Brunswick advocate. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1837-1839, January 11, 1838, Image 1
B’twiistoirk
VOLUME Z.
BY DAVIS & SHORT.
The Brunswick Advocate,
Is published every Thursday Morning, ip the
city of Brunswick, Glynn County, Georgia,
at per annum, in advance, or $4 at
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Legal Advertisements published at the
nsual rates.
EP N. B. Sales of Land, by Administrator*,
Executors or Guardians, are required, by law,
to be held on the first Tuesday in the month,
between the hours of ten in the forenoon and
three in the afternoon, at the Court-house in
the county in which the property is situate.—
Notice of these sales must be given in a public
gazette, Sixty Days previous to the day ot
sale!. »
Sales of Negroes must be at public auction,
on the first Tuesday of the month, between the
usual hours of sale, at the place of public sales
in the county where the letters testamentary,
of Administration or Guardianship, may have
been granted, first giving sixty days notied
thereof, in one of the public gazettes of this
State, and at the door of the Court-house, where
such sales are to be held.
Notice for the sale of Personal Property, must
be given in like manner, Forty days previous
to the day of sala*
Notice to the Debtors and Creators of an Es
tate must be published for Forty days.
Notice that application will be made to the
Court of Ordinary for leave to sell Land, must
be published for Four Months.
Notice for leave to sell Negroes, must be
published for Four Months, before any order
absolute shall be made tliereon by the Court.
General Newspaper and Col
lection Agency.
THE undersigned, late editor and proprietor
of the Augusta Chronicle, having tile ex
tcnsive business of that establishment to close,
and conscious from long experience, liow much
such a facility is needed, at least by the Press,
is disposed to connect with it a General Agen
cy for the collection of Ncicspaper and other
Debts, in this and the neighboring Southern
States, and will travel almost continually to
present them himself. Should the business of
sered be sufficient, the agency will be made a
permanent one—and while his long connexion
with the Press and consequent knowledge of
its peculiar requisitions and benefits from such
an Agency, and his extensive personal acquain
tance with the localities and people of the coun'
try, afford peculiar facilities for the perform
ance its duties, he trusts that suitable en j
quiries will leave no doubt of prompt and faith
ful attention to them.
A. 11. PEMBERTON.
Mr. Pembe rton will commence a trip through
Barnwell and Beaufort Districts, to Savannah,
thence through Bryan, Liberty, Mclntosh,
Glynn and Camden counties, and back through
Wayne, &c. to Savannah; and thence through
Effingham, Seriven, Burke, Jefferson, Wash
ington and Warren, to Augusta. After which,
he will travel through most of the neighbored
districts of South Carolina, and the middle aug
upper counties of Georgia; and through the
States of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, N.
Carolina, Virginia, &C.
lie will receive, for collection, claims of any
kind. Terms as follows:
Newspaper accounts, fyc. (including those of
Periodicals.) when to be madeoutby him, from
general lists, forwarded by mail, &.c. 15 per ct.
JYew subscribers, with payment in advance, 25
percent; without payment in advance, 12 1-2
percent. He has been offered more in some
instances, but cannot consent to take more from
one than another, or than he himself would
willingly pay; and now fixes on these rates as
those he has paid, and as being as low as can
be afforded, or as lie has ever known paid—
trusting for remuneration, more to the probable
extent of business he may receive, than to the
rates themselves, together with the considera
tion of travelling for his health, and to collect
for himself.
Mercantile accounts, 5 per cent, more or less
according to amount, &e.
Remittances will be made according to instruc
tion, and at the rlsit of those to whom they are
•addressed—he furnishing the Postmaster’s cer
tificate of the amount deposited, and description*
of money, whenever a miscarriage occurs.—
When left to his discretion, as often fts circum
stances, amount collected, safety, economy,
&c. may seem to justify, and checks, drafts, or
suitable notes in sise, currency where sent,&c.
can be obtained—and at the risk of those ad
dressed to him in this city, will be-immediatelj
forwarded to him, when absent.
Reference to any one who knows him; and
there are few who do notin this city or section.
He is now Agent for the following Neswpa
pers and Periodicals, and authorized to receive
aubscriptions or payments therefor:
Chronicle and Sentinel, Augusta'.
Constitutionalist, do.
Southern Medical and Surgical Journal do.
Georgian, Savannah,
Advocate, Bruntwick, Ga.
Mercury, Charleston.
SoutherlT Patriot, do.
Southern Literary Journal do.
Southern Agriculturalist, do.
Western Carolinian, Salisbury, N. C.
Farmers’ Register, Petersburg, Va.
Southern Literary Messenger, Richmond,Va
Merchant, Baltimore.
Refornfcr, Wbshingtoti City.
Augusta, June 2D,
UpPublishers of Newspapers, &c., who may
think proper to engage hi%je£rices, will please
give the above two or threWtonspwuous inser
tions weekly or monthly, and forward fhoNo’a
containing it,
V . *
BRUNSWICK, GEORGIA, THURSDAY BSCRNIMG, JAHBfIRY 11,1338.
POETRY.
it- ■ -■
The following beautiful lyric Bv Holmes,
far excels anything we ever read, with the ex
ception of Drake’s “American Flag.” It was
written when some Goths proposed to break
up the brave old Frigate Constitution, and is'
worthy of the subject:
Ay, tear that tattered .ensign down !
Lohg has it waved on high,
And many an eye has danced to see
That banner in the sky.
Beneath it rung the battle shout,
And burst the cannon’s roar—
The meteor of the ocean air
Shall sweep the clouds no more !
Her deck, once red with hero’s blood,
Where knelt the vanquished foe,
When winds were hurrying o'er the flood,
And waves where white below,
No more shall victor’s tread,
Or bow the conquered knee—
The harpies of the shore shall pluck
The eagle of the sea !
Oh ! better that her shattered hulk
Should sink beneath the wave ;
Her thunders shook the mighty deep,
And there should be her grave :
Nail to the mast her holy flag,
Set every thread-bare sail,
And give her to the god of storms,
The lightning of the gale !
FOLLY AND WIT.
Once Folly tried to cheat the world,
Assuming Wit’s demeanour,
And thought (poor fool) the darts she hurl'd
Than Wit's ourn darts were keener !
While those of Wit were used in sport,
And (lipp'd in Pleasure’s chalice,
Young Folly used another sort,
Whose only point was Malice.
A sly and secret aim she took—
But, ere one heart was wounded,
Upon herself, by some ill luck,
Each venom'd shaft rebounded,
So Wisdom ventured to express
This gentle k;.A tv. guide ner: —
When Wit takes aim with most success,
Good-nature stands beside her.
MIS € E L L A A Y.
Religious Pantomimes. On one ofi
the hills near Naples there is situate a
village, whose rustic habitations arc over-'
shaded by lofty pines, green laurels, and i
the fragrant oranges of the neighboring!
villas, in the arrangement of which Nature j
has been more consulted than art. There
tlie votaries ot ancient usages may enjoy
the satisfaction of imagining themselves in
the vfery bosom of the middle age—of
those blessed days into which some of the
musty brains of our times would fain re-j
conduct their restive contemporaries. At I
the festivity of Easter, an immense statue!
ot St. John the Baptist issues from the
parish church of Arenella, for such is the
the name of the village, borne on the
shoulders of four lusty peasants, who every
year dispute the honor of being crushed
beneath its ponderous load. The figure
moves along at a slow pace, and gives
one the idea of a person who lias lost
something. It turns restlessly about from
the right to the left: it goes prying into
every door, and finds its way into every
courtyard and down every street. It was
thus, perhaps, that, in the Eleusinian mys
teries, Ceres went about in search of her
daughter Proserpine who had disappeared
from her eyes, amid the yellow plains of
Sicily. After many fruitless researches,
it seems, if it be not very much mistaken,
to hear at a distance the festive hymns
that announce the resurrection of the Sa
viour. It would fain hasten in that di
rection, and make some advances to meet
him, but Mary Magdalen, who has follow
ed him at some short distance, cotne3 to
remind him of the promise lie has made
to the virgin not to monopolize the first
embraces of her son. St. John bows to
this request, and politely falls back, to
yield to the virgin the happiness of so
propitious a greeting. But the heart of a
mother has anticipated his coming. Be
hold she advances with majestic pace,
amid the loud congratulations of the peo
ple, who advise her to lay aside the black
mantle in which she is wrapt. In effect,
<rl the appearance of the Redeemer, nor
longer habited as a man of sorrows, but
resplendent in gold and jewels, the holya
virgin shows herself to the longing eyes
of the spectators, at the same moment
peopling the air with a number of birds
which escape from her bosom. The peo
ple the sacred group, which
re-enters the chorcb amid the ringing of
bells and the firing of small mortars.
But a still better pantomime, of the sa
cred kind, is that represented on holy
Thursday, at a small village in
the district of Aversa. A strapping bell
man, arrayed like the man of Nazareth,
crowned with thorns and bearing on his j
shoulders a ponderous cross, sets out to i
ascend the bill of Calvary. His escort
consists of twenty or thirty fellows dress
ed as Roman soldiers, with helmets and
cuirasses. From time to time the sacred
victim makes h feiut to fall under the
load of the cross, and the executioners that
J follow drive him along, like very Jews,
by blows of their lances, by kicks and
cuffs, applied in such good earnest that
the poor fellQw remains most soundly
pummelled, and his only consolation is
that such liifrsh treatment will be turned
to good account by being accepted, in the
other world, in expiation of his sins.—
Meanwhile the Virgin and the Magdalen,
bathed in tears,follow the Redeemer; who,
after traversing the principal paths about
the village, returns, accompanied by the
whole population, who are highly edified,
and melted to compassion at the affecting
spectacle.
PARTICULAR UtILITT OF DANCING.
Dancing contributes to improve the fig
ure. V hen habitually practised, it in
creases the strength, the suppleness and
the agility of the body. The shoulders
and arms then fall farther back : the feet
turn more outward, and the walk assumes
a particular character of firmness and
iightnesy. Dancing also tire de-!
[vortmeut easy and agreeable, and the mo-j
tions more free and graceful. Those in- j
deed, who learn to dance when very!
young, acquire an ease of motion that
can be gained in no other way; and if a i
habit of moving gracefully is then acquir-!
cd, it is never lost. It is owing to oth- j
er causes that professional dancers are !
seldom remarkable tor grace in any of,
the ordinary movements of life, and that j
in the performance of these they are gen- !
erally constrained, formal and tbmatic. j
As in its effects upon the muscels, dan-!
cing does not exercise any so much as
those of the lower part of tjie trunk, they i
generally exhibit an increase at the ex-i
pense of the upper part of the body and!
arms. This, however, is not unfavorable !
to female form ; and the best poof of this
is, that this exercise produces,in men who 1
make it their habitual practice, a great'
similarity in. S&tUJh « •• • * -- j
fessional dancers, the excess of this c::cr-j
cise causes the pelvis to appear large, hy’j
the prodigious dcvelcpemcnt of the sur-!
rounding muscels: the neck is thin; the'
arms, meagre; the shoulders seem nar- 1
row, and contrast strongly with the size
of the pelvis, and especially with the en
ormous prominence of the kips. Dan
cers present a formation totally different
from that of Smith.? and porters,in whom
the shoulders, chest and arms, are develo-1
ped at the expense of the inferior parts i
and lower limbs. For these reasons, I
young persons, who dance a good deal,
should always join with the dance some j
other exercise, as that ofthelndian seep-!
tres, having for its object almost exclu-l
sively the de’velopetnent of thc shoulders
and arms. It is further observed, that
bad effects on the form of the foot result
from overstretching its ligament ; that j
very few opera dancers can boast of a
good instep off the stage ; that when the
foot is placed on the ground, the arch of
the instep yields to the weight of the body '
and allows the concave part of the sole
to rest on the same plane with the toes,
that when, therefore, these persons walk,
they never rise on the toe, nor bend the
1 foot., and that, from the habit of turning
! the toes very much outwards, they ac-
I quire a very peculiar mode of walking.
! To bo useful to health, dancing must not
|he engaged in immediately after a meal,
nor be continued whole nights, nor -in
| places confined in proportion to the num
ber of dancers. In %‘se places, there
is frequently a groat quantity of dust,
which, joined to the animal exhalations,
and carried with the atmospheric air,con
tributes with the cause, the least
chill, to create irritation in the parts.
These become the more serious, because,
young people, especially the female sex,
are very careful to conceal the commence
ment of these affections, lest they inter
fere with their views of pleasure. lu a
i physiological point of view,dancing does
1 not differ from ordinary walking, except
ing that the extension and flexions are
more quickly repeated, and that the body
is every instant raised from, the ground,
and as if suspended in the air by the sud
den straightening of the articulation.
Thus, the commotions produced by this
kind of exercise ara-stronger- than- these
| that occur in walking, and their effects'
ion their organs contained in the trunk
! much more sensible. Some of the func
tions, consequently, are soon carried out!
,of their habitual tone - f the circulation
I becomes more rapid, the respiration more
j frequent, and pespirations more abundant, i
[Walker’s Exercise for Ladies.
A Tar of the Old ScnooL. One
morning, when his majesty’s ship Hesper-!
us lay at the cape, a seaman named Wolfe
applied to Lieutenant Strangways for leave
to go on sflore. “No, Wolfe,” said Strang-;
: ways, “I cannot allow you to go on shore..
I You know the last time yoy got leave you ;
jeanie on board drunk, and such conduct
j cannot be permitted.” “I promise you,
I sir,” said Wolfe, “I won’t get drunk.”—
j “What do you want to do on shore ?” in
quired Strangways. “I fight ”
To fight, repeated Strangways, a *pretty
errand truly. And with whom pray do
| you mean to fight ? With Black Sambo
the prize fighter, sir. lie challenged me
jto a match before I joined the. ship, and
j he.hhsbeen taunting me ever sfnee, in
; sinuating tiiat 1 am afraid to stand to my
; bargain. This is the morning. on which
jwe were to meet, sir, and if 1 do rjot at
tend they will call me coward. It was!
extremely foolish in you to enter into any'
J such arrangement, replied Strangways, j
I hut what you say is true—if you do not
attend, these Cape Town buillios may ini-!
pute it to cowardice. You promise me
you will not get drunk. 1 promise you, |
sir. Then you may go. Wolfe accord
ingly went on shore and after an absence
of an hour and a half he returned without
having tasted a drop of liquor. As soon
as lie got on deck he went to Strangways
and reported himself. I «nm come on
board sober, sir. .Weil, replied Strang
vvays, f am glad you have kept your word.
, Did you fight the match ? 1 did sir. Was
:it a long one? Fifty minutes, sir, by the
i watch. Who conquered? I did, sir.—
Did you punish your opponent severely ?
Why, sir, I beat him, and that's just say
ing enough. Right—you may retire, sir.
I hope, sir, you will have no objections to
let me go ashore again, said Wolfe, stili
lingering in the neighborhood of the
lieutenant. What, at present? Yes, sir.
M hy, what do you want ashore now?—
Get drunk, sir. replied Wolfe, vyitli the
gravest expression of countenance ; whilst
Strangways hurst out into an immoderate
fit of laughter. May I go, sir, continued
Wolfe, when lie thought the lieutenant
had had time to indulge his merriment.—
It is contrary to all rule, sir, said Strang
vvays, scarcely able to articulate fir laugh
ter, hut since you have kept your promise
so faithfully, l will permit you once to go.!
Thank, you, sir, said Wolfe, with the!
same immoveable gravity of countenance,!
off in one of the Malay bouts that attend
the ship with fruit. lie kept his Word as
faithfully on this as on the former occa
sion, and towards evening he-was carried
on board in a state of the m&st blissful
oblivion.
Quantum Sffficit. In the course of
a ramble up town, a few days since, we
were struck with a representation in real
life, which plainly showed how perfectly
a human being may lie satisfied witli a
small share of this world’s goods, especi
ally when his happiness has become spir
iltm/izrrl.
W hile standing iu the compting room
of a cotton merchant gathering the on dih
of the day with regard to the great staple,
our attention was directed- to a couple of
countrymen, who had disposed of our hag'
ot ‘the article,’ which had been brought
to market in an ox-cart, and who, having
completed their little purchases in a gro
cery store, were about to wend their way
to the cottage, always known ‘by the smoke
which so gracefully curls :’ the bag of su
gar —the paper of coflee and tea —the
powder and lead—the copperas, indigo
and starch, and 'though last, not least,’
the old brown jug ‘brim full’ of the genu
line crittrr, was placed in the cart. —
I “Come,.git in, Nat,” said a tall sandy
haired chap, who appeared to lie the main
| spoke in the wheel of his cart, “you must
drive home them steers powerful quiJlk ;
! the old woman is waiting for her tea.” —
j .Nat, aiming to get hold of the ‘leading
string,’ made a miss-step, and ‘taking the
hull by the horn,’ cried out gee —who !
| cried the owner of the establishment,“look
’ere, Nat, you’ve made a small mistake;
;it you want to trike a horn, you’d better
git into the cart; old betty, you know, is
i sure lire,” slapping the old brown jug on
j the side. So in jumps Nat, and cross
legged, thdy drank to a rise in the. market
—then with a tragico-comico countenance,
the elder said to the younger—“now drive
I on— l don’t want no more—if they’d give
me all Columbus, and put it right into
this 'ere cart, 1 would’nt have it, would I,
Nat.” “Give us your fist,” said Nat, and
with a mortal whack of the hickory, and
an old fashioned “gee, haw, buck,” the
two sprigs of contentment moved out of
tow;?.- [Cobnrrbiis Sent. Ai Her?
The Hottentots. An officer who
served in the interior, in the midst of the
Dutch African colonists, thus describes
the Hottentots at the period when the
English came into possession of the col
ony :
“At that time (1796—1502) the Hot
tentots were a miserable, abject race of
people, generally Jiving in the service of
the boors, who had so many of them that
they were thought of little value as ser
vants. and were treated more like brute
beasts than human beings.—-Indeed, the
colonists in those days scarcely consider
ed them human. They w«re mostly na
ked : seldom was one of them to be seen
j with any other clothing than the sheep
skin caross, together with a piece of
jack all’s skin for the men, and a wretch
ed sort of leathern apon for the women
! attached to a girdle of a raw hide, which
encircled their loins. Their food was
comnidW v the flesh of old ewes, or any
animal the hoor expected to die from age.
If he was short of that, he shot a few
quaggaS or other game for them. Their
wages were generally a few beads in the
year : or, when the boor returned from
a journey to Cape Town, a tinder, box and
a knife were considered a reward for faith
ful services. Perhaps a very obedient
man, and more than commonly Jndußtri-j
ous, got a heifer or a couple of ewe* in
a year. And if, by accident, any one of
IheJse poor wretches happened to possess
a few cattle, there was often some means
fallen Upon by the boor to get rid of him,
and thus the cattle became Jiis master’s: '
When a Hottentot offended a boor or a
booress, he was immediately tied up to a
wagoi£wkeel and flogged in a most bar
barous manner." f)r, if the master took'
a serious dislike to any of these unhappy
creatures, it was qo uncommon practice
to send out th% Hottentot on some preten
ded message, and then tO follow and shoot
him onjlic road ; when thus put out of
-the way, his relations durst not make any
inquiry about him, else they also were se#-
verely “punished. Sirfch was the con jitiori'
in which we fouud the natives at that pe
riod.”
A Yankee Cock — True Game ? An
anecdote was a day or two since related
to us by a friend, which is worth the tell
ing. Ho was on his tfflf to Havana some
months ago, and when off Florida, a bald
eagle which had been’ blown out to sea,
alighted, exhausted, on oneqof the lower
yards. He was brought down by our in
formant, and his wings were cropped, and
himself was nursed into vigor again. Ar-j
rived at Havana, a companion one day
suggested for a frolic, to paint up the
bald eagle, whose color was dark grey, so
as to njake h:;n resemble a cock as jjiuch
to try'7iis"nft«te“ ftflivk Wj!
had been kept twenty-four hours without
food, our eagle was trimmed aud painted
roosterlike, and taken, in a bag, to jbe pit.
At length the owner of a cock whicbdiad
beaten in twelve rounds, dared a contest
with anv one, for any stake. This was the
time. Our friend stepped up to him, and
told him that he had a Yankee cock, of
tiie native Green Mountain breed with
him, ifhe would like a game. ‘Yes,’ said |
the Spaniard, ‘I don't care wfiat kind of a
cock it is—lot him out !’ The b*t was
twenty-live dollars, and ottr Yankee cock
was let into tire ring. The opposite roaster,
flushed with his victories, crowed and spir
red about, and then planted hjs headier a
fight—when what does sir Yankee do but
to plant one claw unceremoniously on his
hack, and twist lus r.eck with the other—
and in a moment, made a, meal of him.
The Spaniard swore, like one possessed.
He paid his money, but he cursed aH Yan
kee cocks.—[Galaxy.
Long Hair.— We find in the News
and Courier, Portsmouth, N. H,, the fol*
lowing agreement entered into by the
Governor, Deputy Governor and Magis
trates, of New Hampshire, in 1G49, to
discountenance the sinful practice of
wearing lung hair. It is worth preserv
ing, as it goes to show the characters of
the great men of th»t generation.
, M Forasmuch,” says the instrument, “as
the wearing of long hair, after .the man
ner of ruflmns and barbarous Indians,has
begun to invade New-England, contrary
to the rule of God’s word, which says it
is a shame for a man to wear long hair,
as also to the commendable custom gener
ally of all the godly of our nation until
within-this few years: We, the magis
trates, who have subscribed this paper
(for the shewing of our own innocency
in this behalf) do declare and manifest
our dislike and detestation against the
wearing of such long hair, ns against a
thing uncivil and unmanly, whereby men
do deform themselves, and offend sober,
and modest men, and do corrupt good
rnauners. We do, therefore, earnestly
entreat all the elders of this jurisdiction
(as often as they shall see cause) tQ man
ifest their zeal against it in their public
administrations, and to take care that the
members of their respective churches be
not defiled therewith, that so, such as
shall prove obstinate, and will not reform
themselves may have God and man to
witness against them.”
Removal of Washington’s Rf.majns. \
The remains of this illustrious man, the
Father and the Saviour of his country,
were recently placed in the sarcophagus
made by Mr. Struthers of this city,
from whom we learn, that when the vault
and the coffin were opened, “when they
had laid him,” the sacred form of Wash
ington was discovered in a wonderful
state of preservation. The high pale!
brow wore a calm and serene expression ; j
V..-. .
Rrmgßszt a#,,,
j and the lips, press'd still together, 1 hlhL a
I grave and „solemn smile, ,§uch as they
1 doubtless wore, when tfie First President i
gave np his blameless, mortal life, fbr aiJ
immortal existence. f ■f'J
* “When hfssoft breath, with pain, * ■$- ’j
Was yi«lded tothe elemei»tfc*giin.” r
The impressive aspect of
! ed overpowered the man k fvas
to transfer the hallowed dust tyjajf* fast
tonemertt, ami he was unable
his emotions. He placed his hand bpoft
the ample.fifociiead, once highest m' tli?
ranks of or throbbing with the.
cares of an intimt Empire: and la
mented, we doufit not, thlfnho Voice of
fame could not provokq that sileat cliff,
to life again, or pour its stona of revival
into the dull, cold’ ear of Death. r The *
last acts of patriotic sepulture nferC thus
consummated ; and the figure, which wp
can scarcely dissociate front an apoth
eosis, consigned# to its low,dim mansion,
to be seeu*ho more uiUil mortal* shall put
on immortality, and the vesture of decay
be changed to the bright garments of en
dless incorporation.—?W, G. Clark. »
- > - ’ r - •
Tit vof Tat, A young Englishman,
while at Naples, was introduced at an as.
sembiy of one of the first ladies by a Nea
politan gentleman, While he was there,
lus snuff-box was stolen from him, The
•next day, being at another house hc4iaw
a person taking snuff out of his box.—
“There,” said he to his friend, “that man
in blue, with golif embroidery, is taking
snuff out of the frdhi me yes
terday. Do you know him I Is he not
a sharpAr ?” “Take care,” said the oOT*
er, “that man is of the first quality.” “I
do not case for his quality,” said the ss»-
glishnian, “I must have my snuff *6ox n
gain t NTg%and ask him for it.” “Pray,’ J
said liis friend, “be Jeatfe it to
me to get back your box.” Upon tin*
assurance the Englishman went tUVay, affc
ter inviting hie friend to dine with him
the next day. He accordingly came; ami
as he entered, “There,’’said he, “I hare
brought you your smtff-kox.” “How did
JloiLobbtjn it r “Why,” * sqid
a noise aboait it, therefore T picket! (fcsr
pocket of it.” " . ‘ .
iNQUrSITIVF.NP.RS. It is supposed that
the Americans have- attained' th ( e greatest
art iti parrying ifiquisitivemgs, bqcdtWti 1
they arc mere exposed to if; b*t a well
known civic wag, at a late political ex-,
citement, maintainedY dcfcusivstcoHorpiy
with a rustic inquisitive, which vvoald buyp
hardly boon excelled by any transatlfmtic’
performer. Travelling post, he was ‘tfbljg
ed to stop at a village to replace a
shoe, when the Paul Pry of the place
bristled up to the carriage winddw, apd
without waiting for the ceremony of in
troduction, exclaimed—“good morning,
sir—horse cast a shoe, I see. I suppose
you are going to .” Here & paused,
expecting the name of the place to be sup
plied, but the citizen answered — “Ybi.
are right, sir—l generally go there at this
season!” “I—hum—doyc, and no doubt
you, be come from ” “Right, again
sir—l live there!” “Oh, ay, do ye —but
I see it be a London shay. Pray, sir, be
there any thing stirring tlieraT” T ‘Yes,
jUenty of other chaises!” Ay, gv, of
couse; but what do folks say?” “Their
prayers,
what I inean; v f\ish. to kn*w if there is
any thing nar and fresh." “Yes—bread
and herrings!” “Anan, you be a queer
chap. Pray, t Muster, may I ask your
name?” “Fools and clowns call me Mus
ter; but T am, in reality, one of the frogs
of Aristophanes, and my genuine name is
Brekekekes Knoux.- Drive on, postil
lion!”—[English paper.
j A gentleman who had a snuffbox that
| played” “Drops of Brandy,” and “The
| glasses sparkle on the* board,’’ went to
| dine with a friend a few wiles out of
(town, one Sunday, taking Ivfs'box in his
! pocket. He accompanied the family th
j the .parish church, and by some accidentals
i pressure’J)e, about the-middle of the
| vice, thfc spring ofthe box, which
j struck up_“Drops ol Brandy,” most mef
rily. EverjTeye ayd every ear was ."dt-i
; reeled to the spo£, to the great dismay of
; the gentleman, who endeavored to stop
! the box, but iff doing so # he only catised
it to change the tune, On which he has
tened out of the church,the box rattling
i away while lie inarched aigpg the isle.
f “I hold to no aristocracy %xc<?pt the ar
istocracy of nature. To genius, talent*,
moral worth and public services, I render
due honor, and I care not whether tlio
claimant to that honor is clad in robes of*
purple and fine linen, or in tltp squalid?
rags of poverty-—whether he obtained his
education at a country sohoal, or at tbo-
University, whether he sits ip, high
places of the natiop, or digs the ejrjjrtbF
his daily food, whether he bf the son of
?££■*&?' ° r:4