The Susquehanna register. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1854, July 13, 1854, Image 1

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    liir.OLP*E.;94:U4BER, 42.5,::
eluded., completely iivetse.' t thalviaild lady'apa
tience—neVer -too steadif.yaba**"and she-]
replied •to it liv.kweritiot unto on with
her wh§n.veryanirry; by 'shying a. 'i-,ibot she
was varnishing, at, - the delinquent's , ead, ace•
compapied .. - hy a. volley pf exple -• 'es . nbt
necessary:eto repeat. Frequent i f ai, lee .4ti...
abled her grandson to easily avoid{ ; e dap,'
gerons missile; and her words wen --; .aually
.• 1 a
astray of their mark :after. a fen , -nio .. nts, as
Paul•• hastened along :tewaids the'. ~.., • dered
(famsel's•re.sidetim, auk arrived. ther - •oured
forth; 1041 ' all the en•ergy and' dh , ..• etness
swift speed sand ardent, 'affection p ' ; itted,
the hope.,tribulations ' kisfies, and I I leties.
excited.' hi his boSota . by . the - too-. -f ming -
Lucille; . ' .'• •••• ~ . .... .• i . ... • 1
' You do not know, then,'..r.ePlied tin
amused • baggage, • 5 , 04 . 'do not knot
my poea•boiteux,..that-r---- '.
- 'Boil'eu.ti,'.: - echoed ard,. springing
nantlY.froin ¶his knees! -to the full he
his best ipg--- , a* is true; atill f if o
little.lame e ---e- ; .--.• : I, .• , -- , •
`'Orie nifty be six feet up tint . sided inter
rupted I Lutille, with the, same iilelightful mock
ery
of tone - as ' before. - . • I ‘NO doubt; •.brit I
would Say; if' permitted; that: you do not
keow, it • seems; that t am betrothed to Jae
que.a.Dupre, the inaso, i Who can earn ten
frames to • five, nt ~ friend, and that . I we
your ,
intend Marryitignext Tack.' • • - .. • ! -
Patti heant II
no - tote or,•at-least, he would
not.if..he. • eould, have irelpedit ;., but-the liS
sy's merry lau•glt -by iiliieh„ .hewas purStied i
seemed sounding: in his 'ears even whilst re-'
eeunting his • diseomfiture to Madame Tin
quet. -, ...`.Censole• -your:Self Paul; • said ,the
dame, its. she handed her afflicted grandscih a
spiced' nighteafe•and ticked -him
-'— up comfort
' ably in bed' console yourself,
there. are prettier faces.. in Amiens than' ever
-beamed under the:cap Of ‘ Lueille liorlase. ;Be
sides, atsl told pin, they are dissetnblers to
their Very nails;
_you shalt .as easily, ,•find ' , ou t
their secret Meaning, a's What is hidden- under
a conjurer's palm. Giceid n E ight, moil briti3c;
you have :hada lucky escape , and it is I,- who
have. known - the BOrlitse family 'these 'fifty
years; who tell youso' - ) -
'Paid was Very much , het t,
ing :- the fires 'of loVeand. •1
sensibly during - the. night,
*as' sturdily iteirehing . alr l
strapped. to his tatick,lon th
determined 'bravely te•tace
of all. the, I,ncilles in tree
not, however. get further of
metropolis than AbbeVille,'
im
..me ,
late and eenstant woi
-able associate ;that he real
tentediy something- °Vet s i
-which time . '•he•c.kaittritted .t
b ee
hundred franethe 'st pl.
'. igrolla Btaekweoe.-. - .
.• i . '. ' e.,... , ' could -1,4 given of hi' igen.at
.'''tHE .211 /"Eq. 'WILLY.: - '.:':-.- - solltrietv. • Daring hat lei
e• ,c . s.. : .
1 . V.-elain te.:o curs - •" 1 time 4 . 4110 of rail 1 er- only Paid two or - tiitc:. , iltrier
, aoi...hitemother ditel; a'.114 .as iw1 , ,1a1.:1)n , . - -, - (1 1 Trtiquete .andall'• her . had I
had departed this . FA. 'some six etotiths.pr4vir i , Was, tlaat Site had married •
1
.ously.-llittle Paul Was left` an.orphati'•almOst indicated, et td soon ! titter
;,3..5.'.1., - Oaln as he Well could be ; and but ftlr his, :•hint for l'aris.. • 'Patel :Vet
grailarrielrequet,tuanupetAlret and. VelT3ei' i ,7, z , - . : 0311:1 ' 4., A bi n
--(A‘ -sabots in the auelent town of Antiene, m 1,,Year. , 1, when •a letter, teache
thedepartment • of the Sorrinte, France, the 1 that: his ,grandn,otheri had
little. felli - ev 'mast have- been , conveyed-, to 'th4 - 1 sui•iden, and i', was ii.eired,
eel:et iii this refireealnemer., at 4 .cOsiglied I leas vei-•y7 desirous :44••seei
moth, piaai•N dire, of the'good 'nuns alts hid : died ( , 11,..... - set.cati at' duce fi
.tothat lant i-Mal thitsiae tablisturient. 1-11iiind riVed there barely 'title:mei
Darae. Tie:eine( having wrapped':her, tiny 'Of his kind .antl Aged relatii
giesrelson evrt;fully up it(*.her lap,:carried hi • fltintly .'itnittour„, in the: /a:
; •
. •
. ..safi'4v beet' ; ;; ..%tial. - • lay dint of careful nursing,. tereu pa , her lips, an : Mime
.
' 'ells:ha-l' scoldine ;thd•sttipeSnot a few, coil; tevolutionistse and borate
es, .
trivca to I,riilg librecreditably Up to yOung reuie.'• ' •
mar. s estate. 'vith only fete mishap of :an't -- • .- The •revealUtioniets!' 'V : . Paul eorepre
. -, 1 .
~ Th is
va. - .tasequal,,e.., occurred' one (lay when heteled Ind aicesied•to tint without etfort.-e
-..,Pael tv:ii about three Years -old. ; . kedione i lt , was - the•beginning;of'th year '1792; under
••,' Trueeet lieetet stall, in the taarket-place.en Which date - is inscribed th bloodiest pages of
Siqui-da,v, f.,:ar 'the mere ready ,disposal of her•f that frightful 'history,' • , emcees, like
_otilef
. etvar e s.!!ailii wee or ,tva-olikely looking custom.., i towns.; had its Sidu'( I'itbl c and -guillotine_in
. : crs: eating, Up as she was dandling Pat t i' rd I vigorous :execution, land d tinkee snatches of
•, ferlis - uately in her 4rms; she - toOliastily.pop- I the ConaognOle• an4 , Ca learpenetrateal to the
..• ped hini'down upon a lofty and ; loose heap Of I 'sick room. and inbigled 'With the deatlesolis
4.ilbot e just dep:r„,sited. on 'the inarrow - s-tall,- I of the expiring woman. -.ut Lueille-.Ditpre..
whichoinahle to support the.: sudden ' and I . 'strideateti Ile wouidinot e 3
neeal front himself
stnigglite- Weight, . slid` over; • carrying the that• the last word 'iad , eveitiel, even at the
1
;... ehild with sie ; who fell heavily eprai the pave- solemn :moment it *tie uttered, some score of
, moat, and brokehis right leg. ,
..This unfor- i faeferish. pulse-beats • but what of that :.'s Ile
Y- turiate tumble resulted in :permanent lathe- 1. would, Upon reflection, • cool ice, 0 . 0( 111-
. ness, - .the wciiinded • limb whet' • eittedheing.i rate as granite, tol any . . dranee from that
'about•tw . 0 . . inehek. shorter- than ,Its felioiv-a 1 quarter. - - Lucille had ade a fool-of 'him
calainity 'not without its
_comp'ensating'benee once, long - ago, Ntli4n he -as poet and, Mex.- -
1 u
fit, in as much as it rendeted Paul -"Aarevet in-
,perienc'ed,. - bet now tha t - he. was rich-coin
eligible fts a candidatefor.militarylglory .7 ; in i paratively ,sti, at .cleat, (t . - 6 - thousand f row us
.• ether Words, . deprived -him aof.tbe; honer of 1 had been •aocurnulifted. b -• Madartie Trequet,
teetril;atieg, a unit tP•the • conscription lists: I not „ •to speak of - the
....bu -Mess '•and stock iii
Nothing. tither Wise 'esPeeially •noteworthy is 1 trade)•—and ' moreevet knew the World, 1. 1 -
; • reeorded ofPaurs boyhood.. HeterY i .e.tirly.i tine Dupre, rha:v ' 'if sle . entertained guy'guy',.;. inestered the art ',and! mystery o the, Sabot ' 'thought, •as his • ilecea_ el relativ&s. words
1 manufacturing,' and at his own request,: was seemed to intituatte., of looking . him for her
„apprentieed to a coiddnnier,: so that he might second husband, was • i iiscrably • mistaken
th.creafler he able to conibine the ,twin trades 'upon that point • she mi ht depend; •he was
cf'wold and leather: shoemakiitg. , Pael fin' rock-L-adamant..: I . • -'•.. • • .-.
- isle his time at twenty, and but for a mishap . Erta r ,.• Mons ieur Pau N erdot !, A 'young
,• • which betel, him at that , susceptible- age, la r l and ;pretty. ividovs,, and especial)'. _a. French
would at,once.heve set :Out with alighthea ' - -widow—aware of how, nd,where, and when
•-: like other young ; men of hie Class, for ..s; two , she . once drilled ' list hol e in, our suseepfible
or threeyears” tourthrough France, to acquire , heart. ;will, if it be worth. -her while; re-open
- - i experience in hie eraft,atid such geeeralknowle. the old . wound:in fa Way that all the defensive.
edge of the ways of the, world as •v;ould qual- : armor in the world'ean wail nothing against.
. , ify him' to Settledown qttietfy and cot - aorta: It so fell out.. Paul V . rdot was standing at
..
• blv, at Antiens,.. - witti "Truquet:and Verdot, his shop door tine afte oon,. , srrtking serene--
. I;aot,iboe,and sabotinanufactureri n over the ly, spite of the hurly-. arlyoflfieree politics..
door,; ' This• fi ret stumble, itat May be.
,raging in•all direction of which he kept him-
Called, upon the,. very
, threshold aeaf Pie, was self studiously aloof; hen, all in a moment,,
•. caused. by ' the bewililering•black:eyes of •Lu- a pair of eyes that
,had not their equals in
die BO*, a'young shoebindresi,employed Franpe, flashed upon.' im,- and a voice which
by.his Mastet, at - whose dwelling poor Paul he . 104 never pissed' o hear in [hia.dreaths,
1
-used frequently to call lot the „work "which exclaimed, in its softe r • , sweetest tones, 'Bon
"'had been ,given . out to the mischievous dam- jour i 'citOyen Verdot. Ail ! 1 See you do not
eel, and . he was only too happy when owa-1 remember eld'acqUain, nct -so Well as I do.
• siona ll y asked' to sit down and Waite_olltile . .I'm in want of e ni c e i f kgltt pair of sabots; and
till it, was ',finished. At those times, as; Patti • ethught I might as. wlll give you the prefer
.
subsequently confessed Olds indigrianttrand- enee. .-i . .. I • ... ' . .. - ,
. , . . _ ..
mother, be felt Lupille's nierryghtm*.shoot- .- Lucille P eiclairried , Paul, lettin: fall his
threegh and ttwough, his. heart an 4 ;.back pipe, and staggering. back into his sop, as if
Nail; Just aseher bright needle pierced. in arid struck by a blew. : '.A theusand - pardons!r
.. out,of the less tender biriding.she was sewing that is, •I I mean • likatue :LUFille •.•
.. Dupre
, 3il: . This revelation ; made on the- day his.'ape veuve,' he ' added,: inechanicallyiirepeeting a
prentieeship exPired,...Nrould .baidly, perhaps, 'sentence' that I had -been seldoM ( b i t, of his
then '.have buhlilefli..evcrlhis lips; but' for the , head . since - i kadaine TniqUet'sideith, some
• gfeat additional 'fervency imparted' to his. five previous ~:-• ' . ', -„::' •
-1 1 011 1 3) - tal , e. nignerons wine - cups hid been - ‘ifektill'leS Miatis, i ut:. Was the reply, ' and
• dtaining.on.taking. final leave of his eanieriefes . for nearly' tvielvem •di now' ! IA. light, vat'-.
.. .
1-nisited,intir;
.Luetli ..(1.0---a t right smile
* - ' Luc il leiiin t i me:r"4 l eia.'maed ittaibu4 e Tru- . . .chiiiiir -iw si, ..11iii. ', 4.nare,explresai — en. into
• quet, with' explosive wrath; . w h ir , P a w ; :y e w which thi e .heil . 'a a $a a mistily constrained her
must ict"'Yel°4`. your s!dises'• The Berlases; 'features; as she Sea'• herself, and.::exiended
eolTeh.
The .Peteted
je t i c A roma Coetineo.
3 4 , w. C.
•
: The freih Savannahs of the Sangamon •
Here rise in gentle swells, and the long grass
mized; With rustling hazels. Scarlet tufts.
A r e glowing in the green like flakes oftre ;• •
wanderers of the prairic know them well,,
A n d call] that brilliant flowfr the Painted Cup.
N 9 w, if thou art a poet, tell me not -
ittaf th4e bright chalices were tinted thus
To bold the dews fOr fairies when they meet '
ozm ocallight evenings in thejuizel bowers,
; And dance till they. are thirsty, 1. Call not up,
Amid this fresh and virgin solitude,.
The 6'oo fancies of an elder world,, • ,
.lint learC theSe spotted cups tolscarlet moths
°Nano,' and glistening, flies and; humming birds,
T o drink from, ! when on all thee boundless lawns
The morning sun looks hot. Or let the wind
O'erfurnkin sport their ruddy, brims, and pour
shower sadden upon the strairben'plant,
To sweggle reddening fruit that even now
,-.Breathes a slight friagrance fromthe sunny slopti..
liurthou art of a gayer fancy,i Well—
`Let then the 'gentle Mauitou- of flowers„
• Lingering amid the bloomy' waste he loves,
Though alt hislswartly worshippers are gone- 7
-Slender andysmalk his roundeeheek rilltinown ,
And ruddy with the sunshine—';let him come
On summer mornings, when th€ blossoms -wake,
And part with little hands the spiky grass ;
And touching-withhis cherry lips.the edge •
Of these bright beakers drain thetathered dew,
Farmer's Girls.
rpitiiiielearly morning, just at the peep of day . , • - • 4
s t raining the milk in the dairy, turning the cows away,
Elvecping the floor in the kitchen, cliaking the 'beds
'up stairs, .
Tfashium the breakfast 'dishes, dusting the parlor
.el '
airs • , !,. •
1 .
~ . • • -. ,
Brushing thc crumbs froin the pantry, hunting for
cggs'at'the iSarn,.
Cleamng theturnips for dinner, spinning the stocking
• ' yarn, - • , . *,
Spnxialng thOrlifenlng linen, down on the , bushes
1 below, ‘ , i
Ransacking everyl meadow, where the red strawber
• 1 6 '4
grow..) " --- V • * i. '
i g
sauctii the ' flxiks.' fof'Bunday; churning the snowy
i. theln, . .
si pre
a l, '" pails ',anti strainer down in the running
stream, 1 .... .
reedin the geese and l Tiuddes, making the pumpkin
„ Ile; ' - I •
9 3c;Ogibe little one's cradle, driiing-away.the flies;
- i
' firm , in every motion, music in ever:i'' l iOne, t.
Beatify of form and feature thousands ifligilt ebret
.td
own, -, I ' .
Cheeks that rival spring,roses, teeth the whitest of
• •
One thrs , i'coimtry maids is wertli's score of city
girls.
, '
4 'arcs qo:3keteip.
have been' children of 'the devil time out of
- mind.. !The men, seta,_ idlers, apelAthrifts
, !'the women, two-faced, _ dissemik- hussies,'
that would . deoeive Sidon himself. much moie
a poor gawby like you.'- _
• ‘Come,toome; broke in Paul, with great
heat, , inot such a gawhy -as • your Par- PuP•
pose, boasie there. ,Besides, a \ girl larkalways
a saint for having been brought up in a eon
- vent; as for - Lucille, paridau ! she is ainipli
rtity and wider itaelf. One can *wit: in le
looks. ! r Tue '
long raven sigh with which Paul`
q
•, , .i. --.—
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WILL OF. THE P
one.9f the. Prtttiest" On-Amiens. for meas
urement;;:Not- of that wagoners; size, my _
deaf Ptuil'—io far Lucille Dupre,. weave,
got alfeadytt' not • t wagoner's size! Burt
ly,". my. foot is not s P amonstrous - oner
It's my firm belie belie . that:LitoyeaNerdot did
not, at that Fee* 'moment, inow Whether
be stood , upon bis ead or 11 1 8 1 /WOl Or- the,
feet to*bicli he - .04 1 1 b - ing..asurrtVida
was six 'Or - giejentlYji
however 'I -- 01 , 0Mtii,Xki.1*;1:411 1 'aw l
bob wert fitl ,iniaP.the - reiwt:or
was, that half an horr had bareli *Add bei•
. 1 • -
,1
fore Paul had once more Offered his hand t 1
the . Lucille - who in, dais
~gone by, had 4,.
scornfully.rejected it. This occurred tin the
sittingm at the rear! Of. the shop, *he
l lg
the you witloW had allowed• Paul to Leda ;
o
het to : ke a glass of Wille and some eake...' -i
~ It's' . Very kind and .
generous of yoU,' I'6. i
plied Lucille- 7 -a real emetion *Ring her eyes .
with tears aS.she opoke 'but you were' all
*ays kjiia - and generous.; an 1"I hope 'adver-I
sity has] somewhat improved Me. -. My p.tipt!
weddedilife waSnot a happy One,: Paul; but'
with you, she added, in a" gayer tone, '.l'
think I 'ny Ventureto hope for -- -. '
ti
- - :,NVe ill skip, with. the reader'S leaVe, the!
next tw or.threethinutes, as non-essential to
the Sto v 7 -resiiming Arlie conversation!..when,
Lucille i is` readjusting her Op, whieh h d:
.been hi some Tway, slightly •disordered; a d„
Puttin• g, on' her', gloves preparatory to P' ul
escorting her honie. 'You.st i till be charmed,'
Pinil,' , the yonng widow is i: saying, .!%s she
gies a final 'finger-twist - to One, of• her dark
curls, 'and turns Smilingly: away from he
glass ;you Will - .be charmedi' with mV be u:::
-.
tifulnit I gentle Lucille.' • :. - ' ' 1
, i
!,
I 'Yen r oW,n! daughter?' exclaimed ; .Pit. l'''
: . •
greatly! surprised. , ' i . I
e L
. ~ L uei le- seetned to itesitat ~ and her' fl ei
. :
flushed . vividly4—as Paul afterwards reinem
berea-s- s but She replied;;. `Yes- 1 -7, I thought x o
might have a.cen aware of that?' . I.
` Noil,' replied Pant.. ' Ilut • what thtin
- ,
I shall llove all! that. Itelengs to ,- you.,- . den.
• cute: i . ' and -ivo shill' be Happy,
,us, three
t
make o doubt, as peoPle in a fairftale.
Pre 4:sely ~one week 'from that day- Pt
7and Lneille were married ; and a very li .
• py, pirltsperniS , Inelitay,e, that at •Nruntero
Rue des Caputhins, proved .fir' A . .conside
ble tune.. Adversity•nAn
, greatly iniiiro%
Altidarne.Verclot,' - than,:whom! a • more
'1 ' I ' ki l t
prua iit, ' notable , i ndustrio us wiee
tot
scarcely be. She was soon 'Mile tollmann
the bitsitieSs, and guide- the bouSe flinch he
to than . _ her husltand could [pretend to d
and qeryhOdy said Paul had obtained a jel
el of a partner.. Ille thought! so himself ;,t
litightest and , ma precious! in the I .
but' fin- vne,i flaw thcrfiin, which • . his e 0
gradually oVergrew :and dit,
iii
tedits radiitpei
Lucille was f ite felt,iri (Ijssel - abler, ineriti,
portalit pnricillal!--rit east: L child the who'll
:lie li i tTt. in :siteli rigorous s.cclusicnt---altitY,
appearing r4iless Lunt agitated nevelt - he
. ad
dressid a f6l' Nvt.rds to in_r! . What tot e s!
eause could,, there be !for ,that ? - His grand
mother's ufirning of the deceptive, -iftittie
,
trabl. character of the llo'rlase tinnily , cm
-1
stantiv reetUred to hi S mind spite of hit Iself.
'Thenrthe child, who 4 i tppeared to.. be a . c'iut
sii•yl: . tarS of: age, did !not - in the slightes _de=b
• gree*es.enibl e.,either of het; reputed * par nitsj .
They' had both olive 'ccnnpiexions,. and ' . ark';
hair and eves, whilst ,: the Yt;ting-Liteille WaS .
na, beautiful'
, blotide; , With fi nely chiseled', pat
ttitit . ..n featnres— t Like,' •Partil would. tonic*
times passionately intirniur; `like the hang!';.
ty inipress Of himself with which,- a ,prciud
,aristerat ' Might stamp With, shaiae 'on: !titi
'ltonett. family.'*: 'Werse 'than all, it can ete
! Paulta kuoivlirdp,o tb.'t.
,his . wife had. received
i , ,•everal letters through aprivatc channel, Vith
. yespeCt to which she would only, when , Wes' 7
litiotted, sa y they - came froM a relatiVe, o hei
Ildauglite . r' , ., rim' : did not in the slightes ide
-I,greelcone`erti anyone else' certainly not- her
1 husband,.. All ihts: bud -urrevii 7 11E -et, Ai r yii
!' Patti Verdoes habit's. lie began'to fre4aelit
`much more,, than he (night .to haVe Ilene, a
whit; sharp neetr the: 'Pont 'Neuf, kept . by, 'One
1 DenftenipS; irnd this of course led to - ireh nl
tereations with hi . ..wife.. -: One morning,lailer
',. a hite bicakfast, dnrim Which helhtid listen-.
,
cd, in mootv silence, to his Wife's reinonstran
' ecs upon his growing habits of intemperance.
he raised• his pale, almost !haggard face;, from
the hands in -which it bad been - finrfet:,And
.lookinir at her with something ofsi sad,stern
, c•
'. nesi, ..F 'aitl : 1 • . . .
,
`Lneilic,lwhen we married. !.gave yc,
erything : 11.clo not mean alone My w 4.1
' su Li:stance-4110u gh that wns consider:ll3li,
‘ has'fbeen ever since, as... you know, 1
yonr,..4Altati'mine-1 gave,;yon'all ':: my ,
my ! con fi dence, my ; every; thought was
i ,
op n and 'plain to you. '
;You cannot st
sa le, Lueille:, and you ;must know if
t
we ght of the accursed secret "..yon so j
lvguard, that is sinking 'me in . the ab
low vice. which I abhor as much 'as yon
,"CV4That accursed ! secret ? Snrel - y 77 5.•
.• "The child r ,eried Paul, starting to his
feet, and addressing his wife with"paSSienate.
and imploring . voice and gesture. 'T i en Me
in what way it is connected With . 'yo l - 7 Who
the..itivSterious, correspondent of yoursl
is . ; let :
me know! the Worst, if , worst there be. I
wi I Lear [anything for'. your sake,lieloVed
.1
L eille--even -. shame—if you: Will , be . but
frank and . eandid With your husband.', , .
: Sh.aine-l' repeated the wife,..rallying with
thee sting O f the word, 'How dare . You', ad
d e§s• suelk
-, a -Word .. to me ? I will tlll - You
,
nothing 1 . 1 ! _ . .
.. .
..! •
~,
'l' Then I am a lest man.-'.' exclaimed Paul ;..
and seizing 'his hat he rushed out ofitheheuse,
.and in a few minutes Was seated in the wine
shop. Tie Was still there when evening . fell, ,
very early- - -for the month was ,Januiry; and
the weather unusually . dark and co e d --and
had been drinking freely all day, when a.mes-,
senger. arrived from Madame Verdot, who
. 'wished to speak With him! without delay.--
Paul rose sullenly and followed ihelnessen
ger home. . The establishment , ; he found was
closed, tie work-people i
sse
dismd, .and -.his
.
wife dreOsed- as ,if going out. ~
: She was very
kale and, seemingly, excited, hitt 'her. manner
Ivas unusually kind' and caressing ,
• I. 'Paul„ , " she said, - laying her ban
arm as be fell in:ton-chair, ,' I am
-I 'tuad the child : !a faccie,-is:w*iting
the baCk gate, and I shall not. ,pro
turn in Several hours.' - The bus
)t o rcgly, and . she went on :41 ha ,
'eannette . leave to go hoineyand I .1 , 1
krill notlttlerefore go out. again. 'A
jadded the wife;kissing his fbrehead,l
haVelie s eninueli to blame i n having
Icealmeats from ',you, and .; Premise
tcismOrrtkw : you Shall knoW all : .' . ' r .
" To-iitorroWi I - shall know n 11;: - yo:
• i
Ise?! 1 • . ; :. • ; . .; ;*
• . 1" .
" 1 Ake solemnly ; and nOw-:.1 good by ' for, It.
indig
ght ' of
1 e-is a
1 .
ripe next murn
ligtior had c o -010
.ud by• noon:. 10
ug with : his kit
e roast to . PatiS o
I !the world spite
4ion. . Paul I did
t his road . to die
where: he kiund
I,k a 4;re
and Such ae
l. ' ' •
ained there con- .
1* year.:, - 7 duyinc ,
!at -e about eight
:))'...sible. ploof that
:11,*i . iteadiness i and
ag pc;riod . he I had
rvisits-tO Madan e
'heard of L n eille,.
)upre at 'the time
eft. .Amiens •With
dot then bad been
vaebillg: toseven
I. him - 1.0 - the c
effet .
'been Seized ;with
aortal ilivie4; - and :
g, him bi:111.4._) she
)1- Arnim:s i and ur
to close the eyes
e, and to hot licT
t*ords' lihit. tut
!firm tti 'avoid the
of, Lit eil4 e -Dupre,
OPLE. IS TME 'LEGITIMATE
N I T JUL 1 IBS4.IONTR() ,
while. i, ,
' - i
She wentout and presentl Paul tVerdot
heard the Istnaelt - of a whip an theisound of
wheebifrom outside the .baelt 7t yard entrance.
He sat 0 a eosiderable time in a sort•of con.,
rased, dcrzy , dream, but the fire getting low, -
he rousea himself, ral ed. the ember,together,
threw on two or three fresh -loge, eedrelsexit
irt
a ifilin*l4 his lyrireis 'prom' se; as hO, dvicribed
i it, gradually warming about : hi s 1 ' :' ‘I
I shall kflow all tomorrow ,' he audi li elem.
'll‘d; 'es as th eufords posed h is lie, his eye
felru ;. : theinucedderuig frown tea s let:
Lter rudeeed vieiblifit the tor' — °fibs,
Cifiti4y4.litee; 'by the reefeed ' " ' lights--
wicE , E pftlstiliklS , OF 'TILE] OD , OF
.
To a .t tip, seize It; and - 4vonritikeonients
as fin. they could be d' malt=-- the fire
.had'obliterated all but fi few ilettaclied sen
tences--ims the work tl(fti ,moment. It was
signed ' Auguste.: and " 04erel Mlle'. Was
tmplorednot to loie a Momeneui,corning
with 'our child;'.o Sells, a hamlet about a
league from . Amiens, 'on the northern road,
and to.bring ',as. much • Silver. inimef - and
'elothea' , with, her as - . possible, • blatant .flight.
being imperatives .. The 1 atecursipd . words
'seethed to Tint in •fire before . thli . 'frenzied
'gaze. of the unfortunate man, and
.for a mo:
meat he was paralysed by the terOble disco
:very: fora moment only. 1 ‘ k inferrial traitor
ess 1' he vociferated , ."I know all 'to-night,
land may reach•you yet.'`'? He ; theki bounded
up the stairsifound that several 'taiga of ecus,
'which he knew were therein thembrning had
;been taken aWay, and that InCst of his wife's
clothes were. gone. Theri needed? no` further
confirmation of the letter,iand infivetninates
Paul Vadat. Was on ~thee. read:to Selis---
armed. ' • - • . • ! •
1•
' . It' as about half past tileven, a cording. to
Bontemps, when Paul Verdot returned to the
wine-shop. Ile Was as white asil a- corpse,
and there was: a large swelling '4n his:fore
head as if he had received a violent blow, or
had fallen down and ittaink himself heavily . ;
which he "said was the case. -Tie ftold Bon
temps that .hig wife would .ni)t return till the
morning, and as there was no one at home; :
not the servant even, he Ifeltlso ~lOnely that
he wished to sleep at his, Beateinp's; house.
This was acceded to,,andf he Went!to bed at
onee. - yery early in thelmornitia,Message
eatne. front. Madame Verdot,l that.i. breakfast
was ready; . and her husband anxiohsly waited
for. , Bontemps deliver 4 the message him
self
.to'Paill, who stared ;whilehe .!',spoke like
• a man: in a dream, but said nothing; get up,.
dressed himself, and. went.heme, li ~ . -- - 1
• , Paul,. Verdot, .hut for the Istria* shudder
which' passed over him , as he encountered the
- surprised -yet. cheerful-la*. of his Wife, looked
More like a stone iniagernoving bY automatic
pow,er than- a living map,' fSit, down, • dear 1 1
' Paul,' said Lucille, - goOthina r' lY ;, 'have good 1
news for thee.' ..A1 ! I seehowii is,' she ad- .
ded; - 'thou has', seen 00. plece. Of a letter
which l - found on the tail', le.:1I dropped it last
night; 1., suppose, and lit has :put wicked
thoughts in that jealous pate of.: thine. Nev
er mind, I am- pow - going to explain every
, thing, anti satisfitstorily foo,tni thou shalt;find.'
. : '' Brandfr - gasped the _husband faintly ;,
' , brandy: - It was giveni him, and his wife,
though apparently much aStonialied, :procee-•
ded ', ,' .Afterell, ina fii; the explanation is
a very simple orte-.Theehild : Was the datigh
• ter , of the Comttt and . eomtesge Auguste . de
Vervay. They areprOlcrirs, -as you know ;
and the chilli was eontitled •to Ime, under. a.
solemn promise never to illvillge its name to -!
a living soul, for fear of-60Se : Paris , blood
hounds. The CountesS has lt n ig, been Corr.
;fined toher. - bed. :with illni!si , ,, ~ ,4:3 tit.- they : '
could not' until lately leave the etincealtnentl
they had found, to atteMpt(esetiping from the/
country. 'That peril is'-, now, - however, - sue-!
_mounted, and the ar ' • beyond the
rr
reach„of - their ' .
,rs:-: - 4es. :letter 'virus,
of course, :from the cotnkt,. • • flil. clothes were'
required' for the diaguilie - of the countess, and
.flip silver money was alsoseatial ; and Keel
j e..s
rnquvaiSe -tete_ here is! th 'exeliana. I have,
math!, added Latino,. l ,whn . ,had 'a keen eye
7. , .
to:the main chance,diOlayttig Withgreat glee,.
several jewels-, that evidently 'lwere. of great
, .
vulue. - -1,! 1 •i '
. The mental pallor' of Paul . ~ ,Nrerdot's- c ouh-•
tenance had not been in the .Slightest degree
diminished, by his wife's revqtation,_ to which
he Only faintly replied by saying, " Go on-=`
go on.- -What .morer •- ' 1 l, • 1 , • . "; ~
Ts
' What morel Pcd'6lel e thet.surely is en . -
ough? There is..nothinelse to say that [I
know of; except that the Chevalier Meuthni,
a 'ficierl of the count's; . who hits been, living
..perdti.`not far fronolie back of our premise s ,
una- who has reoreritly :sieptl.in . the stabl i
unknown ' ; to you, when aPprehensivehe .Wag
beset, : will, I. fear, tindlitdificalt to get
.off, as
- .the count informed. an: his pursuers -had 0:6-. .
- mined 'a hint of.hiS hallag-p*: I thoUght:
it possible he might have aonght shelter here
last night, and. that was one , 'reason I sent
everybody away, and asked . you - to stop' at
home, who I knew wOuld !neve I betray a poitr.
hunted fugitive, ' But heavens Paul, - what is
the matter? Help! help! My God„ he is 4y . ..
. I
kw. - . • , :
.
A. i !spicily losi ng Cb
Ile was not dying , ! but ~ n...
sciousnesS -, Which hOwevet, a glasS or bran
dy restored sufficiently .10 enable him to say,
in. a husky, rapid . voice: ~';Listen, Lucille,
and hear-hew your accursed secret has., des.;
troyed the. I found .' / tiatt fraghaent.ofnletter: .
1 urshed you to, Sets; and' could nowhere find
you there. I retarned Craz4iii mind,: utter- •
ly crazed ; for I swalkaVed brandy
.at every
cabaret upon the road.. I barstinto this room
and reeliniug upon. the &la fitte there,• saw the,
figure of a man asleip. In iny frenzy:limbed
,at, grappled with hith, and wag grappled in
return. A fierce; terrific ecirdlict ensued. 7--
seVeral times . I dashed., 'tin itt the floor, and
at last I received th' b 1 ay ti . pou the forehead,
i .
which rendered Mein.
/ nsible. How long I
remained, so, I kno4 net. The cold air 1 . re,
Vived me. got. upon iuyifeet,
.proeured at
light, and - saw • that I had killed my antago
nist, who was stone deed.: - It's useless scream
ifig, Lucille. '.. In my horror and. distrOtion
I hits Upon the rnadfexpedient of placing . ; the
body in a sack;• bearing it forth in the dark:
night, and castiag it into the -Somme. !, I•did.
so f amidst,-. as I :afstiUctli heard,- the mock
ing laughter of . deroons----human devils they
Were. not, Or. I sit' alot .ha*e been s puraued.
Ah ! all is • known, and I am. lost l' I
i
The -entrance of / a sergeant of. the comm.
;nal - guilid was siroultabeOna , with this! last '
cielarriction of Panl Verdet. ' Don't be a•
harmed, my friend's; ,said,. the sergeant : 'l . '
have-called upon a ',slight Matter of form, no;
thing more. But ;upon by Word, eipyen
\VerdOt, that was,t(droll freak last night . —
There must have - sen an unusually , ilarge
number - ofpaiitretre4 in {hat head of yours
to have put sucha, fam r y, . 'ere:* Shall fi tell I'.
continued' the : merry 1 fan ' ovary ; - winking, .
and . jerkinglie liettd.toW. , a Lticille l 'as he
Offered Paul his sniaff- x: ii '.. /... • - 1 . .
N •
;.,•o
' 'ee- - ---yei, to 4e
- • urea Ftariiinered . Paul,
utterly confounded . i ' What do you Meant'
. - ' 7'istiirei-ratut,iiiorflite4saiti the. seigettat
'blandly addregsihg Lucille,this. cht*ing.
hatband ,of poem - . ho ii, bli*ever, not a . bads
fellow; let me ad it 1130:* amnia/heti, coming
st ir
home fainche , you :being absent; at we '
:know, that upon finding. decent)) , laid out up.
on' , this - einape, the cleanicidy of' - --.4.--) •...,
• .4. Dead body r I tOraiiitlfiei. -..1 .. ;
.1
'Dead..Wdy, icirblati, t that - 0 (the Okete,r4l
:Meath* ',.. 'and an4ead, 'pa manent.aa:.lowhi
efroet-41Bads**. 1,1 - -Of 'hOletil.. - troni .;
the patikith -o,oorour armd .
time; Who - had, , itaittat tha
• -seistaar;tt in*
-.
MII
ap.
I:
,r:.
~
, 1 ,11 el l --
1)rldly
heart,
and is
ay the
is the
on his
ing outi
'fol. : us at
Is ahly
I made
e:! given
ope, you
• d;
feel I
.sny . eon
you that
u !..rprorn-
his lair, w hich *lets, however, did not
,p :. .
vent him from crawling into and'mtriyiug..ti
conceal hiniself in your premises eiteYen Ye
dot, as if he knew them well,' added the se ,- - -
geant, With a t'3
.o.tain air. t
of mena4.;e; not, ha
pily, difficult ro*follifv: 'ilferr . i• citoyenne :-,
your health-410m ! but this brandy is exee -
lent ? AnotheAglass! Well, ruadanie, a I
was saying, whi, does your amiable husatn •
adiwhilsti,wo,a,r4 gone to • procure !means •iif
fetChing the coite, '134 pop it • ihto a sip ,
caltry Weil; and pitch •it into the Somme !
Did you:ever kear of such . a drol dog, ehl
• But s'eriously, you will come by-and-by. 9
th Hotel . , .de Ville, and sign theproceti verb. 1,
ort there may be difictilty in appprtioning t c
'reWard, which ipiandsome; Be !tso Madam
-'--- , I cannot refu# a lady ,' thougkreally, thr • :
glasses, one after the ot her, i 5,4- no matt. r.
Here is to our:flglorious Rzputiiic, - vue aid
indivisible ! 4;51 now, My tribiids I au e
o t ir.
1 .
, . -. :, ,
I
y . 0 _., „ - . ! . -- .
.. ;As :the door liOsed, :the husband -. anti w f
threw themsels with burtingisUbs.into e .
others: outstre4hed arms ; . and l Lucille, a •
soon . as her !cho king...utterance permitt d
,vliispered brOtenly, ' Never, j !never, P. 1
::shall there aga!it be an '.unshared secret a ,
tWcen usl' I 1 •. : . . .
; ,
•
:1 _ A' RIOUS -RACE.
! : :s i RANG . KOOBOOS.I 1 .
; • ik,
'From cape: gibkpn's.Lecture biyirre the N.. 1.
i . .r i ,1 il forical Societe. 1 i
.1 - These are PPobably of all tlie' races-of in
- Of whom we live . any knowledge, the loWe!
in the scale of),butnanity ; or rather,- the d.
gradability oil our species . wOuld seem t
have reached iltat limit in their . - ease, whic
: Might be regajded•as.the eonn4ting link bi
tween the huill:aii and the brute, creatior,-
They are covered with hair, have arm
and are deficiitrit in chin, or 'rather. it fo-m
no part of thelface-:-these .were the. points i
their formation which:first arreSted my attel
tion, - and led Me to class thenria onceassii4-
ply a somewhat higher - - develOpment of th,e
Orimg,Outang. But on . further obserVatie'
I found a that they possessed tetch,.though e
trernelY rude and Inotiosyliabi6i, - had- ,cisibi
ifaeulties s - and .esembleil the rest of mai - it:in
in their sexual. formation -and i- arran.„,enien
!and were recounized as belonging to the fiin
. 3' 7 '
ily of man by the Malays, l*ho . howeve t ,
hunted them.as wild animals,iii order to Wor
I I
them 'as beasts of hurthen. ! i .-
- ' The •Oranr - rf Kmilmos are only . to be,. -n - ji
.
- within the. almost inipassable swamps an
- forest's that lie between the J . :itribee . and- tb
Volenabang territories, in the . Aland. of_lEl inn;
int.' They live among the - liranaies of tl
teak and marringin trees, whiCh gikw 11(1;0
an enermous. size, as indeed. the case, Withil
forests throughout the Island. They ei2,
struct a 'rude pla . tf6.rin of bamboos where'
they can find -a sufficiency of horizontally
tending limbs of a to serve as the ba
orsleepers of. a Wier, and loVer. -this tin
raise'an equally rude _eonical roof. of si.l
bambuds and, cocoanut or pis tag tree leaN l +t
These savag•es are, ictliyopa t' ,4 ists, - it-3 :lie is
most. all the uncivilized- tribeS ( of the .Easte.
Islands:--and.in all the river's -and hays! ,
bunm,.-.., '...._ 1..., -r .1Y +l, - . ,4.1:.r .r.riilii: iAitans
of the Archipelago. a most - 'bountiful I:av
r
ion 0 71 1 eutfish is tobei found. -. I
I had'ast _LI ”nrl unit.. 3 to 14ye:' a glim .0:
some Kooboos. people while raseendin .wt
my boat a small branch ofthe Soensa g,ili
it was-only. near Palembang' and 'at t e lii
ton Or palace of thenld Snsuhunan, or .ult
of Palembang, and at . the residence It i .. 1
independent . Panzorang Or
. 1 PrinCe (ismi
that I had, art opportunity for an espe iali (
servation of these creatures. 1 . The Pan , ora
had .several as slaVes, Or rather cis b• i stS
'burthen, for they, were not intrusted w thlal
labOr but the dragging dud carrying os Ida
:of dirt, stones or material for buildin . A
called thein"tai. orang," thel ordure. • f ini
He said they were - . burn as the_ lovest -
s, and- thislad . been the case f r In
deeds of generations, inastnneh as th.v W(
deievudants Of. slAVes' and-. bniden ,car , ices
the army of Alexander. -,-, i . • • _ - -..
.'I found them generalli called" ha ba
boodak Iskander"—the slaves of Ale and
It is well known that" nuniberleSS .- tr Olin
of Alexander the great, of IDou'l Kt rmai
—"the Vi - o horned," prevad i?u throng
imam, us-Well as in the Asiatic Coin n. t
It• has been 1 .found `• impossible to ,• lc I
many Kooboos the use of garments; thin
they havela-great fondneSsifor piece: of ,
ored clothA° be fastened to various parti
their body, land seen"; to mike . no di thict
between-a simple :piece of Cloth forio mini
or a manufitetured artiele4the only, Use
preference being the - differ'pnen of eo 0r,,,
has been found. equally imposSible o ate
them. the languageOf theitroasters or tl
who had grown up in. a . .dOmestic St •te t . I
spokothe Malay in an uncouth and I ono:
bible - Manner, like their °Wii jargon o. and
ifiable grunts., :
They' seem. to has 41 no idelt . ,, of- II tutril .
and - the Panzorang - assured , Ma tha . -
he
never discovered -in then' any cv elietH.
their belief or consciousness of the xiisb
of a Spiritual Being 'having any infi etre
on their- own -condition ; b:ut in re _ 3 rd Ito
Matter I . was informed-by a fellow - pisi
at - Weltverden; by one Captain V: • V
den, who has been four _years Conn s andin
• the Small post of Lahat in the inte oriel
matt/i 4 and Who had harr,frluent. priori
tics: to observe - :the grang Ko. i i . , -, 1
male and female,' sit-round-huh* atom + species', of blimiga;that attains to a l lat
would
and wouldiL
id all. In -concert, as- many . c(
Strike -their- heads repeatedly again the t
Of the, „and utter . some rud t :0111
ejactilatiOnS; this,, - he, observed,. - ~.7.
d, got
whenever any one, or all of the.: blind, get
hurt or received any special grafi , s ton, but
;mostly when injur4 : 1 - -,- . , 1
Now, it' is well known, that'. a 11'1 4 ;
portion of - semi-civilized ; - .Semi-pl . Irs
trial's, belieVe 'that in .thb enormo s a :s
bulrth bate* as well ass; the wa itti.
there exists widadiri divas; and flirt,6
.or.goed and evil :supernatural !. in
what is, "remarkiibleithatthrougho t u
.01'the being? of
,their pagan my 6oi
of the ', feminine/ 'genderi ; . I. have .1 . 1. ,
I ,
abed by Ahejnorang uenyany • , o pi
.'verse Veil liotno most 'IIIV . . It : pi(
'of the . 1 i.dijiiif or gool . woOd l o Jo lit
,
- .
buluh bait" uqc. .
The Onu4 Kixibeta ;would
sorne'isgue idea of their supp xis
But; notwithstanding , . the utter
roree
of this Mi r y. brul e non, lie to
insignificant contri uter . to co' rd ,
as yet, in some et limpasub e fore
BSumatra; in the_ll4bn Lekoh, be h tas
the ehilf ectlinetos of 4ni= of . tn 1
ngn. , -. . ••.-i ,
~
'Ovinan. - stoNien 'Wain 't. a
- Aini) - :*1 Italy , tnidan, , in -if
-5,
ERMMT."
'COuntry, about .tie manner of trailing"- with
Orang !cooboi:lts, The trader would proceed
to a certain point on the edge oil a forest, at
certaiti periocis of the year, witl quantitlei.
of colored clo, bead's and other trifles; he
would then l bea a gong for some length of,
l e
'tithe, at - vailou intervals, for one or two
days,•and then tire to a considerable dis
tance, to. return In about a week,: when he
ivpuld find IsatiSfactory quantitieS of beniion
l in place. of his g oods , that " had b6e4 carried
off by the
'Coo off i c 1 ,
~ •
. .
~- RAZOR STROP REDIVIVITS. . .
The repOrte• of the -San ..FratiefSeO News
furnishes that caper with the folldwingreport
of a'speeeh flia. i
; eby a Californian Auctioneer:
- - i
Ladies , an. t` gentleman, I now • have. the
honor
of .. putt* g up a fine • pocket handker
,
i chief; a yard
. iide, and' a yard, lung, and -al
-1
most d yard t I t i ck ; one half cotton and t'oth'-'
er half cotton
i s o ; beautifully,printed with
stars, and stri . on one side, and the stripes
- and stars ,on t' ether ; lkwill wipe dust front
• the eyes. so, leinpletely as t 4 be death -"to
demagogues, : lid make, politics:as : bad a . bus,.
iness as printii , g . papers : its ddrk - color will '
1
enable it to hide dirt, and nevet need Wash- •
i,
big ;
.. going 'tt - one dollar ?-.--iseventy-ftie
-cents I—fifty- its . l=Twenty-five . cents 'I
-77
one bit ?No Ody wants - At 1---Oh I thank
yen,- sir ! , i . ,- .. -- :. j •• • i .- -•.-
;., ' Next‘rentlemen; for the. ladies Wont be..
perrnitted7to 'hid on. .this . artiele,iis a real,. si-L,
1 ' mon-pure, -te,lloered, highly *polished, keenc'
,ed,ged Sheffie d razor: bran sPankin new,;
. -
Inver 'opened before to sun-lightii -• moon light
, . star-1404, day-light, or gas-light; i sharp enough ,
i .to-shave -a laWyer, or cut a. disagreeable .ac
)f... quaintance, or, poor relation ; handle of buck:,
horn, with altithe rivets but the two 'at- the .'
i . , ends, of puregold :• who will give -two dol
;ars? one. d ;liar ?'half y.
'hale d011ar..1." Why, . 1
t
.
long-bearded ;dirty-faced reprobates, with not
!-- . 'room moue ion your phizzes for. 's Chinese
Woman to ki. s I'm off'ring youa, bargain ati '
half a dolls 1 1 .' . Well, I .will throw in thiS,
0 . strap at a' h ra dollar !razor and and strop—
it- a recent pat it ; fIA o rubs npon. it will . shar-.
ie pen the city :aortic):; .all for four bits ; and
Ild a piece of so 'l . ---sweeter than 'roses • lathers
tit, i better than I a - ,' si..'hool-master i and strong
it- enough tow i 111 out all, the stains . from a Cali
,lr, fornia, politi "an's countenance, all '.for four
k bits I . —why, i you •have only to put :this -razor
strop and so
. p ;under your ,pillow at night, to
i s
tot wake up. in he lEnorning eleaush ., aved ; won't
`ad .anybody giN 6 two bits, then
.for• the lot ?I
ke- knew, I wou 4 - sell 'em. . ' '
~.' .
ka- . `Next,la ieS arid gentlemen, t6fler. three
. . ,
he pair socks, - ose, stoeking or half hose, just as
'to you re mine'- to call them,
.' Knit by a ma;
he chire made pn.purpose out of -eotton.woOl :.
r )n- the man that buys theSe- will he, enabled to
er . walk till • he. gets • tired ;. and, • provided his
ex-. boots Are 1 high enough, needn't have . any - i
.sl, , i corns ;I the legs are. as . long as,:, bills , against •
ey the corporation, and .as thick -ta' the Itityls • of_
at . the TT4.tibei-s of the LegiSlature: wild want's.
e s, • 'On at coe - half. dollar `t—thank-ee,niadarni'dol
- ' I
al- lar '1- r., , I i - • , • i •
'!rn Next I Offer you, a pair of bents ; made, es-
of • veciallv•for.Sau •Yraneisco, With heels hang'
tds -enough to • ratse ..; a,.. t uaa km:, *,l th,-,_
.H.,,,,oliy
its- grades, and nans,to. In-Alt e, ... E .,..t f ..... 1..,.„ ;,:;:.,,
... -
tied . Off by 'a ILIA slide ; legs Wideenough to
'of l carry two receivers and a
i boWle;icnife, I:uid
lmth - the. urpo of the very best' horse feather.l A
but man in-theSe' boots can, move J . about as easy
y
:ra• as the State Capital".; - Who says twenty, i dol ;
tan lays I ,- All! the lax payera ought to tulf.a.
the ' pair, to kick the. Couneil - with i ; 'every body
dn. onght, to have d r pair to kick the Legislainre
Ob- with—andth piwill be found of assistan ein
i
ing, - kicking th bneket; especially if some • clay.
of should , kie , at being kicked-ten
.dollars'`for
my- 'leg.S;.'uppElls and, soles! while Spills, and miS
ids erable. souls' •At .that, are bringing- tweitt•
He • thciusand dollars in Saeramentoi ! ten dollar
ten. ten dollar !H -gone. at
. .ten dollars I • ,'• .. I
- of . . • Next- is something. that you -Ciughlto hav ,
air
tun- -gentlemen ; 41.4 of goad gallowse ---- , it
'ere times call d Suspenders, . I know that s i.
fter . while li3e furnished at'. th_
.: 8t• tp - s ip • ex, rile; lint you can't telli whicVoite
i or ' so buy where they're cheap ; all that deter ,-
ler: hanging` a oriotl.supplied. with- a . gallows,
ions so 4tere -ouldike nobody to make laws, cot
tie -.demn.cril iitials, or hang culprits;
.Mitil a ne ,
I,r)
Su- election ; made of Imre- gum elastic-Hstrete
t.— like a jud d'S eonseince-L-and last as
. lOneti
the a Califon is office ,holder will . ;steal;
.buckle
Hugh Of pure ' n,land warranted to hold'r',,so 'tie
col- that no nian'S wife can_roli hind ofhisbreeel
is of es,; . are, in short,
.as strong, As . good,, as pe
4
Lion . feet, as.c ectual, and *as:bona:lye as- the Or'
tent mince 'list Chinese --shops on Dupont r'
for ,—gone•ti tWenty-five . .cents.! :.
1 i . •
It. . : • Napoleon. 1
3ach - - , ri 1. \ . L
1
hose On N- I polebn's return to Paris from Yi
still na surrounded by his family, at St. Clod, i
)syl, one even nias the 'Moon shbne beautifull
lass- 'went in the, grounds of the,palaee-to_enjoy
. the fine.n esiof the weather; 1 4 when the wbole
iag,e, of the e mpany sat down on the green turt
had with the exception of Napoleon ' ,yho str,b.
eof Cid hims 'fat - full length on the al
,enee said, thatlns'wlole life hitherto' had Been...,
up- tunate ; and after some further . remarks ',on
tLis the sam subject, he said—J
i
toner t Noone itnag,ines that I :have any desires
'oor-. for a country life, but I assure you I !woud
ig at give all in y power for the staffof the shep;
$u- herd,' , ... i „..
,
li • 1 brokeinto .
uni. At tis he ent.e company loud
oth laughte, to which the iMperor rejoined in
or the, most earnest manner-T-7 ~ I •
'i Ind lam not jesting.- Did._My, sta
led
tion'all w me.entire freedom of thole% my
,-ink AeOre for he shepherd's life would soon' - be
, ...,
iting realize .' I ' !, -j '- L
,
dace "An lis a id the grand'Admiral of vranC,e ,-
a nd Kiof Naples, 'EwOuld , .be fi Venetian
gondol er j , and in My hogit - 'onlbo sealing
t e undying songs Pf Tasso.',
An ,( , 'said thek)ng,of Holland, erivotild
solely d' simply- be a -
,vfatelunau in Amster;
d 1, -h+ - e.:l should" at least serve, the inier- N
es S , of the country.; at present my duty is--
-4, ' . orniel- in another Altve-tion,'..‘ ...,,
and At
. t.li remark his , ; .illistrious lopther •
1 4 . f.
tetra, .shrn ed-his
‘ shoulder4 , slightly ; s and
-
y are flied 6 .the moon: -- _ . . 1 :gazed
~
l des- i'A d I:- said . the kin 'of Spain, ''. why 'am
1
uittm f -nOt Citizen - Of ~ Sdili ..with - ark, income of
;tures fifty ~ onsinCfraues,..l.and a . good -.hunting
if the ground.... I Ar:ould ratho; bava;inler:Me a. ;
..- couple-4 hounds,.than the tiresome: for4Mll- •
have. ties of alcoure .- .- 1:, - , -'• • . -
tetice. .1 ' Andil,' said the Princess BorgheSe, t'why
lation am 1 riat a flower girl' of Vincennes T Then:
be no I coul d:.' wreatl‘e' el s .owns,..of flowers for ..the :
;-,for, - virgi is.' s' ~,.. _ I; .. .. - .. ,t . ._ - •,, ,
sts qf ' , ) 11.7, fitiqi 1 . 1 - tug_ I4laOleou ) _ rising, _ 'You:
been rred. Otio7lM.st.eonfeas tliatf.-goVern-,
taja- "en ,IS!1/44roilct:Abli'irelItAiir061Visli,.
111
Arti llirg'* . inlin# l ,.. : l ll4l 4V* ol o ll-40;
;i4f.thcrivra*ltkiroakell - o * .tattin,r - w hi c• -
tbee. :t^rr2obtfiythl., 3 lfir.a. r., •• .: . :.."
eitit
,•/-, • . ' -
e pro-
in tree
WHOLE NIMIBE
..,... . , , _ _
COLERIDGNI3 .OtllM 1 , 19117EN101L
Taste and- good, sense are Oady . „
intemperance from the society',of the ,
itt
and intelligent. The man mr obecomes in
toxicated at a public dinner!' no longer 1 - 601i-:'
ed upon - with adniiiation; the . Man whoishO'4l
offer to drink six bottles at -fitting would
a
be voted a barbarian;or as 4 tter- sovereign a - ,
ty ,congressman - , and the I an. Who should
actually accomplish itsvoUld be Voted a bout
But
,as .brandy drenkenness -dies - 13, - Way, opi
um intoifeation is on the itict• . - Tethosa
4am;)
who drink laudanum, -ssiall, - opiu m pills 'of
'morphine, we:Commend follfting terri
ble confession of Coleridg e:Let theta ' per-,
use it, if they havethe ene ~and be wars-
ed, me.
if there is ti" It is , letter to Mr. Cot- ~
tie : -
ii Od
\ '
'April 26th, 1814.---.Yo i . have poured
in the raw and festering! Wound of, an old
friend's conscience, Cottlelli.lbut it is oil of
vitriol ! I but barely glanced at the -ixiiddle
of the first page of yout le t ..Sar, and have seen 1 1
no more - of it—not fromrresentmet4 (60d,
forbid!) but from the state of my bodily And', '
mental ' sufferings, that scarcely permitted •
- huinen fort.itude: to let in a, new visitor , of at
flictien. Theobjeet of my present -reply in,
to stat,ethe case just as-itijis-first,, - that. ear 1
ten years the' anguish of My Spirit
,has been
indeseribable;the sense , of f iny - daiage,r staring, 1
but the consciousness of my guilt worse; far i
Worse than all,! rhave pray ed .with :,dro p s : t
. ~
Of agony onity brow ; trembling, tiet„.o y -! . 1
before the justice of my Maker but ev en be- 1
- fore the mercy of ,rny Redeemer:;` I Oa'
.. - thee so many tektite what hat thou .donel „„,
.with , them l' Secondly,i overwhelmed , as I I
am with a • sene of my. direful . infirmi
~ 11 ...,
nt l e
have, never atteMpted to t driguise or, co n a1..4 2 4.
the cause, On .the contrary, not o y to `,
friends-hae I stated the whole with teas and . I
the very bitter ness of Shaine; but'in tiwti in
stances, who ' had spoken of having talietil
laudanum, of the direfuleonsequences, by an-1
'awful' exposition Ofits,-tremendans effeets on t
myself. Thirdly, though before God I ean4
"not lift uP,my eyelid4,'and 'only 'do not des-c
pair 'of his mercy,, because to despair would ,
be adding crithe, yet to my fellow •then I
May say, that I was seduced to the accursed
hahit ignorantly. -1 had!been almost bed-rid- ' - 1.
den for. many months ; 'with swelling in :!my
• keels. - In a Medical jtMknal, I Mthappily ateti .
with an account of a curl- performed ma simi
ilar case (rir.. What apP4ared to me so) by Vulii
bing in of-laudanum, atj the same taking al 4
given dose internally. [ It acted like a charl
like a-nuratile-! I rethvered the use of' 'my! .
limbs, -of my appetite,' of my sPirit•--q,• 41 4
thus continued for near a fortnight. . Atlength r •
' the unushal,stimulus solisided, - the_ eonipiaint
-returned,—the suppoied remedy was. ',m axi
red •to—but I eannot.: - ge, through - the:, dreary -
history. Suffice it to, Say, that-. effects were
produced Which acted en•me by -terror ' and
cowardice of pain iti. sudden death, "mit.( •
31 -
i l
help }roc God!) by* a y ; temptation of 'ales tS :
tire, or .desire of exciting pleasurable sens. - -'.•
tions. On the very - - ntrary, Mre. Morgan
and her sister- will -, riwitness so far as tiii
say, that the hinger I abstained; the hifoi - 2
t
my spirits were—the keener my enjOyinen -
- t -till the moment, - the direful , moment ,ar-
rivO, wt Mti'mrpx , ilstf-legan to : prill.l . ate.;
sueu At. tll eau.... 1 t...., 4 ,1,4,„„.„1 . ..„,,, i t ..... t
my whale frame, stichmTtileitiW. 1 - Mt.:.:7 s .w- -,- ,
mid incipient bewilderment; 'that in the
,1 t; -
r. l
f several attempts to abandon the dire#
on, I el•clairned in
. ageny, which 'I newi 't
in_ seriousness and soleMnity---` I am too , , it
to hazard this.' 'Had I - but a , few- 7 'iumd 1 i --.- •
pounds ; but 1200, hhalf to send to Mrs.
,11... '•
eridge, and half to place myself in a pr . i . -
'mad-house,' •vihei:e I could preeure nothiOg , - -
but what a i phvsician f thought proper and
whereas medical attendant Could he constant- - -..
iy with Me for two ; on three months [in , liiiis •
than.that tine life or death would be deter- -..
mined, then there mi,ght be hope—now,thete
, is non ! 0 God ! how willingly, wool 1I - '-
I
place yself under -lir... Fox, in his establfilt- .
te , ment ; for my eaae is a nneeies of, mah4s,
le only that it is a deratpment; an Niter. iinfo
-fence 01 th'e volition, and not of t 46 intellictu.-
'e al fdculties:. • ,You bid me rouse
,myielf; ! •
if bid a man paralytie in both arras fa rub m -
Ire briskl:r together and ihat.Will cure him:
If . las i'' he would .reply,' that I eannokifn ire/ . '
i
Imy arms'is my complaint._ands; my mi se r y.' . -.•
s May ,God bless you, and
..your afieetio .
.-but most afflicted-- 'S. 'T.'Coi„*M,tin •
lite
rf,
;h-
Id
A RUSE.—One:Of our Secretaries, of S to
for the United Stites `!trucic outs gbod mode,
of getting rid-of an- intruder in a• partietilar
ease. It appears that' the daorkeeper of tihe ----
Secretary'* office 'ilia_ remarkably
_obi . _ 14 ••••
which proved qii4e the - thing Tor p tabil of , • ,
fie leeker, who managed to - get inev . ery •',
and bother the Secret ary. " When the ati t t ya.
:nice had Coutiaw:4 three or four days; the -
Secr,etary stepped up one mornirit to' the,
doorkeeper' and asked whether he knew • 'hat
that man.came itfter, ably. ; .
Yes,' replkd , thejunetionary, alt.°
I sippo6e.,',
' True,. but do yoti know what
Well, then, tell:you ; 9ur :
pliteel' • •
'Tile !fleeting tiekt
eirtee.seeker
said to hav
tier in whiel
Seeig4rY
YOUNG i and len '
Bateman" were iinvited
by. es - ,q,* . at . Windsor
- Wilt '''
on -
Castle:with ~
their itaiffilie:Prin of WaleliOok h: - -seat,
Ibr 0 1 44ittit ' dints i n the House of =Lo 9, by .
the Seidet•lit his ma er. 'Wheti L le:.,
home, before : hew Uld allow, Ow All ' aging
jewels' to:he taken "to his ti(nis.4l . l4', l' , ht
, Kate Batman; and finding: het'in - ieyal '
nursery,. with ;: his isters,' and Afro : -4 he,
takinghet , hand, sa a,. 4 Kate ; ati-Sooti - lain
A - man ma's going give Jnett e ") ' J
. ..
h 4
t
'then I'll-make you y little-wikand
~: • J . .'
Kate- then - said, 4 ., elt, )ittlorWal...,, ion
will bo-a good - , .ii i-attidy , barA, a. hen
Y. ° ! l ‘ iro w uP; 186 :1" , sOme *made , afar ,
won, ril take. four ease into eost- ,;. ,
.A. NNW - C i UKBEi 0 / " A : 74 1 49W:„ ! ,119 1 . 18
us a notice of n rnOrtkio , oala, -*Olt_ i r f :1 3ut , -.
pose of w hich is :torpirfekilte 7 fitle "to,, "dual
property lettl4:b rtdetielikluni..,.: ,47-icad
4
says she has tot ii*keine ofloVngg' , ' ' - the
publication, tli - . *ill psraktiala imarn•
' ing that our trice A. ,P.,.,NOtAlck , Atf.:
_it-
Ac . n?qi , -bilto.lbfl )7 - h l. OkkfiliP,i e _%",fry ' %
we accede to 'the , rOplAti9i4' 41,14,1n1,:ihat
thO'Cintnti Clerk shall - aikokii .... - „, ' , ro t
norling apoo the aime tfirmg4 -1 0r. c ' , :-iion't
-kilOwnithsek fi)11 irswbo Ought* ... , -
. - . 4.. ..
. . . .
- , •
,
. - ....
:'r 1532:
.5 ,
i
-04
toor-keeis* is
peculiar Um
4)ririsd,l Tim
taornmg,