The New York Herald Newspaper, September 11, 1863, Page 1

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WHOLE NO. 985% NEW YORK FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1), 1863.—-TRIPLE SHEET. PRICE THREE CENTs. Ny ' varmnge, Ponder them and you will see the tendency, | territory occupied by France, and that this measure was | Flying from sea to sea in lawless piracy, t tarn the | and we are petulantly told that the evidence against the coaned- white le i Le teraptation, the irresistible fascination, or the com- | introduced by no less a person than Mr, Percival, aud | Ocead into @ furnace aud melting pot of American com- | ships is not ruiliclent under the statute, and when we ere opened ou the one side to untimited Pah ! VWs nanding exigency under which, ia times past, foreign | commended by bim on round that ‘the savereat | merce. Of these incendiaries the most (amous is the Ala | propose that the statute shall be rendered eflicient forthe | imports oe soppiies and military stored, and On the other ations have been led to take part in conflicts for inde- ) pressure was already res th the saotinans from the want | bama, with a pickod crow of British sailors, with ‘trained | Purpose, precisely as in times past the British govern * to Un nied exports of cotton, Trade ior time would : endence. 1 do uot dwell now on the character of theso | of this article, and that it was of great importance to the | gubMers out of Lor Majesty's naval reserve,’ and with | ment, ubder circum»tances lees atringent, propowed to giv ’ legalized tu these ports, and slivery would » ietainaininigaabadl various interventions, although they have been mostiy in | armies of the enemy.” Such is authentic British prece- | everything else from keel (o topmast British, which,after | we are poiwtedly repeted by tue oid baron.al declaration, ted Ha grinnite front before the civilized) world the interest of human freedom. It is only as examples to | dent, in an age neither “ignorant” nor ‘barbarous,’ | more than a year of uolawful havoc, is still burning the | that there must be bo cuange in the laws of England toned by thin failare, (he Emperor alone push put us OD our guard that 1 new adduce them. ‘The foot- | which is now ostentatioualy forgotten. property of our citizens, without once entering @ rebel | while to cap this strange inecne bility, Lord Palmerston, | ed for wad \9 diph matic enlorpriae againat us, as be bad Address by Senator Sumner at the } priote ail seem to lead one wav. This samo recklessvess, which is of such éyil omen, | slavemonger port, but always keeping the umbilical cop. | in oue of the last debates of ilo late Parliament, Drige | sloue yp) forward bin MUMAFY eDLer prise against Hot even our war is not without its warnings. If thos | breaks forth again in a despatch of the Foreign Secretary, | nection with Kngland, out of whose womb she spruug,and J against us a groundless charge ol y toour peuiral | Mext ed to our government tho unsup: ( I tit te. far in its progress other nations have not intervened, they to communicate to Lord Lyons: never losing the original nationality stamped upou her by | duties daring ie Crimean war, when (he fact ® etori. | porte , ‘offer was promptiy re ooper Institute. have not succeeded im keoping entirely aloot. ‘The forei; ment of the British Cabinet on the President’s procla- | Origin, so that at vhis day « p— | ously the reverse, aud Lord ore eramespirit, | jectod by (he resident Congress by solemn resolutions, groundless charge, which he rec utly enlisted m dove no such t imagines an equally sna degpateb, that we have rec Ireland, when petoriously we hay bus all the obligations of Hervice and g will are openly discarded, wh public conduct well in the past ax the present, s opeoly misr adopted by both hb with singular unanimity, apd comm Hira ed suo 1o al! foreign governments announced @ proportion could be attributed only "to a re tate of the question and the ib which the repablie is en vt hot it was io 108 pature #0 far injarions to the ign trampet has pot sounded yet, but more than once the cr; . Here at least, you will say, isely a8 a native born ie aoe ce eee csrame mane | Sore tao no memaerteeamg ona meena | papas have an abvo1 wat l- | you are mistaken. apact, havi an ol ness of our affairs and an uncontrollable passion or pur- por) being of such unparall pbs th would, under Tt ia bad cnouyh that al) this should proceed from Eng- . Prey te , passions found | land. It is hard to bear, Wh; d PERILS FROM ENGLAND. | feciog: ‘Orcourse this a applicable eepectally not ex. | to’ vent have, hoon trested” by. ths binster of "a | Oue cruiser 1 ht, yerhapsy clude a walsbfut government. re clusively, to England and France, foreign Power with supreme if not with sympa. | But it is ditticult to seo this can occur once, twice This flagrant oblivion of bistory avd of duty, which » that Congress would be obliged to eon - 4 YERMS FROM ENGLAND. thy; but, undor the terrible rifivence of the hour Tord | shree times; aod tho cry is atill they anil, ‘Two powerful | scams to"be the aopted policy of the British gover: peishet yy rf ape hereto aw yh Fo verry There is one act of the British Cabinet which stands | Russell, vot content with ing the proclamation, | ramMBsare now announced, like stars at @ theatre Will | ment, has been cBaracteristically followed by @ fat hori) Cean'ty tates the trae portion ef our A ch ober, whatever may be i mative, foremost as an omen of peril—foremost in time, foremost | misrepresents it in the most ed manner, Gather- | they, too, be allowed to perform? 1 wish there were not | refussl to pay for the damages to our commerce caused seit to the rebellion. la The Angto-Confederate Pi- | 2120'9 the magnitnde of its consequences. Though plan | ing his conaemnation into one phraso, he says thot it too much reason to believe that all these perform. | by the postile expoditions, The United Stes, under sible in form, it is none the less rious or unjustifiable. | ‘makes slavery at once legal and illegal,’”” whereas itis | ances are sustained by a prevailing British sympathy, A | Washington, on the applivation of the Bril sh govera witond even words become th: Of course J refer to that incont te proclamation, in | obvious, on the face of the proclamation, to the | Freuchman, who was accidentally a prisoner ov hoard the | ment, ade compensation for damages (9 Hritis | ions of men ard of inealon'oble im- rate Ships. the name of the Queen, as early as May, 1861, which, careless observer, that,” whatover may bo | Alabama at tho destruction of two American ships,de- | merce onder circurmstauces much les vexatiou ‘y < tho bead Of a grea nation is more than most after raising rebel slayeowners to.an equality with the | its faults, it is not obnoxious to this critic scribes a iiritisis packet in eight whose crowded passen- national government in belligerent rights, solemnly de | for it makes slavery legal nowhere, while it makes [yee the sea resound with cheers as they witneseed | SUL further, by special treaty, smpensation for ost al proposition tended direetly tu + Dy Veseela originally armed’? in our porte, | the disiwe republic and Ube substitution Perrneannnnnnne ares “neutrality” between the two equal parties: os if | it illegal inan immense territory. An oficial letter, 80 aptured ships handed over to the amos. ‘The words | ¢ present case. OF course, i cal wake. ai-. | of a 2h natton, he peceraies < esnelly ‘was not an insult tothe na- | incomprehensible in motive, from a stateaman usually | Of Lucretius were verited—suave diam bdid cer'amina u if the armament is cars | Bertited attempted, the Emperor dees M bo R tional government, end the declaration of neutrality was | liberal if not cautious. must be regarded as another illus: | magna (uci. Dut thoee same choers were eshvod in Pars | ried out to sea from a Britieb port, and | pot We are tokd that * 41 is pont. The Blunder-Crime Must be Re- | her's mora avscraity, oveusive to reason and aittiess | tration of that irritating toadeney which will bo checked | lament vs the iuildor of the puatical craft gloried io nn | there travel an etapion may be effectual Hy 0000 suteble opportunity’ so that be too precedents which make the glory of the British name. | only when it ts ful'y comprehended. deed, The verse which filled tho ancient theatre with | against a ry statate t it will be impotent to st lie cook does not sonnd the fven if the proclamation could ‘be otherwise than im- ‘The acti of our pavy ts only another occasion for eae: ‘eck ith humanity, bot | a the British government, accord in oft warter, Meanwhile the develop. nounced by England. proper at any stage of auch a rebellion, it was worse than | criticism in a similar spirit. Nothing can be dow lish opplaiise ery and ite defend ple ternaticnal faw; for this law fino Mexteay expedition shows tou clearly iho a blunder at that early date. The apparent relations be- | where to please our self-constituted monitor. Gor naval | ‘ers; ‘'T am an Fnglishman, and nothing of slavery ix | looks Always at the euletance abd pot Jorm ‘tiow, It woe all ove trapsaction. Mexico tween the two Powers were more than friendly. Only a | officers in the West Indies, acting under instructions mo- | foreign to me.” Accordingly slavery is helped by L.ngiish | Will bot be diverted Vy trick ef a pettifogeer, ‘(r ompire, and mediation was proposed in ret few months before the youthtul heir to the British throne | delled on the judgments of the British Admiralty, are | arms, English gold, Koghwsh 4 pe 3, pleapes4 mas rasaiment bo pat op board ia port or at rea, oo pot fut the fovagion mast fail with : and, lot it | England 18 alwaye " base, or stood tim | languoge of Sir Wiliam Scott, in'a menorw Iboir names | “station” or © vantage” growud—whieh he deel 4 had been welcomed everywhere throughout the United | reprebended by Lord Ruseell ip idacimaieye rg The | English cheers. And yet for the li States, except Ricbmond, as in the land of kinsmen, And | judges in our prize Court are indecently belittled by this | be m, that there are Roglishmen § which it ts adied. PERILS FROM FRANCE, J vet, immediately after the tidings of the rebel assault on | samo minister from bis placo in Parliament, when it is | and ubeliakes ain idet Uhis painful recreav { French banperor towards our re Oo any uncertain Inference. For Fort Semter—before the national government had begun | notorious that there are several who will compare favo- | caupot be forgoten. And til more for the bonor of | peatral country could net be fherefore the early | a omit tin fo report has declared bim to be on to put forth its strength, and even without waiting for | rably with any British Admiralty Judgo since Lord Sto- | England) let it be spoken (hat tho working clarses, who | Cedent betweed U 1 sand England \s in every | friendly, a put ‘le coutrmed by what ho wrrnnnnnnnrrnrcre the arrival of our newly appointed minister, who was | well, not even excepting that noble and upright magiz- | Were called to suffer (Le most, have bravely bocce their | respect completely applivable, aud since th’) precedont | | (44d (Lo ambacadoral attoreey of rebel known to be at Liverpool, on bis way to London—the | trate, Pr. Laehington. And this same istaier has un- | calamity, without joining with the eueames of the repub- | Was estallished—not only by the conment of £ 4 bu s: ‘ © ‘Vuilerien ; res proclamation was suddeuly jaguehed. Idoubt if any well | dertaken to throw the British shicld over a newly. | lic. Ther cheers baye been fur freedom end got for | t Ber motion-—it must be accepted oy tae present cee Furiament, onan errand of bontuity to owe THE EMPEROR AGAINST US. informed persons who have read Mr. Dallas’ despatcb of | invented contraband trade with the rebel slayemongers, ion AS AN irreversible declaration Of interbatiousl duty. | cave, la by him ot laine bien Kod ST ee - May 2, 1592, recounting conversation with the British | via Matamoros, claiming that it was “a lawful Other nations mi) boat Ragiand is board, wd | th wade that’ he clenves (o Minister, will vindicate it im peint of time. Clearly the | branch of commerce,” and ‘‘a perfeetly legitimate trade,’’ | vail im ber Moajesty’® gos eta ye ret made to take | rr wereas an indepoutent B een alacrity of this concession was unhappy, for it bore an air | The Do!phin and Peterhotf were two shins elaborately pre | lated, wh\'o lnternationa’ te believe, bat it ia Of defiance, or, at least, of heartlessness towards au ally | pared in London for this illicit commerce, and they have | ton todo unto others as teven if against ut in British port 9 the recems to remot whieh clows traditions with ours ip of kindred blood, engaged in the maintenance of its tra- | been duly condemned ag such; but their seizure by our it did not ¢ The Invasion of Mexico a Step- ditional power against an infamous pretension, But it | cruisers was made the occasion of official protett and ie the was "hore unbappy still that the good genius of England | complaint, with the insinuation of ‘vexatious capture and | Dame of slavery, bave been \ Gone whieh i shed agaiusta friendly | a . did not save this historic pation, linked with so many | arbitrary interference,” followed by the monace that, un- | Power. Taking advantage of dmitted principle, that | slips are r ready te the sword of Lafayette an ping Stone to Intervention. trinmphs of freedom, from a fatal step, which, under the Ger suct clroumetanoss,:"it t ob ¥ibus Creat Britaln must | ‘munitions of war’ inay be supplied, the Tord chief | when the pork to ia tec by the sido of the «word of Was! guise of * neutvatity,”” was a betrayal of civilization | interfere to protect ber flag.” Baron of the Exchequer tells us (bat “#hips.of war’ may | to stop them. the British government dec!ues Co am © the Hes of the ancient monarchy Hosted ‘elf. ‘This persistent, inexorable criticizm, even at the ex- | be supp'ied also. Lord Salmerston cehoes tie Lord | it, and so dem, it openiy declines to slop the pi Mare of our infant flag, be torgets Ubae nya PY BNpagenca ote Itis difficult to exaggerate the consequerces of this | pense of ai! comtistency or of all memory, has also broken | Chief Parou. Fach vouchos American authority, | Pins, faying, «f the parliamentary statute 6 jpeie (ua caled by Franklin, which gave lo the precipitate unfriendly apd womoral concession which | forth in forms incofhy ible with that very ‘neutrality’ | But they are mistaken, The steel which they | then let them [tie not needful &» conelder the aps pubic ronce of national life, and mado France t r sides, | The act of declension im positive and ite comreyuc parte visine glory; Hew pietas, hen rrisca fdew m bia ple bas been and still isan overflowing fountain of mischief | which was so ear! slared. It was bad enough to de- | strive to ‘impel’ canaot be feathered from The History of European | sa vioasnea—nce sone dereata clades: iret in what it | clare. veatrality, when tue question was, between a | Since the carlies f its existence she paticual gov. | no less poritive, fixing beyond ;ucat!¢ vonchsafes to rebel slavemongers on goa and in British | friendly Power and an insulting barbarism; but it | ermment has ase« vetwien the two cxses; | Of the British goyorament for and bo forgets still nore the ‘iret Napoloom sar oot bis own banc—bow the Jntervention. ports, and secondly in the impediments which it takes | was worse after the declaration to depart from it, if in } aud go bas the Supreme Court, ath ugh there are words | Ja thus Oxing this respon bil ty rend Tovisian and the whole region west of tho from British subjects ready to make money cut of | words only. ThoCoert of Rome ata period when it power. | of Story whiub have bven latterly quoted to the contrary. | M yiog, “the accession of territory entab- Flavery—all of which has been declared by undoubted | fully influenced the nage of nations, instructed its cardi | Bat the authority of (he Supreme Court is positive on liehew 4 the power of eR nnnnnnn british authority, Lord Chelinstord—of professional re- inst lagute ao important occasion, first and above all | both the points into which the Pritish apology i» d. vided to} * mnritiog rv own a3 Sir Frederick in ex Chancellor, used | things, to enltivate ‘indifereuce” between tho parties, | ‘The first of there is that, oven if asl, ca Brio; 10 for,ots aly Jtalian liberty, bonmted these words recently in House of Lords —'‘If tho | and in this regard bia conduct was to be so exact that } be furnished, the offence if met complete antl the Moral Impossibility of the Recognition thorn confederacy had not been recognize! as a velli- | not only should no partiality be seen in his conduct, bat | meut is put aboard, so that where the wip, tho gb fisted | & ok hander st, seuders Llmacit cele i 8 stood for ew? erent power he agreed with his noble and learned friend | it should not be remarxed evon *in the words of his do- | ut and equipped iu @ Pritieh port, awaits her armamont He has periniied,. iis presimed that usgereigy | Bud. 2 these Lnings, which mankiad sansot f N Ny] P (Lord Brougham) that, under these circumstances, if aay | mestics.”” If in that eariy day, before steam and tele- | at sea, she is pot liable to arrest. Such an apology I aD | Knows 9 he jets openly aud freqnentty eamNit an forget +e the dig unction of Unis republic, with the: or a New slave rower. Fnglisliman were to Ot out @ privatcer for the purpose of | graph, or even the newspaper, ‘neutrality was disturbed | vsult \ the understanding and to common Benso—Ae I iL | ax lo his power of hindering tne cvs), this keine walwaya | Ape) 6 {very toreitory which had come to un aewisting the Southern States against the Northern States | by ‘‘worda,” how much more £0 now, when every word } Was not obvious that the offence beg'ns with the laying | pres med, Vhs eos the Want of i be Cearly yveved from t poleon whlle Frssee, always standing ovnser big auspices to * w it te he seen, i . \ San EE NS Fad be would be guilty of piracy,’ But all ins is multiplied Mdefinitely and wafted we know not whore, | of the keel for the hesiile Fhip, k i = changed by the Queen's ation, For tbe | to begin, wherever it falls, a subtle, wide spread and ir- | and in tuis apirit the Sopreme Court bos decided that | «Natural Law,” quotod with approbation by Phiilimore in rebel slavemongers there is tho ition of | repressible influence. Pui this infumction js in plain har. | it “was not necessary to fd that @ Fbip on | bis work on the Law of Nations. ' Unies these words aro | M OoOUuUR DUPFLIES, ws flag; for the British snbject there is the op. | mony with the refined rule of Connt Bernstoff, who, in is | leaving port was armed or in a condnt s to | discarded os “a maxim Je tho early procedant of |! portunity of trade, For the rebel slavemonger there ts | admirable despatch on this object, at the time of the | commit hostilities; for citizens aro restreined from auch | Britieh demand upon us compensation is algo ru‘ely | t i Such are the words of Berlamoqu!, jn hia work on Of Riavery, with san Ub oe ie the Mepe. + non Lhe “ie Of rebel » avernrngern. . opt Onl, the Emperor forbears for the J i010 the eeale, but be ings bie fellowship and fequality; for the British subject th armed neutrality, cays gententionsiy,‘“Nentratily does nut | actwaa are calculated to involve the co rejected— js diticalt te see how the Britied government | /'" hie ew PAOLO LILLE ig. a new customer, to whom he may lawiully sel! Arm- | exist wlaen it is not perfect."? It must be clearand above | The second apology assumes that, even ii the can avoid the consequences of complicity with the pirate | this eword ba, [af sed cone warhke ‘mini o* eboicest | suapicion. Tike rhe tupeatiag of 8 wots | js lost when ee the pan mee — — ate at ships in all tneir lawless devastation. But | forbear to a uly wot ee peo yp tly Ne sd a 9 ' rhe, 1 a, expedition mal fal, if the r ing liability, r he offer Ne Alternative but to C€ itish workmanship, and Lerd Palmerston tells us, ev you bavin to talk about it. Unhappily there jg too mach | al) pointe, still t edition wou! e laweal, if the | dwell on th! uinolating Hability, arm ae tue yy! 0 secognize the Independence of ‘was unlawful is suddenly made lawful, while the bao is | nothing of a Parliamentary utterance that the national | pont ihe Supreme Court, speaking by Chief Justice | tions also. My present objcet « aecomplinied if finake | Te" — Slavery, taken from anodicus felooy. It ncerva stunoet sipertooas | catac was “detested vy & farge majority of the Henev ot } Marabail, haa loft m0 doubt of ite deliberate and mont | you seo which wuy tanger Ime. iB lw a aken wagutber—aa the comple ne Pritish rata t " enmeut Bat beyond acts and words this shows iteelf in the offleial tone which has been adopted towards the national canse im itm unparalleled «truggle— cepecnily throughout the correspondence of the liritieh Foreign Office. Of course there is po frendship in any of to add that euch & comcession, thos ent in its | Ce Ned upneutral speeches, Icon- | authoritative judgment. In the case before the Court Ben Roop ae Teach, must hace bcen direct encoarageavont and ovér- | fine myroil to effici declarations, tiete thease le plain. | tho armament was on board, but clenred an cargo; tue ture to the rebellion. Slavery itself was cxalted when | Several of the British Cabinet, including the Foreign See- | tnen, tco, wére on hoard, bat enlisted for a commercial barbarous pretenders—battling to found a vew power in | rotary and the Chancellor the Seapeaoer, two great | voyage; the ship, though fitted out to croimo ugmtont a ‘The Hon. Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts, delivered cma Steel ebane Siete ons ores 8 Soe port on masters of Ss rox 17 faves rowan themee! ree, in apuvlic np with base vente ¥ Boece, nee commissions 4 i Aenipanced ae cat condemna- epeec! lo characterize naively our present efor , ? pen ul ‘an address last evening at the Cooper Institute, ov the in | tion—were yet, in the face of this essential deficiency pet aoe rebel slavi ora ne 8 coment for empire on | #te had reached the river La iiats, where a commission | tional ebampionshiy) agwinst rebos rlavemongere, nur one vitation of the Young Men’s Democratic Union, before an | swiftly acknowledged ag ocein belhgerents, while, | one site ond for tplapeodenee on te other.”’ Mere wero | was obtained aut the crew reenleted. Yes, in face | word of mildest dosent even from the mireroant apo-to immense assemblage, ia which the female element of our | %% 8 consequence, their pirate ships. crnising for orda,”’ which. under a srecioua form, were under- there extenuating cireumetances, it was declared | jate which wis preached iv their behalf, Naturally (he elt ‘The tected plunder in behalf of slavery, were acknowledged | stand to give encouragement to rebel glavemougers. Bot | by the whele Court that the neutrality of the United | tone is in harmony with the rentiment, rity was largely represented. subject selected vy | as national aie entitled “to Cn priviteces | they were mere speciens than true, revealing nothing but | States had been violated, so that the cu,ity wbiy could pot ons, cynical, it evinces an indiference to t Mexioo to pe maintsived ‘ aa empue. \ @ Holy A‘liance originally organized agaiant “0. baw alopted by bin representative Frover, What ite despot authors tere cot Linperer, nephew of ibe frst, pro- sb. Ie fe sald that Texas also be to be a ships of war ton, to be used in behalf of slavery. What | occasion to talk about the neutrality’ of Knglond. I say juasie of a sile were adroitly employed. But om this | to many millions of doflars, with accom! ‘ these letters, Nor i thore any #ympathy with (he na as to France, The ‘partition’ of edged to be the great crime of the kant ‘him was that of our foreign relations, and as Mr. Sumer | with the ational chins of the ited States. | the side espoused by the orators. Ciea:!y cn our side it | afterwards be recogpized as o itimate er iver, Alt ong which nation® ought to cultivate with each nw ) woo secompliihed by three Powers, with the is chairman of the Committee of Foreign Relations iu the |. 7Bi# fimple starement is enough. It js vain to vay that | js ac ntert for national life, involving the liberty of a | these disguises were ® no pur) ‘be Court penetrated per, and which #hould be the stody of & wine states | * rene of the reat; bat not a « Senate of tho United States, his treatment of that sub; fueb a concession was @ “necessity.” There may bave Clearly on the olber sida it la a contest for | them every one. saying that ch aship coult lawfully | manship, The Moiay roos a muck, and pach ie the favo |r vrt of one of the spoilers. keow , his trea Subject | been a strong temptation to it, coustituting, perhaps, an | slavery, to order to secure for this hateful { ail there would be ou our part hie dipiomatie sty @ io Jealibg with us. Thin we paintuliy | » 4 1 O48 the ambassador of Lovin XVI, deserves attention, as iDyolying more or Jess the external as with many persons there is a | crime recognition acd power, Our Empire is | disgraceful to our government. of w conspicu vue In all that copcercs the pirate shins. thea |“ t | ape Policy of the government. strong temptation to slavery itself. But such a concession | rimpty to erneh rebel slavemongers. ‘Their indepeadence | be The diye.” But a*peutrality” worse even to ‘well ov tevetand tht tulmeter, Who #0 dos ly con ' After the applause with which Mr. So slavemoogers. Ogbting (or slavery. can be vindieated | ix simply tho unrestrained powcr to whip women aud gol! | condeinned jo advance by our Supreme Court, ° Doiligerent rights lorebel slaversouvers.and then woeneily 1 * with wl Ir, Sumner was greeted lavery is vindicated, As weil undertake to de. | childron. Even if at the beginning. tho national govern. | Do nation would be the dupe,” 18 now served o permitted their ships to sally forth for pirary, would be | | on bes introduction bad subsided, be spoke as follows. — trality’’ between right and wrong. ween | ment made no declaration on the subject, yet the real | which nothing but the Very indjiferent to the tone of what he wrote. And yet | t! ye very port whien of © Fritow (rrmexs:—From tho begining of ihe good and evil—with a concession {9 the latter of - | ebarscter of the war was none tho lees apparent |p tho | into Creat Britain can extain. There was atime when | evon outrage may be soothed or softened by gentia | ' fora Therma: por cond ¢ which we are uow engaged, the public iutercst bas ent rights, and then set up the apology of *'necessit repeated declarntions of the other side, who did not Leri- | the Foregn Secretary of Prglond, traly em cent ae | worde; but none such hare come out of rite Miplome red etn yi 18 ap nated anxiously betweea the cursent of a «10 was natura! that an act so essentially ants fo | tate to asgert their purrore 10 build ‘a new Power on | Statesman and as orator, Mr, Canning, #aid in (ue | to os.) Mot deeply dol regret ibis too snggentive fat . sued be the great erie of the ptecene god Ana aeerastidagie Corsene Roopa. Woree character and a'xo in the alacrity with whichut waedone, | slavery—as in the Italian cimpaign of Louis Napoleon | House of Commous—If war must come, let it | ure, Aud believe me, fellow citizens, I aay thes Ub ‘ Treg) upon she republic im lrauce—teas have been'bardiy less absorbing than domestic relations, | S00Uld create throughout Engiand an unfricodly eenti against Austria, tho oblect was necrssari!v apparent, even | come in the shape of aitisfaction to be demanded for | with sorrow unspeakable, and only in deoharge of my Hie in Mecteo—tt romaine to be seen ‘At Limes the latter bave seemed to ment towards ns, easily stimulated to a mensce of war | before tbe Fmperor tardily at Milan put forth his life | infar.ce of rights to be asserted, of interests toe | duty on this occakion, when’ face ofor Con Pernt as tamper Epon Ue it upon the for; faoe.T meot you 19 ' r © 8 thik be exe; mar am 1 eux And this menace wag not wanting soon afterwards, when | giving proclamation that Italy should be free from the | protectod, of treaties to be fulfiled. Bat in Gort's name | cmsider the aspect of our affairs a prs ter Fmporer a Mexico, wo wit be we the two rebel emissarjer on board tho Teent worascized | Aire t ane Adriatic: by whicn the war became, in ite de. { let it not como en ta the yaltry, peitifoczing way of Gt. | Hutihere ie tem another bead of dauger In which all by & patriotic, brave comm inder, whore bivhest fault wae | c'arod pore, ag well ag in reality,a vear of liberation. | ting out hips in our harbore to cruive for gam At all | others culminate. I refer toan iwtrusive mediation. 0 and a packet frow karope bas bee! the seat of war, Rumors of foreige intery stant—now ip the form of mediation, and now ention a Copnie ogamet the reine tide Of the | fi ce the that, in the absence of instructions from his own govera- | That such # rebellion should be elevated by the unneatral | events let the country «iedain to be sneaked Into a wa the slavemonger y a a chair megs be @nbdeses or he Pincnpennas ne y opbernee g bohare dagye lh ment, be followed too clnrely Pritish precedente, This | “words” of @ foreign Catduet, intn A teepectsiiiity cf | These noble words were nttered in ronly te Lor! Joba | an tedepedtent alum, for euch Propesitions have beea | - Fomsnlnh igen cdakdnngion wilh soma aceidént—for euch tt wos, and nothing else. which it Is obeinusty unworthy, Is ovly acother sign | Rowell and his asecclates in 1829 00 their prororition to | ovealy made tn Parliament acd constantly wrvot by tho | yon onl (hie nnplean it review. 16 ers battling. in tho mame of slavery, to b presented and. with an ntterly inde’ensible exaggeratinn. | which we most watch reign Enlistment set and t overturn the A not yet adopted by ber Mace a wly i explanation af oar porttiy swim, ‘on the destruction of this re was changes by the Pritich nation, backe! by the Prirish Put there same oratars of the Priiish Cabicet, not eo. gnards of Pritich pevtrality. But they epoak @ vever been repelled on priv | row that | have accumulated Ie may be weit tor eo to tare tide trom, battle and | KOvernMent, into scans belli, o8 if euch an ooavtbor- | tent with giving ue a bad nome, have allowed themselves th greater foree than then te 4. threstens | ‘ joge fore ol hom0-— irom the laaciog it 8 2nd | ized incident, which obviously involved n> quee- onnca against ua on the whole esse. They de | Even if it be admitted that “ships of war,’ like “maid bir ticki, tale igen bap abr cameg tion of could justify war bete cen the pationa) send io | tious of war de #old ton belligerent. as ie agserte f } Vicksburg and Cuiplecton—te glaneo tus « ma: Ab ind rh gg ht rs may Desald ton periie from abroad, of course Dnman from isnetapdeand | 4°? gs a Nae re mbes Britta Prieas Misiener brance, for theso ary : ere UAL tBUS | that it an nt, the Rritich ives bf de. | tion (o which Ehave alrewty « | ee aoe wh renee! parations to take part with rebel ri dograde ws andesalt stavery. Vint i . pure and eymy ag: EM evict gan grch ignotio preparath us by keeping ba is apparent that their aonunciation, though made ja Mar. | + t 7 ht 1 the offictal deepateh of A0tb Tament and repeated at public mectings, was founded wae | eho 1 that which prevaitea > ent, aflor anveuner ‘on cry special information from the seat of wer, € | od ford North thot ber Ma ut any instenctions,"* | ing itr recret, than on political theory, if net pre | ng the wii goverpment world | Te is troe that our eloquent teacher, Pdmant iterke. in e the at J folding @ subject, ferme 4 promised tter to the sheriffs of Hiristel, argued moet | & : } - ntry from f fe, , © side ot wavery np. eg iv at . . w unexpected and ' he r ! " tifeet t t nd France sieve the cut of e~ gress | ins t s Peta ’ ar. blow A nth Secoud!y—The nature of foreign interve ie 1} ad fp wirhoot on iy tion, with the principles bie thereto, Peng sncat rgd) cw J hier west . pe Pe oy acleeeants ie yy oe nt Washington was dirc alt wthile on eter a yy PS by her consptenous, » blesprend aud tw ow Pawar ae (ae cima tenes OF “iaaoe thedi ' ' ‘ y ’ in vere of th fe ch ag to become a contrast—so thot whatever } of Carsren, © Power assemed | woe (nog salt f American indepen nt ened wir ce, or pounder and the | vience vos te'le with unmistakable foree against this wew- | Err, neh onife Bes: ¥ mipsioned of | vx, . thie cround. But | fugie! pretensh cintpped tn wearkiee form, within the Himitworthe United | oe.) ‘ pre Posen en bin aptress to mix ia h statesman raw the past more e! | state ‘military expenitions or enter. | w a Phatees by historic instances br of eomed to have for t wien long ago, } phrase, ~iny ting thin poley of | 1 ‘ ! ‘ 4 he en be ihe ret ge 0 1848 with he that Fagtend » he our to the Wre Miniter, thot w ’ tish etateamer we not an ecahital maa Otel jak exaias’ 38" Gla’ eubeneaiaed er iiver woe » precerve the. me T coretimen | , oro t 1 my et ‘wa what ' iMated by courses of lawiese plandor nad | pone words, crit 4 : thort hance, but at 00 thie Cecarton , Ihe We lions at | 4 F urih'y ~Te ae they shall sun. | th one ee oe | the diatinetion tv | om tion, ew nt th hi A tumor nant Ike sam i Prin P ‘'t where It i# cou Gna Dawae Want , immer) | t : found a new ' ‘ : ! brits e . ‘ ta ' j ; ant We veiat woe Beech ed | ihe ® And yet Pritieb { dunt * ienbien | ministers, x th ripol, preome mr | ence : , netitut tar MN, the doom of this reptulic. The | meh « 1 te rece tilee, ‘wae the mister who sntrod ‘ ‘ taieiurh my eonGdence, 1 do not forzet rhiae t : nt yan that sion he vsed there werd hoe often fitee prophets have fi peared, Weloding | | Freneb far t 1 tot fam. t this measure jee.) the “fheeana,”” who pr Wirhed a demoneteatiar i th) wane eee eee ten P " nt preserve internal pen myfewibitity of nonerehy in England only sie month | | ars a ‘ place, even if ocean belli ~A- ire and to save th Chorlos It. enter London winidst vos of eater \} ns . i, b ; . whether odvous character that its re “we 2 Levy oesigd «com Wak be titted ont iin i port v fy a4 ey Fred the (reat 9 t mber \eten From this review, touching open tt he nt of the effort to exnplete the bio A, et , Bitar ome agp ny te Su hs ; , Past; leaning sp m faw tooed | py gicking at ite mouth ebips tn v tone, nenatly ally in t, matatnte wae enacted. in harmony wit | a aad : 7 : tbestone pirekade' Yo common times her on pro ( nations, for the better mainionne r ter | Fe 5 the exasnpte ' . more. patien Oe. reer vould have shrunk from ony there 6 * ° ested oo partis A pom cay Eounite ies toreshete ad not hare forgotten that bie jonah rag oe . The perits to our country, «8 forests: the ne'jon acne cemeee at By "! - | ett, ao th of foreign Powers since Uhe outbrerk of the wor " Pe yhat us y oe te toe & t7 . pur attention. bay Bl he Doke of B t whosoever agsumen to play the t enptet wa ieny rable siege of f clged in character aud pretensin | rimnla to the British Paria whe ry ' t vanne | * 8 with rtone he propicey, The learned Jerome Carden . Gurineg the rebellion in ®. A ~ wey tt e war of the Rerolntion Hh vo dabbler im astrology, of ¢ o | of the Britixh ceveroment - . ia e bo Britieb commander he M ‘xee, undertook to predict the d bh, | ocofetion, a8 wae auponnced in Parliament by 4 2 ? or wna rier, not far from this vey Choticston, ag a pr ai ¢ maintajned be charecter a a succ i yereton, who wae nt the time Foreign t . t. ere aaa 1, wee toet the approach of the French ard Americas | wo Wfeat (he appointet time, If 1 | + eovertiment promptly declared ive puryoer tte ' mary lorce 4} neeal forces: that in 1804. onder the direetion cf the ave played tho prophe tain the Papremacy of thowe laws whiel) hil bor ‘ : “Te ore & “— s Britian Admiraity, no sKempt was mado to choke craft, it will b {0 fait thevbientions of the United States Lows “oure mee Ape: A - nature of wart F pinning th tothe harbor of Poutogne by sieving ag Phapendes tor them Bowing lott: LMA OROER RUE Be eamnee we torviee ov demon | unre aoe rn i tween tro nations it eradaaly widget circle. .cking | tone veawee. and that 12 1800 the cima bioexae But it becomes us to pete well the in. | ic warfared! and, not eatichied with its exiting pew | ’ Me : Se on Yui yi or tog voly he bistory Novis tt difedot, if the wor b q ¢ pee ed dangers to which on this account : n n rom ts 1; edo wy ’ * . be are oe gore i 1 1 « Foren Vower may for a while k , of the eas Gs o m 7 + b - - Pe 1 ote re oF not ih worl’ otly—OF @pcecher, dospatchas | a ober statute, calentate! ty meet the imrordiate ey) os mate be ot pase GUM ee ee ee A some oN vessels of the jing (ratletse hat ur Agger ed tone bee tcnta | scary, sROrehe wae provided thet collectors, mersoake | Preach» art = at Vern mn, enlent be wr The seven Wiited provinecs Of Holland, under th welt toaded wonld ve excelent for the purpose '’ Bot (hee are cls O80 with whieh the Frjtieh govern ‘her officors shalt ‘veize aod detain any veel whieh | Prem veer, ta ° charncter, Willlamn of Orange, the’ predeec his complaiut by the British Cabiget becomes donbly | rent i tco closely Arsceiated. 10 pot refer (0 the un rovided oF prepared for any military espe. om | | ayat we oot ot ' poten % A o Dy dre , strang hon it i convidered that one of the most con- | jmited enpply of © a ons of war,” co that our ariny oot iee ogatnet thé territories or dom . | Ms oid “ eh Shenry o 0 me otto ion # treaties of modern | Ty co tained solemo 4 Charlerton, like our army at Viekaburg, ir competed | foreign I'rines or Power |” It ie something to f 4 "8 Ww the rooowers © barbarity of hie reptteentetive, Alva: bat the eeneie. | { hy Prgland from Pranee that the barbor of | to. ‘ar trong gue ond Blakeley fone, with all | tl uct. BOLI i Conventelt to forget ntl further \* ding debie ma, tnt toe Bs Crongl 66 Ort Waleed to tbe bwaperiice, Wen moter ts | ut rity was regarded with Jealousy, | proper ammunition,from Fog and, for the tight of Br! break ing oat of the Cefmear war. in 1854. the Mritleh gow ror io 8 wyrt ral Vorey gave engage Queen Filzabeth, who lent to this war of indores, | Meant’ ly “filled up.” so that it could no | putecis to irr tickeh 18 bebet shar tonoceere orn ent, Jointly with Prenee, mage apether avn | another character. Its roy & [eas then th Gence the nome of ler favurite Lelewier aba indepen. | jonger fur \ Romed hespitalities to commerce. | fixed when tho ‘etter, by eudden metarorphoris, wore | Vri'e) patent he eitirens | bon! rigor } rertoration of the Late fee cu thie #6 of the Atlan he Uf sidney, while Boain retorted by,the Anko | Tue wee tbe Treaty of Utrecht, in 1723. Bu by the | charged from si vacramta of tbs ocean to | (qm (king Pir ahadtnsute of iusaies +1 | act score that ietitmates thet the Crited Staten must The vnited yr faces OF Flaltond, Yo thal? lnabetee. ries aitieege, ‘Galy tout youre tise. hac wascen | lawfol bellige ¢ Nor do 1 fefer to the meavare eppome J tothe det | ih power snd intv« . tt Mon wend eM = A Ne for in. | strnined to stip fave again that noth uld be omilted 4 od id ita Repeal, which was ; P ‘ eee, NT bead coh ed aah ee a 1 Pritaia eould this veceesary for the entice | wtarpies on the enstord’ ind wider he r meat a koh the trie bap. be ys ‘ America, . hich J a et Sos remsee you ame see ' the harbor. ao the Istter Power was | tag, wich contributions to rebel slavemongers. 0: t 4 on our part by e pe ve srenped ender seo the Spanish colonies, % | " a send com ‘ ‘e too, enjey a kindred immunity. Of cow I pros | mined vigilanee, fo that net a ringle Mr: aval oriental atime, ond meemedty , me e, 1) . ho regal pr S ~ Fising of suo spalsh eoloates, which followed, there wan | (he exren(vn of tue treaty.” These pros'- | ciatwation com chabge Wrong Into Tight br toske euch | ‘hip rifleeed fete aby cruiser ‘Cited not im our yore Md wat have. bee : won Ties eee ena he wa: distant and outlying position of these colonies attnodeh sleue were ronewed in FU cesFive treaties dows tothe peace | business otherwise than immoral, but the proeiamation | An it i* ale convenient to forget 1\\\ further the solemn { pot left the door of the cont pent ajar . ag Wiens saty p Mad Uney were vot beyond the ambitions reach of the holy Satouaan ie seals, fav at Reg arbor me woke f in it the charactor of faony. stuns of kreaty, Dinding oo both parties, by wiicw | T ye bravely coler 0. Aw ’ ‘ — a 4 the. bol wed with ‘Americas ce, Bot Great nt even the royal proclamation gives ro ranction to | it i* etinnlated:— plant © arene by Our erie ® ~~ inward ee feooe, tena ie sone stiow at | Cita, wheo compelied to Dork} © stil! cuited with | the preparasion ia Eola of naval expedite against |. That (he sobjeots and eftizens of te wo na vhs't not | ( mow the Nght,” bad i net be A Atria, w a Ue Motréecknown 62 the Monroe doctr the Dutet im cloning the Se! it, or as a Mu itieh writer ox the commerce of the Cojted States, It leaves the parla | o° '"7 rete of howtility or ver t ’ | soppemed that (he rebel ravemougers were atv! ¢ "} ; ‘ felt « 4 to boaet Rie paviietion one gh i fn — ng | meniary statute, aa Oy nations, io | _T" oueet er aeiek aavetee | friaape taw'y the “ ¢ trantection i > Rerdivie, tween Tos 3 gat f O reaeons put forth by | full efcacy to restraly and pupieh auch an offence. 4 “ sith oor stare, ot! | know ma if & : +~— go forte the balance of | reat Brithin for Breaking peace with Francs in 1702, i | yet ibe ace of thia obi ¥oe probibition, stansicg fort | "Sierra call nine’ athdaey | Cusp sues to Soame™acteah: ‘parictps ‘. Astra seaeP rome i which, OP B COMBI Of several years, ¢ mts wl entericg tpow that World couvulsing war, was that thie } in the text of the law, and founded in reason ‘herr ha- fi widrbing Cree 4 ibe war, Mabie ‘ oe Fo # the © naseacre, Dut Felleved by an exsited vel sacriney able, | Spay Mary, Power had declared !t eculd open ihe | man stalute purge! the common weal,” also exumplilied ; sugrenions 1s } thas a tramienterperiment— for wb ‘ s$ 4 th Se ane hit: | Scheidt, And yet it ig Great Benain, this per by the patonal government, whieh, from the time of tat the date of this tresty, in 1 int enone 4 by ‘ore'gn care ree a tee Wee as ' oaition OF Pog, f cearg Rone sad rivets. thet wow interferes Warh tein, has always guarded iis porte against enc! the wubieet io citber frees appent beture i sro quapratinap aneecoes bs t Greets | este ocese Some cutrage, hips have been launched, equipped. | (ota im harmony w ig oom Uo ™ reece Tho rome propensity aud the rame inconsistency wi fitted oat abd manned in ) WHE wrune Fuprpliod oa the law of patiots, us ° 28 whey DEMOS Home at's bere’ also, acd ‘hore | foreign Secretary, aa woe besheate fiewe tee chee a from another Fogiigh versel, and then, assra tine ty both Powers. ' ; ruiia the gfeat Foner ot seestee vere Aid wok esitate, from bis place by the Ineultiog hocua 'pocas all Bugish | and yet. forgetiiog ail these things soateet came the effort 7 (Bead States with making med). | ‘ability was avoided, they Bave At cace to rob | tanbfully the Rational goveromnt t . 4 Korrnth, whieh, when about to citon and nurgical iastrumesis contrabend, ‘crn. | nd destroy the commerce O the United Stater. Engiand | measurge of vom aa f gree armies ot Russia’ There wee pig ee contrary cit paral bese trom which ‘were derived. the | soe bee oxton Uh British ¢ ; ‘ effort of the Roman repablic, uw etal, whieh whee | tarharec sper” Thus esciaees “toe ons jz t bod ins which enable them to sail the | coives protection at our bmn’. or oi ; : , St Th Robie lord. ore : for . ‘ about to prevail, arowed the of France, Aci. | nave nothing to may of the propriety of mak Sow, epretating @0 the | pie of neutrality bat been apr ce ‘ 4 tastly, we have only recently the on | coatraban’. My eumpte ie thos Under pret © mminatons, | gtatesmen forgetting « | Hialy, inepired by Gariba'di and directed by Coons. | tk +: ei By ee RCI Kagiand 2 not at | vipreety” whieds, beriden be Sein has ten eccompiiabes weil Rete Cavoys. | spirit agxings Mich we ae 1 BORA, It would be Gimp | war with the Ubited talon, theae shine can. ba nethiag | honeet, waters, bad tres >t ' ‘ his well crninied legions, carried the {my eagien Toto | or tiv historic (tet, axvosed 1 ine satterer Puree eecne | lee ina platen, ane ry faruild. | acer ship parm 7 ‘eo the bettie, yin Letters, tbat Parlement, ta 4am, vy betce' ale bie to provides o of primes. yer ro . Seb are fomous jastabees, Which are Bow po many | tice, prolivite! Lhe exportation of Peruy'om bare into acy V pre” Like jiret they bern ap taee tay ~~ o a the Obiigatnns —-

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