Ka Leo o ka Lahui, Volume II, Number 336, 2 December 1891 — REVOLUTIONS. [ARTICLE]

REVOLUTIONS.

'. i(,-! i;■ y Labouchere of tbe Loīulon ; '// mivn i f Canada and tlicUnitf • Siates: llt seems to me a verv prand idea tliat one oontinent sbould j ; ,vcuone government—not the des-j of one individual, but the •iberate will of a nation,'- | T!iese liberal and advanced ex--sions from the world's leading f : :nkcrs, are givinp: scope and free(l i>ī to the masses every where. They j • :.-te and e"levate in oneshort ut- | • nee the mil]ion. c who have re- i 'ned awed and subdued, by the ; iings of centuries ofs'elfishiiess j bisotrr. While such language j bL'.jg scattered m other eoun- j ■ npeaking of freedom and \ • uality, by sueh nien as Labou- j or e, and such newspaper as tbe Tr ii ,we are having here in Hawaii the very same sentiments prefjep'lod by a Huntsman, a Wilcox, r ■ iyde, and other men, from all Drofessions, who have been crad!ed and nursed in the lap of freedom. The seed of freedomj no matter where sown, is eure to grow.—it has been planted here as well as elsewhere, it only needs an Apollos ,to water it, in order to its future growth. 'Phe mail again brings ub inforjnation'■©! an usurper, and would-— be dictator, President Fonseca of Brazil. This is the second uprising of the people of the South American Continent, and is indicalion of a more comprehensive and j ust idea of Jiberty among the Na-! tions of that Continent thau they j rhave hithcrto shown. j It seems, as if there were revivals j all over the world, to restore all | things to there primitive state. \