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SO ITTHJE R N TRI B UNE ,
rCBLIbIiKU WiiEKLV, BY
wn. U. 11 Al*K 1S O .
WM. B. HARRISON, 1
AND > EDITORS.
WM. 8. LAWTON, >
MB—Bwaww—■BWMW—a—ill! ■ i!■!■■■»■ 111 nrm
PUBLIC MEETING,
Os the Fiicnds of Southern Rights and Equality
Tl»o Friends of the Union who favor
the settlement of the Slavery question,
upon the basis of the Missouri Compromise
hire, in opposition to the so called Clay
and Foote" Adjustment Bill," do hereunto
sign their names for the call of a Public
Meeting, at such time and place as may be
designated by Hand-Bills.
Leroy Napier, Win B. Harrison,
N. C. Munroe, Geo. W. Price,
Pulaski 5. Holt, T. T. Polhil!,
"VVnv. B. Parker, Wm. Richardson,
James Dean, W. S. Ballard,
R.A. L. Atkinson, E. R. Haynes,
Thomas King, Sr., \\ m. T. Smith,
Samuel B. Hunter, Wm. G. Bomau,
M. E. Kylander, J. P. Smith,
Samuel Dinkins, H. Hightower,
Peter Solomon, T. S. Green,
Wm. A. Ross, G. W. Seymore,
J. B. Ross, W. Fuller,
B. F. Ross, G. Horn,
B. H. Moultrie, .T. Russell,
Benj. Ed. Stiles, G. Ehrlick,
James M. Green, C. M. Lankota,
Henry K. Gieen, T. Goodyear,
L. Griffin, W. W. Russell,
John J. Jones, A. Hammond,
A. C. Morehouse, M. Cunnian,
C. Mulholland, T. If. King,
M. N. Burch, Wm. King,
James A. Ralston, R. K. Evans,
John Rutherford, J. D. Gray,
Charles Campbell, T. A. Han is,
R. McGoldrick, T.M. Eans,
John W. Tucker, W. H. Turpin,
H. P. Redding, R. F. Ousley,
A. G. Butts, A. B. Adams,
C. F. Smith, J. M. Field,
J. H. Picket, R. Beasley, Sr.,
John P. Evans, A. T. Anderson,
George Payne, L. M. Roberts,
L. Flemister, G. R. Barker,
Thomas L. Ross, 11. W. Tindall,
W. W. Williamson, H. J. Cherry,
Henry E. Moore, A. L. Audouin,
A. R. Freeman, M. M. Mason,
H. M. Lindsay, J. B. Rawls,
H. J. Elder, W. S. Johnson,
D. R. Rodgers, T. J. Townsend,
T. N. Mason. A.J. Orr,
E. L. Strohecker, J. Joseph Hodges,
E. L. Williams, J. D.C ercopely,
J. Hollingsworth, Sam’l J. Ray,
C. C. Usher, J. W. Harris,
F. K. Wright, David Flanders,
Benj. Fort, A. Stotesbury,
S. C. Atkinson, H.C. Lawshe,
T. H. Plant, J. Wilder,
Jos. N. Seymour, E. Price,
E. A. Wilcor, Thos. Williams,
Mark D. Ciarke, Thos. H. Flint,
G. W. Hines, W. B. Hill,
J. Burnett, A. Newsom,
T. J. Redding, S. S. Johnson,
W. A. Cherry, E. Calhoun,
A. Chapman, It. Wilkinson,
•j. r. vjriueu, J.o. Jones,
A. F. Redding, L. Calhoun,
James M. Jones, S. A. Johnson,
Geo. W. Fish, J. M. D taper,
A. G. Bostick, D. C. Culpepper,
J. Holzendorf, Wm. Yorke,
J. J. Kaigler, J. T. Smith,
A. N. Ballard, Wm. B. Gamble,
W. S. Williford, Burral Wise,
Jas. B. Cooper, L. L. Snow,
E.G. Jeffers, M. J. Woodard,
,B. D. Clarke, J. R. Johnson,
H. W. Bronson. A. Burnett,
T. W. Brantley, W. J. Johnson,
Martin Hall, J. Brown,
B. M. Brantley, T. C. Lancaster,
G. W. Atkinson, W. H. Lancaster,
Joseph Engel, P. M. McElmurray,
H. W. Shaw, L. C. Lancaster,
L. M. Demick, J. Willis,
John G. Coleman, S. Sykes,
Willis If. Hughes, "W. C. Carloss,
Chas. Thompson, S. H.Evere t,
E. S. Rogers, J. T. Perdue,
T. J. Wool folk, W. Willoughby,
John Eanes, R. Barefield,
John Bailey, R. B. Barefield,
C. B. Nottingham, Wm. Ryder,
D. T. Driggars, C. B. Bond,
J. S. Fish, E. W. Stubbs,
J. 7’. Napier. W. R. A' ant,
R. B. Clayton, T. B. Stubbs,
Wm. S. Hill, G. C. Davis,
W. C. Hill, E. Edwards.
W. H. Hill, J. T. Barefield,
F. A. Hill, T. T. Brooks,
Asa E. Ernest. J. R. McElmurry,
James Taylor, W. B. Bryan,
B. Trapp, S. Woodard,
Wm. Thompson, L. S. Avant,
A. W. Spence, W. B. Halstead,
J. McDonald, A. A. Danforth,
J. Barnes, W. J. Hammond,
J. L. Burge, J. 11. Cowart,
Fred. R. Tarver, J. Dyer.
A.H. Colquitt, R. R. Minchcw,
Isaac Winship, W. A. Hartley,
W. B. Ector, J. J. Sparrow.
1 heart and hand approve and unite, if
it is proper for a nou-resident of the coun
ty to do so. C. B. Strong.
[Several gentlemen have lists of other
frames that have not been brought into
this office, which will be published in next
week’s Telegraph ]
In accordance with the foregoing call,
several hundred citizens assembl ed at the
Court House in this city, on Friday eve
ning, sth inst.. when the follow ing gentle
men were appointed officers of the meet,
ing, viz :
Col. Pulaski S. Hot.T, President.
Charles Collins, ) ... „
Samuel Dinkins, }' ,ce f resu,ent9 ’
John Rutherford f ..
n a r a > becretanes.
n. A. L. Atkinson, \
The President having explained the ob
ject of the meeting, the Hon. W alter T.
Colquitt addressed the meeting in a
forcible speech, in which he ably defended
the t ights of the South, which was most
enthusiastically received. After which a
committee was appointed to draft Reso
lutions for ilie adoption of the meeting,
composed of the following gentlemen, viz:
Sam’l J. Ray, C. B. Nottingham,
Joseph Seymour, J. M. Green,
R.A. L. Atkinson, J. J. Jones,
James Dean, John Rutherford,
Leroy Napier, Charles Collins,
B. 11. Moultrie, E. L.Stohecker,
Wm. B. Parker.
Who retired and reported the following
Resolutions, which wete unanimously
adopted by the meeting, viz :
1. Resolved, That we heartily approve
of the Address and Resolutions of the
Nashville Convention, and with the whole
South, will be ready to maintain them “at
all hazards and to the last extremity.”
2. Resolved, That we heartily approve
the course of the Delegates from this State
to that Convention, and hereby fender our
thanks for their attendance.
3. Resolved, That we see in the scheme
of the Committee of Thirteen, commonly
called “Clay’s Compromise,” so much to
condemn, that wo consider it an insult to
call such proposition an ofFer of compro
mise.
4. Resolved, That the Missouri Line
was adopted upon the solemnly pledged
faith of the North, acquiesced in for thirty
years, acknowledged and acted upon by
the South in good faith on the admission
of Texas, and the establishment of the
Oregon Territories, and it is a gross breach
of faith, and a violation of justice on the
part of the North, to repudiate it now,
and deprive the Southern people of its
benefits in the first instance in which it
could operate in their favor.
5. Resolved, That unless justice he done
the South, our Senators and Representa
tives will be justified in refusing to vote
supplies to a Government which is no lon
ger worthy of the confidence of the South
ern people, because it has proved either
incapable or unwilling to perform its obli
gations equally to all the States, and every
section of the Union.
6. Resolved, That until the slavery ques
tion is settled, we repudiate all former po
litical distinctions, and desire to meet all
Southern men as bro hers on the Southern
platform.
7. Resolved, That copies of these pro
ceedings he furvvm ued to each of our Sen
ators and Representatives in Congress.
8. Resolved. That the proceedings of
this meeting be he signed by the Chair
man and Secretaries, and copies of the
same be banded to the Telegraph, Tri
bune, and Journal of this city, with a re
quest for publication.
Tiiomaston, July 4, 1850.
To the Editor of the Southern Tribune, Macon:
You will very much oblige me by pub
lishing in your paper, the following article
and correspondence.
Respectfully,
O. C. GIBSON.
From the Weekly Chronicle 4* Sentinel., June 17.
Tlie Nashville Convention.
As the full report of the proceedings of
this body will doubtless be much more sat
isfactory to many readers, than the incom
plete sketches by Telegraph, we
have concluded to give them a place in
our columns, and therefore commence
their publication this morning, which will
be concluded as rapidly as our space will
permit.
In glancing over the delegation from
Georgia, we felt some curiosity to see how
many voters she represented, and there
fore addressed ourself to the investigation,
by which we ascertained the foilwing re
sults: Messrs. McDonald and CoLuutrr,
weto appointed by the Legislature, and
may therefore, be regarded as respecting
that body. Os the others in attendance,
Mossrs. Banning Crawford, Gibson and
Fouchk were elected by the people of
their respective Congressional districts,
and received in the aggregate 2,409 votes,
wliome they may be considered as repre
senting. The remaining four are appoin
tees of Gov. Towns, and may be suppos
ed to represent his Excellency.
Georgia numbers probably one hun
dred thousand voters, and yet these men
who received t r6s than one fortieth part of
them, assume to represent her in this as
sembly. What a commentary upon our
system of government, in which a majori
ty assume the right to govern.
Thojiaston, June 27, ISSO
- the Editor of the Avgusta. Chronicle 4' Sentinel
Dear Sir—Your Weekly of the 19th
inst. is shewn me, in which you take oc
casion to arraign me, as one capable of
misreq/resenting the Nashville Convention.
There has been no time in twenty years’
intercourse with the citizens of Georgia,
when l have not decidedly advocated the
right of the People to have such to repre
sent them as would reflect their will. And
this it occurs to me, entitles me to be heard
by your readers, in reply to the imputa
tion you make.
When the use of my name was asked as
a candidate to represent the District, I was
of opinion the vote would he very small,
because there had been no such agitation
upon the subject of the Convention as
usually attracts the attention of the masses,
because the election was at a time when
the farmers were busily engaged in plant
ing, and because it was not likely the Con
vention would have open and manly oppo
sition : and on account of this belief, in
accepting the nomination, I not only made
known my sentiments to the District, but
closed my communication with this para
graph , “In the present condition of this
movement it appears to me proper, in this
way to present my opinions to the Dis
trict ; for while it would be a bright page
in my life to represent a constituency
thinking with me on this great question,
it would be a blot on my existence tc mis
represent any set of men; and betweer. this
and the first Monday in June, there is am
ple lime for the people in the Distiict to
adopt any proper measures to keep me,
where both my inclinations and warns call
me, at home''
I am not conversant with the result of
the election in the different counties, but
in this county (Upson,) the anti-slavery and
submission parties succeeded in polling
two votes against me, while the friends of
the Convention voted 133 for me.
Since the publication of my letter, (a
boutthe last of March,) no anti-slavery or
submission man has as yet been bold
enough io ask the good people of my Dis
trict, in any of the usual ways of express
ing their sentiments, to denounce either
the sentiments contained in my letter or
the Nashville Convention.
If a majority in this District he compos
ed of men who believe slavery an evil and
want to get clear of it, of politicians who
have no knowledge of a patriotism lofty
enough to overlook the interests of their
party, and of individuals fu&tfriTsiceenough
to have foul and violent hands laid on their
pa ’pable rights, and then meekly say thanks
that their oppressors were kind enough to
let them retain what is left a little longer ;
if such constitute the majority in this Dis
trict, and you and your co-laborers will
but muster them once, 1 assure you in me
they have to do with a man, that would
neither represent nor misrepresent them.
Respectfully,
O. C. GIBSON.
P. S. Os course I do not expect this to
have the place of an advertisement, but in
asking you to publish it in sheer justice to
what has ever been my position upon a
principle and a question, tnat l regard vital
to my country, it is perhaps proper that I
say, you of course would fix the terms of
its publication, atul it wtll be my pleasure
to abide them. O. C. G.
Chronicle & Sentinel Office, )
Augusta, July 1, 1850. f
O. C. Gibson, Esq.
Yours of the 27th ult. is at hand, which
you ask “in sheer justice to your position”
should be published, because you assumed
that the Chronicle & Sentinel. (Weekly,)
of the 19th ult. “arraigned you as one ca
pable of misrepresenting the Third District
in the Nashville Convention.”
The article to which you refer, only
stated a fact in reference to you. viz : that
you and three others (named) represented
2049 voters, in the Convention. This fact
neither controvert nor join issue upon.
Hence your communication contains no
thing pertinent, arid is therefore inadmissi
ble, becaute you have failed to shew that
any injustice has been done you,
Respectfully,
J. W. JONES,
Editor Chronicle & Sentinel.
Letter from Jn<lsjre Sharkey.
Jackson, (Miss.) Jone 21, 1850.
To the Editors of the Mistisiippi Southron:
Dear Sir —An opinion expreesed by
me in in a letter to the Hon H. S. Foote,
approving the plan of compromise intro
duced into the Senate by the committee
of thirteen, is being used as evidence that
the South would the content with the
terms of the compromise. That opinion
may receive an undue weight from the
circumstance that I was chosen President
of the Nashville Convention, and the in
ference may be drawn that a majority of
the Delegates concurred in approving the
compromise. The reverse, however, is
true: The Compromise had hut few
friends in the Convention. And that no
opinion of mine may he used to destroy,
in any degree, the force of the Convention,
a further explanation may be necessary.
The lettter was wilten at a time when
it was believed by me, as well as by others,
not only here but elsewhere, that the
Convention movement would result in a
total failure. Some of the States had de
clined to appoint Delegates ; it was believ
ed the Delegates appointed by others
would not attend, and every where great
opposition was manifested towards the
measure. It seemed impossible to rally
| the South in vindication of her rights.—
| The advices from Washington Cily seem
ed to dispel any hope of a creditable
Convention, and a failure could have no
other effect titan to encourage the ag
gressions on the South.
It was also believed that the Compto
mise was the best that could possibly be ob
tained; so,indeed,l was distinctly informed.
Under such circumstances I wrote the let
ter referred to, in reply to one which con
tainedbut a synopsis of the Compromise
not having seen the measure. But, itt ex
pressingtliat the South was entitled to no
thing more. My opinions on the subject
of the rights of the South, are too well
known, I trust, to be the subject of doubf
I had repeatedly declard that the South
was entitled to an equal poition of the
New Territories.
Since thatlettcr was written, the Nash
ville Convention has met. Its enemies
have been disappointed, and the South is
alive to her interests and her rights. The
Convention was called for the purpose of
enabling the Southern States to consult
together, and to know each other’s
sentiments. After full deliberation, the
Convention, by undivided opinion, resolv
ed to accept the Missouri Compromise
Line extended through to the Pacific,
which would give her a part of California.
This plan received my cordial support.
It was the one for which I had indcated a
preference before I left for theCotivention.
It recommends itself by its entire justice,
in this the Souih is yielding more than
ought to he demanded of her, hut for sake
of harmony she may with propriety accede
to it. I did not go into the Convention with
any other motive than to preserve our
rights by acting in concert with others,
and was fully prepared to act in a spirit of
compromise; and whatever opinions I any
have entertained or expessed, I am now
under obligations to carry out the views of
the Convention. Every rnan who went
into it was at least impliedly bound to
abide by its action; and this obligation is
the more cheerfully admitted by me, as
all its measures seemed to have in view a
due regard for the Union and the preserva
tion of the Constitution. Audi trust the
whole South will unite, in a spirit of firm
determination to insist upon the line of
compromise which we have recommended.
This shall be my c utse, and 1 hope by
pursuing it to accomplish the preservation
of the Union unimpaired. Itisproaer to
state that my opinions were freely com
municated here as well as at Nashville,
and I make this communication not to
vindicate myself against the charge of
inconsistency—l am wholly indifferent on
that subject —but solely for the purpose of
placing the action of the convention in its
truelight. Your ob’t serv’t,
\V. L. SHARKEY.
Cotton. —The receipts up to the latest
dates are within 30,427 bales of the lowest
estimates lately formed for the season.
Last year at this time the receipts were
within about ninety-five thousand bales of
the aggregate for the year ending Sept.
Ist. It is possible that the aggregate this
year will go over two millions of bales,
but hardly probable. It is our impression
now that it will not vary fifteen thousand
bales either way, from that quantity.—
Recent accounts from Liverpool relative
to the cotton market, are of the most
extraordinary character. The present
deficiency in the supply of the raw materi
al, might be a partial suspension in the
manufacture of heavy goods to get along
with; but in the face of the most unfavora
ble season regarding the new crop,ever ex
perienced, we see the manufacturers of
England appaiently indifferent as to any
further advance in prices, and working
literally from hand to mouth. They
evidently look for a break down among
holdershere; for some unfavorable change
in our money market, that will compel
holders to disgorge and put their stock in
the maiket. They appear to havo very
little confidence in our ability to control
' enough of the crop to give us any control
! of prices, and undoubtedly expect to re
tain that influence over the planting inte
rest of the United States, which his here
tofore been so profitable. The money
power of Manchester and Liverpool is im
mense; and such is the extent atul pet fee
tion of the combination among the manu
facturers and capitaliats of those cities,
that almost anything they undertake is
usually accomplished.
We cannot cope with that power at
present. We cannot get up such combi
nations, and are sadly deficient in capital;
but the time is not far distant, and is rapid
ly approaching, when wo shall not only
establish prices for cotton, but shall have
comparatively little to spare, after supply
ing our own manufacturers, for those of
Great Britain,at any price. If the Govern
ment of England can, by any manage
ment, promote or extend the cultivation of
cotton in the East Indies, it had better
set about it at once. There is r.ot a mo
ment to be lost, as the commercial exis
tence of Great Britain depends upon a
sufficient supply of raw material from
some other source than the United States.
W e look with perfect indifference upon
any effort made in England to obtain a
supply of cotton from any other part of
the world but the United States; and
whatever may be the result of any effort
made, it cannot effect us matmially. It is,
however, probable that any fallling off itt
Gieat Britain, for our cotton, caused bv
receipts from other parts of the world,
w. uld give a greater impetus to the con
sumption of this article within our limits,
and rather hasten than retard the downfall
of the supremacy in manufacturing which
that country lias so long enjoyed.— jYcw
York Herald.
Poitlmmoua Sketches of Philosophy.
BY SYDNEY SMITH.
The force of Ilabit—Hobbes and his
Pipe. — He smoked; how did he begin?
It might have begun any haw. He was
staying, perhaps, at some house where
smoking was is fashion, and began to smoke
in compliance with the humor of other
persons. At first, he thought it unpleas
ant; and as all the expirations and in.
spirations were new and difficult, it re
quired considerable attention ; and at the
close of the evening he could have distinc
tly recollected, if he had tried to do, t hat
his mind had been employed in thinking
how ho was to manage and munoeure the
pipe. The practice goes on ; the disgust
vanishes; much less attention is necessary
to smoke well ; in a few days the associ
ation is formed ; the cloth is taken away
after supper, of smoking occurs ; if any ac
cident happen to prevent it, a slight pain
is felt in consequence ; it seems as if things
did not go on in their regular track, and
same confusion had crept into the ar
rangements of the evening. As the as
sociation goes on, it gathers strength from
the mirth and conversation with which it
is jouieu; at iasi, after a lapse of years,vve
see the philosopher of Malmesbury ad
vanced from one to one dozen of pipes ; so
perfect in all the tactics of a smoker, so
dexterous in all the manual of Lis dirty
recreation, that be would fill, light, and
out his pipe, without the slightest remem
brance of what he bad been doing, or the
most minute inuterruption to any immoral
train of thought, in which he happened to
be engaged ; but we must not forget, that
though his amusment occupied himsolitde
and was passed over with such a small
share of his attention, the want of it would
have occupied him so much, that he could
have done nothing without it; all his spec
ulations would have ocupied himso much,
that he could have done nothing without
it: all his speculations would have been a*
an end ; and without his twelve pip s lie
might have been a friend to devotion, to
freedom, or any thing else which, in the
customary tenor of his thoughts, he cer
tainv was not.
Books and Conversation. —A book lias
no eyes, and feelings ; tho best are every
now and then too become a little languid ;
whereas a living book walks about, and
varies his conversation and manner, and
prevents you from going to sleep. There
is cerianly a great evil in this, as well as a
good; for the interest between man and his
living folio becomes sometimes a little too
keen, and in the competition for victory
they become a little too animated towards,
and sometimes exasperated against, each
other; whereas a man and his book gener
ally keep the peace with tolerable success;
and if they disagree, the man, shuts his
book, and tosses it into a corner of the
room, which it might not be quite so safe
or easy to do with a living folio. It is an
inconvenience in a cook, that you cannot
ask quesiions; there is no explanation;
and a man is less guarded in cunveisation
than in a book, and tells you with more
honesty the little niceties and exceptions of
"his opinions; whereas, in a book, as his
opinions are canvassed where they cannot
be explained and defended, be often over
states a point for fear of being misunder
stood; but then, on the contrary, almost
every man talks a great deal better in his
books, with more sense, more information
and more reflection, than he can possibly
do in his conversation, because he has
more time.
Advice to youthful poets.— There is one
circumstance I would preach up, morn,
ing, noon, and night to young persons for
the management of their understanding.
W hatever you are from nature, keep to it;
never desert your own line of talent. If
Providence only intended you to write po.
sies for rings, or mottoesfot twelfth-cakes,
keep to posies and mottoes; a good mot
toe for a twelfth-cake is more respectable
lhan a villainous epic poem in twelvebooks.
Be what nature inteded you far, and you
will succeed, be any thing elso, and you
will he ten thousand times worse than no
thing.
Mathematics of Bees. —The warmest
admirers of honey, and the greatest friends
to bees, will never, I presume, contend
that, the young swarm, who begin making
honey three or four months after they are
born, and immediately construct the ma
thematical cells, should have gained their
mathematical knowledge as vve gain ours
and in three months’ time outstrip Mr.
Maclaurin in mathemetics as much as they
did in making honey. It would take a
senior wrangle at Cambridge ten bouts
a day, for three years together, to know
enough mathematics for the calculation of
these problems, with which not only every
queen bee, but every undergraduate grub,
is acquainted the moment it is born.
The Importance of the Beautiful. —What
are half the crimes in the world commit
ted for? What brings into action the
best virtues I The desire of possessing.
Os possessing what ? Not more money
but every species of the beautiful which
money can purchase. A man lies hid in
a little, ditty, smoky room for twenty years
of his life, and sums up as many columns
of figures as would reach round half the
earth, if they were laid at length; he gets
rich ; what does he do with his riches ?
lie buys a very large well-proportioned
house; in the arrangement of his furni
ture he gratifies himself with alii the
beauty which splendid colors, regular fi.
gurus, and smooth surfaces can convey;
he has the beauties of variety and asso
ciation in his grounds; the cup out of
which he drinks his tea is adorned with
beautiful figures; the chair in which he
sits is covered with smooth shining leath
er; his table cloth is of the most beautiful
damask; mirrors reflect the lights from
every quarter of the room; pictures of
the best masters feed his eye with all the
beauties of imitation. A million of hu-
man creatures ate employed in this coun
try in ministering to this feeling of the
beautiful. It is only barbarous, ignorant
people that can ever he occupied by the
necessaries of lif alone. If to eat, and
to drink, and to be warm, were the only
passions of our minds, vve should all be
what the lowest of ns are at this day.—
The love of the beautiful calls man to
fresh excriious, awakens him to a more
noble life; and the glo r y of it is, that as
painters imitate, the poets sing, and statu
ses carve, and architects rear up the gor
geous trophies of their skill:—and as eve
ry thing becomes beautiful, and orderly,
magnificent,—the activity of the mind ris
es to still greater and belter objects. The
principles of justice are sought out; the
powers of the ruler and the rights of the
subject are fixed ; man advances to the
enjoyment of rational liberty, and the es
tablishment of those great mural la»'g
vvhic God has written in our hearts, to re
gulate the destiny of the world.
* r
Aurungzebe. —Every one possessed or
power is an object either of awe or su
blimity, from a justice of the peace to tho
Emperor Aurungzebe—an object quite as
stupendous as the Alps. He had thirty
five millions of revenue, in a country
where the products of the earth are at
least six times as cheap as in England
his empire extended twenty-five degree 5
of latitude, and as many of longitude: ho
had put to death about twenty milli° ns 0
people. I should like to know the n l3ll
who could have looked at Aurung 2 ® 0
without feeliug him to the ends of his li m s ’
and every hair on his head! Such
rors ere mure sublime than cataracts,
think any man would have shivered
at the sight of Aurungzebe than at the
of the two rivers which meet at the 1
Mountains in Ame ties,and bursting *b r ° u
the whole breadtli of tho rocks, toll t
victorious and united waters t 1) the
ern Sea.