Newspapers / The Cape-Fear Recorder (Wilmington, … / Nov. 24, 1830, edition 1 / Page 1
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rr'' 1 i-'- "v "I unii Miiiu ! i i H in i .... ii ii iiiiiiiMijaiw .7 -T IN J'UOrORTlOM AS Tiiis'sTiii'CTiiiVDr cotrnet iinren tWce To-fcuilc ormox, it is essential tuat.Vcbi.io prmox imoi'to at kmligbtexxb." CcJShfBStCfl. . ' f' J ' ' . ( .' ' "L ' " , , . "m jt ,i. ,rt. r,.'T.';jc--irT- r rWt nri'irf - nr.Tv ttt t nrririrrnn - . t -cataaiWPB afe , m im unumiMi,iiii mrmm uri IiMiAo yol:xV.1;no: 24 K Wilmington;: n: a Wednesday iNiouNma novk rKINTEn EVERY AVEDXESDAT HORN ISO . iiv.wir i rir m iiiutiIiv ' 0? AliCiimXLP .mClAlSQJlOQPtytt TU5IS4-Tiibk'Doij.a5 jpejr year in edrahce. v - NA cxcwJiiiff six'tsksi liw R8 (or pm qoairl in , fCTtUhe fijfst Uiim', l'Jf oiic Dollm", and twenty fivo tern forcwry wiccpeclnig uiMu-auoo. A wo aui Ittis fur iniHTtutg mtyrrtiscnienU f djoid Um iiUcii 'lines itrul not fsccnlin; tvVo iUiircn, the lint time j nd fifty. cunU fur ever vuccumlinff iMibUcatKMi. 'Thoof great kngtl) iii yroportioiV .Luttew y . toe propmtyr mm, w paw f9Mt4 -r i'3rr-Qni tin London- Times of October 0,1830. NAKltATI VE OFTIIE LATH STRUG- On the eyetiinff of WcdricaJay, the 22J, ? tvas ti'nJer8tdo(Ftliattl)'e Prince comiuani diriff tfie King forces had published ft pro- rLiinauon, swung ma uuunuon oi fnicring ' .tiie city of Brussels, and proraisin jtin arh- jies'ty, xcpp'fihg to the ringleaders .of the 'ulsttfeclioa and lo itraogcr't The vague - iermVfcOf tho exception excited jio, smttll, GonsternationlV Evervi man . engaged ip the. affair of; course imagined. himself of - pamcicul unportaixce io coine wiium uie ' vengeance denounced by the commander . of the King forces. y btrangers,' a par : ticular, were !irtcenscd, " jariil determined -y not to be the tune yictims of .the'Princc'a unresisted success, In consequence, they ; did not' regard that part of the poclama tfan Which ordered them to retire unarm' a vi"inn ttieir uweiung9..J.ucn.,ot tne y ultimate. . success of ' the revolutionists is due to the gallahtry of the foreigners who " 1 . .l i rf i-'J 1 S nill : English! Scotch. Irisjv Americans. French irom various causes., arnveii iu' wrusscis (in considerable numbers,) and Spaniards, all Jfou jht vell some actuated. bV (at- : iaciitnent' $o (he popular'cause 'others by 1 the' Tinfiirrtl nuirnn'itv nf thivirv rriarnrifirs a i o J ana many xruin iuo vuuvicuun iuui, iiii tlutionistsVvthey would he "equal endurers . 6f the sufferings which it was hot doubted a that the Dutch, if succeasfulwould inflict. nucaieu or nut hi inu imrues ui ie revu Had the Prince proclaimed a1 general i flnhesry,'i and marched at the head of his i 'Belgian fqrees, and not attempted t6 fore? tli' Dntch soldiers into the citv. I am ' confident he would not havetleen: resist- ;-d. Many Vf the most opulent inhabit ants were- attached to the cause of the Crown. They- felt; and; appreciated the J Royal residence at , Brassels - they had , expcrienccu tne evus resuiung iroiu sever ral weeks stagnation of business": ' were ; wearied of fepluiering; ana $ desirous to . compromise otf" any reasonable terms. - A , party certainly vas determined to attempt to achieve a revolution at all hazards i but their cTorts would 'have Jfecn rendered aoortive ".nao ine rriuq.e aieu mure, ou 1 itmtlv hv the men of nrobertv. who had much to lose and HttU to gain by, a revolution, and by the disinclination of tle lower class of mliabitants to continue the longer endurance of the great priva ppny iney ijau imuergvuc, iur ecvciui . u ... . . 'J .. ..II! .. ' ving. Tp prove this I shall just mention "one fact flfwo gentlemen who had been lVUiH.Mlf5. auuu" un ijijr vu hmo wvah- A' VVilncHdav-: tho 22d,"i Were taken up by ' iGarde Boursreois, and conductod toaheir ."'. 1 . . i'i ' ' i!.L ' notCl 10 asceriaitt u ,i'ey wtre , me t;r gons they ; described themselves.1 ? ;i hese gentlemen requested the guard to partake of somo refreshment, and the poor fellows - ate like famished menr and stated that for several days 'they had scarcely tasted ' bread that their present supply had giv en thetn new vigour and requested to bcr allowed to carry with them a loaf pf bread for their comrades, 1 hough' thus tevidently enduring starvation :the uardc Bourgeoise committed'no iCvlid-l 'ran speak from personal experience of the admirable conduct of most of the privates . O mas corps i lo tswi must uicu wi" Thris stood the matter' ort 'Wednesday evening t th Prince had an army under hb command ; he enjoyed popularity m the cftv : he was tildeil by1 famine and lis- nrrtntt!fmni nrpxrnilirtnr nmrinfrl hia onnn- pentsf wna twere ueseriea Dy iue priuct- iti!il natt of their chiefsi-the bul cravens ' who 1 blenched from tin? hclin when' the .nvmd blew tho highest,-.. out wno retuniea ,.v when success became probaWcj to guide the efforts of thtwc; (eV who. still strug gled on when all was dark, gloomyV and hopeless. DeSmte nil his adranfaesr inlonnosU 4 - . .1 t "j. AS I , has been tne oeieatett, party. J Jtis mgn ncss" was aided bymany eircamstances, i hut he forgot he had a formidable oppp jiienf'in the excited, the. indescribably ex- cited hatred of the Itelgians to thoIutrh, . . - jr . .. .... - . . f: and which couiu oniy oeTenuerea tracta ble by a ebnquprcf success, or by the cjonciiiatioit of h beloved Prince. ; "J lis ' Jlighncss.had the cnoice 01 two courses in pntor ' Ttrn-jp"ln in trinmnh. sia tVtP vanauislier of the Beljrian nation, or as the friend of the people, relying1 on their Jove, and unaided by a mercenary foreign 1 fynjt y9 Dulcli QOnsiiJcred by his on- to- an - numan .wresigutr-wio .i'rince4n3eiM, as ono 01 io uronjern w ttau em Bclgic subiocts. The Prince was indcH sivo: ho adopted neitlr conwe, Imi tfa Versed frbm one to the -other. , To pur sue the first coarse and to eutcr.as a con quering" Prince, he vni Thursday, the 23d, rcnnirexl bu a few risolute'troops, for the disunion of his enemies and the Hight -of their ehicH' woiud have Jell but little for ; disciplined men to effect, f To hare adop 'ted successfully, the other alternative, and to have commanded in Brussels as a Prince beloved by tho people,' he needed ooiy to nave granted a moro precise am nesty, and liave promised to enter the city with those troop? alone who were Belgiaus by birth, and vyho, as events have proved, were not inclined to desert his cause tijl its success became more than dpbious, & that of his'oppdnentd was absorblnslv nbnular, , When in possession . of Brussels? he might have conciliated all parties, for pco- ncopic were weary 01 anarcny, cc tne pos session of the capital by the king's forces wouia nave crusneu trie nopes 01 tne re volutionisto in other places. It is diffi cult to say what the Prince designed : his attack on the jown' was' jus sullicient to excite, hatred and inspire contempt his soldiers must be most atrocious cowards tlieir leaders the; ilest of traitor, or tho mot unspeakable idiots. v , ' r "On "'Thursday rhoi'ning, the C3d, the Prince entered in the direction of Scaer beck his troops marched down th? Rue Royalc,and entered the park. A seven in'the hiorning, he had encounffod but little resistan;e,and at this period 1 first saw the conflic:The-Place, de. ouvain (which lies been the gate of Scaerbeck and the Park) was at : this timo defended, by not more thanjGOor 70 undisciplinecJJotir geoisi with only one officer that 5 could distinguish.'. ...-They, complained itterly that they were betrayed," and Idid not imagine that abpve an hour ou w eLtspse before the ; Prince would havV had ' full possession of the to wn' of .which he' al- ready occupied tho higher part, "with the consequent means of early -'.subduing. 'the remainder At this time ; (seven in the morning!,) the Prince's army :" exhibited themselves in considerable forcoHof ca valry and infantry.) taking up positions in front of the streets, which, however they speedily retired ' from, sheltering them selves behind the corners of the - houses though they were resisted only by a hand fal of the Bourgeois .and a few strangers, who fought behind tho barricades,' which had been f brown up very, carelessly, and which .'were not of, sufficient height or breadth to have offered, any material ob stacle , to either foot or hprso : a very in different hunter would have thought little of leaping these earners. At tins time there was no firing from the houses.';, I saw the inhabitants close their doors, and refuse to allow their houses to be used as forts for, the defence of the city against the Prince's forces. The Jfnnce, howev er, instead, of advancing,- commenced io retreat ; his troops yielded up; several of the barricades they possessed, and retired behind the; trees ot the y Uouievarua.- Their cowardice Is inconceivable to men who have not witnessed ' it. . I saw six persons drive a company of Dutch from a barricade. . Amongst hese six were, a gallant French youth, apparently about 16 years of age,1 owe oi the bravest 01 the brave 1 a Belgian who displayed the most adventurous valour the whole' day ;1 arid two brothers, the eldest of whom, in 1825, obtained the double first honors of Oxford arid tho other a"member of the Jamaica Assembly. Both - these brothers were wounded, the latter slightly, but the for mer very severely in several places, par ticularlv bv- a shot, which at a later pe riod of the dayi he received through , the leg at the Place Royal, whilst leading on the Bourgeois at the Cafe de PAinitie, in front of the Park. . He Was carried frorn the field by hisasHfesiyIrisbgeik tleman to the next hospital som!of .the vagabonds, who . were in the reart endea voring to rob him. ' He was afterwards removed firorn the hospital to his hPtcl by the Bourgeois; and almost stilled with ca resses. - ."several laaies or Brussels nave continued to visit him duringtheprocrasti nated ' cure of - his r wounds,'" expressing tUpir gratitdde to him for having come ex press from rans, to detend them when many of the leaders of th6 people had de serted them. Gen. Van Ilalcn called on um to express his high approval of his conduct and that of his brother, which last had beert hiscpmpani6n in hi3 noc turnal expeditions to surprise, the enemy iri tho Park, and who was introduced . by the General to the Provtsionary Govern " - - e 1 : 1 "I 1. - .1 ' inently servod the cause of the people, & well deserved that medals should be award ed them. ' 'v- J' - . -'V; But these acts of bravery wero at this neriod of the first day almost solitary, and a general depression lowered over the city. About' 9 v o'clock, an oid-de-carop of rince, and as I understood a TJoimt, btit whose precise title I do "not Temember, appeared on horseback" at a : corner, of a street rieair th ' Place .Lqu vain. He wa ved white " handkerchief, and called on the Bourgeois to advance to him. They did S9, principally the ix individuals be- ItJ foro nrentioned.' who were In adraricc- YliiIt tlie aid-do-camp , was stating the uiotjHge he had received,' rabble broke in and dragged him off bis hore. At first I conSHlcred Uiey wcre tavwinr yieir gratification' at liw arrival, but I discover ed tliev intended to treat hiin as a prison er, and- to.iirsuJt.hini. ' Tie gentlemen be fure mentioned, (Messrs JlenamonU), and several -of 'the Bourgeois, defended him at their own ioimincn.t hazard ; they dragged off his epaulets, and lorpaway his cockade : still tho! gallant man; as be wns carrjed Uirough h strrets, manifes ted no particle o! Jear, nw enecs was un blenched and no sigh of dread camc over him ; occasionally his tine aristocratic face was lightened by a smile of scorn he cast on ins uasc asaaiui. v- w itoty brave men . could do to defend him was dono at' their own imminent r peril. I le was guarded to a barracks, and it was sta ted he would be considered as a prisoner, hi retaliation of similar detention of one of the delegates from Brussels. . It is due to the bourgeois soldiers to say, that they in, no way participated in the infliction of tho insults this brave man received ; it was tha skulking cowards who assailed him, and one of theni attempted to assail him with a dagger, which "was wrenched out of his hand by one,ofihe Messrs Beau mont and d bourgeois. ; A most intolera ble coward boasted he had made the aid- e-camn a prisoner. As well might Isaac of York have boasted of making Irauhoc a captive5 tp his spear, or Wamba, tlie wit less, that, ho had ranquisKcd King Rich ard with his shield of brawn. ' The Cou rier des, Pay s-Bas contains a dispute be tween two other persons, who, also each claim to havemadc an officer of rank, pris oner.' If they allude" t' the aid-de-camp I; am referring to, they haye both an equal right to. the honor of his capture. The truth 'is,, he came with a flag of truce, and was detained in reprisal ; and, as far.as I Unpw, justly detained, for I have seen the Prince's troops more than once fire.' on the white flag of the Bourgeois, , r n The detention of the aide-de-camp gate vigor to the Prince's opponents, for a re port was speedily propagated, that the Dutch had been beaten, and the aide-decamp of the Prince, "and several officers," made prisoners. -A Then forth came the coward and! the dubious man. The revo lutionary party understood well the value of such rumors. Immediately after the event of the Prince's d-ilainp"comjng in, a considerable number ot volunteers came forward and proceeded with them to the Place Royale, which lies 'on ..the op posite side of the Park to the Louvain, from' which just the Dutch had been beat en, 6f rather had most shamefully; run a way from absolute fright. Indeed the face pf a Dutchman was scarcely discern able 4urihg the whole period of the extra ordinary .conflicts. .At the r Place Royale two young; Irishmen, resident in Brussels (whose names I do not mention for obvi ous reasons) distinguished- themselves right valiantly, and; made repeated at tempts to, induce the Bourgeois to resort to the bayonet j" but I never Ustrtv' this course adopted. t ) .,- "S-Y-??k'A-' -; " The Ci ret dav of the conflict riianv of the townsmen were Ikilled and wpunded, be cause UhereVwas rib ; discipline, and rip sman portion ui me raouie uhuaiw ted. - . . 1 . The succeeding day there was some confidence, and the Provisionary Govern ment published -To" proclamation without any signatures.' In the , night an expedi tion was organised to surprise the soldiers .l n T ' w .1 T v A in the fark. 1 saw. ine lionrgeoia ai midnight assembled in the Hotel de Ville : but they had no stomach for the fight, and many declared they would not go to the butchery?! The xpeditioni did not sue ce'e'd 5 whether rendered ahortive by trea son ojLcowardice. I know not. On -8at- urday all was gloom; 11 was jmaersioou that the city was to be surrendered. The lower class of the citizens were' in great distress from hunger, and I saw many in stances of armed UourgeiOs asking bread from the inhabitants, but they demanded nothing else.; . v,r " : On Sundav, the 26th, there was . a con tinued firing from the Bourgeois into the Park", but the Dutch being sheltered by a deeD hollow, in which they were ' lying hid, could not have sustained much loss : the trees were the greatest sufferers. Had many of the Dutch fallen, numbers would have remained on the field, or large graves rpu3tTiave;appearedror7nuinerous-wag ons would have been seen conveying off the slainl None of these circumstances took place, therefore but few must have! been killed. UnMonuay,tnexm, wnen the Park was evacuated, I did not see so much as 12 bodies; there-might' have been more, but I speak" of what I isaw, and I walked thro' thc whole Park, but thpre ras.an immense assemblage of emp ty bottles, from which the spirit had de narted. but certainly not entered the hearts of the Dutchmen, for even jheir prorerbial Dutch courage did not avail thcmr How the Dutch came to quit- lbs Park. I do not knoW..s,I did npt fee them decamp, but my opinion is that tJiey:.Mgummoncdup coward mlnu aaldcscnptipumrcgardtpthecxiiiiinitliicnd- wnlwiy.'Tlie'co wsrdice of tho Dutch is, I fcar, unliclicvablci excepting by eye witnesses! I who saw Uie wonder, can hardly imagine it inissible. " ' ; DurW all the nrriod of the four days the Dutch tlirf w occasional bombs rock et a, an J red-hot shot Into the city $ they destroyed one or twP bouses, and excited the hatred and contempt of all classes.- These soldiers of Holland kept themselves out of the way of all danger, but made a most vigorous attack upon the dram bot th'M, ss tho untenanted bodies of tho nu merous slain I found at their quarters am ply evinced. The homely apoththegra savs. that Dutchmen require their courago to be excited ; but nought excited that of the Dutch at Brussels. Oxen and wain ropes may drag them to the combat; but native courage never; they resist even the charms of their bottles.' "A plagfle of all cowards." , " PS. I made every inquiry relative lo the charge of rape made agairfH i the Dutch, and I have no reason to believe it founded on act An English gentleman whom they had visited stated to me that they only ravished a few silver spoons, &c Thin'ffMiitrman m Mr." Arthur &. Bmworitr e turn citizi-n of New-York, mentioned in the Couri er do Pi Bava u ono of th bnithc(Ancri(4n) who had come fnm Paris fr tJe 0prw f urpm of fighting Un the nveJom of EruMcU tgtuut rvgul u surjietion. : ' ' ' ' The ship Josephine; at New" York irom Belfast, brings London advices to the eve ning of the" 12th; arid Paris the 11th ult. inclusive.'. . We select from Jhe Evening Post, commercial and Journal of Com merce. W-Li--. ! ;'".-'-'"'.. The news from the Netherlands is in teresting. There does not seem to exist any disposition among the inhabitants of lirusseis to meet ine iving iu un y measures, or to acknowledge his authority in any manner In one of the paragraphs which will be found among our extracts, H is stated, that a deputy from the proyis onal government of Belgium to Faris, au thorized to make an offer of alliance with France, received; anv unfavorable, answer froin that government, which expressed its determination to enter into no measure that might disturb the general tranquility ot Europe. ? The ex-ministers of the ex'-king of France seem likely to escape the" punishnlcnt of bate took place in.the Chamber of Depu ties on, the evening of the Wth. of uctober, on the subject of the tdtal and immediate abolition of; the punishment ot aeatn, which Cnded in the adoption of an amend ment, proposing that the Chamber should address the King in order to obtain from him the proposition of a law ' to' abolish capital punishment for a great number of spccineu onences especially jor aiipyiiucni crimes. ' The amendment was supported by Lafayette.;. The addres8was.,accorr dingly delivered to ! Louis Philip, who replied as follows: p ',' . - t ' - 1 11 11 -..i:.' II k Gentleman I receive with great satis faction the address which you have presen ted to me.,; The sentiments to which you give expressipn have been a long time inj my heart, vv itness,irom my earnest years, or the frightful abuse pLlhe punishment of death in political matters, and of all the evils which nave resulted from it to France and humanity, I have constantly & warm ly advocated its 'abolition. Hie remem brance of these times of disaster, and the melancholy; feelings'' which oppress me when I turn my thoughts to Uiein, ,ill afford you a 6ure pledge of the eagerness with which I shall hasten tp lay, before you a project of law conformable to your Views. "With yeispect.to mine, they will never be ' completely fulfilled until we have entirely effaced from .our code all those rigours ana. penalties ai manity and the present state of society It seems prohable that the great popu larity of the King, and the deser ved influ ence of Lafayette's opinions, will hate a tendency to reconcile the people of Paris to the" object immediately intended by this proposed measure. The London Sun, speaking on the"subject,says---uThe qnes tion will ' now " be looked upon by the French people as the King's ownas one in which he is personally, interested and we doubt riot his excessive popularity will enable him to 'carry it through. Still it cannot be denied that a vast mass of. the population are bent jon seeing the severest measures of justice dealt out , to the Ex Ministers. and that in the event of their disappointmeut, much aerimonioos party snirit will be brought into play." ' 4 The 'Duch portion of the Province of Zeland, on the leit bans 01 ine ocnciu, w jn a state of insurrection,; The Brabant tricolor has been hoisted at Eclnce arid many other parts of the country called Caszand, -:'".'.'::'-. , .s -England, France $ the Xetlc.rlands London evening paper of OcU 12says : "TTie private letters' received this morn- in from Taris bv the "express, from the highest miarter, arc of a most favorabic ship between England anJ th King of tL t French, as ihcy are determined to idhcra j to a strlc neutrality wit regard to Bclgi ; nraand their mdcavoort will be by medi -ation to maintain a general peace through out Europe." - . - AFFAIRS OF SPAIN. ' : ? The following paragraphs, from diiTcr ' ent .sources, strte to corroborate escji , other, and would be cniitled to full credit ? but for some Circumstances, wluch tend to - invalidate their ttstlmdny., ' ;.' ' f llivnwr. October 5.-i-lt is offifiallr ita t.l Tina Trii iliC ln1 pendent of the Spanish govermentl Tii . news arrivcu ncre last iukuu nuim ut-ni confiiincd to day by tho courier, tcIC , : ' ' tar. . .W graph despatch forwards this news to l'aru. , London, Oct. 11. Madrid.' letters, da- ' ted 27ih of last month, state lha til ex- A I? . . .II ,f . H. . I, A 11 . M . on the morning of the 2jth, but we bar - - received further information . from ParV,.1 f by which it appears that Colonel Pucnsa, '-'. ex-minister of war. and. cxGefe-Politico of Malaga, headed the movement.'' ThtV have been, it is added, backed by the mil-' v iraoruinary ciprcBs, umxivu.iv mt nu- Isttr of War, arrivt'd in the' prcccdinr ! night at Madrid, with the intelligence or ; , the city of Cadiz having" risen Ui favor , of Liberty. Our Madrid correspondent re nnrta iht nrn-a. it was ifeiierallv LnOWTl . nary lorce wiutiu iu i vuit Letters from Cadia of Sept. 221, make". . win men r vit n rpviiiiiuiiii lr w 11 1 iil'ii a . 1 1'iato, at Jiosion, w no jwi pi.t'UHUii; - on the 15th OcL represents the country to hrfve been iri a state of great excitement,., A but does not allude directly to disturbances in, Cadiz. Stv Sebastian is only 22 rnilc't. from Bayonne' '' "'-.V" ' i - Bavomne, Octa-T-Thc regcriey is de finitely established here. ? There has been 4 a general assembly of chiefs ;Mhz wai present- ''.-rj, ' i '-Jl :t: ,Tbe Spanish-- Frontiers in Spain '. are J. tolerably well supplied with royal regular' . troops, under the , commamt oi, uenerai Ivanitot commandant ef the Avante Gusrd. It is swtcd, however, that the troops ard ver'y favorable to the constitutional portyi but they aro nevertheless afraid of com t promising themaelrcabylhcif. cI,.'k At Bavonne the armaments and cntiin - roents are carrying on with activity, bul still' all is done in, secret, ;i he' soldiers only at present ore bing equipped; .TheT ' officers are delayirig, . Many believe thai the matter will be arranged, and'that Per dinand VII;! will abdicate -other! wait fpf the orders , of a, chieC. In themeantimd the great body of .the army of , the fefuy -gees is getting ready with activity,, ; ,'. JcKCTtds or BEtGicst wxtii iyctl ' ' e have received the following infor mabon connected -with the affairs of thc . Netherlands: 'Mj Gendcbien, the fgcntle ' man deputed by the protinciaV Goyrrn-i, ment or Brussels to makean offer pC an ;. alliance with France, ha hod intervie with the Minister for Foreign Aflairs and others, but has' been most unsuccessfulir He was informed thai, "with whatever sa t in that city. Captain Bradford, f the brig1 f tisfaction lle French Government might 1 . view 1 the prospect of increased friendly " relations with the Belgians, it would only r be as connected with the reneraUranquil . - lity of Jburope, wmch woujp: be, edan4 v . " 1 .. J it. j. 'a ' -. ill b.v jl -; ; J : " 7 mnrn nv unnviinr inn iprninrr m iuism - special protection of f the latter countiy. ' It was in consequence of the bad esccega ofM,; Geridebien mission, that the pro- visional Government of Brussels issned ti V proclamation declaring Belginm an inde pendent Stafe, ? Under what fbnri of gov- . ernment, and what chief this state Js. to be) v -fj placed, is now ilie point of interest i tho,' ' , nniflaimnn in 1 iter m a ian w ri 111 ne m 11 rr independent, are not e believe :s.uch a , , IP cause any eenuus uusiacic 19 iue bki ' The Belgic provincca ftieJLOW busied u reparing a ConstitunbnoT Themselves; . Tlie proposal from the Princ e of Orari ge, in a Proclamation from Antwerpihas como,' " -too late The Belgians pay no regard ia - ifiA ntMinitfAa sf k IfmiBd rfki. 4i-4.t ivZ&t . to rule them as a province conquered by " , the f word, arid who, when the attempt lias been thrown back, with5 disgrace n thdV 1 1 t' a ! ...1!. 11 . -1 , neau mai prig.na.cu m unw nvif wia&w y - nflpnt nf rprnnriliahons and concessions. Which Uioytcantiot witnoia ,iue rnnco ( calls on the uelgisnsto accept a separate? Constitution, , with himietf atlicir Lead : f they will form a constitution -for then selves, bnt the House of Nassau shall have nntliinir to do with its forinatieo. rbi ' Provisional Government are takuig the he . ccssary measures for settling their own , affairs. ..They will have an Independent -j' governmnnt whether monarchical or rc publican, i not yet Vnown; most prob-: - - ably republican. ,, ' . f '" Antwerp, Oct. 8th.--The Prmc of Orange lias issued a second proclariiatien, , v pubUshing tlie names of the provisional. -Government, all of whom are Bctian, and inviting all the deputies 10 uic cwvtr 4 General belonffin? fo ihrse provinces to , meet him here, to deliberate on the affaijj of the country, .-.The measorvs seem to . ' give general "satisfaction, and have ever, - been well received fn Iktusels. 4 4 -. : l. . . .
The Cape-Fear Recorder (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 24, 1830, edition 1
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