Jeffersonian Republican. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1840-1853, January 15, 1840, Image 1

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TO
Richard iVugeiit, Editor
The whole art ok Government consists in thwart op jjeing iionest. Jefferson.
VOL.
MILFORD, PIKE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANAJR-Y 15, 1340.
-if
9r.
JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN.
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POETKY.
THE GRIEF OF SHERIDAN,
, ON THE DEATH OP HIS WIPE.
She has gon'from this bosom, who gave
To its throbbings the gladness of lifo ;
Thy have borne to the cold, cold grave,
. My joy and my comfort my wife.
Her smile was thelay-mornrag clear,
Her look was tlie blue sky above,
' Her mind was the flow'ry partaree ;
And her bosom the temple of love.
Her voice was the music that flows
Prom the shell of the echo of joy '
And her eyes like the fair star that throws
Benignity over the sky. " V ff-r
Bu. May-morning's veiled in a shroud ;
It hath dawned on me sweetljfft last , . -
. Jtfrblue sky the vapours, becloud .
And my temple's laid lvafey the blaft. rL.
They have home my wliole world to the tomb:, ;
. . . . h.
Of all earth from me nothing appears,
But solitude, sorrow ami gloom,
And the lf&torinaH'ssolaces tears
'Tis the latest solaco .1 crave
Tis a tribute I owe to my love
Till I steeply hor sulc m the grave
I would weep till I join her above.
SELECT TALES.
noble as well as one of the wisest and richest bitterly imprecating the treason-' of Madame de
young men in all Paris. Yet it seemed that his Bourg. - 1
heart had never been caught in the snare of Cupid, ' By the eternal God,' exclaimed Robespierre,
though many of the most splendid women of ' they shall repent their insolenQand that beauti-
Franco had obliquely acknowledged him the idol ml Rhl shall Dc the victim of he'rfplly.'
of their hearts. Dantan, Marat and Robespierre, had sent for the
It was late one evening that de Blondville was younger Robespierre and St. Just, to consult in
returning from tho theatre, that he heard the cry of secret conclave upon the manner in which they
distress proceeding from the entrance to a small should rid tho world of the innocent, the injured,
sireet, and recognised it to be the voice of a female. ana" unfortunate Louis XVI.
Ever chivalries with a proud devotion to the fair In their hallj hung with blaclcvo shall leave the
sex, he hastened to the spot, and found a man in Wood thirsty tribunal, and returh"tp the parlour of
the act of forcTng a lady into a cabriolet. Madame do Bourg. Madamoiselle Rosalie and
'Villain,' cried de Blondville, 1 release the lady de Blondville were now alone, anil ne was press-
instantly, or this dagger shall avenge her insult, mg her 10 give him a history of (her life, and the
in the blood of a coward.' And he held the wea- sufferings she had spoken of having received in
pon glittering in the liaht of the full moon the house of the elder Rbbcspieffc. After some
- i
'1 do not recognize your rieht to interfere.' re- hesitation and a thousand blushes; she consented.
torted the coachman, ' the lady by Contract is now
the property of tho Count de S
dcred
"lam the daughter of Monsieur Jean Montra-
and I'm or- v"le, wo died in my eleventn year, and left me
,vith the remnent of his fortunes to the care of his
'Another word, sir,' saidde Blondville, ' and I distant relation, Robespierre, wh. promised to be
free the world of a villain.' a father tome. Scarce had I readied my sixteenth
The ruffian sprung aside from the descending year, ore he attempted to betrayfoe into the hands
dagger, and escaped the blow, at the same instant of his infamous brother, who just left us. It was
releasing the lady from his grasp. No sooner was while standing at my toilet, that he made the first
she at liberty than she sprung into the arms of de attempt, but I snatched the'xlaggef from his bosom,
Blondville. and called unon him. in thr nnmn nf and threatened him and mvselfwith death if he i der neck an the block
i , . i-. ,
chivalry, for protection from a fate infinitely worse did not instantly desist. The coward skulked from e ureacuu axe, anu ai ma sounu uur whims um
.i i i -r, -m i mi i l"uulkJ J ., heaved'uith convulsive emotion. I he very heart
than death. Dc Blondville bore her from the the room, and troubled me no more. But the el- r .,...,, r mo, f;wi v,;, . ,n,i
the mitltitudcif who had gathered to see libr die.
Blondeville burst into tears as he cazed unon the
moving mass ofIife, and ejaculated to himself
I ' TTnvv tr.Tn5itnis human o-rnniloiir I llrnv frill
the applause of tha populace ! But yesterday she
was the idol of the nation and fhe admiration of
Europe ! To-day insulted and abused she goes
to the scaffold to die the death of a felon. But
yesterday, the mob followed hor splendid equipage,
in which she satin royal robes, and shouted 'long
live the queen ;' to day in humble weed3 with her
hands tied, she goes in a cart to the place of death.
Oh now precarious is the fate and the fame of
man
yiondcville thus mused as he followed the pro
cession to the place of exhibition, and he gazed
oif the bloody guillotine with awe and terror. Pity
overcame him, when he saw the yet lovely queen
taken from the cart and conveyed to the scaffold.
Thousands were gazing on the bloody spectacle,
ready to sec the first gore . that should gush from
the severed trnnk. Maria Antoinette, gazed round
upon the vast multitude, and n faint smile illumin
ed "her pale face, as she took the handkerchief
from her neck of snow, and adjusted her drapery.
She then tenderly' embraced cue whom she had
loved in happier days, and advanced to the fatal
block, She knelt down on the same spot where
but a short time before the fate of tho celebrated
French General Custine had been sealed, and of
fered up a prayer. This being done, she prepared
for the fatal act : and gently stretching hor slen
der form at full length, she laid her fair and slen-
The executioner raised
ML
Up ).l
ovwii w ciujmtuu iuu piauu JL llUi UUUUU. uci villain iiiavtt niu; ouuuuu u-ntitiij i j uyjiii Ti.i,uiij
' My name,' saidltheladv, ' is Rosalie Montra- thank Heaven and you, I was.this night saved
ville, I have formerly resided with my 'guardian, The ruffian from whose hands you snatched me,
but he is a villain of the darkest die. Marl en- yielded, to a Dnoe, and told me mat. Kooespierre
quire your name V said Rosalie, in a suppressed had ordered me to be conveyed to the Chateau of
tne unavaiier ot. oiair, into wnose nanas i was io
be delivered. I had not money enough to bribe him
to let me go, for he was to recqive a thousand
francsrand was to bring a certificate that I was de
Iivered. Robespierre informediine that my father
and tremblina"
.voice as she cast her head aside.
My name,''returned the young man is ' Victor
Rosaline dc Blondville.'
The lady started, as-that name fell upon her car,
for she recognized it. in a moment. Blondville
ATEscAr-r
During1 The Reignbf Terror.' -From the Tem-
pl Prison.
Fly for your ?ifc,
Onmoment ki may prove your utter ruin ;
involving an umi you noiu uearuu earui :
Oh dp not thus delay the prison gates
Arc open to rou should they close again,
a., wjiat ltand may snatch you trom youi iloom
asked the roason but she waived the subject, and 9n h5s death bed had desired that he should marry
the next moment brought them to the marble steps mc to some worthy man with, or without- my con-
of a large building in the Rue St. Ilonore. Blohd-j sent and tliat 1 was t0 bu conveyed to ttte residence
ville hesitated : and she politely invited him in. of Victor Rosaline de Blondville, who had con
Through a large, iong entry, she led him into a sented to be my husband. Hence tho reason why
splendid hall, and from thence into an elegantly 1 started when you coirfraunicattd your name this
lurried at the moment bv QVGnlnS-
vfT yiresrvery temples,
and hid her face in her handkerenrer. -
De Blondeville felt the arrows of love in his
heart, for in suffering himself to take an interest
in her welfare, he suddenly felt an indescribable
partiality. To espouse an unhappy woman's cause
furnished appartment. occunied at the moment bv
an elderly iady, the brother otTltoTi-pTerr-'"-,itn
St. Just, his particular friend. After an introduc-
tion a la Francois, de Blondville was seated and
! the conversation resumed by Robespierre, St. Just,
and the lady.
' It is natural for the human heart to love power.
i said the younger Robespierre, ' and he who does is at once t0 love her especially if she be young
feveFdid any prince bid fairer to have a glori- j not seize the sceptre when it falls in his way, is a u auuiui, as was uosane moniraviiie.
,,ps and peaceful Teign than Louis the XVI. of , recreant to Ins nature. And m wnat relation uo you stand to tne iady
Iance. In the midst of a profound peace, thej ' But he who usurps a power not his own,' said of the House V enquired de Blondeville, gazing
arts and sciences flourished and the country pros- the ladyi ' is an enemy to his ' intently in her dark, large melting eyes, and on her
nArAil ' Acthfl nritrnn rif :pinrv nnfl tlir. nric ' Hold 11 said St. Just, ' such sentiments mav beautiful form.
Louis deserve- a better fate than awaited him, for i cost Gven yur n,c- ' Madame de Bourg is my aunt on the female
he was then standing upon the vortex of a volca
lio, which eventually burst upon the astonished
wSrld, and scattered its fires through all Europe.
Even at the moment when the unfortunate heir of
feudal pomp and power, was promising himself a
ong and illustrious reign, the flames of a tremen-
i - .
uous revoiutioa were ureaicinir liKe atorrem tumo-
ng from the summit of the Alps or Andes. The
hirr tlie Hosn-l bfinentli its unlmllowed feet, and
lie ties of consanguinity weie fast fadir.g from
the human hmrt. Like a clap of thunder in a
clear sky, the awful truth flashed upon the minds
of men, that they were in the midst of one of the
most terrific Mid bloody as well as one of the most
brilliant revohtions that ever disgraced thp-annals
uf any nation Amid the wrecks and ruins of that
French volca; o, a thousand thrones tottered and
tumbled, a tlii usuhd crowns perished, though they
;erpctuated t! e ambition that blasted them. Scarce
had the mad! though magnificent drama, com
menced, ere liouis the XVI. perished on the scaf
fold, and his llood made an offering to the demon
of frpnzy aiidjsavage fierceness. Yet no sooner
had lie gone (nvn to a dark and dreadful grave
t'lan the awfuj axe fell upon the fair neck of his
(j ieea ; the biautiful, the accomplished, though
dissipated Majia Antoinette. The reeking instru
ment, which lstd drank tho blood of the royal pair,
was not yet stiiatcd. The knell of vengeance had
hounded, and 'jie greedy guillotine was to feed and
fatten on the agonies of the whole Bourbon family.
Never was any nation cursed with a set of more
terrible tyrans than those who wielded the reek
ing sceptre of iFranre, triumphing in the downfall
of all that was great, or good, or glorious, and
dooming to deith all who opposed their savage ca-
nvr. Their iurch was in blood ; and a thousand
mothers minced theircries and mourned over the
tombs of thci'fniurdorod sons. The hands of the
terrific Robeipien! were red with tho gore of
slaughtered p jnees, and the dungeons of r ranee
a ore filled wjjh victims for the awful axe, which
Lad already d-unk the blood of thousands.
A little antecedent to that period, when . liobes
j'ierre seized he rei3 of government, the story
commnnces vhiQh I om about to relate , Victor
Rosaline de Bondville was one of tlw gayest, mosW
among us, he is pointed out as our;fiff '
and we are told at the same time hofc.
is to wear the c.own. This, howcverV
told our sultan until the appointed time",
when lie is to lay down his dignity.
that time comes, he is suddenly dethroiu
dressed in a coarse, and unsightly garment, t.nd
carried away to a barren desert island
Tho sultan trembled once more from iWI
to foot, and asked if his predecessors had been
told, like him, what a sad fate awaited them.
' They were all told of it,' said the wise vi
zier, ' but they nmde no good use of tlu ir
knowledge. They enjoyed the pleasure of tin
moment without thinking of the future. JS;
tho time for their dethronement came
them before they had made the slighte .1 pr,
paration for rendering their future life in the
desert island an agreeable one.'
Why, can that be done V asked the asfoii
ished sultan.
' Surely it can,' was the reply. ' No on -hinders
thee from.no w, at tin's very mouu n
beginning to plant acolony on the barren in
land, which is to be thy future habitation. H
thou doest this, its barrenness will be changt-J
to beauty, thou Avill be ioyfullv received whn
thou goes to dwell upon it, and never regrt
the splendour thou hast left behind thee. But
hasten, hasten-Jf such is lliy intention ! Ff e
ble man is master of the present moment only,
the coming one belongs to destiny.'
The prudent sultan did not, like hi. prei! -cessors,
turn a deaf ear to the warning voice
of his gQOtl vizier ; without loss of time he
sent a large number of his best and most valu
able subjects to the desert island, and com
manded them to prepare a pleasant retrent ft
him against his coming. Therefore, when 1 -was
dethroned, and forced, as others hid frn
In t'islt tllf" nlinflri nf Imrronnoca litv fmnlil i
shout ot tne imoo was ringing m me air iong fcrtile and pleasant to look-upon, and full of
thousands stood in silence and breathless expecta
tion. But the next moment the axe fell with a dread
ful crushing sound, the red gore gushed several feet
from the .leadsman, and the beautiful head of the
French queen dropped into the bucket. The exe
cutioner seized it by the long hair, and held it with
its calm, pale features for the mob to gaze on.
Blondeville could gaze no longer, and turned from
the scene with a sickeninc: sensation. The wild
died the beautiful, the accomplished, and dissipat
ed Maria Antoinette, at one time the idol of the
army, and the fascination of Paris.
(To be concluded in our next.)
Prom the New York Mirror.
' THE SULTAN AND HIS VIZIER.
An eastern sultan, who was far from being a
way, got one day very
blooming flowers and sweet', fragrance ; and
there he lived forever in cheerfulness and
peace, for he knew that this was his final re1-1-ing
place, and that he had no further change
or accident to fear. And here my tale endeth,'
said the vizier, and was silent.
' And what is the meaning of all this,' said
the caliph, impatiently, ' what is the hidden
meaning of thy long winded story ? It con-
reflection ;
oncealed that
tyrant in his general
much out of tern
lrfiOUU"ilo'l.
the Brother of the
tendant came near him abruptly avd committed Know then,' said the vizier, ' the rich an
-K 1.. 7... T-Tio li C net: lirnlro nnt ! 1 . . i .1 -1 ,
owiuo oii"n wnv. 11 utile V UlUIIL IIliLM IS IIUU : Lilt! S IVR IO Wilt)'
in a torrent of rage, and ordered tlie offender j ne gave freedom, a newly bom mortal ; the
. , 1 t r.'-. 1. T . I. .1 . 1 . . - 1 . .... . - . -
iper. All the courtiers kept a-i'tains, I suppose, some useful moral reflc
J1- . ,.o,mH-e it . caroliajv conceal,
he Sun ; but one carefess at- r cannot flnn itr op.a..
to receive the hastinado.iorthwith, and then to
be impaled in front .of the great gate of the
palace.
' Lord of tlieaithftil !' said his honest vi
zier, ' let the ftllfilment of thy commands be de
layed, while I tell thee a story.' Tho sultan
o-ave a mie, surly sign of assent, whereupon
the vizier began to relate the following tale, for
which, be it remarked, he drew on Jus inven
tion, not on memory :
' A wealthy and benevolent mussulman had
' I cannot but dread the most fearful consequences side,' returned Rosalie blushing, ' she has resided
to France,' returned the lady, with a bitterness in Paris but a few years. Her former place of
that went to the heart of the two excited listeners : residence was Lyons. She is a lady of strong a slave whom lie wished to make happy, so he
I5ut lear of. vengeance from man. 'shall never dc- mind, and has taken rreat interest in the welHre gave him his freedom, and presented him more
ter me from speaking my sentiments in regard to 0f her country, since principles as well as men over, with a good ship, loaded with costly mcr-
mv countrv. I he frmllotinemnv rnh mr nf n fmv U,-,r -i,-.-,i v;i,- i,v K,,t;ri .1'inn-iifnr I chamlisc. I he bondman now iree irom nis
years of existence, but it can never obliterate from ; tio ,,-,n an-,rU ii,on hnr- nnhU mn. fetters, set sail joyfully, for his native country
my heart my utter detestation of a usurpur and thcr. But I fear that in those times Pr terror, that suddenly a storm arose and flung him on an
tvrant. France, but .1 little white nan wa nm. .u-:- :.i:- : :u .1 ,un. rm t uninhabited island. His vessel went to pieces
.j- , uiuu iiiuiaiuiiuii 111 luuu iii.iit mi" miji) mi j. 1 . , , - 1. .., i,: ,,,,,1 ( i.
nm.n,,n,n, .1,-:r- 1 ;.-J. . . and he was left to bemoan his sad fate on the
.i lmuuKu tnrn nave Heard mat tne nenu nearteo i.ouespierre nas (esert beach At first he saw no traces
ui jmiui imuuuu in mt nearts 01 sucn men Nona- had his eye upon them, llis disapprobation h...m- uA Knt n l, loft tlm ,bnrp nn,i
is a certain passport to the scallold ; a mock trial fnrnnVed further on, he saw the walls am
bitterly ejaculated Robespierre alone is required. Witness the fate but a few days towers of a lame citv in the distance. JoV'
1 I - n mJ J
past, of the unhappy Louis the XVI. whose only fully he bent his steps toward it, and hardly
as
' Ourselves !'
and St. Just, at the same moment
'If it so please you,' retorted the lady, as her fault was that his forbearing and peaceable dispo- had" he reached the gates, when he was met
fair daughter Emily de Bourtr, entered the room Uin'nn wmilrl nnt Riifler him to din his hands in the and welcomed with shouts of toy. Countless
gaily, and was introduced to de Blondville. hlnnd nf bis miomins. Had ho exhibited a deter- multitudes of the inhabitants surrounded him
' Vou may live madam, to renent this lanrruan-e' minpn c-nmt bn had not neris-hed. Tt is whisner- bowed their faces to the dust, and cried, as
nnl TfnhPQnu.rrn xvhnn ' L.i .1.-. i.: 1 ,.-., :r.,i Afo- A,t-!n ,;n with one voice, ' long live our sultan.' The
' When vou'have usurped the nower. and pros- hnrn thn Snm fate, and ndd another to th cata- P00r shipwrecked frecdman besought them not
,ui:i.--,:- -r 1 .-. 1 . to make snort ot his misery; but fie was as
aM..uu.,H w , ,1IUp,, e miy Mogueoi numan victims. - fc rejoicing multitude, that these
, B (1 . llllu. 1U11IIC ina za ujjpiua.ums, .UUI.H.U honors were paid him 111 sober earnest. ptte
xour. lour secret macninauons nave uccn di- deville, ' and fear many will be victims at the f j j strnrios? llfi was lifted by force into a
vuigcu, iur wore are spies upon you as well as bloody shrine of Kobespierrc's idolatry; the snnnc I splenclitl chariot, and conducted to a palace
upon society. 0f mad ambition.' (ditteriim- with rold and jewels. Here he was
-. 1 I v '-J "
Are you, too, iMadenioiselfe de Bourn-, opposed -ni-.i.,:ii-- a r... ,.-i::.: i;i.n. rlrn::er1 hv nflieions attendants in roval robes.
to the benefactors of vour countrv. and to tlm sal- r m i.r. .1: tt wlnln n ernwd nf crave diVnified-lookinp- old
-" ui .ailing attain, leu nit: apartment. xappy were o . . ,
of 1' ranee,' rerorted bt. Just with a philo- ,i-o. nn ,iint ;h, i, ;.n;n,i i.,-monir men, avIio declared themselves to he the great
m I IJ1U ui.iimi,. J Lllllt lll.UI. lll 11U 111111 1 II llilltVjl I
uation
sophic composure.
' To the tyrants and the eternal ruin of France
you should have said,' returned Mademoiselle calm
ly. 'I can never expect anything good out of Na
zareth.' ' Neither do you expect to atone for your trea
son,' said St. Just cooly.
bowing before the beautiful Rosalie, and gazing
officers of state, did him homage as their sov-
nni'Tn ! ri7w1 nlnrnnl iilfl it . S3n vllf-
,., ner uanv eye. uio.iuev.iie was eurapuirua , j j j mut jjc was
with her beauty, and resolved to use every moans , j hiahness mav imagine, to
in his power to win her heart, and make her his managing the" affairs of a great people, and
own. 1 lie next morning no arose early ; it was Would have cut but a sorry figure had it not
tho 15th October, 1793. The revolutionary bell been for a wiso and aged. vizier, who always
was tollinn. as a simal that another hm'nnr was a- o-ave him nrmlnnt counsels to aid his inexpert-
' We are friends to our country, and enemies to bout to exn:re benoalh tho fatai axn. ondville ence.
all tyrants,' said the elder lady. ,,,, (1mvn fll(, sfr. tmvn1 th vr:nUv nf thn ' Tell mo. vizier, so the monarch not long
Beware of your folly,' said Robespierre,' who prison, whete the unfortunate, queen of France was afterwards addressed his sage adviser, tell
had hitherto been absorbed 111 thought. At this confined. Thousands were hurrying to tho spot, me now is it mat 1, poor menu
moment the dooropened; and a messenger enquired and he learned that Marfa Antoinette had been We been made a great king, and let mo know
for Robespierre, and St. Just, wnose presence was condemned by the revolutionary convention on ! , 1 ,v;r ' nil thn in.
immeoiately required on business of importance. frivolous and improbable pretences. In a few , . :J r tll whnm thnn takest to he
'Beware, gentlemen, exclaimed both ladies at minutes the gates opened, and tho queen was con- man nrn nw oniric ' The ikino- shuddered
once" that vengeance does not overtake the ene- ducted tSFcart by the executioner. She was ,w l,i rnval robes, but said nothing, and
miesol France first, and put an end to the fears of habited in black, and hor pale features, though the vizier proceeded. 'We are, however, al
all good citizens.' composed, showed how much sho had suffered, ways under the govnrnment of a mortal, whe
island on which he lands, which he at first
thought uninhabited, the world ; his advisers,
wisdom ; the time of his government, his life ,
and the barren island to which he is banished,
the other world. The colonists he is permit
ted to send into it, are the good works that he
performs in this life, and the careless rulers
are those who get drunk with the pleasures of
this life, without thinking on that which is to
come. And now, commander of the faithful,,
suffer me likewise to point out the application
of my story. During the period of thy gov
ernment, thou hast sent many colonists before
thee to mako green the face of the dqs'ert is
land which is the appointed resting-place, b t
all the labor thpy haye performed wjll he in
vain, if thou sKotildst take the lifefof a true
and faithful servant for, a trifling inatfqr. For
give him even as than -Impost in God that he
will one day forgive the?.
This bold remonstranccJmduced the caliph
to lay aside his anger, and:ardon his innocent
servant.
' Well, B said a rriember of the Bar, to
one of the school 1 V have been trying to
wade through your tragedy, but I couldn't get
on.'
4 1 dare say no!; was tlie answer. You
found yourself beyond your depth ."
' This is a miserable day,' said another of
the wrangling tribe, to a pro fessionaf friend, 011
one of the late .raw and blustery mornings
' true December weather? It provokes one to
suicide. I have a great mind to blow my
brains out.'
' Well try it ; you will be inglorious sho'
if you hit 'em,' was the quick reply?
-MBM- .
Patriotic sentiment. ' If the individual on
whom important responsibilities arc d'evolved,
can see, as the fruits of his public action
acre rendered more productive, onofectioi
brought nearer to the common centre,
product offered in the common marke
additional institution of learning opene
children of the commonwealth, he may
rejoice that he has not labored in vain
Seward.
51e
Ere the last words were uttered. St. Just and With her hands tied behind hor, she was placed in is sent us from time to time, by the great Lord
Ilphcspierre had retired from the room, and were the cart amid the loud cries and imprecations of of all, to rule over us. As soon as he lands
ar
nd
Ull
The pious African. An African, many ye
ago, before instruction was extended to that
fortunate race, as it now is- in New Engla
undertook to preach to his sable Brethren
faith and works. After haranguing a lc
time, he concluded as lollows : u
brodors Faith widout de work, be jess
beef 'take widout de graveo. If we no I
work wid de fait, we mus' all be chuck do
to do bottomless pit, aV dore roas' and broil
all 'ternity. Which ihay be de happy portion,
ob'us all
likeo
tfT"