THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 18CC. MODERN ECCENTRICS. J101 ADAMS, THB AflTKOLOOVB ten the calebritieB of Clerkenwell Green Jack Adams; bis nativity was calculate! toj Partridge, who affirmed that be was born on e 3d of December, 1625, and that be was so yreat a natural or simpleton as to be obliged to wear long coats, besides other marks of itu Uity; and that the parish not only maintained Mat, bat allowed a nurse to attend him to pre mmt bun from barm. Allusion is made to blm t satincal ballad oi 1655: "Jek Adams sura was pawet (poet) by the vein." And to the WUs; or Sport Upon fiport, 1682, -w read of his visit to the lied Bull play konee, where "Simpleton, the raith, appearing a tbe atajre with a larite piece ot bread-and-Better, Jack Adams, knowing him. cried out, 3uz. Cue, give me some, "to tne great pleasure f the audience. Ned Ward thus nipnticns his lebrity: "What mortal that has senso or thought WonlU strip Jack Adams ot his coatf Or who would be iy lrlond decoyed To wear a badge he would avoid?" Jack Adams became a conjuror and professor f the celestial sciences at Clerkenwell Green; lie was "a blind buzzard, who pretended to have ta eyes ol an eagle." lie was chiefly employed In horary question, relative to love and inai jtace; and knew, upon proper occasions how to soothe and natter the expectations ot thene who onsulted him, a a man mipbt have much setter fortune from him lor five guineas than lor the same number of shillings, lie atlected a singular dres, and cast horoscopes with great solemnity. When h? failed in hit predictions he declared that the stars did not absolutely per form, but power! ully incline, and threw the biame upon wayward ami perverse late. He assumed the character of a learned and cunning loan, but was not o'herwise cunning than as he bmew how to overreach those ere lulotn mortals -who were as willing to be cheated as he was to cheat them, and who relied implicitly upon his rt Mr. Warner says: "'A short time alter we removed into the house (No. 7 Clerkenwell Sreen) two young women applied to have their "fortunes told. Upon heing informed -they were utder some mistake, one ex pressed great surprise, and stated that was the pl:ice she always came to, and afce thought some of Mr. Adams' family always vesided there. This was the first time I ever beard anythmeol Jack Adams. Severnl familiar Applications were made by other persons, and me afterwards learnt, that 'it had been occupied by persons of that profession lor rnanv vears. and they generally went by the name of Adams."' In an old print we have Jack Adams In a tan laetic drees, with a tobacco-pipe in his girdle, standing at a table on which lies ajborn-book and "Poor Robin's Almanack." On one shelf is a row ol books: and on another several boys' playthings, particularly tops, marbles, and a email drum. Bclore him is a man genteelly slrefsed, presenting live eiiinons: from his mourn proceeds a label inscribed, '-Is she a princess V This is meant (or Carleion, who married the pretended German prncess. Behind him is a Tagged slatternly woman, who has also a label in her mouth, with these words, '8ir, can you ell my fortune f In "Poor Eobin's Almanack" lor 1785, are these linen Now should 1 choose to invoke a muse, Muses are tickle madams; Else I eonid so my poem tbroujrb, tre you could iay Jack Adams." In the City of London library is an original rial ol Jack Adams, and a copy by Caulficld. LADY ARCHER. This lady, formerly Miss West, lived to a good age--a proof that cosmetiss are not so fatal as erne would have us suppose. Mature had given ier a fine aquiline nose, like the princesses of atae House of Austria, and she did not fail to give berself a complexion. She resembled a tine old -wainscoted painting, with the face and features shining through a thick incrustation of copal -varnish. Her ladyship was for many year.s the wonder I the fashionable world, envied by all tbe ladies of the Court of George the Third. Bbe bad a well-appointed house in Port land Place. Her .equipage was, with her, a sort of scenery. She gloried in milk-white bones to her carriage; the coachman and foot aaau wore very showy liveries; and the carriage -was lined with silks oi a tint to exhibit her com plexion to advantage. Alexander Stephen;, amongst whose papers vas found this account ot may Archer, tells ms that he recollected to have seen Mrs. Kobin ?on (the PerdUa ot the Prince of Wales' lock) 0 far beyond all this iu the exuberance of ber genius, with a yellow lining to ner landau, with black footman, to contrast with her beautiful ecwplexl n and fascinating figure, and thus Tender both more lovely. Lady Archer lived at Earn Elms Terrace, and her house bad the most elegant ornaments and draperies to strike the senses, and yet powerfully aidress the imagination. She could give an insinaatiug Interest to the scenes about her. Her kitchen garden and pleasure grounds, of five acres the Thames flowing In iront, or uo a pottion of the estate the apartments deoo jrated in the Chinese style, and opening into hot-houses stored with fruits ot the richest PTwth, and green-houses with plants of great xarity and beauty, and superb couches and draperies, effectively placed, rendered her home a sort of elysium oi luxury. COLLEV CIBBEB'8 DACGHTEH. This unfortunate person was the youngest mild ot Colley Clbber, and married a singer jsamed Charke. There seems to have been a teach of insanity, certainly there was no power of self-control, in this poor woman. Jrom her childhood she had been wild, way ward, and rebellious; self-taught, as a boy might be, and with nothing feminne in her character rpursuits. With sell-assertion, too, she w as weak nougb to be won by a knave with a sweet voice, -whose cruel treatment drove his intractable yrife to the 6tage, where she failed to profit "by ber fine opportunities. Mrs. Charke loved to play male characters, and of the many, that f "Plume" was her favorite. At the Haymarket Theatre, in 1745, she played "Captain Macheath" and other masculine Daits. before she attemnted to pass herself off upon the world, or hide ber self Irom it. as a man. Dr. Doran. in his amusing book, 'Their Ma jesties' Servants," writing or the year 1757, that cf Colley Cibber's deatb, says: "While the body of the Poet Laureate was tieinir carried to West minster Abbey, there was up away iu a street in then desolate Clerkenwell, aud starving, Colley's only daughter, Charlotte Charke. Seven and twentv ears before, sbe had lust come upon tbe etaee.feiiter a stormy girlhood, and she had a mania for appearing in male characters on, and in male attire off the stage. By some terrible eilense she fortcited the recognition of ber father, who wus otberwisu of a benevolent dis position; and friendless, she fought a series of battles with the world, but came otf In all more and more damaged. Sbe starved with strollers, iaucu as a grocr in Long Acre, Decamu bank rupt asapuipet-bhow proprietor in James street. Haymarket; rotnuiried, became a widow a second time, was plunaed iuto deeper ruin, thrown 1b prison for debt, and released only by the nDscnptions oi trie lowest, but not least chart table, sisterhood of Drury Lane Assuming male attire, she hung about the theatres tor casual hire, went on tramp with itinerants. burrered dally, and was weeklv cheated; but vet kept up such an appearance that an heiress nil in love with her, who was reduced to despair -when Charlotte Charke reveale.rijher story, and abandoned the place. Her next post was that I a valet to an Irish lord; forfeiting which she and ber child became sau? age-makers, but eoulJ net obtain a living; and then Charlotte Charke cried 'Cominp. coming, sir,' as a waiter at the King's Head tavern, Marylebone. Thence b was drawn by an oiler to make ber manager of a company of strolling players, with whom she epioyed more appetite than means to , appease it. Sbe endured sharp distress, again and again: but was relieved by an nncle, who furnished her with funds, w ith which she opened a tavern In Dniry Lane, where, alter a brief career of success, she again became bankrupt. To the regular stage sbe once more returned, under her brother Theophilus, at the Haymar ket; but the Lord Chamberlain closed the house, and Charlotte Charke took to working the wires of Russell's famous puppets, In the Great Room, still existing In Brewer street. There was a gleam of gx fortune lor her; but it soon faded away; atid then for nine wretched years this clever bnt most wretched ol women struggled Irantically for bare existence, amongst the most wretched of strollers, with whom she endnred unmitigated misery. And yet, Gibber's erring and haples daughter contrived to reach London, where, in 1765, she pub lished her remarkable autobiography, the details or which make the heart ache, in spite of the small sympathy of the reader lor the half mad creature. On the proliU of this book, sbe was enabled to open, as landlord, a tavern at Islington; but, of course, ruin ensued; and A a hut, amid the cinder heaps and wor-e refuse, in the desolate fields, she found a refuge, and even wrote a novel, on a pair of bellows in her lap, by way of desk I Here she lived with a squalid handmaiden, a cat, dog, magpie, and monkey. Humbled, disconsolate, abandoned, she readily accepted from a pub'isher who visited her 11) lor her manuscript. This was at the close of the year 1755, and I do not meet with ber again till 17H9, two years after her lather's death, when she played 'Marplot.' in the Iiu&ibodu, for her own benefit at the Haymarket. with this adver tisement: 'As I am entirely dependent on chance for a subsistence, and desirous of eetting into business, I humbly hope the town will lavor me on the occasion, which, added to the rest of tbeir indulgence, will be ever gratefully acknow ledged bv their truly obliged and obedient servant, Charlotte Charke.' She died on tbe 6th of April, 17C0. "She is said to have once given imitations of her father on the staitc; to have presented a pistol at, and robbed him on the highway, and to have smacked his face with a pair of soles out of her own basket." busby's folly, ud bcll feather ball. At Busby's Folly, a bowling-green and house of public entertainment, upon the site of the Belvedere Tavern, Pentonville, there met, on the 2d of May, 1644, a fraternity ot Odd Fel lows, members of tbe Society of Bull Feathers Hall, who claimed, among other things, the toll ot all the gravel carried up High gate Hill. In a rare tract entitled, " Bull Feather Hall, or the Antiquity of Horns amply shown," 1664, is related the manner of going from BiiBbv's Folly to Ilighgate. "On Monday, being the 2d day of May, some part of the frater nity met at Busby's Folly, in Islington, where, after they had set all things in order, they thus marched" out, or dine qutsqne mo first a set of trumpets, then a controller or captain of tbe pioneers, with thirty or forty following him with pickaxes and spades to level the hill, and baskets withal to carry travel. Attcr them an other set of trumpeters, and also lour that did wind the horn: alter them, the standard, alias an exceeding large pair ol horns fixed on a pole, which three men carried, with pennants on each tip, the masier ol the ceremonies attending it with other officers. Then followed the flag, wit h the arms of ihe Society, with borne J beasts drawn thereon, and this moitor " 'To have and not to use the same. Is not tbeir glory but tacir shame.' After this came the Mace Bearer, then the Hcrald-a'-Arms. with the arms of the Society. the coat I cannot rightly blazon, but I remember tbe stippoiters were on ono side, a woman with a whip in ner nana, besides that ot her tongue, with a menacing look, and underneath the motto, Ut tolo. sic jubeo; on the other side, a man in a wotul plight, ana underneath hi in, Patienlia patimvr." In this order they marched. attended by multitudes of people. This Club, as the tract informs us, used to meet in Chequer Yard, in Whitechapcl, their president being arrayed in a crimson satin gown and a furred cap, surmounted by a pair ot antlers; and on a cushion lnyacornetea sceptre and crown; the brethren drank out ot horn cups, and were suorn. on admission, upon a blank horn-book. They met twice a week, "to solace themselves with harmless merriment, and promote good fel lowship among tbeir neighbors." Busby's Folly was afterwards called "Penny's Folly." Here Tucker, a high German, who had performed before their Majesties and the Royal Families, exhibited his Learned Little Horse irom Lowland, who was to be seen looking out ot the window, up two pair or stairs, every evening before the performance began. Curious deceptions, "Comus's philosophical perform ances," ana tne musical g'usses, were also ex hibited here. ABRAHAM NEWLAND. Abraham Newland, who was nearly sixty years in the service of the Bank of England, and whose name became a synonym for a bank-note, was one oi a family of twenty-five children, and was born in Southward in 1730. At the age of eighteen ho entered the Bank service as lunior clerk. He was very fond ot music, which led him into much dissipation. Still, he was very attentive to business, and rose to be appointed; in 1782, he was appointed chief cashier, with a suite of rooms for residence in the Bank, and for flve-and-twenty years he never once slept out of the building. The pleasantest version of bis importance is contained in the famous song in the Whims of the Day: Ihcre ne'er was a name so handed by fame, 'lhro' air, thro' ocean, and thro' laud, As one that is wrote upon every bunk note, And you an most auow ADranain newiaud. O, Abraham Newiund I Notified Abraham Newland. I have beard people say, sham Abraham you may, Bat yon mast not sham Abraham Newlaud. "For fashion or arts should yon seek foreign parts, it mattvrn not wherever von land : Jew, i.hnatiau, or GrtKk, the kiu language thoy SUL'UK, lhat'i the language ot Abraham Newlaud. O, Abraham Newland! Wouirlul ADiuham Newland. Tbo' with compliments eramm'd, j ou may die and be aa. If you haven't an Abraham Newland. "The world U Inclm'd to think Justice is b'ind, Lawver kuow very well tnev ouu view laud; But, lord, what oi mat. she'll biiuk uke a bat, it thtt sight oi an ADrauaiu aewianu, U, Abraham JSowlanUl lluirical A Drab a in .Newland 1 Tlio' Justice 'tis known, can see throuzb a mill. none, She can't ece thiouch Abraham Nowlaud. Yonr natrion who bawl tor the rood of a all. Kind touts! here Uke mushrooms 'hey strew land; Tbo' loud as a ilium each proves oiatur mum, if atiack'd bv au At.ranam isewiaua. O, Abraham New. aud ! li.vuuMiilo Aurauain Ne viand! No argument '( iound iu the world halt so sound, As tut j o io of Abraham Newiana. "The French say thoy 're coining, but sure they aro uuuiimUK- 1 know writ ihnv want if thev do land : We'll muke their ears riug in doieuae of our king, Uur country, aud Abiauaiu Newiaud. O, Abraham Newland ! lailkiir Abraham Newland! No t'leoior, no ell, uo tho devil Imuteli, Sua 1 e'er tub uioi Abraham Newland." In 1807 he retired from the office of chief cachier. alter docliniug a pension. He had hlibeito been accustomed, atter the business at the Bank, tn his department had closed and he had dine. i mouetatcly, to order his carriage ana riiive to dllehbnry. where he drank tea at a n ull maire. llioi.e who lived in that neicn borhood long recollected Newiand's daily walk- hail. rain, or sunshine, nlons iiignuury pine. It was suld that he regretted his retire ment from the Bank; but he used to say that not ior 20.000 a year would he return. He then retired to No. 88 Highbury Pmce. His health and strength decliued, it is said, through the distress ol mlnd oronaht upon him bv tbe for- crenes of liobert Atien, a cierk in the bank, whom Newland had treated as his own son. It was well known that Newland bad accumulated a large fortune legacy hunters came about him, and an acquaintance tent him a ham as m present; bnt Newland despised the mercenary motive, and next time' he saw the donor he said, I have received a bam from you; 1 thank you for U," said he; bnt (raising his ringer In a sig nificant manner) added, "1 lell you It won't do, it won't do." Newland bad no extravagant expectatlona that the world would be drowned in sorrow when it should be his turn to leave it; and he wrote this ludicrous epiUph on himself shortly betore his death: "Retrain this stone old Abraham hes, Nobody laufhn, and nobody cre, Where he's pone, and bow be far, No one knows, and no ns caret." His thvsician. in one ot his latest visits, found him reading the newsnnDer. when the doctor expressing his surprise, Newland replied, smiling: "I am only looking in tbe paper in order to see what l am reading to the world I am going to." He died November 21, 1H07, without any apparent pain of body or anxiety of Kind, and nis remains were depositea in ine Chuich ot bt. saviour, bombwark. Newiand's property amounted to lzw.wv, besides a thousand a year landed estates. It must not be supposed that this was saved from bis salary. During the whole of bis career the loans lor the war proved very prolific. A cer tain amount of them was always reserved lor the cashier's office (one Parliamentary Report names XlOG-,000), and as they generally come out at a premium, the profits were grout. The lamiiy oi the (ioidsmld, then tbe icaaers oi ihe Htock Exchange, contracted lor many of these loans, and to each of them ho left 500 to pun-case a mournicg ring. Newiand's large tunds, it Is said, were occasionally lent to the ColdRmids to asbist their varied speculations. LI8TON IN TBAOEPY. Playgoers of the present century narrate the early seriousness ot Litton the comedian, and his subsequent turn lor tragedy; predilections which the experience ot the next generation may have thrown into the shade of doubt. The facts are, however, well authenticated. Li-ston was lineally descended from Johan de L'Estonne, who came over with the Norman William, and had lands awarded him at Lupton Magna in Kent. The more immediate ancestors of Mr. Liston were Puritans, and his lather, Habakuk, was an Anabaptist minister. At the age of nine young Liston was placed under the tui tion of Rev Mr. Goodenough, whose decease was attended with these awful circum stances: It Bcems that the old gentleman and his pupil had been walking out together, in a line sunset, to the distance of three quarters of a mile west of Lupton, when a sudden curiosity took Mr. Goodenough to look down upon a chiu-m where a mining shait bud been lately sunk, but soon aiterwards abnndoned. The old clergyman, leaning over, either with lncautiou or siidden giddiness (pronably a mixture of both), suddenly lost his moling, and, to use Mr. Liston's pnruse, disappeared, and was doubtless broken into a tnousuna pieces. The sound ot his bead, etc., dashing successively upon the projecting masKes ot the cnasni, bad such an cflcct upon the youth Liston that a sickness ensued, and even lor many yeura after his re covery he was not once scih so much as to smile. ihe io. nt deatb ot both his parents, which happened not many months alter ihi.n disastrous accident, and were piobuuiy (one or Doth ot them) accelerated by tt, threw our youth upon the protection ol his maternal great aunt, Mrs. Sittingbouru, whom he loved almost to reveience. To the influence of her early counsels and manners he tilwavs attributed the firmness with which, iu maturer years, thrown upon a way of life cuiumonly net the best adapted to gravity and Eclt-retirenient, he was able to maintain a serious character, nntincturcd with tbe levities incident to his profession. Ann Sitlingbourn (her portrait wus painted by Huoson) wasstatcly, still, and tall, with a cast oi leuturcs strikingly resembling these of Liston. Her eFtate in Kent was spacious aud well wooded; and here, in the veneiuble solitudes of Charnwood, amid thick thartee ot the oak and beech (the last his lavorite tree), Liston cultivated those contemplative habits which never entirely deserted him in atter jenrs. Here he was commonly in summer montDs to bo met, book in nana not a Dlav book meditating. Boyle's "Reflections" was at one time his darling volume, which. In its turn. whs superseded by Young's "Night Tnoughts", which continued its bold upon him through out hie. He carried it always about him; and it was no uncommon thing tor him to be seen, in the refreshing intervals ol his occupa tion, leaning against a siue-scene, in a sort of Lord Herbert oi Cnerbury posture, turning over a pocket edition ot his favorite author. Tbe piemature death ot Mrs. Sittingbourn. cccaMoued by incautiously burning a pot of charcoal in her sleeping chamber, left Liston, in his nineteenth year, nearly without resources. mat the stage at ail snouia nave presented itsell as an eligible scope for his talen's, and in particular, that he should have chosen a line ho foreign to what appears to have been his turn ot nnnct. admits ot explanation. At Charnwood, then, we behold him thought ful, grave, ascetic, fioni his eradle averse to flesh, meats, and strong drinkt: abstemious even bejond the genius of the place; ana almost in spue ot tne remonstrances ot his great aunt. who. though strict, was not rigid: water was his habitual drink, and his tood little be? end the mast ana oeech-nutsoi his favorite giove. It is a medical tact that this kind of diet, however favorable to the contemplative bowers ot tbe primitive hermits, etc.. is but ill adapted to tne less robust mtnds and bodies ot a later genet ation. Hypochondria almost con etantly ensues, and joung Liston was subject to Fignte, ana naa visions, tuoee aria oeecn-nuts, distilled by a complexion naturally adroit, mouuted into a brain already prepared to kindle by long seclusions, and the fervor of strict Calvinistic notions. In tbe gloom of Ciiarnwood he was assailed by illusions similar in kind to those which are related ot the famous Anthony of Padua. Wild antio laces would ever and auon protrude upon his senso- num. Whether he shut his eyes or kept them open, the Fame illusions operated. Tbe darker and more profound were his cogitations tbe dioiier ana more whimsical became the apparitions. They buzzed about him, tuickas una. napping at mm. tiouting at mm. nootmg in bis ear, yet with sueh comic appendages, that what at erst was his bane became at length his solace, and he desired no better society than that of bis merry phantasmata. We shall presently find in what way this remarkable phenomenon muuenccu ms tuture aestiny. On the death of Mrs. Sittingsburn Liston was received into the taimly of Mr. Willoughby, an eminent Turkey merchant in Birchin lane. He was more treated like a son than a clerk, though he wus nominally but the latter. Ditlerent avocations, chnnge ot scene, with alternation of business and recreation, appear to have weaned him in a short time Irom tbe hypochondriacal aliectious which hud beset him at Charnwood Within the next three years wo tind him making more than one vo.vage to the Levant, as chief factor lor Mr. Willoughby, at the Porte; he used to relate passages ot nis Having been taken up on a suspicion of a design of penetrating the seraclio. etc.; but some ot these stone are whimsical, and others of a romantic nature. We will now bring him over the seas again, and snnnose him in the countinc-house in Bir- ch'm Lane, bis iactorace satisfactory, and all going on so smoothly that we may exnect to hnd Mr. Listen at last an opuleut merchant upon 'Change. B'lt see the turns of destiny I Upon a summer's excursion into Norlolk, in the year 1801, the accidental sight of pretty Sally Parker, as be was then called, in the Norwich company, diverted his inclinations at once from commerce, and he became siage-etruck. Happy for tho lovers of mirth was it that he took this turn. Shortly after, he made Lis debu'. on the Norwich boards, in bis twenty-second year. Having a natural bent to tragedy, be chose tbe part of "Hyrrhus,"in the Distressed Motlter, to Sally Parker's "Uermione." We find him aiter wards as "Georee Barnwell," "Altamont." "Char mont,"etc; but as if nature hud destined him to the wok, an unavoidable Infirmity absolutely Incapacitated him for tragedy, nis person, at this latier per. on. was grueeUil and even com manding; his countenance t to pravity; be bad the power ef arresting the attention or an audience at cm stent almost beyond any other trail ic actor, but he could not hold it. To un- deiatana this obstacle we n ust go back a tew yesis tn those appalling reveries at Charnwood. Those illusions whica bad vantobed betore tbe dissipation of a less recluse life, and more free tociety, now in bis solitary tragic studies, ana mid the Intense call upon feeling Incident to tragic acting, came back upon him with tenfold vividne. In the midst ol some most pathetic passages the parting ot "Jaffier" with bis dying friend, tor instance he would suddenly be sur prised with a nt of violent horse-lauehter. While the rpectators were ail sobbing before blm with emotion, suddenly one of those gro tesque laces would peep out upon hlui. and be could not resist the impulse. A timely excuse once or twice served his purpose, but no audi ence ecu in be expected to bear repeated! v this violation of the continuity of Iceling. He describes them (the illusions) as so many demons haunting bim. and para lyzing every effort. It was said that he could not recite the famous soliloquy in hamkl even in privaro without immoJerate fits ot laughter. However, what be had not force of reason tifiloieut to overcome, be had good icne enough to turn Into emolument, and determined to make a commodity of his dtt-tcm-peT. He prudently exchanged the buskin for the sock, and tbe illusions instantly ceased; or. it the" occurred lor a short seeon, by their very co-operation added a zest to his comic vein; sscme ot bis most catching faces being (as he expressed it) little more than transcripts and copies oi these extraordinary phantasmata. v e nave now drawn Liston to tne period when he was about to make bis first appearance in London. These details have been condensed from a paper in tne London Magazine, Januaiy, 1824; they are not reterred to m'the sketch of Liston's caieer, written a lew days atter bis death, Morch 2i, iH-iti, by his son-in-law, tieorce Herbert Rodwell. the musical composer, and published in the luwtrate.d London Jvews, March 28. There we are told that Liston was born 1776; that his father lived in Norris street, llaymnrkct; and that young John was educated at Br. Barrow's 8oho School, and subsequently became second nianer in Archbishop Tent son a school. Rod well relates tbat early in his theatrical hie Liston went lor cheapncen, by sea. to Nowcastle-unon- Tyne, and was beaten about by adverse winds ior a lortnight; provisions rati so Miort that Liston was reduced to his Inst inch of dry cheese. At Newcastle, through the above del iy, he was roughly received by Stephen Kemble, ine luuuttger. oiiiiuu; iu uwmi nuue iu tuecenire ot the stage, directing u rehearsal, Kemble eyed him several times before he spoke: at last he eiowled out, "Well, young man, you are come." air. Listen oowea. "men now vou may go oacKBga ni you nave oroken your engagement oy oemg too 'ate." "it's very easy to sav go back," replica Liston, with one ot his peculiar looks, "but here I am and here I must stay, for i nave not alarming leit in the world." Kemble relented, and Liston remained at Newcastle until he came to London lor good. The first comic part he evir pcrlormed was "liigeory," in She stoops to Conquer, lie took a fancy io tho character, and kept secret his intentions as to the manner he meant to play it in, and the style of dress he should wear. When he came on. so original was nis wnoie coLception ot tho thing, that not au nctor on the stage could speak tor lauguing. When he came off, Mr. Kemble said: "Young man, it strikes me you have mistaken jour forte; there's something comic about you." "I've not mistaken mv larte." replied Liston, "but you never before allowed me to try. 1 don't think myself 1 was made for the heavy Barons !" iie nrst appeared in Lon don as "yheeptace" in the Village Lartnjer, June 10, lt-05. "That Mr. Liston did really imagine ne couia do a tragic actor," savs uoawcli, "is partly borne out by his actually havintr at tempted 'Octavian,' tn the Mountaineers, tl&y 17. JbU." Latterly he went Iltt'e into society. His attenticn to his icligious duties was always marked by devout sincerity, and his knowledge ot tne scriptures was very extensive. When Liston first came to London he generally wore a pea-urcen coat, aud wus everywhere accom- naniea by an ugiy mtie pug aog. Ton pug dog, like bis master, soon made himself a lavorite. go where he would, and seemed exceedingly proud that he could make almost as many laugh as coma nis roaster, inc pug aog acted as Mr. Listen's avant couner, alnays trotting on before to announce nis inend and master. The fre quenters of the Orange Coffee House. Cockspur stieet, wnere Lifcton resiaea. usea to sav. lauphlng, "Oh, Liston will be here in a moment, ior ncre is nis ueaumui pug." MODERN ASTROLOGY "WITCH PICKLES." It would be an acquisition to our knowledge if some one competent to t he task would collect materials for the history of the men who, within the present century, have made a profession of judicial astrology. Attention is occasioually drawn to the practices of itinerant fortune tellers, many of whom still procure a livelihood. The astrologer, however, or, as be is denomi rated in some districts ot England, more particularly in Yorkshire, "a planet ruler," and sometimes "a wise man," is of a higher order, He does not itinerate, is generally a man of some education, possessed of a good deal of fragmen tary knowledge, and a smattering of science. He very often conceals bis real profession by prac tising as a "Water Doctor," or as a "Bone Better," and some possess a considerable amount ot skill in the treatment of ordinary diseases The more lucrative paitoi tne business was that which they carried on in a secret way. Tbey were consuitea in cases ot dtmcuity by a emus ot suncrstitious nersons. ana an imp icit faith was placed in their statements and pre dictions. The "wise man" was sought in all cases ot accident, aisasier, or toss, ite was consulted as to the probabilities of tbe return r . II Jl.i J 1 it ana suieiy oi iue uisiuni auu uuseui; oi tne chances oi the recovery of the sick, and of the destiny of some beloved lrlend or relative. Tbe consultation with these men would oi ten have a sinister aim to discover by the stars whether an obnoxious husband would survive, or whether tbe anections ot a courted or inconstant lover could be secured. Very niten long-continued diseases and inve terate maladies were ascribed to an "ill wisn,"ana the planet ruler was sought to discover who waa ths ill-wisher, and what charm would remove the spell. It is needless to say thot the practices ol these astrologers were productive, in a large number of cuses, of much disturbance among neighbors and relatives, ana great miscmer to all concerned, except me man wao prontea oy the credulity of his duces. Some oi these charlatans, no doubt, were believers in the imooture.butthe greater num ber weie ariant cheats, in Leeds aud us neign- borhood, there were, some five and-thirty years ago, several "wise men." Among tne nuraoer vt as a man known by no other name than that ot "Witch Pickles." He was avowedly an astro logical doctor, and rulea tne planets ior tnose v. ho sought nim ior mat purpose, no uwcit in u TPtii-cd house on the road from Leeds to York, about a mile troru the Shoulder of Mut- tnn nnblio house, at the top of Marsh Lane. His celebnty extended for above fifty miles, atwi npiaons came Irom the Yorksnire Wolds to consult him, The man and the house were held In awe by boys and even older persons, who bad bcliet in nis powers, ijiiue was mown oi nis tiuhits. and he had few visitors but those who sought his professional assistance. He never eommitted anything to writing. He was par- llCUiar in IllMOll iuk mm on iuo uui;uillBl.rtui'CT9 nf an v case on which he was consulted before . i : l.t 1 1 . V. .. 1 . be pronounced. He then, as he termed it, pro ceeded to draw a figure in order to discover the coniunction of tbe planets, and then entered upon tbe explanation of what the stars pre- OlCieu. dlallC lUUHja MI1U VI ftliui, owv, as that he performed Incantations at midnight on certain days in the year, when particular placets were in the ascendant; and tbat on such occasions strange hi:uib uuu buuuui wuuni w seen and heard by persons passing the house. These were the embellishments of vulgar rumor. The man was quiet and inoffensive in his demeanoi, and a fully sensible of the neces sity ot a lite ot secluhion. He is believed to have praet'nd a lew tricks to awe bis visitor such as lighting a candle or fire without visible agency, and ntber tricks-far more ingenious tit an the niedern able-rapping. "Witch Pirki' wi on It one among the number who derived a lurge proiit from tbli kinder occupation, lie was one ot tno more Tejpectanle of the clws, and he never de scend d to the vile tricks of other of the pro fession tr ck practiced on weak and credulous women and girls, which .will not beardescilp tion. One of the roost celebrated works on astrology Is that ot Di. Sibly, twelfth edition, 1H17, in two octavo volumes containing Biore than 1100 pages. '"The lo'lowing will give an idea ol the pretensions of the book, which is a re maikabie book, if it really went through twelve edu'.rnr. The owner of a privateer which had not been beard ot, called io know her fate. Dr. Sibly gave lodgment on a figure "recti- lied to tee precise tim tne question was pro pounded.' The ship itself appeared well formed and substantial, but not a swift sailer, as g demonstrated by an earthy sign possessing tbe ensp of tbe ascendant, aud the situation of tho Dragon's Head In five degrees of the same sign." The ship ltseit was pronouncea to nave ocen captured. "From the whole account it is clear thit Dr. Sibly's syetem how now esteemed by astrolo gers l oo not know has out tnis alternative. Fither one and the some figure will tell tbe fate of all the ships which have not been heard of, including their sailing qualities, or the stars will never send an owner to ask for news, except Just at the moment wben they are in a position to describe this particular ship." HANNAH ORBEN, OR "LINO BOB WITCH." This noted sibyl lived in a cottage on the edce of the moor on the left of the old road from Otley toBradlord, between Carlton and Yeadon, and eight miles from Leeds. She was popularly known as "The Ling bob Witch," a name given her, it is supposed, from living among the ling bobs, or heather-tubs. Sbe was resorted to on account ot her supposed knowledge of future events; but like the rest of her eluss, ber prin cipal forte was fortune-telling, from which, it is said, she herself realized a handsome fortune. Many strange tales have been told of her, such as bur power ot transforming herself, after nightfall, into the shape ot any sbe list; and of her odd prank in her nightly rambles, her favorite character being that ot the hare, in which peisonation she was unluckily shot by an unsuspecting poacher, who was almost ter rified out of his senses by tbe awful screams which followed tbe sudden death of the Ling-bob Witch. In the year 17S5. Dr. , of Sheffield, being at Leeds, had the curiosity to pay a visit to me noted uannah Ureen. Ho lirst questionea her respecting the future fortunes of a near relative ot his, wbo was then in circumstances of distress, aud in deed in prison. She told him immediately that his friend's trouble would continue J'uU tree times tirec mars, and he would then experience a (,rfac ddiveranee, which. In lact, was on the point ol being literally venucd, for he was then in the Court of Ki.ig's Bench. He then aked her It she possessed any tore- knowledge ot what was about to come to puss ou the great staco ot the world. To winch she replied in the affirmative. She said, War would be inrtatenea once, out woma vol nap- pen; but the second time it would blaze out in an its honors, ana extend to all the neighbouring cout tries; und that the two countries (these appear to be France and Poland), at a great distance one from the other, would in consequence obtain their Ireedoni, althcutth attcr bard f-truggles. After the year 17'JU, sne observed, many great persons, even kings and queens, would lose their lives, and that io by fair means. In 1794, a great warrior ol high blood is to fall in the held ot battle: and in 17!).r), a distant nation (thought to be negro slaves), wno have been drugged from their own country, will rise, as one niuu, aud deliver themselves irom tneir oppressors. Hannah appears to have been one ot a some what numerous class, many of whom were icsi dent in Yorkshire. Very lew of them went beyond the attempt to toretell the future events in the lives of individuals; they did not aim at such nigh aniD'tion as drawing the Horoscopes of nations. Their predictions were always vague, and so lrumed as to cover a nurabc of the most probable events in the life of every individual. Hannah really died on the 12th of Mav. 1810. after having practised her art about lortv years; and Ling-bob became a haunted and dreaded place. The house remained some years untenanted and ruinous, but was afterwards repa'red and occupied. Her daughter and suc cessor, Hannah Spence, laid claim to tbe snuie spence, but. It need hardly be added, without tne same success. MR. JOHN SCOTT (LORD EL DON) IN PARLIAMENT, Mr. Scott broke ground in Parliament in oppo sition to the fiimous East India bill, and began with his favorite topic, the honesty of his own intentions and the purity of his own conscience He spoke in respectful terms ot Lord North and more highly still of Mr. Fox; but even to Mr. Fox it was not fitting that so vast an influence should be intrusted. As Brutus said of Ccesar: he would be erown'd! How tbat might obauae his naturef-there's the question. It was an aggravation of tbe affliction he felt that the cause of it should originate with one to whom the nation had so long looked uo a wound Irom him was doublv painful. Like Joab, he gave the shake of friendship, but the other nand held a dagger, with which be despatched tbe constitution. Here Mr. Scott, after an apology for alluding to sacred writ, read from the book of Revelations some verses which be ieearded as typical of the intended innovations in the affairs ot the English East India Company : " 'And I stood upon the sand ot tne sea, and saw a beast rise up out of the sea, having seven heads and ten horns, and ULon his horns ten crowns. And they worshipped the dragon which gave power unto the beast and they worshipped the beast, saying, Who is like unto the beast? who is able to make war with him ? And there was given unto him a mouth speaking great, things; and power was given unto him to continue forty and two months.' Here," said Mr. Scott. "I believe there is a mistake of six months the proposed uura- tion of the bill being lour years, or forty-eight months. 'And be caused all, both small and great, rich and poor, tree and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in tneir foreheads.' Here places, pensions, and peerages are clearly marked out. 'And he cried mightily with a strong vo;cc, saying, Babylon the Great' plainly the Last inaia company n iaiien. is fallen iue jjuob iiiuilft vuuipnui - it... vu, iniicii, and is become the habitation ot devils, and tbe hold ol every foul spirit, ana tne cage ot every unclean ana hatelul bird.'" He read a passage from Thucydides to prove that men are more irritated by injustice than by violence, and described the country crying out lor a respite, use -io.-aemona:" "Kill me to morrow let me live to night But ball au hour! This strange tumble was well quizzed by Sheridan, and Mr. Scott appears to nave Iound out that rhotorical embellishment was not his line, lor his subsequent speeches ar less ornate. In tbe squibbsot the period the!r obscurity forms the point of tho jokes levelled at him. Thus, among tbe pretended translations of Lord Uelgrave's fumous Creek quo'ation, rhe follow ing couplet was attributed to him: "Wiih meiaphyne ait his ipeeoh he plann'd, And aid whai nobody cou d andemtaud." Temple Bar, Boy, with ragged trowers and rimless chip hat, rung into Dr. Fuller's drug store with a dirrer in hia hand "Doctor, mother sent me to tbe shottlcary pop qulcker'n blazes, cos bub's sick with the picken chox, and sbe wants a thimbleful of pollygollio in this din tipper, ccaae hadn't botagottle, and the kint pup's got the bine witters in't-got any ? WATCHES, JEWELRY ETC. DIAMOND DEALER k JirLriiAV WATCIIFS, W tLBt MtLTt Win. 1? vWATCH ID3 and JSWSLI Owing to dtrltna oi Gold, feat mtat a inat dactloa la pries or alalarae sad wall aMortcd. ttect Diamonds, Watob., Jewelry, Sllverwar, 15 to Tb pnblle ir mpsctfall turned to call and txamta or tteek before purchasing aiicwherf. 14 SILVER AND PLATED GOODS OF THB Most Superior Workmanship, AT TBI NEW STORE No' 704 "ARCH STREET. Tlis ntderstgned lal "file famoni ftora Broa Manufacturing Company) re?pct oUjr announce tha. tl"'iLtT Pnti a ni w and bau1llui store lortheaaltt ot B1LVKK and 1 LATKIi Vt ARK, at o 7oVa HUM Mm-t. Our long expnlenca aa nianaiaclnrera wU enable u to keep nothing but nmt-clae Oooda. and tnofe bo may patronize our a orewili find oumutod aooda lai aupeilor to any ever Imported, and our eua tcmera nray rely on the goods being precaely what thev are rrpraientad to be. 26S BO WM AS LEOHARDw WATCHES, JEWELRY, &c. A lull Mtortmentot aLovo rood eontni baud at moderate nricen tha liuaieal hn.iil..in. from 2 to 10 tx sutital Airs. FAUK & BROTHER, Importers, Ho. 824CHK,2iUT 6TREKT, llllamUirp Below Konrtn, HENRY HARPER, No. 520 AllCIi STREET llanulactu and Scaler in Watches P'ine Jewelry, Silver-P luted Ware, ' A.ND 81$ Solid Silver-Ware. G. RUSSELL & CO ; . , No. 22 North SIXTH St., IIST1TE ATTENTION TO 1I1LIK V'LI. STOCK FANCY AND PLAIN ' SILVER WARE, 01 the Finest Quality. (526 RICH JEWELRTi JOHN B REN NAN,' DEALEB IK , DIAMONDS, FINE WATCHE8, JEWELRY, Etc. Etc Etc 9 20 KO. 18 S. KIGHTtt SXiUCJhiT, FhiiAda, INTERNAL REVENUE. . TJ KITED STATES KEVEKUE STAMPS PRINCIPAL DEPOT, . No. 304 CHESNUT Street. CENTRAL DEPOT, No. 103 South riPTH Street, OSE T306K BELOW CHESNUT. BSTABLIBHID 1863. Bevenne Sfampg of etery description constantly on hand in any amount. Orders by Mail or Exp ma promptly attended to. United State Koto, Dralta on Philadelphia, or Mew York, or current fnnd received in payment. Particular attention paid to small order. Tha deeiaion of the Commuaionean t e consulted. and any Information regarding; tha law eheerfolM given. The folio in rates ot discount areal.'owed ON ALL ORDERS OF $26, ' 1 ' TWO PER CFKT. DISCOUNT ON ALL OBDIB8 Of 100, THBEJS FEB CENT. DISCOUNT. ON ALL 0BD&KS OF 300. FOUR PiR CENT. DISCOUNT. AH order ihoHld be sent to tha STAMP AGENCY, ' No. 304 CHESNUT Street J 8 3 PHILADELPHIA. LAND8CAPE DRAWING CARDS, A BBAOf tiful teileaot vlowa, Ufleen in number. teb' lp) tor tha lnatruotlon or Juvenile arttata. Vrio, leeui narkane -.WHh the LVK.N1NG TftLEOHVJPH. tMY,. YOKK C'tiPi'E tc, will be Iound on aale ax tba Jt b. W. corner SEVENTH aad CUEtfNUI BtrwM. I MUSICAL BOXES. ooMKxma vv. CAMPHOR TROCHES, NV , . TvMin PrTtlT ol a n O L B s -A- SSgT, mailed oagggj I