Newspaper Page Text
Timber 18
fnamin 0- with fire, and with it,
Ihct*" 0 ' 8 * which 1 had suffered at
f< S' tb night as we did many sue
w ones, we lay under the open
i on the shore of the clear stream
*l'a operates the two countries.
j I i,j my wearied limbs upon the
,‘n 0 f pebbles, on the slope of a
; for repose The night was
6 'hout a cloud, and silent; the
*' s like diamonds seen in the bot
- 0 r a limpid stream, were coasting
L r lonely way through the blue
Lss above : the juvenile moon,
a try of Poessy seen behind a
'rove of trees, a beautiful crescent,
Lwing nutrition from the sun aud
Jpening her virgin charms id bis
, lIZC was hastening down to bathe
.‘d rest herself in the green houses
f Thetis alul the Amphitritomc
Maid* when l first felt the soft and
, at ,e’ influence of sleep unnetting
ilie fibers and relaxing the joints oJ
limbs. We had during the day
over the country, through
which the great central canal was
li have passed, and I had been re
feting on its majestic rocks, and
t ho interminable range of its gran
ge hills towering aloft; and on the
power necessary to penetrate their
Adamantine bowels, and let commeice
Jance through upon her floods
With these thaughts, and the star
light and illuminated heavens playing
through my eye-lashes, I gradually
jropt into sound sleep,—my ideas
continuing to course eachother thro’
mv train, until all was still and silent
, n ’d oblivion reigned. No sooner
ras this done, than another scene,
h new actors, was brought forward,
nand and supernatural as imagina
’ion can conceive, and was acte t
through in the land of sweet slum
ber-, the brain’s sublime and myste
rious panopticon.
Man’s immortality is abscurcd by
the operation of his vital functions,
the nutritiveness of his thoughts be
ing sent and dispersed through hi
system to support life; it is onb
when asleep, the capaciousness o,
his immeteriality stirs itself, eleva
ting in it" ample horrizon his soul’s
full orb arid splendor. It is here tha*
neither space nor time intercepts his
motions. he enjoys the prerogative
of eternity, and feels himself bound
cdonly by the abyss of spirit, of
which he is an atom —of thinking
feeling spirit, which pervades and
lives diffusedly in all corporeal being,
forming an atmosphere to the uni
verse.
I here felt the full force and rav
ishment of the pleasures of arcaniol
ogv—pleasures above all others,
which human nature has always lov
ed to lee!, from our fair Mother ot
Paradise t o Pandora, from Pandor
to us, and which ;t will always lov*
1 saw things, which would mock tin
grasp of the organic eye—things in
corporeal but which yet bad form
and colour, and lived and moved—
form wit ho u i substance, colour wit;,
cut light, lived without life, L mov
ed without space.
How sublime is the land of sleep
and how its activity and heroism
mocks that of wakefulness ! A dream
is a bright thought in anew world
by a disfranchised spirit! Object
ore not counted here by the dozen
or are so many miles ofl, but Un
hand will reach in a moment what,
iftinctured with corporeality, would
lie millniiU£pP leagues distant.
I ficord at the feast of
the great,’Tvhich were visible both to
the evo and ear, and had the appear
ance of beautiful polished gems. —
They enjoyed a permanent existence
were moveable, soft and slippery to
the touch, & were of various shapes,
sizes, and colours. They were ot
the same specific gravity, as the me
dium of air, and when thrown up
would dance about in the most fas
cinating manner, enveloped in their
beautifiil phosphoric atmospheres,
which moved with them, and which,
when taken down, they appeared
again to absorb. On being thrown
Up, I discovered, as soon as (hey be
gan to exhale or sen! out thicr at
mospheres, the sound would become
musical, and on their reabsorption it
would again become plain, so that
like corporeal sound, motion was ne
cc=;;ary. The sympathies or conso-
Uous tone depended upon the num
ber, size ami colour of those, which
w ere thrown iij); the size determin
ed the intensity of sound &the colour,
*he quality or note. There would
he as many distinct tunes as the num
ber ot hartnon c systems ofsizes&co
lours thrown up,all of which could be
distinctly heard and enjoyed by the
inorganic car of the immaterial per
cipient. Their musics or harmonics
"ere three, one originating from the
P| ze, another, from the colour, the
third, from their combination, and
the beautiful policies of dense light,
"h cli surrounded them were vari
cd so that there was the same mini
b r, as 1 may express it, of tunes aud
harmonics of their atmospheres.
This music, in its structure and
luri'iation resembled in many re-
s i"' Is, the terrestrial,the essence of
consists in the gradativc
Movement and variation of suitable
■ ponds. This gradation and vniria
non of sound on stringed inslru
ri " , tiU, is produced by varying too
i* ,ze °f the soniferous chords, and
" &,r length, while rihrutiiig ; and
mlic flute airl trinti instrument*,
'-'oa'r which arc included the or
r>f roire. ip o
ent way.
But neither this music nor th*
modus operandi of its production can
b understood by the organic mind.
It is triple sweetness, the mother ot
sweetness, which cannot find a pas
sage to the gross corporeal ear, nor
to the perception, which is entang
led in the discordant and jaring atoms
of matter.
It was here 1 exclaimsd, where
the Grecian muses, the lovely and
beautiful daughters ofthe son of Sa
turn, must have got that fire, with
which they lit up the courts and pal
aces of Olympus, which peeled in
harmonic strains at the feasts of its
immortal gods and sovereigns, and
which made their whole country
wring for fifteen centuries with all
the charms of melody;—audit was
here Prometheus only could havj
obtained that fire, which was to
warm and animate man’s musical
frame, he had formed of clay.—This
was the precious fire, brought from
these musical atmospheres, for which
old lonides and Pindar and Maro so
long and so ardently besought their
country’s muset,. which since then
has been sought by Waller, Gray,
Savage, Dante, Bocaccio, Moliere,
Pope, Shenstone, Drvden, Milton,
Young, Tasso It is in the harmo
nic essence of fire the soul ofthe De
ity resides, the diffusion of which all
nature enjoys. It is music, which
warms the created soul of man—it
is connected with fire, its distilled
spirit—th** fire, which exhales from
the Cherubim. It can warm the
Lyre of the Poet, and make the
words of human language glow with
unquenchable ignition, which liv-.
through the grave, frown upon tli
dilapidation of time and bear th
name of sepul h r.d man tlirough
le remotest fulu'ity. In the liu
man heart in the state of alloy, it i
r.oncentrated in the bosom of the
celestials, and is the universal elt
mental principle of love. The Dei
ty is its source, whence it radiate"
-is the crude material heat of th
■m. throughout the moral universe
.nd returns back, digested in the la
norat ory ot created intellect, in the
hape of adoration.
So of«dd tung the Bards of Pales
tine on Horeb’s top or by Jordan’,
stream —The most ancient of the
Days,—the lonely dweller ofthe sol
itude of eternity was love.” Love
was the womb, or matrix w hence th
infant universe sprung, is the nuin
turn of its maturity. When earth had
broken her hold ofthe D* ity, and
was dashing unmoored Uj on ruin
Love traversed the wide empire ot
time to come to her assistance ; na
ore was not unconscious of her au
gust visiter, and sent her beautiful
messenger down from the mansion
>f suns to wait on his arrival, and
roclaim it to her children, — the star
■>f Bethlehem. The day when Lafay
ettccame, when a few individuals,
isolated on a little nuke of this plau
<*t, rejoiced, would not, listen ye,
make the shadow to that day of
; ive. when existing man, tor once,
rejoiced and held festival with hi
mother man entire of futurity’s u.i
nnpregnated womb. But lam a
-inner, and should not write suet:
ihings.
From the Augusta Chronicle.
Those who are assiduous in urging
tlie propriety ofelecting Mr. Forsyth
to the office of Governor of this
State would fain induce us to believe
him well calculated to allay the vio
lent feelings which have been exci
ted by the imprudence and rashness
of the present incumbent; but, unf< r
tunatcly for the correctness ol then
losition, it is left entirely unsupport
ed, either by argument or facts, and
indeed, is directly refuted by almost
very act of bis public life His de
cided approval of the conduct ol
Governor Troup, would, of itself, b
sufficiently evincive of this, were it
not established by the general cours
of his own public career, winch is al
most as remarkable a* the Govern
or’s, for its violence and imprudence
The undignified irrascibility which
lias marked bis care r iri Congress
for the last few years, has tended
very much to destroy his usefulness
in that body; and the pevish, quer
elous. and often violent, manner in
which he engages in almost every
subject, however trifling, that cornea
before it, has left him, at last, with
scarcely a particle of influence. —
This must be sufficiently obvious to
(hose who have read the debates in
Congress, and seen the neglect and
indifference with which his remarks
have been treated, and tiie pungent
replies which they have sometimes
provoked from distinguished mem
bers: and, as an evidence of the light
in which his political conduct in tins
respect, is viewed by those who have
been eye-witnesses ot’it, we select
th following extract from the Nati
onal Journal, in reply to the Charles
ton Mercury, which had charged it
with misrepresentation of the public
debates, and adduced to this effect,
a letter of Mr. Forsyth, which was
published in the Journal, to correct i
an error that had occurred in the
publication of one of Ins speeches.
1 “We published that letter without
i a 1 ingle comment. leaving it to pass
I with our readers for just v. hat it is
j worth. We did not say, as rre might
(linvosaid, and as we now do say,
.t"at Mr Forsyth isinlhc practice't
[-peaking to or at almost every silt *
' met v!;rh tC'tnvs Wl'-ro Oongrtss,
GEORGIA STATESMAN, MONDAY, MAY T. 1827
and ihat it is not to be supposed t tint
oue who is such a spendthrift in lan
guage can give an account of every
word he has uttered. We are of
•pinion—and it is an opinion founded
<», an observation of all the course
of Mr Forsyth in Congress, since
I .is retnrn from Spain—that there is
'scarcely a member of the House ot
Representatives, (there may be one
or two) who is so liable to the im
putation of expressing himself in de
bate with a vehemence of expression,
which after reflection wouk, or ouglA
to iuduce him to modify. Nor is
there a member of the House so fas
tidious as to the manner in which his
speeches are reported, with, perhaps
a solitary exception, which we have
no objection to bring home. We
have nothing to say against this cha
riness of reputation. He who has no
fame to spare, is wise to husband
that which he has.”
From the North American Review.
Extract from Capl. Head's account of his pas
sage across the Andes.
At Mendoza our author prepared
for a passage across the Andes. Car
riages proceed no further, and a
caravan of sixteen mules was engag
ed to take himself and party over
the mountains. On his way up the
Cordillera he visited the warm baths
of Villa Vicencia, and the mines of
(Jspallata In ascending the'Andes ve
ry little occurred worthy of observa
tion, except in passing the luderas,
of which all travellers speak so much.
The road is along the north bank of
the river Mendoza, which flows with
great rapidity down a deep valley,
almost from the top of the m *un
;ain. For the most part there is a
sufficient width of level ground be
tween tbc margin of the river and
he base of the steep acclivities for a
c aivcuicnt road, hut in some instan
ces spurs ofti.e mountain project so
abruptly upon the stream as to leave
no room for a passage. It is then
necessary to wind along the side of
' iie precipice, which thus intervenes
by a very narrow path, sometimes
less than two feet in width, afforded
barely room for a mule to pass with
its burden. On the left the Mendo
za is foaming below with great fury,
tad on the right the mountain as
cends almost perpendicularly till it
is lost in the clouds. The path is
-oinetimes five hundred feet, and in
me instance seven hundred, above
(iieriver, and the slightest accident
would precipitate the iruleandits
ruler to the bottom. So steep is
iiie slope, and so near do s the hill
i iproach on the right, that the trav
iler can touch it with his hand and
frequently with his shoulder. So
cautious is the mule in passing these
laderas, so deliberate in feeling his
way over loose stones, and so en
tirely free from any sensation of gid
diness or embarrassment, arising
from the great elevation and the
:-ight of the yawning abyss beneath,
that any accident to a traveller, who
-its quietly on his mule, is a very
rare thing. He is much more safe
ban lie would be on foot. But bag
gag • mules are often precipitated
from the path, by reason of their
Iliad striking against the side ol the
mountain, and thus pushing them
from their narrow foothold. A lit
tle experience teaches them to guard
against any serious accident from
'his cause, by walking on the very
verge of the pathway. Travellers
ire apt to be alarmed at this propen
sity ofthe mule, and at finding them
selves hanging on the brink of the
precipice; hut there is no danger
if the mule is allowed to pursue hi"
course, and trust to his own discre
tion. The following description by
Captain Head oi hispassige ofthe
Ijadera dc las Vacas. presents a vi
vid picture of the scenes he wines
"ed.
■ As soon as tve crossed the pass,
which is only seventy yards long,
the capataz told me, that it was a
very bad place for baggage mules,
that four hundred had been lost there,
nid that we should also very proba
bly lose one. He said that he wouid
get down to tbe water at a place
about a hundred yards off, and wait
there with his laso to catch any mule
that might fall into the torrent, and
he requested rite to lead on his mule.
However, I was resolved to see the
tumble if there was to be one so the
capataz took away my mule and bis
own, and while I stood on a project
ing rock at the end of the pa>s, he
scrambled down on foot, till be at las*
got to tbc level of the water.
‘ 'Fite drove of nudes now came in
sight, one following another; a few
carrying no burdens, but the rest
were either mounted or heavily la
den, and as they wound along the
crooked path, the difference of color
in the animals, the different colors
and shapes ofthe baggage they were
carrying, with the picturesque dress
of the peons, who wjpe vociferating
the wild song by which they drive on
the mules, and tbe sight ofthe dan
g rous fiath they had to cross, form
ed altogether a very interesting
-cene.
•As soon as the leading mule came
to the commencement of the pass
ihe stopped, evidently unwilling to
| to procm-d, and of course all the rest!
-topped also.
‘lie was the finest mule wc had,
j and on that account had twice as
| much to carry as any of the others;
Is load had never been relieved.
> nd it cosfHod of four wrt want wj»,
two of which belonged to me, and
which contained not only a very
heavy bag of dollars, but also papers
which were of such consequences,
that I could hardly have continued
my Journey without them. The
peons now redoubled their cries, and
leaning over the sides of their mules,
and picking up stones, they threw
them at the leading mule, who now
commenced his journey over the
path. With his nose to the gronnd,
literally smelling the way, he walk
ed gently or often changing the po
sition of his feet, if he found the
ground- would not bear, until he
came to the bad juirt of the pass,
where he again stopped, and 1 then
certainly began to lock with great
anxiety at my portmanteaus; but
the peons again threw stones at him,
and reached me in safety ; several
others followed. At last a young
mule, carrying a portmanteau with
two large sacks of provisions, and
many other things, in passing the
had point, struck his load against
the rock, which knocked his two
hind legs over the precipice, and the
loose stones immediately began to
roll away from under them ; howev
er his fore legs were still upon the
narrow path ; ho had no room to
put his head there, but h ■ placed his
nose on the path on his left, and ap
peared to hold on by his mouth.
II : s perilous fate was soon decided
by a loose mule which came, and in
walking along after him knocked his
comrade's nose off the path, destroy
ed his balance, and head over heels
the poor creature instantly com
menced a fall, which was really quite
terrific. With all his baggage firm
ly lashed to him, he rolled down the
steep slope, until he came to the
part which was perpcudicular, and
then he seemed to bound off, and
turning round in the air, fell into the
deep torrent on his back, and upon
his baggage, and instantly disappear
ed. I thought of course that he was
killed, hut up he rose, looking wild
and scared, and immediately endeav
ored to stem the torrent which was
fmming about him. It was a noble
effort, and for a moment he seamed
to succeed, hut the eddy suddenly
caught the great load on his back,
and turned him completely over ;
down went his head with all the
baggage, and he was carried down
the stream all I saw were his hind
quarters, and his long, thin, wet tail,
lashing the water. As suddenly,
however, up his head came again ;
but he was now weak and went
down the stream, turned round and
round by the eddy, until passing the
corner of the rock.l lost sight of him.
I saw, however, the peons with their
lasos in their hands run down the
side of the torrent lor some little dis
tance ; but they soon stopped, and
after looking towards the poor mule
for some seconds, their earnest atti
tude gradually relaxed, and w’hen
they walked towards me I conclud
ed that all was over. I walked up
to the peons, and was just going to
speak to them, when I saw at a dis
tance a solitary mule walking to
ward" us. We instantly perc ived
that he was the Phaeton, whose fall
we had just witnessed, and in a few
moments he came up to us to join
his comrades.’
Majoi General Gaines, was at a
public didner given at Jackson, 'Ten
nessee, in last month, and being call
ed upon for a toast, said, “ he beg
ged leave to quote one, drank by an
illustrious individual [Mr. Jefferson]
in honor of a distinguished citizen of
this state, [General Jackson] and
gave “ Honor and gratitrde to him,
who has filled the measure of his coun
try's glory."
Royal Modesty —King Charles 11.
asked Stillingfloet bow it came about
that lie always read his sermons be
fore him, when he was iuforined, he
always preached without book else
where. He told the King, that the
awe of so noble an audience, where
be saw nothing that was not greatly
superior to him, but chiefly the see
ing before him so great and wise a
Prince, made him afraid to trust him
self; with which an-wer the King
was very well contented. “ But
pray,” said Stillingfloet, "will your
Majesty give me leave to ask you a
question, too. —Why do you real
vour speeches, when you can have
none ofthe same reasons ?”—"Why,
truly, Doctor," says the King, “your
question is a very pertinent one, and
so will be my answer. 1 have ask
ed them so often, and for so much,
I am ashamed to look them in the
face.”
Com. Porter. —We have seen a
letter from Havana, dated April 7, to
a highly respectable gentleman in this
ctiy. and have been permitted to
make the following extract from
it ;
"One of our coasting vessels has
arived here .bringing on board, as
prisoners, the first officer of Com.
Poter, one lieutenant, and several
seamen, who were risen upon by the
Spanish crew after their capture,”—
i N. Y. American.
TO THE VOTERS
| Os Richmond County.
> Having declined being a Caodi
' date for the Seuatc, I feel it a duty
thus early, oo<l publicly, to inform
i you of my determination; and I chi
i brace. *vrh ’ Measure, this ounortcfortt
of returning to you, my most grateful
ack nowlcdgtncnts, for the very kind
and liberal support you have so long
and so uniformly given m.
Wit! my best wishes for your p*os
perity and happiness, I remain your
often obliged fellow citizen.
VAL. WALKER.
To Printers. —Tbe Editor of the Georgia
Patriort being desirous to bring his affairs to
a close, and collect in his numerous debts,
which during a business of ten year-, have
been accumulating in different parts of tiie
State, offers the establishment of the Georgia
Patriot for sale, on accommodating terms, to
an apprnred purchaser.
To an industrious and intelligent gentle
man, who knows how to shape his politics to
the circumstances ofthe times, >his establish
ment ofTers very great advantages.
During the last two years there have been
IVoni 1,500 to 2,000 papers circulat 'd weekly
from the office, and it is -.obable that there
may be a continuation of the latter number of
responsible subscribers. The adiertisng pat
ronage has also been very cousindcrablc, and
is increasing.
I-etters addressed to the Editor (Post Paid)
wiil be attended to.
jrdP Editors in this and the neighboring
Slates will ronfer a furor by inserting the
above several times.
POFTRY. _
THE DIRGE OF A CHILD.
By Mrs. Ilemans.
No bitter tears for thee be shed,
Blossom of being ! seen unit gone !
With flowers alone we strew thy bed,
O blest, departed one!
Whose all of life, a rosy ray,
Blushed into life and passed away.
Yes, thou art gone, ere guilt had power
To stain tby cherub soul and form !
Clos’d is the soft ephemeral flower
That never felt a storm !
The sunbeam’s smile, tbe Zephyr's breath,
All that it knew from birth to death.
Tiiou wostso like a form of light,
That heaven benignly called the hence.
Ere yet tbe world could breathe ouo blight
O’er tby sweet innocence:
And tbou, that brighter home to bless,
Art passed with ail tby loveliness.
Oh had’st tiiou still on earth remained,
Vision of heuuty, fair as brief,
How soon thy brightness had be ensisin
tYith pasoion, or with grief!
Now not a sullying breath can rise
To dim thy glory in the skies.
\Ye rear no marble o’er thy tomb,
No sculptur’d hinge there shall mourn,
Ah ! better far the vernal bloom
Such dwelling to adorn
F og'* ice, and flowers, and dews must be
The only emblems ntttc for thee.
Thy grave shall be a blessed shrine,
Adorn’d with nature’s brightest wreath,
Each glowing season shall combine
Its incense there to breathe;
And oft upon the midnight air
Shall viewless harps be murmuring there.
And oh! sometimes in sions blest,
Sweet Spirit, visit our repose,
And bear, from thine own world of rest,
- Some balm for human woes.
What form more lovely could be given
Than thine, the messenger of Heaven?
"Angels and ministers of grace,
defend us!
"Art thou a spirit of heal, or gob
lin damn’d.—
“Bring’st with thee airs front!
Il6av*u, Oi l>l»o4u IfzxlV I"
Proposals for publisning by sub
scription a Poem on the late War.
entitled the Fredoniad, by Richard
Emmons, M. D. of Great-Crossing,
Scott County, Kentucky, have been
issued in one ofthe Boston papers,
and the work is already in press.—
It will consist of four volumes, and
is dedicated to Lafayette.
The following is the table ot con
tents of the first volume:
"Yol. I.—Canto 1. Hell. 2. Hell,
continued. 3. Heaven. 4. Hull’s
Surrender. 6. Washington City.
6. Cruise ofthe Hornet. 7. Death
of Lawrence. 8. Victory at the Ri
ver Raisin. 9. Defeat at Raisin
10. Massacre at the River Ilaisin ”
The moment the reader enters
upon the poem, he is plunged into
Hell; to fast in fiery flatnes would
not be so bad, if it was only a tem
porary purgatory; but to create des
pair the very next topic is ‘‘Hell,
continued"—surely this "music of
fire” must be a brimestone of a po
et.* Further, Hull’s Surrender, and
the Battle of Bladensburg must be
almost as bad as Hell, and Hell, con
tinue 1.
The price to cubscriber9 is five
dollars, so that every one who buys
is sure to have the devil to pay. —
Salem Gaxettc.
* For he deals in thoughts that
breathe and words that burn.
WUkmson Superior Court , I
April Term, 1827. )
Present, his tlonnr Judge Kensn.
(Copy.)
BY the 25th of this month, I promise t*
pay Nathan E. Mayo or bearer, fifty
dollars, lor value received, Dec. Ist, 1825.
(Sigucd,) CHARLES RILEY.
I T apnearing to the Court, that William M.
Beall, Attorney for said Mayo, was in
possession of a Note, of which the above is a
true cody in substance, on the back of which
there was a credit of six dollars, sixty-two and
a half cents, and which is loot or mislaid, so
that tiie same cannot now be found. It is, on
motion of Robert Hotelier, Attorney for said
Jtfavo, ordered that said copy be, at tire next
term of this Court, establish and in lieu of said
lost original, unless cause be shewn to tiie
contrary: And that this rule be published
once a month for six months, in one of tiie
public Gazette* of this State.
A true extract from the Jtfiuutcs of scud
Court, this 25th April, 1827.
s JOSEPH DELK, Ci’fc.
May 7, 1827 70—m6m
GEORGIA, Twiggs county.
WHEREAS James Pearson applies
to mo for Letters of A.huinulralion
on the estate of Jus Rogers, lateof sild county,
(j ee These are therefore to cite and admon
ish all and rfnf«Ur U*e kindred and cred
itors of said dec.-to be and appear at
mv Office within the time prescribed by Law.
I *o »U w cause if any they have why aald lel
| ter* should not be granted,
j Given from under wy hand Uii# 291 h April,
,M7 ' i etF.lt SOLOMON, C. C. 9.
1 Mirtw T-lrr W. Awßlft IW.
FOBTUNATE DRAWERS in the pro
cui Lunu Lottery can have a ~ oV
th* ir land, without the least delay, represent
ing comers, stations, water courses ajid qual
ity, together with any ether information whick
may h i*e been obtained, respiting it, by en
closing 50 cents for each plat, and tbe yon
age paid, without any risk of the money after
it is or closed and put in the mail, as I will
send the plat if it should miscarry.
CARLTON WELLBORN Sor. Gen
Itliltolgeville, May 7, 1827. 70—#t
THE SUBSCRIBER oilers tor sale, low
for cash, or approved paper,
20 Bugs Coffee.
3 Barrels Brown Sugar.
3 1-2 do. do. do,
1 Barrel Loaf do.
30 Boxes prime N. Candles.
H. Cosnard.
Milledgi ille, May 7,1827. 70 -ts
For Sale or Kent
ONE of the best and most pleasant houses
in the Town of Millcdgcville, situate in
Liberty Street, nearly opposite George R.
Clayton’s Esq. Any person wishing to pur
chase a house and tot in this place, will get a.
groat ba gain if application is made soon, or
will get the rent very tow for tiie remainder
of live present year.—Apply to
H. Cosnard,
.Willedgeville, May 7, 1827. 70—ts
ON Saturday the 19th inst. nt 10 o'clock
a. m. will be sold by the subscriber, at
his Store, an assortment of Dry Goods, con
sisting of Domestic Plaid, Homespun SheeU
in and Shirting, Calicoes, Fine Cloth and Cas
imere, Parasols, Umbrella’s, Linen, Vest Pat
terns, Ready made Vests, fcc. $-c. Also one
doz. elegant Looking Glasses.—Terms of Sole
Cash,
H. Cosnard,
Auctioneer.
Milieilgeville, May 7, 1827. JO It
C O NTENTS “
OF THE FIRST NUMBER OFTHE
North American Quar
terly Review.
ArU i. —American Hiograpky.
An American Biographical und Historical
Dictionary, &c. By William Allen, A. M.
A Biographical Dictionary, containing a Brief
Account of the First Settlers, and other
Emineut Char .cters in New England.—
By John Eliot, D. D.
Biography of the Signers of the Declaration
of Independence. By John Sanderson.
Art. 2.— Trigonometry
Elemcnnts of Analytic Trigonometry, Plane
and Spherical. ByS. F. Dossier, F. A. P.
S.
Art. 3.— Eulogies on Jefferson and Adams,
A Selection of Eulogies, pronounced in the
several States, in honor of those illustrious
Patriots and Statesmen, John Adams and
Thomas Jeflerson.
Art. 4. — Fossil Remains
Historical Researches on the Wars and
and Sports ofthe Moglus and Romans-; in
which Elephants and Wild Beasts were
employed or slain ; and the remarkable
local agreement of History with the Re
mains of such Animals found in Europe
and Siberia. By John Ranking.
Art. 5. —Doctrine of Contracts,
C—'‘ -4-- n—li-in. /if llnnlra.t. . (w.
ing an Inquiry how Contracts are eTSectea,
in Law and Morals, by Concealment, Er-
ror, or inadequate Price. By Gulian C.
Vcrplanck.
Art. 6. — Secret loumals ofthe Old Congress.
Secret Journals of tbe Acts anti Proceedings
of Congress, from the First Meeting there
of, to the Dissolution of the Confedera
tion, by the adop.ion of the Constitution of
the United States.
Art. 7.—Mrs. Hemans' Poems.
Poems. ByJtfrs. Hemans.
Art. B. —Kent en American Lau>.
Commentaries on American Law. By Ja’»
Kent. Vol. I.
Art. 10.— French Revolution.
The Life of Napoleon Bounaparte, with a pre
liminary View of the French Revolution.
By the Author of Waverly.
Art. 10. — English Fashionable Life,
Aimacks.
Art. 11. — Stjmmes' Theory.
Symmcs’ Theory of Concentric Spheres .- de
monstrating that t.*e Earth is Hollow, ha
bitable within, and widely open übout the
Poles. By a Citizen of the United States.
Art. 12.— Greek Controversy.
A Narrative of tbe material Facts in relation
to the building of two Greek Frigates. By
Alexandre Contostavios.
Report of the Evidence and Reasons of tbc
Award between Juhamiis Orlandos and
Andreas Lurlottis, Greek Deputies of the one
part, and Le Roy, Bayard, Si Cos. of tbe
other. By the Arbitrators.
Art. 13.— Souvenirs.
Forget Me Not; a Christmas and New-
Year’s present. —The Amulet.—The 1 jtt
rary Souvenir, or, Cabinet of Poetry and
Romance.—Friendship's Offering.—-The
Atlantic Souvenir, a Christmas and New-
Year’s Presi nt.—Tbe Memorial.
This work will be published on the first of
March, June, September, and December.—
Price, five dollars per annum.
COXTRJIC TORS WJZNTE&
the commissioners
FOll tbe improvement of the O
cortoe River below Milledge*
ville, will be ready in fifteen days
from this date to receive Proposals
for the building ol two Dams and
two Locks in said River near Miil-
I'dgev ille, agreeably to plans and spe
cificatio g made out by Hamilton
Fulton, Stale Engineer, at whose
office they will be seen, or in his ab
sence by application to Mr. S. Granf
land, at the office ofthe Southern
! Recorder.
It. A. BLOUNT, Chairman.
April 14. 1827. CT ts
~ ATTORNEY AT LAW.
THE Subscriber having located
himself in Jackson, Butts comi
ty —Respectfully offers hi* services,
and flatters himself with a hope tlnit
from the unremitting attention which
will be bestowed on all business en
trusted to his care, he shall secure to
himself an equal patrorage from hi?
friends aud the public.
* RICH ARD BAILEY.
Jackson, April 10, 1817 —tt
BLANKS
For Sate ot this Offceo
3