The standard. (Cassville, Ga.) 1849-1864, November 18, 1852, Image 1
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA LIBRARY tat** to spend a fewOxyu with foe old gen- KcOIfklbk Dffaffl. 1 body goes to see then ; bat they «n quit* ^l^«i^»a^teaiM«tUi'c<ttKr • -. ... —*• -. i enough, .anilneverheart anythingagainst fog.- • - The Allowing extraordinary tale is tram- them beyond tbit. Of late their very exite At the appointed time he rmaehed the rasi- lated from a French periodical. The records ence seems to have' been forgotten; and I donee of his old frieod, and found that the of the incident are duly preserved amongst believe! air, that you are the first who, for fondly wen. prepared, and pleased to wel- the archives of the Parliament of Ton louse, • years, has turned your steps to the deserted con* buipa a giyat-'In-fob parlor, were‘'and may be seen by any one visiting foetid j spot.” two young todies, well dressed, and quite brary of that cily ' | Them details far torn oatisfyiug my en- handsome. He was duly introduced to Alia- As the junior partner in a commercial { riaoity, did but provoke it the more. Break* Bes Jape and Charlotte, and found them me- house at Lyons, I bad been travailing for j fust was served, bat I could not touch it, complisbed and sensible young ladies. Be- some time on the business of the firm, when j and.1 fclt that if I presented myself to the ing just now snecetpibleto foe tender pas- one evening, in the month of June, 1701, I merchant in aUch a state of excitement, they mon^ be was easily pleased, and exerted his arrived at a town in Languedoc, where I would think me mad; and, indeed, I felt powers to reader himself agreeable, tofoe had never bee* before. 1 put up nt a quiet very much excited. flattered maidens He succeeded, of course inn-in the suburbs, and being very mueh fh- 1 paced np and down the room, looked oat ■ sensible men, of his age and prospects, »1 - tigued, ordered dinner at once, and went to at the window, trying;to fix my attention On ways'do, whea they try; and’a* his eye bed almost immediately after, determining some external object; but in Vain. I en- THE STANDARD If PUBLISHED CURT THUJtSDAY, AT GASBVILLE. Ofo Oflfcx.—S. W. Corner of tke PMic Spur*. Tsana—One dollar and fifty cents a year In advance, or two dollars if delayed. No paper discontinued, except at the op tion of foe editor, until all arrearage* are Uw. ns. r. wftHi. Oh! if there is one law nbevefoerost, Written in wisdom—if there is. a word That I would trace as with a pea of fire Upon the unsullied temper of a child— If there in anything that keeps the mind Open to angel visits, and repels ’lit Human Loot.' The misnsti7 of *11- God has made nothing worthy of contempt, The smallest pebble in the well oftrnfo Has its peculiar meanings, and null stand When man's best momutiekts wearfast away. The law of Heaven is Lore—and thongh its name Has been usurped by passion, and profaned To ils unholy uses through all time, Still, the eternal principle is pure; And in these deep affections font we feel Omnipotent within us, can we see . The levaab measure in which love is given And in foe yearning tenderness of a child For every bird that sings above its bead, And every creature feeding on foe bills, And every tree, and flower, and running brook, We see how every thing was made to love; And how they err, who in a world like this, Find any tiling to hate but human pride. Advertiaemcnta not marked, will be pub lished until forbid, and charged accordingly. Letters on business must be addressed, peat paid, to the editor. . begin very early in foe morning-my.visits to i the different merchants. t I was no sooner in bed than I foil into a t deep sleep, ami had a dream that made foe' ( strongest impression upon me. I thought j tbatT had arrived at foe same-fown, but in the middle of -the day instead of the evening, I as Was really foe case, that I had stopped, at ) the very nne inn, and gone out immediate- « ly as an unoccupied stranger would do, to l •be whatever was "worthy of observation in the place. I walked down the main street < into another sireet, crossing it at right an- 1 gles, and apparently leading into the conn- l try. Iliad not gone very far .when I came j to. a church, the Gothic .portal of' which I : stopped to examine. When I had; satisfied i my curiosity, I advanced to a bye path which ] branched, off from foe main street Obey-. ; ing an impulse which I could neither ac- j count for nor control,! struck into this path, though it was winding, rugged, and unfre- i quented, and presently reached .a^miseva’jlu i cottage, in front of which was a garden coy- ’ eredwifo weeds. I had no difficulty in get- < 'ting into the garden, for the hedge had sev- j eral gaps in it wide enough to admit four i carts abreast. I approached an eld well - which stood, solitary and gloomy, in a dis- ] tant corner, and looking down into it I be held distinctly, without any possibility of i mistake, a corpse which had been stabbed in several places. I counted the deep wound* and the wide gashes whence the blood was • flowing. I would have cried ont. bat my tongue clove to the roof of my -mouth. At this moment I awoke with my hair on end, trembling in every limb, and cold drops of perspiration bedewing iny forehead—awoke , to find myself comfortably in bed, ttiy trunk standing beside me; birds warbling cheer fully arpnnd foe window ; whilst a young clear Voiee was singing a provincial air in the next room, and the morning son wai . shining brightly through the curtains. I sprang from my bed, dressed myself as , > it was yet very early I thought ! would seek , an appetite for my breakfast by a morning j walk. I went accordingly into the street , and strolled along. The farther! went the Stronger became the confused recollection of. < foe objects that presented themselves to my £ vfew. «. It is Very strange, ’ I thought, 1 have never been here before, and 1 could' \ swear that f have seen this house, artd the next, and that other on the left. On 1 went - till I came to,the corner of a street crossing the one down which I had come. For, the . first time I remembered my dream, .but put away foe thought as too absurd, till at ev ery step! tp>k some fresh point of resemb lance struck me. ** Am l still dreaming’" 1 exclaimed, not'without, a momentary thrill through my whole frame. is the' agree- . meat tobe period to the very end ?’ Be fore long'.-L reached the: ebarch with the same, architectural feafcures- that had.at tracted my notice in the di-uam ; and then -foe high road, along which 1 pursued my way, coining at length to the same bye-path that’ had presented itself to my , mag. nation a few-hoars before—tbere was no possibility of doubt or mistake. Every tree, every turn, was iam.liar to me i was not at ad of a saperstitious turn, and was woolly en grossed in foe practical details ot eommor? cial badness. . My mind had never dwelt upon the hallucinations, the preneitiuieuts, that-science hither denies or u> unable to ex- , plain, bat fmust con less font 1 now tolt my self spell-bound as by some eaeuantiaent— j 1 and with Pascal * words en my bp*-. & I continued dream would oc equal aa reality, * . I hurried forward, no lunger dumbing : that 1 the next moment would br.ng me to foe i co«tage,and th* really was ifte case-. In r. ki— -i* mantas DIRECTORY. Chastain atom;. ATTOBNEYS AT LAW, tuiut, U. Will practice ia the counties uf foe Cher- •kee circuit, - - ' • ■ Stud iu foe plaee of foe old greenwoods which hadfurnisfaed shelter and sustenance for the copious game. The buffalo fled far ther off, deeper into the grand prairies, hearer to the Kooky Mountains. The moon beams fell broad and bright , on fcheopen bottoms where the brown.bean used to nes tle among foe matted canes. The red deer had been scared away by the sharp sound of Collin's axes. It became necessary that Fanny should move. -She sold her-slender < improvement’ on the banka of the silver 10311T H. TATUM, ATTORNEY AT LAW, TRENTON. OBO. BosiMKSS entrusted to Ms care in any of the Cowitiee of the Cherokee Circuit, will meet with prompt attention. Nov. SI. 43-tf liXIMluil. iOHit B. oLESJf BCxxsrsSL & Gitissm, ATTORNEYS AT LA If, CASSVILLE, OA. March, 4. 1843. 4-tfc ly for a Few days; and after capper was over. and the-table was cleared, a third yoang lady, very neatly dressed, entered foe room; and Was formally introduced to him as one of the sisters—Mias Sarah. He was not a little surprised to find that the neat servant-girl, whose handiwork had won bis admiration, was one of the" sisters. He-found her sprightly, cheerful, qs accom plished, and he thought, a little more grace ful than Jane, who was older, or Charlotte, who.was younger than herself. He thought a little mere meanly of himself for having taken her to be foe hired girl of the family; but not a whit more meanly of himself for ' having revealed herself in that capacity; and her perplexity was some-what increased as he sat down on his bedside in the cham ber to which he wks shown by his host, and .said tohimseif- Salitode. 0, ‘Sacred solitude, divine retreat! Choice of the prudent! envy of the great! By thy pure stream, or in thy waring shade, We court fair wisdom, foot celestial maid; The genuine pffiiprihg of-her lov'd embrace, {Strangers on earth;) are innocence and peace. . , < There, from foe ways of men laid safe ashore, We smile to hear fob distant tempest roar; There, Mess'd with wealth, with bnsiness unperptex'd, This life .we relish, and ensure foe next. MARCUS Av IHGGS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OASSVXL&E. OA. Will attend promptly to all business con- fiJed to bis care. ... „ Bay 29, ISM-. tf- CHISOLM A WOFFORD, ATTOBNEYS AT LAW, I —- * Caasrille. as in foe merry thoughtless hours of her DAWSON A. rALKER, ATTOBMBY ABO OOVBNRBULOB AT LA* Spring Plaee, Geo. Refers to Keaxs A Horn. Augusta, Ga. Wilut, Banks, A co n Cliarleston, S. C. A. Wells A co., Savannah, Ga. April it. t 12—l y. ly youth, loud, long and clear as the sweet tones of bell metal. , . *. W One thought of a most gloomy character. Which of the threer wou.d sit up till twelve, studying tbeir . In the-morning; after a night's sotted primers and spelling.books f and all day on J Sleep—for he was not sufficiently .in lave to the Sabbath they tried more industriously keep him awake—he entered the breakfast- tkan ever I liad done in the school-room, Poemv and was soon jmned by foe twoyouag until at laatfoey were through both hooks, ladies who had first welcomed him. flat I was still ahead of tiiem—for long be- Sarah was not yet risible; bat whew fogy fore then I had obtauKid a testament and the had sat down at foe table, and Jane had Life of Marion, and had gone over both sev- poured out coffoe,Sarah came smilling in eral times- In this way I taught my dear behind a cleon white apron, and with a young one* to read, ha ving first of all taught steaming pile of hot buckwheat cakes in her mvhelf.* j. v?-' hand,-which, judging from the hue; of her -For tlje literal historical accuracy of tliejeheeks.Blmhadjast been baking. If there foregoing extraordinary facts, we refer to was a blnfo on her cheeks, any eye might Mrs. Holley s Book on Texas, where she re- see it was forced foere by foe fire, and net fefs to. Mrs Mhre, although in her nan^ri by.*nyam$ot d^radatioa on accouht of live she only sets down the initials of her the effieesheaogracefully filled. She greet- ' ed foe guest wifo a welcome smile, deposited ' And may we not Well be pertnitled io hcr toadof ^tobies, and returned to foe doubt whether the hhnalf of the globe, and ,kitehen, vdienqoabe tripped again to a few alltlie a^es of time, present a parallel to ntinufos with anofoer ptote" of colas, most fois almost nuraculons ease? The biogra* heautifol^ baked by Agr ownfoill. Horace Shies of the. seff-educata teem, to be sure, «*» Urge quantity of them, more than With noble examples among the softer as enough merely tofcatisfy huugef, beemise of among the stranger sex. But did any one ihe heautifaf Httie hands that, made them; ev«^ before, ■ fifoer ihan or *W .|» and timn^^toderednrer Jhe form with 'foromfofoe mOtient, painful process of vol- the ohlfoan, ami pfotodofhorses, and cows, untai^r self cuknre, wifo the same definite and crop., as thought he kn«. «m e foi^ and settled oM«t. Others have struggled about foem as well as hroadclofo and «»h- Fauy SwT—tb« Female KflBterrftke Wnt. The father of foejringutar heroine we are about to sketch was a Kentuchy hackwoods- man. Iicr mother died while she was an in fant, and when ^fe arrived at the age bf fif teen, her- fathehfldss died, leaving her"" a, poor, friendlesjalphan. It isn^^rpris- ing, then, at fois tedder age sheliarriod to deceased fafoer,) double her yhars as to ap, bat; just her %ual In poverty^ Her w hole fortune 'tri* composed tof ode cow, an old feather bed, a riisty fryiim pan, * broken JONES & CRAWFORD, ATTORNEYS AT LAW CALHOUN, OA. a a. cnawronn. r. c. sHnors*»^ CRAWFORD & SHROFSHIRC, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, CASSyiLLK, OBO. Bosixass entrusted to their cafe, in any.of foe counties of the Cherokee circuit, will meet wifo faithful attention. April 8. <■ And o told you toll where that weHuasd to be ?’ afoed T, almost breathless with ex citement. , "u As pair as I can remember, on fob very spot ou winch yuu arc standing,’ said the old 'woman] m-I could astve-swoi-n it,"’ thought I spring- ing lront the plaee as if 1 had trod upon a scorpion. ^ ' A^TMMEY AT LAW sAittSiRSYRiLlLS, m* [May 6, 1842. . fcraiglu haaknoaM! Mtofoto of raimni fnr[ plip Mrprpif •B0«<»<pfs, jild hmW'afflf- July**- ThopoLeo-offieers who had aecompaniwl me, iww rusoid into the house,-and secured the person of foe old man. As to hie wife --ao one 'could, at first, tell what had hc- r some search however, she was found faidiJiB behind a bundle of fag gots. But this time nearly the whole towa had gqfoered aruUnd the spot,-and now that tiiis,teurriote faict had oume to light, every* - 'oody nmlifchoe crintoto teli of, which had i weea brio, to the charge of the old couple. £ae ptopie,who prediot after an event are but hastened baA to the homlin a state of [. agitation dffochit to describe, 1 coni not come"ol her; i make up my nuud to pass uniwticsd sueh 1 extraordinary '«• j|paeucw^bttt bon yah “ any cluoto be tfhCa>ned.io tae- terirtoie uijs^ ‘ tery ; l went to tUe mndiord, atij after ' Uhnhtikg w»foh-m fig-soarirumfe Jdiff^reirt ’ .mfojeeto, i <mme to foe point and :»siwd boa directly, to whom tim cqttogo Uoiougcd thttv I' was on a bye-road whieli 1 Jescv,ded-» h»m.- uuutbrous. f *il wonder air,? e;ud he, ..a hat made . The old » jbn take such particular iu-.^v; ot such * proper au: . mutehai little hovel. ». ^ omahiieJ »y an ayely era , ohl maa sad uis wli.;. who ~b votiie cuarac must pert, ter of ajpg very smuws •.. , i hus^c.at. t.>eyj waits»; i, rarely leavetMhouse, seenuouoy,ami no-' sbenadoa r ■-^ C. ^■f^ v " - ; - ■ ' v 1^.-.. '’SSI -