The Bradford Porter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1842-1844, March 20, 1844, Image 1

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32
r:=74.,
v
(ro , t h e Bradford Porter%)
N. Owen , on the, death Oiler infant.
-cio:lier! could a sympathetic strain
current rushing through each
_ .
filar
thou this song, from one whose heart bath
E:ie has never mourned an infant dead.
i ., ca 'ry whisper of the tranquil joy ; '
I, l i,;nadle of thy sleeping boy it
paint the treasuy done; ,
blighted in its eiily daivn ; ,
- the Eiamond-ilew of rooming clear,
alas! too - lnig,ht to linger here,:
lid it hourly brighten in thine eye 1
on ttri . t brow was .written=-Thou shalt
fair the .image still ! methinks the 'glow
firth the tear of . ..tin aff4cti?:l WO. .
l a n ray winning sister ! take thy scat,
, etk „b m ision, at the Savior's feet;
'gent ever to his, praying saints •
nzs age lind. he:answers their complaints. '
let thy faith behold him throned on high,
pity beaming in his eye, ,
e Infant on his breast, a spirit hright,
la soft visions of serene delight;
01;, an interest in our bleeding Lord,
n ever trembled from aucingerssbord;
his warbling tongue so sweetly cows
eery bosom, at the accent glows,
ov‘,s, bright mid tall, their lyres lay by
ine sweeter song of Infancy.
pensive mother ! catch the dulcet sound,
so soft cannot thy bosom wound; •
each the sound, and, with thy angel-boy,
d i e accents fraught with heavenly joy!
.ang, till sorrow, past and present seem,
ifa:linembranee of a faded dreana!
a sweet communion, with a spirit blest,
thy bosom bring a hallol'd rest.
_lf= the string melodious grief must roll,
Feient language of the inmost soul.
. a yon deeay. 7 .d and fallitig leaf,
riui sydil;ol of existence brief;
r ies sweet, that in my:tsindow bloom,
e , a the fairest hnstens to the tomb!
the.autunin stay,
X:.7.3 the 'sweetest melody may die!
11 tile one 'neath disease's poweic
-taaeui: siduce - of a transient.hour 2
r.ro j e'da bud hath felt death's chilling
LEE
::,,withers ;111 that charms the earthly sighi;
,nll the bud, renewed its tints .
in glory from its gloomy 'shrine !
Ftso . T., P , ., . - • Mini - ty. n
[From the N. Y. Evening Rost.]
We's Snnny Spots:.
=
ilm:;'a life's a dark and thorny pith,
7,41:th. toinb;
't yet some spots'of sunshine bath,'
'1111t;mile amidst the gloom.
The itim's who weal and wo partakes,
Thithan;ea what e'er his lot,
soothes the heart that aches.
L sme a canny epoi. : •
Tha,.-ah a half our burden bears,
Anir.tt2rs not a moan
sae aatiy handwipei - Off out tears,
rtheoled all her o - wn;
trusures every kindly word,
Each harSher One forgot,
Irlcarals blithely risa bird—
SEe's too a sunny spat. • • •
ME
rEe child who lift; at morn and eve, .
la prayer its tiny. voice ;
1 :2 grieves whene'cr its parents grieve,
And joy when they
_rejoice ;.
Whose bright eye yotiagnius glows,
Whose heart, without a blot, _
• freih and pure as aurrksFr e 7 , 3 t r9se- -
That , child'a a sannyispot.. .',• , -
. •
here
yet upon life's very svegry read, .
Oae spat of brigliteeglow, _
t Erre sorrows half forgets it s oad,
And tears no longer flow ;..
if . tildship, may wither, love decline,
Our child dishonor blott; •
lit still 'notlirnmed that spot will shine—
lights that spot. , •
Death . and the World.
EF :13ss lElvsi!vllT.
Vohs world a gay good world,
miles and imuntieslree;:
dealt, alas ! is king of this world,
Aai it tiol4 a grave for me.
4 world ha'th gold—it is bright and red
41 4 love, and the rove is;swaet ; •
Pte, like the song: of n loveltiute 7.
hall those,With'death must meet..-- - • '
rest the gold, will the fervid love,
141 9 igazibeneath,the dark mould ; ,
U PTaise lie will put in an , epitaph,! .
4tea erinuable cold.!
The First 'and lasi' Dinner.
• TALE. OF:LIFin, ' .
Twelve friends, much abou tthe same
age, and fixed by their . .'phrsnits - , their
family. connexione and ether loCal inter
rests.** permanent inhabitants of the
metropolis, agreed ;one.day when they.
were 'drinking their :wine
. at the. Star
and 'Garter,: at itichmonci . , to institute
animal dinner - antung themSelveS,
under the folloWing regulations: That
they-"should dine alternately at each otlt•
ers' houses on the.first and and last day
of each year ; and. that the first bottle
of wine uncorked at the -first - dinner
should be recorked and put away to be
' drank 6 . y him who should be the last.of
their number; that they should never.
admit a new member;: that when one
died eleven should meet, and when an.,
other died; teri should meet, and 'so On,
and when only one remained, he shi3uld, r
on tlhise two days, dine by himself, and
sit the . uslial hours at his solitary table;
but the first time - he so dined alone, lest
itshotild be thdonly'one,-he should then
uncork the first bottle; and in . the 'first
glass drink to the memory
~of all who
were gone.
) There cvai. - something original and
whimsical in 'die idea, and it was eager
ly embraced. . They were all in-.the
prime of life, closely attached by recip
rocal friendship, fond of social enjoy
ments, and looked forward to. their fu
ture meetings With unalloyed anticipa
ticins of pleasure. The 'only thought,
indeed, that could have darkened those
-anticipations, was not one very likely
to intrude itself at this moment—that of
- the hopeless- wight who was .destined
to Uncork the first bottle at his lonely
repast. . _
It'was high summer wlien.this'frolic
compact was entered into : and as their
pleasure yacht skimnied along the dark
bosom of the Thames, on theirreturo
to London, they talked of nothing but
their first and last feasts• of ensuing
years. Their , imaginations ran riot
with la thousand gay predictions of fes
tive i merriment. They wandered in
conjecture df what changes time would
operate; jolied , each other upon•• : their:
appearance . when they shouid•
some hobbling 'upOn•crutches after a'
severe tit of the gout : lithers Npoking
about' with pur-blind eyes. which even
spectaelea• could hardly. enable to
tinguiSh the alderman's walk. or a
haunch of venison—some with portly
round'.hellies and tidylittle btow.n Wigs,
and Othors decently dressed out in a
suit of mourning, • for'the .death of a
great-grand-daughter or great-grand
son •
"!:As 'fin you .; ,G i eorte,'' exclaimed
one.of the twelve, addressi ng. his bro
ther-in-law, ••• I expect I shall - see your
as dry, withered.' and : shrunken as •an'
oldleel-skin,• you - mere,.•ontside • of ai
man !" and he accompanied the words,
with
, ahearty slap the;shOulder.
George Fartesque ivas leaning care
lessly over , the side of the vatcht,
tlte loudest of any at conversa,
tien which -had . been :Carried. on.. The
sudden . manualsalittatfon of his•brother
-in-law threw hits off his balance,, and
in a -moment hefWas oVerhoard. /. ' They
heard ,-theheairy 'splashof his fall, - 66-
fore they could. be, said 'to "have seen
him Sall. he l yacht was. -pflocedinn•
swiftly ..alonN—bnt it . instatitlypopPed b .
The utmost 4oniternation nonTprevail,`-
..ed. It: was nearly dark, but Vortesque
was known to be an excellent swirprner,
and, startling-as the accident was, they .
felt(vertain, .that lie wauld_regain,,the
vessel. Thev - could not see
They listened'. They hear 4 the sound
of his hands, and feet„ They hailed
bine. An answer. Was returned, luit in
a faint, gurgling ireiee and the 'eXela r
.niation,, , iGh God struck upon their
earsk In an instant, ,twt`ior three-who
. -
were 'expert I , 4itntnersplunged. inin.the
.
river, and
. ..swain_ towards. tne opot
Wbetiee.the exelaination . had Ordceeded.
One' of than': wasp within an arrit's
length of Foriesque—he raw 'him; be-;
fore
,he could be reached he went down,:
and his4istracteil - frie,nil beheld the . ed-
dying mein Of the wave just over the
spot where he hadoeunk. Tie dived af
ter him- atUi..;•miehed the beittom but
the tide,must have 'drifted the'hody nn
ward, far.he could not be found !''They,
proceeded to one of the, nearest stdtioits
where:drip were.kept; and. h a vingpio.:
'curred,the : necosary, app,ar,ttus, they
returned to_ihe fatal spot„, After die'
lapse' 61 about an, hoiir, they stiedeeded
in:raising:thelifelets...lxody o(iheir lost
friend. Y,AU „the ,risuai..,rernfidies were
,eMpioied - for restorieg'litiinended;.'aili
titation, but vain.; thdy'noW
pursued the remainder'their
re
tolliondein.; .mourrifiti -silende,; With'
'die corpse of him OP cP.RigIOIFO
ME
Rigisiv4o36 antEittar_ter.-60.* , .
. ,
r&mizzitmabmix , ocycgrguzs, Ii)AQ9 zuklaom soi) 0440
'VC
=IS
I ' .1! • ;
the,ilay of plesspre with .thein in 'the
fulness'of health 'of 'of life IL` ,
Ainui their severe grief, they could not
"bait reflect how Stood one of the joYous
twelve`had slippeemit Of the •little fps='
tive cireleT7 ' " '
The: mOnthsrrolled'on; and cold Pe.: .
cember came with allits'ehe'ering - round,
olkindly greetiogs..aridraerry
lalittes;. and with it came. softened.re 7
collection -of `thii. - late of .Fortesqiie-;-
clevewof the, tWelve assembled on the
last thiy of the. year; : and it. was impos 7
sitile. not to feel their, loss as.they, sat
.doWn to dinner., The very irregularity
of the table, six on one side, apd,cinly
five on the other;foreed"the melancholy
event upon theirtnemory.
There are few -sorrows so stubborn
as to resist the united intliience of wine,
a circle of select ftielidi; and "a:seagOif
of prospective gaiety, A decorous sigh
Or two, a few-becoming ejaculations:
and an instructive observation - upon the
Uncertainty of life;made up the sum of
tender-posthumous offerings to the.. re
mains of pOOr QeorgeFortesque,",as
they proceeded ..to.discharge the more
important ,dunes . for which they had
met. By the time the third glass of
'chamPagnehad gone round, in addition
to sundry potations of - fine Old hock,
and capitalmadeira," they had ceas
ed to discover anythirie very 'pathet
ic iii - the ineqOality of '' the two sides of
thetable, or so inelancholy in their
crippled number of eleven. ,
The rest of the evening passed off
very pleasantly in conversation, good
humored enjoyment, and conviviality,'
andit was not till toward twelve O".clock.
that poOr George ) Fortesque?' was
.agatq remembered. .
ThOy all agreed, at parting, however,
that they
. hadr never passed such a hap
p:ck day, congratulated each other upon'
instituting 'so delightful a meeting,: and
promised to be punctual to their ap
pointment the ensuing evening', when
they were to 'celebrate the 'new year,
whose entrance they had welcomed in
bumpers. of good claret, as •the watch
man bawled, 41 past twelve o'clock
beneath -the window. ,
.
. They met accordingly, and their
gaiety was without any alloy or draw-'
back.
..It was only- . .the first. time of
their assembling after the death of,poor
George P . nrtesque, that made the recol
lection of it painful ; ' fOr though but a,
few hours hau . intervened, they now
took their-Seats at the table as if eleven •
lid-been their - oriciinal number, and as
, if all were.there that had been ever ex
pected to be there. '
It is thus in every ~thing. . The ,first
time a mattinters the prisonthe first
' book an antluit writes—the - first paint-
L ing.aa.artist executes—the first battle a
1 general ..Witri—nay, the first . time a
rogue is hanged—(for a rot eiimie may
provide A second perforateo, even of
that e,.eremouy, with all its . 'ngleness of
‘charlieter)—ditTey inconceivably' from
their' first_ occurrence, on repetition.
There is a.chartn; a spell; a novelty, a
freslines's, - a' delight; inseparable from
the first . eiperietice, '(hanging always
`excepted,"ye it remembered, which no
art or .ciieurristance can impart-to the
second. - And it is -the satle in all the
darker traits ollife: ' Theris a degree
olioignaricy. in the:first ass l
ulis of sor
row, which, is never , foun afterward.
In every case, it is simply thatthe first
fine eclgeof.nor.feelings has been tak
en thatit can never be restored.,
; _l c Several, years had elapsed, and our
I .eleven friends kept up their double an
niversaries, as they might:aptly enough
•be called; With scarcely any percepti
ile Cl6ll . g l o.''• 'tut, alai, there cattle one,
dinner at last, whiCh - WAS'darkened by
a calamity they. 'never expected' to-wit—
. 'ness,-for on . that very 'day their friend,
' conipanion,Zrother ' almost, Avaihang- .
ed i Yes; Stephen • Roland, 'the wit,,
the oracle, the.' tile oftheir little circle,
had on the, morning of that day, .forfeit:
ed . his life upon.apublie scaffold, ~ for,
~having':made,one
,single, Stroke of his
, pen' in the tvrong,.plaee... In other,W.O.rds,'
.a bill , of exchange whien . „passed into
his -- hatnii for L7OO, passed .out of diem
. . ..„ . ..._
for £4, 100 ; he having drawn the lin' -
_Portant little'profix lei- the hundreds;
and the bill .being paid at the banker's
without examining - the 'Worili.'olit.—
,The :fergery. was'tliscovere4brought
Aiome.to Roland, and,though, the.great-.
est : interest tivas,used,to:,obtain the .re.-
m l 4 - i 6 4.0 . 0 1 .!9
,4t.Y.,P4 6 .i*fien
Boland.ivliAtige& 'tverilnitfy pill.'
edhitri; ' find' fi'ohod4z• eiild*.telF iv li y: the
- diti7iLi.. - 4 - 1 witr nOfttoor pile. was:tint
-a 4;4 4404 00, ;; _yos no k : A ~speculator;
,t? II VP,It 01161 Ply , settled it.. , „7 : 1" he, ran
Cif exCii4iittfveiteis . Wei. . tscovere, to
biii:head - lifterlii'itieedtinilai 4 ie
1 ~,
IA 'tiiiigeou'4_o6. ,-, • litt'atiulkno 11.41
MOM
It
,w?t,lld _Alta
t ten ,!o
say . ; thateven wine: friendship, -and 'a
merry session, could Algid the - gloom
which.pervaded the : , ! dinner. it, was
agreed beforehand:that they should not
allude to the distressing;and melancholy
themei and hdvidgintdriliefed the only
thing whicli , re . hily• occupied their tho'ts;
the natural consequence was, thaki3,llerit
contemplation took the place.of,dismal
discourse ; 'and they separated long be
fore '
Some fifteen years•had ' ncitr Aided
away since the•fate of poor Milani]; and
the ten remained ; ,but tfie stealingband
of time, had written SMidry..changes in
'Characters. - Raven locks
had 'become - grlizled-- . --tWri' or'three'
heads : had
be
many leeks alhigether
as may be reekonedittaWalk.along the:
*Regent's Canal— T one waS, actually.ea
vered a lirdwawig ; 'the crow's
feet were visible. in the.. corner of - the
eye ;* good old. Pert and "warm Madeira
carriedagainst hock; claret, Burgundri
and. phampalgnei stews, : bashesi and ,
ragouts, grew into favor; crusts were
rarely called for to reliih the . dheeie . ,af- .
ter dinner.; converSation'ivaS
terous,.-and it turned-chiefly upon. poli
ties and the state: of the,funds, or landed
property ; apologies were - .made! for
coming in their thick shoes:and.stoCk
ings ; the ':doors - and'windonrs tvere
more carefully provided with list and
Sand bags; the fire Was'more in request;
and-a quiet.game of whist filled.iip: the
hours that were wctet to be devoted to
drinking*, singink. and riotous *merri
ment: The rubbers, a - Cup oP eoffee•,
and at home, by eleven o cloCkovere
the usual cries, when the fifth `or! sixth
glass hadgone,reund. after the removal
of the cloth." At-parting, too, there was° ,
now along Cereiriony the hall, but
-toning'up great coats, tviria
comforters,. fixing silk handkerchiefs
over the mouth and . up to. he. ears,', and
grasping sturdy - walking canes, to . sup
port unsteady . feet.
. Their - fiftieth 'anniversary came; and
death . had. indeed b'eenbusy. • One had
been
~killed by the overturning of the
mail, ititvhich he . had taken hi s place
in order. to be' present at the dinner,
having purchased an
.estate ,
Mon-.
moutbshire, and 'removed thither with
his family. Another. :had ~ undergone
the terrible operation, for . \ thestone; : and .
expired beneath the knife. The third,
had yielded up:"4 broken`"
twp
years after the Iris's - of an'cinly - stirvtving,
and beloved dati,,.,ahter . . • A fourth was
carried off a.feW daysby.the cholera
morbus.... A fifth had breathed his last
the very morning he had
. obtained
,
Judgrrient in his favor 'by thelord
Chancellor, Which had cost him his last
shilling 'nearly to .get, and which,. after.
a litigation of . cighteeti years, declared
him the rightful possessor of ten thott
sand a year.: Tenrninutes'afterletias
no more. A'siith badperiSliedby - the
hand of the, midnight 'assassin, .who
brbke:into his house for plunder, and
sacrificed the owner of it;as'be grasped
ethivulsively a bundle of 7 =exchequer
which the robber' was . dratirifig ,
Trent beneath • pillow,. • where, be
knew they .were placed every..night for
better:security - . . •,- • -
Four little oldimen. of.withered,ap
pearance, decrepit w i allt. With cracked
voices, and - ditn,'raylesS eYes, sat down
by the mercy of fieaven,(as they_theni
selves tremulously declared.) tn. cele
brate 'for the fiftieth time the first day
of
_the year--,to observe - 'the frolic com-
'pact, 7 fiich, half a 'century age they en
steredonto • st' the.. Star 'and Garter-sit
Richmond werein their graves!'
Yet ,they . chirped'. cheerily, ever ,their
though.tlicy eould,scarecly carry
it to :their lips. if more thaiL . lialf Cull ;
and cracked theirjelees.'ihough they
articulatedlheir words`- with `difficulty.
They ..they, chattercd, .they
laughed, if a .sort of strange 'wliceing
,ruight,he 'called a latigh..;
. aiul.ivi . beri the,
wines sent theiricy..bloOd in a' . warmer.
'their, veins. they "talked
of their past es if it wor 9. btiv.Veeterdy
,
"that'lifidelipped-liy,tlic;tn and their fu..
tare its if it 'were a !may:century that lay
before them.. ';. ;: .'• '
~`they were just. the.) nurnber ,fer . a
quiet rubber of whist ; and — for. three
suceessivf yeus. they sat dt4iiii'ics'One.
'thi . fOuriliterne;' rebbet
played ,With ran 4pe,n:ldainiitiy;..a.:.6fth
, 4 I_4, n9 ,l 9Pee.
,o,nly, at,cribliage, and
cribbage pas' tlie:' . gaiti l e;'' 014' it' J Wai ,
Vitt& play.,
:Theirpalsied: hands:caul& hakdlyAmid,,..
PoT h4 . ir Sig kit lisEiggaiph i , the
,cards;,..while,their - torpids l la4ti,esmade.
di - doze
'. At length'iarile;lhilligi l Airid
die iiiritiatiraiithentOtvOrfpont*liose
'head ffeilroOre,itt64
shoivered their -stmw Ata'-his solitary'
.„..
WA
ME
ME
Meal; .It so Chancedit was athie house'
and: his' , table ; they. celebrated the, first.
In his cellar,, taa, had remained for eight
arid'Effir yearsi ihe ^ hottle which-they
had uticorkedrecOrked, and Which he
wasihen to , tincork-again. It stood'
beside him; feeble .'and
,tint grasp he.inot . the «frail memorial" ,
of a.youthful Now, and for a mornent
ineniory 'alas faithful te.her office. She
threii; - open the of' 'buried
years and heart traveled • through
them all.. The ir lusty and, blithsome
spring ; their hrigh , tand fervid autumn , ;,
their chill but; not too frozen winter;
he , saw as as a!mirror how one by, one
the laughing companions of that merry
hour atllichinond; had "droppkV into
eiernity:i Hi felt 'all the loneliness' of
hia condition4or he had eachewed mar
riacre and in the veins of no livinir crea
ture ran :a drop of blood whose source
Was . in liis oWn ; and as he drained the
glasi tvliich lip hdd filled, ~ 'to themerno
l'ry of those who were gone," the teats
slowly : trickled down the. lurrows'ofhis
aged face.
, had thas fulfilled' one part of his
voW, and prepared hitriSelf to discharge
the Other byl sitting the usual-number of
hours :at his;, desolate table. ' With a
heavy, heart,he resigned hiinself to . the
gloom 'of his' i own thoughts, .a lethargic
sleep stole . over him—his head fell upon
his . bOsord- I —confused images croWdea
into hialnitid—he babbled to himself-=
was silent—and when his servant en
tered. the room, ,alarmed by a noise
Which he heard, fie found his master
stretched upon • a ;carpet at the foot of
the.easy chair, ,out of which he had
slipped in an ,apoplectic fit. He never
spoke again, nor once opened his eyes,
though the vital spark Was not extinct
till the following day. And this was
thqitsr DINNER., ,
. . .
torrespotident of the.:.Now.' Yb
Trihune,.•writing from Genoa, says,—
Sometimes. you 'may:travel. all day,
and see nothing but the '.ugliest faces,
antl.you Wonder : lto*. nature should
have cronemo•alvay in every. instance.;'
and tl b ten,;bgain, in, another •; prevince,
you see . at:every step the beauttful ',eye
and atitd.flexilile• , brow andAaugh•- -
log face of your true : ltalian beauty.--
In form the: Italians excel Ds; ,larger,
fuller, they naturallYacquirealiner gait
.andbearing. it isLastonishing that our
ladies•Mhould p4sist in that a.
Waist:is—and, pernecessitatem,must be'
,--beautiful - .. Why, an, Italian lady -
would
.cry for vexation if she,pos
sessed such a waist as 'some "of our la
dies acquire only ;by the longest, pain
fulest process.:: .I have sought,the.rea
son of this difference, and .can
other than the. Italians-have their glo
rious statuary:cOntintially before
and -hence. endeavor to .assatuilate the tit •
- ,selyes.Ao •them,; ".whereas- our our,fash
ionahles have no Models except idiUse
French. sniffed figures in the ivintroWs
of milliner's Shops: • -
lundredspertilvannitilly, victims to
corsets.. And. yet,, it : will be .seen . by
,the,models , of, beauty , as - given; by the
celehraled,Spulptois., arehy• no means
"charactrized•bysthe hourglass'waists,
f is Id ah`''olifarik of the'-gentler sex of
this country delight:to.boast..' It:is• a 1
most impossible fora _female to, subject
liersellto-the fashionable systorn which
hie
° so, Tong,preVaile'd' in . the "Vmleil
;StateS,. and' yet' - be Healthro.'oiideruf;
elastfc in.-figure. and •-: in spirits.. :She
may itavea thin waist, but thg,ch.ances
are nine;to one that her:cheeks will-ISe
her.tnovernenisdnguid . ..lier
frante . feeble'Atid -her onstitution•im
•pthoil..-: • 1 - . : f:; `,.••
A Siwwr S'l 4 OllY —A circle hainiet,
List !they arehiapering 10:w. Ifferk
the,sneei- on.tkat lady's countenance.
.Anothet:is
.
never liaie;'suspeCied; stial, r a
AJI are' . talk loamand
•b s lei; n ;they!forf,wt ..entfrely, the 'ell=
ject!iaftiWir anv,assiit.the
charactnr . .of,,a filend.;,..:-.Tyhe know
uiithinp hei, 'hut tvlipt Report
saYs. and . "how correct,
y, a re , alt
the
in
4ter •
.;•
~and wien,they
,part , each
one goes toa•d'ffJ en section toreport
hat'•has'been
Biped,Beforeand ,• thU
Aveek?i(end, the c .. chandler• of-lit
t uldman us .alineit-hritroyid;... k• ' ' _
1 •
• ,
%.-P4slwrrii ft atiaia - -Anti Potriittit'..iil
-Let 'the' poatkry' litiiisekrbe cleaned 'out
and white -washed {fsh straw 0). trait
be pnyn _the ._nestio., and provide the
Rgyitfygitb m 1.410344, lipp-aq gray. ,
giv,e thprtt l % ps4.3iol3 ll l4:tifreq/i
meat; di gib; bOiledana ef4;_upp,
{EU . ' ittatitli; 'anti 14theiti - 6f r i 481
:ted-daiti :saint; Itittii
iinek*theatt,TioAtirtot)begn tcrj4c•:, prit,
r.
. ,
i ', '
IBM=
Beauty of Fe*
cue aa. E3o auszDaaait 41 . fitqatc,
Aunt • _ • x'
. Mont Blanc has never-been ~,so- e ttsy
of ascent-within the memory if man as
during•the present Seaypti. The most
daneerode and difficult crevasses have
remained: filled.by compact sriow, aml
the perwridieular 'walls, .which, it is
necessary to ascend have been'also cov
ered by the 'same 'material - into -.Which
steps copld!:.4 easily cut: .17cier
have consequ.entlysniceeded :in
ing the ascent; Each gentleMaif at=
tended by,five gthdeS, each of whom
receives a hundred fritics, acting iri, ace,
triple capacityof guides to. show the
route ; of friends to assist hith in diffi,
cult passes, and of
~ p orters to' `carry
provisions , and.blankets. - ° 'On the list -
of these expeditions e: variation from
the usual 'ethirse was ; adopted . ; with
int# advattage. .- The party started
in the nithning (at first attending miss,
as is ristkl itl-)atholid countries before
encountering any, great danger)'thid
ter mounting all day, instead of sleeping
as , usual, at the. Grand'lkfulet, . (aiittle
_rocky spot bare of: snow) they rested
at the Petit ilfulet,only. from 7 to.l.Ljn
the evening, and
. then resuming their
ascent by .moonlight,, succeeded in
reaching the top- by sunrise. They
were' accompanied by a little dog, who
-with them pvercame every difficulty,
even the .: steps cut by axes in the per r
penclicular walls of ice, and was at, the
top, the filsl - of the party; 'but no soon
er did they begin 'to descend' than he
rushed down as: if mad,: reaching the
-village two' •hours before them, , with
one frezenfoot, and' could never , again
be enticed to go near the
.mountain.
The, ascent attempted: by ISeargant,
'flatland, the distinguished author of
" lon,"-narrowly. escaped-a fatal result.
He was accompanied by a, son . of only
.sixteen years, anti when halfway up.
the boy became completely ,exhanited
by the fatigue ' , lying asif dead, scarce
ly- breathing, and it was with great Air
ficulty, that..the:terrified father could-re
store,,L him .agatti to consciousness.--
Atwater Of these expeditions restated
hi the feet of a guide beiriat ecr freien .
as 'to require amputation, thoiigh-' tit%
was attributed to -his .carelessuesso6.
-wearing only ordinary shoes and, ,
high. Such are Acme of the. benetits,of
ascending Mont. Blanc. My 'guide.
(Michael*Cachat) 'who had been twice
- to the .summit. l had much ;god 'sense
-on. his side, wheri7-he 'said, ."For us
guides it is well enongli.to go up t , for
we want the meneyi but for gentle
- man to risk their lives and half die froth
Tatigue, - and 'see tiothing but fog it the
-60; and go up only to 'say .that %they
have - been "at.the top pf Mont Blanc, it
is a great piece Olabsuruityf—c' eel une
crrand belie. ... -
------•'
A
• 1 ' A . Nits- Mit-Kissed; `. •
. .
Ad.'amvs~ng incident
oceurred with a
friend nf'ours the:Other - day. •'
expecting, his, mother iu.. the evening
train from Baltimore,
r and_like a good
son repaired to the . depot to Meet 'her.
- It'waS a darh day,' and by the time the
'caraarrived there Was no such thing as
:distingnOing the , facei of the passer",
,gets... , Is he entered • pm ; of the cars, a
fatly seated, in a corner addressed hint
.as
. ...father"the voice Mo
ther's aricl„Alie title one...,Whieh she . al
ways-' gave ''hiM while-4t his house
.altiong,his children—so, without,hesi
lation, he . threwhis arma . round the la ;
neck and kissed her, jtist then. a.
gentleman puShedhirti'gentlYaside. and
rioner the same Ceretriony. Thig
. was very strange, he .`thought, a , man
mother! " Hardly had the
thought , passed his mind, - .when.;his
veritable pother, catne, m •forwaril . and
hissed: Very trinefremberraiied.
he turned ' to the gentlenian..
have made an .=egregious bltinder; but
.w hose .oardon.ehail I aslt, yours or the
lady's.?."..The.meek:reply
:had' : better . ofi the :lady's - pardon,.ifieugh don't` knOve' which Ina 'the
best of the- har g aid,''-theertir-in ir (laugh=
ter. r. ? •:
LEAPS DIE.--TIliS, it. semis is
'the rnost.curions of all arts.' ROW. shall
it b lertic4l l I" answer by
there is:the :writole.secres, and
a Wes - 6d' secret it is. - DYingis a:step
.To,bs prepared forit by,
a. good lif ` c :.wilts givp.P.n..t.,49ileo - der
degree far hidlier - thap
- men briini eli Ii civer'aitalrtl
rtii this detrt:ee, ttio sea re
ticbccome , a ,eavolitlate,- and .furnishett
every facility: fOr
j)!te;3
birVibe iik top dittd 41111bvpieleair , eber0 - :
titandlthe!tabovto*,do dole ithont;: irpera.
, , ,
1 . 0613g,3vjth otAer.)4§p,rq„all
a boold 13e done before ibe Opritzg °peps.
,
M;:11=MM=111
. ..
zr - 27.3.7.- - rx ril
ii.,,,1 ,
t p..R : JI:11 . •?-.,.'f I. A r .
1.1 'N- .o.i. " - - r-1 i' , "4 -
t . 7 ,4
IP:di j,i,, , Z , ..7 A
MEM