Bellefonte patriot. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1818-1838, July 02, 1823, Image 4

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    TRIOT,
THE P.
OT LPL IIS,, pr go BTL ELITES TIITES
Elcquence the soul, song charms the sense.
PSP ELBE E LDS DP LTD EPL
BELLEFONTE, JuLy, 1828,
ett S43 ED LS} En
SELECTED,
| el PT CR —
From the American Republican.
Afier the company training of the © Republi
can Artillerists of Chester County,” on I'hurs
day the 22¢ instant,— the members partook of
a collation at the house of Major Pearce;
where they passed a couple of hours in bigh
glee and good humor. Among the Songs call
ed forth, on the occasion, was the following
NEW one ; which was produced, and sung, by a
Member of the Corps :—the whole Company
joing in the Chorus with the most lively zcal,
and hearty good will.
Joli Andrew Stulze.
A NEW SONG FOR 1823,
Tung, ¢ Auld lang syne,”
REPUBLICANS ! {rom right to left,—
Heads up ! and dress in line!
Me'll show the world we're staunch and true,
As in days o’ lang syne.
CHOURUS., -
For John Andrew Shuize, d’ye hear ?
For John Andrew Shulze—
We'll give an undivided vote
For John Andrew Shulge.
The People’s Voice, throughout the state,
For SHULZE, did fairly join ;
And we'll support the Peoples choice,
As 1n days o’ lang syne,
For John Andrew Shulze ; d’ye hear ?
For John Andrew Shulze~
1n solid column we will vote,
For John Andrew Shulze.
The WHIGS OF CHESTER, they are true,—
You'llknow it by this signym
You'll see them marching to the Polls,
As in days o’ lang syne,
For John Andrew Shulze d’ye hear?
Yor Jobn Andrew Shulze—
You'll see them pouring in their votes,
For John Andrew Shyze.
For surely you'll give your voice,
And surely I'll give mine,
And every man will do his part,
As in days o’ lang syne.
For John Andrew Shulze, d’ye hear ?
For John Andrew Shulze—
We'll to the Polls, in ancient style,
For John Andrew Shulze.
Our Youthful Whigs, too, they’ll pursue
‘The straight, uoerring line,
Their honor’d Fathers mark’d for them,
In. days o' lang syne.
For John Andrew Shulze, d’ye hear ?
For John Andrew Shulze—
You'll see the generons lads parade,
Yor John Andrew Shulze.
Und jeder Deutsche Bruder,auch
Mie Herz gretren, und ren ;
Bey naechster Wahl vartrecen will,
Wien Tage von lang syne.
Zuer John Andrew Shulze mein Herr,
Fuer John Andrew Shulze—
Die ganze Deutsche Stimme geht,
Fuer John Andrew Shulze.
The Feds may chance to warp a few,
Sume six, or eight, Or ningy—
But all the rest they’ll find as true
As in days o’ lang syne.
For John Andrew Shulze d’ye hear
For John Andrew Shulze—
They’ll find us all united firm
For John Andrew Shulze,
Our old opponents ; if they choose,
May rant, defame, and whine:
"Twas aye their trade to slander Whigs,
In days o’ lang syne.
But John Andrew Shulze, d’ye hear ?
Bat John Andrew Shulze—
Their slanders pass like idle wind,
By Johu Andrew Shulze.
Let Feds, and Quids, and Renepades,
Their « Fragments all combine ;
We'll meet, and beat them, as we did,
In days 0’ lang syne.
To John Andrew Siiilze d’ye hear ?
To John Andrew Shulze—
The motly crew must all submit,
To John Andrew Shulze.
“ REPUBLICAN ARTILLERsSTS |”
Attend the Counter ign ym
And emulate the Sentries true,
Of auld lang syne.
For John Andrew Shulze, d’ye hear ?
For John Andrew Shulze—
The Conntersign, for next campaign,
Is John Andrew Shulse.
And when the Victory is won,
We'll form a jovial line ;
We'll hail the bright, returning days,
Of auld lang syne.
For John Andrew Shulze/ d’ye hear ?
\ For John Andrew Shulzif =
We'll make the welkin Joyous ring,
For John Andrew Sha!ze.
Attention, Waiter ! no delay—
Bring in your choicest Wine,—
We'll drink a Bumper to dhe Men,
And days 0° lang syne.
For John Andrew Shulze, d’ye hear?
For Jobn Andrew Shulze—
Those good old times will be renew’d
By John Andrew Shulze.
GINEVRA,
OR THE LADY BURIED ALIVE.
Constant reports strengthened by three cen-
turies and a half, put an end to the doubts which
some had entertained, as to the truth and accu-
racy of the facts which took place in the per-
son of Ginevra Degil Ameri, and of Antonio
Rondinelli her lover. Antonio Rondinelli be-
came enamored of the above named damsel,
about the year of our Lord 1396 ; he continued
to persevere in his courtship for 4 years, with
great opposition from her father, who on no
condition, would agree to give her in marriare
to Rondinelli. Nay, he was pleased to choose
a youth of the family ot Agolanti, named Fran-
cesco, as being perhaps a little richer than the
other, although the inclination of the girl little
concurred in it.—YWhen the father of Ginevra
had concluded this alliance with Francesco
Agolanti, who gave her the ring, the passion
of love increased in Antonio Rondinelli, a young
man in the flower of youth, in proportion as
the hope of possessing her failed him, and hav-
ing not been able to obtain his beloved he swore
never to marry any other, for the rest, never
losing sight of this one at festivals, at the
churches, and in assemblies. 3
On the breaking out of the great mortality
in the year 1400, which was in many cities
of Ttaly, and principally, in Florence, Genevra
also fell sick, and whether it was the plague or
some other disease, hysterical affections as-
sailed her to such a degree, that medicines
having wo effect, and the good care of the phy-
sicians, and the assiduities employed by her
husband and mother-in-law being of no avail,
she became entirely devoid of pulse, and sense-
less, so as to be believed by all the bystanders
absolutely dead ; the disease of hysterics being
then unknown, which in #Cceeding times, has
occasioned great mistakes, and among them,
other living women to be buried as dead, who
afterwards have been forced of necessity to
die in their graves.
The tears of her husband were great, as well
fas the sorrows of those who knew her, on ac-
count of the excellent disposition she possessed,
The funeral
was settled for the same day, the law perhaps
not there obtaining, but since established that
among her other endowments.
the dead should be kept as at present, twenty.
four hours above ground. Antonio Rondineli'
heard the event, and grew ill through grief, it
not appearing to him possible that envious death
should so soon have snatched her from life
At the twenty-second hour she was taken to be
buried, in the tomb of her family, accompanied
by the priests of the cathedral, to the’church-
vard of the same, and 1t is certain that this se-
pulchre is pointed out even to this day.
There was great talk through Florence of the
youth, and not many months married.
some hours of the night had passed, which was
in the month of October in the time of full
moon, Gineyra revived, or was somewha; ree
licved from the trance or lethargy, and having
opened her eyes as awakening from a deep
sleep, and recovered her strengih, came to her-
self, although much weakened by the disease
and by hunger. The moon being up, she
knew by a fissure near her in the stone of the
scpulchre, that she was in a burrying place;
and bound and shackled like a corpse, so that
with that little strength which had returned to
her, she tore partof the white vestments she
had on, and taking courage, and recommend-
ing herself to God and the Saints, she raised her.
self first a little so as to sit, then crawling and
upporting herself, she ascended from the tomb
y the steps which led to the little stone, and
by trying and trying again, she succeeded in
overturning part of that from above which was
not built,and then by creeping got out. The
fear of dying in earnest,and her great terror,
joined with the coldness, produced by the seas.
onyand badly clothed, furnished no better ex-
pedient than to take that way, which now, from
this event, is called the way of death ; and she
went in a very languid state, to the house of
her husband, Angolanti, which stood in the line
of the Adimarni, now the way ot the Cabzajoh,
but she went by the back way, and by that
lane which still exists. When she rapped at
the door, her husband, who stood melancholy
at the fire, looked out and seeing that figure
50 unexpected, and hearing her hoarse and lan-
guishing voice he trembled with fear, and ter-
rified, made the sign of the cross, so that be-
lieving that it was her spirit, be drove her
away, promising that the following morning he
would assist her with masses and prayers.
Ginevra wept, and lamenting and sobbing,
‘she endeavored before she fainted in the street.
ho betake herself to the house of her fathers
Bernardo Amieri, who was not at home. Her
seriously to think of her future state, she at
length resolved, and resolving, determined ney-
er to return to her husband ; and if the worst
cohabit with him, it being of no use to him to
appeal to the tribunals, for this reason, that it
rimony ; and, in fact, who would have ever put
it out of the head of her relations, who all re-
jected her, that she had really died ? and it ap-
peared to herself a miraculous thing, that she
again lived, In this state of things, her former
husband, Agolanti, sold her clothes and orna=-
ments as no longer useful, all which Rondinello
bought to clothe her with. Meanwhile, having
entered into anew marriage with him, under
the hand of a notary, and her nearest relations,
who were engaged in obtaining masses to be
said for her soul, as jt appeared to them she
required, not knowing or not guessing the least
of it, she went out on Sunday morning together
with her new mother-in-law and a maid servant,
Antonia following at a distance behind them,
and all going to mass, she was recollected by
some persons. She was also met by her moth-
mother answered from the window, and to the!
sound of lamentation, interrupted too by reason
of the cold, which seized on her trembling
limbs, being frightened, said nothing clse than
go in fieace blessed spirit 5; with the intention
of laying ber. Ginevra, still more languid, be:
voice almost extinguished and quite weary, no
knowing what elce to do, tock the road, rest
ing herself by the way, towards the house of an
uncle of her’s near by ; and this too was in vain,|
for she” bad ro other reception than a go in
Jieace, and the door shut hastily in her face.
She was obliged to stop and lie down
-— 3
ground, under the hittle terrace of St. Bartholo-
upon the
mew, thinking that she should there have to
die.
At which time, she bethought herself of her]
first lover,to whom she should have been mar:
ried, contrasted with the present repulses and
abborreace which she so keenly felt; and al
though it appearedto her a long way to the
habitation of Rondinelli, yet crawling along she
got to the end of it, and rapped at the housc
of Antonio. Certainly Randinelli was the mos:
courageous and intrepid, at the sight of her, of
those whom she had goneto ; for asking who
she was that was covered in that way, he was
not terrified in beholding her though breathless,
and with a weak low voice ; but having recog.
nized her by degrees, had her carried quickly
into the house and rapped in warm clothes, and
He did not
{latter himself, however, that she would live,
laid in a bed temperately warm.
but used every means to put off that crisis which
he saw impending. In this state of things it
cannot be knpwn which was greater, his joy al
ter having wept her as dead, or his griefto sce
her expiring.—He sat motionless beside her,
er, and all making a circle around her and ine
being by the physicians, the ecclesiastics, and
by all the bystanders, judged dead, and as such
placed in the tomb ; that she had after several
hours, found herself alive, although treated and
abhorred as dead ; and that, having wonderfally
made her way to the houses of her husband, her
father, her ancle, she was received by none ex-
cept Antonio, from whom the power of Jove
succouring ber with restoratives, had a great
hand in her present resurrection. And certain-
ly if it bad not been for Antonia, that which bad
not really happened on the morning before,
must have succeeded in that woeful night
when there was no less cause of dying than on
the former. Finally, when she bad returned
rom church and had dined, she was cited by
the Vicar,by a messenger fiom the Bishop's
palace. TIrancesco was there present, who
tal; wherefore in the presence of her, of Fran.
cesco, and of Rondinelli, the sentences was not
obly, that she should remain the wife of Rondie
nelliy but that Agolanti should also restore to
ber hier portion, which was donc—for so it was
that thro’ the ignorance of hysterical affections,
then existing in the faculty, Ginevra was be-
lieved really dead, and miraculously resuscita-
ted.
ils HCD Atk
CRUELTY OF A MOTHER.
At the Loodon sessions, May 1, Johanna
Hennesy was tried upon an indictment for de
serting her child, According fo the evidence,
this unfeeling mother bad laid ber child upon
the pavement in the night and left it; its cries
were heard, and it was (aken up and pursed by
a lady living in the ne iw hbourhoeaq The re«
corder was so much affected in his address tn
the guilty wornan. that he burst into tears, and
tending her ; the warm but penetrating temper-
ature of the bed, by degrees brought her to her-
sell, so that, timid and bashful, she was able to
|
recommend her honor and [uture fame to her.
former lover, if, indeed, there was any hope of
her (surviving. She related to him, in the
|
best way she could, and mostly by signs what
had happened. Meantime. the best cordisls|
(weeping, that in the person of Antonio, were
(combined the love, the compassion, the courage,
which on that night, bad forsaken her mother,
her husband and her uncle,
As the conversation, hitherto difficult, and in
an under voice, became by degrees somewhat
more easy to heryshe begged Antonio, that for
cvery reason, he would go and close the tomb ;|
and principally, that it might not be the mean sl
of making others, less fortunate than herself,
fall or stumble. Already eggs, drink apd
l
:
}
when he went to the churchyard, he provided|
‘other, though somewhat late restoratives. He]
nourishing broth, were prepared for ber, and
'made bis mother lie down beside her for that
night, and kept a maid servant to watch and!
,attend her.
Four days had not passed when she announc
ed ¢hat she was cured. And as it behoved her]
keeping the people of the house occupied in at-|
3
was unable to proceed. The prisoner was
found guilty, apd sentenced to one year’s im-
prisonment. The prisoner in her defince al-
leged that poverty bad compelled ber 10 the
course she pursued.
ee mt 7 Si —
A clergyman, who was in the habit of preach-
ing in different parts of the country, was not
long since zt an inny where he observed a horse
Jockey trying to take ina simple gentleman, by
imposing upon him a broken winded horse for
a sound one, The Parson knew the bad char-
acter ol the jockey. and taking the gentleman
death of this young woman in the flower of were not wanting, so that she had to provésytrde told him to be cautious of the person ha
When
was dealing with.—The gentieman finally de-
clined the purchase, and the jockey, quite
nettled obseryed—s Parson, I bad muh rather
hear you fircach than see you privately inter-
fere in bargains between man and man, in this
way. es We replied the parson, if you had
been where vou ought to have been, last Sun-
day, you might have heard me fireach,”
“Where was that,” inqnired the jockey. « pi
the Stare Frison,” returned the clergvinan,
Boston Eve, Gaz,
ene J 1 CRD SS EERI—
An Jrishman in America, once wrote to his
Hather in Ireland thos :
“ Dear Father—7J wish you would come and
settle in this place, for your business i$ much
ketter here than it is where you are ; besides, I
dare say you would soon get 0 be a colonel, a
appeared that death dissolves the band of wat
:
terrogating her ; her final answer was, that she 5
could say nothiug in contradiciion of her reci. ™
i ——
should happen to become a nun, rather than , |
»
L
tE
ee
Same
VY
gu
dog: Tp
i
a
<
ol Ll
justice of the peace, ora cons able; for in this oe
country they have mighty mean men to fii
those offices,
—b CTD Cpr :
THE HESSIAN FLY.
The progress of this corse of the wheat
Country, has been extensive and alavming al-
most beyond example, in nearly the whole of
Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio and Penn-
sylvama.
Ae
took away all fear ; and by receiving her,and + 4B
ey
_—
or