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CteonfcVe and Qazeite.
HIM
BY JOSEPH VALLEKCK SEVAN.
rriILISHCII ITtRf
Monday $ Thursday.
»t nvr. Tinixim rum asxok, pataulk i*,
ahvaxck.-couwtr* r*rKn,o*Cß a wkvk,
Til Hi;K DOIUR9 PKR ASHUMf PAIARLE
AI.HO IR ARVARCK.
Laud Lottery Register,
For the Counties of Hurtle, Columbia, El
bert, I-Aocnln, Richmond, Bcriveii, and
Warren— I'com the 22nd to the 28th ult.
inclusive.
FORTUNATE DRAWERS.
. No. 14.
Ro/I'—-James Lane, jr. Edward Ro
gers, Tail. W Thompson, /.achanali L.
I'rver, John Do.cas Pierce.w.d
Ceonre Hynf, Archibald Bell, Daniel llsl-
Ima, Sclvis, Winfred W Fryer,
Mimes Walker, Samuel Saxon, Littleber
vy Jlurch, Bichat d Rogers, Mary Palmer,
wid David Murray, Epniuim King
Columbia— Kliiah Moon, Janies Edward
Barden. Isaac Cliett, sen. John Jones,
(Harts c’Ut John Parks, esq Arthur Sla
ton, Nedotn Alford, .George W. Toole,
.lames Harris’ orphs John Eudy, Charles
K Wiseman, F.dwaid U Hogan, Win Da
vie i
Elbert —Titomas S Haiwerd, Samuel
Turman, Zachariah Rhodes, Ed
wards, Thomas Lane, James Dutton, Ed
ward Brown, Virgin Nicholas, Richard j
Mealc, David liatfbn, Nathaniel Bradford,
Joel Boothe, James Morrison, Simeon
Maxwell
Lincoln— Spencer Suddh, Carter W d-
Jtersrn, John Terry, sen Natlmn Holtz
claw’s orps
Rich nwiul— Kesiuh Ogden, wul Rebec
ca Mlirridetb, wid Phebe Thomas, wid
Elizabeth Burks, wid James C Winter,
Sy.Hlui Bulks, orps Nathan Leeds, Meze
klaii W. Carter, Win S. Thomas, orp
John Collins, Warrington Huynic, A’amucl
Bell
Scriven— iQreen Hill, Elizabeth Hen.
(Very, wid Win S Moor, Hardy M Falg
hmn’s, orpbs Wm Roberts
JVarnn —Sinn Hill, Athelstan Gupten,
t,,,,1.:- —"t
Walden, Tlioma* Garden, Lewis Griffin,
sen Kaiulol Thigpin, Howel Hunt, David
Adams, Prances Wood, widow Stephen
Junes
No. 15.
Burke —Mary Quincy, Richard Evans,
Cl varies Clark, y-ibn (Hark, W'm Cruthers,
John Brinson, jr SusanWt W Kelly, Mal
colm Nicholson, -SteplWl Hoyt, Absalom
Taylor, Mary Kersy, John Walton, Jor
dan Health, jr Elijah PonelPs orps Mich
eal Mixon
Columbia —Orlando Shepard, Ohadiah
M Culbrcath, George Lile’s orps James
Wilson’s orps Robert Byd, orpli Andrew
Heal, Jabez P. M rshall, David Seay, jas
Walker, Uurril Perry, Amos Albritton,
Elinor Burdside, wid
Elbert —Thomas Oliver, sen Thomas W
Williams, John Murry's orps William H
Waul, John A Verdel, Ambrose rt King,
Thompson Dye’s orps John IE Morris,
Murphy Vaughn, Robert Deney John
Holley’s orps Joel Hrawner, Malon M
Richardson John C Adams, Reuben Car
ter, Daniel Roas
Lincoln —John Crawford, singleton
Vnrlr. Evans Florence. Geonre Boular’s
*OI K, rvans riurcuct:. ucur|;c imumi s
.ii'.thi if
D>as, Nathaniel II Ileal, John I, Ander
ton, /ohn 8 Beers, Wm Moore, Needham
Jlawicl, It eea«, .Elizabeth & Isaac Jirejden,
orphs Alfred J Huntington, Alexander'
Uinitry, Joshua Key, James Thomp-
Bun
Scnven—' William Hulett, Josiah Sr. Lew
is Powell, orps Stephen McCoys, cups
7nlm Sanders, Me- owing’s orph* Lewis
-1/cres, Nicholas'Reddick, David Etnanul,
Martha Roberts, wid Isaac Brinson’s orps
Dicksond William
Hamm— Samuel M Wilson, Arthur
Matthews, jrWm Barrel, John Gorden,
John Adams, Wm Grace, Rowell Adams,
Barrel W ise. John Neilson, Icabod FiiKh,
Joseph A/urk’s orphs John Murry’s orps
Joseph Duckworth, Moses Darden, sen
Abranam Sanders’ orph German Tucker,
Levi May, Rachel Persons, wid James Co
dy, jr Joshua Dunaway’s orphs llemy
Golden, John Harhuck’s orps Churchweh
Gibson, sen Daniel Thomas. George Smith
No. 16. k
Diirhe —W’m Douglass orps Elijah Ryne 1
Thiophihis Diyant, Elias U Guest, David
Crawford’s orps James Marlin's orphs
Moses Overstreet
Columbia— Susannah Pftgue, wid. Beni.
W alson, John U lliniort. John vlJcSwain
Const’ne Afurrone’S'Orps
LVAerZ-John McClain, Usry Almond
Thomas S Hanserd, Aik n Rufi; Richard
iyner, jr Wm S Nicks, Wyatt Gentry. Ro
hert Cbrke, diaries Presley, Wm M ;. S s,
Shad nek Holmes, George M Skinner, Da
Vid Barron, Henry 1* Brawner
Jjincoln —James Terry, Chas Jennings,
Richard Morris' orps John Terry jr.
Richmond— Aaron Weaver, jolin Lyon,
/achariah Sinquefield. Sarah Rowlen.
orph Wm T Young, Walter Veitch, Eu--
gene Breman, Albert F Foe, James C
Winter, -Mary E Millory, wid Thomas Fe
nes, Francis C Taylor
Ycm-cit—Charles Hendry’s orps Samu
"r - B “? L ey Urannen . <>rp Wm
Weathers’ orps Thomas D Colding, James
F Scott, Jacob Hunt, Nancy, Charily and
Sarah Gills, orps John Andrews *
Warren—james Cary James Draper.
John Ivy Edmund Johnson junr John
Teasy, Elisha Johnston, Howell Williams’
orris Wm u Lockett. Gain Dixon. Robert I
Eddington, Gum Dixon, Andrew Stewart
„ No I?'- I
am7 , M Are T Di l 9on B Sap P* Mar ‘ ha Thomp-
Je « r ° Farnel1 ’ Kdw ’arcl Roger,
iGitri? B Spivey ’ ,Ie "rv Parnell, John
Hutchen’s orps Whitson p h "
Clark’, orps Wm Wynn’s orphs Jam” .
E lanah Odom, Myrick Iloneycut, Lewis t
da #: CntS hn iFhi -I c ’, Martin White, Jo- c
nltendori, wi.l Leu Stinchcomh, i
Richard Stoke*, orphs John Canter, Jesse
.Vmith, Samuel Beard, Simeon Henderson,
Anthony A Peryman, Nalhaoiel Cunning
ham, John Palkner, John Davis, Lemuel
Dixon's orps
Lincoln— James Gamble, Wm Mitchell,
fohn -IfcKorcle, jun Daniel Ship, John
Montcreaf, John L Blalock, Robert Hen
derson, Tliomas Blalock
Jtichmoml —Charles A Crew ford, Abner
Bedwell, John W Bird, .Wary Sluyter,
wid Alexander Kennedy, James Jordcn,
Car. &. Martha Enghit, orps Sampson L
I.amkin, Bashford Bobbins, Elijah Bet
sell, Peter Wright, Kesiah Arnold, wul
Joseph Bohan, Jesse Watkins, W[m Moure,
Fulaz Kennedy, Sterling Muncrief
Striven— Elisha Wade, Cynthn, WmA
p & Henry A Goff, orp* Elijah Lavender,
James O Pollock
Warren —lrwin Holloway, Basclel Sto
ry, Edward .Mathews, Thomas Jackson,
Edwin Harris, Jesse Hickman, Hannah
Newberry, wid james Gray, jr John New
man, Benjamin Wheeler, Shadrach .Schro
der’s orps Ezekiel V Broome, W , ||] aT " ”
Wilchcf, Eliphulelt Hall, Edward J ay lor,
William May’s orps
No. 18.
Bui ke— Everitt Sapp, Sterling Brinson,
Benjamin Hodges’ orps Carolus Anderson,
Elizabeth Jones, wid Uriah Dillard », orps
Henry B Pcpkins, Green /tobcris, 'I hos
Foi ill, Jesse Holton, Sarah Mathews, wul
Arthur Powell’s orphs John Kelly, orphs
Elizabeth Elliby, wid Noah Adams, Wm
Barnes
Columbia —Jonathan Wood, V a’kcr
Reynolds, Sarah Whittington, wid Alfred
Few, Harriet Coleman, wid James B Dan
iel, Jl/itchell Carrell, Carter Langford,
John Barlow’s orphs Thomas W Jones,
Hardy Powell, James Ross, F.lizabelh
Tindill.wid . i
Elbert— Wm Terrill, Philomon High
tower, John Cash, Jonathan Bell, ’James
Hutcherson, junr llenty Burton, diaries
Presley, John Horton, Peter Oliver, Wi
ley Jones, Clary Skinner, Wm Head, jr
’ William Gibbs, John Adams, James Rey
nolds ten
> Lincoln —Peter Lamar, Allen Golding,
’ Mason Jones, Thomas R Russell, orp
1 Wade Bostick
1 Richmond —William Tinlcy, Henry T
Bdbro, Anderson Windsor, orp IsaacS
’ Tmtle, James Newman, Patrick Brown,
’ Til man *5 While, George Strong, orp
Tippoo S Hannon, Richard Blaylack, Ed
! ward Bvrd, Benjamin G Rim., John Tin
ley, sen Kph 8c Kliz Phillips, orps Wm
| Grace, William Cummings, james It Ades,
1 Benjamin Pierce, George H Cogle, Jeller
-1 son Salmon
Scriven —Fleet Boykin, Thomas Con
ner, Elizabeth Hitchcock, Ledford Uo
• gers, Nathan Howard, James Coughran,
» Jcwc Vickery, Wm Roundtree, Cullen
- Williamson, Walton, Millington, Abigail
i and Martha Atkinson, orphs
• Warren —Josiah Cox, Guthridge Ivy,
- Henry Hadley, Aaron Dodd, Wm Myhaml,
Theophihis Kent, Andrew Pevy, Henry
> Hand Middleton Hilson, Mathew Haley,
s Elisha Burstm, Rivers Reese, Archibald
1 Kellam, Hardy Stone, Daniel W Newsom,
» William Tyson, Samuel Yarborough, jr
> David Morgan’s orps Hiram Smith
j No. 19.
I Burke— Cosey Davis, widow Thomas
■, Mallory, Martin McCand, Francis Ward,
, Thomas Allen, John Rice, Drury Elliott,
i Thomas.l Junes, Wm Thompson,jr Tho-
I masP Walker, David G George, Moses
Johnston, David Monroe, George Gordy,
William Wist, William Wallace, jr
i Coluvilun— Daniel Carrell, Martha Ann
s .lunea. wul
i jhiicH) "iu iVi«ti u<(rci‘iioiiiu. , B| wm oiumiei
- Httnfeyy toutt inrmjfpl
I Isaac Clielt, jr David Walker. William
M' Kinney, Carl Willingham
i Elbert —John Bray, John Powells* orps
V Wn™ B Bradley, Win H Fills', Am 'Craw
' ford, Wm I) Brewer, Robert Brown, Cor
dal Burned’ orphs Benjamin Winn, John
McDaniel, Winney Taylor, wid Benjamin
Neal, J.imer N Legrane, John Ford
Lincoln—’ WmQuinn, jr Jfebeoou Trent
ham orp Edmund Garnett, John McCor
cle, sen Thomas Early, Ezekiel Brown,
William H Norman, Merryaither A San
ders, David G Hardy, John Lamar, W'm
Best, sen John McGill
Itidiinond — David T Ross, Owen Me
Gar, Ebontzer Starnes, Avcrilla & At'a
inantlu Haynie, orps James B Lafilte, Jo
sepli Hutchinson, John G Winter, Wm
A Wood, Andrew J Dill, Wm J Rhodes,
John Lambeth, Laurence L Wilson, Ann
-J/cFarlane, will Ma,y Sner d, wid
A criven R: chard Herrington, jr Hugh
K Caughran, Richard Sharlur, Britton
I nee, Wm Manner’s orps Drewry Scott
‘ "ui ren-David Martin, Thomas Ed
mo«s-,i, Phoebe Smith, wid Septimus
Myra Ic. Samuel Mash, Zephaniah Fowler,
John Neilson, John Meadows’ orps Jo
seph Walker’s orps John Present, Thomas
J Hall rell, Abraham liarrel, Robert
J boson's orps
I'on THE CHRONICLE.
SAVANNAH.
Savawhaii! on thy lovely Bay,*
Bedeck’d with many a verdant scene
Os pict resque beauty—oft 1 lay,
And muse my boy-hood o’er again.
Where Hamovrou lifts its youthful brow,
I’ve gaz’d, and tho’t of times gone by,
When Red Men in their bark canoe, ;
Whoop’d on thy stream so fearfully.
And then I’ve thought upon our si res;
Win) nobly spar’d the tyrant slavi j
That quench’d with blood the Indien fires,
And danc’d and scoff'd o’er freemens
graves.
How alter’d now !—thy noble stream
1 he richest in the Southern clime !
How quick the change ! 'tis like a dream
Os Hope — anticipant of Time.
EDWIN.
• Southern word for the border of a • J
river.
f Col, Brow, —He commanded tlie Bri- !
tish t art during the Revolutionary War, ,
si uated on the banks of the Savannah ,
River, near where the Episcopal -Church ,
now stands. His inhuman conduct to the ,
American prisoners, during the aiege of ,
Augusta, -is still fresh in the memory of ■
our revolutionary sires, whose clemency
towards him, waa as magnanimous as his ,
cruelty towards us was infamous. He <
died in London, it ig 6a -d, in wretched- i
ness and obscurity,
feeVected.
TrantUition from the French, publishedin.
the Edinburgh Magazine, Aug. 1821#
Noble spirit, hast thou fled ?
Is thy glor.oua journey sped.
Thy days of brightness numbered.
Soul of dread sublimity ?
Hast thou burst thy prison bands.
Twin’d round thee by coward bands,
Hast thou fled to other lands.
Where thou must—thou will be free J
Tyrants! cowards! mark the day'.
Even now ’tis on the war/;
When your names, to scorn a prey.
Shall live in endless infamy.
Hark ! ’tis knell,
Lodi shall remember well ;
Austerlitz! Marengo! tell
Os his glorious chivalry.
i «;
Tell his deeds by field flood !
Witness river, mountain-, wood 1
Show his path of fire and blood,
That burned behind him gloriously !
Alas! that hero’s life should close
In languid, Tameless, dull repose.;
Far from the-contest that bestows
On mortals immortality.
Alas! that he, the great, the brave,
Should fill a hermit’s bloodless grave;
Where neverrolled the hallowing wave
Os battle and of victory !
He should hav; died on bloody field,
Where dolumnafter column wheel’d;
Where canmm roar'd and charger, reel’d.
Amid deatiuction’s revelry.
He should have laid his gloriouc'heail
Amid the wreckhimself had made;
Ten thousand errpses round him spread,
The flower ts all his enemy !
Spirit of undying aame.
Endless honor thou shall (Haim;
Whilst thy foes, unknown to fame,
, Shall weep in edd obscurity ['
Glory’s hallow’d light Jivine
F#ver on thy head shaH'thme-,
And valor’s heart shall be thy shrine,
Tliv portion, vast futunty !
x.x.x.
J'rom Jeremy 'Taylor's Holy Living,
Os contentedness in oil estates
and accidents.
Virtues and discourses a*e alike friends'
necessary in all fortunes; but those arc
1 the best which art friends i| our sadness,
1 and support us in our sorrows and sad ac
cidents; and in this sencc no man that is
l virtuous can be friendless; nor hath any
1 man reason to complain of the Divine
[ Providence, or accuse the public disorder
of thing's, or his own infelicity, since God
hath appointed one remedy for all the
evils in the world, and that is a contented
spirit For this alone makes a man pass
5 through fire, and not he scorched; thro’
' Seas, and not be drowned; through him
’ ger and nakedness, and want nothing. For
-since all the evil in he world consist in the
* disagreeing between the object and
' the appetite, as when a man hath what he
desires desire what he hath nut, or
! desires amiss; he that composes the Spirit
- I A a Mann—# aaa!
i *•* * . »»—«yfc. eaft-.<frrfti rtittmssreTTMl-ge
„ n ? 1 beyond Ins present fortune: and a
wise man is placed in the variety of clian
-8 p es « •'ke the nave or centre of a wheel
in the midst of all the circumvolutions and
changes of posture, without ‘ violence or
1 <*•"** save that it turns gently in com
phance witli its changed -parts, and is in
different which prtrt is up, and which is
down; for there is some Veitue or other
to be exercised whatever happens, either
Patience or Thanksgiving, Love or Fear,
I Moderation or Humility, or Charity or
, Contentedness, and they are every one of
them equally in order to his great end
i and immortal felicity: and beauty is not
' made by white or red, by black eyes, and
a round face, by a straight body, and a
smooth skin; but by a proportion to tire
lancy. No rules can make amability, our
' minds and apprehensions make that; and
so is our felicity: and we may be reconcil
ed to poverty and a low fortune, if* we
sutler Contentedness and the Grace of
God to make the proportion. For no man
n lat doth not think himself so,
Pitt if in a full fortune with impatience he
desires tnoro, he proclaims his wants and
his beggarly condition. But because this
Grace of Contentedness was the sum of
all the old moral Philosophy, and a great
Duty in Christianity, and of most univer
sal use in the whole course of our lives
and the only instrument to ease the bur
thens of the world, and the enmities of
sad chances, it will not be amiss to press
it by the proper arguments by which God
bath bound it upon our spirits, it being fas
tened by Reason and Religion, by Duty
and Interest, by Necessity and Convcni
ency, by F-xample, and by the proposition
° , if 6 .! ent Ilewaills * no ,ess than Peace
and Felicity.
1. Contentedness in all Estates, is a
djily of Religion; it is the great reasona
blencss of complying with the Divine
I rovidence which governs all the world,
and hath so ordered us in the administra
tion of his great family. H e were a
s lange fool that should be angry because
clog-sand sheep need no shooes, and yet
himself is lull of care to get come Gal
hath supplied those needs to them by na
tural provisions, and to thee by an arlifici
al; for he bath given thee reason to learn a
trade, or some means to make or buy
them, so that it only diflersin the manner i
of our provision, and whicii had you ra- ,
tlier want, Shoocs or Reason > And mv
Fali-on that hath given n,* a Faj-mj is freer
to me dian if he giv*s a Lfcif ready bak
od. Rut however all these gifts’come
trom him, and therefore it is fit he should i
dispense them as he pleases; ami if we <
murmurbere, wc may at the next melan i
choly be troubled that Godjd d Hot make :
us to be Angels or Stirs. * For If that I
which we are or have do not content us, I
we may be troubled for every thing in the «
world, which is besides our being «ir our i
possessions. “ , 1
-G* l j s , the M » s ! e , r of the we I
must not chuse which part we shall act -it .
concerns us only to be careful that we do t
dwell, always saying, 1/thh pleat* God,
let Übe rtf if u and wc who pray that t
God’s will may be done on Earth as it is In
Heaven, must remember that the Angels T
do whatsoever is commanded them, ti go o;
where-ever they are sent, and refuse no o
circumstances; and if their employment e
be crossed by a higher degree, they sit a
down in peace, and rejoyce in the event: n
and when the Angel of Judea could not f
prevail in behalf of the people committed*!!
to his charge, because the Angel
opposed it, lie only told the story at the a
command «f God, and was as content, and
worshiped with as great aneostame in his n
proportion, as the prevailing Spirit. Do r
thou so likewise; keep the station where r
God hath placed you, and you shall never b
long for things without, but sit at home, t
feasting upon the Divine Providence and I
Iby own Reason, by which we are taught I
that it is necessary and reasonable to sub- a
mil to God. *
For, is not all the worltl-God’s family .
Are not we his creatures * Are we not as t
clay in the hand of the Po.ter ? Do we s
not live upon his meat, and move by his £
strength, and xlo our work by his light?
Are we any thing but what we are from, t
him ? And shall thee be a mutiny.a;.,ong I
the flocks and herds, because their Lord '
or their Shepherd chuses their pastures, i
and suffers them not to wander into de
salts and unknown ways? If wejehuseve l
df it so foolishly that we cannot like it '
long, and most commonly not at all. but *
God, who can do what he pleases, is wise,
to chose safely for us, attcctionate to 1
comply with our needs, and powerful to
execute all his wise decrees. Here there,
fore is the wisdom of the contented man,
to let God chuse for him : for when \vc
have given up our wills to him, and stand
in that station of the battel, where our
great General hath placed us, our spirits
must needs rest, while our conditions have
, for their security the power, wisdom and
the charity of God.
2. 'Contentedness in all accidents brings
great peace of spirit, and is the {t reat and
only instrument of’temporal felicity. It
removes the sting from the accident, and
makes a man not to depend upon chance
and tiie uncertain dispositions of men for
his well-being, but only to God and his
own Spirit. We ourselves make our for
tunes goud or bad, and when God lets
loose a Tyrant upon us, or a sickness, or
scorn, or a lessened fortune, if we fear to
die, or know not to be patient, or are
.praud, or covetous, then the calamity sits
heavy on ns But if we know how to
manage a noble principle; and fear not
Death so much as a dishonest action, and
think Impatience a worse evil than a Fe
ver, and Pride to be the biggest disgrace,
and Poverty to be infinitely deeirable be
fore the torments of Covetousness ; then
~ we who now think the cure to be impossi
ble, shall quickly be of another mind, a.id
I reckon these accidents amongst things
eligible.
But no man can be happy that hath
great hopes and greal’fears of things with
out, and events depending upon other
men, or upon the chances of Fortune.
The rewards of virtue are certain, and
our provisions for our natural support are
certain, or if we want meat till we die
then we die of that disease, and there are
many worse Ilian to die with an Antrophy
or Consumption, or courser nourishment.
But he that sutlers a transporting passion
concerning things within the power of
others, is free from sorrow and amaze
ment no longer than his enemy shall give
him leave; and it is ten to one Imt he shall
be smitten then and there where it shall
most trouble him : for so the Adder teach
es us wherelostrike, hy her curious and
fearful defending of her head. The old
rt . * I . X _ 1 - 1 XI - . l’ A . A—
.t' Ca■■ ■ jaija a|il|<.aa 41 li.am ja aaaaaa ,a4n
e res,ToT-die Tyrant hatli sentenced yon
a also unto prison. Well, what is that i
• He will put a chain upon my.leg, but he
I cannot bind my soul. No.: .Rut he will
.1 kill you. Then PH die. If presently, let
r we go, that I may presently be freer than
■ himself:.but if not till anon or to-mor
• row, I will dine Cist, or sleep, or do what
> nature and reason calls (or, as at other
r times- This in Gentile Philosophy is the
r same with the discourse of St. Paul, “1
, have learned in whatsoever state 1 am
• therewith to be content. I know both
how to he abased, ai>d 1 know Uow to a-
I bound : every-wherc ami in all things |
am instructed both how to be full and to
1 be hungry, both to abound and suffer
i need.”
We are in the world like men playing
at Tables, the chance is not in onr power,
but to play it is ; and when it is fallen we
must manage it as we can ; and let nothing
. trouble us, but when we do a base action*,
or speak like a fool, or thick wickedly :
These things Goc| hath put into our pow
ers; but concerning those things which
are wholly in the choice of another, they
cannot fall under our deliberation, anil
therefore neither are they lit for our pas
sions. My fear may make me miserable,
but it cannot prevent wind another hath
in his power and purpose.- and prosper!-
ties cun only be enjoyed by tlwm who
tear not at all -to lose them, since the a
mazement & passion concerning the future
takes oil all the pleasure of the present
possession. Therefore if (lion hast lost
tby land, do not also lose thy constancy :
and i( thou must die a little sooner, vet do
not die impatiently. For no chance is
eviKo him that is content, and to a wan
i.oJdng miserable, unless it be unreasonable.
No man can make another man to he his
slave unless he hath first enslaved himself
to fife and death, to pleasure or pain, to
hope or fear: -command these passions,
and you are freer than the Parthian
King's.
From the jYexo Yuri National Advocate, of
November 27,
Very late from England.
By the arrival at Boston of the slii.p Tri
ton, Capt Bussey, from Liverpool In 30
dajs, London dates have reached ns to the
evening of the 21st October, and Liver
pool to the 22d.
All idea of a war betwixt Russia and the
Porte seems to have been abandoned in
Europe. Negotiations for a continuance
ot peace between Russia and Turkey are
stated to be going on under the mediation 1
of Anstna and Englan . The latter is
said to have proposed to France to main
tain the integrity of Turkey, except that
Russia might have Moldavia and Walla
-6,'a > I?" s *;* to certain Princes a I
part of Poland. |
n T ' ,e /l l l eeks continued successful. A
fleet of 60 sail of Turkish, Egyptian tind
- genne vessels is said to have collected r
to go against the Greeks. ,
Accounts from Odessa of Sept. ]B, state v
that the Turkish fleet had gained an ad- s
ranlagc over the Greek naval forces, i
rhey state also that the question of war 1
ir peace was decided, and that the camps t
jf both armies which had been in sight of I
>ach other on the Pruth, were broken up, i
ind the troops were marching to stations i
icarer home. !
The Gazette de France has the follow- (
mg intelligence fn-ra St. Petersburg!!,
iated September IJ, and guarantees its i
authenticity. ■
“ There is no question whatever of war;
no step has been taken which c*n autho
rise the absurd reports circulated in Eu
rope- The Emperor quits St. Peters,
burg for Witepsk, on his accustomed visit
to the regiments of (he guards stationed
there. He will return in ten days.” Sub
sequent accounts sav, that Alexander bad
arrived at Witepsk,' and that, previous to
liis leaving St. Petersburg)!, dbpatches
were expedited to the Courts at Constan
tinople, Vienna, Berlin and -Faria, and a
superior officer ol the Staff was, at the 1
same time, seat with despatches to Count I
Wittgenstein, who commands the army, I
that is .stationed on the Turkish frontiers, |
Huron Strogonoff had left Odessa for I
Witepsk, for the purpose of there meet
ing the Emperor. i
The same paper under date of St. l’e-j
terslmrg, Sept. 21, state that M. de- Sal-1
inon, Spanish Minister at that Court, had I
quitted St Petersburg with his family.
German papers to the 13ih October say,
that when Huron Strogoiioft set off from I
Odessa for St. Petersburg, he left all the
persons attached to his embassy at the I
former •city. . j
The accounts from Spain speak forct-1
bly of the tranquility of the capital; hut
the yellow' fever still desolates Hurcelona
and the neighbouring places. \
‘l'lie yellows,, fever is said to have made j
its appearance at'Leghorn Doubts, how- j
ever, are expressed as to this.
Some disturbances had occurred at i
Lyons.
The fears of an unfavorable ’-harvest in
Holland had vanished
Accounts ftom the Isle of Cyprus, da
ted 12ih_Aug. state,Jjthat the Turks had
begun to nnarssacrc the Gieek inhabi
tanlr. The Primate of the Island and
'three other Hishops, together with seve
ral religious Greeks, had perished as the
victims of the fury of the Musselmen, who
do not spare any Europeans- The Euro
pean Consuls bad sent their families to
Italy.
A letter from Smyrna, dated faepG ml
says, “the Bishop of Kitro, who pro tem
pore replaced the Dishop of Silonichi,
hung at Constantinople ; the Primate Bal
lanoqand Mencxus a merchant have been
decapitated; the day after these execu
tions, twenty-five other victims were given
up to the horrible punishment ot the
pal
The King of England entered Hanover
on the 10th October. Among other in
stances of bis gracious-conduct, it is men
tioned, that his majesty had the goo-ines:
to indulge his affectionate people with
the sight of him.,/or ten minute» /
The subscriptions for Sir Robert Wil
son, amount to 40'jOt, Among the sub
scribers are tlie Dukr of Bedford, Ear 1
Fitzwilliam, Earl Grey, Sir Francis Bur
dett, the Earl of Thanet, Lord Holland
Lord King and others.
,j‘ Great disturbances have occurred and,
>. still existed in the County of Limerkl
c Ireland" Not a single day passed wilhou
II outrages, and so daring and confident hat
li tlie actors become, that they committee
\. murders in the open day, and marched it
d bodies of 2 and 3000 to attack the h*use
d of the gentry. 2000/ are ottered for tin
u From the returns of the population o
? Great Britain, as far as published undei
e the new census, it appears that there hai
II been an incireiise of about 15 per cent
t I his increase will make the present po
i pulation 14,000,000, Add 6.500,000, ami
- the populuti' n ot the United Kingdom
t amounts to 20 and a half millions,
r «Tohh Uennec, Esq tl\e distinguished
f Engineer, died Oct. 4, aged 64.
1 . Loniio.v, Oct. 21. .
i It is now said, that it is his Majesty's
« intention to pay a visit to the king ol
Fiance. His most Christian Majesty has
1 earnestly requested it, and the King will
OCC, JI , y the Palais Bourbon.— Conner.
1 he last quarter of the British revenue
exhibited an in rease of 840,000/.
Hie Woolen Manufactories of Yorkshire
are stated to be in an uncommonly flour
ishing condition.
A closely contested election in Liver
pool, terminated after four davs polling,
in favour of Richard Bullin, Esq.
F , noM EsousH rApr.n.
The Times gives a laughable account of
an •utvh'it'urd mistake which recently occur
*ed in England. It appears, in short, that
“ P Q ' lu l“ v preacher, who was intimate in
the family of Mr. and Mis. Whi thread,
amla favorite with lady Augusta Murray,
y v, f e 'f the Duke of Sussex,) had received
invitations from both to dinner the same
day. He wrote two notes in answer, hut
«n Ins hurry sent the one intended for
ady Murray, to Mrs. Whitbread, and that
l»r Mrs. W. to lady Murray.
Copy qf the just note —“ Dear dnkhess,
a thousand thanks for your most delight
'nvitation. I must, I vvHI accept it,
though to do so, I am.compelled to pul
oii the Brewer and his wife."
fft/iy of the other note— " The reverend
i. presents his respectful compliments to
ady Elizabeth Whitbread, and regrets
that the sudden indisposition of his aunt,
irem whom he has great expectations, will
P’-ent him from indulging himself in
the high honor of wailing on the family to
dinner this evening."
■No man could ever have been more c ha.
gruied, than when, he received the fob
lowing note from Mrs Whitbread :
I.ady Elizabeth Whitbread presents
her compliments to the reverend Mr. H
and doubts not but that when fatigued
with the society of dukes and dutcliesses,
he would kindly condescend to put up
wife " ie ure °f a brewer and his ■
/ . I
CoXSTASTINOPIK, August 26.
Letter from his highness the grand vizier,
to the government general of the Mo
rea, and to the commander of the 1 urk
ish troops before Athens.
“Lord viscount Strangford, the Eng.
I. Ambassador to the sublime portc,
laving learnt that the Ottoman troops
(may victory always attend then.) are on
their'march to deliver Athens from tin
reoels, who have taken possession of it. *
he has presented an official note, signed s
with Ins respectable name, in which he e
signifies, that it would be highly agrees
hie to his majesty the king <jf i>?ut u.
tain, if orders were given for j uru - I
tionand preservati,on of the a .r .er.i u,
fices and temples, ami other ovnamciiN - J
antiquity which are in the city and euv.
rons of Athens, and w hich liavc ahvaj.; I
been so highly interesting to the lean.c ; I
of Europe. I
“Now, as his Britannic ms jest vis f ; I
of friendship towards the sublime pc.-.e I
and the cordial attachment and confident.-!
between the two governments ch.ilv i-.l
crease, and as the temples and other an- I
quilies of Athens have always excited th -I
admiration of Europe, ii is becoming i , .1
dignity of the sublime p.-irte to ad , J
measures fir the preservation of those r, I
markable objects, and also for the
of doing wnat may be agreeable >o i| .l
king of Englumi, and to'his ambus.aij
our good tide ml. ■
“ We therefore call upon yon, by voul
prudent zeal, and by the application el
your authority, to issue Hie necersaiy 0 .l
derstoall whom it concerns, (ha*, the U! ,l
cient edifices in Athens, and the viciniul
may he preserved uninjured ; thai i’,<!
damage he done to them, and tnat n J
complaints may he made to ns by onl
friend the amh.is-ador, or by others, tin!
our co ••mauds have not been punctua ,, J
obeyed.” I
j It is stated in the papers brought t, J
the Triton, under date Augsburg,’ Oct. tl
that a meeting of SoverTgns at 1, ( ip Z .,.. J
J talked of; at which it is s-.id the Kuu's .1
j England, Prussia Saxony, Bavaria "aul
•j Wirtembnrg, will he present. A Hail
I burgh article of 2i)ih Sept, contradiel
J this, but asserts that the Emperor Ale J
J ander has proposed to convene a ; E,iJ
J pean Congress, to consult on Turkish 1
I fairs, as he is by no means satisfied will
| the answer to the note of his Minister. I
j The King of the Netherlands in a specs
| to the Slates General of his kingdom, s -I
J “ Notwithstanding the events in the jfl
J vant, there are still well founded honl
I that peace will he maintained ” I
j Accounts from Vienna of the 2<k,h sJ
1 'ember, stale, that Wallachi*. and Alnkfl
• j via have been evacuated by the Tu-kl
1 I troops, leaving only a police guard drifl
I men. I
: J French, Piedmontese and NeapoliH
> I officers are slated to have arrivedfl
- I Greece to organize a foreign legiwH
) I aid of the independence of that cminfl
1 General Lefebrc Deswonettes is to cl
1 I mand it, and three French GeneralH
- I note, six colonels, and many other (H
, I cers of artillery anrt engines are lumeoH
-1 already enrolled and-commissioned infl
i I It is stated in tine Madrid papers of H
- 14-th October that Vilamova, charH
ii I with having-endeavored to- substitute II
e I •■eptihlican, for the constitutional >ystH
I has been condemned by the TiilmuiH
r I '-aragossa to eight years batiislim'‘nHf
i I one of the Canary Islands, to be de|H
- I vd of Ids commission and rank, and tel
is I the costs of tlae process. 11
Ii I About 20. persons paraded Saragossß
I the night of the Ist October with a sH
I-1 ’o which a handkerchief was tied, crS
i- J —“ Death to the militia and Iliego, ■
■1 I live the Holy Virgin.” Th sokhettH
r-1 tucked them, and seiaed live, two vH
1, I grievously wounded. I
At Carlhagena, as wed as at MalH
I, I tlie civil and military authorities h:>v.fl
k sistedat a grand procession in honA
it I Hi ego. H
;l It is confirmed that the
J Austrian Ambassadors to the
ri Portugal, have left Lisbon in
s the Uusslan Consul there having
e insulted by a mob, and satisfaction 99
t inip iw iiLlArl rv» jIV t a
ment. one English Minister
f remonstrated ineffectually against
r acts of the Portuguese Cories, as
9 tious of existing treaties; but be hasH
left the kingdom as reported, I
In London, the title Dundy has i’B
1 into disuse, having been supersede®
i the more expressive and elegant teHj
Corinthian and Exquisite. 9
I Mi. C Kemble, it is said, is
make a theatrical trip to America*
should not settle his differences.
i Covent Garden ■Managers.' fl
f Mr. 1 alum, the celebrated Iragedifl
nominated by .the'King a returning ollfl
I of the Electoral College of Arpcjoifl
which lie has possessions.
i he Count Bertrand, and the Count I
Countess Moutholun, and family, he
mg to the late household of
have obtained the permissi m of Louis ll
lo return to France, and have repairci®
Paris. ■
1 ue London papers announce the
•>' a ppearance, in 3 vols. of “ T.be I’iratß
by the author of Waverley, &c. ;
Juan,” in 5 Cantos; and a new Tragtß
by Lord Byron. H
Rum .Telhy —Among the novrltksH
the Parisian circles, rum jelly has bccoH
an universal fawrite —lt is made in fl
following manner. To a q lart botlleH
common white wine lake a pound cji l
gai, which is to bereducerl toasyrwp.®
clarified '( hen take an ounce of iiß
glass, which put on (lie fire till it is tiiH
cntghfy melted, pass it through .".cloth,
miv it with the syrup half warm. M 'B|
this mixture is nearly cold, pnur it into
while wine, and stir it well, so as (o
completely. Then add a spoonful
spoonful and a ha f (according Vs
strength which you desire to give
1) )"f old Jamaica ruin. Siir again 99
mixture, and pmr it into the mould, tHj.
H may lake the shape in cooling which
design to give it, if intended as a f ining
| lie table, or into glasses, if designed loß
handed round at an evening nariy. B
'Phil. Pape"M
820 lie ward. I
xijtsooyinsn in j.me ijisi, ka
Atrican negro woman, belonging to
subscriber, about 30 years of <*ge,
country marked in her face, is well ' Cl>< ’B[
m this city. [ wifi give Twemy I^H
ars if taken about this city ami
in jail; or, if at a distance, all rea-t
xpeases. B
M. Sandivif
November 12 ts H
Wanted Immediatelv, K
■\ GOOD COOK', without
hat is honest and ii.diisrinns. Apply t* l
hna .'f/ercer, five doors from liie i.jh^B l '
•nd ofHamburgh, or at this Office. BF
Jsov. 26 .If B