-4 4 -, The whole art ok Government consists in the art of being honest. Jefferson. VOL . 7. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1846. No. 22 T TERMS Tivnilnllars ner annum In advance Two dollar! nnr! a nnarier. half voarlv and if not mid before the end of the year, Two dollars and n half. Those who receive tlirii papers by .1 carrier or stage drivers employed by the proprie tors, will be charged 37 1-2 cl. per year, extra. No papers discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except ;it the option of the Editors. ID Ad vertiscmcnts not exceeding one square (sixteen lines) M ill be inserted three weeks for one dollan twenty-five ccntt for every subsequent insertion : larger ones in proportion. A lioeral discount will be made Jo yearly advertisers l7All letters addressed to the Editor must be post paid. .TOR PRINTING. Having a general assortment oflarge, elegant, plain and orna mental Tvpe, we arc prepared to execute every description of C:ir:I, Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER BLANKS, PAMPHLETS, &c. fritted with neatnessand despatch, on reasonable teims AT THE OFFICE OF THE Jef fersonian Republican . From Douglass Jcrrold's Magazine. Bread from Brain. Where the iron of our lives Is wrought out in fire and smoke, , There the mighty Vulcan strives ; Hot the furnace, hard the stroke: There the windy bellows blow, TJnue the sparks in millions glow, There, on anvil of ihe world, the clanging hammer hurl'd. Hard the labor! small the gain, Is in making bread from brain. J Where lhat nameless stone is raised, Where the patriot's bones were placed, Lived he little loved and praised ; Died he little mourned and graced : There he sleeps who knew no rest, There unblest by those he blessed; Here he starved while sowing seed, Where he starved the worms now feed. Hard the labor! small the gain, Is in making bread from brain. In lhat chamber, lone and drear, Sits a poet writing flowers, Bringing Heaven to earth more near, Raining thoughts in dewy showers. While he sings of nectar rare, Only is the ink-bowl there ; Of feasts of gods he chants high trust, As he oats the mouldy crust. Hard the labor! small the gain, Is in making bread from brain. When the prophet's warning voice Shouts the burthen of the world, Sackcloth robes mu be his choice, Ashes on his head be hurled. "Where tyrants live at ease, Where false priests do as they please,, . He is scorned and pierced inside, He is storied and crucified. Hard the labor! tunall the gain, , , Is in making bread from brain. Patriot! Poet! Prophet! feed Only on the mould- crust : Tyrant, fool, and false priest, nned All the crumb, and scorn the just. Lord! how long! how long, oh Lord! Bless, oh God, mind's unsheathed sword ; Let the pen become a babre, Let thy children eat who labor; Bless the labor! bless the gain, In the making bread from brain. Scblime. " Did you observe the sun set 3;it evening?" said a nice J'oung man to a Iadv :t day or two since. " I did not," i,he replied ; was it particular ly fine V " Oh ! it was splendid ! Perfectly beautiful ! The most fascinating appearance of Nature 1 rvcr saw ! It was similar lo the waiters or sal vers that are in some oj the windows in Washing- j ton street." 'fhe sun hasn't dared to set since, but mert iv retired behind the cloud. Boston Bee. A new Rio Wc saw a lady in the street a few days since, says an Exchange paper, with a black silk overcoat on, "all buttoned down be fore." Singular Marriage. The Barre (Mass.) Patriot of the 30th ult. record the marriage, at Athol, of a colored preacher of the Wesleyan otder, to Miss Elizabeth Holt, of Salem, "whose fkin of unblushing whiteness contrasted most strangely with the ebony color of the bridegroom." Kev. Sidney Smith 011 Bulls, &c. A bull is an apparent congruity, and real in congruity, of ideas, suddenly discovered. And if ihis account of bulls be just, they are (as might have been supposed) the very reverse of wit ; for as wit discovers real relations, that are not apparent, bulls admit apparent relations lhat are not real. The pleasure arising from wil proceeds from our surprise at suddenly discov ering two things o be similar, in which we suspected no himilarity. The pleasure ari- j sin8 from bu,ls proceeds from our discovering iww uiiiigs 10 ne dissimilar, in wuicn a resem blance might hare been suspected. The same doctrine will apply to wit, and to bulls in ac lion. Practical wit discorers connection or relation between actions, in which duller un- derstandings discover none; and practical bulls j originate from an apparent relation between two j actions, which more correct understandings t immediately perceive to have no relation at all. j Louis XIV. being extremely harassed by the j repeated solicitations of a veteran officer for promotion, said one day, loud enough 10 be heard, That gentleman is the most troublesome officer I have in my service.' 4 That is pre cisely the charge (said the old man) which your Majesty's enemies bring against me.' ' An English gentleman,' (says Mr. Edge worth, in a story cited from Joe Millar,) 'was writing a Inter in a coffee-house ; and perceiv ing that an Irishman stationed behind him was taking that liberty which Parmenio used with his friend Alexander, instead of puiting his seal upon the hps of ihe curious impertinent, me I I English gentleman thought proper to reprorej the Hibernian, if not wiih delicacy, at least wiih j poetical justice He concluded writing his let-' ter in ihesa wnrrl, . T -!, , t,.., . I " I would say more, but a j .. : j: 1 , sc damned tall Irishman is reading over my shoul-! der every word I write." ! ' " YouJie, you scoundrel," said the self-con- i victed Hibernian ' i ..... " The nleasure derived from ,bn fi,ct f tl,... ! stories, proceeds from the discovery of the lion that subsists between .he anient h hnrl in view, and the assent of the officer .0 an obser- j ration so unfriendly to lhat end. In the first j rapid glance which the mind throws upon his words, he appears, by his acquiescence, to be ! pleading against himself. There seems .0 be ! no relation between what he says, and what he j wishes to effect by speaking. ! In the second story, tlie pleasure is directly' J ... I he reverse. The lie given was apparently the ' . readiest means of proving his innocence, and,tnem' we nd were possessed of unearned really the most effectual way of establishing his guilt. There seems for a moment tn hi a w i strong relation between the-means and the ob- ject; while, in fact, no irrelation can be so complete. ; , "Perfect 3h1Is." Pope, in his translation of Homer, in speak- 1 ing of an eagless and her young, says : " Eight callow infants fill'd the massy nest, Herself the ninth ! Also, in his Essay on Criticism : " When first young Maro, in his boundless mind, A work to outlast immortal Rome design'd." Dryden says : "A horrid silence first invades the ear." Thompsou also sings : " He saw her charming, but he saw not half The charms her downcast modesty conccaVd." Virgil also knew how to make a bull : J iuynamur ei in meaia arma ruamus, " Let us die and rush in the middle of the fight." But the prize hull belongs to Milton, who, in his Paradise Lost, sings : " Adam, the goodliest man of men since born His sons, the fairest of her daughters, Eve." Plain Speaking. Mrs. Elizabeth Peters of Boone county, Indiana, thus notices her ab sconding husband : " Left my bed and board last fall, thereby rendering my expenses lighter, my legal hus band John Peters, without cause or provocation. All the old maids, and young girls and widows, of all ages and conditions, are hereby forewarn ed against harboring or trusting him on my ac count, as I am determined not to be held ac countable for his debts or more especially for his conduct, because he is a loafer, a drunkard, a gambler, a liar, a thief and Locofoco." A lit'le girl hearing it remarked that all peo ple had once been children, artlessly inquired, "who look care of the babies !" Unearned Moiaey. However common may be the desire of sud den wealth, yet it may be safely affirmed that money is never so much enjoyed, nor so pleas antly and judiciously spent, as when hardly earned. The exertion used in obtaining it is beneficial alike to the health and spirits. It af fords pleasure in the contemplation, as the re sult of effort and industry, a thing which un earned money can never imparl; and the natur al alternation of labour and relaxation tends 10 preserve the body in health, and keeps the mind from the injurious extremes of either parsimo ny or prodigality. Unearned money, on the contrarj-, as it is obtained without an effort, so it is often j-nent without a thought. There is no healthful ac tivity used in acquiring it ; no putting forth of those energies, the use of which tends c-o great ly to elevate and purify ; no skill or persever ance called into action ; and it is seldom that it is possessed 10 any great extent without in juring the possessor. It induces a distaste for labor and activity; it lulls to ignoble rest in the lap of circumstances ; it allures to float along with the stream, instead of the healthful labor j of stemming the tide of difficulty ; and he had need be something more than mortal who can possess much of this unearned money without being in his moral nature somewhat paralysed and debased. Naturally rampant as are the weeds of sloth and sensuality in the human heart, that condition of life in which there is . .... Anu -Vel now 0Uen 00 ,00"h" P"en,S eDar themselves of almost the necessaries of life, and drudge on 10 ,he la,esl moment of existence, to . o..j ..f ii, .,i.i , . i J i,l"'u ,"" 1" " ! Sood '"PP1 of ,lns m,earned mone' 1 How fle"' ,n rder 10 aecure 10 "e member f a fani51y lhc COVeted ",ie f a 'g'eman,' ' : greatesl Hliberaliiy and injustice are exercised rela-i,OWards,heresl! No1 urifre(lUenl,'' howeVer' ! doeS 11 hPPen hal ,i,CSe ' '"n ou ' .lr.L:r.:i 1.1 ",e '"USl U"SC"' ; e poor, unPrtmded members, who had nothing but their Wn e"erg' 3"d mAwu 10 look t0' r,Se 10 a j leVe! f resPec,afall,ly ad "sulness far supc- "r ! ,he ready-lade g"l"y heir envied j ! 1,1 glancing orcr the glittering list of those who llare made ,he grea,esl achievements, J , , - .. wne,er in art, science, or literature, how lew , money! iney were lor the most part men of single purpose and patient perseverance ; and , . u t 1 I thls was ,he,r onIy weal- Their genius was , nursed in lhe cra(1,e f 'oil; and we may safely J newer ones: and is also, consequently, one assert that, with respect to the most of lhem,jgreat hastener of their downfall. In young had they been born in the enervating lap of in- j countries men have to earn before they can (dependence and abundance, the flame of their ...... 1.1 t 1 .i: 1 genius uulu ine ucun emici uimmcu 01 ca- business 10 the body, an independence to the char tinguished, and the works of a Haydn, a Burns, acter and an devation to the mind, highly ben and a Rembrandt, might have been lost to the! eflcial to whole community-. In old countries, world. , I Among business men this thirst for unearned j money often produces the most disastrous con- I sequences. A bubble company makes out a j plausible statement of certain profits, to an amount double or triple those which the plod-1 ding tradesman obtains from his ordinary busi- ness and h(J consecueulv Jesnises those aains ! which have enabIe( ,)im Jf) b - & f. in sufficiency and respectability. Business is neglected, customers are offended: his thoughts and energies are bent in a new direction ; and, loo late, he wakes from his dream of affluence, (0 find his hope a bubble, and his prospects ruined. Even when speculations are successful, how seldom is the unearned money acquired by them a real blessing! The mind becomes restless and unsettled; habits of gambling are formed ; with the increase of money comes an increase of ambition; and generally ihe spirit of specula tions become more hazardous, till the hundreth one, proving disastrous, dissipates in an hour the gain of the ninety-nine preceding fortunate ones. Or if the speculator has that rare com mand over himself to stop at a given point, sat isfied with his success, hoiv seldom does his prosperity provo increase to his respectability, comfort, or usefulness ! Too often does the history of such men furnish-a striking illust.ra-; tion of jhesentimcnt of Guleridgo " Sudden wealth, full well I know, Did never happiness bestow. That wealth to which we were not born, Dooms us to sorrow or to scorn." Seldom is money so obtained spent wisely, and not unfrequently in some absurd manner, that only provokes the contempt and ridicule of all right-thinking men, endued with better taste and sentiments of greater prop riety. In the disposition of property much harm is often done by thoughtless and ill-judging per sons, in leaving a mass of unearned money to one individual, for the foolish gratification of keeping it together, or the selfish one of pre venting it from going out of the family. How much more judicious, and, in many cases, more just, would it be to consider the claims of poor er relations, to whom a small sum would be so great an assistance, rather than surround some one individual with what too often proves a temptation and a provocative to idleness and dissipation ! As long as we can help others to help themselves, our help is a blessing ; when we heln them in such a manner as jt 1 supersedo the necessity of their own exertion, we injure them morally more than we assist them substantiallv. There is also a satisfaction and relish, so 10 speak, about money hardly earned, which can never be found in unearned money. The weal thy merchant, whose income has scarcely a li .... . . silver sixpence which he had earned with such difficulty. How it was looked at again and again; how carefully it was deposited in a place of security; and how, ever anon, it was anxious- ly visited, to see lhat it had not, by any strange chance, escaped from its snuggery! And then the pleasurable anxieties as to the most desira- ble way of spending i.-the book, the cakes, lha nresent-how difficult it was .0 nhnn h. , - . . rMniVfi!1 anri re-resolves were taken before ihe important Point was sa.isfactorilv settled Oh. the nos- sess;on q har(,y.earncd 8ixpence produced far grea,er p,eMuro lhan any hundre(,.pound note since ! Such a fresh sweetness is there abmn lh(. ,.hoesome air of poverlv, for which (he luxmlous almf)sphere of independence and competence is a poor substitute; and the period 0f jjfe wi)tM, ,noey was hardly earned, will oenerally be found, in the retrospect, the purest - . and peasaniest of existence Undoubtedly the prevalence of unearned mo ney in old countries is one principal reason of he greater amount of profligacy, luxury and ef- o J ' j feminacy of character found in them than in spend, and the habits of daily toil give a ro- ... . . . jhwv.uij iii,iv un.iv, uiv ui"J IIUUIUIUUJ UI" j dividuals who are above the necessity of toil, and who live only to .pend, habits of luxury are insensibly formed, dissipation fills up the unoccupied hours, and society becomes listless and enervated. Such are the effects, both on men and nations, of unearned money Moriev seldom makes men butter. i.hRr nhv sica of mora anJ ofien makes lbem wQrse Seldom does a man become healthy in his body as money increases; seldom does his mind be come more poweiful as his purse becomes hea vier: not always does his heart beat more be nevolently as his wealth accumulates. But if money, even when laudably gained by whole some exertion and enterprise, be of doubtful or injurious effect upon its possessor, doubly haz ardous and baneful must be the possession of that money whfch is unearned and untoiled for, and which only leaves the disposal of time at the mercy of idle dreaminess or ingenious mis chief, and cherishes ihe growth of those rank weeds of the heart which are most successfully checked by wholesome exercise and occupa tion. The Government has enlisted at PiliBburg a company of forty-three mechanics, of rarious trades, who are to receive a compensation of $42 a month, besides a ration a day for subsis tence. They arrived at Cincinnati on the 1 7th ult., on ther way to Mexico. mit, will sometimes look back with something "wu,u "J"'" " """"- liko a sigh on the time when he was an ap-as s()011 a his friend ,ho"h' he e,,,0l,,d ,1,e la'" prentice, and feel less pleasure in a hundred j ter " i)IJt om" two' He who first Inf., .n, in -pound note than he then derived from the briHht I a zi8ZaS c"rsR. returned ; but instead .,f going; Tlie Ulan lliat Use Mnle lUckctl. Many are the anecdotes and Moris which: our volunteers lell, the scene of which lus been v; the Rio Grande, and many yet remain to jm j told. The following good one was yesterday,, related to us, says the New Orleans Delia, by our friend, Sevvell Taylor: On a certain .!ar Irss night, in the latter part of July, two voluu- ? teert living editions of Damon and Pytnnirs so siuci-re were their friendship', s mutually; strong were their attachments were silting mi some-lumbar in .the neighborhood of .S&wkII's (the stiller'.-) tent. They had given pretty strong proofs during the day of their abhorrence of the water of the Rio Grande in its primmvn state, by mixing with it a liberal component part of Sewell's brandy, which, ai Burn says, made them " unco happy." Thev sat there for t a considerable time, and talked of old iitnos" and new limes of times past, prcsurit and to " come of ihe indomitable courage and invinci- , I ble power of h United Statet volunteers, and . j0 j of the cowardly, craven Mexican. Indeed,1. from the mood they were then in, "they,could." . as they expressed it, " walk into Ampudia and-, his whole pusillanimous host !" . , ... A One of them had occasion to withdraw for a. few minutes, and after making in advance- due? apology for his temporary absence, he assured . his friend that Ititle time would clapie before r rr trimn riiiinn ttin nj raiiirnitiff nfiiiriit'iir I I , " TVT - ' I up to where himself and friend had been sit ting, he approached 10 where a vicious Mexi- ; can n,llle was naileretl- " Co,ne' B,1I" said he lay'"S his hamI on . 1 l lit ! ,he hi,,d luar,er of ,1,e n,ule' " ,et us S lo our tent." " Wee-ee-ee," cried the mule, letting fly the left hind leg at him, striking .him in the abdomen, and sending htm on the broad of his back in among the neighboring chaparal. At- ! er recovering, he picked himself up, and ad,, j vancillS agai ,oward3 ,he tnnle, said, V Look,, ! "' : Bill, this is d d shabby conduct! I wouldn't treat a Mexican so, lettino alone anr old comrade. If you have any pue against, me, just say so, and I'm your man ; but don't strike a fellow that way, with the butt end of your musket in the dark. 1 tell you, I felt that last lick just as if a dragoon's hore had kicked me. Come, now, no more of that let) us hake hands" and again he went up within kicking distance of the mule. " Wee-ee-i-ee," growled the mule, and again he gave the intruder a kick, which laid him flat on the groun.d "Murder! murder!" he cried, "I'm shot I'm stabb'd he has run his bayonet through me he has broken my head with the butt end of his musket I'm shot I'm killed ! Guard ! Rounds ! Grand Rounds !" Attracted by the noise, a crowd instantly gathered round ; lights were brought, and the Great Kicked was picked up out of the chapar ral. Two of his ribs only were found to be broken, and his friend and comrade, Bill, was the firat to render him assistance. Of course, although he could not at the time be made to believe, it was at once seen lhat his enemv in disguise was the peevish mule, and not his friend and comrade-soldier, Bill. Proper Resentment. A mild tempered, old gentleman was going down hi cellar stairs with a lamp and an old brown pitcher, on a. frosty evening, and his feet slipping from the first step, he was precipitated 10 the botlom ! His wife, a nice old lady, hearing the noise, ran to the cellar door and called out: " Why, husband ! have you broken your pitcher V . . " No 1 han't yet," replied the old man,' "but I'll be darned if don't do it now," and immedi ately smashed the pitcher against the "celiac Wall. . y. Hope thet may do him good. A thtef picked a clergyman's pocket at Boston 'the other day. His prize consisted of six Ifran new sermons ! " Why is the letter D like a ring V aid a lady 10 her accopied, one day. The gentleman was as dull as a hanvmer. " Because," added jhe lady, with a. modest look at the picture at the other end of tha icqox " because we can't be wed without it."