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Peterson & Brothers, Philadelphia. J XjyU' G 30 train's great speech on the pardoning of traitors. — that the five and a half-millions sterling revenue received for these articles be abol- ished by prohibiting them altogether. — (Cheers and applause.) This will be consistency — I asked it for my cause — for you cannot be consistent and pay a direct premium in slavery, by buying at high prices the product of the slave. (Hear, hear, and that's so.) My argument is closed. I thank you, gentlemen, for your courtesy and your attention, and ask you if I have not gone further than you have done in my abolitionism? (Hear, hear.) If not, I will conclude by saying, once for all, that I would do away with the Christian mode of civilizing the heathen (loud cheers) ; and that you may thoroughly appreciate how much of a reformer I am, I may mention that I would go further — I would also do away with the rumshops — close the opium-dens — I would abolish courts and prisons — I would have no bastards — no paupers — no Cyprians — no drunkards — I would do away with dice-box and cards — with envy, hatred, jealousy, slan- der, and all uncharitableness — I would seek to improve mankind by sweeping away vice and crime, and substituting virtue and hap- piness ; and most assuredly I would do away with this accursed plan that Englaud has introduced into our country of elevating the black-man by a system which has debased the white race, until it finally culminated in the most damning treason (loud cheers) ever recorded on the archives of time against the grandest Republic humanity has ever wit- nessed ! (Loud and continued cheering.) GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN ON " PARDONING TRAITORS." "WOULD CIVILIZATION BE ADVANCED BY THE SOUTH GAINING- THEIR INDEPENDENCE?" [From the London American of March 12, 1862.] '• Would civilization be advanced by t h South gaining their Independence?" was the question discussed on Monday evening, March 10th, where Dr. Johnson once held forth : — "Sir," said he to Boswell, " let us take a walk down Fleet street." Mr. Train: — Nine speakers have already spoken for the North, and none for the South. Whence this change? A few weeks ago, and you were all Secession ; now, everybody is for the Union. (Hear.) As no one has touched upon the question in the paper, why should I ? All you can ex- pect is, that I should talk America, and wander from point to point as others have done — (laughter) — but I hail this change of tone as a happy omen. (Hear.) If a few salaried writers form public opinion in the Times — making England despise America — • why should not the clever debaters that fre- quent this hall be allowed to represent the masses of your nation? (Hear, hear.) ENGLAND HAS TURNED ENTIRE- LY ROUND. * England has turned completely round — the Trent has drawn all her fire — Mason drops down here like a spent shell — and our lands are bound to be more friendly than ever. (Hear.) I speak the voice of our people, when I tell you that none of us, disgusted as we may have been at your neutrality— (laughter) — endorse the strange speech of Lovejoy. (Cheers.) A pupil of the Shaftesbury school — and remembering that his brother was shot over his Abolition printing press in Illinois — you will not blame even him for feeling annoyed to see England's apparent forgetfulness of slavery, in sympa- thizing with the slave oligarchy that sought the ruin of our empire. (Hear.) RISE AND DECLINE OF SECESSION IN ENGLAND. I am glad to see that Secession is dead in England ; Russell settled it in his block- ade letter — and its rise and progress during twelve months is noticeable by Gregory's motion last year to acknowledge the Con- federacy — and this year vainly trying to put a question as to the blockade being effective ! — Yancey's advocacy was weak as water ; but Mason's letter was water diluted. It turns out that the six hundred ships that run the blockade were a few fifty ton schooners on the inland estuaries, and steamboats between Memphis and New Orleans! ("Oh," and "question.") Civi- lization was the point, and as every speaker has dodged it, you, of course, expect me to take it up. Well, then, the South does not possess the elements of civilization. (Oh.) THE SOUTH UNABLE TO STAND ALONE. If they cannot get on with the North — what can they do alone? They want a standing army and free trade ! — that is a paradox. They want an oligarchy and im- migration — that is a contradiction — for emi- train's great speech on the pardoning of traitors. 31 grants will not go where they have no representation. (Hear.) They want open ports and manufactures — that is also an- other impossibility. Even let them carry out their plans, and the Government is at a dead lock, for revenue — an export duty on cotton is an import duty in another form. (That's so.) IT IS WITHOUT THE ELEMENTS OF CIVILIZATION. Besides, as I said, the South has not the elements of civilization. (Oh — and hear.) "Where are they then ? Let the gentleman who interrupts me take all the advantage of his interruption and answer me if he can. (Hear, hear.) Is it in jurisprudence? Where are their Storys — their Kents — their Wheatons — their Parsons and their Bige- lows ? (Hear.) Is it in Finance ? Where are their Bateses — their Peabodys— their Browns and their Sturgesses ? Is it in ■tcrce? Where are their Goodhues — their Taylors — their Forbeses — their Apple- tons and their Grinnels. (Cheers.) Is it in shipbuilding ? Where do you find their Webbs — their Mackays, and their Wester- velts. Is it sculpture ? Where are their Greenoughs — their Ilosmers — and their Powers. (Applause.) Is it in painting? Where are their Alstons — their Stuarts, and their Benjamin Wests? (Cheers.) Is it in manufactures? There are no Manchesters, and Walthams, and Lowells, and Lawrences in the South. (Hear, hear.) Is it in his- tory? Where are their Bancrofts — their Prescott — their Sparks, and their Mot- leys ? I can see nowhere in Secessia the elements civilization requires. 7s it in ro- mance? Where are their Washington Ir- vings — (Cheers.) — their Fennimore Coopers, and their Hawthornes? Is it in poetry? Show me where to find their Holmes — their Willises — their Lowells and their Longfel- lows — (Cheers.) — Is it in Inventions ? Who filled the Exhibition of Fifty-one with im- provements that still live in England ? (Hear and applause.) Where did McCor- mick hail from? where Colt? whence came the Enfield Rifle?— Was Hobbs a South- erner ? and who furnished the Secession Times and Telegraph and three-fourths the Journals in Loudon with presses to abuse America during the Reign of Secessia, but our Northern Colonel Hoe. (Cheers ) Where was the Niagara built? and was the Yacht America a Southern Institution? (Hear, hear.) No — gentlemen — these are some of the elements of our Yankee civili- zation — peculiar to our Yankee climate, and Yankee habits not yet appreciated in Secessia. (Cheers.) Is the common school system of New England an element of Southern civilization ? The South alone benefit civilization ! — Why, Mr. Chairman, I have proved its absurdity. Bearing in mind the debate on previous evenings, I will answer one or two Secession fallacies. The gentleman from Australia says that no black man in the North would be allowed to enter a room like this for public discussion, and this in face of the fact that there are two negroes admitted at the bar in Boston, and have practised there for several years. WE DO NOT WANT CANADA. He also spoke of America's intentions re- garding Canada. — America wants nothing from Canada. — The two lands are as differ- ent as the two people — one is day — the other night. (Laughter and hear.) One is going to a funeral — the other a weddin«*. One is the old world without any progress by assenting with the new. In Canada they can't even make a barrel. (Laughter.) — The only great thing accomplished there is about the grandest swindle of this, the nine- teenth century, the Grand Trunk Railway. (Oh, and hear.) Another spoke of unjust representation, citing Rhode Island — Con- necticut — Vermont, and New Hampshire, with a small population having so many electoral votes ; and yet he omitted to men- tion that Arkansas — Texas — Florida pur- chased of Spain — Louisiana bought of France — and Texas of the Mexicans — have equal representation in the Senate of the United States. (Hear.) Original Secessia entire with its six hundred thousand square miles of country, has but two millions seven hundred thousand white people — while New York, with but forty-seven thousand square miles, has a population of three millions eight hundred thousand, and Pennsylvania, forty-six thousand square miles, has a popu- lation of two millions nine hundred thou- sand. (Applause.) These two States alone have more population than the Two Seces- sias, and ten times the wealth. (Cheers.) — Little Massachusetts has a bank capital of fifteen millions sterling, while all Secessia boasts of but thirteen millions ! (Applause.) THE REBELLION A GIGANTIC HUMBUG. I tell you the Rebellion is a gigantic hum- bug — (laughter) — a gigantic sham ! — where are their successes ? (Bull Run, Ball's Bluff — question, and laughter.) Must I again tell you that the nation was sold at Manassas, by treachery, as General Stone sold his country" at Ball's Bluff? (Shame.) But are we alone in reverses? Look at England ! at Peiho ! at Cawnpore ! at Cabul aud at the Redan ! (Hear.) Look at Russia in Circassia — France in Algeria — Austria in Italy, and now the Spaniards in Mexico ! Surely we are not alone — The Pretender with two thousand Scots frighten- ed all England a century ago! Our seven hundred thousand soldiers only allow — so .£12Q. 32 train's great speech on the pardoning of traitors. gigantic is our territory — but one man to every mile and a half of border. AMERICA MERELY HAS THE VARIOLOID. Lamartine eloquently observes — every Revolution has its birth — every birth its pang — every pang its groan ! All nations have their diseases. — We are just going through the varioloid — (laughter) — having passed the scarlet fever, measles, and chic- ken-pox on the heights of Abraham — (laughter) — and the plains of Saratoga. — (Cheers.) Our tree of liberty is sound at the core. — We are only shaking off the cat- terpillars that have so long disfigured its branches. (Hear, and applause.) WASHINGTON AND CROMWELL VOLUNTEERS. I am tired of listening to England's sneers about our volunteers. You seem proud of your hundred and fifty thousand men — (cheers) — let us take the same ratio of glory for our volunteer millions. (Laughter and applause.) Sneer not at the volunteers — Washington was a volunteer — so was Robert Clive at the battle of Plassey — and Oliver Cromwell was not educated at the Horse Guards. (Laughter.) The two-spot is too much for the ace of clubs if it happens to be a trump. SEPARATION NOT NECESSARY. One speaker thinks that civilization would follow separation, on the ground that States become too large to be prosperous. Hence he agrees with Bulwer in breaking America into parts. England, to say the least, has never followed that plan. (Hear.) She went to India in Elizabeth's time, and put Prince against Prince, until she was enabled to absorb the entire empire of two hundred millions. (Cheers.) Had she gone on your theory — India would be off the reel long ago — and Australia — and Canada — and Ireland ! — Again, what a spectacle of weakness the petty Principalities of Germany — Central and South America present — compared to the consolidated strength of seventy millions in Russia — and forty millions in France — or even England herself, with an empire on all the oceans ! (Cheers.) REBELLION, FIRST PALSIED, NOW DEAD. No, Mr. Chairman, the revolution is dead It received its first attack of paralysis — when Congress voted five hundred thousand men — and five hundred millions of dollars ! (Cheers.) It, experienced its second attack when, after the Trent affair, England and France refused to acknowledge their inde- pendence. (Applause.) And now comes apoplexy and death, when the Commander- in-Chief of the Army and Navy sounded the bugle and gave his order to his Lieutenant — Charge, McClellan, charge ! — On to Ma- nassas, on ! — were not the last words of our Presidential Marmion ! (Cheers.) The world will shortly see how gigantic has been the success of the North — (Oh, and where) — and how gigantic the failure of the South ! Secessia was a sham at the start, and has been a sham all through the revolution. (Oh, and interruption.) AMERICA CAN AFFORD A GIGAN- TIC PARDON. Now, as America goes to war in a gigan- tic way, I am prepared to show for once in our great strength- — gigantic clemency! (hear) — and suggest that as we have killed Secessia that we still keep our originality in doing things differently from Europe — by giving our erring fellow-citizens — a gigantic pardon ! (Loud cheers.) England sends her rebels to Tasmania — France to Cayenne —and Russia to Siberia — but let America follow out the good work she has begun in liberating all the State prisoners in Fort Lafayette — Fort McIIenry, and Fort War- ren — and pardon all the traitors, without any security for the future but the sentiment of Union. (Cheers.) Hanging is really too good for them. (Laughter.) They ought to be compelled to live among those they have deceived, and obliged to associate with their own kindred. (Laughter) — No more terrible punishment could assail them. — If a man has a fault, trust his own family to find it out. (Laughter.) 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