ao” 4 A Goverpment ite ob. noxious members who + uments, 3 os : te 1) RRA Riga ts FETS SLT Be AT Ral Cette . laid = a —e ve — eee eee ee ae Ca a ae SS ee ae me ‘ sa ae Nn camaiitiy ‘ . , ’ i = = ~ - —_ * 4 a : amen veil he . ont red tand gauseguae servitude wth theé Hare i4 : ——+-s ta : iy a see Was Do longer imme Offices has boed tive Gay) of frequent and aa , , oe i tive ward flistie of ie re) eee shohked Five wih , ‘ , an at conversation ton eo le iaaws manthe be will be the most unpopulw for sume Timer past, Ther: Wri Ine pager 30 by Lindi GML de dee I ac, ti ¥ ~ we - at Bie cin’ wi < Lt ich dues go. deseend to” cular qurehoas apper | ve a ; es Ren pooeary: = bi ue duabiay aden the Col mee CXCEPE vy yer bimretl | diate iear of Warbet ween tha Pree State and 4108 gelf-Tagdation With the pugty sh Power sot oe orn “a TL aly tm a be tine ‘ " . é F y, ane ? thealby 3 . wor utticnl! . tape ol bat This decabeduats did. reapect. If we wish to mahe progress in any of the sig was the reflection of the greeny cloth or not, ” | puted lo< ations untauc hed, | rm — ye { lien Lestiintind of ti SA OSI NIE holding the Presid - cottimetnn’ \ ners tine oe nnn | KETICN, if ja no slight advantage for the intelleet if thought ** the yods ** looked yery green, | Che Framer Mu Natal with eyowny 7 “% a —. against the inelinatio 2 | Pm as Count -Pallfy fs in Hungary The n tml tity - While indulging 10 these reflections, u ‘ + trom the interior announce the death o , after predicting that the Award will NEVER be) meeta; but it hae boen carefully purged & ae }to have a safe and firm axis around which it may CORRESPONDENCE. | revolve ; it isa fortunate thing te be enabled to eee To THe Borrok or Tue PROTESTANT Sin —Ic hae been frequently asserted by Pro tees wiiters, aud by yourself aueng the rest, thet the ductrines of the Cutivhe Chareb are such ae to tend to degrade the harman mind, and shackle the powers of the andersanting, and that it bas ever beew the policy of the Popes to restruia freedou: of Asoughl, and keep the faithful in 2 state of igne alain rence and degreduios. Now, Air, | purpose Ww avoid at the very outset in the jntellectual mice a inulutade of questions which would entangle us in inextrable labyrinths, or from which we couid not escape without falhay inte most lamentable absur dities. In a word,when we approach the investiga tion of these questions, we ought to consider our selves happy in finding them resolved befurehand io their most important points, knowing where the truth lies, and where there is danger of falling into error. This is the cause of the vast advantage which in these matters modern philosophers possess | over those of antiquity; the aucients had to grope im the dark; the moderns, preceded by brilliant lights, advance with a firm and sure step, aud muareb | how that this grave charge is without foundation, that the Popes Dave ever been the friends of the freedom of the miad, and the generous encouragers of the enlsiystion of the understanding. In doing this 1 shall occasionally borrow the sentiments, andtiometimeseven the expressions of ober writers, | investigate quest, satisfactoril _ philosophers discovered anything incompatible with | te éjamine bes Be weiadl «iow the doctrines of the Church? When Descartes, in | & inimical to the devel et ee ae the seventeenth century, effected a revolution in | and survey, in ite widest range, the history intel fund } princip! < hy ave ton of the als doctrine respecting the august mystery of the ae is eibinete 7 faith. Thie is th as | Ruchariet is known, aad also in what consists the | ‘ ooh a ahtacho ad Prot ee hace ewer | Hog of tranaubstuntiation. Many theologians, in ' teed 5 De there oenything in ‘ order to explain the supernatural phenomenon which Ba takes place after the consummation of the miracle " b ; pry of eh A ie ~ he che, had recourse to the doctrine of accidents which they of ~ Sade spenthanit distinguished from the substance, Now, the theory parasigte wy: of Deseartes, and of almost sll the other modern Stamissios OF THE INTELLECT To attuonirr. straight to their destination Atter all their reasonings on the attributes of the Divinity and the relations of man t God, have tall, gaunt ** Southern" looking personage \* dragged his slow length along’? towards the raised chair; and judging from his cade- verous appearance, he did not belong in any way to the jully god, Bacchus, or else he had undergone a long purgation in atonement for past offences. No sooner bad the President taken the chair—for sneh I found he was— than a Gray gentieman started up, under, apparently, great agitation of body and mind, as well us a palpitation of the beart, for he pressed his hand convulsiyely agsinst his heart, and said—Mr. President and Gen ‘themen, although } have the honour to be one | cof ** the gods "’ of this **board,’’ 1 am sorry | to say that t eannot lay claim to the immor- ‘tality of the heathen gods of old, for ] really, cannot live without Auman sustenance ; and) advices had been receives from the British Mini#- | other parts of the empire, und the ever since | had such « desperate run for wy! ter at Washington of such a nature as to give as-| will lmve pecuniary assistance given | | dertake the jowney. We may shortly expect to to free them from an enormous load of arrears, life from that raseally black Sikh in India, [ um subject to such severe palpitations of the heart that 1 must sometimes press my band and arm externally against my person, | philosophy, & singular incident occurred that will | jest my heart should jump trom its resting | trade and manufactures, which manifested an up- | throw a strong light on this subject. The Catbolic | plaee ; and this more particularly when | am) ward tendency; and the money market—that un- | hungry, which you know is not one of the attributes of the ** the gods.’’ I am also, Mr. President, | regret to say, subject to very severe fits of J/ypochondriasis. This very pame is an abomination to me; ard 1 can tell you, Mr. President, and other gods be- longing to this ** board,’’ that unless there —— = Ss lS = Charlottetown, January 27, 1862. | a. ad —_—wwrr LATE NEWS FROM EUROPE. Tur Rh. M. 8. Arabia, bound for New York, | called in at Halifax on Saturday, the 16th. Her} dates from Liverpool are to the 4th inst, She! | brought two batteries of the 15th Brigade Royal | Artillery, destined tor Bernida. The Mail for ‘this Island arrived here ov Tuesday night, inst. No intelligence had been reeeived in Eng: land up to the time of the sailing of the Arabia of | the surrender of the Southern Commissioners, but Q1et | surance of a pacific solution of the difficulty that | ‘arose out of the eapture of Mason and Slidell. | | ' | tuiling barometer of the politieal atmosphere—be- | came buovant as ever. We are informed that the | ' reports from the manulacturing districts are very isevere disease is always accelerated by that, satisfactory, showing that not only has a check | ‘madcap Abberdumbee Wilhock, whose very been put to the restriction of business going on for ' soine time, but that « rebound has taken place. The funds, railway shares, and other securities | philosophers, was incompatible with thiv explana py y period put to his career in some shape, bave also considerably improved. A fresh rise of ‘These words do, at first sight, couvey an idea of tion. for they denied the existence of accidents dis- | op way the indignant tenautry will soun place | 4 per cent. took place in Cansols. Cotton rose in| actagoniam to intellectual development, unless We cinct from the substance It consequently appeared, other gods at this board in our stead. Whi, price, and Breadstuilk fell. | Sugar was steady, svise their true meaning, and ascertain the precise 4: first sight, that a difficulty would bere arise for if the conlounded fellow would only tell lies) Coffe firm. ‘allow quiet. Demand for Linseed objects to which this submission is applicable. If ih Catholic doctrine, and that the Chureh would yea cherish an ardent affection for the dignity of pave w oppose this evstem of philosophy. And did our nature; if you are an enthusiastic advocate of | i 50 happea? Not atall. Upon a careful investi soventaic and bebold with delight the gstion of the matter, it was seen that the Catholic & bold, vigorous, aud accomplished gona belonged to a region intlnitely above that in geuias, you will discover something repulsive in &) which this uncertain philosophic doctrine moves, | principle wiifeh appears to invoke elavery, check however closely they might have seemed toapproxi- | the Might of the mind, and clip the wings of the in’ mate. In vain theologians discussed the matter, of ua, the sume as the * [slander ’ and * Moni tor,’ even the * Protestant,’ although some times letting out truth about J. Arbuckle and some others of our underlings, yet tells ‘enough of les of us to keep its readers in) British journals. rood humour with us, we could bear it; but that mad fellow, Wilhock, has a way pecu- liarly his own, not only of telling the truth, | but of telling it in such a manner that any or , and Sperm Oils, with an advanée. The retarns of the linperial revenue had been | announced, and were undergvuing diseus#ion in the | A considerable deticiency was exhibited, but the Times explains that that defi- cieney arose not from tie falling off of the produce | of taxation, but the remission of taxes, The new . . . ‘ . . ® . ~ : » sollect, Bat if you an this prineiple = it® indulged in mutual recriminations, and drew from | all of our drided scribes cannot contradict it, Year, says the same journal, finds us in full funds easalite,xpply it w the various branches of learning, :he new doctrine all manner of inferences, in order Something must be done, and that something , and good credit, and finds oyr enemies peuniless aad, what are the points of contact which to represent it as dangerous. The Church, always very shortly. I believe he cuu be easily caught and ereditiess. it With the wuthods adopted for the cultiva « gunerior w the thaughts of men, kept aloof from Sbout the sfreets; but Lam qoite sure the beat, usm, waind, will you discover any foundation ese disputes, maintaining that grave, majestic | for these, -auspicigas and apprebensious! How gtricude so well becaming her to whom Jesus Christ auch truth will you find in the reproaches of whieh | confided she sacred deposit of His doctrine. Such is Capbolieny has been file the object? Mow vain _ the liberty accorded by the Church to the genius of will appear «lt the deelamation published | philosophers, that it is free in every sense as long as subject ? its investigations de not infringe on the exch are the objects an Which our minds can be oc oviek RNa ne, Shee dines we sap w2ether a regards (hod or man, society or yulure, sacred pre of faith, or wander frow the track of true philosephy, : ! riety and pride, and in the une of Liberty and indepen. the Catholic principle of : sutbority imposes ne gence claims a right nl error, siinemennde sraekies, places ne obstacle inthe way ofthe human Almighty, to deny man’s free will, the immortality wind ;inetwend of checking thie progres, it serves ang spirituality of bis soul, her sublime origin and rather as @tofty bewron, whieh, fur from inter! heavenly destiny. Ateuch a time we avow, and we fering with the mariner's liberty, guides him glory in the ayowal, the Church does ruise ber: pe a pe ing "af oraeralirtiae or tyrannize over the huwan mind, but to proseribe Protestants surely will not tel! us that there is any- thigg wrong inthe ides which the Catholic religion 4), siveooltivd. Ayreving with us on the ides of 8 fend the rights of the Supreme Being and the dig. | Leing sternal, immutable, infinite, the Crestor of | nisy of haman nature ; then, indeed, we see ber op- | beqves gedearh, Jutybolyyfuil af goadsess, 8) Wang with ynyielding fSrmoges that sensclees Kewarder of the good, and « Punisher of the wicked, whieh elaime the fatal right of tiering all Uney admit this w be the only reasonable ides of | sorts of extravaganor. Tabs ost Collie cabior tid that cam be presented to the mind of man. To nor desire, knowing that in these matters ow idew the Catholic religion unites @@ ineompr- there is a sacred ling of dempreation between liberty. Legeible mystery, the august inyatery of the Trinity | 444 liceutiousuess, Happy. slavery that keeps us | but. om this poiut Protesjaute cammot reproneh us un-' from gpheiam, materiulism, and from doubtiry lowe they are prepared wo avow themselves Sociuian. | whether our souls came from Ged, whether they The Luthersus, the Calvinists, the Anglicans, 2d tend towards Him, aad whether there existe for un. many other sects condemn, ss well as we da, those happy mortals, after the sufferings which weigh whgdeay shjaiuugust mystery. | cannot see bow | yoon them in this life, a life of eternal happiness this mystery shuckics bum reason 19 lie comlem: | purchased by the merits of » (iod-man! plation of the Divinity. Does Wipoevens i from! Ag for the sciences Which have society for their gving forth into immensity? §=What limit duce it fix | oy iect, I think that I meed not vindicate the Catholic to the infiaite ocgan of light and bring employed ' religion from the reproach of having in this respect the word Gun? When the mind of mum, Coering oppressed the human mind. Her doctrines and ber. above dhe regiaas of ercation, and detaching itee!f i tuence as regards the nature and extent of power, from the body that would beur it down, abandons aod the civil and political liberty of nations, are | sufficient to prove that the Catholie religion, with- | iwelf to the delights of sublime meditation on the allt ce Bes, Creator of beaven acd earth, dora! ... descending to the arena in which the passions of tag sublime may qey. sop tua in bie beavenward | nen strive and contend, teaches a doctrine most fight?! Ask the iapewerable volames written on | fyourable to true civilization and the rightly under- | the Pivinityyeloquent aud irrefragable testimonies of good liberties of the people. we liberty eujuyed by the buman mind wherever’) | jaye not space to touch at length upon the rela- Catholieity prevails, The doctrine of the Chured | yio04 of the Catholic principl eel cshditelins the Diviaky mate he eed rt ons e Catholic principle of authority with the study of the natural eciences. It is not easy to see seo aoperts:; ae ee et mysteries i what way this principle can be injurious to the touch what is ; i hi abqve ow ' ~**| progress of the human mind in this department of within the resea of reason. As sogards mysteries, knowledge. I have anid that it is not easy; I might weir abode is in a region sosublime, they sppertain bave said that it ie impossible, and that fora very w an onder of things so superior to any created } simple reason, founded on a fact within the reach of ee a. every man, viz: the extreme reserve which the t) ' at og | Catholic religion evinces in everything relating to ' is unable, witbout the aid of revels purely uaturul scieuce. One might suppose that ost = : even the most rewote idea of these in- tiod designed w read ua a severe lesson ou our ex-— How can things which never cosive curiosity relative w this matter. You have ‘ time would be on the Sabbath during divine ser- vice, when he resorts to his garre? to fabricate his desperate attacks on us. Why, | never take the * Examiner’ in my hand until after my wife or daughter tells me Aberdumbee’s name does notappear therein. Now, [ have an idea of how ty make a capture of him, but as 1 have not at present any active force that Lam aware of beenealled 19 question— who, with the volunteer assistance of forty vr fifty Geraye, | think would be able enough to secure the fellow, by tnvesting the pre- mises during bis sleeping or writing hours, At this tho Major jumped up, circled round as if u wasps nest bad been about _ Yeice through her supreme Pontifls, not to oppress tijs posteriors, and veciterated iu exalted. military tones, and suid—I am amazed, the ehiet uflicer in command could be expected to risk his precious life in any desperate or hazardous undertaking, such as the arresting aud bringing to justice su tremenJous a per- sunage as Abberdumbee Wilhock, who, it ix wel} knows, is the mest popular man in the Colony — at least, wmongst the tenantry. No, ur, such a rale never existed in ** the tervice,’’ which L knew well when | aceepted the high and important ofice which | now vhold ; bat even supposing me to be so fyulisl base it stauds 154 feet high. in regard to my own personal safety, and that my precious life was lost upon such an extra hazardous expedition as the one under consideration, it is & neturivus fact that no other * god’? in the Uolony could be got so able and willing to act the part of commander at this peculiar juncture, and hence the ne- cesnity of taking care of myself, tor the public guod. | know my duty, sir, and when the danger does arrive, or the necessity of facing cold lead or steel, my daty and my inclina- tion shall direet me to sume convenient ob- |serving spot *’ out of range,’ and there issue Leda. my orders, through my uids-de-camp. But let me see; here inmy neighbouring * god,” Majer doln, aid-de-camp ! just new from the mint; bow would it do tu detail forty or filty of our Grays under bis charge for ** the ser- vice’’ needed. At this, Major John very coolly and cordially greeted his brother gods, and informed them that his high military commission was given him before has military exercise or training commenced ; and besides, he has sent for w sword of pure Damascus ‘steel, ull the way to Syria, and tent off a full | length portrait of bimself to the Prince of have his uniform made befitting his rank ; and under such circumstances, he trusted! Wooded nature of their godehipe would held him excused ; and For the present year we may pretty confidently expieet that the peace of Rurope will not be disturbed, oursclyos, and it Heaven favours us and our neigh- If we ean keep out of war bours with abundant harvests, we may hope to pass through the year with a fair share of werldly prosperity. A suspicious steamer has been seen cruising in ‘under my command, 4 siral} just wart to hear the English Channel off Dover, and there waa De sds. ‘ But Guman reason, at once so powerful and so the opinion of lus godship tue Major of the, streng reasons for suppbag it was the privateer embrace infinity. Well, then, feo sje, sometimes become pufed up with arrogunce Mifl-s, whose daring valour jes never yet, Sumpter. An effort is to be made te perpetnate the me- mory of Prince Albert, and it can hardly fail to be | “successful, cousidering how much he is regretted. | What form the memorial is to assume cannot, of course, be decided ou the instant. A question like this demands time and consideration, and the opi- nion of men of taste and experience. The pecu- ; error and immorality, guard the fuithfel fram Mr. lresident, that bis godship who has just niary part of the affair mmay be dismissed without | dangers, to maintain iaviolate the eacred deposit af *4t dawy bas eo fur exposed bis ignorance of a thought. Any reasona’le sum for such a pur- faith entrusted to ber guardianship, and tu de. be rules of “the service’? ws to sappose that) pose would be subseribed within an hour in the city of Londou alone; fund the other great towns and cities would, if called on, be only too happy to coutribute towards the object. The London Times suggests an obclisk on the site of the Crystal Palace, in Hyde Park, and refers in _ proof of the excctleucg of the gdea —— in St. Peterburg, ralscPin hemory of A or, With the massive the first Czar of that name. A great meeting was held in Dublin, on the Sist, in aid of the movement fur raising * a national tri- bute of respect to the sawemnoreot the late phar! of Eglington, for his efforts to promote the miterial interesta of Lreland.” His Excelleney the Lord Licutenant of Ireland has with his own hands distributed a large quan- tity of warm clothing te poor persons. On Saturday evening, 28th ult., H. M. eutter Pad ger was run down, at Kingstown, by the ateamer In about tive minutes afterwards she sank in about seven fuihoms. The erew ngrrewly es- caped drowning. Ono Christmas morning, at Castlebar, the Rev. James Loftus, while inthe act of eelebrating mass in the Catholie chapel of the workhouse of that town, dropped dead at the foot of the alter, Every regiment in Aldershott has been medi- cally iuxpeeted, «o as te be ready to embark im- mediately for active sérvice in Canada. BALLOONS FOR THE CANADIAN EXPEDITION. ) —The authorities have now betore them a propo- i i ’ Wales’ military tailor in London, in order to) sal for the employ ment of balloons in recoghoitring in the anticipated war in Canada. The thickly the country renders the work of | ) reconnoitring in the ordinary manner very difficult, | and the adoption of some such means of ees to! a besides, continued the Major, I must candid tne : . : moet, are of a toully distinet order, and | only to read the Bible to be convineed of this. Ido say that 1 would not like to run the risk pA 4 ve y — aa. Tho Rangeen ob be | whieb ‘ al distance apatt, interfere with | not mean that nature is never noticed in the Bible; petting an ugly ** thrust’? from mad Abber- j tine 3 Shot ip ent ie great ' firat eneh t ‘an the moon's orbit come in basen | that Divine book presents ber to us in ber grandest, dumbec. night be supposed; besides the véry great culty ! wite Temotest fixed suns? Do you fear that | noblest, and indstewblimeaspect ; a8 a living whole,| The president here drew a long sigh, and) of hitting an object high up in the air, it Id re- | the of smystery may limit the sphere) jn fact, together with all ber relations and ber | 4fter some convulsive bodily heaving, he said, | quire a great number of shot te - bihers an take place ; an \ wf your reagon’s operations! Areyouspprehensive Jeet in wandering throagh unmeneity, you may be | of decomposition. In these sacred pages the painter's | smothered in the Garrowners Of your reason? Was! pencil and the poet's fancy will meet with magnifi. opace waned for eg a of Descartes, of Gax cent models; but the inquisitive philosopher will seudi, of Malbrouche? Did these men complain | jook in vain for thé hints he i# in quest of. The tums their letts were limited, imprisoned? jfioly Spirit did not aim at making uaturaliste, but Why, indeed, should they complain when they virtuous men; hence in describing the creation, He cannot bat own that they areindebied to Catholicity represents it solely in a light the best adapted to tot the and sublime ideas that enrich | excite in us feelings of admiration and gratitude to- ani The philosophers of antiquity in| wards the Author of so many wonders and benefits. on the Divinity are ut an immense | Nature, us she aypearsin the sucred text, bas not -| much to gratify the curiosity of the philosopher; ~| but then she delight, and ennobles the imagination, , she moves and penetnites the heart. Before Christianity appeared on the! Prom the rapid view which I have taken of the primitive ideas on the Divinity having several branches of learning in their relations to the hgman mind wundered amongst 4) thy Carbolic principle of guthority, it is clear to a a thessand monstrous fancies. " demonstration, that the alleged enslavement of the necessity of a God, nau substituted for Wee, th the sublime destiny, but without any kind of analysie |1 quite agree with your gudships that some- | considerable escape of gax wou thing must be done to destroy the influence of that mad Abberdumbee ; but ‘the tame Aas balloon, there would be no eseape jut all. \nut yet arrived’ to take military possession ot him ; we must respect the Jaws of the land which have not as yet been set aside by mar- \tial law, and until that be done, our Volun-| teers are powerless for such an emergency ; besides, your godships, perhaps, forget that we have not even obtained a writ of any kind trom uuy court as yet against the fellow, and as your godships sre persona//y aware that homan nsture is weak, and that ** every man has has price,”’ | think we might make an ap- propriation for that purpose to great advan- tage, tor even mad-men are generally fond of money ; and if any one out of Pluto's lower regiens can do a job of that kind to advan- tage, it is our grand scribe, for [ need not re- ‘mind you that atter domg a Bank out of ‘ ; en. inteliget of Catholics by the Church, with the Pope the Supreme the ereution of bisown imagina- | 4 irs head, is nothing but a mere bug-bear, and that tion. Jiut ever the ineffable splendour, de«. \ ccading from the bosom of the Father of light, has shone upos the whole earth, ideas of the Divinity have rewained so , Cleur and simple, and at the same ime and sublime that human rea- we has obtained a wider range, the veil which cou- sted aii of universe has been with- : world's destiny has been marked out, téived the key that explains the ‘fill god surround him. Protestants force of thie truth, and although their aversion for everything Catholic was almost fanati- in mattersof faith, have converted Balmez paesim.} } You have thought proper to keep the other eom- munieations which I have sent you nearly a fort- night without publication ; and in the case of the last yon not only withheld its publication, but you published in the meantime, a contemptible, seurrJous letter of some one who came to your assistance agajnst me, and who wus either afraid or ashamed to write over his proper signature. If this unge- nerous and undignified way of acting is not in aec- cordance with your idea of Christian honor and £15,000, it will be very strange if he can’t dow ** smart business’ with poor Abberdum- in no respect dees either our faith or discipline ar. | bie Wilhoek ; and then if the worst comes, | to find that, in some of the eases ch t rest or retard the progress of learning. (Vide \und he should prove either too hard or too of the realin specially devised forthe seniel of pub- | and his Goverment know no more of it than was the pungency of its wit ;— the honest to be corrupted, you know our scribe can accuse him of offering his services for a consideration, at which fabrications we all know right well he is as periect as if he were a god like one of ourselves. 1 merely throw out these few hints for your consideration, seeing, as | before remarked, that the /aw is against vs; and moreover, | know of my own knowledge, that more than one electornl dis- trict have already asked him (Wilhock) to represent them in the next [louse of. Assem- bly ; and you know it ie safer tu keep up ap- pearances—even false ones—than to offend the ry’, , justice, you will not, I , treat thi : weny of them. both in Germany or nearer howe into! nication in the same mtn ary. "St Ce tee tenantry by arresting or injuring publicly anbelieving philosophers, yet, generally speaking, | A Vd i ot SCTE | their favourite Abberdumbee, for we cannot they may be said to have respected the idea uf the Divinisy. , indeed, could it be otherwise? | Taleaie Galle ccs ico gene w bo 2o-| A. McDONALD. placed by any other. Now: and Leiboite, embrac- | St. Duastan’s College, Jan. 21, 1862. ing heaven and earth in their speculations, could | — muy pothing new of the Author of so many wonders, | nothing but what had already been taught by the Catholie religion. The Church does not impede the operations of the’ THE TENANTS’ FRIEND intellect ae regards the study of wan. Philosophers .. 1 dreamedia dream, and yet it wae not alladream. Your obedient und humble servant, ‘ i FOR THK EXAMINER, ¢ are divided into two schools, the muaterialints and | the spiritualista, The former assert that the human | : soul is only a portion of matter, which, by u certain, ration to your ** Christmas Pie,"’ pre- modification, produces in us what we cal) thought 884 to the Government in a late No. of aod will; the latter maintain that the evergy accom-| t'® Examiner,’ Fe er under a + ey ‘lively impression t ‘bt of gratitude vaaying chaught and will is incompatible with the which the Tenantry of P. B. tendons you 'a rosy of laughter at **the beard.’ , the merriment subsided, Bacchus stood up. fenge, gaye uo reasop for the act, and expressed |with a face as refulgent a8 & new moun af uo regret at having committed it, He was about A few evenings ago, alter giving due! midsummer, and said; | declare't god, gen-| thirty years of age, tlemen, bdou’t see any great cause tur laugh. ter whatever ; 1 wm only just returned from. **the B—g,’’ where I had a pleasant time ‘amongst the goddesses, and where, | would ask, should a god like me be, unless amongst’ conceal from ourselves—though gods we be —bhis certain faet, that our late depends on the will of the Tenantry at the next genera! election. It is therefore just as well to ‘look beture we jump,’ the splendid military ar-_ i dour of some of your godships to the contrary notwithstanding. Ilere a prolonged silence J s ‘ensaed until « loud nvive was beard to pro- TO ABBERDUMBEE WILHOCK, ESQR., ‘ceed irom the jolly god Bacchus, 2 which caused After j ter, aud bomen feelings, sad she will wil you tua ou thew matters you ure périectiy free ‘4 ; evald not with the of individuality. Wor these reasons they assert that opinion ia false and wbeurd. The Ca *Psttment, where he wild me, lutervenes ia the dispute, and gays: | be bos * Catholic and a matertalist.” Chureh by whut eynem y w capliin the Sdenn, the seneatinan, the ents of a iis to bold what 2 Aud consequently of divers entities, pointing out the destructive, walizioas apd essential deceitful to # being that thinks, en ul policy of their conduct. haere cesar} sides uf @ table, covered with green cluth even of ee the gods.”’ ’ sub luaged to ‘“the bourd’’ there was one it wae raised above the rest. , Sppear to be any tormul business before | the ** Land Spy’? Whitwan occupied iu con- fur your able advocacy of their claims in how long it alter i si ‘ ben J g it was alter e ] fuund myself under the caninctadi Max- pleas, who conducted me w 4 magnificent oe the gods ’’ usvally met for state deliberations. Un buth Huw many wore be- Jus equals? Aud if you knew the quantity of Nectar which 1 quafled while endeavouring ty establish an erecion for a ‘+ perpetual mo- preconcerted signals they raised their egrbines and |tion,’’ you would uot be surprised tofindine, discharged them at the culprit. ‘The prisoner tell on bis right arm. The Prune Mar fn ad- if not ** in the wind,’’ at least rather windy. { have listened with much attention to the. suggestions of your godsbips relative to the popularity of wad Dambie, but 1 can tell you how to destroy 1u—aud the only way you can do it—and that is, to give bim a Go- I did not iesrn ; but large chair ut one end, which longed tu the king or scribe, us Lhere did not! jal, and my word for it, there won't be found cernment appointineut or take him into Coun- # constituency in the Island which will elect him alter that or give him the office which’ pea than a hole was made in the apper part of the! DISTRESS IN THE WEST OF IRRLANP.—De- “PUTATION TO THE LORD-LigCPENANT. — Ac- | ‘cording to appointment, the de tion from the | Town Council of Dublin waited upon bis Excel- | j leney on Monday, at the Viceregal-lodge, to pre- ) sent the memorial of the Corporation oy the subject of distress m the westiof Ireland. ‘The tation were aftired in the corporate robes, auceom- | panied by the civie officer, bearing the insignia of | | the Corporation. The Lord Mayor read the me- morial, and his Excelleney replied as |“ My Lord Mayor and Gentlemen: It must be al- | | ways pleasing to wee | any portion of the commn- nity sympathizing with the wants antl privations | | of their leas happily situated brethren, Theeondi-. | tion of the poor hus, withontdoubt, been unfayour- | ‘ably influenced by the general character of the | | weather in the yer we are just closing. It con- tinues to engage the watchful attention of the Go- | vernment. With re which you have proiginently sdverte unless iberaltty | ‘of the proprietors of the soil and the wealthier | claskex in the respective neighbourhoods has been | ' called _ Bn a view 1 (ae and distribute | the supply of this essential requisiteyand I cannot | | doubt that if unha ily further onertleatahould be- ‘come necessary, the initiative of relief, at least, would be taken by that general public whose be- nevoleuce and generosity have been seldom invoked | in yain.”—The deputation then withdrew. Before the death of the Prince Consort it had) been arranged that his Koyal Highness the Prince | of Wales was to spend some inc of the winter | in the Levant and Syria, reine, course, Malta and Corfu on bis way. We under that this’ programme will be adhered to, no anding | the moxt nelancholy event which hag intervened, | and that the Prince will shortly leave for the East, returning in time to take part in the ypening of the Great Exhibition. | Mirrary ExecetTion aT Matta.—A letter ‘lie distress may have failed to meet, | from Malta gives a painful account of @ milita | execution:—* The event of the weeluih this garri- }son has been the execution of the r Jon | Edwards,.of the 3rd Brigade Royal Artillery, for | having fired bis carbine at Captain Keate. At his trial by general court-martial he made vo de- _ bore au indifferent charac. He is said to have served in the Royal Ma- rines, but little is known of his past bixtory. Atter } his eyes had been bandaged by the Provest-Mar- shal, the firing party, consisting of twelve artillery- men, Whose carbines bud been previougly loaded, sixwith ballaud six with blank cartgdge, mlvanced within ten paces of the prisoner, who was resting on his right knee wiih his face towardsthem. At ‘ j ; vaper l fired a pistol through hi« T - : Tenet abana w ys sevens that de pea f O heen privted in this journal on the subject, > “I definite anid precise, f liberty, | 20 the body ne ineffectual by ry The whole of but we are not vain enough to believe that Tie} my Se haeo > seers or nd am wry 4 — D’Esterre wea shot troops were then marched in slow time, the) px ayineR exercises more influen ‘er the | ing ull the rights of freemen by hie mege fiat, he of the pistols bands again i exercises more Iniene? Over ee jan not in the loust exdecded the powers accorded | inent that did it. O'Connell's sebond in plats nee, Se ly p just as it fell, and, from © troops soon became | a mass of blood end dirt. ‘ the ‘Dead Ait the | Cave or Goop HoreThe Norman has ar- rived with dates from Cape Town, Ney. 21; St.) Helena, Nov. 30; and Ascension, Dee. 4. Native | broeress'ng more j j attire wer _|den, the traveller, from fever. Award fromm receiving the royal sanction, Commission Was inquiring mtg the management of Robben Island. There had been violent gales on the coast. Two colonial yeasels had foundered at anchor, witb all hands on board. The crops and wool @ips have been abundant. The oi ium was not so W ide-spread among the vines us hint been acticipated. Russia.-—Aflairs in Russia appear to he ap- proac ‘ing a climax. We learn by a telegram lust eyeniog Chiat the University of St. Petersburg hus been finally eluved by an order from the Minister of Publie Inctruction, sanctioned by the Emperor. The alleged en use is the recent disturbances, but he real one, nd doubt, is the serious attitude re- cently assumed 1," the people, the students, and the wokdiery, : ; The students are pecmitted by the Imperial de- cree to pursue their stuJies at the universities in poor students them to un- hear of an explosion in Russia. i The loyalty of the army is by no 7heans unin- These advices had a very salutary influence on| peachable, for the recent policy of the Czar has | seriously, alienated the affections of Its people, and, when Russin i embarrassed, the Poles wil! not hesitate to help themselves. Even the si “fs, for Whom the Czar had sacrificed so much, ar ungrateful, and think thermsetyves injured—so dissi- milar are the views which people take of their respective positions in lite. InpiA.—Bompay, Dee. 12.—The man who was captured at Murrichee, when trying te get away from India, was recognised by a former servant as the Nana Sahib. chant. Jalabut Khan, the murderer of Major Bur- ton, is to be hanged at Kotah. Col. Baird Smith is returning home on account of ill health. Mr. Laing hos arrived in Calcutta, A resolution of the Governor-General creates a chief-comiission- ership of the central provinces. Lieut. Stewart, of H. M.'s 28th Regiment, has been murdered by his native servant at Nosserabad. FRIGHTFUL MASSACRE IN CIN’, — News reached us by the last mail that near Chetoo the rebels bad committed the most frightlul devasta- tion; that neu, women, and children bad been brutally murdered, some being burnt, others tied to stukes, and others with ropes round their necks dragged tu death by horses, At this juncture we are told that the French landed 200 men and three yuus to detend the place, aud that her Majesty's gun-beat Insolent opened fire onthe rebels. Here, then, the neutrality of whieh we justly boast anay perhaps be said to have been violated. But it must be remembered that the lives of Europeaas were at stake; that this attack of the Taipiugs, or rather of the local banditti which acknowledge the rebel Emperor, was followed up by a most tright- ful massaere; and strange indeed it would have been at such a time it, with the power to intertere, we had stood ehtirely aloof. The wretches who attacked the villages adjoiniag Chetoo were not satisfied with the diabolical acta they committed on the inhabitants, but actually murdered two, noble-hearted American missionaries who went out to the rebel camp js ministers of peace.—Lon- - don and China Telegraph. re The ‘Correspondence Bullier,’a Paris lithographed sheet, speaks of u rumour that an atempt bad been made to assussinate Gen. de Goyon at Rome, and that one of his aides-de-camp had reeeived two peinard wounds. The Times of the 24th ult. has a lengthy article upon the Prince Consort, of which we quote the opening paragraph. It says :—* Yesterday the yrave closed over all that was left us of the accom- lished and amiable Prince who has for 20 years ischarged the duties of his exalted position in a manner to defy detraction and silence envy jiself. Around his cotlin were gathered together all that is | most lustrious, most venerable, and most powerful in the country. Several prelates, capecially dis- tirguished as the leaders of our ececlesiastical hierarey, many Royal Princes and their Represen tatives, the ministers to whom the destinies of the country and the honour of the Crown are eutrasted,. were yssombled to mourn the loms-of one Whidse cx- alted esteem, and who did not leave behind hin, in all that brilliant erowd, any one who had dixcharyed the duties of life with more exewplary and un- swerving steadiness than himeclf. The day was still and gloomy, as betitted the sorrowful oceusion, and the melanehely trappings of woe, the long train of plomed horses and imeurning coaches, lost on this oceagion the impression of emptiness which is tov apt to attaca.to such exhibitions of material sorrow, und were slight, but still fitting, accompaniments to the deep and sincere grief which was felt in every heart as for a domestic calamity. Dut this sad secne was only a specimen of what took place over the whole suriace of busy, bustling England. Shops were shut, labour was suspended, Exchanges were closed, and the eountry veluntarily imposed upen itself a fine which, probably, cannot be estimated at less than a million sterling, in order to mark its re- grot for the dead and its sympathy for the survivors, A country whieh can thus mourn deserves to be thus served. "We have buried our dead out of our sight with u grief as sincere as unostentatious; but his memory will live among us, and his mune will al ways come tirsi wo the lips of those who wish to describe the union of the highest rank with the purest virtue.”’ sinning From the Correspondent of the London Daily Telegraph. AUCKLAND, New ZeavLanp, October $th.—The principal political eveut which has occurred here during the pust month has been the arrival of our new Covernor, Sir George Grey, who landed in this citv on the 26th ult., from H. M. steam corvetie) “ Coasack,” 41 days out from the Cape of Good Hope. Sir (ieorge Grey arrives in New Zealand at a moat eriticul period—a time when the present is | uncertain, and the future moet diffieult to penetrate. | The veil which is hanging over everything relating tothe Maori people enshrouds their relationship with the European Colonists in the greatest mys- tery, but we took to Sir George Grey to act the | magician’s part and dispel its gloor. A smart shock ofan Earthquake was felt at Auck- land on the Ist, about midnight, a slighter one the day following, but on Thursday a most violent shock | crented general alarm. The Louses creaked and | shook and the clocks stopped. The first blow was immediately followed by a second with increased | force, but no material damage was caused by this! alarming visitation. The atmosphere was dufl and surcharged with electricity, and the rain fell in| torrents, j THE AWARD STRANGLED, | WE stated jn our last No. that sn extraordinary article appeared in the ‘ Islander’ of the previous | Friday on the subject of the Award of the Land | } } } Commission. Ye purpose to deyote a little space such vagaries—to use a very mild term—since the lows :-— | to a consideration of some of the points that struck commencement of the present very unhappy war, us ae peculiarly remarkable. Our readers are aware that the Legislature will meet in about three weeks hence; yet the: ' } ‘Islander’ assures us that the Award—which every | one supposed would be not only the all-engrossing | subject of legislation, but the first topic for promi-. ‘pect to the article of ate to ‘nent notice in the Governor's opening speech—has | gon at nach not yet been received, and that * his Excellency | lyes who have seen it must have been struck by | But | communicated to the public by Mr. Howe.” this is net all. In the same article the ‘ Islander says: ‘There is, we imagine, too much reason | i to fear that the Award will meet the same fgte | as did the attempt to effect a partial escheat in| 1832—that it will be strangled by thoso who! led us to expect. The mode ia which Mr. Lincoln : Mi Dg | saves society in Ajerica varies in very few parti- claim to be the ouly friends of the people.” After | culara frow the treatment applied with so imueh | slain in the attempt to | thix announcement from the Government organ, | S4Cce*s by the Nf ae Saviour of Sogjety in France. | 0 there ean be very little doubt that there is ne in- tention, and probably never was, on the part of the Government, to give any practical effect to a considerable amount of money, and eovered it with the disgrace of having a Spy quartered upon it. But we have been repeatedly told that the Commission was quite a favorite object with the principal pro- ! prietors, and that they would cheerfully submit to! verbiage of Liberalism, and to appeal to “the prinei- | any decision arrived at. We bave been told, moreover, that the Liberals had no influence at all at the Colonial Office, and that they are abhor- red by the proprictors. Hf this be the ease, how could the Liberal« have “ strangled” the Award ? ; But the Liberals, as a body, dou’t appear to have | land of the free and the home of the brave.” troubled their heads much about it. To be sure, there have been some public meetings held, and resolutions passed condemnatory of it, but no re- wonstrance or protest aguinst it, so far as it has been maade known to us, has ever yet been pre- sented to the authorities, A good deal, indeed, Colonial Office and the proprietors than the Ge- vernment of Prince Edward Island does. Now, |we are informed by the * Islander,’ for, perhaps, the fiftieth time, that the Government “ is com- posed of those who have some interest with the vroprietors ;"’ and their interest at the Coionial He was disyoised as a mer | nk wa: among the least of his titlesto our, | ballot and universal suffrage. They both silence in-; *“* : ‘ ah | convenient ibecibetenes by the simple process of in-| Hibernian, being partly in F reneh, the duel /careerating the members; and they both devote | called , | their particulay attention to the perfect subjugation | Dr. D'Esterre. There’s historic material the Commission, although it bas cost this country | of the i , pupil ‘ ‘ olen the discovery is due that the eopyentional The Liberals are charged with having used | fo7 the realjty. He has found that there jx a posi-| their influence with the proprietors to prevent the ‘Islander’ ; re @hjoving a ; that particular spot im the “Land of thee ia which by an odd whim of fortune, bears a of Fort Lafayette. With praiseworthy f —— General Dix has recently taken mengures “ight to secure the foture alleviance of the Ma Legisluaure. He has issoed an order direes otticers at the pt Ing broth e ~“renbires of ie to refuse the votes, and arrest the > _— ‘ : voters whom they «hall BuSpect of bovine AL. | the cause of the Contederates ho limit ib i betted upon their diseretion, either IW reapart to fie of the abettulbor the extent of root ; ; Louis Nepoteon never shot wer ae bvem methed of deyewimr of a hostile majority. ne hewrty corvqemtion of the It ; - cured by a etnilar procesr. Bahonere has been arrested, ada mend tis his place. The poliee have bee and the osly person who can be fowad te their duties to the satisfaction of the Governinent | Washington are the leust reputable portion of the eeeee of the town, whe, before they > ween, were “~wellkaewn to the -4 Namereve anetdotes have made Eng }ieh Tenders oo sauctioned by the British ¢ Sinister, the | BAYS S— | “Phe trath ie, which we assert boldly, and ebal- Henge the closest investigation, by all honest and impartial men, into the conduct of the Government on the land question, that they have exerted all their influence with the proprietors, in favor vt the | tenantry.”’ W here is the result of their “ influence W hat have the Government done for the tenantry’ ‘These are practical questions that must be an- | swered salisiggtorily betore the Gevernmment can ‘take eredit fur doing anything else but practising | the most Gugrant deception on the country. The ‘ Wlander’ dilates upon the great alvantages to be derived from the Award—says it “ss celeu- lated to confer important beuefits ou the tenamtry, and yive them the right to become freeholders on! quite fumtiar w ith the omtrayes these mey , P J Y . a . wir | Comméinted: Causclser stteete, ij payment of each sum for the purchase of their | withou’ wareand, iiustbounen pe rence aul farms as impartial arbitrators might determine | count of ths colo of var ee have been ine; ‘upon,’ —that “* no measure ever prosecuted in the — pe! pr 8 ieee nie Sishike eee {eland by the advocates of escheat resulted in 80 of being compelled tor declir @ astute auy European desgotiem, hag itestved in still more serious en Aertaewr certs Lafayette, the writ of Batwae corer ie git} law the right of every citwen whorit | his liberty ; and so long as the Bow stitiy, lawyers and judges who are not afraid | This caures the President. great perp would not, fer the world, inflict such a Awerican liberty as to suspend the law, he leaves the legal right in full vigour; opposes the execution of the writ witha focre, and threatens with imprisonment all snd lawvere whe are concerted in isouing it, fate of Judge Merrich—who granted the to release trom prison no alleged traitor, obtain the discharge of a lad whe had been curried off into the army without his parente’ no doubt act as a warning to bie bevtheem following account from Wasbingtem indi the liwyers have to expect:— “It is known that General Porter out under the advice of the State 1 that it is the intention of the Gove to urrest any lawyer who seeks toemb cers inthe disehatge of theirduties. By ) much injury to the proprietors generally” as the wooder."U Land Commiseion,—and that the Go- i yernmout sould not be held up to censure “ be- cause they hase procured for the tenantry the re- | mission of ncarly all their back rents.” are i All this wretched twaddle shows that the editor ef the ‘Islander’ nust have a very poor opinion of the mental capacity of his readers, or that he is ‘ himeelf as great a fool as aL” of them. What is \ the use of chafling about the au ¥antages to be de- ‘rived from the Award, if the Awa.d isnever to be | confirmed, for Mr. Pope says—and Le ought to} know—that “there is too much reason to fear it But even supposing the pre- ” will be strangled cious innocent were allowed to live, we deny that | the tenantry would derive any advantages Srom it, or that the proprietors would sustain any in\ury : ‘ ‘ ‘ - | President the payment of the salary of from its operation. As regards purchasing th’ po. been etopped, and he is himgelf now. farme, the tenantry can do that now, and could | surveillance of the police. In this ‘ : : =e Dh nantes Warranted in snying that the Government always do it, on far better terms by private treaty) \) any w By recognize the employment of with the landlord than could be effected under the | pocure = re rae of woe arrested and: CD a ‘ ewe ‘ bel nce | ea tor political offences. e Secretary . arbitration clause, which would entail immense oo igcr it his duty to promptly investigate thee delay and cost. | of 21. V pergon arrested, wd act wy 4 ‘ r: —e » sates atic » ys taines without argunient of counsel. , eahiny stata: . ‘ amber . Award, we ean sce no trace of it in the outline” ypon the nubjecip of b friendly power ou = hie : be inhe mm the e - the | pieion ef political Intrigue. imore W hile b hus been furnixle 4,4 n the coutrary, the = a oe dieeat cham to tenen tt een tse proprietors would derive very important benefits) the attempt to detain them when they ure from it. Their doubtful and imperteet tithes would ; 2¢t ot — ~ = ang B a of apy . resFlion While Stuart Utce be coufirmed—the debt which they owe to the . perraliel, but is absolutely inconsistent with the Colony for quit rents would be expunged—their The a poligatione of 9 teeetas : Y . , ie only excuse for the arrest © fraudulent exercise of the righta of ownership over 4.6 are even now under im onegent in » fishe aze : “re J as an inde-. fortresses is the allegution that they wete the fishery reserves would be regard das an inde sano on American ground. But ‘eueb an tien in respect to a lady who was in the et tuhing herself to the distance of thousands ef | from American territory, Wis, on the face of it, ab surd. The only concelvable exphination of rs proceeding is, that in their mad neces of they have forgotten international hiw ae well as. every otber kind of law ; ond that their object wat to restrain her from acta whieh she was iy hit rats eg of intending to do upon “* English” ground. 2pm, lands, which, under the arbitration clause, they porn has been actually done, ne explana would bave influence enough to exact~—a price) probably be nee but the a ee : y beuray . slenderness of the thread much higher than they have been accustomed to Aid y a Se te » two nations bangs demand in private arrangements with their ten-' eventa, it ones list of se advantages ti 4 : aie mark © the land of free.’ Tt is a land antry,—and, in short, they would be hedged round, | electors may not. vote for feur uf under the Award, with great privileges and ad-) may not execute the law for —s 4 thie - bia 'which ausubmissive advocates are threstened % vantages which they could not hope to enjoy in an imprisonment, and hostile ewspapersare unsettled state of the land tenures. / ed—ia which women cannot live in safety, It is extremely fortunate for the Island, there. | which they may not depart iu peace. " —_———e-—_——— ot? te fore, that our braggart Government has not had | By: Influence enough te procure the Imperial sanction | O'CONNELL'S DUELLING PICT to the Award. The presumed and acknowledged fact of its being strangled is not owing, we are | Tue London correspondent of the * coutident, to any action of the Liberal party, but Albion ’ supplies the following graphic muy be attributed to the power of the Colonial, connectio: with the sale by auction on @ Minister—whose sense of justice, we may well | casion of the duelling pistols said to have bee suppose, hax been shocked by an apprehension of used by the late Daniel O'Connell in bis — ' the evils which it would entail upon the Colony, | able encounter with I)'Esterre. It is extremely and his honest nature revolted at the mockery | doubtful that the queer sort of instruments herein — attempted to be perpetrated under the plea of! deseribed were ever seen by the great | iberator 5 satisfying the just and reasonable demands of the, for we think that such “s souvenir” weuld ever tenantry. | have been allowed to fall inte the hands of a Sa | Saxon” in a London auciion room. However, THE LAND OF THE FREE. there is so much quaint humour in . # of the sale, and so much Tus United States Government bave committed of a very interesting character mixed up that we readily commend the perusal of the te all jevers of humour, whe, like ‘ no doubt willing to be sold as regards the genuine shooting irons :— that we are not surprised to see constant attention given to their affairs in the free press of Great Bri-! tain and the Colonics, 2nd to notice that, scarcely | without an exception, reproach and condemnation | A souvenir of old Ireland “as she saght t characterise the tone of that press. The most pi-! great, glorious, and free" —free to blow a quant article in reference to the war which we have | ro a wa awe an Fagen pead for a Jong time is the following from the Lon- and propriety, turned up on Wedn ‘Saturday Review.’ The Federalists them-; Debenbam’s King- Ce close te the Garrick Club: and rt dent partevk of the tragi-comie cha . ‘such locale, What was it? The sale by The Model Republic has exposed herself to a good of the pistols wherewith the Liberator e deal of ignominy by the devices of government’ |. aasaesi which she has borrowed from the tyranuies of the | himself from the st Old World, and expecially from that tyranny which ‘or the purpose of tranquillizing his rose, ten years ago, upon the ruins of u Republic. 84 opiate pill of lead or otherwise The imitation is, oy the whole, much more faithful , failing narcotic, if properly admini than the ditferences of race and history would huve | this ease, the operator became the | engineer was hoisted = his own , having sold the skin of the Lrish Roman kill the animal. cription in the catalogue of this very odd They have both Less odd because the pistols were a pair, was uuded a reign of force ou vote by | une affaire d'honneur, aud the victim a, Sys there is one point jy woieh the | ture Macaulaya, Dr. D’Esterre! Pe as far outstripped hig muster. To Louis | tor in divinity; » minor eanon 3 i shrases of freedom might, even in these enji htened | eerie erie teeta oF toe papistical Pat. ‘ jays, be made, to a very great extent, to do duty} btm ’ rous bore was seemingly ’ y | quired, to judge by the barrels of these an jand a mock freedom of the press, even though the | ver and pre-pereussionary unrifled fliate, egastrute | delusion be perfectly traneparent to his subjects. ed to carry about a quarter of a pound of metal |1t has enabled Imperialist scribes, both in France the very aspect of the instruments being ep | jand elsewhere, without exposing themselves to the | to eause an aspen shiver through any nerves 1 | risk of bejay looked upon as lunatios, Lo vse the | Tipperary fied strung than those of the Sir ' ples of ’89.” The example has not been overlooked | 0’? Tigger genus. erhaps no polemic i by the on which admires Jmperialism so Of our time ever oceasio ea ned more excit ‘much. Jt hus only been followed, but improved. } the duel between O'Connell and D Carre |The necessity of giving some color tothe mendacity | Waterloo year, and five mouths before ¥ . | of partizans ‘at home ayd abroad has been felt as day; and yet the very name of one of the cous | tive value ig mock electons, a mock Jegislatare, | keenly at Washington as at Paris. Northern orators, | tants is eutirely transmogrified at the sale ‘and sych Northern (porpaliews ax are allowed to, weapon that slew him. | write, still love to celebrate their coyntry as “ = On a piece of paper pasted inside the cone, i , te} 7 ’ > ~ ” i title tothe latterdesignation has been conclusively | Set forth that 1) Esterre Pog? nant a established at Leesburgh and Bull's Run; and Mr. | down, and £1,000 a-year for : _ san formidable ' Lingoln has learned from his French models an jn-| Orangemen, it le killed their even the /genjous machinery for preserving its claim to the | antagonist, who gave full erry! his future former. ‘The policy of veiling byrmpnnica} measures! formance. ‘There is no doubt there wat ® under a flimsy covering: of Lil ome qeepreasts han deal of truth in this hypothetical i | hever, eWen in wurope, 2c Carried BO "eres y ty ~ i t srest any European despot has broken the laws thaz bound | that D'Reterre was, Bes Fahores ‘him more ontrageously, for saa toe ne wg by | Doniel. on. Fae of being t Mr. Lineoln re- (to him by a Constitution whose informing spirit was | well-known fire-eater, and coolest | jealousy of the Exeeative. Of course there is @ Yaior Macnamara, the Beau Nash of ell | aatisfactory side to "Lese subterfyges. ped mci monies, whereof he was & consummate . is the homage which vice pays to virtue ; Iso, aed wé meeting nt the | is the hotuage — the creatures of univeraal aut. | He ccaiicas daud cae the w rage pay to freedom. | Powe . i Pose Maryland is destined to furnish the most go out of it, or afford another gentleman . striking illustration of the compatability of absolute of going out of itin a