!1 O' : ? -V - y' v; y n i i i i - 1 fait-? j .a :::r 'i .... J TILS E1E2SHIGS OF OOVESIJSET, IIKB THE OF HEAVETJ, EtlOULD E2 DISTSISTTTED ALXKE XTPOH THE man A2ID THE LOW, THE RICH ASD THE PCOR TEW SERIES. - i EBENSBUItG, fiXRCU 29, 1855; VOL. 2. KO. '20. -.11 ! L : 1 I IV t -1 I L J i .i ,r iv, t THE DEMOCRAT & SENTINEL, i publish ed every Thursday morning, in Kbenelmrg, Cambria Co., Pa;, at 41 50 per annum, if faid is ' AUTAHCEif not $2 vrill be cbargeil. ADVERTISEMENTS rill be oonspicuoasly in aerted at the following rates, viz : l square 8 insertiona, , 41 00 Every subseqncnt insertion,' 25 1 square 8 mimths, 00 , 1 ' " 00 ; V 1 year, . s , 12 00 : . " col'n 1 year, -. v , -t , , 80 00 1 , ' . 15 00 . Bainne Cards wilh oee copy of the ' ' ' Dkmockat St Sr!rtit. rxr vwr, 6 00 - THE WASTED PLOWER.- v : The itorras 0 Heaven have bom thee down ; Thy tem ia bruke--4hy leaves arc Btrown , In wild dirler o'er the plain, ' ; , .' 7 j Wleuce 0ku ahalt never lift aaia '. , ' ' " Thy head, to patch the evening dfw, - . Or charm the lonely wanderer's view. , " Yet; wisted flower! thy sweet perfume Partakes not of tby fearful doom ; It lingers still around the spot " " Where ifirst thy form the sunshine caught ; And pours its incense on the air, ' . When thou art desolate and bare. t . : ' " r Thou art a type, thou lovely flower ! - s ; , Of virtue's death-serving power : ; j Fit emblem of the fragrance shed ; r. Afouiul the truly, virtuous dead . The hallowed memory of the good, v Wbich from the grave's cold solitude, ; l Gives to the thought of parted worth; A charm unknown to things of earth. From Dickens? Household Words. ISSU AND m RUSSIANS. 1 : BT AN EXGLISH LADT.'i n ? . " - An English lady who, for ten years, was domesticated among the Russians, and did not pVit their iountry until some time after the commencement of the present war, has just published under the title of an An .English woman in Russia three hundred and fifty pages of information upon the actual state of society in that empire. The book confirms ideas familiar to many peoplo ; but inasmuch as it does this in the mot-t Satisfactory way, wholly by illustrations drawn from personal experience or information of a trustworthy land, its value is equal to its interest. ' Ilav in? read it, we lay it jiown, and here make note of some of the impressions it has left up on US. ' i ' ' ' ! - . Unless, from one who has been for a long time aa English resident, and who can speak without : passion, "4 is not easy : to get clear views of the internal state of Russia. - Despo tism has established there 80 strict a censor ship, that even the Russian scholar only learns as much of his own country as the emperor shall please, and a learned traveller assured oar countrywoman that, of an account written by him of his journeys in the north of Asia only those parU were allowed to be published wherein nothing was said tending to .expose the desolation of the land. The regions of the barren north were no more to be confessed thaa a defeat - in arms; . The great historian of Russia rKaramsin was obliged to read his pages to the emperor before he was allowed to publish them. . Not only a certain class of facts, but also a certain elass of thoughts,' are rigidly kept from the public mind. . One of the best living Russian authors com plained to the Englishwoman that all those parts of his works that he valued most had been cut out by the censor. lie wrote a play con taining, as he thought, some admirable speech es ; it came back to him from the censor's office with every one of them erased, and only the light conversation left as fit for the amuse ment ot the public. . Shakspeare is honored j greatly by the trading class, and translations j of King Lear and Hamlet are frequently per- formed ; but all those of Shakspear's plays j which contain . sentiments of .ibertyj such as Julius Ciesar, are exclnded by the censor. ! A Russian .writer wished to produce a play, on some subject ' in English history ; - upon which he "consulted with our countrywoman. Every topic was found dangerous. The story of Elfrida, daughter of the Earl of Devonshire, was. suggested. The Russian shook his head. It would not be allowed." Why not? It is a legend of a thousand years ago." " Why; they would never let Elfrida's husband cheat the king." ' But he was not a Czar."" No matter. The act is the same, and the possi bility of a crowned head's being deceived would never be admitted by the Czar. . The Ctar of Russia practically ; stands be fore the greater number of his subjects as a little more than God, The Czar is near, - Y.nJ? ' ton"non Russian saying. - God and the Czar know it - is the Ruanfn for our Heaven knows!" A gentleman describing one evening the emperor's reeet tion on the route to Moscow, said, "I assure yOu, it was gratifying in the extreme ; for the peasants knelt as he passed, just as if it were the Almighty himself "" And who bjvjon. tradict this deity ? , Oar ennntrv was orioe at the opera when dT tvperoriras gra ciously disposed to applaud Madame Castellan by - the clapping of his hands. Immediately soma one hissocL I He- repeated his applause : the hiss was repeated.. His majesty 6tood up -looked round the house with dignity and. ume, soiemniy ciappea nis nands. " Ul followed Heroin ' Tii-. m fran.nnJv,, . fie over-headv The nolice had caught th. Aa example of another kind was made by a young lady whose broth er was killed at Kalafa and who, on receiving news of his death,, smiled, .and said,' MShe was rejoiced to hear it, as he had died for the emperor." Imperial munificence , rewarded her with a splendid dowry, and the assurance that her, future fortune thould bo cared tor. There is need now to encourage a show of patriotism. The Englishwoman who, on her return, found London streets as full of peace as when she quitted them ; had left St. Pe tersburg; wearing a far different aspect. LS lines of cannon and ammunition-wagons drawn op hero and there; parks of artillery contin ually dragged about ; outworks being construe-' ted ; -regiments , marching in - and out; whole armies submitting to inspection and departing on their mission, told of the deadly struggle to which the CzatV ambition. had committed him. -There was no hour in which wretched recruits might not be seen tramping in weari ly, by hundreds and by thousands, to receive the emperor's approval. It is hard for us in this country to conceive the misery attending the terrible conceptions which plague.the sub jects of the Russian .empire. Except recruits,, hardly a young., man is to, be .seen in any of the villages; the post roads are . being . all mended by women and girls.' Men taken from their homes and families, " leave behind, among the women, broken ties and the foun dation of a dreadful mass of vice and immoral ity. It is fearful enough under Ordinary cir cumstances. "True communism," said ft Russian noble, " is to bo found only in Rus sia."...; ..: - ; ..- i t v 1, ,7 !;.-:;. .. One morning a poor woman went crying bitterly to the Englishwoman, saying that hoc two nephews . had. just , been forced from her house to go into tua army. - "I tried", we leave the relator of these things to speak, in her own' impressive words "I tried to con sole her, saying that they would "return when the war was over ; but this only ' made her more distressed.- ' No ! no 1" exclaimed she, in the deepest sorrow, " they will never come back, any more; the .Russians are beaten in every place." Until lately, the lower classes were always convinced; that the;. emperor's troops were invincible ; bat it-seems, by what she said, that eventfoy have got to know something of the truth. A foreigner in St. Petersburg informed me that he had "gone to we the recruits that mornincr, but there did not se"era to be muoh patriotism among them: there was nothing but sobs and tears to be seen among those who were pronounced fit for service, whilst the rejected ones were frantic with delight, and bowed and crossed them selves with the greatest gratitude." Reviews were being held almost daily when tho Eng lishwoman left, and she was told that, on one occasion, when reviewing troops destined for the South,' the Emperor was struck with the forlorn and dejected air of the poor sheep whom he was sending to tho slaughter. : - " Hold your heads up 1" he exclaimed an grily. Why do you look so miserable ? There is nothing, to causo you to be so?" There is something to cause hiyi. to , be so, we are very much disposed to think. , . , , But we did not mean to tell about the war. The vast empire over which the Czar has rule is in a half-civilized it would be almost ivore correct to say in an uncivilized stated Oreat navigable rivers roll useless through extensive wilds Except the excellent roads that con nect St. Petersburg with; Moscow and with Warsaw, and a few fragments of road serving aa drives in the immediate vicinity of these towns, there are no roads at all in Russia that are roads in any civilized sense. . The post roads of the r empire are clearings through wood, with boughs of trees laid here and there, tracks over, 6teppes and through morasses There is everywhere the grandeur of nature ; but it is the grandeur of its solitudes. A few huts surround government post stations, and small briek houses at intervals of fifteen or twenty , miles along the routes are the halting laces of gangs destined for Siberia. . A few og huts, many of them no better, than the wigwams of Red Indians, some of them ador ned with elegant wood tracery, a line of such dwellings, and commonly also a row of willows by the wayside; indicate a itussian village. A number of churches and ' monasteries with domes and cupolas, green, gilt, or dark blue, studded .with, golden stars, and surmounted each by . a cross standing on .a crescent ; bar racks, a government school and a. post office ; a . few good . houses, , and a great .... number, of huts- constitute a Hussion provincial town, and the surrounding wastes or forests shut it in, The rapid traveler who follows one'of the two good lines of road, and sees only the show places of 'Russian civilization, may be very much deceived. Yet even here he is deceived on!yl. .fey. a show. ' The great buildings that appear so majS8jve are of. stuccoed brick, and evin- the massive grandeur of the quays, like that of infinitely greater works, the Pyramids, is allied closely to the barbarous. They were constructed at enormous sacrifice of life.. The foundations of St.- ; Petersburg were, laid by levies of men who perished by. hundreds of thousands in the work. , One hundred thous and died of famine only- ., ,;.t , f The ' civilization of the : Russian capital is not more than skin deep. - One may bee this any day in the streets. The pavements are abominable. Only two or three; streets are lighted with gas ; in the rest oil glimmers The oil lamps are the dimmer for beine sub ject to the peculation of ofSijials. Three wicks are charged for, and two only are burnt ; the difference is pocketed by the police, -All the best shops are kepti by foreigners, the native Russian shops being mostly collected in a cen tral bazaar, Gostinoi Dwor. The shopkeepers appeal to the ignorance of s & half barbarous nation by putting pictures of their trades over tbeir doors ; and in his shop a Russian strives to eheatwuh oriental recklessness. - Every shop in St, Petersburg contains a mirror for the -Me-of ; the customers. Mirrors," says the Englishwoman, bold, the same position m Bttssia a. clocks daln EnglaDWitli us time is valuable j ! w,th them, appearance. Th7 car not tiioBgh :it be pearance.". They even paint their faces. The lower classes of women use a great deal of white paint, and, as it contains mercury, it injures alike health and skin. A young man paying his court to a gTri generally presents her with a box of red and white paint, to im- 5 rove her looks ; and in the upper classes, la ies are often to be ' seen by one another, as they arrive at a house,- openly rouging their faces before entering the drawing-room. . " , - Tficse are email things, indicative of an ex tensive principle. ! Peter the Great undertook to civilize Russia by a eoup de main. ' A walk is shown at St. Petersburg along which be made women march unveiled between files of soldiery '. to accustom them to go unveiled. But civilization is not to be introduced into a nation by imperial edict, and ever since Peter the Great's time tha Pussian emigre has been laboring . to stand for what it is not, namely, the equivalent to nations that have become civilized in the slow lapse of time.. It. can only support,, or attempt to support, this reputation by deceit. It must hide, or attempt to hide and it has hidden from many eyes with much success its mass of barbarism, while by clever and assiduous imitation, as well as by pretensions cunningly sustained, ; it must put forward a show of havingwha it only in some few directions even strive to get. " 7J- . "The" elements of civilization Russia has, in a copious language,' soft and beautiful without being effeminate,' and a good hearted people, that would become a nobler people under bet ter government. Their character ia stained chiefly by ignorance and fear The best class of Russians especially those who are " not tempted by poverty to the meanness that in Russia is almost the only road to wealth are boundlessly hospitable, kindly, amiable almost beyond the borders of sincerity, but not with the design of being insineere. They are hu mane to their serfs ; , and although this class suffers in Pussia troubles that surpass those of the negro slaves, it is not from the proper gentlemen and ladies of the country that this suffering .directly comes. ; When the noble proprietor, himself - lives in the, white house that peeps from among trees, side by side with the gilt dome of its church, the slaves on the estate are reasonably happy. It is not true that a Russian gentleman is frequently intoxicated. A Russian lady never Is so. Of the government functionaries, who forma large class of the facitious nobility and gentry of the empire, no good is to bo said; they- are tempted to pillage and extortion under a sys tem that all radiates from a great centre of deceit." ' Ostentation is 'the rule! A post master, a colonel in rank, receiving forty pounds a year, and Without private estate, is to be seen .keeping.it carriage; foar horses,' two footuien, and a coachman. His .wife goes extravagantly dressed ; she has two or three children, a maid and a cook to keep ; but she' can afford to pay a costlv visit every season to the capital. ! This system of false pretension ruins the character of thousands upon thousands. It makes of Russia what it is, a land eaten up with fraud and lying. 1 Living near such a colonel-postmaster, , the Englishwoman could obserye his mode of opera tion He was about to pay a visit to St. Peters burg, but wanted money. ' Uis expedient was to send an enormous order for iron, for the use of government, to a rich - iron-master in the town. ..The iron-master knew that .gold, not iron, was (he metal wanted ; ; and as he dared not expose himself to the anger of a government official, he was glad to compromise the matter by the payment of a round sum of. silver roubles as a fine for default in execution of the order.: The habit of ostentation bar barous in itself, which destroys the usefulness and credit of the employers of government tempts the ' poof nobles also to a forfeiture of their own honor and self-respect. " ' '' ; It runs into everything. "- Even in the most cultivated classes, few Russians who have not gone out of Russia for their knowledge are really well-informed. They have learnt two or three modern languages, and little elsel Yet tbey cultivate a tact in conversing with an air of wisdom upon topics about which5 they are almost 'wholly uninformed, and after an hour's sustainmentof a false assumption, show, perhaps, by some senseless question, that they cannot have understood properly , a syllable upon the points under discussion., Their emptiness of mind is a political institution. "If three Russians talk together, one is a spy," stands with them'as a social ' proverbs They are forbidden to express their own opinions upon great movements in the world ; .their censorship excludes from them : the- noblest literature ; they have no common ground of conversation left but the merits of actors and actresses, tho jests of the last farce or trashy comedy, or the state, of the opera, in which place, by-tbe-by, such cperas as William Tell and Massanelld are performed with new libretti, from; which1 all taint of a love of liberty ;bas been expunged: ' Peeling the weakness of this, and in a great many cases, secretly resenting it,, the men shrug their. shoulders and say, " Wha' would you' have ? We must' play cards' and talk of the odd trick." " While our countrywoman was staying with a friendly Russian lady,- an old gentleman called to bor row a few roubles', got them, and departed. " Ah, poor man," said the lady, when he was gone, ' ' think how unfortunate he has been. He once possessed fourteen thousand slaves, and he has lost them all at cards." The En glish visitor expressed regret that a man of his years should be the prey of such a vice. "Dow old do you think himf ' was then asked. : "Oh, sixty t the least." "Sixty ! He is past eighty, only.be wearsa wig, paints Jjye-brows, and rouges to make himself look" younger." L v ' j -The ' Russian ladies have1 little to do but read dissolute French novel (which' the cen sorship -does not exclude,) .' dress and undress, talk slander, and criticise the dresses of them-; selves and one another. Their slaves do all that might usefully occupy their hands and they are left to idleness; whiresults inva horrible amount of immortality.' The trading classes' and official talk' almost exclusively of money. The enslaved- peasants,' bound to the soil,' content when they are not much beaten, sing over the whole country their plaintive songs (they are all set in the minor key,) and each carries an axe in his girdle ; for 'which the day may come when be finds terrible u&e. At present, that day aeems to be very dis tant. t The ignorant house slaves, like the negroes holding the same rank clsewere, are treated as children 1 . Anew footman, in. a household which the Englishwoman visited a man six feet two out of his shoes -was found to have an apitude for breakage. He was told one day that when next he let anything fall he would be punished. - On the day fol lowing he droped the fish'ladle in handing fish at the beginning of dinner. - He looked dole fully at bis master, expecting that blows would be ordered. .'.4His mistress put him in the corner 1 . Their ignorance is lamentable., , A Russian gentleman returned from abroad, where he had seen better things, determined, to devote his life and fortune to the enlighten ment f his peasantry.' " The priest taught them- that he was destroying ancient customs, and that his-design was to subvert the religion of their, forefathers.'? Th consequence was that the slaves formed a conspiracy against him, and -shot him one evening, as he was reading a book in..his own setting. room! 5t Sometimes they take vengeance upon an oppressor ;' and terrible incidents of this kind come within the experience of .our country woman. 'The heads of cruel masters are some times cleft with the hatchet of the serf They are capable at the same time of strong feudal attachments.' It should be understood that all the slaves .in Russia are not poor Some of the wealthiest traders in St. ' Petersburg arc slaves to nobles who will not suffer them to buy their freedom, but enjoy the pride of own ing men who themselves own in some cases hundreds of thousands of pounds capital.. The inheritor of an estate in which there were many well-to-do serfs, arrived at it for the first time one evening, ' and in the morning found his house as he thought,' besieged.' His people had . heard that he was in debt ; and their pride being hurt at servitude to an embarrased mas ters, they brought with them a gift of money raised among themselves, not less than five and forty thousand pounds their free-will off ering, to make a man of him again. He did not need" this help, but the . illustratiop still remains of the great generosity of feeling pos sible among the class of Russians. ; -' The slaves detached from their lords, and living in a comparatively independent state,; acknowledge their.-subjection to the soil by payment of - poll-tax. Oppressive owners often use this claim of poll-tax as a means of aevourrng air ine earnings oi a struggling slave.' Our English woman met with a poor cook,, who had served a seven year's appren ticeship in- a French bouse, and earned high wages in a family besides -being allowed to earn many fees by superintending public sup pers and private parties. ; -There was an : up per servant . under the same roof with him whom this poor fellow sU ove ternary ; but much as he earned,' he strove in vain to save. Year by year the abrock or poll-tax was" raised. pro portion to the progress that he had made , and the . last time the English lady saw., him, "he was 6obbing bitterly ; over an open letter-r a demand from his proprietor for , more abrock; and an answer to a request from Madame with whom he served, that she might buy his free dom, naming an impossible Bum that doomed him to continued slavery.- is -.; ,'J I v There was a poor man in Twer. a dave born .with a genius for painting that in any civilized country would have proourred for him fame and fortune, . .His master, finding how he was gifted, doomed him to study under a common portrait-painter,- and -obliged him then to pay a poll-tax,-which he could only raise from year to year by painting.a great number . of cheap Eortrajts. he who had genius - for higher and etter things. "When we last saw him," writes -our countrywoman, he had pined into a decline; and, doubtless, ere this the village grave has closed over his griefs and - sorrows. and buried his genius in the shades of itseter-- nal oblivion."' , , , ... ..... z -. . , -) ..- -r . The Englishwoman was present once when a bargin was struck, for-a dressmaker.'. A gentleman had dropped in , to dine ; the host mentioned that his wife wanted a good dressing-maid.... The guest recommended one skilful in dressmaking,, with whom he thought his wife would part. " Well," the other said, -"her price ?", t "-Two hundred and fifty silver rou bles." That was more than could be given.; but the bargin finally was struck for a hun dred roubles and an old piano. ; , t . ; : . Sueh a servant must-be. content 0 'submit to much oppression. ' The, mistress who parts from you in the drawing ioom. with a , smile, may be met ten minutes afterwards -in- the. garden, her face inflamed with, rage, beating a man before her, one of the serfs employed ppon the grounds. - iA. lady who lost much money at the gambling table, being pressed to pay a debt .of honor, reraemberpd that she had not a female servants who possessed . beautiful hair. ;She ordered them all to be cropped and their hair sold for her benefit, regardles of the fact that together. witbjthcir hair, she robbed them of their. "reputation"; cropped hair being one of the marks set on a criminal. - -.---' i ; The boxing of the ears 'of maids is not below the dignity of any lady, but when the maid is not a Russian, there may be some -danger in the practice.; f. A princess,' whose hair was being dressed by a Trench waiting-maid, re ceiving some accidental scratch, turned round and slapped the face of her ''attendant.-; -.The Frenchwoman,' had the lady's back hair in her hand3 at the time, and grasping it firmly, held her head fast, while she administered a sound correction on the cheeks and ears of her high ness with the back of her hairbrush, r " It was: an insult that could not be resented publicly. A lady of her highness's blood could not let it be-said that a servant had given, her- a beat ing, and she therefore bribed the- Frenchwo man by mstir and kind I treatment to hold her totjgue. rs vt Yet blows." & not account for much in Rus sia; from the highest to the lowest, are all liable to suffer them. A lady of the hi,. hot . rank, using the lady's priTih-ge of chartering I in the ear or the Emperor at a iuakcd ball, let fall some iudicrcct f uggestiotia. hc waa j followed home by a npy ; (tuukuosed nest dy to Count Urlott s ouiee ; presently let ntyeUy down into a cellar, where she was birched Ly some person unsi'cn. This lady whose bt.ry we have heard before, tho Ecg'ihwouian often met ; her sister she knew well ; and she had the- anecdote from an rati mate friend of the family. " ' - ' - ; ; TJbe knot, the emblem of Russian barbae-; ism, falls not only on the slave . or the , crimi nal.', A poor student of more . thau ordinary tajents had, by great perseverance, , twice merited a prize ; but he was regarded with jealous hostality by a certain professor, whom he was too poor "to - bribe. "Twice- cheated, the poor fellow made a third : effort," though barely able to sustain himself in'; Lis humble lodginguntil the period of examination camel His .future hang upon the result ;' for,' upon his passing the ordeal with credit, depended his access to employment thai would get him bread. He strained every.nerve. and succee ded, welL All the professors . testified their approbation except one whose voice was ne cessary to complete'the votes.,".. He rose, and withheld his'suffrage upon false grounds that cast dishonor on the young mans character, It was -his old enemy; and the poor boy -a widow's son with starvation before him, and his hopes all to the winds, rushed forward by a sudden impulse of despair, and struck his persecutor, He was arrested, tried and con demned, by the Emperor himself, to receive a thousand lashes with the knout.- . . All the students and professors were ordered to be present at the execution of the sentence. Long before it was complete, of course, the youth was dead . but the full number was completed. Many students, who were made spectators of the scene, lay on the ground in swoon. - From another eye-witness, the Englishwoman heard of the-presence of a Ene of carriages, filled with Russian ladies, at a similar scene the victims.being slaves who had rebelled oecanse a master introduced upon his ground a box in which to thrash them bv machinery and had seized him and given him a taste of his own instrument of torture. Need we say more to prove that the true Russian civilization is a thing to come. -' ' ' ' ; ' - Our countryman, visiting a monastery, was invited to. eat ices in the garden She saw how the 6poons were cleaned behind the bush es licked and wiped. Such ice-eating, with the spoon -licking in the back-ground, is typi cal of the sort of elegance and polish Russia has.,t.. .,,..'..." a One day the Englishwoman saw an officer boldly pocket some of his neighbor's money while playing at carda, ' Another slipped up his sleeve some concert tickets belonging to her friend. She and her friend both saw him do it. One day a young: officer called while they. were at dinner; was shown into one of the drawing-rooms, and departed witha lady s 'watch. Nothing was said to the police, out of respect to his uncle, who is of rank. La dies going to a party will sometimes steal the papers of kid gloves and the hair-pins left on the toilet tables to supply those who happen tq come unprovided. Our countrywoman went to visit an old lady; and. as all (he drawing-rooms were thrown open for the reception of visitors, thought it no sin to walk from one room to anptljer for the purpose of examining some pictures. - The old lady rose and followed her, watching her mpyements so closely that she returned to herr seat greatly amazed. :" You must not be surprised at it,' my dear," said a friend, after she got home again :' "for really-you do not know how many things are lost iq auchpanie8 from the too great admi ration of the visitors." ' ' c" J'- i ' l'; The officers just mentioned were men hold ing .employments under government. - So much . has been . made notorious during the present war, of the extent to -which tho Rus-; sian government suffers from the peculation and falsehood pf officials in . all grades, that one illustration in this place will be sufficient, and we will choose one that illustrates at the same time another topic. " The railway at Warsaw is dropped, because he money needed for it is absorbed by war ; the only ' Russian railway line is that between he two capitals, St. Petersburg and. Moscow. .- When it was nearly finished, the Czar ordered it to be. ready for his own use on a certaiu day. It was not really fiiffiihed ; but over several miles of the road, since the Czar must be obeyed,' rails were laid down upon whatever contrivance could be patched up .for the occasion. ' The Imperial neck was risked by the Russian sys tem. While this railway- was iu course of construction, the fortunes made by engineers and government officials on the line of road was quite astonishing : men of straw rapidly acquired estates. Government suffered and the serfs. Our countrywoman living once. in-aoproTmce through which the railway runs went by train to a pic-nie " At the station, four hundred workmen were assembled, who asked eagerly whether he' governor was of the party-.- No, they were told, but his wife was. Her, then, they bogged to see. To : her they pleaded with their miserable tale,' for interference in their behalf. For six : weeks they, had been paid no wages, their rations were bad, and a fever like a piaguuund bro ken out among them, of which their compan ions perished by scores, to be b'iried, like so many dogs, in morales along the line. Their looks cenfirmcii their tale. The criminal em ployers were uron the spot, and acted igno rance and sympathy, making at the same time -humane speeches and - promises, ' which the poor men received by exchanging looks pr profound despair with each other. - Then there is the system of espial. ' - In addi tion to the secret police 'the accredited spies -there is said to be a Btafi of eighty thousand paid agents, persons moving in society ; gen erals, tradesmen, dressmakers, people of all ranks ; who are secretly engaged io watching and betraying - those with whom they live. The consequence is, that nobody dare speak his rarneiit thought. ev n to Lis familiar frit nd. Men ay what ' tLy do' sot thick, after -credit of gwernBient rrpertarhich they know to be audacious lies, and take pains to exhibit theu.Hdves as vbedicnt sul Jects. When the Englibhwouian lived at Archangel, a deaf and dnuib gentleman arrived with letters of introduction to the prinipj people, and was received with cordiality and Kympathy ; he was a clever man, read several language, and, displayed pretty drawings cf his own execu tion. He was made everywhere welcome. ' More than once our quick-eyed country-woman fancied that lie looked over-attentive to words spoken behind his back'. - It soon afterwards was made only two certain that this man was a government spy,' playing a difficult part for a baae purpose. . ; . 4. . k Of the Grek form of religojQ . wesay no thiug. ,Lct the Russiaua bow before, the pic tures of their saints. , We will quote oly an anecdote tpl5 in this book, of a poor Wander ing Samoyede, a fish-eating savage from tho borders xf the Arctic Ocean. le asked whe ther his visitor was Russian, and being an swered No, lifted up some skins in his tent which covered pictures of paints, and, pointing to them with disdain, said, " See J nere are Russian gods, but ours, raifing ihi's hand heavenwards, a greater. - He lives up , , An Election Speech. . , . Laiues and Gentlemen :. I rise; but there's no use telling you that you know I'm up as well as I do ' I'm a modest man very but I've never lost a picayune by it in my life ; because' its a scarcecommodily among candidates, I thought I would nientiPn. h, for fear if I didn't you would never be lucky' in finding it out. ..".' ... W . .a Candidates are generally, considered aa nuisances, but (.hey are not ; they are. the poli test men in the world, bhake you by the baud, and ask how's your family, what's the pros pect for crops, &c I'm the politest man in. the State.' I'm not only the politest man, but the best electioneerer you Ought to see me shaking hands with all the variations the pump-handle and'the pendulum, the cross-cut and wiggle-waggle : I understand the scienp e perfectly.. If any of the country candidates wish instructions, let them come to me. . -: Fellow citizens ; I was born if I, had not been I Wouldn't have been a randidate but I was going to tell you where. It was not in the Mississippi, but 'twas on the north 6ide pf the negro line ; yet that is not a compliment, as the negroes are mostly born in the same side I started in the world as poor as a church mouse, yet I came honestly by my poverty for I inherited it ; and if 1 did start poor, no man can say but that I've held my own pretty well. .: ' - , " ' . . i Candidates-generally aek you if you think they are qualified, Ac. Now I don't ask your thought I ask your votes. Why, there's nothing to think of except to watch that Swan's name is not on your ticket; if it is, think to scratch it off and put mine on. . I'm certain I'm competent for who ought to know better than I do? Nobody. , ' I I will allow that Swan is the best auditor " that is till I'm elected. ' Then perhaps it is' not proper for me to say any thing more . Yet, , as an honest man, I'm bound to say that it's a grievous sin to hide anything from my fcl-low-citizens. Therefore I say it's my private opinion, publicly expressed, that I'll make the best auditor ever in the United States. ' e - 'Tu cot for honor I wish to be auditor ; for, : in my own county, I was offered an office, that ' was all hpnor-coroner which I respectfully; declined The auditor's office is worth some , $5,000 a year, and I am iu for it like a thou- sand of brick., To show my goodness of heart ; I'll make this offer to my competitor, I am sure of being elected f and he will - lose some thing by the canvass ; therefore I am willing to divide equally with him, and . make - these two offers : I'll take the salary, and he may i have the honor ; or he may have the honor, .t and I'll take the salary. Iu the way of honors .. t have received enough to satisfy me for life. " J went out to Mexico,' eat pork and beans," ' slept in the rain and mud, and swallowed every-'' thing except live Mexicans. When I was ordered to go," went ; " charge," charged ; and " break for the chapparral," you had betr ter believe I beat a quarter nag "n doing , my . duty.r :. . .:; ,.,': f - . i . My competitor, Swan, is a bird of golden plumage,. who has been fewimming for the last four years in the auditor's pond at $5,000 a ' year. I am for rotation. I want to rotate him out," and to rotate myself in. There's plenty of room for him out side of that pond,T therefore pop iu your votes for me I'll pop -him out, and pop myself in J L '. . " I am for a division of labor. Swan says hp has to work all the time with his nose down -upon the public grind-stone. T Four years ( must have ground it to a point. Poor follow, . the public ought Dot to insist on having the handle of hU mug ground clean off. I have ' a large full grown nose, and tough as sole- ' leather. I rush to the post of duty I offer ; it up as a sacrifice. - I clap it on the grind-" ' stone. : Feilow-crtixens, grind away, till I ; holler ennff, and that'll be some time first. Time's most out.' .Well, I like to forget to tell you my name. . .. It's Daniel (for Bhort, , Dan ; not a handsome , name', for my parents . were poor people, who lived where .he quality t appropriated all the nice names; therefore they had to take what was left and divide " around among us but it's as handsome as I am) It. Russell. Remember every one of you, that it's not Swan. " 1 am sure to be elected ; so one and all, : freat and small, short and tall, when you come ; own to Jackson, after the election, stop at the auditor's offico-the latch-ats'icg hang , out enter , without knocking, f:akapff youir things,' and make yourself at home. ; " Mother, did you hear sissyswear V : 1 No. mydear; what' did bh say ?" ' -"Why, she said she vr-'t going to wear her dirncd stockings to ch'.u hT - : i . ;