II C 1g r 3 H II IsEittlEvlaty ME! 305.. a on the crest e. 1 (Of M3.—ONE DOL 'Dollar Fifty Get and if delayed two &liars w ntinninkies opti; :esire paid. Ira to the. Publish, 1.4 13 . e post-paid t; TB t Que nten t¢e ye less Item , P 0 The , PrOst- ; The iin tit! rest-Sing sat on is esberg halrsp And scowled on e looked around ongedforthe!" • The mlur,h, and :For.. iAnd i" To iand tarn:. let , rms! to arms!" stern eye glei " Bring in). snot II hp the winds 4 6 troops in an icy Then Lunn far ti, Wit` g '. Vane .tly flames of -th! it t as the•stnim And the tempest 'll, wild neigh, . yawning months With the nhiriwi With CM mmer-Queen, on floats along with ver flow'ry hill c fierce, wild s rns in flight froml BM tlearc Then -it cnme•s on th MS e efouq'mr thmu• GM tering chains and and reigns in his e fair, broad real exil'd Queen On the shores of t O'er t While hnt iThat re the ntthlmas - [ode foe 'seeks th. I to strike for her / shall-froth his ho goy' queen-barm. I nee more o'er hi For hr And he Ansa FrOut the Lou Y MOM stißv ErENMIM CAnto, February 14. 1847. been so out, of the world for the / KAY .1 111111 Wit comma passing Me, far bc+ond thit on an i t thin months, that I am not qualified:to,: - - on the events which have- been! n it. I have been sailing up the into Nubia, sornehundredsof milesi post-offices and newspapers ; so ny return• to Cairo, I have to learn over the -news of the would instend h king upon it. But I hare ken ta4 pother kind or survey, full as inter- vie as that of the busy living race eylof Time instead of Circumstance; nay he well for once, to speek of :t only because ply own mind is toll because it is good for us all to hate of irema kiim a eling 14 -a SUI*O arid it this—n. opt, tm cur tho preaent sr!ifrh , thts now and then called off frolm fiiiirs, and fixed on a point of view minds a wider prospect. e all apt to overrate the importance times,.our own work, our own • Ido not speak of this as a us. It is natural to the human nd good in its effects; for We ardly, pot our work, or our hear into the events of every day,l if •ow small a proportion anything -ors to the history of our race...d--- ,ck me powerflully, the other day 4 as standing On she highest Stone s t Pyramid : of Eisipt. The preset: 4 Ireland, and trying winter n En'g4 :ms, naturally 'enough, to those in • or experience' of them, the most t events that eer happened, in the .ut it is as worth while to loUk baCk s which oteurredinthisEastrrepOrt orld several thousand years ago, if anything could be more importaut •ir causes and theirconsequtces.-- several monthsl patt,lbere eheen various parts Europe, sWeeping ellings and produce,- and leausing of some lives. ITo thoseon the spelt,- 1211 of gut o •tipenen fault in mind ; sho'inld ty imere we say present , 1 ' This sir] whin I 1 1 the G • ,1 famine land se: fag vie imports world-; to tamio of The - 1 and see thluo th. Daring floods • . 1 away d th 4 loss this eve, t appears like • test calami But, 100 —?26e Of ma 1 Otood W, trtived I thefe" was a `here a. , great mighty mona ! etc& the desti'. lid of time: A :htepmect of .1 wle'age is' 'aim .I . ble to do thi lectricity, the • , irce:, whic ~of by Mao, 1 • heart OE ital ant aff. to the e; ;, the enli l our kn . 1 1 we are PC (Wert ing-pre chf-arne fripp th 'eethis I s true, and per' d to "oar`- own s of the tate. " EEO MgPe Alt . for sometim ' • rtiOn 'of Jithol; that our year t r-::,4h: hrist ;rand 41,1 e 'game time proved that t an had been , ' , a long tittle. -fishes, of :•4' - , .• -Mau -Ara:, we !Doti late liptiOme pij. - i ant ••• • I Waltz diOught; of ..;or ofmett - ',4iiht- ! ", , . the ae about before I wed at , ology b 010er 4 , %ad I baits nol4', • thP ^mare GOO y about Aft no 439n0y gd_rden" ink bee, clbthin agtionsl is Wie iinucl e l t o ns • its . v age , :II yeett o t te o s iiii4 ... ; l ~n athat ttieliii: , liprilititl'ilatir lt libith ' ... ..„' . 401 be qknie -111 * Our boastiot . , -,,' -,- itiiiiifei* IIY win wide • , Itceleit siiiiifikaki‘ j with C4MIOI abieratk, ilvasiiif ttOYit.. ! "- • e of the' PO* Aven4c) AR apse inedvnooeJ • • , I ir:not. paid witbinl*o Atil aftor Abe expinitfen, of I be exacted. 44.11 on businessivn.th:the pf iusure ottfullon,,, tim. nil% ts 'Bald.' 1 . 1 is ezir caul I.lurone, , •, ; • the,frigid zone, _ his courtici throng; : .: . . his narrow realm, tunitliefrost,plumfyl4ltn, e battle song. MI len the monarch trial,: 'd with a, victor's prloe,) -wreath hattle-car! f the winter sttinn, phalanx form, • ,7, e soutbern war moitheru sky loud looms on high, burgers bound, j` .m the dusky caves) l , drink tin+ arctic wa.464:,- .1 . tab circling 'rousikl.. he zephyr Maid," er joyous band, and dale, ' 9 • , nt of the Ncrtiretkit the ruthletu; horde " charging galc over hill and dale '• his icy mail, .! nisterotts glee • !', by his prowess wan, I. eks the pareut ain' t • t'S i e tropic sea. 11=111 It • when i fight again,' ;at domain; • • throne be hurled, . it he unfnrhtil 1 and prain. [attn. on Ppople's Jurnal.. • UE PrUAMED. I= the end of the world y in the - exiierieo,e g over front where place almost -within, flood rose, , arid des-, ch and all his haat, y of the human taee we tire lain ;of ur age ; we dunk - tit:at at all new, and "tliM , ga by steatn, t water- telescope, the Print- I were never t o efiiee' V survey of the p4 f it may showits Imps sober our rietirs attainments and the r. 6 rs who judged too - had been created is,- about' 4000 yeant that Man was ere „The science of ge e world is very much apposed; and that it 'inhabited by curious nds that we peter-ice excited. And ' gyptiaa litOoMihr•, tbat*elitirf-hOn einturietilds4 =t6lt atiiini!freitat 04y theii fantlitte tit one elietiko-*le of Aden ltild Etio such tithigViiir. Auinneabiid*cilw *arte"of life , dr triina• wanatf; tint iloikit reason, that - the Fyrr :the"othei4iiin . i - • 1 • \ I • r • . - - I ... ~. , • , . \.... 1 . • 1, .. . . .•. . - _ ' . -.- ,•_..1-... j ' :. ,IV - - 1 ' J....iv , ' __________ -- -•.-- - ... . • ~..,,,i- 1 .•,• „• -,.! 1 ..,, ...: / yr , ..! .' , ' . 7...-' -''...! . , t i . ... (~,,-;;; tit rV l •••,.A v , . .. , 1 i • , ': 3 , • '.' , k : t, , ~. s, . , .t. t :','. ' ~ • veiltietrieptive . , , pply inserbAst ugi---11 - • - • . . ~,, . N.. , ~1 L-14 fd+ f!''..r..:i :air: t ,',, - 4 • ...-..,-,.„.„) • ariiiiiiw*lii quits' '• , r-'`. , - otAhettit*(l.l, , . • i. = - , - , i • . 4 - q a., r i ~, i '..,; s ~.., ..-,- 'v • - - -.t- -• • ~ ;._ ______ ., ___Twair_. - ii , ..$119 , Z 2 . 11 , _'' ' :. ,f,di". •„*,lllllll, biliffillielli . ..., , ~- '' t ''', •,... "-:. 7" - ' , •i• , , ' 11“. 1 ~_. , .., - , • ,;•1.,,, „, ~.. t. . , ,4. r ill ' • A. iVi.,.. i. : '4 , i rilvst . 1 !,47.! j,1. f,,af, l!gßeFeg" . ... ~, ..,,: a , ...t- , , tt` , i' . ' 4 '' ' l'i! i ' o V S,VA' 0 ..,-: 'LP ,r 1. , . 4 . '''' : 1 1 . ;1? ' . f. , . • ; „ , . ' ' Ad, . • ' . ' "'" -' '' •'''''' l "-' l '''' t'W•l i• 1 '-' ~` - --" '' t' • ;,...... ieratiolliottii xcee} • l . ; 7- ' — ' ,-- ''. ''" : 1 11l . , ~. , .• ~....„..,_ „,,. ~ . „ . r . . , ~....;- ):, ; , 0.t.,1 , i ; / ~,i ~,,j - .3 , 1, • t', , .7' , ' itilarterPl:ll . " ~vita * E MU!!! ' 111Wilen of. ill- * . ' .. ','-• - -'44*;;;4 . 4.110 1 ; .. ..„ __. . . . , . F. - ' - . 1- .1..1 , -', - . + ,, ,; . .a40 .i • , '''''' ' ' l4- ''. VERY I)IFF.ERENCE' OP OPINIONIS - NOT At DIFFEREN *E OF PRINP,IP.I. %'l-4 Vrifinted` zt. -, 3. - 41 . :11. "till 1i , v....:0.):: , ...,i: 4.-1.-. , .1 /Weal= -3 " - _„ ., - 1. 1111 X; 4 +:Tt1 f,,, •; ,, 5f,.•`.-1 .';,2 - tt t r,7tsf.-, •',- 11 1. , -,4, -1'" I : SNP 0 00 1111 Znirl c - `.`- 1 ' ...!:' , -"ZWei'l 11 ~. . • _ ...,- '' Aies* Corgis , do: .• ' .3-Od 1 2,-;- x ., ..4-.. -' s l • , 1,/ : j ii . + .g . i 't .'''' I . 1:( ~ ...1 iI I. ;.` - 'II .'. . \''' ..4 f , i• • 1 t l . lal -'4 t .. '' . AlMiihet Lid i ,_, t 3 , r t . . 8 7 ,,,,. 4 ,, i c i l i :, 1 .•43.1:11 ::::: t if a - W11 ,,..5.,,,,,5,3 ii 7: 7 a ilt,:r :; 7 f . if ~ L 7 a , l ee ,- AA --- .) - 41".4 rl'-'i• • 1 - 1 , . .• 2. Nv..,,E ..„,e, ,A„ -6., - ' , MONTIIO E - , PA. 4111 Yl . ,-, ~-I 1 - '''''''''' fl ' ' - ' 1 h' AILLEL , • li t M.../V: , -; • :• • 1 .• -- r viel.fl 1 qf • . r , , le . , S t' , ) 1417 It ,1 .—4 ,:v ~ .. _ ..,...... _ "- - •.•st • , 1 -4. ii 't >2 4 • ~elti - .5 111111111111 i~ VQ~.,. This . rregiltY Mia,•Oflndldingens rielev'- en.,actetinf, ..gnOl:la r and it is imilt. o blocks ~ of St ( Ve .14 en ..._2 ° F rn , _ ..O 4l f lh A tt Aii B ,- / ne9 1 , 1 . ivobJe how, .0 01 41V. 41 41:6 1 4.:0 . f; tim e , .or nu • ber,of merit dig£ .o o l .4 l ialre , ireen .brought i ow die quarr y aud-pdsed, In ; their proper . pl , cert.,-It was .onc9AnK.mni!ioo4, polished on he out side ; and itslirdory, was engraver& , o it in hieroglyplte chrepeters. So the of histo rian& tell ne.f. . ;But now .the , smooth outside id all,gorko. taken, probably, to.lmil • other edifices,; ; ancl.the ne.st range of ston , blocks us formi.a let Of. steps; by . ..vv. : kick men RI got to th top i.- a rough, broken,. and, - 'Ewalt stairj e ef i d&i.feet high— , the step being old_ y from - .throe to,fger I feet high., Each of our_perty_liad diree Arabs for aseistents 1 -dark brown men, in turbans or lithe white caps, and loose shirts and drawers, and who _never dream of being silent for a miaow, or .of leaving off asking. for a i present. 1 . The,se Arabs aye .of a different race from the people Om 'built the Pyramid, and they know .no thing wlunver ab outthem, e tho, nor eau they , , , conceive why we go ,and tf&sit such monu- An ents. They can i hardly euppose that we go in search of treasure. But they are kind to strangers, and faithful to their crest ; and I felt it very good , hands while they - were helping me.up and down the outsideof this --the largest building in the world., They drew end lifted me up the high steps so as to spare me any great fatigue, encouraging me with the few words of English tkiey had picked up,--- 7 " very good!" and " half way !" After some__particular difficult steps, they were in great delight, and patted me on the hack, all three crying out—" Ah ! al !good s itiorning—good ' morning !" They were Ordered to ! be quiet while we werd at the thp, where sve wished to took about 'is un disturbed, dnd tip ildt6 and begin soine let ters-to our friends ; but, with all my inter, nst in the seence which spread abroad, I could not bet l'ar&ir . on these men with won der and sor row that they Should be iiiltabi. 1 tants of a country abounding in such: tnonu- i meats. ! , % The landscape which we overlooked Ards this : Frain pear the foot of the Itvramid to the Northern Itorizon Stretched , tree line which divided the-, sandy desert fram the fertile plain! which extends to the Nile. The line of separation was wary, 'and Marked by a little cattail which had still init - some of the water lets. by the inundation, To the east of this line, filling up the landscape I to the rivers and vanishing in the northern horizon, spread the most fertile plaint in the world—coVered : with green crops, i dotted with villages of brown - mud housea, over shadowed livith : palms—and marked by a faint line of causeway here and there, and by many threads t lf water. To the East was the Nile, about five miles from ti's at the nearest point, but winding away frOm the fartherest North I to the utmost South. Be- yond the river spread- the beautiful I city of I Cairo; its white citadel crowning is lofty rock, and being itself backed by trirocky heights. of ;the Mok - uttum Hills.. These : Eastern. hills then spread away 'So ; My3rd into the Aiiibian Desert, which allotted the. eyes ne rest until it came round to the4iver again.• The circuit of the landscape was completed , by the Lybian Desert; the parch- I ea, glaring desert, where nothing was to be seen on the; iota:minable sands but it line of : camels pacing-along in the heat, and a few brown Arab tents, not far from the Pyramid. -Fora few xiiilet to the South of us, and close •I• round about ui, _were clustered a crowd of I .Pyramids--+sonie larger, some smaller.--but I none to eontiparp with the one we stOod on. -Of these, the most interesting were those of Sakharai Which we had visited the day be fore. They i stand amid the Necrepolis-- the great burying ground of the mighty „old city or,Metophis—of which nothing - now re mains' ut a statue here and there, and some scatteredbleckit of sculptured stone; OOthing Ili 'else b t the tombs, which are etteugh to show that this Was a great city indeA. : Here in those tombs, ,which are cliaraters cut out of the rock; and adorned w4h'!col unins and': pictured wall; ,in these tombs andothers Were 'men busy sculpturihg 'And t. pawing at in time When we have been: apt ,t . co ltuppose the earliest generations Were learn= ng ho w toi,,ltve on, the rode earth. I These pictures on' walls, however, 40* the Avo, o r .life i , o f the Egyptians to be utit very 'far.belfind our own. I have seen . • bat the itosse'''' Isit:lol6f ~ .inen were in thoie 44 i from these . . memorials ,in the chambers f their gratipti.-,t'llhave seen their flocks * o , cattle, their ftelds;itn 'seed time and harvest, .their fisheries,thleir ,hunting mi l d sheeting ( parties, Ate'Nista - With many oars and gay cli iii!ered i sail ,theirpeautifill.furnitore 7 —conch s, easy :c :• ', - liiiios t atid vases,' very like th hand harlc I :soinkst 'Of f L oarti,nt , the present da ; their I kitchens, IT th,the slaughtering of ca ile,and '.thi,'coOkio of the joints of beef; h* wine i. pr t elks -ne_ :thett waro.o ofpc i clot4es ank, kitiniftene:-Ifeellaoe .;.' iheii - 4 s and lwai,Atrit is,,,;ttail, tie bridges nod 'f o rtified 40W4-tbSt 01'14 over o . stormed, .. I. have I seen thi,,sfireavinf tif gar c mit , an d ; , e steep ing.iax ittakiiptenttag pf..,.. '. trope-making, . ilass-britwitit;joit as Ma he seen iti piewi , :bastinaitiAsy;ltlie,building Of h00t.01,, the carving? 4 ,Atittkes, l ;l,,gn. : err .: at ball, anti ~.g3 T u*!', USs!. 444.0,* r. , 14, and , OaYiTei, 1,401 maFl 4. l 1... ~. ;_', Z -4:4'w -,i1,, , ::,,,:_:, ' -..e •: 1 -,'..L' 1 :. , ..il l 4 l . ll t#l9r 4ii..ffip'i9„ _ , 000044 As of , ` f.!PiPlit,i'PC)ii4*.f, l 4 o 37, -00 41 0 . flkili. that ;, ~...clifoc.,;lo. , ,e,yrl4 e ie . ;.E f ,.. en'O.oo l olinii.,.or lops - 44*-,-theie. .iokikiik..igogro, Attout,delit-4144.b0na1, .4:gr.540.14.460 i44711*„1461 ti*o,44 , -1 040,04,0 3 Y 1044.443= .. .on 4-bie .•to the ItpeAt. 4 ; - and t i ma 'tiii34 hi .‘ ik)ii - 16 the . , or .* , ,} . lioh iiiiiot t. , - between the '.lli' e: seen g i' Itli'ferif iiip - ,thi'Aiig • wiOli ii4kit6l - eiii the farther:l: , '.-aitil;the judges olio irp).lo* - 1100siiirsi i 0100C.-LOC theiSlegosiand4 ba re •re4.*#e11AiNfiP4 1 7. 11 ...4e0444 ~n01,11t:441'.. Mi li tiiiik.. .. 1.1.i!.. 1 . 1 04:, - 041 714 . cini 44 1 00* .:,o d- 70 10 0 1 0 611300 .0filiiir 16iiii; In t o - fied'ili- ' ' ' ' fiuotit: -, :*iiipi inii i ii4tiathii, , pioiile*iir ' ' • '•*liii**, -. l4l4ffislh a t ii i i,, A i n d `4401 . .t h elblidt* l-40 4 * -;.10400-4 11 11VillkOclIM , Pf- * .., . - '' . ...4 01 inb l il44 IsecnriiitylvAlA r - Aeir 1 t• i I , .it _ . . owners, occupied bathe embalmed bodies, rind . cloriatkutillir•al - far future' agette tilled ; _the inighty;Pyrtitnida had.: ieen ' built, add .their • appearance lad grown ,-fiunilliatte generations; and tlieir . liudders—kend e of thohs'addi "in - number -had ' long Slept in their grvesovheti - Oleh Arab . entered the copntry,'With'his-flOcks, and I servants; and family, -to seek - subdietence fer - theni till in the 'fertile wally of. th el Nilcy as people On ,his„osvik plains were .diore than ecaildhe fed.' ~This, rielt4rals mad hid train . 'trav,ersed, the bike, no - doubt, to arrive ht the 004 1 city of the great Monarch of toiv?dr Egypt ~.. end he Must, it is thought, -have seen•theobelisk now. standing at Heliopolis, which all travel era admire, ,and •hase looked. with 'amaze ment: like ours at the .Great Pyramid. This visitor was received 'ivitlf - fatior "and pomp by the mighty lcitikt, And made much of for a time. This was AllitAllAM. - As I stood, the other day, looking. at the. way he came ; and wondering at my lot in seeing the very things,he saw, and cdnsidering how refined. and' advanced were the people whom he vis ited,'the history of the world did appear to stretch itself out so adto confound our early notions, and make uslumble as- to the ra pidity of human progress. In those days, women reigned and were obeyed without question. Not only were there' long and regular reigns, but the su premacy was unquestioned when r in the hands of a woman ; tutoken of high civiliza tion; as was the fuudtinn of the priesthood, with-whom was lodged a science and phi losophy which we hake reson to belieVe has since commanded the veneration of the world-when delivered ] by Greeks, and might do so still,-if we could fully recover them. A few generations after this, a young slave was brought into the country, and placed in the house ofan officernf State. We all know the story of Jos.eph--how ho became the Minister of this great •country in• its rising greatness; and how he changed the whole political condition of Egypt by buyinn• n up-all the land for the Monarch. Prom the time of that Seven year's Famine, the Kings of Egypt were possessor of the whole land and river—as the present Ruler is at this day ; and., as at this day, the proviiion for an un mitigated despotism was Complete : as, also, for great improvementd, under the sway of a wile sovereign ; an Object which Jciseph may bare hl in view ns winch as the interest of the King, ft . - In various buildings , of this early time, t have seen the unbaked brick,--etude brick; , it is called—which 'cannot be made without n large admixture of straw to bind it. ,The soil of the Nile valley'is moistened, worked up with cut straw, moulded, and laid in the hot sun of this country to dry. Some such. bricks bear the name and mark of very early kings. TO make theise bricks was the work nssigned to the Irrielits; in which they were so cruelly oppressed. i I could see them with my mind's eye, as ifist,cre but in the last cen ury, ns I looked down from the Pyramid on the brick remniqs below us, and the dwellings Of the plain, and over towards Goshen, which was given to the Israelites while they were in favor ; and again over the Eastern hills, through which Moses led his people when the Oppression - became too bitter to be borne. Nearer than these hills, and close by Cairo, lies the island of Roda, where tradition says] Moses , was found'by the king's daughter. ] But this is of course, a very 'doubtful point, ]tind one which I cared little about while-gazing- nn the same lead- 1 ing features of natural scenery as were be -fore him all the days of his youth. , One impression hag taken me by surprise. fused to wonderadd always did, till nos —=at that stupidity of the Israelites which so angered their—their pining after. , - fi Egypt after n mg it possible to livethere. -It Was intone 'vabl c ralk e how they could long to ! go back •to a place ofisenh cruel oppression, for the sake of anything itcould give. I now wonder no longer, haping seen and felt the desert, and knowing the charms of the val- 1 ley of the Nile. Ond evening lately, just at , sunset; the scene struck upon my heart, op- pressing it with the sense of beauty. A vil lage was beside an ex i tensive grove of palms, which sprang from out of the thickest and richest clover to the height of eighty feet , — , • Their tops waved gently, in the soft breeze , - which ruffled the surface of a blue pond ly ! ing among grassy shcires. There were gold en light and sharp shtidows among the banks where a stream had finely- made• its way. , •.-- The yellow'sandhilts 'of-the desert just show- I•edjhemselves between the stems of the more. 'icattered4lalmii. Within view were sodie carefully tilled fields, Iwith 'strong wheat, .lu pins and-purple bean blossoms; and melon-andsmite •eircumberii• patched were - not -far, off. • Cattle were tethered beside the hedg es; and on a - bank near sat an -old woman and a boy and a-girl, basking in the last rays - of- the sun - with evident ' enjoyment, though - -the magic *tiering !given by ' the Egyptian armoipliere mitt-not-be so 'stri king as' to Edglish'eltes. - But what 'mast h have been in the 111min:sty "of "-the Israelites,` •wandering , in the desert where 'there is -do r ' color except at' dithrsierind siiiiset,'buVonly. pareliedlineks and- choking dust Or- sand !. Twill notcattempt noW; for no one'has- ever succeeded. in such titaftempt, to conveY any impression; Of' •the 'appalling! driarinesi of - the depths of the desert-•• I-.•eati -only •say that when itioisetiribeforo-nielin :contrast otithitiot imoieofthel valley olaurisiti -I - tit 'lad onderitdiid ithe •aurreadei of=' - heart and 'r elOport'forts the partr of .tho-gerielitesi'auti could'' iiropittb*?•4 their forgetfaloesc of Altiir-paat' arOes'id 4.liiiiti'ploOt!for ,'*ardare 'end attittinia/for4liadeotid -gOod loodi - ,4iiid for'aVuttletuld'Olgbt*Aluyidoretlitivar; : io , iota - of , the , hitifarliatidi iftithiatirmatod thintitri=wliekettrylitisthoriuritett ' l '''F 2 - 0 --i.origivieniitookilivfor-ives , 'ilifillbst iiittiksthilittpdi , io - 'therodatida - , 4ogi, 0 4iiii - Xg*liiittr- ' - "and tito*Btorii'ofilitoietiVitit iiiiatqtuidtct it:iiktilmilaltlintoitt i i liolljitil blii ; 4.11 4 • ci aiiiweiiiiie diiiii* 4063 . sthii*ifvolin a tetosibit , sualmicheepighia Vitae 44 , gnsibiii* and bed tiiiiii-oAitell *eitif.fitgiti Illii,Perfiliustiiitit there beraietitideello 1 , --- 1 i h Great. I will,pol ' obsfirKe - shat Moses was; the son- in k Kiest, .apd:Latlist theilei fore have leen of.. a priestly caste whit h' held more power! more knowledge, moire, wealth, and: a highor stOtiortOhitn any othli.; An at& - Egyptian; 4tistbrriati `-'iireetaie' a tlati, Plieses was liimseatletirned priest of Heii -We il p , opolis. e carom gut:Oast! this to be true;: bat it show* lioVitli 'Nies •abliceted in ttliei popular belief wit ` the - priesthood , and how' naturally much' 4s 'hit iyitein must hate: been derisedtfrotatil€ iiistititicink of the coun try he was b . roughitap itu i , 1 - The despised Isr elit4s .spread and 'con quered their enbint s',th4 *lure a nation patwerfuretiOngli - lb have uCk i tiOwledged le texcourse of war or peace with the kings 4f Egypt. King Sol mon' married a princeSs born and reared li the Nile ; Talley; inid wberi, Solomon . dietl,.his. father-in-lay, Shils 7- hank, went up age' st Jerusalem , and hilt home many capti es ind previous spoil. I have seen on the, voile . of the great temple ofpkarntic, at The es, it . sculptured ..giinfp Of•Jewtsh captives, •liodi the cOnqiieror was hollding by the hair of their , headS,and rais ing. his War knifever '(item while-they ill mercy wide pliged hands- 4: ‘ I These battle pieces abound on the walls and gates of the e l and ',old temples Whieli are ranged along the Nile valley as far aslit has been explored; mid they remind every one who looks at them of the battled of HO mer's poems—except in the great point that Homer makes , thegods take part in wars, while the Egyptian :got s were of too high aq order to be so de pse dby human passions. 84me scholars thin i t that Homer had seen' the City of Thebes; of Which he' gives sinth magnificent reportt; add' *here he' retire seats the gods as coming down to visit the ncibleinhaditants. Ift is, pleasant to think, whilegazing, abroad, thnt the father ofpoei ry saw what I see, and wrought his Epips inlhis mind from looking on the sculptured walls that I have 'been studying. Abopt another,, great man the first of his-classi— the old llerodotus, Whom scholars venerate as the, father of history,: there is no su4h ticiubt. We 'have his account of Egypt in hiS day; and so remarkable is his venerh- I tidn for the' antiquity of Egyptian - usages 1 and edifices, that I shall ever, thinkiof hitaa as standing before, the, great, monuments id the land—a learner,---aS we ore. Ile knew: well enough, and plainly declared,. that tile Greeks derived their religion frorn tliki Egyp. .4.-- q thinz which itl would be hard -so doubt-when 'we titikik , ottliele - .. , ..cotint of e scone after death— r their river 5ty.,.,._, If ferryman Charon, their dog Ccrberus, and the Judges. All this natural and solexim amid the funeral sciencty of Memphis, Was borrowed and spoiled by the Greeks as was moth else which iii supposed ro be their own. If anything- is called Greek) nuke emphatically than. another, it is the philos ophy of Plato; but flat° lived thirteen years atHeliopolis, studying philosophy Lin der the priests, wlid were Considered m4s tei.s of all learning.' NO one will undertake to say that we should-hive had Plato's Oil ' osophy as it is, if be lied not studied under Egyptian sages for thirteen years. This happened nearly4oo years befbre. the time of Christ. 1 .. , I L Now, after considering these things, acid seeing what Egypt was while thereat of the known world was inattinfunite.or barboilas state, what becomes_pf our pride of knoWl. edge a t eti achievement l ! It is _clear that the Egyptians of the time of Abraham, and fur ginerlitions before his (toy, could do things of which we are incapable, and bad knot) , l edge which- is, yet ;concealed •from us.l.- - - Antid their-abstract religion' and.high phil• osophy,, they pursued ia_ fierce.- and ..ernel warfare—as was men's way in the „early ages .of the world. Artild. our noble and Apure religion, and the lights of Minty th i ck'. send years,-men and nations now ate- qtrir riling and fig,hting, and cahoot 'even carry the point.titat every member of society shall have sufficient food. S t irely there is -mat. ter for day) consideration here. -, The • land of Egypt is nuw inhabited l 4 Arabs who know nothing, hope nothinrcare for nothing, but living-tn as.quietly -ris.t* can under a despofisna Svhich foey ~ camipt resist. Parents cut off their ; ch' dren ii . irst ' il ' e" finger, that theY initYle uhible u to "nriite,' 4 Or m fire off a musket ; end:if a ' min 'earns auything that he likes, he conceal' it Jest it 'should - be take*frchn - him: . ' Tliei PhOlie lip the solemn old temples smith Mud hilts, "iincl ,build - theithovels.tin the-holy reofit, They burn statates.for lime, and, split the head ;of a granite Colo sus to make l; miii.Amnes . *- - They light - firekagitinsethe paitited:*alls' i of niitique Widths, and; in 'tiettiell'of - ticieillies, crush , under.folit the:brines -of kings. '-:Tlie tereplesl_are filling, np:With-ther,sand- of ;the desert, and the ; tombs tire „decaying under the ignorance - au4,''v;i?rence of ~rnal,l•.• ,11 at tit d l e sand is- it friendly preser-- ver, and may bp only *itlidrawing.a grifat lohk ofltuowleOmor . S, . time ffir , Fesjorti-, iidn - When iecan,_lin betici used; . The." key 'tolihn' hieinglAilil'elatiiiiiio 'Whiali thp , y,' War Ims-been dictrOfeci. 'Mile Iseditte,kif, this. and knowittglhatAiiiittit -,mottumeettii treasure lies safe,and lf;iry,Yheere4 th O the, N said f ive nift or itffi a fit gi ghts& kY d tePii e t ' , v l _,P,th....el o stihet burnlnv!Se briglitly,-when. the, i tt eat hap . ° Tome lrd :yi ntitte9 !holm ittte s the' j;itft Ore. Iniliiise 4 s there - 11:40v some pile, to aliii4 trilli'rii ;lig i ctifrie n ,Otiiifitiriill Stn-iteroili-thlifttfiiima .;'. i ,-- . cli orjobr,ndrlatibeeqoproirmirotio io , tbe: 19 4 9 free - "DY: l 9#l;99.gloOolpk , W 9 -as : 99 t h r9r g 91 0. r..„ 1-. ' • 'ooiitba • HinaOlaitunti.-i:-The 1-, ' liiffposei I'4 14drotiatliylifibm-tre It-: vid u ilingyi* A l e ck t roo d l , :l 1 ;4 -,:-..w.., -! 'NW W1N*04 , 4 1 144ti1l Jiret t i hte.i.„4.lm--ile. bt 4 ~.why".roli,iit i ocit n o: l ki Jaw ditiiib'clitti*ir. iipiii' hit e l. ' ' , i . .! 'em ; and when a dog'ti sick dosen'eloa , ', rum ,If !kii:ifigidfnet is licit- -1 .,:, IL oiiialCirWpoinlike, '''.42 ir,a' A vi Plr totoriboittripitial WO the I Oeast 0- 7 " but bid you inveieeianyNif 4".111.49fign114.044411.4.16 AhcoMlrAtem:W4h o , l7 , *ol,ll)el►tf; tAin the ditches, and every w4re too, hereabouts, nererAnitAgke4 lo9kjipir s up jn the. 9f, .4de4o"Anil Ting (I fOtilfinVnwilYziYO.o,,Revilt 500'.414 nor 114 INC,rdoWt, kqPw Pit 40071.• tY.Y3 got more Offlct.,7 t -ti • . , i ;',•:1 . '... . ' ,'` ' ',."'- j -...-. -- 1--0..., -,„; :- .. , 7 • , +. 4 1. !li ; ' 1 :VA 'i, I , f+-r:{+: Frinfiitbe;,llorae„totunal4.3 13::r I , ) REA1)111141' TEO I WIL.L.r: •, • ._ ; -t,ri: ,•tr..t I, ::: 1i.,,,• L ;;;- ~ r • , : + . lH'i• I+ , ' ! - ~z This mOrilln i g it receivisi a nine from my affectionate -bride,. Cohs(ance- Climb= .''re-' ilgeollet Mgto: ll 4 o 4d A;`,019! ci?,Clgetta4ll4t, day at the house of her hitecunclCiiilJUricur street,. for !he,pnrpihie 4 hearing his will: read. I had ` -the greatest M easure in gam-. plyitig•With•this invitatind.' 'T had Tealktbe-. gar : to i fitiCX that, -641 'Mi.' Graham ' Wee' :O. brig n rennin Perneinalli oh the earth, like Mrs: Nolion's 44 l litidYiiii'Ope :"* he %vas Al Ways on 6V 'Pinta of ikentli, 'and always Cured, and better thiittleilu. in a Easy days; last month the 'Cold 'whtbr 'systetit' seemed completely to l retioitite' hint; hut lie 'sudden: li relapsed, departed frOtri 'the, World, ..and left fifty, thousand 'pentiditind a'srill behind him:. Though Chnstaifie 'is 'the prettiest, and thoAlimiable girl lif i 'Mty acqUaintatice,; f had detemiined'never'hp marry, her 4bile her uncle lived '; lie hacteOcittently prOclains etl her his heiress,'but h4ifrequently took of fence at'sothething or not iiig iii n her hehavd ' ior, and'ilegneatted his itkealth. to a hospital,, , Orison, or "lunnii, asyliitill: ' . l felt nnitc - easyl . on the present OirMrs. Bates; Mr. Graham's' hiinse-k . eeperl had giVen' me in- formatioa.that, only tin - 11'04r before hettntis ter's death, he told her hif had bandimitely provided for;Constancet It _felt, however, that it was policy for meld appear ignorant of that circunistange Cot Veiny.''very r , ' 3 ns Co nstance 0 romantic, tronstance's •aunher .very suspi cious.",, ,„ At the nypeinted timel y walked into the drilwing room in flarleyttreet,;' the very few relatives of the old gentlemzih were Resew- I bled., .There was' CoOtince; looking as Relic might have 16oliedilitt Flee had ever worn crape, hnd . bointagiche;.' i chastaticn . 's ' 'mother, looking itiff, ' ' i andl. uneasy; ,in elderly female 'ccinsiti, ti 'a stripling nth - ew ,of the de,ceased.' I' ecar'ed done of thein.- cro I knew that'Mr. Graluthi disfilced his firm lady sister-in-law, depiAed, ' the servility of, his elderly Cousin, and d'feaded, the frolics of I ” - -tiriplinw(nonhew. 'll seate myself by Constant.el 4 - f !! i .. .--, _in aso t r tone b egan to 'pro test my affection - - yiSintetiestedness -- " txci,,wing, the caprice o ryu,,t.. 4. - ,.. tie my i x. loved," said t, " I liav l'every reasoil .... . elude that t shall hear yhunre disinheritW; 'this, however,' will be iif little moment to me ;' J have enough f , hcomfoit, though tint 1 for luxury, and, as the i slon,g beautifuly says: "§till fixed in my heart i.ie it never forgot That the wealth ofthe cttage its love." ' , "I fancy, Mr. Chilton,'.' said . Constance's ' mother, looking excesilvely sneering iand shrewish, "that it is pretty well.known that my ' - .daughter. iSeole heiress of her uncle's wealth.'• _ • • .. -.11- .r , ii: ! -.. .! . " Indeed, - madame r't I replied,• with a start of surprise, -" I entii dot awarethat any , surmises were 'hazarded . oonceraing the con ' tents . of - Mr. ..- - ~,- ' -- '“- -, .,i - ." I , 'haveheard- a --t4niiise i hazarded;"r sharply interposed the elderly 'cousin, , wthat ';lttr. - Grahinti was not itilltiv, senses . whin he w al l a :kW , -..-;. :.,-, ~ .;,0 1 it , - 4- t•• 1, ',•:' " - '1 "f - The mind must be both base and. weak 1 which couldlive credence to sncli a rumor," retartediConmenee'smather;: Andforthwith a .sparring dialogue tong place between: , the i two ; ladies, , durin g , - , whi`ch'' I .I*.hisPered-to , • , 'Constance a. page - of Mores ,' poetry' done 1 1 1 hite Prose. -:,:-'-,-! •, • 1. , •i . • sd . . :,-: • -. 1 ' Tetripl& linty,: entered lthertiomi the - -spl i t eitor arid': Intimate - --friend inof the; late Mr. tGmhim 1 liewas a handsomeo young , min, and . had -presumed-nt• one timeto li ft his eyei 'to Constance ; - he opened the 'Wilk 'and , we lull; becaMe "mutelf attsittirei - r . Oh; what a , disappointment 'awititedl'ual I Three '. thou.. nand poands,Weii - beginimlied-tuiConstanee, I(this.wat the' ld 'l'elfotv'eFdeti of at handsothe Iprevision : 4 ' . Five : hunted pounds ••••to' the elderly 'cousin; ditta - tOt t it iaripling , neph4r, email legacies to the kin-anti; and Ale :I,'.e:. Amainder of his wealth toilf‘Amit ocold water etitablishmetit' for the reOptiai of thosewho lwere no rielreaeugtilolliar A • gratuity: for beingfr-halfdrowned. Temple !Iced- ~ the -Haines elithe iittestiertiitinessisi'an& then refreshed , himself With 2 silerryand - -biscult Avlia'Avai a . friend of - lite famdyhistrmil enit *as . no'reltreint'arPerinversittioW - - 1 ,, iikThat will:e6ilitr; , ttiteirdiatikited,F l ! said Comitanies mbther f :lon loo king veryired ;' , -' l 4 , do' norbelievithaillk Graham was itti;hiS a nsegiv h e ii ti d Otifi r otiiie/p..!_14 ; , . , .•3 ,;.-• '- i r : ' -: . 1 !, - Z i 1! " I Tthoukht,7 said diel.lderly cousitt*iiii , a , stioe:44hiit tteliiiedt it lie +tiothqiasi and w ea k whigi - ;ould 71 vetredende to such fti 4 .- su i n q a t i rm -.;:4,11! ~:::.: 1 , .i.: : - , 41 , 1 -i-; , -':.;:i- , -.,,...---?. I , h I , 4 lldar:tnaninalrfsai 1 tatistaneeo":4o lioube'dieeeinPoo4Vir 4iii'very , ;_irell -ca ii-', teniedi-1 'shall ; ticit:thelipiiteliiiortimileSSl bride.- - Ceititance - `11410 ,, ant-hei- delteitiel - Whitohmill MI ttle-4lliiffiteted nor tO see pit. - I' , l' l likilinrlllisCOraloll 4 ," , 4014 - li'''"dik i 1 oat hell - eve s . !iiejeii: ctueligid s aidftiih ti tr; , ifill II l i w i r tioik.),o tt io tol k,i n o v .ii;?- • i jk,r,:?, :a , ...,,,, i •,-,0,,41 ii.thauti*,:eiiiitlfrioxritoitieliiiiti •:itiflietimit*iiinieniißlii ,7 4 4e4iiiarliedfAtiel stripling nephew..- :- :-. - ? - ;k - ':'. - I'': , _ d -.''..! 42. '''' r ':': i !.'. l ; i.s:.sirkilid iiiiteouletii , :oll - 11t - 0_ l l4h 40itl 'Oflitititctil :•'' ,l "# l .iit f e+ool l o*;tlth 6 ' 14# 411 , ;bienkiliii* ' . *0:": - I flitteStlitti- ! *or . Nook' ir yin ti - ,1 ,Oylre'.loo failioi*:-Bill 4. -. .1 1 10, .*!.. • AtifiEffOlic 1 0iiiff*Iii.th 7 4 00 ...0001.4*rif , 4 i s tril:010 '•' . --•':lta°; i A r r;;liiii* V **-'''• + I, - ...: . 7411102.11006, - - .Ibeill .llitioieMe*: . .ilit - Tiviliorogiogii.liiiitiovinal ..iiittoir.wiiiivt - -A.? ' * whi...;:isA.- 414- s eytirmoii , - , .istu, : • i ...... ii. ,, ; .-. ~ 4;7- hititiiiciAo k; ' '''iiiifirniiitiii , 4, MEE -.(1.V 444rAtiA B=!M el- 1 \ el= V li t c * 4 4 4: l l : 4 A* llitee he ) to: AirakPßiej lio - 1 11 M+0 11 " stern iittat4 ,keel .04%*-. - dieditte7 - , '_,,._ 4 ~,-,,..,. ~.„,._1 111 ,h9,tt.- I !., ' ,then angel ,-..; Teifi - *.'-'l'.-7: 4. 1.e0iVi,..1,;'' - ottli ,10 1 , a t readAl r park: . - iiiili , - . :(T:' - ",...._ ......,..s, '• I " I read; a ery weird] of the . will;'' he re- i plied,” and; aving-lolecome fatigued by ea.,' dainr,itlflfs - that rit r *arperfect!yilegtdr { to I: iiiiiesh hnikeil . withd glass, dr ithoy . befoie reading the odicil.” . l . . - --, r I ... 1 • I was going,to utte;some further remark., when i ponssuncek. ethe!..,./ad k ," - Goad i Turning; Ur."Clilliiiii" in,a tade of - yoi.e i. 41 iieliileftinein; t altelsitive - b4t - tnechisler 'leave-taking, and' I- escendi#l,the ,ittCuri, L tinnined - by- a..sincitheredialighwfronrthel: Al wlvinp.reem,,returrld rimme., iii. - verrlow.' 4 , spirits, aitd,entered my , adventure or rather . 1 nui:adventine, in My diary, deducini from i this i . it, valiiiil?la piece 4 Wilco to gentlemen' - in‘search - of p 'fortune ," Never believe that, 474iWiff 'cobittded any you have inqiiitedil whether the is any clodicil f te it." .. - :.; 'l if ~ ..? • .2...L._.2________l____.4....___ _ .....• : : - V i' .` , .''..r il;eiii iof A ighwitYmeien. •., i A Treneli robber, - anted 'bore' once Ili The aisdaeityV alone - d - tinassi ted, are hi Jii'sowit-ingentiity,te , top,a di igence . ull p h pitisengersl. 4 I fie, "constructed several - , el gent inen pf treyisr, of the size, of life, and'. quite.:ol natural-at leitst 'in . the dnry.- 7 i l Tbese,,be.'investedria he needful triggerY-H! neither 'freak or 'fashionable ivelorsunt,eW bin seryint - the purPose.m a y,. e, __ t'. thesticks,' intended to epresent musets, Ic't.l lioutiler of the 'figurek.libiehfie:paitedi in rail against. trees - hordering_, on the:' big - It' ll . road:':. U p ` came theldligenee,.. "'Halt l" il ShOti4d . 1:1Oro, - in' the Voice:of - a' s4;tifor,,;ll. " Half! or my m en fire .'' The '6l - Ate - nal drive pulled up , Wort ; the conductor ;ofd;: `PliSsettgeii, seeing alrrow-of,i,tgures. with) leireled - fire-arms, thought they ',had :fallen: into :the, }hinds of a .v 0 whole army of bandiftbanditti,ti.o 14 40A...f0r mercy, ' 1 Dos 6 4*fcrvilitill in, .chisrapter Of, r a ,generimi protector i, Sternly - ordered lo his men abst4frOpt . - , leiteeldnd 'tenirtin, Where` , they were, and aid- ', lected trpni the trembling and i . feihted intii- ' iefigers their, Pursee,Warched and jewels' ; -4 .1 forbid on is fi re," he sheinceto" his qtiisker gang,.. 4 Whilst pneketiti4te rich ,trt, .1 ute .;'l.,',.They , _Make , no. resistance,; t 'Will i have i no'nSeless bfeod:shed." .1 Theconclucti or, 'delighted to save 4 - 140 . stint:of :trionCYi! secreted, iii a chest, - quietly sitbMitted 'i.heli ptiSs - engers were too happy to get* • withi. Who* skitiS' and wonida ikanki4Vtlltelr`. - spoiler,,and_called him a humane mart,tindil ,elmOSt.. kissed. him Out of gratitude for his!, sparingg ttielr live:a: • 'The plunder colleeted,l the driver!, got permission toi 'continue lasi 1 loamy, wh ich he did at -full i .,s:peed - i list:thC:. , i e s - t 7 the - i r il i ,o r t i sl t iLcha r ng , c their mindilaitelf,or-11 • cape, I#i f4' Dore' inane 'his t rio, iti ntrayr reat-ii ntetit:On picket by ; the roan ~,,.,....,_ „. -..- -,.-',,,. II crOvV,llll dayhteak, to the - Taisini,4 l ol ler: 1 '• • • ' • - i- - • :I' MEM :!.- ,• .- -- . - :: 1 , :_. . ~. I- • • 77, f• 2 1; ' A - 04 0 9 kv!•Er ,, 7itLis.ohrltYl a-11094 : '.-rutAti 'lo,,follOitO _tep .in pgl.p4th, to speak - 1101• 1. 1 ,werd:,:tp,eonifnitinitiOt When.ponsei pee : ep?- *nr4,-1 0 '.*hisPe :whisper -- Beware . - -X..9n, goli . bets! ter wait a twelvemoni l h;•-a_nd i lletitny, u; m , du ty, than tithe a hasty i step and bring tears and repentencetoltifying day. How matt* .niletli f inah[might:bee# sayed,,hiid-he_liiqett,_ i ! ed tolan;j4wirAffppl 4 tor,, •end,:risisted dui; first ;incli n ation to d eviate 'from the whole! "Oitliw,i,i:ei#tide." 1 . ..'xiii: eitterlsijie',' the ground . Whitenediwithteii 1;040, and '"iirieiii of millions' irhO'.hitiei :lierishgcl:igneble'itithe t ri areli . oflife , `' They . iiiiiied - theireill and fell, ."TheitrinttedS Vietii4iit( - ,iiiiir l siinkj[ - at 'tbe ''oriset. ' • Take ii'aiiiiiii,.. by die m." : p old theii'rbiltiell i liiei q - 'e .find' ?breathe, • *and' .... aii,:fidir "'earnestly • :ii , i).oiirib l iik , appeal to do, iiiit il?die, O',TIOI:i i . dea„virificius coarse that - your ' end Might, 6, lOydiiii : Oad not d4f,iiide: - ' .' ' - ''''in:'l , ' . r A c orAilp. . ,..•.',- , typ , one of.the., quer WerAt„-. 4 etitit :'.- ' , -,.- '4% :, 1. . - . ~ 1 i kni .- .... , 1... + , , .2.. .. . i t i7.ll:, y.l, ! iyi;_. iO5 t,was: found necessary to,9teitd : out !ii,c(jr4lial# . o. f ranger 4 or IPiOf.. , Ittl*.e4t.lioYi - hadtirriired:at their pdknt id(i. : Agit*agdg,.. 4 .was,thonight , adyisafile.to sem - 4,one - * the A rX(:; the , cOMPOOYINvik, kr, - Cpypßaaflt of . fi v iE.Ogn:9 l . 4 q : recoPoOlti"*thiti*oreioo 6 4lPit, 1 141 1.**M311 , 1 , :34 , iiPAckM44 , A19. 1 4.044ea.0.rw. of Al*: i Otrty, io.o l l-1 1 i$0 1 1, -;llP , eYeniot Of,-,4Pii . Peso* cl#Y, tin qamp,4pdrk 40,11 - 1.4* sot* ,c4..4,;4o'itit bark, -and.,discoyieke4 discovered. ,14g.c4. Rfi9Coc , ene!tnY, lA.' c000gik,.,.W7..-ASA nY-,.44i 44t*14 014 ; upon ; which . it: vOsy/iteFininedl 40,m4r*tk.;toidOvesOPP4*O cAr* - $4 .94i , 'Aitriii0:PtiCC1 14 iO04;:' :. A0g-0 01 Pjghtrolkfißj Oekijo4 foYorok9( . oli l o4:Lor 40:•tirP.i*PtgrP4 tho-,94 , -iiieSei; =4=4 , leyilef;theiriignlenents- OCINi-01„0)4i kdpOrags91e , 44ijritthm04,p ,44 y .. :4alliki.:of.;hiinger, ; „ , ,,qer,,poloolan.. )30,:, oil itching 4144.60 Fr-2 what was ot!*ing,on-belif* : Ap:iacepplogly faikeith44lof,pa,:bja**lF ' ‘. 0144:mit oto:,iir*itiiolog:4o* - 40014- lie.fia_licg..4 441449flii4a1Pg:iii#04:0Chlii, -geni*,f,-.41 unti. l Jll , rm*he4 , 1k004,4.4_40, fib.. -RP O 4O-, , ' 0 7 , 0094 1 4*eet 0 4 4iititjikt, - * * ,......14 1 1!' NA 4jo9Vittito:;kitittl' :=lt:e4k .- ,44 .--- .. :, - 4 - ioi' og r ok!;- , 419:hepAcdriiTiii4, , ,ibi:i. 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