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“NEW YORK. HERALD, FRIDAY, SHPTEMBER 1], 1863.—TRIPLE SHKE'. ee ae of the workd danced upon this great | than than for ‘man, Tam sure that a good mation | mongers may be a corporation in fet. but no such Ristory » This sheng @ good man wou'd seorn '0 do, ration can find @ piace i that sublime eommonweal b. ee oo a , builders 13 | But thergts arale of ir . eat article of n Mgerevt without @ port into which it cam take its priver, Aby otbee rule would be absurd Tt will net be enough to sailthe #04. ike the Flying Dutchman: the ovean bellger ent must be adie to touch te hand, and that la d its own $0 crimyon as that reckless procia sla and helped helps the demon, io the fected ‘the fret dence superadded to the rule | As well admit the Vhugs, whose first article of faith is to Resco the chief stone at he corner.” ‘And then, ae if | Of Morality. (rotius Jo discussing treaties does uot for- | Kill a stranger—or the buccaneers, (hose old ‘brothers of of on oO » Be » law of Blavery on h, he proeseds to | Bet the wistom of Solomun, who, ic not a few places, | the coast,’? who plundered on the sea—or betier still, re- | ‘This proceeds on the klea of civilized wartare, that some Sueb a ship with th melority beaten rere Tature supremacy. saying | WATDS Against fetlowship with the wicked, although be | vive the old Kingdom of tho As-assing, where the king | thing more than naked {oreo i essen’ ial bo ihe cotmph-te deck and with the flag of stavery at roe: it is already “a growing Power, which if trae to y+ do these were maxims of prudence and not was an assassin, surrounded by counsellors and generals | neas of @ capture. According to the earlier rule traus. | for slavery, burnit 5, = See ‘on poe furd mulation of property was accomplished by the “pervoc tation” of the captured ship » itbia the port of the bel ligerent, or as it was called, detuctio infra prasidia, AS early a9 1414, under Heory V., of Engiavd, thee was an get Of Parliament requiring privateers to bring their prizes into a port of the kingdom and to make a declare Vion thoreot to « proper afficer be\ore undertaking to dis pose of them. Hut the modern rule saver an additional ebeck upon lawiees violence by requiring the copdemna Aas it in Se tbe © Teninds us of tho saying of Alexander. who were ansassing, and ali bis sub.ects were asgssing. Neel, ita deatiny and tte big mesicn. wl) vecome thoee grievously offend who eater the service of barbari- | Or yet again better, ut once and o enly recngnige ADI. eogireuing Fo agate hn | the “¢ mer stone? of hie pew | 828.” But better still are the words of the wise bigtria0 | Christ, who is the supreme ang bighest impersagation of vi ‘denounced the Alwiahty throne, of classical autiquity, who enjoins upon a commonwealth | she slave power, ~ ‘of equal audacity. In the duty of considering carefully, when saed fer aésiste Amidst the general degradation tbat would follow i me deat ‘can be ves paranel, | "C0, whether what is sought is sufficiently pious. safe, | an obeiauce toatavery, there are two Christian Po wh down to Heaven. and earth, | £'°rious, or on the other hand unbecoming,” and 4/80 | that would appear in sad and shamelal eminence, I rofer bariem was proclaimed ax the new | thOFe words of Scripture which, after rebuking af alliance | to Groat Britain, the declared *+protectress of the Africam have already passed, Duty ae the with Ahab, ask with scorn,‘ Shouldet thou help the | yace,? and to Frauce, the declared champion of ‘ideas’? avemongers, can be DOtbing lens, in spirit and character, than asiave pirate and the wy of the human race, Liko produces like, amd the hich is slavery, must stem hip, making it a floating Offence to Hi in andacity—wild, outrageous, he deep to be busted down by all who bave not forgotten their doty alike to Cod and man, H : tH i r 33 a 5 Meanwisile there is one simple act which the jugtice of webeion began 4 jor of South | UBROdly who, from the very largess of their pleiges, are 80 situ- | tion of e competent conrt. ‘This rule, which is among the " J Caiza in a Niedaen oe roteimure we lute | lf the claim for recognition be brought to the wuche | awed'that they canuot desert the grod. old-cause and turn | Most authoritative of tho British Adralralty , wil be found Epeland cannot coutinge to refuse. | That fatal contessicn en 3 April Yook up the boastful strain, | #tone of these principles, it will be easy to decide It. their backs upon. civilization without a criminal solf- | im the famous letter of Sir William Scott and Sir Jo! nanan ona kperenay, made in @ moment of eclipse, #hon east ‘congratulated | the rebel shavemongers that Vain ie it to urge the lepers Od Rations tn its behalf. | stultification, woich no amount of apologses oan conceal. | Nichol, addressed to John Jay, as follows'—'*Before 4 Tre bi — umanity were obscured, must be annulled. were ‘a refed, cultivated und enlightened | Never be‘ore in history has such @ candidacy been pub | Where thon would be British devotion to the African | ship or coods can be disposed of by the captors, there | 7o% ‘wmudir cvine mui be renounced, 10 that the slave pi wand that the new government was “ihe | fOFWard in the name of slavery : and the terrible outrage | race? Whore then would be French devotion to ideas? Re | must be a reguiar judicial procosding, wherein both par | [Oct may no longer suit the sect, Learning, ens, ‘type that the worid ever beheld.” God save the fs aggravated by the Chrietian light which eurrpunds it. | membered only to puint a tale and show bow nations had | ties may be ‘d and condomnatien therefrom as prise mg, ar Brvch Leen, Then wilh U promptly dis. mark! And @ leading jonrna), wore then any other the | Th'# is not the age of darkness. But io in the Dark | fallen. Great Britain knows leas than France of natiopal | in a Court of Aduiralty, judging by the law of nations | *PPe*r wa ever, and with them will Ms ippear the occa. of the sia rs, has uttered the original | 4&¢#. when the slavemongers of Algiers ‘had peduéed | vicissitudes; but such an act of wrong would dosome | and treaties,” This is explicit. But thie rule is French sion of strife between two grent Powers, wh? ought to be, Sowet with more then ‘original bratality. After themselves to & government or State.” the renowned tring io its influence to equahze conditions of | a8 well as knglish. Indeed it is a part of international pcg —or-ent roy py ss Spey ep ~~ Qwelling om**the grand careor and lofty destiny” detore | 1ouis 1X. «ur them asanest of wasps.” Afierwards | these two vations. Better for the fast anchored isle | law. A seizure is regarded merely aga preliminary act, por y G merey belp um 4 . ‘of 28in | butsiowly they obtained ‘‘the rights of legation” and | that it should be sunk beneath the sea, with its b. : fea ee lattes ok of us | ‘the reputation of a government.” but at last, weary of | drals, its castles. its fields of glory, Runnymede, West beart the true nature of that their criminal pretensions, the aronsed vengeance Of | minster Hall and the home of Shakepere, than that it Any and the responsibility it imposes, | Great Britain aud France blotted out this Power from the | should do this thing. In other days England bas valiantly the confederacy is, verily, a dis- | Mt of nations. Louis XI., who has bee described as | striven against slavery, and now she proposes to sur- against the whole coursé of the mistaken | ““the fovereiga who best understood his interest,” indig- | render ata moment wi more can be than ever ‘of the age, For liberty, equality and trater- | PAOt at Richard Ifl. of England, who had murdered | before against the mouster wherever it shows its head, We deliberately substituted slavery, subordina- | $¥° ‘ofants in the tower. and usurped the crown, vent | for slavery everywhere has its neck in this rebellion, In government. Reverently we fea! that our confed- k. hia ore without holding any intercourse | other days France bas valiant'y striven for ideas; and ie @ God-sent missionary to the natinns with great ‘aluable precedent; for the parricide | pow sp Soo peotonas, \ surrender, although all thatene é weurper of Fngland had never murdered 80 many infante, to preach. We must speuk thus bokily; but whose | | Abd 90 mach an thee prdtented aie y rf has prof have at heart is involved in the doom of | which does pot divest the property, though it 8 the right of the “proprietor. bee Sosad or of condemuation by a competent tribunal is necessary to determine if the weigure is valid, The question is eompendiously called prize or no prize. Where the pro- perty of neutrals is involved this requirement becomes of customary Delligerent rgbis with fegard to pociraa are jorent rights will to neutrals are coneeded algo, 80 tbat the concession puts in jeopardy neutral commerce, But without dwe'ling on thie point, I content ha with the authority of two receat Freach And here I leave this net the subject, founding my ob;ections on two grounds :— embryo governmont of rebel siavemongers has not that degree of sovereignty op the ocean which is eesential to delligerency there. 2. Ken if it possessed the requisite sovereignty, no Christian Por cap make any such concession Wo it with Out a shameful complicity with alavery. Both of tiese are objections of fact Either is suffictent. But even if the belligerency seome to be established as a fact. #till conocrsion in this age of Christian light iF ut sé i faath cars to hear hear.’ is this God-gent wer, wit slavery. which a word from ber might hasten beyond re} writers. Hautefeuille, in bis elaborate work, says po aye igen age fg Deans o'| © IY tolerated by the sagacious sovereign who rite | call. But it is in England, more oven than Py ll apape Fy of the ob- | Would seem to bo impossible, unless under some tempo ‘welcome a4 the household hearth of the civilived world, | 0p the of Louis XJ, But it is pot necessary to gO | that the strongest sentiment for rebel slavemongers has gene but he is held to bring Defore the tri. | Try aberration. which, for the honor of England and the Gnbapoity theve are old nations, st » |.20 far tn history, nor to dwell on the practice of nations | been mani‘est, coustitutisg a moral mania, which me- and oblain a sentence declaring them to be | Welfare of humanity, it is to bo hoped will speedily pass ivendy in ihe famn\'y; bet vow, for the first time in his: | 2 withholding or conceding recognigion. The whole mat- | ‘naces a pact and concordat with tho rebellion itsel’—-as | prize.” And a later writer, M. EBugeoe y, | “way: tory anew pation étaime adentesion there, wbich n:t only | 'F isatated by Burke with his c power -— when an on Pope, the head of the Christian Chureb, | whose work has appeared since our war bogal. Coeae me, ree | slavery, bot, exulting in ite shame, strives t | In the case of a divided Kinetown by the law of natiens, did not hesitate to execute a piratical convention | eays, ‘A usoge, which evidently bas its source io | ,.A#si®, fellow citizens, | orave forgiveness for t a Jong pa yh of mankiuid against this outrage, | reat Britain, like every other Power, ia frec to take any | with @ pagan enemy of the Christian name, 1¢ | natural equity, requires that, before proceeding to divide trespass upon your patience. If the field that we oI Ser masks ita’ chicg suprort aud glory, 20 that all | PAT she pleas’s, “Bho may decline, with more or tess for | Only remalos that ihe mew. coalition xbould be | the booty, there should be an inquiry as to therreyulariy. | tAversed bas been ample, It has beeu bri of the prize; and to this end every prize taken from an y by the light of international justice, expening clearly from — sbould be carried before the judge established by = ing to end the sacred iandmarke of dut: . mality, according to her discretion, to acknowledxe t! w Power will be the recognition of a 6, ce, eehnorledae begin: Deen frank, disguising nothing and tems signed, im order to consummate the unutterable degrada. Satin ale ell dae edt aga covernment de Cito | slop. ‘Te wan the ‘ate of Ldipus, ia the eaddest story of ring the ancient menarel . The antiquity, to wed his own mother without knowing it; sovereign of the captor.” But if the power, callit Shinubene dtany ton tions lentes dur court ope toite choice The aeclaration ot | but will wed the slave Powor with full keow: ) itself belligerent, cannot comply with this condition; if | %2 tbat you have boon able to s0e the perils to Rubetnore. Anew species of government on new principles is areal | ledge that the relation, {f not tucestuous, is vile. The | it bas no port into which it can bring the captured ahip, | Pub! 6 exposed from the natural tondency of Exons toe inepiration arian (hepeliien eédiarane, contracting parties will be the Queen of England and | and mo court, according to the roquirement of the British | War,ee exhibited in the examples of history , ea eee Apotber eloqiiont publicist, Sir James Mackintosh, while | Jefferson Davis, the rebel slavemouger patron of “repu. | Admiralty, with -‘a regular judicial proceeding wherein | ‘B¢ fatal proclivity of joreign Powers to intermeddie, Srent. 4 oh ha urging on Parliament the recognition of Spanish America, | dintion.”” It will only remain for this virsuous both parties may be heard.” it Is clearly not ina situa. | ¢xhibited in recent ioetances of querulous criticism or in. Sao ctnionat says—"Tbe on of a now State into the society of | whise pride it is to Justice always, to bend in pit ul tian to diapore of a ship of goods as prize. Whatovor | ‘0sive Propasition, all adverse to the good canse, while civilized nations by those sets which amount ¢ recugnt | abjecinesa to receive aa & plenipotentiary at hor Court the | may be it ferce in other respects, it lacks a vital ele nienoe ewe, ate, wen eemeurens, te Caareenle Oe tion is a proceoding which, as it has no lega! character, ca the Fugitive Slave bill, mento! ocean belligereney. In that semi. sovereignty commerce; then how the best historic instances tertify in A favor of freedom and bow ail intervention of every kind, is parely of amoral nature;” and he proceeds to argue ir Power will take its seat at the whether by proffor of mediation or: ine conte a. toleral . that since England is ‘the anciently freq State in | council board, to jostle thy und benches, while it ‘the world, for her to refuse her moral aid to ¢o>mmuni- | overshadows humanity. Its for attorneys, epee thes at hog (Asse perineal Act of unnatursl harsh. | slavery, will have their letter of licens> as the which constitutes delligerency on land there must be a provision for the admitistration of juatice, without which there is nothing but a mob. In that same sem|- ty on the ocean there must be a similar ” | that soulless anomaly a professed republic built on the Lord Ruse’ll himself, who was so swift to make this }, bas been led to comfens the necossity of pi ize courts on the part of ocean bell! ts, and ius to ex ere irrational character of bis own work. Ina let © the Liverpool Chamber of Commerce, dated Ist of January. 1862, occasioned by the destruction of British cargoes, the Minister says:—'‘The owners of any British Property, not being contraband of war, on board a federal vessel captured and destroyed by a Confederate vesee! of nations can be found than in the words of Vattel, whose | led and drawn away from the cause of Wilberforce and work, presenting the subject in a familiar form, has | Clarkson to sink into ueseemly Hance with the done more, during the jast century, to fashion opinion | scourgers of women and the of children. ‘on the law of nations thao any other authority. Here it | Alas! for that royal consort, humane and great, whose SrisAbeso. bo,surpandion ibes mapas intertal despatch by which: ga evil Wort, Pugland waa ere mal nm which, in an ev! é was wenn jaruiee Sates fons. [bey made to strike pends with rebel slavemongers; for the Feat of human society will anther! Pir igetar hed norte Be coxpuvie es iveqy po imes to the cause of cognition of embryo government of rebel slave mongers, on two grounds, firet, because {i co is pot in feet entablisbed; and impossible without criminal complicity with slavery and chastive it, To form and an} sion of ocean rights to thix hideous pretender bie when its influence tends to the establishment of sovereign! rece—and nese.” v Tecognition forthe sake | dors of slavery, to rove {rom court to court, over foreign | vision. It will not be enough that there should be ships | Dpelers and everlasting bondage of a we of freedom, How truly bo would bave repelled any re- | oarpets, talking. drinking, spitting slavery and poisoning | duly commusionea to take prizes, there must aleo be cialy bow reat Briain agcrtiy wogaged yall the ee the sake of slavery, lot bis life testify. that alr which has been nob): iced too pure for | courts to try them; and the latter are not less important | |), ‘inst tf h ble baseness; then how it, perhaps, no better testimony to the pract ce of | aslave to breathe. Alas! for d's , seduced, | than the former. imoage aguiaet any such anatteral sabe ogy all the Christian Powers, constituting the family of na- tions, are firmly bound to net thefr faces against any ro- Utrecht, crimson with the Diood of slaves, is not on. which gave to me, may, Seid ¢ with which it battles against wen if in fact established, its recognition is and lastly, how these same Christian Powers are firmiy bound by the same two fold reasons against any conces- unjust pretension §s to do 40 Injury not only to him who is interested in this | Rngland, vowed a ti the | war, may claim ina Confederate prize coart oompensa- Protension, but fo mock et justice in general aid to njure | A‘rican tace and Kit Dorpeteally by ber best renown 10 | tion Yor destruction of auch prope Bat if]thece be | len ree ot lice. or ws bord to beamecuish a saan. pote Copel Oxhions 83 he who de- | this sacred loyalty, now plunging into adulterous honey- | no prize court then justice must fail; and with this failure its 3 its wounds, ite funerals. But in this Keto thane monster ena atemnnrople—violates his duty. | moon with slavery—recognizing the new and impious | tumbles in fact the whole wretched pretension of ocean va eat Bade’ chnomace, We learn teen, chal ? @rthemselven the scourses uti horror ef the human race, | Protestantisns sgainat liberty iteelf—and wickedly be- | belligeroacy—excopt in tho galvanism of & Queen's pro. | jeagedto the doconce of our country, and in this sacred by its criminal clan, and ted by its | (hey are savare bea man may justly | coming, the defender of the faith, even as profersed by ] olamation oF a Cabine! conseHalon. ew it ig only be. | OAURE, fo crush slavery. ‘There is no alirrnalire. Slavery ieftaine—braves the clyilization of the age. | Si arelicion tend to i polenes aud to Opera rr all this 9 ok some exsoptioeal exigency fore, jartlosiar ‘cass, began'the combat, s rule or die, Thi must be no slaves; #0 that our own necurity is loked with the ‘redemption of a race. Blessed lot, amid the harshness of war, to wield the arma and deal the blows under which’ the monster will And fer all this sickening immorality I bear but | cause of some exceptional exigency in a particular case, ‘and pot according to any general rule: The general rule declares that there can be no right to take a prize, if there be no port into which it may be carried, The right Of capture and the right of trial are the complements of each other—through which a harsh prerogative is tal any recognition of this Power will"be a recog- | all those who will not embi said y whion of slavery itself, with welcome and benediction, | us to favor that roligion oF to « eeuiat ok still aad phy ig rereny map rting to it new consideration and respectability: and, | nce with its inhuman fol owe: ‘afety of T foreign nat! Beognics ' rebel” ole groree still, necuring to 1 Dew opportunity and foothold | Mankind invites them rather to entey Jnto nn -alliunce ba iMag MR sir o eenans® Sor the supremacy which it openly proclaims. faqainat micl a people: to revrees such outraccous fanatics, |“ 8 New Power. But hore is the preciso question, ancient da: the 10 diatiirb the publfc repose and threaten all nations, Vogiand is stil) in diplomatic relations with Spain, and in ys candidate was robed in : A surely fall! The battle is mighty, for into slavery has : Vainly o you urge this recogntti was only a short time ago in diplomatic relations with | supposed to be rounded juto the proper form of civilized | St a Petarar bile. nan.she cage aed Jn. tbe, 0°00 | abe CumIty OF Mallon. hie ity au expansive tora inte | Brazil, both pormittirg slavery: but these two Powers | warfare. Thore(ore every ship and cargo burned by the eoiere ihe, Beir of Ex... Fe pypietent: Soaks & Gadlieg satids. which" te 0h, hamamned avery. should | Which enters rurich of the refinements, amcnities and hos. | &7e NOt Dew, they are already established; there is no | captors, for the reason that they bad no port, testilles Ged, we have a tenacity of life, which will not yield Be robed in black while it conducts its grea! canvass and pitalities of civilization, and also something of the obliga. question of their recognition, por do they pretend to | that they are without that vital sovereignty on at once, But might will not save it now, nor time the ovean which is needed in the exercise of bel ligerent jurisdiction, and that they are pot ocean belligerenta jn fact. + more, all these bonfires of the sea cry out egainst that Power, which by @ precipitaie concession of x false belligerency fur wished the torch, As well invest the rebellious rajae of India, who have never tasted salt water, with this ovean prerogative, so that they too may rob and burn; a8 well constitute land locked Poland, now in arms for Independence, an ocean belligerent, or enroll mu either. That the whole war Is contained in slavery may be seen, not only in the acts of the national government, but also in the confessious of the rebel slavemongers, Already s were. 7 rane | national interests or contrary to-national policy or ques | {008 with bow Power, with slay with black, vield day fo night.” ne the ovtrace | tionable in morals, it cannot. be commeniat by any | declared * Wheee gospel iss ition of the claim to Holl property. in mar to eed | considerations of courtesy. “There is a paramount duty | "bose evangeliats are slavemonge.s, should be ances ‘way from the hneband: to ger the child away | Which must not be betrayed by a kiss. For the sake of | 1, the family of nations, If Ire! were io triumphant ie . toshut the gates of knowledge: to an | COmILY, Acts Of good will and friendship not required by | Tebeilion against the Tritish Quees, complaining of righte Boe Mineo ‘of another's labor Abd yet the | * AF@ performed between uations; but am English | denied, it would be our duty {6 recognize her ax an inde band 10 he ‘canvass, altbough al history | SOOrE Uae authoritatively dectar@i that this principle | devendent Power but i Lrwatd repelled. wich, the do. Proceeds cannet prevail ‘where jt violates the law of our | ¢!4 i a epte chal circa heal: tact 1 own country. or the law of nature the law of God;? | b¢ nothing less than a giant felony anda nuisance to the gis te votes ‘Of the Chrixtian Powers, “Iong be the tions of moral duty. But wherean act is prejudicial to found peariee eed, ‘There {4 uo reason ip any vg proceeds slaves throughout the whole rebel region “are and hence forward shall be (ree:”’ and, in order to give the fullort assurance ef the irreversible character of ths mbiime edict, be has further annonnced that the executive goverument of tho United States, juclvding the military 5 and on this adamantise ground it 4 world, then it would be our duty t sporn the infamous | tain Switzerland in the same cinas of join with Shakes " nthe - - Jaws: Darbarizes busivers: Divbarizes manners:barbarizes | ‘Aricrican slave, who lad fourd MiBKer of board of a | Pretetision, and no triumph of the rebellion could ebange | pair im making inland Bohemia a country with borpitable | $4 Bava wuthorition hereof, will ree guise and Fiewn, Andatil the candidate nrocecds. althongh, iv 1 | British man-of-war, could not be ized an awiave. | this plain and irresistible necessity. And yet, in the | ports on the ocean 4s enlightened commission has been constituted to po angscate. & bs. ie * | But the same principle would prevail t i. | face of this commanding rule, we are told to expect the ‘To aggravate this concession of «false belligerency the | 2 tee ee cine anwing freadinon can be best etn. tal yer tengo a a. tion of a new slave nation, recognition of rebel slavemoo; ships are ail built, rigged, wrmed and manned in Great | Couvider how these (hrink it ree tanal defence. And oe eset mabenuiak aaa op aed Vainly do you urge this recognition on.qibresson of | But an aroused public opin' he work's collected | Britain. 1t is out of British vak and Pritish tron that ecaay theqnce Of 20a 1, an matatne. poldters ofthe ‘ender their instigation and to advan e their provensions, | Peace. ‘There can be no peace founded on + and | Will’ and returning reason in England end France willsee | they are constructed; rigge! with British ropes, made Union, bave pat forth a dixetpline and a bravery not un formidable with British arme; supplied with British gun ‘aloud re. | {2 it that civilization is saved from this shock and the bers and navigated with British crews, Ro as to const: expeditio s, identical io motive with the presentrebelli n, | 22Y Fec-gnition isan injustice which wil tohave | tations themselves from the temible, setribution which wor fi ; het J ii eatical Jo motive withthe present rebelln. | Socoding through the vuiverse.” Yoo may | rthy of their fathers of old, when the prophet Jere minh said, “Let the mighty men come (orth, the Ethi- peace; but it will be only a smothered war, sooner or later must sui it, No Power can | tute in all respects a Britisa paval expedition. british | '™' * ; Sea brice, seo against Nicaragua, breaking the peace of | break ‘orth in war more direfil then before? e4 to | Cord to lift itsblr before wadkind and opealy vote anew | ports supply the place of rebel slavemonger ports, Brit | °P'aus Pores oisggramng gore egy A = Dited States - reatenine'the repose of me » Thos 1s every argument for recognitton repelled, | 8%d vatrammelied charter to injustice and craelty. God | ish ports are open to them when their own are closed. | (heir Mature, Dy eaear Of sanitary #tatis Segard anh Joferson Davie, Aud'set the candidate pra. | hetber it be under the sounding worde, practice of SE reewert eng We eel pucistekan Be signty | meoaiet totbibeee Srormekicg nesters coset ta sane tice acording to which, for every black soldier dis nations—comity of nations—or perce oF ‘towers alon, Loop’ wall agatan mighty } supplies, urnishiog everything need'ui—except an officer , « . wi Pty ee neon PY | not agatost any xuch shameful surrender. can utter ‘0 any appiteation for this unboly recognition. } exch of which is efeential to tho legality of theexreditio®: | (hat ot the white;by al. thes things, they have shown baleen ery everywhere throughout | it anplyi ciples which have been already sot | It '# simply and susteroly “No,” with an empasia thai | And yet there same ships. thus equipped. in British ports J (hat he wmiesby All thew, thinga Shes Wave, taint whether on Corus: assutniey t cannot be denied! that shall silence t and extinguish itself. And : ! Power argument and extinguish hope ry ship, which ie & vart of the floating territory. will ia free to use recognition. aerating that it is’ nex every | this proclamation should yo torth ewi(dy. Rvery &: ae OT rege Dera body of men tbat can be considered acommonwealth, bur | Moment of he itation 1 & moment of apostacy, cast chuckle axa oetson une aaa motlag from his lips» with the | nly «those associated under the wanction of justice and | 10K It lengthening shadow of dishonor. Not to dis- » forabe common good: that men “banded together for | CO°T9se is to enconrage; Dot to ‘biast is to biews, Lot this ith dlibasteriem in hin recorded jife, avd with | ine sake of systemal , simpie word be uttored and slavery will shrink away with mavery, Bring in bis herever it Bats au land oF Nanbweing "Wash avery: moceer of the —8 porpetual vi ered wo think that there bas been delay in repelling will surely obey the ‘rule of morality; the able canvass. ‘Is thy servant a dog that he septate tes Dettinger Seneeee” ane And never touching a port of the pretended governtion®, im whove name they rob and bura—being simply a rib takea out of the mde of aad contributed jo a stavemonger rebellion— the further parapor! of belligerency {rom the British goversment when in fact the belligerency does not exint. whole ing, Tron the iaying of @ kee! ina Britieh dvotyard to the bur flames on the oc-an, is a mockory of international and ap insult to a frieudiy Po ‘The cave is somotinies said Ethiopia ax ‘the most distant region of the earth, whore Ate the tallest, most beautiful and moat long Bational governmoot were less significant, all doubt is re. $ Fi} : ] = § new ; but it is new only ing ‘ta life and determined wo we may continue freemen there ¢ President, by proclamation, has anuonneed that the authority, was not entirely mistakea when he spoke of in lived of the bumnan race.’’ But even if these acta of the moved by rebel siavemongers, themselves who in Satanic ity, openly avow that s.avery is the eod and aima Of the government which they seek to establish, 80 that every blow which i# struck by them is struck for do this thinc?’’ Tt im not necessary to Be a hris- vm 4 , darkened by ‘a8 DO euch **purr @ provided aginst in ex. | Savery. Therefore, in battiiny against the rebellion we At fe sufficient to be ® man—in to detost and ee a vate ated glee ae ad tt at aaly hich | wan doomed to a perpetual cruie, Press torma.. It was nosantioipated. But, the principles Ra Gi Se writes Oils tlle feos webor ig of ans hooters, eae Seat om socuseed. Senate im. | Will not ea’ er Into an alitiance ‘to help the ungodly.” as- | POrt > wbich govern it are ag old as justice and humanity, i | By ang sign conquer, Such a wat i bot 10 any just senre cee acne eretone ‘ort intarustional lew thers | *Umi0g there things, every such member must reject np bf pony dang the ipterente of wibich belligerent rights are said 10 be | 4 war of subjugation, but a war of liberation—1a order to Boasts. opportunity f r vgndvas report by aa. patie ned reveasion whose declared Revell from par 10 ors they aie a ral, “ Kote all reversed, ond it nnip ihn ina ve the repablic {rom @ betty oligarchy of tak monsters rs 4 emrential’ tok low, . oe uel BesTetey, hat tera no noch ots tarainan, | Ean PHtere. taere cen ‘be no “nuwcton. "ine | ict Get aad mat tne at eet bee eae eee Ceca ves to ecb nation, precisely as the municipal law | cise ig plain: nor is any language of contumely Its view strange horror to the storm shall 4 feo wud iihumanity. Burting | or our yoiy war, And yet British statermen Jeaves to each citizen, what c mpany te fpergp: sed nt ba or #00rD too strong (0 express ihe ircepresuible | *® CONCE*ION CF OORAN MELLGRERNCY WirnovT 4 rae | ships and goattered wreck» are the witness ee af eral Gtotte sion —forgetiia Partnership toform. No company and no copartnersbip | raupnance to such a pretension, which, like view, ‘to be COPRT, RBAPRCIAILY TO REBEL SLAVEMORGERS i much & case is uot condemned raters. Hi no: de forgotten—zravely announce that ou ae be forced upon a vation. It ix all a question of free | nated gcede only to be seen.” Surely ‘there can be no Too much have 1 spoken for your patience, i not Iptervational jaw on this bead is ™ enough for the cauw. Bot there is yet another topic e-vatitation of she United Kiauen, which deoinres | Cimtrresistibie voice. "No ner erection & riavtee’? Re | woies | have reverved to the last, becuse logically I be- national law, thea has this law jost its “Virtue Coll auch craisers by whatever polite term most se the ear, and you do pot onange their character with thelr ‘Wut fail! Alege! individaa) wickedues: i* anccessful; but a pretended nation, suckiod f “New States may be admitted by the (oncres longs there, or at jeast it cau be best con: in the | name. ‘Without a bome and without a legal character, | S1N@S and boasting iis wickedness—a new todom, fete ibis Union.” Net muat, bit may, it being | terpdnwan No uew eucsuragetsent tr the whiteecters:. | gathered light of the previous discussion. Its immediato. | they are mero gyymies of the nea, who, by their criminal | iB al ee ee Sees te. bo siastes, fo the discretion of | Congress to determine | ongendered by siavery. 1 | Practical interest is great. I refer to the concession of | actx, have become disturbers of the common highway, Tater ° " | shail ve admitted Accordingiy. in | fone No new creation of Deligerent rights, Being the Grat stage to independence. | culms and enemies of the human race a countries boasting civiliztioa, & = i & ‘She exercise of this discretion, Congress for & loug time Nt Y < Creat Britain led ‘the way in theenbryo | But there ina it, which hows bow im aera ag Tefused admit Missouri aaa slave Suse. And now the | Bev'ar; yc imcaustimn of wlavery, as 8 new cicstization. | poverament of rebel siavemouge's ae on sa | it a fr 8 prevraerd Power, withost a slog ports tapes sone belligerent fights op the ocean, and how 4s for abip of such ower t be anyib! buts felon ship. Jemes I, of land, after he ceased to be de facto king, and while be was ap extle without « single port, undertook to seu’ intteve marque, |t was argued unanswerebly belure uke i’rty be Prace barbarous pleupoteutiaries erorodiles crawling on the pavements of (OF the earvivorous Mole of Afnies ia ip in Wostmiorter Abley aad Notre theatre, wiih monarehs to behold ibe ewelliug | tis 'ey wo Christisn were prevented Slavery, through the new Power, will take Ng yy Thad in the Farliament of maskind with all the = ery 4 u a0 judepeadent nation, rear, alwage exclude a pretended nation, | 4,” upno'd and advance itself, aod ccgunsena ts | with ts queation, ina more outrageous form. on a | vy ., 98 well as 00 laud; aud, by s proclamation of the Quewn Se aang Sevens! Rer.sen ie fees ¢. dectared ber neatrality between the two porties. ii» 2 place | lifting the embryo governmont of rebel slaremoncers whi was nothing else than organized and aggremive ery, YM en equality om sea as well aa on innd is ancient ally, the national government. Here jt ka which pot ite millions of slaves, but pas. relen' was a blunder if pot a crime—not merely in the alacrity | Cvoneil of William Ili. (hat, whatever J Bvaw if the republic ware lens strong, yet I ann giad to lead the perpetuity aud propagation of | Pawar neving itt inopeution is, wack a barker sa mud | with which twas done, but in doing itat all. [twas fo” | calms dejure of a doponod peipoe, be enukt* neh glove T8at tie! rebeli9a mur Yall, rtm tbe waren as tbe cause snd object of ite sepxrate existence. | 16 essentially barbarous. founded on the asserted right | lowed immediate'y by France, and thea by Spain. Ho! | {rom any other sovereign * ‘nabinnal p ferent ONS sDY Boch Wicked wuccess. ‘The rexpona! ical statesmen have always treated the question | 9 whip women audio sell children, it nvuet assume a | '80d and Brazt!. The concession of belligerent rights vn | ‘ hat. if be could grant & commission wo, tip the” Corman Towers would be incressed by pada plead one of Poliey—to ve determined OD | character of disgusting hardihood. aud, openty professing | nd was ouly a pame and nothing more, therefore | my | oi @ single nation. it would im, effect . hind our blockate there would ie case-—even whore the Power was de | & aetarmination to Tevolutiontre the publie opinion of the | Botbing about it. Hut the concession of bellizerent riguis | conse to plunder, because (ibe “bo were Vieckade; behind our armwiet there facto cxtubiihed, as a amply in the de | world, it must be in open schism with civilization jaolf, | 0 the ocean ts of a widely dillerent character, and the | s:oned would be their own Judge of wait yped Abe ‘ardused judgment of the civilized we % British Farhament op the recgl: | yy thai alk its inflacuces will be wild, eavage, brntal, and | {%0 Feasnus againat the reooguition of tbe independence «¢ | and that the reason ot the thing whieh prd Sgr ort on this account can we Spapieh A: we co vebind the practical | ai sey ‘Offepring kindred in character. 4 the embryo government are applicable atso to this co rubbers and pirates, wheu they tormed- themneeiyy Yi Qe time Wo stop. Forward! Forward Gatesmen and consult the earliest oracles of interna Cuswaid “ris com ion, Firat, the embryo governn @at has no maritine | a civil Bockety, became just evemier, pronounced bus de {Pathe formerly pleaded so often for peace, now tonal Jaw, we eba'l flud that, according tw their most ap- oddee to bathed sana tee alent or paval belligerent rights, de fart», and secondly, on | a king without territory, without power of protecting the | SouBd to Srins But it Ix because, iv this terrivie mo ‘words, not only may recognition be reiused, but Secs - . a < embryo government of rebel siayemon, eannot have | ineocent or pagishing the gotity,or many way o ad ment, there is no other way to that sincere and soltd Of duty this way which cannot |.* Ronit’ wietasend yrmage 2 nature, must be despotism | the character d @fucte which would justify the concession | voistering Justice, dwindied into a piraie If he issued | peace without which there will be endiees war. ven ou vated. it ie not enough that a pretender has the | st home, tempered only by assassination.” wite cotwa | of maritime or naval belligerency —so that, could the cou. | commimions Wo eeize the goods and ships of oalfons, and | economic grounds. it were better that this war suouid form of 2 Commonwealth’ “A people,’ saya Cvero, ina | fields instead of Siberia, while abrad it mast be | oe sion be vindicated on the first ground. it must fail | that they who took commissions (rom bim tupet be held | proceed rather than recognize any partite, whieh, be- GeBnition copied by most joriete, “is netevery b dy f ercmee, dangerous and revoliing, in itself ® | the second by legal tnference to have associated tgcelrris gaa’ and | gibuing with humiliation, mort Involve the perpetuation men bowsvever copgreguied, but a gathered muitituae, faguem ium, whore fellowship can have ‘The concession of ocexm belligereucy i# & letter of | could nO DeCooKidered as members OF civil ragiety,”” | Of armamente and break ut again in blood. fut there ix emmociated under the renction of juetive and for the com: ing bot fithiness of evil,” and whose very ex: | conse trom the conseating Powers to every siayemonye: | These words are strictly applieable to the present case | Something worre than wasle of mouey it ie want of axe good. "”— Juris evmensn of wlililatis eommimione soria. | Astence will be an intolerable nuisance. When Dante, in | cruiser, of rather it is the countersigu of there Powers ') | Whatever may be the force of the rebel slavemongers on | Character, Cire me auy perce bul @ libertinice peace. tus i he goes s0 far as to say, in the republic, | tbe vindictive judgracpt which he buriel against his own | the commission of every such cruiser, Whout «ich | laod, they are no better du thoorean than thevdepset | In ether days the immense ch quence of Horke stirred against a regicwde peace. Hut m peace fouled on the killing OF & hing IX NOL RO bad as a peace ed on the killing of Hberty nor can the sadde-txcenes of euch a peace be fo sud o# the daily life which i legalired by siavery A queen on the teaffold 16 pot so pitife! « wight a+ 4 wornan 00 (he auction binck. Therefore | may again Pi w UiOjuet, OF the aristoeracy, or the | Plorenes, calted it “bordello,” he did not wees term too | Cougveraigh the slav Ma v Commonwenith ie pot vicione, but | strong for the mighty hotise of ill fame which the moar oraiees _wonté.. BO he Jaw, with 00 right to enter @ single foreym port. The | claration of veliigerency gives to hin leg@i. compete and admits bim to teatl'y by flag and arto, Woitout such competency he could have uo flag, av bear arws oa the ocean, Burke soatenti prnce”—"without power of protecting the inmerent or Poutehing thé guilty, or ia any way Of adininu'ering ue Lice; amd, hike the prince, they. too. bave ' Iwindted 10 & pirate,''=except so far ex they may be mustalved by British recogmition. Aud there is yet muciher prevedent. which shows that ‘® commouwealth that wax null | Obristian Powers are now seked for the first time to Rt Grotiux, who speaks al- } license. Soch must be the character of the new Power. iatral voice of le«rning and genius, hat | But thongh only a recent wrong, and pleading no pre. Shen be presents the distinction | scription, the MMimitable andacity of {te uature will besi- iy i i i 53 f; i the just [F f (ing, have any legitimote existence” | the lame, saye the ancient prover mea, who being airesdy a recozwized | tate at nothing, ner je there any thing offensive or de | jax an ‘intermediate treaty which puts rey the appropriation 4 a capt red #bip or cargo, WikhOut uw orward: forward wealth, are guilty of evstematic erie, an, for | testable which it will not absorb into itself. It will be an | seasion of the law of nations,” And thie j plainly (roe | die! proceedings, i= pitacy. The sace te memurable. it 1 while thus steady to Our purpose at ty rout Smatance, of pitary, and another boty of men, who, not | Ishmael, with tt# band arninst every men. It will be @ ‘The maguitode of this concession May be reen in Lhree | 1) rome OLWer nan tbat of Lhe as Kidd, who, | @0t pegiect that proper m doretion abn bh ve g ized aa a Commonwealth, are banded together | brood of barpies defiling all which it Cannotet@!. It will | aspects: first, in the immunition which it confers putting | Cn bit indictment for pirsey. os long ago ae LNA, pro enpes the CmcURnEE of Gur nirenth snd the noble ike of of systematic crime—sevleris causa coruni | be the one ey Cyclop of nations seeing ou'y througt | au embrya government of rebel fslavemongers diced & conn im jo-tifeation “Bat it was at oace | Bess of oor cause, The mistaken symp thy which foreign ‘The initer, bv a happy discrimination. he places beyond | slavery, spurning ail as fools who do not see likewise, and | equality rouk established governments, makinx Gclared that ik was fot enough to show « commiasion | hOwert now bestow upon slavery —or ib may be the min We pale of honor oF felowship— vam bi criminis causa | dellowing forth in savage exotisen Cruisers iaweil wustead of piratical, nut opening t+ | he must algo show a conlemmation of the capt p taken ineoosihility. under the ) ible mame of neu geciantur. But whee before in all history have creaturer Laps are & race above them boundless facitities at sea aud’ in port, so that | The Lord (bie Baron of that day said that “ir he had | tality, whieh they profere—will be worn for then ‘wearing the human form prociaimed the crimimal prin they may obtain supplies knd even hospitality. See w acted pursuant to bie cnnmissvon he ought to have con | than (or oe For them it will be = re ora of shane 1 their atscelation with the audacity of cur slave ly, 10 tbe degradation that it fasieus vipou the navova: | demued ship and goods. that by rot condemning them ua | Shick their children would gladly biet out with tear showed bis aim, miw! aud jotenth a, and that he dia pot aed o Ps wit! be es y — » tbe fot i thal care by vir) 00 OF hin panies) B, bata cou tie roviiaton, where nie are pte. Rao that the declared principle of the pretended | stein—the wretched creation of mortal science without | and also the just rule Of “neutrality” between beniveremt | trary to tt That be lox ship utd cbared the money and | Mi get with open enemies. Fiver if (be crue ohall was & violation Of internations! Inw. Hminent | Got—endowed with life and nothing eise—torever racing | Powers called in to fetter its activity agoinst @ gisut | good, and was taken in that very ehip. wo that there ie no | Seem for a while umper ited from foregn Fuwers, yet our en have solemnly rated that. iu the devel | mudiy, the scundal to humanity—power/ul only for evr— | felony. And thirdly, it may be seen in (le dietorbance | color oF pretence tua! Le intended to bring Ibis elop to kag | Gatien are fone toe lem urge W the premure be 6 of cavitination, the wlave rade lat he | whone destruction wil! be essential to the peace of the | i» commerce which Iteanctious, by leliiug loose aw! * | land W De condemied or to have eudemued i. in any of | rR, the resistence mort be greater wy cam there be iiegal by & law higher thao apy «tarnt wor sem rovers, armed with belligerent rie «| the bogleh p me, afd that whilet men pareue y retreat, Come weal or eve ths i (Be piece for us ‘William Grant, ove the ornaments of the 4 Who caw consort | right of search—wheme natural reck their ormmiasions they must be justified hob when they | ™ 4. tah bench, whose clegant mind erverved always hiv? There te something loathsome in the idea. There | uridied, and without ony remedy even (ror do Uhings act authored of ever whended by them. it I know pet 0 ® repediie ithe cure . Prectical sense, adjudged tbat thie trade ern, a! It you live with | intercourse, The ocean i# » common highway, but Tusy had £O commiations. Captiin Kidd way | DO% Myon ide certain Friendabiy of wey Forotenm ovr geeat authority you will learn to | this acconnt it i for Uhe interest of all who alare it chit | condemmed to death and executed aca pinite. If te was | we It be the repabin of Wu » Mr. Justice =tory. ina re | limp: if you keep in the kitchen yoru will smell of | i: ahonid not Be disturbed by predatory hurts Lie » ite worthy of death, then, by tbe kame file, thos ” clome to the hewn wr declared himreli contizsined “in | smoke, H you touch piich “you will be deviled. But | a concession should be made with the yreatost otto. | rovers who bute ships, rob cargone and adore their | who forget lew agpioet the univeraa! Led ociety * Pan nl a, hm, wae if his pretead | and then only under the necersity of the ca¢, on ih rabing with tows of Klwlen cRronowelers, wikmit avy | #¥en im waiern W roa ay ae ieee oe ‘which are atrong againes any reong | ed Vo fout as ite breath: what why nity at of for. from bey i | pretence of mn Keele werthy of | ma Republi iw or om be change al at he vane Wede are curune aite aghines ony re. | pitch oo dediiing ap its t pe Aeiry oy J ads ds ya ggg poe g atl i id we ehall doit. Our nue | example = wh? tie an Orientat sine a That a clelern Of rose water 10 end, it te # 9 SuetlOn Ot faa wdactniely vor deat on those cond tions and prerequisites « ovean belligerency canpot exint As a gnooral rule hetligereat rights aro covoie! only whore & rebel government, or evpteniding party 0 9 war, bas acquired euch form amd bly that fer (he & being, within certain limites ia sovereign | (« far ot least o8 te comand woope and to ae unleier © tee, The eonorssinn of bell y We the recognition of eed Hovitat wove iy, wi bears the fame rel become impure nomavaty +. 19 tbe determ nation of | dog be dront (uo it bata continent of rose water with hat ery, oF the slave trade, | rebel slavemongere would be chanyed into a vulgar pud- @niatiog international law. [i | die. Tmagive, f you please whatever in mont disgueting , ording tothe spirit of fhat | and (his protended Power it more ee ei Nato empress, crowning good, re- | ratinte report var the pike wit 9 TeBing except i, and im? to hone conimanding | ite trad. bul ths \f cannot do. The experiment hes beeen vue wh Pat without pow conmdering mare criteally what | Thue far #e bave been Know thowid be the fate OF theo Ocean leamdiaries. oF what the reapapatilities of Enyiand, oat of whow thay came | content myself with the concivsion that Umy are oot entitled to *eap be'ligerency papstetne, vou ut oven i reve! siayemaugere congt'ated ww embryo fh remurees Of 8 4 bepyy te Gniver sovermment, dave arrived at thet eemi povereiyuty de | f8! ulrabchignmess, Mt will be mere thin «omy eel OF the cea wbich Justiow reer oh bile e yeat for fis power, nattag tow miente for per@at rights, yet the hr giao Powers eheod lodiguant 7 mnphent over the celine to witle the sevomubon, baceres they epes: Lietet—atier (Be biowdient war ever wagedit wil Know wt the repubtie betty Bivetet iY, Which cannat be wet | fried, dod, though the leh, im ite yormeity, alwars gulps ‘of Suntice and harman without 8 thock to buman natore iierif, we foul | hate or Lirown fo it, yet invarial sh it epewe thie a oe slavery @20 sereive no voluntary sup | Hvinance from itr rot tour slavemnonger preven. acknowhagot a8 griniie Deure to bon. et the commonwenith of cations {tie | som is worse than the (nad, and yet there are foreign na | jt i abyie owh st de fecie m.| wae aghiclty @ith a chamne’sl crime. Here! avo | DO Mapmiy Of right and the beauty of p frepered eet 8 question of law, hut & guration Of my. | lions which, instead of rpewing It forth, ere sirewiy ice wisheut ontoteg as fede om phony way pee dames oe Ayn has that Sm - en ot | wage to ophetd the on , othe othe warty. The rule of is oometing: Jers cota } turning it)'ke a precious morrel on the tongue, Vail i armies aod yet fail in Baview. iu short. tue fot | (oot and feanon—every whisper Of aeC#oee aud { “trong te ite own mighty stators “ah a ES rooney. the role of morality, so shat the laiter But there te yet another grownd on which § make | may be one way on land and theother wuy on the ocrno, | ty—every jadignans outburst of aa honest man ega ner Whe Oilares of & new life ang covered with & panepty of positively condemn what the or can It be inferred om the vgeap winply [rm ity the reougnilion Of rlavemouger indevendonee equrty | TOHOWE, It wil! comfort that po domition It of aloe w this appeal ft ie ® part Of the triuimpha of civ qatee But within ite own domain tbe rule of Riration that eo mation own act for Meet be jar authoritative than tho rule of taw iteoli, | Whatever jt dors fr good Cad daw of nature and aleo | Ge reat There ore @ pation athea taauher we | gations 10 others. Kaycoaly olerdational law, eonfere ite binding pow: law S080, i | when A deyiares of Stepeadens na. } reason implanted in nature, which prascriheas | tone Cast Ypon all nations the duty of Considering well welfare = LJ of deat wut cOotribote to Dunaas happiwess. Born im tht latter day and the child & ite Own Biroge'te, withwor ancetiims Cala, bub bolt of al Ihe seem wil gtund forth to aenort \be dignity of maw, Abd wherever any member of the homes ‘any i be enteoret there i+ voice whl reach aa (be woice of Cromwell reareet vorm Vrawce, CVeR bo (Le penne tad foguptaiooers of Back Ah be (he repebi—ayet@et amore the rte Aye, an the eieate angise, the Lemgtarh 04 hirtorw are wpetart, Comforter hod belver tee (eee r Beow bo bunds to te Crnpere OTeT A Fling wd ht Abe Regt loge @ ihe death f wavery Mr, Pacers todience oe & mem © Tre dry 1600 Dai ie Fag. | hamiaatic me TVErY corner of ibe vast err Delimereory Cherien eKh | OVER the Mark remote, wae oboe! Wh F Of Mavery, oo bat the wb bee men an catension |g eh tien war woccwuly leree The epenker herr iory oy Wet ink Concemmeon. a receive ate id tah gach a rosaries 8 eo \ithed to thy, SOOT DO OpROtEd, wan received with nproniove aione for evil affects al. nnot forget lie oblil once om the teed. Binet every wach conor wo! ‘vorre to the original government, nd is m the necareity Of tho cane, ub must be careuiy hirnile! to the acwwo! fret. ledeod Mr, Canning, who hae eed #0 much light ©@ there topior, openly too ibe gronr | that’ délligerency i@ wot Oo much a prigeiply ota fa! | And the question Son erines, her eb! ala my ogere have arn sueh @ de facts sovereg Ay om Lue ornad a@ entities (0 ocean belligeren! 1 sl Phage: pp oY ee patent lo a rst, tbat the rebel slaw vo not a mina’e pork into ‘which oven egal rusers’enn tte. iver prises ('t Adjudication, ad secondly, that the #b) 4 which now Prememe to exereme ocean belitgerent rigit* ther hame—oonetituting the rebelakivemouger navy, whic» met. ber OF the Fritinh Cabjoet an be arented’'— | wore al) Herented?” in ma, from whien (hey eally forth on the. strong againet any conecmsion 19 cman Deiligerency, lo Jeod seb Cunconmt ty i* Lhe halfway bonne to recognition ihonn be made o.ly where » vation ® ready, 0 toe fact Of independence be fal clontly eMabinhed. to ae knowledge !t, a8 (he princwle of Vulte'l that “ whineever ban @ right 6 (be sod beg aright t (he means,’ Bub + is equally clear, Gat where a waiton, on rounds of copecience, mont rela (ke reoremition OF indapendence, ik taomt conced y. for where ine end is forb the mtaot matt be forbidden Vso, fw the Wiogions abaurdity of aby fick concession by Creat Britaio, #0 porto { Glvayt agavet slavery, ne AAEM the dso ated pre rack becoree doobiy apparent t <3 which ought to be dove forbidn the | how thie privioge rls)! be Dostowed, wo that ibe ‘This law ir an ereential part of intorpational | of ali may be bert upheld, Bat ihe whole family of na. ‘twaleo (br toni, eel and, where treadies (aj) | tour would be waded by adn. ting the new preten- silent, it ia the ovly Inw betwoan natioas, | sion ail Ca and qountrwe Rave delightet to | cum 7, twleration, mach ies to any eyuaiity. There reason for much admimion,for it caw bring withority it s0ke only im | Rofting to the general weal. Civil only ix created for cry emai) vole of 60 x a ne wareny bad wameaniy. Seuese come wether ud fra. Role in, Gor Own day—Sevigny— nine commoe good. Hub thie halefur protem. whores name dencted by the mtodenta of jorm pad Cn civil nowety at ‘me or 4 iw relations with eneh other |) can when ree that ‘thi Bherw no Fitl® 1 FecogNiion, Bo paseport for jue travelm, Gn) LAKIONF & COMMON COnET ions ese” Tight be Old creation. Tt igall new: and here let me borrew the langoage of Rorkeom another aveasion —''1! te nots new ava ne ectakory Or one without core entering @ port of ther own pre a} overnment. which t« condemned its ebipe treated might be On grounds of reacom and an | Or worse stilt, it will be the sourlees monster of Franken fons vanity with the ships of rebo! slavonongt . a0 Of Kied. it ie a new powor of 4 new wpocion. | povernment, Ci * a ae. : ! iqhte Yo im plintform whence he Sd0r@ed (be nemem , he, Ube admivied | "These two “fect? axe different in , o tere | So pa op Sag Ee oy ‘. ‘Seen w the role of into the br ot Christendom, 1s | auischap-abentetety to Whe prerended Tower, rendering’ cise onewermmieataae aun Tabane te the IB Sos godlike Ml ale eurleety to cons) ler bow iar | ievcrnpetent Wo eRAreem Detligercat urisliciion om the qaine to Mam ord treaty. wPich snantian the Tepebtienne of thie chy, wiih » spridtiing here an6 there Myr} of law in thie ave altinble with the rest” Fhe greatest | icean, ThE second wAtnches to the indiyhionl whige cent Beg @emen as they foot Of pore te of riher poliveal opin aman ‘Matida; the pubitmest of all sess | rendering them pitutienl, Rut tuere rin te aml ones trade Wer proteriet . ‘The tacet bovediers crthor arm serined te seme the pT, ca force. compened of math Be indevendent | onshie “facie are ihe Bey lo lk ie prement que bah @ulyeels. | mee bo om : a Cd Ca in the bowda of peacefutfraier | rien. been second by the femreetnw nedanee oben Mir of ented) Onr renee wih Pad ree WP PRT Be reve orem the renee of Ube whee Deere caw b6 te ocean bet commeree. Luk koe tht the fngines Aad Brence. ile belay ndywonted (he amity and 3 integrity of the republic, and declared that the Praperor Of the French stall nevor be able to dictate tarms to thie Country. When ne spike of the possibility of Mreace elaing Texas anc adding " 4 the empire whch the Emperor proposes to inake permanent im Mi 0, loud cries of “Never, ney wo (row all partk of tbe house. An intelligent viteriy lady near our reporter quietly remarked at this juncture, © Hanks wil! got there before him.’” There aro no particular incidenis arising out of the ad dress to be recorded. The © wilh bie usual fluevey interest of hie hearers never abated. (im the conclusion of lw addroms he was loudly applauded, and a number of pe the opportunity to be presented to bim, CHATTANOOGA. General Crittenden’s Forces in Possession of the Town. mn Wook General Wood in. Command of the Place. THE HASTY RETREAT OF THE REBELS. The Union Advance Threatening the Georgia State Road, Ben, Reo ae Crrorman, Sept. 10, 1663. Aspecial despatch from Newton, Ga, September 9, At twelve o'clock to-day General Crittenden took peace- able possession of Chattanooga. General Wood was put io command of the place. ‘The principal portion of the rebel infantry left (lattes Booga yesterday morning, their cavalry rematoing tlt this morning. The headquarters of the department will probably be at Chattanooga to-morrow. The rebels are in rapid retreat; but our combinations are gach that they can hardly get off with all their forces. They are cutting down trees and using other meane to obstruct our farther passage over the mountains Our advance threatens the Georgia State road, which io the rebel line of retreat. IMPORTANT FROM ARKANSAS. The Evacuation of Little Reck by the Rebels. THE AFFAIR AT BAYOU METOIR, he, dew ae. Leavarwonrs, Sept 10, 1663. ‘The rebels have evacuated Little Rock, and removed forty miles to Fort Washington, which they are fortify ing Cmcuvani, Sept. 10, 163 A apecial despateh from Huvail’s Biull, dated Augues 20, states What Genoral Davideon moved gn the rebel works at Bayou Metoir on the 27th, and after an evgage ment of one hour and a quarier succeeded in driving the rebels from thelr intreuchmens. The engagement was conGued to artillery and eherp shooters firing from under cover, The rebels bud three \bounand moo and three pieces of artitiery. They reyeated across the river, burning the bridge be bind them, and took up @ strong position in the woodr, on the west side of the bayou, where their ebarpehootern cat pick Off any person approaching the east bank ‘The bayou canmot be cromed without ponto ins im the morning Biel Correspondence. Heanguanpens, A wore, Wa ‘There has been brisk #eirmishiog for peverat day+, the rebely invariabiy getting the wore of Rathor @ sharp engagement took piace on the 27th a6 Bayou Metoir, nine miles thie ride of Little Kick. between 4 lurge cavalry and infantry force of rebel and tmwd son's cavalry division A prelimimry copamement o¢ ed 04 the 26th, bat did Bot renuit to much Fither way AN daylight oo (he 2idb Col wet Glover, command ng the Union (orcer, ordered a reo mmoimance, (he result of which was the discovery thit ahont sie towed of the eoemy were posted to the eize of the woods in (rom Seirmivhing tminetiately bogey and soon «@ generei eo Eogowent wee io progress. The euemy fonglt hercely but were suocemsively driven from their fret and ser ood Positions, and into thelr rifle pits on the est pide of the iayoa Metuir flere they were permed to remain til about one Mi, whea General (over ordeveda ree, and they retreated rapitly a ibe briige, which iber lred. A gallant allot wee made to nave it by the Piert Obi» «¢ + Colonel Anderson but the fire had eo much headway in ot be pus and in & few minuter the bredge fel wo the boa, Tie Voten forces wore mponed wholly of cavalry, wiih the exception of two fu'l UAlle ins aud tao sections of avother, Thore inne deme Usat the rebels old howe been chased 10 the nouth ede af the Arhanes e i cor forces bad bern eypported by infantry but wt nore thas su aru nieoted, and whew that was ina © ordered the withirawal of his trope to the positon (hey cooupled on the previous aay Onur ens on the Zin wan emven killed aod thirty Ove wounded Among the late or Company A, Vir 1 Kavanaugh : The rebel cavalry wen cur Yeambe Walker, a brother. | belive, « wher Private Mecretar yn! Pre iien\ Po muy wae ntier Command Of General Prive It # believed that the rebel (ree arouud Li‘te Mork tome nek pow exceed Ofieen thonewnd bet that Lean be largely iocressed saan ie @ comjeiure whe ne Tee od fog. however, fomt over ttle Rvek at an eeriy day IMPORTANT FROM JAPAN. the Trewbie—¥ ee Kapeeted, Ac. hae Pe rcom a) Ry ‘urther accounte |i eppente that the Japanese errtment hat aiiomplet w avoid war w hearing A only puld OM the indewniy 4 dea by Fagland, but aloo mate a Qatistectory apoony bul thm dinpleneed the iammoe, Cincem emt © ee tent theomghoel the romntry - rriery shone the Mirelt of Sirmowrk), te the or « Mace foccveniy Cred comm bie fon ve shige of ve then Cent pened Ve bat ae feo tener supe wor veurela, Sith hevry gute, whe aitht (he forte mm the attagy. Thome are be rtuenls tuppeewl io bere bern deairoye’ by the Ab the talent one eo gems, onder Aime: Kenper ae strat eau) fam tbe MO OF Hirt ote tis furiber ctated Veet the Princes of Magot) done met cape tor ter ah be wnurnner \bat neurty t 2 oll sme . Te es The larger Are of raat y yours Wook phabe 4 A thet We sobs vert ame Penetiat, of Ulevelents O, Th Bute we A North, of Wathinewn ‘4 » ©, Marek, Mo tom, of o ¢ Fremeery, @ Welvumere: 8) Pract. of me f Hoyih eh Mew Yor, ar Weve Cavt, Gehan HN.. Vngiaed Tiewt Crete » Hatass, Wm, W. Crewe aoe! fom a KY. Press wad © fe mA fond, 3, 1. Mowe, Mien tala " Loum, |e qiabi Cart © tabin set oy, © ae chow peng 6h (Mt (Re reretee sete