The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, August 02, 1862, Image 1

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    IEI
Editor and 1101rietor.
VOL. NINE.
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
AT ONE DOLT,AR A YEAR,Ad
PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
OFFICE on Front Street, a few doors east
of Mrs. Flury's If ifel, Marietta, Lancas
ter County, Pennsylvania.
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vance, and if subscriptions be not paid within
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umns, fire cents a-line. Marriages and Deaths,-
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A liberal deduction made to yearly and: fialf
yearly advertisers.
FEMALE RESOLUTION.
No I I Will never see him more,
Since thus he likes to roam,
And when his cab stops at the door,
John, say—l'm tot at home!
lie smiled last night when Julia smiled,
(They must have met before;)
If thus by her he is beguiled,
I'll never see him more !
I'll sing po more the songs he loved,
Nor play the waltzes o'er;
for wear the colours he approved,
I'll never please him mote
3'n conquer soon love's foolish flame,
As thousands have before,
Look strange whene'er I hear his name,
And ne'er pronounce it noes !
The plait of hair I must resign,
That next my heart. f wore;
Ile, too, must yield that tress of mine
Ile stole when truth he swore
The miniature I used to trace,
And feel romantic o'er,
I'll tear fiain its morocco case,
And—never kiss it more !
This ring,—his gilt—l must 'return,
(It snakes my finger sore ;)
Then there's his letters—those Pll burn,
And trample on the floor!
Pis sonnet, that my album graced,
(My tears thus blot it o'er.)
The leaves together thus I'll paste,
And ne'er behold it more!
I'll waltz and flirt with Ecsig❑
(Though voted oft a bore!)
In short, I'll show my heart is free,
And sigh for him no more!
If We Should meet, his eye shall shrink,
My scornful glance before;
tines! thai's his knock! here, John! I think
see hhtl ;Mit —ol.lce morel
LOVING AHD
,FOFIGIVING
Oh, loving and tolgiving—
Ve ange!-words of earth,
Years were not worth the living
If ye too had not birch !
Oh, loving and forbeati!ig
How sweet' your mission here;
The grief that ye are sharing
Eath bldaings In its tear.
Oh, stern and unforgiving—
Ye tvil - words of life,
That mock the means of living
%'.ith never:ending strife.
Oh, harsh and unrepentivg—
How would v meet the grave,
If leslTen. as unrelenting,
Forhom not nor forgave !
Oh, loving.arnl ir:giving—
Sweet :::izter; Of the soul,
In whose celestial living .
The passions find control !
Still breathe your' influence u'er ;
Wheneler by passion crost,
And, angel-like, restore 113 ._
The paradise we lost. , -
t tli pre;
time many of the trees in oc cities
pear as if they were coverer •ith
flakes, Myriads of white. Miler,
seen flying about them in te - eve
busy-with depositing thei .ggs.
miller lays about one hu red et
a malt hatch. They oof Iv
shape, einch is about th size off
pin head, and each is entente ,
transparent varnish to to trunl
tree. These beautiful bite ins(
almost es soon as t y deposit n.
eggs, which in due I le become offen
sive caterpillars, thc crisandes, then
millers and thus ey are produced
from year to year,
,
a Boston Transcript_
clerks in dry goods
i: and their places bo
men now out of en
suggestion is exten
vill prove that war is
d evil. •
erg A writer in
proposes that tli,
stores:shoyld emir
given to young
pluyment. If t
sively followed i
not an unmitiri
ice paid for army sub
ginia is eight hundred
,
roo much. Precious few
.n do eight hundred dole
fighting.
The tos.rkef.
stitutes' in Ili
dollars. It
of the reblesi
lure' worth
that the rebels most loathe
re of Federal drums.
is has a devil in his heart and
etch on his head:
The loa
are the r
Jeff D
an old
(-j t 1111 t
tit +
0
11111
liplnbrpenbtot Vinttsebnia Nurnal gthl6 to Volitits, leittraturt, Agttlatltart, littus Af ti2t gal
_Natal afottiligna,
FA . A TRUE STORY; .:- ..
1 Tot many year's ago, a yorig, lad,l.he
son of a poor . farmer, • Evil* "Crieh`-'—
Church; fancied, or ratherdr . eame.l. the
if he mink) go up to Londob
i Bridge, lie
.
would find aortune.- 'Now' !Aden was
a great way from Crich • Chtircl3, - espec
jelly to a poor lad; ignorant Ofgeegra
phy and travel, and {drink in adfasre be
fore railroads. Bo'lie . - put - away' the
strange dream-from his Mind ;' yet again
again and again 'it 'rettirned," until: . the
poor lad became So excited that he-could
no longer d lay . ' visiting - London: . Bat
'he- hadftold nb one ;of his'dreaM,' nor of
`his 'intention - to ''gri - to London, - for lie
well knew tiirerY 'bre:Wald iidictile•the
dream, and' his father would prolfibttaim
from , visiting, London on Bo foolish an
errand. SO be kept his own l aeoret ,and
counsel, end, early one .pletteent ;,morat,
leg, set outom his adventurm,. It was„a,
weary long way,:but be;footeil it lirave.,
ly; only. resting by day to :eat the simple
ineal.of bread and cheese he; had .provid
in his:small pack, and resting-by night
wherever, roa.d-side. shelter offered.. ..
At last he came in sight of London.
Our poor lad was riot a little bewildered
by the great show of St. Paul's Church.
the London Column and Tower ; -with
many other marvellous sights, butupper
most in his mind was his dream-; and he
wondered how London Bridge-could: be
connected with the i fortune •of 0120 so
humble as he. By dint of.preserving, in
quiry, he found •the bridge, determined
to cross the Thanies in no other 'wily.—
Coco on the bridge, he looked•on every
side, but no f6rtuhe appeared: 'rile only
saw crowds of pople going to and fro,
inding 11 . n. Faint with travel i
400[10. n, having for hoors--
i
up and own the bridge, be was
his fee homeward, satisfied
, s dreg was, like all dreaMs, a
when itt ragged boy, of Lis own
never ni
and mol
walked
taming
that his
cheat,
,ccoste him with. , . •
hat fu are you searching Loudod
;e all ay ? have you lost a bob ?"
ing, b "bob," a small coin.
ay," id the dreamer, "I have, come
,ere, coatis° I dreamed if I wont to
led Bridge, I should find my for-
size, CI
"V
Bride;
MEM
up 11
Lon
tune
to !" replied the ragged strang
er, if were to follow all my dreams 1
s to d, have had a dozen ferttinea' long
;Igo L was only last night I dreaioed
that I would'go to Chusliston3 Cross,
and ig under it, I should find a . bag of
, bat blame me if I belieVe in—
;'ms, , besides I don't know- if there
. co a place as Chuckstone Cross in
world."
The dreamer caught a sudden light
m this confession, and, without more
do, bidding the strange-boy good : by,
:trode hack for Chuckstone Crors, which
was near by his father's house, "for,"
said he to hititseif, "perhaps this 'this is
the fortune I was to nod on London
Bridge." Elope made hii feet light,
and he was soon at Chuckstone Cross.
kV hen night came, and all was"still, he
crypt front his Ju, it his father's house
and stealing out slyly to the cross, he
fell to work, removing the stone, and
digging up the hitrd earth. It was not
long before he struck upon something
chioky, and directly but camp a fine bag
of gold pieces, in all many thousand
pounds.
Thus the poor lad; obeying his per
sistent dream, ftloind his fortune ; and
beyond all doubt, all our former specu
lations to the contrary notwithstanding
tde cross was originally erected by the
persons who buried the gold, as they
naturally conjectured a cross the last
thing to be disturbed, while it
a goad and durable mark over their de
posit. But, though the fortune was
found by• following a drea : n in this
instance, .we donut whether ills safe - or
well to trust too much in dreams, since
&earns are generallw shadows of ideas
of our own
_conjuration—still, - if any of
our readers do dream persistently, and
think their dreams worth tracing out, let
them be careful how they reseal them
to others, as the ragged Londoner did
Fen
ap
llow
care
.ni ng,
Each
oval
ME
El with
of the
acts die
to the poor country lad who found what
with more curiosity and secretieness,
ought have been another's, fortune, un
der Chuckstone Cross.—TVhitney's; Re.
public.
The Mobile Register says that " the
Federals roar with distippointment."—
F9derals and lions roar, rebels and
wolves howl.
'Whilst the rebels are fighting against
us, our armies in the West and south
west feed their living and bury their
dead.
We can't let the rebels have any salt.
but have no objection to sending them
a few copies of the Psalter.
T.TA.,.-p*, : ,sATTTR - DAY,4vous-T r ..,..,-;-,,v362.:
1V ARI
MIEM=iEIIIIII
A great,deal said,against Mr.
Stanton, the Secretary .of.l)rar, and , a
great deal in his favor. .I(lAmopinion.
he is a' man of unquestionable genius,
talent, honesty, courage, and patriotism,
and,:if he has , :erred in, anything. itrchns
been in exercising over: ireportAnt 11.iiii
.tary movements, a control cor,which.he
was not fitted by either.,military cdaca
tion or military experience. 3
The rebels in" Tennesseeare . said to
have' captured' fifty of Geri. Mitchell's
seoUts'and'hung them e ort the epot.. If
this is:true; let the 'vietifns be irniiieai
diatelj, avenged: LiiC us, according•tto
the rulei mentioned •id Seriptlite; take .a
tooth' 'for-ti °tooth': And 'hit thetootb
we tak:e bean eye-tooth.- 'l'hen lierhai)s
'treason' will • begin to cut qta;wiedolb.:
It is stated ,that in the fight befoie
Richmond the canteens. of the rebels
were fonud filled with whisky and gun
powder. There is an old.nollue - ifilit
the sWalloiiir4, of a heavy - dose of kun
powder gives a man .courage, but,'if the
rebels find themselves tinder the neces
sity of resorting to such contemptible
means of getting themielves into fighting
trim ; they may as well stop eroWing
about victory.
When:the last batch of rebel prisoners
of war was landed on Governor'slslam),
at the roll call the following .conversa
tion oceured : Officer calling the roll—
" Private' John, Smith, Tenth ,Georgia
volunteers?" s , John Smith answers :
" Tenth Georgia volunteers be• hanged I
Tenth Georgia Conscripts: you mean.--
Here !" •
Jtist look at the'rehel Wonien and coin
pare each countenance with tiba.i it was
a year and a half ago. Surely there
❑ever was such a destroyer of good lo'oks,
such a blighter of beauty, as treason
Oh ladies, eschew it as -yeu would the
devil, unless* you'wiih to be'as . ugly as
The report of our capture of Gen. Ma
gruder at Richmond was. untrue. Ma
gruder is a good Sghter and a great
drinker.. He, drinks so much whisky,
that, if he were buried, corn. and rye
would sprout from the ground for a quar
ter of a mile in all directions from his
grave.
A S uthern.exehange speaks of Pthat
miserable, God-forsaken,. Yankee-Doo
ble pirate, Farragut, and his poverty_
stricken. Yankee hirelings." This really
arpeare like a rather violent aspersion
on the noble fellows, considering how
they have just shelled out at Vicksburg.
The Memphis Avalanche says , the re.
port that Gen. Crittenden . has resigned
his command in the rebel army and gone
to Texas is a mistake. It states
,that he
was court-martialed, and, after the court
had made up a verdict, he was permitted
to resign.
It is reported that Jeff Davis contem.
plates' a day of thanksgiving. He will
influence the course of Providence by
his thanksgivings and fasts as 'much as
a billiard-player does the course of a
ball by running his tongue out of his
mouth.
It is the exhortation's and taunts of
rebel women that have driven their hus
bands, sons, btothers, into the South to
fill rebel graves. If their own hands do
not smell to them of blood, God must in
pity have paralyzed their olfactory:
nerves,
Gen. •Butler has issued an order at
New Orleans forbidding , the admission
of laundresses to the quarters of the
men.. It is probably thought a great
hardship that the poor soldiers can't
have a chance to court their washer-wo•
men. . • , ,
The Jackson Mississippian callS the
soil of the South" sacred." Wheallo
ses stood upon hOly ground, ho was com
manded to put off his shoes. Tho'rebel
soldiers needit't be required to put -off
theirs,'for they' have got' none . on.
Alan , Illagdalen had but seven devils.
Probably the race of devilahas increased
and multiplied since. Our rebel wo
men, if we may judge from the manifes
taigons of some ofthem,'have about sev
enty devils apiece. .
A correspondent asks " What should
be done to an officer or soldier who in
sults an unoffending lady'?" A spot
should' be marked on the seat of his
breeches, and he should be lacked oh
the spot.'
Jeff Davis is the stem of the ship of
rebellion, and Humphrey. Marshall the
stern.
MI
DWI
, G EN.- .13 UT I. 11: ES , at.FLANATION. FOR . TIIEI I I
i-`:::NaoNAN,P,Oapga.-,-, 7 Thos fol;owing char
.acterist4c:, lelterwkom .Gen. B_ntlor,..ox
'lllftillitig hie wascius‘lktr,issiling, the cote
,bratg d -. ., order: in "regard, io the%wpme u . of
,Nemi.l • 0 rleaneit has :;been. - , rteef,ved - by a
,geotlemao . of.B,oston.;, !T-he, , orJer in the
letter; hhs already been.,,ptqiliehed :1 .1
f }
.I.II3ADIWARTFX S I:)..ex . Artrarertr • OF Ilq: '
tt • GILLLE • 0 , ;. • ' '
i 62 1
-. N Eiv ORI F.,U S . , .lliify, 2 ? 1;4. .
AIi,DEAR:S,riC: I mil ae joillotis 9 the
gbod opinion of in rriends as.l am care
leis bribe r hirinileri
_of my
Your kind exprossiOns in ,regard to Or
, rierllo. '-) 4. lead 1L'4. , ; - tot - ..y a ' .vo t rd fo you
on.the subject
That it ever could have been so mis
conceivcd `it .has been 'Some ;p6F
tiolis drib, NOithern pross'is'woiider.
,l'ul..tind-vtould lead one to exclaim with
the L Jey, Father "Abraham, what
these Christian 3 - arcs, .w.hope owp..hacd
deeling§.,teseh-. them :.to t suspect the
thoughts of - Others , •
.W hat; was the 13 tate4of things to, which
, the.worhan applied 1,, . :
We were two.thousand tive..hundred
mon in a city seven miles long by`two
to four•wide, of a hundred•aud,fifty thou
sand inhabitants,fallihostile,,bitter,Aiefi
sat, explosive, taading literally .on,a
magazine ; a spark only needed: for du :
structidix The •Devil• had entered the
hearts of thametuan Of 'this town4you
know, seven:of them choose- Mary Mag
dalen for a residence,j.to stir up strife
in every way possible: - Every' oppro
brious epitliet, - ev4ry.insniting gesture,
wasinade,by Ahese bejei*eled;
becriuo
lined;:and laced creatures, calling.them
selves ladies,: toward' niy soldiers, and 'of
ficers", from the windows .Of houses dud
in the streas: How king do Yoh:- sun
pose oar
~ flesh and blood could pave
stood this Withoutretort That would
lead to 'disturbances and 'riot; frin
which the street: With ar
. we must clear
tillery--abd . then ,
'a howl that „
we had
murdered these fine women. 'I had ar
rested; tte inen who ha:cl liurfalied for
Beauregard. Cduld I arrest the we.
men ? No: What was to be done 1'
No ordei`could 'be macie . Save . one, that
would execute itself; With 'anxious,
carefUl thought I hit u; on this : Wo
men who insult my soldiers, are to be
garded and 'trpated common women common
plying their vocation:".
„ .
Pray, hoW do you treat a common wo
man plying her'vocttion in `the streets'?
You .pass her by unheeded. She can
not insult you.. As a
.gentleman ; you
can and will ifake no notice
,of, her. If
she speaks, her .words are-not : opprob . ri•
one ; It is only when she becomma
eoutiauous and positive nuisance ghat
you call a , watchman and :give ber,in
charge-to
But
,squie of the • N"orthern, editors
seem to think that, whenever one.. meets
such - a woman/0E143;4115t stop her, talk
with her,: insult her, or hold. dalliance
with:her, and so , from their own conduct
they construed my order,
The editor of the Boston Courier inn
so deal with common women, and out of
the abundance of -the heart his mouth
may speak—but so do not. :
'Willy, these she-adders of New Or
leans themselies were' at once shamed
into propriety of conduct by Ile* order,
and'from that d 4 no woman has either
insulted or annoyed any ifve br
offfcer, of a certainty 'no soldier has
insulted any woman; ": ' •
IV heir I passed through . Baltimore , on
the ' 23d of February last; Members of
my staff were insulted' by the gesthrbs
orthe ladies (2) there: Net• so in New
Orleans,
One 011ie worst possible ; of all thesti
women sbowed disrespect. to the remains
of gallant young . De Kay,' and you will
see berTunishinent., A cgpy, of the or
der which I.e,nclose is at once, a vindi
cation and a construction of my order.,
I can only say, that I would i.55U8. it
a.gain unde.rlike. circumstances. , Again
thanking you for your. kind interest, •
I am, truly your friend ;
BENJ. E.. BUTLER,
Major General Commanding.
Gen..Mitchelt, it is said, has , grl.l+4A
a passport to John Bel), .09 wants, ti
visit" Washingtde its 'a
Eichange. • - • • •
Old Mr:•Bell might have'quite' enough
employment as a peacernakerin , making
peace With - his own conscience; .with his
late party, mid with- Ifeave6.—Preittice.
Dr. "Wklids)ilp, Of llbston, expects. to
VErStrotig,nnonkhinless - thana yeai to
Carry a wefilli of 3,000 pounds. We ex
pect General Mccilellan to be strong
enough-en a few days to carry Richmend.
..........
pi era s B y tha •t' •..
• " . Jeff-Davis
rion : :1 1 .; ` , 1 dice evongh to
WM
MB
rcal ,nh
too uneophisticated to affect
31A-Pcs:LEO - 11.- AND MA PelieseefeUlSE• , She
love, se . oed
' • Marie-Lohisseseas n little ktro'vin tre th•e eehe -; only felt. ti
• .
midilee and resignetion. Nature will
Parisitene; and :bee little-. beloved- in
history
pity, ihoagb may accuse her.
,'ranee: fl Beene away - ernme Vieenteas a ,
This is. A .true eportraitere of Marie
erbehy ciPiictiere; 'chi:tire-441d .rithre-•than ; ;
I .. 4 LI • eel ee ee h , , e h Louise. I ,wrotelit.iu,heripresenee ten
re ' thlr '' .Bkicee. "' 2; : " ---e'- " er"c-ile
' years afterwarthee She had developed,
the stilt livineeEtopreseisose`plArte? whose . .
:Creblikegreees, tieertemit , goe ,
• en e e e
una ateethateperrodreeitiringther libertyand
widewhood; all the hidden graces of her
leibt-hearted'ilespoeitioheineade her evert
.with' theseyuotee • They wished her to play aped ;
very defectseenerhepdpeler '.
—thienctreee was :outing, but the wo
with so light and eup erecial a pemple ; ic,-;
an remained.
weary
shold
award
strangee m the.midsteOf:Frattee seelik- . '"
lug its language with timidity, eteee„ , yeetz her-I-what., ehe,:perteel v-erdice of Napo
leoree ' c•ourtiere- has refused—pity, ten
its manners with et:Op:res.:spent, ..elarie- ~ ,
...
~ .
e 4,7 :•' .. . .... like t: (.. - .7.
, e ..uvaess, and ,greee., e
Louise lieed in seclusioe, a carte. 4. „
..., e e ,
amidst the OfficiarVircleee itliteliice e tEa '' i ?eb b e a s b eer cee r ee ee e, ? ie for not her_
Einperor etir r reeeded here- e ryat ed trt Wi n g b ee , t h e e hee e i e e ee 00 , 0ihe. °ran - me
of beautiful Woniee,MeWly titleel'aiii*s feetioa4Venever felt. 'OverloOking the
to repreSs " e - .•ere attraction except-teet feelin g s if a Woinen, lier accusers forgot
or"their own iaitk and highfavour,' ei- fhei, the heart 'Will Wake itself beard
loled nolhing to be - known 'of theenew et en" iel i'lEt &Anti of such an unparal
le' rrient:ss except teee'tireplici r tyeaue the Tell, deetitee eitei,ef the, heart is not al
awkWeihies's Vtklilrie t - ee e end'e'ho was el - ways a justificatiOh,lt is at least an
most:a child, and which 'Wee celeeleted ! 'excuse. Justice should weigh such ex
to -render her unpopular in liar own cuAes, even when she Condemns.
creert: That Court — Weillle' t hatighey Marie-Loeise never loved Napoleon,
- Bleeders:it' df 'the 'Ymener ektnpresi. 'Ma- How coed she love him ? Ile had
eie."-Loitise'ioekeeefuge in ceitirt-certeree-, grown old in camps, and amidst the toils
ity—in iblituele andein silenee egaityA l ef ambitione she Was . only nineteen.—
'the malevolence- that acted aterespy =on fiis:soldier's heart was cold and inflexi
her every word and aetiots. Intithideed I hie as the spirit . of Calculation which ac•
by the:: fame by' the grandeur, . and by teiniplished his- greatness. That of the
-the impetudus: tenderoessl of the ravish- fair German princess was gentle, - timid,
ite, whoin she dared 'not to contemplate - and pen Sites `as the poetic dreams of her
asei husbend ; lt is-unknown Whether her : nat i ve " me. eseni, ead fallen from the
'steps of an
_eiteient throne; he had
timidity permitted her to-love him with
mounted upon lals'brthis force of arms,
uhrestiened affectiore. Napoleon loved
and ley tieulifding hereditary.rights tin
her:with -teenage of euperiority' -and,
eiseideee She9tas:the blazon , ellie effilie - -'der foot. Her early prejudices and edit
tionWith: great dynasties ; sheeweseille, eatiott had taught her t=o consider Napo
'Mother OP trielsone and the establishment. Won as , the scourge Te - f, God, the Attila of
_ o f hisearatiiteais: 'But thofighhe,exelted A
Mouern kingdoms e the oppressor of Ger
many, the merderer,of princes, the rave.,
no favorites, lessefrom virtue than ton-,
stieutieualdisdainehe was known to have ier, of nations, the encendiary of capi
had pass i ng predilections for tome of the tale iin a word, the eleerny against whom
be.intiful eieeteen by 'Whom: he was stir- her prayers had been raised to heaven
reunded. Jealous, , therefore, ehotiele frietri her cradle, in the palace of her au
.she eared not accuse-1 . 7 het: rivals, might 'ees:tors. ,She regarded, herself as a host
. . , $
have chilled the heart of Marie-Louise. age,conceded, through fear, to the con-
Tlie ' public Were unjust enough' t'o're- equeror, after the ungrateful and tolers.-
quire,frore her the most intssiiiiiiLtizi . and te e repueietinn.ota
wife,
who had been
deeeteie l , o en,*hee her nature enallVenle the very instrument of ,his .fortunes.—
Inspire' her with deter, and respect fora She felt that she bad been sold, not gi
eol.diet who had merely recognized in her ven: She looked- upon herself as the
a cruel ransom of her father and her maim
hostage for Gerni anrand a pledge of . . .
posterity try. She bad fesigned to her fate as au
This constraint observed her natural ~ i mmolation. - 'Phi splendours of 'an im
charais,cleuded her eeatures, intimidated penal throne-were Lc:Cher as the flower
. .
her mind, 'eel depressed her`"hert.— • I .
detking , a victim for 'sacrifice. Cast
She was only regarded as a' foreign or- eerie, and wit
without a Need, itite a'court
Bement attached to the columns of the - cemposed of parvenue'soldiers, revolu
'ttirone. Even histol7, Written -'in' ig ns ° - tibriary couetiers; and bantering women,
ranee of the truth, and influenced by the
whose names, manners, and lattreiage
reeenement e efNapoleeeee, cottreiers e has
were, unknown y to . - -- bee,. her youth was
slandered this ,princess.. Those who •
consumed in silent etiquette. Even her
have kunein her will aware her, not tee n ,'
usCand's first addresses Were not calcu
stocial, and theatrical glory, which peo
lated to inspire c.onfleence. There was
ple,required of her, but her natural q.ual
eOmething di.srespectful and violent en
; Wes.. : See was a charming eaeghter.
,of •
his affection ; he mounded even when he
the Tyrol,. with blue_eyee and fair hair.
Bought to .please. Ilisevery love wee
Her complexion varied with the. white- . ,
. . . eougn and" imperious; terror interposed
uess 'of its •snois aid the. roses of its
between him and the heart of his young
valleys , her "figure." light and greceful ;
wife, and even thie.eirth of an ardently
its attitude yielding and languid, like
desired son could not suite such oppo
those Getman maidens who emu to look
site nature.:- easeie-Louise felt that to
for the support ,of some manly heart.—
.. Napoleon she was only "a medium of
lier dreamy, glance, fell of internal vis- posterity—not a wife and a mother, but
.imis,was„velleeby ehe silken
. fringes of
merelythe reot of an hereditary dynasty.
her elese , iletelipsevere somewhat Pont- This master of the World could not boast
lug—her bosom fulkof sighs and fruitful
even the inherent virtnes.of love—faith
affection ; her armsewere of due length,
and constancy to "the one woman ; his
fair and adtnirably inotilded e and fe.levith att - -Z /
itentnents we're transient and 'nnmer
-graceful languor an her 'robe, as if weary
ens. - ll'e respected not the jealousies
Of the burdeu of her "destiny.: Her eeek. t e eter ,
al to' the 'bosom 'of a .weife'; and
habitually inclined •tomards,her shoulder though he did'apt openly proclaim his
She appeared of horthernmelanchely, 'meats like Louis XI . V . neither did he
traniplantedf into the.tumult of . a Melte - pe e_
,
sess that eirMareh's courtsey and re
camp. The pretended insipidity of si- tinelnent: Thl - thiet noted beauties Of
lence ,concealed: thoughts delicately
: hielleiwn, and of fereigeeeourts, were .not
feMinine, and the mysteries of sell titnent. to him ebjecte, pf pas,sionate love, but of
:whichiwafted herin imagination tar from irresistible, eraasieut e desire ; thee ,even
ieat, court, to' her „maguiflcent but rude
place of excite. The moment she return
ed to her.erivate apertments, or to ; the .
.mingliteghie contempt with his love.—
Napeleon's lengiand frequent. absences ;
his severe and melee orders, so strictly
•solitude of-her gardens, she again be' observed by a household of spies instead
became essentially. G er m an , ,;he culti- o f friends, chosen rather to control than
vated theearts.ef poetry, painting, and " to execute the will of the 'Etnpress ; his
music." In these accomplishatpnth.edu- pettishness of temper on his frequent ab
et/goo lead rendere4 her perfect, as if refit • returns ;elniorose and melancholy
_console her, eveeri far from her native
after experiencing- reverses (her only
land, for the absecce and sorrows to iecieatioe being ostentatious, tiresome,
_which pee would '4-4 day be-I ', l) . ° ',°'e -- and frieolone ceremonies ;)--Meeting of
t erethese•acquerements she ekeetle'd ; but
such a life, such aCharacter,. of,sue? a
they were cenefined to herself 11.1cuite.—
utau, was , eafeulated to inspire litnrie-
She read and repeated from memory, Louise with,, love Her heart mid her
che poetry-ofher native bards. By na imagination, expatriated in Fr e ance,had
"tare, Sher'whe simple, •but pleasing, : and f remained beyond the Rhine. The wee_
absorbed within herself eiexternally , si- dours of the Empire might, have coesoied
lent, but.fall of internal feelings; formed another; but keebe-LoeiSe was 'better
'formed for :theeattachment of. p> date
for domestic love- in an:obscure destiny,
but dueled' On'a throne, Shelelt herself dife, aeil:the simpleteiletisures 'of .telOef
triatehoriesseLemerrtfee'e *Yalioteorrdl, :, I
expoicelio the gaze' of the world as- the
conquest of pride,•tiot the' love'of a ha-
Gen. ' Pope is pre. , elready* en.
ro. She could dissemble nothing, either
for
_,•, .„
~ ~ ,
~ ~ ,
route tticnmon . !
d with his - whole'army.
(luring her grandeur, . , F e e let e nee. Now-if Gen._Polleieteere, ee elegbe as
' . or - after tie iii , Are•
es let' her 10 . rd ;' and thiS wires .
The theatricalwined, into whiehesheeliee , l 17 . !,11;Preparfte., ,,.. i7 5.:... 0 .,.. e ..;. ,,peptee. ::
,i,
'ijelet'ecif '''- Gelr.'Biitlin's Ppiohlamatiots:itre so
b c oeti tfiro : in; 'looked fdr the
conjugal pasiiiiti — in aecapiive of-rvi'efoiy: sharp tliat-hrrneedn't file: thin). ' .
18 - 6 :21 _
NO. I.