M 5 - ntrmiting 51;thij. IRVING'S LIFE OF WASHINGTON GEORGE WASHINGTON AT SCHOOL, 1N LOVE, AT MEE Messrs. PUTNA fit C C0.,.0f New York, are about issuing a new life of acoany. WAsnixa TON, written by the great American Author- WAsnucp•ros "avian, which promises to be the most meritorious and popular life of the "Fa ther of his country" ever written. The Lite• rnry Editor of the New York Tribune, who tins been permitted -to examine the advance F hects, says "its publication will form an, important c och in American literature. The life long labors of its illustrious author could not have been crowned with a more appropriate termin ation. His name will henceftitth be indissolu bly connected with that of Washington, not on- I,y by his baptismal appellation, but by the no ble mot ument which he has reared to his mem ory. It was a befitting task that the uriter who has left such a brilliant imprers of his ge nius on the nascent literature of his country— whose fame is devoutly cherished in the hearts of the American people—held in equally af fectionate remembrance in the rude cabins of the frotier, the halls of universities, and the saloons of fashiouable life, whose successes itt the varied walks of classical composition have done as much to illustrate the character of America in the eye of the world as the elo quence' of her Senators or her prowess in rims —should create a permanent memorial of Wnsh ington in a style worthy the dignity of the subject and the reputation of the author." All former biographers and historians have presented us with Washington as the great military commander or civil ruler. In this volume Mr. Irving presents him as a living personality, as well as a great hero. Ile has I tid hare the mighty heart of the hero beneath the buff and blue encasings of the Continental uniform, and enabled us to listen to its audible shrubs. Henceforth we shall know more of the man than we ever did before. The xi me of Washington will not only be a household word us of old, but will awaken sympathies in every lover of our marvellous humanity. This vol ume opens with an account of the Washington family, and although not of exciting interest, it presents several curious antiquarian details. Washington was of nn ancient English stock, the genealogy of which has been traced up to the century immediately succeeding the Nor man Conquest. William de Hertburn, a fol lower of William the Conqueror, was the pro• genitor of the Washingtons. The surname of this brave knight was taken from a village which he held by a feudal tenure and after ward exchanged for the manor and village of Wessyngton. The family changed its,surnanie with its estate and therfccibrward assumed that of Do Wessyngton. By degrees, the seign , :ria sign of de disappeared from before the family surname, which also varied from Wessyngtot Wassington, Wassington, and finally to Wash ington. A parish in the County of Durban bears the name as lat-t written, and in this probably the ancient manor of Wessyngton was situated. We give a few extracts from the earlier life of the hero, reserving a thril ling description of the battle of Bunker's Hill for another occasion: WAS 11INGTON AT SCHOOL Having no longer the benefit of a father's instructions at home, and the scope of tuition of Hobby, the sexton, being too limited for the growing wants of his pupil, George was now sent to reside with Augustine 'Washington, at Bridges Creek, and enjoy the benefit of a su• perior school in that neighborhood, kept by a Mr. Williams. His educalitn however was plain and practical. Ho never attempted the learned languages, liar ruanifested any inelina- tion for rhetoric or belles lettres. llis object, or the object of his friends, seems to havebeen confined to fitting him for ordinary business. Ills manuscript school books still exist, and are models of neatness and accuracy. One of them, it is true; a ciphering book, preserved in the library at Mount Vernon, hos some school boy attempts at calligraphy ; nondescript birds, executed with a flourish of the pen, or profiles of faces probably intended for those of his school mates ; the rest are all grave and business like. Before ho was thirteen yearn of ago he had copied into a volume forms for all kinds of mercantile and legal pa pers; bills of exchange, notes of hand, deeds, bonds and the like. This early self tuition gave him throughout life a lawyer's skill in 'drafting documents and a merchants exactness in keeping accounts, so that all the concerns of his various estates, his dealings with his domiestio stewards and foreign agents, his ac counts with government, and all his financial transactions are to this day to bo seen posted up in books in his , own handwriting, menu• moats of his method and unwearied accuracy, He was a self-disciplinarian in physical as well as mental matters and practised himself in all kind of athletic 'exercises, such as rim ning, leaping,:wrestling, pitohing qUoita , and tossing bars. his frame oven in infancy bad been large and powerful, and he now excelled most of lii!playmates, in contests of agility and strength. As a proof of his muscular power a place is still pointed out at Freder icksburg, near the IoW- - er ferry, where-when a boy he flung n stone across the Ilappaba s iWek. In h a-semanship too be /already excelled, and was ready to back and' able to manage the most fcry steed. Traditional anecdotes remain of his achievements in this respect. Above all, his inherent probity and the prin ciples of justice on which he reglated all his conduct, even nt this early period of his life, were soon appreciated by his schoolmates was refeiTed to as an umpire in their disputes,. and his decisions were never reversed. As he had Udell formerly military chieftain he was now legislator of the school; hut displaying in boyhood a type of the future man. THE LOVES OF WASIIINUTON In ono of 'these manuscripts memerm his practical studieti and exercises, we have conic upon some documents singularly in con• trast with all that we ,have just cited and with his apparently•'unromantic character. In a word, there are evidences in his own hand writing that, before he was fifteen years ()cage, he had conceived II passion fur sonic unknown• beauty, so serious as to disturb his otherwise well regulated mind and to tnake him really unhappy. • Why this juvenile attachment was a source of unhappiness we have no positive means of ascertaining. Perhaps the object of it may have considered him a mere school boy and treated him as such ; or his own shyness may have been in his way nitd his "rules for behavior and conversation" may as yet Irrove sat awkwardly on him and rendered him for mal and ungainly when he most sought tr" please. Even in later years he was apt to b silent and embarrassed in female society '•Ile was a very bashful young man," said an lady whom he used to visit when they were I both in their nonage. "I often used to wish that he would talk more." Whatever may have been the reason, this early attachment seems to have been a source of poignant discomfort to him. it clung to him after he took a final leave of school the autumn of 1747 and went to reside will] his brother Lawrence at Mount Vernon. Were he continued his mathematical studies and his practise in surveying, discurbed at times by recurrences of his unlucky pnAssion. Though by no means of a poetical temperament, the waste pages of his journal betray several at tempts to pour forth his amorous sorrows in verse. They are mere common-place rhymes, t3ucli as lovers at his age are apt to write, in which ho bewails his 'poor restless heart, wounded by Cupid's dart,' and 'bleeding-for one who remains pityless of his griefs and woes.' The tenor of some of his verses induces us to believe that, he never told his love ; but, ns we have already surmised, was prevented by his bashfulness. "Ah, we is me, that 1 r.hould lore and conceal Long have 1 wbhed and never dare love td." It difficult to reconcile one's self to the idea of the cool and sedate Washington, the great champion of American,liberty, a woeworti lover in his youthful days 'sighing like furnace' and inditing plaintive verses about the groves of Mount Vernon. We are glad of an oppor• tunity, however, of penetrating to his native feelings end finding that under his studied decorum and reserve he had a heart of flesh, throbbing 'with the warm impulses of human nature. -- The merits of Washington were known and appreciated by the Fairfax family. Though not quite sixteen years of ago lie no longer seemed a boy, nor was ho treated as such. Tall, athletid, and manly for his years, his early self-training and the code' conduct ho had devised, gave a gravity and ecision to his conduct ; his frankness and modesty in spired cordial regard, and the melan choly of which he speaks may have produced n softness in his manner calculated to win favor in ladies' eyes. According to his own account the female society by which he was surroun ded had a soothing effect on that melancholy. The charms of Miss Carey, the sister of the bride, seem even to have caused a slight lint tering in his bosom ; which, however, was con stantly rebuked by the remembrance of his former passion—so at least we judge from let ters to his youthful confidants, rough drafts of which are still to be seen in his tell tale journal. - To ono whom ho addresses as hes dear friend Robin, he writes; 4 My residence is at present at his lordship's, where I might was my heart disengaged, pass my time very plesantly, as there's a very agreeable young lady lives in the , same house . (Col. George Fairfai's wife's Sister); but as that's only adding fuel to tire, it makes me the more un easy, for by often and unavoidably being in Company with her, revives my former passion for your Lowland Beauty ; whereas was I to live more retired frOm young women, I might in some nionsure alleviate my sorrows .by burying that ()haste and troublo some passion in . the gilave of oblivion,' too, ,'Similar avowals ho maims to another of his young correspondents, wbom ho styles Dear 2 friend John,' as also to female confidant, btyled IDear Sally,' to whom he acknowledges .I`sill'a itZa,t 111-0,:*1110 the company of the ' very agreeable young lady, sister-in-law of Colonel Georgo.Fairfax , ' in n great- measure cheers his sorrow and. de jectedness. The object of this early pas ion is not positively known. Tradition states that the ' lowland beauty' was n Miss Grimes of Westmoreland, afterward Mis. Lee, and mother of Gen Henry Lee, who figured in revolutionary history as Light horse Harry,' and was always a favorate with Washington. probably from the recollections of his early tenderness for the mother. Whatever may have been the soothing effect of the female bociety by which he was sur rounded at Belvoir, the youth found a more effectual remedy for his love -melancholy in the company of Lord Fairfax. Ills lordship was a staunch fox hunter, and kept hor-;es - and - hounds — in --- Eoglist sty lc. The---kuivting seroon had arrived. The neighborhood aboun ded with sport ; but fox-hunting ill Virginia required bold and skilful horsemanship. He found Washington as hold as hhnselt in the saddle and as eager to follow the hounds lle forthwith took him into pectiliar favor; made him his hunting companion ; and it Was pro bably under the tuition of this hard riding al nobleman that the youth imbibed that fond ness for the chase for which he was afterward remarked. ME Tradition giv'es very different motives from those of business for his two sojourns in the latter city. He found there an early friend and schoolmate. Beverly Enbinsrn, son of John Robinson, speaker of the Virginia l lottse of Borgesses. lle was living happily and prosperously with a young and wealthy bride, having married one of the nieces and heiresses of Mr. Adolphus Philipse, a rich landholder, whose manor house IS still to be seen uu the banks of the Hudson. At the house of Nlr. Beverly Robinson, where Wash ington was an honored guest, he met 7qIFIS Mary Philipse, sister and co-heiress of Mrs Robinson, a young lady whose personal at tractions are said to have rivaled her reputed wealth. We have already given an instance of Wash ington's early sensibility to female charms.— A life however of constant activity and care— past for the most part in the wilderness and on the frontier, far from female alciety—had left the mood or leisure for the indulgence of the tender sentiment ; but made him more sensible, in the present brief interval of gay and social life, to the attractions of an elegant woman, brought up in the polite circle of New York. That be was an open admirer of Miss Phil ipso is a historical fat ; that ho sought her hand, but was refused, is traditional and not very probable. His military rank, his early laurels and distinguished presence were all calculated to find favor in female eyes; but this sojourn in New York was brief; he may have been diffident in urging his suit with lady accustomed to the homage of society and surrounded by admirers. The most probable version of the story is that he was called away by his public duties before lie bad made suf ficient approaches in his siege of the lady's heart to warrant a summons to surrender, Washington was now ordered by Sir John St. Clair, the quartermaster general of the forces under General Forbes, to repair to Williamsburg and lay the state of the case be fore the Council. He set off promptly on horseback, attended by Bishop, the well trained military servant who had served the late General Braddock. It proved an event ful journey, though not in a military point of view. In crossing a ferry of the Pamunkey, a branch — of York River, be fell in company with a Mr. Chamberlayno who lived in the neighborhood, and who, in the spirit of Vir ginian hospitality, claimed him as a guest.— It was with difficulty Washington could be prevailed on to halt for dinner so impatient was he to arrive at Williamsburg and accom plish his mission. . • Among the guests nt Mr. Chamberlayne's was a young.and blooming widow. Mrs. Mar tha Custis, daughter of 'My: John' Banbridge, both.patrician names in the province. Her husband, John Parke •Curtis, had been dead about three years, leaving her with two young children and a large fortune. She is repre sented as being rather below the middle size, but extremely well shaped, with nn agreeable countenance, dark hazel eyes and hair, and those frank, engaging manners, so captivating in Southern women. We are not informed whether Washington had mot with her before; probably not during her widowhood, as dur ing that time he had been almost continually on the frontier. We• have shown that, with all his gravity and reserve, he was quickly susceptible to female charms ; and they may have. had a greater effect upon him when thus csaually oneountered in fleeting, moments snatched from the cares and perplexities and rude scenes of frontier• warfare: - At any rate - hierheart appears to have been taken by sur prise..._ • .The dinner, which in those days was an earlier meal than at present, seemed all too short• The afternoon pAssed away like a dream. Bishop was punoal to the orders ho . . had received on halting ; the horses pawed at • 'the door, but for once Washington loitered in the path orduty, The horses were counter manded, and it was not until the next morn ing that he was again in the saddle, spurring for Williamsburg Happily the White House, the resi•lenCe of Mrs. Custis, Was in New Kent County at no great di:Aance from that city, so that he had opportunities of visiting her in the intervals of business.' His time for courtship, however was brief, Military du ties called him almost immediately to Win ( Amster: but Le feared, should he leave the matter in suspense, F owe more enterprising rival might supplant him during his absence, as in the ease of Miss Philipse at New York. .lie improved therefore his brief opportunity to the utmost. The blooming widrw had sutors, but Washington was graced with aill that renown so ennobling in the eyes of wo men. Tn n war I, before they separated, they had mutually plighted their faith, and the tnniriage wn's to take place as soon as the campaign against Fert Duquesne was at an end.. WASTIINGTON AT 1101I1'. Mount Vernon was his harbor of repose, where he repeatedly furled his sail, and fan cied himself for life. N impulse of ambition tempted him thence ; nothing but the call of his country, and L s devotion to the public good. The place was endeared to him by the remembrance of his brother Lawrence, and of • the happy days he had passed here with that brother in the days Of bo:, hood ; hut it was a delightful place in itself, and well calculated to inspire the rural feeling. The mansion was beautifully situateA on a swelling height, crowned with wood, and com manding a mngnitieient view up and down the Potomac. The grounds immediately about it were laid out somewhat in the English taste. The estate was apportioned into separate farms, devote] to different hinds of culture, each hav ing its allotted laborers. Much, however, was still covered with wild woods, seamed with deep dells and runs of water, and indented with inlets; haunts of deer and lurking places of foxes. 'rue whole woody region along the Potomac from Mount Vernon to Belvoir, and far beyond, with its range of forests and hills, and picturesque promontories, afforded sport -of various kinds, and was a noble hunting ground. Washington had hunted through it with old Lo•d Fairfax in his stripling days; we do not wonder that his feelings .throughout life incessantly reverted to it. 'No estate in United States,' observes be, in one of his letters, 'is more pleasantly situated. In a high, and healthy country; in a latitude between the extremes of heat and cold ; on one of the finest rivers in the world ; a river well stocked with various kinds of fish at all seasons of the year, and in the spring .with had, herring, bass, carp, sturgeon, &c , in great abundance. The borders of the estate are washed by more than tea miles of tide water ; several valuable fisheries appertain to it; the whole shore, in fact, is one entire fish ery. These were as yet the aristocratical days of Virginia The estates were large, and continued in the same families by entails. Many of the wealthy planters were connected with old foul Hies in England. The young men, especially the elder sons, were often sent to finish their education there, and on their return brought out the tastes and habits of the mother coun try. The Governors of Virginia were from the higher ranks of society and maintained a cot- responding state. The 'established' or Epis. copal Church predominated through the 'an cient dominion,' as it was termed; each coun ty was divided into parishes, as in England, each with its parochial church, itS parsonage and glebe. Washington was vestryman of two parishes, Fairfax and Truro; the parochial church of the former was at Alexandria, ton miles from Mount Vernon ; of the latter, at Pohick, about seven miles. The church at rollick was rebuilt on a plan of his own, and in a great measure at his oxpease. At one or other of these churches he attended every Sun day, when the weather end the roads permit ted. Ills demeanor was reverential and de vout. Mrs. Washington knelt during the prayers ; he always stood, as was the custom at that time. Both were communicants. Among his occasional Visitors and associates were Captain Hugh Mercer and Doctor Craik ; the former, after his narrow escape from the tomahawk and scalping knife, was quietly settled at Fredericksburg; the latter, after the campaigns ou the frontiers were over; lead ta ken up his residence at Alexandria, and was now Washington's family physician. Both were drawn to him by eampaiguing ties and recollection, and wore over welcome at Mount Vernon. A style of living prevailed among the opulent Virginian fanatics in those dayi that has long since faded away. The houses wore spacious, commodious, liberal in all their appointments, and fitted to cope with the • free-handed, open hearted hospitality of' the owners. Nothing was more common than to see handsome set , vicee of plate, elegant equipages and Seperb carriage—horses—all imported from England, The 'Virginians have always been noted for their love of horsA 4" manly 'passion which in those days of opulence, they indulged with out regard to expense. The rich planters vie, frith each other in their studs, importing th best English stoats. Mention is made of on of the Bantlelphs of Tuck:thee, who built stable for his favorite dapplegray horse Slink spear, with a recess for the bed of the negr groom, who always slept beside him nt night Washington, by his in trriage, had :idle above one hundred thousand dollars to hi already considerable fortune, and was eniilde to live in ample and dignified style. His int macy with the Fairfaxes, and his intorcour with British officers of rank, had, perhaps hn their influence on his mode of living. He lie his chariot and four, With black postilions i livery, for the use of Mrs. Washington at her Indy visitors. As for himself, ho appear( riiiThorseln - Tek. 'lris stable twas well filled; ar admirably regulated. His stud was thorout I red and in excellent order. His househo oks contain registers of the names, ng tal marks of his favorite horses; suchlts Aja , •Blueskin, Valiant, Magnolia (an Arrib - ,) &c.- Also .his dogs, chiefly foic-hounds, Arnica RingwoOd, Forrester, Sweetlips, Music, Roe wood, Truelove, &a." A large Virginia estate, in those days, w a little empire. The mansion-house, was ti sent of government, with its numerous del - if? duncies, such as kitchens, smokehouse, wort shops and stables. In this manqiun the plant ruled supreme ; his .'steward or overseer w his prime minister aud executive officer; I had his legion ofv.house negroes fur donunq service, and his host of field negroes for tl culture of tobacco, Indian corn, and I , th crops, anti for other out•of doer labor. Tht. qunite'r formed a kind of hamlet apart, col posed of various huts, with little gardrrn , poultry yards, all well stocked, and swain:4 little negroes gamboling in the sunshine. Then there were largo wooden edifices t curing tobacco, the staple and most protital production, and mills for grinding wheat nt Indian corn, of which large fields were cul vated for the supply of the family and t maintenance of the negroes He was an early riser, often before do, break in the winter when the nights wi long. On such occasions ,he lit his own fit and wrote or read by candle light. He brea fasted at seven in Summer, at eight in \Vint( Two small cups of tea and three or four cal: of Indian meal (called hoe-cakes) formed 1 frugal repast. Immediately after breakfast mounted his Lorse and visited those parts the estate where any work was going on, se ing to everything with his own eyes,.and oft, aiding with his own bands. Dinner was served a 2 o'clock. He a heartily, but was no epicure nor critical abc his food. His beverage was small-beer cider and two glasses of old Madeira. I took tea, of which be was very f , tpl, early the evening and retired for the night /Wont o'clock. If confined to the house by had weather took that occasion to arrange his papers, II up his accounts or write letters--passing pr of the time in Tending and occasionally rc - a ing aloud to the family. lle treated his negroes wilh kindness ; tended to their comforts ; was partietdn careful of them in sickness, but never tch • ated idleness, and exacted a faithful purr\ I: slice of all their allotted tasks. lie had quick eye at calculating each- man's capal. ties. An entry in his diary gives a curie instance ef.this. Four of his negroes err pi ed as carpenters wore hewing and shaid: timber. It appeared to him in noticing amount of work accomplished between t succeding mornings, that they loitered at th labor. Sitting down quietly he timed th. operations, how long it took them to get till cross-cut saw and other implements real how long to clear away the branches from t trunk of a fallen tree; how long to hew a saw it; what time was expended in consider\ and consulting, and, after all, how much we was effected during the time he looked on. from this he made his computation of It, much they could execute in the course of day, working entirely at their ease. . At another time we find him working fot part of two days with Peter, his smith, make a plow on .a now invention of his ow This, after two or three failures, ho acco Oahe& Then,, with less than his usual jud ment, he put his two chariot horses to t plow and ran a great risk of spoiling-ocm giving his • now„invention a trial over grou thiokly awarded. Anon, during IL thunder-storm a frighten( negio alarms, the house with word that t mill is.giving way, upon Which there is a go oral turnout 9f all tho forces, with Washiu tou at their head, wheeling and shoveling gr vel, daring a pelting rain, to check the rus lug water. Washington' delightod in the chase. In t huntiog season, whou he rode .out early in t morning to visit distant parts of - the est:, whore work was going on, he often •took sot of the dogs With him for the chance of sun lug a fox, which ho occassionally did, thou CONTINUED ON BEY_RNTII I'ACE El D