THE STAR Q£L THE NORTH. K. W. Wearer, Proprietor.] VOLUME 9. THE STM OF THE NORTH I n niumn AVEER WIMIMUT aomie IT . W. WMTtR, OFVlCK— Upstairs, in Ike new brick build ing, on the south side of Main Street, third square helots Market. T ER H BTwo Dalian par annom, if! paid within aix months from iba lima of snb-1 seribins ; two dollars and fifty cents if not paid within the year. No subscription re- 1 reived for a less period than eta months; no | discootinoanee permitted ontilall arrearages are paid, unless at tbe option of the editor. 1 ADTESTISCHEBTS not exceeding one square will be inserted three times for One Dollar, 1 and tweulT-five cents for each additional in- ! eettioa. A liberal discount will be made to ' those who advertise by the year. ' ' ——————— TOE WOkLD WITHIN. Many tell na of the beauties Of the world wherein we dwell; Of the forest, rock and fountain, Of the crysiai light and dell, Of the eoward ties that chain u* With a bolv binding spell; Of the gentle word Of kindness, That invite us—that is well. Still there's a world of beauty Lies hidden from the view— The sacred world within as, With its varied shape and hue. Who can read the happy spirit! Who can paint the pleasing scene ? Are not thoughts that thus inherit than gems may aeem I Have noniupes more verdant foliage Than the palm or forest tree? Do not thoughts mors gently ripple Than a peaceful moon-lit sea ? Though the storms of sdvsrse fortune On tbe ontwsrd world mar frown, Still the inward world may glisten With a radianee all its own. The rock majestic towering, Tbe cavetn-bonnded shore, Afay be matched in mind's imagining Till time shall be no more; The ocean's vast expansion, With its fathomless abyss, And tress ores deeply bidden, Are small compared this. insatiate longing \m endless motions rife, KnoOT no ending or a limit Through tbe active path of life ; Even then its powers expanding When Shis world no more it seen, Proves the beautiful enduring Of the world that dwells within. From Macaalay's History of England. Titus Dates and Know-Nothiagtsai la 1879 la L'nglaad. One Titus Oatss, a clergyman of the Church of England, haj, by his disorderly life and listamfsa disni is, Inm w kits Um •en sure jf his spiritual superiors, bad been com pelled to qoit bis benefice, and bad ever since led a vagrant life. He had once pro- , fsteed himself a Roman Catholic, and had passed some time on the Continent in Eng lish colleges of the order of Jesos. In those seminaries be bad heard much wild talk about the best mean* of bringing England back to tbe'true Church. From hints thus famished he constructed a hideous romance, j resembling rather the dresm of a sick man than any transaction which ever took place in tbe real world. Tbe pope, be said, hid intrusted the government of England to the Jesuits. Tbe Jesuits bsd, by commissions under the great seal of their society, appoint- : ad Catholic clergymen, noblemen, and gen- j lleman to all the highest offices in Church j and Slate. Tbe papista had burned down : London once. Tbey bad tried to bum it • down again. Tbey were at that moment planning a scheme for setting fire to all the shipping in the Thames. They were to rise , at the signal and massacre aft their Proles-: tant neighbors. A French army was at the , same time to land in Ireland. All tbe lead ing statesmen and divines of Eogland were to be murdered. Three or foor scheme* had been formed for aasassiaating tbe king. He was to be stabbed. He was to be poisoned iu bis medicine. He was to be abot with silver bullets. The public mind was to sore and excitable that these lies readily found crvdit with tbe vulgar; and two events which speedily took place led even some reflecting men to suspect that the tale, though evidently distorted and exaggerated, might have some foundation. Edward Coleman, a very busy and not very honest Roman Catholic intriguer, bad been the Deison* uwi s***ah was made for bis papers. .It was fonod that he had jost destroyed the greater part of them; bnt a few which bad escaped con tained some pass ages which, to minds strongly prepossessed, might seem to confirm the evidence of Oates. Those passages in deed, when eaedidly construed, appear to express little more than tbe hopes which the posture of affairs, the predilection* of Charles, lb* Mill stronger predilections of James, and tbe rslaiions existiog between the French and Eogliab conns, might naturally excite in the mind of a Roman Catholic strongly attached te the interests of bis Church. Bat the country was not then inclined to construe lbs letters of papists candidly; and it was utged, with some show of reason, that if pa per* which had been passed over a* unim portant were filled with matter so suspicious, some great mystery of iniquity mutt have been contained in those documents which bad been carefully committed to tbe flame*. A lew days later it was known that Sir Edmoudsbury Godfrey, an eminent jastice Of the peace, who bad taken the depositions of Oates against Coleman, bsd disappeared. Search wee made, mud Godfrey's eorpao was found in a field near London. It was clear that be bad died by violence. It was equally dear that be bad not been set a poo by rob ber*. His fata it ts this day s Secret. Some think-that he perished by bis own baud; some, that be was stain by a privets enemy. . The meet improbable (apposition is, that he BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTYetfA., WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 18, 1857. | was murdered by the party hostHo to the J court, in order to give color to the story of I the plot. The -most probable supposition : seems, on the whole, to be that tome hoi headed Roman Catholic, driven to phrensy I by the lies of Oates and by the iusolis of the , multitude, and not nicely distinguishing bo -1 tween the perjured securer and the innocent I magistrate, bad taken revenge of' which the ! history of persecuted sects furnishes but too j many examples. If this were ao, the assas ; sin must have afterwards bitterly execrated i his own wickedness and folly. The capital ; and the whole nation went mad with hatred and fear. The penal laws, which had began to lose something ot their edge, were shar pened anew. Everywhere junices were bn sied in searching hooses and seizing paperß. All the jails were filled with papists. Lon don bad tbn aspect of a city in a slate of ■isga. The train-bands were tinder arms all night Preparations were made for barrica ding the great tboroaghfaree. Patrols march ed up and down the streets. Cannon were i planted round Whitehall. No citizen thought ] himself safe unless he carried nndrr his coat i a small flail loaded with lead to brain the | popish assassins. The corpse of the mur dered magistrate waa exhibited during seve ral days to the gaze of great multitudes, ar.d was then committed to the grave with strange | and terrible ceremonies, which indicated ! rather fear and the thirst of vengeance than ! sorrow or religious hopes. The hooset in sisted that a guard should be placed in the vaults over which they sat, in order to se cure them against a second gunpowder plot. All their proceedings were of a piece with this demand. Ever since the reign of Eliza beth the Oath of Supremacy had been el ected from members of the Home of C om* tnons. Some Roman Catholics, however, had contrived so to interpret that oath that they could take it withoot scrapie. A more stringent test was now added, and the Ro [ man Catholic lords were for the first time ! time excloded from their seals in Parliament. The Dnke of York was driven from the Privy Council. Strong resolutions were adopted against the Qoeen. The Commons threw one of the secretaries of state into prison for having countersigned commissions directed ! to gentlemen who were not good Protestants. I They impeached the lord treasurer of high treason ; nay, they so far forgot the doctrine which, while the memory of the civil war was still recent, they hsd loudly professed, that tbey even attempted to wrest the com mand ot the militia bat of the King's hands. ' To