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:- vt-y &l , -. f-teg'ft . ' 4:y ' rrir-iVr r - - A- j3- ' . mi. ' : z : . ' . '.. at .- . . . " o.v - . -.j -t .1 '' " . ' ' t ...... ' . ... '" Vs I FbM. '' FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER W, J819. r JV. W '! '' '' " ' ' ' ' " ' ' " ' 1 ' ' "... , 1 V . I 4 fRINTtT), WEEKLY, BT 'HARVEY AHD OASSO, JT A. EDITED B LUCAS. Term of Subtcriptton t Three dollars per year, one hal to be paid in advance. No paper to be continued Ion . jrcr tiian thre months after a year'" subscription be- c.ines due, and notice thereof shall have been given. Ivtrtitement), not . exceeding 14 lines, are inserted thrice for one dollar ; for trenty-five cents each sub sequent insertion: and in like proportion where there it a greater number of line t han lourteen. Thekash ninsi accompany tnose trom persons unknovrn to the i rfN'o subscription can in any case be received without payment of at least SO ii advance ; and no dJscon- unuance wiuuxn payment ot arrears, ualt-ss at the option of the editor. lJoltical Tlie ra8lion of publhhin.2; articles beaded Private Correspondence," Vi mn some foreign jlace,ls very prevalent hi the journals, print ed in different parts of Germany" nnd of France, as well as of uland. ThelLundon Tiincs, for example, lias frequently a corres pondent from Paris, discussing the most juter- be imagined more diametrically opposed, than tbe system of M. de C TfM. J lift man nf rtu moment, and that of the Doctrinarians , who winK themselves the men of eternity. M. de Cazes has a quick and sensitive tact ; he per ceives whatever may lead too far, and whate ver may hurt: the Doctrinarians, soarinc aloft stem of nam fb h.IM... J - : ' a 1 - v ba mw uj iu iccioivr Mnnki a i ami F I ' I i I I ,1 1 1 . . O v,.UWu principles, cannoi see me 'every am niu ; everything must be modelled earth under their feet. M. Royer Collard is rtAer the same pattern Marsailles like Paris. wiv tisairav iitirim ll rim WdriU I lie IIVM III UOmeailX 1IKP l.vnnm i, ia iUa ll :a: ,. . . k . , ' I , tuui mat ail iiiui- aisputation, as bis element. M. Decazcs lovcs'-vwluality disappears in the provinces : all the habitlby square and compass : yoa ivoyld be ed to ocar. I h.rdlv need info. m ,.u that all taken in Fnuic fur n4Vor nmn.i ., m th. .k... .. . wiojm iqi au -r - """ft nwuiu -- worn ouse, ana nuioeai or ver be almost accused of higa treason, if you kind eotirelj at a .taQd.The Cap of LiberS shooU propose to leave local institutions toia rried in front, with other haWr. bear mouK themselves upon existing differences. ' 5 i"ciptiont : oa one, wai Dei (rustlon to The government wishes to administer every 1! Lef5ilnto Governmeuts on anotnar. ....... riiB.inenn. we. or ueatn to thoia ia Anrnnpif. i.l, ...;ir-firrr.'- . . t speak alone and to be listened to. blood in the body is violently impelled towards Nothing can be more comical than the attempt! the head. The absolute government of Louis of a Doctrinarian to use curium? n? arfifirn ;l th Fourteenth hail d tins is often tlm case with M. O. i. if ; lie for every purpose, and yet he suffered local alition between the nvstertu of ,vr. u auu of the Doctrinatrtini, may b? apfly com pared to a motley coat, madejti.f shreds aasl hah'Loo lil..f.. ... .k . -it M de Serve stands atom 2 h thn nnlv f """j man ot ancient family in the ministry; ho finds himself attracted, by terns, by the Ultras and by the Doctrinarians. When Messrs.! time Mai, Int tiaine, Kavez, and Iloyer-Collard contrived il. 1 1 w ... ... x . iusli(u!i(ns tosubaiit." We wonldunt be uuderutoocfas expressing any opinion upon tli tmth or justness of the s'iJitoments and inferanccs in the above ex tracts; We 1 merely present them to our rea ders as a transcript of a nicture coloreil on tlie spot, and probably bearing some resem blance to the form and pressure" ef the Foreign. A -p. - woiuiviiimi m athonty yrho oppose their Adoptioo j' on a third the Memory of Paiqe, Brandreth, fce. on a fourth, Buceest to female Societies. Some tnttiug intuit, or fcome pretended one? beiDB oBered bv a drunken .,- tiff' oea bawling out Churoh and king for ever confusion to all reformers 1' eacj suoh a, icene of terror, and I mnv .AA .. never before .oeeurred in this place. What windows wereJejTt eypoeed wero ahatrered "4a AD instant. nartieuUrl iTin.." . iivi'.K graced by fenjaltKf.rep4iKility insults of tbo grossest deseripiion wore offered to the laU ter by those of their owa sex who were in the mob : and nut bins- but th ini.P.h.. . IPW milll.m vi'l..il n I.I L .... . ........ ,j , Huuiu urv prevented tab most alaraiiug consequences. Thanks, hows ver, .io the judicious arrangements of ear twfr m 'S'Tes, major Berwick nod captain Oase- ' tehpitoQo their presence upon this pot, tm threaLened denser nnkiTnidi.rl Ti. ..j .... ; w - iu tau or liberty was torn down in au iostast, and alt . " . i 1 1, ii:: . ; , Mam., novcz,, miiu noyer-uouaru contnveu tacliPd by public opimon to some of these ar- that law of elections which was directed against fa;,bete,t,mra tle circumstance the ra,, M.de Serre opposed in TM.de Uateaubriand having late y on one the best reasoned and most able speech V occaimn addressed a note to the journalist, Inouoced in the Assembly of 1816. The dis th .R f hat cones-, cussion of the law on the press reflects more Pomt be iro.n the pen of one of the ; credit upon th. talent of His Exeellencr the m ,f Ttl l 1 '; m,nwte- lt wo'd keeper of the seals than tl.edrawing upoftho seem thai he restrain s upon i he. preas have law, which is confused, in tilicial, and load gusiEested thisraode ofobtHiuiiiff mih lnfv for ...t ;il k . . t ... . . . r . uau ociHiiis. leveruieiess, ai. do --, .r r... -" ' ", uem whb so littte ee what it night not be safe in the hist instance; Serre is not remarkable for nrofound view. ? m' Jhon,Psou declined reraony.They assembled aeaio, at the blarir to publish, but What mav without ilanrrr ho: iJ.i ".TZ ? , 'r I,,oluu"a T'.wviegthat office, when the choice of the I.iJoriiioallv fiJfA,,b. from a foreign journal, accompanied by grasp of S he7 anUrSi SZKS t0 W,e a Mr' AiU ,7" prudential remarks, and hus serve to make atvi ci,u ' j r. t iwiw., uorintn ttoUiwell. son Harrison was the Dtominiuit hr-.. Jf that appeal to public opinion wliich is attend- Z h oi lasers it hVmarkln ti. T V" . "T- f V'0"11 Pa,riot' and I the """''""-The old major's bill ri be el in all cases by such salutary results. In n 1 C8nd"r n co, " on by proposed a. a rallying p,ini and to beSe raS ii. r,i;ci i . t . u.umuun, muugu aucoiatr"w"",TCB mereiora we oea leave to lav swer it asked what thv wnnt.,1 t, the political characters ol per-panied by inconsistencr. the fruit f ..n-nvem. before o.,r readers sha fnii. J.. . .u".. Th " i"V VMU 'Fartherextracu from London Papers, to thehe other age followed as if a sudden Diralr- IIIVIJUIV.IIIP.IIIIIVP I.., I. . l.u.l I . . . ' V , - v J luPV . 'cu lutsmnuara oeerers ; the mob) et Arsity,. at thej Oflice of the New-York: 6'd off m every direction, and, as wasthoBrhrT Even,,,SPot- j nettere-assemSu. But the mind, of K v , London, july 2?-. """guided men and women were too thbroak r ..i. J , "a piwuea,.y "yucu una reunion, eoospiraev and rebaE. ror the p.rpo.e of electing a new sheriff, jgFthe j to be driven off the field with so lillt. room of VV'm. Thompson, who declined remony.-The, a.sembled .60 at th. yuX servinsthat office, when th pi.Ai..r,i.A r : fori?ii.ii r,.Jt r...i 6 ' ,B Jno J" I'd passion. j sketch It must be "acknowledged that, in 1816, the U tras committed no offence against public morality ; thev were onlv i - - w 4 1-- vt i SUV Liberals abound in intellectual gilts, bathave . r tliis way. too. the Political chamr-tci-a nf ru , K . - - - - I'"- Sons in !mer are exhibited, first to anlmlif. ferentaud perhaps incurious public ; but the niagic lantern is soon transferred where envy and malice., or adiuiration and gratitude, give a stronger interest to the representation. The Uuiversal Gazette, of Augsburg, lately -inserted a CiiiTesnondence from Paris, which soon ' - -iwuib au isami it 1 1 1 1' 1 ' .1 1 nin inniev n-e after 1 on l st June lash fonnd its wav into lfiM.i. , . .L..- . the PaVis fournal des Dehats " VhU arti. .uTi . J .! . . . . , ; ..uv.i vuiu iuuM-.n, man ineir still ij CiC seems to treat all Dartina with evn,tv . .,fPL. fY, . . . . ;(a :me grains of alia wancc, however, for In' sarcastic spirit in which it is written, it Dw serve toeivean iden'of the cnmnfisitimi - . - -wmwp "Si. a- . -m. . . : ? present rrcncji ministry. 1 he follow. i is a literal translation of lhftfnrh"vefl arT.-rvui. Tifl, L There is a great want of unity in thoaH. khi;.:i;ration,' ajihungb ministerialists flr m.r ecwr io ararin the contrary." The Dost leaves at ni . fniovgiviiig you the tiualo of tie Fdaf busjk " . ljfH.lf il a srafpamnn hv n.i mn..r.. , - - "y savuijn CfiMi i:t in skill : he ftbounda too in iho ta. wins wotcn make a man airrreabh m sonptv but his self iove is easily offended. M. L?: i le, who formerly, when ' in the tmlirw ni' t r'jva;il. 0 'Sjr:llc ir:iTi2 Dronti i.f attari.. ci n, ntv t.rspiys great influoncc over the mi w-.er, tty fci ieging him every morning a col Trciii n( iiss and abuso attributed to thn UL fc-ii? togf-ri-p with the 6,jn. 'Hiafs of M. de ii ' jTMiifi, 3H'i all the uack-bitings uttered in ih-saiwriof that prince. '""Under the irri- lati'ii civ;; :ed by these satirical remarks u( t he VUtuitM, Dssol!c, lowever auid au he jievolent by nature, .took pan in favor 'of the Inc. I 1 1 , onw ua me elections, eonti ;ry to his opin ks brfire expressed, and assumed u lursh- .vraa-wuMit- is not in his character. - ..... V...SB Mr.uaa M W. le Comte l)er ctdcliy rhomme de co.ifixnceut the monarch ; a post ot dang r. -From attachment to the ting, and through enthusiasii for legitimacy f which he showed hi,msclf the active parti Jan in 181S, ho supported then tlie law of ear. option (banishment of certain persons) with ur.h warmth ? but these strong measures Could only be supported by a strong govern ment. This minister has not a Sufficient knowledge of the ancient monarchi cal institutions of the country; tie had howe ver no prejudice against the ancient order of things; but the gossiping prattle or somo Ul ra ladies, and their msuitiog expressions re fating to his person and family, exasperated tym to such a degree as to sever him finally U'om the party of 1813. The.more thii party abused his excellency, just so much the more! big excellpnrv iI-froBfoii t- lAlYk urtl If ,. AU..n uvuoiwi miviii ami 1 1. nnn UIU9 cras brought to make concessions to the MPtraux. - The prescntadministration appears to at tach itself principally to the Doctrinarians ; at is to say, to some school-masters meta morphosed into statesmen. These Doctrina wns lay down new principles, 8& far as hens Jy eggs.- This little faction is suffocated un w the multifariousness of its own conceptions. wry member would be a leader ; however, jne two souls of the party are M. Royer Col wrd, and M. Guizot. The former, once a toyalisj, -made the very new discovery, in the year 1 8H, that the institutions of ancient Eu ! 1 are not in conformity with pure reason; W. Buyer,- too, looks with tender affection to Nvi tlB the philosophers of Scotland, which can only be equalled by that of M. Guizot for the Vihsophet s of Germany. No twp things can president of the Council pf Mjpisters. of wbll occurrd vdirpiv Mr. Hunt and VVaithinnn .1.. I ..,,. blundering through a verj common part of a It is laid to.be the ioteniion of G.Vernmenfc enairmau's dotv. thai nr ....i,;.. .i. 'in ...... ..n . , . u "vernmenf " " """"s uo iu"iion , " 111 u luiureseitiera to th r.n. opoa ..ti.a t. li.b .u .m.udra.DI h.. Im.d J Hop. Colon.. 1. AIJ n.. A'V! , van uc iirorii uoerai man meir Hatred of the mum fir ,...4 , ; r ---- wr- .uccaciuers are to be la- Ultras-than their joy at their defeat: til' lnlL.I:"!" "V -J the Deh. : i . , . . - "! m in v run. ' siHfrAiiiisT ra i iiuun w Mini " u aaf a j t - ThrAgh "T' 1 5?P. aUrP?Uft l,e'1 W"-".- iw Noryo inUr mine; like ' lho Abbe Loniii Minuii ..r t ..,.. k..!ia .:...-..j t . .f. . . """ "c ,rt f . . . , - --" - ,ain.c- v, 'iuoii UIIOl. WHO equal pOlltODeiS. was formerly at the. head of a commercial es. "akrusLug his nose into tht Alderman s tablishmentatHiburgli, which was obliged to Thi provoked Mr. Waithman, who stop payment. He in nevertheless a skilful fi- decwd that bullyia, f w t vouio luwcier, but very systumafic. Tlie (maker8 of aef6f "Sluifflin won't do here," Pans are attached to lii o but the great laud 00th Mi,ter Hu, " il ' J""1 ed proprietors, and the couimei rial men of !Te ,0,t your .pwef ia ttat way" The" Hie mai itime.citics, detest his fiscal tirinrii.hJl ! "red of ,k U,S' alier""- He .. . i : . i wi . . ..v uittiuujjuea ia mo tioute or Uominous. TV . i I . 1 or,l roared out You need not 1 cel u the province, called k Th- n . iT atVhaabC,;Tv?8lbu11 ea"" IeS"l'y -Naur. vJIRThX iieaantry. loried Waitbmaa. Narx.11 inlu mina lilralSuadav nil NrA.i Oil... . ' "u ". mat i ran baft Ueeo Cape Town and Alrona Bay. fh5 leave both places ever, we& fSaehjamefa ii at prannt nine days on tk nsaaiV8 ? tu( uii f( easy toforesefc how soon these roads and eonveyanacs will bei imprvci, when a mass of onr intelligent and. industrious countrymen shall be settled in this country, so foyored by nature ia sail and elim inate. ' . . tiers are vety rotigU ; he is by nature a lover oi aosouue power, but !us reason teaches liim that the edifice of public cmlit can onlv be founded upon a free government." The Miniate- of War is. like hiiii of tlm Fi. iiances, the obect of violent hrttrcd h of strim;- x . . n anunimqi to the ditterent parties. A eort; va, wl( ui jjumn;tti union nau oecu concerted, to dis tribute equally the military commissions be. twecu tiio ancioot nobles and tlie nffii.w . (at bed to Bonaparte: so that, inrtho divisinn between the two opinions, no party should be formed danecrous to constitutional lihrtv. iiit this policy, however well imagined, (and of which the credit is ascribed to some of the Vjctri7iaria7tS.Ycail scarce.lv Kiistnin iir-tf. in Hl'UiiiMaJho.iolencG gcncrais wno-groupc themselves around-the . f . Ik - , .- .i 'uinisier oi war, arm to the impetuosity of M.Gouvion Saint-Cyr, w ho cannot brook even the purely passive resistance of tho Ultras ..I the royal guard. This guard is not viewed wiui a partial eye by the Minister ; indeed, it has at its head some marshal! who Ii-ivr n.i great affection for him. How dangerous is prejudice, ot whatever nature, in those who are called to govern ! For the rest M. Goy vion Saiut-Cyr is iu all respects an honorable man. - " The wind is not fnir in the Dcnartment nt rue iavy commerce, lleets. St. Doniiimo : in all it is adverse ; it would be jerhapsiulre important torH,urone than lr France herself. to have the French commerce restored, in or Jer to keep a look out upon -England, and to place a little in check the mercantile sceptre which"" has been erasned bv "this iwwer. :im. w a t - merce U the hapDiest bond of nati ins : it teaches the.n to cherish mutual sentiments of attachment and esteem. The national indus try, as II has been na,mcd and fostered during tliis Revolution, is the sworn eneiiiy of a - free comraercp : it can oaly subsist wittf tiio'"aid of an army of custom house officers it has had, too, this unhappy effect, that it has changed one of the most amiable andgeucrous nations into one of the most niggardly : a most inveterate hatred of all strangers has grown out of this raanufucturingjealousy. The Liberanx are, in this respect, precisely the most illiberal. VI will not conclude this letter, without calliog your attention to one of the most grie t, LONDON, july an. Aeioilnta from Berlin of. the l5tb imt. slaw, that a certain Doctor Frederick Lewis John, had Ion; been insinuating revolutionary prinei; pies into the minds of tho University Students- uii.i u urra me rigni to assassinate the ser, value who v 'rtffisiiiii in hia r.i;n u. n V8T3i0herfr9, been conducted to a fortress, and nroeeediap-s ar i tVfiug bun j trial. An r,el "'"0,n Iasati, dated the 13th iusl states, that the president. Ibel. ia ill. in P.n rpience of the late attack upon his life be has returned, with his wife to Wicsbadou. Loh niu has been conveyed to the same r.Iaco for III.. Ulke 3U Ul.Ui tIinl nn ran. . he prefers death bVbis own nut t Av. the scaffold ; be lias refused food duriue ssve- . The vineyards on the ithine, the Moselle, aim id rranconid, are represented offering uo j.. unjiuci wi an auunuant vintage. it is with much nleasure wa rnrJ il. fAl lowing additional proofs of tbe determined vi- 3r wuu wnicn tno iaw.ot tbe country contin ue iu ue enroreeu agmnst the disaffected. -A i the Manchester sessions on Mnml.. . bill of iiidiettuetit for sedition, uttered at the aiatkburn mreiing, was found by the graud ju ry against, Knight, Fitton, Mitchell and War die, and one agniutl. Yfyoe, end auothi r against Wardle, foe libels coulained iWjJieir respective papers, the rival Obierven )'f M f - IMie gaodjffecofjhese indictinents was ob- serviiuie in iue suuutiuu toue ot tbe speakers at tho lloehdttle meeting, on Monday, of which an account will be found in a subsequent arti cle:. Knisblrdf Manchester. FsUnn.nl- U. ton, and Harrison, of Slockport (vrould auy ouo have believed it possiblef) were there, but their language was extremely guarded. ' VVe stated on Mouday, that a meeting of re formers 'was to be held that dav at Rni.twl.il.. lb Lancashire. The meeting took ulace sn. eordingly, and in the following letter will be found as ample, an account of the proceedings as could be furnished in time to he transmitted oy that evening's post. - " ROCHDALE. JULY 28s The DrOCeSsion besao In mnvn atuinl n o'cloek,aud was headed by at least five thou sand femalo reformists, and followed h ohnnl 30,000 men, bearing but too sad an evidence of the distresses of the times, but withal so terri- ll-M, .i " oie in weir appearance as to make the boldest tremble. Ouly figure to yourself soon forms of government which have been succes-1 Vmn w,th.,ix times that number of the other "J wiitiuincu OHILO llie ACVOlUllOn. II IS -u i . , j j that rage for uniformity which Moutesauiculi long since desiKnateda3 the of .un.rlfrS.1 1 '! T.T V0Te .1U0 mlrJ fr the V0US WOUnds Which has ' rankled in all fk Hf. . m wa fcUV lonr Sinn hi .VT. J" " I ?"-" .ft "or. .09 m,l,ut, Ul Ihe do- find rONDO, JULY 29, The empfror Alexander has just seenred fo the widowof M. de Koijuhucthe eohtinasaet, Ne regret to learn that Mr. Walter Setts ia confined to bis bed by illness. A serious ealamlly has befallen Mr. Moor, tbe poet, in ronsenninii r ik. . . deputy, hom he had employed Some yean at """-" wo obs emDazxiee a consider able sum of muhev. for wliih Xl- i :. -A course responsible. An attachment is decrBeif against bis person. . We have received undoubted intefligener. that a Aiifale Ifaton Society is at this moment forming in the metropolis itself 1 No doobt it will consist of but a few, and those the most depraved of their aex; but still it ia horrible th ""''bAUbe fuE&Je charactershould.m single ihstaneebe rendered so odious and die. gosling, or that a single child should be in pired by in mother with the sentiment! prtS. fessed by these furies. It is the constant argument in exeose of btfxV ng matches in Eogknd, that Ibis, species of eonU.cl accsstoms ihe people to fair play, anil uispires an abhorrence, of every thing that is foul, and particularly of assassination. Eog land is the onlv country nnnn earih ;n i,;i. couibute are never disgraced by dishonor, or in which no uomanly advantage is taken by on en eonibataut ofibe other, or by the apeolatorft overeilber-V I cannot but allow" -aye tho aethor of Maurice and Brrtrhetn ,. ed,- that the English shew themselves as re. - ....u am uusc, cowardly, ana savage ; foriu England a man i.n..j. upon his own eouruge.. He never tries to raise a party or faction to join him in -figging. . i uuiy wnen oaeksu by a mob of friends that an Irishman will Rrh, i t-. laud, too, it would b rerlrnn ...... shame and seandal for two men to fall opoa i .i iu iiriKd a man w ben on the ground $ but in Ireland, twenlv man will h.lv r.H nn on one : audit is whpn ili.vh.r. k.. .i. the ground, that their nvim .An.A .i..t. i self by trying to beat him to death. . Id Ene- ianu, too, a man disdains to use any other weapons but those that n B. I lira baa aiaan kin. his clenched fists ; but an Irish combatant ne ver thinks himself fit for irtinn iihn.. . .c.l- generally loaded with lead, or willi seize I knife to have his raveoge." The same thing mixhc be said of the Scots. Pran.b ..rf ;.a..S of all people bat tbe English and thus tbe ah-- uuiicucti aievory ining lasmious and brutal is instilled in their hearts as ai moral "principle. It is this that makes Englishmen shudder at the thoughts of murder : and ninr. im.i. .halt the period arrive, when assassination tiii.lt uuu apoioisis, or waea its perpetrators shall i . - ; ' 4 v t u cAicbv iau I with by the pubjicjprei84 As yet, fte rc
The Raleigh Minerva (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Sept. 24, 1819, edition 1
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