Augusta chronicle & Georgia gazette. (Augusta, Ga.) 1821-1822, November 15, 1821, Image 2

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* * 4k r %>. VVvpouicU' Viu^AU.j BY JOSF.PH VALLENC^B JLBLISUEP EVtßT^^^^^^^ Monday § Thursday. *T FIVE DOLLARS PKH ANHCM, PAYABLE IK. ADV.SCE —COURTBY PAPER. ON.'E A WEEK, TIIIUF. lIi'LLAHS PEU ASSM, PAYABLE ALSO is ABVAKrE. W\«rtMM»«'» vl,ww v" V '"" WWVVV .In 'Extract from BUidnoood's Magazine t, T h P Mpcnliiiou* ii Awn" ot the Hap. tirti, fell a. a" |»"»nw ol ihe compass.— V c do.) lifSbte.l alter sunset upon the “ eve of St. Join,” on tin- mourn,ns which lie *o the «>uth of Dublin, (and winch embellish the vicinity of that city, ' with a variety of romantic scenery, rarely to be met within four -iniksot u metropo lis ) Hint your correspondent reoollec's to have b eo stopped* v.licn a boy, o s Ins return vith a party from an cxcun.pi. in to the county of Wicklow, by a hue of country cars • rawn atrosi the road, at the village of Sti lorp-an, the • wners of wluci. S ludopted tins mode of exact, i« Jo™- thing townrob the bonfire And ac cording to a provincial enstom m Low or Saxonw. . very young gnd plucks a sprig of si. John's Wort on mul summer n«K»‘, a,„l Micas i, into the,« allot hurcliu».«.e- Si,onli! it, owing owing to the daippm ss ot |he wall, retain i.s freshness and v. dure, she may reckon upon ewnmfi » s n tor in the curse of the Jcars but. it droop, til. popnhu belief is, < ■» *s d'-stil, d to pine and will es away. TIIK SI - JOHN’SW OUT. The \oung maid Hole thro’ the cottug And as she Bought the plant of I the my stic ST. ’ t(MH; lit, The wonderful herb, whose leaf will dc ; cidc If the coming year shall make me a bride.” And the glow worm came Wi 1 h its silvery flame, And spiu-kleu and shone Thro' the niglit of St. John, And soon lias the young maid her love knot tied. W ith noiseless trend v. To her chamber she sped, 1 Whev ■ , be spectral moon her white beams tilled:— “It eeie bloom here, thou plant of pow’rj To deck toe young bride in her bridal hour!” Hut it or «p’d its head, that plant of pow’r, And died die mute death of the voice less il ower; | And u w ither’d wreath 011 the ground * it lay, Mure meet for a burial than bridal day And when a year was past away. All pale on her bdr die young maid lay I And tin glow-worm came With its si v. ry flam-, And sparkled and, shone Thro’ the tight of st. lohn, As they .dos’d the cold grave o’er tin ma il’s cold cay. Tile following louciiiitiv Vcrsesaretak- I on. „ Acvwspaper, U»« “Tym; M.fcuiy” A W»»tkh Mousing. From lllacrw Emnu. Magaz, It was upon a wiiu’.y more,— When snow flakes on the wind were borne. The keen black frost had scarcely failed. And sleet and ruin by turns assailed— lioa-ked, as where in v armtli I smsd, Ana die sight did almost freeze my blood, A due imam on a stone, Chided and shivering, sal alone. The snow felt thick and fait, yet he Del never sp. ak, but piteously I Up n each passer, with a sigh, It. it. Ins little, tearful eye— Yi t i»f him notice none w.is taken, lie s ciiicd >o be b ad forsaken, As coi t and shivering on the stone, The little sufferer sal a.one He ask. cl no* rid —he looked for one Who cam.- no.—who, mas : was gone For eve;- from him- n ’re was he Ag.iinthui guilty onctost-e, Nor i-’ru again wustliat sweei boy '1 o warm his modi r’s heart wi I. joy— Foi she, that morn, upon Unit stone, Hud .est dim there to sit alone. At b nfcth Ids fears his si! ( n-e broke. And unis the little Inst one spoke: “ A.js! me.hoiks she in.es oug— -1 cannot see her mtfn Hi ong, T sir.nn my eyes to ook m vain, A as ! ..lit ivill no. coni, again— Ami yei she promised, win n alone Siu I t me silling on this sto..c. “ t)h, .o' her! i ome to me, ior I Am cotd —..nd rick—.aid'e-dv -Mediums ih. uigln b gns >o fall, Fo d' Kn s slims nii on. bom all I ...in iii.fur; —I foe, not now Ih damp snow lalim . on my brow, And suit da cod uts le.t tins s ono, II . cie 1 have sat so long alone. ('one, n o.her, ionic! nor -airy longer, For oh ! tins weakn -ss g ows stiff strou „ « e . 5 Co ue u oiherj take me to my borne— Ho. sum-. I am—come—mother—come ” Me saul no more—lns little breast lleavi dfair once, then sunk io rest. No i calm and colder than dt . stoue where first fie sat, he lie? a one. • xl' ’ o . on "’'vlched mother came, YTi tjfa. ,■ eyes in tears and her heart in flam •; And—t.otl '—bow she stood in mute stir prise AVfien hrs, ihe vision inet iier eyes, AVnen first his liule face she km w So d .rom the last and ovely hue It wp.e i.mi mom, when she left him alone. In tempest and storm, on a damp cold stone. But who shall tell the pumrs shp felt, As madiy m the snow she knelt And clasp d him round, m her deep dis tress, ITb all bis chilling iciness r The tear at once forsook ■ er eye. And he ra s’d a harsh .nd horrid cry, That seem’d on its mshm, wing to bear The last of her knowledge ot gmfand I care. (»h ! ne’er will she taa-e sweet rest again- ' Fo' madn ss reign* in her troubled braim For In boy she calls through day and ' night; In coldress—in darkess—m pale moon I’ght— “ My bov '—my bov '.—have you seen try bO; ?” Not another thought does her mind em ploy — Not a g>eam of hope from the past can sin borrow. As she waders alone in the grasp-of her to: i ow! The & f’orious. Front Blackwood’s Magazine I.anffv litres —According to a ‘ View of all tin known Languages and 'he r Dm lecis,” pi bushed by M. Fred Ad rburg, ct nncel o; O' s.ate loth Kmpco of Bus sia, their lumber an ounts >o 3,064 all Asia 037, Knopci.n 587. African '2Tb and American L-6-1 [F. OIW THE Gl iSOOW lIEF, ] Anecdote of a Scottish Lawyer, _ An advocate, id of clari I, is said to nave forgotten for winch pi.rty, in a par ticiPar cause, he had been retsinsd ; and to the unutterable amazement of die agent dial had fee’ll him, and the absolute hor ror of the nnot client behind, to have ut tered a long and fervent speech exactly in the teeth of the interests lit had been hired to defend- Such was the zeal of his e'oqni ace, that do whispered n mon strance from the rear, no tugging at hn. .. elbow, con id stop him in medio ffiirgite di cendi. But just as he was about to sit down, the trembling writer pul a B l'P ()1 y ....... • ..i „a»„vU...,|l>ese „t)lai( party;” whereupon, with an air ofinfiu . ite composure, he resumed the thread of his oration, saying—“ Such, my Lord, is - the statement yon will probably hear from my brother on the opposite side of this cause. I shall now beg leave, in a very lew words, to sln-w your Lordship bow utterly ui tenable me the principles, ami . how distorted are the facts, unon which • I is very specious statement has proceed ed.” And so he went once more over t he same ground, nnd did not take bis seat i li| l be bad most energetically refute cl him self from one end of his former pleading to the other. The Mendicant Monk—An Anecdote. Piickheiincr, a German, informed Eras mus of a comical dispute which he hid wijli a mendicant monk. This good man being in company where Erasmus was highly roniniended, shewed his disafficr tion by his c tuntenance and gestinesj and being hard pushed to declare what lie hud to censure in Erasmus he said, » «st» n an. w\. IX' _a i . » so inucb, was a notorious 0 and thai be knew i) to bo true, not frorA the testimony of others, but of his ovw • yes. “ Dul Erasmus buy them, or steal dnm?” B.ud I’iikhVimer. “He bougln dmr,” said the monk. “ VVliy thr..,“ qumli I’irckbeimer, “there is u cer ain fox, who is n much greater knave ; tor be comes into my yard frequently, and taker away a fowl without paying me. But is i • lien a sin to tat fowls ?” “ Most certainly,” answered the monk : “It is the sin of gluttony; and becomes the more lienious when it is committed and freqently re peated by Firckheimer, “ hewts them on fast days ?” “No,” said the monk ; “ but we ecclesi astics ought to abstain upon all days from such delicacies.” “All! my good tat her,” said Pirkheuner, “it is not by eating dry bread that yon have got that huge paunch of yours ; an J if all the fowls which have gone into it could lift up their voices at once, and cackle in concert, they would make noise enougK to drown the drums and trumpets of an army EPITAPH. Inscription on the To mb-stone of a Bbick smith, in Mansfield church-yard, Not tinghainsbire. “My I'onqs and Hammers, lie declin’d My Bellows, too, have lost their wind My Fin’s extinct, inv Forge decayed And in the dust my Vice is lay’d; My Coals are spent, my Irons gone, Ny Ai'atU are drove, nr ft’ork is done.” [Most of our readers have no doubt of- ■ tener heard than read of the “AVanoer ing Jew.” To gratify the curiosity o ! such as may feel an interest about a per- , sonage who engaged the credulity of our 1 ancestors, some ages ago, we give the fol- | lowing extract by the Editor of Black < wood’s Magazine from tbe “ flisteria Ma- I j.)r,” of Matthew Paris, the Monk of St. , Adlan’s ] Legend of the Wandering Jew. \ !n iJ'-'S, u.e Metropolitan of Armenia*, I on Ins 1 ravels arrived in England, and was 1 interrogated of many things respecting ' thi churches under his Jurisdiction ' Among other things, being asked as to ' that Joseph (concerning whom there is 1 much talk among men.) who was present 1 at the passion of the Lord, ai d spoke 1 with him, and who yet lives as a witness ui the truth us the Christian religion, and 1 whether be had evtrseen or heard of him. 1 seriously a.'Hrmcd the truth of such ic p it; am a certain knight of Antioch, f iti h s retinue, who vas his interpreter, ‘ and who was also known to one of the 11 abbot’s servants, (by name Henrv tie Spigournel,) spoke in the French as foi l, ws:“ My master well knows that in. i, o and a little before he journeyed to the s .vest, the said Joseph ate at lus table, r whom he had often seen and heard speak.” r And being afterwards asked respecting c what passed between our Lord Jesiis n Christ and ‘he said Joseph, he answered t rli'S:“lu ih- time of tlu passion of v Jesus Cnrlst, when, having been taken by a the Jews, he was brought before ibe Gov- o ernor Pi ate in the prxiurium, to be judg- li ed by bun, Pilate, finding no cause of li death in him, said to them r “Do }e take v. him, and judge him according to your I) own law.’ But as the Jews continued to * clamour yet more loudly, he dismissed y Bm abbas according to their petition, ami > •clivered to them Christ, that he might t< |oc crucified. While the Jewj were drawing Christ without the prxtorium, »mI when lie had ci if.'e to the pate, ami whs panning into it, Caftapliilus, porter of the praeorium to -Ponth'9 Pi fate, struck him on the bark with Ins fist in a con temptuous maimer, and, mocking said —‘ Go, Jesus go quicker— why do you delay ?’ Whereupon, Jesus, looking bark on hmi with a severe countenance, said —‘ 1 go, and thou shait wait until 1 re nin ;* it is said according to that sa/ing of lite evangelist Therefore’ by the word of Godi the aforesaid Curtaphihs is still wailing, he having been aged aloui thirty years at the lime c v f the passim of our Lord ; a.idetcr, as soon as lis arrives at the age of an hundred, he isseized, 1 a.i it were, with an incurable infirmity, and is ravished in a sort ot ecstasy ; and upon recovering his senses, finds hiinseif again returned ba k to the same age at wind’ he was in the year when our Lord suffer ed—so that he nay truly say with the Psalmist, * My youth U renewed like that of an eagle. When the Catholic faith in creased, this same CartaphilL's was bap tizedby that A nanus who baptized Saint Paul, and was called Josepi. lie fre quently sojourns in Aimeiia, and in other regions of the Past, li-iug_glitong the bishops, and 01 her heids of the church—a man of holy convcmation and piety, speaking little and wifi ciictim specion—saying nothing, except when inquired by the bishops and htly men j ami snnu times he relates concerting the things of antiquity, and the circunstances of the passion and resurrection o- Christ, and of the wilm »es of the resurrection —those., namely, who arose with Christ from the grave, anl went into tie holy city, and appear'l to many. Ilf alio speaks concerning th a pos'd's' crc. d, and their uivsi n aid, tuu.iatsy s ami t : 'is with'.tit any in giite.- t.r V-.hy, or any sign <f ihbin lief—lievig tab, r occupied l>y grid, ami fear of the LAd, ever ex pecting 'h a ivent of Jesus f\rist in fire, and the judgement o> the ' <vl, and fear ing lest, at the last tiiivi, he '.Wild find . n itn '({tMlllt hint ,e . tv,-. ni,(l 1 i.j. .u-iislon. M»"y fen come to him from t ie most d.svanl pits “i he world, rejoicing to see and on verso with limn—among whom, if sere he any worthy, he briefly answers heir questions. He refuses all j,resents that are offered to hint, bi ing emu nt viu> moderate food and clothing; and lu dac es all his hope ot safety in this, naiicly, that he sinned in ign-i anno, and lha our Lord prayed that his Pat her might pjrdon his nunclmers, as nnkiiowing what they did ; and that St. Paul, a so sinning 11 ig nonane , nevciihejuis deserved pafduu; as also Peter, who denied the Lord through fiailty ; while Judas, who thnight n> quily (that is, through avarice,) brt;ay ed the Lord, hanged himseil, anil, his bowels gushing out, thus ended his wretched life without hope ofsaWaiiou For these masons only Cartapliilus hopes tor salvation.” BONAPAFTR. Extract of a letter dated •. J (lli , “ Pa it, Sept. 8. ST5 L Hi'fruiwi m«Z given Un; lust drops of water to such a man, and I therefore readily accepted the invitation to meet him The Ducto; was very circumspect ; but I have collected many interesting gleanings from perversa lii'n with him, which I give you as 1 got (hem. • “ Bonaparte occupied himself often with gardening ; au dander l»is immediate superint'ndance bow. rs and grot',us were • ree'ed in the gard •• at Longwoud Gen 'tertrand, Madam Beitiand, with du chil dren, and li <•. iiitomarctu assisted him on such occasions His usual dross was that of a Chinese gardener; nankins, and a large straw hat. Within the last eight mouths i f Ids life ho could scarcely move om, and was obliged either to it-<t on (hi sofa, or his easy chair; he siifV, cd considerably, a.d was in consequence ixceeding'y morose ; he had lost full tw o-thirds of his corpulence. “ His last words certainly were “ tetc urmec,” but .vitliOut any conni xi ui; tor wlut he littered was in a convulsive (state, ami no other words could be distinctly understood “ During Ids Pines* hi* son was the principle topic of his conversation! he tie ver conversed on po.ities, at least the Doctor said so Two priests were sent to him by bis mother, obe an old man, (Buonuvita) and the other a young man. ■ The first could no< bear the Affiliate, ami was obliged to return to Kurope. Since their arrivals mas was read every day at Longwoud, and the Doctor said, *ll est nioyt en bon Ch>'< t.m ’ Bonaparte oxpresc (d nine 11 disgust at the old priest’s so,. 1- ling of tobacco—he dis iked smoking and smokers. He had entirely left Isl taking snuff Vou have seen it nofic J in 111 - papers that he sent a present to Lady Holland. The ciroumstaoees that led t-> 1 arc extremely li n .rab e to her .adyship Lady Hmland was never pcrs.'tiailv known tv> B napai te, but since his confinement die had been unremitting in her atumion to h m. by constantly providing him with a--- licics tor Ins table winch she thought would be agreeable to him ; also by send ing him books, ai d con nbuting In many other ways to his domestic ci.mf rt. He sent her u Cameo of great value, as .1 u> ken ot gratitude; it was on a snuff' box winch the 1 ope presentee to Na, chon. „ 1,, con. radiation ota I tne anecdotes 111 English and otn er newspapers, the Doctm assured me dial the enipr.ror (lie ne\ei ended him otherwise than VKmpe rear) never had any iemale attendant in hi.- household, nor was any one in attend ance on him during his confinement at Si Helena, “ The veneration with.which the Duet, or spoke ofhim is beyond any thing of the sort 1 ever witnessed. Speaßing of It. rt> rami, be always sty Is him ie grand .Iflj recfmi Madam Ueu and \i as ai way s allow - ed to er. lei lis room without being an nounced. Napoleon was quite resigned to ~ie in St- Helena. He often conversed with Antoniarchi of events of his earliest age, and recollected the most trifling acts ul his childhood ; the Doctor being a na tive o! Corsica, they generally conversed together in the idiom of the island, winch iVas quite familiar to Napoleon. The house at Lcngwood was exceedingly 1 small and uncomfortable, and damp be. y nd conception ; the new house was not yet finished audit was Bonaparte's in- 1 tenti ui, had he lived, never to inhabit it. i " The library of Napoleon consisted of t the best" classics, and through the kind- 1 nes of Lady Holland and other friends, a he had afresh supply of what was new and ; interesting every three months, scut to ; him under Lord Bathurst's seal. Dinner I was always served on the plate (service 1 d’argent) with the imperial arms on it, ett 1 which he dined at St. Cloud. “ Dr. Antoniarchi found a proper stone on the island, with which he had prepared plaster, and succeeded very well in taking a cast of his bust after his death; unfortunately-it had been shipped to Leg horn, else 1 might, perhaps, have had a sight of it. The Doctor has intended it as a present to the mother ot Bonaparte, whom he stvts Madame Mere. « The hair of his head as well as Ins beard had been shaved, and sent to his re lations, his household each retaining some small quantity of it. The Doctor had a small lock of it in a broach. I had it in my hand, and confess, and am not asham ed to say so, that ny feelings were very acute at the moment, and I perceived something like a tear in my eye '1 he doctor could not obtain permission to cm balm the body, nor would the governor (Sir Hudson Lowe) allow any inscription- The remains were first placed in a coffin of tin, tin n in one of Mahogany ; these two in one • f lead, and the upper one again in Mahogany ; all four well secured under the insciiption ot Dr. Anlomarchi. « I could not learn any thing respect ing the life of himself, which Bonaparte was said to have written, butil is piobabh, ai all events, that nothing was done in it after the arrival of Anlomarchi, as lie de clined in health during those two years. - Monlholoii, who came over with Bertrand and his family , has permission to return to France; hnt Bertrand, who had been con 'leiuiif d <6 death, pa" contnnmce, has not \et received that permission. Doctor An ■ omarchi brought over his journal of the two ’a*t years attendance on Napoleon, ready for publication. . Several of the London bo: ks. liers were anxious to ob tain it, and I think he said he had sold iticm me I lie doctor, will) is about thirty two years ohl, was sent ou r to St. Helena by Letitia, mother of Bona parte, “ The point on which 1 was most anxi ous to obtain information, was the-cause of t ie non-appearance of the Doctor’s name, along with the rest ot tin- surgi oi.u; to the official report i.f the cause of his death, and the appearance cf his body us ter it, He was never asked to sign it, but Ins opinion was well known, as he had frequently declared it without reserve, to be, that die death of Buonaparte was ow ing to the climate.” .. 1 FUth IGN. Translated for the Philadelphia Gazette. 3 From the L'lndicatenr, Sept. Ist to the 9th. Constantinople, Aoo. I.—The public tranquility has been again seriously dis turb'd here, within these few days. On the 28th of July accounts were received from the Peloponnesus, which the Divan ' carefully concealed. The people, how ever, soon saw that they were of an unfa- H -wmhls t.wUu-r-; .iL was nimoredjhat the L . rained gr, at advantages, that tire 'new ! Turkish fleet was entirely destroyed, ' utc. On the- 27th in the morning, bands of assassins, who have long since infest ; cd the city, assembled, an ! jointly resolv : ed to bid defiance to the firman of llu Sullan- A party of Janissaries joined 1 them. They forcibly entered the ships of the Greeks, murdered and plund u-ed at discretion, and above 200 Greeks were killed. The government did not resolve fill the evening to have these bands dis persed, winch was effected without any resistance on their pait. Little trouble was taken to pursue the murderers, and the feu that v,ere taken were merely pun ished with the bastinado. On the 28th an old man appeared, who Mve himself out ns a prophet, and an nounced the downfall of the Ottoman Em pire, from a passage in the Koian.—lt is impossible to describe the affright of the 3 tp rstitious populace and their boundless lury. The murders were about to be re newed ; out at this time the aimed force dispersed the bands of assassins, and ar rested the man, who has not since been heard of On tire 2ffih, small bands appeared a gnin as iisu d, who murd Ted single Gret ks without resistance. On the oOth the scenes of the 27ih were renewed, md the Government shewed more indifference than on that day ; not the slightest n.ea sure being taken to presi me order. Yes terday the city was again more qui“t.— flic supineneess of t lie government is in excusable, for these bands are as cowardly as blood thirsty ; the smallest detachment of troops is sufficient to disperse them. Os pubdc affairs noti ing has ;. et been known; the m gocialions between the Reis Effendi and the Foreign Ministers continue. The French and the English appear to act in concert,- so do the Bus sians and the Austrians. The Spanish .Minister, on the other hand, the advocate ol the Greeks, acts nearly alone, or at least supported only by the Ministers of some infvrior powers, for whom ■he Port has hut little respect. The Netherlands have joined Fiance and England. It is said that sumo points had been agreed upon, when the French ami English party suddenly started some difficulties, and the negotiation had 10 begin afresh. Be tween Ali Pacha and the Divan fresh ne. goclatioiis have certainly been entered up on and also with (he Albanian Chief Isma el, who has hitherto spared the Gre ks The negocialions with the Barbary States have wholly failed ; but new ones are said to be, opened with Persia. The Pa clias in Moldavia and Wallacbia received orders tOjpursue the Greek bands without intermission, and who’ly to extirpate them. Ihe Pachas, sn (heir side have asked for reinforcements, which the Divan immedi ately granted. An insurrection among the Survians was spoken of. Symptoms of the plague have mamfi.sted themselves among the Asiatic troops in the neighborhood Prices at Bordeaux, Sept. B.—Cogniac, ' 250 a4OO fr. fourth proof 050 a 370 • i 1-ivKHPoot, Se-i. 26. ! The King’s Return to London < Ihe Roy td squadron, with his Majesty i on Board, sailed from Dttnleary harbour, t on Wednesday, the 6th instant, and pro- 1 ceeded within the banks to near Wick- ' t i low, when the wind came dlreCUy round i ami headed them, so that they could .iot ) possibly get ihiongh the Swash, the name of the deep water between lac Kish bank and Afhlovv bank. The squu dron. then fore, was obliged to pul about, ar.d at five P. M. on W ednesday, came to its old moorings at Duuleaiy, after having been at sea seven hours. On Sa turday the Koval Squadron again sailed tVom Dunleary(which is now cMled King’s Town,) and arrived in Milford Haven the next day (Sunday.) 'Hie King was de tained by contrary winds at Milford Ha ven till ten o’clock on Monday night.— His Majesty sailed next day with the in tention to bear round the Land s End, and up the channel to Portsmouth; but the wind being adverse, his Majesty re turned to Mi If rd, and landed ihe.e about five o’clock, A M. on Wednesday las'-, and set off with post horses on his way to London The turn of his majesty’s head, the shape of bis hat and clothes have be come quite the fashion in Ireland since the King’s visit: every act of the royal personage has found a crowd of admir ers; even the manner in which his majes ty drank his wine is imitated in every com pany by' those who wish to have a charac ter as judges of the flavour of Uhtnish.— The king on public occasions always drank bumpers, but he kept his glass four times longer to his lips than is ordinarily allowed for swallowing a cheerful glass, and seemed to sipjlhe wine drop by drop, so that the palate had the fullest opportu nily of imbibing the flavour of, no doubt, a rare and rich vintage The king threw his head gently back as he sipped his glass out never took the wine from his lipsun- 1 til he had cleared the bumper. ALDERMAN I) AH LEY, Important Communication to Lord Fignnl. It has never fallen to our lot to pubbsh any document which we consider so im portant to Ireland as the following state ment. On Sunday Lord Figral, .with some other iVisiinffuishcit yrcißiirrapci), dined with Mr. O’Coimt ll in Merrion-square. In the course of the evening his lordship received . a message from Mr. Grant, acquainting him that he had a communication to make on (he pa't ol'tne government.—His Lordship lost no time in Waiting on the chief sec retary, who apologized for sending for him at so unseasonable an hour, by stat ing that it was the wish o"liis Majesty, 'hat what he had to impart should be made known to his Lordship, a id through hm to the Catholic body, before his M ajesty’s departure from Ireland, which vva, fixed for the following day. Mr Grunt then proceeded to stale, tha Lord Sid mouth, by the directions of the King, had sent for Alderman Darley, and ma- e known his Majesty’s strong displeasure at that Magistrate’s conduct at. the late en tertainment. Lord Sidmouth, he added, had inquired into the character of Aid. Dailey, and found that before this trans t action he was a meritorious officer. He • had learned besides that he had a large > family, and had expressed the strongest 1 contrition for his offence. These consid > erations had induced his Majesty to abstain -for the present from makinghis displeasure - in the most exemplary way, and confin ' ing the punishment of the transgressing ~ Jr c,:nc:u , Majesty wished it to be und«i.^V£ h l ,‘** 1 in respect to this incident, he acted alto tfether from his own feelings, he (M; • Grant) was nevertheless authorized by Lord Sidmouth to state, that the senti 1 monts of his Lordship, relative to the f circumstance, altogether coincided with t those of his R yal Master—and that in ‘ structions had been given to the Lord : Lieutenant to conduct the Government of • this country on principles in accordance ’ with these sentiments. ; The communication to Lord Fingal was altogether a verba' one. As, how ever, it was intended for publicity, his lordship felt the necessity of drawing up 1 a minute of it, and submitting it to" Mr. ■ Grant, for the purpose of obviating all possible mistake touching a matter of i such extreme importance. he [ rocted ings of yesterday impeded the execution i of his lordship’s design but we expect to receive a document for publication be fore the close of the day. We shall only add a line to say, that thejCatholic body is perfectly satisfied at this mode of dealing with the offending party, whom, for the sake of the country, they wish to see corrected, but not made an absolute victim even of his own im. pru -cnee. —Dublin Evening Herald, The following is a copy of a letter ad dressed to his Excellency the Lord Lieut, by Viscount Sidmouth, his majesty’s sec retary of slate for the II me Department. Dublin Castle iSep/,3, 182!. “My Lord—The time oftlu King’s de parture from Ireland b. ing arrived, I am commanded by bis Majesty to express his entire approbation oi the manner in which all persons acting in civil and military sit n ‘lions in the city of Dublin and its neighborhood, have performed their sev eral duties during the period of his mu jesty’s residence in this part of the king dom. His majesty is pleas, dto consider, that to your Excellency, his acknowledg ments are particularly due He is con scions how much he owes to your Excel lency’s attentions & arrangements—and his majesty gladly avails himself of this oc casion of declaring the high sense which he entertains of the ability, temper, at <1 firmness with which your Excellency has uniformly administered the great trust which he has placed in t out hands. ‘ I am further commanded to state, that the testimonies of dutiful and affectionate attachment which his majesty has receiv ed from all classes and descriptions of Ins Irish subjects; have made the deepest im pression on his mind—and that lie looks forward to the period when he shall rc ' isd them with the strongest feelngs of sat isfaction. His majesty trusts, that, in the mean time, not only the spirit of Loyal Union, wheih now so generally exists, will remain unabated and unimpaired:— but that every cause of irritation will be avoided and discountenanced, mutual for bearanceSc g iod wdl observed & encourag ed. and a security be thus afforded for the continuance of that concord among them selves which is not less essential to his . majesty’s happiness than to their own ; and which it has been he chief object of his majesty, during his residence in this 1 country, to cherish and promote. “ Dis Majesty well knows,the generos ity and warmth of heart which distinguish the character of his people in Ireland, and he leav, s them with a heart full of affec tion towards them, and with a confident « and gratifying persuasion, that li,i s r mg ...lunuit-ion and injunction f. Sovereign will not be given in v ,; have the honor to be, with ai.d regard, myl.oid.vour Kx,-iL. c , most obedient and faithful servant ’' . “ SIDMOLTH “ His Excellency the Lord Lieuuaant P.inis, Sept, i Frtract oj a private letter “A ludicrous, though painful sc, to one of the chief acto-s, took pi -,- few days ago at thp Junllu ,ks p\ inl ' K . ffijvmotus electric us, or electric eel, ! arrived, alive and in good ucaldi h Surinam. The savuns and natural j were all in motion, and hastened to Garden of Plants to sec with’ thdr u hands, this living electrical machim I he greater numbers we* e satisfied v a single touch and consequent shock; one unfortunate Doctor, either urge, greater ze.i, lor science, or governci a mme insatiable curiosity, resolve try the utmost cxtmit <f ih c an i„ powers, and seized it with both his ha but bad quickly reason to repent hi mevily, tor he immediately felt a ran repeated series of the most v :olent LI I cessively increasing shocks, which ibl him to caper about in the n*usU-xlra| nary manner and to utter the most pi ing cries from the agony that he I He then fell into convulsions, in cl quence of which his muscles becanl contracted, or from some strange pr| ty in the fish, it bi«erme impassible 'I tach the animal from bis giaSp til situation he remained acoiisideiablcß and would) in all probability have I * pired under the agony of his sersafl if some one of the persons p-csvr.l not suggested the plunging of his B in water, when the eel immediately I ped off He (Hu Doctor) has becnl j since mos*. dangerously ill,” ■ New-Yohk, Niß From South A merit J By the arrival i f the brig I Captain Hillard, in 46 days i Video, we arc furnished with the i ing.—lt will be seen bat the i the fall of Luna into hands of tin, is again revived—but die r that place is only to the 20th . and consequently the news cf the , of San Marlin, in out fnrmet e to ihe 9lh of July, remains i positive contradiction. Captain Hilliard slates, that , lisle lu’l]? Cecelia, arrived at MouHB t sih September, from G |. ]ilace she left on the ?‘Jlh June, :1 time it was reported, ami ciutcß| e Sieved ihat Lima had t that San Martin was in q iiet i. that place It was a well [ that Cocln an was in possession of B| of Callao, by capitulation, i Information of the surrender HH e had been received from St. ,lagoH| e by an express over land, several^H fore (Ja|it. Hi : hard left I consequence of which, there vB ii rejoicing at Buenos Ayres H A continuation of f*cavy bad been experienced at g -f the La Plata, from the 29ihoBi| i' to the 13th of September, in tfl.' English brig Ann, from Gibralt^Bj ft" •* —■—■* l? *i mi muU Vi*.co, cargo mostly saved— one man, saved Hr! y English brig Clyde, from j l ist near Maldonado—seven of e saved—cargo partly-aw l I, Young Josephine, from cargo of dry goods, lest near j do—cargo entirely lost, and f * rev- urowned. A nun bt rof e sels w*mc lost, between Monte and Maldonado, during the j which had gone to pieces; were supposed to be two s Portuguese, and it is presumed p perished. There was much in the harbor of Monti Video 1 same gales, out no vessel entiix BHtt f .V T cßi 1 Pill LAU£LPIIIA, C^B* The Flour Mark® During yesterday w might naturally be expected, ;* I reports from the east and the f they hud not any considerable ■ on the state of the market. may be said that flour is insusj^Kr ■ though, we understand the so tiding a considerable quantity Their stock of wheat is very hie : but from ' the want of (ow are able to grind modi has been stored up in these mills^B 1 ing in copiously. h^B From the National Gazette, A mercantile friend has peri^H,. to extract for publication, the passages of a letter dated August, 1321, addressed to very re.specable ctuninercial H, that city, “Wewisiiit w r as in our nouuce some improvi men’s in oßm els fi-r sale of p.ot’uce, h it irciW say the case is quite (he reveise<BM of every drsa-iplioti conti nu-t r*-®** dull, and at low and and this is not at all less than 22,000 haks of the utWf, . been imported at Havre durinßß and present month, fr'*m y.-mr States, N. Orleansand the crops rj grain having proved- BhM rict is nut wanted; and the priceß*-.**. maud of tobacco, do: end tile will of the government?" “ None but American purchased at the last and fnnnrrH , We are not aware that it case at the next, nor when tins “ Our brandies have been 18t)f, jier 50 veltes, some in< ' ,! 'Bßl* They have been gradually anvr.Bßj are quoted since a few days'*'■ , plain Bordeaux proof. It ,s i’HH they w ill be ere long at "juf- r not s doubt but our will prove one of the most have had for years, owing to , ' : \li|! > heat we have experiened'h''' f - Sl ß®|| past, and which still costumes. B nion can as yet he formed quality.” Job IViiiliiß Ner/ly Executed (it fk’-^BjP®