Newspaper Page Text
From the London * Forge
FAIRY GAMBOLS.
Night’s! silver lamp ascends the i
By invrjad splendid stars inapwl’d, y—-. ■
And biv her midnight beautiefc rise , > ^
lSv - 4 *’r*A rKv-rm n nrflnri^/l wnrM.
To li? * land cht.rm a weajied world
Yon nw'ufc. ing turret’siiiwSpwom form
Her soft ai.d yerablinr, beams illnnkc j
She,smiles ami <0 th- Ci uing stoim.
And brightens C -.n surroundiniftglooTr
Now tl.v lleet-foovjd fairies lave '~3
Their spotless lifibs hi peailydew,.
Or sit beside the luelff ^vS, ' ’ '
Or deck the scene that Spencer dj.ew.
mTbiy wrr
J endeavo;
„ >pcs. H- ii?. c
to nil 1 coi/U pu
od my neck: wrr /i
arted.y* I saw him but on
teurinjg the>* hottest part of _
Hole day, when, with A'noise that even
drowned the roar of the artillery, Sir Wm.
Ponsonby’s brigade of fcavalry dashed past
our holfow/square, baring before them, in
that tremendous cha<K e J the flower of Napo-
livalry. For ahead even of his na-
regiment, J(saw the manly figure of
friend. It Vis hut for a moment. The
ext instant ho yds fighting icy the centre of
leoc#
’Jibe enemy’s ,>i«tdron ; and the clouds of
j pnaoke that closed in masses round friend
f r Itnd foe hid/Aim from niy view. When the
fDattle was 4ver. and all was hushed but the
door, when the youn
■JJlfMIll LUL1 I
*
'
r ^
I op
BH
■
on fell off on’t
Jonathan, “on
have indicated
that a venerable
glance towards the spot where _ she
saw the apparition, shrieked with terror, i.. .
then flinging herself convulsively. into het /’•//, aged 1 lS.vears. He still retains ma
Tarboro’ Press) a man named Anthony Van
mother's arms, she exclaimed,
On some, gay flow’rrt’a emerald stem
Pel-chance tb<*ir magic feet alight,
Whose silvery sandals wear «. gem,
Dropt from the 6tarry sphere of night.
Or sprightly o’er the spiral grass,
With giddy graceful ease they glide;
A dew-drop is their looking-glass,
Their mirror is the steeping tide. A
iyh»ri morning opes her cloudless eyyt
; The fairies seek their mossy cell;
TjV.re in soft smiling slumbers lie
li
Till uajicn’d by the evening
? * *
From IAnslafs Scottish .Wclodkj.
Up, clansmen, up! the heathcock r crows
• His note unto the morning,
Ivor slumber we ivh}le/yra)Y* foes
Our fiec-born ri^Ij
Each sturdy hand V . t ,
Within its hilj/2m»ll wither, >
E’er freedom’s tree shall blighted b/J*
-ire^ jkirning*
grasps ' he brand,
Or tyranny come hither
On, clansmyjA on! the morning’s bea.i
Shall light us to our glory.
Or ouenen each claymore’s dazzling gleam
In streams more hark and gory.
In bonnets blue to Scotland true,
The thistle wavingo’er us,
We’ll ^aisc the cry to. liberty,
Or death to all before us.
THE. SOLDIER’S ORPHAN.
A TALE OF WATERLOO.
I overtook on the road a^reffunent of
Highlanders, then on their iuarS*rTor Cork,
where they were f6
lands. It was a
spring of 1815. *1 <
and the arms
jlfAtM
tenng in
martial d
pated tl
*
or.!he ~7ethar-
.oining in the
Shining ’ right,
rite were glit-
pluraes,
E , t oon dissi-
ncy from an
ardent, and opened
V I«» a few moments
rthe whole career, and
l gh rank and covered'with
native village,’ to my mother.
The first slop to this
motion was easily obtiued. In n
^uig the entire of the night, I quitted the
T shattered remains of the gallant regiment
I L whose ranks I had that day the honour
f\ of standing. The moon was wading through
/ ^ /scattered masses of dark and heavy clouds,
•’> when I commenced my search for my friend,
iTHe light was doubtful and uncertain; yet
’ it was easy to keep along the track thftt
marked the last career of Ponsonhy. Slnid-
dering, lest in every face I should recog
nise my friend, l passed by, and sometimes
trod upon the cold and motionless heaps,
which now looked so unlike the “ fiery
masses of living valour” that a few hours
before had commingled with a concussion
more dreadful than the earthquake’s shock.
Although I at first felt a certain convictiou
of his fate, I afterwards began to hope that
the object of m> search had, contrary to his
prediction survived the terrible encounter.
I was about to retire when a heap of slain,
in a ploughed field, on which the moon was
now shining clearly, attracted my notice,
Literally piled on each other, were the bo
dies of five cuirassiers ; and lying beneath
his horse was the dead body of my friend.
You may form some idea of my astonish
ment, on finding, by a nearer inspection,
that his head was supported and his neck
entwined by the arms of a female, from
whom also the spirit had taken its depar
ture ; but you can form no conception of
the ’^rrqr I felt at beholding, in this scene
of carnage and desolation, in the very arms
of death, ami on the bosom of a corpse, a
living infant, sleeping calmly, with the moon
beam 'resting on its lovely features, and a
smile playing on its lips, as if 1 angels were
guarding its slumbers and inspiring its
dreams ! Arid who knov'-s but perhaps they
were ? The conviction now flashed on my
mind, that these were the wife and child of
my unfortunate, friend ; and the letters we
afterwards fo’jnd <?a the person of the for-
seemeuVto
looking figure apmtoredat my bed side, and j
beckoned me to him. I aVose, not
without trepidation, allow, and my noc
turnal visitor speedily Conducted mo to this
identical tree, and pointing to a particular
spot under it, which is still impressed on my
recollection, fixed his eyes on mine, rind
uttered the monosyllable “ Dig.”
“ Well what ofdat gaid Hans.
\ “ Listen to me, Sir, and you shall hear.
Although, as I have before said, my confi-
' in dreapis is very limited, still this
kes m ! as so uncommon, that
ious to obtain.your permission and
sistahee in excavating the ground abo^t
the. jvf It is possible that- treasure may
be concealed there, and if our search is suc
cessful, we will, if you please, share.the pro
fits of our discovery equally.”
“ You, may dig a hole there as big a Coal
pit, and Caesar may help you—and if you
find any mone/, by dunder and blixem,
Old Hans ’ll have a part. on’L”
lere are two of them,” and almost instant-
expired.
Jonathan quickly aviih T himsplf
permission, and accompanied
of this
j the African
mer p rdved that I was right in; my conjec
ture.
en aside*-b
inutes I had the honour of being en-
Wi a private in the 7Sih mighlanders - HB| ^ ^ 1.^ I
and, beforejny . arrival at Codk, was fully j or«mpihftB, or'hy: tee ston
^ipiipped in the garb of the warlike Celts. “ fections ^jpf man majr veer;
Nightingales.-—In the gardens of .the
Dilgusha, in Shiraz, in Persia, nightingales
are said to abound, which not only sing du
ring the night, but whose plaintive melody
n,°yb>j|tlay suspended, in tne^st, as it is in
our colder region ; and it is said that several
of.those birdihave expired while contend- jph e bottom of a deep
An Old Man.—
There is now
Green county, in this state, (says th
.... , . J 1
sprigiitly in conversation’
talks
about getting married, &c-
stance is of, rare occurrence\aJ
worthy of being recorded. -V , - ,
a circ.um-
certain!'
Animal Life.
At Organ ! -
toad and two muscles' have I
proceeded to the be” *pear U se ante com
menced operations. ' ,
After ah abscettce of about three hours,he
returned, bringing four iron kettles, each
containing something lik a thousand Spa
nish dollars ! Th..; eye of the Dutchman
expanded to the, size l one of his own
Duck’s eggs; )k hugged Uis protogee about
the neck, and promised, in his transport,
that he should rharry his daughter Katreen,
who blushed at this permission, like a full
blown peony,''
An equitable division was made of the
specie, and Hans’ portion was deposited in
the family chest. Jonathan having busi
ness to transact at Philadelphia, pfipposed
that Hans should give him bills for his part,
they being more portable, and he w-as com
pelled to carry his money with him. Hans
readily consented to this, and Jonathan de
parted—promiiiing on his returu, with the
assistance of the minister to change the name
of Miss Catherine Keeler, to that of Mrs.
Jonathan Doolittle.
Sorry are we that a regard for our repu
tation as veraciodh historians, compels us
to record the denou<g$j'nt of this affair. Jo
nathan, alas! neverTfeturned to bless the
confiding Katreen with a husband ;
ans in the loudness, or vari-
^ notes. It has, indeed, been
known, according to Pliny, that it; vocal tri
als among nightingales, the vanquished bird
terminated its song only with its life.—An
intelligent Persian, who repeated his story
again and again, and permitted me to write
it down from his lips, declared that lie had
more than .once been present when a cele
brated lutanist, Muza Mohammed, sumamed
Ballah, was paying tefft large .company, in a]
grove near Sharaz, .whale he distinctly saw
tee; nightingales trying to ik|j^pke Mu
sician; sometimes warbling on the trees,
sometimes fluttering from branch to branch,
as if they wished to approach the instrument
whence the melody proceeded; and at
length, dropping on the ground in a kind of
ecstacy, from which he assured me they
were soon raised by a change in the mode-
And in one s of Strada’^ \cademical Prolu
sions, we find a most beautiful poem, which
tends to confimi the Persian report: for it
supposip .a gpig$t of emulation so powerful
in the nightingale, that having strained her
little throat, vainly endeavoring to excel
tee musician, she breathes out her life in
one last effort, and drops upon the instru
ment which had contributed to her defeat,
—Sir William Ousley's Travels in Persia.
rocic, and re-opened after hav
up for a hundred and fifty year;
mu scles and the toad are
alive in some of the water m
were found. . .
France, *
Jil’-en out
^ithe
e of the
served^
1’ they
i-bb
Copsimptioni-r—The. letter^ da-*
ted Prince William County, Ya» SepL 26,
1827, was lately published in the National
Intelligencer, and the waiter lui» since noti
fied that applications to him ru i>t be ac
companied with a fee of 5 dollars.
“ Gentleihen,?—Having witnessed the
powerful effects of a little
and
i.you with
tnd uninteresting life,
in Jielgium, previous
ight of Waterloo. Th
#He battle I f
mle of our
hie and Unchanging is a tv
man. “ She loves and
Ic
sot pleasure
f-lifej the af-
unchangev-
rt in no-
?s forever.”
This faithful^vife had followed her husband
through a la^I of strangers, and over the
pathless Seay through the crowded city, and
bustling cpipp, tilb-ehe ihim Stretched
on the
time to receive his parting sigh, and her
spirit, quitting its worn out tenement of clay, jwho had res
'g contrast to t*te ;
y as they passed the
round their watch-fires.' I should not, per
haps, call it silence, and yet it was something
like it; but not the silence of sleep, The
■'Astern and sullen sound with which the word
v zid oountetsign were exchanged ; ihe low
deep tone-in which the necessary orders
'“lowing day were given ; the sigh
irig feelings in the soul, which al-
ed the groans extorted by^bo-
;from the wounded, were oil ?]still
srb aadible than the distant clang of the
y jarhinu#x, and the snorting aruLprancing of
the steed, and showed, that all around was
waking watchfulness and anxiety.
About the middle of the night I received
,'a visit from a young man with whom I had
‘ formed an intimate ncqudiritan^ He was,
•- the only son of a gentleman proper-
L ty jn the South of Ireland ; buf having for*
/ med an attachment to * beautiful girl in hum-
vble life, and mer riod her airainst the will of
father, l.e had been disinhented atid turn-
jut of doors. The youth had soon rea-
repent of his rashness. His wife
Butiful, virtuous,aifeciiodate ;
want of education, and entire unac-
winged its way with his to Him who gave
outs of thefteem being. With the assistance of some
Hans ultimately ascertained that his Spa
nish dollars were manufactured from his
service of pewter plate, which had been
spirited from his pantry in a Most unaccoun
table manner, shortly after his family had
increased in number by the accession of
Jonathan.—Middl^ x Gazette.
[The paper from
re take the following,
haait prefaced thus:Inof the western coun- ... • ^ - ^ —-
ties of-England, an occurn;.. •<. has taken place cal- week, as .the actor him. s elf v. 'l be in a year
r>nlotoJ tn nnhrkLl Hi* At* f WA fr ItUiV InC AlYllOn Crinria ttiwifiXMA nnvt
The 'Orator of Perugia.—The town of
Perugia having sent deputies to Urban Y.
who was then at Avignon, they fdunte this
Pontiff sick in bed. The orator of the em
bassy made him a long speech, without pay-
iriqrf C arjl V> Hi a wnd-wlte-
out ever coming to the point. When he had
done, the Pope asked them whether they
had. any thing else to state. Seeing that he
was heartily tired, they said, “ Our mstruc-
rently simple, in a case of foimidablf) pu!
monary disease, and wishing to make .the
facts as public ag possible, T * - - —
quest you to permit me to
I
•vo to>'re-
rcneT
medium of your widely circulating papf k;■ *
A very respectable man, Joseph Heins,
about 41 years old, formerly post maste? at
Rock Hill, near Middleburg, Loudon <
ty, was for five years subject to distressirtj
affections of the lungs. The first 3 ye;
he had only periodical discharges of bl
from them; but for the last two years he jUs
charged quantitiec both of. blooii and pus—
frequently friom half a H^i<ifMOpint nf Thr
former at a time, attended with a most har*
rassiqg and r suffocating c
He was
greatly reduced, and so far gone in what hia
friends thought consumption, that they en
tirely despaired of him, and aba^j^sH
hopes of hi» ever being restored ; as tue or
dinary remedies, ante almost every thing
that could,bj^.- i .thougfit-g£ f Aad'.been‘tried in,
vain.”
Haying been a patient of mine, as well as
a particular friend, Icouidnot vtew, without
the deepest sensibility, his deplorable cpndi-
-^1
M
,yj
tions are, to declare to four holiness that if A*™;tend mysdff relinquished any hop*
you do not grant us what wq ask, our bis surysying. In his desperate sitofttion<,
will male his speech over again before
go.” The Pops granted the demand in
stantly.
A Bostqn paper has, in the following sen
tence, touched the ne plus ultra of theatrical
puffery: “ In the Iron Chest of Thursday
evening last, Mr. established ‘ a name
and a fame,’ which, should he die to-mor
row,would pyeteitn a.niclie inibe temple
of fame, to' endure uncrumhied in the decay
of ages.” [This ‘ uucmmbling niche in
tjje temple - ’ iume’ will he forgotAan in a
culated to uphold the opini
Johnson to his d ying hour,
pernaturad appea ;ances.”-
among the best ev>idence that
■.iiei s.aie altogetl
an U'
Singular OccuWenc
able family hfd parted tV'
rtained by Dt.
y of sw
orn* opinion (it'is
•posed app^ar-
of my comrades, I consigned this hapless
pair to the earth, wrapped in the same mili
tary cloak : and enveloping the infant, the
dear child of mv adoption, in my plaid,
I returned to the spot where our regiment
lay. A. P. C.
The Dutchman's Triamre.—So long ago
as the period of time when the whiskey iri-
sufTectioh raged fn the interior of Pennsyl
vania ; wheri the honest faveners were led
tobel.eve that thnr ‘vested rights' were i^
danger, a rich old Dutchman, living not a
hundrUu miles from Lancaster received in
to hte Amily a semi-genteel looking stran
ger, who promised to make himself of g^eat
service in superintending the agricultutril
concerns of his benefactor. He was ohe
of those smooth tongued, plausible,- fel
lows, who possess the art ^f making them
selves agreeable to every cne they meet.
Th.0 manner in wl.jch he persuaded Hans
Jleeler that his temporal interests would be
bi. efitted by his agency, Was rather singu
lar Experience had taught the old Grr-
;e with those polished manners and
cies of life to which he had been
omed, soon dissolved fmch of the
.... which her beauty atf* rtiessness HH| ..
at fust thrown aroundhim. ^ /tetitrugA. he wiis a member o!
man, that aH conn exiou with that respe^ i-
able clash of merchants yclept ‘ Yankee
pedlars^’ was any thing but profitable, rind
from the appearance of the stranger, whom,
. C A :: -
respect-
le servant,
with them for severaiyoars,
and she immeteately pr Veeded to Bristol
where entered'tatb the si ' ice of a respect
able tradesman. The gc 'yaman whose ser
vice she had quitted,
and strange tolsay,
the servant quitted
lady never entered her
middle of the nil on da
or fancy that shje'sa'
her arms uxteiided,
middle of flie room.
only daughter,
om the very day
use, this young
imber, even in the
at she did not see,
a girl standing, with
on ihe floor near the
It was ill Vriin tp rea
son with her on thq impossibility of the
thing. So poweiftd vtes the illusion under
which her senses 1
ed she had really oc
ed, that she imagin-
r demonstration for
what.she asserted. * In vain was sheaccom-
panied by. her friends into the room—still
she saw the samfe spectacle before her,
which at length made ’ such a powerful im
pression upon her mind, that he! health, na-
tprally wYak, begad to give way, and in “
portion as her bodily strength declined
dominion of her ifnapnation became m .,
absolute. In this dilemma the aid of meJi
cihe was resorted to in vain, arid at length
for fault
style Jonathan, lie
ing for some time withpoyerty dnd discon
he enlistetfin a regiment of heavy dra-
ms ; and being ordered to the Continent,
his wife, with an infant daugiiter. in W
wretched lod
brought us to
’: " A • •x"" T w 1 * *• • *> '
ste soon
than overcame
by praising
cognomen, we ^hall
led to believe that the young lady, who
Jona
hat fraternity.
Dutchman’s scruples
e, his horse and his
ilaiity of
Chance
and a sir
lip.
Depresse
jck with
it night he i
gtiment.
the battle
daughter; and in a week was as firmly seat
ed in tee good graces of the whole family,
as if be had iivedjvitb them "a half century.
the professional attdhd ’
ced that her >iniln(\y Am f tV
solely io Thet* re fi‘
Imagination upon a
jobnvin-
attributed
ationsnf a
mind, determined
opposing reality to
to try tee experiment o£i
fiction. The girl whoyfiad quitted theirser-
vice teas accordingly s4nt for, unknown to
so weak as to require ti
iodhe slight exertion, of
drawing room.
by this time grown
be supported, even
ossing hfer father’s
or two;
:*r his
not express themselyps in any other way.
They tear their inexpressibles 4 as if Hea^ii
; was advised to try the Liverwort, in the
•Vi . of infusion, or a strong tea, to be used
cold, as a common drink. In less than ten
days, he derived the most positive benefit;
and in four or five weeks every violent
symptom had vanished: no cougte’no
pectoration or discharge of bteodteaT let
ter—-a fine appetite, generaUheahte^tiiiM
improved- gaining flesh and
and such a cliange in his whole 3,1*11
as has both astonished and deligt
friend he had. It has not toante*:.- ZZ
eight weeks since he commoR@eai<A of
the Liverwort, and aithou^fiMUyiMn^ 01 I
4 X*.
w
me writers can- dip P° nse wi te Mjet he*-wjlj|^fin‘;; it fo?
and earth were coming, together*!*”and
weeks, or even monte#* IdN"
the only one that ha$
iary influences. Tlitv
is not
to take the powder from a wig thdjr do\npt his neighhourh^kj|jj|p u hte 0l ny
wash dMMi te' eas y^BP!w^^*p,titonorify ’
ocean.”]—JN\ T. Enquirer.
Inscription upon the great. Bell at Ike
Glasgow Cathedal.—In the year of Grace ;
1594, Marcus Knox, a merchant of Glas
gow, zealous for the intere v of the Re
formed. Religion, caused ttie 1 be fabricated
ip Holland,for the use of hrs reDow citizens
‘ heel) telieved
consumption,
by it. "•
I will «« *Seribe;lha Mi
verwort m *&&&>*** 'Ghali enable
the most cmeeMSfeibsertte^tfee^ mi dis .
tinguish it. It greeaeoViatKtjntthe north
solemuityin
Cathedral. My function
was announced by the impression on my bo-
c om—Me audito venias—Doctrinam sanc-
tam at discus—And l was taught to pro
claim the hours of unheeded time. One
.hundred and ninety-five years had I sounded
these awful warnings, when I was broken by
the hands of inconsiderate rind unskilful
men. In the year 1790 I was cast in the
furnace, refounded at London, and returned
to my sacred vocation. Reader,, thou also
shalt know a resurrection—may it be unto
eternal life.
During a late trial in Philadelphia, Mr..
Ingerso[l, related to the Jury an interesting
anecdote in reference to the late Col.. Cad-
wallader.—A harmless maniac, that had
been for years suffered to pass as an inoffen-
sive idiot,J|ie day took the mischiei^tato his
head 4o load a gun with balk-and .»boot tbe< ^ ent teminari
uaU
& nail,1
id strong
[frequently
tfUrflar-—
first man he might meet in the streets.
sides of hills
places—the leaves are
smaller, but seWom larger, tliatij
they are green and rou ldteu, bfcu deeply
botched, so as to divide'teeApdf - 1 '
lobes, with a round slender side***
length from about two inches
four; of a slight purple it v>t . ,4
as the leaf itself, is a little down
dition to this, the leaf (is be -.tR
short hairs, soraewh^/tiff pW'
this, there is nothing rer^arliable
except a slight rl? qree of pqogeiu
tringency,»which it r inpa9te to ipe Mi
after cjiewing it some {fee- -the tea is :al
pleasant than otherwi e.—Shorild it
ral application be atended with the sjkfe# m
bappy • esulls time is partial exhibition <
been, what an acqujsitiou IKh y
Materia Modica of tbe U. States, and to d e
sufferers under n milady which affords .#4
of the^reifest 1 vi-
was the opinion of doctor Rush, one of hit ?
R cnupUCv gf. Mete X
,With his loaded musket he sallied out, and
it happened that Col. Cadwallader was the
Every particular as to the position in bow, pulling out his watch, and%pfeing wii
Jtidi.IL it fl 11 * ii'felf nlv 1 rrronf nffalxililu ^ .Tlt4t Sir ^ Tl
which the young lady usually sate.tl
having been well ri 'certamedVri® 1 '!
Matters wnbt on swimfningly for nearly a gW amved the/ oondticted l»ed
year, whin one morning, Jonathan met
Hans with a most imn i.-mg gravity of coun-
‘ nee, and accosled him with,
3 ; r. ITeeler, 1 do not usually place
in dreams ; but for three
sleep, which has been
much con
successive hi
Ai and i
hasbeem haunted with
hid me farewell, and to in
lit, v.iilch, with 'TsH
I*, was all he had to bequeath tp.'
[andcbil$ Abscence brid ler.f- o 1
sion of a most singular nature?’
firsf object teat struck his sight. The maniac
went.up to the Colunel and sternly demand-
ed “ What o'clock is itl” Col. Cadwalla-
der, observing the singular state of the ma
niac, flattered him by making a very I$w
j^pat affability, “ Jutb twelve,
maniae said, “ TJhat man is too
won’t shoot himand went his way.
ter doubled, all hi
Rand portrayed
v< tiness that had w
talked of her
us cheeks, and <
England,
i all the withching,
iyish aftcction
ran dowi
mu, ifever I -earh
nd tnak
‘^Der deufel take your dreams, I r
the impatient Dutchman, the
jjidteile;”
Your remark is just, in its general ap
plication. Sir, sa'. f the other, “ but I must
began exception for the one which lam de
down sirous of relatii. ”
room of her former young mistresri, and pla-
ced ber,65ftctly in the. position which h^i
bbcii descVih^d to them as that in which
the young lady declared that she continually
stow her whenever she entered the chamber.
She received her instructions also as to
the line of conduct she was to adopt, the
object being to let the patierit first imagine
very next man he met he levelled big
and shot him dead on the spot.
cine, that there isftfretnedy. for evary‘phys’|
if*
cal evil, and time did science will probaidjjf
realize Hi ■ j T. t- HanEFORig^
JVeto Case.—li the Dunhafe (Massa
chusetts) Register, n«e f tid the “fellowing
“ ' “A gentleman
new medico. T .
of t^itetojevh ha.J%- paralytic ^ieck tegifee
morning of the 18th inst., which so aflbeted'
thP musc’.osof deglutition that he was wholly
unable to swalJN? either splid r Uynd food
,t she saw a spectre, and then,
her upon the spot, to i
mina with the convictior. that it wa
vant in reality whom sbe had alw
With this view, as soon as every thing was
“ Tell it den,” said li is, “ and don’t be
3riii£i me wid your palaver,” •
pear tree,
arranged in proper order, with the rnotlier
of the lady on one side, and the Doctor on
the other, they supported their fair burden
into the apartment. Scarcely however, had
could eon\
being heard
Sjr John FiekYng, the fampus roagfetote,
who was blind, had a pipe fixed from the car
riage to the coach box, through which he
with the coachman without
by others. When his chariot
was slopped b\ an obstruction in the streets,
he inquired of the coachman what kind of
carriage, &c. occasioned it, and it was his
humor then to put out his head, and shou
‘put in his usual peremptory tone, “ Tak
that cart out of the wayor, “ You, sir
that chaise, <i-ive o.i!” This occasio
nights
njj ( in thiifPppB' /TTfee physician in nttendaner-
ifearing teat \ss patient would famisa c
the power of swallowing e.oultl he restor
determined, to use the stomace pump if on
could be procured, for the purpose of con
veying food into his stomach. He sent, ti.
Dr. Johd D. Fisher of Boston, (who re
ccntly broken £ one of these important iu-
strumeitts from Paris,) to consult with him
inthbTase. And we are happy to learn
that they succeeded perfectly. A quantity
of broth was thrown into the stomach of the
dent, with great ease to the operatm-c
they all tun
e mr-.'
♦be thrcsMiofd of t!
If'