hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 193 results in 65 document sections:

llippe, and in 1837 we see him an exile again, wending his way to the land of liberty and promise — the United States. Here he made himself universally known as a lecturer and public speaker, advocating the cause of Poland, and addressing some 500 assemblies in the Northern and Western States, and almost all their State Legislatures, some of which listened to his patriotic appeals during their legislative sessions — an honor which has never been extended to any foreigner since, not even to Kossuth. But the revolutionary movements then expected in Europe became delayed, and seeing the hopelessness of further endeavors, he devoted himself to the legal profession, was in 1845 admitted to the bar of New York, and soon after became a member of the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States. It was he that brought to an issue the famous case of the heirs of Kosciusko, recovering for them most valuable property which that illustrious Pole had left in this country. During the last Pres
Kossuth. --Kossuth has published another address to the Hungarians, in which he predicts that the Emperor of Austria will either voluntarily offer a compromise or be compelled to sustain in order to open the way for an argument, at last, Kossuth. --Kossuth has published another address to the Hungarians, in which he predicts that the Emperor of Austria will either voluntarily offer a compromise or be compelled to sustain in order to open the way for an argument, at last,
Sickness of Kossuth. --The Albany (N. Y.) Journal states that letters from Italy brings the inteligence that Kossuth is alarmingly ill. His disease apriears to be a kind of consumption, which has thus for baffled the efforts of his physician to arrest it. Sickness of Kossuth. --The Albany (N. Y.) Journal states that letters from Italy brings the inteligence that Kossuth is alarmingly ill. His disease apriears to be a kind of consumption, which has thus for baffled the efforts of his physician to arrest it.
Turkey It is asserted that after nine months solicitation, Omar Pasha obtained from the Porte permission to attack Meatenegro. Dervish Pasha, with 10,000 Thiks, was moving on the Montenegrin frontiers. The Montenegro were making great preparations. Latest via Queenstown. Milan, Sunday, March 28 --There was great enthusiasm and festivity here in honor of Garibaldi last night, at his hotel. Allianzi, of Milan, publishes a programme of action in Hungary agreed on by Kossuth, Klapka, and Turr. The principal points are the establishment of a constitutional Kingdom, with the exclusion of the Hapsburg, dynasty; civil equality for all the inhabitants of Hungary; and an offensive and defensive alliance between Hungary, Servia, Croatia, and Roumelia. Commercial. Trade Report. --The advices from Manchester are favorable, the markets for goods and yarns being firm and quiet. Liverpool Breadstuffs market. The Breadstuffs market is dull. Wheat has a d
A Boastful Base. The people of the North are greatly given to extravagant jubilation. Whilst representing the South as an excitable and demonstrative race, and themselves pre-eminently rational and sober- minded, the truth is directly the reverse. The Konixing of Kossuth, the crazy demonstrations over the Atlantic cable, the furious toadying of the Prince of Wales, and a hundred like examples prove what manner of men they are. These celebrities excited little sensation in the South. During the fast war with England the Yankees illuminated and hurrahed over every victory, and when the war was ended, they illuminated and hundred because peace had come. In every victory of this war they have fired salutes, rung balls, and made themselves generally frantic. The great battle of Manassas, on the other hand, was not celebrated in the South by any public demonstration, nor did any of our victories call forth any such childish exhibitions. Our people have felt and acted with the so
plaud. No matter where the torch of rebellion was lighted, it was enough that it was rebellion to insure their cordial sympathy. Whether it was the Mexicans against Spain, whether it was revolutionists in South America, Irish rebels against England, Greeks against Turkey, Frenchmen and Germans against their kings, or Italy against the Austrians, the North boiled over with enthusiasm in their cause, and welcomed their exiles to our shores with the grandest ovations. It is only lately that Kossuth became an object of frenzied idolatry in the North because he was a rebel against tyranny. Not until the South threw off the chains of vassalage and determined to be free did the North attach any opprobrium to the name of rebel a name which has always heretofore been with them a synonym for all that is praise worthy and glorious. A despot is all the more a despot, that he is many headed and many handed. Of all tyrants, the mob is the most odious, senseless, savage, and beastly. It h
Kossuth. --A Scottish newspaper says that "poor Kossuth, the Hungarian patriot, is in the final stage of consumption, and that probably before many weeks pass away a noble country will have to weep for the loss of one of her noblest and most gifted men." Kossuth. --A Scottish newspaper says that "poor Kossuth, the Hungarian patriot, is in the final stage of consumption, and that probably before many weeks pass away a noble country will have to weep for the loss of one of her noblest and most gifted men."
Kossuth on Garibaldi. Kossuth has published a letter denouncing the call of Garibaldi on Hungary to rise, and repudiating the use of his name in connection with the call. He says: I cannot but attribute this abuse of my name to the manoeuvres of the Court of Vienus. It is not the first time that its busy agents have abused it in order to cause the Hungarians to engage in desperate minutes Austria acts in this number at all times when, feeling herself free from any danger of an attack from without she considers herself sure of being able to repress any such movement. I am not astonished, therefore, at beholding her active agents lay hold of the proclamation of General Garibaldi; for, much as Austria fears a combined action by Italy and Hungary, she would be more pleased at seeing an isolated insurrection break out in Hungary at a moment in which, in consequence of regrettable dissensions, Italy, trembling on the verge of civil war, would not only find herself complet
lating that most essential of the army regulations which insists on "conduct becoming a gentleman." Had he been displaced for this cause it would have been worth a victory to our armies in the warning it would have been to the mass of our officers, whose discipline in this respect is very defective. The New York Herald says: Major-General Nelson was a Kentuckian, and was formerly a Lieutenant in the navy. He was one of the officers of the Mississippi, which conveyed the suite of Kossuth to our shores. Upon the breaking out of the rebellion he espoused the cause of the Union. Brigadier-General Jeff. C. Davis hails from Indiana, and was a Lieutenant at Fort Sumter when it was bombarded and captured, and from his talents and gallantry was assigned a higher position in the army. His conduct in the Missouri campaign was brilliant, particularly at Pea Ridge. Gen. Nelson also distinguished himself on many a hard-fought field, but more particularly at Shiloh, where he fought wi
nningtonville Pa., on the 25th ult. He was formerly city missionary in Baltimore. M'me Marietta Grisi, mother of M'mes Carlotta and Ernasta Grisi, has just died, at a very advanced age, at the Villa Grisi, near Geneva. James H. Birch, the defeated candidate for Congress from the 6th district of Missouri, announces that he will contest the election of his opponent. Birch is an Anti Emancipationist. The Nationalites, of Turin, announces the arrival in that city of M. M. Klapi, Kossuth, and Teleki, who, it adds, are preparing to start for Greece with a large number of Hungarians. Gen. Scott's letter to Lincoln, about "wayward sisters, depart in peace," has produced a sensation in England. Some of the papers call Gen. S. the Wellington of the United States. Madame Geffard, wife of the President of the Republic of Hayti, who is now in Paris, has presented, the Society of the Prince Imperial (a charitable association) with a donation of one thousand franc. Th