The Georgia journal. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1809-1847, August 15, 1829, Image 1

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I r%. C4K.1K & R4GLMI), s. *S- u. s. prim ers. MII*I.iK8]>Cj5RV!IaI*E, N.VTUIUDAY, AUGUST 15, 1S2SJ. VOLUME XX.—NO. 53. fs pubikl.cd tivire n wri’k during thr si ssion < and weekly i»r (lie remainder ot Die ) and Hancock St reels THE GEORGIA JOURNAL, i the legislature, meroi mrjf.tr, >u me corner ot Wnynr Til K K K DOLLARS per ann. in nd- > mcr.-ifFOUR DO GLAUS ntilie end .d thr year. The Taper will not hr sent to any person out ul the State, until the juuscriptiou money is patJ tn samnci* or satisfactory nlvrcncr * l Advertisement# inserted nt the usual rates. N. !»• Sale# of Land and Nugroes,by AdminiKtrntors, Executors, or lliinrdlans. are required, by law, to be ltrld on ^inmuo^nml county in w liich sates tnu«t be given in a liniA’ic f'aiette SIXTY.days prey ious tn tl».- da> ot Notice forth-' sale ol Tersoual IVnj.n ly inii'l lie given In like rn-nnrr FORTY days previous 11 the day ol sale. Notice to the debtors and creditors Han thdatr must be publish ed lor FORTY days. . „ „ N like that application w ’l be made to the Court ofOedmnry for leave to sell lan,I, must be published for FOUR HON 1 US. IVrsons interested In those Advertisements which are published Monthly, uillliiui ih-iu in the first and fourlli page of the fust imnertu every month. All business of this kind routieu •* to receive prompt Attention It the Oilier of the GEORGIA JOURNAL. CAMP MEETINGS for the Mil- ledcoville Di'tric t. At Helm nth A*. Tod ibelp A» L i . > Chap-'. ! .••mi L'M\’s, Aleutl . Or mill gee iltU' Creek tuber 1'hh LAiiNoLn. r. r. CHEAP GOODS. T iie subscriber COlitillUC'S to re ceive fre h suppl.es of DRY UO'iDS and FANCY Ail* TIC LE tion of l the Mar - Miile l/.-viHe. An ; I —H I* i :NIT E N TI Ait V. 7BXOW o:i IiidiiI, mi 1 lor solo :-l tlx.’ J..M trntlary, the following articles M&r. COSMiVRD’S OFFICE, M1LLEDGEVI LLE. HIGHEST PRIZE 3Q,G8@ JO€>!,&&&&' MILLEDGEVILLE MASONIC HALL LOTTERY. Authorised bvtheCJeiui.il Assembly of the State nf Georgln. most sr/.i:.\nn> scheme: 1 PRIZE OF 30,OOP DOLLARS, 1 PRIZE OF 15.000 DOLLARS, 2 PRIZES OF 10,000 DOLLS. J’ri 2 iv.z-s ,>r $5.onn i ') ill) 1,000 “> Ao tioo r» <io ”> t!o WOO ‘J."» rin ’» flu 7001 r»t) »lo r» iio non cr»o <ir» r* it.* 50o | oouo do fn nil $180,000, In bo d.s:ril)ii!rd in Prizns, HUCE or TICKETS \\ Ii•»!••*» $10— 11 m I vo- 1 i'jttrit'rsg.'Jli .’<0 Jl. COSNAHD'S Slate Lottery «$• F.xchavg c Gjjiee endhl Lottery is nnnniitv < i*U I ML CAltM JlMlI.II’s' ol l ! : the pin.I TAVERNS. mansTon house, MILLEDGEVILLE, GEORGIA. *•. under the lit tn e( >i.ind kimu n a, 'i r-. ■ ■plug a IIOI si. k MINI .. .11. urnr • si r, !i» KNTKK’I UN Ml N T. V. ul, x dele. lends ar.d Sira • e tl.. .MANSMl . M . FARM.*., MINI R. - Fnfjiiirei ):| h« I ii I o * ‘ \*l li t. hi L AI A V KT’I'E HALL, in Mii.i.i;iu;tvu.i.!:, Is now occti|.,,a n« n TAVI'.HN. tv JOHN A JOM.H. \\ KILN.-— e1o ***".ure his with their eoiii^ eouutiy aftoi ■ -. It is mid.ite uii tin l.iMi i i.. '' diamn near lie. Ingi )'•*!» I'effj. ■i irj h r i ol onol . : I LI .A HO com meticOX i iof e i“ /i'A INDIAN Ul LI'.N T: JIM, Si poetry. TOO GOOD TO 11F. LOST 1 in* follow inu I. trixi n ns a sample of Continental pot rn ‘t ap| i„ ti„. Hniti.nore K.mernld.nnd is-Hid to has d amour the old papers of the Editor’s father. The .n......... ' - ol. lionjainin Eiliu, lurnierly of Ivcnuc I hatpape Come out, v " t... To light the NN ho'rc " ng lor to go red i oat enemy, plaguy cute,” j oil hnow. Vnv shoulder whoop! ryes right—nndilres-—' l rout. t) ;i \ j*, w ip«> your tio«e; "\iu" • • ' » '> ‘leek—now carry w hoop! a - turn out your toe*, a t that’s I poke the • «top laugliln?, Nic\; * Plntoon—wheel!—hah -die. II ml up yur immle OH the left — No ttilking, more nor lev". r. ill ‘Lice?, r, keep your cantec n down NN * 'er cuing fir to travel : Fnptaio—| wants to halt nbit. My ahoe /s full at gi .nej. rrom the Democratic Duns. Mr. f’.iiiti't I ii-u Ire in your paper of to-dny one of the old n.e|il«l” Muir. Some vi or* si nee I met u ith one ofthesatn and feelings »f those days, w lit-h,« mured Washington* ici> for their pniirs, NN lio did Irdh money ntid men mlvnnre, And from hU lofiv throne did ri‘e, To war ng.'linit our ytieuili We’ll llintik the lmoornl I\',nt;o| Spain, The M,ites ,.| Holland khall share the sum'- NN h<> diil all they noild |e ‘elns free. And like tin ins, lies a nation be. The refugees and torie* nil, Dow n on their bended knees shall fnlk And beg permission nt «m hnnd«, To return and enjoy their land". P.uf were nil Amerlrinf my mir.il. 'l l retngees, they M»on should Isf.d, 'f'ti-it it they dined toerosvtii, j.,*a A halter should their portion he. July 23d. LADIES’ DEPARTMENT. bren c\penib’il ,bc lure of so mucblnbor and genius-—tliu waste 1 of so much urt mul <dc- gtuice, rim) it, the other why so much studied convenience, with here und there n prominent efiurt to please, though pleasure has r,o lit tle apparent itflinin to tvlmt is around ; und what will be the reply ? Wli have sprung from the all-pet ending and uni- ^ Vl 'rsal passion of man to participate in vari ous degrees of the sweet communion, and to share of the rapturous enjoyments of it.m.ux SOUil'.TV <A WOMANS’ IXSTINCTlVf, St'IlVAS- si.mj i.ovrt-i.Nr.ss 1 Sav what you will, therein lies the secret electrical shock, broke his plate with his fork and exclaimed in vehemence—“ That block head Hebert 1 as if it were not enough thru, she was really ajMessnlina, he must make iter an Agrippina also 1” ^ M hat a burst of indignation to proceed save that all [ from the bosom of a man so reckless of so cial laws nml human life as was Robespierre.' Ay. it was an expostulation of nature’s sym pathies for womav—the last of nil to be ex-I tiaguished or driven from the heart of max! \N lieu all others arc dead, or hushed to si- J lance by the violence of appalling crimes, these will break forth and plead with a voice | of all tlmt is good, or great, or ennobling in 1 of thunder that resolves lo lie heard !—And [/•'mm thr. Eastern Argus.} WOMAN. mu! w bat n Jtrangc; the character of man. Strike womiN from the face of nature—if your blot out her cx- isteuce—deprive man of the lofty inspira tions and noble, dating guidance of her beauty and her charms ;—shut from his soul only, for a moment, all hope of ever again floating on the courteous, kind, approving smiles of her sparkling, ntid now half-sor rowful countenance : and what is left to sus tain him ! Ah ? lie sinks—his soul cruni- bh'S the same instant beneath the overwhel ming heaviness of Iris despair—ho faints bc- tarc the dreary waste, the sickening void, pro seated in his destinies—hc becomes a nm- niac—alas, nothing 1 tih :it our few. * Without t ha lion,.- tlmt j»iig hted love endantw, “ NVithuut tiie 5))iilt>frum partial beauty won, “ ° ! "'imt were man a World \\ itbout asun! v Female influence is nearly every where of a texture so fine and delicate, and mingles so softly and imperceptibly with till the fcel- '"g s , passions, and whatever else interests the '| opposite sex, and controls all their cnlerpri- ; scs so gently and silently, and withal so char- ‘ niingly, that its tyranny, or better effects, sel- • dom stands out in a.t ctnbodied, independent | shape, like those of other causes, making distinctly in their train and appearances their ) true characters nml origin, lienee it is, that no more acknowledge, and intact, so few appreciate its real extent. Rut, nevertheless, there are on the pages ofhistor", and even within the earlier or late observations of most every individnal, very many striking instances, where the true cause was at the moment felt and acknowledged, w hich form exceptions to :ny general remark. Whole nations have sometimes risen tip in high rebellion ngninst their constitutional rider.-, under the maddening suspicions of woman’s invisible hut actively operating in - influence over the councils of those rulers.-— The history of quite every nation and dynasty in Europe, furnishes more or less f‘r v\ How, ton ill ur ninthvr.Hhc run chnng»‘ lu i JJ .N!mcl li‘ r ti.i \n iixl : vt hntrri i «.!ir has Mild, Hi ilui'i’. Is light In \\ li.it "In’ll »ny m .lot - i li ■ ulilc»t tiling on ri’curd an 1 jvt m w. [Ilyroo. Rut how ridiculous it is for man to set about ridiculing woman 1 There is nothing on earth—or conceived of in heaven ;—noth ing in this world, or any other, that he wor- . Dojis so fervently, courts so incessantly, nd- ■ frequent instances of commotions Irom such mires so sincerely ami obeys so implicit)’, a? lie does woman. She is to him nil in all.— He thinks of her twice where he thinks of lusdreator once, and renders hrr moro real homage every tiny he lives, than he does to the author of his own being. Yen, every enterprise which outers liis heart is weighed, tud formed, and fashined, and executed, with reference to her pleasure or taste, either mare or less remotely, or abandoned entirely causes, amounting to, or nearly to such results. I have not rnotn tn particularize even tho few now fresh upon my me- emory; yet the homage which was upon one occasion paid to the l'einnlo ecx, in the personage of the unfortunate 31x111!'. Antoi nette, of France, may be cited to exempli fy in n few words the instinctive pulsation of reciprocating tenderness and regard toward i them, implanted by God and nature within l.ccm.ee judged incapable uf yielding that 1 the bosom of man, und the which nn envy high wrought satisfaction, with which lie no hate, and even no barbarian inclination would fenst her inclinations. seem able ever wholly to eradicate. If a man builds a stately ship, tho clmuce is, that his only moving wish litis been to see gilded upon its lofty stern, or perchance car ved upon its majestic brow, the name or image of his beloved wife, or sister, ur other female friend. At any rate, the miser by as well us the more generous, wear.and tear their minds and bodies—exhaust the lire and vigor of their lives, in exposures of their property to winds, waves, wastes and destruction—in disciplining and feeding hosts of subordi nates, mid in the ten thousand various scr- vilifies and perplexities incident to a business life, and nil for u hut 1 Suva enough for what 1 Why, mainly, that they tnny hold out in themselves or their lnutilics tho more dazzling splendors and conveniences of wealth tn excite tho admiring gaze and cu Many will probably recollect the occasion to which 1 have alluded—the flOth of June, 17!fJ. The King, through the influence of thr. Queen,had put liis veto upon, i. e. refu sed to sanction, two decrees ordaining the deportation of priests ; and tho formal 1 .u: of a camp of twenty thousand men under the walls of Paris. An irritated populace, to the number of forty thousand promena ded before the King’s palace, armed with pikes, hatchets, and murderous instruments of all kinds, decorated with ribbons of na tional colours, shouting—The nation for mer ! down with the veto? “The National Assembly sent a deputation of pence to quell the insurrectionists. Rut the deputation did not reach the Thuillerics until six in the evening. All the donra of the apartments pidity of beauty and female loveliness; or, [were broken. Doth the King and Queen perchance,each one tomakcliis own solitary ] lmd narrowly escaped assassination. The female companion praise Him the more—ok-I Queen pointed to the Deputies the state of tnl him above tiie exaltation of all others—-] the King’s palace, mid the disgraceful man ually rate, that lie may at Inst ho mourned 1 tier in which his asylum had been violated, when in the grave, for a few short years, tti She saw that Merlin de Thionville, otic of the tenderness ai d holy, fervent sinrcriti/ of : the <1 'putation, was so much affected as to seldom, very seldom indeed, do they plead I in vain; so matchless is the power of their J eloquence. The greatest of men—-those whose minds) would seem strong enough to resist almost J any and every affection nt pleasure, have each in turn more or less publicly nckmnv-l lodged the unconquerable force of female* charms. Even u Napoleon Iionnnnrtr strug-J glcd—and then staggered, and at last fell submissive victim to their invisible operations! upon his soul—-and while no other power ■ principle on earth could bow his high antl| ambitious spirit for might, bat to receive un qualified homage 1 I have already run intol detail, whero t intended to confine myself t<«| generalities exclusively. Hut n i.ttle’' ohm detail upon our subject in relation to the won-J derful personage just named, will uut, I trustT be unacceptable to the reader. It is known—all historians record the fact] that Josephine’s infltionco over Nupolcoiu was almost without limits, r or a long while. 1 She had nt all times the art of mitigating his temper, nnd turning aside the hasty detcr-J initiations of liis angry moments.’' Where-] ever lie went—in whatever measures ho pnr-j licit ated, he felt the guidance and suggest lions of her lovod spirit. “ Wurmsor,” Ira he to her upon one occasion; “ Wunnsel shall buy dearly the tears which he matte! you sited Upon another time he wrote her as follows] —“ By what art is it that yon have been able to captivate all my faculties, nml to ennreni trnto in yourself my moral existence ! It a magic, iriv sweet love, o liich w I! finish on| ly with my life. To live for Josephinc- thcrc is the history of my life. I am tryinJ to reach you,- —I am dying to bo with yni^ Fool that I am, &c. * * * There was time when I was piottd of my courage ; anl sometimes, when contemplating on the ill that man could do me, on the falo whic| destiny could reserve for trie, 1 lived my cyt steadfastly on the cost unheard of misral tunes without a frown, without alarm -j—bt| now the idea that my Josephine may be utj well, the idea that site may he ill, and, abut] nil, the cruel, the fatal thought, that she mu love me lcsn ; , withers my soul, stops my Moo! renders me sad, cast down a leaves me nj even the courtlgo of litry and despair. “I stop, my sweet love—my soul is saJ-| my body is fatigued— my head is giddy disgust me—I ought to hate them—they sej urate me from my beloved.” I cannot conclude without citing the oft| cited henutiful nnd just compliment of inimitably enterprising lf.dyard to the fentd sex. “ I never,'’ said he, “addressed self in the language of decency nnd fricndsll to woman, whether civilized or savage, wil out receiving a decent nnd friendly nnswl Willi man it has often been otherwise, wandering over the barren plains of inhosl table Denmark, through honest Swcdl frozen Lapland, rude ar.d churlish I'inlal unprincipled Russia, and the wide spread] gions of the wandciing Tartar, if hung' dry, cold, wet, or sick, woman lias cvcrbl friendly to me, and uniformly so ; nnd tof to this virtue, so worthy of the appellation! benevolence, theso notions have been perf med in so lice and so kind a manner, tf it" l was dry, I drank the sweet draught, i if hungry, ate the coarse morsel, with a de( 1c relish. IiOKr.TTj [II.LEDGES’lLLE HOOK ir ,nl.>, as ahcm>, a ECn<-rr.l supply STATION \I1Y. Amoni! tli«* Books nr<’ :iun> Liable Stnmliml work'* in I. . . Medicine, Science &. Divinity. I Paper V"UU A emit v nriety H Bible*, llyiiii) [ Lb 1 * k and Led Ink It Ida I < Books, k Workfol’ Devo ’ Novels, Poetry, Voyages TravcD. Srbool Books, including every Book generally nml in tin* I Ilia English, (freck anti Latin Be- j I* l parlments of the Seminaries | Black of this Mate. \o entensivetoiler •’) or Book J'ortbemnnsenienlaiul instruc tion of cliiklrcii it young per woman’s heart und of woman’s surviving FECTIOKS 1 It may be, that none of these objects arc obtained in the course of some luisy men’s lives. It may be, that the inclinations of <uuiio men, ns viewed hy the world, appear to Imve no tcmlonry towards such i nd?.— The sordid miser, whose soul, apparently, has been made tn float oil nought but gold nnd silver, or the base coin of a speculating world ; and the lonely bachelor, who spends dtivs in thoughtful, unsocial melancholy, nml bis nights in seemingly unhappy seclu sion, may be. thought exceptions to my po.-i- tion. But wlio knows that tho secret incli nations of their hearts are none as strong in hopes of future conjugal felicity, as are those of men who give earlier vent and wider and more open scope to their passions ! True-— ** In iovouf youtli, »lint *oul liasi)ow»’ known :hi. D eling, tnMe, hnriimuiniK t•» its own * t ptiu»’d, w bile Beauty'* jwnsive fju ’ll Iron# h » ii.it tl tiof OH It'd, V. i c< r of gritrr, (I, tin* liotoHge of i niptur-Miiitt* 1 )) fr: ntfgtc of tt mmm t pork UbuikJB 1 jncils. | Paper Hangings Recently received the followin und valuable Works: Q tills, Bl ickand Hr<l IV Ornyo.t*—Self-pointing P biiu-r Pencil Cu".’#. u- I Columbus’ own Journal of hi« I lint Voyaao, t’s tlo'. tl)«‘ Oi-l Te diimeut, I NVnshington Irving’s Life of Co- Slieteliesof Persia, | imnbus. ** ' | Tales of a Grand bather, by Walter Scott, Death-Bed Scenes,by Dr. Wlinr- A rt of Living Long and Comfor tably, t 'tie’s French Coi Lifcol Ledyard, I*aily .Morsmi’s piquant oatirnc,i| Novel, the 0’»rifn*an«l0* l'ltt- heriy*, ^Flirtation,!*y Lady Campbell,ke Journal of the Mi’tliraJ Sri .\rrangenfiit5 have lieen made, wliieli will in future terure t the iu»seri!»er«, in the up-ooantrv, to the«e vain.tide periodicals, an early and piotnpt rrcejiti"'» <»t them. And a large supply ol FHKSIt G\ni»F.N SERBS. Ur. itC. Al*o an citeuM*e n«ortinont of Drugs, MedieitJ Preparniions. IVitcnt Medicines,Oil', Paints, Dye-Studs, Wmtinw-Gi.is-, Spire* an<l Perfumery—A constant supply of fine-t Wint.-r Strained Lamp Oil—Fine Tobacco and Markauoy anti Srot«*h SnttlT. All of which will be sold at very reasonable prices, for Cndi 6 ithfactory paper. March in A N APPRENTICE is wanted nt this Of- fire.—A lad Uor J4 year* of »je, who can read anti nnd is of Steady habit., will find the situation a desirable ore.— A toy trora the country would be preferred, uuj i 1 George Lunipkin, I j-xinginn. payment, viz F.I| nltri.n*. S ibspir VOTKT*. \ 11 persons nn* liur: 1> %J liu.’ied agnin-t trespass,n» orii iri'diiu; in NY.Nl. UOBI Il'I SI N D r, KAUl r«dtuiy, < Jeurgin—Jesse Cor-1 b«tl, of lh« dl«t. O. M. pOrteil b,for, Jl, 11111,1 U.. SmJj i, Ksq.one bay mare, about 12 prats, dm 10 dollar", bd dny of J Clerk loth July, If.!'. . Ml'UPIihY, C. I. C. I V\V.—The subscriber having located 1 A iiims'df nt RHinbridve. Deciitur r m.ly, olfi i s Id* ?rr\ire lien Ulir in tiie prartire of the Law. in the several rn, intie the Southern Eirruit. Btisine*# Copfided •«» liis rare will im-e ith prompt and due utteidn n. THOMAS BISHOP, jtny 11-aCri Tlimteh thyw ;• b>- - rt «oire lnpl."s hour, nttij n.li?, •• Ti.e peart Hit ti r.or • >t utouru d bn*«, •• N . I s,dl ,■ 1 \ ||. ,*e 1 . rt.dLn.MT. cmpley *• ' \ «i ‘imt' It trum If 1 itvt ii ai lii .piili djoj , *• Anti nil her kindred i-iierg'ie* impart '• That bur n the lit igidert m the purCftlu art' ' A cs, I am aware, that even other*—•near ly all men—only tell them it is as I luivo re- |ii i esonted---tliat nil their motives concentrate one object, and they will answer, nnd perhaps indignantly, to the contrary ; .is though the object were unworthy of so much I'l.AN I 1.1!rt. 1 solicitude! But, nevertheless, it is so, however I lie Subscriber insensible they may he of it, or little they have appreciated the inclination that sways their actions, or tlmt first swayed them into these Imbits of industry and toil, now tho oc cupation nml at tlm same time the pleasure of their lives. Goto that high edifice which is reared on olid columns of imposing splendor, amid irnainents of transeenflaut laslo unit gran deur ; or to yonder humble cottage, seen through the lowly but lovely vale on your left, nn.l ask the motive—the moving impulse of tjic builder of either ; why iti tljp pjp foas shed tears while she spoke. “ Foa weep, STonsieur Merlin," said she to him, “at set ing the King nml his family so cruelly trea ted by a people whom ho always wished to make happy.” “ Tntr y Madam," replied Merlin ; “ 1 weep for the misfortunes of a i.mri.v woman, tiie mother on a family. Rut do not mis take : not one of my tears fall for either King or Queen. I hate. Kings nnd Queens —it is the anli/ fueling they inspire me with. Tl is my religion to hate them." The unsparing revolutionist nn.l clamorous jacobin, Merlin—who could accuse and call loudly for the condemnation of Montmorin for merely being nt heart a friend, of the Queen ;—even Merlin, who could trump] both Kings and Queens beneath the heavy tread of anarchy and desolation, mellecl into tears on beholding a i.oveey woman, tho mo ther of a family, though in the person of a ltairful Queen ! All may remember, perhaps, tlio effect, a? narrated by another author, of this same per sonage’.- influence over even tho bloody and hardened feelings of Robespierre—her influ ence ns a woman, I mean, and not her influ ence us coupled with her high ciflieial sta tion. I will repeat it, as it is worthy remem brance, A young man of the revolutionary tribunal, named Yilatc, was invited to dine with Ro bespierre, Barrel’.- and St. Just, at a tavern near by the Thuillerics, during the progress of the Queen’s trial. They were seated around a table, in a close, retired room, when Yilatc was asked to give them some lending features of the trial, us already developed.- — He proceeded : but when be came to that part of his narrative where he described Ma ria Antoine i te ns having turned with great dignity to the audience, and, in answer with BEAUTY. In our opinion, the beauty of female sists much more in tho expression of I countenance than in either coniplaxiotj . feature. Wo have seen numbers of In with brilliant complexions—with the pit white nml the most delicate duraask- wcrc, nevertheless, not beautiful. Again have seen others with features almostaj| feet in regularity, in individual construe and general harmony, as have cverbceiJ ated by the finest touches of tho eculptf painter ? but they were not beautiful, imve seen others, however, with imp! features nnd unlovely complexions, vyhff hibiled that in their countenances commands the name—the magic nnifl beauty. This beatiry, too, is lasting, touch of disease will change the most] complexion into the pale of sallow touch of time will wrinkle tho brow] take from the chory lips their moisturt] fullness—hut the beauty of expressiu mnitis almost uninjured, und is, as loi virtue is maintained, indestructible. Troy Tiudi “ I IIOFE I DON’T INTRUDI 1 like to sec young meu gallanting through the streets with cigars in their t Ton. I like to see young men smoking eijj a room without knowing whether itisj aide or i ot. Civility. I like to sec squirting the juice of co over the floor of n house. Pretty I like to sec young men und buys .1 liquor in a bar-room. It looks well. I like to see young men and hoy- ing and swearing in the streets, laj of sense. I like to see persona when cult] church walk aa if they were killing Practice. I like to see young persons staiiiij) hurch as though their heads we* Hebert’s horrid accusation ot met her own son, said—“/ appeal io the con- j pivots. They wish to hear more tba science and feelings of every mother present,\ 1 hlto to see young ptoplo disiur to declare if such a crime is possible !”•—Ro-1 grcgrutioii hy getting up and {join j bespierre, struck with this uuswvr 8? by aw it is over. Gentility.