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aes uf powera, tbose granted and those cunntry calhi 11µ1111 tht:111 to pcrforo1.
which the Sta.tes have reserved to tbem11
JC'!°":TlCE A:-:D P,lmtoTl.iU '"-\Vt! are eorselves. Mr, CALHoUN' solemnly declare~
ry,
vcry sony that tlie offi,:ial paper of
JOHN SWOPE, Ediror.
in the Senate, that after forty years' serYÍce in that body, he bad never concious- this city, .La Gaain, uuUt:!r th: abovo
hea.d has dirccted tu u:; a tüugub,r
Asoi.moN LlTERATURG.-,ve bave only ly given a Yote or utte1ed a word into \ate up tbe current magazioea of the tended to weaken the U u ion; but, on the thrn-1t. Onr uticl~ rc11µei.:ting Gent:ra.l
V10ArRRI and Col. (l~!lROQA ha.8 beeu r.1i11day, to be con~inced wha.t a ~~rent _of contrary to streugthen it. How little, 1111,ie.n,tood, and fr.rnkly, we meant only
misrepresentat1on, uf false poht1cal bta• theréfore, it becornes an annonymüUi:1
thttt theÑe gcntl~men :-1huul&lt;i returu tu
trJl"y, and perverte~ and l!entimen~l Magazine acribbler to impugn the trutbthcir h~unc~1 peacea.bly and quietly, 38
fülness
oí
a
raan
whoee
au~tere
virtuc
fiction the Ucmocra.t1c party of the Um,
ted Sta.tes is forced to 1Stem, in orde!' to and disiuterested patriotism puts to we st'e thronghout the Empiré a epil"it
co11cilliat iou ii; exerci!-lcd towa.rd&amp; all
preae"e itself from complete anoihila-- shame 8.:ppant and merceua:i.·y upstarts of
pa
rt1es.
\Ve di::i&lt;l .a.i!t w itb ilidign:i.tioo.
tion. Thf:: two rnost prominent literary who now impose their vulga.rity, ign1r
monthly's tbe Allanlit and Har¡,u', are u.ncc and fanatici1:nn upou a suffering the uug;cneni u'-1 :m ppllsi t iuH a ttri but ed to
of sowing the seeds uf dis c1Jrd: and
now completely given up to tbe propa• people. Mr. ÜA.LHOUK, unfortunately fllr
le
t
o ur word .s a.nd tone Li; the test of our
gation of the most disgusting abolition his popularity, in hie owu day aud genettentimente, and to a systematic perver• eration, pointed out the danger:J which truth: ba.,ring clt!a.rly 1111:1.nifesteJ our
version of the politfral history of tbe threatened our country. TTc honestly primi-p!~~ in an article, itl our lu:Jt wcck~'
~iexican .Em pire,"
United States We chanced to take up told the North tha.t unle8A they cc:lsed iss uc, hea.dcd "'fhe
which bv at tent i,1e ly reading, itwill b"
their
warfa.re
upon
the
relatiun
of
the
Harper'• for September, aud our eyes
ñrst lighted upou a hiet1.)ry reriewing raceM\ at the South, the cnd of it would seen thaÍ we are not for mtn. Godforbid 1
Mr. L1NcuI.N 1s administratiom. We de- be a disruption of the Uniun anda bloody tha.t wc shoul&lt;l, at thls crii:;is, er1deavor
tcrmmt':d rn réad it, so as to judge ofita civil war. It served tl1e purposes of to pi unge thili uow quiet and happyfronpolitical arti cles \Ye then concluded demagogues wbo loved oflfoe better thau tier intu the fler,Y fm•nace of a desolating
to t.ry its xto ric~; and the first one we they did their country, to denounce Mr. foud . \Ve ha.ve 110 pNsonal feelingiS of
t:ucouutcrcd vrns entitled "ln BOftds." CA1.ROUN as a. dissensionist, becanse he re\•enge to gra.tify, 01· hope of reward to
, Thetie tWll t.ati1:1ficd our appetite for Har- had the coara.ge to tell the simple exact stiurnlate, but are instinctively dil!lpoaed.
.jterian litcrature, and we threw ti.ie Mag• tru1.h Like the honest phy~icia.n who from habit to ubey a.nd respecta governuiue duwn with a feeling of repugnance tells the patient the dangerous charac- ment that sec1tre.s um· lives, our property
ter of bis disease 1 he wa.s disliked in ut- and our wcll•being.
Mlmost akin to disgust.
Thc article on Mr. LtNCOLS's adminis- tering unwelcome truths. History has
PooR Kuun . -\V~ lrn.d come to tb.-.
tra.tion is a cunningly devised Hpecimen now written with a pen of steel, in letters
of historical Mosaic work. Truth i~ av of blood, TRUTH, over every on~ of Mr. conclusion not to uoticl" this cor1te,nptiiuterwoven with faleehood that it wou\d O,u,aouN'~ epeecbcs, ami if bis stalei:-- blc Yankcc 1 but, aK tlwrc a.re sum~ pa.r11atur11llytl.eccive persona not thoroughly man•like warníngs had been heeded, in- ticu lar featurt&gt;s that the publi c slmuld. bL~
versed in the political hiNtorv of the atead of tboae wbo cri11d "peac.e, pea.ce/' m,.de acflua.iuted with, wc• h:we dceme(I
lJnited St-ates. 'l'bc writer opens by al- when there was no pt!a.ce, the couulry propcr to makc th~m public. Duriug thf1
luding to the fa.e t that Mr. MoN1t01~1H ad- wuuld have been preHerved from the residence in t.hi11 city, llf P.x-Preeident
vent to power was knowu at1 "tbc era of sorrow and death to whicb it ha:J now Ju.i.ns"ñ, he touk upnu hiuu:;t'lf thc reepo:1 •
sibility oí dcnounciug our papcr att ad
good feelings," aud wherefore so. Sim• been su bjected.
The other &amp;rticle in Harptr'3, to vocating intcrvcntion sentimcnttt, and
¡,ly because the Federal party, at bes~
thoruughly convinced of thcir utter dt..._ whicb we hitve referred, is a sacr111.men also 1•ur expubiou, with mauy other■4 ·ir·
feat, grounded their arms vf oppositiou tal story of the Mrs. Grannny STows re~pccti•e of natinn,\lill eis. If we had
to the Revuhlican party, and plead for species. lt rf!latee how a perfect little thcn advocatC'd thlli:;e idcus, they weru
merey aud forgivne88, just as the pres- Yankee Puritan girl rufused to marry a from the pure1:1t sentimcntt1 of our heart,
~nt &amp;bolition party will do tbis month, ricb Southern plauter, "be&lt;.'ause he own- and as it a.ppea.rs our prognoi.tica.tion
when their prescnt conspiracy againat ed uegroes," and just huw ahe succceded has heen verified, and general aecurit,!'
tbt: governmeut will come to na.ught and in converting him from the errors of hi~ and protection given to ali pa.rties, and
\hey will stl\nd in trembling aud fear ways. The darkey who figures iu the 11atio11alities. It would now nol be ami&amp;11
over tbe ruin they have bruugbt upon story is one of those "impossible nig for him t.n prt'\sent a. peti-tlon asking
the country. Referriog to Mr. YoNaoi.:111 gera, n who only livcs in the imagination that his name be takcn from the record•
time, tbc article eays: "slaver.,- had. 'not of New-England maideu la.die:t of iln of Lhe court befure whicb he wm:m.ittd
extinguished patriutism in half of the nnccrtain age. The atory is un11a.tura.l, r! cri11Lf., for a few CTnt!i. Perhaps tbrough
St"tes of the Union." What a vi1e in- ridiculoue aud disgusting, ilnd yet it i~ thc intluence uf Gas-Preacher LYok's and
11mlt.1 wl1P.n it is recollected that alave• a fair sa.mple of the tl'ash wbich uow thc t.x-Pr~-idtnt of the "Ha.rtford Saving'w
,¡ holders founded the governweut of the pJisons the susceptible minds of the ris• Bank/' ho could havc the ma.tter st-· United Sta.tes, defended aud preserved ing generatiou. No parents ought to pnngui.
it against opposition from ali quarters, allow sucb debasiug- lit.erature to find
¡e- The sea druwns out humanity,
over ha!f a century. The article then ita way to tbeir 1:1001 ur daughtcrs. Ev•
goes 011 to assail the memory of JoHN ery paper in tbe land ougbt to raise • and time it l1as no eympathy with either,
C. C.u.souN, designating bim as "the note of warning against ali those Aboli- far it bclongs to eternity~ and of that it
Great Áp&lt;Jshte," because of bis State tion Ma.gazines. Let them be bani:;;hed sings its monotonous song, forever and
Rigbt views, though )[r • .MoN•o• was a from every C.mily. lt io b~h time th•t ever.
atronger Sta.te! righte mv.n, if poBSible1 the axe was laid at the root of tbe tree.
..... 'I'he etrongest man feela the in..
tha11. Mr. 0AtBot"N, and, in tact, voted We cannot expect principies to ffourisb
against the adoption of the present Fed- ao long u the apread of such senti- fluence üf womans' gentleat thought:e,
eral Couatitntion, because he looked up- ments is encouraged,. The ma.in h6pe ae the mightiest oak quivers in the genon it u baving dangerous te11denciP.a to for the future of our country is in the tlest breeze.
consolidation-a view of thecase whicb rising generation. People of maturity
W The LJoos journale auuoa.noe tli.6
hu proved bis political sagacity. Now, rarely cbange tbeir principie•. Tbence death
of lf. Gérard, director of tbe Part of
impartía! hi■tory will abow tbat no man the necessity for vigilance and energy ihe Tete-d'Or, caused by tb1 bite of a •ene•
in ali the eountry ever did 10 much to- in driving out of circulation every thing mousfly.
warda preaerviug the Uoiun, as M.r. tbat inculcates Abolition principies.
JiJ- Let ali the enda thou aím'at at.
C.wrou,r, To preserve tbe Union it waa Tbere is nota man or a woma.n in Texjuot u -ntial to maintain tbe rights of aa,. no matter how bum ble hisi _or ~•r })?- _be thy country'R, truth ':!1, 3nd God'e.
tbe &amp;ates. u tbe rigbts of the Federal 1it1on, wbo cannot do somethmg 1n thts 1
_.... The sev~n•:vea.r 1trl1 exempte •
Government,.for tbe Union of thP Fcde- good work. \Ve beeeech them to remcmn11 G,,,·eNlment ÍH ma,tc up 0f two d:\."!· bt"'1 th~t it ib only lil. dttiy tbcir t_:otfrriti~ mu:,, fmrn th•• r\ r /t , i11 t~ •; , ~11i t, •ii ~. i. ♦.'"'1- .

THE MONTEREY
ERA.
--++s.

u,

4

4

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