u u - . I .. " COME AND TAKE ME. Duvivicu. YOLrl. CLEARFIELD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 11,1855. T0. 49. "THE OLD MOUNTAIN TREE." i- ' BT JAXE9 G. CLARK- Oh, the home we loved by the bounding deep Where the hills in glory stood; , ..And the moas-grogu graves where oar fathers sleep, -! Neath the boughs of the waving wood; : . We remember yet, with fond regret ." The rock and the flowery lea, j Where we once naed to play through the long, --.j. lng day, In the shade of the old mohntain tree ! We are pilgrims now in a stranger land, . Aad the joys of youth are past; . ivand friends are gone, hat the old trees stand, ; Ltaaanned by the warring blast; H. the larks may sig in the lands of eprinjr V-. he swans on the eilvery sea, Butwemoat'Tf0rth,8haJ,5wheroti hltd made - "n t Her nest in the old monn. ' a'8'. Oh the time went by like a tale that's toid, , In the land of song and mirth. And many a form, in the ehnrehyard cold, Finds rest from the enres of earth ; And many a day we will wander away, O'er the waves of the Western sea. And the heart will pine and vainly pray For a grave by the eld mountain tree '. iisttllmnm. ,. STKEET ROMANCES. A great writ.er has said that you cannot walk the; streets without encountering a romance, and the remark has more truth in it than is generally believed- The saddest and gayest ' volumes, tho most dramatic histories, the most extravagant vaudevilles, the most singu lar tales, pass by you every day under silk and broadcloth ; but, the volume is closed, the his tory is mute, yet its presence may be recog nized; there may be only a rough sketch, but the sketch is visible. Shall we take one amid a thousand ? Fol low us into the labyrinth of streets, and we have only to choose. Do you know the Lady of the Hat ? She has never been produced upon the stage, but she drives every day in the Camps Elysees, or the Bois de Boulogne. The frequenters of these places have remarked her for a long time. She is always 'alone, half-reclining in her car riage, with a little dog lying upon the chush ions opposite to her. No one accosts her, and she recognizes no one. Her application is derived from the hats which she wears, and which she changes every day. She has seven, one for each day of the week, and the color of one day never encroach- I eB upon that of the next. Monday is devoted to white, Tuesday to blue, Wednesday to straw color, Thursday to pink, Friday to brown, Saturday to grey, Sunday to green. What does this regularity amid variety mean ? Why all these hats, and what mystery Is concealed under their tints? I the lady a Parisian or provincial, or a foreigner ? 'Is she J a widow or wife? Does she desire an' "ex change of souls," as the romances say, and does she seek in the Camps Elysees the blue bird of her dreams ; or, like the Calypso of the fables, is she consoling herself for the dis appearance of her illusions. Seven illusions; it is quite enough. S5SIJ II chance had led you to the line Pigale, at the corner of the Z de la Rugere, a week or two since, you might have seen a coupe with two horses, standing every day at the angle of the sidewalk. The coachman was on his seat, reins in hand, a footman walked back and forth by its side. This empty coupe serv ed as a clock to all the street. At the first sound of its wheels the neighbor's said, " It is ten o'clock ; there is the coupe.'.' But if is arrived at a fixed moment, it was by no means so regular in its departure. Some times it remained but a few moments, at oth crs it might be seen in tho same place at three or four in the afternoon. If any idler asked the coachman what he was doing there, he re plied invariably : " I do not know." Tho departure of the coupe always coin cided with the passing of a nursery-maid, who trotted along the house in a white apron and a little bonnet, with the most innocent air in the world. She held in her hand a book or a work-basket, and sometimes, but rarely a flower. If the little nursery-maid, who never srlbke either to coachman or footman, came by the Rut Pigale, the coupe drove away by the Rue M la Bruyere ; If, on the contrary, she came by the Rue de la Bruyere, the coupe departed by the Rue Pigale Eight days since, the coupe did not make its appearance at its accustomed corner, nor has the little nursery-maid since been seen. The neighbors remembered only, that the last time she appeared, she had neither book, nor work-basket, nor flower in her hand. The romance has broken off at its first vol ume. A. little mystery, three or four years old, bad for its theater the Rue des Trois-Freres. This street was bordered on the right bv the wall of a large garden, which communicated with the street by a small door, with a poor fastening, and which appeared very old. It was of the same color as the wall, end would not be readily noticed. No one had ever seen it open during the day, but often at night, betweeutwo and three in lb morning, it opened suddenly, a bright lieht was thrown across the 6treet, and a man leaped from the garden upon th sidewalk The gate was instantly closed, the light extin guished, and the man disappeared? He was always alone, and enveloped in a cloak. lie appeared tall and thin, but it was impossible to distinguish his features. It was remarked that the door never opened until a small light like a star appeared at the upper window of a house opposite the garden. It Ehone only for a moment, but during this moment, the door always opened, and the man of the cloak appeared. As soon as the feet of the unknown touched the pavement, two shad ows detached themselves from the extremities of the street ; one from the direction of the Itue St. Lazare, the other from that of the Rue de la Fictorie, and accompanied him in his rapid walk. One might have imagined them two sbtrri of ancient Venice, follpwing a mem ber of the Council of Ten. A neighbor, one night, took a fancy topene- i trite tL-'3 mJsteT. He watched for the man of the cioak, nl followed him, regulating his own step by step. But as he turned the cor ner of the street, ont of the shadows turned and barred his passage. lie attempted to pass him, but was repulsed, and a war of woih en sued. While they were quarrelling the second shadow came up and interposed, saying : " 1 beg your pardon, sir. I know this man ; he is my comrade, but he is intoxicated. Fay no attention to him, but pass on. He is very strong, and at such times very violent. If I do not succeed in restraining him, he might injure you. In the meanwhile, the man of the cloak had disappeared. - z About a month since, a horseman arrived every day at the Bois de Boulogne about noon, and galloped around it twice or three times ; he then darted down a narrow lane, stopped near a thicket, fastened his horse to a tree, and sat down upon the grass. He next drew a knife from his pocket, and, like a shepherd upon the banks of the Ligon, he began tracing figures and letters upon the silvery bark of the birches. Nothing could divert him from this occupation. As soon as the work was completed, he detached tho bark from the tree. I said that nothing could distract him ; the gallop of a negro, however, had the power of drawing him from his reverie. As soon as he made his appearance, the man with the pen- knife leaped upon his black horse, and do- parted in pursuit of him. The two horsemen left the Bois dc Boulogne, and soon arrived before a small house, situa- ted on the road to Neully, and entered the garden, at a single bound, leaping the hedge which surrounded it, after which they could no longer be seen. A looker on, one day, after the passage of the negro, collected tho remnants of bark left under the birches by tho dreamer. One of them had tho letter C, upon it, the other the figure 1G. Was it an initial and a date ? i Z At the extremity of the Faubourg iu Boule a Spaniaid resided last year who had the su perb, haughty mien of a descendant of the Cid. He was still young, had no acquaintan n and nonmifcd a handsome houss wiln a court and garden. This Spaniard, who only wanted a rapier and a pourpoint of velvet to represent an hi dalgo of the time of Philip 2d, remained often a week without leavinc his house. When he went out, it was on horseback, and always alone. He was never seen to smile Twice every year, since he hai inhabited the mansion, on tho 17th of Decembor, and the loth of March, the windows were brilliant ly illuminated, the doors thrown open, vases and baskets of flowers filled the apartmants, and long files of carriages entered the court yard; but if any curious person had looked into the court, he would have seen that no one alighted from these carriages. They stopped a moment at the door, then drove away, and others followed them. An inquisitive stranger one night glided into the door, ascended rapidly the broad staircase, and, concealing himself behind some hangings at the entrance of an apartment bril liantly illuminated, gazed around him. He saw the Spaniard standing at the extemi- ty of this empty room, by the' side of a full length portrait of a lady, which wa3 placed in the arm-chair. The picture was singularly beautiful Whenever a carriage stopped, a servant in livery announced with a loud voice the name of some imaginary personage. The Spaniard ad vanced to meet his invisible guest, saluted him, and, making a gesture as if to take him by the hand, conducted him before the por trait. The orchestra mean while was playing waltzes and polkas An hour after midnight, the Spaniard , en- tercd a neighboring apartment in which a splendid supper was prepared ; he sat down at the table, and a servant placed the portrait opposite him. He took a glass, tilled it, ana turning to his immaginary guests said Gen tlemen we will drink to the' health oi iiaaame the Marchioness."' Beneath the portrait a date was written, the t .... 15th of March; above it, another, the 17th of December. 1 The concealed looker-on afterwards learned from a servant, that the Spaniard was married on the 15th of March to one cf his cousins, whose birth-day was the 17th of December. She died three years after her marriage. Duriug the life-time of his wife, he used to give two balls in memory of these two anni versaries, and since her death he had celebra ted them in this strange fashion. As soon as the day dawned, after these imaginary festivi ties, he entered his own apartment, preceded by the portrait of his wife, shut himself up, and received no one. The, orchestra departed, the candles were extinguishedj the flowers re moved, and the deserted mansion became som bre and silent as a tomb- This would do for the commencement of a first volume or the termination of a second. From tho Cincinnati Columbian. GEOLOGICAL DISCOVERIES. A gentleman who recently arrived in this I city from Tciiango county, Pennsylvania, had in his possession, and has had on exhibition for several days past, some very curious petri fied human bodies, which were found by him in the bed of a stream which is one of the principal branches of the Allegheny river. These remains are supposed to be those of a man and woman, who, by the wonderful pet rifactive powers of nature, have been turned into solid stone, which, on being struck, gives out a clear ring, and is very hard. As petri factions, thcs stones are objects of great in terest ; but as much of the appearance of hu manity has been lost by the attrition from the running water of tho stream, in which they had probably lai.n for ages, they might, after attracting .brief attention, have been classed with ordinary petrifactions nd been forgotten, had not their close examination Ly one of our savans led to the discovery that they are irre fragible proofs of the existence of man upon this revolving globe long before the period ; when corals, crinoidea and tribolites, first made their appearance. Heretofore no fossils have been found in primitive rocks, and hence geologists have in ferred that for vast periods in the world's his tory, nothing but plants and the lower types of animal life, were in existence, and that for ages the earth was inhabited by saurians and other creatures now found only as fossils. The petrifactions to which we refer above, and which overturn this theory, may have bjeu carried a considerable distance by the stream ; but we do not need to know the locali ty in whieh they were originally placed. They show by their constituent character that they belong to the very earliest period of the world's history. The remains supposed to be a female are evidently of the sandstone strata, and have nothing peculiar about them except their inde-finiteness and wanting feet. The petrifaction supposed to be that of a man is the great curiosity. Its feet are now wanting, its body and legs are composed of sandstone, and its head of quartz and gneiss. From this single fact science has evolved coil elusions which overturn the speculative hy pothesis of Agassiz, Lyell, Dana, and the whole host of modern geologists. It is well known that quartz and gneiss are primitive rocks, which underlie the sandstone rocks. It is assumed that when first found the feet were on this male petrifaction, but as they seemed slaty, and of a coal-like texture, they were binned by the women, who prefer utility to scientific discovery. If this was so, then probably the body was originally so buried that the feet extended upwards into the carboniferous strata, and were petrified into coal. As the feet are now gone, it is, perhaps, improper to speculate upon their character, but luckily science has this wonderful body and head. The body be ing a sandstone proves that the petrifaction must have been done in the sandstone strata, and the head being of gneis3 and quartz, proves that it must have been petrified into gneiss and quartz in the gneiss formation. We may bo asked how this could happen, and the answer is obvious. It is certain that the man when alive must have inhabited the sandstone for a period, and if, as we think is evident, he was buried head downwards, and at just such a depth that his head came in the gneiss and his body in the sandstone formation, then it is easy to con elude that his body petrified into sandstone, and his head into quartz and gneiss. Upon no other hypothesis can the quartz and gneiss head of this petrifaction be accounted for. It is hardly likely that the man was buried in the sandstone strata, where all but the head petrified, and that then, by some convulsion of nature, he was jammed into the lower primi tive rocks, where he lay for ages, until by some other convulsion of nature, he was thrown out into the stream, where found. Whichever of these theories is adopted, the old theory about man not being found in the primitive rocks, is completely overturned, and geologists will have to acknowledge that there " are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in their philosophy." u7""A midshipman asked a priest to tell the difference between a priest and a jackass. The priest gave it up. "One wears a cross on his back and the other on his breast;" said the midshipman. Now," said the priest, "tell me fh HiflWrnf p. between a midshinman and a jackass." Tho midshipman gave it up, and asked what it was. The priest said he aia not know of any. THE LITTLE PEDDLER. BT MRS. C. n. GILDEK3LEEVE. Ono rainy afternoon in the early part of Au tumn, I heard a low knock at my back door, and upon opening it I found a peddler. Xow peddlers are a great Vexation to me, they leave the gates open, they never have anything I want, and I don't like the faces that belong to most of them, especially those of the strong men who go about with little package of course goods, and I always close the door up on them, saying to myself lazy. This was a little boy, and ho was pale and wet, and looked so cold that I forgot he was a peddler, and asked him to come In by the fire. I thought he appeared as though he ex pected I M as going to buy something, for he commenced opening his tin box, but I had no such intention. Jle looked up in my face very "arnestly and sadly, when I told him to warm himself by the fire, and did not wish to pur chase anything. He rose slowly from his seat, and there was something in his air which re proached me, and I detained him to inquire why he was out in the rain. He replied: "I am out every day, and can't stay in for a little rain; besides, most peddlers stay at home then, and I can sell more on rainy days." "How much do you earn in a day?" "Sometimes two shillings, and sometimes one, and once in a while I get nothing all day, and then, ma'am, I am very tired." Here he gave a quick, dry cough, which startled me. "How long have you had that cough? "I don't know ma'am." "Does it hurt you?" "Yes ma'am." "Where does your mother live ? "In heaven, ma'am," said he, unmoved. "Have you a father ?" ''Yes, ma'am, he is with mother," he re plied in the same tone. "Have you any brothers or sisters?" "I have a little sister, but she went to moth er about a month ago." What ailed her?" "She wanted to see mother, and so do I, and I guess that's why I cough so." "Where do you live ?" "With Mrs. Brown on X. Street." "Does she give you rnedicinefor your cough?" "Not Doctor's medicine, she is too poor; but she makes something forme to take." "Will ou take something, if I give it to you?" lNo rna'am, I thank you; mother tookuued- icine, and it didn't help her, though she wan ted to stay, and you see I want to go; it wouldn't stop my cough. Good day, ma'am." "Wait a minute," I said, "I want to see what you carry." He opened his box, Rnd for once I found what I wanted. Indeed, I didn't think it would have mattered what he had. I should have wanted it, for the little peddler had changed in my eyes he had a father and mother in heaven, and so had I. How strange that peddlers had never seemed like people human, soul-filled beings, before. How thank ful he was, and how his great sunken blue eyes looked into mine; when I paid him. "You don't ask me to take a cent less," said he, after hesitating a minute;" "I think you must be rich." "Oh, no," I replied. "I am very far from that; and these things are Worth more to me now than I gave for them. Will you come again ?" "Yes, rna'am, if I don't go to mother soon." "Are you hungry ?" "No, ma'am, I am never hungry now, I sometimes think mother feeds me when I sleep, though I don't remember it when I am awake. I only know I don't wish to eat now, since my sister died." "Did you feel very sad then?" "I felt very big in my throat, and thought I was choked, but I didn't cry a bit, though I felt very lonely at night for a while; but I am glad she's up there now." "Who told you you were going to die ?" "Nobodv, but I know I am. Perhaps I'll go before Christmas." I could not endure that, and tried to make him stay, but he would run and tell Mrs. Brown what good luck he had met with, ne bade me good-day again cheerfully, and went out into the cold rain, while I could only say, "God be with you, my child I" He never came again, though I looked for him everyday. At length, about JSew lear s, I went to the place he called home. Mrs. Brown was there, but the little pilgrim! his weary feet were at rest, and never more would his gentle knock be heard at the door of those, who, like myself, forgot that necessity and stern want often sent about these wanderers from house to house, and that their employ ment might be far more unseemly to them than annoying to us. I have learned a lesson, and I never see a peddler bending with his load, but my heart softens to them, and I won der if they too do not wish to lay aside their burden and 'be at rest. A Clergyman, catechising the youths of his church, put the first question from the catechism to a girl: What is your consola tion in life and death?" The poor girl smiled but did not answer. The priest insisted. "Well then," said she, "since I must tell, it is the young printer on Third street' WASHINGTON'3 SIYLS OF LIVING. Washington, by his marriage, had added abovo $ 100,000 to his already considerable : fortune, and was enabled to live la ample and J dignified style. His intiniacv with the Fair- ! faxes, and his Intercourse with brother officers j . . . i oi raus, iiau pernps, aa laeir inuntnce tn . y0 II tra.o out their nitines in the oil Kirk ri hle mode of living. He had his chariot and j 0 mo,irn not for them; their grijf is o'er; four, with black postilions in livery, for the ! O, weep not fr them; they weop no mora; use of Mrs. Washington and her lady vieiter.. ' ?r.de,s v."4 As for himself, he always appeared on horse back. His stable was well filled, and admira bly regulated. Ilii stud was thorough bred and in excellent order. His household books contain registers of the names, ages and marks of his favorite horses such as djax, flfaexki. Valiant, Magnolia, (an Arab) 5"C Alao his dogs, chiefly fox-hounds Vulcan, Singer, Ringuood, Sweellips, Forrester, Music, Rock wood, Trm clove, 4c? He was an early risen, often before daybreak in the winter, when the nights were long. On such occasions he lit his own fire, and wrote or read by candle-light. U breakfasted at seven In summer, at eight in winter. Two small cups of tea and three r four cakes of Indian meal (called hoe-cakes,) formed hi frugal repast. Immediately after breakfast, be mounted his horse and visited those parts of the estate where any work was going on, seeing to everything with his own eyes, and often aiding with bis own hands. Dinner. was served at 2 o'clce-k. lie ate heartily, but was no epicure, ror critical about his food. His beverage was small beor or el der, and two glasses of old Maderia. He took tea, of which he was very foud, early In tho evening, and retired for the night about 9 o'clock. If confined to the house by bad weather, he took that occasion to arrange his papers, post up his accounts, or write letters passing part of the time in reading, and occasionally rea ding aloud to the family. Ho treated his negroes with kindness, at tended to their comforts, was particularly carcful of them in Bickness, but never tolerated idleness, end exacted a faithful performance of allotted tasks. Washington delighted in tho chase. In tho hnuting season, when he rode out early in the morning to visit distant parts of his estate, where work was going on, he often took some of the dogs with him for the chance of starting a fox, which he often did, though ho was not always successful in killing them. He was a bold rider and an admirable horseman, though he never claimed the merit of being an ac complished fox-hunter. Irring's Life of Wash- 'nston. The Origin of the White, Eed and Black Kan. From Washington Irving's new work,4' Wool- fret Koost," we take the following pleasant legend : When the Great Spirit had made the three , , i . . , j ..v i men, he eauea mem logemer aim buuncu them three boxes. The first was filled with books and maps and papers. The second with bows and arrows, knives and tomahawks. The third with gpades, axes, hoes and hammers. 'These, my sons," said he, "are the means by which you are to live; choose among them according to your fancy. The white man, being the favorite, had the first choice. He passed by the box of, work ing tools without notice; but when he came to the weapons for war-hunting, he stopped and looked hard at them. The red man trem bled, for he had set his heart upon that box. The white man, however, after looking hard upon it for a moment, passed on, and chose the box of booKs and papers. The red man's turn came next, and you may be sure he seized with joy upon the bows and arrows, and toma hawks. As to the black man, he had no choice left but to put up with the tools. From this it is clear that the Grat Spirit intended the white man should learn to read and write; to understand all about the moon and stars, and to make everything, even rum and whiskey. That the red man should be a first rate hunter, and a mighty warrior, but he was not to learn anything from books, as the Great Spirit had not given him any; nor was he to make rum or whiskey, lest he should kill himself with drinking. As to the black man, as he had nothing but working tools, it was clear he was to work for the white and red men, which he has continued to do. As Evidence of III Breeding. There is , , i i no greater Dreecu vi guuu mauueu vi uiuu, no better evidence of ill-breeding than that of interrupting anotho: iu conversation while ! speaking or commencing a remark before an other has fully closed. No well-bred person ever does it, or continues a conversation long with any person that does. The latter often finds an interesting conversation abruptly wai ved, closed or declined, by the former, with out even suspecting the cause. It is a criteri on which never fails to show the breeding of the individual. A well-bred person will not interrupt one who is in all respects greatly his inferior. If you wish to judge the good breeding of a person with whom you are but slightly acquainted, mark such persons strictly in this respect, and you will assuredly not be deceived. However intelligent, fluent, easy, or even graceful, a person may appear, for a short time, you will find him or her soon prove uninteresting, isipid, and coarse. n .! ( .-.t! jl i .Nv . THE OLD KIUK YARD. O, come, come with m to the old Kirk Yard, I well know the path through the oft green sward; Friends elnmber there we were wont to roara ' J'-"" " "J : I kiiow 'tis in vain, when friends depart, Tobredthc kind words to a broken heart: I know that tho joy of life seems marred. When we follow them home to the old Kirk Yard. Btit were I at rert beneath yon tree. Why shonld'st thou weep, dear love for me? I'm wey worn and sad, ah ! why then retard. The roe! that I euk in the old Kirk Yard? Hehgioa aal Holiness net Dig'.mct Things. It has been a mighty mischief, that religion has so often been divorced from the other modes aud ways of men. Men have looked at it, as something distinct and peculiar, having Its own sphere and its own powers, and not as the father of goodness and truth. The man of God has been separated from the man of sci ence, tho man of literature, the man of poli tics, the man of business. The world has helped the separation, and so has the chcrch. An ignorant piety, a strong and shrewd im piety, have done the same work. The general exercises of the intellect; the common chari ties of the heart, the familiar proceeding of the life, Lave been too frequently regarded as provinces Into which religion has no right to penetrate, or should only come when invited, and be thankful to be treated as a guest, and expect to be honored as a sovereign. nence literature, art, social life, worldly en gagements, have been treated as things apart from godliness, and not as things which god lines is to possess, and through which it is to act and bo seen. To borrow an expressive illustration, the partnership has been dissolved between religion and other business, and thus it has come to a disastrous bankruptcy. That It is so, la apparent from the fact, that there is a general disposition to regard immoralities connected with money matters in a different light from other immoralities. The same stan dard is not applied, the same measure is not meted owt. There is more gentle treatment of the pecuniary sinner than of any other sin ner. " It is the only way of business," cov ors a multitude of sins. A man, in many cir cles, had better defraud his creditors than deny a single article of the popular creed, or violate a single conventionalism of respectablo society. Vanity in KinisierB. Vanity is bad enough in anybody. But iu young ministers it is fatal. It shows itself iu a want of deference for age, which makes them odious to their older brethren. It gives them a pompous manner which exposes them to ridicule. When an unfledged stripling rises in the pulpit, and gravely announces some new metaphysical theory which is to throw light through the whole realm of theology, we can hardly keep our countenances at his self complacent air and the presumption which would thus teach wisdom to gray hairs. In truth we have had enough of these young peacocks fluttering in our desks. It is time that the whole tribe was exterminated. Unfortunately, young ministers are less likely to be cured of this infirmity than other men. Lawyers are so knocked against each other that they soon find their level. But black coats throw around their wearer a charm ed circle. In his own parish, a young preach cr is exalted on a pedestal. " He is monarch of all he turveys." His congregation flatter him. "Ho is such a dear man" "such a sweet preacher!" All this creates an illusion about him, which he never 6ees through. Vanity covers him from head to foot. It oozes out of every pore in his body. 'Tis like the choice ointment, Down Aaron's beard did go, Down Aaron's board that downward went, Ilis garment's skirts unto." And so he goes through life, the same prim and pompous little person as when he deliver ed to an awe-struck assembly his first pulpit oration! The great evil of this inordinate self-estimation is that it prevents a real prog ress. The most hopeful state of mind is a painful sense of one's defects with an earnest desire for improvement. The Presbyterian. TJJrrUTOEED ELOQUENCE. A Catawba warrior in 1812, named Peter uarns, mane Knun m uw . I nf South Carolina in the following lan- - - - guage: "I am one of tho lingering survivors of an almost extinguished race. Our graves will soon be our only habitation. I am one of the few stocks that still remain in the field where the tempest of revolution passed.: I have fought against the British for your sake. The British have disappeared and you are free; yet from me have the British taken nothing, nor have I gained any thing by their defeat. I pursued the deer for subsistence the deer are disappearing, I must starve. God ordain ed me for the forest, and my ambition is the shade. But the strength of my arm decays and my feet fail me in the chase. The hand which fought for your liberties is now open for your relief. In my youth I bled In battle that yoa might have independence let not my heart in ray old age bleed for want of your commiseration." life hi - is Yv, f I i i I mi