Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, August 12, 1869, Image 1

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    GIESMI PEACOCK. Mar.
4VOLUME XXIII.-NO. 1.06.
naE.INTJ uscE
• The Hatarard Crew feeprigleitatl.
,The Pall Mall. Gazette of. ,July `3lst, says:
"The Harvard . College four have at last corn
. ...
.• menceil active rowing upon English waters;
nild even thus early one of our first
_Drogues
etications..-has - been' realized: - Like "all other
challeitgers who have before. 'this ctime to
England to test the Merits. of our oateunen,
anti 'have brought with them - craft of native
- manufacture, they • have soon 'learned to be
skeptical 'of the merits of its 'architecture
compared with that of boats turned out
from English yards. We - remarked some
time ago that a four-oared boat up
. ward of forty feet in length, such wt described
• by the Xew - York papers, could 'not be both
figght and, btill i -accordnig-to-our - own --- narrow-
minded ideae of boat-building. The first tip
pearanee ofthis boat on the Thames Confirmed
our anticipation.% and, perhaps,. converted the
•Harvard crew. She seemed weakin the back,
and traveled with her ends up and mitlships
Iniried, - which, if in accordance with her ori
s
ginal 'lines,' must lie, to sley the lewd, an awk
.l.: ward eccentricity: Be that 'as it may, the
S'alters of Oxford liaise received ordere to build
a boat for the Americans, which will, we trust,
•• prove equal to- . the occasion. •
"The internationaal , rivalry ef the race will,
• theri-foixe most Probably, be confined to' the
:styles and. „sinews ,of the competitores, , but
lielley, the ex-champion, who. has been re
tained by. Harvard, gill, if lie coaches the
oarsmen in the science of rowltsg_ as well as
the. coxswain in the intriiieciies of Thames
navigatigniinfese,a further Britatinie element
• into the performances of the Americans. a
• "Their rowing can as yet, be hardly criticised
1 With fairness ; perhaps it Is stilted to their own
claile'of boats; at is not what we should 'teach
to our University' oarsmen. It is too much
like leamill'e style; the arms are used too
much; the bodies too little, and the • reach is
too short. . The quick 'stroke talked of as pe
'culi:tr to the crew mast plainly be imperative
with such a style, to compensate in quantity
for the i Avant. of quality and length ,in the
stroke. - At the sameetinie it was, . perhaps,
hardly fair to expect to see uniformity of swing
with four parallel bodies when the build. of
the . Harvard boat placed the men in
two- . and .. twos at irregular inter-.
vals, - instead of on equielietant thwarts;
:us • its English • beats. Possibly when
they try an Engfisli boat tiler nmyadopt some
what of - au English style. ;If they do eet, the
contest will be the more international frona
the .very opposition of !Style aud swing. 'They
are decidedly fine and muscular men. 3luch
stress is laid by cotemporaries on tlds latter
tact; but most rowing - men know that 'biceps' .
muscle is the most useless and even mss-
chievoue with which a coach can contend.
Those - .who possess it arc apt to finish the
• stroke with arms 'instead •of shoulders, .bury
. the. boat, and not catch the begififilieg7The
111• s of it in, the Oxford boat the better.
We peeler' work . from fhe loins, shoulders,
anti a taut fore arm ter Ox - onian'style.' The
latter erew migrate to. Patighetwne trielay
(Saturday.) They tried a new boat from. Sal- -
ters's on Wednesday; and sit her frtirly.
say that-they haves° far been Under the eye
1)i the well-known Etonian conch will tette ce
to ehow.that there has been uo'lacis•cif science:
on the onelandiand, we,trukt, of 'plains acid
improvement on the other. The race will he
rowed oil Aug. 2.5, or 2e: At present,:the
Aniericanehold out for the option of a smooth
slay. The-Course-Mill be buoyed throughout,
and. the. Thames Cousereapey :: will doubtless
secure refair field anti no 'favor: Same very
stringent police regulations . ought, certainly to . 1
be made (and enforced) with regard to - steam
ens. - Why allow any, except the umpire's?"
The Mar of July AS says :"In, "In the mornin
the suing and time was much admit g.
admired,, hat in ,
the afternoon, after nsevere pull, they fell oil
considerably -and as well not catching the
first Dart oftlie stroke, and thus Whig to 'row
it ottt,'.there etas - a decided teddency to lie
..tots . ..lfareea,gretiona faulLthat must be,
inunediately remedied - before it goes too
Their time, however, swiss excellent, and they'
were 'like one' after the first 50
yants, during
wltiektimYro l led Mkt Wet abene.tremetidens-.
Iv. Their heavy oars require changing, for
they appear to require great strength to use
propeelee consequently the crew bury them
too mech.. The trial in the afternoon was on
the whole satisfactory."
. .The (Sletis-ef duly.l.l,lsaya:LiffTheilglit-Seens'at,
Putne.y mere disappointed this morning, the
Harvard'gentlemen departing from their pro
-gramme;nuddecidingtiot-ter-getlert-WIT the
..._eVenitsT:restivhieb;_considering:tlie--siork:
they have done, and the rough nature of the
weather; we should not begtudge.ehem,2_.hiet,._
withstandli4 - the adverse criticisms passed
upon them by many of the mewspapers, - it is
generally conceded by. men= at the . 'waterside
that they mill prove no mean opponents to the
Oxonians,-who, for a four, are certainly too
hearyinnti are as - certainly attheir best. That
the Hareardrmenitave Much.' to learn cannot
he deified; but while they have manifest de
fects, they enjoy. some advantages over out
Crest, and: the • chief among , which is theit
great strength."
The
The l'elegraph of -July :31, says : "The Har
vard four took their•accustoined training ex
ercise yesterday, Coachretas usual by 'Kelley
in ;his sicifi. In the evening they Went as far
as :Chiswick, led part.. oe:th. way ; by .four of
the Lauded Iteiwing Club. - - .Tithing; Short' and
vigo'rietitestrokes, and doing good work in the
find half of the, pull, they appeared at the same
time tellibtir bard Without producing a Cor
re_sponding effect on the pace of the boat.
l lVlether this be due to the want of spring
aid the presence ofa quantity of dead weight
iretbe hoat,herself,er to any actual..defect in,
tlitgrtisting,- soon tested when the Hare
yards try their new Salter: Meanwhile water.
side opinion is 'against them and in favor of
Oiford "
The Ozfenl Crew.
The London Tinto of July, 31 says: "The
Oxford UniveUtily •fetitte. have ,beilif ,111! 'daily
practice at Eton, under the able direction of
the ltev. Edmond Warre. They have now
disinised their, tug-boat„ and have got into a
new fonr-oared racing -boat, built by Messrs.
Salter of Oxforll., This boat is, very long and
very light, and, therefore,can scarcely 46,seen'
to advantage on such ' shallow water as
she has hitherto' been dipped in. , Individual
faults aro gradually disappearing, and the
crew aro getting together in time and rowing.
We understand that the weights of the crew
remain on an average about the same. They
are as follows: Mr. P. Wiliam, Exeter...Col
lego.(bow); et. 9 lb.; Mr: A. C. Yarborottgh,
Lincoln College, 11 st. 7 lb.; Mr. J. C. Thine,
University College, 13 st. 7 lb.; Mr. S. D.
Darbishire. Baliol College (stroke), 11 st. 7
14r...1% H. Hall, Corpus - Christi College (cox
sivain) st:3 lb. , ' .
THE 13RITI61NI HAT.
, . a A gry ,Against It..
The London Tetegraph is assured that the
odious chimney-pot hat has lasted nowso long
that there is' no way to be clear'of it during our
natural lives - ..the -Prince' of Wales
would endear himself Still more to' all loyal
hearts by boldly coming up . to'Londou.during
the dog-daykand drivingabout tovzii in a felt or
billycock or calico hat, - with a puggree, at his
'oyal pleasure. How many lives that young
Prince might saive l The simple factis, no one
will be the first to take. the' deep.- Oertaitv
changes for,the potter; man's,l Orem have
taken place in our time. Our throats are free.
It has, been found by practical experience that
young men do not run . off
with „their neighbors' twee or commit.
forgery, bbeame "they tie a ' bit ' of
ribbon round their throats ill place of choking
themse4ves with a ,high satin stock and a fall;
•or with three or .tour terns; of black silk:
_ ___
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RUSKIN'S NE VilBlY_OR, "THE QUEEN O.F_TIIE AIR."
We receive, through Lippincott &- Co., of
this city, Wiley & Son'sneat Ainerican edition
of the new work of Mr.- 'Ruskin; ostensibly
devoted to atmospheric appearances and phe
nomena, but branching 'relentlessly out, after
the author's manner, into general =consi4erar
tions of social economy and theories of phi
losoPhy.' Though fullof eloquent passages,the
treatise is one of the most desultory, discon
nected and aimless of all Mr. Huskin's latter
oracles, and that is. saying a great deal
in the preface he mournfully 'ad
wits this, and attributes to broken health
the disconnected and inartistic way in which
these lucubrations are arranged; but prefers, to
leave them as they stand, in despair of finish
ing theit presentation in a..manner to content
fa.stidious taste, am! trusting that they
contain, in their preseat state, indica-,
tions which the reader may follow, out with
safety for himself. From' a younger writer,
no collection of half-uttered truths would be
saved by eVen so abject an apology; but we
are always glad to,listen to _Hoskin, and learn
the latest leadings of his noble and methodical
madness.
Athena, as the female form of, the atmos
phere, sprung from the forehead of Jove, the
power of thesurrounding airs, is the inspira
tion of Mr. Hoskins' treatise. His manner of
redwing the Greek myths to their extreme
origins in natural phenottfereveaLs , his
patient study of investigators like Max Muller,
while it is his special privilege as a prose poet,
to "p'ersuader from` them lissoas of attractive
grace such as the man of science can never
wring from their study. ifere, for instance, is
Mr. Hoskin's treatment of the legend of "the
shepherd bf the clouds," the wing -footed Mer
cury:
' " You know that the valley; of Sparta is one
of the noblest mountain ravines in the world,
and that the western flank' of it is formed by
an unbroken' ebain of: crags, forty miles long,
rigng, opposite Spain, to a height of 8,000 feet,
and known as the chain of Taygetus. Now; the from whom that mountain ridge is
named was; the mother of Lacethemon; there
fore, the mythic ancestress of the Spartan
race. She is,the • nymph Taygeta, anil one of
the seven stars ot spring; one of those Pleiades
of when' is the question to Job--- 4 Can.st
thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades,
or loose the bands of Orion?' 'The sweet
intluenees of • Pleiades,' - of the stars
of ipring--nowhere sweeter than among the
pine -clad slopes Of .the•billki of Sparta' and Ar
cadia, when the snows of their higher sum
mits,• beneath' the sunshine of April, fell into
fountains, and rose into clouds; and in every
ravine was a newly-awakened voice of waters
-soft increase of whisper 'among its sacred
stones r and on every' crag its forming and
fading veil' of 'radiant cloud;_temple .abOve
temple, of divine marble that no tool can pol
lute, nor ruin linden:eine.. And, therefore, be . -
yond this central valley, this great Greek
vase of Arcadia, .on the 'hollow' morm
tain, OYlle'ne, or 'pregnant'
- moutain,
I called aistf • - geold,' - ' - because — there the
I vapors 'rest, I. and born , _of__ _ the eldest
I of.those stars of spring, that Maia,from whom
your own month of May ha's its name,bringing I
to you, in the green of her garlands . , and , the
white of her hawthorn, the. unrecognized sym-.
-- bols of the npstureSand the wreathed snows of,
Arcadia, where long ago. she was queen of
_staxsz_there,-first-craeUed-and- -wrapped-lir
swaddling-cloths ;• then raised in 'a moment_
of surprise; - inte - his wanderingpower, is born
the, Shepherd •of the clouds, wing-footed and
-deceiving, - blinding the - eyes of ArguKescaphig --
_from the gratrp.of ..Apollol-restless insenger
between the.. highest sky and to most earth=
'the herald Mercury f new lighted on a heaven- ,
kissing" •
- _
The author's pathway- leads him from the
high places of the Queen of the Air-Athena
in her blue hoine,,-to her track , through the
nether world-the influence • of the at'inos:'
phere on theeearth-surflice:' in inferior terms,
the mysteries of nvnpor'ntil; - ndrninige and the
gaseobsV cimibinathins' 'effeete •• by organic
creatures. Mr. Ruskin knits heaven to earth
by one of his graceful flighpi; in which he'
compares mad ,considers. the two elements,
earth and air, in the persons •of their typical
creaturesof the serpent,•which eats dust and
is forever fastened to the °round; and of the
,
bird, ;which drinks the air.with its wings :
THE DIED AND TUE SERPENT.
"We! .take :the ,bird first. It is little
more than a drift of the air brought into form
by pinnies; the air is in all its quills, it breathes
through its whole:triune imilliesh, and glows
with air in its flying, like blown flame; it rests
upon ,the air, subdues it, surpasses it, outraces
it—is the 'air t .conscious of itself, congtiering
itself, ruling itself.
"Also, into the throat of the 'bird is given
the voice of the air. All that in the, ; wind it
self is wriakovild, useless in sweetness, is knit
together in its song • As we may.inumine the
wild form of the.clond closed into , -the perfect
form of-the bird's wings,'sn'the' wild -voice of
the cloud into. its ?ordereil.' rind.. coinmanded
voice; unwearied, rippling through the clear
heaven in Its gladness; interpreting all intense
jkassion thrriugh tire soft spring nights, burst
ing into acclaim and rlipturtrof choir:. at day
break; - or. lisping` or twittering among, the
boughs'and hedges through" heat of day, like
little winds that only pinks ;, ho cowslip bells
shake and ruffle the petals of the wild.rose:,
"Also, upon the plumes of the bird are put
the colors of the air: on these the gold 4 of •the
cloud, that 'Cannot be gathered by .any, covet:.
ousuess; tliernbies of the clouds, thrit•are not
the price of A.thena,-but are Athena; the ver
nailion of the Jeloud bar, and the flame of the
cloud -crest, and the snow of.thri cloud, and its
shadow, and thermelted blue.of the deep wells
of the airy—alithese, seized by the creating
spirit; and woven by Athena`herself into.tlims.
and threads ~cof ::with wave; on. wave.
following and fading along breast, and throat,
and opening• Wings, infinite as 'the' dividing of
the foain and sitting "of the sea-Sand ;'.even the
white down of the cloud seeming to flutter up
between the - strongerylumes seen, but too soft
for touch.' • •
"And so the Spirit of the Air, is put into
and upon this• created form; and it 'becomes,
through twenty centhries, the of di
vine help, descending, as .the Fire, to speak,
but as the Dove to bless.
"Next, 'in' the serpent, we ' aPproach' the
source of a group, of , myths, •'worki;wide,
founded on great and •common Iniulan in
stincts, respecting Whieh 'irtlist''nete one, or
two . points which bear, intimately ,op, an
sub3ect: For it, seems, tito 4iethrit the' scholars:
who are at' present occupied interpretation
Neither have we all turned froth the religion
of our forefathers, 'because 'iwe wear ' loose
wrappers it sleeves large' ettoughlor com
fort, in place of the tight frock with rolling
collar of our youth.'. Thee old hat, however--P
the old.chirnney-pot—remains !'master pf the
situation." Why should this grotesque fashion
be? If the present weather continues , all who
are 60 unfortunate as to be detainedin Loudon
should at °nee invest in puggries, felts, billy
cocks, and such other reasonable coverings
for the human head. Down with the chimney
pots, down;with them, even to the ground!
NEW •PUBLICATIONS.
THE BIRTH OP HERDIBS
PHILADELPHIA THURSDAt S AIidU,ST 'l2 1'849:
of human myths have moat of them forgotten
that are any aubh' ihingii as natural
myths; and that the dark savings of men
maybe both difficult to 'read and, not always
worth reading; but the • dark, Sayinge of
nature will probably bedonie clearer; for
tbe looking adi into, "and will. seery 'certainly be
worth, reng. And, indeed,'all guidance to
the right sense of ,the limtuatr -mid , ',variable
myths will probably depend on our first getting
at the sense of the natural and invariable ones.
The dead hieroglyph:may bare meant this or
that—the living 'hieroglyph means always the
same; but remember, it 1.9 just as much a
hieroglyph as-the other;:nay, more—a 'sacred
or reserved sculpture,' a thing with an inner
language. The aerpent-crest. of the king's
-crown, or of the - god's j ron.the pillars ofEgypt,
is mystery; ; but the 'Serpent itself, gliding
past the pillar's foot, is it lets a znystery? Is
there, indeed, no 'tongue, except the mute
thrice& flash from its lips, in that runningbrook
of horror on the ground? -•
"Why that 'horror? - We all feel'it, ,vet how
imaginative it is, how disproportioned to the
real strength of the creature? There is. more
poison in an ill-kept drain, in, a pool . of dish
washings at axottage door, than.m the deadli
est asp of Nile. Every backyard which you
look down into from the railway, as it carries
you out by Vauxhall or Deptford, holds its
coiled serpent; all the walls of those ghastly
suburlis are enclosures of tank-temples tor ser
pent worship;yet you feel no horror in looking
down into them, as, you would if you saw the
livid scales and lifted bead. There is more
venom,mortal inevit.ablein a single word,sorne
times, or in the gliding entrance of a -world
lees thought, than ever 'wind Libia eon, sua
rena.' But that horror is of the myth, not'of
the creature. There are ruyriads lower than
this, and more loathsome, in the scale of
being; thelinks between dead matter and ani
mation drift everywhere unseen. But it is the
strength of the base'element that is so dread
ful in the serpent; it is the very omnipotence
of the earth. That rivulet of smooth silver—
how does it How, think you? It literally rows
on the earth, with every scale fur an oar; it
bites the dust with the ridges of its body.
Watch it, when it Moves slowly; a wave,
but without wind current, but with no fall!
all the body moving at the same 'instant, yet
some of it_to one _aide, some to another, or
some . forwdrd, and the rest of the coil back
wards; but, all. with the same calm will and
coital way—no contraction, no extension; one
soundless, causeless march of sequent rings
and spectral procession of•spotted dust, with
dissolution in its fangs, dislocation in its coils.
Startle it; the winding stream will become a
twisted arrow; . the wave of poisoned life
will lash through the grass like a cask
lance. It scarcely breathes with its one lung
(the other shrivelled and abortive); it, is -p-as
sive to the sun and shade, and is cold or hot ,
like a stone; yet -it eau outelnub the 'flunkey,
out.swim the fish. outleap the zebra, outwrestle
the athlete and crush the tiger.' It is a divine
hieroglyph of the dereoniac power 'of the
earth—of the entire earthly nature. As the
bird is the clothed power of the air, so this is
the clothed power of the dust; as the bird the
symbol of the spirit of life, so this of the grasp
and sting of death.''
The second chapter,. froin which the above
extract is taken, is introduced by an investi
gltion into the origin of life, which, though
shedding little light for, the philosphers, will,
we hope, convince Mr. MattheW Arnold that
Buskin penfonally has got deist; this matter of
virihts the rhapsodist turns'over curiouslyin
his band a moment to examine its several as
pects, and then, in a trice, has fallen upon
modern science,' making ftui of It for the ex
treme comfort and applicability it is finding
in itslatest toy; the''"waVn-theory,:,
THE zuvsrxity OF LIFE. .. .9
.
"But it is .of great consequence that you
should fix in your minds, and holdagainst the
ba.seness of Mere materialism on the one hand,
and against the fallacies of controversialspeeu
; lation on the other, the certain and practical
sense of this word ‘spirit'=the. sense in which.
- yon - all - know - thatits reality exists, as a power
which shaped yon into your shape,;.and by
which you love and hate when . you have
received that shape. You need . not fear on
the one band 'that either the sculpturing
or the . loving poWei can - ever- be
beaten down by the philosophers.into a metal,
or evolved yy , them into a gas;tut, on the
otherhandF - take - care - that You - ycinserves, - in
tD•ing_ . to elevate your cenceptionnt-itrdo-not
loseitstrah in a dream or even in a word.
Beware alwayS of contending forwords,.
will - liod - tlrem not easy to grasp if you know
them in several languages, - This very Word
which is so solemn in your Mouths, is one of
-the most doubtful. In Latin" it means little
more_than : breathing, andanay mean- merely
accent; .in French it is not breath, - but
wit, and-- - our neighbors are ,there
fore obliged, even in them;.most
solemn' expressions,,to say 'wit' when N-e say
'ghost.' In Gree.k . , ‘pnetuna,' the..word we
translate - ‘ghost;' means either wind or breath;
and the relative word ‘psyehe' has perhaps a
More subtle - power; yet St. Paul's words ‘pneit
ioatic body' and"psyckic body,' involve a ditfei
.rence in- his -.mind -which no words will ex-.
plain. , But. in Greek . and in Bnglish,. and in
Saxon and in -Hebrew, and in eVery,a - qiculate
tongue of humanity, the 'spirit of ,man' truly
means his passion and virtue, and is stately
according to the height of his conception, and
stable according to the measure of his endu:.
"Endurance, or. patience, drat is the.central
sign of spirit; a constancy against the cold and
agony or death; anti as, physically; it is by the
burning power of the air that the heat or. the
flesh is sustained, so this Athena,. spiritually',
is the queen of all glowing virtue, the nneon
suming fire and inner lamp of life. Arid thuS,
as Ilephaestu.s is lord of the fire of the hand,
and-Apollo of the fire of the brain, so Athena
of the, ire of the heart; and as Ilereule.s wears
for his. chief armor the skin of the Neuman.
lion; 'his chief enemy, whom lie slew; and
Apollo has for his highestnarue 'the Pythian;
from' his 'chief enemy; the Python, slain; so
Athena bears always m'breast the deadly
face . of her chief enemy slain the Gorgouian,
cold, and Venomous agony, that turns living
men to stone. ,
"And so long as you have ,that lire of the
heartwithin you, and know ,the reality of it,
y9u need be under no,alarni as to the possi
bility of its chemical or mechanical analySis.
The philosophers are very humorous in their
eestacy of .hope about it; but the real interest
Of their discoveries in.. this direction is -very
human kind; ,It is quite true that the
tynapaniuu of the ear vibrates under .sound,
and that the surface of the -water in - a ditch
too::but the • ditch hears nothing for
all that; and uiy hearing is still tome as blessed
a mystery as ever, and the interval between,
the glitch and me quite as, great, If the tremb
liiag soundinmy ears was once ~ o f the'noin--
riage bell - which began my happiness, midis
now of the, passing bell which ends it, the die
ferenr4 petween those two sounds to .nie can
not be counted by the number' f concussions."
,
'si
•, .
2 -Hungaxlan-jouriuils relate a ngular.case
of suicide. .A.sholikeeper at Pesth shot him
self with a pitittil, having pre:iriOusly written
to a friend that • "life is insupportable. T adore
my- wife; biitshe has grown so stout:--she that
was of so ravishinta figure when I .married'
her." He added that he. preferred to die rather,
than be unfaithful to his wife on this account,
or to tthe legal means to bo separated from her.
—.Echnund 'Kean once throw,a.mgar Atutnp
in Othello's face on the Canterbury theatre
stage in 'Washington, recently ~ burne(l.
was not ei'member of the State , Temperance
' • •
• .i ;li.) a ,
OUR tozninser
- Tnlcresting Historical Notes,
A Writer in an English inagaiine. xdits to
gether in an attractive form some lustencal
notes edncerning oldshtinett 'on& tillgributgeS
irrEnghtrid. `We quote a fen - passages f',
"The attractions of St. JoArt of: Beverley
consted principally in , the sanctuary ..'it. at
forded to criminals,. evenuf the worst deOrip
non. The murderer's chair—the Prid-stoi , -.18
still to be been in the minster,.. and. consists of
one _entire stone, said to have been brought
from teotland. Certain, fees were require to
be
„Paid by those seeking mattotnary. The
bailiff, for administering , ' the oath,
was- to -receive- two-and-fourpenee; and
the clerk of the court for inser rftg the' •flamiq
four -, pence. , 'At • Beverley," says ,Professor
Phillips z in his =excellent book,- 'The Myers,.
Mountains and Sea (roast Of X•arkshire,' 'was
flie"shrine of St. John, preceded' by an earlier
settlement marked by "four' stones;! from
whieli we infer that it was the • British Ped
warllech and Greek Petonaria, chief eity of
the Parisoi, as it still is of the East Riding.
From Pedwarllech, we have Bevoriac, Bever
ley. To St. John, of BeverleY, .A.thelstane
offered the sword which•had ivavedin triumph `
at. Brunanburgh,perhaps the greatest of Anglo
Saxon victories.' '
'*The shrine of Thomas, ii Becket; which
Chaucer has immortalize:lj was not. the only
attraction at Canterbury. ' The :Cathedral
boasted of no less than four hundred relics.
Among them was some of the clay from which
God moulded Adam; Aaron's rod; the bed of
the Virgin; specimens of her spinning, frag
ments of the manger of Bethlehem; of the
table of the Last Supper; of the rock on which
the. Cross stood ;.besules many other objects
connected with our Lord..- '
"Reading, also, had a greatattractioriinthe
spear which pierced our Lord's side; and the'
angel—with one wing gene—that brought it
to England. At the. Dissolution, the spear
was carried off to Notley, but inquiries were
made after it, which resulted in Its being sent
up to London to Cromwell. -The relic, how-
ever, for which Henry I. founded the Abbey , 1
in 1121, tV:II4 the hand of St. Philip, which his
daughter :Maud brought back from Germany,'
after the death of her husband. the Emperor.
It had a gold covering, but this Richard the
Lion-hearted appropnated when in pecuniary
difficulties, and it remained defenceless till
John Lackland presented a whole mark of
gold to provide a new cover for it.
Glastonbury was the resting place of so.
many saints—Joseph of Arinuitinea and his
companions,St. l'atnck, the Apostle of Ireland,
&c.—as to be called the second Rome. The
contents . of its museum of curiosities were
'both various and interesting. There might be
seen part of Rachel's tomb, the altar on which
- Moses pOured out oil, part of his autograph
copy of the Pentateuch, some , ' manna tof
the wilderness, and other memorials con
nected with the Old Testament. Mater
relics also abounded. There were two pieces
of the manger of Bethlehem, some of the gold
offered by the \Vise Men, one of the vessels
of Cann—another of these übiquitous objects
,was given by the Lord Prior of St. John's to
the Niuniery Church of Cler'kenwell in 12119;
some of the stones which our Loid was
tempted to change into bread; :• fragments of
the five loaves with which he fed .the five
thousand; some of His hair; part of the hem
of His garment; and many others, too numer-
OUS to mention.
"'Besides these, Glastonbury could. boast of
one more object of very great interest—the
grave of King Arthur. Giraldus Camhransis
tells ns lie was present at its discove7 • , in
the time of Henry 11. That King, while in
Wales, had heard in one of the songs about
Arthur the tradition as to his burying-place.
He caused search to be made, and presently
came upon a stone. with the inscription in
very rude letters: 'Hie jacet sepultns inclytus
Rex .Arturius in Insula Avelonm.' Nine feet
below this, in the_trunk a tree;
were found the - huge remains of
the good .King, and by his .side Queen
Guinevere, with her golden hair as fresh and
beautiful as when Arthhr used to play witth with
'not knowing; but on a touch it crumbled into
dust. Arthur's skull showed no less than ten
fractures, the most extensive of all being, no
doubt, the one he received when ‘so • deeply
smitten through the helm' at_the great battle
of Camlan. EdWard I. and his Queen, Elea
nor, were so interested in the matter, that the
tomb -- was t againopened - for - their-inspection;--
_The two skulls were kept in the treasury, and
a xnagniffent - monument erected over the
~r ave • but all disappeared at the Befoul:la
non.
"At Bury St.-Edmunds was the sacred
standard of the , martyred king, from. which
the town derived its name—the brother of Al
fred, so cruelly murdered by the Danes..._ His
head was found forty days afterwards in the
possession of a wolf, which gave it up quietly
and walked away. When placed near the
body, it reunited , itself so cleverly that the line
of junction was scarcely visible. Bearing the
sacred standard. Henry 11. marched out
against his son, and of course, by means of it,
gained the victory. , It.was to Bur/that Rich
ard the-Lion-hearted seat the standard of the
Ming of Cyprus, which he had taken on hiti
way to. Palestine. T.bere, too, was the altar
on which Count Melim. in fang John, tells the
English nobles - the King has sworn to put
them all to deathif Lewis is victorious, having
just before, on that same altar, • •
• • " --sworn to you
Dear amity and everlasting love. •
"One of the accounts of the Rood of Scot
land assigns to it a supernatural origin. David
1., insisting on going out, hunting one Holy 7,
Rood Day, tell in with the fairest hart that,
ever was seen before living, creature. . ' The .
King's horse ran away, closely pursued by the
hart, stumbled, and threw the King, who,
an
he put up Ins hand to save himself' from the
stroke of the hart, suddenly found a cross in
his hand, of no common kind, "for there is no
man can show of what matter it, is of, metal or
tree."' Holy-Rood Abbey was built to receive
•
it.
•' Only one or two other relia can be men
tioned : Such as our Lady's Girdle of Bruton
—ten other originaLs, a 8 Nichols WIN us, being
in • Leicester alone—and Mary 3lagdalen's
girdle. Both these:were of great repute, es
pecially among married.women. One of the
heads of John the Baptist was at Trimming
ham. Lincoln also could boast of the chain
- with which , St.- Catharine bound the devil ;
while the relies at Leicester (the missing ear
of 3lalchrts 'being one of them), York, Thet
ford, Glasgow? &e., were quite beyond count
ing. • l• . • ,
"Of the many, holy wells in ' Great Britain,,`
such as 3ladifria Well in Cornwall. St. Eustace's
in Kent, &c., we must 'be _content with men
,tinning two. St. Winifred's Well, in 'Flint-
Shire, enjoyed a reputation for possessing
power to heal &wonderful list of ailments. it;
failed somewhat, however, in the case of Sir
George • Peckluim 'He continued so long
mumbling his paternosters and Santa. Whatfrida era pro me, that the cold struck into his
body, and, after his coining forth of that well,
be never, spoke mere.' St. Michael's Well, in
Banffshire, arag Wont to be , visited by its
patron saint in the form of a fly. He would
seem, however, to have tired eventually of his
employment, and the well, hi consequence,
became utterly neglected. , • •
"Ireland,. of-,courso,_ has her places of pil
grimnge stall i though these, are, sadly fallen
now-a-days from :their` ancient glory and re
nown. The' well of "EinglasriSt:Patriek'S th,`•
vorite 'residence, was of 'great'virtue in're-•
storing sight to the blind; till a. quack, Aohniet,
turned it into , punip , rooni; •Donaglimore;
county _4lLeathi -one , of, .St. ',Patrick's 385::
churches, possessed ; the relics of, his 0 180 4 11 0
Cassanus, endued, with„ - such; miraculous ; ,rowers ' t hat searcelr” arty 'o.sitors went away
aTED RuittrE4
lIIIMERMW
-r~i:';i z<il
.... -:i:;i a;
; - ''„
. V4l, •+, 1
lintottstled; sTiownpatrick 4 301 1 0• 1 boast the
grove of 8t .:,Patrick, on Which nothing would
01)* but grass andAtunrock;and'thertaratins
innotrfnumented atone time on
account of the,miractkus flowing of • its wa
tent k'n'tbe v)gil
"Wear Carrick-on-Suit . ' IS' a • fainotts • well
called,Tubbe.r (ban, in "which the St.
Qtunt arui, pt. Progawn, are undorstoodi to ;lon
pear at tiaies`t4wards the end of June in the
shape °lndies; whereupon' the waters obtain
great powers of bealing it tree • close bc, is
almost coveted with Icicle, or hairyphtceki thorn
ae aspecitie• againirt 'headaches, and presents
an appear ten ahnost as wonderful as llitulgo
Park's .IFeenaa Taba, withits. bundles of, rags
and • coraps •• of elotW . Three • other wonietc
working Welbi *nay just be nayntioned + this&
of Pt.-.Dolough . ; near. Dublin Sr., Iton . ogue-ift
well near Co ., and Pt. Canine's at , lulkenz-
4Vcronetills ttairiuttell. r`}
,
The announcement of, the autideri,,and'un
' timely death, .by, 'accident, of 'T.S.r. Cornelius
Grinnell;at Ryde,lelle of Wight 'on Thurs
day morning last, was Made by cab& telegram
yesterdaYpanti oeeasionetk profound regret in
this city, where he' wail well and, "favorably
known: The. unfortunate gentleman was 'a
son of. Mr., Henry:Grinnell,,: ands` nephew:of
Mr, Moses H. Grinnell, both of New - lork,and
was born about the year I£lll/ . , being some forty,
;yeats of age at the tins* of his death: Afterdoing
business here ibr sometime the deceased, ten
years ago, moved to Loudon, where he estab 7
liShed , a commercial house known., by, the
name of Grinnell & Co.; and having i a close
corm c oon - with the house of Grinnell, Min
turn & Co., of this city. It held a high posi:
tion in England and, controlled 'a large' and
profitable business. Its , head, the subject of
'tbissketoh, was President of the New York
and Liverpool line of steamers,; Vice-Pre.si 7
dent of the London ana Liverpool Insurance
Company and a .Director of the Asiatic Insur
ance Co., of New York. His 'character stood
high in commercial circles for enterprise and'
integrity. As..a representative of the shipping
interests of the United 6"tates he , was quite
prominent, and liis taking ,away• will be , felt
- severely.
Mr. arimiell, at the time of his death, was
on a visit to Ityde, whither itched gone on, his
yacht Hawk, on'e of the swifte.st yachts in
England:' It is famous as the Ivinner of one
or two regattas of ttie RoyaltYacht Squadron,
off Cowes, and its owner s as devoted to the
pastime of We earn that the ill
fated gentleman, instead of being Instantly
killed, as is reported by the cable, lived for
some hours • after the , accident, and long
enough to .sigri z 'Will appointing , his father
legatee to, him property. He;never' married:
The body will be embalmed , and brought to•
this city, where it will be bfiried. in' social
life the niany, sterling qualities of heart• and
mind, which marked the character of Mr.
.Crinnell endeared him to a large circle , of
friends, who will deplore the sad accident
which sent hini to his grave.—llerfild.
This gentleman, well known in New York
as an actor, :died yesterday, aged thirty,four
'years. He was born. in England during the,
year 1835, and came to this country when a
child. At an early i . .age he '.embraced the
dramatic' ..pTofession, his first apPearanee on
the stage being in St. _Louis.' • Be subsequently
performed low comedy characters in. Cincin
.nati and other Western cities: About fifteen
years ago he appeixed in this city at the
Chatham Theatre, and later at the old and,
new Bowery Theatres. Ile-afterwards -went ,
to the West .Indies as manager of a theatrical
company, remaining there three Years„ and
meeting with marked Success. The last en.: .
gagenient of Mr: Brookiv was at the WaVerley,
Theatre, - on Broadway. •He was a Mason, and
leaves a widow withoutchildren.—/-lered.
:NEW irons, Ang. 12.--The reported_Spanish_
gunboats, recently seized by Marshal Barlow
and Judge Pierrepont, were transferred to the
authorities at the Brooklyn: Navyf 'Yard, yes
terday, in conformity'with orders from Wash..'
ingtgu. The vessels,will be held until proper
inquiries can be made into their character.
Justice Nelson, of the United States Circuit
Court, has rendered a decision in thetheatri
-cal-suirconteriling-thlYPTayaAPer Dark, in'
which_he_overrules-the motion of-Tienry E:'
Palmer, the complainant, for a preliminary in
_junction against _John___E. __3lcDonough,---re-,
straining him from producing the play.
Judge 11103111 in yesterday rendered his de
cision in the Can of kratt,the alleged Texan
murderer and outlaw, who, was before the
court, on a writ 'of habeas carpus. :The Judge,
after reviewing the case - t length; ordered the
prisoner's discharge. Pratt Is still , iir , the cits
tody of the United, States , Marshal at Fort
Lafayette, and islo be brought,. before Com
missioner Osborn, t oday.
United Stattis Commissioner Shield,s yester
day decided that lottery-ticket venders selling'
as agents or clerkS of other parties are under
the law dealers, and as such Must pa3r the spe
cial tax. This decision settles over sixty cases ,
which have been brought before the Commis-
LiSt of patents issued,frona the United States
Patent Office for the Weekending August 10,
and each bearing.that date:.
Treating, Clay • and Drying Bricks—Jeremiah
Fisher, lteading, Pa.
Liftins Jack—,W. A. Bowyer, Helen Furnace,
• 3lanrfactyre of Iron—..t. Brady Philadelphia,
Pa.
Rainfall Cai Couidingr-11. Brenentan,
R apho township, Pa. •
,Stearn , Engine--Ante-dated August 3, 181;9-
W. C. Champlin. Allegheny City, Pa. ! ,
3111 k Cover-J..Dinge4Downingtown, Pa.
t'ooking
• Slotte-J.lleraing, Erie, Pa.
' Reclining Chair- A. Isko, Lancaster, Pa.
Windmill-C. S. Jenkins, Landstlale,,Pa. •
Ulain-a.lllcElrO, Allegheny City, Pa.
- Machine for Bending Car hooks-1).
Catasaqua,' Pa._:__:' - '
Warn Lasher—p K. • Overhiser, Williams
port, Pa. • 7 - • •
.Sled Brake-rj: B. Storey, and'J.. Ross,Butlef, Pa. r • _•
&tinny F. .A.tidrews," Lancaster,
Pa.
Horse Hay Fork—F. Cramer, Chess SpringS,
Match Machine—W. 8.. Eltonhead, Philadel
phia, Pa. • r t , ,
Method ‘of 3Veaiting GallOonL-J. ICeinPer,
Philadelphin, Pa
'Values far 'lrate!' (Toast E. Moore,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Ray Elevator—LT. - Tray; Pa
Befrigeratai4--E. J. (IreaSy, Philadeiphia, Pa
Cleaver—C. Hammond, .Philadelphia,
Hydrant—lL aweibel, Pottsville, Pa, •
Neck Ties—G. Kennedy, Philadelphia, Pa.,,
assigper to , i ltiniself and. G:,,,Hrixhaligh, sanie,
Kiln for Ores. J. M. Rohrer' and J.
11 . . Brasier, 'Pine Grave, Pa. "
Mechwitsm_ifor Operating 'l , :huttlaboree of
Looms—A.!, Ninlmo, . Pepua.,
assigner. to ~himself, and 'l . -14.1 :Moran, same
Placict• •
Ante atekl'Aiigusg, sou.
ywasstyw..47,4, , Apf"rtirifyini
V. Hit*, Ccintesville;Pa4.and - 11*Mtnen-'
burgirtir4ullo4tet l ll.P o , l, _,..... 4 —' '
) n.t..Notv
Solietitor ofi Patents,
N,Orthwest• corner Offl'9llll4,lauct Vilest/rat
streets,
.11
, .
oscTUAAy.
Georgod Brooks.
F.lllOllll pupw YORK.
MST OF PA.TENTIS.
* ,,., ! , ::•::;ii:; . , ; : t ;
Sl'Olf.
:
, ounirtf
THR.S-1P
,:. „I;
. ! ir "!eil• ANP ArAri(Clikir e r " •
• ' • The ilisurn,er/cato
• .. • • ,
• Br oakn4us c. Kann.
.!TWas-by the - Wail/lite, near nSotitherri ,
Toted a sage bOneatb a tree recliniit4
His old Btmw hat waCs zmiltlsqs of a '
Ills pantaloons had less of cloth mot*.
Ashlressing him about the latest neWs,
- laiuiakly found hihr; bl,- his salsitation,- •
A trum,of boundlms and erronewito •
And, Oast and 3.arigas mixinfonnatlou. , •
•
"I reckon you're a' tatikee, sotne,n, /aid
4 17p0n some sheakitemish4on or moother,"-•
To see bow being - Equalized and Free •, . • •
Agrees ;with • hiM yotr can your • Coloredr ?
Xlrogmer. , •
- .Errit4cTiol Waits on hbn, wlllll ail his'tigg l
ht/10'
So freely given by'yoittliwneonfoustied I •
He'll keep attacking theedelentelem whites,
• Till all the eoloredrace are kiliedlor wOttaded
# , ln New Orkans•--behold(tho lesson taughtt..;
. When in Convention, airtain. Mack& as
sembled, • • • ••,. •••• • •
A sound of, peaceful thiongo onfiale wars
caught, - • •
'And in the ball the blaelia blOoditurstie,
"'trembled.
slilheithrOn glithowinilows,lobbies,ontesgato,
ily,the armed Caucasian•raoe aurstrunded, •
The Freedmen sallied in theirmurdlkroushato,
And nineteen, colosed-aneoy- werei madly;
wounded. , •
"In Central Geisa, several montlis
The sons of Ai held a Loyal meeting ,: . A
And divers White' Nen went to 'see the show'
And give the - speakers fritinißyiSantlikrie
But lo when speaking bad gone ono spell,
And all the.pir,vdthloyal words•rotesnatled,
Vpou the helpless Whites the 0
uegroesi 4/,
And thirteen "colored , men weke
wounded. :*
. .
•
' , ln cud Virginia, at a rural place.
Where many'Africani had come-for •vottufge
The merest handful of the Higher . Race •
Were looking on, and minar,matters noting;;
When' at, a 'cry abo ut: some , vote refused,- e
The blacks infuriate on the Efandfulboundedy;
Then' knives and piitols merciles . sly usedA '
And 'fourteen . - colored men -bstdo:
*minded. • •• • , ; •
•
"So, at the Capital of all the States— -
Your ,boasted Washington,
the.pinottL oily' --
There was, in. ,Journals of the proper dates, .
Correet' report, of ,A•hat should morn yonr
The town'el44lon MllihileonutleS.4 Wicks,
•-Who, • nrmed•land maddened; and ny..rion*
• hounded, . • ••
Made on the uuresisdng Whites attack:B, i ._
• And fifteen iored men were . , b at
wounded..,: .. • •
•
• •
~l 'it; f uriiierinOre': of late' in Tenneisee- -•
,
• Whet* 'Stkokes *as beaten". at' the . 1i9144•03;',.:
• • — *Center; ' • • , ,*% t ••• • • •
The savage negroes, armed from had toktlei;.b
Seemed, on a. tight than on theirvotes inga•
tenter;
To rent some petty, thabolie spite. •J •
Upon 'the plea o f
acme yaguu char g e; founded;, — " • .
They turned in tin" Ingle *bite,
And si*tiien ••• cnlored men '• Vete' :badly i•
woundold. ' • •
• • •.
. .
4 - 4 7'11e Ince Heim-ericaifia dying out!"
:The itagb concluded, with a Mama! gesture •.
'Andlefi-meorictim of amazing doubt, ,
lYhile liewent onward in hie ragged y,eatin•e. •
It Southern Whites, linaimed,'ilo deadly are
To-.Sonthern ;Colored Alen 'rull - !nyined dud'
•, : • • • • •
Bow canthliforelatalvould they•lie4bpfard
If bythelkeconithlunion buraviduanitedi ;
—Dr. Lees and bienl Dow are both to stump
Ohio for the temperance ticket.:
--Straliesch:. has captured, Patti, 'ant/ wrll
transport her hither - to - transport ns, alt —
—Northern Texttandh its best cropha t-.tventy
—The dqueen of Portugal,. sitice-slah,liaa.
taken to drinking, is getting well..
--Char,les - Reati said a bad horse mast like. a
poor play; it cant run, - and won't drityx.:
Sorne-one-says of-a-certaia-caligregattau,
that they pray on their knees onL.SundNitvand'
11 Their neighbors - We feiri of thel.Weelz . ' -
Chicago Is contracting. fottwenty_miles ofd
wood pavenn — n - d . . - - The' cititenaivient.',li great'
many soft places to fall down upon. - '
—Can it •be trite thatthe ladies of, this city
get drunk on chloroform? The 'World.saysso.
—N.Y. Sun..,Then of coarse it isnit trne.
--South Bend, Ind., has a charnpionilAugher,
who claims that he can laugh .louder,, longer,.
heartier,and morescientilically than any other;
man, white or hlack, in Indiana, ,
. .
,—Mark Twain likens the sun on thtl7th t o o a
negro, because of "thick, lim." Such. ia, ,re
murk shows "Ids t fatty degeneration thc,
heart.
,
--rani. companies of California niiiitia have i f
been mustered' ont of the State service for re-
fusing to inareh in the San Franciseo Fourth
of .luly prbeession with colored hien.
—An.lllinois woman secured the arrest 'oe''
her husband for beating her, and elabited hair
the fine imposed as the informer. . ', . 4
—A pretty little Miss, aged! flfttion, • rAu;
away from New . Jersey to New; York, "in, '
search, of a husband." The„Porloce . ran her , i
right, baek again . and without on t .,.
e, ~ ,, 1 i
—A pump dealer in 31.innef4ofa ,tfells: on, tt.
credit, agreeing to, take pay this fall, if ,win t at,,
sells at two dollars a bitsbe I, otherwise, to
,w, 1 0,,t,„
another year .
The Rev. Mr. E— was preparia.X.inaii.W.,
course for the next Sabbathr,'stoppitig,ocial c -^
sionally to review what he has written. atil''.
to erase that which he was disposed to tlisari4 '
prove, when he -was accostedby'his , liftb4son,,: , •
who had inunbered but live sneoinierK ,, ~t ~ tI,
"Father, does God tell you what to preachttr ;
"Certainly, my child"' • , ~ ,-
"Then what makes you Seratch,it oiit:'- o
.—A, Litchtield,.; Conuectient, clock „ dep,inr.,,,
lately sold a ,small clock to. au Xri.sli *man,
~
who walked 'oft with itt o under. hair; _arm: ,
On her ' way" She, turned it, hotioni up-,':
ward, and a wire droppedifrein l its . - 14oziitiou', ,
causing the clock to striko..without inte . rtfus--0 ,
sion. Tkerenpou she itturned inf trouble„;.
complaining to the merchant, "Situ; an' ;i4,,,. .
eryin' after ye already."' , , ,
—Orpheus C. Herr coutrihntes. tihe ~,, 12
ing, under the title of, "NentaiiilVAci*W#gts..---.;.---
"He meets the made at;'l'i ow,Pc- - 41, ,;,. , „ 1 . •
ht. eara serene', she, , ~ , , ,
And otethe sands salutes her ~, , '',`'.,". ';;. L.
.494 beauty's blootaingQ,Uottfl!'" " 4g c.. '
" ‘orlreitix ., a oueol4 •what would'stotiivi;44,',., C.,
• For hint "Who.asking liztßile." - , - . . '.''
'l'd ask thee, ltivii, to make me ~-,-. ;""''"''.. 3 ' - ' ,-
Com.l.,nutoli. OF THE DATWP ' ;, , Pi ''.:'. ° 'it
Th, ~ i. , , W. '' , '
e. Orange (44. J.) CAron4lo, 'w - rtti._,,i,r, '
,Spiritualism, says the "my.steriout. ' phigii
proceed from the sub4leratigezeienit 3:431 nr , 4,' f
tent y4i
effervescence ootlsmall eunietiAglritithiMiv'bo eiti.: , '
situated heterogeneonalyiu, theamOtilinbun- of -
the inferior . atephalcoOlalai , W -1 4 1, 1,1111. kr , cowing •;'•
in unconseions, contaCt with the 'ethovi,, za ti o p,
of the five sup,erior , prooesseel, of, the dorsal ;'
vertebra), also results in... 4 tivpix t ic*l v , giving,
rise to spoulaneeniCeorabnatieonav,itk mul l'
abnornuil eVtionatiiihs` of Obinbrbynous hi- ,
eornis,, situated ', in varitiiis'abilinninal - orifloft '
the 'raps occur *dm':• thee etAatitiona of , thoW
former in certain tekaporarnaiktal , structureii- ,
and tbe tili ,frpra,Ltb.e),tboracto ,eartiutneotta :,
el title, yvbenoyer tbeitr col4enta Are oarapKarmil, ~,
b., - eerObral 144 ligation, 9
.1? k
P'lrft
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• .41 I , : n:194. - 4:!:!Y
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