The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, February 15, 1855, Image 1

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A Rain Dream.
Br WILLIAM C1714 . ..E BRYANT
These strifes, these tumults of the noisy
world, .
Where Fraud, the coward, tracks his prey by
stealth,
And strer gth the ruffian, glories in his guilt,
Oppress the e heart with sadness: Oh, my friend,
In what serener mood we look upon
The gloomiest aspect of the elements -
Among the woods and fields ! Let us awhile;
,'As the slow wind is rolling up the storm,
'ln fancy leave this maze of dusty streets,
For ever shaken by the importunate jar
Of commerce, and, upon the darkening 'air
Look from the shelter of our rural home.
Who is not awed that listens to the Rain,
Sending his voice before him ? Mighty Rain!
The upland steeps are shrouded by thy mists ;
The vales e gloomy with thy shade ; the pools ,
No longer glimmer, and the silvery streams
Darken to veins of lead at tby approach,
;Ob, might-37114:in! already thou art here;
:And every roof is beaten by thy streams,
And as thou. passest, every glassy spring
Grows rough, and every leaf in all the woods
Is struck and quivers. All the hill-tope slake
Their, thirst rom thee ; a . thousand languishing
fields,,
A thousand fainting gardens are refreshed;
A thousand idle rivulets start to speed,
And,withlthe graver murmur of the storm
I Blend theft• light voices as they hurry on.
I • Thou ffirst the circle of the -atmosphere -
Alone; there is no living thing abroad,
No bird to wing the sir, nor beast to walk
The field; the squirrel in the forest seeks
His hollow tree ; the marmot of the field
Has scampered to his den ; the butterfly
Hides under her broad leaf: the insect crowds ;
That made the sunshine populous, lie close ' 1
In their,roysterious shelter, whence the sun
Will summon them again. The mighty Rain
Holds the vast empire,of the sky alone. •
I shut my eves, and see, as in a dream,
The friendly clouds drop down spring violets
; And summer columbines, and all the flowers
;'That tuft the woodland floor, or overarch
The streamlet:- 7 -Spiky grass for g enial June, 1 /
'; Brown harvests for Afe • waiting husbandman,
And for the woods a deluge of freshleaves-
I see these myriad drops that slake the dust,
;.Gather in glorious streams, or rolling blue
I•In billows on-the take or on the deep,^-
And bearing navies. I behold them rhang,e
To threadkof crystal as they sink in 'earth,
And leave its stains behind, to Ilse, again '
' In pleasant nooks of verdure, where the child,
',Thirsty with play, in both his little hands ,
Shall take the`cool clear water, raising it
.To wet his pretty lips. Tomorrow= noon
How proudly will the 'water-lily ride
The brimming pool. o'erlooking ; like a queen,
I.Her circle of broad leaves. In lonely wastes,
When next.the sdnshine makes them beautiful,
,Gay troops of bathrflies shall light to drink '
At the replenished hollows of the roci;.
I No* slowly falls the call blank night, and
still,
.All through the sfarless , hours, the mighty Rain
Saiitea with perpetual-sound the forest leaves, '•
'And beats the matted-grass, and still the earth
I ;D:inks the unstinted bounty of the clonds, •
Drinks .for her eottre wells; her woodland
brooks, .
; ;Drinks for the springing trout, the toiling bee
'And brooding bird, drinks for her , tender flovi
,
• ars,
Tall oaks, and all the herbage of her bills.
A-melancholy sound is in:the air.
A deep sigh7in the distance, a shrill wail •
;Around my dwelling. 'Tie the wind of night';
A lonely wanderer between earth and cloud, •
in the black shadow - and the chilly mist,
;Along the streaming mountain side, and throw+
4 The dripping woods, and o'er the plashy fields,'
;',Roaming and wowing still,Ake one who makes
'; The journey of life alone, and nowhere meets
I!A weJeom or a friend, and still goes on,
•,In darkness. Yet awhile, a little while,.
And he shall toss the glittering leaves in play,
And dilly with the flowers, and gaily lift ; •
The slender herbs, pressed low by weight of rain,
And drive, in joyous triumph, through the sky,
";White clouds, the laggard remnants of the storm.
Alba! mints.
HANNY IgEALL:I
lam aphelor ! • Don't suiiie oipass judg
'mem ras upon iae—l must tell why lam
what I aui.
/ can scarcely remember, when 'my father
• removed to•the new village of Brookville. It
*ma, too, that there is a dim'. remembrance
of an old house by the lake,, It is all vague,
dim and uncertain,however.). a
Yet I some
times find lingenng within me vision of an
old brown building, with elms in frOnt and.. a
sleepy lake down in the vale, such, I have
, beard my father say,- :was our These
impressions seem to me as much like dreams
al realities, and no. wonder either, for the foot
steps of long yearstave marched over them.
But I do remember distinctly :a broad river
that we crossed on our way to our new home,
that is tbe most distinct of all—its silvery.
\raves flashing around the flat we crossed
l over on are not to be forgotten.' •
• ' The streets of Brookville were not cleared
of stumps when we entered a little cottage on
main street. There was, a 'newness and
freSliness about everything there. It, was not
18,4 before it began to' assume a busy char
aiter, as new settlers came in, and new' stores ,
airl shops went up. My father was a brick
layer, and I carried' some of the brick and
mortar, that went' into what is now called .
''ibe old Court. House at Brookville," and I
laiiPed to refit its brown Walls. Time flies!
Among.ethers who came to Brookville was
roan named Neall. He had., been a rne.r
ell'ant in one of the seaport_ cities, but failing
by; injuilicioui - speculations, he had retired. I
with a little' wreck of his fortune, to the' new
vilfage, either to recruit or to spend the eve
ning.of his life in quiet. I never knew which.
Ile had been a hard drinker during the few
last - years-;--the demon in the wine glass had ,
been the main rock on which be wrecked his
andhis - srife.he left in the city, in the
grave -yard- he . hind , the steeple church--a n t
there by hii - abases and cruelty. So said the
old shoemaker who came with Neall front
the city. ,
Nannies Neal! was like ..a bright star gleam
ing in the stormuight among the clouds. She
waslthe only child of the comer, and a love
-I.y being she was ! She was just my age, or
' nearly, not quite—from Aprii to June iva.s
differenc4, ' believe.
Neall managed to get a house a few rods
from ours; and he with his daughter, a sour
old dame of a housekeePer, and the old shoe
, maker, bothof whom came with him, consti
tuted his family.
Nannin and I were not' long in becoming
sat friend : we met one sunny afternoon
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down `in n the learing - on the trolikside:, after
which the village was maned, and there for a
full hour we played, "tatitive's . biise" among' •
the broad walnut . andpopalar Stumps that.
stood tike watching sentinels in the vale. -
' Thavery nest day we went 'sant together,
on, the_hills with our baskets, - arid. gathered
- whottlebeffies_, and talked . ,and played
,among
- the -flicks, and when the drew tired sat down
and she.told me of her mother-4f how AA
used,to Weep while she sat at.- her feet, and
then died in the old night with consumption
and ajbrolien heart, and that ti*Prieit, said
,she went to live,with . the Virgin IFAngels. 1,
have : Since thought that her matiier was per 4
haps tt•Patholie,;but of - this lam not certain.;
Nei:di - put up 'a tavern in
,BroOkville, and
the..neW settleragathered there and drank. I
remeMher the first :night there Was a nUise ,
and latighing, fiddling and dancing, and sing-: 1
ing'there, and I - thought . 1 it must- be some -1 1
thingvery nice . .btit my mo.ther ' i told me it, ;
was it!very avitled .; place,. and that 'I, mot ,
never: 0 there. 1 I often: wished My mother
had not told me that, for, my Nannie was',
there;and she was my dearest frieud.
Years passed as others had, and NatinieH
and I grew up; she ,was one or the loveliest',
"creatures of female beauty I had lever seen.;
She waa as gentle as the , whispermgs of--the!,
white-iiinged zephyrs among the .April flow-' ;
ers, and as pure as• the filly that bent beneath ,
, the iiiitniner breeze to the kiss' of the rippling
-waves Of the meadow rill ; anji yet she was
reared:among, the 'Wrecks of a father's fortune,
and had beard, tithe after time, the rude,
jest .
.coarset and drunken ribaldry Of - drunken
men aroundlhe little bar, her father kept. :
. Nantiie•was- happily in possession of.the
virtueswhich ennoble and beantifY woman's
character:. She-was kintii and cheerful ;4'16-,
Ither will nor inelaticholy, yet the lOvely calm
1 of her countenance was tinged with ashade
i of sadness—motion, look, tone, deed, were
gentle =44 the spring-time sun-beatn . 4 shim
thefinge"anaeng the garden flowers - Nannie
I Nealltwas the loved one in Brookville:
. I'lov'eti her When we were childre,n playing
on • copse and-.heath, - on, rock .andidell ; :and
now that We were grown I loved lierwith all
pas;itinate ilolatiy efiny younginanhOod.
- N4t a Whisper, of fore ever passed hnr lips—
end yet the secret was written in - and.folidly
, eherished by.,.eath hidden heart. 1 Al, we
Were 'happy 'in this secret heart worship. IWe
were often together in the wild' tilled: where
; we - had gathered beriies when r h eliildren ;
along the brbok where the waves danced o'er
their pebbly-path that 10 to•the riVer; in the
Old w s where oak and "pine ponied - their
taper s i
tit.
res'u'p.to heav=en, we rambled :and
dre.amed , and loved in -silence, with } none, but
natiire with U., s.. For' hours ive 1.4-e sat on
-the 'brook brink -watching the',l 1 — frisking : fish
gliding like golden creatures among the erys
)tal waves and the ' clear way.elets hastening
aWav, the mellow sunlight , trembling ,onl the
. jtee tops and falling-away behind the hills,
and all\ the time we felt t hat
,'our _ hearts held
Sweet communion in breathless whispers—
dins a holy tie ; was Weaving ! : woof Land Web
into our life and hope Sand destinies. 1 .
-.1 . 01d Neal! became aware of eiigrowting,
intimacy 'and became [enraged. One evening .
when I had gone . to . spend a few hours Witt
Nanglie atlher horne, - the 'Ohll-min eatne to
tha little sitingroom' 1 wherei we_ vVere, Sad
sternly,erdered me. sway. I arose, and a tear
drop hint .upon Nannie'seyelid. IltoOk any
hat,-and as I went out, th 6 old ,nansungOut
after use—" Hod Carrier !" .; r'• I.
The old housekeeper flattened her ugly
face against the glass door betweeni the two
rooms and echoed the chortis—"llod car
rier!" I
1 The old shoemaker stopped itammeritig his
leather as I went out, and spoke lowland said 1
he Would see me that evening. ! , 1
! 'The rabble in the .dram lattop,l ithro - ugh
Avhich I had to pass, cauft- the hots of the
derisive taunt, and shoutedit afterine--"Ilod
carrier!" The infernal taunt ringi in my
ears 'et. . '' . ;' ' 1 ; [ .
Th ,v atevening the, old shoemaker saw me
and told me Nannie loved me find we should
see each other clandestinely. LA than -ed him,
and thrOugh his interference,. Nannie and I
met each; other almost every da , and talked
and loved. • . • .
And!, this way we spent sot eof our hap
' piest hours, dreaming of the 1)1,-s that was to
be our in a few short 'monthii for wren the
•
summer was pro.M l we, were ffit - e arried.
Love with us was a ;reality, and in the Soli
tudes about Brookville we &reamed. of' its
'I bliss, asiterrether we tvatched the drfiling of
the white clouds ridiagon the ',blue ocean of
the sky.. . - ' I
Our dieams werelike[theclodds. . A cloud
was in the sky with a:storm in Its bosom too,
but. wesaw
'.it not.
,:* , * i•*. •*, 1 *
_I Christmas day we were to be maried.—
;,
None knew,it, however, except !the old shoe
inaker. and Rob 'Lincoln. RobWaskeonvey
her to a neighboring louse in-,lfis'neW sleigh,
and I was to meet him there with the[ village
parson. ', Snell was the,arrangeinent. [- $ ,
The, dayslbefore Christmas
, the hills and
houses' were white With snob ; ifrOokville
Was all life (Or the enjeYments Of the[sca 'son.
That morning two strangers ar&eared in ottr
midst, Non knew from wbetfee they came.
them i n ,
11 ti3<it them tne streets early.: ; in the day.
;disliked their looks and turnedi,asideJ, There
was a lnrkiniloOk of Sin lingering about. the
'face of the eldesi,—fa heartleslobking Wretch.
The youngerisppearedibat little;hetter.
i All day le;ng the revel increased in and
about Neall'p house. lOnce 4e i twiee there
clime near 'bepag a fialit.', Justinfter sundown
Ilmet Rob Lincoln r uning toNals his fath
li
er's house at !full s' ed. I luid:_ no trine to
aSk- liim 'a sinrsle ' • , t don There isins the
Mildest- e' L.• I I l _• • . the, brave,
wi terrortlasuing from. tne urave young
tr#Ltec. eye -S Run iwithritte V 4 meal! s--run,
dreadful dares; there," [and he.grasped my
aim . and I•bonnded away L with him. I
Iligt'l the Wind blows talawiust',aS it flitiek
ed. by my ears} as I ran- up , kite showy ( street
of Brookville on that fatal ei/ening. [Draw
your chair 614,6 r; I wish ',to,ipettlt.. iti whis
pers now. ,Within Neall's 110usi t ts when. w
reached it, I . 4ithis scene; 1 - ; 1
The old hoffsekeeper istdod with ter[ch ..,,
ped! hands folffed in hei yelloiv 'apron, Zvil
4
her 'f . flattened against a . dirtt Pant ) of a
a
,gl• • floor looping in to the tavern.. tt. few
of th .t Ivillagei tots were staggering • aro,und
the room, or half dozing on the pine benches
at the flre; the old shoemaker!,se-ented ledg
. -:
ed with Neall,twho was,nearlyt drank, co re
voke some de4ree of his and my f owaNan-•
~ pie was struggling in the 'armh of one of the
two stratigerrittle tile othei• stood a little
„way off grinning with grini satisfaction!!
• .
.A. `'+I I AEEKLY 3OMINAL---DEyOT-ED TO POLITICS, KEW, LITERATU'4 AGRICULTURE., SCIENCE, END *ORAISET.-:
When .
mered in -
"So, ho.
Nan to a city )
.
roleaux of gold c I._
up from the throat .1
ser.. • • ' ,
Nannie sold ?, 1.
. , .
- -
I grew dizzy—t* room, ..ith its tragedy
seemed to whitl around wit. -me. heard'
the familiar Voice of the old sb.. baker cry
out: . . 1 • .. ,
. . .
"Mr. Neal!, how can you limier .yo• own,
child away to
. one •Whose heart is to-da: as
block as-any purgatory, after pionisifig-yo.. .
pod T dead 'wife to be bath father and•mother
to the dear child 1", •
A drunken curse came from the hot lungs
of the - father against, the shoemaker and bis
own child ; " lietterlthat than the wife of an
infamoas hod earriei!"
saw the old wotian's pitted face grinning
against the glass., .And then I saw the mild
• blue eyes of my 'poor; half distracted, Nannie.
almost starting from', their 84cl:es, and her
right hand, that was free from ,the monster's
grasp, held out imploringly to, me for 'help.
She screamed my name: I rushed to the res
cue. Rob Lincoln Was before me:
Draw your chair closer.
Old Neal!' was enraged that we should dare
•to rescue his child
.friam the.infainy to which
he. had sold her, and! grasping. the old_ shoe
maker's hanimer froth the bench; he hurled it
at us. • The Weapon hew close by Rob's ear,
and struck the head jof my poor • Nanuie.—
With a low Murmur, of "Mother, mother!"
she sank in my armS,to the floor - The
~two
strangers fled forever from Iyookville. I call , :
ed again and again to Nannie to tell me that
she had not fled from earth to heaven, but
'she kept her blue eyea fired upon me, and a
changeless smile rested upon , her damp face.
And all .this time the old housekeeper kept
her hideoui face pressed -- against the glass,
:grinning through the scene: And : old Nenll
stood with his, arms folded, clutching in one
;hand- the roleaux of gold. leaned againand
,again' to Naanie, and like it child, whispered
in her ear, that I loved her still;' but the
changeless smile was the only. answer. I
he!d her head in my arms and wept. The
old. shoemakerjan and brought the Tillage
;surcreon. Ile came . and knelt down by her
i!on the, tavern floor, and took het pale bands
his. I loved him more than ever for,hold-
Ong it so softly and tenderly, ,exa mining the
livid spot half hidden by.her auburn hair,
where the }launder had struck. I could bear
rt no i lon g er. I whist weed, "Doctor, - is‘Nan
etie gone r—l could not say idead; but
.
iw orse
I And he laid his slender lingers signifieant
ily on his noble brow. -•
Rob Lincoln, the doctor and the old shoe
,
maker carried Nannie from the tavern to the
ductor's - house, and I follow/A..
And the' blood of the.victim fell drop.- by
drep on the pure white snow.. --
The nest day old Neall went to' • eternity.
the Angels of Rettibation• had Watched bis
Meps and had marked his. last • going out,
the shaft ( -, f the Pale Archer had Smack im
to vex and then destroy. In the bat • strife
kith the demon of dolerhWtu tremens he was
Overcome, and his sr.irit shrieking, with 'fears,
Went to be judged by him who' weighs Itu
Mortality in the eternal balanced Truth.
Ile was buried beneath the . snoir-web that
jay on the yard behind the village church,
fund no eye in Brookville wept.
bay after day I watched. by the bedside
Of poor 2 N.annie, and whispered to her, and
Wet her dry lips with water. She mostly lay
With her languid eyes closed, bat when. she
did' openthem they stared out at me with
.4uch terior that I shrank from them. And
4.lte wothi
,paint her finger at me, and call
Mein monster, and command ate to . carry her .
hack to Brookville, to her own . dear—. Oh !
bow agonizing that was! To liearber call
My.own name and link it with *the . fondest,
endearments, yet look. upon me as the mon
ster who had bartered gold 'for her level
nesi.
Thus, days and
. nights passed,: and the
:faithful surgeon all the time endeavoringi, to
Call backiher wandering mind.
_tlt was 0 in vain.."
The cloud that bad drift ai; our : suMmer
Sky had burst upon . us.in a winter storm that
knew no spring time of life 1.
My poorloved and lost Nannieseall! She
sits in, the broad flock of sunbeams that falls
through her window in . one of the little rooms
4t . the 1) Asylum; a harmless, dreaming
Innatie, .
71y Fellow. Passenger.
What strange characters one sometimes
Meets intravelliug 1.. I was lately going some
distance by railway, and thought at one of
the stations I was to be, leftls&us; when just
as trie train was starting, in k stepped a little,
p'ompus, grey : laired old gentleman, almost
as finical in his attire as the celebrated Beau
Ifrummel. To have determined exactly what
time of life lie had .arrived at witild have been
quite impossible, as he was .an Odd mixture
of iouth and age; . his manners :and move
reeks being as gay as a youth ,of eighteen.
After picking up nip little badret; which bad
fallen, presenting it. to me with a bow
,which
any • exquisite' . might have envied, and re-
Ordiag me with as, inquisitive alook .as was
consistent with politeness, he (apparently sat
isfied With his scrutiny) seated himself oppo
site me with the evident detertuiton.hmof hav-
I:. "a talk."
i - '....
1 to thispart of the country be
fore., madam f" . , , . .
• ,l," IsTo.r . - . :
• •
1," Ah ! 'then you, hill 'be very,, glad -to get
seine 'one to point-out the / different places 'to ,
you; one can't enjoy travelling otherwise.--r
Pray look what a fine bold ~scene we'at_pres- -, •
cut passing! that tower built on the very edge priso)
I
ontrost, cS , usque4antta Couittp,.Tenit'a, Iftbrttarg I', 1055.
• blood bolled%in every knotted vein 1--
prang intpthe arena, old Nea
.drunken
tieter; Hod Carrier, I've sold
ritleman !" and he held up a
-kip.: A low laugh gurgled
- 4 the infernal pureha.
And there she will sit and chatter to her
bird and her straw until the good angels beck
leraway !
I have sat by.her side in that neat little
cell, looking into-the tfreamy! eyes, many a
lOnely hour, but she never knew me !
She sometimes calls to her kind hearted
awayl”
matron,"
,- and bids her I " take 'the stranger
And I have sometimes seen tears in that
kind' hearted woman's eyes as I have depar
ted, at. the slime time if rging her to treat her
'Poor Nannie kindly.' .
Andnow, fair readers, do yOu wonder that
tam bachelor?
. _
Believe this, for me,. there " never was 'but
one Nannie Neal% and3-she yet. lives, hut a
lunatic! -
of the rocks, and the - deep ravine of dark, un
derwood beneath." , 1
";Nothing to what We shave in Scothtad,"
was'lny somewhat ungracious reply.
I n Scotland! ah, ,I thought yo U were
froM the sister kingdo l m." (blow this cent
of mine does betray Me I I do believe if I
-went to the South Sea Islands, that the first
question the good folks there would ask ine,
after my..first sentence, would -be, "Are you
(torn Sclltland Y") . " Sci you don't think Iwo
can 'compete with it rs . •
"Not In the grandeur'of your scenery.";
" ! well, I believe you're right; I've
been in ,Scotland, and. admire it very much.
Pardon inc for asking, but are you a veid
sw •
"I am." I. 1
h l you look very young; shouldn't
-• .1k four and twenty.."l,
1
intepded as a question ; howev
' in reply, and he looked a pt
', resumed after a pause.
in, but had your husband
V
think y,
This w,
er, only smik
the confused, ly.
"Pardon me ag.
his life insured I"
ttN o. ,,
" Ali ! what a pity !lev
sure his life; it it really the
proof of his love that 4 mart L
should always d'O it, even if it wt.
a few hundred pounds.; Rase you
, dren I" 1 • -
tt Ah ! I was just goiag to
to insure ytetr life; I should
to do' it. rm an agent for at
pany, and I always take evi
to recommend gentlemen an'
I so."
" I have no One theta won
suring my life for.". - ,
"Ah ! but in case yeti shod
do
,itt just nllow me to wive
on the subject." ;
"Oh ! no, pray don't trou 1
"No trouble in the world,
it's just in my_way." I I
I Seeing it wasrevitable, Il i
.with the best gret:e possible t
and appeared tistere but on
er ,
iTords here and there. After
were pretty numerous, but se.
h4ress upon my mind that h 4
advantageous cornpany r in wi
insure their life in Great Bri
htusted,' he again returned to
May I ask what your hue
!" Consumption," . •
;What a- change came over
man' s,
countenance i The IO
vanished, but the little grey e„
eel as if there wzu, a tear twin
.rts he repeated : tnourefrilly: 4
I had a daughter who died
two years since; she was as s
1 father need desire to look at,
_take care ofWA; she .wo i
and parties, poor qiing I poor tl
" Was she long ill r' •
" About a year,; she Caught
cold by going to a ball; one bi
ter's night. Her mother and
. her to go; but Tom—that was
—came for her, and she looko
her roses and white mu4in, al
both so happy-like, thativre hat
to say, 'nay ; so go shetdid, and
till three in the morning, drov
open carriage, went .tcrher bi
leave it' for months." -: • i
"And was she never able to g o out again it
" Oh yes ; when the snromerr -) retUrned, the.
light came hack to her eyes, and the roses te
her cheeks, and my darling waS as bright and
gay as ever; singing liki a birtLand making
her poor mother and me as happy as before
that long illness; but, oh dear! she mou ld`
not take care ofherself imy ti .
Itwn little Lib:
,
la!"
. -
The old gentleman tu'zned away and put, T
his head out of the window, . if to look at,
something; but -I saw the tea 'again twinl4
ling in his eyes, and theirtemu ons motion of
his lips." After a little, I . requ ted him, if if,;
.was not too painfel,—to tell, ' more of hind,'
sweet child. i•
"Yes, I shall tell you ibecau I think you',
feel for me, and like to speak a ut her.' She'
continued well all summer, till - )be beginning
ofVutum; and one glocnny da - , she must go;,
away on an excursion to i the country, dressed]
in.her laces and nruslinsi as if it were' the
middle of summer and lit wa'n't going tot
rain. Her mother wished her to put on al,
warmer dress and shavvl,hut sh laughicland ' t
said, " Oh, no ; if it breaks out fine, .I gliiidd I
just look like an old woman, 41 .din that
way, and they will, all be so - ,,g7 1 ; so mother 1 .
• dear (and she had such ri4oaxr g "way with
her,) do' let me go as Jam ; and Tom likes I
this dress so much." There was,nd resisting
her ;so off they drove, laughin and joking,
and looking so happy and handsome—my
poor child ! The rain came on as they'were
returning; she arrived home drenched and
shivering, and never set her prtty foot
_on
the green fields again I ,klut she died very
happy, that was a' great' consolation to her.
' . .poor mother."* • • ,
We parted at tire next station -whir l a hear
ty shake of the hand and o
kind w sties n both
i
sides; and then I fell into are e rie on how
!little we can judge of the. inner I man - unless
•
scene accidental circumstance calls forth the:
under-current of concealed feeling. , For I
' thoUght, when the old gentleman was expa
tiating on the merits of his insurance comps
ny4hat his heart was bound up `in the mam-I
molt of this world; and had no place for those
deep affections-that lay hid beneath the friv
olous manner and foolish attire. 'Well inay
we ponder our Lord's precept, I" .nudge not
lestiye be judged." 'Had I.
.yiel?ed, too, to
my ;impulse whencthe old genii i man began'
his queries, I should have hastenidto the op
posite side of the carriage, and thus deprived
myself of what was a real
in
ulee and prof
it—namely, sympathising snot tee's sorrow
-1--t4e opening of those kind fe4lings in the
heart, which must ever be bens vial' our
naturally selfish naturesetLeiirtrie Hour..:
) ,
* nder the'corirm oe expression } there lurks :
nisi rauchiatit error. The ban:Horn zukhith
er h unta of worldly plearniee are tet the school
in w rich the foal cap learn that we htiest of all
les us—the lesion how todie._ . , 1
.• it
-"-'
_ .„ ,_
. To,nesite.pped up tha . genpernan who
orris ngaged in. converee'On- !with about, 'a
- do others," and *said r: -' 1 - -, I'-. ' •' ,
'I seems to me I have 4ett yoei l pbysiogno
-1
mymewhere, before, but, I cannot imagine
whe .'
;eoper of a
rely likely, I have been the
for upwards of twenty yea
TILE, BOSTON
. March stllii 1770.
On Friday, the-2d dal of March, 1770, a
pidier of the twenty-ninth : asked to be em
ployed' at Gray's ropewalk', and be was reptd
sed in the coarsest words. He then defied
the roperuakers to a b:ozing-Inatch ; and one
of them accepting his challenge; he was.bea
ten off. Returning with SeVeral, of his
Ari
com
panions, they ton, were ven away. -A
laiger number came dean' renew the fight
-with clubs and cutlasses,- and 'in their turn
encountered defeat. By this time Gray and
others interposed, and - for that day prevented
further disturbance. ', •
-There was an end of the affair at the rope
walk, but not at the barracks, where the sol
diers inflamed each other' S passions, as if the
honor of the regiment were tarnished. On
Saturday they prepared 14udgeons ;.. and be
ing resolved to brave the citizens on Monday
night, they forewarned their particular ac
quaintaince not to be abroad. Without duly
restraining his Then, Carr, the Lieutenant Col
onel of the twenty-nintb, Made complaint to
the Lieutenant Governor Of the ir.sult they
bad received.
man should
nip substanoal_
&m.o.
o only for -I
chit-
Thee°lonel deliberatinth on Monday,see4-
ed of Opinion that the town would never - be
safe, from quarrOs between the people and
diets, as lona' as soldieip should :be guar;
among them. In the present - ease the,
the rope-walk gave satisfaction by
- - the workmen complained of. -
should on their part, have kept
the barr q ls after nightfall.
have insisted on measures
too: Much wished the
:4uenee at Weitminis
-
Lreconpnend Yot
pe, most hat
a ingurance co -
•ler) , opportunity
id ladies to flo
s 0.
teret
owner
The office
their men wit)'
Hutchinson shou'
of precaution ; . *fit
favor of all who had
-ter.•
. .
• Evening came on. Thei',..oung moon. was
shining brightly .in a cloudle:s winter sky, /
and its light was increased"! by a new . fallen
snow.,. Parties .of soldiers were de Vett - about
the streets, making. a 'parade - of vale, • chall
enging resistance, and staking the i t
nabi
tanLs indiscriminately sticks orsheat.
cutlasses. . • •
A band which rushed out front Murray' , s
Barracks, in Brattle street, armed with clubs,
cutlasses and bayjmets, prOvoked resistance,
and in. affray ,enstled. EnSign Maul, at•ihe .
gate of the barrack yard ctled to the soldiers;;
"Turn out and I will stand by you ; kill thern ;
stick them ; knock than !down ; run lyour,
bayonets through them ;" and one soldier after
another levelled a fire-lock end threatened to
" Make a lane" through the'. • Just be
fore-9, as an officer crossed King street, now
State street, a barbert lad ?cried • after .him,
" There _goes a mean felloiv - who bath not
paid my Master for dressing his hair . ;" on
which .the sentinel station* at the westerlyend of the Clitstom ! llonse ;on the corner ,of•
__. • _ _ .
Id think of in-
ld ever wishlto
ou a few bias
I
e yourself"
my dear I:i4
( resigned nays'elf
the infliction,
ly caught a f4w
Ins hints (whiph
stned to tend ' i to
l is was the mist
ich one could
Ox
his .queries:
baud d;ed off
the old gente
ok of frivolity
es almost look
-ling in them,
Consumption !
f. consumptiOn
eet a girl as *
ut she wouldn't
d go to balls
;ping :"
King street and Exelange i lane, left his post,
:and with his-musket gave Ole boy a Stroke
on the head, which made 'him stagger. and
cry with pain.
The street soon became clear, and nobody
troubled the sentry, whenqiiparty of soldiers
issued violently from the main guard, Ibeir
arms glittering in the moon,'-light, and• passed
on, hallooing '
" Where are they 1, . Where
are they ? Let them-- clime: Presently
twelve or fifteen more, uttemg the same cries,
rushed from the south int King street,and
so by way of Cornhill toward Murray Bar
racks. "Pray soldiers, spare my. life,"cried
a, boy of twelve, whom they`; met. "NO, no,
I'll, kill you all," answered clue of them, and
knocked him down with a
. cutlass. They
abused and insulted several ;persons at their
door, and others in the street, "runningtibout
like mad-men in a fury," crying"Fre,' which
seethed their watchword, and "where
. are
they I Knock them down", Their outrage
.ous behavior occasioned the ringing of the
bell at the bead of,,King-street.
The,citizens whoin the aliirrii set in motion
came out with canes and chits, and,partly by
the interference of well-dispised office's, part
ly by the tutrage of Crispin - Attucks, a mu
latto and some others, the figr,ht, at the bar
racks was soon over. Of the' citizens, the
prudent shouted "Ifome, home;" others it
was said, called mit. "Huziah for the main
guard, there is the nest;" but,"the main guard
was not molested the whole evening. --
1 A body of soldiers-came ' up. Royal) Ex
change lane, crying, "Where are
_the cow
ards ?" 'and brandishing their arms, passed
through King street. Frorn, ten to twenty
boys came after•them, asking; "Where are
they,- where are they?" "There is the soldier
i who knocked me down,". said the barber's
boy, and they began pushing one another
toward the sentinel. Ho primed and loaded
his musket..,"The lobster i 4 going to shoot
us," cried the boy. Waving ; his piete about,
the sentinel pulled the trigger. "If you, fire,
you muSt die for it f' said - Henry Knox
' who
was passing by. "I don't care,' reputed the
'sentinel ; "damn them ; if thhy touch tne, rn
fire.". "Fire and be d--_-d} for they, were
,persuaded he could not do o lt without leave
from a civil officer.; and a P6iing, fellow spoke
t
irut, "We will., knock him . down for sn-ap
ping ;" while'they whistled through their fin
gers andhuzzaed.
,
1 '"Stand off,".said the sent 6-, and shouted
nlond,r Turn nut the main guard. They are
killing a sentinel," reportedi.a servant from
!lie Custom House, running to the.-main
guard "Turn out; why don't you turtiout?"
cried Preston, who was capthin of the day,
to the guard. " He- appeared in a great flut
er of sprits," and.'spoke of them roughly. A
iiarty of six, two of whom
' Ailton and. Mont
gomery, had been worsted at the rope•walk,
formed with a corporal in front, Preston fol-
Vowing. With bayonets - fixed, they haughti
ly "rushed' through the pehple" upon the
trot, - cursing. them and pnshing them as they
ient along., They found about ten perions
round the sentry, while about fifty "Or sixty
came down with them: "Far God's .saket,"
sidd Knox, holding Preston liy the ceatitake
your men back again; -if- theyfire your life
reust_answer for the consequences..- " L know
What. I am about" said he hastily,
. .
,ttated. - • : •
.
None pressed on them or twovolted" that'll
til they began loading, when party of about
be
i elve in-number ,. with theii sticks in,their
h nds; moved front the middle of the street,
1
Where they had been standi_ig, gave three
elleers and' passed along the - rropt, of the sol
dieni,-whose musitts some of them Struck se
they went by. •." You are cowardly rascals,"
t i
y said,-for bringing arms against naked
nip; lay aside your guns, and we ate ready.
A very severe
itter frosty win-
I didn't wise
her sweetheart
,d so pretty in
nd they
'dn't the hearts
after dancin
o home in an
and didn't.
Nistaricat *llO4
for. you. "-Are the soldiers t. loaded,", '
Palmer
,of Preston., "Yes," he answered,
powder` and` hall" they going
to fire upon the inhabitanW" ,asked Theo- ,
dere Bliss. ''"They'eafinot, without my or-.
den," replied - Preston ; while, the ton born
called out, " Come on, you ra scal_; you bloody
backs ' you lobster scoundrels, fire if you dare.
Welnow you daienoti" 'Just then' Mont
gemery received a blow fronira stick' thrown
which hit his musket; and the word "Fife,"
being given, he stepped a little on one side,
and shot Attucks, who at the time was quiet
lylleaning on along stick.' The 'people im
mediately began moving.off.• "Don't fire,"
said Langford, the watchman, to &ilroi, look
ing hiMfull in the face ; but yet he did so,
and Samuel Gray, who was standing next to
Langford ' with his bands in his bosom, fell.
lifeless. The rest fired slowly, and. in suc
cession on the•people who were dispersing.
One aimed deliberately at a' boy, who was
running for safety. Montgomery sthen push
ed at Palmer to stab him;
on, which the let
ter, knocked the gun out of his hand, and lev
elling a blow at• him , hit Preston. Three
persons were killed, among them Attucks,the
mulatto ; eight were wounded, two of them
mortally.. Of all the eleven, not more than
one had any shareln the disturbance.
So infuriated wee the soldiers that when
the men returned'to take up the dead, they
prepared to fire again,„ but were Checked by .
Preston, while the twenty-ninth regiment ap
,
peered under arms in King" street; as if bent
on:further massacre. "This is our time,"
cried soldiers of the fourteenth, and dogs were
never seen more greedy for - their prey. i
The bells rung in ll the churches; the i
town drums beat, " arms, to, arms,':_ was ,
the cry. And now 'Was to be tested' the true
character of Boston. • All its sons came forth
exelted almost to madness. Many were ab
sobitely distracted by the sight
,of the detid
bodies, and of the • blood which ran plentiful
ly in the streets, and was imprinted in : all
'directions by the foot tracks on the snow.--
"Our hearts ," , says . Warren, "beat - to arms;
almost resolved by one stroke to avenge the
death of our slaughtered brethren." But
I they stood self-pos.sessed and irresistable, de
`mending justice according to the law. "Did
4ou know, that you should not have fired
thout orders from a civil magistrate j' ask
ed utehinson on meeting . Preston, "to' save
' If
my `nu • •
Thep le would" not be pacified till the,
regiment a s confined to the guard-room and
the barracks, and Hutchinson himself 'gave
assurances that instant inquiries should be
made by the Coqntry Magistrates.
.The body
of them then retired, leaving about one hun
dred persons to keep watch _on the examina
tion, which lasted 'till three- hours after mid
night. A warrant was issued against Pres
ton, who surrendered himself to the Sheriff,
and the soldiers %she _ composed the part
were delivered •up and committed to prison.
7 —Bancroft's new volume of History of Uni : -
ted States. . ,
Fanny Fern.
The publicatiOn of " Ruth Hall r has stim
ulated public curiosity with regard to the,
name end character of its authoress, and..
given occasion for a number of articles par.;
•
porting to describe her krson or narrate her.
history, Some.of these articles dbntain state
ments which we know to be groundless,' and
even calumnious; and no one of - thefli that
we have seen, is calculated to, give the pub
lic' a Correct idea, of her character. We
emhrace the opportunity to tell our readers
a great deal more than they ought to be.-
,
Fanny Fern is the most retiring end unob-•
•
trusive of , human beings. More than any
other celebrity we have ever known, she
shrinks'from personal display and 'public 'ob
servation. During her residence, in this City,
she haslived in the mostrperfect privacy, no--;
er going to parties or soreis, never . giving
such . herself, refusing „to, enlarge her cycle of
friends, and finding full employment its well
as satisfaction' in her domestic andliteritry
duties., i She•• has probably received More in
vitations to private and„ public assemblies,
and het:ecquaintancehasheen more frequent
ly sought by distinguished persons, during
the period' of her residence here, than esiy
other rt4lividual. To alt solicitations, of this
kind she returns a mild but decideAuegatiye.
In the hotels at which she has resided, no
one, neither landloid nor guest, has ever
: known her as Fanny Fein. Indeed, she has
an abhoance of personal publicity, and can
not be persuaded to sacrifice any part of Are
comfort of an absolute incog. We cannot
but approve her resolution.
Fanny Fern is a sincerely religious woman,
the member of an evangelical denombiaticin,
and a regular attendant at church.—We nev
: "er knew any one who •believed in •a belief
more strongly - than' she in hers, or who
was more 'deeply grieved when - that belief I
was treated with disrespect. No one sta ds,
less in *We of coventronalities---no on'e is
moro strict on a point of honor and pri ci
it
ple than she.: She is ,a person Who is able to
do all that she is convinctd she ought, .and
_to refrairf,from 'doing all that ship is sure she
ought npt. In strength ef purtrrse, we know
not her equal among,women. - i
Fern
word- which :
,best describes Fann y Fern is the'Word,l4dy.4ir her ways and
tastes are feminine and refined. Everything
she wears' every article of furnitnre in her
-rooms, 'all the details of her 'table, mist be
clean,eleAant, and tastefuL Her attire, which
is generally ,. simple , and,inexpensive, isaiways
•exquisitlY,,ntee And becoming, In
• the storm
iest days; when no visitor could be expected,
she is as`, carefully dressed and'ifitairett its
thoughAi, was going to court.: 'Weinxy; as
carefully; thoughla fact r aluthruta quick ' in
stinct for, the becoming, . and makes 7 hers&
attractive ivithimt bestowing
Her
time Or_
thought upon the matter.' Her veicii is '..shi
griiiffy musical; her manner varieS2with her
huittor,i,but is-always that , of a latlyo44one.
-whet knoifick s ouuy. }:ens,-. has- qn. , Pleit , , what
kind of women they must have been for who
knights-errant did. battle in 'di Middle
ages.
'-'With'itli her siren`
gtli , Fartny- Aril ii ev
trameliseulitisit-t She eau - majtiy ttore,l suf
fer incite, Ictv.e more, 4 1 !Ate•morel Admile more
mut detest imote,. Oaa- any one whqn):,.ive
have 'lndia. With all her sentlinietta of
manner, Aare' is'not i drop of milkind twat
!pin her veins. - She befitivesin haviiirjus;
Woe done. 13eveuty thiesitud,peevi, 00 ipould•
.f org i v e a re' ntant - b her; but nekkuroollt
loss he re red.
F r
Fanay ern writes nue* in ! k luge:bold
• 1, •
ME
Volume 12, SUMINT
hand; . but she sender)* articie"Withotit ' very ,
catelul revision ;and her manuscript is put,
sling to printers from it numberless erasu 1 _
and insertions., She • writes'' , from her bea
and her eyes; She - has littli aptitude. or.' .
for abstract thought. She never talks of h r
writings, and cares little for criticisni hnowev
er severe. She is no more capable of writing
an intentional ttoubk entendre, than'the'gross ,
minded men Who have acettsed.her of doing
so are capable of appreciating the'-worth of, •
pure_womanh*l.- - ''' '
Such:are some of our . impressions Of this
celebrated authoress. We have read lately
that she smokes, rouges ffirtsoltesses in Mil
-linery, -Wears Wellington'boOts, snuffs candles
at ten paces, performs on the stage, drives,
tandem, and cuts an,unprecedented dash gen- '
erally, to the dash)! astonishment -of Broad
way. Those whourefamiliar -with the wri
tings of Fanny Fern do not need to be assured
that each and all of these allegationik are nt- -
rerly and ludicrously , false. , She is no such
person. The people who have: assertedthlit
she is, are either puppies whom she has obt,
or women whom she has out out, Fanny
-Fern, it is true,las a superb i figure and .a Stri
king presence. But all her charms ire her
own ;to nature, unassisted, she owes ell her
beauty of figure, all the rosein, her cheeks,
and every waving.curl of her silken auburn
hair. To whiCh wondd,that no one of the
namea,recently assigned her , in the papers is
°her true name.—Life Illuttrated.
Nohneninn—Letter from One of
President Young's Wives.
We take the following letter from theßoa
ton Times, which states it came to them from
a yesponiible source. The ladies mentioned
have been the victims of Monrionism, and are
,!
prepared to.eirse the mysteries of the creed
in a light which will doubtless. Start the en
tire community : - •
Allow me to trouble you 'with these few
lines . which I wish you to insert in your Dai- :
ly Times. My object is this.- 7:1 I have been '
for the° last ten years •s' finfr believer in, the
Latter Day Saints, or rather Mormonism.—
My 'parents became followers of the celebra- 1
ted Joe Smith in an early day, and ernigreted.,l
to Nauvoe. , , After the death of Smith and
his brother we were driven from thence..-ne 1
society split; there were two: who - wished to t
take their leaders place, and standat'the bead ',
of the chnrch, but could not'sped; therefore
they sepersted. ° Col. Whitn, and his . follow- 1
ers, that is, sue as believeA in him, 'went to .
Texas, and are iving in peace and prosperity. '
Co!. White is a ar - o4hy Van .cornparoi. with
ourg,reat, or ra eentstoriousßrigham Young,
notwithtanding he has , been fo-rthelast three,
years m i fawful husband that is according to
their own JETS and rules.' Birt foitlie -last
twelve months I have seen enough to !satisfy
me; for what irlon't know about minium
ism-is not worth knowing . ~.:They liavesecret :
plots and, objects that-they „mean to =corn.
plish. They 'censure the government fer 'net i
protecting them in all their hellish "'works,
For all this; they mean to havesatisfaction.--
My ikject in writing this is '•to - wain My fe
male friends to beware of ' the: false . priphets
wlm'are daily sent . out from c ille, -- Great Salt
Lake City to deceive the people, It. is: my
intention to trsvig through the United States,
and visit all the principle cities,- and lecture
o_n this important subject, tcreaution all young
people who shoulh be so unforintrate as to be
le . d into the ungodly trap.. Beware. ' .
In Boston I shall deliver my first lecture,
as that is' My native city. 'I have one young
lady in company who also . le ft the Mormons
with
.me. She has renoun ced 'the doctrines,
and will help : me in my lectures. We shall
both be prese nt, and show Mormonism in its
true.colors, which you never had in your en
lightened State. Had it been represented in
its true light, and its object told, there would
not of been a follower left sweet New En g land
to join sneh asset of impmitori, for I call them
.-
nothinrf else, knowing them to be . such. If
there ;horrid be any elders Or followers of
Mormonism I hope they will come to the lec
tures 'and dispute-what we haVe toss) , it they
can. We have and shall fetch'doeumeOts to
prove our assertions. I We . stall be there in .a
few Weeksi We are at present 1 staymg,i with
friends,: and its soon as we are refreshed 'from -
the journei' we shall start for Boston. It is
near two Mouths since-we-left the Salt Lake
City. ' Yon shall-hear from 'xrs#, again, with
particulars. But no md,re at present
from your,humble servants, ' i • i -
. r - MIV.§. SARA.IIIOUNG.I
MISS. ELIZA WILLIAMS.
, ' me. -• 41.
Dec Was of .
il .111know-Nothluglain.
The
,Union (IC' H.) Democrai of last - Week
held a very sensible article.tipoii this *subject.
The ediviritif that paper lied just '
returned
from a tour through the State, 1 which\ gave
him a good opportunity of ascertaining i the
state of public feeling on the subject of Kno*-
Nothingisti.--:After stating the 'fact thaethis.
heresy is everywhere on the deeline f the Wri- `
ter adds:--„" A change has come over 1 the
spirit ,and prospects oft linewkNothingism..
Inflated with its then recent suc c ess in Ittan 7
sachnsetts; , i it .looked'` at - - New Hampshire
as already within its leontrol, and its jubilant
deciples had actually commenced :an allot
ment of the, aPoils,..: Perliser:Nin may , say
more. ' Perhaps there were some Who hore
the thing, no lore, - who' were'Anevertheless,
half inclined tilieoniprornise with a foe which
the* fared ,might not be - suese 'astally,,resist
edi Rut Milne ieNt change.. The '•eober second
th hi' It 9. stone its work 1 The,grim t
heart of the: Deinociatio Party-i-gtnt heart
throbi beneath', home-spun, jacket's, lon,
vtlie MITI mid in the' valleys - of the : Ole-Ginn-
Ito Siate-i visa/ I:and the fait4 en* per-
baps feible,that‘ ibis he" - - miltitt - ))4erSh
edt.laslgrOWD ts 3 •an IP fl exible-4.thqerminatiou
that it alai/ bei. anti it Viiii6ititita - ..0f ' tha
tiinea do not 40074* 11 ' ,14 ' t doinicira6y . go
into thin ' contest `iiitlyttnennt 440 1 ' 3 * or , a
s u o u ss f u i issua,-,:e, Tliev nausea -,trhich hare
prodncial'ihis OAP& af l 4 - 044.14ted1 . :- -..: -
ling tha'rPtPutet.t.,o4*ettY-Octh.g , 4"00
Snow-NolbiliOmnieMeni. ‘' It ho - iiiit 'even
thiiiiiircifinink at' honest; failitkiistri:+l
-meritfrOvhtire -tem titnew been'ii*Ao4.,,
accord.Antholitioni m; in 'some et its. ttaies.
It.irnot sirriply lin nor, whichnity„ . s, A .:
_cnsett - Vnt a MPtiatrOUSSinfit e .! k . k4 kb ought
To' 4 . liiiiral/0:: le ii 14%4'
, u. p o tt : p a i.
Ittipetextinree all itniit r iali,- - lbe' - Wit:- it
complains of ' 3 ,10 not exist . ; eraibei do, it
'is the !Snit ofillits pirpCans tn'appifivie:m
-04.: We hareilit be sure, a few !Judo:like;
I•but they , ire notlikely to' be turned from the
ell* of their ways .
.b y such litierAngelical
. I ".. • • ...
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CHICA 0, Tuesday;Jatt.lB, 1855.
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