Coryespoudence. : “T ium Episor or Tux Exayiner. ; For four months the savage was employed in devising plans for order to avoid the | was pronounced in October. l** yood Queen Bess’’ eausing her victim to be assassinated, in order ‘odiam of being herself the murjerer! This is proved hy Wurraxer beyond all possibility of doubs.’’ At page 170) r —* Detestably base as was the | in the act of murdering her| Sin—TI «ill now proceed to fulfil my promige with regord to this historian continues thus ; - ** Good Queen Boss.”? ** A Normal School Student’’ says : — | conduct of ** good Queen Bess ‘ il : ** Let us now hear what is eaid of Mary's successor, El:zabeth, | unfortunate cousin, her subsequent hypocrisy ve * : —_— opalarly known among the people of England as good Queen detestable, She affected the deep one for = ee So At page (90, LGnd that ** withoat any of the causes had been committed, pretended that it bad os os g : which induced the severity spoken of in Mary's reign. she her wish, and bad the superlative: injustice anc wort aa commenced & syst matic and eruel persecution of her Catholic :mprison her Seeretary, Davisoy, ee ee * subjects.’ ‘O° the private character of Elizabeth nothing warrant for the ex:cution, though she, observe, hac oe favorable,’ we ave informe , page 192, ** can be said.’’ ‘* In- | that warrant, and though, as Wurraker has fully prove 180 sincere, treachor sug, cruel and tyrannical, she anpeared | bad reviled Darysson for not haying despatched ae oe destitute of erery gentle quality which adorns her a (had, in vain, used all the means in her power to inauce a This ia all trae. and ten times more, as I shall show from | to employ assasging to do the deed. Sho had by a series of | the most r speetatie Procestans authorities. But why did not perfidies and cruelties, wholly without a parallel, brought, the writer give some tavonrable extracts from the ** Outlines her hopeless victim to the block, im that very country to) of History.’ Ar page 191 Grace says: —** The reign of Eliza- | which gbe had inyited her to seek safety; she had, in the last) beth is one of the most striking and prosperous in the history | sad and awlul gouents of that victim, bad the barbarity to of England. She was a wowan possessed of masculine powers refuse ber the consolations of a divine of her own communton ; | of mind and singulir alplities as a sovereign ; and the splen- | ghe had pursued her with hatred and malice that remained | did Kivugu veapurie course which marked her policy, elevated junghutted even when she saw her prostrate under the common England to a more brilliant position thin it had ever hefore | bhangwan; and when she saw the blood gushing trom her attyined. She grouped apound her throne some of the byighi- | severed neck-——uvsated with the destruction of her body, she, est int Il -et- that England ever claimed. Among these may Satan-like, had sought the everlasting destruction of her soul | be mentioned Bacon. Burleigh, and Walsingham, as states- and yet the deed being done, sha hud the more than Satan: | pen; Sir Franeiy Drake, Sir Walter Raleigh, and Robert, | ike hypocrisy to affect to weep for the untimely end of ber) Kacl of Esser, as commanders; and Spenser and William |+* dear cousin - and which was st:]l more diabulical, to make | Sbakspeare. as poots.”" use of her despotic power to crush her humane Secretary, | Leali the -pecial attenticn of the Scoich of Belfast. New under pretence that he had been the cause of the sad catas- | Glasgow, Lot C7, Murray Harbour Road, &c., to the fullow- trophe : All expressions of detestation aod horror fall short | ing extract which the writer in the Monilor considered it very | of our feelings, a d cur only consoiation ts, that we ire to See | prodent mot t) give. ‘ Circumstances of the most tragical | her own end ten thousand tunes more to be dreaded than that aud discressing character, having driven the beautiful and ac-! of her victim.” ah : complished Queen of Seots from her own kingdom, she - | The * Eneyelopadia Perthensis,’’ in the article on England, | re ying upon the pl msible professions of the Queen of England | has the fujluwing : —** This pacification was soon follawed by —songit a refuge from her persecutors at the hands of Eliza-/an_ irree mreteable quarrel with Mary, Queen ot Scotland oe beth. ‘he asylum she foand was a prison. The stern and | wich was not extinguished but by the death of the Scottish | eruel Queen of England had dissembled, but had never fo - | prince-s ; gud that with suck circumstances of ACCUMULATED | gotten her fear and resentment. After a crael captivity of | TREACHERY, HYPOCKISY, and DISSINULATION, 28 have stamped an tightven years, the ill-fated Queen of Scot and was brought to | INDELIBLE Disckack on the MEMORY of ELIZABETH. | a trial, which was a mere mockery, condemned upon base and WHITAKER makes the following remarks on the murder of | slanderous charges, aod was behea ed by order of Elizabeth, | the Score Queer: —* The legal murder of Mary of Scotland A.C 1587. This stroeivus act has stamped a stain of infamy | took place on the 8th Febroary, L587. a day of everlasting tn- yu the cheracter of Elizabeth, whieh will descend with ber | famy to (he memory of the English Queen, who had no Stbsi- name to the latest posterity." }Uility of tenderness, and no sentiments of generosity, who ‘Loat pers m who would say that Grace's character of Eliza- | looked not 1 ward tu the awful verdict of history, aod whe beth is p rial to Catoles, treasonable or disloyal, must be | shuddered not at the infinitely more awfat doom of God. 1 io deplorable iznoranee regarding English Hustory. | blush, as an Englishman, to think that this was done by an| tus listen ty what Protestant authors of undenighle wutho- | Eaglish Queena, and one whose name J was taught to lip ta) rity say of ** Good Queen Bess.”’ jmy infaney,as the honor of her sex and the glory of our © Wad:, hee ows couitrymin, says of Rligabeth :—'* Her | iste.” 4 amiability ant morslity mast be at onee given up. She had) § presume all these Protestant authors had not floating over by fem OH graces. even accom isiments were matcoline. pofurtanat: Svottish Qacen, tiowrh deemed necessary by her | ministers, ig an in Fycestls blot on her memory. the legislative and judicial michinery -he used, her absolute | Mary, Kiizabetl ordered Secretary Davison to bring to her) Ness wag ever the giiding principle. }the warrant for ber death. Having perused it, sie observed | * Fiest was the Court of Star Chamber, whose members t at it was expressed in proper terms, aud annexed her sub- | held their places during the pleasure of the crown, and might | seription. grr ing Tne execution of the | woe sicno VINCES,’’ surmounted with a crosg!"’ The *+ Londow Enel yclopae lia’ . . . . } fine, imprison. and punish corporally, by whipping, branding, | she was yet ‘erritied to encounter itsinfamy. She was solic | wrier The Queen, tf present, was sule tous to accomplish this base transaction by some method | Sitting the nostrils and ears. sont ' judg: ; and the jurisdiction of the court extended to all sor s | which would conceal her consent to it. After intimating to | of ufences, contempis aad disorders, that lay out of the reach | Davison an anxroua wish that its blame should be rem. ved ef tre common law. | from ber, she counselled him to join with Wa'singham in ad- | The Court of High Commission was a still more arbitrary | dressing a letter to Sir Awias Paulet and Sir Drue Drary,| jurisdiction. Its venceance was directed against heresy, which recommending it to them tv manifest their love tu her oy was defined as @ difference of opinian on religion and morals shedding privately the blaod of her adversary. The unlawful- with the Queen.”’ | ness of this deed affected Davison, and be objected ta it. She * Martial law was first introduced by her. In suspicious repeated absolutely her injunctions, and he departed to $ mes, the jails were full of pris ners, who were thrown into deliver them. A letter under his name and that of Walsing- dungeons loaded with irons. and frequently tortured to ex- ham was despatched t» Mary's keepers, communicating to | tract confessions. Not unfrequently in the agony of their | them ber purpose. Corrupled by her passivns, and lo ¢ to the | tortures, the unhappy sufferers wrongly accused others or | sensililities of virtue, Elizabeth had now reached the last ¢x- | themselves. Agains: these enormities the subject had no re- | tremity of this wickedness. Though a sovereign princess, and | dies: neither judge nor jury dared to acquit wien the crown entrusted with tire cares of a great nation, she tlushed not to was beni ag conviction. The Queen, by special warrants, charge her ministers to enjoin a murder--a murder connected giaimed the right to interfere to stop the course of justice. | with every circumstince that could make it most frightful and ‘Phere ape many records of specia) warrants granted by the forrid. Lhe victum for woose blood she thirsted was a Queen t> save malefictors fom death; these warrants were woman, a queco, a relation, splendid in beauty, eminent in neither to be cany ss-d, dispute}, nor examined.” ability, magnanimous under misfortunes, and who had fled to! (ne of the kinds of torture alluded to in the above extract! her for refuge from her enemies. A wild Arab would have | was gailed the ** Scavenzer’s daughter,’’ whieh has b en de-| spared his enemy on this principle alone. Sir Amias Paulet scribed as a broad hoop of iron, consisting of two parts, and Sir Drue Drury, though the slaves of religious prejudices, fastened by a hinge. The prisoner was made to kneel oa the | felt an elevation of mind which refleeted the greatest disgrace avement, «nd to contract himself into as smal! a compuss as | on fAc sovereign. They considered themselves grossly insulted he equld. Then the executioner, kneeling on his shoulders, by the proposal; and they assured Walsingham that the and having intradueed the hoop under luis lega, cor;pressed queen might command their lives and their property, but that the victim close together, till he was able to fasten ihe feet and | they would never consent to part with their honor, and to hands together aver the small of the back. ‘The time allotted | stain themselves and their posterity with the vuilt of assassi- tu this Kind of torture was an hour and a half, during which |watiov. When Davison carried their dispatch tu her she time the blood gushed from the nostrils, and sometimes from broke out into anger. Their scrupulous delicacy, she said, the hands and feet.” The Rack was another instrument of | was an infringement of their oata of association; and they tyrture. *f This wasa large open frame of oak, raised three were nice, precise, and perjured traitors. She then recom- | feet from the ground. Tne prisoner wag laid under it, on his mended one Wingfield to strike the blow. Tire astonished Se- back on the floor. Hise wrists and ankles were attached by | cretary exclaimed with warmth against a mode of proceeding curds ty two rollers at the ends of the frame: these were | so unwarraptable. Le protested that if she should take upon m ved hy leyers in opposite direetions, till the body rose to 4 | herself the blame of this deed, it would pollute her with the level with the frame. Questiors were then pat, and if the | blackest dishonor.’’ answers did not prove satisfactory, the sufferer was stretched) § thought to enter ints particulars regirding Elizabeth’s more and mare, tll the bones started from their sockels.”’ i scourging of Ireland, which unhappy country o 1] bears the The Court of Elizibeth was notorious for dissoluteness. A | trks of her scurwon lash,”” and her cruel persecution, 10: | lonty of Catholics, but also of those Protestants who dared to | writer of the time describes it asa place +‘ where was little | : godliness and exer ise of religion, bat where all enormities | differ from hers-If; but the fear of teking uy too mach ot your reigned in the tighest degree,’ (Ellis# Original Letters) ; valuable spice cuapels me to confine ims ee fio the fullowimyg anuther, ag a place ** where there was no love but that of the | ©*tracts = a on eae a wae, me oe leswt od of ¢ 2 ~ Asmode “9 c _ -} younger days, he ritteu again atnolics, Ar Tee te cenet i — — live er eae ea | ? ** When one looks at the deeds of this foul tyrant, when one godliness und exercise of religiun, 80 dissolute manuers and | #¢*s W 1st abject slavery she had reduced the pation to, aud es- | currupt conversation generally, which I find to be worse than | erciilly when one views this Commission, it te unpoesidle for | when I knew tve place first. (August 1, 1582. Birch, 1 25). | #4 not to reflect with shame on what we tave so long been say- Auother writer says of her:—** At all times her diseours |'8¢ against the Spameh Lnqusition, which from its firat es. was sprinkled with oaths: im the sallies of her anger it tablishment to the present heur, has not committed @o much sbounded with impreeations and abuse. Nor did she content | cruelty as this ferocious Protestint apostate committed 19 any herself with words: not only the ladies about her person, but /»ne single vear of the forty-three years of her reizn. And, | her courtiers aud tie highest officers in the state felt the vrverve again, ond never forget, that Catholica, where they weight of her hands. She collared Hatton, she gaye a blow | 'Mficted pawanmews, wélcted them on the ground that the on the ear tu the Earl Marshal, and she spat on Sir Matthew joff-nders had departed from the fathom which taey had been , With the foppery of whose dress she was ofended."' | "8rd, and whien they had professed ; whereas the Protestant {Nuge Ant. 167. 170.) paneahmenta have been infle+d on men because they refused Wyrrskern, & Protesrant Clergyman of the Church of ¢ depart from the faith in which they had been bred, and: England, speaking of ** Good Queen Bess,’ the * Virgin | “hich they professed all their lives, And in the prrticular Quyeen,”' says :—* Her \ife was stained with gross licentiouse | case of thia brutal hygoerite, they were punished, and that, too, ness, and she had many gallants while she ealled herself a | '9 the most barbarous manner, for adhering to that very re- maiden qaeen.”’ [T wonder if this Protestant histor:an was Me age “ie oi a op ny = for me a of ed pecused of * treason,’’ or received a** gold medal’? from the | fe, and to «heh she, even at her coronation, had sworn that | Pope for having given tu Elizabeth such a disgusting character. jae belonged! Tt is herily necessary > attempt to describe | William Cobbet, the Protestant historian. in his article on the suifermye thar the Cacholies bad to Mech during es Elizabeth, suys :—** Her virgin propensity led her to prefer | mu derous reign. Ne tongue, vo pen ts adequare Cy the task. | that sort of iiniadens ik oan whieh bow not male par- | To hear mass, to harbour a pest, to admit ihe snpremacy of ticularly allude to. Ler amours with Le:cester, of whom we the Pope, te deay the horid virago’s spiritual supremacy, and gall sce enough by-ani-by, were open and notorious, and | aay other tings which an honorable Jatholie could wcarcely have heen most amply detailed by many Protestant historians, | «void, corsigned them to the scaffold and to the buwe!-ripping geome of whom have been clergymen ol the Church of England. lkaife. But the most cruel of her acie, even more cruel than | it is, moreover, well known that these amours became the | her bu'cheyies, because of far more excensive effect, and far. subject of a play, acted in the reign of Charles If. she had | more productwe of suffering in the end, were the penal laws in me vr year of her reign assented to an Act that was ofirtng fines ge ant ans = wean tor rae going to assed, which secured the crown t» her ** natural issue.’ by |v new-iangled Venessant Charen. And wae there ever Pnieh any basigrd that she might have by anybody endl ltycanny equal tot us? Not only were men to he punished for heir tothe throne; amd it was by the same Act made Aig | a0" confessing that the new religion was the tue one: not) treagun to deny that such issue was heir to it. Thia Act. Lonly for continaing to pracige the religwu ta which they and | which is still in the Statute Book, 13 Eliz.. chap. 1,8 2, 19} there fathers and children had be-n burn ond bred; but also | a proof of the most hardened profligacy that ever was Wit-| punished for not sctually gong 10 the new avembiages, and | nead . oe ; = tt a8 a. aoe that — a mark of | ‘here are ere they ee Sue atees, fee's apparent Bational a’yectness and infamy ehould have been | «arty deem ao ae: Of open apostacy neo ow, in oa red to remain in tack and white to ‘tied ig. Her minis- lhe wis wurld, was there heard of b-fure tyranny «qual to | ters and the nation, who saw ali the dangers uf such a mateh | this?"" : | (with Ansov) to the independence of then country, protested “ The fines were eo heavy, aud were exact 2 with such an- against it most vehement! :, and finaily deterred her from it; | releni mg rigour, and fur the offence of recusancy alone the) buta gentieman of Linculu’s fun, who bad written and pub- |gu:na were 80 enormons, that the whole of the cunvse.entious | lished a pamphlet against the marriage, was persecuted, and |‘ atholies were menaced with utter ruin. ‘The priests who had had hes right hand chopped off torhis public spirited effort | never beet out of England, and wio were priests before the | ib assisting to saye Engiand trom the ruin abuut to be brought | reign of this horrible woman, were, by the 20h vear of ber, upon it, fur the mere gratification uf the appetite of g gross, reign, few in nywber; for the law forbade the making of any libidinous, nasty, shameleys old woman. t was said of ber | neW ones gn pate of sey aad, indeed, none cou'd be made monster of a fathe? that‘ he spared no man in bis anger, and hin Eaglon! here there was no clerical authority to ordain no woman in his lust :"’ the very same, in substance, with « them, the exrviying Cy holic Bishops being forbidden to do it little change of the terms. might be said of this his monster of }o% pain of death. Theo she haravsed the remainder of the old | a daughter."” At No. 315 the same historian says :—** To | vriers in such a way that they were, by the 20:h year of her, enumerate, birely to enumerate, all, or one half of the acts | teign, nearly extermioa ed; and agit was death far a priest to of hypocrisy, perfidy, meanness, and harbarity that ** good come from abroud, death to harbour him, death for him to per- Bess"’ practiged against thia anf -rtunate Queen (Mary Queen | form his functions in Englond, death to confess to him, there of Scots), who was little more than twenty-five year$ of age appeared to be an impossibility of preventing her from extir-| when she was inveigled within the reach of ber harpy claws; pa'iog, total'y extirpating from the land, that religion under: barely to enumerate these would sequiye % Space exceeding | which England had been 80 great and 80 happy for ages—that | that of this whole Number. While she affected to disapprove | rel'gion of charity and hospitality —that religiou which made the of Murray, she inatigated him to aéeuse his Queen and sister ; | maine of pauper urknowa—that religion which had built the while she pret nded to assert the inviolability of sovereigns, Courchet and Cuthedra's, wi'ch bad p'anted and reared the she appointed a commission to try Mary for her cooduct in| Universities whose professors had made Magna Charta and | Seotland ; while she was vowing vengeance against the Scotch ‘the Common Law, and who had performed a] those glorious traitors for their rebelliqus acts against her cousin, she re-|deeda in legislation and in arms which had made England oe es 7 a re part of = a which really the envy of surrounding nations, and the edinirauen of | ar received from her first husband, the King of France ; the world. ' and ohe at last she was ¢ mpelled tu declare Ser innocent | “To say masa, to hear masa, to make confession, to hear of having cohsented to the murder, she not only refused tq confession, to teach thy Catholic rengion, to be taught it, to restore her,agrewably to her solemn promise repeatedly made, | Secp from her Church service—these were alt great crimes, and but refused also to giye her her liberty, and, moreover, made -a!) panished wih a greater or less degree of severity ; eo that her imprisonment more else, rigorous and painful than ever. the gallowse-:, and gibvets, an! racks werg in constant ase, Murray, her associate in perfidy, wag killed in 1570 by amen and she geols and dungeons chokwg with the wens. The Wh #» estate he had unjustiy conlise;ted ; but traiter after punishment for keeps away from her Church was £20 a /u- traitor sacceeded Lim, ever traitur in her pay, and Scotland war menth, which, of money of the presen day, was sbou bieeuing ull the while ac every pore, because her crue] policy £250. ‘! housends upon thousands refused ¢) g» to her church ; taught ver that it was n-eersary to her own seeurity. Ware. and tous sve sacked their thousands ppon thousands of estates . | anes ene a crowd of au thusities te prove pliat she endea- for, observe, here was in money of this day, a fine of £3,550, vou w a infant suninto her hands, and that/a year. Ani now, e-nsibie aad just reader, look at the var- ving failed in. .s @ cndvavo. red to cause bim to be | barity of tris. See a geatleman of, perhape, sixty years of off by poisoc! At luse, in 1587, the tigress brought hér age or more—ase bias b ry and bred a Caihohe, compelled to wring victim to tie block! The sentence of death moke tunseif ond his eridiea beggars, acinal beggus, or to | i | | sants,’ not worth twenty inarks a year, i filthy la‘ bad tendesey toexhbit tu che world the villainy, immorality lintensions of wineh bhuiwan cepravity can be guilty. )berh was ‘treacherous and tyrannical 5” but when the reading L ke her person, ber mind, passions .nd | their heads every week * a large flag with the motto, * Ix | matter, they 1€ ‘ lother feelings than those of anqua ided sco-n and Contempt for * has the fullowing :—* While | os * base’ attempts at defamation ; and they cdauat regard a Amongst | the nation was thus artfully prepared for the destruction of | t Be labuse of Catholies and their Coorgy otherwise thas a most * in- Though she earnestly desired the death of Mary. } 9° ee . T v 2 |* GROSS, LIBIDINOUS, NASTY, SHAMELESS OLD WOMAN’; @* TY-) dismissed from the Normal School. | cellency is acquainted?” : . ‘ ; tt ate ‘ , . . , your Excellency will probably, with myself. observe that Mr Man’ to give this or any other annuuncement respeeting pub- and @ naked assertion made in vindication of the honor of satisfactory. PA SCT ee ' course not having been adopted, [ am constrained, your Ex- cellency, to think it “passing strange”’ that Mr. Haviland, who, at the time of the a in tre a SPN apes ’ . elE from the seene of our Bank's victimisation, anc that the tyrant who committed i hed for many ae ot = toch karti ot ee fully acquainted with the whole minutia of openly professed the Catholic religion, _— at ler coro i the transaction, is sought tor, aud comes forward and publish- See Pe re ak ap peeities ’ that is to soy, es the blemishless honor of Mr. Pope. The public, however, t Ae to the poor pine a " ‘ who had no money / must naturally be of opinion that the late President, Mr keepers away fiown the 'yrant’s Charch, — gon until the gao 8) Breeken, int:mately acquainted with Mr. Pope’s dealing by ee er ae aes and un‘il the! daily observation, was and is the gentleman to give the certifi- Sao we ch see from the charge of keeping | cate, Yes, your Excellency, Mr. Brecken was the fitter—the eae ee oe io diacharged, being firs’ publickly whipp- | proper arers s ve ovieee : we: or pw ed, or having their ears bored with a hot iron. ‘Vhie, not ane Pope ; Mr. sree par mora - e183 gh as that of Mr, : r . sged to compel all * recu- | Haviland ; his veracity as reliable—his word as good—his -wering the purpose, an act was passe sy = Ihe coanice a aan an ear Gull aanMlL: and bis bectiedas<f ht : them with death facts sounder than Mr Haviland’s; but passing by the in cace of their retven ‘The old ‘good Bess’ deleated hersell ‘fountain, Mr. Pope —— + “ pool, oe his semi- here, for it was found impossible to cause the law Co be exe-| carte blanche oo Mr, t ——e , and wears the frail ingenious cuted, in spie of al ner menices ag eins the Justices and | thing _ his ee ro ° ange eae Sheriffs, who could not be brought uy to bh F standard of fe-} Should your sxcoliency 6 om mre Mr. Pope, be ab e to : i d they, therefore, 1 0 der to punish the poor obtain from the late President Mr. Srecken, a paper with his tte & nd " on them at their pleasure, as a com- name affixed thereto, exonerating Mr. Pope from dishonor- Seance costinacal abstaining trom apostacy and profana- | able dealing, and announce therein to the public that Mr. tion’? Herl fe,as Wirrakkn observes, ° wes & lite of § mis- Pope's conduct towards the Bank, in the case referred to, was chief and of misery,” and in het death she did all the miscmet | marked by honor and integrity ; then, your Excellency, the 2 a v See ian whe a eanas to a people, whom she tad been | what truth I know not to your Secretary, would be wiped villaging and scourging for forty-tive ponety a probabie civil j away, und his name would be tresheaed w.th a new odor in war, aa ‘alegacy of mischief after her death. Hi storimns have | this community. been divided jo opiniva as to which was the worst wan Cisat | ®ngland ever produced, ner father, or Cranmer; but all man- kind must agree that this was the worst woman that ever ex ested in England, or in the who'e world, JezaBeL herself po exceped.’’ Tuese extracts require bo Comment 5 thr ¥ speak tor themselves, Theea authorities whon | have quoted were not of the ‘farhfal,” nenher were their works primed by Duomgan and Brother; nor did they thew-elves receive from the Pope ‘a rol'd medal’, for their services in making known sone of the fi abominations of * Good Qaven Bess,’ the * Virgin ‘ttt * A Normal Schaol nay think that has —————— PRI IEL. 6 I commit what he deemed an act of Imagine, if you can, barbarity equal | = ’ e . 3 w is not seen in ite most hor ible light, unless we tuke into wie postacy and blasphemy. o this; and yet even this three months atier coaviction, and to punish Tam, Yo r Excellency’s ob'dt. Servant, NOM VE PLUME. To tux Eprron or tor Examiner. Siz,—Our Government appear to be fast hastening their | destruction by their iscapacity, stupidity, inconsistency, and ‘their aristocratic and high-Tory prediiections. Was ever ‘people imposed on as our Proprietary Government wish to | unpose on the people of P. H. Island? Our sapient ralers | have been speaking for the last two years about the woaderfui | | | Queen,’ the * Brvht Occideatal Star Student’ in hes *senpheity and igaorance education; bat as yet they have dene uothing towards this fend, Ir is ail down bil work with them, aul they appear ‘to be fairly bewildered with regard to the new College. and pertidy of a tyran' ; bu’ people of common sense will be ot opto un that moos betrer to teach truth than to hag to one’s » east the ignorance and prejadies in which a person may be nortured, of (o en cavour ta injure he neighbour by propagat- ing slander and calumny regardins bin, by garbiing tnetory, his religion, and by gratifying the most maligoant He may consider it admirable aport t» accuse Mr. Roche of disioyaliy | the Academg into the College; and yet this building is now a perfect di-grace tothe Colony. Lis iter for a Cow-house than tora College, Protessor Ingles cannot entertain a very and treason, and do his best to arcuse against him the preja- | high opinion of those who seat for him, and praised this place dices of the igaorant, because he teaches tis pupils that Elras-) up to the skies. When he was delivering bis inaugural ad- | dress the other day the Govern nent should bave blushed with shame at the exceedingly shabby appearance of their College, ‘the study room of which resembies a Sinoke-Louse, for its ‘ceiling is as black aud dirty as smoke can make it. The whole building, with its smoky ceiling, broken plaster, &., | presents & must wretched and dilapidated appearance, Qur 'wonderfully wise rulers closed the Academy last summer, ridiculing become sequainted wih the real mers of the public ahall . can entertain for the writer in the Monitor no journal which contains weekly the most vite and scurrilous lamous pubdheation.” It woud be well that tie Board of Edu- cation would see what hist.ry is taught in the Norma! School, and thereby deprived many young men of the opportunity | They bave shown a specimen) sv that the youth of this Colony may not be taught, as the | ¢; prosecuilng their stu lies. in the Monitor hae been, to call that monster ‘Good of their inimitable economy by having a Professor for several | Queen Bess’? whow che most rescectab'e Protestant historians months, at a high salary, and doing noching! They neglected represent to have been ‘as one ee re ER seat ; | to get a second Profess Y, and have been obli red to appoint whose * DISGUSTING AMOUKS WERKE NOTORIOUS 5 whose * LiFe ~ & : ' 5 ‘ WAS STAINED WITH Gross LICeNTIOUSNESs” ; who wag | 25 Teacher in the College Mr. Monk, whom they themselves This is consistency with | Guess’ who procured the legal murder of the Queen of Scot- la vengeance ! The peoplte thought that when the College and, when a ‘wito Arap’ would hive spared her, and * UN- would be opened they could send their sons to it for a very | DER SUCH CIRCOMSTANCRS OF ACCUMULATED TREACHERY, jow sum; they thought that it was quite enough for them to, AVPOCRET. AND DIUNNOLATION 45 HAVE BTANFED AN INDE | pay £000 per annem tothe Prolene; but ales! bowsedly Lend wieennes’ of * SVERLESTING thTARY OO Sat Mmeey 311154 they been disappointed! They now find that the tuition | a fiend in human ehape, who wished to ASSASSINATE her 0°" ” Or ; seit tilt bhenane fee for one pupil is the extraordinary, the unreasonable sum | Hoping that * Disbulus’ shall not seize the ‘Monitor man,’ of ten pounds! ‘The Government do vot wish the poor man’s | or *A Normal Sehool S-udent’ by the nose with # red-hot son to go to the College; they do not want the tradesman’. | tongs, and hurry hun * down unfathomable deptne,’ before 1 son to go to it; the Prince of Wales’ College is to be only stail have further shown bim what an act of consummate folly | for the young gentry of Charlottctown and vieinity—for the } he has commrted in exposing to the public hie stupid * sim. | young Havilands, Orlebars, Hancocks, Longworths, De- | phony and ignorence,’ U remain yours sincerely, = Bioises, &e. The poor honest man’s soa must not presume | aa pubic A Pence. to go to the same school as these high-born persons—these . 1, | scions of our aristocracy! The tuition fee tor pupils from | Fon ve Rgauwemn. the country should be zed; it is difficult enough for them to | TO GEORGE DUNDAS, EsQ., LIEUT. GOVERNOR ANU pay forty or fitiy pounds for their board. ‘Tae fee for City | COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF, &c., &c. pupils should be such as to allow the poorest man to send his Sir—Clad in the constitytional armour ef the subject, [ 00 to the College. Tae action of the Government with re-| again respectfully and publicly ase my privilege to addeers | gard to the new College will have the effect, 1 trast, of | your Excellency. opening the eyes of the people tu see the base manner in | This paper will be confined to the gist matter ofa a corres- which their dearest interests are being unscrupulousty sacri- | pondence between your Excellency’s Geseveaty, W. iL. Popes ficed by an uaprincipled, Tory, Proprietary faction. The pe and oe eo eet a paeenere a a people of P. KH. Island will not soou forget the Ten Pounn! slander of the 4th inst., and with which, Ll assume, your Lx- ee area College. Jan’y 11, 1s6L. A LOVER OF JUSTICE. nn OS That correspoodenes is issued obviously as a sacecgsfal ree | mover of tie public impression of dishonorable dealing im- —_——— + oes puted to your Secretéy in certain transactions with the THE PRINCE'S BOUNTY. President and Directors of the Prince Edward island Banking Company, and related in my first communication to your Ex- | eelleney, as havins obtained eredenee in the publie mind To rue Epitror or THe Examiner, : : Sin—It appears that the Monitor has become the organ of during Sir Dominick Daly's administration of the Government the Goverament, for it states, ** by authority,”’ in answer to of this Colony, and whieh influenced Sir Dominick to the ex- ipy enquiry respecting the money leit by the Priees of Wa'es| clusion of Mr. Pops from office unter hs Government. joy the ben fit of the poor—that it will be made known at teverting to the e rrespondence in the Islander, but more gome future day how the money has been spent. I regret. particularly and immediately to Mr. Haviland’s respom-e to that Her Majesty’s Representative has been compelled to Mr. Pope’s communication, seesing certificate of good name, | wats nee of such a disreputable charaeter as the * Monitor H's letter in its entirety merely isa beltet simply aunounced, ji¢ affairs. But the information in this case is by no means lL am informed that the amount loft by the your Secretary,Mr Pope. | : : _ | Prince for charable purp ses was £150 Island eurrency ; Mr, tiaviland expresses his belief that in the transaction and this has been distributed amongst a iew favourites to be with the Bank, Mr Pope endorsed certain Bills, purely ** to quted out in such pittances, and at such times as they may | oblige the drawer.”’ andhe asserts tha! the charge preferred | soe Gt, jeaving the poor recipients in doubt or ignorance as to agsinst Mr. Vope iv the Lraminer nas not the least toandation | who their generons donor may be. There are several Chari-| in truth.” Whea the Hon. Mr. [laviland came to the rescue table Societies in the C ty, and surely either or all of them, of his friend, he should have spared me the trouble of cor- might have been, with great propriety, entrusted with the | recting him in his statement of * charge preferred, &e.”’ 1 distribution uf the Prince's b munty. made, as your Excellency is aware, and Mr. Haviland must {¢ has been said that a portion of this money has been given be sensible, no charye against Mr. Pope. I merely related ¢y 4 certain individual to finish a hall-butlt house. Will the | certain pablic impressions of damaging conduct wuith had) pew Government organ state, ‘* by suthority,’’ whether this obtained against him in his dealing at the Bank. Havi g_ jg the case or not? set Mr. Haviland right, | would now take leave to observe, | January 5, 1361. your Excellency, that when Mr. Haviland used the expression | , * to ob'ige the drawer,” he appeared to held in light esteem | the obligation which devolves upon an endorser who guaran- | tees the payment of any paper at maturity. Would Mr | Havi'and gravely veuture to own that wheu an individual makes his endorsement on Bills representing eash to be paid | atbany stated period, that by such endorsement he does not incur a deeply personal responsibility for the payment of | that paper upon its becoming matured ; or that he, the en- ** Has been agent for Mr. Melyill-,” should read—* Has been | durser, 18 not morally buand to protect against loss, by agent for Mr Winsloe.’’ ** Pe linds reserved *’ aluuld be, | all jawfal and proper means within his power, the holder of |** The rents reserved."’ They prefer paying 10s. an acre as | that paper, irrespectively of any private understanding or rent,’ should be. ** They prefer paying 1s. an acre as rent” pecuniary consideration, vf matter of obligation, existing be- “On Sir 8. Cunard’s property the tenants have had the oppor- tween himself and the drawer, whose guarantee he voluntarily tunity of purvhasing at 10s. per acre,’’ should be, ** On Sir) ENQUIRER. | . To tne Eprror cr tux Examiner. Sm.—In the report of my evidence before the Land Com- | missioners, contained in your last issue, | notice the tullowing | errors, Which | presume are typographical, viz :—** The ave-| rage price of sales of land per acre on Lot 14,’’ should be, | ‘* the average price of sales of land per acre on Lot 24." Would Mr. Heviland think it the act of an honorable man, | purchasing at 20s. per acre.”’ with a show of property in his own right, grounded upon | = which his pecuniary ability rests, to lend his naing ta * ab- | F lige the drawer,’’ and therehy effoct the sale or negotiatian VERY COMMENDABLE. ot Kxyenange or athor Bills = but upon the stamp of dishonor | being impressed upon the Exchange or Bills which he had) Qn the ist iust., a Committee of the Bay Fortune section } nadernet annmeye tees his Soperty, real = aa te | of the Rev. Henry Craw ord's congregation waited on their! re reach of the law, and sets his creditors at defiance ? | .4o5- ; ; ‘ollowi Would Mr. Haviland, [ again ask, hold or esteem such an pastor, a es, a on the fetlewing Address, and individual, either honorable, honest or trustwort»y, or a re- | ee ent sleigh and set of silver plated harness, Tae | spectable member of society? Could Mr. Savileod think | Sleigh was bought at the shop of Mr. Kellow, in Georgetown, | mueh of that man’s morality or decency who could deceive, #84 cos: £12; and the harness at the shop of Mr. William | dupe, and inflict severe pecaniary loss upon, for example,any Smardon, in this City, and eost £12 10s. Both are superior | Banking Company ; and after having victimised the Company, | articles, and on account of their workmanship reflect great could openly abuse, caricature and defame its President and | eredit on the Directors ; and in the most coarse manner, broadly glory in jg worthy. of notice, too, that when Mr. Smardon was in- | the deception he had practised, and rejoice in the wrong he | . . had inflicted? Surely afr. Havjland could not or should not. formed of the purpose for whith the herwasd was bonght be countenance such ingrate egnduct ; or sanction any of those prone deducted £1 10s. from the price, as a donation | dishonorable acts. 1 do nut say that he has favored auch de- | rom himself towards the praiseworthy object. | pravity; nor do I allege that Mr. Pope hag been guilty of | * any of thoge abominations; but your Exeellency will per- | ADDRESS ceive I have merely proneuseed questions, To the Rev. Henry Crawford, Pastor of the Presbyterian | Again, turning to Mr. Haviland, your Excellency will per-) Cone t g : ; . mit me ‘to observe that he writes thas: “+ the charge.’’ as he a g East St. Peter's, Bay Fortune, Fe . erroneeysly styles it, ‘in the Examiner is without the [éast , We, a Committee appointed by the Bay Fortune, Souris, | foundation in trath.’’ I hope the public impression referred and Grand River section of your congregation, have come to | to is without foundation, both as regards the sustentation of wish you @ happy New Year, and to express to you our, Mr. Haviland’s veracity, and the honor of Mr. Pope; but, gratitude for your faithful and acgeptable pastoral labours your Excellency, the naked assertion of Mr. Haviland may be among us. Eight ve: . Cita | inguflicitnt to ihe aimed at énd, and his vindication of Mr. P vatighe igmt yours hayouew macriy cloyned cinte you Pope prove futile first visited this congregation, and more than seven since you | Direeting yoar Excellency’s attention to Mr. Havilanl’s| first became our pasior. During this time the most cordial | triumphal burst, in which his pen appears to glow with * the | affection has sprung up in the hearts of your people toward | Bank-exoneyated Mr. Pope from all liability,’’ I have to re- | You. You have visited our houses, catechized our young, mark, it is trae, your Excellency ; bat why did Mr. Haviland | enlivened our wedding parties, comforted our sick, consoled neglect to state the circumstances under which that exoner- ‘our dying, led our funeral processions, baptized our children, ation culminated. Perhaps it migut be unpleasant and in- | broken to us the bread of life, and dispensed to us the bread convenient fo do so; or maybap, his Christian charity, over- 344 wine that points the faith to the broken body and shed whelmed with virtue, might lean from virtue’s side, and he | as > 3 iis ied eae | blood of our Saviour. Sy each of these services the It is unfortunate that Mr. Haviland has appeared in de- happy impressions praduced by yout first Visits seem to have fence, and such a defence of his friend, Mr. Pope. * Cunning | beeu constautly deepened, and the ties of affection that bind of fence” as these tagtitign gentlemen are, | opine that a wrong | the hearts ot your congregation to you have been greatly move was made in placing the Hon. Mr. Havi and in the fore- | strengthened,’ Qur family circles have been cheered, our ground, which should have been oceupied by Ralph Brecken, | youth have been ingtructed, our church building bed ae ae 90 resident, - - a ow wie sh apg and, our He ahd have ae on >t a with the Bank was of the honorable character which Mr. a ' P Haviland asserts it was, no injury to Mr Pope's honor and | a ee geseral aan Soop guently snaedenges. esiring to give you sych tangible evidence of our grati- integrity could accrue, if Mr, Brecken, who wus President of > pf the Bank at the time of the Bills transaction, had been asked | tude as might help to render comfortable your labours in to gize his certificate in tha case. That palpably proper | your wide spread charge, we have procured for you this H. J, Cynpau. } é' parties by whom they have been prepared. It to do by suk ly refusing to name | stain of dishonor and the spotted integrity imputed, with | jthings they would do, in order to perfect our system of} They have been nearly a whole year engaged in converting | a — — om a j Sle‘gh and Harness, which we beg you to accept asa sma‘ ‘tain for your person, character, and ministerial usefulness, | You will please to convey to your amiable partaer ogp best wisbes for ber health and happiness, and for that of jyour childven, Be assured our earnest prayer is that yoq /may be spared to witness many returning and bappy New _Years—that we may long enjoy your pastoral labours—that ‘the uninterrupted harmony that has hitherto prevailed in our intercourse with you may long continue—that the doctrines you prociaim may be the means of bringing many to rigite jeousness; and that at last you may be among those who shall shine as the brightness of the firmament, and ag the stars for ever and ever, Wituram ©. McKie, Davip Morrow, Daxter U. Disewens, Joseru Dineawei, Avex. Leste, juur., Jouy Ronerrson, Jouy A. Dixowert, | On behalf of the congregation of Bay Fortune, Souris, and Grand River. | Bay Fortase, Jan. 1, 1861. REPLY. To Messrs. William Craig McKie, David Morrow. Dani-f Henry Dingwell, Joseph Dingwell, Alewander Leslie, Jr., John Robertson and John Alexander Dingwell, Geyttemen—t thank you beartily for your very affection. ate address, aud to you aud through you to that section of | this congregation by whom you have been appointed, I would return your seasonable salutation, and wish you all a Lappy New Year, The eight years that have nesrly elapsed since I first came to labor among you, though they have beea to ime years of unceasing meatal avd physteal tou, have pever- theless passed almost imperceptibly ; and it is only on reflec jtion that [can realize that so large a portion of time bas ‘glided past. Tuus are we reminded of the speedy flight of (ame, and that death must soon overtake us all, “ Our days }ou the earth are as a shadow.” _ _ To you aud through you to the section of the Congrega- tion whom you represent, | would convey my warmest thanks | for these valuable preseuts. I cheerfully and most gratefully “accept them, as an appropriate expression of your effection and esteem, sach as reflects credit alike on your good taste and generosity. While laboring in this Congregation, [ have _ sometimes beea cheered by pleasing evidences of success ; but ‘more frequently L have expericuced a degree of painful anxie'y lest my labors should be in vain; aod under this 'sense of despondency, L have been ready to say with the | Prophet: * Who bath believed our report?’ Tais manifes- ‘tation of your affection, however, teuds for the present to dispel all such feeling:, and induces me to hope that, though have gone forth weeping, bearing precious seed, I shail oubiless come again with rejicing, bringing sheaves with 0 ' @. The flattering sentiments of your address, which are to be attributed to the partiality of your sympathies, shall bo cherished among my most pleasing reminiscences, and these suitable gi‘ts will greatly increase my comfort. While journeying from settlement to settlement, through this widely scattered Congregation, [ sit in that beautitul Sieigh, and cast my eyes on that elegaut Harness, my earnest prayer will go up to heaven for the generous donors, that, as they have ministered to me in temporal taings, | may be enabled successfully Co minister to them in spiritual thiags. { shall be most happy to convey to Mrs. Crawford your kind wishes; and I can even now assure you that they are cordially reciprocated. Our united prayer for you is that our merciful Heavenly Father would preserve you all in safety through the whole course of your pilgrimage on earth, aud at last to reecive you into his Heavenly Kingdom. : Your affectionate Pastor, UENRY C2AWFORD. Bay Fortune, Jan. 1, 1861. * The Examiner. Charlottetown, LD EL, anuary 4, 1861. THE LOAN Bill, We read of the once notorious John Dennis, the contem- porary and opponent of Pope, that having devised some | particular method of producing the sound of thunder on the stage, he on one oecasion astonished the audience of a theatre, by exclaiming in the middle of the perfurmance of a play— ‘By G—d, that is my thander.’”? We will not imitate the irreverent and unseemly vivlence of the robbed inventor of histrionic sound; but we respectfully sugzest to the editor (of the Js/ander (who is also a Pope), that in preparing the ‘minds of his readers for the adoption of the report of the Land Commission he should, in common decency, admit that the idea of a Loan Bill, which he now advocates, vrigunated with the late Government, and was scouted by himself and his party with all the impudence and malignity which a sense of political defeat could engraft on personal antipathy. The people of the Colony well recollect the violence with which the Opposition of the day encountered the Loan Bil introduced by the Leader of the then Government, the ex- treme exertions they made to prevent it becoming Jaw—the gross and wupsraletied abuse to which Her Majesty's repre- ,Sentative was subjected by Mr W. H. Pope and bis friends ; yet we are amused to see the manner in which the editor of the [slander now swallows the leek, and, his employers having given the orders, approves of the very measure he and they so strenuously opposed, when the Hon. Mr. Coles introduced ita few years since. While we have no desire to increase the mortification which the Islander people must feel im being compelled to fundle the bantling they once rejected, we must congratulate the members of the late Government on the testimony which has been borne by the Roya! Commissioners to the practical statesmanship which proposed che much abused ‘became, and on whose credit the paper was negotiated?) 5. Canard’a property the tenaot have had the apportunity of Loan Bill. We hope that no unecemly exultations of their opponente will be allowed to grate harshly upon the feelings of the Go- vernment and their supporters in the Legislature, while they shall be painfully employed in eating humble pie, by carrying into effect the measure introduced by the Liberals, and nulla fied by tho present rulers of the Island. MEETING OF THE DELEGATES. The Delegates, appointed ou belialf of the Tenantry to represeut their opinions before the Land Commission, met, according to anvouncewenut, at the Temperance Hal!, ou Thursday last, at 2 p. m. Shorily after that hour the meeting was convened by John McKaig, E-q., of West River, baving been chosen Chairman. There were not more than about eighty persons present, nearly all of whom were Delegates; but the great storm which prevailed during the day, and the very heavy and difficult travelling for several days previous—prevented the attendance of those Delegates who reside at any considerable distance from Charlottetown. The interests of the Teuantry were, however, ably and energetically represented. Several of the Delegates from the country spake in very strong terms in reference to arbitrary proceedings taken by certain Proprietors and Agents to recover arrears of rent, from persons who had even offered to pay one year’s rent, contrary to the reeomwenda- tion of the Royal Commissioners; and several esses of extreve hardship, thereby entailed, were brought to the notice of the meeiing. We have not space at present to enter into particulars; but as a report of the speeches was taken, we trust that all the facts disclosed on this occasion, in reference to the evils and oppressions of the proprietary system, will soon be communicated to the public. The ful- lowing resolutions were adopted, at the close of the mecting, without a dissenting voice ;~- Proposed by Mr. W. S. McNeill, Cavendish, seconded by Mr. Patrick Wynne, West River— ' : Resolved, That a Commitiee be appointed, consisting of Delegates, empowered to correspond with their brother Delegates in various parts of the Colony. in order to obtain euch information as will enable the said Committee to judge how far the proprietors and their Agents have adopted the recommendation of the Royal Commissioners with respect tg ; BR: ‘token of the affectionate respect and esteem which we enters Ve LAE Be, eee é ts qn