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the obligation that their situation imposed on them of shewing an example of courage, and publicly displaying their steadfast and firm adherence to the faith which they professed. It appeared that a high-toned sentiment of duty, an enlightened feeling of what was right and fit towards the community, an abregation of self, were in this awful conjuncture associated with that piety by which they were no doubt strengthened; that sublime confidence, which looks calmly down on the injustice of earth, making its appeal to Heaven.

The holy service began, but what must have been the emotions of the auditory, when, in less than half an hour, their solemnities were interrupted by the horrible vociferations of a frantic populace, and loud and repeated strokes assailed the doors, in order to burst them open. M. Juillera, the minister, continued the service with a firm voice, and the congregation listened with that calm which is the privilege of those who feel that their witness is in heaven. The uproar increased; the tumult became horrible: the preacher ceased, and his auditors recommended themselves to God. "I held my little girl in my hand," writes Madame Juillera, the wife of the minister, a woman of a superior mind," and approached the foot of the pulpit,-my husband rejoined us,-I thought of my nursling boy, whom I had left at home, and should embrace no more! I recollected that this day was the anniversary of my marriage-I believed that I was going to die with my husband and my daughter-it was some consolation that we should die together; and it seemed to me that this was the moment in which we were best prepared to appear in the presence of God-the victims of a religious duty; in the performance of which we had braved the fury of the wicked-we had flown with eager footsteps to our temple; we had clung to the altar of our God, without heeding that the assassin's dagger might cross our path, and impede our purpose."

It was at this moment that general La Garde, who had hastened to the post of danger, received from one of the assassins a ball, which entered near his heart. He covered the blood, gushing from his wound, with his

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manteau, and protected the retreat of the protestants from the temple. He was then conveyed to his house, where the bullet was with difficulty extracted. The fury of the populace was not satiated. In the evening of this day the temples of the protestants were broken open, and every thing contained in them-the registers, psalm-books, the gowns of the ministers, were torn into shreds, and burnt.

Upon receiving tidings of the events of this fatal day, the duke of Angouleme instantly left Toulouse, and repaired to Nismes. As he passed along the streets, he received with repulsive coldness the acclamations of the multitude. He sternly rejected the services of the national guard, who demanded permission to form a guard of honour arouud his person He declared his intention of ordering the protestant churches to be opened; but was conjured, by such of the protestants as approached him, no less than by the catholics, to abstain from issuing this order, until there was a sufficient military force to ensure public tranquillity; since such was the fury of the populace, that the attempts would be imprudent, and that the conse quence might prove fatal. The duke of Angouleme yielded with repugnance to those counsels, but he solemnly declared the will of the king, to adhere to that religi ous toleration presented by the constitutional charter, and evinced in the most unequivocal manner to the catholic clergy, his abhorrence of the measures that had been exercised against the professors of the protestant faith.

But the question so often repeated will again be asked, How could such evils exist longer than a moment unremedied and unredressed? Lamented and disavowed by all, they have not been more the general abhorrence of protestants than of catholics. Every candid and enlightened mind, every generous heart, has deplored these outrages. The Buonapartists alone exulted in the disastrous events of Nismes; they fondly welcomed every courier that came laden with tidings of dismay. Little did they think, and still less did they care, about principles, toleration, or rights; whether catholics or protestants prevailed was to them alike in different; but it was not indifferent to have

a new subject of outcry, a new chance of disorder, and they hailed with complacency the evil omen; they followed eagerly an opening path that seemed to lead towards chaos;-they count every agitation that may be worked up into tumult; abhorring nothing but tranquillity, allowing no breathingtime for humanity, that, wearied with long successive years of turbulence and convulsion, consents to call repose felicity. But the placid blessedness of ordinary life, when it flows in its calm and equal current, is hateful to those whose hopes are only buoyant amidst the disturbance of the tempest.

The period was now arriyed, when England fixed her steadfast eye on the protestants of the south of France. The story of their persecution reached her ear. The feeling of their wrongs had penetrated her heart. Indignation beat high in every British bosom. Public meetings were called together. The various associations, which watch with wakeful jealousy over the civil and religious rights of mankind, expressed, in their addresses and declarations, all the energy of virtuous resentment, impatient for redress.

Englishmen wait not the tardy spur of government to goad them into action, when the tidings of religious persecution strike in their ear. They are at their post when danger menaces their brethren. They pause not to enquire against what form of worship or mode of faith religious persecution be directed, it is sufficient for them that this demon exercise its ravages. The followers of Calvin, and the professors of a less difficult faith, become the mutual guarantees of their common religious rights.

The high-toned and generous resolves, proceeding from the three denominations assembled in London, and which were reechoed by all other denominations, were not unheard in France. The French protestants, while they paid a just tribute to the upright intentions of their own government, in declining the proffered intervention, felt all its grandeur; it was rejected, but admired; it was discreetly repulsed, but enthusiastically applauded. This intervention was the calm coinmanding voice of a great people, lifted up against persecutors, and claiming kindred with the persecuted. Its sound in Paris was

noble and persuasive; and it glided over the south like that sacred harmony of the hea venly host, which spoke to the watch of shepherds" of peace and of good-will."

But it will be inquired, by present and by future times, Did the French government do all that it was possible to do, in order to crush the persecution of the protestants? It did all its position admitted. It exerted the full extent of its power, but its power was then feebleness; and some secret and evil influence rose between its purpose and its act. The French nation, at that period, was not placed in the ordinary situation of human affairs, when the machine of government moves steadily on, controlling the obstacles that oppose its progress. This is not the first example during the French revolution, of a deluded and ferocious populace taking all rule into their hands, and marking their momentary dominion by memorable horrors. The remembrance of the massacres of September, 1792, sometimes rises like an hideous spectre on the mind: they were committed by about fifty assasins, who went from the gates of one prison to another, with their bloody arms bared, and their sabres lifted up, ready to strike their victims as they appeared; while the people of this great capital, frozen with terror, stood aghast, in silent stupefaction, and suffered the work of murder to go on.

In England, the despondency of the friends of religious toleration was augmented, by the untimely and melancholy fate of its noblest champion, at a time when his exertions might have been of peculiar benefit to his country, and to Europe. The death of Mr. Whitbread excited a sensation of regret which attested the estimation in which he had been held, and the affection with which his memory was regarded. It was felt by every class, and every party, that his loss was irreparable; and the circumstances of his death were peculiarly awful and impressive.

Mr. Whitbread was the only son of Samuel Whitbread, esq. many years an eminent brewer in London, by his second wife, Mary, third daughter of earl Cornwallis, and was born in the year 1758. He was taught English and some Latin at home, and was sent

to Eton at a very early age. In that seminary he was contemporary with the late Mr. Lambton, M.P. for Durham, a promising young man, who died at a very early age; with Mr. Charles Grey, now earl Grey; and with several other distinguished characters, who have since filled eminent stations. Jo nathan Davies, M.A. was the head-master; and for his private tutor he had Dr. George Heath, who, in 1791, succeeded the former, as head-master of the school.

From this celebrated seminary, with all the advantages which are likely to have been reaped under such able instructors, he repaired to the university of Oxford. He was entered first of Christ-church, but soon removed to St. John's; and, as he possessed none of those convenient pretensions which lead to academical honours without academical industry, it is fair to infer that the degree of A.B., which he took while there, proceeded entirely from his own merits.

After visiting many parts of his native country, Mr. Whitbread, at a proper period, was sent on his travels over the continent of Europe, under the care of the rev. Wm. Coxe, now vicar of Bremerton, and arch-deacon of Sarum, with whom he repaired to France; and, after visiting every thing remarkable there, as well as contemplating the vestiges of Helvetian liberty, he returned home, qualified to become a legislator in his native country. The tutor, some years afterwards, dedicated one of his works to his pupil in the following terms:-"To Samuel Whitbread, jun. esq. M.P. this third volume of Travels into Poland, Russia, Sweden, and Denmark, is inscribed, as a testimony of esteem and friendship."

Soon after his return from his travels, Mr. Whitbread, like his father, aspired to a seat in parliament. Their influence in Bedfordshire arose out of character and virtue, a reciprocity of good offices, and a liberal hospitality, afforded by the possession of large estates. These legitimate pretensions enabled Mr. Whitbread, in 1790, after a struggle of some duration, to represent the borough of Bedford. The numbers, at the conclusion of the poll, stood as follows:-For Wm. Colhoun, esq. ....... 616 Sam. Whitbread, jun. esq....... 601 John Payne, esq. ....... 574

Mr. Pitt was at that time premier, and he swayed the councils of the government with a degree of authority which had been exer cised by no minister since the revolution.On great occasions he still affected to be the advocate of those early principles which had rendered him popular. His professions, however, were less warm, and his exertions equi vocal; for while he employed his voice he denied his authority. That power which he would have exerted on the most trivial occasion, he exercised with constitutional scrupulosity whenever a reform in parliament, an abolition of the slave trade, or a repeal of the test laws, was proposed either by himself or others. Such was his regard for decorum on those occasions, that the dereliction of his dearest friends, or the lowest retainers of the treasury, never affected either the temper or the language of a statesman, who at other times was as irascible as eloquent.

He had hitherto founded his claims to applause on an economical system, but at this period he suddenly changed his principles and his views. As if fully determined on displaying his talent for war, he looked sometimes to the north, and sometimes to the south, of Europe; and, although he had lately announced the certainty of peace for many years, yet he now aimed at a contest with Spain, Russia, and France, in succession, and on light or groundless pretexts. The member for Bedford spoke for the first time on the Spanish aggression; but it was on the Russian armament that he first distinguished himself. The heads of the opposition had moved a resolution expressive of the impolicy of the armament; while the ministry had recurred to the previous question: demanding, at the same time, an entire reliance on the wisdom of the cabinet.

It is almost unnecessary to remark, that a divided opposition was beaten on this occasion by a confiding majority. Yet the former in the end triumplied; for, although the eyes of the ministry were shut to the evils of a Russian war, yet those of the nation were open; and the complaints of the commercial men poured in so thickly, in the form of petitions, that the folly of expending British blood and treasure about the possession of Oczakow became conspicuous. An ar

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