitted to die in bebalf of the outcast race for which he had endeavored to live, and for whose deliverance he had ventured with death in Las Be- the least of these, ye have not done it unto me!” Came | view. When bas thero been in the world anything like also the great command, ‘Thou shalt love thy neighbor | this? It has properly been marked, in regard to the as thy: ”* and, ‘‘Whatsoever ye would that men should | brightest names in the historic records of sei sacrificing do to you, co ye even so to them.’? Atvended by such | patriotism, in the pages of the struggles for liberty, that angels, commissioned by sueh words, John Brown grew onward to the sphere of character and duty for which God had appointed him. The same influence in kind came npon him as upon Jeremiah, the same concentration and intensifying of divine revelation in one direction, as al- ways happens when God pleases, and when, for His own great purposes, He will discipline and prepare a man for Limself, to bear the reproach among men of being a fana- “From above He hath sent fire tic, a moan of one idea. into my bones. as a burning ‘fire His shut up 1 was weary with forbearing, and 1 could not stay.” ‘With an eye single against the iniquity of siavery in jaw and in practice. John Brown, trusting in God, has thrown word was io my he in my bones, bimseli into this conflict, a martyr even unto death. ‘ie cieath, in the train of his daring opposition against this infinite unrighteousness in law, im government, and in 0. ciety, the whole country is stirred to its foundations; and concerning the government and the people that sustain those that rise up against it, there cometh out of the whirlwind and fire of Divine vation unfolding itself, the voice of the Almighty, ~: Execute judgment in the morning, and deliver him that spoiied out of the hand ef the oppreasor, lest my fury en hath ike Gre, and burn that none can quench it, od cause of the evil of your doings, Exesute ye jadgment and righteourness..and deliver the epoiled out ot the hand ‘of the oppresser, and do no wrong, do no violence to the neither shed in- But if ye will not hear these morde, Lewear vy myeelf, saith the Lord, that this house Shall become a desolation.”” Will the country hear them? itl the people lay them to heart, and shall juagment re- righteousness, that the Lord’s vengeanoo may ‘We must look this great event ‘a deods and character of the under solemn examination, wueb iniquit ; and put to re’ stranger, the fatherless, n hocent blood in this place. su mercifully the face, and 88 agalvet averted? ‘bring the the funder the wee, fovernment, jor_the widow, ing glass of Ged’'s Word, that we may their ventures were for their own country, kindred, homes, © ery thing and if ye love them that love you what thank have ye? If ye salute your brethren only, or defend your own caste, do not even the publicans so? But this self-sacritice of John Brown was for a despised and hated race, condemned to perpetual slavery. Well and truly has it been averred that Washington and War- ren never rose to the height of such virtue. It is a Sublime and solitary instance in all modern history. A man in his senses, in an age of prudential wisdom wor- shipped as religion—in an age of self-interest and ox- pediency—when the world is full of priests and levites, ecclesiastical, political, , passing by on the other side, offers himself in the service of a despised, rejected, eart and By | dowatrodden caste, pursues his purpose for twenty years, watches for Opportunities to strike some mighty blow of deliverance, and at , think ing ‘that God had given’ him the hour, goa forth to suffer unto death for slayes—for negroes, Now, I say that under such circumstances, John Brown has all the characteristics of a Martyr, and his death is a martyr’s death. The false accusations, the prejudice and hatred, the reigning religion and lw against hum, the abuse, the torture, the-present ignominy and shame, the apparent failure of his life and defeat of all his plans, ‘and perfect triumph of his enemies—all these things ure essential circumstances of martyrdom, as a just cause and spirit are its qualities. Success never can make @ mar- tyr, never conld canonize one, and those who determine the moral quality of an action or a character by success, are not fit to sit in judgment on aman like John Brown, or the nature of bis enterprise. A martyr’s death must always, atthe time, be ignominious, When Stephen was stoned, it was not amid plaudits of his caugo and cnarac- ter. When Latimer was burned, it was not as on a thea- tre of og pone ioe that his departi it could be waved away upon na very halleujas of his persecut- on see | ore. A martyr is always putto death by the batred and prone ciges4 bee condemns, and whose sentence God wil! cruelty of men under a cloud of obloquy and odium, un- Foproachor aint aey.Go4forbid chat 1, atmiast the storm of | der authority of wicked law; what men suppoce to be the an examination: ane oet, should ebrimk back from such | highest triumph of their cause, being, in fact, but the ely. poopie, having boow 224 {0rd thet we, as achorci and | max and highest demonstration of their wickednnoss— 0 many fires, should now we are afraid of the contin manding that we have the Son 9: | midst Of it. Lot us look ret a. wang Ww the complication, accumulatios, and against which a maa, ove moade bis protest, and for has becn awful contrast. Biguity sball aurely be ged as a murderer. God says, “the brought of God encnnsumed through Perish im the stoke, because the clewy’ fire, notwith anc th usin ‘@ state of t.¢ O&se, in ity, has ‘on, climax of ign Of the noblest of is rack's Putting taat protest into act, put to death, It tea most intense wd juan that comrmaite thie The State in Must be at nee of highest the filling up of the measure of their iniquity. For when bot oni ‘athe wickedvess established and tciumphaut with consent of all, but God sends witnesses against it, avd © | men put the witnesses to death, then we koow that the cup is well-nigh full and the end is not far off. “ Oh, Je rugalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets and stoncat them tha’ are sent unto thee, how oitea would [ have gabhored thy children as a hen gatbereth her ahick ens under her wings, and yo would not! Behold, your house is le’ unto you desolate!’ An age of martyrdom aud popularity lemn light. "John Fox's Book of "Martyrs beng opene 4 before us, you might almost think a score of pages " been taken from it to be rehearsed in Charlestown, John Bunyan could hardly have drawn a more graphic descrip tion, as to principle, if the trial of Faithful, with all the proceedings, bad been made up from notes of ibis modern wickedness. You can recur, almost from memory, to the picture. “Then a convenient timne being appointed, they brought forth fe! ny to their trial, in order to their condemnation. When the time was como, they were brought before their enemies and arraigned. The Judge's name was Lord Hategood; their indictment was one and the same in substance, somewhat varying in form; the contents whereot were : That they were cnemies to and disturbers of the trade, that they bad made com- motions and divisions in the town, and had won a party to their own most dangerous opinions, in contempt of the law of their Prince. Then Faithful began to answer for bimself—that he had. pul set himself against that which had set itgelf against Him that is higher than the high- est. Then the witnesaes were called against him, the rst of whom testified that he neither regarded prince nor peo- ple, law wor custom, but did all he could to possess all meh with certain of his disloyal notions, affirming in parti cular that Christianity and the customs of our townof Vani ty were diametrically opposite, and could not be recon- ciled;,.by which saying, lord, he doth at once not only: condemn all our laudable doings, but us in the doing of them. If need be, when the other gentlemen have givov In thelr evidence, rather than abything shall be wanting that will despatch him, I will my testimony against him. Then, when the witnessess ished their tosti- mony, Faithful declared, among other things, that he never said aught but this, that what rule, or Jaws, or cus. tom, or people, were against the word of God, one Sintnetrically ‘opposite to , Christianity, It ja always the Higher and the lower law that are brought into coilision in kong Gog trial, and the victim is con- diteplanoe to the ighe ceo the It for, hi meee allegiance r lower, his to God rather than man. Accordingly, when the Judge called the Jury, he said: Gentlemen of’ the Jury, you see this man, ‘whom 80 great an uproar hath been made in this town; you have also heard what the worthy gen- tlemen have witnessed against him; also you have heard his reply and confession. It lyeth ‘now in your breasts to hang him or to save his life; but yet I think meet to in- struct you in our law. There was an act made in the ie ibwe fa eon raligo thold uly and grow st ‘Q contrary rel oi Soovateings Saari {eis Maree should be thrown into the river. was also an act made in the days of Nebu- chadnezzar the Great, another of his servants, that who- ever would not fall down and worship his golden image, should be thrown intoa flery furnace. There was also dimes called upon aay Yo but ua Showld be cad nt the time, called upon an; ut 3] Now the Sheianoe of these laws this rebel Yon’s den. broken, not only in thought, (which is not w be borne), but also in word and deed, which must therefore needs Ve intolerable; He disputeth against our religion, and for the treason that he hath already confessed, he deserveth to die the death, Then went the jury out, whose names were Mesers. Blindman, No-good, Mi ie, Love-lust, Live-loose, Heady, High mind, Eumity, Liar, Cruelty, Hiate-light and Implacable, who every ond gave in his private verdict against him themselves, and afterwards unanimously concluded to bring him in guuty. before the judge. And 80 ive p did. Therefore he was preeently condemned to be from the place where he ‘was to the place from whence he came, and there to be put to the most cruel death that could be invented. They therefore brought him out to do with him according to their law, burning him to ashes at the stake, after torture. And thus came Faithful to ment, under the full it of the ion, ility of itshows that the limit of forbearance from God towards us is reached, the point reached where God will say, Ephraim is joined to idols; let him alone. But I will not now dwell again upon this. There isa brighter, happier im the "s fate, which are some lessons to be drawn from the whole char- acter and solemn, im) ‘The last that human eye can see of Faithful is the form of his and body half visible through flame and rayed in white robes, and whence came they they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and have made them white tn the blood of the Lamb.’ Therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve him day and night in his temple, and he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them. They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun light on them, nor ray heat. For the Lamb, which is in the midst of the throne, shail fod them, and shall jead them to living, fountains of waters; and God shall wipe away all tedra from their eyes. ‘The canse in which John Brown suflered is made, if possible, more sacred than ever by his martyrdom, which has all the seals that ever could render a martyrdom glorious. His name, bis memory, bis letters, the vindication of his character and aets, are a sacred and invaluable trust which large portion of the socalled Church of Christ in this nation, proud and judicially blinded, will baughtily nfolly reject. Yet God will not let the lessons esealed by such a death in vain, ‘The ns himis not worthy of him; bat we 1 for the divine: k 'y pregiwus and sunlike’ testimo- ny of his membership in sho true fokl of Christ; for the example of one such Christian is confounding to a thou sand hypocrites, and ought to bring back to Chris fold the unhappy wanderers whom the blight of such hypocrisy mistaken for religion, has made’ infidels. We 4 that the first public victim of the cruelty of and of the glaye despotism in otr land should have been fonnd a faithful servant of Christ, so. unblem ished, 0 entire, so pure for such an offer’ We thank God that this immolation, so awful, so solemn, on the altar of this Moloch, with ostentatious military ministration of federal and State powers as the willing priests of its » sacritice of aman in whom, as in couid be found, except concerning applied and obeyed by bim against y of the nation. It, is matter for pro t thoughtful praise, that after the moral assassina- tion ofthe race by federal justice, declaring that black ‘men have no rights'that white men are bound to respect, this culminating State erime of the er of the first man who openly struck for their deliverance, has been signalized by finding in its vicur a being with God’s seal, God’s baptism, God’s commission, God’s trath manifestly upon him and Within him, and whose very form, even out of pricon and obscurity, has beeugenlarging aid be- coming radiant, as with a divine trausfiguration, ever since the revengeful and implacable insulted slave power lifted him to the world’s gaze as a traitor and a crimiual. Tt is matter for grateful joy, that the first great govern- mental martyr of this wickedness was carricd to his act of treason against it by the impulses of a Christian heart and conscience, by the word and spirit of God, by the loftiest teacbings of religion, by his convictions as a wor- shipper of that God who is no respeoter of persons, a believ- er in the Lord Jesus Christ, and inthe incompatibility of His Gospel with that form of eruelty and gin for op- posing the law and government of which, in seeking the deliverance of its victims, he was hanged upon the gal- lows. It is matter of devout thankfulness, that out of the malice of his enemies, ont of the rage and successfal cruelty of the slave power, out of the roar and fury of the elements, where occurs the first great public violent collision between conscience and law in the matter of the right of slavery to exist, the grand emphatic develope ment and exhibition, filling all minds with astonisament, is that of the most exalted personal virtue, piety, hero- ism, against which the stave power fecls ‘that it has no right but that of raurder, no security but that of havging. The storm has been raging and two seas have met, ard on the height of this great first wave we see, as by the midnight oe of God, the form of John Brown ruised between heaven and carth—a moment seen, then gone forever. But the image shall remain—the sight of that gallows and the form of the Christian victim upon it—destined, we may hope in God, to awaken a deeper, holier, more intense and comprehensive indignation and hatred against slavery than the detail of any of its Jess public ond illustrious ‘atrocities has ever produced. Now, again, we affir obligation of gratitude to God for Jobn Brown's Chri character, It is just cause for praise that God has so sanctified the battle against slave. Ty that He would not leave the glory nor the sulfering of this terrible protest to be monopolized by in Bey sol. Him; ut that He dier of this world, or any unbeliever in Christian wa ricr to strike this fearful blow, own : old, no fix the law of his God prepared a and then, when it had been struck, continued with him amidst its consequences, shielding him with His truth and buckler, not deserting him as if he had plunged into some forbidden sin, but fildng his mind with the peace of God which passeth all understanding—showing forth to all men the fact that he had been with Jesus, revealing as through a transparency the hidden life of faith that was impelling him, br beforehand the seals of the invisible engraving of God’s spirit on his soul, and making his bare heart a living epistle known and read of all men; publishing from that heart letter after letter of such apostolic simplicity, gravity, sound speech that cannot be Sondemned—n0 incongruous. utterance intermingled ; continuing him long enough in life Himeelf to ‘cxaminp ‘his own “conduct in the view of death, and to reiterate his calm affffmation of the righteousness of tho deed for which he was to suf- fer a8 a criminal; abjuring and denying all purpose, all motive, all idea of personal revenge; declaring that he de. sired and intended simply the rescue of siaves, without injury t any one; that he never did intend murder, or treason, or the destruction of property, or to excite or in- cite slaves to rebellion, or to waken insurrection; avow- ing, algo, the right and duty of all men to aasist the en- slaved to regain their liberty; declaring bis holy and reso- Jute defiance of the slave power and wickedness, and his rejection, on the verge of eternity, of any ministry that would sanction such wickedness, as maintaining a religion incompatible with the law of God and the Gospel of Christ. ‘The perfectness and glory of thie protest—its complete- ness, its sublimity, ite solemnity and firmness, even to the end, surpage all possibility of mere haman contrivance, and are at once the work of a Divine Providence, and the impulse of divine truth and grace. his there are wonderful lessone ag to the righ' our warfare against p Banctions; as to he weapons ti would bi agto the moral omnipotence of His word; as to the neces sity of being rooted and grounded in it, and in the love which it inepires; as tothe impossibility of being sapport ed and faithful wo the end by any otber strength pl that have been stolen away from that first generation, and hundred years, & new, fresh, buried; but now, after two A ‘vivid im) is before us. Perhaps God is going to cast in furnace a new set of plates. At any rate, God io bale ana Sone, the Darvel in this ago, of an old, stern, yet courteous hero. "The character is God’s work, not man’s, and it fills us with ration to Bee 80 rise up in this age of cx- Ppediency, and mere cheap sensibility and téars; 80 com- aboveal expedisnoy,and of Sympaiby in bohaf of the above all ex; ay’ iy enslaved, where f them as’ property are m2, @ character shows the power of prayer, and such a crisis shows the need of it. could John had he not been a man of ere it not for the belief men have in his character been his letters, his words, his grand utterances, how in- the assurance of ‘his Christian invegrity of wi God’s Word, and the of hig whole bemg tho sense of’ God's attributes, God's presence, God's rte and justice, carry a weight, a power, a majesty in his ex- ressions that can equal, Pp eq fore such demonstra- Uons of the power and teaching of God’s Word in his heart the most glowing eloquence is Foor. and feeble. Men fee] that it would have been impossible to have. conceived or framed this man’s singularly simple, forcible and encred speeches and letters, under such awful circum- stances, ‘by more mortal teaching, out of the habit of a soul, whose resting place was God, and God his rock and refuge. The habit of prayer and communion with God’s Word seem to have made him what vast man this huge tyranny. At the conclusion of his sezimon Dr. Cheever took a note out of his pocket, and observed that he was informed that a mob would probably attack him that evening. He hoped that God would preserve us from mob violence; but as for himself, he did not fear, for he relied upon God’s word and faithfulness, He believed that the laws of the city were the greatest security against any such wickedness, and he did not believe that the people would suffer such an outbreak. Dr. Cheever offered up a fervent prayer in behalf of the atliicted widow and her family, and the audience, after singing the Doxology, were dis- ‘missed with the benediction. ‘When the services were brought to a termination, the audience, on leaving the building, expressed themselves yery freely in reference to the rumored attack upon Dr. Cheever, which appeared on the bulletin of an evening paper on Saturday; but it is needless to add, that the er was not interrupted, nor was there the slightest indication of a preconceived plot to molest him. The fact of the body of John Brown, “the martyr,” being in the city to-day, furnished a fruitful theme for gossip as the brethren and sisters were leaving the church, one of whom remarked that Brown’s remains would be con- ‘veyed to Boston by the first morning train. SERMON OF THE REV. ANTOINETTE BROWN BLACKWELL. ‘The Rey. Antoinette Brown Blackwell delivered a ser- mon or lecture jon John Brown last evening at Gold- beck’s Music Hall, 765 Broadway. Although the weather was anything but inviting, the hall was filled to its utmost capacity by a respectable and appreciative audience, the reputation of the fair divine, not less than the subject, doubtless contributing towards that result. The services were begun by the reading of a hymn, which, Mrs. Blackwell said, she would feel happy to have sung. After waiting some few minutes, and it appearing evident that none present felt inclined to undertake that Portion of the exercises, a short prayer was offered up, after which another hymn was read, meeting with the same success as the first—no one would sing. ‘The reverend lady, whois of pleasing appearance and very good address, then proceeded to her sermon, taking for her text thef8d verse of the 13th chapier of Hebrews:— “Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them.” The wife of Old John Brown was lately asked, when spoken to of his great love and — reverence for the Bible, what were his fivorite passages? She replied that one in particular was ‘Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them.” ‘That remembrance, burning for ever on the altar of his heart, has cost the brave old man his life—the last sreat’ martyr to. unselfishness. Could he have for- gotten the slave he might have lived to a good Old age; could he have forgotten the boudmen he might have gathered his own chilaren about him in peace, bat he could not; and therefore his four sons were murdered, a fifth is outlawed, and the rest scattered, stricken and atherless. ‘The speaker believed this to be true, Tt was or this that he, too, was put in bonds and “numbered with the tranegressors.’” She had nothing to say of the wisdom of the let act. in his life-long drama of emembrance. Jt was, however, a fitting crowning ct, and no more than’ she would have done had. the bondsmen been her own mother’s sons; no more than ny one present would have done had this mighty, law- leas government taken their children and put manacles on them. She never remembered that any one con- demned to die had ever put forth so noble a self-justitica- tion as John Brown did when about to receive his sen- tence. if he had gought any selfish ends he might have ventured his own life, but he would not have perillod the lives of his children also. A man who could infuse the same unselfish remembrance of an oppressed race into his whoie family, so that they are all ready with him to act or suffer, must be terribly in earnest himself. ‘Those who said that he was maddened by the killing of hissons in Kansas, had but « poor realzation of the virtue of disinte- resiedness. Let such think of that matchlces assertion of Mrs. Brown, that she could not say that her husband was insane even to save his life—because he was not. He and his wife would not belie the gacred unselfishness of is motives, not even to purchase him years of earthly life. No wonder be was thought insane by people to whose dark undorstandings his whole life was a madness, The non-resistant with his moral suasion is a fanatic, and Old John Brown, backed by his pikes and revolvers, is mad out- right. Who ever heard of a single individual identifying himself with the oppreseed and still be considered a pru- dent and discreet citizen? The speaker then went on to give an account of Old Brown's foray—the capture of the hited States Armory—the taking of the whole town of Charlestown, &c., during which the chivalry of old Vir- ginia suffered nota little. The Southern press, too, was not forgotten. She believes that there never Was a clearer case of moral paralysis and helplossness than that of the South 10-day, but hopes that by this time they have learned to sleep peacefully on their pistols. She trusts that the result of all will be to make the South utterly tired of slavery. She does not despair that the result will be peacefully consummated. The acknowledgment of the moral power which lies behind pikes and Sharp's rifles gives her _ hope. spirit of the age which created John Brown will create others like him, 80 that by-and-by they will be as numerous as the John Smiths, and she trusts in Providence that the future Jobn Browns who are to capture the future Charlestowns and shake slavery to its foundations, will see that the power of the great martyr was not in carnal weapons, but in his Godlike identification of himself with the oppressed. She believed in the justice of the old Puritan creed, which could plant ite cafmnon in the face of the enemy and kneel beside it os at a sacred altar. They could have fought for every just cause, and the old Puritan mantle had fal- Jen on the shoulders of John Brown. In fine, the speaker believed that if the Southern slaveholders believed that we of the North are really intent on besefitting the de- spied race, and that we will never die till they are free, that then they will hand them over to us and to our sympathics. But to receive them we must first cast off the demon of prejudice and selfishness, It is easier, she believes, to die for the slave as John Brown has died, than to live for him ag all of us must live. Shall ‘we be equal to the responsibility ? After the sermon, a collection in aid of Brown’s tamily was taken up, when the andience dispersed, evidenuy pleased. REV. GEORGE F. NOYES ON THE TIMES. ‘The attendance at Hope Chapel, yesterday morning, to hear the lecture of Rev. G. F. Noyes on ‘Tho Times” was very slim—there being only seven persons present at 1034 o’clock, the hour appointed for the lecture to commence. This number subsequently increased to about twenty, however, and after a consultation as to the expediency of postponitig the lecture till more favorable weather, the rer stated that he had been aavised to postpone his discourse until a more favorable day, and as one of the objects of the meeting was to take up a collection for the family of the late John Brown, he considered, in view of the small attendance, that it would be more advisable to tpone than to proceed, und he thorefore postponed the lecture till next Sunday morning. JOHN BROWN AND THE ALBANY PREACH- ERS. Aumany, Dec, 4, 1859. Two fanatical priests presented treasonable discourses to their hearers here today. They out-Cheevered Cheo- ver himself in justifying the murderous conduct of John Brown. THE LATEST FROM CHARLESTOWN, Cnartmsrown, Dec. 4, 1859. Six companies of the Richmond and Wheeling miltary have been ordered home, and about one-fourth of the members of the other companies have obtained furloughs for ten days, to return before the 16th to attend the other executions, A juilitary force will thus be kept up, and martial law be enierced throughout the county. The excitement has greatly abated, though there is a Great fecling of inseci.\tity in the rural districts. ‘The weather is cold a..d Wet, and the military are suflor- ing greatly on picket gu.Ntd and in their ungomfortable quarters. FOR CALIFORNIA, New York.....Deo. York. pay. mano me YouR—Tuis ears. 8 | BIGH WATER. nnn orem Port of New York, December 4, 1859. MN » diava ‘Marseillcs 99 days, vis St lorw), a wut in for provisions, &c) Oct 26, with abicht experienced very heavy weaibery Sus Jumber, to Bin 40) ae ae a lle at a to Rimpeoh & Clapp. night, Inland, was run into by schr Elvira, from Machiag, Dearried away ihoribboom. ‘The divira’ lost forstopgal Ewen for Boston. matey Curry, Coruwalls, WS, iS daye, with $n), Burgess, Windsor, NB, 12 days, Moore, Mobile, via Providence 1 ‘here abe pot in tg dlchatge part of cargo), with nav: Bark Seana Brig Henry Laurens, J Ee ef i iJ i) ® { ; ue Oct 27. by steamtug lard, at Bostan from Landon, reports. Oot Suir Kossurn, Ballard, at + Fepoi 25, lat 99, Jov 34° in a NW, broke rail, alove bulwarks, split piatk abear, ik overgtalig off deck he ip waa thrown on her heam ends, and cargo, which caused ber to leak badly; threw over a considerable amount of cargo to lighten her. Suir Tuenese, Wallace, from Calcutta, whieh put back to ‘ancisco, abd got into collision with ship Peru, had re- apd would sail on 15th. She had to give bonds for 10,000, a8 aleo had the ship with which she was in collisio each baving been lbelled. Smr S R Maory—Capt Stringer, of the ship St Helena, at New Orleans from Liverpool, reports that on the lath ‘Oct, lat 4240, lon 21 50, spoke the ship 8B Mallory, Seaman, of Key ‘West, from london for New Orleans, with nothing standing but foremast and foreyard and after house badly stove, having abifted bailast, and was knocked down on the night previous in a violent gale; was oblige? tocut away maiv and mizen masts Ene foretopmast to right her. ‘Did not. waut any” assistance, ‘It was blowing hard at the time of passing her, and conld get nofurtber particulars. Barx Oasis, Beals, at Callao Oct 24 from New York, had lost all her topmasis. Bric Amina, trom Boston, before reported lost in a norther at Vera Cruz, a cargo of ice, Day, tar and lumber, and part- ed ber chains and went ashore on Mocombo beach, 5 miles south at public auction, ht $100; hull $256. But little cares ro at Northport, Me, in a blow night of 26th ult, and was full of arrived at Smyrna Nov 4, their monthly ctroular of Dec 1, state tha sider that an improved feeling extsts towards ship property. ‘ales of the i 1660 tons, 8 do do, $36,750; at A i Sass built ship, 1200 do, fo do, $16,000; am Bi i! do, $7,000; an'A2 Long Ieland built brig. ‘300 of Vera Craz, whore she lay sunk in the sand, Her car mains in her, much of ff having beea washed overboard. A topsail schooner with lumber, nome unknown, went ashore water at last accounts. A Rewargame Passace—Bark Bounding Billow, Small, of and from Boston Oct 6, making the shor test passage on record. Nersrs John McKee & Ce, of this lly, tn t sibce ourg of the Ist ult, an in- creased number of vessels have changed hands, and we con- The mont include sn Al Mass = 8 jears Old in order for sea, $38,900; an AL Nik all ‘it, UE Monk ult ap, 100d do, an ‘ork. bul 0 Maas Saue Ship, 600 do, 1 be ne 0; 80 do, g19,an; am AZ ssaltin: ede orto $4,500; a Aig Maca built jan A’ 13g Maas buift. bark, 600 do, an A2Me built brig, $08 do, 5 do do, $8.90; an A2. Be built brig, 200 do, 6 do do, $5.00; an Az Me built $7,000; an A2 Mugs built schr, 210 do, 3 do 46, 87 ‘Wert india built sehr, 115 do. 4 do do, Jaland bnilt schr, 120 do, 18 years old, $1 Duilt sch, 120 do, 10 years 014, in order’ f Maryland bulltkchy, 100 do, 8'40 do, $3,500; sey built schr, 130 do. 6 years old, $2,200; Old, in order for wen, $4500. New Se tons, $484 per ton completed. have been launched 'since owr last: In Maine, 8 2 brigs, 8 schra, 10,940 tons; in Mags, 2 ships, 1 572’ tons; Conneciicut, .1 ‘ship, 1 bark, 1,650 tons; in Isl Dark, 450 tons—in all 14,412 tons, Bark Azof, of New York, 297 tons, built at Medford in 1844, was sold at Plymouth, , llth ult, for £520. Whaling schr Antarctic, of Providence, was sold_at auction 26th ult, by Mr Bowlby, and bid off by Capt Martin W Conwell —price’$$100. Lavcnzp—At Phipsbure Centre, Me, by ©_V Minot, Faq, ® febr of 68 ipns called the Fiying Dutchman. ‘She ts owned by lider. At Newcastle, Me, recently, a hark of 878 tons, called the Harvest, to be commanded by Gapt George Austin, Notice to Mariners. Coasters, Loox Ovr !—Consters approaching Cape Poze Light will look out fora sunken vessel, her masis at nt mostly above water, Cape Poge Light ‘bearing from the sald wreck SE34K. The wreck lies ove mile or more from sald ight, with Edgartown Light bearing near SW. Again—Coosiers when passing tothe East of Portsmomb, N B, must beware of a ledge lying two miles SW by 8 from ‘the “Spindle” on Old York Ledge, having leas than six fect of water on it at the lowest tid as having ten feet of water. passing Eastand West. formerly understood by coasters it lies in the track of coasters OWEN PRESCOTT, Coast Pilot. CHESAYEAKE BAY AND TRIBUTARIES—POTOMAC, RAPPAHANNOCK AND JAMES RIVERS, The Upper and Lower Cedar Point lightvessels, Potomac River, the Bowler’s Rock lightvessela, Rappabaonock River, and the Hooper’s Strait, and James Island lightvessels, Tangier Sound, Chesapeake Bay. will be withdrawn from their stat for the winter, between the 15th inst und the 5th of January next, and thelr stations will be marked by spar buoys The iron can and nun buoys in the above rivers will be re- moved at the same time, and spar buoys will be substituted during the winter, Die notice will be given of the return of the lightvessels and iron buoys to thefr stations tn the spring. Br order of the Lighthouse Board. JAMES H NORTH, Lighthouse Insp, Sih dist Norfolk, Va, Dec 1, 1869. WRECK IN THE, RIVER DRE. Trinity House, Lonpon, Nov 11, 1859. Notice is hereby given that a green Buoy, markea with word ‘wreck.’ has been placed about 20 fathoms SSE ot a brig sunk on the SW aide of the Salisbury Bank, in the River Dee. ‘The Buoy just Mes dry at low water spring tides, with the following marks and compass bearings: — ‘West Kirby church just open to the Sonth of a remarkable single white house, on the side of Grange Hill, B by 8. Webury Middle Buoy, NW. Welshman’s Gut Buoy’ N3,W. Sekiom Seen Buoy, SE by’ Fe. Sallebury bar chegivered Buoy, 8 by E34, BY order, P H BERTHON, Secretary. WRECK IN SRA REACH, RIVER THAMES Trimity Hose, Lonpon, Nov 17, 1859. Notice is hereby given that the buoy on the wreek of the ‘Sea Driit,’ sunk near Canvey Island, in the river Thames, hus been removed; and that two beacons have been placed on the Bank aoe Inland, to mark the position of said wreck, in liea ite ‘wreck lies with the following mark and compass bear- weiehine church, m line with the north side of the Sear house, Chapman lighthouse, I y order, P H BERTHON, Secretary, NORWAY, WEST COAST—NEW LIGHTS ON FRISTEEN AND SLOTTERO. MARINE DEPARTMENT, OMRISTIANTA, Oot 31, 1859, In connection with the preiiminary notice iesned by this de- ernest on the 12th of Angust ery is hereby made known it the following lights will be exhibited in the evening of No- vember 10 next. I—Lile Felsteen—A fixed red licht of the fourth order, showing all round the compass; will be kept alight all the year throngh. Situation, lat 68 49 30.N, long 5 rit E of Green- wich, Elevation above the sea 66 feet; visible at 8 miles dis- tance (12 minutes.) 2—Slotterr—A fixed light of the second order, showing on all the points of the compass towards the sea and Smelbo ford, and will be kept alight all the ce mye the lantern is eet in « round tron tower, palnted red, 66 feet high. Sitaa- ion, lat 59 #4 30 N, mei? 65 0 KE of Greenwich. Elevation above the sea 148 feet; visible at 43¢ to & miles distance (18 to 20 minutes.) t men. a] Sid from New Bedford 24 tnst, fin Chine, for Pacific Ocean. Arr at Ei wn 25th ult, bark Ellen, Slocum, Indian Ocean, §t Helena Oct 7, with 500 sp 00 wh. At brovineetown Ist inst, bark Acorn, Nickerson. nearly for sea" AtTombez a few days prev to Oct 26, ship Seconet, Cleave- land, NB, 76 sp since leaving Taleahuano, Payta, Oct. 26, barque Ulara Bell, Fisher, Matt. from sp on board : Edward Stanton, from Tombez—put leak and ealk top side; Letitia, Stowell, N #, I In port, , bark Active, Wood,aN B, 1450 fap all A letter from the first’ oficer of bark Franklin, Gifford, N. B., dated Payta, Oct. 28, reporta her with 400 ap and 50 wh on board, Also reports spoke Oct 4, at sea, Clifford Wayne, Swain, FH, boiling out4 whales taken 2 days previous, wl Would make rising 100 bbls oll ; 209 bbls the last cratse, A letter from Capt Gifford,’ of bark Harvest, NB, reports her at Fayal Oct. a taving landed 168 bblp ap, aif well-—tound to Indian Ocean direct. A letter from the 8d officer of ship Comoro, Maciel, NB, da- ted Western Islands, Sept, 15, reports her clean, bound on a cruise, and would next touch at Taleahuano, All well. A letter from Capt Cleaveland, of abip Secenet, NB, her at Tomber: Oct 22, with 70 bbls ap last jerulbe—tou Of Shore Ground, and would beat’ or Mare. nd on ‘alcahuano in February A letter from Capt, Stanton, of bark Edwand, NB, re her at Pasta Oct 2, with 0 ap 10 bebe.” Would Erma "hts APT et Fae 8 ‘apt Stowel vt 28 having Taken 160 Dbla ap ofl Inst cruise, ‘Would sail next iay to cruise. ‘A letter from Capt Pease, of barque Bureka, of Edgar: town, reports ber at Ture Taland Rept.6, with 90) ap 400 yk. A fon fore a ee A oy ote of West- reports her nt wi Pon eter from Capt Husford, of ehfp Richard Mitchell, of Ra. rT Ha Seat otc etc ke is ol i te, Mr. iy 8 previous t her arrival atM. Expects to be at home in May for Tamme next, A letter from on board ahip 8plendid, Norton, of town, reports her at Turtle Islands, NH, AugSl, with 80 hpbk. al ‘Well- would cruise unul July next, for sp oll, on coast of New Goinen and Timore straits. A letter from Capt Sm ith, of ship Almira, of Edgartown, re- ports ber at Anjier Sept 21, with 300 sp aud 850 wh, all well— maa eter from Gupt Quay, of brig Amaaret, NT ler Day uRy maret. NT, te pe Bakes song 7 er aes ui cis, While at Dheo ‘shee ‘aboat and denerted, bu wiht me ws but had supplied their places Dapt Ponting, of bark Caroline, ‘ta—M: 5 a Winegar, who veporis hasing spoken Many Anti Oona? FH, with jfoboom, foretopmast and maintopgallantmnet gone, having pltthed them of while Jying too in» gale of wind from ir Brent Britain, from Liverpool for NOrleang, Nov 15. os junta, Hosmer, from Mobile for Liverpool, Nov 25, la, Bhi; Spear, from NOrieans for Liver; ip Jobn 5} 1, with loss of! fore snd zoaln topgaliant masta, Nov 17, lat toh 79.0, Bark Brunette, Fomer, trom Leghorn tor Philadelphia, Nov 1,0 lat, &e. Bagi Fanning, 9 days from Galveston for Liverpoo, Nov 20, Bt 26 82, lon 79 29. rk Dacotah, Besse, {tom Norfolk for Havas, Nov 21, lat 80 39, lou 74 36, Mov, Son fort neo. Minterooaae, Harding, f Agu lov T—! ort ing, Mobile or NOrleans in 'a'few days, n ballast 7 den for Havana Mary Opion, Lavelands asbworen: Brodie : parece sid Adele Glam, Clatason, for New York; © D Merwin, Mee win, for do. ‘Aubuossix, Nov 10—Sld bark White Sea, Evans, Boston. ox Caves! Nov 1—In port schr John Miiott, Wood, 0 mntase, Nov 2h Inport sehr Commeree ot Bulimore), Cos leans, repg. Bounesvx, Nov 12—Sid ay Oulendar, Patteo, New Orleans: ‘k Alma, Backer, Brem bari , 40. Tn port lath, ships Bnterprise, McLane, for NYork Nov 15: Moloka, Groves, for do 20th; Coston Planter, Wood. and Ai ‘Washburn, Merryman, for NOrieans 26th; ‘Regulus, Thamp- son, for do; ard the French vessels Marie jemann, Voss, for Philadelphia Nov 25; Jeau Bart. Oliver, for San Francisco bth; Colporteur, rd, for do Dec 10; Beo’d’Ambea, Ber nard, for do Dec 1 Buemxnuaven, Nov 11—Sid Bremen China, Schwartz, Parks Leura’ Wilmetn, do; Auton Gunther, Aitosen” Gaives ‘ony Riltzabeth smal, Philadelphia; 12, ship Ama- be irhrea 2) York. Gais40, 21—In port bark Eliza, Baker, disg; and others) os lore. b yore Da vente, Nov $—In port hip Harvest, Loring, frou: Gibe Havient Nov 20-In port brig RW Packer, Lee, for 5 days; schr spring Hill, Breeman, for do 4. Demanaka, Nov 12—In eid \, Kirwan, Baltimore, arr llth, fordo; brig Tornado, McCarty, for do lig ‘and others as before. Sid 12h, brig E P Sweet, Jeweit, Bo: MGnamatzan—Datesto 10h ult recetved. No report of wi cr, varnain tn tap Hae, bone. aath tae lok win Wack ancl s Wind bound American vessels were in port Ki Ig ean, : Lina, ju ‘ir Ei ths Ulydor wae adv tS rotarn 1S Nore t In the Cl Shandon, for Sevannab, dg; bark Loisiy Beaiey foe New York do. Nips eR 16—In port ship" Wm Stetson, fi NYork Nov 2); Joba Merrick, Orebiree, for NOricans doy a Tquiauz, Oct 10—In port ship Carrington, Sumner, ldg. Sic Sept—, ships Kit Carson, villingham, Live Magellan Walden . Boston i, Gara, ingen Baltimore % lett, ——. Masstva, Nov 5—In barks Revolution, Webb, une; Bini Ua (Br), for the United States; brig Austin, Vose, do; schr Mara: quita, Lowe, for Boston; Republic, Snow, for a port North oi iatteras. Sid 6th, bark Fernandina, , Boston. MaLaca, Nov 9—8ld bark Northwood, New York. Mansziiizs, Nov In port sbipe Helen A Cooper, Laphimn for New York Nov 80; Lalla Rookh, Cotton, for do, une; anc MaNsantiza, Nov 20—In ‘Thomas Dennison, Hat 3, for Boston or Now Yorks away, for : Patzuno, Nov S—In port ship Souther Johnny, Fdmonde, f Boston; barks America (Sic), gupposed for do; Omegs, Me for NOrleans; Nor brig Otto, for Uuited Pont Spat {sid ketch Laura, Cook, Spanish Man. ocnkLLE, Nov 18—In port Fr bark Juliette, for Poll and Boston, \dg. Bark Amanda was to commence lg ork in Dee. Rortrzxpam, Nov 15—In port Haines, for Balti more, 12; Seth rague, Biase, Araold Boule (Prue). Hustigen, and Jobanues (Brew), Von Triten, for NYork do ¥ ama y rr Miyane, Ne : Bounding Millow, Small, 2) buyeNA, Nov 4—In bark days from assage on record)—would sail for Boston in ab daye. bb ‘VALPARAISO, Oct 16—In port ship Rose Standish, Hutebins for. churter; bark Sigem Bird, Gerard, for sale or chartar. Vera Onvg, Nov 22—In larraganse! from NOrleane, arr 16th. Sia Bin echra§ Hark, Delano, Ne ‘ork; 10tb, Mary Clinton, Ryan, Pent American Ports. ALEXANDRIA, Dec 2—Arr schr Cornelia A Crook, FE. , NYork. Sid scbra Henry Pinch, Davie; Virgin aud Brothers, Davey, NYork; MO Durfee, Hall, fall Ri Seursville, Sears, Boston. BOSTON, Dec'2—Arr steamer Kensington, shia; brij er Higgins, Cape siaytien; G L Sires, Yellmiogton, iC; schra Emma Higgins, Pierce; Emma Curtis, He ‘and FC Simmons, Newcomb, Tangier; Pa Fagon, Hatch,and F A Heath, Williaina, Philadelphia, Cld shir) De Solo, Keed, Suvan: Reed. Matanzas G@wail, ents; Mode i apzarotie, Harriman, Key’ Weat: ins, Aux Gayes; John Price, Paine + Ls nah, barks Gan ‘Eden, Ree nis, NOrlosis; Modena, Ryder, Charleston; brig achrs Sarab Burton,’ Has Casi ), Newcomb, Turks Island; {imore: Hamlet, Wade, NYork (at We tine, sbip Juventa, Young, Li from Riga. Bignal », Char'eston; la, Kendrick, Charleston; brigs NS: Zulelka, Grozier, Baltimore; rest, Jeremie; Argus Eye, Nickelson, New Orleans, Jonn Pric Sears, Mobile; Frank'Herbert, Parker, Philadelphia; Hamilton, and Woodraff sims, NYork. ‘Sl J, 90d breeze, burke Gaxony and Modena.” Al ald sbip De Soto, bark J W Hall. Brig P M Tinker sndaceed el. bey, Demarara; gn), Coche \ig, NS; brige Ka ‘aroline (Br), Byrne. st Jago de Cuba; echra NYork; Oranaska, Webb, South Deer Isle. me; Levi Kowel ‘Thomas, Abaco; Sea Breeze, Hulse, and Sea Witca, Smith New York. Cld steamship Thos Swann. Ramsay, New Yor barks Grace (Br) Stowe, Queenstown; J B Johnson, slake ; Sehr Petrel, Shi cr Lucy And, Carrigan, Havana; Anoa Ge der wal t, Terry, Mobile| Moses VanName| hips Haperance (*), Camus, Pierre, Mart; , Edwards, New York. Cld ships Hero, Emith, and Fiza Bonsill Michaels, Liverpool; bark Cherokee Hopkins, NOrleans, Sid schr Emily, Smith, NYork. DIGHTON, Dec 2—Arr schr © O'Badier, Sipple, Philadel 3 FALL RIVER, Dec 1—8id schrs Frances © Smith, Smith, Philadelphia; 24, L © Vandervoort, Wicks, Baltimore, Uncas Coit, Elizabethport. .Dec1—Arr Br brig Henry Leeds, Grant Philadelphia; schrs Flying Fish, Low. NYors; Klvira. Warrec, ibridge, ‘Sid echr Hydranger, Butler. Baltimore. 2d—Arr sehr Thos Ellis, Kelley, NYork. Sid brig Hy Leeds, Gnd returned). HOLMES’ HOLE, Nov 30, P M—Arr brig Movica, Lond, Ban-_ gor for New Yerk;achs George Washington. Sherman, Dela-_ ware City for Braintree. Keturned, brig Bovayare; schs David Smith, 2 Stration, H B Bascomb, sharon, Mary E Pierce | (not Mary E Pearson, as before reportei) aud Moairove. sid | | Rocket, Luce, for Norfoik. Br Dec l—a'rr scha Paragon, Hatch, Philadelphis for Boston; - Harriet. A Rogers, Rogers, Salem’ for Philadelphia; Sianey Price, Godfrey, do’ for New York, F Smith Chase, Chathaty ; Golden Gate, Weeks, Salem for Norfolk. Sid) sachs George {Washingt ) Par sgon and Montrose | 2d—Arr schs Yankee ‘Blade, Boston for Wilmington, N 0;, Mary Miller, Laws, do for Philadelpila. Sld sche Eiiza Frances, Mary Frances | 10A M, wind W8W—In port, brigs Mary F Thompson, Monica, Rebecea, (Br); ache Silvér Magnet, repu: i LT ‘Triumph, David’ Smith, Z Stratton, HB Bascomb, Mary 5 Pierce, Sidney Price, ¥ Smith, Golden Gate, Yankee Blade anc Mary Miller. Brig ‘Pico, from Port au Privee for Boston, ‘anchored yesterday in the Sound near the Hedge Fence, bu got underway this. morning and proceeded. HARTFORD, Dec8—Sid schrs Alfred Hall, Tucker; Charles | 8 Hazard, Billard; J § Curtis, Clark; Cora, Kel’ey, and 8 M Seaddick, Williams, New York. KENNSBUNKPORT, Rov 29—Arr brig Billow, Lawrence, Baltimore; schr Token, Jtracy, do. MACHIAS, Nov 24—Sld achr Now York Packet, Davis, New ‘ork. NEW ORLEANS, Nov 27—Arr ships Buehire (Br), Metesn, Liverpool; Charlotte, Nesmit'h, NYork; alice Wilson, Wilson, ino W White, Lothrop, Bordeaux; Einy epool; Oliver Putnam, Smith, and. ton; Henry (sr), Thomas, Liverpool. An and Baltic, iver} . AM—AIr ip Moses Taylor, Grifiia. NYork, via. Havana; sbh/p Prima Kspinola (Span), J Havana; ‘4 ‘Wm Abbott, Smith, Ruatan Island; Virginia Antonieta, Sbisa,! Tampico. Below, coming ap, ships Joha Hancock, Coffin, from Antwerp; Kxpress, Milton, from Liverpool. Cld ship Malabar, Kinsman, Havre. Towed down and to sea ship J M Wood, bark Grace Ham-. mond, and brig W R Kirby; ships kilen Stewart, and MJ ‘ard; 24th, ships 8 it, and Maid of Orleans; 26th, ship!) jth, ships Chas Dave: port, and Gulf Sireain. RFOLK, Dec l—Arr schr Empire, Howell, NYork. Cid Fullerton, West Indies; Minnebaba, Candage, | ‘ortamout 3 3 NEW BEDFORD, Dec 2—Arr schr Prince LeBoo, Tripp, | Chatham for NYork. Sid ist schr Pharos, Keene, Baltimore: via Sipptean, NANTUCKET, Nov 29—Sid schr Elizabeth B, Bacon, Ron lout. NEWPORT, Dec 2,734 P M—In port, among others, bri Gov Bull, Arthur, and John Hathaway, Smith, for Philad hia; Boronda, Gardner, for Havana—all waiting wind; sch: ght, Beebe, from Providence for New York: Mi enn, Lucy R Waring, Charles Morrilla, Electric lestiess, Electric’ Uneas, Transit. assed up, a, Cummings, from New York for Fal) River. ON, Deo2—Arr schi Saxon, Nelson, irs Defiance, Boyntoa, and Bangor for NYork. Cld subrs John Uliver, Stroud, ard Paltadium, Avery, NY: PHILADELPHIA, Dec 3—Arr steamer Phineas Sprague, Jatthews, Boston: Roska, Litehten berg, Malaga; Orison brige Adams, York, New Bedford; sebrs Milton, Steelman, Piermont; Eleanor, Townsend Jacksonville; WH Dennis, Wheaton, and War Steed, Hulse, Boston; Excelsior, Riley, and Ann Tatner, Ayres, NYork. Gid steamer Delaware, Copes, NYork; ships ‘Thos Jefferson, Meacom, mobile; Ualliope, , Nurleans; rencke, Charleston; Robt Pennell, Hux ford; ‘Santa Clara, ‘Ellmgwood, Havana: Smith, ; schra J H Stroup, Corson, Cardenas St Marks; M A MeNeil, Turpie, 8 ip, Henderson, and Thos Twibell, Donelly,”' Gt; Excelalor, Riley; MA Sbindier (aew), Ireland, and P Boicd. ; War tulse, Quincy’ WW Brai- (new), Boice, Boston; for Richi ers, do for NYork: steamer Chesapeake, Crowell, N York. PROVINCETO' WN, Nov cca Or Wa & Susan, Phils delphia, bound F: C A Stetson, Cobb, Philaselphia: Eliza. Jane, Howes NYork; Thacher Taylor, Who, Elizabethport, Palne, do; Smith Tuttle, Mayo, Philadelphia; Courier: ao; Wio Grande, bound Be py PROVIDENCE, Dec 2—Arr steamers Petrel, Baker, NYork; brig Ida Mol. John Roe, Hammond, Savannah; J sloop Thomas Hull, Hull, NYork. Sid sohra’ Isabella ‘Thomp~ ick, NI; George ® Hrown, Uons Rer te NI; Geor rown, Ulayton; Bkldmore: Mirror, White, and J B Blecoker, Kdwards. WN York: mond, irror, Whit Sloop Frederle Brown, Chrr, do. pRAN FRANCIBOO, Nov b b—Adv, hips Black Warrtor, Mar: long Kong soot mathern C for do, at ready; bark, ‘Auekiand, Neleon, Tor Masnian ned. Manzaallio §T MARKS, Noy 22—In port brig Suwannee, Monroe, from NYork, arr 18lb, ding; sche & 8 Potter, from dy'via Key’ Went do do. Cld 16th, brig Mary Staples, Staples, NYork; 22, barks RH Gamble, P and West Wind, Raut do, SAVANNAH, Nov %0— Arr ir bark Tallulah, Carwen, Fleet wood; brig Rditi Ann, St Martins, “Below a ship. SALEM, Dec 2—Arr brig Catharine Nickels, Nickels, Phila~ farue oe bay bp Lioyd, Africa; schr Sarah Wood- bridge, ings Alexandria, WASHINGTON TERRITORY—At Seabeck Oct 24, ship Teoninm, Heustis, 16g spars for Amoor River. WAREHAM, Nov 22—Arr achra HW Godfrey, Alexandri: 2thfLomartiné, Gurney. NYork, 2th, Leader, Hearse, Sith, Atunron, Beare, NYork, | Sid 24h, sohrs — moe sprague, Alexandria; 27tb, Rebeooa Knight, do; h An eaee, NYork, vs

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