X27\ 1735= DA VW -3 11 . , of T r cp the German Xrumrnaetter.) • • 1[ The Div', of Creation. . c . 140 and silent was' the earth, ' bjeepeet night , it lay, Etemil spethereition's word. _ Ani called to being,i Pay..? cit. it streamed from nti high, .411 reddening and bright, And, angels': songs welcom'd new-bont light. t : 4 3,51.ka : the murmuring waters fled, • , left their deep repose, ' ik over-ittlin heavie's Mae vault The firinament.earose.. • r. Now sparkles above licaven's'ilorions dine, It sends to the earth . The light and the dew; • - .xilake: he bade the rates' divide; Tie earth up:earsher head ; hill, from rook. therrushnig strewn" la Sashfing torrents spread. The earth rested quiet, And poised in the air, In haven't -blue bosom 1.31- naked and bare. - , 4 3 sinte hilts and,ptaios put on 7:4i !ohs of frfati iti ;'amts in the Tatieys wave, Az.Vzukiiing trees are wen. lie ward of his breath othes.;The hi gi„43a CI e forest with lesiva; ft of beantY The spin a , " e receives. -. ..:,?ise: an 3 the new dressed eszth Sit smiled the glowing Sun, full. of joy he s pr a ng aloft, _ .in.arenly coarse torn. e ...14u3 shouted the stars As thry shone in the sky, The Moon with mild aspect Asoendoi ciihirigh. . the waters teem with life r xszts at the floods; cord winged birAs through the woods. . H rushes the twee Oa Eery wings, 1.-ow: ‘ hii in the valley nightingale sings . e z . the Lion, steer and horse, the =is:acid day, -.1.7.112 tie breast of mother earth and lambkins play. - They give , litie to the mountain, 7`-es mar= cm the plain, 8... t tine eyes Qt: d ou earth. fcr - ever. remain. ;e: he Zwked on'earth andissaTes amizrich-in.s a-= Lzige =An he wade, for lum degrntc. • Fier - •i•z. s from the d L ust, r•th . locht4 oithe eattb.. The chome of itorecr t: his birth.. ixtriOwage:rehiel, his lead, he spoke . • Z 3 c i f ma by Gud oidakted, eicar l ing broke. . The gauitifal. to ! the bizsitilnt! irs End it itot d ' 10,: l a pct.-2,14z grace. 44= tf - iitleth every spot oCiaa_ wair; in the &w, b ear enci.xts sky. Ili is tie 6'3e/ s tet's bee, rant,- <. e F les i !p . c . ilae*Mraikt =OM the t(=U:4e ass, .'sd - ci.s.zi'ext.:l=ti =lea, =3=4%25 sel4=2, aY, (3n hig . cli _ . • trav al •pc. ZlPlts4s' C.'oll &rat szcae. of Eaiih— C 1 _'slascma.ear..4 tiers, ey. .1 * :is ciammi we Ism 4Xl' mod! 3 31" :a We it theft, t 4: Grad Lb.:vs eet 1 4 1r 2:=2;g eltnecl etra, "gx..3.14 it " very, , tal &4 was th: wm-ii is do, gives, ears an *Tory es- fizz belie s kii4n es • " rim tizr gray bear, , .a.; teiscfc,l! - • six 9. come Bird's ye Ale,w of 'Flc4ida. wantonly sinks in o its embrace. On ' their landing, they ltimparted,to their wearied minds and bodies new life and new vigor; their blood ran maddening Discowne of Florida—Ponz de ion--Deriva-, ' with joy through their swollen veins, , film of its same— ' Object of research -l-Foure.; w ith their sanguine imaginations saw at t i f in :,f in il , eath— ,..,... iNecomer eabot ' s route — o ßnut l: once their fonaest hopes re a li ze d—Th ey First adventurers 'in search of gote,e ar ein. felt thathealth was in, tlidse zephyrs, ty of Vellisqure—Seizure of Indian. to carry breathing flowe sweets, and joy and to Cuba as staves=-The resuhof Velisquee's. happiness we sin the _riches before enterprise—His second attempt. • them. Such w rethe natural feelings Florida was among those portions of qf those who . d changed the hot-glas- America first discovered. Its. contigui- eir ocean and the narrow confines of a ty to the islands found by Columbus v r rsel, for such a scene as that which natUrally led to that result. After the now lay before them. Who. cari - won- : return of the Pioneer to the old world, der that the enthnsiastie followers of -from his successful. voyage of disceye- Pore de Leon believed, that the prophe ry the glowing descriptions given i lby ey of the Carib girl was abotitto be fule him and his crew of what theyhadseeni filled to them in every rivulet of which heightened as they were by their fanci- titer drank. - ful imaginations and ' the timers ) l exag- "The rich foliage of the majestic oak, gerations of traveler*, who.have beheld as she stretChed forth her arms far 'and what none others 'ever saw...createl a wide, like a parent to meet and Wel perfect-mania among the Spaniards for come theneeecomers—the long dense enterprise and research. The spirit of forests or grange.. lemon, . and litne, gain. too, was amused, and mines of trees: giving and exhaling sweets—the gold; mountains of precious stones, and "mossy magnoliaand thesylvan shade" streams of nectar, were talked of as e--the mellow warbling of the restless thin g s ever.y day to be met with in the mocking-bird—the wild scream of the' land of Columbia. Men of wealth impatieut paroquet, and the , rustling of were now foundin abundance, ready the frightened fawn as she erected her to risk their all in what they conceived ears, alarmed at the firstsightnihninan an enterprise of undoubtful character; beings'. and darted in graceful- eaps in. and those who before had spurned the to the depth of the wood", ,_;; ie away, enthusiastic Coluinbus from their We- would have been of the.. -," entre i settee ,as a mad visionary, were now cient ice have satisfied them, that if ready to believe the most,extraragant health was snot there they had at least.' accounts, and risk all their fortunes in arrived at the Grotto of Calypso. could a voya g e prompted by him. Among they only. like the son of Ulysses, gave the early discoverers of Florida was been attended with the fascinating and Ponz de Leon, a Spaniard ; some give spulbewitchingnvmphs who wove such to him the honor of being the first voyi- graceful garlands. and disported'in such get whoever beheld that beautifurland. amorous dances for the love-sick Tele- - It is said by them, that he discovered machos. and feasted_ hii- too confiding, it on Easter day, e season of dowers' soul with love's bewitching viands.-ef: among the Catholics. An intelligeet Every thing about them %gave eridence author, who has made considerable re- of the handiwork of I f haul. where the search among the e Spanish archives." creatures of this world - by a spell of as to the discoeery of his native land, : enchantment were to assume innortali:: and to whose Writings I sin indebted ty. They looked around ' them as if for much cif , my information. in speak- every moment their visions were to be ing of the origin of the name. says— blessed with beautiful fairies coining "The happy taste of Ponz named the forward to welcome them to a new, a land, Florida, from the thick luxurious- happy home. which was but an invite nes" of its woods and the vanity of its lion to those brighter realms of departed blossoms, with: a wish alsOto)coromes.spirite who have shuffled off this mor morate, by the appellation, the day of tal coil. in the bright hope of a welcome discoeery and a new birth—La Pascua to their father's dominions by' the bless- Florida. or " Feaster Floe-ere.", It is -eticl Redeemer of man. probable. too, be desired to influence , All about - them seemed redolent with, the minds of his followire with hisown , life, and .as if spring ever held eternal cherished and charming fancy, that 1 dominion. Imagination worked its part, they= should reach, through conquest, and the old felt youth again returning. • the river of life and reparation. where. and the sick and enfeebled, health, and upon banks of bloom, they should die- stredeth, as they bathed in the soft wa port with companions fair as the laugh- sets imin the warm pH stream, and .ing Honrii. and gather fruit from thel drank' cold' draughts from the gurgling - groves and ' garlands of an eternal fountains on the shore. :spring." - De Toequeville. insvoking of the , There is a tradition.-for the truth of first landing of the Euilltreans on the - which I cannotvo, gch, that de Leon i shores of the Antilles, and Scnth Ameri ' was led to Florid ' the prophecy of i ca. describes ! vital must have been the a Carib girl. who -told him , that there..l condition of the followers of de• Leon. . 'he would find A spring of. water. the . He says eee They thought themselves use of which - Would restore. youth to transported into those felonious regions the agernind health . to the diseased:— of which poets had sung. The sea I Everett) thisd4, may befonnd in those sparkled with Phosphoric light, and region', po , inco I nsiderahle number of the .extrabrdinary transpareney of its Spaniards who verily believe that such' waters discovered to the view of the 'waters are 011 to be discovered in this , navigator all that hail hitherto been landlif genial zephyrs and onerous hidden in the -deep abyss. Here and flower*.. e there appeared little islands perfumed All do net agree .that Florida was so with odoriferous pleats, and resembling called - for the reasons I hays quoted ) baskets of ilowere floatin,y, on the Iran i - ' , above. but that . the great quantity oft quit surface of the ocean. Every ob i Hewer" found there in all seasons of ! Jett,. which met the sight in tiers en ! the Veal.. rowing wild in the finest., 1 chanting' reeion, seemed prepared to iupon bush and tree. induced thine who leattefy the wants or contribute to the I christened her to call her after Flora:: pleasures of man. Almost all the trees llt may be. and it is quite neutral so to.; i were loaded with nourishing fruits, and "appose, that the coincidence between t these which. were useless food, de. the season of its discovery and its t lighted the eye by the. brolianey and flowery appeerance, left not for a imo- 1 variety of their color"._ In groves of 'merit a doubt upon the mind as to given it.. the ! fragrant lemon trees, wild fies, flower name' which should be 1 myrtle. acacias and oleanders, which The beautiful natural, parterres form-were hung with festoons of various I I ed in every acre of her soil—the tall climbing*mats covered with flee era, a and inajetnii magnolia tree. bearing ! multitude of Nide. unknown in Eenspe, 1 from its lowest its highest branches. I displayed their bn„,.: plornegre glitter ( e virgin ' the velvet white flower that fi lls i ing with purple and as,ev _and min env Ithe air with the most delicious perfume, ; gal their arelte.. in Ate lraern ... while the deep. dark. and sombre look- lof a solid teeming - ith life and'aw i jar evergreen leaf, seem by nature to 4 tion." I hi=ve b een formed as a' c o n trast, soi . the first impulse of a good Catholic I make appear more lovely. this. one of ;. in his moments of teraspri. to his hen : her-.loveliest and most magnificent of; : pube it said. is to give thanks to-the i the flower species, and sufficient to !great dispenser of all good. Ponz de l satisfy the most sceptical that . Flori aj Leon and his followers'no sooner found I derivedher name in , a .great ins . 1 thee:me-1m upon terra firma, than they . 1 from the rich and gay attire in whi . i with one accord raised the symbol of her barer' found her decked. •' 1 their religions faith, the cross of their' mate only w h o have visited i cruc ified Savior; and fell down before Miebtful 'mimic. kiwi, the beauties o sit in solemn adoration. Their- hears a 'Florida wood; and the delicious t iirelfmg with gratitude, they poured balmy wiedi that. ton to p o se re p ose Iforth to thanks Heavenly , Fattier. their the tr oubled soul. • They alone clears- I fervent thanks for their safe voyage. and preem i e — th e blossomy groves redolent 1 the 4 mercies they had received. and In wit h atilie e h er e lfilled by natures melo-I,t humbleness dedicated the rich and gir -1 di vas e t /t wi s t er s I noblitkg to the breeze; i go on s land of promise to the object "'asit &A i i tie wee through the fonsts,il most worthy and IPast ado their unit th e m ume nS oyo roar of bteakingi{ hearts. After role - zrald'ilg-the - bigh and t-, ware, as it kitties the =AY there and i solemn M att _ __.• the Y i tere led forward in + r svazomes JEFFERSON aura. Regard:en of in e n sa d a li en 'io g y i ally guarger.—Gov; Porn:. INDTPUMINI 9 EBIROMMIIMID 00152Y1179 3:141.4 MCONEEPIE - SY9 11 o, search ‘ f neartreasure,s and the fountain -of life, still be)ific_l4 that their longing eyes would soon behold, ,beyond a - doubt, the Ilygenian waters prdphecied of by the Carib deceiver 'as the corn , pensaqon for the toils and dangers they had encountered. " ~ The best informed, seemed inclined to the belief thatene - • Sebastian Cabot, sailing under the British flag in 1498, coasted the whole eastern Shore of Florida, and that he was Ate voyager who first.beheld it. Certain it is, that its'' - 4 s consisted of French. I Englis ', and I§panish, who kept up-a ' constant state of warfare for supremacy of dominion t in tact, Florida seems , to , have been destined to internal ,Totniiio lions from the period of its oc cupation by Europeans , to the 'pfesent day., There is not One of her streams whose waters have not been stained with the blood of her children ; d scarce one of leet,:settlemenui but uld ;bear *it (l nesilb some encounter of mares fear ful passion; in which hunt:gnre has been considered as a plaything. Beane tiful as she looks—mild and ,placid as ' are her sheint of water—green as are her fields, atylowery her !oil—there have been committed deeds of cruelty too rejoicing ter the ear tos isten, to, or the eye to rest upon. C imate, it is ,said, has much ii -do wit the charac ter and dispopition What is there in that of tlor)da Which 'should have made her first Children creatures of' the most sanguinary temperament, and ,the most eruel disposition ? hi the struggles be tween the French. English, and Span iih, the wild Indian, - a native of the, soil, would be found aiding first one . - and then the ether. • Thitt untutored child of the forest was led, to believe, by the party whose cauie lie espoused, that they were fighting to secure to the aborigines the right to the soil-, of their birth. Alas, poor deceived Creatures, they were only aiding a powir to con quer. that in turn would sulelue them. Gold; that—whnt shall 1 call it, Col or devil !—was the loadetone which attracted so many sntisepient settlers to Florida. The rich mines of that aeee'rwhich had been found in other . parts o f the Western world, led them to' believe that the whole country was filled with it; and the fact offinding pieces f '' mold et the possession of the Florida Indians. which had been by the, posses sors manufactured rudely in some ornament. inflamed the mi s of all 1 41) whe visited these para. and led them tc"euepect that every' reek Contained a portion of the precious metal, and the sands upon the shore. and at the^bot ' tont of the rivulets, were found by some of !him, and' this strengthening their be fief, rendered assurance double- sure. and stimulated them to new and in creased exertion. - The suffering and deprivations; of some of these advmturers would. if re lated. scarcely be -credited. They of ten traversed the country' for weeks,' with barely enough of thereof:est kind of food to sustain them through their, , toilsome journey in the miry .: morass and deep entaniled hainmoci, encenere. 1 terinz sickness from their ezpointre. and 1 , fighting every mile of theil way against i the:Fifa beasts with which the woods ! abonrried. or the native Indians. who just:y I,A , Aetl upon these adventurers as tree-a.,--rs upon - their riems. and who too plainly ~ began to see,: with proe i,phetic eye. but not until it was too late, that the first step, of theft intro ; tiers was but 'preliminary to the inju ries that 'folloWed. El Dorado. how -1 ever, nas never discovered. and those ' who went in search of it, that returned alive. came back disappCimed and Iwo ? ken-her,rted..to linger cut their brief i ,• . existence. brought on by hopes defer ! red that made the heart eick. i .. *•*•* a * s_ I Not content with seizing as slaves those he had invited as °vests. ibis blowl-thint.ty mercer fired ' E- the cannon from hie vessel in the reilet, of the 4 ro gup of . meet, women, and cbddren on rtheehore. who had fallen on their 1 kneei;-azd. with opliftet! han&, •wt re l ge suplicatiige ' -- to them , the brother. i bncbend. !and the sou, ;en froia ! them., Time terror strkkor eLildreo 414_ 5 forest twaries Heave:is art fiery so zsii mimicked. imarinted that he who cona wield the, thunder must be no other - than, a sod. Considering fitht as useles,s, tley fell upon tireir-faces' and implored a merry they_dittnot se eeice. Cautted'iri*blood,, and *all:6- fed with his treachery. this etinter human forth - set 'sail fin Cubs with his chained' *vitas. 114 lightning- Pr heap, did. net blast' hi= tens ; pests 44 not pitent h 1 ,!--'-neither briny, trnbeent WW I fir 1111 . set ! God takes bt' own .1 time for is vengeance ; and the' kid Upper aril ell safelyin Cuba, and , sold but cargo of red men to 'work as slusiin the mines., Thus was broken; in poise instances, the proud spirit of the Indian ; and he who knew no confinetut the ocean, no toil Init the fatigues of aide and of the Chase, who never b died but ha in -11, haled the pure winds of the heavens, was'cast into' a loathsome; notions mine, filled with putikitial airs, shut out from the light of ; dai, chained to a ball, and, for'his rich forest food, was substituted the felon's day, .to toil from , day to day, till bin/srury, body fell to the earth, exhausted with fatigue and broken dosits with desciair, anere ion remain and_ I linger out the bal ce of his loathed existence. , ',Can any wonder, after this, that there e,ier hai been, and over might to be. a feud betieen the uniophisticated Indian and his savage neighbor and treacher ous enemy. the white than f Can we Wonder that a people thus goaded on by wrong heaped piton wrote ,till grin mountain-high, should in return 'by way Of self-defence, reieot to sou' to entrap their enemY. and w en in their itower to treat them with ' apps rent crueltY,f q'q,.. '{ , Velasquez dot Dot reap, however. the rich harvest; he anticipated, and God visited thin wretr by punishing his avarice. Number of the Indians died on board the`T vessel on her pas sage, grieving. like caged birds, for the green fields acid fond connesioris they had been torn from ; , while others, less sensitive and rum* 'resolute; refus ed all sorts ofiustenaUce, and thus died of starvation. 1 ~ . i ‘.. i Ligbtalh. After the flash ha/ beei seen, , the peal of thunder is heaid ; and- this • be more or fewer second after the peal, in proportion to-the distance of the diurder .cloud frost, the ear. Lightning miter -- sets any space without any perceivable succession of time; nothing seer to be any obstacht to its progress. A multitude of person, taking;hands. the first and the last connected with the .deleeric machine, all feel ;the shock in th same instant; and(srere there * condo tor to go round the globe, the last w old feet the stock in the same ' nt as the first. But as sound 'depends on the undulation of the air for as propogiitiort,, ' and is know travel at the rate of Only 'lli2 feet in a second; consetitiently if the gash were only 1142 feet frol the spectator, it would be seen. in one second, or one swing of tke pendcilum. before the sound could reach the ear. though the elm:l'2nd the flash take place in the same instant, and if twice this distance. two seconds, and ect on. it is of some eonsequence to know that lightning at * - considerable dis tance, suppose six Or eight seconds of time, is never knoHiro to berts,_ till. its do injury; when the flash and 'clap immediately succeed each tithes. then there is'strong grou for alittrehensiona as the •thunder cloud nd is near. If the thunder cloud be aI mile :and half dis tant, it is never knnws to kill man or beast.' Now its disMnee may be easily known 4 ) 6 y means of a pendchwt clock. °Twat :th ) `tda his .seeon, *iris the flash is .a, count' the seeoads until the el is heani— , Then compute: If only one ; second in counted. Then the the thonAer dared ts.uithin 1142 fret. or- about -ASO card! ; if two seeoridt. thee its, &natter: iii i l 22B4 feet. or 761 dyi cads. ; . if kh seconds , Te seconds , then 24 26 feet. i• • •-• . or 1142 ids; if fear seeou4s. 'ben ; the dem Is diraitt!4s6B 'feet. or 1522 i yards; if-, five serends, /then the die- I. cane is 5718 feet.' or 19e4 yard_; ifsix seconds, then the distance is M 32 feet. or 2284 Yards. one mile and nearly onethird4 if seven, seconds. then the I di.tnrce 4f tb.e cloud is 7994, feet or ! 266.5 wards. or one, mile and a half and 23 ic - anla..; Beyond this &Mance light- nieth lies been I . knouss so de any r= C a Liz rei li " .—lt is a cutiosity to find tit ho ple=d, a ewe successfully and then docks - off a pottion;of h is Ja entity to meet a •Farte who swirtnets in be: conce-mtio,Ht. 1 - ' , It is a Otiosity to find a sehoolreaster - arbadoes Dia wish to be 'a that : , I he knomps„tnnte than arty one -e . r z , v ..- . I Tim gam 07.1BAIST - LON.=—There ill It is a Curiosity ;to meet with - a ;tri..-. r 3l ED " in potrfkoly N' -' -L , so tin thst, who thinks 1e.. ... . of hinted( than oar; the Mn has searched all the hair crff pe6e.e eiv .4, ek ci hi 1 .1 his ham. and be is obliged to climb s'p m. „,,, .! a ladder to pat on his his trig '' JsirsTtiniosos ADTEIVITZ.E.: -PO you i --, ' i nr4.rwand me notO thantiere on: one r, A TAIL GlitirriNE!• 'editor of the . of car citv r ed.;.c.÷...ftt In tin trek;m it : WatersHlonian has senuired to' sett 1 wbwe he'threir 2n Tttfririt.i. cs I !ninei'' - that there is 2AL-I s . co 'tall in Termoni, I et i gn i4 i -i-4,: a . ~i ~.. c . 5 m,” ;ret- i that she 6.3 to n squat dow tolvei ot* 1 ca,d th e, , zi .,.... ;,• ; - , • - - t1.r... , Green 3lncr,tairei. [ : - , ~ i MN MI tr'nt Ulla* PCSio , lames; th • Bd, ascended thrt,Throne of ;Britain, ~ fears went Intensified that the spirit of persecution ',Mild loge, and the protestanti suffer.• William Penn (craned an enlightened government in Famtrylvanikk, irrhere eve ry man Witi tel have'chow' eof raters and lawswii , • , fdistinction m religious opinions; V rank or fortune. In 1686 when he ~ - to England; he came forward as e 'champion gi o Universal Toleration. ilk °blinked liberty of thirteen hundred Friends, wh had lbeen barbarously imprisoned` for ylars On count of their peculiar tenet* in reli on. In 1687, king James. publlikd his w.ernorable Declaration in favor of "Free dom of ambience.' • . Sir lames Mackintosh, say", he issued cciApird 4th, 1687, " A Declaration kir Miens, of Conscientr," which, after the Statement of thoseplinciples of equity and =Mr which religious! liberty is proCeeds to make provisions, in their o nature so wise and jest, that nothing lawful authority pare , ,• to render &ern worthy of admiratimi. • 1. Wl] .Pesin's influenee l with King Imam had obtained this Defier, ation. ;And he was' charged with. having been edu cated at St.l Omer ind .a mist. Hill motives were misrepresent " and his life in danger. Tenn was enamelled to defend himself from the accusations.— This proithee. was ,at this 'time left to the charge of Thomas 1.144, and , .two assistants, Thomas Holme and William Clark. On the fifth of NoVember, 11688 Prince of Orange," landed in Eng gland, Fetmiary . 13th, 1689. William d Maty- trete mulled King & Queen. .Penn havint enjoyed the confi dence 44 King James, Was !inspected of being seemly engaged in his cause, and in consequence, was attested and exami- ned in the yea r.lOB, 1689, 1690, tint. was 'discharged frOin.want of evidenie. In I.6:4,'William Penn was deprived of the o f this province, by King Wawa. and Benjamin Pletibgr, then , Governor of New York, appointed. OLD our Iriahman some\ yearslines attending the University at Edinburg. waited upon one of the most celebrated teachers s of the Ger.' roan flute. desiring-to know on what term e could give him alfew lessons; - , ate player charged two guineas or the first month, an - done guinea for the second. “Then, me soul," replied the eitnning Hibernian «I think ill come, the second womb!" Intrxr.ss.—lt is a mistake to icie that only th win / lent-passions, sn'eb as,ambition• and love. can triumph over the rest. Idleness, languid as the is, often masters thenrall; she indeed in fluences all• our designs rod actions, and insensibly consumes mid destroys both passions and virtues. Feat.-Thousands "through fear of want, want all their' lives; and thou= sands every day, • for . fear of dying, suffer worse than the pangs of death. The demon fear, trembles at all_ timei at impossible ',semi. Why should we grow pale. at the hideous fictions of our own imagination. We should at all times endeavor to be serene and tamers of o s es. cars= ar.unco.--u What is the moon: my love, that. *inn you 1114 Poor tee. 41. your are forever talking 7 asked an ansinos husband of his ador ed sponse. Beernie. my dear, there is so much rodm tti rov mouth, my • tongue keep How Cts Fizzur.—Deacon Pequivk, a staunch temperance man. having at eideatallg swallowed a coming, tumbler. of gini the other day. was asked how he felt \after it. ' , L.. Bois ; did I feel r" said he.' •• Why. I felt is it I were !sitting on the roofofour Meeting hotase, and every shingle was , a jearsharp." . Rinurtramr. Taut.--Mauty spend op much time in conuiving how to get mo ney easy, that they tieset get it at AL So trade will produce anything utless wall followed. Whitt you do, do / Well; and if sateen don't follow, then Maisie Gown-Lothemise blame yourself,. 111.1EI U i(367/to. jr. S ' irs i Zo tao