Edited Text
- He Co
POETRY.
5°) (From the Edinburgh Witness.)
âTHE CHURCH.
A voice on the hills of Scotland!
A voice on the'batren heath!
A stirring of the martyr dust
Phat dieth underneath!~
The good old cause is owned again,
» As in the days of yore, ,
And the Banner of the Covenant
Streanis of (he storm once more !
» Wer hail thee! ancient Bannerâ-
*Neath which our fathers fought!ââ
âThy very stains are sacred,
From their true-heart-stream caught!
Once more we rally round thee,
Our holiest and: our best
Nor let a standard bearer faint,
*-. Until we reach our rest !
Not ina quiet haven 4
The bark mast hope toride,
"That bears the gospel freight of peace
Oâer the worldâs adverse tide!
Notto! earthâs sinile atid sunshine
The Church of Christ must cling=-
When did the usurperâs minions love.
The children of a King ?
On through the barren desert!) â
On âneath the worldâs dread frown ! .
The thorns that strew our pathway oâer,
Fell fromâour Master's crown!
Beariug the vessels of our God,
Striving beneath His eye~-
Oar beacon be the â Burning Bush
Our record is on high ! :
aS 1
THE RECENT EXPOSURES OF ROYALTY.
â foolish game, but the manner in which the Royal Faniily of
Bngland commits itself is really most extraordinary.
Phe Duke of Cambridge has demanded a dowry of ÂŁ3,000
a-yéar foy his daughter, whe is about to marry the Prince of
âMeckletiburg Strelitz. The most vile mind, to which nature
ever gave the powers of a depraved imagination, could pot
form a conception of a demand more outrageous than this.
âPhe little, paltry, dirty principality, has no trade or manu-
factures, and is completely an agricultural country, of the
âsmallest extent and of the meanest poverty. âThree thousand
-pounds sterling a-yearâ would buy up any six of its richest
nobility; and if our countrymen are to be taxed for the sup-
âport of the Duke of Cambcidgeâs danghter, as the sovereign
Duchess or Princess ofthis little, vile, out-of-the-way, nook
âlexcept one high-spirited noble s
â| Ffrench presided.
| principal topicsâ
| Saxonâ enemies; heâ sai
.| England; and
ââ
pension was éranted in
and with which it litera
had with the last Epsom or
George HL, who were so pro
meétit, were the veriest spectinen
lly had nothing mor
âAscott races. All the sons of
fusely provided for by Parlia-
s of servility to the Crown,
on, who was from first to
ft is useless to pursue such
last, provided for most scantily,
a disgusting speech.âDispatch.
OâCONNELL AT ATHLONE.
A gféat! Anti:Repeal Demonstration took place on Sunday
the 18th June, in the vicinity of Athlone, which was attend-
ed by a great concourse of people, who conducted thenm-
selves in the most orderly manner duringâ the day.â Lord
Mr. O'Connell's addressâ embraced to a large âextent the
whieh he had introduced into his uddresses
ut other places. Spexking of the successive steps of the ill
âusage the frishâ people had suffered at theâ hands of their
dâThen caiie Wellington of Water-
Joo upon them. © (Groans.) Was it on the 18th of June they
would groanhim in that way? But Wellington well knew
that it'was'not the red coat that made theâ soldier daring, but
the native bravery \of the Irishman, who âwas as vrave 1 a
frieze coatias he âwonld'be in ared one. He began by
threatening them with civil war. âThen came Peel with the
bsame âthreat, °' Honest Boby, however, told a fie upon the ov-
casion. His defiance hadâ caused theâ Duke toâ draw in his
horns, and Peel to shrink out of the scrape. The Whigs
had proinised much, and undertaken, to do much, but they
placed a confidence in them which they did uot deserve,
and he now. told them that, no change of that kind would
drive the people of Ireland from their determination to have
a Repeal of the Union. He would .put Whigs and âTories
into a hag, shake it well, toss them ont, and from first to last
there would be found no friend to lreland. among them. -Ire-
andhad: but one friend, and thiat~was herself (Cheers.)
The Morning Chronicle, the orga of the Whigs, said-itwas
quite true that it might be usefit to Ireland to have a separate
Legislature of her own, but that it would not be useful to
â | that therefore they shonld not have it, Would
they abandon - their agitation for repeal on that ground ?
(Cries âof âNo.â) The same paper said, if the people conti-
nued their struggle, they were likely to obtain all they want-
ed in the moment of Englandâs weakness. He thanked the
Chronicle for the hint... Jt contained a strong tewptation to
them to pray of an afternoon âmay, England soon be: weak
that we may carry repeal.â (Cheers and laughter.) Fle de-
nied that his object wus Catliolic: ascendanéy, for there did
not live a man more decidedly opposed to it. He consider-
ed it-would beâ bad for the country and much more worse
for the religion. _He was'tdo well satisfied with his priests
asâ they were to expose them to the danger. of Castle visits
âand-corner principality of Murope, actually one-tenth of the
money would have been amply sufficient., But it.is:not to
the amount, butto the prineiple.of the grant which the Queen
claims from the Commons that we object. $
_ The Duke of Cambridge is said»to-be the richest and mean-
ânestâman in Kurepe: â For about 22 years he'was oti Vice-
«roy of Hanover, enjoying ai immense revenue, which ought
to have goneâto the mitigation of Britishâ claims on that
âgountry, which has ever been a mill-stone round our necks.
âDaring this very long period he_kept receiving his immense
âEnglish allowances as Duke of Cambridge. . Be it observed,
that these enormous sums. of English money were spent or
~ââhoarded in a country where sterling is at least fout times |
the value that.it\is of in Ragland.) The Duke of Cambridge, | hour in improvements, to register tose improvements in|
â not content with keeping âthe -rank of Field Marshal, was the Clerk of the Crownâs-office every year;'so that when the °
made Colonel of two ofthe most âprofitable of all the âregi- | {
âments in our military service, and though residiig in Hano-
vor as its Viceroy, and consequently unalile ever to set eye
uponleitheriof theseâ regiments, he kept'receiving the Colo-
nelcy profits. In addition to this, though resident in âHaro-
ver, he retained the Rangership of Richmond Park, with his
apartments in Kew Palace. dt is impossible to conceive a
greater concentration of impudence. Can a case be carried
to greater-extremes of guilt? Oli yes, it can, at Jeast when
Royalty is concerned. This immensely rich Duke of Cam-
bridge has had! butâ three children âto maintain. . His, eldest
s0n, at the age of only 22, has just received the valuable ap-
pointinent of Commandér-ib-Chief of the fonian Islands, avd
now that the Dukeâs only marriageable daughter (the youn-
gest being a chilil) is to be married to one: of the most petty
ofall German mendicant Princes, the Duke has the shame-
less avatice, the indeceney, the profligacy, to muke his niece,
the Queen, fix'a burthien of ÂŁ3,000 a-year uponâ our Working
classes asa dowry, to this immensely ric lady on her mar-
riage. | Ee
Phe Dake of Cambridge himself married from Hesse-Cas-
sel, a petty Langravate, the whole population of which does
not amount to one-half of that of London. _ This is-the, way
our ighorant, credulous, and spiritless countrymen suffer:
themselves to be victimized by all the paltry paupers of
Northern Germany that choose to call themselves Princes
or Dukes. : Paka
Two sources of reflection arise from these facts :âThe first
is, that our Royal Family ought to be allowedito marry ge-
nerally throughout the Courts of Europe, andiamongst our
own subjects. Infamous religious prejudices oblige our Roy-
al Family to pick up the most beggarly wives and husbands
in the rookeries of North Germanyâthe refuse of Europe.
âThe plea is, that of Protestantism, a most expensive 1sm; and
the veflect of this narrow circle of intermarridge is toâ pro-
duce madness and idiocy in our Royal family. During the
middle ages evils arose froin Royalty intermarrying with the
subjects, but now nosuch evils areâto be apprehended. Let
the vile Royal Marriage Act be repealed. It was passed by
res Ik, and has proved a disgrace and curse to us.
My second point is, that our Royal Family ought, like
other people, to pay for the births, educations, marriages,
and burials of their own children, Why âshould theyâ tura
the Exchequer, or Treasury, into a sort. of'national, work-
house, and palm upon it all their offspring as State paupers?
Ve give our Princes immense incomes under the most fri-
volous pretences. Next we throw into their way, under fie-
» titious systenis, and in the plea of oldâ prejudices, large col-
lateral sums. Surely, ander these cireumstances, each
Prince or Prineess ought to provide for the birth, education
or marriage of their offspring. Sir Robert Peel says, that
this marriage will incur additional expenses; let the rich
parents provide for them. Ifthe husband is too poor, which
he unquestionably is, to support a wife, let the marriage be
prevented ; but. certainly do not let.our Princes âand Prin-
cesses be perpetually marrying foreign paupers, and then
come on our working classes for incomes, on the plea that
they cannot maintain dignity or support: their ehildren. In
every case of an English Royalâ marriage, England always
pays and: never receives. It matters not whether the Eng-
lish marrying person he male or femate, for, in either case,
England always pays for both parties. ifthere is a contract
for payment to England, it is. never fulfilled. For half a
century it has been held that the marriage of the last Duke
of Yor was, in point both of morals and finances, theimost
extrayagantof all infamous espousals; but, in the present
case, it is impossible to dispute that the present Royal mar-
riage is, of all others, the most contemptible... .~
The reigting Grand Duke of. Mecklenburgh . Strelitz
has had a pensionâ of ÂŁ2,000 a-year out! of oir taxes for forty-
five years, tnerely because he was nephew to, Queen Char-
Jotte.| Itâ was granted by thatâ precious hrish Parliaihent
whieh Mr.OâConnell would wish to restore. Sir Robert
Peel declares that this pension was given to him for a loss
of territory in siding with us in the;revolutionary)war. This
is an utter falsehood, for Napoleon. conquered this wretched
territory many years after the Anglo-Irish pension was gran-
ted. At that period, 1798, the whole territory. was not. worth
ÂŁ2,000 sterling a-year, A ie
There are private estates.in England larger than this most
despicable principality. . The whole revenue of this Puddie-
dock nursery of our Royal Family never exceeded 126,000
" rix-dollars, equal to about ÂŁ21,000 sterling; and when our
infamous pension was granted, its reveiuie was much less,
We have therefore paid for 45, years a,pension equal, annu-
ally, to one-tenth of all the taxes and:revenues of this pau-
per rookery of Princes. âThe Prince would have glasdly.sold
us the whole of his territory. for, ÂŁ2000 a-year; and: yet Sir
R. Peel has the shameless face to tell Parliathent\ thatthe
and Treasury. money,,.. With, regard . to fixity of tenure, he
wished to explain that by it he meant that no landlord should
be.entitled to. recover: rent,unless, he inade a lease of 21
yearsat least... No lease, Mo rents (CheĂ©rs.)- âThen the poor
man would not be afraid of being turned out: of his cabinâ
next May. It might be said that the landlord would put too
bmuch rent m>the lease: > For that he was not without a cure.
| The Ordnance Sarvey had made a valuation of the land, and
he would not allow the rentto be any higher than that valua-
| tion.â Ifthere Was no Ordnance Survey,-he would give what
| the tenant required upon registering his votleânamely, whata
solyent tenant, would give. for the land... He would give
power.to eyery occupying tenant who. laid out money or la-
21 yearsildase'had expired, the landlord: shouldâ toss up and
payin money'the price of his improvements, or grant him a
new lease of the farm. They might in that case build_a bet-
ter house for their pig than they now lived in themselves.
These were the solid and lasting fruits he anticipated from
Repeal. He wanted first.3,000,000 of enrolled Repealers.
(Cries of âYou'll get them.â) Wellington gaye.a:man a shil-
ing when drunk to fist... His (Mr. OâConnellâs), men listed
when sober, and jaida shilling. . The contrast was great.
While.prices were broken down in England, and the agri-
culturists in a state of distress, Ireland) was.pouring in her
ÂŁ2,000 (and to-morrow he expected: nĂ©ar ÂŁ3,000) aâ week.
(Loud cheers.) In>civilization Ireland exceeded every other
country on the face of the globe.â The virtue of ber daugh-
civilization, and theseâhe claimed for them.; Iftheir enemie
âWhiy, they were enough to take them in their arms and
throw them. into.the Shannon..,, But he would. ecatry repeal
as he carried emancipation, without violating! the law,
mitting an offence agaihst morality, or shedding one drop o
human Slood!) Would theynot meethim again if he wanted
them?» [Loud âcheers, and cries of *Yesâ]. He might wa
them, again; but he did not think England would be.m
enough to:'refuse their demand. âShe was: the weakest
f
dissatisfaction in Ireland, and if she wanted, strength she
had only todo justice, to Ireland.. The hon.and. learned
gentleman concluded with a glowing eulogy upon the beau-
ties of the river Shannon, to which [he wound up by saying]
a Saxon river, Was no. more! to, be compared thanâ the water
of.a dunghill to. a living wel He retired: amidst several
rounds of.enthusiastic applanse.
Several speakers then addressed the meeting.
The meeting then separated, giving three cheers for the
Queen, O'Connell, Lord Ffrench, and repeal, the traders
and inhabitants of Athlone, refurning to the town as a pro-
cession withsbanners and music, Mr. OâConnell-and friends
bringing up the rear. A number of the officers and soldiers,
and also several Jadies, located, themselves at various parts
of the fortifications and barrack walls to witness âthe return,
FROM.LONDON TO BOULOGNE AND B
Ifany one had told you a few m
ago, that in thispresent mo June you should rise from
your bed in London, breakfast on the sea-shore in England,
lunch inâ Boulogae;spend a few hours there, and have a good
laugh at the Napoleon monument, and yet. that you should
bĂ© back inâ London at such an hour, that (if you were a man
-of fashion and hada patient stomach) your dinner would
just be ready for youâif any mamhad told yot this, proba-
bly. you would have. set hint down asâa) Bedlamite, orâ the
projector of some Joint-Stock Aerial Ship Company. | Ne-
vertheless; on, Saturday; JunĂ© 24th, this:impossibility âwas
conyerted into a fact; the journey so indicated was perform-
ed with so mueéh ease as to renderit not a fatigue, but actu-
ally atrip of pleasure. sg Bear ae
At 6oâelock, a special train, containing the Directors of
8, or even a few weeks
the South-Eastern Railway Company and their guests, start-
ed from the London-bridge station, which arrived. at Folke-
stohe temporary station, a distance of 82 miles from town,
in two hours and 40 minutes, having stopped at five-stations
by the way. In Folkestone harbour the Water Witch
steamer, commanded:by Captain Hayward, was lying ready,
alidas âsooi dĂ©theâ different passengers could be got on
board, she âstarted forâ Boulogne. © Aiiong those on,, board
the vessel wis Mr. Justice Haliburton, the celebrated âSam
Slick,â whose âpresence alone wasan augury that all, would
âgo ahead,â HHS
âAs the day was remarkably fine, the voyage! acrdss' was
very-fine, and but a few suffered the horrors of being tossed
in Neptuneâs blanket; to most on_ board the trip .was ove
of enjoyment. Perhapsthe shortness ofthe voyage might
aid in this; for it was inâless thanâ three hoursâ from the
time of starting from FolKestoneâthat is.to say, at a quarter
past 12âthat a confused sound of niultituditious chatterings,
and a startling exhibition. of. gesticulating figures in,naval
uniforins, satisfied ius that we, were. within siglit and: héaring
of the harbour, of Boulogne.. By balf-past 12 all the! passen-
containing the debates in)Parliament of the previous night,
was presented: by the chairman of the directorsâto the asto-
nished authorities of the place who had come down to the
pier to meet their English âvisitors. ee :
«iif 'FolkestĂ©ne âhadbeeh cousiderably excited, Boulogne
(owial Weraly.
consideration fora loss of territory; }
e to do âthan if
ters and the religion of her sons were the highest-orders of |
s 0
attacked them, he knew who, would ;have. the worst, jof it, course of it pointed out tohis auditors, the: pleasatit pros- |
com- | whieh
nt | erected thronghout the land by
ad tiad/been desecrated, and-a meagre form of worship substi-
Power in the world at the present moment, by reason of the
gers had landed, and a copy of The Times of that morhingy
bour were crowded, with spectatorsâa dense mass,of peo-
ple, high aud low, rich and poor, in every costume.and fs
lour possible even to French imaginationâblue, pink, red,
black, brown, green, and. pretty faces without end. Aud
the good lively people chattered and chyered so heartily,
and gesticulated in such ecstacy of abandonment to.their
delight, that the English strangers must have lost all; the
wartth of their country if they could. doubt fora moment
âthe cordiatity of the welcome... The Satine scene Was conti-
nued from the harbour to the shore, where, ina saloon over
the baths, a-collation had been, prepared. for the visitors.
This was a splendid room, beautifully decorated, and capa-
ble of holding perhaps, 500 persons. In addition to those
who sat down to table, the sides and ends of the saloon
were fined with gentlemen and ladies. who took.a. lively im-
terest in the scene, and every available peep-hole from the
outside was commanded by a peering eye. ise
The entertainment did credit to, the town by, whom it was
provided. âThe viands and wines were of the most costly
description, and all the arrangements were In that style. of
elegance and. taste for which the Iârench people are remark-
able. 2 1450.25
Tt was not to be supposed that the occasion could, pass off
without some speech-making. 1t was-brief and to the pur-
pose... ane i - Pe
The eating and drinking having subsided, the guests then
returned to the steam-vessel, escorted as before by a gazing
and cheering multitude, They hi
ten minutes at Boulogne. The steamer got under way at
40 minutes. after 2, and arrived iu Folkestone-harbour at
half:past 6. At 5. minutes past seveu the, train started, and
at five minutes past 10 it arrived in, London, stopping, at
eight stations to put down passengers, : bes
'Phis trip. therefore was performed in 16 hours, allowing
about two hours and a quarter at Boulogne. But ultimately
\qt will be done differently... An hour aud a quarter of time
was lost in passing to and froin the station and the harbour.
This will not oceur when the arragements are complete, as
there will be âa branch line down to the barbour, and the
| distance will be done in Jess than five minutes each way.
A steamer is being constructed by Maudslay.and Field | for
| Captain Hayward, which will do the distance to Boulogne
| (27 miles). in fine weather in two hours, se that, the whole
| journey from London to. Boulogne. may-in favourable âcir-
Ren iaatantes be, performed in four and a half. âThus, persons
leaving at .6.a, m, aud returning to town at, 10 p..m., could
(allowing for delays) spend at all events five or six hours at
Boulogne. _If we go on, at this rate, we may hope to realize
Jonathanâs idea of perpetual motionâi. e, a rail laid round
the globe, an engine and tender with amad steker put upon
itâand. then, âgo a-head eternally â nae
ron.âOn the 26th June, the ceremony. ofâ the consecration
of the lately erected Roman Catholic church, dedicated to
St. John the Evangelist; at Duneanterrace, Islington, was
performed with all the pomp and display of the Romisb ri-
tual. The service was commericed at 11 oâclock, by which
time all.the seats: inthe building were occupied, and there
were many who were glad-to obtain standing room to wit-,
ness the proceedings. âMany of the most influentialâ of the
Roman Catholics! were present!) Amongst them were the
Barls of Arundel and: Surrey, the Hon. I. Petrie, M-P., the
Hone P. Howard, M. Pi) Lady Camoys, Lady Bedingford,
Lady Cadell,) Lady Clare; Lady Lovat âand âfamily, the Hon.
Misses OâParrell, Petre, &c.) The attendarice ofthe Romish
priesthood was extremely numerous; there could not have
Keen less than 50 ecclesiastics present, amongst whom were
Bishop Griffith, VJ AJ, who officiated as high priést} Dr. Mor-
ris, Bishop of the Mauritius,â Drâ Wilson, Bishop of Hobart
âFown, and Dr. Wiseman, Bishop of Melopotomas, and Prin-
Leipal of the 'Romish College at Bath; Drs. Frere, and Bur-
| gois, and Conors, and Messrs. O'Connor, Molino, Doyle, Cot-
j ter, Kyan, &c., priests, Drs. Picquot, Cox, DArey
kris; &e. âThe ceremonial was accompabied with the musical
| performances of Misses Licomb, Bifield, and Whithurst, who
-sang respectively: the 'Incarnatus and the Gralias Agamus.
| Mr. Fitzwilliam was amongst the tenors, and Mr Le Jeune,
seh., presidedâ at the organ. The ce'ebrated imperial âmass,
heamposed by Haydn, was âselected for the oceasion. âThe
| whole was'got upâin the most imposing manner; and con-
| ducted with becoming effectii The sermon, whieh was a
| dost elaborate piece of e'oeutionary declamation, was de-
livered by the Reve Drz Wisemiun, who took forthe argument
fihis discourse, the 15th verse ofthe 102d Psalin, and in the
pects of the restorationâ of What the learned: principal called
the:religion of their fathers. » He lamented the sufferings to
Romanism had been exposed for 300 yearsin England,
âbut rejoiced to think that the signs of the present times were
an augury of better days for its professors.. The temples,
the âpiety of their ancestors,
tuted for that which was originally performed in them; but
he hoped that at-âno distant period the ancient religion would
be restored, and the faith! of which he was a minister be tri-
âumphant, âTowards the conclusion of his discourse, Dr. Wise-
man adverted to the saints and confessorsby whom the an-
nalsiof England bad been adorned, and to the joy which must,
fromthe presentiaspect of religious feeling throughout the em-
pire, be given tothe Edwardsiand Edmonds, the Dunstans and
| Cuthberts, the anchorites: and virgins now 4m Heaven, who
once: âadorned the faith professed in the best ages of the
church. After theâ conclusion of the discourse a collection
| was made, of which the aggregate amount was ÂŁ104.
Tar Rust or Lire.âAt! if! people live withortâ an ob-
ject, they stand,as it were, onthe outside of active life, whieh
gives streiigth) to inward occupation, even if iio noble endea-
' vouror sweet friendship give that claim to daily life which
makes it occasionally, at Jeast, a joy to live; disquiet rages
fiercely and tumultrously in the huinan breast, undermining
|
\
oO
ad remained two:hours and |,
Consecration or THe Roman Caruoric Cuunca, Istine- |,
y, Rolfe, Nor- |
|. IMPROPER CELEBRATION OF Marriage.âDr, Irvine; | stiz
pendiary curate of the parish of St Mary, Redcliffe, Bri
has been suspended from the exercise of his saered culties
for one year; for celebrating a marriage between parties Who
were within the prohibited degrees of affinity, and. neither
of whom had resided ia the parish a3 required by law. .
There is now living, neat Georgetown Heights, D.Âą,)'9
lady, aged near 100, who is the only person in the district,
we believe; says the Capitol, that edn and has said, «4,
daughterâgo see your daughter, for your daughter's tanigh
ter has a daughter.â _ petit = ghi-
The Auckland Standard, not half the size of Chambers
wainburgh Journal, and more than half ocenpied ee
viseinents, is one shilling. It may be useful to
; to ine hig
fact, ag indicative of the high value of Money in New Zeg.
land. . In'a late number of this paper, a four roomed.c
was advertised to be let at thirty shillings per week. eae
The following dialogaeânot a bad . illustration of the:
Cockney tongueâlately took»place at one of the Metropol.
tan police . offices :âWitnessâ* This here feller broke our:
winder with a tater, and
hit Isabeller. -on the elber, as she
was playing onthe pianer.â Magistrateââ Phe eonduet ofâ
the prisna, and his general charactaâ render i
t propaâ that he
should no longaâ be a membaâ of society.â i
wre
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#927
and conjuring up all the spirits âof darkness; so* does'the
corroding rust eat intoâ the steel-plate, and) deface: its clear
mirror: with a tracery ofidisordered caricatures. He who has
noremploy ment to: which. he âgives himseli with true earnest-
ness, which he âdoesnot love as muchas himself; has not
forth-fruit.» Sucli an occupation becomes a quiet and con
weigh the: worth of): others.
bearing ground ofâreal Christianity.âVary: Howitt. -
Inthe Spring of the year 872, a young man jn the thirty
first year of his uge, in evident distress of niind, entered im
his garden near Milan.âThe sinsâ of his youth,â yor?
spent in sensuality and impiety, weighed heavily on his sil.
Lying wnder a: fig-tree moaning and pouring out abun@t
tears, heâheard, from a neighbouring house, a young ?!Âąe
saying, and repeating in ârapid succession,â* Tolle/@8°
Tolle, Jege?? |!'Bakevand) read, take and:-Feads* Resving
this as a divine admonition, he- returned to the plac/„ Ere
he left-bis friand-Alypius to» procure the-roll of S) âalâs
epistles,| which he had a short.timerbefore left tb bir.
âLseized the rolk?-says hey» i: describing thisâeney â*?
openedit, and read>in silence: the chapter on whi my eyes
first: wlighted.â\ dv wasithe thirteenth of Rottiaâ di Let us
walk honestly, as in the day; not inâ rioting runken-
ness; not in chambering and wantonness, 1/ strife and
envying. But put ye ou the âLord JĂ©sus crs and. make
Hot provision forthe flesh, to fulfil the lugâ ereof, ~All
was decided by aword. âIdid not want ty ABY, MOK», |
said he, ânor was there any need; every.â nt apa eapiali-
ed.â The, moming. star had .risen in hig at d n the-lan-
âguage of Gaussen:â* Jesus. had conqu yy) er the grand
career of Augustine, the holiest of tha: vai, then com
menced, A passage of Godâs word |, Seb ef that glori-
âous Inminaryy whieh = was: to enfighy 1° © rurch forâ ten
centuries > and whosesbeams gtaddâ of Sten tothe pre:
sent day.âA ter! thirty-oneâ years of, of combats,â of
discoveredâ the true: ground:/oniwhich Christianityâ brings
secrated temple in all) hours ofâ affliction,in which theâ Sa-
viour pours out his blessing; it unites us with otherâ men, so
that we cano sympathise with! their feelings, and âmake our
actions âand our wills: adininister to their-wants; it teaches
us to: know our:own cireumseribed condition, and rightly to
Itis the true, firm, and fruit-
husiness with Mr. Simmon
Misery, or asm
se âa
GENERAL AGENCY AND. COMMISSION
OF FICE, (TRUST
No. 18) Cornhill, London, opposite the new Exchange.
To Hida Commercial News Rooms, Publicâ Libraries
Phare Societies, Officers of: the United Services, Printers
Pulli rs of Newspapers, and Colonists generally, °°
P. i SIMMONDS, General Agent and Commission
Blow dt Pip at ren offering his, Services to his friends, and) the
- vis ublic in general, begs to acquaint them that.he isready
k receive orders for supplies of any kind and quantity, and goods.
Fieeey Ceectiption of first-rate quality, at the very lowest market
_ 0 the day, anid to transact business upon the most liberalâ
petsel oad tebe x ato ta furnished with funds or drat te .
- long ort dates, 6 : or Liver
ree * ouse for piopaicdiias: rh me na eee pipes ee
_L. Stmuonps will receivecconsignm deseription:
! 1 ° ents of any: deseription
of Merchandize, to-be sold'-on pcviiniaasin« cod atcata ili
re Raion of the Amount, op receipt of the bills of ladingi» Com
§ Ares a chaeiad aide to vin pare will meet with every p@ssible des.
Pease der disposal, and sales be conducted with the grealest:
eke aly to the Interests of the disposer, An. extensive know>
Went In api business, acquired during a long residence in the
bes ee and. subsequent extensive Courses of business with
: i ba ritish Colonies, thelex perience of sevetal years: inâ Lone
Jonas ia âColonial Agent, coupled! with promptitude, atterition,,.
whee Judgment, will}:he: trusts, enable him to give satisfic
\ ugesclionfetuy favourchim with heir commands...60 |
of„b.â Parents sending home their children for education
with:con fidence entrust them to.the care of Mr. Simnntbaton wie
will undertake. 1o.see them, placed in, first-rate and respectable
establishinents, where, every, attention shall .be. paid 10. their
health, morals, improvement and general comfort. ay
(âThese American and Canadian Editors who exchan and do
ds willâ oblige him by copy me
Nerina 6 lige him by copying this).
josttet tn SS POR Sai. Os oF
A LEXR. PICKERING offers: for Sale the
i Saopnin: New! London, burthen âabout! Twenty
os, old:measurewent.,.. Sheis well calcalated:for the:
i 7,,og1od 198s
yh coaster.
one woo od
New
a
London, 10th, 1843, % is
i 2
fallsofanisery; faichi lifes etermalyâ Came to this erring
soul 5 LG QRUpon MPO! CI enpsT
was myne jd frantic on the octasion. â'ThĂ© whole population
of the towft ant! âneighbourhood bad poured out_to_ witness
the embarkation, and the worn DP, G atm re) vey GE :
acwet tying des ly 2 88perately Tt or despe-â
| CHARLOTTETOWN :
Printed and, published by Cooper & BREMneRy
âHon, the House, of Assembly,, at, theig Qticesctiast
â* Printers, jo. the
2 gaa lstsfo, the
f
âi SPERA TR CA oe Petes allârell about âPar:
Fatoly well, he has bee fing desz"ely this long time,
corner of Pownal and Water Streets.âTerms, 13s. per annum,
payable in advance, or 15s. per annum, half-year ly in advance:
en ee eee
POETRY.
5°) (From the Edinburgh Witness.)
âTHE CHURCH.
A voice on the hills of Scotland!
A voice on the'batren heath!
A stirring of the martyr dust
Phat dieth underneath!~
The good old cause is owned again,
» As in the days of yore, ,
And the Banner of the Covenant
Streanis of (he storm once more !
» Wer hail thee! ancient Bannerâ-
*Neath which our fathers fought!ââ
âThy very stains are sacred,
From their true-heart-stream caught!
Once more we rally round thee,
Our holiest and: our best
Nor let a standard bearer faint,
*-. Until we reach our rest !
Not ina quiet haven 4
The bark mast hope toride,
"That bears the gospel freight of peace
Oâer the worldâs adverse tide!
Notto! earthâs sinile atid sunshine
The Church of Christ must cling=-
When did the usurperâs minions love.
The children of a King ?
On through the barren desert!) â
On âneath the worldâs dread frown ! .
The thorns that strew our pathway oâer,
Fell fromâour Master's crown!
Beariug the vessels of our God,
Striving beneath His eye~-
Oar beacon be the â Burning Bush
Our record is on high ! :
aS 1
THE RECENT EXPOSURES OF ROYALTY.
â foolish game, but the manner in which the Royal Faniily of
Bngland commits itself is really most extraordinary.
Phe Duke of Cambridge has demanded a dowry of ÂŁ3,000
a-yéar foy his daughter, whe is about to marry the Prince of
âMeckletiburg Strelitz. The most vile mind, to which nature
ever gave the powers of a depraved imagination, could pot
form a conception of a demand more outrageous than this.
âPhe little, paltry, dirty principality, has no trade or manu-
factures, and is completely an agricultural country, of the
âsmallest extent and of the meanest poverty. âThree thousand
-pounds sterling a-yearâ would buy up any six of its richest
nobility; and if our countrymen are to be taxed for the sup-
âport of the Duke of Cambcidgeâs danghter, as the sovereign
Duchess or Princess ofthis little, vile, out-of-the-way, nook
âlexcept one high-spirited noble s
â| Ffrench presided.
| principal topicsâ
| Saxonâ enemies; heâ sai
.| England; and
ââ
pension was éranted in
and with which it litera
had with the last Epsom or
George HL, who were so pro
meétit, were the veriest spectinen
lly had nothing mor
âAscott races. All the sons of
fusely provided for by Parlia-
s of servility to the Crown,
on, who was from first to
ft is useless to pursue such
last, provided for most scantily,
a disgusting speech.âDispatch.
OâCONNELL AT ATHLONE.
A gféat! Anti:Repeal Demonstration took place on Sunday
the 18th June, in the vicinity of Athlone, which was attend-
ed by a great concourse of people, who conducted thenm-
selves in the most orderly manner duringâ the day.â Lord
Mr. O'Connell's addressâ embraced to a large âextent the
whieh he had introduced into his uddresses
ut other places. Spexking of the successive steps of the ill
âusage the frishâ people had suffered at theâ hands of their
dâThen caiie Wellington of Water-
Joo upon them. © (Groans.) Was it on the 18th of June they
would groanhim in that way? But Wellington well knew
that it'was'not the red coat that made theâ soldier daring, but
the native bravery \of the Irishman, who âwas as vrave 1 a
frieze coatias he âwonld'be in ared one. He began by
threatening them with civil war. âThen came Peel with the
bsame âthreat, °' Honest Boby, however, told a fie upon the ov-
casion. His defiance hadâ caused theâ Duke toâ draw in his
horns, and Peel to shrink out of the scrape. The Whigs
had proinised much, and undertaken, to do much, but they
placed a confidence in them which they did uot deserve,
and he now. told them that, no change of that kind would
drive the people of Ireland from their determination to have
a Repeal of the Union. He would .put Whigs and âTories
into a hag, shake it well, toss them ont, and from first to last
there would be found no friend to lreland. among them. -Ire-
andhad: but one friend, and thiat~was herself (Cheers.)
The Morning Chronicle, the orga of the Whigs, said-itwas
quite true that it might be usefit to Ireland to have a separate
Legislature of her own, but that it would not be useful to
â | that therefore they shonld not have it, Would
they abandon - their agitation for repeal on that ground ?
(Cries âof âNo.â) The same paper said, if the people conti-
nued their struggle, they were likely to obtain all they want-
ed in the moment of Englandâs weakness. He thanked the
Chronicle for the hint... Jt contained a strong tewptation to
them to pray of an afternoon âmay, England soon be: weak
that we may carry repeal.â (Cheers and laughter.) Fle de-
nied that his object wus Catliolic: ascendanéy, for there did
not live a man more decidedly opposed to it. He consider-
ed it-would beâ bad for the country and much more worse
for the religion. _He was'tdo well satisfied with his priests
asâ they were to expose them to the danger. of Castle visits
âand-corner principality of Murope, actually one-tenth of the
money would have been amply sufficient., But it.is:not to
the amount, butto the prineiple.of the grant which the Queen
claims from the Commons that we object. $
_ The Duke of Cambridge is said»to-be the richest and mean-
ânestâman in Kurepe: â For about 22 years he'was oti Vice-
«roy of Hanover, enjoying ai immense revenue, which ought
to have goneâto the mitigation of Britishâ claims on that
âgountry, which has ever been a mill-stone round our necks.
âDaring this very long period he_kept receiving his immense
âEnglish allowances as Duke of Cambridge. . Be it observed,
that these enormous sums. of English money were spent or
~ââhoarded in a country where sterling is at least fout times |
the value that.it\is of in Ragland.) The Duke of Cambridge, | hour in improvements, to register tose improvements in|
â not content with keeping âthe -rank of Field Marshal, was the Clerk of the Crownâs-office every year;'so that when the °
made Colonel of two ofthe most âprofitable of all the âregi- | {
âments in our military service, and though residiig in Hano-
vor as its Viceroy, and consequently unalile ever to set eye
uponleitheriof theseâ regiments, he kept'receiving the Colo-
nelcy profits. In addition to this, though resident in âHaro-
ver, he retained the Rangership of Richmond Park, with his
apartments in Kew Palace. dt is impossible to conceive a
greater concentration of impudence. Can a case be carried
to greater-extremes of guilt? Oli yes, it can, at Jeast when
Royalty is concerned. This immensely rich Duke of Cam-
bridge has had! butâ three children âto maintain. . His, eldest
s0n, at the age of only 22, has just received the valuable ap-
pointinent of Commandér-ib-Chief of the fonian Islands, avd
now that the Dukeâs only marriageable daughter (the youn-
gest being a chilil) is to be married to one: of the most petty
ofall German mendicant Princes, the Duke has the shame-
less avatice, the indeceney, the profligacy, to muke his niece,
the Queen, fix'a burthien of ÂŁ3,000 a-year uponâ our Working
classes asa dowry, to this immensely ric lady on her mar-
riage. | Ee
Phe Dake of Cambridge himself married from Hesse-Cas-
sel, a petty Langravate, the whole population of which does
not amount to one-half of that of London. _ This is-the, way
our ighorant, credulous, and spiritless countrymen suffer:
themselves to be victimized by all the paltry paupers of
Northern Germany that choose to call themselves Princes
or Dukes. : Paka
Two sources of reflection arise from these facts :âThe first
is, that our Royal Family ought to be allowedito marry ge-
nerally throughout the Courts of Europe, andiamongst our
own subjects. Infamous religious prejudices oblige our Roy-
al Family to pick up the most beggarly wives and husbands
in the rookeries of North Germanyâthe refuse of Europe.
âThe plea is, that of Protestantism, a most expensive 1sm; and
the veflect of this narrow circle of intermarridge is toâ pro-
duce madness and idiocy in our Royal family. During the
middle ages evils arose froin Royalty intermarrying with the
subjects, but now nosuch evils areâto be apprehended. Let
the vile Royal Marriage Act be repealed. It was passed by
res Ik, and has proved a disgrace and curse to us.
My second point is, that our Royal Family ought, like
other people, to pay for the births, educations, marriages,
and burials of their own children, Why âshould theyâ tura
the Exchequer, or Treasury, into a sort. of'national, work-
house, and palm upon it all their offspring as State paupers?
Ve give our Princes immense incomes under the most fri-
volous pretences. Next we throw into their way, under fie-
» titious systenis, and in the plea of oldâ prejudices, large col-
lateral sums. Surely, ander these cireumstances, each
Prince or Prineess ought to provide for the birth, education
or marriage of their offspring. Sir Robert Peel says, that
this marriage will incur additional expenses; let the rich
parents provide for them. Ifthe husband is too poor, which
he unquestionably is, to support a wife, let the marriage be
prevented ; but. certainly do not let.our Princes âand Prin-
cesses be perpetually marrying foreign paupers, and then
come on our working classes for incomes, on the plea that
they cannot maintain dignity or support: their ehildren. In
every case of an English Royalâ marriage, England always
pays and: never receives. It matters not whether the Eng-
lish marrying person he male or femate, for, in either case,
England always pays for both parties. ifthere is a contract
for payment to England, it is. never fulfilled. For half a
century it has been held that the marriage of the last Duke
of Yor was, in point both of morals and finances, theimost
extrayagantof all infamous espousals; but, in the present
case, it is impossible to dispute that the present Royal mar-
riage is, of all others, the most contemptible... .~
The reigting Grand Duke of. Mecklenburgh . Strelitz
has had a pensionâ of ÂŁ2,000 a-year out! of oir taxes for forty-
five years, tnerely because he was nephew to, Queen Char-
Jotte.| Itâ was granted by thatâ precious hrish Parliaihent
whieh Mr.OâConnell would wish to restore. Sir Robert
Peel declares that this pension was given to him for a loss
of territory in siding with us in the;revolutionary)war. This
is an utter falsehood, for Napoleon. conquered this wretched
territory many years after the Anglo-Irish pension was gran-
ted. At that period, 1798, the whole territory. was not. worth
ÂŁ2,000 sterling a-year, A ie
There are private estates.in England larger than this most
despicable principality. . The whole revenue of this Puddie-
dock nursery of our Royal Family never exceeded 126,000
" rix-dollars, equal to about ÂŁ21,000 sterling; and when our
infamous pension was granted, its reveiuie was much less,
We have therefore paid for 45, years a,pension equal, annu-
ally, to one-tenth of all the taxes and:revenues of this pau-
per rookery of Princes. âThe Prince would have glasdly.sold
us the whole of his territory. for, ÂŁ2000 a-year; and: yet Sir
R. Peel has the shameless face to tell Parliathent\ thatthe
and Treasury. money,,.. With, regard . to fixity of tenure, he
wished to explain that by it he meant that no landlord should
be.entitled to. recover: rent,unless, he inade a lease of 21
yearsat least... No lease, Mo rents (CheĂ©rs.)- âThen the poor
man would not be afraid of being turned out: of his cabinâ
next May. It might be said that the landlord would put too
bmuch rent m>the lease: > For that he was not without a cure.
| The Ordnance Sarvey had made a valuation of the land, and
he would not allow the rentto be any higher than that valua-
| tion.â Ifthere Was no Ordnance Survey,-he would give what
| the tenant required upon registering his votleânamely, whata
solyent tenant, would give. for the land... He would give
power.to eyery occupying tenant who. laid out money or la-
21 yearsildase'had expired, the landlord: shouldâ toss up and
payin money'the price of his improvements, or grant him a
new lease of the farm. They might in that case build_a bet-
ter house for their pig than they now lived in themselves.
These were the solid and lasting fruits he anticipated from
Repeal. He wanted first.3,000,000 of enrolled Repealers.
(Cries of âYou'll get them.â) Wellington gaye.a:man a shil-
ing when drunk to fist... His (Mr. OâConnellâs), men listed
when sober, and jaida shilling. . The contrast was great.
While.prices were broken down in England, and the agri-
culturists in a state of distress, Ireland) was.pouring in her
ÂŁ2,000 (and to-morrow he expected: nĂ©ar ÂŁ3,000) aâ week.
(Loud cheers.) In>civilization Ireland exceeded every other
country on the face of the globe.â The virtue of ber daugh-
civilization, and theseâhe claimed for them.; Iftheir enemie
âWhiy, they were enough to take them in their arms and
throw them. into.the Shannon..,, But he would. ecatry repeal
as he carried emancipation, without violating! the law,
mitting an offence agaihst morality, or shedding one drop o
human Slood!) Would theynot meethim again if he wanted
them?» [Loud âcheers, and cries of *Yesâ]. He might wa
them, again; but he did not think England would be.m
enough to:'refuse their demand. âShe was: the weakest
f
dissatisfaction in Ireland, and if she wanted, strength she
had only todo justice, to Ireland.. The hon.and. learned
gentleman concluded with a glowing eulogy upon the beau-
ties of the river Shannon, to which [he wound up by saying]
a Saxon river, Was no. more! to, be compared thanâ the water
of.a dunghill to. a living wel He retired: amidst several
rounds of.enthusiastic applanse.
Several speakers then addressed the meeting.
The meeting then separated, giving three cheers for the
Queen, O'Connell, Lord Ffrench, and repeal, the traders
and inhabitants of Athlone, refurning to the town as a pro-
cession withsbanners and music, Mr. OâConnell-and friends
bringing up the rear. A number of the officers and soldiers,
and also several Jadies, located, themselves at various parts
of the fortifications and barrack walls to witness âthe return,
FROM.LONDON TO BOULOGNE AND B
Ifany one had told you a few m
ago, that in thispresent mo June you should rise from
your bed in London, breakfast on the sea-shore in England,
lunch inâ Boulogae;spend a few hours there, and have a good
laugh at the Napoleon monument, and yet. that you should
bĂ© back inâ London at such an hour, that (if you were a man
-of fashion and hada patient stomach) your dinner would
just be ready for youâif any mamhad told yot this, proba-
bly. you would have. set hint down asâa) Bedlamite, orâ the
projector of some Joint-Stock Aerial Ship Company. | Ne-
vertheless; on, Saturday; JunĂ© 24th, this:impossibility âwas
conyerted into a fact; the journey so indicated was perform-
ed with so mueéh ease as to renderit not a fatigue, but actu-
ally atrip of pleasure. sg Bear ae
At 6oâelock, a special train, containing the Directors of
8, or even a few weeks
the South-Eastern Railway Company and their guests, start-
ed from the London-bridge station, which arrived. at Folke-
stohe temporary station, a distance of 82 miles from town,
in two hours and 40 minutes, having stopped at five-stations
by the way. In Folkestone harbour the Water Witch
steamer, commanded:by Captain Hayward, was lying ready,
alidas âsooi dĂ©theâ different passengers could be got on
board, she âstarted forâ Boulogne. © Aiiong those on,, board
the vessel wis Mr. Justice Haliburton, the celebrated âSam
Slick,â whose âpresence alone wasan augury that all, would
âgo ahead,â HHS
âAs the day was remarkably fine, the voyage! acrdss' was
very-fine, and but a few suffered the horrors of being tossed
in Neptuneâs blanket; to most on_ board the trip .was ove
of enjoyment. Perhapsthe shortness ofthe voyage might
aid in this; for it was inâless thanâ three hoursâ from the
time of starting from FolKestoneâthat is.to say, at a quarter
past 12âthat a confused sound of niultituditious chatterings,
and a startling exhibition. of. gesticulating figures in,naval
uniforins, satisfied ius that we, were. within siglit and: héaring
of the harbour, of Boulogne.. By balf-past 12 all the! passen-
containing the debates in)Parliament of the previous night,
was presented: by the chairman of the directorsâto the asto-
nished authorities of the place who had come down to the
pier to meet their English âvisitors. ee :
«iif 'FolkestĂ©ne âhadbeeh cousiderably excited, Boulogne
(owial Weraly.
consideration fora loss of territory; }
e to do âthan if
ters and the religion of her sons were the highest-orders of |
s 0
attacked them, he knew who, would ;have. the worst, jof it, course of it pointed out tohis auditors, the: pleasatit pros- |
com- | whieh
nt | erected thronghout the land by
ad tiad/been desecrated, and-a meagre form of worship substi-
Power in the world at the present moment, by reason of the
gers had landed, and a copy of The Times of that morhingy
bour were crowded, with spectatorsâa dense mass,of peo-
ple, high aud low, rich and poor, in every costume.and fs
lour possible even to French imaginationâblue, pink, red,
black, brown, green, and. pretty faces without end. Aud
the good lively people chattered and chyered so heartily,
and gesticulated in such ecstacy of abandonment to.their
delight, that the English strangers must have lost all; the
wartth of their country if they could. doubt fora moment
âthe cordiatity of the welcome... The Satine scene Was conti-
nued from the harbour to the shore, where, ina saloon over
the baths, a-collation had been, prepared. for the visitors.
This was a splendid room, beautifully decorated, and capa-
ble of holding perhaps, 500 persons. In addition to those
who sat down to table, the sides and ends of the saloon
were fined with gentlemen and ladies. who took.a. lively im-
terest in the scene, and every available peep-hole from the
outside was commanded by a peering eye. ise
The entertainment did credit to, the town by, whom it was
provided. âThe viands and wines were of the most costly
description, and all the arrangements were In that style. of
elegance and. taste for which the Iârench people are remark-
able. 2 1450.25
Tt was not to be supposed that the occasion could, pass off
without some speech-making. 1t was-brief and to the pur-
pose... ane i - Pe
The eating and drinking having subsided, the guests then
returned to the steam-vessel, escorted as before by a gazing
and cheering multitude, They hi
ten minutes at Boulogne. The steamer got under way at
40 minutes. after 2, and arrived iu Folkestone-harbour at
half:past 6. At 5. minutes past seveu the, train started, and
at five minutes past 10 it arrived in, London, stopping, at
eight stations to put down passengers, : bes
'Phis trip. therefore was performed in 16 hours, allowing
about two hours and a quarter at Boulogne. But ultimately
\qt will be done differently... An hour aud a quarter of time
was lost in passing to and froin the station and the harbour.
This will not oceur when the arragements are complete, as
there will be âa branch line down to the barbour, and the
| distance will be done in Jess than five minutes each way.
A steamer is being constructed by Maudslay.and Field | for
| Captain Hayward, which will do the distance to Boulogne
| (27 miles). in fine weather in two hours, se that, the whole
| journey from London to. Boulogne. may-in favourable âcir-
Ren iaatantes be, performed in four and a half. âThus, persons
leaving at .6.a, m, aud returning to town at, 10 p..m., could
(allowing for delays) spend at all events five or six hours at
Boulogne. _If we go on, at this rate, we may hope to realize
Jonathanâs idea of perpetual motionâi. e, a rail laid round
the globe, an engine and tender with amad steker put upon
itâand. then, âgo a-head eternally â nae
ron.âOn the 26th June, the ceremony. ofâ the consecration
of the lately erected Roman Catholic church, dedicated to
St. John the Evangelist; at Duneanterrace, Islington, was
performed with all the pomp and display of the Romisb ri-
tual. The service was commericed at 11 oâclock, by which
time all.the seats: inthe building were occupied, and there
were many who were glad-to obtain standing room to wit-,
ness the proceedings. âMany of the most influentialâ of the
Roman Catholics! were present!) Amongst them were the
Barls of Arundel and: Surrey, the Hon. I. Petrie, M-P., the
Hone P. Howard, M. Pi) Lady Camoys, Lady Bedingford,
Lady Cadell,) Lady Clare; Lady Lovat âand âfamily, the Hon.
Misses OâParrell, Petre, &c.) The attendarice ofthe Romish
priesthood was extremely numerous; there could not have
Keen less than 50 ecclesiastics present, amongst whom were
Bishop Griffith, VJ AJ, who officiated as high priést} Dr. Mor-
ris, Bishop of the Mauritius,â Drâ Wilson, Bishop of Hobart
âFown, and Dr. Wiseman, Bishop of Melopotomas, and Prin-
Leipal of the 'Romish College at Bath; Drs. Frere, and Bur-
| gois, and Conors, and Messrs. O'Connor, Molino, Doyle, Cot-
j ter, Kyan, &c., priests, Drs. Picquot, Cox, DArey
kris; &e. âThe ceremonial was accompabied with the musical
| performances of Misses Licomb, Bifield, and Whithurst, who
-sang respectively: the 'Incarnatus and the Gralias Agamus.
| Mr. Fitzwilliam was amongst the tenors, and Mr Le Jeune,
seh., presidedâ at the organ. The ce'ebrated imperial âmass,
heamposed by Haydn, was âselected for the oceasion. âThe
| whole was'got upâin the most imposing manner; and con-
| ducted with becoming effectii The sermon, whieh was a
| dost elaborate piece of e'oeutionary declamation, was de-
livered by the Reve Drz Wisemiun, who took forthe argument
fihis discourse, the 15th verse ofthe 102d Psalin, and in the
pects of the restorationâ of What the learned: principal called
the:religion of their fathers. » He lamented the sufferings to
Romanism had been exposed for 300 yearsin England,
âbut rejoiced to think that the signs of the present times were
an augury of better days for its professors.. The temples,
the âpiety of their ancestors,
tuted for that which was originally performed in them; but
he hoped that at-âno distant period the ancient religion would
be restored, and the faith! of which he was a minister be tri-
âumphant, âTowards the conclusion of his discourse, Dr. Wise-
man adverted to the saints and confessorsby whom the an-
nalsiof England bad been adorned, and to the joy which must,
fromthe presentiaspect of religious feeling throughout the em-
pire, be given tothe Edwardsiand Edmonds, the Dunstans and
| Cuthberts, the anchorites: and virgins now 4m Heaven, who
once: âadorned the faith professed in the best ages of the
church. After theâ conclusion of the discourse a collection
| was made, of which the aggregate amount was ÂŁ104.
Tar Rust or Lire.âAt! if! people live withortâ an ob-
ject, they stand,as it were, onthe outside of active life, whieh
gives streiigth) to inward occupation, even if iio noble endea-
' vouror sweet friendship give that claim to daily life which
makes it occasionally, at Jeast, a joy to live; disquiet rages
fiercely and tumultrously in the huinan breast, undermining
|
\
oO
ad remained two:hours and |,
Consecration or THe Roman Caruoric Cuunca, Istine- |,
y, Rolfe, Nor- |
|. IMPROPER CELEBRATION OF Marriage.âDr, Irvine; | stiz
pendiary curate of the parish of St Mary, Redcliffe, Bri
has been suspended from the exercise of his saered culties
for one year; for celebrating a marriage between parties Who
were within the prohibited degrees of affinity, and. neither
of whom had resided ia the parish a3 required by law. .
There is now living, neat Georgetown Heights, D.Âą,)'9
lady, aged near 100, who is the only person in the district,
we believe; says the Capitol, that edn and has said, «4,
daughterâgo see your daughter, for your daughter's tanigh
ter has a daughter.â _ petit = ghi-
The Auckland Standard, not half the size of Chambers
wainburgh Journal, and more than half ocenpied ee
viseinents, is one shilling. It may be useful to
; to ine hig
fact, ag indicative of the high value of Money in New Zeg.
land. . In'a late number of this paper, a four roomed.c
was advertised to be let at thirty shillings per week. eae
The following dialogaeânot a bad . illustration of the:
Cockney tongueâlately took»place at one of the Metropol.
tan police . offices :âWitnessâ* This here feller broke our:
winder with a tater, and
hit Isabeller. -on the elber, as she
was playing onthe pianer.â Magistrateââ Phe eonduet ofâ
the prisna, and his general charactaâ render i
t propaâ that he
should no longaâ be a membaâ of society.â i
wre
TRANSATLANTIC NEWSPAPER AND â
GENERAL AGENCY OFFICE, LIVERPOOL. â
CHARLES WILLMER,
Newspaper, Forwarding, and General Agent,
UPPLIES to order, with greater promptitude , and.
regularity than any other house, and on the most reasonable |
terms, (a London Daily Paper for ÂŁ6.10s. Sterling per annam,)
NEWSPAPERS, PRICE CURRENTS, SHIPPING LISTs,
MAGAZINES, and 8OOKS, to all paris of the UNI
STATES, CANADA, NOVA SCOTIA, NEW BRUNS
P. EB. ISLAND and NEWFOUNDLAND, by the Mair Stra
prs, sailing on the 4th and 19th of each month from Livene
as wellas by those from Baisror and SourmamPrTon; and to
the WEST INDIAN ISLANDS, MEXICO âatid TEXAS, by the
Roya. Mai Sreamenrs, sailing every fortnight fiom Patwoura,
C. W. will receive Consignnients of Goons, or Smart Par.
CELS sentto his care shall be punetually forwarded to their d =
nation... Any. description of Goods purchased and forwarded Âą
order,
uns tain Sb
NEXT OF KIN, and all other description of ADVERTISE
MENTS, received for insertion in all the Evnorran Pupui-
CATIONS. chiara
N.BeAIL ofders Shotild be âaddressed â CHARLES WILL.
MER,â in full, and none will be attended to unless accompanied:
by-a remittance; or reference for payment on someâ Liverpool
Londou House. t â as me
[Editors of Newspapers: inserting ithe above advertisemento:
a weeki will receive The American News; Letter (gratis), on
og a.paper (MARKED) contaivivg;it,) ohsin be
et Te
LO STATIONERS, MERCHANTS, $0)
CHARLES WIELMER :
ANNOUNCES that he is now prepared to receive orders for every
déseription of WRITING and PRINTING PAPERS, PRI
ING MATERIALS and~ TYPES, PLAYING CARDS, a
GENERAL STATIONERY of every description, which he can
éxedute on most advantageous terms, FoR cAsH, having entered 4
irito arrangements with «Manafaciurers, whieh confer upon âhime
inany.. advantages.â The, attention of the TRADE, «MER.
CHANTS, and, others; desirous of importing any ofthese, Anti-
cles, is respectfully solicited, „s witt hy
Sunday Times, Dispatch, Bellâs Messenger, New Bell's, Mes.
senger, Satirist, Age, Mining Journal, Era, Conservative Journal,
Examiner, John Bull, Court Gazette, Gardenersâ Gazette, Gar-
itiersâ Chronicle, Argus, Journal of Commerce. British Queen,
aolway Times, Railway Magazine, True Tablet, Britannia,
ehalanx, Einigration Gazette, Agricultural Advocate , Observer
at neonformist, New Farmersâ Journal, Colonial Gazette, Chure
Lutelligencer, City Chronicle, Tlusteated London News, published _
6d. ÂŁ18 0 per annum. 18)
Magnet, Weekly Chronicle, Watchman, British
i Beliâs Life,
Statesman
Athenzumnd, published at 5d... ÂŁ1, 4,0 per annum
CHARLES WILLMERâS,..... » '
AMERICAN NEWS LETTER)
oo AND EUROPEAN INTELLIGENCER, ine
Enlarged to the! extent .of Len: additional. Columns.â ° â
PPE above Newspaper, now-enlarged> len âadditional
Columns, which wasâ established in July, 1842, isâ regularly
| published at Liverpool expressly for transmission by every Steam
Ship sailing from.any port in Britain toany -portimthe United
| States. and its leading featureris.to. give, atone glance, an account
ofevery important, event that, has occurred in. Great Britain,
âEnrope, or Asia, in the interval between the sailing of each Steam
Ship, whether in politics or couimerceâa correet and comprehen
sive Shipping List, in which will be found a faithful record of the
| arrival and departure of American vesselS at and from all the
British, European and Asiatic Portsâwith notices of such casual:
ties or disasters as may from âtime toâ tme oectrâa complete
\ Prices: Current, in which. the greatest careâ is âtaken to give the
| Jatest reports of the markets for the various descriptions of Ame .
rican.Produce, from the most unquestionable sourcesâtbus. com-
bining,.in one.sheet, a Newspaper, a Shipping List, andia Prices
Current. < ; s : . yebitsist
The Annual Subscription to CHARLES WILLMERâS AME-
RICAN NEWS LETTER is 12s. Gd. Sterling. Orders, and
Subscriptions will beâ received at any of Messrs. POMEROY &
âŹ0.'S EXPRESS OFFICES in the UNITED STA ES and
CANADA, and in Bostox, by Messrs. Redding & Co, News
Agents; Hatirax, Mr. Belcher, Stationer; Monrrear, Mf. Wm.
Greig, BookseHer ; Sr: Jounâs, N. B.; Mr. @ E. Fenety, Morning
News Office; Quegec, Mr. Charles F. Ford, Mountain-street ;8r-
Joun'âs, Newrounpianp, Mr. MâCoubrey; Times Office ; Chat-
lottetown, P. E. Iseanp, Cooper & Bremner, Herald Office; ot
they may, be sent, direct to the Publisher, addressed as follows:â
CHARLES, WILLMER,, :
Transauantic Newspaper. Office,
âbiverpool,,
#927
and conjuring up all the spirits âof darkness; so* does'the
corroding rust eat intoâ the steel-plate, and) deface: its clear
mirror: with a tracery ofidisordered caricatures. He who has
noremploy ment to: which. he âgives himseli with true earnest-
ness, which he âdoesnot love as muchas himself; has not
forth-fruit.» Sucli an occupation becomes a quiet and con
weigh the: worth of): others.
bearing ground ofâreal Christianity.âVary: Howitt. -
Inthe Spring of the year 872, a young man jn the thirty
first year of his uge, in evident distress of niind, entered im
his garden near Milan.âThe sinsâ of his youth,â yor?
spent in sensuality and impiety, weighed heavily on his sil.
Lying wnder a: fig-tree moaning and pouring out abun@t
tears, heâheard, from a neighbouring house, a young ?!Âąe
saying, and repeating in ârapid succession,â* Tolle/@8°
Tolle, Jege?? |!'Bakevand) read, take and:-Feads* Resving
this as a divine admonition, he- returned to the plac/„ Ere
he left-bis friand-Alypius to» procure the-roll of S) âalâs
epistles,| which he had a short.timerbefore left tb bir.
âLseized the rolk?-says hey» i: describing thisâeney â*?
openedit, and read>in silence: the chapter on whi my eyes
first: wlighted.â\ dv wasithe thirteenth of Rottiaâ di Let us
walk honestly, as in the day; not inâ rioting runken-
ness; not in chambering and wantonness, 1/ strife and
envying. But put ye ou the âLord JĂ©sus crs and. make
Hot provision forthe flesh, to fulfil the lugâ ereof, ~All
was decided by aword. âIdid not want ty ABY, MOK», |
said he, ânor was there any need; every.â nt apa eapiali-
ed.â The, moming. star had .risen in hig at d n the-lan-
âguage of Gaussen:â* Jesus. had conqu yy) er the grand
career of Augustine, the holiest of tha: vai, then com
menced, A passage of Godâs word |, Seb ef that glori-
âous Inminaryy whieh = was: to enfighy 1° © rurch forâ ten
centuries > and whosesbeams gtaddâ of Sten tothe pre:
sent day.âA ter! thirty-oneâ years of, of combats,â of
discoveredâ the true: ground:/oniwhich Christianityâ brings
secrated temple in all) hours ofâ affliction,in which theâ Sa-
viour pours out his blessing; it unites us with otherâ men, so
that we cano sympathise with! their feelings, and âmake our
actions âand our wills: adininister to their-wants; it teaches
us to: know our:own cireumseribed condition, and rightly to
Itis the true, firm, and fruit-
husiness with Mr. Simmon
Misery, or asm
se âa
GENERAL AGENCY AND. COMMISSION
OF FICE, (TRUST
No. 18) Cornhill, London, opposite the new Exchange.
To Hida Commercial News Rooms, Publicâ Libraries
Phare Societies, Officers of: the United Services, Printers
Pulli rs of Newspapers, and Colonists generally, °°
P. i SIMMONDS, General Agent and Commission
Blow dt Pip at ren offering his, Services to his friends, and) the
- vis ublic in general, begs to acquaint them that.he isready
k receive orders for supplies of any kind and quantity, and goods.
Fieeey Ceectiption of first-rate quality, at the very lowest market
_ 0 the day, anid to transact business upon the most liberalâ
petsel oad tebe x ato ta furnished with funds or drat te .
- long ort dates, 6 : or Liver
ree * ouse for piopaicdiias: rh me na eee pipes ee
_L. Stmuonps will receivecconsignm deseription:
! 1 ° ents of any: deseription
of Merchandize, to-be sold'-on pcviiniaasin« cod atcata ili
re Raion of the Amount, op receipt of the bills of ladingi» Com
§ Ares a chaeiad aide to vin pare will meet with every p@ssible des.
Pease der disposal, and sales be conducted with the grealest:
eke aly to the Interests of the disposer, An. extensive know>
Went In api business, acquired during a long residence in the
bes ee and. subsequent extensive Courses of business with
: i ba ritish Colonies, thelex perience of sevetal years: inâ Lone
Jonas ia âColonial Agent, coupled! with promptitude, atterition,,.
whee Judgment, will}:he: trusts, enable him to give satisfic
\ ugesclionfetuy favourchim with heir commands...60 |
of„b.â Parents sending home their children for education
with:con fidence entrust them to.the care of Mr. Simnntbaton wie
will undertake. 1o.see them, placed in, first-rate and respectable
establishinents, where, every, attention shall .be. paid 10. their
health, morals, improvement and general comfort. ay
(âThese American and Canadian Editors who exchan and do
ds willâ oblige him by copy me
Nerina 6 lige him by copying this).
josttet tn SS POR Sai. Os oF
A LEXR. PICKERING offers: for Sale the
i Saopnin: New! London, burthen âabout! Twenty
os, old:measurewent.,.. Sheis well calcalated:for the:
i 7,,og1od 198s
yh coaster.
one woo od
New
a
London, 10th, 1843, % is
i 2
fallsofanisery; faichi lifes etermalyâ Came to this erring
soul 5 LG QRUpon MPO! CI enpsT
was myne jd frantic on the octasion. â'ThĂ© whole population
of the towft ant! âneighbourhood bad poured out_to_ witness
the embarkation, and the worn DP, G atm re) vey GE :
acwet tying des ly 2 88perately Tt or despe-â
| CHARLOTTETOWN :
Printed and, published by Cooper & BREMneRy
âHon, the House, of Assembly,, at, theig Qticesctiast
â* Printers, jo. the
2 gaa lstsfo, the
f
âi SPERA TR CA oe Petes allârell about âPar:
Fatoly well, he has bee fing desz"ely this long time,
corner of Pownal and Water Streets.âTerms, 13s. per annum,
payable in advance, or 15s. per annum, half-year ly in advance:
en ee eee