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Nov. #, 1851.J W%* lLtU§tX. **& 7
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INTENDED DEPARTURE OF KOSSTJTH. The foll...
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M. KOSSUTH AND WALTER SAVAGE IANBOR. "Wi...
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KOSSUTH AND THE FRENCH EXILES. A deputat...
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CONTINENTAL NOTES. The first meeting aft...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Kossuth's Welcome. The Working Men's Dem...
^ « tate of Italy . On such information I declare that , tesides myself as regards Hungary , I know no man of nation in the whole world who more fills the same Nation of being the representative of the hopes of Italy ttan Joseph Mlzzini . { Loud cheers ) That is not my l « Hef that is my knowledge , founded not on unilateral formation , but on disinterested investigations in which Lnme honourable Englishmen had given assistance . Tntar hear ) This is my knowledge of the situation of Mazzini with respect to Italy . { Hear , hear . ) I will not v that there is not one or another party which does not ^ nnc ur with him and his aims ; I will not say that the whole Italian nation is included in his individuality ; but this I
know , that a very large party—the only party that has a future in Italy—is returned m his person . , ( Loud cheers . ) And of course this conviction points out the necessity , not only to be on a good understanding with him , but , if nossible to combine the direction of the exertions of both Nations , ' as there is an identity in their causes . I con-Tider therefore , it is a happy circumstance that there is a man ' who when we speak to him we speak to Italy , as in my case when you speak to me you speak to Hungary . With these opinions I can desire nothing more than frankly to give my hand to combined honourable action for the independence of Hungary and the independence nf Italv . ( Hear . ) M for the rest , as for Hungary , I
have declared publicly that 1 believe my people share my conviction that the future organization of our countryprovided circumstances beyond the reach of man do not intervene—must rest on a Republican basis . That is my ¦ wish because all our monarchical inclinations have , by the repeated falsehoods of the house of Hapsburg , been completely destroyed . { Hear , hear . ) I know that it is not so much the form of government that makes the happiness of the people , as it is the goodness and morality of the governors . { Hear , hear . ) Therefore , no government can be good wherein people have not full
confidence in the governors and security for the future . { Hear , hear . ) That is the case with Hungary . As to Italy , although I am not unacquainted with the " aim of the Italian nation as resumed in the person of Mazzini , still , as I stand here to claim the sovereign right of every nation to choose its own organization , and as I will not permit any foreign nation to Interfere in the affairs of Hungary , neither will I interfere with the internal affairs of Italy . Where people obtain power by obtaining independence , let them regulate their own affairs ; and then if they do not , when masters of their fate , do what is best for the happiness of a nation , then I say that such
a nation does not deserve to be happy . { Hear ) Therefore , I mix not wjth the internal affairs of Italy . We have a common aim and a common enemy , and we must work in brotherhood to throw off the enemy of our mutual independence , and to dispose each of our home affairs , in an independent position . Acting on that basis , I declare that I will do everything possible to accomplish such unity in action with the Italian nation , and I believe , that in saying so I . am speaking the sentiments of my whole nation . , For the rest , I believe that Italy will feel the duty of not hurting the sovereign right of Hungary to dispose of itself ; and I , on my part , give the assurance that I will have nothing to do with the interest or home questions of the Italians . "
M . Kossuth then alluded to Socialism and Communism , and . said that Hungary had nothing to do with these doctrines , because the people did not want them . He entered at length into an explanation of the reasons why Hungary did not want them , which were satisfactory . The people have the land ; and had he remained longer in power , he would have distributed the public lands among the people . He wound up by a few hearty words , delivered with great force and feeling , thanking the deputation from the heart of his heart , and promising a written reply to their address . After a few minutes the deputation departed . IN THE l'ROVINCKS .
Manchester is not to be put down . Sir John Potter , Muyor , of that borough , refused to call a special meeting of the council to vote an address , although the requisition was signed by fifteen councillors . At once , in a very short space of time , a large and distinguished committee was formed to undertake the onerous but graceful duty ; and representatives of the industry of the great towns of Lancashire rapidly sent in adhesions . On Wednesday they reached 400 in number ; and on the lltli instant a banquet will be given at the Free Tradehall , at which Kossuth has promised to attend , when
addresses in shoals will be presented to him . Manchester is to be made the great centre , it appears , of the district , and bodies of people are coining to present addresses from many of the neighbouring towns . Amongst tho first of these is Liverpool , from whence tho deputation includes Mr . Robertson Gladstone , Mr . W . Rathbono , and other eminent men . Bradford in sending an address by a deputation , including Mr . llobeit Milligan , M . P ., Mr . Titus Salt , and Mr . VVm . Rand , Mayor . Then , amongst other towns sending deputations with addresses , are Ashton , Oldhum , Rochdale , Clitheroe , Bolton , Burnley , and Dudley .
On Monday Kossuth will meet the men of Birming ham on hiH way to Manchester ; on Wednesday addresses will bo presented from Cheltenham , Kidderminster , Derby , Coventry , Walsall , Wolverhampton , Athelhtone , ( Jruuthum , und many towns j » tho Midland districts at u great banquet to be held in tho Town-hall of Birmingham . Tho surp lus funds arising from tho banquet will bo devoted to the Hungarian cause , and placed at tho disposal of
Kossuth , to be applied by him as may seem most advantageous . At the banquet the chair will be taken by Mr . Scholefield , M . P ., and a most influential committee and list of vice-presidents have been formed . The Mayor of Dover presided over a public meeting in that city on Monday , at which , an address was , on the motion of Mr . R . Friend , voted by acclamation to Louis Kossuth . The address , was yesterday forwarded to Mr . Thornton Hunt , with a request that he Would present it to the illustrious Exile .
Nov. #, 1851.J W%* Lltu§Tx. **& 7
Nov . # , 1851 . J W % * lLtU § tX . **& 7
Intended Departure Of Kosstjth. The Foll...
INTENDED DEPARTURE OF KOSSTJTH . The following communication has been received by the American consul at Southampton : — 80 , Eaton-place , October 30 , 1851 . My Dear Sib , —I have seen the telegraph despatch addressed by you yesterday to Lord Dudley Stuart ; I write to say that I will certainly proceed to New York on board the Washington , if you can make arrangements for that ship to sail from Southampton ofi the 14 th of November next , in the afternoon . I am , my dear Sir , yours truly , J . R . Croskey , Esq . L . Kossuth .
M. Kossuth And Walter Savage Ianbor. "Wi...
M . KOSSUTH AND WALTER SAVAGE IANBOR . "Winchester , October 25 . Sir , —It is with peculiar satisfaction that I accept the address from the citizens of Bath , at the head of whose names I find one so distinguished , and so long familiar to me , as your own . Be assured that the sentiments you express are those which have ever animated me in all my efforts , and in every trust which my countrymen have confided to me . " Social order" I believe to be consistent alone with constitutional freedem . I have sought to insure the one by strengthening and enlarging , in peaceful and legal methods , the other . In this I have been consistently supported by my countrymen ; it has been all we aimed at . Your allusion to the potentate to whose firm and upright demeanour I owe so much , touches feelings of respect and gratitude which can never be effaced . I have the honour to be , Sir , with feelings of the highest esteem , your obedient servant , Walter Savage Landor , Esq . L . Kossuth . Bath , October 28 . Sib , —The chief glory of my life is that I was first in subscribing for the assistance of the Hungarians at the commencement of their struggle ; the next is , that I have received the approbation of their illustrious leader . I , who have held-the hand of Kosciusko , now kiss with veneration the signature of Kossuth . No other man alive could confer an honour I would accept . Believe me , Sir , ever yours most faithfully , Walter Savage Landor .
Kossuth And The French Exiles. A Deputat...
KOSSUTH AND THE FRENCH EXILES . A deputation of proscribed Frenchmen now in England , headed by Louis Blanc , waited on Kossuth on Thursday , and presented an address of sympathy . The following passage in Kossuth ' s reply is very important . " My address to the city of Marseilles has made known that in my heart I should not make France responsible for the inhospitality of Louis Bonaparte . I have alao affirmed in that address that I wish for my country the government of a republic . I am convinced that there is nothing possible henceforth in Europe , but the republic based on universal suffrage , with the principle of the solidarity of peoples and the independence of nations . I ought to add that I did not think the opinions which are now discussed in France can be applied
elsewhere , for the present . As for me , I do not wish to occupy myself with those ideas -which divide France . 1 ought only to occupy myself with that which is of a nature to Insure the independence of Hungary . If I have not manifested in England that thought which I expressed at Marseilles , it is because I do not wish to interfere in the affairs of a country which gives me hospitality , and whose assistance I desire for the future of Hungary , for which , I repeat , I wish the republic based upon universal suffrage . You speak of temptations vvhich will be offered to detach me from the cause of democracy , and of homages which will be rendered me . It is right to tell you that I luive seen none of these homages , and that , if temptations were tried to separate me fr 6 m the cause of the people , the attempts , of which I have 6 een no sign , would fail with me . "
On hearing that the English papers had stated that the address to tho city of Marseilles was not his , Koflsuth appeared much surprised , and said , with marked emotion , that not having time to read the newspapers , he wuh entirely ignorant of what he had just heard , and added , that ho would send to the papers a formal contradiction . An admirable address has been published in tho morning papers from . Kossuth to the people of the United States . It was written a year ngo , in captivity , at Broussa . It is an eloquent exposition of the policy of the Magyars , the animus of Austria , and tho advance of Russia . One paragraph on tho latter subject we quote : —
" 1 hough my dear native Hungary is trodden down , and the flower of her sons executed or wandering exiled ) and I , her Governor , writing from my prison in this distant Asiatic Turkey , I predict—anil tho Eternal God hcaro my prediction—thut there can bo m > freedom for tho continent of Uurope , and that tho OoBuacke , from tho uhorea of the Don , will water their Htocda in tho
Rhine unless liberty be restored to Hungary . It is only with Hungarian freedom that the European nations can be free ; and the smaller nationalities especially can have no future without us . " Kossuth Hung—in Effigy . —The Austrian Government have taken , an imbecile revenge on Kossuth and other Hungarian patriots , who " failed to appear " before the court-martial at Pestb . on the 22 nd ultimo , to which they , had been summoned . The were all condemned in contumaciam , and hanged in effigy ; ttyat is , a black board with the thirty-six names inscribed thereon in white letters , was affixed to the gallows . Sitch an affix on an Austrian political gallows is as good as a statue in the temple of Liberty .
The anti-republican Government of France have followed up their rigorous persecutions of the press by refusing to Kossuth permission to pass through France , in obedience to the wishes of Austria and Russia . — Boston Transcript , October 16 . M . Kossuth called on Wednesday at Morley ' s Hotel , Trafalgar-square , to return the visit of Mr . Foldsom , Minister of the United States at the Hague ( Holland ) . He was met there by several American gentlemen ( among whom was the Honourable Mr . Rhett , of South Carolina , a member of the United States' Senate ) , who had beert invited to be present at the interview , which lasted an hour .
Continental Notes. The First Meeting Aft...
CONTINENTAL NOTES . The first meeting after a recess of the French Legislative Assembly , and the last Message of the first President of the Republic , are events to be remembered , after the one has disappeared and the other is forgotten . M . Louis Napoleon , after playing fast and loose with the factions who had not elected him , and whose tool and tyrant he has been by fits and starts , now , at the last gasp of his prostituted ambition , remembers the Voice of the People , of the five million workmen and peasants to whom he owed his election , and five millions of whom he disfranchised , and proposes the abrogation of the law which he had borne aloft as the banner of his policy , and to which more than one retrograde Ministry has falien a sacrifice ! Believe in the patriotism , the self-denial , the disinterestedness of the Prince-President after this
latest proof of his devotion to France ! Did not the Emperor express his readiness to serve France on the eve of becoming Consul for life ? And how shall your mere Emperor ' s nephew not be willing to bear the burden of office for France ' s sake ? The beginning and the end of the Message are alone worth notice . The rest is the leather and prunella of " cooked" Governmental statistics , and a strange mixture of blind executive optimism and a pessimist
exaggeration of " subversive ' antisocial' tendencies . " Our first extract is a morsel of what may be called genuine " Russian Bear's grease . How the French People will appreciate such a dictation , time and the hour of reparation will show : — " It appears , however , imprudent to flatter ourselves with illusions on this appearance of tranquillity . A vast demagogical conspiracy is now organizing in France and Europe ; secret societies are endeavouring to extend thcir ^ ramifications even into the smallest communes . All the
madness and violence of party is brought forth , while these men are not even agreed on persons or things : they are agreed to meet in 1852 , not to construct , but to overthrow . Your patriotism and your courage , with which I shall endeavour to keep pace , will , I am sure , save France from the danger wherewith she is threatened . But to conquer those dangers we must look at them without fear and without exaggeration , while wo are convinced that , thanks to the strength of the administration , to the enlightened zeal of the magistrates , and to th-e devotion of the army , France will yet be saved . Let us therefore unite our efforts to deprive the spirit of evil even of the hope of a momentary success . "
In what respect M . Louis Napoleon has endeavoured to encourage those institutions destined to develope agricultural and commercial credit , to come by means of charitable institutions to the assistance of all poverty , which he declares to " have been and still to be his first care , " France knows already . We , at this distance , are unable to discover . The following brief and compendious resume ol the interior administration of the country affords an interesting glance at the high degree of social and political liberty and comfort with which M . Louis Napoleon ' s Executive has endowed the citizens to whom he so confidently appeals for a prolongation ol his powers .
" In the greater part of Fiance ordinary measures have sufficed to insure order , but the state of nieg <; maintained in the sixth military division has had to he extended to the department of the Ardeche , stained with tho blood of frequent collisions , and more recently « liU to the departments of the Cher and Marine , terrified by a commencement of Jacquerie . At Lyons h strong and unique system of police him been organized , embracing twelve towns or suburban coniiniiiu'H , which the law lias comprehended under the denomination of the LyonncHo agglomeration . " Political refugees entered into dangerous affiliations . Some it was neeessaiy to t-xpH , but hospitality has continued to be extended to very large numbers . A huh . of mor « than 48 (> , OO 0 f . has been divided among
2000 refugees . " Tho vicfH of the munioipul organization spring from the twecuaity under which the Government found itHelf of in <•!><> year revoking , on the advice of the Council of JStnte , 601 oluotive Ainctionuries , of whom 27 H wero muyorw , [ wud 12 ' 6 adjointo . Tho ditmoluiioms
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Nov. 8, 1851, page 5, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_08111851/page/5/
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