UNION. THE CONSTITUTION, AND THE LAWSTHE GUARDIANS OF OUR LIBERTY. Vol. XIX. ,3 . 97-1. r - l A LESSON FOR COQUETTES. We hsve a visiter to day, said LnrJ p .Titter to bit aeice, the Uvely Elizabeth I'littcr, who on a far a week a her right honorable nacte. li ke ia ii aiJ tbe Udj; lady t gentleman! A geatleman Mr. Janes. -ki who ie Mr. Jones! ii it Romper fnitt Janet, or tht renowned To! Hut we U eavt bit tordehip tha iro.b!r f describing who Mr. Jones aa. II wss simply Mr. Junes ( IWcfirlJ. in ibt roomy of Suffolk L. ibia detection it very abort. bot'T m 4e sauieieut w aeerribt Mr. Jones. ; ...a m . I U evident b. wa. o very .e,e, gsauiitt t bad kt beea an, he woulJ hare brtn Mr. Jonee of Fiercefietd Hall, or Pierreful Manor: be was not a retired wwliant. or ha would hart beea Mr. J,MCt of 1'ierrenrlJ lloute; seilher could be hoe bea a retired ahnp-keepcr, or bia Ii.hi-i would hart beea dignified with tbe rupliniru aaant ol Koae Villa, or Urllrtue Lwttage. or riercpfieiJ Iodge. Uut Mr. J..nea s bnurt waa a tery good . a I a til k-uM.;ttai.iolnn a lawn only one hundred tarda Imrn the road -aide, andiht tatranrt g.ie nat auijudrj between naaaive uine piera. aurmouuted with round ball w. i i, therefore, etident, that tie owner at a man of a email independent fortune. u4 tli't be was a gratleaiaa by two or lltrre dearentt. Now, Mr. Jonea waa a bachelor, Ine age twenty fie, bit educa imm tuch at he could obtain at a eelebrat r-d endaarrd tchnd ia the neighborhood; be wat eminently handorae, but couM am pretend to great abiliiieat but he wat g'NHl-aatured and well ditnoaitioaed, and a tfxriat farori'e of Lord Paliietcr. New, Mitt Palliatrr, betides being a wit, was a little bit of a coquette jett tuGeient of eil ia her diepoeilion ! preaent her being an angel, but aht waa a rry charming lady. She therefore ilchatre with herteif aa to tht courtt the ihould pursue toward Mr. Jonet, whether the thuuld abaab the or sqare by her tatire, at-imth him by her wit, or fat rhaie him by ber emideaeeneioa, and finally determined to be ruled by circum- ttanrra. Accordingly, after bating been introduced to our squirt, Miis Palliater R'cupicd the fits minutes which atually imerrene between the romplelioo of the toilet aa l the eerring of dinner ia surrey mg tht fortrete aha meant to attack. " Not at all dittinguithrd in hit appear anre," waa her fittl thought, but the mm ia decidedly handtome," ber eecond. People may talk al their appreciation! of intellectual gifit, but thert art few who are indtffeieat to personal beauty; and whea Mr. Jones led the lady to the din ing room, ht wss farored with the sweetest of emilee, and during dinner, and until sht retired to the drawing-room, tha had directed the full battery of ber eharma and (races against tht heart of Mr. Jones. Sht wss witty without ill-nature, end sitsrious without being rude; but when sht was alone, eonfotaed to heraclf, that to all appearance ber labor had beea thrown away. Jonea had liaiened to tht conreraation, but he had not eipretted. and did not seem to feel, any great admiration of enher her wit or ber beauty; but hie polite replies aod accommodating afiirmaiires, were gien with a degrrt of good humored noncha lanct thstcinf ineed Miaa Palliater. lo ber great mortification, that aht had failed in her attack oa tht heart. " A mare country aquirt to be thaa invulnerablt to cbarmtj uicn nave uriTrn iiiii tn imuuum , a. - . sk.ir ..i....i.ia world mad, thought ahe, it is wonderful!"; and Miaa Palliater waa not vain in so thinking it wss a fact "The man ia not a foot either, and tht fellow ia hand tome." She colored, though alone, as this ides a second time occurteJ. She, the star, or rather the aun of faahion, waa not aurelv loaine? her own hesrt without obtaining another in exchange. Pahaw! it waa ridiculous, but thia did not prevent her, when the party re-aatembled, from1 renewing her attack, and ahe again failed; for Jnnaa, from the efiVcte of good wine and Miat I'allitter's encouragement, had become rather talkative, and, to her turpiite. he talked remarkably well; for though not brilliant, he had good sense, had read a great deal, and had a good memory. Tha evening aonn paated away. and the lady, on reviewing the eventa of; the day, waa rnirtiued to conieta that, not only had ahe made no impresaion on Mr. Jonea. but ahe began to sutpect that her own heart waa not invulnerable; ahe recollected that ahe had liaiened with pleasure to Jonea' ditquitition on the Pto lemaick kiogt, she who had never liaiened for two minutes together to any body it waa ominoua. . The intercourse between tht partiea became daily of a more particular detcrip tion, and Miaa Palliater wat delighted to rind that ahe aubdued tha atubborn heart of Jonea. How ahe would teaae htm when he had once been brought to confetaion. Uut to bring about thia confetaion waa mora difficult than the lady aspected. If ahe gave him eneoragement in the pretence of her nncle, Jonea would follow her lead briakly enough; but alone he waa grave, frigid, and polite but alat, not loving. Now this waa exactly the con- irary W Alias Pallistrr'a wUherj tht bad no ejection to cohort. h bad a treat aversion to being found out. She knew that brr uncle WM1J BOf Uw her to take a fool of say aaaa. aad if Jonea vert lo make a declaration in coneeqaeece ol aay public coqueUry. aba nuti tidier at eace accept bin or inear that aobletaaa'e eerioua ditpleasare, aod aht wit alwsys aneasy it say difference look plaet with tbat relative, to whoa aba aa aineerrly attached. But all things cone to a dote, to did . M mm Slut Palliilera vit to ber socle and it . tA. l.j ..i j t7T I iMarf wZl u V iara.ioti r! i t, t "n. 1 ..t i, , . -, HC (HmWI Will ROUS Ol lUt BMt fchf ,fI lh . J" the game of coqattry. aba bad not oulv failed ia ber object, but had loat ber heart and double and feara poeteterd ber breatt, Ibktperbapajoaea.ditgttated with her conduct, anight direct bis aitemioa elKwhere sad she bural into irate at thought. Now, Lord PalIitUi had area the game ma nirra waa piarinr. ana was orettv .ii r ,k. ,. t . u..A .-fi "mw w vrw at wa saesit att& him that her ar7etian. I.t fallen where they bad; but ba laughed neartny at me iriougiit. tuat a mere country squire like Jones should so completely out-mancrure a practiced co quette like his niece. Jones likes the girl," said bia lordabip to himtelf, " and ha ahall hart brr, but let ber tufler a little; and aha did. Letlrre from bis til-M0-law drerribed his niece at not well, pale, out of epirite. So," aa' J hie lordahip, she ia ia lava at latt, it the? I mutt gitt ber another chaoce, 1 aup pote." L-ird Paltiater's ncit letter mentioned incipenl symptoms of gout, snd bia sflec tionatt nice eoon srrited 10 nurte him, but he waa allocked to perceire that ahe ItNiked horribly ill. Poor thing," thought he, I rouat be merciful;" but in the cvurte of the day he gate her a hint respecting her rountry beau, Mr. Jonea aid Miat Palliater, in a paationof teara, threw heraelf at her uncle'e feet, and eon fested at onct ber loe, and besought him not to allude again to ber wicked snd foolith conduct. It wss wicked," said she," because I intended to injnre tht happinets of a worthy man, and I tufler now juttly." !ord Palliater thought to himtelf, ' Thou art a good and hoorei girl, after all. and thou a halt be M's. Jones yet." Lords hare great power, no doubt, but how hia lordship eontrited, a few weeke after, tt detect Mr. Jonea in the act of imprinting a kite upon tht lips ol tut tatr Elisabeth, wt cannot tell; neither bate wt heard that either bis lordship or hia niece cspreeted any violent indignation at tht audacity of Mr. Jones. Nay, it haa been insinuated that tht said kiss wss giten with tht full approbation, not only of Iud Palliater. but also with thst of his nieee but this sesms incredible. ADDRESS Or COL. BAXIKL BAItlXOIt, Dtlitarad at the celebration of tht aaniter. aary nl tha Mecklenburg Declaration of In dependence, le Conceid, N. C, May tOih, 18.19. Frltndt and Ftllow-Ciliztnt: t am much gratified with the pretence of ao very large and resectable an alterably oa this occaaion. For though reluctant to become tht organ of tht committee in addrvaajlie Jm fot mion M ;-.,i trt tham and nal neeemrv ta ba repeated; yet as wS have resolved to mark thia day by an act 01 public celebration, and aa it is tht firtt attempt at thia place to do public justice to the memory of tht actors in a memorable event in our hiato- rr: it mutt bt hit hly gratifying to every cititen of oar county, and every friend to the reputation of our atate, to know that our people art willing and anxioua to do all in thtir power to render the occaaion worthy of Ibt deed it is intended to com memorate. Fellow Citisens: Tht dote of tht 18th century waa remarkable in the hittory of the world, both for tht magnitude ol the eventa by which it waa diatinguitbed, and the results which followed them, on the destiny of mankind. To America, espe cially, it was marked by trantactione of the highett moment. The last quarter of that century witneaaed our emancipa tion from tht thraldom of colonial vataal age. It saw a people without means but with a fiim reliance on God, and the justice of their cause enter the titts, and contend, against the rnott fearful odds, with tha then moat formidable monarchy on earth. It saw tbat people aurmottnt every obttacle, and coma out from the coniett triumphantly victorioue. Itjaaw that people occupy a new untried petition on the theatre of human action; and tabliah for themselves a system of self government, by which they hsve practi cally vindicated the inalienable rights of man acanowieugtng no rceponiiuiiuy but to their Creator, and the government of their own choice: a eyatem which haa become the womler and admiration of mankind; which haa ahed happineas and renown on the nation which it protecta. and by whom tt is maintained. Wt art all familiar, cay 'tirade, w'uh tLe history of oar reTolatioaary struggle, and tbe important reaulia il hss'prodoced, tod aa a grateful people, we eer recur, with a just pride aad taiiafaeiioa, to tbe part which waa bora by oar common country in that etrr memorable eoatro t eray. We dwell with patriotic iutereat oa ttery incident, baiaer may bate beea iu bearing! on tht gtorioue ead to ardently wished for, the eaUbliahraeat and aecurity, oa a 6ra aod permanent ba aU. of our freedom aad independeaet. la tht hilory of that period. wt find me event which we Haft thie day aart to celebrate; an I nldiough it nay sol bate tht event which wt bat t thia day met to rountry men, or filled, in tht eye of the world, so largt a apact at that other great deed, by which onr whole country proclaimed its Independence; yet, to aa here ateemhled to tha citizena of tha countiea of Cabarrus snd Mecklenburg and to tbe people of tht suit of North Carolina, 11 poateatca a luih and pceul ar interett, and deserves to be remember ed, with tha liveliest gratitude, by aa and our deacendanta, to the latest posterity. When tht Britith. deluded by Mae and mitchievoua eoonaels, arrogated the pow er of using America without her content. the latter intUntly resisted the assump tion, not so much on account of any immediate detriment to her interett, as oa principle on the great Saxon piinei rle of M no taxation without repretenta tion," no imposition of burdena without the content of Ihote who sre compelled to pay them. A great fundamental prin ciple which had been recognized and sus tained by the txample of Britain heraelf. and which would have involved, in ite tie- atruction. tht entire overthrow of the li bertiea f the coloniea, and the suhjuga tion of America. Keaiatance to thia on authorized claim became the general epi rit of the country: every part waa more or lets under ita influence, and determined lo tacrifics all in defence of their invaded righta and privileges. As might readily have been foreseen, thia coniett eoon re aulted in the employment of the last ar gument of kinge the argument of tha a word. Tha appeal was the choice of the King; and tha continent accepted the cbsllenge." Before thie eri.-is. however, had arriv. ed, light and knowledge on tht nature of our rights, and tht principles of human liberty, were diffused among our people; and the moment of conflict found an in telligent and fearless yeomanry prepared at all hazards, lo meet it, and abide the fate of arma. Meetings in every aection of the country, had been held, where dis cussions were freely and fully entertain ed on the oaurpationa of the mother roun try and the meana of organized reaistsnce to her tyrannical claima. 1 be urea or pat riotism' spread over tht land; and when the Congreaa of '76 declared one entire politics! eenaration from Great Britain, it but re-echoed the ardent wiah of all Ame rica, it touched a choid that vibrated in every true American bcait, and exploded a magazine of feeling which had long be fore been collected and cherished by the patriotic sons of freedom in our land. This truth ia illustrated by the whole his tnry of the revolutionary contest, from the firtt attempt 01 the bnglith Pariia meat to atainp ua with a tax against our content, till the final declaration of Con gress that we were a free and telf-govern inr people. But, fellow citizens, to our beloved atate. and 10 our immediate seetion of lhat state, belongs, in an especial manner, the high and single honor of having first publicly proclaimed to the world tbat we would no longer aubmit to the lawless de mands of a tyrannical parliament, in which we were unrepresented; to us be longs the glorious distinction of lesdmg off in the race of freedom, and of declar ing long before all others, thst wt were a sovereign people, recognizing no other power but that 01 our uod, and tht go vernment of our own creation. Let ua, my fiiends, for a while recur to the history of thie memorable tranaac tion. Let oa contemplate the character of an event which haa placed the namea of our Revolutionary Whiga in the bold ett relief, and which haa become diatin- guithed in our state and throughout the Union. Tbe truth of tht Mecklenburg Decla ration of Independence, ia now placed be yond the contingency or a doubt. 1 tie praise-worthy exertion of our native sons, snd 'public acts of our legislature have established, beyond the reach ol controversy, and made known through out the land, an era in our history, which waa attempted (for reaaons it ia not now neeestary to examine) lo bt thrown in the shade, and, perhaps, obliterated from the memoriea of men. To ua, and the generation that have preceded ua, it haa ever been familiar aa houaehold words. To aitemnL therefore, before thie audi ence, an argument to prove tht existence or the event we have assemoiea 10 com' memorate. would be inaulting 10 the un deratandinga and feeiinga of thoao who breathe the air and tread the aoil where it transDired aome of whom are the cotemporariea, and others the descend ants of its illustrious actors, and whoae recollectiona of ita truth are aa early and aa strong aa tht first impressions ia their infancy, aad as vivid aa tha remembrance of their fathers who periled their lives a t . - . .t-- an weir torwnce in evPDon 01 tneir pledge on that extraordinary occasion. I'tevioaa to aad oa tha 20th of May 1T73. tha pretcnt county of Cabarrua, as yon all know, wss a part of the old coua y or Mecklenburg, and ao continued tiu 1797; aa therefore, this county waa a constituent part of Mecklenburg at that time, and waa fully represented ia ber fa rooue convention (havinr not less, 1 be lieve, than one third of aU tha delegates,) snd equally entitled to the honors wa this day render; ao the obeervatione wbicb are made are intended to apply equally to both countiee, between whom tha only rivalry ahould be. which shall most ap propriately commemorate tbe deed and most successfully maintain the principles it promulgated. In tha early part or iht year 1779 tht Briiiab troope were atationed in tht city of Boeton, and as lhat city had always been distinguished for its enthusiasm in the cauae of the coloniea, iht eyee of our eouutrymen were anxiously turned to the early cradle of republican liberty, in live ly expectation of eomt hostile movement. thst would bring the ontetileJ affairs of lha two countries lo a crisis snd makt np tht issut of liberty or submission, to bt decided only by the (od of batilee In May of lhat year, tht then count of Mecklenburg, always conspicuous for its attachment to the Whig cauae of the revolution, and once honored by Cornwal lia with the compliment of being denounc ed aa "the moat rebellious county in America." held deUched meetinge of the people in the different neighborhoods: at which neighborhood meetings, (some of whieb art doubtless remembered by the veterans who sit before me.) tht people discussed the general state of affairs, ex pretted their aympathy for the common caute, and especially for their suffering brethren in the city or Boston, in whose , fate wrre identified the interest of their countrymen, asserted their determina tion never to submit to Hie cxacuona ol the British Croan; and to support their brethren in liberty thoughout all the tri als of their perilous situation. These meetings and disrussions, prompted by the love of liberty among the people themselves, prepared them for tbe event of which we now apeak, and tats dsy ce- ebrate. Accordingly an order waa issued by the Colonel Commandant of the County, directing every militia company to elect two delegates and to veal them with un- loiited powers for the general good and safety. This order met with a hesrty response from the people. Ibt dele gates were elected ae required, and met in the town of Charlotte on lha lUth 01 May, 1775. A remarkable coincidence occurred on lhat occaaion. When the drlegatea were atsembled and in lha per formance of the high trust committed 10 their charge, greeted and urged on by the warm approbation or their assembled countrymen, an expreaa arrived announc ing that tha first hos'ile blow had been struck in defenoe of liberty: that the fol lies of negotiation were ended: thst the Rubicon hsd been paated: lhat the aword waa unsheathed and ita scabbard thrown away: and that the blood, the firtt blood of American Citizena, had been ahed on the plains of Lexington and cried aloud for vengeance! 1 he very lioddeaa of Ii berty heraelf could not have furniahed a mora powerful motive for prompt and de cisive action, a more irreaiatible incentive to that noble deed which has crowned our patriotic forefathers with imperishable re nown. Suppose, Fellow-Citizena, our beloved country now intuited and our rirhta trampled under fool by an imperi oua enemy; auppose that enemy to invade our ahorea with an hired soldiery and besiege our cities and to complete the climax of intuit and injury, suppose that enemy to make our free aoil drink the blood of American citizens, inhumanly butchered! What aon of here would not quit hia fireside and meet in the tented field the violator of his country'a injured righta and honor? Yes, my friends, thoossnds of eworda would leap from their acabbard to avenge the wrong and defend our country tboutanda of patriot warriors would lead us on to battle. But tht deed we now celebrate, aa we ahall preaently abow, waa of alilt higher daring and glory. When the niestenger arrived and com municated the momentoua purport of hia intelligence, our delegatea were aurroon ded, but not overwhelmed with new dif ficulties and atill greater responsibilities. They still proceeded in their noble work, with unflinching firmness. Tht 19th pasted over. The night was consumed in sleepless and crave but unwearied de liberations. The aun of tha 20th of May rose upon their labora. They felt the awful responsibility of their situation. They knew the dangera by which they were surrounded tha extent of tha power they defied, and the weakness ol their own arm to contend against it. Still they wavered not. The proposition for independence waa finally prepared eubmitted ditcuated and unanimously agreed to, in the form, and in the chaate, simple, firm, and sublime language, hich bat been, thia day, to veil read ia your bearing by ear venerable Inend. Tbe eease ol America at tbat moment has never beea so well express ed before or since." After devising anctturet for the safety of their new government, and for tha se curity of the persons aad properly of the citizens, and tha future progress and sue- cese of the Whig esuae ia our section of state, our Convention dissolved; aad its delegates again returned to tha ranka of tht people, but not to bt idle spectatore of tba heart stirring events that wcrt oe curing in our country. Look then, my It tends, at tba c lortous deed as wa bate described it-a deed worthy the cauae of libertr, St tha praise snd gratitude of ber friends as long aa ahe can find a homo upon tha earth. For thia noble deed, wt art aasembied to do grata fut homage, not to aa illuttriooa lion of titled nobility, not to tht memory of a military despot, whose laareis bavt been dyed in the blood of thousands, inglori outly slain, but to the patriotism, the e nergy, the prudence, and unyielding firm neta of a email but fearleaa band of plain but intelligent men, who knew their righta and dared to maiauia them ; of men, who, allured by 00 promptinga of peraonal agrandizement, and onawed by all tha frowns of power, took tha first bold step ia tbe history of our liberty ; of men, who, unaided but by tba com mon aympathy of our people, and uncooa aelled but by knowledge of their ughie. were the precursors of all others, in pro claiming themselves free from the shack les of royal dominion. It was an act wor thy the enduring admiration of posterity, deserving tha noblest gifts of the orator, 1 and the brightest page of the historian. It evinced a heroism equal to tht beat day a of Greece or Roma. Il wat un aurpatted for ite daring boldness and mor al courage. 1 do not mean that reckleaa audacity which is needjess or consequen ces, and fortees no dsnger, but that true fortitude which is seen in great exploits that justice warrants, and that wiadnm guides. Recur, then, fellow-citizens, for a moment, to the 20th Msy, 1775, and reflect under what circumstances lhat declaration was made. We were then a feeble nation, thinly settled, in wbst might well be termed, the wilderness of the New World. Wa hsd also domes- lie foes to divide our rsnks, and cripple our resources, some Irons the natural propensity of men to uphold the forma of government under which they live, . .- and otnera irom ine oarer mouvee 01 in tercst, of fear and subserviency to the powers lhat be." Wt were without meana or friends, except the cheering encourage ments of the friends of freedom. Without arms, except the double armor of the jus lice of our cause. Without sn orgsnized and efficient government for our protec tion. Without concentration of power to give energy lo action. Without cred it abroad, or an army at home. Yet, in the ruidat of all theaa privationa and ob stacle to success, with tha gloomiest prospects before them, a little band of patriots assemble, in a remote section of tbe country, and hurl defiance at the common enemy, dissolve all connection with a government on which they had been ao long dependent, proclaim them aelvea a free and aelf governing associa tion, and pledge their lives, their fortunes snd their sacred honor in defence of their principles! And against whom, my coun trymen, waa this pledge given t Why, sgsinst the then most powerful kingdom on ihe globe against a nstion whose prowess had bumbled the proudest ar mies of Europe, whose wealth abound ed in every land, whose commerce whit ened every sea, whoae victorioue armies were spread in every quarter of ihe world, and whose navies had won ber the proud title of Miatreta of the O cean." To op pote such odds, wss an elevation of courage, and firmneas of purpose that we can acarcely realize in thia our day of palmy prosperity. It haa few parallele in the annala of time. Leonidaa and his Spartan band have not more deaerved the applause of mankind for their invincible valor againat the Persi an hotta, than our ancestors for tha no ble boldness of their msnifesto in behalf of liberty and the immutable righta of man. If the heroes of Thermopylae have gained immortality for tbeir desperate bravery againat the invaaion of their country, by the armiea of Xerxea; equal ly high in the temple of fame should we inscribe the names of those who pledged tbeir lives and their all, upon the issue with an enemy not less terrible, in defence not only of their country, but of their principles, sscred to all mankind! But. fellow-citizens, our forefathers were men, not only of words and pro fessions. They practiced whet they tauirhL and acted out what they pro fessed. The delegates of the 20th of Mav 1775. were the heroes of many a well-fought battle-field. Throughout the campaigna of ibe South, their heroic v Tha ninna. elooutnt and dielineoiahed John Robinson, D. D., who kimialf well re. mernbera tha particular! of lha declaration r tha 90th Mav: and waa neraonally ac quainted with nearly all ita airnera, and who teatintd (this day) to their high individual worth, at well aa the truth of the evanl ia which they were actora. lor was displayed; tb sir blood freely she! snd some of their livea sacrificed to at " teat tha sincerity of their pledge; aad tw tht end of the eanguinary con teal f lib ertr. and amid tha most appal ir-g difS caliie, they over evinced the aamt intrt pio courage, ana taamoiaoie constancy. Tht leBueneo ol their searleat exam ple, pervaded all ranka of society: aad our part of tbo Suit became proverbi al for its ardent devotioa to tht coot mna cauae a rrpotatioa wticb it nobly sustained until the great object of the re volution was achieved. But that iafla enct waa not confined to onr aection of the suit. It diffuved itself far and wide; it decided tha fata of tha Whig cauat in North Carolina. Tba lukewarm were confirmed: tba bold encouraged. Coon ty committeea aad aaeociatioru were formed throughout our borders, ia which every effort wee made, and pledge given, to tnainuin and band dawn, unimpair ed, tba just lights and privileges of tht people. Kt state was mort fixed or forward." Tbt Prounrul Con frets of North-Carolina, on the 12th April, 1770, waa tht first organised, deliberative as sembly under tht authority of tbo atate governments, that recommended the tie claration of American Independence. In Mecklenburg declaration wat tht firat link in that great chain which termi nated in tht etiabliahmenl of our nation al freedom. Our siste, however, much as aha msy have beea neglected ia tht t history of tht timee. was the firat to put the Ball of that Independence ia motion; and amidst all the embairsss ments and distresses by which eha wst eneoropsssed, no etatt maintained the Whig cauae of that day with mort a tea-" dineas and integrity of purpose, with mora ability in couocil and alacrity ia tha field. Suffer mo bert to eay, my friends. thst although our euts msy not, with a falaa ambition and overbearing vanity. have blazoned forth her praiee lo tha dis paragement of her sisters, none bavt ad hered with more rigid consistency to the fret principles sbe wst tht first to pro claim. No sute is blessed with a better constitution. There is no atstt where tha laws, tempeied with mercy, art ad ministered with mora ability, juttiee and impartiality; where licentioutneta ia more detested aod avoided t and whert tha peoplo better nnderatand and praclict upon tht principle, that true liberty conaiats in n willinc obedience to jutt and equal lawt and realricifone impoaed by themselves. In short, no state, thst has jutter and higher pretensions to all the attributes thst dignify and ennoble n moral, religious end law-abiding peo ple. Fellow-Citizena : Wa have derived a grateful joy in the contemplation of the event we have thia day brought to our re membrance: shall we not alao learn wis dom from tht tame eourcef Wt should never suffer occaaioos like tht preatnt 10 pstt unimproved. History is phi losophy, lesching by example:" - It it good policy often to recur to purer and better timet. Let oa, then, imiuto tha example, and emulate tha virtues of our socestors. We msy never be compelled lo makt another declaration of indepen dence under similar circumataneea. That is an epoch that can happen but once in lha life of a republic Yet atill we have dutiea to perform. Wt bavt need to guard the gift, and improve the legaey bequeathed to ua by the blood and virtu ous intrepidity of our forefathers. Liber ty is to bs preserved, only by tha prac tice of the virtues by which it waa ob tained. Our forefathere were watchful of the firat invaaion of their rights, wtre prompt, bold, disinterested, and perse vering in ihe execution of tha great trust committed to their keeping, and in re sisting the tyranny of unconstitutional oppreaaion. , Let us, also, imitate their vigilance, their promptitude, their diein tereated patriotism, their boldnets and conauncy in preserving, improving, aod transmitting, unadulterated, to after times, the blessings, civil and religioua, . they have bestowed upon us. They also understood the nature of their rights, aa well aa exhibited the cour age to defend them: They felt that vir tue aod intelligence art proverbially the pillars of a republic : and that vice and degeneracy are the offspring of ignorance. Let us, too, cherish a virtuous . love of country, and let knowledge reach every home. These art the foundationa of our greatness; these tba grounds of our hopes. k But thert waa one peculiar character iatie of the timee of the revolution. hich it would bo criminal to omit to notice, on this iutereating occaaion. I allude to me epirtl ol reliance on Divine Providence for protection aad success, which pervaded the public acta of that eventful period. That apirit is seen il luminating tha pagea of tha declaration wa have thia day celebrated, and msy be witnessed, shedding its benign ia? fluence, in most of tha public records and documents of our revolutionary time. From the illustrious Father of bit coun try, down to tba common soldier in tha ranks, they fell and acknowledged tht force of the inspired truth, " righteous ness exilteth a nation, bat sin is a re- i. f 1 I 1 1 1 , if t it I