Newspapers / The Raleigh Register (Raleigh, … / Sept. 19, 1843, edition 1 / Page 2
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ADDRESS OERJQPNhHI a Before tho &i Literary Socictlci9f tli? Vvyi J fi -wr W a v TBI PhIXJLXTHROUC " . .;. akd Dialectic Sociwrii:?r rT Thia timehonored Anniversary is full offceluig and instruction. The DtsL tho present, and the ftrture, crowd upon our exeitea j .' J I.. t.4 W. mi full kpfnr tit with its tlODeS, itS fears, and lis excitements; t . (C The larailiar erowd that, once answered to our greetingthe ". , chosen few who shared our aympathies, and warmed ui with, their ' friendship the thoughts, the feelings and imprpssiont f happy coynooa- ine mousana mir mewmp ?'. "?v. ; tirae was fast closior, are nrougaxDag !uin J freshness, and we stand upon the theatre of or earliest enons re juvenated and buoyant; the halo of young life brighteningaround us. t-Ware to give to the aspirants f the future, the benefits of our experience. We have r? ' ' travelled over morethan half the journey of life, and are approach w ing its ineviuble ? goal f Ye return irom us anxious cares, iw , :aciUtinec6nflictV tpoor;eiuploymenta and its low ambition, to f - th keeties of our earliest ana oest enjoy menu, me wommg ousom ' of ourveoerable Alma Mater j not indeed as once, to find shelter v " under her shades, brothers in every walfcanU the rtjigrng laugn oi happiness aroujad 'p&tj& & participate in bygpnejejpdior, to sit ''at her. bubbling fountains and quaff the pure watersof knowledge ; out to t neaiMP j pu v ne accs in,viuyi we ijaw imnicu u ra& whichiha world peer before wtto Obrillreiiba witStecrepitude and inhereri weaess. . oflh6 rnicroscopftmian -i:4k ititi.noT tn na virtuous veoaacrTT-Kv"i i i , and wblic tnteiligeliM langaished iOVe-Q country an empire, ue wouuw.ui "vr -vo q to iU close its daya of glory were numberedlike the leaves or th? Sybil, seeming to increase i lot Cato's vfrtuerand Tully redeem the fortunes ot ttome ' barian camewaTe fteraVegredjn, pw9JWIPn yielded, walUfier wall U broken dowm therGoth,'the Yandal and the Hun, cer fits upon thunder at her, gates, Rome is Rome nq longer, and pdoa aon the throne of the ! Casafs.-- 5 't ,f crganle transitions, the impftVe riant of the circle of khawleuseif WIucK are'jJailyrriogW Diybd; the dreaming Bac(?ns3 enthusiasm, and snouia arouse us n aasiduitv. The divine emanation win era. or chain.lt to the vile clay ? that - w ma twt'fert teranto tBeTesti Cwe mav not jlh; de iiDOaith.t- eiirtaiir aJiidest myteriea ? vr.'. t w , t.A Jl'lie eloquent OJeagiesuy hortala "of wisdom we approach the temple of human perlectibility. may be but Jthej bright illusion of enthusiastic genius, yet e ti ni i versal liberation of mind, its new incitements to application, the ;,' ANprmiltSARY OPTIDEBATTU1 OP Bat W m PHT-l-DEEADFUL. RAILROAD Ar SJJJz: CIDENT. U pardreadra have keen already informed tka. the iarriring ? Defenders of Baltimore" had mij arraneraeuu or celebration the twenty.nin2 anniversary ot their victory, of 18U by a vi.it i . York; in Penntjlvaniaf whither they bad beei? vitad by "a portumof.their comradea, and wh the. hoepitality of the citizen of the borouirhh5 provided a;handoiM enterUiatDent for their ancholy accident which interposed to Wtk . . B . i n Hiisnnri l m nr niniietnn rnrrnniii iiik r rcss u 1 ua.cvci v ULUuiaiiiuui lug i t w 'o4, rrnn in' its moral darKness.or ra is snecf upon supjecw which csirujr'fpusuciiuw force, HoUnn wiifi": derndbue WJne !W!0,Y"!?"""r- ""IJT'S mifiurr,rt,Mnt!( niNivaii inRarniFVEiiicuui v h-'-'i -.7.-, -. 1 - -.11! ".''fc.ts bright, eager arid restless as your own. Shall I tell you what hobes. and how thev have beeli real i red ? Our tvitip.nt (I rude : dishmcnts oflove. brinrinz no thrill to the weary and jaded heart? 1 Wh Mtwalr arAttirra. vou can neither realize or believe why .ahakelhe pillars ot your - moral faith why damp the ardor of 5 ' yoiir'young minds, or cast a cloud over the bright heaven of your hopes? ; 1 will not j the moral is written in letters of light, and tf J who hasten taugbt by the luffefings and experience of other? You mast gainer around you tlie memories and the warnmgs of : your, own conflicts, " Your past will be the best preacher to your, 'future ; and the lesson full soon will reach you. If the golden fruit turns to aahearon your lips, and the leaves wither from your J tree of hope, while the breath of the morning is upon them ; if V fruIUoh here teaches you that the world has nothing to satisfy the ardent longings of your divine natures, wearied in the fruitlesa search, it may point you to the glories and beatitudes of imfaor- tality;v-;'"r . .. , , . ' ut, gentlemen,. against these moral revulsions, to which the ' finer and purer of our kind are more peculiarly liable, you are now . making the best preparation, next to our holy Religion, which this world is capable of affording. You aredisciplintng your minds, by . patient research, to the arduous duties whieh are before you. - You V are training them to philosophy and reason. You are imbui ng them "with theiplrit and lore of literature you are laying up intellectual treasures,' and enlarging all your capacities of enjoyment Believe ine, these are resources which can scarcely fail you. Betrayed by . the world and wounded by the bosom on which you leaned your affections paralyzcdind your faith in human nature gone, a culti vated taste and the- charms of literature will remain to you, and you will find inthej bright" creations J" 'poetry, and the sterling truths of philosophy, a. refuge and a consolation which the embit tered )icart may refuse to receive elsewhere, ;. . . - But important aa they are, reflections like these are hot new to ' you, and i must not press you to repletion. It may be aj useful, certain)): alapprppriatd, to review the progress of Jitters, and to . trace, briefly the developement of mind. The aubject I know is of 0 imroense magnitude, and beyond the limits of an occasion liko thisJ If I ean win your interest, excite a spirit of investigation, stimulate you? energies, and direct your enquiries, my objects are jansweredV,,','; 'y f -. need scarcely tell- you, that the -origin of Jetttrs and of social - refinement, is hid ;in fable,' and veiled in the mystery- of time. The claims of India to these proud honors are geherally conceded, but Europe has been i reluctant to acknowledge her obligations to Asia, and whether the tide flowed in from the East, is still an un settled question. T shall not pretend to decide it. Yet ive know that with the Jews " the wisdom of the East" was a proverb, and that the oldest Historians of Greece, speak, of India as an old and ' populous country, abounding in the luxuries of wealth and the refinements of social progress. But the remains of Hindoo civili sation; her : pagodas and vlemp1es, her shattered porticos, prostrate obeliskrandinoss-grQwn sculptures,are existing evidences of her lost - Tefinement and mournful monuments of its' high antiquity. Yet ' ; replete' with interest, as is the hiatory of this gentle, delicate, and plastic people, I: must not pause. The little rill thus rising in the dim and misty heights of fable, struggles onward through a thousand obstacles, from the sunny plains of Hindostan, gaining volume and current as-it spreads through the lan,d of. .the Pyramids and Nile ; flowing forward bright, bold and majestic, through the lovely and classic groves of Greece, bearing on its bosom the wisdom of her 7 lawgivers, the sweet soft voice of her philosophy, her matchless elo quence, and her imperishable poetry, till it burst upon the Roman ;rworld, vivifying Europe and receiving into ita foaming; channels, the myriad tributaries of her splendid geniusand her hardy industry. S. Tbe .early periods 'of . Rbmait history aflbrd us few subjects for observation. Jt was at firat a struggle Tor mere existence and then . for political dominion. There was more of barbarian energy, of 4 rudepower, of atrong indomitable will, than of intellectual progress and refinement. She had existed more than three hundred years, r j subject to all the uncertainties and disorders of traditionary Laws 5. before she adopted a written code, shd bprrowed the twelve Tables :":-;frfto-OreeSp''' .Thiswas a triumph of mind, and afforded ood for still further afuisitionsbt she had little leisure for the cultiva . tion of elegaqt literature. - The aggrandizement and secunty'of V rV . "v'1" uu 11 was not in tne nd ollhe fjrstFoii?; war. tb,st the repose of peace brought a passion w" uc,c6. nc,c,.DI wrccian moueis, and infused into the rials of,a rtfinemtHt .1CM z- k.rutn rti.K5 fThe'rude barbarian paused before the majesty of her temnles, and shronk W1 01 hersacrea auars. niaacn in iicr wwt - - -- . ures of past ageswere preserved to us. to relumine mind ad to atimu iate its pngre4 Yet ceerless and gloomy aa were the middle ages, the 7th eelntary has been called theNadirof the human mind, .5,1 tK i Wf ihR 1 ith centurvv it was difficult to find a i- k .lh in Pt.trryne. It was the aee of tqurniments and chivalry, of empty pageantry .aimless .enthusiasm, and sangm naty strife-. whenaheiiS ran wild with itsowavacuity, and dallied - with the sense still it lost all noie oi.ns imnww song of reward Inlnnlr fnr !n TTmriuw w.ilrloi written even!in prose, before the tnid die of the 14th century. The-fearliest , English workj bjr JohD Mandeville's travels, was written in 1556, and Chaucer, the first of her Poets, appeared in.J39:2. Then the progress of mind spread enward with electricTorce; and in less than two centunea, Shakes peare satand still sits upon the thro.nebf English , genius, thedelight and ornamentbf mankind. . The geperaiintrodiictlon of paper, and about the middle of the 15th entury, terminated most happily, may we not say forever,; the. barbarism, humiliation and wretchedness which had so Jong hungits pall over - Europe, and threatened to take from man the divine characteristic of his nature. Thefetters of Ignorthce were hroken. Books were multiplied and became the inmates of the humble cottage as well as of the lordly Palace, Prejudice, superstition and power were impotent longer to curb the unchained mind, and itsprungupward like the lark, to the very gates of Heaven, carolling its songs pf joy and thankfulness. Modern Europe and modern Literature dale from 1500, when Grenada was added to Spain, and Brittany lo France, perfecting . thosa kingdoms, and establishing the fixed and independent gov ernments which at present exist. The chaina of the feudally s tem too were broken, commerce was exerting its healthful influence upon the intelligence and personal independence of man, a new class was springing up, ardent in the pursuit of knowledge, jealous of its rights, and zealous to win an honorable position in the scale of society. Stability and order are fenced around with new guar anties, the security of map inthe enjoyment of his privileges, and in the exercise of his powers isMncreased to him, he feels the with ering debasement which had sunk him to the level of 4he brute, and in the majesty of disinthralled mind,'shakes from him the palsy and the blight of ignorance and passion. Erasmus was the great leader in philological warfare To hU genius and ardent love of eludes the lat df the Stuarts, there ! 'was, wfe. must: confess,5 more of v tne vigor and spienuor oi geniusinan.oi me rennemeni anu uen- V! But it'bad ebtten rid of Ihe jargon of4he 'SchooU ;iWof 'bolemieal. d mhityv .wjiich.liad m -Ulealy iTpiciipteck thei- attention and engrossed the efforts4 of mindand the public! ye ''became fixed upon the" literature of the ancients. , And let 'np one ' gainsay its importance., in inis presence, i ieasi4i9 ueience were bootless. If there was one cause paranigunt to ibe rest, For the moral, political and intellectual regeneration of Europe, it was the treasuryof knowledge which antiquity had laid up it wasthe mod els of a refined and cultivated taste the high mental progrecsi on of a past age, preserved to illustrate the trueTCgnity aqcl. capabilities m t i . i it . i . i i i i l j., '.ij JsVCharles, and the gloomy fanaticism, and absorbing; political excitement of the ' Common wealth, turned aside' for a "moment the current of taste, "and checked' the progress i of literature and?sci- ence laut in, toe raiast ok tnis irenzy ana aisoraer, inia mixaire of passion; hypocrisy and 'isuperstiliortwith cool' decision, high achievement and elevated patriotism; tel di vine" mind !bf Milton, disciplined by age, poverty ancl inja&rt in the alembic of anarchy and revolution, gave to his country his sublime Epic, ri valing the nobef efforts o ancient or modern ge nius, and throwing upon his name a flood of light which av ill ahine on forever. ' . . a The licentiousness of the'CourtDf the 2d Charles, cast pollu tions over the host of bright minds that might have'illummed it, -, mistaking profanity for wit, indecency, for truth to nature, corrupt ing all the fountains of taste, and giving us to mount over the fane but perverted genius of Dryden. Yet if literature languished, and imagination ioited her -fright wing injthe impure atmosphere of vice, science, receired an impulse from Boyle and a crowning glory from the masterly mind of Newton which it is destined to wear forever. Theirs was the true philosophy, high above the affected stoicism of the. porch, dr;tha licentious soft ness of tbe"gar , den, untouched by surrounding depravity, ranging with eagle eye the realms of thought, and " looking through nature up to nature's feativiuea Ue,iceiio64 Notith6tadinff S! iDCiemeney w tl weanierTroiff fifteen to eWK tee luhundred rs3en7TSarUtnira for Yor r Tuesday iWinfifatibSeWMrate train. n,r beat two hundred (mtl.a l r .. un oi tneir Sifirnt volunfoA . pameMhe thSee other.fraina coimiinm .k mainder of the eacort and -a large ndmberdf 2' uruu. ;-3 ' ? t .t,- ..v..!.. -. ; MPhuoaopby,aptiaed' . . . . t In the pure fountain of eternal -love, , has eyea indeed.M v The progress of mental illumination' In the regn the Stuarts, Is illustrated in the lives of Russell, Sidney, and Hampden, in the cuasuiniiruggie oi iiocriy againat power, ana ajusier appreciaupp.. . of the dignity and rights of. 'man: The i suppression of HhelstarJ" chamber, and the removal of retramts upon the freedom iti'tlieT . i.r. .3, .. .: . . ,ur ncr inwuianes, anur poured into her bosom the treasures of ' waljh and the refinement of their civilization. " Taste, cenius nd tmbiUon, flocked to her for employment and display, and the .bright aatellite of mind molved around their; sua, shedding OTwnin? glory. And Romeave back some of the benefits the l received Her conquests were not like thoseof Greece deadly "niinaUrQ She received the conquered , into the bale of 47k 7i2 ner power, made them th chiiarenf her illustrious family, continued iVo them therefine- '. v. ""V." Fswea, ano extended to them those -tvere pecuharl v her own. - i- i ": - -Vrsr letters, are we mainly indebted for the restoration of learning, and for its humanising influence over the late barbSrians of Rome. It - was garlanding the Gothic column, with the tasteful capital ; of Corinth etiKraftinc: on the hardy children of the North, aU thet, eleeance and erudition of the softer South. Then came the Reformation, the collisiofl of ppwerful ipinds imoelled bv the most oowerful of causes the bold, resolute and untirins Luther the amiable and learned Melancthon, imbued with all the garnered wealth of antiquity, and lecturing on Greek and Latin Literature at 16 years of age the daring Calvin, un compromising as Luther, and learned as Rtelancthon,, throwing down every barrier to free inquiry, and teaching a corrupt -and licentious Priesthood that aee cannot sanctify abuse, and that there) were no subjects too sacred for the bold and full investigations of mind. Add to these the discoveries of Columbus, and of.Vasco De Gama, opening new fields of enterprize, speculation and science, and we have a singular, nay almost providential combination ot causes, Tor the establishment of a new era, and. the impulsion of mind. - . But it is to the developement of English mind, and the progress of English Literature, (which are our own) that 1 must confine myself. I can but glance at results and deal in generalities. And if the reign of the Tudors was cold, bloody and remorseless, we must remember that the sea was still working with the physical disorder, the moral and intellectual tempest, which had followed the dead calm -of the media? vat ages, and society but beginning to be adjusted. The times perhaps required a hard and iron nature to rule and direct the movement, and it may have been to the firm ness of their grasp upon the reins of government,: that we Qwe the social order and the rapid developement of mind which marked the period. The age ofElizibeth, of Spencer and Shakspeare, has been compared to that of Augustus, of Horaceand Virgil,and it may be well to mark the analogy between them. The civil wars of Marius and Sylla, of Pompey and Caesar, of Lepidus, Anthony and Octavius. with all t her sanguinary horrors, were ended by the firm, despotic rule ot Augustus, and followed by a splendpi1 or intellect which stilj throws its halo around the Empire, andfsurviv.es its glories In England, the no less btody enormities of the: Houses of York and Lancaster, were closed by the supremacy the cold and calcu lating firmness of the 1st Tudor, and the dnUvnight is succeeded by the bright morning of eeniuB. The Faery Queen, and the Ve nus and Adonis,? appeared about r 1 590 and the creative mind of' naaspcarc poureu iorin its roaicpiess treasures wiin a raptaiiy almost equalled toils dazzling splendor, t Where are the Titans of genius that now stand before him where -the vieor and variety to the j of iniagT rfin- ! j seemed almost the' gift of inspiration F Vhere are none, nope X i ne power and the beauty ot past ages- seem to hare been trans fused into his great and all combining intellect, and he still stands out from the host of genius, sublime and inapproachable, the oracle oi nature anu us priae. We might have mentioned, the gentle, the rntellectual, the un fortunate Lady Jane Gray, so embalmed in ou'r best and earliest sympathies, and who was as.mucha prodigy of learning, as 6'f purity , . r. 'T .. ' " "IS"J. 1U4UVIUUCB Wllirn - ! Ui If L'" -'J I " O - ""- " "f . m m - . x . . . ... h d n ill in an. a mnn I inn i'v '. . & - .immcmi iSftini. r a hntfl Jt - v. w - ..'.it- - - " .-"--, r oTe, into ine lUlfiratf inn At t. liicji ' i-;.- ii-:i-jt-i.iuiB.kfAi n.. ' i thuJt,revera I . .-Jf.Tli.e! tottmtnA nvahncte f -derarmftd tW MWviH..-L . rrr?":' T .f",,Mril!w b-1 Jess nnacities ? Whn WHr; Le . . -d . Thrice aiftd kv th arin. W .:-tieav-Vv.ff.i-Cft '"mVWB JMwnear ' I! In.th- nnw A ,t.r..k iIi. T:iittTVTj'zr- ,, Fkk after Hake, ia hearea "V r uwiuiica -sociTV'--- Lj-iw-:--Tr .wMfc.yj ioo nicn aoove tneraaen, i - , , . TvivMfiA.,ni th natinni I ana virwe xor anoum we ooiil. rare Uen Jonson' as much I aboveftaxspeare in acquirements, as below him in genius A4 f little further on, ahd the vast and philosophicafroTHd of Lord Bacons I .1 mi mi s u nan nx. nroinir mm iha jn. ....r 1 . i : m 'i ' ': -' ,Z,Vt 'WT- """o KcmiiE ,4i-r'wJ tvhirh I m,U mnl lMm k UrJ.- -I YL l . . . . 5?Li 1 iC5 4 ;V ". k i iici iiuucu Biinues oy nia inuUCllye method: 1 oociciy, iepronrsporwlichg fwashed. clean J , age, arms-r by the sinfetity of his atenius. ind the lamhU. eJt iJZ 11a 1 ihvlna - ii. 't . . a i - t . ' w. wmuu uu ' " . rnnwn ' i Mi:.nH k k ... . v i munificent appreciation of his country. and. genius .Cress, were vast conquests achieved- for. man, and mind had now few fetters, but public opinion and ts own moral convictions. ' ' It is not important to our inquiry to dwell upon the Revolution, . and the election of the Prince of Orange to the throne of England; it was an era in politics, and with the Bill of Kights, brought fur ther concessions to the side of liberty' But he was warlike,, am bt. ."tious and unfettered, had few sympathies with the people he was ine period oi time inai nas aince-eiapsea, nas-no cause; to snrinK from comparison with any that ; preceded it It is. illustrious with-? genius) and signalized by its loftiesiefioris Tbe progress of mind has still been onward, with every thing to quicken' ita energies, ' and develope its powers. Every field of literature has1 been made to bring : forth, its annual harvest inrich" abundance i "every de- ' apartment of science tortured of it's secrets by" the microscope and J cruciuie ui sieepiess genius, we are inaeea oiesi wun an illumi nation rich, luminous and mellow, and marked by strong and hope ful features of yet further improvement The age i advancing in purity of sentiment and refinement of taste, and no longer tQleratea the grossness and obsceniijr of the past. Sensuality' is driven tl its brolheland hides its orgies in its lowest depths, and nterajture comes to us, clad in robes of unstained whiteuess,, breathing" tbe influences of christian refinement, and delighting us with the force,' the imagination, the high inspirations of poetry without its defile ments. Compare ; the writers of the last fifty y ears t even with those of " good Queen Anne' and the truth ia obvious. , jr, . But in Science, which is endless in progression, increasing ita rewards at every step of its patient votary, and beckoning him stHI called on to govern, and did little fok th'promotibiifof fiteratureT or science. ; Taste however was reviving, there was atleep feeling ' of religion and morality about' William, which curbed licentious ness ; and the equable and bloodless, reign of his successor, and her matronly virtues, gave an impulse and a ast to intellect, and pro duced a constellation of genius, whi'eh' has rarcluatered in the: firmament of mind. The English language .was at once raised to its present dignity and perfection, and the writers of that period' still retain the proud distinction of the British CJassica:" There were. Addison, Steele andxSwift, ArbuthnoC Prior, Gfy,ope, the' master of, melodioua metre, Thompson formed by nature's self to sing her gloriea, the versatile,"depraye(T;: but nobly gifted Bolihg broke; so-esteemed by the Qunger.t'itfhat amongst all thcTloaM treasures of the past, ho "preferred to rescue one specimen of his -eloquence. What age can boast of names like these, aparkling with wit, brilliant withimsgination, Imbued with erudition, Capti vating with eloquence; r v JC not as illustrious as .Shaks'pearand; MiTtorij. together they form a galaxy of. genius, which the menUl . eye delights ta dwell upon. -i .1 : j - forward to newiconqaests over the dominion of nature, the present age.is ricfiln acquisltiQO and bound lesVin prospect ' Nor is jt'iurr prising that it should be so. ; To the delineation of natural obiecta. , the portraiture of the passions, and the efforts , of j the 5 imai nation, there may be airmit and elevation beyond whicK we mW riott M.wuuw ji ne. jrveis, me.uraiors, we i-ainiera 01 anuquity,:wemay liave rivalled, but not excelled. Homer and Demosthenes .still sit 'Upon their thrones, the Olympic garlands' resK bpOn theirbrows. 'But in physics and. the various departments of science, it'll other-' wise. , We collect materials, we- lay up facts, and build monuments V fligber and more enduring than the ( pyramids. All tif Rvalue tthat i jrS'"M6u, ,M vp Wy 13 uui-a. a ruuu janqriousiv, wop jrom pa are eternal. ..They are incorporated into theJlramework of . ana oecome laeniinea wun tne sentiments ana nsDiis ot1 'rAcquisitions.thus mad or earlb.'in chemistrrV relicuDD or no -X . r trfPcea,i ; nouier and another is added, each throwing gleam , o t li irht upon -a darkened truth, till renius -settes and combine! fan . toin- aiartrlKo vatl U ...iitm Ua w.mI.sw' .rmmh kJ f- pasaenger car broke, thrtMrintliat d Z twoi(ltowiuayodyoff the trackTand pniducto "! C'M'Aet ar persons uuiiuing ua ue yunjorm wi yronz tA ran were thrown P5We of ibein be iny .caught between tW cars ahi Ethers forced under them. Some of those who hadtaul exposed thediielvea to danger escaped .iuhurU but e let en were -more orkM seriously injured, though fortunately no life wai lost oh the Spot - Medical attendance being at hand, it was rendered to the wounded pereoiw aa aood'asrtbey could be extricated fron n,e ruin. BUD'eeaiientJV to which thv hospital at York, where tfcey were weu provided for." -: ' ' This disaster so loterropied tfte progress of the company, many of whom , walked from the scene of-lhe accident to the ' town, that the eeremoniei at York were sot commenced till five o'clock in the evening ; to that tbe numerous guests had acarcelv time ta partake of the abundant and tub. taJit'ra Cam provided for them Ly the good peo- pie "6f Yntk before has time touke .up the line pf march for home, which they reached in safety without encountering any further mishap. ' : r -; , - NalioTial Intelligencer. Cause op the revival op business. . The New York Commercial Advertiser of Sat nrdaj says : The improvement which has taken place in the trade of the country, may be consid. ered aa the reaillt, to a great extent, of the Tariff of 1842. The protection aflbrded to our manu. facturing raterest at a moment when they were suffering from the extreme depression of trade, has been of advantage not only .to those directly concerned bat to the other neat interests of the country. . It bas farnhihedthe agricultural inter, eats with a home market in the absence of a fo reign demand; a.marrt . which it is the true policy of every country to foster and protect . V Perfcapq no bettor illutrtion of the effect thai -produced'ean be given than that afforded by the article of wheats The c6p of the last year, as is well known,1 was exceedingly large, and the gene, ral expectation has been daring the present sea. son that flour would 'decline to a very low price. More especially has this been the case since tbe prospects of the present crop have been so favort. Me. Cut the actual result hsa been directly con. trary to tbjsk Th price of wheat, both on the seaboard and in the Interior, is now from thir. ty to fifty per cent: higher than the lowest prices of tho epring-.- To what -cause an this be attri. butedl Is it not the direct result of an improvement in the condition of other branches of labor, by which they are enabled to purchase more freely and IX letter prices !" ' .. ' . ' Ajt allthp Whig State Conventions, county and tQWjGp,tieeting8 &c which have recently been held and they have been numerous the nom ination of. HiBY Cuur for, the Presidency baa been nnaaimoua; soother mao is ever thought of, lie is . the one,, the only me; first, last, aod always. , The attachment.pf . the Whigs to Hen rj Clay je undivided, urdeat, exclusive, devoted: ; they love him now, and they will love him forever. Such a union of feelings is a guaranty that be will, be elected D'Znt)arf Journal " Ma, w he ra boots shall I.find the5dof MatrTmon?.!"1 said hopeful yountj lady. u I reckon it's one of the United StaUt." ' Cnlycrally of Tlrinla. rtnHE Sessions of thialnsdiuiion annually com U mence on the 1st of October, and terminate on the 4th f July following .Tie Schools fftheUni veraiij," with their ripectie' Profesnora, are 1. Ancient I .anguage. Dr. Gemnor HarrUoo, 3. Modrro Xanguages.Dr Charles Kraiuir. 3; Mathemalici, Mr Edward H. Courtenay. 4. Wataral Philosophy -Mr Wm B Rogera. "' 5. "Civil Eagmeerinjr the subjecU of wbicb re aiyklW ttiTiofo'aC Matbemstia and Natural Philoeophy. " " -. 6. nalairy anoT M.terit Mdica,-l) . 7vMdioe.7 Ui Henry Howard. ' 8 Anatomy and Burgnry Dr Jamea L Cabell 9. . Mora) Philosophy M r Gaorgs Tucker. 10. Law-Jidc Henry 6tG Tucker. Judge Tucker is Chairman of the Faculty. The regular, stated charge for the session are - - a . fiW For alVaihtrneeessarjexpenaea thif suniM ; 4mM'- -" 1,500 j . , . :yuu: 39oo The om of $350 hss Wen foond, for sewalyeu" ' ptut, to lie (he total avers je amouat of the eip of resident tftoenu, from the bucks .of tbe Petro with whom they are. required lo deposit all their foooj. ! For farther particfalari, see ona of the printed c i alogoea. or tha Waahiiigtoa Globs and the Cbarl - Un Mercury, in both f which papers a standing (J" ; veriiae meat will be foond.. " Prtar mnA PatTOO U. of V. Jfuty 14 5A..I Oct irttUTuifTraicIu9tJeietlrv ;tiK . A mil aOICO- t2'-df aMortment of Watch- '."yr V u thm ri.fia to befoona . . - ' .1 1 iA i achieved triumphs like these; if fork1 state diaeust- ''MW' - .7 1 6 hav. iinervaarom me nrain ot -r-r-crr-r ..v.-? tvuii yT.vv. 7.r.i 7 nv wtot;maaa v- fathered there ; vfe 'uh dfyiny'tnindi ' Ja'' ted:t!B atar'tfrwaV&V -ni'V nwnmaina mOWC S! .1 .iwinlT all oa .s- f COLD AN" mVER'WATCHES.of livi -.-i rf.W from to U.HnMnria in EngitfXH ; !lWicaiiodrttierlsHW oftr5 '.ff lassortmeat and at inoch Uif pnc: t Retail, than ? ! iay othar hods IirAtterka-' tld Watches sa low ' las 1 t5 Dottara aach. Waicbea and Jewelry ex- changed otitodgutf Atfatchea warraated lo kP f WUaia-iLjnoan VJ'.cb I Jewelry repaired ia th bestananncr and w0""; , w. iH Utf vM mnh tawer than at anj stays, and aterUag ftilter pnonV' tor sale t7 Wall Strict, Mm York! fp August t. " ' ' 3"a"
The Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 19, 1843, edition 1
2
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