3111.16111.111 TOMO. £xtrav n*a . l nb.AeM. OcAnAentits--Smoor,atirz4, • Vutom. Scego--Groitb nj .Pos tI g - t• ULDE. This, =e f ts Vir ''s .) ,, b , :., •'..,, Scnootnev. - 0 d i et tie see! I've often thought be'd e the deathof me, 'And this is where he lees! ' (Meditates.) What time Ptwould save T . ' - TrairbitiVorka l larerO'Vettett in'thetrttve ! yirfill engra te y'sll Stich 4 Vctings .elit scarce it-•t , ‘ d ut;bovirl wis cione - Ver'ha been printed! Let's walte'him up***Virgil***Arirgilius Ifl ,. i 4'ilap tA =. 4 ,r , -- --' ' 1 ' • . ''', ' ilitTiaitlitigitiiii Tram c tile t ' omb). .-•.• l olliether thou vora'st,,from 'Eton' 'or frolif Non& inl'its mike vocative in i.;; . / ' ', glailtit noi r '" VI itililth v h *Op sa:y "yirgill." l tut: vi , llr - dost rotible me './., , - . - t Benoot,nov.. That's very cool 1 As if you'd rievor.troublettnie at school. (Virgil, outtaged , by-EtisiichAft; , ro•euters • _ tomb.' , thutilort.) , VICTOR MOWS 14 1 ;W SlRAtir. CriAolsan •by. • iChairles' Ruin. '•• , r We are temPted, in spite of its manifest, rhodornontade; to-give •.place;` to the elciqttent tribote"-paid , by-theloung-Englisii pagan to tho French 'romancer's latest Work. WC find the 'review, as folloWs, in-the'Y'Ortni,gittly rsE GESTEIS...OF VICTOR 1ii740 • `Only.'onee.n'My,life hay.e.l seenthe likeness o Vic,torAnge7l : genins... , ' Crossing over;when a . boy from I ..Oste Ad, , /. .bad the fortune to be caught in Midi hannel by a thunder-storm strong enough to delay the. packet some three goodbours over the due time. - About mid.: night the', thinidei•-cloud was right , overhead; full. Oflicieessant sound. andfire,lightning. and dexlmeSs so rapdly that it seemed to have life, and a delight in its. life. eAt thesame. hour the sky was clear, to the west, and all along the sea line Ogresprang and sank .as., to music a: restless dance or,clirise, of, Slimmer, lightnings across the lower sky; . a race and: riot of lights, beautiful: , and, ; rapid ; !as , coutSe . of shining; Oceenidee. along, the tremulous Mier of the sea. Eastward,,nt :the. swim, moment, the fripace. o Cc) ear s . ky..wa,s, higher 'f and 'wider;a, splendid '.seiniciiele of too, intense purity to be called blue; it was of ne colcir .nameable . hy man ; and midway in it; between the storm and the sea, hung the motionless; full moon'; Arte mina watching.,. with, a serene ; splendor of scorn the battle of Titans . and the revel of the nymphs, .from her stainless and Olympian sum-: mit of divine ,:;indifferent light. Underneath and about us the sea was paved with flame; the whole water trembled and hissedFiith phosphoric tire; even' through the windliand thunder I could hear the crackling and sput tering of the water sparks. -In the same beaven and in, the same hour there shone at elite the three contrasted glories,, golden and Sexy and white; of moonlight and of the double lightnings; forked arid sheet; and under all' this miraculous heaven : lay a flaming floor of . - . • That, tn a most; close and exact symbol, is the best possible definition I can give of Victor geniuS. And the impression of: that hour was upon me the impression of his mind; physical, as it touched the nerves with-a.niore vivid passioA.of pleasure . than music, or wine; spiritual, as it ealted'tbe spirit.with the senses, and aboVe them, to the' very summit of .vision and. delight It is no fit4tastie :similitude; but an .acurate likeness of two causes . working to. /the same eMct. There is. nothing - . but .tlutt de light like the delight given by sorne ,. • of his works.. And it is because his recent book bas not seldom giVen it me again, that I have any. , thing here to say of4t. •;, THE BOOK TO. BE REGARDED. AS IDEAL. It is a book tO be rightly read ; not• by the lappligheof realism, but by, the sunlight of his imagination reflected ' . upon tours. 1 Only so shall we see it, as it is, much less under Stand it. 'The beauty ithas, and the Meaning, are ideal; and therefore cannot be impaired by any want of realism. 'Error and violatiori of like- .illioocLorfact, wliicli would damn 'work of Balzac's or of Tha:okay's, cannot even lower or lessen the rank and vallie' of `a Work like this: :Wind it away liecanse,'it..lias not the peatand precious Analities of• their school, but thobe of a school quite different, is just as wise drh - o. Band; to assault the fame of Bacon on the-ground that he has not written in the manner . of ,Shakespeare;.or Xewton's, because -he - has . not written like Milton. This premised , , shall lehve the, dis • section of names and the anatomy of probabili tiesjo, ibe lltings , of cbatter. an&chuckle, so - welLand scientifically defined long since by r, • Cliarles Realie as-"itnonYmuncides-whe _ • scribbling , about;". there is never_any_ lack •of them;. and it will not greatly hurt the niaster'l popt_pf. an age that they should shriek and titter, :cackle and ho ! ot_inandilily_beldiid_itis___ .it; is not el , ery deniigod_whols.•_yithier able_here. . . - This book has in it, So to say, a certain _ele mental duality:. It is great because it deals greatly with great emotion. It is a play played out not lry human characters ;only; wind and sea, thunder and moonlight, have their parts too to fill. Nor is this all; for it is itself a thing like these things, living as it were an elemental . life:. It pierces and shakes the very roots of passion. It catches andifends the spirit as Pal-, las caught Achilles and bent him by the hair..- . Were it not.-so, this would be no child of • the master's; but so, as always, it is. Here; too, the birth mark of thle great race is visible. It is not, what&er it may seem, a novel or a study, historical ori'social. What touches on life or manners, we see to be accidental by-play \as soon as we see what the book is, indeed;The story of the battle of a human spirit, first with Fate, then with the old three subordinate ene nnes : the World, theFieshanti the,Devil. And • here I will saywhere the flaw, as 1 think, lies; for, like other great things, a great book must have a flaw. The Flesh and the Devil, Josiane and Barkilphedro, are perfect; the Warld is drawn wrong. And the reason is not far to seek. We brush , daily against the Flesh and the Devil, we must all rub shoulders and'sliake hands with thew; and they are al-. wayi much, the at root, only stronger and weaker with this maw than with that; therefore it, needs only the hand of a great poet to paint them greatly, after their true and veryaikeness. -But the. World is multi form.''' 'Po paint one aright :of its many faces, you must have , conic close enough on that side to breatbethe breath of its mouth and see by the light of its eyes. ' No accumulation of fact 11 00-faet,gleane d Arid &Lid "up never so cafe-:, _ fully will • avail:You instead. Titian himself elmpot pail t•Without oakum. Here:we have canvas and easel duly made ready, but the • colors are not to be had. In other words, here are many curious and accurate details painfully' studied and stored up for use, but alas it is not seldoin for misuse. Here are many social :facts rightly retailedand duly Lid outside, by :side, but no likeness of social life. Here are .the Mohoeks of the day, , for example,, flinch as we find them in Swift; here is often, visible • :even a vexatious excess of labor in the research of small things; useless, because the collector ,of them leis never applied his spirkb? . — th6 ; spirit of : • th e time in which these axial' hung's ylayeTM passing their small parts. lie cannot, booti Oat time has no attraction fot him, on anypite,, side to temper the repulsion he feels Trot . jawqber, side of it. Pure is and scorn of otae iris' &people destroy the faculty of ob- . avringlimonimb' more of description, even in . - „,“,4,;t• . . • , the bistorie lk p inhab,. then will.: they do 0 4 ' ill ,poetic? trOt;,l4les t , :ere, has been,,i?as' do htless there leOsowi. v itch that is hattifal, 1 , 1 4 46:12:101nrible #ll 'sec imarle,A 'English:Or of lys,r ; touclialsO,As 'ce 1,4._ • yabatlik`allnkio , abtraturthiqtwo •, . ' . .,.#,C1 übtl4o, al#, atone ,- j ti VI andl,noth; j :the .•,' hagz",,tekt: , mbrei:' ,vislble ~..of Vit,' ~ .;'• - .sblti'i'efu >' i • !„, • 461i1e itildATatlOAln . l., ' , 0,, ,,- .. . ' , 1;;;.." ,:1' 'Ve lOW a.'W time ,• of;* ''• mlx"`i . '.. • , 10. -2 , , -• Se %I , ' and he only who has fe t the pulse of ~ an age can tell us tow fast or slow its heart re allY aleAt„-o.3vakd .eVit,or .toyard .g00d.„., A nian who' writes,cif 'a nation or a time, how ever bad and base in the main, without any love for it, cannot write of it well. , A great _English pcketess has admirably said that a poet's heart may be large enough to. hold two na tions.• ' Victor Hugo's, apart from its heroic loyesf man, a love matchless ,except„ by Shel ley's, holds two nations, especialy close, two of f the ';' .greatest; a t es t .lt has fcen : been said he 1i tFieneland SPanish; , that is, he loves France t iod, paiti,:the spirit of thein attracts his spirit;- , but he - daes not love England. , There are great,' t. •t Englishmen who , no man has, praised! more 'nobly' than he ; but the, ,spirit of his ' 1 torte • 'England has 'no • ' attraction for ' his. :, Ifence; '', 'far ' 'more , .im ,portant than any passing errors of the; i nomenclature ,or misplaced detail, spiritual and ingrained ,error ~ of ;,thee book, seen only from its social or historic side. We catch' no where fora moment the note of English life in the reign of Anne.i . These' for whom 'T Write' will know, and will see, that I 'do not 'write,as _a_special,Pleader_forcountii_oraclas:q,a.s_cuie_ who willsee nci spot in :England or nobility.: But indeed it is an abuse of words to say that. England , ' is;. governed or misgoverned by her aristocracy. A republican; studying where to' strike, should read ;better the blazon on his en emy's shield. ;"Englarid," I have heard ,it said, "is not , a despotism tempered by epi grams,' ' but a plutocracy modified by acci dents." 4 #3MD* H CII,4It:A.CTE4B:: TOWORLD; TapFLY SH Awn, ,Enongh,UOW, Of the flaws and.failures m this work.; ;; "enOugh WWI We have,yet before its the-splendor : of 'its depths and heightS. , Entering the :idepthS ; first,: we came upon the evil spirit of the place. Phedie, Who here the Part of deikis baStard . ;begotten:' - bY,'lago; ePon his sister;: Madame, de Xertenil:, haVing, sothething. of ed both but dindnisb, and degraded; wanting, for instance; tbe deep . demoniac calninf, their life-longpatienee. haS too much inward heat of discontent,' too much fever and fire, to ktioW their perfect peace of spirit, the eqnable eletntiit `their` souls, the quiet of mind in, wbieff they and' work out-then work at leisure. He does not sin . rest;• there is somewhat of Anne and fret in his wicked - - ness. Theirs , is the 'peace:of the devil, which passeth all understanding. He, though like. them Sinning for sin's sake, and hating for the love of bate, has vet a too - distinct and positive quality, of definable evil. He is actnally ungrateful, envious, false', Of them. We cannot say, that they are thus or thus; in them there is a purity and -simplicity. of sin, Which has' no:sensible components; which -can not be resolved by analysis into thiS evil quality and that; Barkilphedro,' as his" maker : ' says with profound humor," has his fahlts.". •We fear-that a sufficient bribe might even -tempt him into virtue for a Moment,. seduce him to soil, by a , passing slip the virginity of :vice. Nevertheless; as the evil• spirit of envy rather than the devil absolute; he is ft'strOng spirit and worth study: The feW chapters, full of fierYelognence and a passion • bitter •aS blood,. in which his evil soutis stripped and subMitted to. vivisection; contain, if read aright, the best commentary 'ever: written on lago. We see 1101; at last, what no scholiast on Shakespeare could, shOW us, how the seed may -be sown and watered,'Whieh,•,in Season', Shall bring forth so black a blossOM; a poison So , acrid and so Ore,. is this poem, as in the old pictures; we see -the-serpent writhing, noL fatiglesg; under' the foot of an angel; and bract • to bruise as `of old heel that bruiSes liis head.. Only this time it is hardly an aii el of'light. . Uncoriselints of. her' offiee as *Aber St. - Michael, the Angel of the Flesh treads tinder the unconquerable Devil. Seen but,once : in full, the naked glory of the Titaness irradiates all one side of the poein with excess and superflux of splendor: • ` Among the fields and gardens, the - Mountain beightS • and hollows of Victor I - Ingo4 vast poetic 'kingdom, there are strange, superb mates,-'bird•, , ,-Euid--. 2 -beast,-,:o1 1 „various—fur--and • feather; but aSi'yet there wag nothing, like this; Balzac, working with other means, might. have. given us,' by dint of, anximis, - unatOiny,•"simile pietureS of - the virgin 'harlot. A Marvelous study we Should have had, one to burn into the brain and brand the memory forever; but rather a thing to adMire than desire. The magnet 'sin of beauty, the_efiluence of=attraction,he— wmild not have given us. But now we have lier - frinif the handS of a:poet as well as• a stu dent," new-blown and actual as a gathered flower; 'in Warnt Ihlaom Of blood and breath, 'clothed — witillive — '7eolor. - fair — with — ogioacC fle - sh4aSsionately_palpahle.' This we_see_firSt_ and feel, and after this the spirit. It is a strange beast that hides in this , ,den of roses. Such has. been, however, and must be.. “We are - all lit the mad, beginning with Venus." • Her niakePs definition is complete; "a possible Astarte latent in- an actual Diana." She is not merely spotless' in body; she:is perverse, not unclean. There is nothing of foulness in the mystic rage of ho desire. .53he is, indeed; "stainless and shameless;'? to be iinclean is common; and her: "divine depravity" will touch nothing common or Unclean. -She hail sevetr•deVilS in • her, and upon her not a fleck of filth. She has no more in common with the lewd, low hire lings of the ,baser .school of realism„: than a creature of the brOthel and the street •has in common with the . .Nhenails who rent in sunder the living'limbs of Umluts. We seem to hear abOnt her the beat and - clash of the terrible tinibrels, the IpllOC 4?.schyltis set to'veme,, - the music that made mad, the tipper notes' of the psalm, shrill and strong as a sea wind, the , qiull=voiced" bellowing; nrademong of these dread choristers from somewhere out of sight, : the tempest of tambourit les giving back thinater to the, thprider, tlit' friry of divine lust that. thickened with 'minor' ;blood the hill-streaMS of Cithanon. ,• • , It is uo vain vaunt of the modern master's that he has given us in . tiaiptlier guise one of . tbe fEsebylean Women, a nuni strons g oddess,' whose tone of vidce "!_rai'e'a :sort, of.Prolne thean grandeur to her - Inrioni4 amorous. words," Who 'had in her ;the tragic andVitanie passion of the women of :the.Elettsinian.feats . "seeking the sat3 , ls zualer the slarv.'"/AikV•WitYi . i all this tierce . excess of ithitgi'natOe tragic intonation, the woman' is modern and 4T know nofif it ha.s ,heen remarked how decisive a note of the English siiirit there is in Idoliere, a Frenchman of the French . ; an; English current„as recogniza,ble as indenna ble,,pa.sidng iinder and through the tide-stream of his genius. There is'a more northern flavor ?nixed into his mind, a_ more uortliern tone in terfused, than into any other ef the great French writers, Rabelais excepted. Villon, for instance, in so many _WIVE, so like , them lioth, is nothing if not Parisian. And, if lam not, wrong, no third:, great ' Frenchman has Vol . k foulid such 'acceptance and sympathy among Englishmen unimbued Avith the French spirit as Rabelais and Moliere. For them in stinct breaks down the ,bar of ignoranee -- fFey one instance, if a court daily had in-: deed insulted Swift,,she, would, ,certainly have had, by way of answ , r, ~ , something .(i4. De QuirleeY'sPhrll69),,,at°° InPAI24MAIY AWitttiati rot VotatlOn; , •eoy l ething e tio tnotetrOts, that the, ean Might` thencefotth have' ',held the Next plate to Grwynpleinein her bout. THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN -PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 10,4869. "THE FLESIL•" ...P:1•, i ._ tOie might be now alive, and-may be. . . ..... 4Y, _,7oter Words have the light of an i , ..:) .I'isk "the tone;',o truth indubitable , 4iiiiqlf_eXth and sensibly , f4lll. 41 %15* )v,eke #91 , .i; i ern, with that • • Airii). I _oo,ol l a l 11, , 'ry . were you? 'tol t,' tnusti,gbe 1 , - ar:'4, - a mutilation *-,-. - ,',- ,:hdtii - i" , rott ~ ,liitTiet?l, . committted s e, oz ..,sp,: No open, Af ' l ypairu 1 your: as pure ito',yo e n . uched me, I ii e: in •burning fire, V. ,— e Y oi- do uot ' be liev , but if you only 604 w little I care! Despise me, you that peopiAlesphse. Degra dation,below -degradatioxyAwhat , a ...pleasure 1 the double flower of ignominyt I am b aathering it. Trample me under foot... 4 4YobWiiiike me; all the better. I know that: Oh! I 'should like to be with you in the eveninir, while they were playing music, each , of. us , leaning back ; against the same cushion,' under the purple ,awning of a golden, galleyou...the midst, of, the infinite sweetnesses of the sea. t Insult me. Beat me. Pay: , re'-', Trcetllan like a street walker. I adore y0u.”..,' , ~.2,1 . , , i, , The naturalism of a that, is absolute; you. hear the words pant and. ring Sonic might doubt whether her wild citations of old stories. ,that matched her case,' her ' sudden fantastic . allusions to these at .the very height of her frenzy were as natural: `I -think they are. • The great poet had a right if it pleased 'him to give his modern Menad the thOught and the tongue of a Sappho, with the plebe and the caprice of a Cleopatra. Such a pantherees might be such a poetess; then between, fancy. and fury we should have our Bassarid •domplete, only with silk for fox-skin. Anil this pligfit be; for the _type_ of__ spirit_can ~ _LI hardlsr-----brare in any luxurious ‘ age. Perversity, fs'th'e fruit of weariness as wearmess is the fruit, of pleaanre. Charles Baudelaire has often set that theme to mystic music, but in a- minor . key; his sweet and subtle lyrics were the prelude to this grand chorus of the masters. ' . . "IPEA. ), ' Wehtive seen the soft fierce pity of the cessant'Suninier bet ; Weenlhe deep sky full of passing lightS and • dreams, and the deep sea full of the salt, seed life ;, and be tweenthem Venus arisingi the.fmal and fatal flower, of the rhYstic leaven: and 'of the raven oils sea. Looking nOW::frenr west to east, we may see the moon-rise; 'a. tender, tear-blinded . Moon, Worn thin - and pitre,'ardenyand trans: parent. : ,„ ; • A great poet can perfect his . picture with' strangely few touches. We see ‘‘,Virgilia" as clear as "Imogen:" we see :/ : q.)Car as clearly- as Es ineralda:" Yet "Innigen." pervadei the action of. Gymbetine: Speaks in crossing the 'stage. or coi-t.oftozu, ? . It is not easy to Write, at all about the : last ,chapters of the' book; something divine Is :there, impalpa ble and indefinable. I Must' steal the word I want; they are "written as if , in star-fire and immortal' tears." , - Or, 'to •' take Shakespeare's words after Carlyle'S they, are` "most dearly sweet and bitter." The . lathes: of Asebylus is no more like, Dante's, Dante's no more like Shakespeare's, than any of • these is like lingo's. Every master of ,patihoihas a key of his own to unlock the source of tears, or of that pas sionate and piteous pleasure' which 'lies above itnd under the region of teaiS.' Some, like Dante, condense the whole agony of a life into one equlsite and bitter drop of distilled pain. Others, like Shakespeare, translate. it pang , by pang into . a complete cadence and symphony of suffering. Between "Lear" and "Ilgolino'? the balance can never be- struck; Charles Lamb; we may. rememberi' spent hours ow- the debate with a friend who,. upheld 3 Dante's way of work against Shakespeare's. .On which side we are to range the - greatest .pbet of . our trivia age thet'e t be no moment of question. I am not that he has ever touched the keys or SMITOw 'with surer hand I: to deeper music than here. There nothing ha his work of a more 'heave* kind; yet, or, it, May be because every. word has in it,.the _Vibration of earthly emotion; but through it inther , than above, there groWs and pierces a note of diVine tenderness, the very passion T of pity that be fore this has made wise men 'mad . Even more than the pathoS ;of this close, the purity and exaltation are to be noted; nothing of connnon is there; nothing , of theatrical.; And indeed, it needed the supreme sweetness of Dea's reap pearance; a • figure translucent with divine death, a form - of flesh . that the light of heaven shines through more and more as the bodily wail. wears thinner and consumes, to close with music and ,the luminous vision - 'Of a last com fort a book so full of. the sound and shine: of storm. With the. ; clainor , and horror yet in. our ears of that raging, eloquence in which the . sniferer flings the_. faces. of prosper— ous men, the very flame, and hell-lire of liis stif; to "ring; it neededno leis than tlfiS to lea.Ve, the, mind ealted and reconciled:" But this dew 'of heaven is' enongh to 'quench or allay the 'flank* alien'. There are words Of a. sweetness` surpasSable, aatheSa:. Mu; s'en .ra; plus ce chansons." And upon all the.Se dwells the measureless and nameless • ace of night upon a still sea. To this quiet we have.' been - led through all the thunderandlainnilt - ofT things fatal; from the/tempestuous overture of storm and whirlwind; from sea, again to sea.: There-is - allivine-and-terrible-harmoi*ln—fthiv chorus - of the'play, secretly and stiangey sus- tailed, yet - so that on a - fult reading we 7feel it, • though at first' sight Or bearing' it must be missed. tIMATMENT OF NATUIa , . Of the master's unequaled power 'upon natural things, upon the elementS we call fri anithrite, knowing even . less .the laws'of their life than of ours, there is happily no heed; as surely there are no words, to sneak. Part of this power we may, recognize as due to the. subtle and deep admixture of moral emotion and. of, human sentiment with the mysterious 'rnOtion and passion cif nature. Thus, in 4 . , Les frfivailieurs de la Mer," the wind and the sea gain Strengilt, and depth from the lminari wt to fight them; from the depth and strength of the ineartiate spirit so doing and suffering:: Thus in this' book there is a new sense and . a . new sublimity added to the tempest by the re morse of men sinking at once under sin and stop In, drowned muter a double weight of deeds and waves: . Not eVen in that other book is the supreme mastery of nature, the lordship of the fortes of things,. more admirable anil Wpliderfa: than, throughout the first part of tills. • Ile who could. think. to deseribe might think to rival it.. But, of 'dhe point 1 cannot hilt take note; there is nothing, even at the height of tragic horror ' I'e,-. 11 pelleitt,', ugly, 'hateful. ' It has been - said tlioe, is, 7uid will he said'itgain; for how Should there not be distorted eyes and enViouS tofighei 'in (lie wetici? ! 'lndeed, n pieuvre is no`pleasant playfellow; the "tree , of man's making" bears a learll4l , fruit; the nionstuntsr maidenhOOti •of 4Tosittneis.no'sister to the stariT virginity 'of :Pea; but how , liaS'.tlte great. poet handled these. things? The mutilation of a child's facOls , thing :unbeatable for • thought le rest on; but have WO not .seen first the face iflierefeSotiPi ` For elsewhere • than , • in the work-' of. • soverelgit'Peet must: we look for the horror % .- Whieliatt! will' hare - none of, 'which ha - titre . ' flings : back loathing 'in the britiger'.4 face. If net, i've 'Of this time Who hive anti serve : his art should' indeed be in a bad ease. But upon this. Matter . we , cannot permit the ;blind and nameless leaderS of the nameless blind tifdecide'fot us. 'Let' the seriortS 'arid candid student look again fin. himself and see. That,‘.!fight of the dead with the dark," that. sWinging,of carrion-bids withlhe swing of the.. bbeted-'earrierclitight have been so done into wordaas to beget in us mere loathing; but-how is it done here g r i T t l: ., .i h r i n is ig g l h tt as y t r i t y ta i T a r t e t t e ' l o s f o V in i e o : tor thing Vve b it i " ofa horrible , o t r - s oi, lai o e f ki o n l g e splendOir of effect. horror , thing penetrates us not with loathing, hut with' a tragic awe and terror as at a real pieced the. wind's work, an actual ego of t.. 1 ..2.- 4 ,:,;, - 4 v , Ortion of ~,the tempest o f t • i ! ' ,;. ' ; ;- ."i, L - • always; handle what he may, , I L 010 ii' : - ,jI E i t e great; '!= - Wpave6:, "it i , '‘ : . .4p ~ ii te r and t ' t ~ , - N orio a . A , f,/,`thuoisitii,:. leave ' l' t puls% ,1 • ?) ~ ,',, • 1, '..,,,,,- F;Y,L, vi • on oo's Pa . aittirtivrint I T §,,,, er:' nokwer•' 4 z o ff ~.; , p,,kiing xi, ~ :great, . • t, 'a rigthvelishglik lello I v „ q ueiltiin which cane gravely 'deliberated. ' a have only , to record my own poor conviction,, based on, some study and comparison of the mem -that , precisely as=•rwe. now -think of those judges who ,put Fletcher above Shakespeare, • CONVicYYtbOvellilton, tbe paid poets of Riche lieu beside Corneille, and I know not whom besidelitoliere, will'the future think of those jridges who•woulitplatey , ,a - nyliwepdf his age by • the . fide of 'Victor 160. - 14 for has his age • proved.poor—it has rather been-singularly rich • in men and, in poets really :,And greatly ad mirahle. - ,l3ut even had ' another;done•as well once and again , as the •master hinwilf, Who has done so well as Much? MA he done but half, had he , done but a tenth of his aetilalWOrkillia suiiremacy; being lesi ineentedtable: would no doubt, have been less contested: A , parsi-, monions poet calCUlateS Well:for his own time. had Victor lingo granted - us but one great . play—say 3fcirion de Lome, but. one great lyric work—say .Les Contempkaltnts,' but one ; great tragic story—say any,ono you please, the, - ternptationte decry and , denounce him by coin-, ?Faison, would have; been „ les.s r for .with - the ' tribe 'of Rarkilphedro • time strength of 'this temptation•grows with,the growth of the bene-• fit - conferred: VAndNery potent is-that-tribein the world of•men and of letters. • ' not praite or dm-. Praise:by comparison not curious o inquire What, of OP** : Or ,bf actual truth there May - be, in any charge hrought against, the. doer Of. the greatest Wfts given among : men: in our timel. Goethe found , :hiti ' way l)f work mechanical and theatrical ; Milton alio lived to make Cobliqte recantatiOn'orffis early,PraiSe" of, .Shakespeare; we mayi and tiboUld; wish ithia: otherwise;, yet none the „lesSare they all great men. lt may be therels 'PereeptibW in Victor lingo something too mach-of vesitiVe.bitem tion, of prepense application of'composition and forethought: what if: ,there' Were One ,question standp forth first and laPt ;" is the work done good : work and great, or not? leswr, question is this ; these, that we find to.be fatiltsi;' are they qualities, separable front the man's nature ?.could we have his work Without them.? If not, and if' 'lik; 'work be great, what , it profit us to blame them orregret First, AA: events, let us haVe the sense to enjoy it and' *the grace to .givethanks. What, - for example, if there be in? this. hook .we have spoken of 'errors of rangnage, 'errors historical or social? Has it not throughout : a mighty hold upon men and . things, , the god-like strength ofgrasp which only a great man can have of them? And for, quiet power of hand, for scornful sureness of satiric truth, what can. exceed his study .of the Queen of England 11(Anne)? Has it not been steeped,in the fire' and tears of live emotioo the style be overcharged and :over-shining with bright, sharp strokes and points,' these are no fire works of any mechanic's, fashion; these are the pheSphoric flashes 'of 1 the sea-fire moving on the limitless and living sea. . Enough that the book is great and heroic, tender and strong; full from end to end of divine and passionate love, of holy- and ardent piety for men that, sutler wrong at the bands of nten,Tull, not leSs, of lyric loveliness and ryric force; and I for one out content to be simply glad and grateful— content in that simplicity of spirit to accept .it as one more benefit at the hands of the supreme singer now living among us the beautiful and lofty life of one loving the race of men he serves, and of thetti ui all time to be beloved. GOSSIP FROM THE FAR• WEST. Rapid Growth—The Ilerd.Cirounds—.The Indtans—Swiss and Tyrolese Settlers. . . . ,A correspondent of the Cincinnati Commer rial writes from 'Laramie, Wyoming territory, under date of July 17: "The people of this section have already de mqnstrated. that there will be a way, trade;' two years. of the railroad have stimulated pro dnction, and the', firmeri of the Upper Platte, the valley of Crow Creek; and the cattle upon' a :thousand hills near Cheyenne, though but a , beginning, demonstrate the great natural wealth othis region. • From the vicinity •of .Kear, ney, ,to the foot : of:, the Mountains irrigation, would be necessary for general agrieulture but nine-tenths of the whole country, both -and high plain.-is-available at once - for - grazing - . 7 Millions of buffaloes have lived and fattened upon that range for ages, attesting the value of the native grasses. To an easteiw eye much of the grass has a sort of, a dried, cured look, and this is really the Most valuable part. The markets .of Cheyenne arenow-regularly : sup-.- plied with theheef of cattle, that have never tasted grain, and xnany . of them wintered_ out m t e neighboring valleyS. This business, 'is-beginning to exOte due - attentions Many are, already engaged in it,' . and it 'is shown„ that the actual cost of raising and fatteaingari'px varieB - -to eight dollars,naking7this - ni equaled; is the' stock-growmg region of the • world. "The cattle slaughteredin Cheyenne for`the'. use of the city and Fort D. - A. Russell are as tine as any Cattle t4at'cain be shown in the markets of Cincinnati. • Consider thiS area of two hundred mileg froni east to West, and six hundredmiles north to south, and calcu late the immense herds to be fattened there in the future conceptions of the undevtloped Wealth of the West. The objection to settle ment is, not the barrenness of the regien, but the,great extent of our lieW *country, - which Still gives the emigrant' a chalice to find a home farther:. east. Ihit few years, how ever, will elapse until the tide /of life rolling' westward will reach and , vitalize* these - "vast herd-grounds. When the MissiSsippi Valley is more !thickly settled; 'it will be foinadMost Profitable in the, cultivation of grain, and Cattle call he sent hence to'their great suck markets, cheaper than they can be' grown theM. Rut. there is another and‘,,inore serious obstacle. river; all that region four hundred miles south and Southeast of Cheyenne roams that Savage and implacable foeWhoM eivilizatimrhasneYer teen able to reach tad enlighten; with Whom' stipulations are idle, and v;lion - i no oatlia,nor beetles, hind. . ' • . „ , - "It is the custoin ,to speak'. Of ,'lndian' War there is in strictness of language no such ' thing ;their, warfare is simply. organized • as sassination.". if We could lmeet':and ; , fight the Indians, we would soon 'conquer a'nettee,.; but' t iet . 6l.y over them' neeeSSarily - nothing more than . a surprise 'and a ,',MasSacre. The raCillating Indian pOlicY of :the government, if continued, must Postpone the development ,Of ,this, country for many. years. , : i lls ;'last idea bresell'eil, to .. asSigir certain : large reserva'-' for • 'ally the • : tribear 'arid `treat as enemies who' refuse' to' upoi l thetifiliAnite popular •in the' WeSt. idle' to: sup- Bose Bose that'treatie6till bind a I 'i:4/hole:tribe; they must be.dealt with as. Ihidii.ridnafs; and .either. gathered into settlements and there treated as; wards:of the nation; or:suffer a waraelate: ‘Exterinination7 is. -a'barbarous ' teriii;b4 in 'surgery a limb may be given` 'to save :> diplomacy - .a lirovinee surrendered to'savea kinwhini,tAV,o,hundrea ~t housand` . savagesmay certainly be coiTO/6(7,,,0r ~ p )ant.edi. to give, comfortable safetyto four, milliOna ',of :whites: N'etwithstanding;these drawbacksonuCh:more. is being done than is generally known. "Quite a number of hardy foreigners are Set tling in the •eaStern':tilleys of Colorado, and stock-growers frortikaniias and even lliitiois are, extending' their • operations along the upper Platte, and estah)lahhig, :numerous: -ranches throughout '.Wyoming. hlr. Knollaeh; Of ;.Denver,-:ant :nhave con- , sgracted for'ai ?fUld in tlid 'Asti valley ca nikr a nch 91 . tlifttUnion 1 stl4B soon fr Wa.laig9 4,4 try of Six .imipsmetilti:v 90tipy the ei k are prOoctorSr itialves of SI xosOtoe, hAra. 7 Mice a , large WY"bie`iflato these valley' id off on the Denver bra, 'Scheller,' in honor of 31; Iler, the dig-, tinguished tti _JEW __-.......Led in - the'VV:' tlement, and intends making the place her per manent residence: , 1 "Another colony of Swiss and Tyrolese are to occupy a valley - further West, near the new gold mines of , Southern' Wyoming. The best grazing country extends along the foot of the mountains and for.. hundred - miles'easr,"heing swell watered;y mountain streams, and sup plied with a peculiarly nutritious grass. " The dry atmosphere Of .the ; late summer cures it upon the ground, and the wioter ing is, almost saline that , of; summer, the natural sweetneSs of the grass rcinaining unin jured. Sleet storms arc . _ almost nnitnown In this section, the snow , 'falling in a dry powder, so to speak, which is' less „injurious than rain. This will in time be the leading interest at Cheyenne. At present the trade of that city • consists of occasional outfits to Sweetvirater or the new mines of southern Wyeming, the trade and travel to Denver; furnishing supplies to Fort D. A. Russell and Camp Carlin, and sup plying herders' and' hunters' ranches in the vicinity,-and other—plaCes-4hroughout_Wyom-._ mg. The capital of, this Tonitory,is nominally at. Cheyenne,. but sdlittle progress lots yet been 'made in mganizing t ,the Territory that this fact adds but little special interest to the place." SUMMER .RESORTS: COLUMBIA . ;110USE • CAPE MAY, With, accommodations tor 760 guests, is now oven. •The Germania Berenade Bench ander the direction o Prof. GeO,..Bastert, has bgen oec,nrod for the season. , JessGEO. J. POLTON, P.roprietor; SURF HOW, ATLANTIC CITY, No Al ; BE OPEN UNTIL SEPTEMBER O. For Booms, Terme, &c., address THOMAS FARLEY , Proprietor. Carl Soiled Parlor Oithesiranas i,sen engaged fir :As season, . . CAPEISLAND• .N. • J. • • A first-eines RESTAURANT a is carte, will be Opened by ADOLPH PROSKAI?ER, of 222 S. THIRD Street, Philadelphia, on the( ith ofJnne, under the name and title of MAHON DORBE f at tho corner of WASH INGTON and JACKSON Ste., known as Hart's Cottage, liar ramifies will be supplied at the COttage. Lodging Rooms by pap or Week to Rent. • jedo tr L ORETTO SPRIIZG'4,. CAMBRIA COUNTY, PA., Will be opened to Guests July I st. "Excursion Tickets, " good for the season, over the 'Pennsylvania Central Railroad, can be procured from Philadelphia, Pittsturgh, and Harisburg, to Kayler - Station, 2 miles from the borings. w here coaches will be in readiness to convey guests to the Springs. The proprietor takes pleastire In notifying the public that the hotel is in proper order, and all amusements usually, found at watering places can be found at the above resort. Terms,B2 SO per day, or etSO per month. FRANCIS A. GIBBONS, Proprietor. • SIMON NEWTON, Superintendent, .irn-tfi• Of the Atlantic. Hotel, Newport. QBORTLIDGE MALL, FOR. FIRST ),..3 CLASS BOARDERS; Concord Dill, Delaware county, Pa., Philadelphia and Baltimore Central Rail- Location elevated and beautiful; noted for lb; coolness good room Mr s:om 4 'o 6 weeks.' Inquire of . CII t ARLES ItESLLVER,I229 Chestnut street. Address • JOSEI'II STIOUTLIDGE. T IGHT HOUSE COTTAGE, ATLANTIC JLI City. 'JONAH. WOOTTON, Proprietor. ' The most desirable location, ea the lelawlibeing the nearest point to:the surf. Guests for the housemill leave the cart : at. the United States Rotel. No bar: jyl9.lm§ S„.IEA BATHING.—NATIONAL Cape'llay City, N. J. This: large and commodious hotel,: known as the National Nall, is now receiving visitors. AARON GARRETSON, je24-2m§ . Proprietor. LELAWARE HOUSE, CAPE ISLASI), • N. J, Is now Open for the reception of visitors. el7-2m . JAMES 31.Et1RAY. Proprietor. WINES AND LIQVOItS.-., ITRBANA• WINTI CO.'S (HAMIBONDST'ORT, R. Y.,/ PIT R E E S FOR SALE BY J. CLAIRKSON GRIFFITH, • Commiralon 'Merchant, 20 N. Front Street, Sole Agent for Penna. ,Nov,' jersey and Delaware. — ails at§ . TURE, are. _ 1869. 1869. YURNITUR 1 1314 - iIIIESTNU STREV.T. . . Having just completed tuatlnestlot of Furniture ever produced in this city, 1 will receive orders for the same; during the month of August, • AT PRICES THAT 'WILL OFFER 'INDUCE/11E13TE. . TO YURCHAS.VII,B. , • , • , The designs are , now and' elegant. The workmanship and materials are of the highest order. , • • I invite the attention of those who intend furnishing to calla and examine the 'stock of Furniture, and convince themselves of the above facts. . • . 3011 W M.'GARDNER ..131.6 Chestnut St. lm . • MACIIIIVERY; IRON, &C. CUMBERLAND .NAILS • $4 80 PER KEG; • Containing' 100 lbs. , lfalls; other brands of NM'S GO p er keg; lio?rdman's Barbed Blind litapies, 64 25 per box OEIO lhs. Stap fi les; Shutter Hinges, from. 12 to 17 ' complete with- xtureS; 73 ets. per set; 11.2 in: Frame' Pulleys, 25 ets.; 1 .6.4 in. 26 ets. per doz.;' Rim , Locks'.And Knobs , 85 per. dozen; at • the Chea:for. the•Ctssh Hardware and Wool Store of, J. B. SHANNON 1009 Market Striet. my= -13 tai th ly • * ATERRICK' SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY , 430 WARRINGTON. Avenue Phil adelphia, MANIIFAUTUBE- . - • • STRAM ENGINESIIIgh and How PresguretHerizon tal, .Blaet 'and Cornish Pmnpfug BOIL /il--.Cylin'tier, , • STRAW lIAMAIHRB , .-Nesmytli arid Davy styles, and 7 all sizes ~. OA STINGS,,,Loara, , Dry and Green Sandi Brass, ROOF&-Iron rrnmes,,for covering with ? Slate or Iron. TANKS-Or Oast o r Wrodglit Iron,pir refineries, water ', GA S-MAGRINEP.T-718lich. fis.Retorte, Benchr,Orasiltigi; - ' Holders, and Frames, .Purifiers, pcke and ,Oharcoo, k Barrows,.Va Wes. , Goveinors ;Are • SUGAR; MACRIN.F.RY—Stach• Thins- and • • Poulos,/ Defecators, - IBonti 1 Black .+ Filters, Burnere f Wasbers and.Rievators, Rag.pilters,,Sugay and Bone; 'Black Care, . . . Sole tunnutactutere o fthe zonowingspeciarties: • In rbiltidelphia antlvicluity,of William Wright's Patent Variable Cut , ol7 Stearn Engine. L' In. the'l.lnited States, of Westen CPatent Self cent er in/. mid Self-balanaing OetitriihgalSugar-drainfngßa• Glass & Barfon's, inip,roVetdent onAspigirall 84:Woplvey's Centrifugal: Bartel's Patent WroUght-Iramßitort Lid.: ' Strohm:Os Drill Grinding Rest,. Contracters,forrhe design, erection and fitting up pf Re fineries for working Sugarbr Molasses:. COPPER, 4.1.1 D YELLOW SiOntbingi'Brai.l6o,, ' 4 '3 pre , 1 , 1 - 0 I METAL copip_er, , colastantly_ On ban lid a i t a t ir ßl 6 / 3 1 0 4to and ia iiv, wirißoßA; CO.. NO.= Booth Wh 9 ' l)Y 11 RimoYAth. . . - • EMPVAL:--()()OHRAIT, -RUSfiELL & JCLCO.:have , rotnovod from n North rront street to CinESTNUT -north above Front 04 . 4 i • rA R CAPE;; MAY ThUndaysand • , SatttrartyB. .11 . URDAY;4unci••2Bth, the new and ,trolen , ..OF 2 THE . LAKE, Captain ; ps , • domnienco •running„.regulatly• to r 0/1r) 1 ~tOB tch , litteet' Wharf' on TUESDAY 1) , J.:l I As,„lo,tagi ..41HATURDAY MORNINGS at o clockattfateftnairdtd-lenvo the landing nt Cape Hay ton -MOND*YEI, - WE - DlifEt9» l / 4 :Ks - :awl „FRIDAYS at I 8 o'clock. • . FARE; INCLITD,IE% CAIIIIIAGE lIIRE;e2 24 4 ' CHILDREN, • "' • I 25. • , SERVANTS, s • ••• ,c- •1 w. • 4 tIEA9ONIOKETB,. 810 HIREEXTRA .• THE LA Dlr• hati. handsome state-room eccoinittodetlons, and is fitted an • • with cvorythit* necessary for the safety. and comfort of ' passengers. • •-• • ' ' • • •• ' Tickets sold Ma -Baggage- checked' at •Ithe -, Trarsofor • offi ce 821 most Ind treet Meier t hapold inentallletol ' Freight reedited - until • . . For further_particulare; ittenire 9 Ait44o,Ploc,. 1t0.',38 li • bitIiDELAWARRAVentio,. • • • .'.G;M:gRiIDDECI., • , • CALVEkITAGOART; , , , OFin GE ~_ 01? . PH IL AP ELPIIIA. AXii , • ii- READING ' RAILTIOAB (7031PANY, 11ROAte' STEEET. Pli ILADELPIII A., Aultust bth.P4',9. • • BEADING 11A11.1toAD PARK. A('CONI3IODATION TRAlNtlietween . Pliiladelphle, end , Beiment, eminent!. log A uguet 01.114860-,Slarting front Stetlbne Seventeenth street and Penntylvanla revenue. and'atopping at Coates . . street (Park Entrance),,- Brown • street ,(ParkEntr.ince ) , Thompson street. bfitliin lene; - (Entranso to Engel it Wolf's Farm.) and east end Columbia Bridge it Entranco to Washington Retreat), daily, Sundays excepted. • . Trains 'start' from Seven , Trains start front Bel. Menth and Penns ay.; , - manta At 7.10 A. M. '' At 6-'3O A. H. , 9.10 A. M. . ' . . . . " : 8,00 A. 31. • " 11.00 A. M. , ~, " 1(1.00A.-31. 1 " 1.30 P. M. 12.71) Noon, " ' .0.00 P. 111. : , ' • k. . " . , 2.10 P. M. 4.fn P. M.. 1 6311P:M-. .• , " SAO P. M " 7.40 P. 31. -. •, . •" , 7.10 P, M. -Arrangerneithiluive,houttnatlawith Green-and Coates, Seventeenth and Nineteenth Streets; and 'Union Passen ger, Beltways to . sell Exchange Tickekt in connection with above trains, good either way, for - 12 etc Single fares on , Park Accommodation Tra1rx'...:.....10 cts. Tickets in packages ,7 for al Ma.. • 11 for till ''' For tiniest Offices, ' Seventeen th . etreet, - Coates street, and Belmont. ... . ..,., . J. LOWIIIE BELL, General Agent. GROCERIES, LIQUORS; Art- NR`.W ALB TC. ROURTS, DEALER IN FINE GROCERIES, Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets. J 931 tgeXi ^ 1 1 V11.1.TE BRANDY. FOIL PRE SER G N. —A chafes article ;Just rerelved and fur sale at iJ USTY'S East End Grocery. Notts .S ou th s kton d strftt. t!elals Chretnut street. . 'MEW GREE!..;_ GINGER.-400 POO NUS ..1. 1 1 of cboko Green Ginger in :storo and for 641 e. at couSTY , s End End Grocery: No.' South Socond Arcot, Clean= trivet, • _ XTEW. • MESS ',_SHAD AND -7- 6 ; 1 3 14)ED J. Salmon. Tongues and Sounds, In prime order, just rOCtilftli and for sale at CovsT East End Grocery; No. Il i South Sor.ond street. below CithAttrat street. . Z! 0 U 31 A TO, PEA, 2310 - CIC Turiln and intik,' Soups of Plosion CIO %allot:se. tutu, one of the finest artirles for pie.tdes and salting For sale at COUSTY'S East 'end grocery, lln tiouth St . Tend street. below Chestnut street. Fultz 13PICES, GROUND AND WHOLE =Pure English Mustard, by the pound --Choice 'White Wine and Crab Apple Vinegar for pickling In slate and for sale at COUISTYII East End Ciroeery, N. llg Stinth Seeand street. Helen' Chestnut street. ROBERT TRNER. (late with J. U. Tomlinson, Laurel BR. Wharf.) ; 'DAVID CALBIL4 TENEII 41L7, HONEYBROOK LEHIGI-i, .AND WYOMING COAL, No 955 North Front Street. NW Trial Orders, personally or biplan e invited , Proprietor. S. 11:140211/11.11111.. 30111 v. surarr. rprUNDERSIGNIM,,INVITE, ATTENI ti ß ott to their stock of _ . tng Nouptain,Lehigh 11.13 d Locturt Ifountain which; with this preparation given hp us,wo think can aot be excelled by any other Coal. Office, Frankila institute 'Building..So: IS S. flirreetb street., • . BINZB SECZAFF t ialfi-tf • Areb etreetwherf.Schu JEstablished 1705. A. S. ROBINSON- FRENCH pi,..giTg LOO KIN G GLASSES, Beautiful Chi-oruPs, ENGRAVINGS AND PAIN'AIINGS, Ntinufacturer oral" kindu of Looking-Glass, Portrait it kicture Frames. 810 -- CHESTNUT - STREET,: Fifth Ilootatiofit tfieo43fithiatia, - PHIL ADELPIIIA. GiEliTSr - FITRNISITING - G - 017DS - . - 1 FINE DRESS SHIRTS GENTS' NOVELTIIS. J:.• : .yv...0.)T.r . ' . 4:.c.0 4 NO. 814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Form doors below Continental Hotel. - mhl-f ro w tf PATENT SHOULDER SEAM SHIRT . NIANTJFAC TORY. Orders for aim celebrnted Saris supplied promptly on - brief notice. Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods, WINCHESTER & CO., 706 C HESTNUTI e3-mw f tf pHILIOYE4PISLIA : • TYPE 'FOUNDRY • , PItINT.EI{Q';' FURNISHING NVAItEIIOI7SE, r', ' •Z'stabliebed 1541.. The Subscriber," having greatly increased facilities for manhfactutingt" calla funicular attention to his rNew ' Series ; of ClassicEaces of Book and Newspaper %flees, which will compare-favorably with those of any other Pounder..• Ilis,luactical experience in, all. branches ap pertaining to' the lilanufae,turo of Type. and the fact of constant ...Personal Supervision - of each department of Ids business, is the best guarant offered tothe,printer of, M 11131144 arid durable article: ' • - • Everything necessary, in, a. complete Printing Es tablishment"furnished at the shortest notice. A.GY.NT FOR '„ GOPi t % " 'TAYLOR; ,• 'L ' CAMPBELL ' • P*9EKERO POTTER, AND GORDON, 'ALL' ' PRESS',. HANIJkAPTUREIIB. Bole Agents for this City , • 11• D. 'WADE & " UNRIVALED • INKS. A good article is a, Saving, of money. NW' Give yea trial. " _ L'.. PELIUZE corner of THIRD and - CREMUT Streel,s my3l-m' ftf • • phlfadelp a, Fa. HOASEM • SH • —i., cally. taught at tho 711adolphia Itiding,Sobooh ' our h. street, abtive Vine. _Vim horses are puler and borqughly trained., Por h o, paddle, horsOo.• Mao oar , loges at a 0 thneo for woddle parties , opera , funerals,o. 'Horses trained to the *. • •'. ' 0 AS ITIL410}1:1 & SON 110 A. CHEESE.--Alif I.I4VOICE OF. NOR TON'S celebrated Pine Apple Cheese daily ex pected, andfor sale Py JOB. B. BUSHER A., 00.1 Sole, SXTxslolVs,: FIRST OF THE SEASON. COAL AND WOOD. EE=I3;aMMMI ,cif;late styles lu full .farietY TYPE FOUNDRY =EDUCATION. • "•••: Turn "United •Ancient Order 'of Druids' held their celebration at 13etille.hem yesterday. Posratikarmi-GrimEnAL'OngsivEtx, re turned to Washington. ' ..•1 :1 • TnE revenue returns, yesterdai, amounted' to neatly one million dollars. CESSIVA has been • nOminated,for the Senate l.ty the Reptildleans of Fulton 'county., Tm real estate of Washington - City last assessed for taxation, amounted to some eighty millions. - ' Vzor , PuEgthENT Cor F&X and his party were at Virginia City, Nevada, yesterday after- boon '• : • . • Five hundred timusand pounds of wool was yesterday shipped'tfrem San Franeise4) to New York. • THE cotton, caterpillar is reported In por nous of Georgia,'Florida and , South Carolina, but not serious results are feared. BALAUZETUGUA, the. feeder of the (larlist 'consphLiey in -Spain, has been Captured and, ' !, • TnE Spanish Government demands the names of the clergy who took part , in the Car list conspiracy. 1 , , TEE Journal Official, of Paris, publishes the - conditionS on which. the French cable was al lowed to Land at Duxbury. miners in - the department ofThe Lowsw, Frante, have been sentenced ; to-fin prisonment for taking put, in the late riots at Etienne. 7 A6T week the , Carlistal were,.' defeated.' at ' Mont ialegro, Spain. Nine were captured and shot to death by order of the officer in com mand of the government troops. Inoxs, who murdered his wife in tune last, at Bam R L sville, . , was; on 'Battir day, found dead in the swamp _near the scene of the umrder. lle luul committed suicide. Foutt prisoners escaped film lialtkrtore City Jail yesterday. Hoffman and Dennis, the Ilarnden Express robbers, were two of the fugitivtgs. • ' JOHN IL Fiver'', accused of murder in. Texas, has been remanded by : the civil courts to the custody- of the United States au t honties. A BoAnn.of officers , haS.been appointed to make a general ' review of army affairs kt the United States, and to reform and impra4 thew. - • ' Ii L stated that important despatches fitun Adpairal lioff, relative to the recent executions of Americans in Cuba, have been received in IVAshington,and will be laid before the Cabinet to-day. - . Two inns avh6 had run' aWay frrint tome, went to sleep in an ash-pit on the New Jerser Central Railroad; near Elizabeth, last Fri • day night. During the night, the tires of a locomotive „were pushed into,the 04- burning theurto death; ' ' • " GExEn.a.t, !lynx, of.- Cuban , filibuster note riety, has luirsenthipped • his 'former private secretary at Niagara. The cause of the as sault is stated to have been, the presentation of a forged letter to decoy Ryan back to New York. PRESIDENT ASIES, of the • Union Pacilic Railroad, denies that any bonds were issued by that corporation in excess of the legal amount, and that the - issue, in fact, falls short-Of the amount allawed by law nearly one .Million dollara. • . Juttor. IlfeCusw; of New York; yesterday issued a writ of habeas corpus, directing Supe.r intendent Kennedy to bring the English forgers, Harwood and ib,tr Cr, into court. The - forgets sailed for England on Slitunlay, and were, therefore, not produced.. _ • Tm' steam saw-mill of Roberts, Calkin.s Hull, at 3luske.pm, Mich was bUrned on Sun day evening, causing aloss of over $50,000. There were • tires at. Port Hope and Guelph, Canada, on Sunday night, involving losses, re spectively, of $30,000 and UO,OOO. Tun following is a statement of the securi ties held by the • United States . Treasury for national banks on the oth instant: For circu lating notes. $343,054,900; for deposits of pub lic moneys with national banks designated as depositories, $20,9011,500. Teta], $30,064,400. 'CUBAN advices say that 'General Lestca has gone to San Diego to 'recuperate. Rebels are scarce in, the district of Las; Tunas andno -quit". In a fight at' Dextiganes, the rebels were defeated andSorty of . them killed., A convoy of provisions reached the starving garrison .at Las Tunas, a few days ago. Mr: Valts, lately sentenced to four months' inuirisontrient by the Spanish autlimities in Cubal liar been releasea. THE A'4 'cultural Bureau Las received ad- vices t iat t e tx" - tton crop of Texas is larger. - this season thanthat of - any - preceding year An unusually large ,amount of, sugar has also been produced. ,There same authority w the - assert ion - that the - material -prospe - The State, in all - branches of its purely - tom Inercialaffain3 - t,ls assured for several years to .come -- by the - unprecedented success of farming operations this season. A JOINT committee of the Atlantic ' , and Anglo-American Companies and the directors , of the New York and Newfoundland and Lou- don Telegraph Company have made a further reduction of the tariff between any part of the United Kingdom of .(ireat Britain Mut Ireland and New York, commencing, on Tuesday, August 10, '1869. , Thirty shillings sterling (seven dollant and a half gold), for ten , words, and three shillings sterling, or seventy-five 'tents gold, for each extra words. Press mes ages half the above rates. A NASHVILLE despatch says : "Last night a party of young men went to the City Hotel, and called for Joseph 1,. Barbour, of Hartford, ,Connecticut, in the name of Mr. Stone, late candidate for Senator 'on the Stokes' ticket. When Mr. Barbour appeared in the of ice,they ,look him out, and carried him towards the sus pension bridge. /Barbour`seized • hold of a lamp-post, and while some were trying to pull 'him away, others struck him overthe shoulders with their canes. Here gentlemen came up and interfered in his behalf, and lie was Per mitted to return to his betel., Barbour tra veled with Stokes during the latter part of the canvass, and corresponded with the State. JouP He was not seriously hurt. Trim returns of passengers who • departed from the United States during the fiscal year ending June 30,1869, so far as received at the Bureau of Statistics, show a total of 68,016 embarking for foreign Ports: 'Of these .19,027 were males, and /9,889 Teniales; , 6l,l2s'are put clown as adults, 04.7,701 as children. ;Nearly all took-Passage: by • steamships, only 2;706 - going in sailing Vessels. The number taking cabin and,steerage passage-, nre very nearly equal, 38,037 bemg classed as cabin, and 33,870, as steerage passengers, These , •tuay be- again , subdividedi giving for\ the cabin . 36,026 adults' and 4,111 children. 'The males and females are much Mora, egnally divided among the:, children than among the adults, there being' of the fortner 3,239 females to 4,552 males; while of the latter thereare,only'l6,oso females to: , 44,475 Males. • Dest•ructlVe Fire in Youkeyes, N. "1" 1020 0 ,099. . • , - NEw.Yoseir.,August ir-A - :141,0ek of buildings. in the village of ...Yonkers, bounded by Ather ton:dock and Owen street and Wells ,avenue, were burned. last night, involving a: less . . of about $200,000, On whiCh , there iii butnesnialli insuranc,e;lThe fire is supposed. o hav bee the work of anincendiary,!sAniong lags consumed Were Acheit's steani saw, mills, J. F, Parson's himber yard, Stew art's stables, Yeoman's real estate office and a large number,of dwellings. • .. lti ."' ..... MEM ======',2 EM= tr'o,4a .141 3 0401 X, diti0)144(143 at iilay •-• •• • .• ••• . - Sly 0540 Atlantic Cable .;' .31A,Data, Aug. imperlaitlewspaper says that reinforeetnente of 20,000 men will be; sent to Cabe in,4eprrucict, -.The., Cortes will assertibleh4en; toilet p3t.i .The:tbusinesB to come ibi•forly the liill'hetlte-eleetiort of a 'King. Several Carlisle agents were arrested iii this eity last night. WASHINGTON, Aug. IL—Three three-dollar coupons of 1881, paid by , the Assistant .Treasurer at New lcork,l and received by General Skinner to-dayotielprotiounced to be counterfeits. They are lithographed and ;badly executed. • The Secretary of, the Treasury, to-day, re ceived s's from a .resident, r of toston t ,who Says he cannot liYe 'without 'doing justice to the Government. lie begs the Department, for hiswife's sake, not to .publish Its .act of restoration but forgets to sign his name to the Exeitement in the Gritln Illittrket. DeitOttch the'rhllliZionfilg leitin'.3 Yonl4; Auginit a. 77 -rzivatcitelegrams from Liverpool announce that bad weather is likely to continue in England. These advices created considerable 'excitement in the grain market. No :a Spring ViThWtralosed at being an advance of fifteen cents Mace Satur day. No.l is held at Si 80. There is an ac tive shippi_ng demand for _flour,loNv_grades_ot adVance;tiliic - i'Siaturday of ((AV 46C nts. E'it!d of tllClSumitte'hrOots*"lltisifiroitd Irirsir rioltOWasted.- Augnet 9.—Tvltitnnny„was taken and argyunent hehrtithefore,Judgeiree.kbaini to-day, in the matter contesting the receiver ship for the Susqltehannti , sgallroad, and the ./Mige decided that the 'Rpm B. EC Pru 11 - is legally appointed reeelYer, And.,tbat. James Fisk, Jr.ris giten'the 'Eartany in terest full possession of the'road, and they are HOW in charge of iti,-,-` ' Viom Bosrcs, Aug. 9.- 7 -Charles G. Little; founder and senior, partner of the firm of Little & Co„ the well-known law book publishers of this city, died to-day in Cambridge, gaged 71 years. -the •coroner's jurv - in the case of 31'rs. Hobbs, returned a verdict that "she was killed by Thos. L. White. • On Saturday last 128 gallons of 'ale and 6 gallons of whisky .; were seizedin the brewery of Joseph Shaw, m Salem, by the State con stables, under the liquor law. Ilflatitk.en, for a Burglar and Killed. CLEVELAND Aug 9.--This morning at 12.30, Philp Gilmartin, proprietor of the Lake View House, at the corner of Seneca and Summit streets, shot and instantly killed his son, Thos. Gilmartin, supposing bim tb 'be a burglar, While. the son was attempting to enter the house. Ballootsing. • M'EsnviLin, Aug. 9.—Professor Thurston has been making partial ascensions in his bal loon "Bridal Chariot"to-day. He will make a final ascension this afternoon at 3 o'clock, wi accompanied by Oliphant and 'Baldn, and expects to land in' blew York city within thirty-six hours. .. • The Fleet eeihm., 1%: 1 w Yonx, August 9.=-The two t first bales of cotton', for :the !ieagoni -from Text.% bare arrived. One bale was sold at auction to day and brought fifty cents 'a'potuid,realizing $l9O, or $6O wore than the ruling rate. The second bale will he shipped to Liverpool. Obituary. . HUDSON; Aug. EP—Charli P. 'Waldron, a prominent and well-ktiotvireitizen, died suit= deuly this morning of apoplexy. • • Marine Intell!orenee. SEW Yomi, Aug: 9.—Axrived; steamship City of Antwerp, from Liverpool. . • . RANDITTIL TV THE CII33IIERIGAND mourry4ijars. A Man lilidinapped..;42;ooo lEtansern -He ( From the bisehville Republican Banner,•Pinin;st B.J We received yesterday the particulars of an. an affair of the most astounding character, which, did. our information not :.come corne from re-, liable sources, we.should certainly discredit. Our readers are doubtless aware of the ex ploits of the notorious'desperado named Budd Carter, Whine . we 'have bad occasion to Men- tion a number of times during the' keit- few weeks:: Budd, "-it will be' remembered, was captured and confined in jailinNorthern Ala nama_on the charge of., horse stealing, haring.. fled from Tennessee on account of his many outrages against ~ law and order. ft seems that he .:..watt -last: engaged in the illicit distillery scheme in Cum berland county, whence lie was run out by the officers of. the Revenue Depart ment,-and then, after--plundering-about in-his travels South, finally brought up in Northern -Alabama, t where be - ,stole, a.:hoixe, was- fol.: lowed and captured. AN 'soon as the United __States. authorities of -Cumberland-county-be came aware of the fact . that , Carter. was in durance they procured a. regidsition.from Gevernor Sewer, took Budd from jail anti. = bronght - him - to=Nash - villeTfor=trial=b - efbre - flie -- federal court. — Budd was called upho ore u . ,ge gg, an the trial on the charge of illicit distilling com menced. As soon, however,as the civil author ities of Cumberland countit heard that Carter was in the hands of United States officers,they sent down and had him taken on an old in dictruentfor miirder 'there. t He Was adcord, ingly carried toCrosavilbu' and lodged .jail for a future hearing. This was about a month ago, and Budd has - lain in durance ever since, till last•Tues.daynight;'wlien he broke jail and escaped.. Immediately. oollecting a gang of his friends, the desperado went over into - • county, , and on , Wednesday the villains rode 'up . to the'house of Mr. William Hill, a prominent citizen, who once arrested Carter, and, making him a prisoner, hurried away toward,- the mountains. Word was at once sent back by them 'to the 'friends of Hill that if they did nbt make up $2,000 at once as a ransom Hill would be hung or shot. The money was to be left at the house of Budd's 'mother. Hill. himself sent word .to have his friends accede to. the demand, as he feared for his life, and thought that even if the ransoin'money were paid he might be foully dealt with; Our.readers can. readily,understand the con-, sternation which this affair produced. Those interested in the welfare of Mr: Hill exerted themselves', 'and 'the'rcieney "was raised "and sent to the point designated. , These particulars we learn from Mr: George Hill, who arrived in the city.from. McMinnville yesterday. No news; has yet arrived as,to, the. safety'. of, the prisoner who Was thus ruthlessly carried away, Pai,4l,llllll* • PANANA, July 81'.--The 'city is at present filled with. passengers ' from all parts of the world; ZiAtiong 'whoni ate arnumber 'of bishops and priests on'their way for Rome to attend, the •