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'.• .;'", . 7 '-•- • . .. •r- 1 • ! . -..1, . , _i„... , ,, .....- ~.., -, '.. z .;4 : . ~4 1.. • •tif 4 4,lt;' , •i; . r.r._l?` <',.:;Z:/i ;1 - — - •.. - - ' - .' :'.', • iJ , . . • • ... , ::, , ::ig-2 ", 1:.1 . ; .k.. _ Yo,L . P:ik-';,*: - : - ...N,Jj.l!Pgit,':, - :_4:!,.. 'Tetfo Catwt.'? Liive Me—love my' "Pilgrim M . eGince . Greenwood" Penis Sftiisli J. Clarlre ' ) ,re- cently 'of has coiniameed publishing jatenila pape! the tilde She:eithortiall Ver.frietis and, neighbors to Show theirLovi fi3i the young strap g er taking liiiwinto.their house*lds." - p. S; to her ".editortal friends:! she :thinks they will best prove their constancy .4,popyfeksi the fol.: . . ,lowing Graceful plea, which we most cheerfully do. PlitYrustes of my: childiti days,, When life mid before our gaze Likes 4ovelytealin'of mkt; ' .When, with all its' castles arty, . Bright the great world o'er us shale, Like gardens of otcl Babylon— , Doi you stilt Cetnetnber I _ • In life's whirl, can you forget • Scenes and joys that haunt me yet 1 Spring-day ramblei after,flow.ers. Strolls through Putanuir's moorilit bowers, Antutnbleasts and beivist mirth; Latighter 'round the winter hearth— , . Ah, do you still remember I , : All our school-girl joys and sorrows; `All our algebraic horrors ; - All our tirezOtue moods 'and tenses -, !- All our little.confidemies— ,Terrors of examinstiim— , . Fun and frolic of vacation - I'm sure you stil remember I• Gentle friends - Of Inter Ames, - Listener. irriy early rhymes, Syrnpaibisersun romance. - - Gay- companias in 'the .danee ;, If my Memory still.yon hold, If you lore me as,of'old— • - Then Jove my . LITTIVPILGUIX . . _ By the hopes and flowers \we ve gathered; liy the April showers' we've Weathered; By our compacts and our break-ups; By our quarrels and our tnaketups; • By 9tiri,ienrs *ben called to sever; By , our tows to love 'for ever— ": . • ' Lore ms Lamm Bu.amat 1. - .Friends c•lici by My-il . debare.stOod. - In My t.obered womanhood; you my simplelrord.• . Bath Voursonrie..deep waters stirred ; are fond and true,- I. knoai i .„. Couut!e-s times you've told me Then lice my'tritta Pttattiat I • 3.'ll . ,riObilt*: . stltitiOL. BiOgraphy of Solon Robin s on: • • OF ROT CORN.. When-an individual-haS done arty re markable deed whether on the: field. Of carnagre or in the paths Of - civil life; there 'naturally atisec in the public mind sire "tai know something of his.history.— The - question '• Who and what, is he r-ii straightway 'beard Passing from :lip to lip, • This. has been emphatically the case with the personage whose naive heads. this. article.. Who is the. author of Hot Corn 'l' a:Coninibn question until to- . cently.; and who .is 'Solon Robinson;. the author, of.' Hut . cOrti"?"' is the question since the volume containing ".Little Ka ty,' and• other Ja)es of the, poor, has been issued;• by Dewitt. - ,DaveigTrt. No. . question . has 5c era upon -so many lips . for a few weeks past; and ,none has been so earnestly put:, 1 4 We propose to answer it, and to thus -sathfy . a very. :natural. and • • • - ~ Solon Robinson' is a genuine - attkee by birth.. His native State is nnecti-. . c ii. 'cut. He was, born in Tollstul,, Milian • tic villags .. ittiated 'among, the sterile kills east. of Hartford. His age was fifty years on ,the 2lst of October of the present. year. His parents were Of the Puritan stock, and 4 poor in this: world's goods; They died_ when he wBSyoun fr. His u father's christianame, was Jacob', which wa's the of his direct. ans.eStry, back . , through many generations, but was bro ken in the naming of Solon and font oth er sons. ~ . .The &theidiecl when our atilt-- ject was young. Solon was thus left, .to ' take c‘are of himself.. Hiseducation tiiVa..g, as will be inferred; very imperfect - . - It,. -. . was; as. Fe exiwesses'it,of the commemest . sort, picked up in the etitntmonest schools;. and such as it was he secured before he -• wass 14 years of age. . For the "'est he was. ' emphhticallf4 self taught.', , , • - -, • ' In purstiits; Mr. Robinson has been Jack -at-all-trades, but far . from,' 'master of none," as his masterly production may testify: A sort of -universal Yankee ca reer lias been , his.;.'_Hd ,-Wtis for seven yearls clerk of a ". .court in -Indiana. - lie .-haibeen connected with the press, more. -pr less iutimately', for ,t wenty. years. Tor thiee or fees' of these •Ite was one of - the cditors of en agriCultural jeurbal ,in this 'city: -lie has been a Wi4ft.traveller; \ and. • bai t Written, -a great 'number (if -let` -principally to 'sgricuitural 'papers; in" which be has imparted many - Acts . _and , . opinions which &long and vOried,:experti-1 erne has enabled him to collect. ..lint Corn' was his first work excepting 'Mute pamphlets. - - ' .-.• , • The fact juststated will Anwthat Otur''. - silbject-is not ieSponsible for . the endless making of books - complained of by Solo mon. Of the cirenlaiion °film copies of his'•single book we canna's. say- as much. in flew of the facts preseutly_to be" stated. - Had the complaint of the ,wise - man been - . ,s• against_ the eirculittion, instead - of " the making of 'hooks, we ' fear. 'l"fr. Rnbinscll wfiuld come under the, ban ere.lnilff„ . ;fiw the IMesent prospect, is that ' liot Ccitikt: .will•have-been exceeded in rapidity .'of. , ._ sales by no, book:: of the century, except- . ing • i ttncle Tom's Cabin!. . : fl Mr. Robitisoe is now one of the st .4 °C \ • the. ,New ryoilt. Tribune, with.. which, he became connected in June.'lBs3: • lig - - the.agrieilltural editor,-Icir which post his', extensive. end special 'experience had ad-' Minthly'-,fitted- himi • His. sketches - of "-Little Keiji. the lint ,Coin - Girl, , 'So.,. . were incidentally prepa red'for the oilier and we have; good reason for inferring tioif, 4lso far from,any design of;colleActing, - theta, in -a volutneoor Orem' 'multiplying . them to any greit . extent,- was Abe anw • ' thor's pnrpose, no one was moresurprie. ed than himself - at - the iiernense , *sate: MBE Men they 1. tied, t o - ve v a belie& nt art attracting sy ‘ pat Ity,' niary aid for he ente Five Point's outls" The - life o' frif". of incidentr Durin g ea Aeveier:re ' Over, in one df vvhi h hear , j ityBis of thei.lower ,1 upon crutch nearly tore years , h has bee. space ; of Ile a. Viand limes. tie ad the', I Orleans; and he small Inlboth cases his We remarkable ,- evotion proved the - best of fra served him ftta geol . it It was sick l ess' prul at the 'age 0 1 thirt .- 1 I,- .-G age , . y. -ailveret s, and a look of age .be 041.- his yea he being .now 0 I fifty: a wehave seen, nd possessed of g?otilit share of vigor of body as well Intel' ctl. His- attack Of small pox,was veryse we, which het k RS he suppo ~.froni !tt .Ista:which:some one exchanged with iv m in' a barbershop. His face, though Writ badly, scarred, 'lost much 'of its natural c t . by: that ,terrible disease. . - - I ~ - • ,I, . .• 1 .1 In person,.. Mr. A nion, Is tell, , his height being six feet:i e, is stoop-shoul dered, and rather•aWkward in, his gait.=-• He has 'light skin, blue eyes,'white hair, and afiowing white beat sl;Which he wears Under the i chili about three' inches long. He generally. dresses in . black.-and'very i plainly,-almost shabbily. and: w lksi with a long, clumsy stride, and ;alwa a with a stout • cane, al which. decs; to 'A ag hint down.., i. . . ,i 7 f• .' . Mr. Robinson has heil n h gre 1.-travel-. cr. as we have *eats: 1.14 i luta hee ;through about all the States, oisseriitig , en anti :things. and retaining vii'vidittsprrsions of . whit be has' Sera, so :a to be able - to de scribe places The() on yonce. as lon . nsr thirty, yeah; ago. Onel Of his. 'jour eys was in a carriage' froiniChitagn to i ew Orleans4nd from - thede to New Y rk, making in aWabont fi4Oliousand tn ten. He-drove one i pair of lhories the w ole, dist ance,.and travelled i t4lene. . This tour teas ut i idertaken for, the; purpose of:studY log the `agriculture of the . southAvestere, States.' Many of his letters. descriptiVe of the Country, have been 'dished amid' read 'with interest ; and tt me of his sketches of character and hie' dentsnof the route are very , amusing. g,,sy.eral of his letters, such as "The Virst - ls.ight on the. Prairies."... First trip tO Mili,"- " A Man Perishing in a ,Prairie SislW Storm" i '..' The First Bear Killed," a' d his " Bon, der Tales of the Weif." ci criptive 'of . the sett,klment •Of the first ;' mil). in 'the ! I northwestern county , ! 'r in anit, - fifteen mil4si frOm' 'neighbors - and forty', miles from'mill, among,the nits's ; attomie In dia s i hare been read b tho - nds of de.; lig tectreaders.. i . e has long been a of etaperance , and an fn L - svio lift Op the, fall and we are , asaurbd thi ,in writing 'Hat *Corn,' men,ied these stories . tl making a hOoli Was s much less oftrialiing (si t others in the vastness Of the mand for theirst ettiti We are informed by - Rot Corn that' the fo were ieedy,when:they were all taken the 6 •-• thousand of the first ed tlse first - *pelt, leaving oid thonsand copies' - unsuPplied arriving by mail and . ieleer that they found six ste#rn pr , plate to meet the dem,nd. • therefore ordered a dupliCate entype plates: and engqeed it two of tile largeit printing bi city. V i ire .;Hot . Of. the develnpenients of - .;•-• - ther/, are signe. curious Mei of the most 'remarkable - may - le read., on page 231. of 3: minister who . • i.ited a eery . lain hence to look after-the 4 elinquotlcy of ime of his flock. and • fell i, to a snare. But the most carious inciden(is of an in 7 dividual who-.;returned io "the publishers seine of . the, volumes ' of ' Hot Corte he had purchased for sale "on account as' he alleged, of their 'immoral t end ency. - Yet this.paitern Of morality keeps the French. works of Pant de Kock:, But the secret of his -remarkable .stretch of squeamish ness; is the most funny ,pa.rt.of the matter; for it turns t that he Was the identical individual ded tdc "on the above - cited' ,r7 i ing .- ' " " * i n page:., follewl ' . s another am usin g Anci dent •:. A - tady .p rchnlied . a violume of ' Hot Corp'. and kept it twenty-four i IMu rs, and then brohght it hack toicO eange for something else, f because. au _!she said. 'she would.*i 118 , 0 ber family re l 4 it . - ,al , i i on ,any nee/unit: . The, polite booksel er, of contra. ha e her /elect any other work. Our readers ' ould • •smile: if we - sh 1 Id : tell them t name of the. work chn.. The reader of qint Corn'. *ill laugh. .when told th t -she_ was - seen and redog niied, swam le ft the store , as One of the charshers whose pOrtrait - is drawn on j risitte'3s6.l. ..' .... d 2... . -.." ~ .-- . ~ _Such characters, as Ahem: and: of others that are . war lied ,by thitt writer,..whuse li motto ht; .0 =SAM- inuot he *eon to.-he healed. -. Wil l, f conrsodenounee.Mr: iteh. Anson's book ors sltike. -bitterness of 'tle . f l e tee -1-. ts 4 guilt : • ' 1 . a A 144rge *fey thehtaterdritio; . • T • With -k w bf tk i claw." . . 'The 'anti) r- "sfirlos . Clint ' heatie the imnoiv hes' nrießtti;T . ~and the Joiiiiiei-, !ain't of cha ateseihal-lies espO i Sed; With eilisnimityl Into ItinnoYei.Wei.lan swer. is dm cferoitie of .thei.'tostn., To one who said,'' Itoir'Aninvit 10 41;ifigi0 31 - you are able to describes she sfant4eti i ttes. - of certain,charasttitit mild houseigo . tri4t 11 , fully?' he replied :4 i have! :- stn heCthem faithfully'. • - .1 ti,.-,.. 1 1... :--:: :,..;:. ,_. When asked, 6 hew does is lie 'pei i i iel yen kito w they ere . truthfellY'. eieribict: !' • , OF. 4 _ .. 1' ,sarnot of Ole icy tb lerovea;" in ib l y,AKeuring , 04u- F rose of Sr.fieaiie's 1 . Industry - ~ 1 11 Pg9n bels*li u ll bikyouth be se er au ar.ks of sick n6S, 2 affected ,wtilt Oar : . inilis. 104 walked tw'l:Yea:rs. . I.n ina -2 milli!) a narrim Laud:water sey4 i a l cholera near .evi 0 pox in th 4. eil)r rPras saved by o ratangerife nai.,aid thitt; , utP o se• , , .ably that gayei 116-.1 'td Jr .it advocate thropic ef .is motive: aim corn iectation of • nterta fined; -wi.ceeds all resent de- aril phita • n of wAs \irk iblishera of said , which tho sale. - and fifteen re - exhanst- - •ra timer and others ph 'sit- fast •.-ges inade hey have set of der o presses of uses_in "the this: book, ent.s. One . cot :SOTIRC IONTROSE THURSDAY: - - 26 - '1854' .1 • • '- • - • -- - . •-•• '• did not ~reply, 4,1 have visiled.thern.' others Pioagla : so. ,That is is good o upon Britain's-Coat -of &mast', and licable to 4 got Corte : and its author : ea soit.gue astaty pease:, .-1 , . he work ; nf.. beneAcettge„mitichiMr. It Wilson has ,incidentally done - through th sketchei.gathered-into _his book, !has he il one-of the most extensive and grat— ify jig: Of theday. • Thousands of i, &dui' were sent in to Mr...Pease, during- their appearance in,the Ttilnine, for; the Sup port of the Rouse of Industry at the Ptve Points,. and ten thousand dollars :have. been pledged. fur the parches!: of a farm . tofecilitate Mr. Pease's mission of mercy. and hive., :The, children of the establish- ment, 'young as many , Of them arikseem , to appreCiate the blessi which he -hes showered =upon them: When he appears among them; which he dues almost deily, they .floCk. around and caress hith, amid en is i the m t joyful esultations.. . Who would .not. atie,happy. by-gratitude thus displa in remembrance of Such. benef icence, aS hhi. ' J. E. S. he Bel tem . Disiaiery of Van Dieman's Land; . 1 SENTIMENTAL GEOGRAPHY. • . i Anthony'. Van Minion, Governor of Bataviaihad a daughter, wlioao name was Maria. i ince she was not only charthing and' arc mplished, but also the child era rich pa a, who was tioveynnr of the Dutch_ ast Indies, Maria i s image ,wair' impress •on many a heart and 'she had no . lack A' suitors. There :were .great men ain ng them ; but with ' maiden like perveriai ~.Maria' twat fiveied a -poor i young !dor. who , was - ver!y_skillful in- his, business but bad do pockets, or . no 'use for any . The young sailor's name was Abel Ja sen Tasman. He was devoted to Mari , heart and sent, had exclistiged_ pledges ith her, and had brought mat . , . 1 ters to se serious a pass -that the proud fa= ther determined to put-the young ad-ven turer.- quietly - and courteously out of , sight ; the - doing so he took .to .be a bet ter and more fatherly ceurse than the in stitution an great family quarrel... That hi 4 Mari& i,hould:become Mrs,Tasman, 'he knew very , svell - was a thing not for a mo r . nent Who thought or, Whoever .won his rdatighiei must have wealth and a patent of nubility. She was no fit mate for a poor saili r.. Tasthan, however, could be ' easily diiniissed from A a ngli tilt:aft er her, . The.Bai avian triders bad at that time a - vague.nt tion• that there u;as'avast eon tinent—a& unknown Austral land gene , 4 where near -the. Seuth Pole ; *and Vrin Diemen determined to,sencl :Tasman opt to see alma it. if he never came beak it. Would Pet' matter ; but at any ' rate, be would be certainly along time gone..Vsn- Dieman therefore fitted out another elt pedition, and gave to young Tasrnal die Command-of it. ... .-r , Off the young feltow set in the year 1642: and like-an enamored swain as he was, the first new ground he discnvere_d —a considerable stretch' of land. no v .. forming • a very . well - known English colt ny—he named after his ilear• love, V. n Diement., n s Laud; and put-Miss Van . Di;- men's Christia name b&side her micro ~ ymic, by. giving the name . of Maria to i small adjoining Island close to the south eastern extremity of the new hied.. That landVaii Diemen's Land-tire, haveOf late began very generally to esti lim'its_ discoverer;, TaSmania. ' - '' - Continuilig his journey sonthwaid, the young sailor anchored his shipi on 'te .14th of .December ,' in a sheltered ba y which he calkl.lllcicidenare's (Murderer's) Bay, because t e natives there attacked. his ship, and k i lled three of his'men.-, Et i Travelling,on 'e reached afters , me days the islands rich he - called after the three kings, cause he saw them on the feast of the E iphany ; and then, coming upon• New Zealand from tlip• north,: he called. it 'in a - patriotic Way, after the States of Holland, Staten Land •, bat the extreme nertl4rn point of it, a fine hold headland jutting out-into the sea,. strong as his love, he entitled again C ape . Ma ria—for he hid gone, oat resolved, not in deed, to • carVe her name , on trunks of trees,' but to . o big mistress- the lanie • sort. ofhonor i a way that would be mait her, nobler, and more enduring. ' • 1 ' • After' . a long and' prosperous. voyage, graied by .oneler two more discoveries, Tasman came back to Batavia. He had More than, earned his wife; fiirlhe had . won for himself sudden and high renovin, court favor; riptc and fortune , . Govern or Van•Dieme got a famous son-in-law,• and there was 0t)-e rd se to the rest of the career 'of the dual comfOrtafile married . couple, Abel land- Maria., Tasman did not undertake: anothor journey to New Zealand ' ..". it- liemained unvisited until 1796, wh en- - it livas ie-discnvered by Cap tain Cook. whit') very quickly recognized itns a portion f the land that had been fits} seen bY.,thti love-torn sailur.- '• •; .• ' , mi...t.....:-........—__:. ',-•, ' .., WISDOM Baas.-The-ot her I. ,' th .day. Dr; S.'s three mall' children, ' while play- . .ing in tho nu 'll, decided to have a rail road mariiiiii i' So fhey. sli -mounted np into the Crib, ' d. commenced rocking full speed. Afro ii while it was proposed to have an accitibt, thinking, I suppose, it would beniifaibionable to travel far with out one. -- Bo i.hey all took hold' and tip-. ,pod the crib aar: by main - force , and ht tielo ' MarY-b her arm shortofT/ ' — Mies IL re to see heriand wan pity: iiii.bei very 1,116 with her helplest and bandiged,al ) when Mary said - : . -- , Welt it I ver gee wett 111 mitt - the' company f9r. three ree thousand dollatz‘daT l ages! 1.-, tliitt ihat . rlll'" be enough, for father says lit P in't a n y . great a ff air, ift - cr The-same little young one (seven "years old). once sfttab?f : frier . little Orother l ,lpe, whti.is. a grottotettSii. 4114113e.ivi . ii)ied her heavenly;, #1 . 4 - e either IMO, ntadelor or her 'brut be . lee'—it_didn't aialtis ;any . rthirctienee siltieh.--Pryiti**loicriutt - - - -.' nit. ' .7400tt 'Tirti_ _ :::talliitipa litit*lla '. my amiein pubui and: aysti britie . in private . . - . 1 il . • - . -. • # I !I4WWYLAIIINESS 'OF THE PEOPLE THE - TRUE END The - Baby's•Cusplaist. 1 ._ Ncok,l suppose you think because you . l never see ide do_ !anything i but teed!and .sleep that 1 have a - very diCil time:of rit. : Let me :tell you that you ire, mistaken and .that' I'' tormented half -to - death, though i it _say anything , abont, -it!. w, Ho should._ n 'like ._. every morning td i t have your : , washed up : instead of down? How 'should you., like. to have. a pin put, through ,yous areas „into your skin,ead , haveto bear!it all dayentil your . clothes Were- taken off . 'at night f'. ' , How l should ypalike to be -held panear the fi re that your eyes were half schrcheil out of ;your head; ,while the nurse was reading al _nevelt ':How should you like „to have a great fly light on your ecise. and not know! \ how - totake!ains at him with your 'little fat.. useless fingero - 1 - Howl should you like to be left _alone in the room_ to take a nap,. and have a. great pussy jump into! your cradle, and sit staring!. at you veldt her great green eyes till you were all bt a tremble 1 How.. should you like to reach Out goer hands for _the,' pretty bright candle and' find 0ut...! that it wad ' away across - the room -instead of close - by .1 How should you like tot. tire youri self . out crawling away across the earp l et, . to pick up :a, pretty ,bittfon or piti and have it snatched away as -soon as ' y o u began to enjoy it I—l tell. you.what it ii 'enough to ruin- any habil!! temper. How should you like to have year main t ma stay at a party till you were as huni gry as a little cub, and lie left to -the meri cy of a nurse, who ;rotted you up and_ down till every Imo in Your body ached; How should you' like; when mamma dres! sed you up all. pretty to take the Mee r ! fresh ,air, to spend b the afle on with you r nurse in some smoky kitc ten, while she gessiped. with - one of he ironies'? li.ow should you like to submit to •hare your toes tickled by all the little child:, . red' who insisted "upon' seeing babY'S feet 1' How Would you like !to' have, s' dreadful pain . under your spree, and have everybody call you ' a little cross thing,' . when" you couldn't speak to tell What Wai the matter with'iou 1 How should yO4' like to crawl to the top of the 'stairs ' (just to look about . a little,) and pitch beelS over head tra ihe top' to', the bottom 1 ,- in .0h; r can tell you it is ili) Joke to be a baby ! such a thioking ai we' keep up !;• and.if We try to - find out anything, we are 'sure to get our braitisikdocked- out the-atteinpt. It is very trying to a ieril! sible baby who is-in a . huiTy to know - qv!! erything, and can w 't wait to giew Up.-4 - Fealty F ern: - - - i 1 I ~. I ' • Sicily.l 1 . This coi ' mtry one -oft he most fertile and lovely ' on the face of the glCbe,•iii _groaning Snder.theoppresise talc: f t:if the Neapolitan. .The situation of -the — Seilk flans, sad as it was before' the sere ution of 1 . 848, has been'.made "bv misg vern 4 meats 'till more insupportafge since lhaF revoliation was suppressed.' The f 'llow r ing from a . fro a work entitled, ' Na _pies and Sicily in 1550,' gives a' gloomy picture orthe condition of the iilanl: • Forciterly the most _fruitful country in. Europe, and the granary of Italy, it: now does not i produce corn enough for itiowe consumption. but has to import it 11'1'4' 'Calabria: Over a great part of the coun r try- thesis's no other Means of comMuni4• cation than by mules and bridle! paths ; districts in which larga t eities flouruthed• are now a silent and desolate wilderness , : roads, which 'formerly existed have been interrupted—in' some places by accidents.! such as the carrying away of a bridge by e ' a flood ; and no ofßial person has been! _found to , take on himself so much of pnbh lie duty as to see z to. its repair. thought the inhabitanti suffering 'greatly fronithei loss, would gladly pay fur the restoration As long as there remains a-ledge a foot broad 'along which! a mule can scrambie.! the means of communication are thought! 'enough. . Between!Sc.iacci and Girgenti. a great , part Of -the' way lies through mei! raises sandydunes ' bogs and-rivers Which travellers must . furd. r Searcely any of the streams Turnish . .a reeler and moderate supply' of water, their beds being as usual in wild count! _tries, sometimes dry. and 'sometimes fill' ed with rushing torrent's ' which aweepi everything before them'. . Vi hole districti I 'are . becoming sterile, frnm'the gradual! " disappearance of the trees, which •the ig-11 norance of the peeple induces them td consider unwholesome, and, productive of . l fever.-, This increasing scarcity of wood 1 is also highly injurious to the .sulphur 1 works 'which have' often to obtain their! supplies from, Calabria; OP *wood has to t he carried on the backs of asses to its phalli t of destination. . . ! - - - r - ---A It is- scarcely necessary to _say , ' that . the few vb-called !cheek, are throughout Naples :and Sicily - in . the most miserable eonditiOn.f In one which M. Helferich accidentally came upon, the gentleman' who officiated as schoolmaster was at the, same tiine,!carrying on his probably , more profitable trade of a cobbler, sitting_ at. his door with "the Toot to be repaired , in handl,: while. his aeliPlara, a row ! . of little boys of from six toeight years old. sver;_ ranged against a . wall: on. the .Opposit , side of thee narrow lane: Inoue article; however, io the government _i's extremely liberal: to. Ote..Sicilitins; Immediately aft ter•the revolution, Blears° of Ito less than. fresh: priests was . dispatched, t ti. t he island, many of „them aiming _the "-milt Stupidly ignorant' s'atuktleprased.Of thet cline. . - '!". ' - - , - -' - ' - ! In the : Magni fi cent harbor. of SyracUse _where thousands evessels, bribe largest alio, could 'find- safe and. ant choreic, tiler,. 'were . - `lying , scarcely "a - dozen little ificiffs;. ttaatown Was sivarrn. ing with soldiers, - and , the;-seamen ;were ..begging in 'the siranita i - In Messirui,thii streets-,burnt down in'->lB4B.remain in, precisely tame: state ;',. end no-: hand 65 been stirred . o - ,.., restore the, villaigas *that,wern 1 iiiid iik:isheit *calabliiir , tieeeral,Strongli ,liiinself.. stated , inl the attabei of Peers, that !its pondition_ wee (in 1849) entirely:that of it country re lapsing TheraMrti longer rispected the rights -:priirierty.; the land .could hardly .- ivited ; fur the 'banditti ; Whoever tioaseased any cap.: tat Wits' driven away;: and, if- be refused to comply With tbe tnanda, he was sure to see,aoi~a after, bite house and Win btillaings.in-flaties: Volcanoes, theirCiases.- - The general theory embraced by some leading men of- ! - scienee,-, in reference to the cause of'skilcanoei, ie that they are tti&sttioki iripes:of the great fire in the interior of this earth.,' They believe that we are living on the•itap of a huge white hot ; cauldron, and that volt:names ift differ ent parts of the morld -are merely. vents of this eternal fire. , ~ •• views, . - • The,follewia ow - are of Prof silliman, of Y ! le College, on, the subject, l g emliineedin a ecture recently delivered Yei in _New _rk. ity : , I ..; -.!. The internal heat of the y - earth ; is proved by direct el:ow-brier,. A 'gent leman is still alivin g in Paris,: who first, called the attentionof geologists and plril .. ~ was` one ~ osophers to this subject. e was one oi .. those sciernific nine who. a,ccOrntinnied !Xapoleou s to.. Egypt, • whets be went on that great expeditipu—for Nripoleon took with him not only the weapons eiwar, but!he took a much more import ~ i co hort—that is , men of Science, end.imand literature, able to explore and examine all the antiquities of that most important and venerable country. , .;! , ! - ! - ! '4. great, literary work resulted from , this ' expedition, which ' proved to the' world that the interior of the earthly* in a heated state, bringing.together let s . already known, in. - regard_ to mines nd springs. This general principle annopit ce d,• has been followed up repeatedly 11-4 very deep borings, called_ artesian wil , l e s. The. very - deep well_ in Paris blab ii worked upon__ for _Seems yeag4f-- ..4 h .. ..t. tut . reaChimg water ; when Aragei came r ward and gave the goverument_essurance that if they would .continue their wor k , and go through the beds of . 'Chalk, they windd, • in all :probability, find. water. They- continued their work till tbey got doWn -through the chalk, when the water rose up in 'a great volume!of twelve iCet.' This water still flows there; to doribt lesS will continue to flow to the en 4 of fline. - This water was found to be very hot; Many oilier artesianwells .ri 'have. beeirmade all • over Europe,' for vaous purposes, and the uniform result has been that we find the earth increasing ill( beat thelower'ive . go down:- ' .•' _ , , 2, Add ta thia the testimony ofthose Who work in very deep - mines, and' We aseer , tainthe fact, that. the rate of heat, hi , . crear about one degree for - e very fifty feet of descent, so that if we were to go - dov,io. two . miles, we should find bailing ' Water L ; and at - ten miles we might sea snnably expect' to arrive at ignited rock's. is all. then, beneath us on fire 1 I r am not prepared_to say, With some, that this is the case, although there is strong evi- 1 derice to justify such a theory. Witness the' geysers , of Iceland—where hot-Wat ors! are gushing up,frorn the-earth-age af ter 1 a ge, •and century aiter.century.r The . result of all observations on springs, goes to Shaw, that they are , thermal—that, is, 'of 'a !higher: temperature : , The Axoreti in-went !a very important: tact in exam ple_i___ : . I ' - The hot -springs of. Lucca; . in-the AT,• pentne MOuntains, are larger ipoutin g . springs, t.tf a high teinperature; copy-, ous, that' they may be:relied upon far hot baths , all the year r..und: 'Another elute is hot spritigi of Bath in ,England. Theie are the more remarkable as there are no vidCanoes in' the Britiih- Islands: We, knew that . from the timehof the Romans the r ae.Vraters - have never, ceased to gush up in vast abundance: ' - ! The hot ,springs of. the Rocky Mann taitls-ara- very important., - and the great Spit bake iii Virginia is Wary bat. Taking the artesian. well's and the therm al, we have from these intirces, the best evidence of the heated! temaperatUro of the!internal portion of the earth, and this is placed .beyend all. question, .by -the igrtmt vidcatteeti in the world, And - here' we have dedisive eviden4e that the heat Which will mek the solid rock is not con nected :with!::, any 'external cause ,for among the cold, icy mountains, there are, voltanoesi. bursting up to the height of 12,000 feet.- j _ I In Spain and South America we find great volcanoes bursting out. ill! fact. ti, .the world is 'on.fire. - It as alWays been on fire.' It was - kindled at. heltime )of its creation, and has been but ing et since: !' , • - ' -Dr. Antiseli of this city, recehtl deliv ered a lecture; n which -Ithe sant views ;lire developed.; tlie substance of it we !will present next week tj ashe e braces ihedictatorittl theory,• he certai y mili tates against! tlie - nebular. theor Both agree - as to, the ',internal' heat. - : : -that 'we'live on the top or a. furnace .-rAScieis,. !tine Amesieetre.j. F , . 1 Rsv. 71". h ve heard many good things that amen• Led- .fro !the keen . witl,of this reverend entl enitti4 but the last one thievv us dow, A . man recently pusing unt, was Accompanied; by a small dog;; and the lit 41e canine scoundrel took a:sudden Talley . ',to stick, his . teetb.in the old geritTemAtri legs! :This ; physical manifestation : :. not ' Iprovinesitiiractory..,to - the.; lerical :.vie I ,ttei, he determined to victimize the'dok lin Urn,' drawing: Upon gni the big en 41 — of hii cane; Soon added_ atintbei sub- - jeCt to di'i-teitubs: T4eikbegOn the dramatic m4140144:1 Stringer, ; Wfifdid. You kOl - -my dull 1" Hunt.: ' ! • Because-he was gelagto'btte ~.T B tranger..l Why .'flidpit....ll,4 use the 'small: end: Of yijur, Cut* stick eit4la hsve frightened *lima net kiif i ed Hint (exeitid.) E :**btarai4 y o ur dog come et me r - .1 IrgRNMENT 9 : 1...,;i-!::`:..i-';:.•'..1-.9,-;..f.,..f,t,;..,:,i , r.;, - i f'r ~~'b.'r ~~^. itiohi•ken spiugaiiim -14 f . - t . :4 ~ - BY AUCX FAltilt. , 2 iun y i , Taw .. pram - i' ' -'" 1 . I 'lytn nipeek -• . Rimed our father's Mee, : . ~1, 0, . 1 Laughing eyes and roaT.ek.eek.• ,-,. . '44. i " • :LWhere' thOnaid - to tei t :. --- '''“ l ,-. : 4- 1 1 ..... -lure s "th v bi t ono so w id e ; .-, -,.. ',..:-.....:: ..: -f-11g.i '' Three are. wanderers, three have di.ct :,.: 0 1, f ' Golden haired, and . "'dairy'eyed, ... t I - tltrittlhigiiill "the vikr:;.:,. il '.' . . - ',l-: , . - ;." - ' 1.' ' ( - - - Nral the lathifina that dieii, - - Oh I Itiaias - hard to loy —. • ' : Dimpled hand and cheek of snow i nn, . ' Th. ,- tk. 4 l re: 1 9 dark and, low. ~• .- . ' &ailing ch.* all that: sm il ed, '", MAI. sorrow &railed, - : '-' - . ...1iit1f a..,yt " half Lehild, ' ~,...;. IrtLX the next one called.: '.- - "Thaio.,a;joiia theta "deeiand liri4, i Made".th . !Ii: the bataidec. - 'When Or here the Other fl!/4: -. • Onli. Feb can tell ;, ,, Treading anhoOd's path `4: pride Vie h '''''whinhe fell: '',' , Haply thittles, blue. and,red,. .. Mown: abort his lonely led.. :I us fOr fiti: - living, ihiee- .Ottly!leftio y; -Two are iin th stormy sea,. , ~:.. • rothotottil than they,? ..- .: Wander/I one, is .you n g hear t ; dun, - OfteneAltaost I Pray for hito., .;,. -/ ' : • .. ,• . - - ri ' *itahtaller t do or dor% : . L..... c ra --, Wltirehme they roam, .• ;Have, them, Father, ni thy care,. • Giddithem safety helmet - '-• ' Iforne, -- ohl - Faiher, in the'sl9 , ;• - - Wheie tame wander, rind none_die. _-- ~ . , . I -. ‘. , . . . :i.. . E- I I The - Vreat American Desert. :1- 1 There is `a great desert : in the hate tor ' ~ of NOrthAmeriCa. It is altimst,aal 7 . 0 as the famous Saharah'of 'Africa:, ' i tii, fifteen hundred Mika Jsznig,tud a thou and i;vide. ' - .gem if it were i a regular abarle-- •;:-. that Is to say, 'a parallelogram—you could at ,otiOe compute its erea, by Ina ! , .. 6g, its length npon:its'breadth;''atia' 'yeti' would: obtain one milliOn and a ' half 6L, l equeve mites for, the result.„ But itsr. - 'en Mlles : are ea yet' very imperfectlY known - ,1• lend ',although, it iakfully.fifteen,hundred, Imiree 'Ong, and in - Bailie/places' at , housand , sin breadth, its :serface extent is ; net - over one million- ' of square Miles or' Wenty- - 1 i five;times the size of Englan a l l . ...faney a' desert twe n ty-five - times, ' - big ..es - all England!, _Du , your not think, that it has received a:most - appropriate name,, when' . it is celled the Great AmerfaaeDesert - 1-, . 'blew, my young fri, ad; what: do you underatind ,by . a dese ? I think I can -guels. ~.Nirken you re” ! d Cr heari.of a dei ert,- you think of a vas level, plain,. Cover;- - ed with sand, Ind wit Out - trees, or ; grass; or any kind Or. veget don. Tow think, also, of this .sand bei . g blewn about in thick clo4da and no i' , ter ft; be - seen in any directiOn: : ' This s your, idea of a , ' ' - ' 1 % 11 'f. - '' talto= ,`' desert, is ,it not - e , i ISLI3O getkier the correct pri:: ;it is - true: that" in almost ' every (lege there are these: " , sandy plains, yet ther rare ether - parts er_!l a far different charac er. equally deseii. - .`i inghe name, of deserr ' 4.lthouzli the le-__l teller of the great S ',arab has not' yet- - been . fully explored , e . ough t known ie of it,tn prove that it ,con . ids i4te tractiaf mountains and ,billy .. untry., withreeks. ,and valleys, lakes, rtv'-rsi sea . springs;4; Timing ape else fertile spots, at wide.dis 7 tau4es froni each of i itt-, covered With treels and shrubs arid b autiful vegetation. Smite of theie s p ots • - inaall - 111'1eoil)." ers are of large extee and inhabited* by independent tribes, an even Whole:king-, doms of . people.-- A. - ride traced . 4l/ii, land is 'ailed an oasis .. - ' ,' - Or a similar chase ter ist the Great flricii nn"Desert ; be.its surface in still a varied with',wh , t::may he,..1 . !.0 1 4.1: g r P hic 4 l f eau q es, Th.l.'e , nr.e.; Pli!ini,.! . e ofthem 'mare th a a-hundred Miles wi e, Where 'you - cad .see nothing7 , hut, .ivb tetsando ft en. drifting about on - -the wt d, ,and here and here throwes:lnto lon ridges SUChII3 th . , ,made : by!), snow 'StO in. There ' are o' her plaina . equally, c i e lar ,-wherp no sand ppears, but, brown bare earth, k utterly d • titute rof vegeta tion. iThereare othe . again, - on. which ; grows e stunted. Are. with , leaves or .u . pa a silyery, co4or. -, a some . pladee lit ; grows so #dcitly,intc; cleking.iteisted, and kotted bran - cheat ~ n t.- a horseman can 'hardly ride through t ~ em. This shruh in. the artenusia—a spec' ,of wild saga_ or. mirtnwoot —and the . lains ,upon, which . • it rows, re=called b ,the - huntera ivv.4o, cross , them: the sage prairies., : Other. plops are met with th • t present a black . ;. aspect to he traveler. These areceret ed . :with late, that at . me-distant -period of time beOeen vomit - . forth by volcia. : is mountains, and limn; lies frozen up, and . broken idle: small f gamuts, like . the: mania up n'a new ' . ,e. road . -1 Stilt - cith-- er plains, resent the .IVeein the Amer ; iota Des, . i Some a, - white , /Wit ".9, 4 ,' bad fallen freshly u ,n then, -rand ';ye .'it: i t . . ' Yeei'imkre *b4 . is lot o no „but salt., , pure ,:; whits' _, ; Salt—cove ring, the gro , nd :six ificymideep for fifty milesvin eve 5 direction .: Qtbii" era, ; again hive a -ai liar, appearance 4 .,: but instead of salt : ou; find the stil*ane+, which cnvilra them go , ~. sods. _ , ,' , -. : _l. •.Thete ire ,mountai n ~tOp—indeed, one hair of -.O.gem* .ia v, 4 mountainous-j. and, tbe at chain 0 the; AuChY gaunt, tains of iwhich youlis, e rinaont*heardi, 'runaShee through it r ogooorthltesoutii t - Pu L l 4 1 9 re . are other: euncains, 4hortt ul unfains sof ; every ' hefeit4 . a u aoreetim iiu;their 5 0 apo-ana color. - :' sent very ; triking and,, singular aptsea ni, Ces.l - . 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Pad - . :-. , , I:tztie, At,-- yicksburgcrecnn _.;` 4-4•"1.1. callt4'hiMeOr Winikit;- '' erSeingtiTie • the usaidTeati of, slight, ; hand4 . ictlms , hur .- card , loading 'a ., , • tol ItrAtti*l's: ashes, ii id firing it into :nininnt,_ ~,,v.. the identi,cdl card` %yes ' P ntiT,i tiiki4figgnt" egg fr°" `ti , eID x P. 4- . ."!....... polinniqwP :It ki n d,t-g f ..., ii nr , C,C9flt-i l n% • 7 1 ,1:theesiiin4i ixiitleiti,T - itnt's,:.atch,f 4. GO; 8, thousand Plecge , -, 121 '11. 9 1.04111, -f -itie fragments, and. after`,certainAnttfP. words, restoring .thecr - te'llteir---P 1,. just'as he bad received theta, yrith.„yitne, -!iiiii`Other,'-exhibitloas=ef al : lke-411 ' a " 41°14 - expos' Iheitbsurdity 'of the old,adat ing - . ._ ,,, . e ,,,' ~. r , . t Ithat ii,rieeink is4;elievi ugo i -'= in w-TTrti-..,4 pectators tbai he watabOut te__P- , , to thewonclerful eitiniininnt'°f tq l ttt i 'aeritleman to load and fire 4 0 4 ° i,-,, ~ - a ' Wallin his hand.: `-.41.0 the would catch the- ~ ,„,. , -_.,,,-.1 'that announce 'ent a ii.ebOnti' sol tti,lS asnli,-. li n the crowd llel'ent Le , tel,#)) l i; - ; ' i --,. ' .--• , ' - .” his-tnird • t -, - - -f.- - „ , t . r rik e tool", aim,' Said 'die ilimglPnnt* ( 'or I may miss the ball.- ~.. - --I, Tliepistol wgifi:red;iiti4ll,,ii:Vaa"*V-1',21 a Liok of.ttiilmpli, hell u P l46 i ° a , ri - I -7 41° the billet. ' -Tke. applause hat'-',guuu7l had-' ; hardly sibside ,i' When twii4tistfo i :were: fired In a - niament[he was' seet,_!. . • /., e a ch , t y.,. i ----- = playing with a bal in s ina ,.., , .I' 2 4 * *J , bt Ma e 1 I YOU:fi11151/14 not fir!' v! ° 9.,,,,, ~. [ sa id h‘;'' , you might - lasi+ iPeu nr- , ; '..r - .N' wasmyskirtsthat saved' el °- " • ..,._ ~.,. ~ ~,_: , : , ...t Scarcely were thecg)vp ~firn‘imlicen,__ when a voice in - the firnb,,t, a l. l a c'' l t '-,: . You devil! be.on ynitr 1 4 141 .. % ' Wy inansair a pist_olieliel l!t:ll....____./..'1)!4,t , no time ter' exc Mati . „, .--.a.-•,„ ',iiPorrfollovied.'accomPiint 0 7, 11 -‘ ~.„ ~,, that ;' told the hall - had entered ` t , t t i!p 4 ' h" head. . -- , I , -•;, near Is = ! thiseiii-410' , .. For God's sake, gent e ~ .en-P.,, „,,,, ~ ..- k e t. -- -', , ,,, ~ . Here is another- 7, 1 ~ 1 ":, , ..„14.. ter luclein catching thi ti ti! A,,' - report - and - a cras h fo lowca,..aal!?,T. fore: The magician, co u ld ,stin4,:,,-, liinger, but, ''uttering 'as s mnt.4,!!"rur ludicrously,fverr. ~-ma d- e , l tf i , i ll', t t Ta. 043 -_.-11, 1 ' [door, amidthe ist!or!ta an. lauga l .l?7,.f , iciiiipaiii , . .': Thii:atidietiCe'untitiid.,,, , ,, mime, but Ai ilisizkaid d id 1.1441Pe-:. i Tile Confusion increisedij,!#ll:tir.,_,_l!;4,,, , delmorisheil, lights - eXtagitts ,Iele; . 1 , __,..,,, t ,, 'shrieked. are:, b ut W Y m i t n,"l: , #4 l . , -, , ' '- ' H had made 1i1a:03444e alli4lllll, nomn,g; stiamer Gen e ra l, Pike ,„ ..-.. „ itsg' ”' g r in' tcv:e•- , ..eik a Inilietitar nt never a ~, I i •••• .... iit .::,s v. hand OD the ' - t i lAil } Psio) Li. lowingis sc. . . `hiitg4r - ContlePticAk:';`f 1 , - 1 - ~. z ~,-., :.p. , ..,: 'it, I_, - .' . :: i.' Boonlift s - . i4hi 3 , settle. iiient:`4.r - Olettoivii, -of 'klityir Have - severed tierscinairiee s ,ix - 40' to ivhat:ii 'no r-theiltivin 'nf'.l l relfe*W . vvliere , gnding - t -Soil V were; Ary,stiona" ereideskreini" to . - ; ect 5.1t-eettlooW.4. 1 But the sett:lament. . . in'Ahe .. ": '..... - . . ' 10(ii3Seelsi° of the /Oak ' - -:11 14. itOnie,":.,', 2: Bc'Vltious , eei'ufaestitroliEr 'S fot:fie": - :' , ;-, et of deposing antl , exOalh,'; thain.. - ..:T 4 i . test the ease; le chiral rode!' ' ',twilit:Vl; ) ea, and the iOatet+ . wnedeieimi.^:.liyiiiiV ewe vote of I that- iret 1,04; t•- . o*- -- ,-. °everalBoeales hie d: ij t ii. iOde l l, . `,. '' '' 1.; - i 7 ,43 turn -At, the cubjecti , they' -, -,_. - ~. . '-.t#F:- `i -Pass vo_tes• . 'The 'AT, Nies' ' 'l4* 'i: i i : - , ..Veted, , that the`ea hiia , e leraTe l ., I . ke tallness tiireof." ' Thii' - 4 ' iii r tairt;: 1 ( ; 1, aihrliative, Ind itV ' ea;:that i , 4 ik - , s i t h:..l given -to 'the iainte? ~ his was, tais,, Oar. : E :.s mtned liii&thetbnn ' " :'-' 4 Tbfe* ' litoi ly,„'Vcifed, that . we are t ' iititifli t 'r , 'Vtas I Pasie - a - vith o 9 a:, inn - 416aisietitt . Thetiffewais:intiaidettabiaiiriitt(abligo4 the - Indiani *: , - ve 4 i4 l46l :iiiill44 - 4 twee - Mite th - - -klintit i dif tiii i .. ~. ‘... , , • ''' , , , :. r , t i.-, -, `kb.tictii'EL 440 , 1 ~_ rokit _ . , has recently k 1. 1 ,49 4 . 1 1 I k / A I Atikil IP . , r Talte, i i, „ nu , -- --- 7 -.74 le gi tho - Soixt; - ' hr,.i , uAttorneliknd,COntitie lorsi- it,faiwkaiio AllYl • aikte: i ...I : 1 . ,z . hpillaivjnis-Xrckii•leng*llt ' ~---- unixfaist•pplilegesi,orth,voiltieviibiitg-,. 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