%\)t <3ajcttc. ; ; PHILADELPHIA' f MONDAY FVF.NING, DF.CSMBER 4. 1 Li. - t A Baltimore Stage, which arrived here f yetterdav left that city ori Saturday morning r —A Gentleman who came pa(T,nger in. c forms that (ignals were displayed at the ob- ( fervatory when he came away for fix flrtops and schooners, four or five brigs' and three i ITiips.—Our papers from Baltimore a are of Thursday last. t t Mr. Spragve is ele&ed a Federal Re- t preventative for New-Hampfkire. { A letter from Waterford, contains the a following melancholy account ;—" Thurf- c day morning the following accident happen- t ed 3t Newtsn-ftrand : Two fine young wo- < men (Miss Murphy and M'f s Power) iti j company with several other "females, bath- f ing in the river at the above place, had ven- c tured rather too far, when the tide being a cm the turn going out, they were carried a beyond their depth : the cries of the other femalfs alarmed a small boy who was near j the plsce. He haftcrted to the spot, and t feeing their melancholy situation, inamedi- c ately plunged to their afliftance ; but, we 1 al-e sorry to date, his humane endeavours \ 'proved fruitlefs, as Miss Mutphy funk be- f fore he could reach her : he, however, was 1 enabled to convey Miss Power to the fi'.ore, where flie raniained nearly half an hour with- 1 out any visible signs of life ; (he then be- 1 gan to fhevv some symptoms of Yeturning a- 1 nimation, and in a short time was so far re- 1 covered as to be able to speak ; her firft en- ] quiry was about her ill fated companion, and ] being informed that (he was fafe, ftie seem- | ed perfectly at cafe. A sedan chair was ; then provided, in which (he was conveyed j home arid put.to bed, where ihe continued very easy till about three o'clock, when she : made another inquiry after her companion: i the person who attended her was so rafti as : .to inform her of her lamentable fate, from which moment flit appeared bereft of feufe : i (hortly after {he was seized with strong con vulsions, and about five o'clock expired* 1 Lott. pap. From a London Paptr. Last week a wedding was solemnized at a village near Stamford, which was attend ed by -some fingolar circumstances.*—A young man having paid his acldreffes to a female in t>he neighbourhood (for at least nine months,) it became requisite he ftiould marry her. He accordingly summoned his friends and relatives to be pfefent at the. con fummationj this being done, it was necessa ry to feod for another attendant, and he no j ltfs a person than the accoucheur.. Agreea ble to the notice, friends, relatives, and Dwaor attended; The lady being •some ' thing easier, it was agreed they Ihould pro ceed to Church, which was only across the way, and that the do&or (hould attend them as it was not certain wbofc services might be firft wanted; but for decency the was stationed in tHe porcli of the church un til the ceremony was over. On? at tendants, brother to the bride/newed, dur ing the service, anxiety, observing, that if'the parfo.n t vva3 not quick, the child would be a bastard. There was no necessity for such great haste, as the lady was not de livered of a fine boy until early the next mor ning. sA new way of reckoning—A sailor marri ed'a woman, staid with her the firft night, •went to sea the next day, and returned in three months, when he found her brought to bed of a boy. Jack stormed, and called his wife a w ; but the nurse abused him in her turn for a sea-looby, that he did not know how to reckon for a woman on shore, who counts by day and night. * Well, fays Jack, but that makes but fix months, and (he ought to g» nine. You fool, replied the matron, you'have forgot thethreemonths you were at sea ; only that three months by day, and three at night, and three at fea,-make nine months, and you'll find you* wife an honest woman. Jack could not follow this calculation and was obliged to knock under, and allow it to be all right. memoirrs or citizen Barthelemy, Latety chosen Member of the Direftory, iiv France. M. Barthelemy, is the nephew of the Abbe, of the fame name, who acquired such deserved celebrity by his learned labors, particularly his "Voyage dejeune Ana charfe." The uncle was patronized by M. Choifeul, theprimeminifter of France, whom he had accompanied while Cpmpte de Stain ville, in his embassy into Italy. After their return, young Barthelemy was placed in one of the public offices at Versailles, and 1 became initiated at an early period of life into the foreign correspondence of the then ministry. His prote&or was a nobleman, who unit ed very dissimilar and apparently incompati ble pursuits in his own person. An ac complished courtier, he cultivated a taste for the fine arts, intrigued in all the cabinets of Europe, and was greatly attached to litera ture and learned men. To him has been attributed two of the most remarkable and portentous events of our time, the family compaa with Spain, and the union of the lioufes of Aullria and Bourbon by the mar riage of Marie Antoniette with Louis XVI. No sooner had Barthelemy attained the age of manhood, than his powerful iaterefts procured him a foreign million. He ac cordingly accompanied the Baron de Bre teuil to Switzerland, and resided with him some time afSokure. Thence he repaired with the fame minifttr to Sweden, witnessed, and, if 1 niiftake not, afiilted in that memo rable revolution, the event of-which'has de monstrated how easy it is for a king, aided by a (lauding army, a parifitical nobility, i and a few fplliers cf fortune, to overturn ! the liberties of a nation. ( When count d'Aduelmar was sent ambaf- J fador to this country, he was accompanied . by the present dire&or ; and on his return ' to Paris, M. Bartheleiny, who before was secretary of legatip., became minister pie- \ nipotentiary. He also resided here for a , considerable time,- during the embassy of M. < de la Luzerne. < In the mean time, a great revolution was ' insensibly preparing in his native country ; and it was his singular good fortune, not- , withftandmg his declared averfioa to- it, to 1 be benefited by the event. His family had 1 been prote&ed by the nollejfe, and both him felf and his uncle had received many mark* ' of attachment from Louis XVI. It was , accordingly imagiued, that he would have | openly joined the emigrants. One of the ' two things, however, rr.uft have occurred : either he became a sincere convert to the principles of the republicans., and afted j from a conviction of the goodness £f their 1 caufc ; or, he concealed his sentiments, and, ' affe&ing to be the open enemy of t}ie roy- \ alifts, lacrificed bis opinion to his ambition. ' It was Switzerland; the school of his jure- , nils years, that was destined to be the thea- 1 tre i.'f his glory. There he firft opened the diplomatic powers cntrufted to him as'mi nifter of the new commonwealth ; and it is but justice to add, that he conduced him felf throughout all the intricacies of his po litical agency with equal address and success. When he made his appearance iu the po litical hemisphere, he was treated with con tempt, nay even with insult ; but such is the magic of success, that fame no sooner began to display her gigantic powers, than he found means firft to get himfelf acknow ledged as the minister of the republic, and soon afterwards to enter into advantageous alliances with the very states which had beer, its bitterest enemies. , M. Barthelemy was eletled to the direc torate in the most honorable manner. De clining pomp and parade, he repaired to Pa ris by a different route than that expe&ed, and thus avoided the envy which generally accompanies popularity. 0« his firft inter view with his colleagues, he publicly pro claimed himfelf a friend to peace. He is finee said to have been in a minority in the cabinet, a9he has Gded with Carnot against the other three dire&ors, with whom they hbve differed on almost every fubjeft. I Mr. Barthelemy succeeded Letourneur in i the direftorv, who went out by lot ; the latter has since been employed to conduct the negociatlon at Lisle. ✓ MALO, and REVEILLIERE LEPAUX. TheMoniteur haspublilhed a letter which contains authentic and circumstantial details of what pafled when general Malo lately vi sited citizen Reveilliere, the Direftor, to complain of his being suspended. The Direftor replied to the complaints of Malo with much gentlenefsand prudence, avoiding every thing which might hurt his feelings, or add to the kind of disgrace he complained of. The Gen. however, sup posing thrit the moderation which was dis played in the Dire&or's converfatiou, pro ceeded from fear, suddenly changed his tone. Supporting himfelf in a menacing air, upen the guard of his sabre, he said, " It is not to such a Triumvirate that I (hall surrender my honor and my rank. They will soon not have it in their power to per form any more arbitrary a£U. Their reign will not last long." V Citizen Reveilliere Lepaux approached him with a firm countenance, and pushed him out into his anti-chamber. " Wretch" said he " because I have spoken to you with mildhef* and with the greatest delicacy, do you come tp insult me in my own house with arms in your hand ? Know, that sa bres and epaulets cannot terrify me, and that I entertain no other fear but that of doing evil. Tell those who resemble you, and would overthrow the Republic—inform in particular, your generals—you know whom I mean—then they are not capable of intimidating me. It is not easy to turn aside from his duty the man who fears nei ther fuffeiings nor death. As to you I (hould order you to be immediately arretted for having behaved with insolence to one of the firft magistrates of the Republis ; I am, however, still inclined to fliew yau indul gence ; but retire immediately, and never set your foot again within my house." Reveilliere Lepaux is generally esteemed to be a man of excellent moral charafter and a firm republican. The royalist prints of Paris, therefore, have lately been very vi olent in their abuse of him. fr<m Ih ANALYTICAL BEVIfiW for 1796. A*t. lxvii , Strictures on the condud of theßev. George Markham, M. A. Vicar of Carlton, in York/hire : occasioned by bis prosecution of se veral members of the people called Quakers, for their non-payment of tythes. In a lcttef to R— W— of H—n memberof thitfociety.— By Charles Wiifon, 8 vo. 50 pages. Pri:s Is 6d. Owen. 1791. THE age of perfection, like the age of chival ry, is, wf trust, gone, never to return. Yet it may still be in the power of a bigoted or felsfh in ' dividual, to render cxilting laws subservient to his paflions or his intcreft. A charge of this kind is, ■ in th ' present pamphlet, brought against a clergy - man. We do not take upon as to authenticate the r charge; but we (hall give the heads of the affair from" a state of the cafe, fignnd by eight per foes ' imprisoned in Yoik castle. According to this > Oatemei-t, about the latter part of 1781, or the I beginning of 1782, Mr. Markham procured a r futr.mons for some Quakers to appear before the justices at the quarter sessions at Skepton, to (how : ciufi; why they did not comply with his demands ' (or f.nall tythes " they obty-d the summons ; th« • justices deemed the vicar's claim unreasonable, but ; told him, that if he would make reaforable de j mands, they wouid grant him a warrant to obtain them : this hs declined ; ahd, after four years, " commi nosd a suit in the court of exchequer against " fix person!, only one of whom was a Quaker.— 1 While this suit w:s pending, in 1789, he obtained [- processes out of the fame court against ten persons of the pei suasion called Quakers. The defendants ' stated their religious' fcruplcs against complying " with any demand of this nature; men ioned the - summary, and comparatively easy mode of pto -1 ccedirg provided by aifts of parliament ; pleaded that thJyhadat no time refitted the t :Ung ofgeols by legal authority for any fuch'claims r andfild, j,. that a fatal! prifcnrnt bad b'-cn cu2omarily made _ in lieu of tythenMr gtafs mad? ijstnhay. The pro- . Xecutor (till eantimied his fttit, with eonfMcrabie 1,1 delay, till a decree was obtained for the tythesand costs of suit, the latter to 2*.'— rn After fevaral st!tmpt= top.ifftnde'tHc c; to desist, the defendants, having been h?.rr:\ik' !by » the proceedings, abput fix years, .were by attach rnent tak'.'n into ctlfwdy, and committed to the county ghol in York, w 1 ore they still remain in b confinement. Most of the prifoncts are in low J; circumstances, and all of thtm dependent on their in3uftry for support. It; is said to have fincc:ap peared, that, above a year befprrf the imprisonment , took place, the Rev G M. had recciv:d of tJie * of f :veral of tie ptifoners a compilation b for his dem|tids, £ . 1 he author of these on the ground of the prcc animadverts \vith>ftce dom oil the f.veiity of chit conduct which eou'.d treat as criminals, wit!i ujn . leyainsr ri gorjany members of a profefiion, the principles of which are adverse to' hatred a' pni:y[lL\V!L- e: Tlie peaceatite and orderly behaViot pfthe j r Uers ccrtiinly entitles them to cofrtpleat prate; 1 I 'll „ (rotn the f'ate, without any consideration of the ground of their religious firuplcs and if it has 1 P l)e<s] in the power of any unfeeling individual to ! ts harrafsany of their-fraternity in the manner def- a eribed in thit pamnMet, the laws refpeitiug rejig- ion are in a very defective state, and require a n im mediate and thorough re vifal. It is much to be re- v grettcd.that the late 1 eafonabW petition of the Qua- q kers to the legislature was rcj>-Aed. c ~1 i d GAZETTE MARINE LIST. b . n PORT OF PHILADELPHIA. a t Arrived. days. c Brig James, Gemmeny, C. N. MXe, 29 Schooner Fanny Allen, Allen, Virginia, 21 * Cornelia, Green, New-Y&rk, 10 | CLEARED. | 1 -Ship Wilmington, Hillman, Hamburg j c Rigfdag, Nanniugs, | ' Lisbon Brig Polly, Coffin, Cape Francois ' Fair American, Harquin, St. Bartholemews and Leghorn ' Anna, Maffit, Gonaives ' Polly, Charnock, Charleston ' Schooner Harriot, Da Cefta, St. Croix Alciope, Rice, '»'♦ Jacqmtlf 1 Letty, Mason, Savannah ( Fair Trader, Sequin, Norfolk ' Sloop Sally & Jane, Small, Havanna Sally, Mory, Petit Guavo ' Betsey, Sweetfer, Charleston ] Triton, Mnir, Snowhill ; Industry, Rigby, do. Carret, Brent, North Carolina Captain Gemmeny failed from the Mole in company with the Elizabeth Fullerton, ' arrived here on Thursday. Captain G. in forms that he left at Jeremie the 30th Otte ber, the Brig Weft Indian, and fcheoner Juliana, both of this port, and fpokein the river the brig Eliza, O'Connor, one of the Mole fleet, and brig Grace, Wills, from Amsterdam. The (hip Thomas Chalkley, Clark, from Martinico, is below. The Grace left the Texel Oft. 2, a few days after which spoke a French privateer, ' the Vengeur, belonging to commodore Bar ney, three doys from Brest. The captain informed, that General Buonaparte had sur rounded 35,000 Auftriana and obliged them to lay down their arms. fThis i$ probably tbe fame account the public hav* been in poffeflion of some time, brought by the {hip Farmer, captain M'Collorn, from Bour deax. Boston, November 29. Captain Fojlrr of Schooner Nancy inftrms thai he lefl at Turlt IJlaud capt. Hutchins late of the trig Robertt, of Charlejloivn, in great dijlreft, having cfJeßed the escape of lis life only from the Liverpool Jhip iuh\ch was risen upon, as'mentioned under the Providence head in our lq/1. He was about going to Ja maica, with capt. Thompson, in order to take andcarried in there. Capt. Fojler generously aJSJIed capt. Hutchins with some money and - fought hnme his mate. Same day arrived, brig Ruby, Harly,from Guadaloupe, 27 days. Spoke nothing. ■ Same day arrived, fchr. Parrjlorough, Gore, from Nova Scotia, 13 days. Arrived,Jhip America, Stinfon, Malaga, ' lajlfrom Gibralter, 44 days, whenceJbe put in on account of head winds not carried in, ai re ported in our lajf. Sailed in co. with the Gen. : Wayne, IVeld ; Mary, Poiuars, for Bojloa ; fchr. Winthrop & Mary, Dolivcr,for Glou ' crjler ; also the Hibcrnia, Young, of Ntwbury port, who had been taken coming from Naples and carried into Algejiras, where Jbe was cleared, aud put into Gibraltar, Spoke Oct, 31, . lat, 33, 28, long. 37, 10.Jhip Hope Childs, on 1. a Whaling Voyage from Wantucket, Nov. 19, on the Banks, spoke fchr. Gov. Carver, Spoo ner 38 days out from Bourdtaux. Capt. Stinfon brought with him as pajfsnger eapt. Lawrence of the Jbip Plato, of New- York, who had lejl his vejfel, being taken, and ' carried into IJle Mary, and condemned, vej fel and cargo. r Cap. Parsons also cam: pajfenger in the a America, hisJhip. the Debonair, having been taken into Algejiras, and condemned with her 8 cargo. t , Baltimore, Nov. 30. Yesterday arrived brig Fanny ar.d Jane, 5 capt. John Conway, from Cape Nichola '• Mole, which place (he left, the 4th instant. ' The following was handed in by the cap r tain : ' Nov. 3. Sailed from the Mole in compa c ny with the Englifllhomeward-bound pack a et, convoy of the Ambuscade frigate, e the commander of which waued f«r, and " took under proteftion American yelfels-a ---* mounting to 1 2 fail, among,which were the * fchr. Edward, capt. Duncan, of Baltimore, fchr. Betsey, capt. Gorfuch of Baltimore, 11 and capt. "Clark in a fehr. name unknown. Oft. 8. The Ibip Sally, capt. Bufwell, was taken in lat. 22, 3 C > N. long. 69, ij, d W. from the brig Pandour, capt. Gatereau, is who took out 21 men, and put on board 11 t» Frenchmen to fend them to ot. Domingo ; g after eight daps, was retaken from the En -3! glifli brig Dilligence, and sent to Jeremie. *d One half demanded as a salvage. Brig Polly, Coffin, The ship Ard-uf, cspt GraytelJ, was- " boarded fromatlm. foiailroa v/.'tbin two leagues of Francois, and. ordered [' iitto the Mole with liberty to fell. The brig Olite, capt. Brady, of Balti more, from Mariguana bound home, was captured off Heneaga and carried into the Mole: vcfl'cl and cargo condemned. The Charming Betsy of Baltimore, was beating into the Mole, after a paflage of ten days, when capt. Conway failed. [Our Hibernian-American readers will y doubtless rejoice to hear of the tranquil and happy Jituation of the famous kingdom of 1 Dalkey.] ■ FROM THE DUBLItJ COUIAST. 1 Dalkey Gazette Extraordinary ! . August 23, 1797. It having-beeii generally reported that his excellency, Earl Camden, intended honor- ing the annivtrfary with hia pre fence, the ■ KING OF DALKEY ordered that the " prime minister (hould be prepared with a sui table extempore speech, and gave orders that a table (hould be prepared for his excellency and suite's reception ; and that a hamper C with the choicest viands and the mod ex- ' quifite wines, (boughtfrom Kellyand Coop er, of jShip-Street) confiding of Hock, Ma deira, Port, Claret, and Cbampaigne, (hould be prepared. The fpeecb, which the prime £ minister instantly wrote, was approved of, and would have been delivered had the wea ther induced his excellency to put his gra cious intentions into execution. " May it please your Excellency, " I am commanded by the KING of DALKEY to expiefs the high sense his majesty entertains of the honour conferred on him and his Kingdom, by your Excellen l cy's prefeace this day. The fubjefts of Dalkey have rVt been'inattentive ohfervers j 6f what pa(Ted in the neighbouring king- , doms ; and they remember with gratitude the eminent services which your illustrious father rendered to the empire. His large contribution to the stock of PUBLIC LI BERTY endears the name of C AMBDEN 1 to the people of Dalkey. May you Ex- ' celltncy continue the faithful represen tative of the lejl of kings ; and that yeur Excellency's administration may terminate honourablp for yourfelf, and happily for the prince and people, is the ardent with and fervent prayer of the King and the fubjefts of Dalkey." Letters patent have pafled the great seal, containing a grant of the dignity of Baron and Viscount of the kingdom of Dalkey to j th« Right Hon. Sir Sobiefki Capias, and the heirs male of his body lawfully begot ten', by the name, fty'e and title of Baron Norway, and Viscount Killiney, of Satisfa ciendum Castle. Letters patent have pafled the great seal, containing a grant of the dignity of Baron of the Kingdom of Dalkey to the Rt.JHon. Sir Robert W«rfted, and the heirs male of his body lawfully begotten, by the name style and title of Lord Baron Plush, of Li berty Hall. Letters patent have pafled the great seal containing a grant of the dignity of Baron of the Kingdom of Dalkey to Capt. fofeph Southwood of the brig Ballon, and the heirs male of hia body lawifully begotten, by the name, style and title, of Lord Baroa Ta mone, of the United.States. Letters parent have*pafled the great seal, containing a grant of the dignity of Baron of the Kingdom of Dalkey to Capt. David , Bruce, of the brig Polly, and the heirs male of bis body lawfully begotton, by the name, style and title of Baron Salem, of the Uuitcd State,. Letters parent have pafled the great seal, . containing a grant of the dignity of Baron , of the Kingdom of Dalkey to Sir Thomas I Trump, and the heirs male of his body law fully begotten, by the name, style and title ; of Lord Baron Invoice, of Trump Place. AuguJ} 24 Jive in the Morning. We stop the press to announce that the ' council was then fitting, (purfant to royal notice) but no orders were then iflueftto the ~ press. POST-OFFICE, Philadelphia, 4th Dec. 1797. ' Letters for the British Packet Carteret, Capt. Taylor, for. Falmouth, will be receiv s ed at this office until Tuesday the sth inft. s at 12 o'clock noon. N. B. The inland peftage to New-York n mult be paid. , Imported in the brig Eliza, Capt. Hastie,/rem Bourdeaux ; • Claret in Cafei of a very fupcrior quality, r White Sauterne Wine in Cases, Olive Oil in bafcets of 1z bottles each, j White and coloured Kid Gloves, do. do. Silk t do. A few pipes of Bourdeaux Brandy, / For Sale Iy ,/ j AMES L ATIMER, jun. n j-t,South Wharves. r Who has a/Jo for Sale, A few qr. Calks Old Sherry Wine. Dec. >. daw Six Cents Reward. '■< n ANAWAY, thisnior»irg, December 4,from a Jt\_ the SuMcriixr, an indented boy, named Wil liam Aston, about 5 f«et, 6 or 7 inches high— fair completion, heavy brows, ff-eaks thick, ft out made. Had on wheD he went away, a blue coatee, black vest, blue trowfers. This is to caution the L- p.sblic t"t to credit him on my account as I will _ not pay any debts of hia contracting after this date. Afiy person harbouring him, or employing him, j (hall be profcuted to the utmost rigour of the law ; all masters of vellels are cautioned not to take him L " away at their peril; any person apprehending him e and lodging him in )ailfo that his master.may get », him again, (Hall receive the above reward and no charges paid by j' "John Harper, 1" . No, 67, Arch Street. . * Dec.. 4. 1» - h To be Sold, 1 The time of a Negro Boy, ' About fifteen years of age. has seven years yet to fcrve ; T.e is an exce'.l nthouf; servant, aiftivs e. an Iheahhy. Enquire ol the Printer. D;:em l . er t. ' <liw IMPRISONED LOYALTY i his fx>j! ] mt old Jong is f referred in Qiyv'<l Lloyd's " Memoirs if thoje that fvffered jn the eaufe of QbarLs I." He speaks of it, as thi cothpifitiol of ,a -worthy psrfonage, W 0 fiif fered deeply in those times, and was /till Uv ingt ziAtb "3 other reward- than the confci enxe of ba-Ang'fuffered. The anthhr, nam* s>e has not mentioned ; hut if traditiou my h* credited, thi< fang was written by Sir Kr L'Estrangf.] . BE AT on, pruuJ Billows ; Poreas, b'ow ; Swell, cyrled waves, high as Jove's roof; Your incivility c'oth Alow That innocenee is tempest proof; Though Nereus frown, my thoughts are calm; 1 Then strike, Afflidlion, far thy words jre bilpi That which the world mifcallj a jiil, A private closet is to me; Whiltt a good confidence is rtiyhail, And innocence my liberty ; Locks, bars, and solitude, together, me', Make me t\p. prisoner, lyat an anchoret. I, wbilft I wifh'il to be retired, Intp this private room was turn'd ; A« if their wisdoms had The falamatider Ihould beburn'd'j Or like those sophists, that would drowii t <ifh x I am co-rtftriln'd tt? fuffer whit I wilii. The cynick love* his poverty ; The pelican her wildernefa : And 'tis the Indian's pride to be Naked on frozen Caucasus : , Contentment cannot smart; Stoics we let- Make tormruts easy to their apathy. T Thcfe manacles upon my arm I as my mistress* favours wear ; And for to keep ?ny ancles warm, 1 have foinc i.ori lhacklesthere: These walls are but my garrison ; this cell, v Which mea/call jail, doth prove my citadel. I'nl in the cabtnet lock'd up, Like fame high prized rrurgaritc, Or, like the great Mogul or Pope, Am clayiter'J up from public light .• Retirediiefs is a piece <jf ntajeiht, And thu? proud lultan, I'm as j*teat as thee. Here fin for want of food mult starve, Where tempting obje£is are not feeti; Aud thete strong walls do onty serve To keep lin-out, and k?ep me iu : Malice of late's grown charitable fuie, I'm not committed, but am kept feenre. So he thatftruck at Jafoti's life, Thinking t' have made his purpose lure> By a malicious friendly knife Did only wound him to a cure: Malice, I fee, wants wit; for what is meant Mifchief, oftimes prove favour by th' event. When once my prince affliflien hath, Prosperity doth treason seem ; And to make fmoeth so rough a path, I can learn patience from him : New not to fuffer (hews no royal heart; j When kings wani cafe, fubje&s must bear a pari. What tho' I cannot fee my king, Neither in person ner in coin ; Yet contemplation is ? thing That renders what I have not, mine : My king from me what adamant can part, Whom I do wear engraven on my heart > i Have you not seen the nightingale, A prifontr like, coopt in a cage, How doth <he chaunt her wonted talc In that her Barrow hermitage f Even then her charming melody doth prove That all her bars are trees, her cage a grave. I am that bird, whom they combine Thus to deprive of liberty i Bat tho' they do my corpse confine, Yet, maugre hate, my f«u! is free : And tho' im«nur"d yet can I chirp and sing D i (grace to rebel?, glory to my king. My foul is free as ambient air, Although my baser part's immtw'd, Whillt loyal thoughts do Hill repair T' accompany my folitqde; A'though rebellion do my body bind, My king alone can captivate my mind: To be Sold at Public Vendue, 1 » j (If not bsfore dlfpofed of at private sale) OV Monday the firftdayof January neve, at fix o'clock, in the evening, at the Mercl anta' Cos- , I fee House, in Philadelphia, Tweutv-Six Tioufirad Seven Hundred and Eighty acres «f LAND, in the * i Siate New-York, between the northern bound# of Peunfylvania and the Sufquehanna, now, lata * m the townships of Hamd«»and Warren, and coun ty of Montgomery. One ioarth of the purchase money to be paid at the time of sale j for the relidit credit- of one, two a#id three months, will be gives* - on intareft and good feturity. I D<-c. 4. * .qtawtS. * To be bold at Public Vendue, (If not before dfpofed of at private sale) - /""AN Monday the firlt day of January nex,at sue o'clock in the evening, at the Merchant' Coffee Houfc, in Philadelphia, Forty Thoufind Nine Hun dred and Thirty-Nine acies of LAND in Gieert ' county, Commonwealth of Peunfylvania, on th» Wa ters of Fi(h and Wheeling Creek, and tf'l Mile Rud. 'l'lieCc landa are fertile, well timbered and abound in coal i they were |fotd ten years ago for ss. per acre, patented eaily in 1787, except 3,700, which were pa ' lented in 1792 t the grei'eft part of them were lut veyed in 1783. , This traft i» between the Ohio and Monongahela, very convenient to water carriage—about 19 miles from the town of Waihington, and from 14 to 16 from the villages of Greenlburgh and Wheeling. One fourth of the purchase money is to be paid at the time of sale ; f<#r the iclidue a credit of one, t*o, .nd thru months will be given, on interest and good fecurit) -Dec. 1. 13 »"'J- House and Lots, in Bordentown. BE SOLD, a handsome two story House. with the Lot on which it is ereiStcd, situated ahout the middle of the beautiful and healthy Village of Bordentown. The heufe is forty two feet front, and in-neat order. The lot contains one acre, and is one h»ndred feet 011 the main _ street, and extends with the fame treadth tobaak street. Also, a large Lot, containing nearly four acres, feparattd from the former hy back ftreyt. II Que third only of the purcj»afe money will be re. quired upon executing a deed, arid for the re " mainder, such credit will be given as the purchase 1 ermaychufe. This property will be fold free »- ' all incumbrances, and an indifpntable title givenf ® For farther particulars CDqaire either of Dr. !l William Barnes, residing in Bordentown, near, the premiles, who will Ihew the fame, or of 1 PETER THOMSON, Conveyancer, no. 144, Market-street. n December a. juvtf I Samuel & Miers Fisher, ARE NOW OPENING, At their Warchoufe, No. 47, Dock Street, a f.-elh afTortmcnt of Wqolen and other goods, fiuublc to the season, received by the late arrivals from Eng land. Tlei have alft ftr Sal*, Lilbnn l eneriffe Cln pipe;,hhds. apd.quarter callss; ct Sherry, and C /£ Port WUies, J Assorted queep's ware i* crates, &c. loth mo- diw3tiW3w.
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