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Show 74 TUE UBEttT'i BELL· 1 , rrorgcous gloom, l!'illccl that 'femp o s o btlo rich perfume, Like some su Too refined for eye or Cftl', But with o.wful]o,•o and fear, Calming all the atmosphere. Englaud. Jribrrtn, ihctionnl. filnurrv, N ntionnl. JJY WILL IAli I. 110\\' DIT C U. "r E have never read any congressional speech which more deeply moved us, than tl1at of the Han. Charles Sumner, delivered in the Senate, August 26, 1852. We agree with Mr. Badger of North Carolina, in thinking it the most cxtraordinnry speech that has ever been rlelivcred on the floor of the Senat.c. An irrefutable demonstration of tho unconstitutionality, on principle, of tho Fugitive Slave Bill, it abounds with evidences of the oloquonco, the ologaut scfiO!arsbip, the legal and historical knowledge of l\Ir. Sumner, and what is more, far more than ali, shows a. heart large enough to embr:wc in its kindly and noble sympathies even |