Newspaper Page Text
Georgia HI Statesman.
T £R M S‘-83 PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE,]
BURRITT & MEACHAM, Editors .]
THE
OEOBOZA STATESMAN.
is PUBLISHED EVERT MONDAT IN
MILLEDGEVILLE, GA.
0„ Way ne-Street, opposite the Eagle Hotel.
BY S. MEACHAM.
ftp Term*....Three Dollars in advance,
or Four Dollars if not paid in six months. —
No subscription received for less than one
rear, unless the money is paid in advance,
lad r.o paper discontinued till all arrearages
sc subscription and advertisements are paid.
N. b.— Notice of the sales of land and ne
rroes, by Administrators, Executors, or Guar
dians, must be published sixty days previous
(o the day of sale.
The sale of personal property in like man
ner must be published forty days previous to
ie day of sale.
Notice that application will be made to the
Court of Ordinary for leave to sell land, must
be published nine months.
Notice that application has been made so
Letters of Administration, must also be pub
lished forty days.
* ¥ * All letters directed to the Editors on
tusiness relating to the Office, must be post
ftdd
Margaret Kemp (
vs. < Libel for divorce.
Thomas Kemp. {
OCTOBER Term, 1826.
In the above stated case it appearing to
the court that the defendant is not to be found
in the county of Rabun. Upon motion of
Smith and Brown, Solicitors for Libellant.
It is ordered that service be perfected by
publication in one of the Gazetts of this State,
October term 1826.
The above is a true extract from the
minutes this 20th, November 1826.
H. T. Mozley, Cl’k.
55—tm
GEORGIA, > Whereas Jeremiah Fowler
Early county. ) and Nancy, formely Smith
now Tyson have applied for Letters ofdismis
sion from the administration on the estate of
Ladin Smith dcc’d. These an; therefore to
cite and admonish all and singular the kindred
and Creditors of the said dec’d to be and ap
pear at my office within the time, prescribed
by Law, to shew cause if any there be, why
said letters ofdismission should not be grant
ed, given under my hand this 11th of Novem
ber 1326.
NEVEN McBRYDE, c. c. o
49—6m
rasas
OF THE FIRST DRAWING OF THE
WRIGHTSBORO’
ACADEMY LOTTERY,
on the 7th April, 1827.
PRIZES only drawn —The Numbers not
drawn, remain in the Wheel, and may
be drawn hereafter. —Second Drawing, on
t,'ic 3rd Saturday in May next.
Those Numbers to whichno Prize
is opposite, drew two dollars each.
No No. No. • No.
12-4 75-4 96 28
13 77-4 97 38-4
15 80 2703-4 49-4
18 88 4 61-4
25-4 99-20 29-4 67
6 2509 34 69-4
8-6 10 35-4 92-6
30-6 16-50 58 96
3-6 18 3002 98-6
6 44 11-4 99
7 46 14 3300-4
9 48 19 3433-6
90-6 53 20 41
101 71 21-4 45
2 89 24 48-4
10 93-100 28 65
15 2605 34 57
19 22-4 37-4 58
21 * 25 3127 64
70 S3 34-20 93
229 40 47 95-6
953 48-6 48-.200 97
69-4 52 54-4 98.4
71 53 55 3506
81 56 3200 19..6
82 58 1 19-6
2404 61 2 40-6
52-20 2665 1 7-4 4 2-4
58 67 1 8 4 4-6
66 74 24 47* 4
73-4 8 0 28 51
The above Prizes subject to a de
duction of fifteen per cent, but those
*ho have drawn, may obtain new
tickets for their prizes without any
deduction, by returning their prize
tickets to me, or, if they choose to
take only a part of their prizes in
pew tickets, the balance will be paid
*o cash, from whjph the deduction
will be made. It will be to the ad
vantage of those disposed to adven
ture in this Lottery, to do so early,
for if the ir numbers should be drawn,
they must draw prizes, and if they
should not be drawn, they will re
,n: »!n in the wh el to a subsequent
drawing, therefore, the early adven
turer, at each drawing has a chance
for a number of handsome prizes, &
should a prize not be drawn, will
have as good i chance at the last
drawing tor the Capital prize, as
those who take tickets only at an ad
vanced stage of the Lottery.
Highest Prize, $5,000
And many of 2000, 1000, 500, 300
*OO, 100, end 50 dollars, and a va-
r **ty ot smaller prizes.
PRICE OF TICKETS.
Whole $2,00
Half 1,00
Quarter 50
Orders to me (post paid) will.be
promptly attended to
11 PETIT, Sec.
W’nyhtsboro. Columbia cu
RULE NISI.
GEORGIA, ) In the Superior Court,
Monroe County. ) September Term, 1826.
Anthony Gilmore, 1 RULE NI SI.
vs. >
Me Lamore Walking ) for foreclosure.
UPON the petition of Anthony Gilmore,
praying a foreclosure of the equity of
redemption, in and to Lot of land, No. one
hundered and fifty seven, in the fourth Dis
trict in the County of Monroe aforesaid,
stating that Me Lamore Walkins, on the 13th
day of April, in the year eighteen hundred
and twenty-five, executed and delivered to
him, a deed of Mortgage for the better secur
ing the payment of one-hundred and seventy
five dollars, for said Lot of land, and praying
a Rule Ni Si, for a foreclosure of the equity
of Redemption in and to said premises. On
motion, it is ordered, that the said Walkins
do, within twelve months from this date, pay
into the Office of the Clerk of this Court, the
principle and interest due on said Mortgage,
together with the cost of this application, or
that the equity of redemption in and to said
mortgaed premises be thenceforth hared, and
forever foreclosed : It is further ordered that
this Rule be published in one of the public
Gazetts of this State, once a month for
twelve months, or that the same be served on
the mortgager, his agent or attorney, at least
six months previous to the term at which the
money is directed to be paid, as aforesaid.
A true extract from the minutes, Given
under my hand this Bth day of September
1826.
WILLIAM f. HENRY.
Clerk.
Estray Horse .
GEORGIA, Jones County.
George g. king of Captain
Davis’ District, tolls before me
one Estray Horse, twelve years old,
his left fore leg white also his hind
legs, some saddle spots, no brands
perceivable, about five feet high, ap
praised by John Martin and Pleasant
Philips to thirty dollars; this 21st of
March 1827
STERLING LANIER, J. P.
A true Copy from the Estray
Book.
C.MACARTHY, Clerk, i. c.
66—3 t
Two Journeymen Prin
ters of Steady, Sober and industri
ous Habits, can have employment
during the ensuing summer, in the
Office ofthe Georgia Statesman
REPORT OF THE HILLSBORO AUXIL
IARY BIBLE SOCIETY.
The Hillsboro Auxiliary Bible Society,
held its Annual Meeting on Monday 16th inst.
The Rev. Iverson L. Brooks, delivered a wry
impressive and appropriate discourse ; on
reading the Annual Report, it was resolved
that it be sent to two of the Jtfilledgevilie pa
pers for insertion.
11. N. SPENCER, Cor. Stc'ry.
REPORT:
The Managers of the Hillsboro
Auxiliary Bible Society, in present
ing their first report, find cause for
gratitude and encouragement,though
at the same time, they must confess,
that there is much calculated to dis
hearten. Every sep they have ta
ken in the discharge of their official
duties, has tended to strengthen the
conviction, that the principles which
regulate the proceedings of this most
benevolent f all Institutions, are de
rived solely from that volume to
disseminate which, is its sole object.
More and more are they convinced,
that it is one of those great opera
tive means—which, in the hands of
the wise disposer of events, shall
hasten the latter day Glory; when
Ihe implements of war shall be con
verted into those of peace, and holi
ness to the Lord shall be inscribed
on all the works of man Believing
therefore that it is the work of the
Lord’s, they would be e..'ouraged,
for it will prosper. Though your
board have been able to bear but a
very humble part in this great work,
still they find cause for gratitude,
not only that they have been ena
bled to give this bread of lile, to
some who were unable to buy, and
have supplied others who under dif
ferent circumstances probably would
not have bought—but more espe
cially, that they believe that many
who have hitherto kept back, be
coming convinced of its vast impor
tance and usefulness, will unite heart
and hand with us in promoting this
great work of Christian benevolence.
Perhaps the discouragements
which the Managers have had to
encounter, are not greater than might
have been expected. The greatest
they conceive to be the apathy and
indifference manifested by so large a
portion of our fellow citizens. But,
as they believe that a correct un
derstanding of the principles bv
ivb < h the American Bible Society
is governed is all that is wanting in
order to insure it warm and devoted
friends, they trust that this indiffer
ence will soon yield to more active
exertions, to supply those who are
perishing for the bread of life.
From inexperience and other cau
ses. the Board have hud to labor un
der fdifficultics which have in some
instances, retarded the benevolent
opi rations of the Society.
Some time iu May la&t,they api>oint
oil a committee to uso all diligent
means to ascertain the number ot
He tibi erunt artes, pacisque imponere raorem, parcere aubjectis et debellare superboa.— Virgil.
Milledgeville, Monday, April 30, 1827.
Notwithstanding the obstacles that
occured to prevent their ascertain
ing the full extent of the dearth of
the sacred volume they found in
this vicinity seven families without
the Bible, who were considered pro
per objects of charity, and seven vo
lumes of the scriptures have in the
course of the year, been gratuitous
ly distributed, besides some who
had lived for years, and raising fam
ilies without the sacred volume in
their houses, have been induced to
purchase. From circumstances that
have come to the knowledge of the
Board, they are convinced that ma
ny within the sphere of our opera
tions are still living without the sa
cred volume.
Since the organization of the So
ciety, books to the amount of $33.-
25 have been purchased from an
Agent of the Augusta Auxiliary Bi
ble Society, and fifty Bibles, and one
hundred T< staments, have been ie-
ccived as a donation from the Parent
Institution, making iu all $107,76
worth of Bibles & Testaments. Dur
ing which time there has been re
ceived into the Treasury, $87,81,
Forty two dollars, have been paid by
annual subscribers, and forty five
dollars and eighty one cents, has
been received from the sale of books
—sixty six dollars and fifty cents
worth of books remain on hand. De
ducting the amount of money paid
out to the Augusta Bible Society for
books, and for contingent expenses
from the money received on sub
scription, and the sale of Bibles and
Testaments, it leaves a balance in
the Treasury of $45,65. —It is not
because theie is not a demand for
Bibles, that so many still remain in
the Depository ; but since the arrival
of the books, which was sometime
in January, the Board have not been
able to employ suitable Agents for
the purpose of disposing of Bible's.
What sales they have effected,
have been made at the Depository.
They are convinced that the em
ployment of Agents, will greatly in
crease our means for future useful
ness. It will be seen from the Re
ports of other Societies, that they
receive more from the sale of books,
by Agents, than any other way.
On the 21st of August, the Cor
responding Secretary, by the direc
tion of the Board of Managers, direc
ted a letter to the Secretary for Do
mestic Correspondence ofthe Amer
ican Bible Society requesting that
this Society be acknowledged as an
Auxiliary. In answer to that letter,
the Agent in New York, says “ I am
happy to inform you, that your So
ciety was cordially recognised as
Auxiliary, and that the Managers, as
a token of their Christian affection,
and earnest desire, to place your So
ciety in a way of immediate useful
ness, voted to it a donation of 50 Bi
bles and 100 Testaments, with which
you will be enabled to prosecute tnc
good work begun.”—lt is no small
privilege that we enjoy, by living in
an age like this—by being associated
with an Institution, the most grand
and sublime the world ever saw—by
forming a part of that system of
means which shall change the whole
moral aspect of our world—which
to the thousands of our fellow being-,
shall smooth the rough passage
through the valley and shadow of
death, and open to their vision a
bright and glorious immortality.
Let us not then be weary in well
doing—let us joyfully anticipate the
day when the “Glory ofthe Lord
'■hall be revealed, and all flesh shall
see it together”—When the King
doms of the world, shall become the
kingdom of our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
This plan of benevolence, is not
one of cur own contriving, were it,
we should say less.—No, it is one
that comes recommended to us by
the pious of every persuasion—and
upon the honest conviction of our
hearts, we trust, we have become a
tributary to this great fountain, that
shall spread a moral and a fertilising
influence over this world's wide
waste. Do we hear some object to
this What ! object to spreading
among our fellow creatures that sys
tem of morality, that plan of redemp
tion, which Christ left heaven to
bring to us ? object! we will not in
dulge the idea, for Oh! how misera
ble. how wretched should we be,
without the Bible. We will not be
lieve that any man, much less any
Christian man, can seriously object to
spreading the Bible—can refuse so
small a pittance for the purpose of dis
seminating those truths, which alone
can make men wise unto salvati n,
which alone can bring life & immortal
ity to light Time is on the wing-the
night soon cometh in which no man
can work and we hope and trust,
that all of us who profess to !ov«
the Bible cause, will awake from our
former inactivity.
Homo of our members who occu
pied these scats with us at our lust
the portals of the eternal world, and
we must soon follow them.
When the last loud trump shall
burst the graves, and summon the
unnumbered millions of our race to
the bar of God, will not th< swelling
interests of that eventful day, anni
hiliate forever the objections which
now quiet our consciences for not
coming up to the help of the Lord ?
When the righteous shall enter upon
those joys, that eye hath not seen,
nor ear heard—and the wicked shall
go away, where the smoke of their
torrents shall ascend up forever, and
ever,—would we not give millions
of gold, to redeem such a day as
this. The day now is ours, but be
fore yonder sun shall set beneath
the western horizon, it shall be en
tered on the records of heaven,
whether our deeds testify to the
sincerity of our hearts, when we say,
“ Thy kingdom come."
POETRY.
THE BIBLE.
“ This Us true saying, and worthy of all ac
ceptation."
This little boob I’d nther own,
Than all the gold and gems
That e’er in mon&rchs’ coffers shone,
Than all their diadems :
Nay, were the seas one chrysolite,
The earth a golden ball,
And diamonds all the stars of night,
This book were worth them all.
How baleful to ambition’s eye
His blood-wrung spoils must gleam,
When Death’s uplified hand is nigh,
His life a vanished dream !
Then hear him with his gasping breath
for one poor moment crave !
Fool! wouldst thou stay the arm of Death?—
Ask of thy gold to save !
No, no! the soul ne’er found relief
In glittering hoards of wealth ;
Gems dazzle not the eye of grief,
Gold cannot purchase health :
But here a blessed balm appears
To heal the deepest wo ;
And he that seeks this book in tears,
His tears shall cease to flow.
Here He who died on Calvary’s tree
Hath made that promise blest:
“ Ye heavy-laden, come to me,
“And I will give you rest.
“ A brused reed I will not break,
“ A contrite heart despise;
“My burden’s light. and all who take
“Afy yoke—shall win the skies !’’
Yes, yes, this little book is worth
All else to mortals given—
Fcr what nr* all the joys of earth
Compared to joys of heaven ?
This is the guide our Father gave
To lead to realms of day—
A star whose lustre gilds the grave—
“ The light—the life—the way.”
An abridgement of a classical Tour
to Troup and Muscogee Counties:
Continued.
ARGUMENT
Aspect of Thomaston—dress of its inhabit&ns
—natural beautifulness of the Ladies—the
•ex are adventurers in love—cruelty and
despotism of Fashion—Physiological reflec
tion* on the influence of the modern female
cuaiume on the constitution —a Belle—whit
—Arabian beauty—The blowing spring
of Muscogee—Manner of building a viilag
—reflections on Societ.y
A few days more, and wo must
part With our readers—part perhaps
! rever, and that too betore we have
even cultivated a familiar acquaint
ance, like travellers in foreign coun
t ries, whose roads meet and again
-parate tiiem. We must bespeak
-wilt travelling, and gallop along
leaving the minor parts of speech,
conjunctions, adverbs, prepositions,
&c. at the mercy of a jostling mo
tion to assume their attitudes in the
■■entence. How much troublu and
perplexity do these parts of speech
cost the composuist of every lan
guage, the little hooks and eyes, that
unite the parcnchemtous vessiclcs
of thought, and allow the soul's pur
meaning toipour aonlg its full torrent!
The vassals of Poetry, their position
>mootheus or roughens the prosaic
line; and how many men have writ
ten themselves to fame, by merely
having detected and learnt their
plasticity and coilocability!
In the afternoon of this day, after
leaving Forstyh, we rode into Tbom
aston. This little town is all new
that you would say, the other
day, it came out of the timbers,
which grew upon the spot. The
little tapering dress coat of the
males, the short-bodied tunic, and
wide ribband, which girdled the
comparatively huge, but natural and
comely wast of the females, all indi
cated the distance, and noninter
course of capitol cities, and bore evi
dence of the fashions of other days.
Here I beheld woman in all the
glory and felicity of her natural form,
not twisted aud distroted into de
formity by the direful and reveng*•
:ui Dcamon of la-hioo. The ver
milion of health spread the feast of
the eyo upon her lovely clu ck, the
delicate passions of her soul, natur-
fVoL. 11. No. 17—Wholk No. 69.
every feature of her lace, the firm
native globularity of heir bosom
>tood forth in a world of loveliness
and attraction peculiarly its own, the
pledge of support to future genera
tions; and the proportions of her bo
dy were those of the primitive
syinetry and beauty of her form.—
In her constitution expanded by
health, where life unfettered enjoy
ed a free circulation in every part,
roved, gamboled with natural fierce
ness and energy, in the sphere of
virtuous and refined sensibility, those
gay ideas, like the vines tendrils
which look to future existence, and
are wait to encircle man with a firm
grasp for support. Hence nature
made her comparatively weak, and
compensated her with loveliness,
that she might not be repulsed, and
though necessarily an adventurer in
her affections, she is sure of suc
cess.
All her motions were fre and
light as those of Milton’s Eve ; and
she seemed to live and move in the
firm enjoyment of physical strength,
and of moral and natural feeling.
I exclaimed O! tis Fashion, which
has sickened her, which has wreck
ed and dilapidated the fair world
of woman, and left it little better
than a barren waste!—which has un
feelingly devoured that beauty and
that loveliness, which nature intend
ed for the enjoyment of Man, and
for the decaration of his home and of
his fire-side. Compared with the
Daphnes and the Hebes, the Maids
of Thomaston, how vast is the dif
ference between them, and the vil
lage girls of other places ! Famish
ed and shut out lrom nature in the
hot houses of fashion, like plants
vegitated in the shade, they come
forth pale and dilapidated, never
having breathed the pure oxygen of
life. Their constitution crippled in
infancy, and still fettered, they nev
er arrive at the perfection of nature,
which is abhored as an abomination.
The nutritive juices turned from
their proper channels by cruel com
pression, go to unnaturally expaned
other parts, and destroy the harmon
ic proportions of the constitutional
form ; so that a modern Belle, chis
seled out by fashion, unites the in
fantile wast with the overgrown or
gans of the adult, and should of right
he class 3(1, in the history of Zoologi
cal Man, among monstrosities.—
Without the men were brought up in
the same way, with their constitu
tion strangled from infancy women
thus raised can never become their
fit companions and friends. Such a
woman is doomed never to feel the
full torce of moral and physsical sen
timent, for her mind, from its organic
connections, will likewise be deform
ed, and there must exist a dispro
portion both physically and mentally,
which must disfigure and wring tears
from the fair Image of matrimony,
and convert her sacred temples and
abode into a den of porcupines. A
woman thus enfeebled, and her con
stitution sown with incipient disease
for life, naturely seizes and employs
the arts of cunning and dissemula
tion to defeud her weakness, and
the perfection of these arts is co
quetry—she feeds continually upou
Hi Novelests story, and mounts up
and fives iu a world of tumid unre
ality. Galantry pretends to sympa
thise with this artificial weakness,
and stretches forth its masculine en
ergies to succour it; coquetry plays
up fomentingly to galautry, feeding
it with ambrosia -, and like the fair
images of the Grecian Deities, when
the bloody Roman came, the excel
lence and dignity of human nature
fall prostrate on the grouud. To
woman organizing her charms in the
toilett, there comes a voice from fu
turity, she does not hear, “Spare the
unborn, ye sole and lovely hope of ex
istence winging its way forward, ye
fair and beautious depositaries of the
human t ace ! ”
Man has never yet loved nor ad
mired woman feebler and weaker
than nature made here.—Listen to
one ofthe oldest of the Arabian Po
ets. ‘ She is tall and slender like the
rush, or like the spear of th Men of
Yemen Voluminous at mid height
from right to left, she enters the tent
door with difficulty. Two firm
pomegranates smell the alabaster
whiteness of her bosom- Her eyes
arc soft and tender like the Lynx’s:
Her hair flows over the snowey white
ness of her neck, like the Camel's. ”
The Arabian pomegranates have
left the world, and fashion glories in
having demolished the forms, which,
by the consent of all ages, except
the present, nature had made most
beautiful—the theme of I'oessy—
(he charming land-marks, the volup
tuous distinction of the sex—the
nectariferous vessels of unborn men
—the feast of the cradle!
Tho young men of business, at
this hour, were engaged in the sport
of the ball, at -Inch they mauilefeted
(OR ,4 IF NOTIfAIDiN SIX MONTH 6
was truly a healthy and athletic ex
ercise, not much dissimilar to one,
which was a favorite among the an*
cient Gre( ks, and was played off with
a spirit and dexterity, which would
not have dishonored the youth of
Sparta or of Athens. Each player was
armed with a huge jacobstaff, with
the forceful blow of which, they kept
the ball in the region of the clouds,
or projecting wide arch.a through
the air, the plain.
Some old Philadelphia beer bad
found its way here, for a sip of which
beverage we paid 50cts. and which
was very refreshing, famished as we
were with heat. Here they shewed
us some yellow sand, which had beeo
brought from what Midp called the
blowing or bellowing spring, lately
discovered in Muscogee ; and which
they assured us, to add to the mar
velous properties of this spring, was
perfectly soluble in the mouth.—
Supposing it to be some neutral salt,
1 instantly crammed mine full, bat
found much difficulty in again get*
ting my fames clear. From all I
could learn, I was led to suppose
the coutinual boiling and rumbling
of this spring was occasioned by a
stream of hydrogen gas, constantly
rushing out through the water,
which might be generated by the
current, which supplies it, passing
through a bed of iron ore, the ore,
by the assistance of other elements,
‘ decomposing the water to form and
oxide, while the other base, hydro*
gen was liberated, and carried onto
the fountain, there being no other
outlet. The water was said to be
warm ; and this fountaiu, on account
ot its wonderful and singular proper*
ties, being one which can blow and
thunder, bids fair, at no distant day,
to arm itself with vengence against
the diseases, which still belabor and
emaciate the human frame ; putting
the Indian and Ballston imposters to
flight, will array the Materia Medica,
of the schools against the school's
nosology, will then assemble around
on its green margin, the gay and the
fashionable, the fair and the beauti
ful, sick of city pleasures and city
haunts, with the pallid train meving
slow under the weight of afliction,
disgusting and repulsive, and will
Mow to earth’s nethermost corner,!
whatever of age of sorrow or of in
firmity oppresses them. So the
good Peruvian Doctors are said to
walk round the sick bed, and blow
with their lungs full force without
ceasing, uutil they have blown the
disease away from their patients.
Here although this place was so
new, we saw, as elsewhere, those
buildings erected, which look to the
administration of the laws, and tho
execution of their penalties—a court
house and a joal. Here too were to
be seen tne workshops of the de
scendants iEsculapius and of tho
Atorney’s at law, thrown forward in
to public view. The order, in which
a village, so well as I could discover,
goes up de novo, is after this manner.
First go up the buildings. I have
mentioned, which may be consider
ed more or less for public use, and
the propelling power of pert is the
public fund ; next, store houses an 4
private dwellings, next comes creep
ing up the church, rising by the slow
and weak hand of charity—Money
extorted to compromise with sin;
and last tho Academy, the town's
great night cap, in which all the chil
dren are to be quietly lulled to sleep,
by some half paid wight of fair pre
tentious and northern fame.
This order of building a village
offers such a lesson, such a powerful
commentary upon human nature, I
cannot pass it over in silence.
The operations of human depravi
ty become a matter of prophesy and
calculation, and before either evil or
good is done, the instruments ofle
gal cocrtion are provided with fore
sight and sagacity, to protect the
public harmony and tranquility of
society. In the embryotic elements
of a village, a court house and a joal
stand conspicously developed, aud
are the first to reach maturity. We
arc therefore, to conclude, the hu«
man propensity to sin stands devel
oped in the same proportion forward,
menacing public rights and public
tranquility; that man is really the
natural enemy of man, and ought
mutually to fly eachotbers sight;
that the celestial image of the crea
tor planted within him, lies prostrate
broken, and pays tribute to the throne
of the fallen Archangle, and that
the motion, which carries (be human
race from life, it is met by another
motion, which approximates that
huge Machine of woes, with all its
interminable train and bustle of op
perstus,—vast receptacle ol their in
corporeality; dolorous. My thoughts
shrink back into nonperception, and
hide themselves from what they
would gazeupon, were tho subject
not so transcendantly subline and
terrific.