VOL. 11. NRINVY.D- AND PDBLISIIVD. BY BENJAMIN BANNAN. wan SLY. ' Ten DOLLARS per'annum, payable semi-annual n advance. If not paid within the year, $2 50-will b.: charged kilviartiiernents not exceeding:twelve lines will be harged $h for three insertions--end 50 cents for one .nsertioe. .Larger ones in proportion: .kll 4ivertisements will be inserted until ordere n at, unless the time for wit, :b they are to be continue is specified And will be charged accordingly. Yearly advertisers will he charged $l2 per annum: including.subscription to thepapeir —wit h the privilege of keeping one advertisement not exceeding 2 squares during the year. and the insertion ofa small ,•r one in each-wipe r for three successive times. kII letters addressed to the editor must be post paid. otherwise ne attention will he paid to them. UI notices for meetings. ..tte and other notices which have heretofore been to erred ire us, will be chirged 25 cents etch. except Nlarriages and Deaths 1 On yonder shore, on yunde shore, Now ardent with the dept of shade, Beneath the white-armed s).•amore, There is a little infant hill]. Forgive this tear—a mothe - I,sceps-- 'Tis there the faded flower 'ceps. . - She sleeps alone, she sleeps lone, And 611 . 1111111W8 forest u'efilier-ave; And sighing studs at autupin moan . Around the little strange ifs grave, As though they murmured fit the tate Of one so lone and desulatei ilii sounds that seem like S4rrow's own, Their funeral dirges taiiilly creep; Then deep'ning to ariaorgal tone, In all their solemn coder ce sweep. And pour, unheard, along e w0d,,., I Their desert anthem o'er a had'. she came, and passed. C I forget, How we whose hearts h• hailed her birth, Ere three autumnal suns h'd art, Consigned her to her mo er Earth ! Loy..s.and . their memories p s's away; t We laid her in a narrow 41, We heaped the suit inouon her breast, t „ri r „,..,,, rs..se. , like ear drops, fell U pen her lonely place ui its,. may hey bless \lay angels guard it -1 filer slumbers in the wilder. cm. ' She sleeps_alune, she sleepri alone; For, all unheard, on yonier shore, The sweeping flood, with t. rrent moan, .At e7enirig lifts its solem roar, As, in one broad, eternal ti. e, The rolling waters onward glide. There is no marble monur ent, There is no stone with seen lie, To tell of love and virtue. Mint ,In one almost too gowi . die. We need no such useless t ice "I'u point us to her resting lace. She sleeps alone, she slee 11=1 But amidst the tears an( April showers, The Genius of the Wild *h strnwn His germs of fruit, los litire. , :t flowers, And east his robe of vernal bloom, du guardian fondness u'ec•ihe tomb. - . She sleeps alone, she sleet+ alone, But yearly to her grave lur t , dressed, i And still the sunirfiervine are thrown, In flannel wreathe sera.l s 'her breast; And still the sighing auto , n grieves, And strews the hallowed N ,I it 18 ith leaves EUROPEANIN*LLIGENCE The recent arrivals CriMS Europe have brought I nothing of interest. We [give below some ex• ARS tracts from old files, lich we hope t i 'v be THE. FO .. R n TIIRL. Visi.g to r e Wreck. flood entertaining. Th visit to the wrec/or ' “We have this - -i-eek aid a visit to the wreck. the Forfarshire steamer, and the incidentit,/con• I which is lying in much he same state as it was. netted with the herpinel Grace *Darling, have only somewhat more utted by the occasional d 4 dashing of the billows nmangst its timber an quite an air of romance cached to them. Doncaster Cup for 183 I planks. Upon this occitsion, owing t? the low 1— fhe.''Doneaster S.ll. , nide, the extent Mille ro k was much more con. 'ter Cup, won by Lord•Ch sterfield's Don John at ,spictous than before. The sta r board sine of the the late St. Leger is as bl.iautiful in conception, . ill•fated vessel lies chocllyyup against a sort of shell as it is splendid in exec- non. 'I t' consists of a of the rock;the deck sl holy inchniag. When magnificent bowl, supported liy the stem of an she went, in two here, th sea, of course, instantly oak, the branches and foliage of which spread in rushed into her engine m, whichi was then es• wild luxuriance to sustain the seperincumbent e,p6 sad, at the end Wherh the breach .had taken •weight, Beneath the howl, and surrounding th plae'e.., to all the fury o the raging billows; the . true, is a group of stock, • comprising a sire and tore-cabin, situated bey d the engine -room, was two dams, with their foal . modelled from nature, soon laid open also arid tilted of all its furnittire in a style of accuracy i ighly creditable to the snd fittings. Here it was that the poor woman artist. The tree, its brahehes and foliage, with Mrs. Dawson and her two children %ere cur the jock beneath, are esectited in frosted silver, rounded by the merciless element; They were and have a pleasing effeet, when•contrasted,with lyin on the flour, it is Aieved, the anxious mo. the polished surface of . the Cope • The n•hole ther g clasping' a child i each arm,,when the bil sten& on the pedestati with entablatures, on lows broke through th frail partition that nos Stewards, (The DUKE OF which are engraved on ohe side the names of the atone sheltered them tom .their fury fiercely tLEVELAND and Ctiaiti.es struck them, over 'and non, with its briny surge, C. F. GaRVILLE, Esq.,) arid 014 the other •'Dowcss and at length destroys , first one, and then the TEE Races, 1d38." Thel weight is 500 ounccit, other, of the children, i the arms 451 their agon and the height nearly t m feet six -inches—the other, parent, whom it h d very , nearly consigned width in - proportion. he real. vahie is 450 to a similar fate. One f the bodies of the child guineas. ran, it will be remem ed, was washed out of its Fire.—The large Cotton fadtory or Me a. Cart- I mother's arms, and foilnd amongst ,the floating aright, at Wigan hasla en burced_ ;-1 ss esti- wreck; the other she still retained in her grasp, mated at ten thousand p unds. • trout taken up to a place of comparative safety Height of Mountains.— he highest mountains in upon a rock. The oost striking object in the Ireland, are Gurrancc ' cal in Berry . 3,404 feet,' wreck is the mass 04 machinery. Cyilnders, , Brandon 3,120; Lomombill in Wicklow $,029, piston!, tubes, pump —the whole engine, in and Gualtarnere in Tippeary 3,008. short, with a ll aPPhaner and means to boot, there Agriators.—Lord Ebsiingftan for the Whigs., Iles .Mr. Oastler for the Tomes; Mr. Atwood li,r the 1 radicals, and O'Conneln - Ireland constitete a quartette of worthies. . The Joker 'taken in. knight of the thimble, went into a draper's slit purpose of purchasing The shopman. feeling a thought there could be ,ton, for trying his hand me a piece of 'scarlet A peace of purple was qt tan';scarlet," said the • W . I w ELL: TA C H THU, TOP lERC THE 10W zuktwer It &ATI' AND t OCT 1 , 101111 THECAVZIfft HIPTHZ .CHTATHIRIKETAZA. do as welt," was the reply. The knight of the counter, a down a green. "Now, do y in a-hall angry trine, said lb ticnce, and IT show yoq on saw;" at the same layi the heat superfine bbiek. " ' f , aid,the than of brncoli, ••bu it !" ^Smells :" sal yard.gtick, putting his n. This was the mimen't fur th hi! tort of the joke; eck, lay filopman's rare, home hie on the counter es nose neve tal stream (as doctors and most copiously , 9ver the c scarlet—that's sca4et, you tailor, as hetook his exit ; wit to ruminate upon his m, cloth, and his own unimp Greenwich Ga-zette The Wandering Piper, Ayr in Scotland. nallooning.—ln Mr. Gr second experimental trip in Mr. Rush, he states that tl tamed •was 27.146 feet, w ll altitude or any known m. The thermometer fell to freezing point, and the n 4 stmettitr 'to 11 inches. Mr. Green experienced gtt ~.. difficulty in breath. mg, but he attributes it principally to the great exertions he Wes obliged td make in the ascent; M. Rush, he says kit ni inconvenience nrhit respiration.. . ~1 . The Nassau Balldon ade another ascent, when it carried into the r glom; of air the Vito count Drumlasirig of the .7' cond Life guards, and another Officer of tite aan. regiment. The comb pany in the cur Also numtiered Mr. Pole, the aut I hor ; NI rears. Richard undrrhomas Hughes ; Mr: Spencer, Mr. Green. and, iiif course, the aeronaut himself. The. ascent was'one of the most beau tiful we ever witnessed. Mr. Roebuck —A servic has been I,n...wilted Mr. It( his political admirers.'. Spa ie.— The. Cleopatra South America tsfation, an i the 28th of September, wit larg for tnerclianl.' necoun Mayor of . London.—Al. erman Wilson, citizen and weaver;lias been eke •d Lord Mayor of Lon ii don for the ensuing yea : In his address of thanks he said the livery ed found it ii very die ! . ficult matter to pronounce What his politick were, and he hoped that at the end of the year they would have the same difficlulty. - The British paelio Linitet arrived at Fal.nouth, September 26, from Metro, with . a million of dollara. . Effect of Railway Troielling,—mr. Mori, to. r„thi-crite,tvi'l.mitepte-P, , i',Vit d &W.,-A ll r- r l l 4 day at Birmingham ; the 'allowing evening they ' lei-formed in Manchei.tert: on Wednesday elicit day another in Nliachest r; nest evening anoth er in Liverpool; SIM •on Saturday they gave a second concert in Btrman ham. They have thdii, visited the•two great tow sin the north-of Eng land, and the capital o the midland counties, twice in Liz days, and iernaincd two nights in each town, during a space, of time nearly one. half of which, under the of system of travelling, would have been alone c4isumed on the road. - ME blond Society = Aril unprecedentedly large meeting or the High-laud t Society heti been held at Ghpignw. At the ciir se orthe preceedings, - o f dov• - dr Af few days since, a r iTunbridge eccentric eh a t r o a r , t c i z e , prime of scarlet cloth. title disposed foi a joke, ,Ater subject, or occa . at one. "eau you show loth ?" said the tailor Ott produced. 'That.. tuilor. "Oh ! but it will 1 Ell _ 1 _._-_,—.___ • . • ' .." . .. • .. _ • •••111,NIMMIL . .1, • N ' , . . .....,1 4, 4.1. .., '..; 2 ~.. . i . ~. ..„ . .....,.....,...44:4„... 1 ,.,.. • lb ,- • l' 1 . . -. li., ... . - iI , " ' ... .- • -- ..vi .:,.., ;4 4 - .. , AND - POT TS '• 'LIM GENERAL ADVERB ER - - -.. . . 7, t.-- • , - • ..---; , 4 . : ,1 1 _ __________,_____________i , . .. - • - 1 • . . - - . .. - - ------.- . - _ . I 'i • Iri t Igilizikirfn TO OUR HOLDS mcb MIT= ALL WiTilla TO OUR UZI ANL PLZASURZ-DRJORRSOR. , _ t V ' t ~ . , i . POTTSVILLWPA. SAT/I4tBAY NORNING; NOVEMBER 17. 1838. r. 0,0`,C i- Show me 'scarlet." • .in a twitier, pulled call that scarlet.?" tailor. "Have pa ol the best you ever down a piece of es, it is very good," mercy on us, how the knight of the , e close down to it. tailor to commence ng hold of the poor ',use such stmping, had before—the Nil. •ts call it.) flow ing oth. • "There. that's lockhead," said the aving the astonished .ster's soiled broad vcd nasal, organ.— as last heard or at! en's narrative of the Nassau balloon i i e, extreme height atx [eh is higher than thei untain in the world! i '7 degrees below the aplate, confine £350 flebtick, late M. P., by loop of war, from" thn T,'ed at Portainouth on tw•o millions of dal. ns and wild heap."ar "One gloriiins ch' a every mark of having emote, end . the fallen pa rcmind one of the proe. I. recian temple. Another { as the fiforehead—a full figure. glided, which with ling mie n , yet Mood gaily ruin and desolation. It .. - le a lam rook of the airy ed aloft :Waving her out Iwreck belOwt and the et. i sing. . . The machinery bea been of first-rate menu' lore and archea sneer I trate ruins of,,some t object of attraction • length sylph like, fomal way ing hand and a 11111 erect amid the scene .- r) s wa twilight when we and hmirieform, per .- stre hed liand over th feet was extremely im. ~...~1.~ \ ~ . ^.~ ^ C .- -...u-.1..:..~ ~. y Visit to the EoSgstonit Lighthou e[. "It was a beautiful iitattet. when `Wie Were at the wreck. The last gleant of goldmi - tint had faded away, and night was. gradually- closing in epic] us when we quitted the rock. ..,We 'could not find in our hearts to leave the !pot, late though it wee, without visiting, weratt but forte moment, the Longetnne LighthoUre,' to pay our respect to thaparlings, whose humanlend gallant Conduct in putting off to the rescue Of the survi vors on the wreck, at ,the imminent peril of their lives, has already been described. Old Darling was waiting off in his beat, to take the carpenter to his island. We all went together; and, As we approached the Lighthouse, the herniae, Grace Darling hereelf was deserted high aloft, lightning the lamps whose revolving illummatioil has warn. ed so many an anxious mariner of the rocks and shoale around. At the side where we alighted a bold cliff is to be ascended ere you reach the Lighthouse. Having gained its senorita, we. were soon at the door of the hospitable tower, and' received a hearty welcome from old Mrs. Dar ling Rind her dauntless daughter. But Grace is noth4ng masculine in her appearance, although she has so stoat a heart: In person she is about the middle size—of a comely countena.•re—raih er fair for so islander—and with an expression of beneielence and softness moat truly feminine in every point of view. When: we spoke of her noble and heroic conduct, she blightly and appeared anxious to avoid the notiet; which eipoaed her; she smiled at our praise, bu said nothing in reply—though her look the whl in. dicated forcibly that the eonciousness of ha ing done so good and generous an action had not it ed to excite a thrill, of pleasure in he;. b m, which was itself no mean reward." .• Her conscious heart of charity was warm :^ '•W hen the nine wreched.eurvivors were taken Wl' the wreck by old 'Darling end. RI I! heroic daughter, they were conveyed dt once to the Lighthouse, which was in fact their only place of refuge at this (line;ank, owing to the violent seas, that continued to prevail among the islands, they wcie obliged to remain theie from Friday morn: ing till Sunday. The boat's crew that came off to their relict from North Sunderland wete also obliged to remain. This made a party of nearly 20 permns at the Lighthouse, in addition to its usual inmates; and such an unprepared for acne& sion could not occasion considerable inconveni ence: But the Darlings have too uiuch of the human kindness about them to. be ea l tlAput out of their way under any such circumstances: Grace, characteristically enough, gave up he 'Au& And btris the (dream at -hope reflow That languiah'd m the fainting heart." The situation of Grace Darling is a peculiar one fir a young female, and one which we sus. ' pert, very few ofher sex would envy. Living on a lonely spot in the middle of the ocean, amidst the wildest war of the elements—with the hor rors of the tempest familiarized to her mind and her constant lulaby the sound of the everlasting deep and the shriek of the" wild spreading ocean with the distant sail on the horizon—she is thus removed far front the active scenes of life, and debarred. sate at distant intervals, from any com munication with her own sex, and from all therse Innocent enjoyments of society and companion. ship - .which, as a female, must be an dear to her. And these are circumstances which go a long way to enhance the admiration due to I.er gener osity and heroism; for it is well known that the natural effect of solitude and seclusion is to dead• en all the kindlier feelings of human nature; and, of solitude amongst the most awful scenes of tem. pest and gloom, to imbue the breast with a por tion of their own saysge character: And yet a- midst all these adverse circumstances do we find her evincing a depth of feeling and a noblenelia of soul which we might look for in vain amongst many of those of either sex who are pampered in the lap of luxury and surrounded with every blessing which wealth, ease, and noreatrained freedom can bestow."—[Dundee Adv.] MARSHALL NEY At the battle of Borodino, or as the French call it, of the. Moskva, the most. sanguninary in modern times, the braii' est of the brave surpassed himself, and nobly earned the princely title with which his princely master rewarded him on the field. But the most valuable service he ever ren dered France, was in the deplorable retreat from Moscow. His station was in the rear—the poet of danger and of honor—and he was the chief if not ( excepting Napoleon himself )'the, only. hope of the troops. .In the story of the flight, for anch it was, every thing is so wonderful that pos. terity would disbelieve the detailirlf one contem porary voice bad been raised against them.— That with a handful of worn-out fonowers, desti tute °revery necessary, he - should repel the as saults and arrest the progress of unfired, well provided, and countless legions ; that, while his heroic little- band was daily diminished by bun. ger, cold, and lassitude, he should yet bid deft. ante to the whole Russian host ; in a word, that Noy's desperate valor should have secured the n. arape of any remnant of thes:and army must ev er command the astonishm 'nt of the world. - At' one Cline, after leaving Kraenoi the whole :Russian army lay 'between him and Napoleon,- but, though he had only' three thousand inen,.he resolved:to cut his-way „through the intervening leg;ons„ ;When summoned by Miloradovitch to capitulate, 4 rnarshal of France never annelid era!" was his on reply, as he fearlessly led his d compani against the destructive bat teries the mine- He then mad a circuit at midnight - to c banks of the Dnieper, which lie crossed on the blocks of ice, in spite of all oppo. vition, gnd finally, with fifteen • hundred men, joined the emperor., Well might Napoleon be unable Co find language sufficient to express his admiration of the hero :.'What a man what a soldier ! what 4 vigorous chief !" While he still feared that the marshal had fallen into the hands Rossiaits. l he arod ti Also three roilltoos of ,tit joy .nsy pe well col id receised hia em wards the gear) deck of this of Irezas. 1 ted bet. Limo di hoe BOW. returnel had soon a of saving tb the passage of the 100 need not be re. observe that on no occ j brave exhibit more in, valor. Five horses were garments were pierced with son was disfigured ,with bloo would have couitineed the co life remained, had he not be field by the_ dense and resist fugitives.-.:4l,turray's Family A Shrew& Remark.—A iend, who Oppose , the amendnients, ip conversi.g upon the isubject this morning, remarked, the dill Constitution was an excellent one s and that he id not consider the amount of patronage in the r overnor'a hinds ob. jectionable so long as we el•eted honest men.— He added, however, that slow "thelparq" have boldly assumed the ground. that the people have nothing to do with the private character of a candidate for the Guberni torial chair( it was wise and proper to take an appointments out of the Governor's hands.—Pitisbuig Gazette. "Lcres/WiPe.."—IVIT. Colt tural Address last week, ill; modern fashionable female . ecdote.—A young man who remained In that useless' st 'half pair of scissors,' at last he would procure him a WI sal' of one, who was beau accomplished, and look her Soon learning that she kne to darn a stock lug or boil a of beet he returned her to ems useful- purpose; she u Northampton Courier. Serious Affair ;.—A contekt arose on Friday nt Chesnut street wharf, which, we regret to hear, is likely to melt in the death of one of the parties. Mr. Bowman, the agen •of the Philadelphia. Wilmington, and Balumor Rail Road Line, met Mr. Van ''Bergen, an ag u e n for the Philadelphia, New Castle. and !Baltimor Steam Boat Line on - Isciarktho fctry boat that' lies from the foot of passeo,,:tittmt to Camden on the arrival of the with a viAP 94/ ;Nove..Yl4; , ialha maulipzlim. in their tespective lines:, Some dispute arose between 'Thum, which caused Mr. - Bowman to strike, or strike at, Mr. Van Bergen witn his canc.—The latter seizeii the cane in his hand. and drew oil the lower pall, which had sorred as a sheath to a sword. We 'understand that there was some attempt on the part of the captain of the boat and others to separate them, but before this was accomplished; Mr: Bowman's sword was passed through the breai of Mr. Van Bergen. The latter wee eonveye into a neighboring house, and surgical aide led. Mr., Bowman is in the ,handa of the police.— ; U. S. Gazelle. We understand that gr. Van Burgen dicd yekerday afternoon. SELECT TALE. TIT E EXTR AI From Dr. Bird'smori:,"Peter Pilgrim." AMONG the numberless tyrants*, in and out of office, who rella the sovereign A merican people with rods of iron, none can Compare—whether it respects the despot ic rigour of their rule{ or the patient sub missiveness or their iMbjects—with their high naightinesses, the•innkeepers. Steam boat captains. and stage proprietors may, in their vanity, contest with them the claim to superiority in power, and, indeed, l the undoubted privileges both these class es possess to maim d kill their custom• era at will, would see to put them at the 1: 1 0 head of the powerful but no honest, dis .interested man who ill! consider all the circumstances, the wer of the lordly Boniface over the c mfort ofhis lodgers, and the uniform dep tram of his rule, can hesitate to award the palm to their rivals. In other lauds, cir.- Instances have de graded the lords of t 0 spigot into a con dition of subservienc : and vasselage to so ciety ; and they are i• , 'tingly regarded, and, incredible as it i ay appear, they e ven regard themselv:s as the servants of the publick. Here, n this happy repub lick, where all are ree but the people, they have assumed • heir proper attitude, as masters of their • • trona, whom they rule with aetocratick severity, grievous to behold and lamenta•le to suffer. • High and low, ,the prince of metropolitan ho tels and the 'kings o t the log-cabin tavern on the wayside, the know their power, and exercise it. Th • metropolitan poten tates, indeed, somet mes affect a certain citizen-kinglike hum ity, and govern with decency and suavity while it maybe ob. served . of the others, their compeers; that the lower you ,de= s• nd in rank among them, the more say::: and irrespective be comes their tyrann . -Thus, -with the lord of your town nn, you may some times venture upon a little complaint of the cook and cha • : rmaid, widreaut a fear • of being knocked do a for impertinence ; and, somet imes , in : village hotel, ,you may prefer -a little expostulation on the subject of horse-rue: t atitl , clean sheets, without 'the absolut , certainty of ,being turned out into the a reets.. But even here - I 1. we matt 'ant expect always to find our dig nitaries in a good humor. The passim:. sion of power is a constant provocative to the exercise of it ; and we know not when the monarch may put on his robes of state, and shake his sceptre of authority. It is but a little while, as •every body knows, h b vboli , ' l f t tio would WO ranca for till rad ceived when Ney, brace, The latter undivided, honor ce mighty twat at L he sttuy of Water •.. We shall only the braves of the , though hibpeless .t .under hiM ; hi: Ils ; his whale per and! mud. yet he :. test on • foot while : a forced (into the leas colummi al the Library.. , • lan; in his Agricul. strated the' folly of .ocation, by an a had for a long w le designat y a seriously det ruffled He got 'e..refu "ful and asitionable : pon trli to his home. no mg either how p moor roast a bit r father's house, as balance and found ienced by the good that she was not General, your doctor, your Reverend, your Honorable? - You are, sir, his customer —a suitor fur - .meat and drink, which he graciously vouchsafes you, Calt.ng no con- sideration therefor, except a certain num ber of ninepencos, or half dollars, togeth er with a due addition of reverence natu rally belonging to the master of the house that shelters you. His house, though ev ery chamber be' reeking with mud and rain, is his house, and if you don't like it; you may leave it ; his beds', th , ugh forty human souls, with boots on, may have -nestled betwixt theunchnozed sheets, do ing battle all night with incubus and Sue cube, in the shape of those strange bedfel lows with which misery makes us acquaint ed, have harboured your betters, and why therefore should you .prestuno- to grum- so the obligation to , binding. The jury lam but be would than to be liberated ,agement. 'AR well tginal Venue de Me• said the orator, •aa le women.—lndeed, much better to have or she might angwer tight fait Nis b-acon. ble ? His table, pkn i ifulty cit sparely covered as the case may be. with uneata ble eatables—coffee Made, or seeming to be made, of burnt blankets, sodden bread, stale bacon and palpitating chickens, grea sy potatoes and withered turnip•tops —is. the table that contents him, and if you don't like it you may go—to a place en tirely unmentionable. Truly . , your republican innkeeper is find him, sometimes a very amiable per sonage, as great men sometimes will be; but take heed you trifle not with . his ami ableness ; for, verily, he is not a person to "be trifled with by any rabblement travel ler, for whom he does not, care the snap of his independent fingers— no, not he. In truth, the common country tavern keepers—those especially in new regions, or at a distance from the great towns— are, for the most part, mere farmers, who have been driven by sheer necessity ( nor poverty ) to open their houses ,lb the pub lick. In very few parts of the land is the country densely enough settled, and the travelling sufficiently great, to support lines of taverns along the roads at conve nient distances. The farmer must hang out the bush and play the landlord, or.be eaten up by his hospitally. He knows nothing of cooking or housekeeping be yond what he has been accustomed -to in . his own family, and lie cares nothing a• bout learning ; in half the instances, he would prefer the traveller's room to his company ; it is not therefore surprising his hotel should not be the best in the world, nor himself the most obliging of landlords. LODGER With this condition of things prevailing, it is evident one must not look for any ex emplificatiens of the alarming rural hos telries, the little hawthorn-crowned ale house, so long embalmed in with pages of English poets and novelists, with its prop er familiars, the facetious host, his bux om wife, and trim daughter, all obse quious, bustling, eager to make themselves, and their house, and every thing in it, agreeable to your honor.— You cannot here say with propriety, you will take your ease in your ion, that being the privilege solely of its master ; nor can you have any greater expectation of com fort, which is an article seldom put down in the bill of fare. In brief, one should expect nothing ; and to the inexperienced traveller Urecommend the maxim which observation has shown me to be produe tive of the best effects in mollifying evils, as well as preventing a bundled inconvenien- Mes that might otherwise occur : Be sub missiire ; graciously receive, thankfully suffer, pay • your money, and depart in peace. - It was once my fate to pass a night in a certain wayside caravansary among the mountains in Virginia, a lowly and logly habitation; from whose mean appearance no one would have inferred the majostick spirit of . the ruler Within; up—or • rather down to which—for it stood at the bottom of a hill—one fine evening in, September rolled a mail-coaeli, well crammed 'with passengers, of whom I, for my . sins, was one. We numbered twelve souls in.ali, nine inside and three out; of which latter group, I, being somewhat a valetudenarian, was honoured with elicit beside his high- nests of the mobile my` tVik e lcsoirlettl • ions, the r. a Missitssippiati,. t ibia r'.OlllOPl4 vat min as he 'called himself; a:Tenni*. ' gallantly upon the titoto, where`they 1 d & pitched about, as witliittiOri:d .own the "rocky road in a miumer . aillittia able to behold, as the Missitisipittanexa' pressed it "like two short-tailed degairtia poi"—a , resemblance that yr,att somewharthe stronger for the 4en, i ep - ditiliti bow•wows and yelpings with illicit" --sometin es assisted by the lent esseatO _ . see, rol —beguiled the weariness.of the day., -•• I Certainly there never was. ti sets of rantipole persilhaies got togetlitkitOt mail-stage before. Besides Atte, Missitisippt.l an yelping on the top, there was anotheiii of the same tribe on the inside, who`e,Ould# imitate the braying. of' an ass to perteu-1 tion—a melody wh;eli ho kepi up in, rival i ry with his blend and partner aloft. Add tb thee an Alabamian who sang negro- songs; a Rock. River Illinois, who .Whoop ed like an Indian; a Texiao that played . the mestang, or wild horse of the pratriesis and, besides kicking the bottom nearly from the stage, neighed and whinnyed till the very team. horses on the road respond ed to the note; and five ofheri who did nothing but scream and laugh to fill up the concert; and you have . before yeu a set o f . the happiest madbrained rbistererS that ever astonished the monarch .of a'atage: house. • At ,thts place we were destined to sup. and lodge; and accordingly, in due course of time, ne were all seated at.the board, _where we had the satilfaction of' being tyrannized over both by mine host- and homes., the one glum yet facetious, the other' gly as ill.temper, and haughty as ir princess. There was nothing at all re-' markable in the supper, which Was no bet ter nor worse than usual, excel t the ti tat absence of that sine qua non ofa.Vitginitt table, fried chickens—and, indeed, of chick. ens in every shape, there being not -as Much as a wing ur claw on the table.— This omission producing a gentle-interrod • gatory, somewhat in the lose of expostula: tion, from one of the Mississippians (ebot as well as all the other travellers; it is pro• per to say, was playing the part of a very, - modest, well.behaved young gentleman.) mine hoetvory ittily g ave ue to understand, "that it was all our oo n f dt r seeingthril approaching the tango had. scared - all the fowls into the mountains." This, the . Mississippian declared, "reminded him , of Captain Dobbs' chickens in Kentucky, * . which, he had the captain's own word for it, no sooner caught sight orb travel: ler approaching, than they Immediately, took to their heels; !King well aware front long experience, as Captain Dobbs said,; that the visit of a stranger was eertaitt death to them." Before we had finished supper, a thin . teenthi guest made his appearance—a, tall, .raw boned Yankee pedlar, who drove up' io , his little wagon through a shower - -that had begun to fall, and presently entered the supper-room, bearineaTair of saddle:: bags which he laid beside him with great - care, as if afraid its contents should be in jured if placed out of his protection. He had a very meek, solemn, unpresuming, solitary look, and rather sneaked into, than took a chair, at the . foot of the, table; where he waited very submissively for the cuptircoffee which my landlady deigned i after sundry contemptuous looki and five . minutes delay, to send hint. On the whole. he did not seem to produce any . more fa vourable impression upon my fellow•travel.i lers, who left him to consume his chicken:.; less supper by himself„while they proceed.. ed to the bar -room to resolve, a, doubt which had entered the head. of the Missis sippian, • Captain Dobbs' friend . --to wit,- whether the thunder of their approach had not killed all the mint-plants, and so prived them of their juleps. This waa fortunately proved not to be the case ribs' young gentlemen concocted their sleeping draughts, smoked their cigars, settled the affairs, of the nation; and then, having re ceived a hint that such i was the will and pleasure of the landlord; ascended to the traveller's room to seek their beds.' This traveller's room was the garre or the half thereof, the other moiety being partitione3 off, and applied to some - other , purpose ;,,and as it was neither ceiledscii plastered, it presented nelerY stfiftingr look of luxury or comfort. But:,if ted the rare and captivating spedtacle of dozen different beds, in which' mitt, maw was t possess, for pne night of least, dis happiness of sleeping without a bed-fellow. The-beds were, moreover,-all single ones, one only excepted, which was neither sin.: gJe nor double, and, indeed; was a Ines* plank stretched beta ceo two stoele, with. .a'feather bed hung over it, imonier-wise l . and so far, it appeared to us, that our land-. - lord even in his out-of-the-world nook; must have been visited with some inklings" - of civilization ; but upon further consider ation, it was agreed we owed -the size,-as well as the number of the couches; to-the necessity of the case, the garret being . of such a figure as to stow a toZini . tcrwitle 7 , 4 beds much more commodiotilly than hiat that number of double ones.- , f '4;13'.1 Fir . . „ • N0:,52: .14.- it . I U U 13 II