Carlisle herald and expositor. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1837-1845, November 15, 1843, Image 1

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ME
A FAMILY° Einn wsrAppit-4EvoTED TO GENERACINXIEI6I4OEIiCE, MOVER S(4*SITICS' l'irpt s , IR
~, poßAOry;;*GiitiqippißllßE ARTS Ail) po4 i4cE4 itiusENIENT &c &e
741MT!litd,2
HERB LD & !EXPOSITOR..
ffice, Centre Square, S. W.
Clnwer e at the Oid
TERMS OF PUBLICATION: .
.... ~
Tlio HERALD & EXPOSITOR is published
weekly, on adouble royal sheet, at TWO DOL.
;
LARS,per annum, pa able within three months
tinm the time of sub eribingi oa' — :""or wko . Do 4,, Afts
sup strry CENTRE., at lie end.of the year. ''
No subscription will lt taken ' for less than' six
months, and no papeo' discontinued until all or.
nearages are paid, orpt at the option of the
publisher, and a fail eto notify a discontinu.•
stile° will be considered a new engagement.
Advertising will boded° on the usual terms.
Letters to insure attention must be postpaid
Pro bon° publico ! Call. and save a
Dollar !
HATS ! HATS !
•
mrye-whrrvrish-to-voit-yOurselves ip
in first rate lIATS of .every kind, just give a
call at the new Ilst Manufactory of the subscriber,
No. 3, I halter's Row, two doors north 'of Anguey
I :Ind Anderson's store, where he intends keeping con,
stoutly on hand, and . will manufacture to order of
'Abe hest tusterials nod at the very shortest notice,
' BEAVER, A'UTRYA, BRUSEr
La,,,r11,2
"ol every description, in the 'wiliest and 'oust fashion
. ':'ildt3stvle, W 11 1 .111111 . 1,11 to have as good 111111 permanent
its any of the flats manutiretured in the et
‘Also,
`Cililapeatnis and 11.11111ilary Caps, •
:,:tirevi..ry description made in the best style, and at
'very moderate pelves.
For a will sell lower than ever I lass have
:been sold hi ibis llorotigh—and, indeed, his prices
,generally such Ito to snit the depression of
dlie times; Aliptigh lie prefers selling toe Cash—
yet'he will; as its)1:11, he willing to take Country pro
....'doer at the marketi . prices Mem:Mingo for lints;
The subscriber returns his sincere thanks to a
generous public for the encouragement lie has re
ceived suttee lie first comment:lid htisine'ss about three
ago,iii the old shop in Loather stret,tind hopes
by strict attention to business to merit and receive a
•contimtance of their patronage.
Call ;Ind judge for yotirselves.
WILLIANI 11. TROUT.
Carlisle, Nlay 24, 18.11. • tf-fid
S. [ELLIOTT
tot , sale as 142 Q —reduced prices, a full
_ .‘4l , 3, l _assovltoeitt of
Drugs, 'Medicines, Dye. - tfiffilf,
toii , ther with
ttiottarr,_rito• Coo the 'team, Letto• do
Slatt•E dozen, Silver Pialeilv,Dvawang do
. Sable heir do., ram% Paper, S 13.4
Wit%, I'cukiityoo, of n hoe
iituility, Painting brialies,
oat do. Shaving do.Teetli'do,
tto., Sim vii* and
Toilet Soaptiiii'grk•at '
yta tilos Grorenit iffqwriiii triad,
TogolloO with every OtileVikt i lkie in Or. Drug line,
11o'lliteotiott of Cohatily ,1
llteva, iG lilllil,ltoll as 1 Urn (IC(6'1 . .11111! Ut sell At (Tr)
privt•E Gish.
M.truh 15 , IR4i. • tf
Pooull Profits 64 . • . qu'ai I.!*'' ales
7 11 E snbsrtibrrhss just it' ,, ni,(l his new
(iooDs, witiolt he will 14c11
poked of Clotios, Cat•simeres, Stitinefn, L, Yrilliiqel,t est-
Ing. , t, ft-4 shectings for 1•24, 5-4 110. HT,. hento;ful 4-4
Illtmulted Ittkliths for 14, `2-1 IllenCAted sheeting,
Inuidsonie new st le 10, I¶4 chintzes, gloves,
stonliings, wish lint Its, VIM hit:1(111i and paramols.benta
-o'4l 4.4 lisir cord tintslins, and Iswns, Itts!lt•
I,nins ; with it vnriety of other gnnds which lie incites
the uhfolks of Giclisle to call and cumin.; fat
themselves. Also, Braid, Rir:l tv.ite!l lionnets.
1-dulles t Nlisses nod Childrenit orneeo and kid slip
-1)(1"'. Best 1 0" Colree, hest hlstek,imperinl and oth
er Tens. Superior Ca‘endislt Tohnoco, so pronoun
ced by tlte hest judges, nil of w Wolf lie will sell 01
priceditittwortlattee with the times.
S. M. If ARAI'S.
Carlisfe, May 3;1343. tt -27
rorwalrding ek. Commission
60t5 , 0 rg
- 6Eolibt 'FLEMING
V.SPFICTFULLY listbrius the puldio,tied lie in
prePat radii reeeive,.. forward mill dispose of
Produi:e of C'Ve ley desOfiPtioll,
rimer at the. l'hilndeljillia or flalthnore Markets, or
at any other point :wee:sniffle by Rail Road. As he
will attend in person to the - delivery and sale or all
articles 4:Min:iced to liis,ar in
c, the satisfactory
nod speedy returns may at egpected,siiil
the utmost prouttptitudeln The trim's:it:tint' of all bu
siness entrusteilto him.
' Farmers mid dthers any a'rucle which they
wish disposed of, will do well to call on him.,
im
'medfntcly olmositeAtie N,litiAlow' Hasse, 'anti Hail
'ityliti Uppot, WdSt i igh iteeet, Carlisle, ,
I;". us aittiliOri*nl to t i ihrelia'so, hundred
I lift stela or Cando, fdr Which Vie higlfat prit%e will
Ile given.
Ntity 17,,)84:1
itelling Oft al,t Cosii
WITHOUT RESERVE:
•
o.lt bastoribej., deft:4lll4mi) to cloFe 11'4
Ilnhint,'sA, will sell tier stock of Goods
v o.st, rersons {Vidal lig ! . 0 . OPCIIIISC rely
on gating goods precisely at cost; tier stock consists
Of a assominctit a Dry Gail's, Groceries,
J lardWattr, China; Glass and queenilware; Shoes and
Roots of uWtv kind; Paints and Dye s Stuffs.
Counill• AreVrilants and ()thus twe Invited to call
and exiintla lot iliemselves, as She 11111 sell her
whole stook dt disi part of it to suit pnrtliasers.
Store in, Shah Hfanovei . • street, Garli; , g. If the
entire stook Islllirlhnsrd tub Rabbi, War . eliouse sad
cellar can Li. hail trill it,
S. dIARK.
tf-42,
August 16, 1.84,4
FARMEIS' HO
lIHE subsdfiliet ikoilid iesp,b6lfu4 lb;
.' . form his frterids add We, pdbliO generiilli,
t at he lists token the •
PUIII.IC—
, 1111 qYliigg l
. llr ' • 2-16.- ... CCI:,) . COO . lii
..• ~
~: 4 0 ,1 3" pthyAlv. Simon Won'tleitelt. in East gt,
•
Ito House,- "Ito will di . tdl times tske pleatiure in ,roltidpistering
' to the !Comforts of those who s'aey facie h'iin wi t h
theie ddstom.
II? RAU shall be consinntly.titppli ed AVitli fife
. cholcdsilhplors; and his TABLE: with lbest the
mnrkeg 64it fdrelsh. A careful OTLE, sitiVie
kept iit adteiklatide—'and nothing shall be te titutod6
t9p:ealearl,ilici 411 with him.. ,
" BOARDERS 01001 theweek,month ory6ar:
.-. • •
.. WILLIAM BROWN.' ,
Carlisle; Atiol l i 2; 1843.% • tr
, . .
JOHN 'SEMPLE,
• ‘.::;.-TEvat a
ESPECTFULtY eanicis t 61116
cititena of Cailiale aiar itigibittiq, that ho
VW Attend to Ida perform all 4,l4 4 lpportitjahs.
hiplti4Pkarting, Pluging (at, Biking:77g via:
fuktitrath, inserting
.091i4r;Oiiiiiiitinglo tooth to an'dtitire
opiate M'Farlaita'a
Diediclues.AN add onel=euip~~lp , of the alioro ,' valual ) le Died
• IFiopa . , crnisistyt Jj~yne ..9ll ,
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rccsora
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A stranger young and eloquent,
Who nobly bore his part—
Warning the sinner to repent.,
Cheeritrg Ilte , etkrite heart
With many a blessed promise, given
To those who seek a home in heaven
Among his henrers there tins one,
Whose eye Was t)Nett on him alone,
IVIto seemed to watch each word nod tone,
As front his lips they !ell
'A nd'soon, her mild, expressive face,
tier tie:Wing eye, and native grace,
With 'demure he had learned to trace,
And found them when he left the place,
Upon his memory dwell.
Iler name he View not, ask'd not---yet
With deep antt deeper feeling.met--,.--
Tlaittbrißing glance, and owned its power
IVhen higher duties claint'd the hour.
His thoughts were of the sacred cause,
In Which he Canto to laborthere,
lint.when the anthem rose,
And when he knelt in prayer, .
,
lie felt her spirit join With his,
l le ,Card that beanditg hte'e Was there.
NlMillos glided hy, tmUl a yea
In secret thought, in hope, and fear,
Had passed sine'e forst sloe met his .
And tillat%gli hci•eye heesnie briN,
. - I:iiKs - lirioiloerAepTlstore - piitirliVe - eloceß •
And peo osi ye brow,lippealool
While wishing, half 'resolivd to sPeilk;
Ile 'tluilloted, paused, mid feared. •
Stilt 'that inysterioos bikei:est gr'etv
Afore strong, nod hl• resolved ht last,
That et c another Sabbath .
Ilex 11111111 . , her dwelllng,ihould he
And then , Hope whihpeVed lib might woo,
Might %111 14er for his ovti.
A messtige catne,---n soul hail he'en_
Called from its earthly home away;
And Ito was 114;01 to IniniT:ter
The last rites to the S111 . 011(11:(1 clay:
Ile went---ihe coffin till vial raisetl,--:
\l'ith soul-felt agony lie Lazed,---
It was her oue that shone
Upon hint in theltottleortii.it 9 . ;
ittityll! the kimii.9 .. l soul was guile,
The still colt, fat'e . aloac was there.
Ills dearest tie to Ife was broken,---
Ily other lips the word's were spokt
I . lle SCIrIIIII ' WONIROT "(111.:i to dust,"
Ile felt his heart, his spirit *crushed
ith speeVltleha hot there yet- .
Wits nuire . to sutler---to regret.
iler"l..tl . le'r told alai she hail been
A sileUt suff're . r, until death
In her lived eye iand 1111 Wa5 . 13111211,
Allll . lllell, that ‘llOl her latest breath
She breathed /do name,---and thus reveal'd
A secret until dies taste:Al,
'Flint hopeless lovi! its poison'glive,
Short'oung her psssage to tlit.;, grave.
Ilia heart was deaden'd t that one ray
SoTotally cherished quenchi'd io night
And never on his darkened
Arose another star so bright;
Po hope alone to cheer his putt%
Ilia solitary path, was given--
'that .wlien his spirit rose froni
twobld be to meet with betos n in heaven
She tvasyelensed from earth; while he survietl;
(V,• elwrisled feeling's deathless strength td
prove,
She Pied an early victim,---and lie lived
A vietim,through long years, to SILENT LOVE+
EMI
This is a sweet woi:d, Who is not charm.'
its music \Vho'hath net felt the
pbtent magic of its spelt?"
• By home I de not inethi the house, the
tiAllor, the fireside,the Carpet; or the Chairs.
THbY are inert, Material things-, whiCh.de
rive all their iniefegt from the idea cif the
Home which is limit: locality. Home is',
something more ethereal, less tangible, net
easily described, jet stionglY Conceived i
—the source-of Wine of the deeFeil emo
tions of the soul, grapind the hedrt-sittings
with stieh a sweet and minter force,
,as sub
dues all rCiiliiji the rStign.of its intluenh.
Horde is the palao6 titthe husband ind
the fatliet. He lathe nimiarch Of thai lit
tle empite, wearing a devils thai is the gik
of heaveif; swaying a scep'tr'e ptitini6
'hands by the Father of all, icknOvvred4ing
Vio stiperitir, fearing no rival . ; and dinading
no' n'su'rpei: In him dwells L'ove—Vie
ing spit% 6f 'tome. She that was the fwd
bkide of hib youtOlheert; is the aide' Oa.
ate Wife Of, hie ni'atti'rer.yedrs.
The . Mat! that s'inites on' tlinit WM' eve
Ilan' never'set. l i ts' still' tilted a serene
lus on'tiio horriosttif ome, .There,'teci,'
is _ , ornament of home; the
bisautithilyrepresented
b ttie,opOit of inspiration as !` olive litanti
yOuttil.atlibr this: table." We h4ve , Aon
There Ohs dui' si44llii'' Thai
idle' Wast'eneltedlliY:e
!Or our
•-Si livelong Tihi'l4oo,i9;o(9 44 4
091;e,,
0 81 4 fOle*.X4-04..1(11::`Zkti1494
aleaumn.
SILENT: LOVE.
I=2
The grave has victims—and the sunny earth'
Has many It one who hopelessly, lives on;
When all that gave to early life its worth,
When all that made the future bright, is gone.
'The early dead !—Olt call themQ Wielbat,
No more by storms of .grief or passion tost,
They arc the early blest—to them is given •
The changeless calm, the endless blissof Heaven
Within a quiet village rose •
A house of social prayer,
Where those who worship'd met with one
Aiding their pastor's care.
Each Sabbath morn they saw him come,
Then turn to seek his distant home—
He was a stranger there ! '
msaasa,b/ai&artra
HO DI E.
Br - ISANFOO`II.
:
helpless child, west indebted to a mother's
love, sanctified by. Heaven's blessing for
a prulthigicl,exia , tekice. throdgh a sickly in
fudiy.:. thOu ever grieved that fond
heart'? ,No oan be too freely—too
sincerely, shed, fOr,suoli an offence agaidst
the sweet . Charities of home. tf there was
in
,the,palice at' thy birth, oh, never let
it be turned into sorrow by any violation Of
the scored laws of home.
We that had our happy birth; like•midiii
of the human race, in the countrY, can.re
call many tender and pleasant aesociationn
of home. There is earnest poetry in thiti
part of our life. , We reiiiediar with de . -
light the
and
the early moim ; the
.
tuneful and sprightly walk among the dewy .
fields ; the cool repose amid the seijuester:
ed shades of the grove,vocal with the music'
of nature's it inillable vat: es ; the '!.tink
' ling spring," where we slaked our thirst
with the pellucid waters as they Came froni
the hand of the Mighty One—Alle . ,bleating
of the flocks, the leWing of the .Irer6, ,the
humming of the bbes, the Cry of the
poorwill, the melancholy,rtionebuous song
of the night bird; felieved only bq the deep'
bass of that single note; Which he uttered
as he plunged from his lofty height into a
lower region of atrhosPhere—tliese are a
mong
_our recollections -of horirigc -- And
they come softened and sobered tlirough the
medium °Stile . past, but withbet losing
their power to touch the !testi', arid still
endear that word honi6: '
There, too, perhaps we haW a father
die ; !laving attained ld a patliarchal age,
he bowed himself on liis bed, haying "Be
hold I diec but God, sholl,be ivith you,"
and was gathered to Ilia people. Nor can
the memory ever forget that niother in her
,
meek and lu refageTwal iiwtlikough=iiran)
. a peaceful year on The verge of heaven=
breathing its atmosphere, inhaling its frag
rance, and reflecting its light and holy beau
ty, till at length she left the siveet home of
earth for her. Father's home in beaten.
.So gently dies the ware upon the shote."
Home, too, is the scene of the gay and
joyous bridal. When the lovely daughter,
affianced to r- the youth of her heart, stands
Up to take the irrevocable pledge. What
an intekesting . ninment ! I saw, not long
.snMe, such an one. She stood unconscious
of the blended charm which innocence and
hcality Meow around her face'and person ;
he soft, smooth, polished forehead was
circled with a wreath of flowers ; her robe
was of ptirst tvliite, and in her hand was
held . a bogtiet of Variegated roses. Beside
her s'foA the halt) , man, for Whom she
Was to be
noughts.
The simplest view of, a subject is often
the most impressive. , Bstimate then the
press, by the acknowledged influence of
any great mind that has spoke through it:
Do you see that man, in the eccentr icity of
~.,
his genius, prostrate upon the floor,-labor
ing to recall One of the noblest efforts in the
antials . of intelfect l It is Robert Hall . ; busy
with his sermon on modern infidelity.—
His friends have asked him to publish it,
and be will not decline; but as s'
yet it has'
he
loathed
existence teneee t x hi s o ul b
except inih4isoori o f v wri t ing,
g
n in r i i i t i i d n, li
iand
t i e
is turning his harid atintervalS to the Work:
lifonder of the age as he tins for modeetY
as , well as for gsnitia • ,.lie &mind not of
the influence that sermon , . '. , 'as destined to
exert; but when it came 'forth,.the whole
~,
world recognized it as the Masterpeice of
a master mind,, itnuisitself into commun.
l ion with the greatest intellects of the age
it tbrew around billstiniti a neiv wall Of
fire; and Infidelity% as She bent over its
pages, resolved that silence was prudence.
. • .
~ ..rurn, now y o u r eye to yonder villa on
the of the Mediterranean, and See
another mighty mind pouring out
-upon - pa-
pet its brilliant thee:gilts, to be given ere
the Pri n te r's
long into te is hands. It is Ilyrori
-trio HeaVen-tev'ored; end yet fOnl-miti'deii
Byron—in the act of producing one of his
licentious poenis: ,..., i Peradveniiire he" is
dreaming of nothing , lint his own tuthe .;••;-
~ •
. ' lint he is
,ini•eatiiy , qienOig a r tieW fOuntain
"Tha t fire they blest indeed, and swift the hours
Till her young sitters wreathe her hair in flowers,
, :•-•,,t,.. of death Upon the tytirid ihe ite . rn': eking prO-
Kindling her beauty—while, unseen, the !met
ill it and ' = • • • •
'l,4eftchea her robes, then runs behind the tett, t , . -.-- ) P 8 '"
Known iv her laudh, that will not be su pitressed." nothing eliel vision to perpetuate his existence as the en-
Known + ' . , i
gin ; emy o f Ins race; he is r enderin g the splen
i'Vfn'ess *II CIA ' Ir y I -
. Bit even this picture must be shaded. ,• i .— e , aam ice ie - ,
i uors•of his genius subiervient to the wild
..
If the cradle be one , of the things of home, a ireat 77 ,, .i. %•• 1 6 'il a''' •" ' 1
, 11,f__ .: lan esperate urposes o heart. °L
ao is the ebf fi n I Thtbridal Iril;e is; alas ! 1 614 s:•;:-Thi l e is Woler s ahle;
11127 " Mall - a Byro n stars that ''
i .4 •
'an are , must
too Often' succeeded i;v• the funeral pall.— please the cour r
t-- move that this witness , •
aline; but
. 19 the beams
, of the one there
"Six Yeats ago," heard I the minister of be committed for a contempt—he seems to ,
, is life—in the imams of the other ifieilO is i
God•saY at' . . file funeral ora young and loVe- be trifling with the court.
•
ly member of a friend's famil y, "she who ' Coiert.—Witnps you .are now betore a : ' ..• ..v •t t , . 1, . :. ~, .. 3 ~.. ..
I• li novr not whether it iti p'bril‘ibleto .
lies thele, steed here to take the tnarriage Atm of Jathice; and unless you b'ehave! "' • • • = •
~ ,„ .., • . 4 , , „ gain a hifiher idea Of the 60'Wer of t he PISs
vows. She is now the, Bride of Beath:" yourself in a' more becoming manner, you r ,, 1 ••' •• 1. 0," -. r, '''' t ho se s'
iiilfaritihotrifir - tiffiWWefitaihr `the - Wift - treOliillil'itiNtiliii:in - Vncr ifirt;:fiy ~,,,h0 t 4: 40 it , i t ir m A 4 y .i r T ok i ng at the e h t
froth the.home of foie and , felicity to the you ,know about the fight at Captain '. 1 . 1 .=6 1 .• ~ 1 ="...' •• "• "' ." ''.."
IV I iit produc es in .connection with the
grave t SS fetv years since I eat amid a Dice's:
political . struggles 'which occasionally cm
• 1.1 A • • I , i
, 0 u s enten cur '1! our own history. A member. of
domestic circle , of t tether, mother, &um ' I , Punes;,-:-.6fitinied,i'liell' e''ti .“ " ' '
sons and iiVaegtitei. , it: was •the ham of Captain Rice, I% gin treat, and Cousin a t, eng - reee're'e .rise in . kittPhi'eo, and speak
lieipliality. :Whee are tliey noW 1 The early' flilliat'd., ! , - , ' ''
tibfeinn•Chuilellyard Wilt tell. 'key fi'ave tfi ' 4 ' ' t "' j.' '''•"'`• ''• "' ‘ I " • ' ."
• '
~..
~.? ps. . : 7 —:,
. hope, this witness , may
. be may .have said ,
, thai' which in one 'week
at sunk into the liiiiji;dri;amleiri re eiiti of
.1 0 , ..v. , • ;Z.; ~ L •;, , p , 4iiikered,,into thistady.,'
me grove,,, ,reatieotare those halls that otter =. '6104: 'Nfter'deliberating .) . -411i. Attor- A convention may assemble'. to , '
echoed te'the'eheeifultithind iiitteir vofees ' II " t t i ll .' 6 .‘ . .'''
f • • ' ' eeralideis • for the . Pre sitieltial ' e p lip ro i F i s ti e hd a
inu lisive , glin' ii iet twine, .lo'l46'i home. save il e me7b u y rt te is lit °' 'ni ci th P riritn t e li s a a t‘ t w o f t ' r' n3 o BY n scarcely Abell , thereinii4o 'elinouneed ' , be
grid tie.'Aillii4 I c 'ia,the' 'fine language of ' in . hit ;own 'wail. -rProceed;'Mr: Harris, ,fore'the 'reMitteei Village •°- the most. if "'
.iiiii!"-''li beco m es thos e who have wives; with your' story, ; bit'atiCli icriti`e point, liaa'a it'''''''AVlT` , . - `' l '
18"
ie be as though thay.'tiaiL , ,iiiinSi' l andihosti .-:',';,';,' '' v - '.'i ; i ',.:' • s ' 1 - ni -, 3,4 q. , - 8 ,, - have responded „tp:4; ‘ loid ,
Alfa weii ' itelhiiii . 1 tli' !'' ' '' - , 7771- '7' "'" 'g e n!'PT e '. ), : w . el l‘:9*".=' 0404 OhoeWit'4,l,ll°,4titing,.ang l lnil. -
, thoset ,-.',,...:.;,, ~4,,,', -.Prr,i,p,c l ,!.oo',PPO thin 'itiCe; he 'On 'a treat; and co g in'(' eilel , liOns''ilflibandirhaiv•-ferili 'S eif 4 "' a- '
ibid. rejoice, ae 01,0'0'. they refaced ' ..' •• *, ~- ~.,.. =. , , ~,,,,,:-,, - . . ' '..'' .'I ... -.: ~,- '''' , ..,..-,'.. ~!'.' 1 .,',?, ° .. 6 ...." ,fr
..;,,,:;-' if .4., ',>..;',.... ;; -;,, .' •_. . ^ ' .Dilliera.;tehe Seine' e„vei.te,;nur: ? hpeo',lnitt , :eq4,,offttte n.Onlin4sloo,4 - ':Wa..Orgeiniy
P . M4 , 1-. - 7P-t- Jr. 44 1 9 4 '4 1 :111' Abose-Ntte,‘ tiavn.‘a ii ii A i moat , i r rqi,liti,:ii w i,:':''' '6)7? t : ;, - I '' ' v' - '''i, - 4 1 1 ''',` - soft ,; ',l
PRiiiii , 6o he.,ia; thi,... had -,
~' „,
...e . ,, , ~y;,,,,. .„
,„,
~, to
,n !, , ,ge,,.• , me, oe ur in . le a d ministration pptin F ,4 9 'y t 1
_.,, .; , z,
,•
~-1 . ~ t hough 7'- 114e:ei fur ' told'emieln;s6lloilliiirdthaf mYlwife'sle'l einuient that lo'oks'partthitii64iiib Vii: and
ttO'fiiitlitekgthitt , WOrld iiitleiliii*iiit'Y''' 44 '''''' '' '7 l s''''. 'h ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' '''''
' ' s ' ' '
,' —. : ' '? 41101 / 4 9-1, •,' r, ntk'sl;`o, lll te 4,4; 1 0 4 0 . 1 .'%7,1, i it ‘ii..,o4Mr..oo49ellie'Veiltatitiplie:dig°th'i
, L3,1e., -44- 7. ',. „"..:''''' , l - ,; ',:.:7;,,`,";:,' -' - ','.. - ; - .7-.^,-•••••-,,- , ;‘ , 1.- , ;,- . '•`:•44 4 '4'..t: • ,` ~ .a,....*1Mi., . :2,,f, Vi1:A1p.,..i,,,,_,, 5 .., m ,,..L ~,,....x.,.. , j/k ..^ ,a,
"A guariljuu augel o'er Ms life presitlink7, • •
Doubling his pleasures mid his cares divnling."
-As I pronounced the words that made
them one, adding the nuptial benediction,
a tear fell from the eye of the bride o n the
wreath in her hand ! was a tribute to
"home, sweet home." Not that she l'ove'd
father and mother less, but husband more.
That piece of music, "the Bride's
well," plunges deeper into the fountain of
emotionin the soul, than any other cont•
bination of thOught and song, to which I
ever listened. Was the bride ever found
who was 'equal to its pe'rformance on, the
day'of her espotisals—or rather in the hour
of her trepailore from her fong , loved hme,
w hen the tithe had aritiied to bid farewell
to het failtei.; Mintier, biethers and sister
l i erhatiii in looking at the picture of denies
tic life, tie eithibited in Seek ciretematan'ces;
we shoUlil not omit tn . notice, some of the
least prominent traits fl - delloring, for theY.
neverescape.dle keep,and practised eye of
the title poet. Thus Itogets, in his graphic
and natural poem of Whieti
he snatches so many graces "beyond the
roach of art," does not, , in describing the'
wedding incite, forget the younger portion
of the family; ever, the little deo' giaer . o 'e`ei
often_the_getn-and-thej4 of-home..
44.1411400i'.:144i . 0a01ztAti . i::.3 , :,.:i.c•:.i.t.ii altr**4;t-
• 'Fr om'Atianeoli's,Casket.
' 4 4 cousircsAifirm injr.lJAktn.,
SCENE. Cot of Aortic e 4:zv'Caltlina
beardleei rises
and thus adAresks . :the court:,-May it
.please youi 14 . qtiship„
~a nd, you gentle
men of the .tury', - sipT, it hati,been My for-,
Mile (good bi bad Y
.rtii not say) to exer- :
cise mYse4 legal Quisitions, it has
never befoTe befallen me to,.'be obliged to
proe l ecute so di l refiii, ma rll4iifid,
assaults-C snore ktlf + ul; vto!e t; dangerous,
and murde t rous belierir; naV a more
diabolicalfireach.4 the pease has seldom
happened in a Civilizetl..cohnti• r y, and
dare say it has seldona'been your duty; to
pais upon one so shocking to bebevcikent
feelings as this, which look place over at
4
Captain Rice's in this County, but you r ill
hear from the witnesses.' The witnesses
being sworn; two or three being examined
and deposed—one that he had heard the'
noise and did not see the fight—another
that he saw t h e row butAlitrnt know who
sti4ick ,first—and a_third,,that he was very
dkink and coultrnt say much about . the
gcrtinage--, , •
.tauiyer Whops. -1 am sorry gentlemen,
to hive o'cCupied so much of your time
with the itupidity-vf-the-witnesses - elain=
fried. it arises, gentlemen, altogetl4r
rrom misapprehedildii on my part. Had
known a 4 sl now do;.iliat I hdil a witness
in attendance; who: '`vas well acquainted
with all the circumstances of tii case, Enid
ivhii was able to make himself Clearly mi
iliietood by the court and jury, I should
not solong have trespassed oil , out. time
and .pattence. Come forward; Mr. • Hai
and he sworn. So forward comes the
witness, a fat shufry looking man, a 4 leetle'
ied his corporal oath with iin
M
Otops.:--111r: harris, the tviSh ''Yotl • to
tell all about tIM riot that happloe'd the oth.:
er day at Capodn Rice's . , and as . a loud
deal of time has been dready • wasted in
circumlocution, we . wish' Yon to be corn
piindions, and at the same time, as expli
cit as 'possible.
lla rris.-11(Izactly,' giving the.lawyer
a knowing Wink, at the same time clearing
his throat-=Captain Rice, he kin a treat,
and cousin Sally billiard, she came over to
our Iniuse and axed me if day wife she
ntouent,.koi I told Sally T)illiard, that
my wife- was poor, being , as how She hod
a touch of the Itheinnatics hi the hip', arid
the big swamp was itt the iOad, and the
big swamp was up, t there had been a
heap of rain lately, but howsoinever ad it
was she, en - usiti Sally Dilliard, , iny : wife
she moot 'cousin Sally EtilliSrd
then asked me if Mose, h . e moui'nt go.
told cousin .Sally billiard thaat Moses' he
was the foreman of the croP,and the crop',
was smartly itt the grass ; but . hows Om-,
ever, as it was she, Cousin Salry DilliaPd , 1
Nose he moot go.
Chips.—ln the naiiii3 of common seitsei
1.
Mr. Harris, what chi you mean by this
rigmarole. „
• .(J tn . ess'::-ditptaili Mice, l r gin a treat,
and cousin Sally Billiard, she.came over
to oe'r house and aied me if my wife she
inounit go, I told 'cousin
you please . : We
don't want to hear any thing about cousin
Sally billiard and your wife—tell us about
the fight at
tritnisi.—Well; I wiii sir if you will
fet me.
sir; go on.
Witness.—Well, Captain Rice lie gitl a
ir
treat, anti cousin Sally billiard, she came
Il•
over to our house, anti asked nie if niy
wile slie mien* i
again—witness,
witness pleaseAO
sir; what tio - you want?
;ant to -know about the
fi g ht, na net firoceed_io_itiisirii—
,
portant story--du , you , know any thing
about the matter before the court.
Mtn es To be sure
Chops.—Will you go on and tc
' id took
niatics in the hip, and the big swamp was
iip but howsomever as it iae' she, coital
inEy. aliyDi!lipnif, my wife alto Mout go.-L
Well cousin Sally Dalian] dien axed me
if Mose he mout'ne
go. I told cousin Sal
ly Millard as how Mose, lie was the fore-
. .
Man of the crop, and the crop was smartly
in the grass; but.howsomever,.as it was
sne, cousin Sally Dilliard, Moan he pent
go. So they goes on together, Moie . 7 my
wire .and cousin Sally Dilliard and they
comes to the big swamp,- and the big
swamp w as up as I
, was telling you; but
being as how there was. a log across the
big swamp, cousin Sally Dilliard and Mose,
Hite genteel folks they wallted The log, but
my wt
• .1 .
e like a fOol, waded. and gentle-.
men that's the height of what I know
about it!
THE OFIESSOVIIR AND
tide malle the i atiVoined extract from the
Address of the Rev. Dr. Spanottn, deliver
ed before the Society of Beta Kappa,
D ui Yale College, on the 17th of Angtist
last:. It claims an attentive perliSal : - •
"We talk of the press until it has he- 1
come a threadbare topic ; rod yet with all
cur talk, we have really no practical , esti ,
-mate-of itsimportince. 'Time was When
men's thoughts could be communicated
only
,by being spoken ; and some have con
jectured that even the works of. Homer
were originally committed only to the
memories of men, and that generations pas
sed away before titeYr were written on any
.
material .substance. And when Demos
thenea :thurideied . ,.and Virgil sung, it
. was
for thefew i and not for the many; and their
lofty producti'dits ivere , indebted to the dog
ged labors of the transcriber,
i3ut the art o'cpriniing has oerated in 're
..
Tectto-the ancients like - the - word — which:
will accomplish the - great resurrection-L—it
has brOught them up from the grave of age,
and pledged to them an existence every
where and, through all nine. And " the
same att now advanced to a degree of per
fection which casts into the shade the best .
improVementitof the past, is embalming,
men's thoughts in our days ';..aye, and giv
ing them wings
. hy which tgy fly all over
the. world. Yon may sit in your closet
now; and without opening your lips, speak
to those , who. dwell nearest the poles.—
You may milltiply yourself, in a single
week, into ten thousand agents either for
good or evil: You may scarcely ever look
into the world, and yet even thrones and
principalities may feel the influenceof your
the councils of the, cabinet, befell,' the de,'
tails of: the . Whole matteriaiti . paised under
the Are of the nation, 'B'o men of. Avery
class and etery ch aracter
i are .specUlating,
. .
in rekard to th e policy that should be pur
itheth And w he n ever: the waves of public
lie feeling;lare wro"Udit up' like the mighty
1. • .
ocean in a storm, it w i ll' aiwaya be fgAttd.,
that the press, has had a principal agency
in producing the commotion. .
cannot leave, this brinich of my
spb
ject without adverting• fy to,,our peri
odibal literature; though I regret the neces
sity of dismissing So ,
important and fertile
a topic with a passing remark. What was
at first a geole rill that - flowed so silently
as searcely r te be observed; ere long became
a ma jestic river; and that flea been grad :,
natty, widening until it has lost distinct
ive character in a mighty delugv . ,""that flows
within. no de'finable limits . . If there 'is a
t '
ot
single corner
in any departments 9 r
human Speculation or - human action, which
~
our periodical press does not cover, I knot;
it not. You may be a philosopher, or , a
Otateatnae, a physician or a divine, a far....
Pier or a
o rperchant, an artisan or , an artist,
a friend of the muses Or fi - friend the gra
,
-cos,--snd - , - yotriaie.only to i step into one
of
, our pehiodical depositories
the
supply
yourself .With the latest, if net the bright
est, thoughts in the dePartment to which
you are devoted. And you are fortunate
indeed it there is ho attempt made to set
aside your moral :agency iii this matter;—
for it has come to pass, in these dayi, that
periodicals come to us unbidden; and what
Comes at first with the editor's compli
ments, is followed up in due time by the
publisho's full.
INFLUEtid
But withotit hazarding any speculations
upon the trade, I may say with confidence
that the man who conducts a widely ex
tended periodical, presides at one of the
chief fountains of public inlinence. lie
'keeps himself in constant, thouoh
•
contact with thousands and thousands of
minds. may. take little
,note of the
elect which ne prOduceS upon them, and-
NF
~
may even silently cpngratulate thelOselves
that their opinions are their own ; and yet
he may be holding them spell-bound under
his magic influence. While be, deter
mines the manner in which no small part
of their time shall be spent, he impercep
tibly helps to mould their taste, guide their
judgement, fix their prejudices, and give
complexion to their ch aracter. ; Yonder is
the respectable quarterly, devotO to ilie
interest of science and literature of philos-
Ophy or religion. it gees abroad to do a
gloriouswork: and posterity will 'see that
the name of its. editor hai a place on
, the
list of the :orld ' s benefactors. Yonder is
a weekly sheet; designed as a vehicle of
slander and falsehood, of pollution Biotin-i
-f
piety. Its issues are like tlix opening of
a cage of unclean
; blrds. The vulgar.
herd together at the corners or the streets,
-
to glut themselresover it. Its editor is a
scourge to his generation.
Who then can estimate the in ,uence for.
good Or evil of the periodical press? Who
can estimate the ntimber of individuals
whom it reaches, the amount of time
. ,
which it •kuarosses, the expenditure of
thouelit and feeling to Which it leads, the
decisive bearing which it has upon, our in
social, and national interests? Iy
is not a small matter, my friend to be the
condUctor even of a country newspaper;
and I would say to every man who aspired
even to hut vocation, you down first,
and count the, cost."
THE DOOM OF THE CONDEMNED;
• ,
%re take from the Knickerbocker for oC
teber,_the..following mournful_ficture_of
.
prison life. It is from the . " Editor's 'fa
- . , ~
ble," the most delightful portion of the
Magazine. • •
"If the unhappy young man who has
recently filled tbe journals of themeqopo
lis with the letails of Ins
. fiilly and crime
could, before yielding to teMptation look
in upon the State Priscin at Sing Sing, as
•t•
we did the other day, surely he would have
hrunk. baekfrom the vOrtexbefore him.--
Poor xrietches, in iheir best estate !
f
nayievi . tifetr, cells ; flow ceaseless their toil;
wnat iiigition of emnfort tbeir, whole,
enedition . It was asweltering #ugust day,
breatltiess and oppressive ; btit there was no
rest for the eight hundred convicts who'
thpir,neyer ending, tasks within those walls.
Stealthy glances from half-raised' eyes; pale
.courttgamlecs,4-eviLwitlCln_eeli su
sion, or gleaming, with pewe;leseliate,ar i
impotent!nalignity - ; and "hard
the, ftpest,sense, , were the main features of
"the ktill.fife:, scene, as w,tt passed tinnitgli
the ,seyeref,worh, shops. But whatia'pie
ttire,was`Presented;4!4 their occupants,' dame
swatinieg intn. The- o;lett; courtyard. aetho
sound of the' bell, to ( ' proceed Mlll'o4.'ollB
*itti - fitetidiniter Frani' the thibk:alition
pliere 'of the icarpet)nil, rub
the aka:#. l /1-Wtties. tr)o:duit Biutnp tbe
";weavei"abeauh" endthe '44 eopfused .
000,46..0.e-.01...,00,8-tid '011 . 14, 3 t it t d,mlif;
" 41 -ilitilfes4 l ‘the'y ' ponied'
fr , ,iin - Pdrt4 1 04100)90.t4 of,
V:u'lcati4 attAhOilt '14064 from
hick 'they 'Aiiiitelfti4.4tini"i'viiiell'o•
pitit,ppon intercott4e rottrik of : close lieneh
-140*:011.14101-YLVALIOAV,1.4,
Z . 112110181M =Z.
hammer; therub-a-dnb of thepoper's pal- •
let,the"gealc of his sllayin kniceovestilli
the sie'ne haMmer wai ellen, ; 'tid the •ouk
yard was full of . that striped rew !
t
Gott o f 9edof coin Passion ! tvhat'a L lgftt it
to see that . eked?) , Multitude , t e up, in •
”•••• ••
gangs„th humiliat i ng marc h.
ne
,groes; sweltering in the heat, Were inter
Ipersq among "the lines hands crimson
with murder rested upon the shoulders of
beings alike young in years and crime ; the
victim of bestiality .:pre!sed i ,p,gninst the
heart-broken tool of the sbathless villain ;
and a ll were blended in one revolting mass
of trained soldiers orouilt • their thousand
legs moving as Ole -lee- , ni- one, man, All-in
silence, sai'ing thePemuliar sound of the
stilling tread, grating, not less upon the ear .
than the g'round, ' One by one they. took
tlteic Wootlen pall; of dingy and
arnphibi
`ous Woking 4 grub, ' and passed on, wind. •
• VC • •
different
lag up the stairs of the different stories, •
and streaming along the narrow corridors •
to their solitary cells. It was too much
for the tender heart of poor E., this long •
processionc the gangs. As they passed
on in slow. succession, her lip began tc
quiver,_ and one after_another,drops-olpity- . •
rolletrdown these,' said
she to the iieepeJ, "had a mother, who
loofied upon their childhood, and blesses
their innocence ! Ah ! how many infant
feet, softer than velvet to.the'touch, have
been pressed to 'maternal lips, - that now
shuffle along these prison Aisles:"
IMMENSITY OF TIiE,UNIVERSE,
'.`About the year 1610, the tefeicOpe,
then newly invented, was for the first time •
applied to astronomical investigation by
balilui): ; he, with his refracting telescope
14th a e --o,tiverTitationtitrirty-tiMesTobserv-----
•ed thousands of stars invisible to the naked'
.
eye. Since the lays'of. Galileo
, the tele
scope has been very much improved.
The large 40-feet reflecting. telesCope of
thp late Sir William fierschel , 'ties fre
,quenty charged ivith the great magnifying
power of 64 . 50 tithes. 'ith such a pow
er the heavens seemed, as it were, to-dis
solve beforeits strength ; on directing it to
that Peculiarly white track in the sky corn
monly called Tn> MILKY lyi.V,•it was in--
stantly perceived that 6 , ro!iiill; work
Was of stars.' In one Proportion of this
track 110,000 stars swept over the field
view of this telescope in fifteen minutes: •
at another time 251,211 stars in forty-one
minutes ! It has been calculated, that the
• "least 18 •
0
Milky Way alone contains at,500,-
, , .
0 stars,' which , are equal to 5314 times
the number of visible stirs in the heavens,
or about (9,000 times the number visible
to theeye at one glance in the most favor
able evening. Although the other parts of
the celestial canopy are not so densely
crowded, yet it is astonishing to consider
the increased numberghe telescope unfolds
to view in every constellation. „
"It may safely be asserted, that thF . tel.:
escopic number of the stars is at least
80,000,000 (eighty millions,) some of
‘yhich
, must be upwards 9f.tifiro-one
thousand billion of miles distant from the
Earth. It is well known that the ,late Sir
William Herschel concluded fioin very un
questionable evidenee that Ilis!eleseopo en
abled his ,ey,e , to reach and rest on portions
of space 497 times FartherVistapt than Si : ,
rms. Suppose the d i istaitio , of Sirius t o .
be es great, as thy star Cygni, or 62,-
528,490,69 l 000 miles • this multiplied
t ...•
CI 497 = 31:,076,059,873,,874,300 miles
for the probable radii; 62 1 ,153,319,757,7
748,600, Miles for dr diameter, and about
195,060,060,006 000;000, (one hundred
. • , I.- ••
and niney-fiye thousand billions) of miles,
for the circumference of the •universe, as
•
developed . .by the telescope .alone! At
suchenlio*ed views of the amazing. ills--
lance and number of the worlds, as sound
ed.,hy,l telescope , the pious,,.and,son
templative mind may well exclaim,,'Great
and marvellous are His works !' ist.‘these '
are but part of His•ways.' . There, is ev
ery reason to conclude that these are 'tiq
as the small dust in the, baiance,compared .
with the overwhelming . nunper.:of worlds . •
located in every nqbulte. 1;1,p ttohe Fes-,
ent year there . have been reckened about..
3,275 nebula:. . Nebultt is: a natne,glyfit
to a singular , cele'vial alrearamai‘elMidy i
in aspect, some4hatrhsemOng
'; apiall
patches of' Ciotti ott.the,surtahh '
of water. not ~iniooNible, : that each .
of„the'se,327,snebult4mayvontain - at least
thiin of the.yaat odent . 4 thri dpikerse and •
its fininmen;ble host of stai;li'? .,
lvven 'al
- thsari,nrbulato
n'umbi=Vof, stara.nientuoned, they , ~uot ott
ly be conaidereiVar , likry' small parr of
1 . overMheirniog.v.Aole-r—only.,,as 'a,' few !
groyint:elesteting on the Irinitiirs 04 , the
theittor'3 dominiop.'"
40401.i t yrtest
who w coming
CQFl l o4.!P ll * .sked
o : 6 44trimeal . AYltoqi
get in at,the '0; "ts
11 7, y
might," r e p aid the his
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