The Susquehanna register. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1854, November 16, 1854, Image 1

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    E 29.7.---NP, - 1:BEIt..- 43. -. I
VOLU3
`l, ) l oet's
Vor the S, seltanna Register.
An Song. \ •
I wandered o the hill-top
In the mo .130. early ran
While Yet alo g the Talley
The boar, w ite frost Idn4lat.
wzmiered on the hill top j•
When:athwart the broad expanse
;The Orions sun of autumn;
Shot his bri ghtly beaming glance.
And. wood, and vale, and
Bathed to the golden light,
All glowing &their gorgeousness,
~ - Stod Out before my sight.
I wandered in
Its beauties
When .each
'ln its purpl
the forest
to behold,
ring bough was regal
!, red and gold.'
leaflets quivered
morning air ,
e stealing p a st me,
ng everywhere."
And the fragil l
In the l
gelid l
As.the sigh ca.
I
"Beauty's d
I wandered in
When the a
.And with pale
The earth w
' I
Low;ailed th
Through th
For the iorg•
That ritstle.l
e forest
tumn winds had blown,
. .
and dying
. thickly thrown":„
sighing zephyr
branches overhead
us robe of autumn
to my tread. ti
I l.e Register. ,
• 't of Rope.
sney I burst into life, -
ane the. bugle of strife; •
I riAi aid-de-camp ; Fame l
In iimily echo l lny name. -.
irs with eglantine dreSt o _
by. all thins but rest;
I e sailors to please
a i 1 of plpugh - the'salt seas ;
nture, and soon shall be found
where' icebergs, nbminci ;
earts, and With \ me they disdairi
~. - .
11 : that lurk on the main. •
!zinan—rm found at the throne,
o l ry—and virgins alone; '
.1, 'midst gaper and pens-
ii . n, and!very few frierukl—
—-4 he's.uaed likes Turk,—
The S .
\ Piom the region of F •
With 'the pastoral pip
Mr colors areplanted
Makes the whole hu
I'm foUnd in The fiord i
Where Lore is attendt,
Renter on shipboard, tpi
Srfairr-wore dreams
•
TiF the good bark; 4.FIr
ruder vertical suns, o
IM enthroned in their
'To think of the dange
I'm found with the sta
With. Ambition and Gh l
Po
ir, found with the Po
rho iteer had a pat '
Iki,ti, loW in the pock!.
Inn I've lent him my n
l'at•;found in the dungf
FM found with the chi
In fine, I am pacing ft
there the breathings
1111 the Spirit of /lope
And Fin coming, l'in o
Arlauts, N.Y.'" • \
e to commence a new work
n the patriot to cheer—.
I f whtit the battle draws near;
r ever and aye,
f life meet the breezes of day;
see, my standard's unturfcl,
ming, to light up the worldl.
J. m m.;.
eo N i
Oqic4lioqs.
I Ise, RegiAtrr-
for Givernment.. •
no htimaW institution or
Man, indi%:idnal or the
interest' than . th 4. of 'ger-,
i t,
this, one form or . 'anoth 7
i
er. every man is n methately and personally
connet:ied. The led: man ' of, the - forest,
whil e he little. reeks the . rise and fall ,of
states ; is prepared , to defend " to the death"
the rights of his tribe and. the honor ''of
eliief, The untntored 'negro, who kuovr.-k noth
ing 'of the World bdyond the limit of his sens
-I-
* the narrow observation of a darkened
inind, feels that his present bting, in dura
ii ii aqd 'happineas, hangs on the will and
rlea' , .ifi! of the rw , wersthat be." . The-rude.
The liemmi
We can 'tliink
science, with k•hi(
pass ; .has a deeper
eq4,lnent ; for" with
P°
- - subject-in the enjoyment of every _right,-
I,,luuderi may'eare not how soon the - thronesthe.' furtherance of his Pri:perity , in,the•great
of the , old world are Shaken down ; the es t possible degfee...'- Government is at mice,
staunch royalist may ardently desire, yea, and a noble and diffieult science. It 'isliasedion.
r•i r-ir the failur of, every.attempt, to es •the great principles of truth ina Vght, and
'tallish and perpetbate-free, fi'appy republics, has often times many invoiced ,
,and eompli
yr: each of these constitutes a part-and..par- cited relation& To understand all', its bear;
Lt; Of a system, hi s
h
whiche must co nt r ib u t e i n i
s and applications; the 'profoundes t study
rropni-tion to sustain. The merchant and
;
and niaturest, refifxtion of the strongest midds
rt,t...hanie may turn with - careless indifference are , neeessary. Government is no" t, a. mere
morn the noble Pursuits of th e intellectual , , al—,tractiou, a creature of theories, tint a prac
i..
.v!!1(1... from the (kaitemplation of the spirit
, 1 tieal Matter of fact, every day coaeern. It
.liy andnature around them ;•the scholar h as e n gage d Ad thoughts. of all - Pa.st ages,
with lnexpressibledelight pressing on to ex- and. yet they' could not agree on any form,
p!ore and comprehend the sublime mysteries as the true only. One :• and however i much We
of the uthverse, may not tell you tife price of
stocks, or,Ptcdict he result of any
ascribe to the collected wisdom of the i p a st
ceinmer-u in other things, 4-e • are far from
, aapixrsing
6:11 cuterp - rlse: yet:neither the scholar northe that-thev have attained the Ultirnfil 2 knit : of
mail of hu . ::incss can with safetflo their 9W12 perfection in their inv I •tigations clit I>oli*l
,ialterests be ignorant of the principles and ad- science. "Ana men e)* n now entertain oP-in
s
ciiiiictratign of, the government under which . ion. the very Antipod of one dnothcr :on
they Eve: There is no place in the whole this subject. • One hol sto the &eine. !l i ght
, wide world, where any,can go and say, "here of kings ; "another to their delegated autliri
f atu free, from the restraints of law, here I ty. ; One to an absolute, another tt't; a limited
..an live for myself and no other;" / There'is ~,,--nstitution. 'Whilst a fifth discierds rpOti
Lo man so isolated that othershave not claims i archy in all its forms, and ads the fa.
Dr' his . ttrvieed, who is not bound to love his i pabilitv of the 'people,; - the 'w/wde People. for
fellow, and • pert - gr i m toward
,him all acts of I selfiovernment. Whiteagnin the'repreSent
. kindness,- of respect and duo obedience. I j atiye system or sotne other o£" the thousand
kl.(.lv it is sometimes said (bacmost untruth- and one mixed forms, is pronounol the lat.
filly) that goVerninent has been devised by est and best. It is not , strange' that some,
man. without warrant from on High. Those i tyssed t i p and fro by, thesC Views;".S:p conflict
who make this ass ertion , believelt a tontriv- ing.and ;diametrically opposed, shi:4l4l bOak
allo- 1:y which the crafty and
. strong lord it away" from -the moorings of rEasOn and phi
oventhe rest of Mankind, and that it is there - josophy, and drive without helm bt• Piro
C c ire unnecessary and wrong. This doctrine inte the' tumultuous sea of Ultitaism, and
, - . i.- 7'
I : l( ''' 4 ' no r .futatitt. •If such persons:could founderat last on the dangerous r a cks of-;\ 0
IA- . c • ' I
I P' Nu aded to lk - -'.ep silence, their fully might Government s : As the ancient philOsophet Co
6,-• . . i--
- 111 /known ; .if they' would but read: .their
.Boles they 'would learn that ", the.. powers'
.\ that be are ordained:of God;'' that, govern
ment if a terror Only to evil doers: Govern
ment nuneeeSsar!r I Show; to me.tttt,- it is
40 ,. Mid br ~ ilic sane, argutriePts: . will prone
religion to be eq ually. r.l . fillike "useless—a'
mere system Of priestetart; ' , Man i s a social
being, and this element in his charade . r can
no more be 'changed •or driaroyed than . you
can change the . course of. ;the tornadO, or
iols e k the sun from his path' in'inid heaven:
• We owe
.our life and-continued existence to
t l 4 social prinel . ple, - fur we aie dependent on .
. kite lor another support; from it.springs . Ou r
..
. 4 n, illy 'avidness ! and to it ,is ateribuble all
lirigress hreivilization and refinement: Doer':
fexistence oll.it religions system of
. some
;tln, and a - fiiith.in the suite; in every Part'a
q.ic , wurbl. Irove men to be . ,e;ridOwed - With re•
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1 ligious auSceptibilities; .So does.the univerial .
adoption of white-mode . of.gOernment sl+vr •
that tis necessary - to his 'nature.' • Persons
' have hceii foundinev l ery age, icho, Withdraw
, . .
ing 4rom the resorts of busineSi - and: the On
dearments of sweet society, have plunged ',:
in
to the forest'sdepths,lor sought the solitudes'
of the desert'y where they vainly •• imagined
they could dwell:free from the trainmen of
civilized.life; or where;they might holdjOre
t • e-
intimate ••andl.unrestrained commu nion with
.• , i i.
the In fi nite ITOseen.,:;But - they have learned
that-rnan..ls never more a slave thin-to him
- self; that ;the heart iii to .mote a subject!; of
iheavenly influences when imtpured,in a eloti
ter -or monastery ; than when engaged .in the
htitnble, - fitithful discharge of active dities.h..: .
Rear --for me a beautifid and vigorous plant
without the
.aid of air; earth and . Moisture '
•
.-1 t• • . ' t .
produce any thing worth haying, wlole you .
neglect the appropriate means, and then it 11.
eadmit.that the established 'and immutalile
;
laws - of God May . b eset aside Withentinju'ry.
i • I i . 4.
or. disadvanta ge;.. that a nOble,..generons, and
enlightened spirit may mill Chance
. i 4 mother,
and say to Nothing thou hastbegottee nie4.,,
That_ gov ernment is•necessarY, we .. might_
, t .
proceed to . snow. oy tracing its- beneficial i•e-.
. _ fir. Me •fiegister.
sults,Or on ..thelother hand, pointing . out the •:-
\ I.
and . 1., • ; ; , , . .
•misery ruin - tnat'would..ensue - fr om its - Rise of 'the Papal . Church.
abseriee; but' ; 'We' prefer to show.lt from the -'There are many subjects, which„ thougi
- mind; and the analogies!, of
. the natural and destitute of .. any : real or intrinsic 'excellence,
spiritual-worlds: We' have seen, that-man , is ;yet beeause.of ;their - eVi I tendencies . 'and e 1
not a& isolated-being, plone in the' t . tended influences upon human seciety,cliiiu
x li
he SPOtains - sacred apd • insetible relaticins
t he attention and. call forth the ; action off. the
- i .
,• to hiS fellow' titan , : which sho w he disregard, intelligent' and]s;irtuoui. In this list •is Ro
the Voices of -reason, iconseienee, and) reve)a-
,manisni, than Which. a more corrupt sYstenk
tion ,Would speak in thunder : tones! to his - of faith mid' practice was never devised, need.'
heart„ " . where jart
.thotil' " where , . is thy in only to be noon to
,be abhorred, *hese
~I;iother?" If .1. were not: so, why are. we a .object, end, fi nd aim is evil and - only evil con
S, 0
r 4
race so nu. related to; and so de-. tinnally. WhY ; such a sym'
stehas 'been per=-
.pendent on otte• - another 1 If. it were not So, milted toexertlit - s•hlighting and soul--destroy,;
one pair; or at i i east 4 few, might haVe sufoc- trig influences. on the race, we cannot tell. - •. ft .
e( i• t o inhabit this earth,. and .iasteadj of that/ is a portion of - this" world's history, known in $ -
moral. beauty stud orde r , r instead of the warm, the Eternal mind far back in the infinite age,s
lushingaftectiOna of the soul, the harOnessof of eternity`, reveled to man in.the volume of
the rock, and the' coldness ..of ',the - iceberg unerring truth,!i n ma fully-. seen and exPeriene=
answer
purposes
.-
might the of our t ture'lt•s ed in the revollitions'of successive centuries'.
ivell.;• - .The law of reeifFrocity and snhordina. TO'donbtthe tiistence Of some design, - that
tion Prevails; through Out all.theorders' of the good will not .ie brought out of evil, were
inferior - creation: No creature in earth, air impious.' It is !one of the ripe fruita . of" that
ii • •
or sea,: but yieldi to it b ready, cheerful of e- - first disobedience which brought death' into
I
dienee. •In
/ the- vegetable kingdom -it see - is - .the world; and all our woe." It. may bettiat
- -
to bCwfil, understOod, whilst the mineral has the world
,needed some such proof of tht
'
:its groups, families and spec ies. ' •I`o where heart 4 s eorruption, before it would •embrac, _
is the principle More - beautifullY illOstrated the.purer.faitli of the gespel,'lltat "the myS-
than! in "the heavens over our.headfs?! There, tery of iniquity been.perMitted to vrori,
-
amid those countless hosts that gent : the . sky, or as a just punishment that so many • hav
whetie "one star differeth- from anothei - :star been left "to - lkiii - evei - li - e; - " - , - ----1.-- - - ----• .----•-'
in glOry," the law..of harmony . prevailS, ea In`.tha y,ear . 006, (anageof ignorance,) wit'
fulfils its - appropriate and appointe4 cour s e, the pr fligateT,l i KKas. sat on. the throne of the
:from:thchright moon that "walks the queen Cmsafs - , the PaPacy took its rise. Then - it'
of night," to the faintest luminary that git • was" when the !church,- in heart and life, • had
tors •in the.eelestial sphere. Would you as. - di Ea- from the doctrines and holy ex.'-
• • 0 11 / I •. ,
cend still ?-, totheSe; realms, f WhOse Ample of- high e r'
its Divine rounder and His first . •
glories "eye bath ;not seen,•nor earlheard i 3 followers, 'when; lust and ambition, and love
- even,there .-in those heavenly
.place . s /are of power scented : almost wholly to reigwin
thrones, and , prinCiPalitiesi and pour e rs; 4.0 d • the hearts of the avowed Christians, that from
,there all: - is,order,itind beauty, and,levei 101 d # out this dark Clunis of in - congruities • Was
. 1. - : • i
perfect: peace. ; .. ..
NOwthe question irises, whatifortli of *)v.- with the - name of the -Church of, Rome, with
.., 1. 1 '. ' •
ernment is the beStl Which Will. • i•ecure in
-, • . the additional ',
cegnomen ; "Spiritual lleadOf
. - i
the4ighest degree the objects for, l i thielt ;all . all Churches." lt . Was a vigorous Child, care.
pOliticalcoinpactsare, - -or ought' to )3e estab- '.fully fostered, and -- destined to live for age!,
fished I cif : the - entire. protection, of every I .and to grow to a g i a nts_ strength. For ears
of -,.• =right,-rind _
__. , , _ y- I
MONT.A.
,
“THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE IS THE . LE
the misery of life, and calling
ing, replied} : " To" live:lS not :an
IJ , t
live billy," so we 1131 4 Y ; uPv,"
If is_not, an_evil, 'bit* biis' :sm` if,
,2.
(wenn:dent is an evi and biter
alike ,in accordance' with lithe
Of cominoti see and the
"ngs of reyelationithat a per
eat is not to be realised by'Man
t imperfect stag_ le expesi
ousind yeast, ought ;tP have,en- -
1 - this point. But siti fur.. lime,
*ening his fiille.n State; forget- I
that originates in, ki.i., proceeds
de nature must pe : take of that
naturevastly strives .tio seek , a "more
excellenCwaY."_, Renee e ' er a on some
i
ifs w system,V" retort:nen( "raliel 4 pa called,"
4 1 3 ;Peers. w " ' it hi otiAdintli: 4 '', idea Will
renovate , remodel society% !ft iii be
. ,
on 4. bewailitJ
it-an-evil .
•
evil,.•but to
ernmenti,
while a-bail
L lt:: . "
- plainest di
unerring,
-
feet govern ,
in his Piese
epee of six
settl.
this, roan f ,
thug that •al
fr.o-01
MONTROSE"
the community ; System- of . FOurier;: . the . So.
cialisni of Owen, from which religion .js_ezi
eluded, or else niilter the garb of citraordii
nary zeal and superior sanctity, men at once
become saints, and must needs separate fro ni
the rest of minhind to avoid contamination
or even prepare, tb leave the iorld and as; .
cend unbidden t.ethe mansions of. 'the, blest
In: our day, thi6 *onderful age of improver
perpetual motion has been discovered.;
it is the perpetiaal., motion of Society after
the "lo here,"attdlo there of 47ery new thei...
Ory and opinion. f We fully btlleve in 'th
progress of hurnan.society, thatl it is tending
onward and up*ard, that the true .principle 4
of government,; a every thing else, are he.
coming More: and more understood, :that.
golden 'age - is-Yet to dawn on the race, .before
whose Splendor ;all error and imperfection - :
Will flee away. But' our hope is not in feeble
man—it IS' in who will' bring the 4:
things about b the .omnipotent energy . of
truth ; and yet)han shall be the honored in i
'strument„,the.chOsen apostle of ditTuSing thiS,
gospel of !lightthd truth' among the nation
of the earth. !.? -• A. 0. I
• • •
Franklin, Oetr.. 20th. - .-1. • -
•
. „
before had ihe way been preparing for nsher
ingit into being.. To the great body of 0.41)-
fessinff eltristiaitS. at . l3. especially the digtfitit
0.
ries of the church; vital piety was experiment
ally, unknown and undesired. In the heart
the's left without the good seed of the Word,
1
the seeds of sin found a congenial soil. .Tll4
struck deer their roots.. They ;lit...ma-up in
~, .
a luxuriint grdWtheir p
th, and y i elded all ot
.l
sonpus fruits- 7 -the ta...e(of selfishness, feat
otisv, envy and ha • B brother waged. /
. te.ence • • 1
war with brother, bishop strove with bishop,
_ . ,
council dfsagreed with council. ' For many
yuirs the chtircbes . had. byeti diyided into .
two great. divisiptis, Eastern and 'Western.The seat.of the; firmer was pynStatitinople,
of •the latter,' Rothe. `To these. the smaller
churches. had ;paid .4t - defcreneci ; had .gi vett .t
precedence tOheir-bishops, had sought th 4,
counsel.-and aid. in time.; of trial and dad I!
f
ty, not from any dlffereriei in rank,, but he
6tese - of the . central position and greater
wealth and influence of the City Diocesans.
Tor till then they acknowledged no supericr,
but all - wenj -"paresitini petri Gus," kqu Is
i . - ,
among equals. Soon; boweyilr, what was : t
A .
first . granted its.o
an act of courtesy , began
be *claimed 'its a Matter of right, and e
weaker were obliged to succomb to the mote:
••' i I
powerful. The union betvir&n, "that king
n't w : .
dohich is not of. World,"'and the n l a
tions :of the earth, will never be consummat
ed so 1943 . .45:they are alienated in . foiiiig
and interest.' If, then, an outward union x. •
i
ists, it *hawk one of tiro things,. either t t
the people in all their civil and•sochtl rela
tions , . ~.
. have attained tie.that.hiA -standup of
morality and 'piety . inculcated In the ffibe,
(which no one would be willing to assert of
any government,) or that,the Church herself
has fallenfrom her pristine purity, and relita- .
ed the rigid Files of truth and justice suit
the desires and:circumstances of depraved
men: • •
About this time, greater power'was claim
ed by the church over the spiritual (*cern;
of men; and those assumptions of supreria
ey which have since, like the Wide-felt ha,v
ings of • the earthquake, disturbed the(de
menti or society, or silently, yet irresistibly,
brought domin kiniii - from their proud thrones ,
began,tole!pnshed forward.' Who/will l ira
it' unholy men in'the exercise of their
illrgotteo powel,.l Ltizuy,
atabition, *and ityranq, all follow ita
6•teM • blab: Tha mind . non'_ Went ion
v..4th, repressed In its IfOsven•born
Iteaiemwaid risPiiiliona,=f6r6
§otTncE, ANA;
MMDI
NO - 4y •
faith, glitter 04 .parikde usurp the place of
prayer and Ftralie., Afot satisfied wittt pres
ent appearatteo.arktfequisitions, the thirst
for power anoreitth incessantly increases,
till it becomei (q!• rullittg passion, swallowing
up all others, 41 ition takes po.mession
m
of the entire in. mind to at that isgqod,
but Argus-ey4iiiol, the ;fittel resolution
fatal to the p4siee 4-itte would and the kite
e
of the trtlo ch*h)is taken of seizing
the reins of , %noel* doMinion . : For lack
of foes without' 44 torus to Prpy
on herself to :irat. itltll her own. Members,
and behold! thitiwq leadingßishops of Christ
endoth are striiittgc!!tirho Amp be greatest"
In a favorable I ;Motalent the VVeltern Church
aims an effectunl bloitiiat its Eastern brother,
and Boniface, 11 ; 01444 spirit , in iniquity, "a,
court sycophant of g profligate eMperor," is
raised- to the Papal*r, \ and obtains from
an earthly prince,f . ' 11.0131 a guilty man, like
hiniselg the aPpella4 of God's Vicegerent
on Earth. T#iss th Pontiff of Rome, rich
worldly., ambicOusc is tnode the, trne and latg
ful successor of the; `poor, humble, devoted
disciple' of Galilee. - Ouch was , the _Aso of the,
Papacy.- , , ' , A, 0. 4
Franklin, o,o** 1854. , '
:prow; ifii#l4sti f.. e'4LVe of lb'idsoloa,
• jilit 1116410 D B014i0T•
Frogere, art Setofiat one of the minor. the
atres in the Boulevard in Path, had • entered
into an , engagenaetiOalth the manager of the
French Theatre at St. Teteisburgh, - where he
had . the good fertinie so greatly to please
Paul L, that hgl, soon became a distinguished
Favorite of the'.'inonareh. An ill-timid 60n
s/of one day convinced Frogere how danger
ous it/was t o it, e ak . ',o4 freely to the eccentric
autocrat. It *as at:th,e imperial dinner-table,
Sihen one of the guests lauded the • present
Emperor at . th eXperiSe ottcter the - .*Great.
"That is relibit4Veter to pay Paul," said
the EmperOrJturningko his favorite ; "is it
not so, Frogere r, ,
sir,;!
" Certainly'.wered the latter.=
•
To satisfy n ay -rob not only Peter
the Great, butrelsOPeter the Apostle."
" And pray why 4So 7" asked the Czar,
quickly. '„! .
"Be cause''; Said* actor,." Paul in his an
ger has trequentli_petnniandea, in the words
of our Savior,;',GO and bear the cross through
. out the .world; mere especially Siberia." . .
Paul showed angerin his face; and no one
dared to laugh Or, to, be i plea:sed with the act
or's reply. • A. few % Trlituites 'after - wards the
Emperor roseand diiinissed the company.
. it was in the Middle of. Winter about mid.
night, when FrOgetle was 'aroused - from his
sleep by loud knOeiting at his door. 'lle
I jumped tronilnahee,,ppened the door, and
saw to his
. atritizere l ent!an officer . and a file of
soldiers enter .thel apartment. The former
I produced a warrant from the ,Emperor, ban
ishing Frogere- to. Syria. I We may. readily.
tne Frenehman. He
cried,threw• himself upon the floor, tore his
hair, and repeatedlyexel aimed, "What crime
have 1 counnitted', to deserve such . punish
ment 1" Ile4vcciVed no
. ansier. Ile beg
ged fora few; hours:' delay, to throw himself
rat' the feet oflthe Monarch and' learn .the tia-
Aare of his guilt.; in vain : the officer would
allow him only time to pack up a few - Clothes .
and linen., Seareely iVas the operation finish-,
ed when he was introhnded by the soldiers
and carried outside the "Muse., •where a coach
was in waiting. He tiros,. then lifted into it
'- 7 -more deact.than, - alive==while two soldiers,.
with drawn Sworda arid .cocked pistols; took
their seats olicachisicle of him:. The 'doors
of the vehicle' were lOcked„ and, the ,officer.
giving the signal / the Oath rolled awaat full.
speed, surreinided i ty 4 cavalry escort. How
hung the first stagy wasted Frogere was Una , '
ble to, tell, the vehicle was so thickly cover
ed that not the least 'ray of light could-. pene
trate._ He *as .tOld . on - entering the coach
that the 'soldiers bad. orders to Shoot him on
'the spot the 'Moment he opened his mouth to
put any que4oeus• ! te them., He consequent
ly: observed SttictSilenee,Aulaufferedra world
o'f. pain. • The doer 4the.coaeh was at
,last
opened —it - #.as broad day light. Ilis
however, were bandaged, and he Was led into
a miserable hut, the doors and .windows of
which.werejlosed as soon as he entered.=
.
. When. the bandage was removed, he saw by
the faint .glianner i of a . rush light, a dish of
coarie food Orion . * bderd before shim. Tho'
he. had been; a'sting for some 'time he Could
- 'hardly sWallnw altnorsel;' fear,. however, In
dueed him •to
.eat,fur 'the laces, that watched
his merlons seemed to. portend no good.—
Siberia t Siberia liTtuit was the only thought;
he, was to Hie, inthat 'terrible land. Frogere
gave himseltap to deSpair, When the previous
officer—by-flie-bYe, Sh. old aeqnaintance—en
tered the room, attended - by a Courier. The
poor prisoner felt:, as if he had not . seen that
friendly *.e for ;y ear's. • .1n _ the joy . of his
heart he wals abo ut to embriee him ;
.but a
motion. with the hand l and a stern look 're
straine d hitp , while the finger of the officer
preSsed upon his: lips limposed i silence... Ile
had! flattered that the courier 'had
brought an Orderfor his releaSe; but he was
mistaken. 6. • • .
The officer dis Missed his guide, and.,order
ed the 'soldiers. t 4 leaVe the room rand wait '
outside., Being alone: with the prisoner, he .1
said, -almosf in a'ivhisper,'"FrOgere, we must
now. part. 1 bdie aceompanied you to
.the
first stage, and yOu Will hence. be under. the
inspection ntanother:nffieer. carefid not
to - speak a *ord,3 f risk much even in giving ;
this. catitio4 but 4 I 'your friend. • Have
you any orderafor me ?; Canl ser v e you on
my return t'plit:i'Reteribtfrgr Poor FrOg L i
ere' melted Instead . - of replying
; to •the'question,,he.orily tiewailed having - to,
undergo pidlishnient tor an unknoWn crime:
" Ationktitivin crimer Said the officer.—
" Don't yob, toed, know what jou have done 1
Are you in lf d; rtagere 1 - Have you forgot-1
ten the saitasticijest 'You' made at the Imp&
'Oil table I !has' Offended - - ;the Emperor ;1
you are .piinished, ,be Was so much
truth in'. .
;.'1 •
Goodheaveiii 'I exclaimed the exile.
". Hush I,.',he silent " Whi'Tered the- oth
. ,
er ; " wal ly nav e earl), but not to waste time 4,
.Frogere. I ant the only one: whoml'k
you know Oien4fortlt,diting your long jour
ney, pia fiales . wholly Unknown td
you.: - filui]EtpOemr, yOu ire aware, is rm
movible iii - his.;lresOrvei, -and. inexorable it
AA.bitter,bP. se
signed to ;;dour ire ' . foil hive nothing .;
\
TirE ITAPr *NESS 1 OF
1410 40, Bkeiviiies.
` 11,
t • • •
•OPLE THE T.lo!g 'END OF GOVERNMENT,"
TILE' P
yE3II3PpR 16
:. . •
,I ti ' 1 '. kl i '•
hOpe.
t 'fell me en quie - y, : whatl * c • mit sdo
-9 - z -- i - - '! .
fur yo U." x i• \ ' - •- • •• ! *
,P Speak for file to his Majesty:" •
.f ~:i r liht a word of that," said hisfriend ; . ask
an thing but 6:A." : ' 1. 1, •• .1.
•i If that be - tie ease," said poor Frogere, "I
bAci n othing td ask." :I;
~
r And your money and trinkets, " rejoined
thO Officer, "Idve'you left them all behind.
Ctlii,l li.idge thani, forcyon, somewhere', • until
pin return 'I" , :' .• ' - '-- • • i •
- !1".11y returiti?- gasped 'rogere : • then..
I
am not, exiled:Ori life !" • •.! • .
.'p" Of course*t--only Or! three years..--
Take c o u r ag e ;;ahoy wilLsoOn piss. awaY-',--
' t • .1. - 3,,1 • ~
,
and then—, - - -t .. 1 . li
.I" Three years , for an innocent word I L ".
whined Progero; and began again to cry - and
ciirophiln. Bil at this: moment - the ! soldiers
egtered, and ' L4n_daging his eyes, they lift-.
e 4 hith into the vehicle, afid away , it rolled
again.l • 5 - ' - '-' 1 - '
' p ~— i '.' .•
tit seemed a very long stage—for • Frogerei
1 ealeulai.ed. that l4 4he had travelled a whole day,'
• 4
'when the vehicle again stopped. • As
.before
ha wicsl•banda o +l and led into a wreteliedlnt
a count erpart a kf the' first, aid lighted, by a
. Piece' o bliiiiii.pineWood.r ;The same coarse
foltAWas agairirldaceil.befOreliim • lie looked.
: the la, ~.. I hint:
at, laces around hint: None that he knew
--'none that in4pired him With co mf o rt., Al.j .
'ter several similar ourneys, the. v e hicle - .a.;
/gain stopped. Bp.;Fro,,irgreis - estimate, ,as
well a 4 he could 'tell,•he - had : travelled three
days Old
. nighti. His evei' i were .' - bandagckl ,
ai.lickire,-but instead of beiiig led, his guides
seized him, and carried iiiiii Some time, until
they placed -liiin , on, a wooden , betieh. lle
waited fur -a tew moments; and wondered
why the bandage was - in:it removed. ' At last
he heard - soft j whisperings,, and then, quick
- steps approaching:. i His hands were suchlen- • - ,
lei seized, and tied beliindliislx:iek. lie treil
blingly asked I what. it meant, 'but 'received
,ntr reply. In another moment. his coat was
torn of his - sliohlders and his, breast laid
bare. Frogerse nOw diouglit that eternity,
instead of Siberiaj.*as to be , the goal. of - his
jdurney. " Take iaiin 1" was the command of
one whose voice ha thought he knew.` 1 , 7 ref "
al,d several sliots;•were at' :once discharged.
Far acre fell . se.nscileSs to the ground. • He
NvaS raised, nnvroiinded,• and . whilst he was -
binte along he bciannie tiensthle of.a division
or soldiers niareling past him. • Ilaeing•been
Otieed upon a chair; his luinds were (1111;011nd,
and the bandage! 'l:iiioved. : He then. found
;
.himself in the sat e'rooin, at the same table,
- OA in; the, same OCipan v. - where, that unhap
tiy Loil.mot had . scaped. 'dirt... Opposite to
hltu r stit the. Eli) eror... The astoni - slihient,
tttiori and doubt Vhich altt.irnately reflected
ill the "poor actor" :face; so greatly excited the
risible faculties o'f.Patil„.that the entire coin
ryiuy joined hearti
,z. in the :mirth. 1 i ),,c,rt..
1411 - ,in a swoon. i'l he whole! • terrible trip hail .
TV ; lasted twenty , Our hours The Emperor.
had accompahied him - 'in 'disguise all* the-
Ome, and found immense delight in the pris'..-
Oner's painful safferingß: ;Though used .to
ii,oinedies, it was Ituig before 'the actor. recov-.
Otxl.fron - r the sad dream of the, iniperia!
three. • -.• 'I- •.. s - - ... •
i The ltio.,wliO Fired the First Shot. - .
The first American who di4charg,ed his gOn
cat ;the any tit theitiattie twLexingtoei was Elie.'
Ozer. Locke, Haut died at •Dcering N. IL,
- 1 .
about 50 yearsano. lie resided at Lexington
`ip 1775. The . pritish regt4lars, at the order
Of Major Pitcairq, having tired upon the rebels •
On the green in front of the meeting- house,
kWh* some and wounding Othersi, it. was- the
, iignal fur war. i "The. citizens," writes one,
th night be-seen cpming front all directions, in'
the roads, Overt the fields f tuid through the
, I
woods—each t'i•it his rifle in his hand, his pom
4er horn slung t his side, ainllas - pocket pro
.
' fide& with bulle -. Aniong•the number was
tbenezer'Leckel • The .' British had posted a
• 1
deserve ofitilantv g inile . iii the rear ; in the
irection of Boston. This .vas in the imme:
aiate neighborhood of Mr. ~,who instead: of .
biting to joinit i .he party' At, the grpen, • pla
' bed - himself in a old cellar :it • a convenient
tlstanee,for doing execution,". A portion of
he reserve'- - were standitig 0u the bridge, and.,lir.
J'tir. Locke corm encedfiriag at them . though
there was :no of ot t er American in sight: ' Ile
court
.i.vorked valiefitt for some ittintites, - bringing,
Town one of the enemy, at ttearly every shot.
1
Up tb this tin e not a ; ph . .had . beep fired
Iscwhere by . th rebels. The 'British;great
fy disturbed at osing so ii1 • 41):y. men by the
tandem- firing o au unseen enemy, were not ,
f lung in discver_ a
ug he man in the cellar, and 'l
dischargingj vo ley -of •
bullets '
which lodged
. A. •
i •
tt .
!n the all. oppo
, ite. : .Mr.L L- ocke within, re-
Inained :unhurt-i-,contintied' to load and flue
'ill, -lilt the 'precisi4n of a markstnan. Ile was
46v-cll.. to such close quarters,.-however, by
;;the British On hisYight and ief t t,tlakt he was corn
t,elled to retrea. He hail , gust one bullet left;
and there was now butane Way to escapc,and.
;that was through an orchard in the rear.. The
-*old iers were all around hi fit,iate o f the rit:hav ing
'even gainedithe.i.)rchard. Not Irnibmcnt was
'.,;to - be lost--4e lt,..yeled his gnu at . the niatl t tioar
by, fired,drOppe t d the - gun;- and the man ,was
:==shot through thy - heart. The bullets Whistled,
labont,hint; :Lucke reached t he' bri uk of . a steep
!hill, and threw himSeltur)oo..the*dund,..tunt
'i bled downWardO,rolling as if niiirtz4l}-woutitl
: ed: In this wo,y he escaped unhart At the
el.oso of the wart he 'ternovoil to New Hamper
shire. where 1107:resided' um)! his . death, sonic
~ . .
'twenty" years atter.
. ,
(jarilinE i ati example of the strange 'ig
norance French Feuilletunists fionpetinies ex-
Contributor, to the Paris illustra
tion, objecting Ito the practicefc(rnoking in
public-Whieb s perhaps-fiat a nice practice--
writes asTullowt . : • .
"In New Ygric t .those very United States,
from whence s i much ot.4.tur tobacco is de
rived, it is thrblddeni under the penalty of a .'
fine, to smoke U . the publie street. - Shall we;
the French, allow oursclve- to be belitoi, uii
the ground of Public propriety and the usages
of civilized life) by 'the Quakers?", •• • '
. Our friend cif the . illustratien - must excuse -
,us foreorrecting him: .Theinhabitants of Net
Nork are not Quakers; •Ndhisan as the "r01i...
glen of the United States, though the lioliam
..medan Mind Jciwislf eree4.4',are• tolerated by
;the Government under Certain'reitrictions.
The' Emperor 'of New York is the recogniied
head of the church, and presithei every Sium
day in the' Kentucky Synagogue. ' His eldest
• sonitheDeke of New Orleans, has been dectlar
ed- ineligible to the . throne, On account of his
avolved.lcaning toward - the,Brahmin forni of
Wortibi areically :surprised at a frenek :
writer in-the nineteen!!! tjelatury IMawing so'
little of the Teligiods,_ and - pOlitieal institutions
of a conternpmary people:;: . .; • .
A ; KNowNoTintro atklornerset, *befell into
gie water,, refliied to ~ttseue4l br'en Irish.
min - wiri drowned,'
. ' ..- - • 'THE FROZEN -A 5..._ .:,. i
.. -.
,
One serene evoniug in the
,niddle. of Aug-'
u5t,•1775, 'Captain. Warren. master 'ollie
Oreenland,wludeship, tbund ' haself, beca; ha
ed.arnotig an; inanense Man 'r of Icebergs in
about, I a
.deg'rees of north la; tilde. Oa one
side,. and withina mile 'or ,hi • vessel,'these
were closely:wedged togethe',-, and : . a Sucivi-.
siert of show colored_ peaks 'a
_Reared ;behind:
cach4ther as far as,the eye cu hi reach'silOw--
: jug. that the i - ,ciiati 'was .com letely . ti ' lecked
'up in that, inrte.'', and-,that i. ' had probably
been 'SO flit 'a long' period Of time. Captain
Warrensdid not fev.l'altOget eesatisfied with
his situation ; but. there - i -hero l -.:no • -wild, he
could not, move :one. Way 'or *4 0.1*,1,1r.d . hq :
therefore . kept . it - .Strict • watch,. knowing that
1 he would be sate ai - long as theiecbergs,een
‘ tinned in their 'respective Tollicei. - ' •-_ .._-.'
- . 11 bput!initln len the.' wind frose to. a
_gale,
accompanied by thick_ shoWerls of snow, - *liile
' a succession : of tremendous thundering, grind
ing, and crashing npises, gafearfulevidence,
deuce that the iceswas in moon. -. The vessel
: received violent shocki ever - - moment ;-, air
the haziness Ofthe atmosphere, prevented those - ,
on board, from discovering in what 'direCtiOnr,
the open water lay,, or if there • actually. was
any at all on• either ii.le of them., The night,
was spent in tacking as often as. any' reituse - of'
• danger happened to present; tself, and in the
the-storm abated, - air Captain War-,
rens found to his great joy, 1 tat his ship had ,
not sustAined - any, serious juju y. : ~ He'remark. .
i l.
ed with surprise that the accu nilat . ed icebergs,
which had on the preceding formed
an impenetrable -barrier, had .been separated
and disarranged b,y 'the wind and in one place
a canal of. Open sea wound its course among
• thin - ai fares the eye could! diseern.. . .
•-,
It:: m as: two miles • beyon , Jhe. entrance ; of
this eatiarthat a ship made i, s.. appearance a-.
bout . noon: : The sun stioni brightly at • the
1 13
tithe, and !it gentlebreeze ble , . from the north.
At first, some intervening ice 'ergs prevented
Captain Wtirrens from distinctly seeing ally
-
thing but her ra nge.manner in., whit i her sail toasts ;"but he! was struck with
( I
the, sts' were
disposed, and With the dist' nutted aspect- of
her yards and rigging. 811 continued to go
before the whip for a few fu" longji, Ind then.
1 - gromiding upon
! thpl4w- , ice ere, :remained
1 motionless. - . : - 7 ! : • • . ''. . .
Captain Warrens' Curiosity was so much ek.-
cited thathe,immediatelY 'leapt into the boat
with severaLseamen;,and relwed tOwardSher.
On approaching, he
. obse+d .that her hull
was miserably weather' beiten and not a soul
appeared,on the deck, which' covered with
snow to a considerable depth. He hailed her
crew several times but no aitswee was return
ed. to
Previous•stepping n board, an opeti': -
`porthole near the.main (I:Ll4,c:flight his eye,
:and on booking into it,. he pirceived a man re
`el in ing back'. on a chair, with/writing' materi
als on a table.'befure him, lint the feebleness
of the light madt: everything indistinct. The.
party went upon! deck, Mull having removed
the- fratchWay, which was elOsed; they descen
ded
,to the cabin. They ;first came to the
apartment which Captain • 1/Yarrers viewed
through the Port-hole. . .Aretnor . seized 'him
as he entered it: , Its inmate - retained his for
mer position, and seemed to he insensible to
strangers. HO Wits found to be a corpSi.,.and
green damp mould had erred his - checks
. [ •
and_ forehead,lmld velletl'h • open eyeballit.--
He hatta pen in his hand, and a Ip.r-l?Ook ly;
before him, thenast sentence in whu'e unfin
ished 'page - ran thns : . 1
. • "Nov. 14, litl2: We 4
closed: in the icelseyenteeir
went out yesterday, and oel
trvitio since to kindle
~ •- . ever. .
-success. IliS wits died thi
is no relief." .- ' 1 . 1 ,
Captain Warrens and - his seamen . hurried
. 1
from the spot. without utte''ing a' word. Otr
entering the principle cabir, the first object
that attracted "their attent an Was. the - dead
- body i - )f a'female reclining' rt a bed in an . : l at,
tittide of deep interest an attention. Her
Iconntenance retained the fr, sinless of life, and
a contraction of the limb - showed that; her
IlOrm wasinanimate. Seat .d on the floor was
the corpse of an appareutlyi ynung.man hold-
.ing - a-steel in - one hap d,And a flint in-thonh
er-, as Win the aet of striki4g fire upon -tome
tinder which lay beside hitrr. Mille for part
of the vessel several sailors werefunnd lying
dead in their berths, and - the body; of M boy
was crouched at the littom, otthelgangWay .
stairs. -. Neither' provisions nor. fuel: could be
discovered
,anywhere, bAt Captain Warrens
I was prevented by the supe,•Stitious prejudices
of his seamen, •I'roar examining the, veSsel as
minutely as he' Wished t 4 have „done. • He
therefore carried away the log-book; alieady
mentioned, and returned'to his own Ship; and
immediately steered to .the southward; deep
ly impressed with the awfill example which
he had just witnessed of the danger of nayloa-
Ling tlar Polar seas in highlnorthern hititn&s.
.on 4 returning to England, he made various
inqutrais : respecting vessels that had dis*
pearedhr an unktibwn Way, and by ctunpar-,
l ing the resultsofthose,with inforination which
l as affordepy Written documents itk his pos
session, heaSeertained . the 'name and
history
unfortunate
of the iMprisoned ship and of her
1 master,"and found that she -had. been frtizen
1-thirteeh'year previous to
ch Q. tithopr his. dis
covering ' na her amOng,.the' rice.—Westminster zs
Review.. . . -1 7 1 . :. . •
TT ~,,,- A
all . -,...- • „-;
. ANOTHER I tOAN.--7ilvar y , thepapth - S' iii
Boston,oti Wedriesday ; pnblished AS:genuine.a
proclamation for ThimkigiOng, purporting lb
be. from Goirernor W.itshlturn, of . Ma:4.4om; '
setts, which Appeared in f.he 13oston Herald
the .day before, The official-proclamation s ,Of
the Governor was published' in the Atlas on
'Thursday.mariiing, and IS' quite" a difliirent
enrirposition.'! The: Bostotr.Journal,'Avbidt is
said to bein,the habit of eonamending every
thing the Governor does ; published the,-,lnlse
proclamation as : the pi . o4ctiot! oh'', our err el
lent GOVertior,' - afid.protrOntieed ',it a' rOdel
for 'imitation,. being - cottiprthenSiVe, emicke,
and eloquent in thought And dietion.' ': j, • -
. • 1 . _
SOIR:TIIINGFott LADIEB.--The Norris.-
• •
town: Heiald i gie the followltig • reelpc for
making,a Corti Cake, which took •the
um . at the:: Agricultural Fair of litititgoitiery'
county,..and endersca it . wi 'the aticiiitid Corn :"
Take the wAtitekofeight•Eigs i•one-tharth.
• tiotind each of cOrn Starch; Flotir. antl.Bfitter ;
L alf pound. of
,Stigair ; - one. tea spoon. full.: of
Cream-of-Tartar; halt' tea.si - m;:adn
,full. Uf *An.
Flavor with Almond, or 'to *tilt 'rthetagte."
q ~,
erNOGIUPHIDA!. AND roirrieml-Cost tt NDIt UM:
The Philadelphia qulletin propoutid& the fel
lowing i
, - •
Why i
_President Pierce_ like
:which LLI . o ,
Bee.uu&p althouoll be was thavgbt,,ai first,
to be peifeit in his sphere; it
hi lc ronsittoirobly,fiutienerl et thePotis."
NITA .
_,
i THE KNOW-1111YTHIMG IitOVEIDERT.
The`KnoW-NOthitigniovenient.reatir partl y -, ,
upon hoStility to ' Roman ? Cattuiliciiin; • ‘ and ..,. ~
partly upon jealousy of:foreigners; .. -The. for- ..„.
mer element finds:ready alliance ir.the,-$ll-. 2, - .,-- ? ,
,gioue feeling of all the great protestatit,Seetii,i. '.,
—the great mats of iifiese
,thedibert 'regard- --,,.
Catholicism;asand.- farfar
.more aggressive - -.'
inormdangerena ) than:SlaVery, - -;larid'alfletitig'
olics as subject in-all things,iivil and emlesi- • .
astiral, to the dictation of and absolute despot,
`--wlio has hitherto held all:Enrope in subjee- -
tier); and who new seelia similar / . authorityover
the Americartßepublie: Thfilatier iistretigthf
.ened by the growing rival:Y . of• foreign - 00u'
alf.departinent&,ef laber. - " , '",lliii is felt 'Mose"
sharply in the large eitiestinitheie is kerne- ; .
ly a considerable - -village in `-the _State' :into
which the Irish have not penetrated;in consid-' - '-;
crable. numbers, :and. made themselves up- ,-
pleasantly felt on the laber; 'religion ; Moralsi ,
and above all, on the politiii . oftlik - ,Viace.-6-; -
For in every town; s hoWeitilishiall: *here - tan'
-1 ,
or twenty' Irish frotes.ate to kevis!,i , thit kit'
ingpoliticil wireTulier-of both - Taxtias bends,
'all his efforts tn-secure them; He. centribU: .
teasostentation ly - tO the 9itheliii ,Churehi;'
goes therehim ;Ifind pets inoneylti the poor=
hos '.,. is twice „careful to speak pleasant/ y= !
to an Irish vote ,as he-is tofan - Aniericano='.. •
gves hiaithe iiireferenceif he:has:to hire help . , , •
promises to sell him, wuoai ,0r...• potatoes, or- ,
wheat a:trifle Cheaper than'anYbody'else can
buy it ;-and in a-variety or ways contrives .
r :
, to Make manifest his supr nit•-divotiOn 40-
.
any religion and any race, ut those to which
nine, out of ten d of his neighbors belong,--r-..
This of itself e4 c ites, ill feeling, aid lays die;
,founilation.for. a counter'ingkement - W henever.: •
the opportunity shall' rise. ' Andin a . secigt
society, wherelne'riake are run the tempta-*,
i
ticin to do something than .fir'diese Ifish,7..
iw too strong to be resisted. Those i who _ are..
governed by religious moti es feel that tey . ,
have given a death blow to the - ,,power'of the
'Pope ;—and the-rest are satisfied with having
4...
preserved ..the . litr-rties 'their country=-
against foreignmschination in a general way:
. Besides this; the catholi themielves havel
done muchto provoke , thi hostile. political i•
Movement. ' They begin to - years ago, when
Frelinghuysen, was - ninnina il viithClay; by
denancinghun, as the Al i eenieririi- Journal
did, as- a' spouter "at the religioni Anniver;
§aries and Bible - Societiesl4 the, Tabernacle,
and-by calling' upodell, Catholics •to _ vOt ; a r ,
(Tainst him. - Thes defeatedi the. Whigs„ 1
n
and roused a deep' feeling of reeentin t -
throughthroughout the country thereby... And , in ihe'. - - •
1 last Presidential contest, it is perfixtly well -
I
understoodthat - a meeting of Catholic
. mag-...
1 Hates was' held in Boston "Omit a fort night
1 before the electioni at which an understand- .
ing was had by which the Catholic' voie•Was
turned over en ma§se. to pn. Pierce. ' or f
has the fact that a Roinan Catholic froinTenn- -
sylvatiia; never itnoWn in any way, as a ,pub
lic man, was, appointed Postmaster_ Ge.ner- , \-
al, escaped` notice in this connection. , The
Catholic presS and ', clergy have, 'moreover,' •
strengthened! the representations of these who m
ren'ard , ' their organizations las hostile 1
tO:Re
pu ,
0
blicanism, by denouncing every : _ hbOal
1 movement in',Europe,-aiid by allying them
! icives with Austria, France and every des
potism which sheltemAheiri Church; Inithis
State their demands' for new tenures of their
Church property, and foria niodileation of
lour Free School System, liaveexcited a good
i deal of distil'ist and some alarm. It'istO these
influences, aided by the 'violent and inteMpe- - ,
rate tone of!the Catholic press, metbY . cor:
respondinglyiolence from the other, aide that
1 we attribute that deep and .4trou, gener4a sen
timent which has giyen hirth'Tind Tower to
this new'and form tdableNianization. : So-far
as ii is proscriptive-and int. erant, ilo far as it. '
k
iri,
would deprive a 4 citizen Of a ' ofthe.rights •
and immunities- of Citizenship, on account of
his religion }or his birth Plat:e, it cannot ebtri-
mend; general ',approval nor meet with perm.-
neut Support. • ,But no one ; 3 1ao deny 'that some
of the:evils at which it., pr fessee to `aim,. do
reußy exist land ' need ciirriction. We only
hope ti - at it _will not-create greater evils than
it pretends to cure.—.2V.• .1t.., Tinier. '. ,
l ave HOW been eh
: tray s. • The fire
r master has been
It again without
morning.. There
1 Ali Of -nig .citizens. ,ve4mte the:C.harter
Oak, thee - grand old tree. that - So , completely
shier filed: the written charteir, Which continued -
to be' our or,„franie law till 1818. -- in song and:
story the old oak is.' made' famon ; and thou;
-- I .
sands of strangers from abi•Dad a nuttily'. visit ....,
..it. 7The free stands upon the -NV Ilya Place, :.
now , owned, and, ecupied by, the, on. - -. 1... 1Y;
Stuart., whO bus . kindly . ited: - fii It. ', :A fenr n
1 year i "sinca some boys . kindled afirer within.
its trunk, which .burnt init. bust o the „rotten ,
1 parts; Of it..l - Air:. S;„ soim . iscove edtlinfire,
(
I and ai once,. had it piit'out. Rat. en, at . icon
' siderable expepse, had the . . ,olloir enclosed by
, a door; wiili lock tind key. t. :.I . Pi _also had the
_stuniPs of branthea that had been broken - off
covered with tin and painted:. The tree from
..this tilde seemed.'to .be imbued With new . lift, .
n each stieceddhig SprinidreOing itself in a rich
and ileite foliage. - On.:thq;2d iiit,,tii6,Nv.e.i.
11;iv en fire
n .Conipanics - Who'.:catiii up - '• to- join ,
thdir brethren in 'Hartford 'on the occasion of n
their annual muster,. :visited' the fatuous .oak.. ,_
- I yy show tlieni the - capaeitipt the- true, they
n wer&iivitAld - to. -enter,.the_hollow trunk, when .
. tWen f y -font. ‘• n u n belotigini id • No : .A entered.
t. igkip.r. . IT.ey
.eittii. q . out, and twent y-e ight
of Nii: 7 entered: ', By - :•pliteing -I.winipoight
full grown, 'men hf-_ tin-. ordinary.:-I.ootn - 44ja •
: dwelling;,,ane may judige.pf.tlie . * *4
. .size-*
the fa tit ousiold Cita rice Oak .!--I/a rifhir...ritnei
Se/?•142 ,- .: . ,. , 'i,.-, . 3 -—: ~
. .
~ . .. . .
lEEE
;,,,,,..•.,1-
,'-‘,,,
. . --
I The Charter ,Oak.
i . 1
2 .. W -" If, in: D. S. 'Dickinson' in. Ms ieeenti
speech at' pelhi, said ;' : 1 , •*, .'.,: - ' „
_,
" The soft Prpinization leould not long
Ist,- nude invoked the -rank atalfile Who were
ansied hyl the pretensions 1 ,:of interested lead),
efs, tli..retOrtt to the densi,:leittlestaralaiii-.
The orgartintina was ,i:: ,: upon n o loftiell
pretensim S than the sup ," rt of an : admi.
tration Willett had* more uture thttn'tilli .
t•-did:" Its eowttentientin .%)filie:1180, thong
eontainin whithy men, - s its .under
. tho- ,eoh
troliot. the.gorellninent 'apptiltite#24-- - teitan
,of the New If tritleustom 111005e,. -- ,viiho•Mire
there eruintnedAilie Chri,houts tirkteytowitli
ftovernment bread,end ,tiutter t ,to taiglosan.
1,
Him to the wisdom of the aditunisttati:Ott.'iic
fed tlaliii a thetrwiatrle ilttiattitthin ol* the, in.
teresti4 truth t hilt, the " ciilmowetti its oiytt
er, apt) the ats his nuister'tOetib.!' -
there ilint a 4eacutf:h'n ton` iit". Se%
ITanipBhire,'., y , the ) tuntle of D 4, bi. , tride s
cooper. Ono abbatif•marning , lie = heard` ' a
number I.lnls playing in , frout of his btituse l
Had he went out to stop their Sabbath kr,ikk ,
.4414., Assutliwi, a gravc epuntenanto r hp tuild
to theni P , BoilB" . 'dii - 'vou'litioV - iviiat r :ffar OIL
lit* -- 4 i i Wiir,',' ifilifitill4el, : itl4lavolir s l)l
. the boy:II: "Steneiin ; Da?: 043' 1 6 10 1 10 4 1 !' - ' x '_ s ''
MEE
MINIEMEN