nea ——— ont? ee Oe OE AD a . ¥t f 4) a Che Pailp Examine ‘ ‘ wee } ~ a oe Charlottetown: November av, 1877 ry a7 ae ALN ROMIVELL AND THE IRONSIDGS. Joun LATHERN, ore a large audience, delive: od his elo- lecture on * CROMWELL AND THE [Ron- ‘Why,’ be asked in his exordi- why in thie day of stirring event and y> LHE ot }, .. av. last evening, juent sipes.”’ um, ‘ rapid the old beaten pathways of centuries 2 And the answer is, that between the past and present there are always important } breathless movement go back to ; points of contact; that the incessant strife of opinion which has long marked out the oar e and character of Cromwel! as legiti- mate battlexground in English history, has not yet subside}; and that the continued accumuiation of material for doing justice to the Protectorate, invests that period with all the freshness and interest of a now chapter in history. The lecturer then spoke of the lineage and birth of Crom, well, _showing that he was descended from x line of able men, and was ascion of the roval raca of Stuart. [He described him as aman of powerful! frame. tirmly compress- ed lips, a massive brow, over which fell (lowing hair parted in the middle, and an attitude of great resoluteness, as if con scious destiny marked him out for wreath and laurel ia troubled times. ance was vehement and bis sentences often bewildering in their confused verbiage and grotesque shapes, ary speeches of Cromwell weighty and practical wisdom; and from the first unto,’ were were | much hearkened Now and then ~ Ver golden sentences : fell from his lips, pretty proverbs and | of ciear ringing force. The sentences times in which Cromwell’s public career | was begun were then pourtrayed. The lecturer showed that the extreme meas ures of Cromwell and his associates led to the organization of a ‘ Royalist Party.” Liw-loving men, shrinking from revolu~ tionary movement, rallied round the throne; while those who prized the liber- ties of England more than aii else, hsid by the leaders of the Parliament From that disruption, in the Long Parlia ment, dates organized political party which, under various names, Royalist and Round- hezd, Tory and Whig. Conservative and Liberal, has preserved the balance of Par- liameutary power, and proved of great and signal advantage in the dispatch of public business, both in Imperial and Colonia! legislation. To the same period we trace back the two great classess, Cavalier and Puritan, into which the nation was long di- vided. Oa both sides were men little bet- ter than caricatures of the great body to which they belonged: the biustering, bois- terous. heartless Cavalier, and the solemn, praise God.bare-bones Puritan. And in either rank, at the other extreme, were ine like the accomplished patriot Hamp- den and the chivalrous Royalist Falkland who closely resembled each other, and | who, by wisdom and moderation, com- minding ability and unimpeachable ins tegrity, inspired the nation, irrespective of sect or party, with esteem and confidence. The stamina and strength of the royal ciuse were in brave, thoughtful, loyal men, who clung and clave to the order of the olden time; and who fought and fell for Church and State, for throne and altar, for hearth and roof-tree, and for the glorious banner beneath which their fathers lad marched to battle and to victory. And Puritans of the genuine stamp, of the cast and calibre of Oliver Cromwell and his compeers, were grani and noble men— crim, strong, sagecious, inflexib'e—fearing nothing but God, penetrated to self-abase. ment by the consciousness of a Divine Presence, and holding lightly in compar ison ail lesser and lower distinctions. ‘‘If,” according t> the eulogy of the brilliant ea- sayist, which forms one of the finest paa- sages io English literature, “ their names were notin the register of heralds; they were written in the Book of Life. If their steps were not accompanied by a splendid train of menials, legions of ministering spirits them. palaces were houses not made with hands und their diadems were crowns of glory that should not fade away. On the rich and the eloquent, on nobles and priests, they looked with contempt; for they had charge over —— Se = His utters | but yet the Parliament. | often | | track, until, at the battle of Marston Moor, ‘the great qualities of his mind and military | genius broke into a blaze of splendor that ‘caught the eye of the nation, Onan Eng: ‘lish summer day, in the beginning of July, | 1643, when the woods were in their green: ‘est foliage and the harvest was ripening in the fields, close by the city of York, in | which the boom of battle could be dive | tinetly heard, upon a broad heath known 'as Marston Moor, stood forty six thousand 'men, of the same race and speech, burghs ae from the same town, and brothers from | the same hearthstone, compeiled to take | sprigs of brooms and furze in hat and hel» i met, as the only badge of distinction be» ‘tween friend and foe; charging on the one | aide for “ God and the King,’’ and answer- ‘ing on the other ‘God with us.” Fronted by a broad, deep ditch, exposed to @ con- ‘centrated and deadly fire, Cromwell cleared, ‘by a wide circle, lanes and ditches, and | sweepin g the op+n Moor, charged and shat. ‘tered the royalist flank; then, rapidly wheeling his conquering cavalry round ‘their centre to the left, he found the array ‘of hattle changed; for, at the other wing, | ** Rupert of the Rhine’ having broken by | impetuous charge, and routed with great laughter the force opposed to him, jerece troopers round to the Ss | 8 'wheeled his | ‘right; and, in the gathering dusk of that summer evening, eacn on ground the other had oceupied, alike flushed with supposed victory, the fiery Rupert and the irrepres- ‘cihle Cromwell dashed front upon front, like the fierce tempest wave upon the ‘rugged ocean rock, and the pas: ionate Prince and bis proud cavaliers were shat | | of j ‘tered in pieces like the broken spray. As they turned the tide of battle at Mar- | ston Moor, Cromwell’s troopers received | their imperishable name of lronsides. , |The pecu iarity of those famous Ironside ‘soldiers was the combination of deep con | vietion with strict!y military character— | burning enthusiasm with stubborn cours |age--the thrill of spiritual fervor with the | intensity of martial fire, They fought and |prayed with equal alacrity. They trusted in God and relied on their pikes, ‘' Arm- ed within,” says Whitelocke, ‘* with their good conscience, and without by their good iron arms, they wuld to a map stand firmly and charge desperately. They were never surpassed as pikemars and they were equally gifted in exposition of the word and prayer. In disciplined culture and resolute firmness, they closely resembled the Prussian levies of the present time. The lecturer concluded by saying that the work of Cromwell, and the men of his time, was so complete, that eyer since the British nation has been saved from the necessity of revolutionary struggle. Nordo we see any sign of na- tional degeneracy. More magnificant than Babylon of old, more intellectual than Greece in her palmiest days, more powers ful than imperial Rome, foremost of mod- ern States in all that constitutes the great- ness of kingdoms, the old Spanish boast is with her, soler truth, for on her vast do: main the sun never sets. Great and vic. torious in war, greater and more potent in the rivalries of peace—with vastly aug-) mented material sources, an intelligent and powerful press, more powerful in this age than the artillery of kings, constitu- tional government, the sheltering eegis of venerated law, sacred truth as a vital con- servative and progressive element, — ‘ Old Englard stil! throbs with the muffled Ofa sce can never forget; And again shall she banner the world up higher— : F.r there's life in the old land yet. The well-estatlished reputation of the lecturer was fully sustained, and the large audience present highly gratified. omens t_m—uipP > 44> +o o- es Tim steamer Moravian, which arrived et Halifax on Tucsday morning, reports a very stormy passege. ‘The barometer average- lower than the captain had ever seen in thirty-six years. ~ 6 8 ‘Aw INDIGNATION MEETING” wlll be held in New Glasgow Hall on Wednesday, the 28th inst. Representatives of the Dis- trict and members of the Government are, requested to attend. eo ~—-- Mr. Parrick, Manager, and ‘one of the Their | principal shareholders of the Beliveau Al. ‘bertite and Oil Company is in town. He ‘is soliciting subscrib:rs to the stock list. -Of the 2509 shares required for « working ‘capital, 1900 bave been sold—- 600 remain ‘to be disposed of, on terms the most esteemed themselves rich in a more preci, | favorable. ous treasure, and eloquent in a more sub. lime language—nobies by right of i —a So THE NEW FRENCH MINISTRY, ees oe thus describes the proposed new Min« istry :— “ Gen, (trimoudet de Rochebout, the proposed } inister of War, is a very intels ligent Gen val and s«ecomplishsd man of the world, very amiable, yet very resolute, Hareone fthe youngest Generals of the Divissu, 1 in army a Legitimist and a de- voted Catholic. De Welche, the proposed Minister of the Interior, is very intelligent and energetic man of the world. At the late election for Deputies he was beaten at Nancy by a majority of 6.000. He may be called partly Monarchial, and partly Bo~ napartist. M. DePeyne, the proposed Minister of Justice, is an ex-Minister of Justice, and at present three years Senator for Lut, is a Catholic, Legitimist, and an energetic man; very foniof power, and never having ceased to aspire to it. Cons ciliitory measures are not those ho is most likely to defend. The Marquis de Baune- ville, the proposed Minister of foreign Afs fairs. wag Ambassador under the Empire at Vienna. He is a man of great eX» perience, amiable and extensive in diplo- matic knowledg», is a moderate Bonapar.- tixt. Deputy de Lome, proposed Msnis- ter of Commerce, is a celebrated marine engineer and a modera’e Bonapartist. Balbier, proposed Minister of Public In- struction, is at present a threesyears Sena- tor forGers, He was Minister Instruction in McMahou’s first Cabinet. He is s scholar amiable, but very reaction- ary, isa fusionist but a very Catholic. De Montgolpr, proposed Minister of Works is at present a three-years Senator for Loire, and is an important paper manufac, turer. His opinion is chiefly marked by ardent Catholiciem. M. Pouyer Quertier, proposed Minister of Finance, is at prasent & six years Senator for Seine. He is a pro- tectionist and belonged, as regards polis tical opinions in the first place, to Conser- vative party, and he may be called Legitis mist-Bonapartist, lt is uncertain whether Gen. Grimoudet de Reouchelout or Pouyer Quertier will be President of the Council. 1) avaVi Correspondenee. gpaex~ We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions or statements of Corres pondents, fo the Editor of the Examiner. Sir,—One of the very meanest and most contemptivle insinuations which could emanate from the pen of even the editor of the Patriot—a man who himself makes no pretension to belief in any revealed re- ligion—appears in the Patriot of yesterday over the assumed name ‘: [nquirer.” Because in your paper, Mr. Editor, you spoke favorably of an esteemed Missionary of the Catholic Church, whose labors ia this city during the past two weeks can. not fail to be promotive of the greatest good—a man, too, whose eloquent and thrilling appeals against the monster vice of intemperance, drew hundreds of Pro. testants as well as Catholics to the Cath. edral every day during his short stay here. Even this good man’s labors of lovefcannot receive a friendly comment in yodr independent columns without arousing the ire of the Pairiot ecribblers. Shame upon a man of H, Lawson’s preten- sions to liberalism, when he would allow himself to descend to such a mean trick as to attempt to convey the idea that the! EXaMmNER is not ‘far from Rome,” be-| cause he has the independence to give a; short review of the Mission of Father Glackmeyer, Yours truly, A Ligexat PRrorestayt. —— To the Editor of the Daily Examiner : Dear Sir,—A poor, puzzled individual, writing over the signature of Inquirer in yesterday's Patriot, wishes to know wheth- er the Examiner Company “ have become Father Glackmeyer’s converts.’’ Unfor- tunately, | fear there is no such hope for you ; for it is wellxknown that a corpora- tion has ‘no body to be kicked, or sou! to be saved,’ and, consequently, is net a subject for the grace of conversion. * [nquirer”’ proceeds to give an extract from one of your articles that the /’atriot’s readers ‘‘ may judge how near the Exam< iver is to Rome.’’ And here I| assure him, in all seriousness, that be has made another mistake. A newspaper cannot join a Church—at least it cannot join the Church of Rome, I have carefully looked over the /tituale and Poniifical Romanum, and | have been unable to find any *‘ office’ for the admiss sion of a newspaper as a member of the Catholic Church. _ Yours truly, An Amusep Reapgr, eee Tc the Editor of the Daily Examiner : Dear Sir,—“‘Ingnirer’ in the Palriol has italicised some words from one of your leaders; you remarked that a particular ser mon was avery eloquent one. The sub staace of that disconrse must have been repulsive to ** Inquirer,” evidently making him feel that your judgment on the elo- quence and the English of the preacher inust be leading your company Romewards. Let us laugh. Comment is uscless. TICKLED. SESE Ong of the new modes of improving the capabilities ef a cook is that which wus | practised by the captain of the brigantine Streamer Lost.—The steamship Sirath- | Fanny, on her recent passage from Liver- an | : . ; : : lay, laden with grain for Scotland, was lost| pool to this ports After leaving Liverpool carlier creation, and pricsts by the imposi-| 95 tho islanu of Miquelon, in the Gulfof St./it was discovered thatthe cooking was tion of a mightier hand.” The measures | Pawrence. Captain Small and the crew of done in an unpalatable manner, and some taken by Crorawell to discipline the Par- twenty-five men were saved. The cargo! did their own cooking. The Captain was liamentary troops under his command were | was owned by D. Buiters & Co, Moatreai; of opinion that punishment might serve explained; and the course of the war jnsured for $66,000, the fall value,in Amers to improve him. Accordingly on a very sketched witha master hand. Onwardthe jes, and Canadian offices. The steamer| cold and blowy day, he had the cook— tile of battle surged, often gloomily for was owned by W. Thompson & Co., Dun-| whose came wes Inman—hoisted and lash- the Parliamentary cause, but with sti!l a dee, who are their own insurers. She was) ed to the miim rigging, where he was kc pt | bright light in Cromwell's conquering: wor-h $159,000. : i e h verirg for about one hour. — Tbe Paris correspondent of the Times of Public; |Ch town, Nov. 15—4i eod Sg See New Advertisements. GENEGAL AGHA NOTICE i BEG toavnounce to the Trape of th; City, and the Island generally, that or the 2nd of JANUARY 1 will have a com plete ASSORTMENT OF SAMPLES, of the following lines of Goods for Spring aud Sumuner: English & Canadian TWEEDS & WOOLLENS, BOOTS & SHOES, AMERECAN COTTORS, Readymade Clothing AMERICAN RUBBER GOODS, IN GREAT VARIETY. Tobacco & Cicars, Confectionery, Coffee & Spices, Naval Stores, Teas, Sugars. I am also Sore Agent for the Lower Provinces for Wyarr & Co’s (London) CELEBRATED Pickles, Sauces, Je'lies, Ete,, —AND— E. James & Son’s (Plymouth) celebrated STARCH, BLUE & DOME LEAD. This Notice is only to the Trade—no Re- tail orders being solicited or accepted. Sample Rooms at No 9 Queen St., over the Office of Messrs. Hyndman Rrothers. JOHN H, CATHRAS, Ch town, Nov. 23, l877—lw klweoy St. John Fire Waltzes.” JUST OUT, COMPOSED BY MAX. STERNE. PROFESSOR OF Music, SaCKVILLE ACADEMY. The above Waltzes are really good. Get acopy. For sale at FLETCHER'S MUSIC STORE, Queen Street. Nov. 22, 1877. seamen yp, int atte ee THE QUEEN STREET MILLINERY STORE ! HATS & BONNETS TRIMMED and made to order in all the leading styles. Fancy Gocds, Silks. Wools. Miottoes. and Frames. STAMPING DONE TO ORDER, HE Sabscriver, having removed from the Old Union Bank to the Store on Queen Slreel, next door to Mr. Charles Fuil’s, begs to solicit a continuance of public patronage. E. SPIKE, Queen Street. Nov. 22—pat ar pres ne 2i CAFR D. N. L. HERBERT, General Insurances Breker. zm MARINE, LIFE and ACCIDENT RISKS negotiated with reliable Com. panies, ou the most favorable terms. OFEICE: Queen Street, 2 doors uorth of ‘the Brenan Corner.’ Nov. 22—pat ar pres ne 2i i de Kn (Square and Upright) ORGANS. Mason & Hamlin’s AND Canadian Cabinet. Some of the above kept constantly in Stock, and any of them promptly furnished to order. Instruments guaranteed, prices very low, and terms for payment exceedingly favor-] able. Second-hand Pianos or Organs taken inexchange. Liberal reductions to clergy call and examine, or send for fullest invfor- mation to N. L. HERBERT. Queen Street. 2 doors north of *‘the Brenan Corner.” Noy. 22—ne pat pres ar 2i CURRIES GRAMMARS, COLLINS GEOGRAPHY, Just RECEIVED AT THE SCHOOL BOOK DEPOT. HARVIE’S BOOKSTORE. Queen Sirect. men,churches, and Sabbath schools. J'lease | _—_— ar New Advertisements. CLOCKS | ee ee | A LARGE LoT OF Gne and Eight Day Striking Ciscks, From $3.50 to $35.00 each. Warranted usual. Ww. W. WELLNER. ClL.’town, Nov. ii THE LADIES — OF THE Temperance Union WILL GIVE A USICaL Eni EATEN 99 oS TO THE MEMBERS OF THE RERORM CLUB IN THE Atheneum at 8 o'clock, ON FRIDAY EVN’G, The 23rd Inet. Members will have to show their cards of membership at the door. JAS. McKECHNIE, JOUN “F, SCOTT, President. Secretary ADVERTISEWN INT il ie STOCK IN TUADE |! COMP RIS1 NG: DINNER SERVICES, In Green, Pink, Brown a+! Granite, Covered Dishes, Flat .D shes; Tureens, Plates, Baier s, elc., etc. TEA SERVICR” White and Gold, China, Printev. and Stone Sets, Breakfast Cups. Egy Cups, Plates, Creams, Slops, wii Toast hacks. EXTRA CHAMBER SERVI.z°. White and Gold, Lined and Print: 1, Mouth Ewers aud Basins, Candlestich:, ote. GLASSWARE. Cut and Engraved Decanters, Sherry, Port, Claret, Hock and Champagne Gias-es, Tumblers, Mugs, Goblets, Claret ad Water Jugs, Saits, Pickies, Celery Glasses, Fiager Bowls, Fruit Bowls, Center Stands, Curefls and Ups; Tea Sets, Butter Coolers, Nappies, Sugars, Creams, etc. Vases, Toilet Sets, Lusters, Shells, Birds, . Wax Figures, Flowers in Shades, and * Candlesticks, Silvered, American Lamps—- Amer con Burners, Eng- lish Lamps-—S:iver Burners. French Lamps—Argan Burners. Giobes, Chim- nies, Wicks. KEROSENE OIL, Government Test, J. B. POLLARD, hent Street. Say Nov. 22, i877.- frikiue nt CHRTAIN | Preservation of the Sight! Lazarus. Faorris & Co's PERFECTED SPECTACLES RYE GilAS@=E, The most perfect Spectacles - ever manufactured. — ALLO Blue Tinted and Bifocal SPECTACLES! SKELETON (GOLD MOUNTED) SPESTACLES & EYE-GLASSES. Chickering’s, Steinway’s, Smoked, Green and Blue Emerson's, COQUELLES, GOGGLES, and GOGGLE Gabler’s. | SPECTACLES, &c., &c. WM. R. WATSON. Ch’town, City Drug Score, Victoria Building, Nov. 20 TEACHER WANTED. ANTED —A Male Teacher, of the First or Second Class, to take charge of & Boys’ Department in the Upper Prinee St City School (late Protestant Academy). In addition to the regular salary, a liberal Psupplement will be given. Apply to ISAAC OXENHAM, Secretary City School Board, Glass Box 189, Ch’tow9. pat ne ar pres 2w CARD. Tt Subscriber, having associated himself with THe Examiner Proyting & PUBLISE- ING COMPANY, would take this opportunity of returning thanks to his friends, and the pubbie generally, for the patronage extended to hint in the past, and would solicit a continuance their tavors in connc:tion with the above Company. a@ All orders for Printing, as heretofore, will receive prompt and personal attention. J. W. MITCHELL, Jharlottetown, Oct. 20, 1877. ae ol Noy. 21, 1877—4i. | a ———