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HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1848-07-14, Page 2tio 1 M T1 coaaiderable sum, ammonite( to urea pounds, yet, is order to rata Beery frtbfag, he had takes up his Woody at • the cheap ledging: fur a eight. But, .lack, for worthy utd Nicol end his well-estoed uuree both ! For it was not deatturd that either ut theme ebuuid leave the town so samosa intended. UW word from ".e sufferer --the mere '.sotto• of her name and her tfsuty, riveted Nichola. Shaw to the yul; aad that very) slight tie entered into as •gtcemest web Relay 11.e, under the mot 60101nn presumes of .ectccy, that he was to pay all expenses incur- red by the lady and her daughter, and the hiding too, TAM could. In the Loan time, Betty was to try to list some aanetases. elsewhere', and better lodgings, it she could obtain them, at any expense save his own; ter beteg uncertaiu of the duratton u( her illoees, ie was, of course, uncertain u( his ability to answer all demands. Betty could man poth,eg of the u.1suNer; could get so belts, lodgings, but .be made her uwo'edg- iege as cowtortable as it wad to Isar power to make Ihenh and that with the resolute purpose of charging nothing foe 'bout, should exigencies render such a sacrifice necessary. Aad wheo the nursing is taken talo accunat, really Betty hail a gaud deal of mint. Seery three, however, was paid punctually to a farthing, b,djtngs, nursing, and outlay, by old Nicholas, befure ever Mrs. at'Quns left her lodgings; so that there was scarcely, ever such a windfall came to the tut of a poor woman, as dad that sight to Betty Rae, is the arrival uf Mrs. M'Qeees at the ' cheap lodgings.' But wetthy old Nicol bad stow to bogie a new oteupetIoo. For, terrified that hie funds should run .bort before the lady gut better, he had no other resource but to be- got the begging, which he practised with such afoci.a.1 to have rendered he Marcs. •proverbial over all the dales of the West Border. His custom was to inverse all the remote places is the forenoon, and pig up whatever was-olkred to bins; brat it wad towards the eveatage that bis success was altogether tea - paralleled. Ile let his beard grow. tad wore a tremendous skew -ditto, or liighlamd dirk, w has breast, tiu that be because a most frightful slid dangerous look.ng chap; and then, ere the tun went duwo, he beg.n to a.k Lodgings, es • te gi.arter; as he called It. U.e loop art lour was enough; he was demised with a peony, and very eft he ioduced'goodwives to mike It "te tree pewpee to pay her supper and ber bed."— Then away W another, always with the same request for lodgings, without the least tst.otioo of excepting til tbem d offered; and never was be refused the penny at leant, to pay fur bar bed. Wboo any body appeared to hesitate about letting Ism in, he took care always to *bow the biotite of bis dirk - ro hie coat breast, plush settled the bargain, ted the halfpenctiewere produced. I heard .gentleman (Mr. Knox) say, that when be heard the geeu.oe Highland twang •tills door use night very late, he deter' mined on letting the old .nen in for the night, and accosted him thus: "i think you I soca late, friend ! W ha are ye that, is gun asking quarters at this tone u' night !" •• 0, she just pe 'te poor heelant pody tat whose of to Sassenach will pe !betting within him', teor for to sake of Cot." '• That's very hard, man. What ails a' the fol at you, think ye 1" " 0o, she hafe cot te wort of peing fery pad un te Lief and te moorter !" and at he. said that, he pot his hand to the handle of his skeow-dhs. " Aih ! L— preserve us j' exclaimed Mr. Knox, "boith a thief and a murderer ! (iudesake gee away about your begoeas ! 'There'. a .axpence t'ye, gag and get I •tfl' where,.roo be.:t c.in.' 1:1 th,: 'winner' did he p'•r..•vere un every novo till mulnight, ave :is, long aa there was alight in a window -in the Whole vat - ley; and atwaye the laterit tats, his alms grew the better, end were the more ruddy bestowed. • About ten at night, 1e. would go through w hole villages, fsaistiag on hevtng " te quarter" at every door; and fro.o every house he extreeted something that the inmates oneht be quit of him.— Anil then when no more -was to be got, he lay down and slept in an out -house till the morning. ilia earnings 'averaged about -half-a-crown a dt.y. B.rt twice every week he visited his cheap lodgings, attending to every wish and want of the broken-hearted befTrrer and her darling child, without once hinting at the means he took of s'ipptying their wants. Their di -coarse together Wan always in Gaelici• and Betsy often re- marked hew the old ratnach's face wonLl glow with a thankful benevolenro when he perceived Mrs. 5I'Q teen's -advancing state user abut the old @tory e' the alum' atJuw 1' 1h ! dear, dear Beth, and do you tot reesewb.rr your owe child, oho sat ae oAea on your knee 1 1f., Voir but remeatbir It1U; Anti •1•e!l M'Qsietc f' '• "bah, gods eau( us to the {a} i /p. y♦ her 1 Oh, Cm tarmacs o' the God ef lIaaveo he on your b.iaay (ace. Sot it ye really her 1 Aik wow ! {low is your dear blessed mother 1 lr, ohs leering yet 1 Aad haw'. told Nicol Shaw, poor mus 1 Bet etude sauf us to the day, wbere are ye gnus ibis `ate! 0, ye ti.auut furgie an suld 'Meted buds, fur 1 o aas happy, i neatber ken what tin doing or sayinle. 1 hae good reason to bless the day ye entered my poor door. 1t was a visit of an anger u' beeves to me; add there has sever a argot gate ewer this null head on whelk 1 hae sae pori' ed ter your welfare, end your intones, et the thyme u' grace." "Tu cut short a long atory,•tbat was a happy meting—Annabel) was us her rnar- nege jaunt—A los. r flower never bloom. ed on the i.anks f the Spey, end she was married t,• a bate ,. 1, a 'noel amiable young titan, w bi'.e her mother was stall living of convalescence. He begged for her tilt she r(•:olered, and never quoted her till he landed her safe in the !sin+nm of her owe ted her bueband's !rieodaln Strathspey. Now, Cuddy, 1kis to what 1 call sorito 11101t1L1Tt—p.rre practiced morality, an - adulterated by any ecIf nr theoreti- cal quibbling. 1 bare often envied the feel- ings of this old ll,uhlander. There •re traits of bennlence in hie character that do honour to human nature. To think 01 a re.pectable and Independent old farmer begging night and die to .n,•+ply the couch of desires*, appeared to me unbolt ;she • ro,nasce than a pontoon,. of real life." " Why, Mr. Moody, it Ramonly tbfm halt. It want. generalizit'on for true and splen- did magarfcenee; and the morel excellency. of the totem depeods on the proa.mety or remoteness of the c,nsangutnity of the portiere." healthy anal happy, In the house of Colonel Ml'Queea, her husband's (robot. But net trier of them ever f,rgut, Or ever will for- get, au:J Betty Hae and the cheep tu4gings 1 the Bad town." Mut-.T lit -Noe:., 1416 nay, 1829, ' 1II DISTURBANCES 11 ENLAND. These appear to have been more serious than they wee represented by our Latndow correspundeut, *Luse slighting notice u( ahem was no doubt inetigated by his perfect cootdeoce 1° the Wilma. putter 1t the authorities to cupe with the m. lconleuts, as well as by the feeling' not unlike euu- tempt which is naturally eugge.ted by a repetition u( mere demoostrattons without etL cove result. But :t is a bail sign that repeated failures do not have the effect s inducing permanent ceratin horn these agitating movements; the political disease becomes chrome and must eventually work out much evil, Jin no oilier way, by unset- tling the winds of men, inducing habits uo- favourable to productive industry, by keep - tag up alarm among holders of property, and by unelarutaui.g thesesuinent ofeemipecti fur law, aid fur the officer,' appointed to up hold it. • We give,,.from the London Spectator of June 3, a 'condensed and every lucid ac- count of the riotous movetltent. In London and the provinces :--.\ ee York Spectator. On Tuesday night there was again a large meeting on Clerkenwell Green, and some mere Inflammatory speaking. Mr. 1Vilhams urged his hearers to action " What he wished all those wlw heard In to do was this—to go without an hour' delay and poi some ' association' or ' lucali ty,' whether it were the Irish Cunfedera tion ter the I-bg;i+h Clutuas hs dud 00 care a stew. When they had done "that they would call out 100,000 or 200,000 me al less than half an hour's police; nut ger ing the authorities of the Bauk-time W 111 up their assailable points s•.th sand bags and cannon; without giving the police the opportunity of bludgeoning the people, as they had done in some cues the nigh before; and before too Odvernment could call out their cowardly rpeclal constables. Mr. Sharpe "declared emphatically" that the time was now come for, measures •• t destroy the damnable and despotic power 'he Whit Ad,nautatratson.'' Ile too prese- e.l his hearers to juin sense club or cowed ere ton, " where they would lar inforwed a secret that the Guvetnirte,.t would'm scruple to give a:1,000,00.j to learn." 11 spoke • openly and advisedly;" and if the I '1 not uuderetand bun, they, mutt please t misa•e.0e what 1►e meant. (laughter and cheers.) lie eoncloded by solo" wgnifi cant gestures, which elicited loud appl•uee Mr. Daly spoke to the assembly as a Irish Confederate, delegated to form a "offensive alliance with the Chartists o England." [He was proceeding' with grey warmth un the Mitchell topic, when a body of police came io sight, and a multitude u his hearers ran away.) 1n great disgust he " Ingn.red bow did' they wean to light fur their liberties if they raaaway from the p ,l; e ! There were 10;000 men at - Wap- pin , and as many more at Barmondeey. ready to ripe when tallest upon." 'rite police pres:red'forward fan a connect mass, bea.ted be some score on horseback: and to a ,bort trate the whole meeting dis- appeared. At Bradford the attitude of the Chartists .b"eatIo1 io M'faoua on Saturday last, the {cur sampan:es of infantry, too troops o dra coos and two pieces of horse artillery, "nth eg'tipmcnt•, were despatched thither i from Leeds; and the local yeomanry and hussars werecalted out. On Monday morn- ing the borough magistrates hauled a pro- clamation against tumultuous processions, and ega.:wt drilling. They also organized a scheme for arresting David Lightowler aid Isaac JefFerson, two inlgcntial leaders, who set the few and the authorities at de- iascr, fr;'m tbeirltroog hold, in the small streets of Bradford near the Manchester road: Lgbtowler was Itlely a member of the Chartist eonVeetion in London; Jefler- suo, who is called '• Wat Tyler"—a man of east s gth and ferocious temper—is a Waeksmith, art mtker of pikes. Forty ,pedal cru.+tab:es sec out on the mirsio'e of capturing these men early in the morn- ing of Monday; but on metal to the houses of the uQendern they were set nn by the whole population of the neighborhood, with ether, staves and bludgeon.. The constables fought stoutly for some time, but were overwhelmed; and every one of then was severely handled before they succeeded in breaking throngs the mob and escaping. Tney were driven a euesidera. isle dt•t.tnce in retreat, and the Chartists paraded the streets in triumph. Carrier pigeons were flown from their quarter. 1, numerous flights The author' es imane- dia'ely s't about aeeerting their r power. At four in the afternoon, thew le of the police fume, followed by 1000 special con- stables, headed by the Mayor and magis- trates, together with sloe infantry eeldsaa, and two eumpanhee of dragoons, eel forth t. captors every person known to have been engaged in the morning's affray. The (;h.rt►sts were not elems►ed; but merebal. .0.teet wee eotlfe,ed aad doebtfbl, the- the mohttnde,—ref wheat thee -fourth glo- Maguu$e tieing their Diked swords with rioesly refused to partakes—well dose sass unit, tltiagneee. At last the Chartists were of Mesterei 1 we ask were Yoe ywwredves effectually brokeu and dive:, to flight; and aU day leeg, your wrap and families sad the mounted spacial constab;er preeavg ea the esmsanuv at large tut meth the better their retreat, a great number of thsat were/ on secant of t1.. pituee-watby Imo el twe- datachtd and taen pruoaere. The etrayga te-cad farther ae shall sate by u4 bye hewing bees rleae,1, the bootee were any assaults to trespasase, se eesemoe ,esch0d ler arras, and many suer. found.— kmeagst us, were contemned by those who Neither w the tio leaders ungiw!ly sought wt. .hed the matieweag dnwght.—QWJed was secured. The cowtabks are kept iter. .a guard, and some fad the a under arms, the whole of Tusaday night: bust ter (wither disturbances occurred. Witham !lager, one of the rioters captured, has since been committed for 111111 at York Assizes, os a charge of drilling. At Manebeeter, a greet meeting of Cbsnats and repealer., to tiuvensnn hare, was placarded for 1Vednasday. 00 Tues- day news arrived that tumultenea eteetines had Isere held at Oldham, Stockport, Asa - 'on, and Mosley; •ed that bodies el armed mem were to resemble at those place. and marsh to the weetungp(ots Weduss4sy in Manchester. The authorities drew out the whole of their special cunelablee oo Wed- uceday morning, and a con.idereble body of military- They seized all the avenues to Manchester from the places mentioned, sad posted strung pacqueta uf police at ad- vanced points drew up 10 Stevenson Square, and the streets leashing thither were cut by columns of men thrown .cruse thew, oho kept them dear. {low To Raroa. a Bap B•y.—A prose lady of my acqualntarwe, who had charge of rumor the del.artawote 1m •.boyi school, in a neighbouring city, states, that a lady mune t0 her school one morning with her toe, about twelve years of age, who '•bad hewn besspeaded from every other school in Mat section u( the city, for truancy and other bad conduct." The mother said to her, •• He is a very bad boy. Ills father and 1 have whipped him and whipped him but it does do good. You will be obliged to punish hum, he to so very had." The young lady, immediately after the mother left the school -room, said to the boy in a very kind and affectionate manner, (-she war a cheerful sod •pleasant young lady,} •[Charter, 1 wish yes to go to Mr.—'s, in —street, and take a letter for me, and u a matter of some importance to me, • I wish you to go and return as soon as you can, without injury to yourself; and bring me an enamor." The boy then, said the young lady, " raised,bis bead, (which up to that tome, had been diropped down;) sod smiled. Ile took the letter, and judging from the time he was absent, and from hs appearance when he returned,- he must have run all the way there and back. 1 , !complimented him," said the young lady, promptness, expressed fears that, s he had injured himself io ,consequence of running o° fast, and thanked hum for his kiodoeie in going for me ; with all of which be seemed highly pleased. 1 then gars • him a scat to a class aid for several days o requested him to do errands for me ; and," - the coreludes, " I never had a better boy ire I sohuo(." This boy had most probably , never received any encouragement to de well before.—Lyres Ceti•—Com. School Journal. . . In u SAD occUreNCe.-1M Monday meriting last, Mr. McMAnus of Otanabee*, left his house at a very early hour, fur Peterboro', and on returning home found young wo- man Lying dead at his door. He immediate- ly informed his neigbbours, when the body wi. found to be that of Miss Mary Wear' daughter of Mr. Robert Wear. A Coro- ner's Inquest was held the came day. before A. Macphail, Esq., wheo John McManus, a by of eleven years of age, confessed that he had accidentally shot the deceased.-. The jury returned a verdict of .wilful murder after an hotter deliberates. We will mut cocoanut. on the ease, ae;it will undergo a a thorough invesngatiol in a Court of Law.—Weekly Despatch. • ei ne'rlt(: r or Fan Sc.ottsa on int: Ts LCD op-faursaTT.—Ata. mse'log of the " North a Western Edocauowl• Sdptety," odd at of Irilw•ukte, on the 11.t origlr dart, thR Pueeident of the Sudety, Wm. B., Ogden, Req., 1n some cloep remark., nn leevhag of the chair elated elk he was entrusted with the rate and disposal of'nurnerour lots in trho city of Chicago, belonging to nen-resi- e dents, in1 he found that he sold hundreds r :t.013 uw •r,.rw1 fifty per cent. higher, than • he o1bcro.so *uuld have .done, were not for the exiateace of the Chicago. Free Schools. - n Mr. Kennedy said, that Common Schools n se fer.esceiledallether kiods'ot_acbowl, to f common seise was better than hay other I kind of eense ; or, he would add, as cowmen people were better than ally tither 'kind et f people.—Joveaei of 1 u04iss. " That's sorely an extraordietary grand rrpeeeh fur L herd, Cuddy: i gee ye credit for that speech. 'The proximity or remote. ness of coosangninrty r Ila ! ba ! ha Excellent 1 Weil, then, the deed had all the moral excellence that could attach to It in that rupee', for twelve years afterwards it came out that old{ Nicol Shaw and Mrs. M Q'leen were so •uthsrwtse related thus being of the sante clary and bo had beard her father preach twice or thrice al the dis- tribution of the Sacrament of the Supper. 1 said twelve years afterwards, for it was just too mneh that a handsome earriage stopped at the door of the cheap lodgings in the Bad 10w11, 0,11 of wl'ich a beautiful lady looked and asked for old Betty Rae. -- .The woman of the house an.w'ered that ' Betty had g. ea rep besine.s tang um. a•' .eyed like a teddy nov' and pointed out he Imam The carnage drove up to the o► e(• elessly thatched cottage, and this taseati4sl ereehre, sateen %a nimat nee- te atm 'notelet had old Belly to her la Betty was confounded; and when dietse creature asked the rased -looking it rhe def sot know her, she replied— eked so, deed so!hem should 1kin tidy hire yes! Bet 1'a warrant bee Lady A.oaedah, a Lady eery, er Iw/y Wooten., twos to a e led their levee*, armed, eit the entrance* a' their quarter, and eramme'I the streets ma their mon. Tee -police, whoa were armed with cutlasses, aad the special constable,. made an nn.Isught; b t were received coo Ij, an 1 were remit t0 d,enrder and eoefeeme. in folio wiLg doer advantage, the Chartists somewhat opened their rune. and the cavalry wised the opperuwty to rds tato the midst of them. The horses' legs were struck al, to u- tters' ebe dragoons; and for some rust the .CROWN LANDS. - We are informed by A. Ge.ides, Eeq., the resident Land Agent at E :ea, that the sosinaf cbar,2e is 8s per acre, bot a d pay. meet is received in scrip, which may be !meditated at 23 per cent discount, the actual price is only 6s per acre ;. and although. ten credit the assertioo of our con- temporary that olid laud may be purchased . is the United States for • dollar we are sure that he would consider the difference bet Steen being a subject of Cines Victoria and one of Prewdeut Pinkie •'sovereign people." quite worth the odd shilling. But jesting apart, we do hope that so soon as the ministry shall have matured the scheme for the settlement of lisp wild lands with which xhey are stated to be presently occu- pied, the Crown !.ands will be offered at a t rdscednte, at no barter wiil bel opposed to* large and contorted snit.,* .of .uisigrant.. ilnw moth bettor poorer to 1 permit toe poor Irolt to become lords of the , I soil In terms of the engi.s' grant •'reple- nts► the earth and .ubdme it. ' than to spend milieus of money to feeding and keep,ng them riflts shooting and menetaeturing pikes is Ireland. They might become peat -able subjects and indeatrtoes .eaten In Cased& at a titbit of the eapesse it takes t , keep shoo fres breaking into open rebebun et' home. \ } We • lbj•sin the author zed statement of the Crows Lands for sale at ;he office of the Dtatriet agent, loessoioeselpb Herold. The progress of Reform is encouraging. Public meetings ars held almost daily. At the meeting for the ('oenty of Middle.", Mr. Hume Inti expo'rnd,d hie eaten on the i subject. He west through the four poets 1 of the sew reform proposition, aad submit- k ted the following resolution, which, it will I he observed, advocates residential tot household suffrage :— That ..see the stability of the b throne, public order, and e:ontestrnent, the cooslituuosal rights of the pleople, lomat- ° saline of taxati e, economy of the public 1 esposditure, jest laws and good govern- ment, it le luud..prlesable that the elective se /nseh.ie ehetild be extended to all nark ex lode ere r jgrrrrcd es residers/v./Or n lfwrfrd •t time ; 1611 the aeration of Parliament• g awk wet etresed three years : that verve d g ook be tabu by Whet ; soil that there w sbw4 be • More egad gpnrtioe *sou. o(' bf empeabeve to pepwMt s "—. sereef Regis- Iiquarr.—An inquest was held yester- day, on the body of David Gillett, an Eng- lish emigrant, who fell, or rather jumped, from the deck of the steamboat Gildcnleaee, in a fit of Intoxication, and noosing the wharf, fell Into the water, and was dropp- ed. The unfortunate roan leases a wife and Eve small children to deplots his lose, and, by this catastrophe, adds another proof to those daily and hourly occutnmg, of the (oily and inprodence of keeping alive to ,•1'aety, the use of taluatcatteg drinks. .Not,Geul Gazelle. HURON -SIGNAL: FRIDAY, JULY 14. leis. MORE ABOUT REVOLUTIONS. By the late intelligence from Europe we kart keit the city of Paris shill oont.nues to he'd', teems of di.coateat and inereaing anarchy. We segtet this very much ; bet there is .oaseti*g else -that we regret much more. It is the Imam - doing spirit with which some of oar fellow-ete•- totes exult over what they consider the failure. of the people of France, to govern the Ratios e s more popular, and More nghteoas principles, than 11.e despoiisue of the Basebee& We are sorry for the tete of Perin, because it is suether mournful illostntioo of human depravity ; it is another Bickenieg exhibition of the frailty Rod in - .stability of the aggregate memo( that hamaaity, of which we are u iodi'Jnal stem; it is mother her manifestation of for mental darkness; and dupchility of oar race. Every rational man —every good man regards himself es a ?onion of the great family ; sot isolated nor independent, but as part and parcel of the whole ; a partaker of the common nature. Ile feels htmseh malted is the triumphs of his race, and debased in their degradation; he rejoices in their progress, and weeps over their errors and their follies. We bdiepais the ultimate physical,' .moral, and in- seUecteal red -empties of mankind; and in our faith we have joy ; and the eoc-ial atrocities, te- rms, and outr..;es of a multitu.tn or a not: n. ging a eha•h,w ..f temporary eloam over our bright bopes, and draw forty a e.gl. ot.syin;aihe : therefore, w4 lamest' rhe present condition of Paris Bet it mat be obviates to every tbiakisg Irmo, that the cenditioo of Pates is a email mese of regret moire benevolent iniad, cornpareJ with that suicidal spirit which exults over the mise- ries anti m'isadvaat.rea of the ignorant anti mis- guided ; and can chuckle over the errors 'of our eommna nature, wi'h a kind of fendish'deligh;, as if he were an isolated iuddridoal whn.e glory sprung from the sorrows and infamy of his own species' ! The heart sickens and recoils from the contemplation of the worthless wretch. who ally a few Sears, perhaps a few months ago, was wreoched from the jaws of positive starvetioa, by the kindlier sympathies of our humanity ; sed who at the very moment he is Iniog on the sim- plicity and generosity of his wealthier add better neighbour., can laugh and sneer, with a kind of iefereal triumph, over the follies and mistakes of an excited and illiterate multitude, and can talk of the mob, the mobocracy, as if he had bees altesdee the: r Nursoy wed pwpeua$ Hash d' visksce. 'Tia • hea.raly hype ! feNatasce to the despotic Goverment of Leek 1'hittppe, was • duty soh •h the purple of France t.weJ l their (Bud, and to :heir "MI - dreg,. 'That Uo.e,u.nrat, Ole a:; ',oar Deeper• isms, was stippling'ed.:.ac►sae the reergi t the i mb aortal o, ad.. t. a...bec ter jai rad impe`i`J el Om progrewve developnsent of theme email principles of u.tb tad jsatire, hitt, ars eaisu- lated to give us the tafuest eoaeeptiees e( eat C,eawr, stud to nuke as tear, bre, and obey lade, Guru a kaoeledge eel restrictions of hie greatsrss, gsodees, sad wisdom. The tier of doe withering policy would naturally eaten to all future geueratieos, even though the policy itself had terminated with the earthly router of Louie Philippe. l'he knowledge •,d atiaia- meats of the numerous geoerativas of maoktad, roll oo i. • cesuauoss chain, like the wares al a firer ; tits power sad speed of sub respective ware being deternuaed by rut predecessor ; if the cuneot of knowledge is *helmeted, is any particular generation. the effect is felt by all suc- ceeding generations. !lace respect for the honour and glory of God, imposes the imperitive dety upon alt whether individwlly in collective- ly, to resist sod reamer to the lull eaten of sur abilities, all obst.actioea to the pregrees of gam- ut kasekedgs, wh;eb if properly oederatoed.' just peau a keowkdge or God. The ',habitants d Pans reproved the corset• t p.lioy of Louis l'nihpps, hides moat uetcdal, and praiseworthy eraser. Their rerolatio°. 'Ma nut marked by cruelty soda wastoo.deatrue- tioa of life. Reweave ler pest aggravated te juries did sot preuneris saintly faro o thetpkit of desolation etalke! net beyond the limit Of se- cessit►, and the desire for change seemed satisfi- ed with the downfall s(despotism. Tie eosdact of the people at the general election ear entitled to the respect of all who rejoice la the moral •,d intellectual improvement,mankind ; aad their natural love of peace and order under the benign philosophy of Genitalia', would ere now have produce an improved condoled of society only fur the "dcsigwag raUa.y of soiree aristocratic scoundrel," who perceives that the republican- ism of Emmeline was a fall embodiment of the principles of justice, liSerry, and virtue, aad that couegeentry the glorification of unprincipled ntality amid eely be obtained free • usenet - lien of the Burins the nteatrom er from the establis4mest of • military despotism. And by taking advantage of the distressed condition of Europe in mercantile sod monetary affairs, the excited ammo( the public Mod, and the utter destitution which the extreme wickedsess of op- pressive policy i.as brought opm the entire ia- dr,try of Europe; by taking advantage 0( these circemetmce,, and by appealing N the reeltap and passions of the multitude, with the welesme and nimatiog hope of ameliorating their fortes coeditioo, the .111607 has 'acceded in.persued- ;ng • nultit.de-of the most depatde to swallow the hetLs6 gesckry, and to attempt the butchery ' of their owe Jaiemu amid shouts of " Vive - l'Eteperear." Arad Auld the demon traitor sueceed—aheald • large proportion of the people el France be .educed to rebel against their own interests and tbe interests of posterity—it will merely prose the iniquity and corruption of the Government which tolerated ouch a mass of pope- ; lir ignmasee to grow up ender its c.gojtanee in an sae when education was so accessible to. all ; and it will farther prove that this neglect of the Government in net elucatiog the people, incapa- rotates them lot aypreciariuo or rap ring the • b:r-tont. oivil be rti; and, ,1.r,.,,,..,:'.... soon, ti:.t Mme !rile l'w is em,ma rel t••, cheviot them with the iron roti, the sooner will they leave that their political redemption depends' upon .ref-eehere, and not epee Klee see l rs perors, Thai they will be seduced is snake shipwreck of weir republic is highly pvebable in' the present depressed este of labour; fat homan nature would not be led by a deity to be made worse, bet it would be led by a demon who would promise to make it better: la the fall of that republic the good nae will lament the • mom of igaoraace that arertursed it ; he wig lament .1111 more the soul -les rilliaay that tempted that ignorance,. but his priaeipsl regret and indignation, will be reserved for the demes melt gaily of tet reptile who ma chekleand tre- nt!! over the disgrace and debt nwot 0f the ho. formed of superior clay, or rt gaified with a n obler soul ; poor worthless stain on humanity The maltit.de do not err through intentioo, bet through an ignorant eothsiaam tb do good— through false views of elevating their own con- dition. Their object is great—is laudable -1 glorious, but the mean of attaining it may, through miuepreseuution and duplicity, be false ; still, the most ignorant and infamouswretch i, that tumultuous multit.de, would V still farther degraded, and disgraced by beingeao aai.ted with that diabolical spirit whish ex - . I's ever the depravity of his fellow -roes. This e the spurt which at first triumphed in the reit .1 race ee ; which basriveted the fetters of political and menta bondage ascend our primi- tier deg -Mame, down to the present day : and t is that mme mint which is beg. Isag god es - tieing the ignorant populace of Pans, to tote. mit *strap epos their ewe interests. The cos- t *tine of Paris ia, to every istell.gent homes be- am• matter of deep regret, but it .s sot • oat- j er Of disappo'otmeat. The greatiternum- Ware s num- Waree Mtarall7 Weisel to peace and nodee- ry; their immediate interests amuq.d{.teed 1. the uhd ay their county d ; aif there were ,e tyrannical Item., there would be no am - loins demagogues, aad cossequeutly no wars or revolstioss. The workteeo g -res of • •n - y, wooki never quit their eeespelious aid mos - tet tap n tem large bodies, and drill, d train them - '''.in the pnstic, of war, foe the purpose of tHw oaati.g the iodinaioas popdau.° ormolu POLITICS:FOR THE PEOPLE—No. e. Law-*A'at00. 1 A good old veserabls.Bishop of Roche•ier, in - lite..ige of the Third George, soil he could not y understand " what the people had to do with Laws rnvpt too :nr Nene !" But the good old ! Bishop, however honest and venerable he might have been, must have been a very-igraor,nt old rate—for unfortenar,Iy, for bis good-natured doctrine of pasnee obedience, the Eoghsh Par. harmed is the reign of the Third William had• passed a law expressly declantg that "The laws! 4 England are the birthright of the people there - 1 of, and that all the Kings and Q•eraa wbo shall j in (store ascend the Throne of tl,s realm shall , deal with, and administer these lawn as filed same," tet is es the birthright, the property of the potpie. Bat notwithstaadiog the explicit Jeelan tos of ibis act of Parliament, the exten- sive liberality of sentiornt and the incalculable , progress of political intelligence since the year I (fee, the people of England -that is twenty - 1 sere' out of every twenty -ti t of the week inhabitants—have, in reality, at this mom..., neither right sof property in the kw. of their eoaatry. And i' Canada, the chief of the Bettis\ ('olonies, there are still mes belnogiag to the Rochester Bishop's school, who deehre that the people have and should have no other right thin ice right to ohs ! Their faith is apparently fiund.J on a literal interpretation of the words of Solomon " The thing that has bee' is that which shall be." Tbe7 never -4ive us any re - easing to sheet that the this( is right, bat sim- ply reNer to the fact that it has for a Ioag time been se. Happily, bowever, fie maakied, that the poetic have goo. far par tabs: age when the antiquity of a practice was takes as the mea- sure of its nghteo.wnes.. All principle, and pttetieea are now teed by their ow" menta, °d est by the prejudices sed esperauuins wb.eb se. tiq.iy has woven armed them. That all mankind are not equally gealiied to make laws ,. a feet which we fear will sever be altered: bat that seas mem sho.l4 be called rpm to obey law, is their ewe nester without hav- ing • voice either directly er idireetly is the makiag of these lava, is as absurdity which i lie older It tends mr4s. Is /sal poets am. ilames ivy. 11 the lof ser gmadhshere we poo emits wicewlsdpd te.1e geed. ear eiemberse N m s react i•eeesimeatelt1err pe asipie, Wit teeeld be wllfa.m sere' thew se reem; end i( tb., are bad, the.' seumeit7 is cettalaly • very add* ilflpmrnt (w emtigitliag inreli t all wise are ed 010%11 eb: alresld bare a emus le Itiamusearag of that j 4g mately very far lam either w;t et asp . r toyte.re to as itw.leg!,!abaetlswk.irllygNli/ amu of the world should be colloo.i tees .ar vast assemblage, and that every ea* ,\•s4 be at liberty se bawl et Pio *miss aiss ee tbs• mebieen The ter. wee weid deemed twee* , y mar,/ taw, silly sarscatrr weep a.aeyhimself smallm is he a small wit, bet really he would have em daffiest ty is perseaduee g cum little mt jpelrbeys eq. Th adopt his fancy. e natant ability to husky laws, like the Baleful .14617 14 lathe UNIV. barrows, is coafiaad to eo.puideely few 'Weals, and me no gout, of saes ner arrest of wealth can lacrosse the w eiserreve fleshy the e e.e aw se, se eltle and psepwty leave me iafleeece is exte.diag the capability la the weber. Amu tr.e 1 the eapeasrat .f wWel- bartow-making es his sea exposes, if les em- oted,s- oted, in prsvwmee g• by the expesnt that eaters mindedd him for a wheel-banew-miler, the. hie "teletheaters twill pelsosie W ...; .m.Intl iris . we.kmssahip as • matter of in- terest, they -will tali'the e article when they meed it—bsf 41 he is a sere beagleslim twechealc—J his .wheel -barrows are ..e la..,, Ikea nobody its injured by he experience!, aa e, sad .a et,liged to gay* hie 160111th 0., ey will re- death oto laMae, Bad he will so„ he freed to Amides the toads. Bat if t eeeenetstetws(the cosier, decided that • eartaia elms of ma, se that ad 'sea elseweft bora as • reruns ` .aaII- 'y of property, 01 whitmislaidby i.dawy or (reed er asy ether eireemetase, become pommeled .(:his amoeot of property, sheald be ce.midered the only le4iutnate obey{-barraw•mtkem, .d ats that the whole members of the ceas_ity should be obliged m p.rehass their wheel- barrows whether they seeded them er not, ee wbetbthea were good ee bed ; • the ab- surdity and tyranny of wheel-barree9isitieg would met be equal to the pe.eat Bean tlad injmtiee of Law-Lae-makerLae-maker- . It is use, the law e, the Cenetitatisiailliat decree that a certain class of propertybddei must hake yws, whelks they chew or qualifiedwhether they are qualified Of tet. This eetrage ou eommease oa sense exists oaly i■ the eof the British Peerage, or in the iesta•'tes of hereditary my Moaischiee where a sweater er i •dmaseemes Isup Ito the world with the e keel right to revere as though be hada bn bur. a Sales or • Sir Robert Peel. But though eke Coeselt.tive does not thus b•sefaeedly *.salt our understand - tar, by declaring that every rick man still be lend to make laws, it dlchtres that every poor aloe shall be booed Bat to make laws 1t does n ot decree that tberich teas shall impertiaeetly jump op tat) my absolutely "1 will govern you ;" bat it decrees that the rich man deme has aright is decide what other rich Inas shall make the law.. 1a other. words aukDick eye that uncle Tom says hat t usele Harry shall maks Dick the wheel -barrows, and as uncle and each Tom are brothers to tick Harry, they mut be the best j.dgea ethic wheel -baso abilities, aad. ' therefore, the ignorant people mast es a matter of course, purchase and pay for wade Harry. 1 wheel-barroas, whether airy Yr pleased with Ithrrn or not '1'!t' 11:::.,!. Muse of Commons and almo.t ',tory o•:.er re{•r•.entaare body are -founded d+a thePrinciple that tace:ion without represense- tion rs trrraaay, and the idea of a man of proper- ty being the best repre.esudv of the man who tropes and pays • seat for that property Os too .breed to require any notice. We ad- mit, once for all, that those Oho are empowered to rex property should poise* some property, bat is taxing property to be the exclusive sad *terse; subject of Ieguth latou 1 'lave e Boman family Do other interests to attired to, and ad• mance, but the paltry interests incorporated is the sod'. Is the life of tSe poor mg, sot as . valuable as the wealth of the nib tees? Or de die mumps, sad .renes, sad rail -knee., .ad swamps., tm , add acres tense rod the slimness a( the rich eta., and produce the mauve earam,t solienm- ity.e:t.de fur the peace and prosperity of bis ea - try. as the poor mea feels whet eessllieg the comfort and happiness of his wik aad eWdrea If en, the rich man must be warte,Md ia -hea- deed. 41ei cavy not his lenses, bet we deny the truth of the assumption: The truth is that the laws oft country are just the transcript cf the minds that frame them, and as eleeliog • man to rake laws, is just egninlest 10 making them, because if the laws of year first rcpreeeam- tive do not please you, 700 amy elect a.eee.d for the purpose of repealiag them ; therefore, the practice of realties wealth the ata.dard of"legia- letiee wisdom 1. as i..lt offered to our Neese. which se long as it is e:o.tiaaed, mew pvees d. evil ; it is giving earth, ad sold, ed erases, • pre-eminence over mind .d petite/hues life at • les. valme 11 * "goode aad chattleaa esu permit will the subject in oar amt. d"' We have jam received the fine sub*of " Willows Camelia. dia. Casket," a theraryp cal of useful aad ealertainitg kaowhdga. p - . Tney have neither time nor ia- ,aalion for eech eek{-bleoded, and deliberate ekedneee. 'They mat be either ironed down •ppreemen, till returnee. becomes • 'leve. ler. ]reams Mumma at B.avwwsr.—iAat meek a .wa•rewe wester tweed out for the use eilme.t, bet toe (herr weaprwe.4 10 do . e. A lass (Nita, with a bodily meat, 1 stared refreshments of whiskey sad beer to bot sir stimmelated ad excited by some ',principled villus, who seeks his saws aggrandisement by drl.dug them with der prospects of elevensg tr condition, before they toll leave their b.0est ocrap•tions to fight and %pert the elat- ag eider'( thiega Net1isg bat the hap. of tone( their caddies as ever settee them to idled by Mr. Joseph Wilma a dellvilk,'wbese enterprise ie the dessernfoatiee Weiser merli.g, is certainly entitled to eoo•t•ge erst. He bee within the lest twelve mem he .erablia`d the " Vittoria Magazine," and Wiles.', Lapsei- meat," both of which here e►taised a wide eir- tektioa ad refuel credit on their ,perimd pab- fisher. The Ceiba sot his third mum" tad if we are to receive the Ent member as a ftalm spiel - num of the week, it will certainly gusset The Casket will be limed mealhly, sot • dots of Sell pMges, aearly .dgaai v nim te L filet edifies of Clembes'* Jala.a( Fi 1l esmp lr•raes w •stssesm Mr. Mwssp. 0111 [1'st to on 1'breplgy, h. the Bsbeef •ssvesiat to llir. B P, ea the lhw is ]la.d, u eiglt e►yTja' wpleee► M *Veit of y 414 {aorta t. w The teat weenie/d the perdu kii1 einem its half pear. and le ales ie les wpm - wee, will mot be p•Yithed •nil Fri+ay mousing. C.eeasisa ire !e9°°°mM 0.55 hOslly thehet ° tow beer thew ieesatst .t* cease. uric► hers, sus say, ced se. greuly sp1°°t edea opiM plume Ills Kama there rue oris ices erg oho sin r•svaaret Urwseiee ptttty,'1....Illmmummo Nsrefd.