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VOL. XIV.
THE GEORGIA JEFFERSONIAN
ts t-ÜBLISIIED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING
BY WILLAM CLINE,
At Two Dollars and Fifty Cents per an
num, or Two Dollars paid in advance.
ADVERTISEMENTS are inserted nt OXt
per square, fr the first insertion, and
■fttfTt o€./V TS per square, tor each insertion
thereafter.
A reasonable deduction will he made to those
who advertise by the year.
All advertisements not otherwise ordered, w#
be continued til! forbid.
ft&sJLEB OF LAXDS by Administrators,
Executors or Guardians are required lij law to he
tield on the first Tuesday in the month, between
the. hours o! ten in the forenoon and three in tin
afternoon, at tire Court-House, in the county m
‘which the land is situated. Notice of these sale,
must be given in a public gacclle FORTY DAYS
pr<>’’io'i< !o the (lay ofsalft.
•8 ILES OF XEGHOE'S must he made at pub
lic auction on the first Tuesday of the month, be
tween the. usual hours of sale, at the place ol pub
lic sales m the county where the letters Testa
ncn!ar/, of Adtraiftsir l ion or Guardianship may
qavo been irrartted; first irivintj FORTY DAYS
notice thereof re one of the public gazettes of this
.State, and r.t'fhe court house who e such sales are
‘to t-e held.
Notice for the sale of Personal Property must
he given tn like manner FORTY DAYS previous
■to the day of sale.
■Notice to Debtors and Creditors of an estate
tiiusi ho published FORTY DAYS.
•Notice that application will he made to the Court
VifGidmary Jbr i.kaye to sell land must be pub
lished tor TITO M OXT I IS,
Not ice for i.f.avf. to sell negroes must he
published TIVO JUOXTftS before any order ab
solute shall pc made thereon by the Court,
4JITATIOXS for Letters of Administration,
lnust he published THIRTY DAYS; for Dismission
from Administration, monthly six moeths; for
Dismission from Guardianship, forty day ’,
it ules forthe foreclosure of Mortgage must he
puhfa'ieil monthly for four months, for estab
lishing lost paper:-’ tor the full space of three
months; for compelling titles from Lxeeutors or
Administ-ators, where a bond has been given !,\
he disc i o- ! tire full space of THREE MONTHS.
Business Dircctovn.
MtM H. WHITFIELbjT
Attorney at Law,
Kawldnsville. Pulaski County, Geo.
Maret. il. 1862 1-.ini.
R, wTMoCUNE,
ATTOUNSSY AT LAW,
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
f );]!{'i: up-stairs in Chapman’s brick building
next d,n#r west of Bedd &. Cos.
.lanuarv 15. 1852 3
Attorney at Law,
A TL A N T A , GEO II G I A .
Aptil 8,1852. 15 —ly
F. W. A. DOYLEj
1 r £’ ‘A’ &Id Y A r r I„ AW ,
OFFERS hi# protessiooat services to ll>e I’ul>
lie. All hu.-iness entrusted lo his lUiinagemc
will meet with the most prompt attention. Rea#on
siiile deductions will lie made in fees, in proportion
to the amount of business so entrusted,
ota C o i Solomon street, opposite the Bap
ist Church.
C Attention,
REFERENCES < Perseverance,
( Promptitude.
Gri lin, March, 1852. 12-If
henryHendrlckT
A T T O R NE Y A T la A\V ,
Jackson, Butts County, Ga.
Fehroarv, 1852.
L P, WATKINS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
McDonough, Henry Ccuuty, Ga.
February 2,
BOMBERS & HARRIS, _
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
A. L. Borders, Gr>flin, Ga.
West Harris, Zebulon, Ga.
Mare It 5, 1,852 50 —| y
11. & G J GREEN & MARTIN,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
David IV. Martin,) /-..
it ben J. Green, 1 Gnffin,Ga.
gfi art ford Green, Zcbtiion, Ga.
M>y 28.1852 22
” OR. 11= W, BROWN,
OFFICE ON SOLOMON STREET
Opposite the Baptist Church,
April. 1852. 18
1, MUNSON STELL,
A 7 T O R N E Y AT LAW ,
Me Bminiigh.Ga.
maftSHALL HOUSE.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA
WM üBH VSOX, Proprietor
October 4, 1852 41-ly
A. i3. DU LIN,
COTTON FACTOR,
No 74 BAY-STREET,
f >- ’9 (41) _ SAVANXAU
Dr. M. J. DANIEL,
GRIFFIN, GA.,
)iiicc i!i New Brick Building on New Orlcan St.
Oppoate Planters Hotel
An gust I. 1852 32—ly
PP.Si£ITKE ’
>?EETH
1T ®2A'^ 9
ftftTotJL'J respectfully i, llo rm all who arc in
* * heed ol lull sets r.r partial seta of Teeth,
and who wish them put up with skill and experi
ence warranted to answer every purpose requi
red, that they can now he supplied at short notice,
and with the Mine style put up upon u hcaiitdu
inetiilio mao, which took the premium ovcral
d'liens ot the kind ai I lie late Fair in Macon, also
the First Premium at the late Fair in Atlanta. Dr.
C. has lately made arrangements so that persons
living in the country, or in any of the adjacent
towns, can, if they wish, command his services
tree of charge, winch will secure them against 1 1<-
pcftiv imn isdons pra< tieed'!iy iiiner.tnt quack l.ul
fra ly lr .verse the cjmin v.
fcScpt
®l)f ©corgift Jcfferstmiim.
(Education.
TO THE CITIZENS OF GRIFFIN.
My Friends, —The commencement is
with myself, the end with onr State and
country; objects greatly contrasted in mag
nitude and interest. ‘The flight of time
leaves its impression on every thing.—
“Fuit Illium” once was, is the doom of all.
Nearly seventy circuits of the sun have
made me, as well as some of you, a monu
ment of their wasting power; with his keen
edged scythe, time has shorn the plumes
ol my imagination, clipped the pinions of
my fancy, and with his wings shadowed
my intellectual vision. Effete is written
on all my faculties; gray hairs cover my
head, and the tremor, which anticipates
dissolution, teaches me that I will soon be
a disembodied existence. lam left with
out an ambition to gratify, by success or
apphui.se; without an aspiration beyond a
quiet, retired, and peaceful close of life, ex
empt from care and emancipate from debt.
But my friends, it has seemed good to me,
in the midst of the ardent devotion of all
classes to the cause, that I should offer to
your consideration some remarks on Edu
cation. It is hoped that a willing spirit
to render a mite of aid, will ensure an in
dulgent reception of them.
One who lived three thousand years
ago, and whose name has ever since lived
in fame, while myriads of beings of like
form and feature, have passed from memo
ry by the oblivious tide of time, so justly es
timated the natural and political rights of
man, that he proclaimed in poetic measure
this enduring truth:
‘‘To spor.k liis ihftngli's, Is a freeman’s light.
In p> > vrar, in couiict', nr in fight,”,.
Tinder the protection of this first principle
and law of our nature, I purpose to write
my thoughts, crude as they may be, on the
subject intimately connected with this an
cient truth. Expect no logical argument;
the scholastic laws of composition will be
relaxed, in order to say the most in
brevity. Freedom of speech and the cur
j rent of thought spurn artificial rules among
i :l free people, as we profess to be, and 1
hope, its yet, avc are indeed. Our theme
is indeed one of vast extent, affecting for
weal or woe, all the imaginable interests
of our existence. It is an orb, one ex
tremity of whose diameter rests on earth,
the other ever seeking its position in eter
nity; its circumference enlarging and en
larging forever and forever-aioHe-w, aionon.
On earth it is the province of man to dis
charge to fellow man its sacred obligations.
Beyond our sphere of sublunary existence,
angels and the Father of spirits perfect it,
by bestowing the power of intuition in the
world of spirituality and pure intellectuality.
Me have been able to explore only the
minutest part of this great circle, and will
freely communicate the few discoveries out
dim light permitted us to make, and refer
you to others more instructive, more lumi
nous, of stronger miri ‘ Jcarcr light. I’octs
paint the subject in such colors as the
l'rism of their fancy refracts; orators, as
their maginatiou under the rules of rhet
oric suggests figures and imagery to their
minds. Practical men treat it according
to the dictates of common sense—all aim
to enforce its importance, but the latter
make utility the desideratum. Philoso
phers give it a tripplc division, physical,
moral and intellectual. Upon these, singly
and jointly, volumes have been written by
the wise and good of every age, and much
common place might now by prosed. But
the first we will assign to the medical and
gymnastic schools, the second and third
to those departments of science with which
they are usually classified, ethics and dia
noetics. To these divisions permit us to
add a fourth, scholastic, for this is now our
peculiar province, and the present object
of this community. Before we take it up,
however, we crave your patient attention
while we generalize a few propositions and
arguments.
Man is a rational and responsible being,
and his life probationary, lie is therefore
a proper subject and susceptable of in
struction. Grant the terms, and the obli
gation arises to bestow it on him, and once
existing it cannot be cancelled, for it is of a
moral nature and must be immutable.
We believe that iu the design of liis crea
tion, he only fulfils his destiny, and it is a
glorious destiny.. He is made a little
lower than the angels. Misapprehend me
not. We are neither a stoic nor necessi
tarian. The wisdom and goodness of his
Creator has purposed that his destiny
should pursue its tenor and complete its
end, by the operation of secondary causes.
These leave to him the consciousness of
freedom of volition and consequent action;
hence his destiny is alternative, but certain
in its ultimatum. Education is a seconda
ry cause greatly influencing this, and thus
its importance and indispensibility are
demonstrated, obligatory on every parent,
man, woman, community and State or gov
ernment. lie is endowed with faculties,
by the active energies of which, his rela
tionship to an improved condition of being
is prosecuted to higher and still higher
degrees. The structure of the human or
gan of perception and reason demonstrates
its capacity of increased development;
hence we infer the mental unprovability of
man’s nature, and the design of Deity” of
his perfcctability. Comparative anatomy
justifies the conclusion. Here there is a
cogent argument of the importance of Ed
ucation as a secondary cause in the fulfil
ment of our destiny, and of the imperative
duty of society to diffuse its benefits and;
.blessings on all its members. We need
not hesitate in this community to deduce
an urgument from ‘ a proposition iu holy
writ. The spirit of man ascendcth, of the
brute descondcth, suyß tnc qoVi of inspired
wisdom. Their idiocy ncracy is adapted to
their . and opposite dispensation.—
ihe latter is carefully fitted by discipline to
answer arid accomplish the object of its
creation, though after its proper use, and
at its dissolution, it merely multiplies the
particles of dust; the other or former, when
he puts off this mortal coil, mounts on se
raphs’ wings to habitations suited to the
expansive powers of the soul—aud shall
he not be disciplined for so glorious a des
tiny? Who shall deny? Is not this an ir-,
refutable proof of the duty and obligation
of education? But my friends this mode
of argument, though it might be continued
to prolixity, may bo deemed too metaphy
sical, we will therefore conclude it and
GRIFFIN, (GA.) THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 20, 1853.
move on earth among sensible and tangible
objects.
Let us, my friends, take a coup d'aeiJe of
the field of nature. In all her manipulal
tions, what do we observe in her botanic
sand zoological kingdoms? That her univer
al law is gradual and progressive devcl
opement. Every thing receives a tutor
age from her plastic hand, from the vital
germ and swcHing bud to the expanded leaf (
and full blovrii flower, from the flower to’
the full ripe fruit and towering tree, from
the ova to the larva, from these to the
winged bird or gilded insect, from quick-,
cned embryo to the terrific mammoth, every
step progressive, all is culture, under some
controlling and superintending power, in
stinct or genius, nature’s school-master.
From these analogies may we not draw
maxims of wisdom for our guidance rela
tive to human tuition? God enjoins it on
us to study in his universal laboratory, to
scan the bright page of nature, his chief se
condary cause. Here we learn every thing is
taught, and by analogy ourselves ought
to and must be taught. Shall man be ex
empt from this general law r , he wiiom his
creator pronounced lord paramount of this
nether world, not to be educated to qual
ify -him for his sceptred vicegerency? he,
the only being to remain unimproved, from
birth to manhood, from the cradle to the
grave, except the mere explication of his
material properties, possessed in common
with every block or rock in his path, save
animation? Then, my friends, all nature
proclaims the necessity of education. So
affirms the Mantuan bard — “Felix, qni po
tuit rerum cognosccre cans as.”
Another argument arises from the r,ow
er to infix in himself what is not aUirst I
con-uiai tO uir nature, wo meyn habit,!
which is sometimes called second nature,
and man a creature of habit, a bundle of
habits.
°Tis education forms the human mind,
As the twig is bent the tree’s inc'ined!’
“Train up a child in the v r ay he should
go, and when he is old he will not depart
therefrom.” Both poverbs affirm the flex
ibility and the impressibility of man’s tem
perament, and this again is a strenuous
| argument for education. It is closely al
lied to habit and may be its synonyme.—
The one pursues the other, pari passu, and
is also a secondary cause affecting our des
tiny, appointed to qualify us easily to re
ceive those plianccs and take those posi
tions, which are requisite to accomplish
the ends Providence has in view in his na
tural and moral government, and as moral
agents renders us responsible for the faith
ful discharge of the duty of education; for
aided bv flexibility under the dictate and
direction of reason, education can fix or
eradicate good or evil propensities.
In close connection with this, another
enforcement of duty springs from virtue
and vice. We give you no logical defini
tion of these terms, will not say whether
they be entities or nonentities, abstracts
or concretes, relative cr.independent kk'ft".
Philosophers have impaired their wits in
such disquisitions, refined ideas till they
had none. The world of common sense
knows well by their exeinplication in prac
tice, the existence of both the happiness
of the one, misery of the other, recognise
them as opposite principles growinglnto
eontrarious habits. Which shall* we
choose—the choice is important for time
and eternity? They too are secondary
causes, and in their application toward
fulfilling our destiny are much subject to
our owii direction. They were once deifi
ed, house-hold gods. Which shall be our
guardian genius? When the election is
made, education will, we assure you, per
fect the worship of either. In plain lan
guage, education is essential to purity of j
mind; it is the fountain in which the stains
of vice are washed out. It will render us
virtuous or vicious, consequently happy or
miserable, reputable or infamous. Jlow
necessary then to attend to it in the spring
season of life —A poet aptly says,
‘By virtuous education, our lives discolored by
our present woes,
In progressive age, m iv st 1!I be bright with li .ppy
hours.’’
Another argument is, that iu the aro
ma of our literature, we embalm the mem*-
oryof our patriots, our great and good
men. Their lives, their actions and coun
sels, which serve for future guidance, arc
perpetuated on the historic page and re
joice iu immortality from the indelibility of
its traces. Manor in nostra, nostra res al
entnr, sennonibus crescent , Ulcrarum monu
■ mentis inveterascent ct corrobora bunlior.”
We have few or no breathing statues, let
tered urns or sculptured columns; but to
our patriot-fathers, statesmen, warriors,
jurists, orators, will bo raised unfading
monuments by the genius of education.—
While even brass and marble moulder and
dissolve, the characters of a national litera
ture defy the impress of time. Achilles’
fame is imperishable, because the Iliad
can never die, . because the thoughts of
the poet like lus mind are immortal yet
his monumental urn has long since passed
away from Tenedos, the lonely isle of the
“far sounding sea,” “polw pUoisboio thalas
es.’’ When think you the names of Wash
ington and of Napoleon will pass from
earth? Only when the light of education
and historic literature, and nature sink to
gether into chaos.
In this way, education exerts a powerful
ennobling influence over a magnanimous
people. Its influence on the fortunes.of
men in life is a prolific source of pleasant
considerations iu its favor. The casualties
of life, prosperous or adverse, arc much
subject to its control. It adorns the one,
or alleviates tile other, tempers tbe zest of
| prosperity, mollifies the griefs of adversity,
moderates the pride of success and buoys
the spirit under the pressure of misfor
tune. Great is the beauty of life,’ yet
many of its hours lag heavily with the ig
norant and unemployed. To such, soli
tude is intolerable, and no torture is sharp
er than mental inanity, or the ghosts of
murdered hours, whichmaunt the conscien
ces of the idle. But the man of cultivated
intellect is never less alone, than when a
lonc. Think, Sir Walter Scott was ever
solitary? With the magic wand of chast
ened imagination, he could conjure spirits
, from the vasty deep, fill the space around
him with disembodied existences, of friends
and relatives, heroes ‘and sages, and hold
sweet converse. Or lie could take his
stand on the narro.w isthmus, between
time and eternity/review the long retinue
of hazy and shadowy forms as they* retire
into the dim vista of the one, or anticipate
with ecstacy the beauty and brightness of
the other. To the mind purged by educa
tion of all grosser appetites, such reveries
are delightful, because they are like angels’
thoughts and foretel of angelic association,
and whisper to the soul its immortal na
ture, for immortality ahme can conceive
such thoughts. | Eff tnind's flag, when
by choice or wer, placed or
immured in ‘ solitude? Ask the spirit of
Raleigh in the tower of London, of Mar
montel in the Bastile, of Tasso in the dun
geon of Farara, of Cervantes in a Spanish
prison, of Milton in exile, of Lafayette in
Olmuts, and they will tell you.
But come w r e nearer home. I appeal
to you, ye generous souled women of the
South, yes, to the assembly of female beauty
and intelligence in our day, for their esti
mate of education. Do they not constant
ly show ns how much they ‘ value positive
over adventitious merit? Be the young
gallant ever so v destitute es this world’s
wealth, yet beside the sons of fortune he
maintains his stand. “Among the rest
young Edwin bowed.” Have he virtue
and education, they reward him with a
ruby lip, the lilly hand and faithful heart,
recognising the perfect equivalent of wealth
and science,nay the superiority of the latter,
bless their warm hearts and democratic
souls! David the son of a humble shop-/
herd, himself a shepherd. Was taught by I
Samuel the
phets m aiofch. What of him? King
kaul desired him sos a sop-in-law, the prin
cess Miehal loved him unpossessed of
wealth. Permit me here as a short epi
sode to refer my fair readers to the last
efyarptcrof of a
well educated lady. you have the
wise man’s opinion, and he was a royal gal
lant and great admirer of your sex, in this
respect the greatest Mormon in ancient
days.
In order to acquire an enlarged capaci
ty for true happiness, it must be a chief
duty to discipline the mind by education.
Literature enlarges, and science strength
ens the mind of men. Under all circum
stances, it inspires tranquility, patience,
composure, beneficence, charity, modesty
and peace, and resists the impressions of
trouble and anxiety from extraneous causes.
The educated man divests himself of every
prejudice against his own countrymen, and
citizens or subjects of other lands, and
views them as they really are, his brethren;
he quarrels not with them for their climate,
their conventional manners or their go
vernment, consequently can enjoy himself
everywhere. He is never esteemed a for
eigner in foreign countries, and though he
may have lost friends in one place, he will
find them in another; in every country he
will be esteemed as a citizen, and every
where be able to despise the casualties of
fortune. On this are based all those in
terests, which flow from the cultivation of
cultural andTofflfu^cial. All those affec
tions which make up the st’.tn of pleasure
in human intercourse, conjugal, pafC’dal,
filial, social, are enhanced, refined, attuned
and harmonized by its influence. The use
ful arts and sciences and polite literature
look to education for their very continu
ance. We all know the effects upon the
moral and political world iu the medieval
age, when the light of science was extin
guished in the darkness of bigotry and
superstition, and men became autometons
of tyranny and priestcraft. Inline, edu
cation is a property the sheriff can never
take, a bank whore -no bills are protested,
not liable to insolvency, and when houses,
lauds, negroes, money and friends are all
gone, it remains to us a sure capital.. JLcc
stadia adolascentiam alunt, sencdntm oblcc
tant, secu ndas res oriiant, adversis perfugl
um ct solatium prabent, delcctaut domi, nan
impedient foris, pernoddnt nobiscum, pere
grinautur, rusticantur. Here we close the
series of arguments, and recommendation
of education. In our next we will take up
our fourth division. Education scholastic,
and its best method. We will discuss it
in its popular form, F. D. C.
January 10th, 1853.
jk. ~ -
* Tho I-kdiid at Jamaica.
A late number of the New York He
rald portrays in the darkest colors the
ruin brought upon the Island of Jamaica
naturally one of the most productive
on ihe globe —by the act of the British
Parliament emancipating the slaves of
the planters. The negroes once freed,
to induce them to work more than enough
to make a bare subsistence, became ini-,
possible. Labor having failed, magnifi
cent sugar and coffee estates are yearly
becoming worthless; and the prospect
instead of growing brighter is day by day
becoming more discouraging. Statistics,
recently collected, show that of two hun
dred and thirty-one sugar estat. s> valued,
in 1841, at nearly eight millions and a
half of dollars, one hundred and sixtv
three have been totally, and twenty par
tially abandoned, within the period of a
few years. Their value, in 1841, was
two millions and a half of dollars. Du
ring the same time, of one hundred and
thirty-two cattle pens, valued at one mil
lion and a half, one hundred and twenty
two have been totally, and ten partially
abandoned. Buch are the (workings of
abolition ! In the conclusion of its arti
cle the Herald remarks :
“ The Isiauwhich some
twenty years ago was the most wealthy,
prosperous and productive of the West
India Islands, is to-day impoverished,
bankrupt, its trade and commerce anni
hilated, its soil uncultivated, and its natu
ral products neglected What caused
this sad and wonderful change from pros
perity to adversity? Every one knows
the reason. Ii was, first, the passage of
the Emancipation Act tie success of
the fanatical abolitionists of the day
and, secondly, the change of policy in
troduced by the B.iiisfi government, in
withdrawing protection from their then
weak and debilitated Colonies, it is a
question whether Jamaica or Cuba has,
at present, most cause to complain of the
conduct of the mother country* and we
do not'know hut the annexation of these
Islands to the United .States, or iheir ab
solute independence, would he as justi
fiable a subject of rejoicing to the inhab
itants of Jamaica, as to the Creoles of
thtf“Gctn of the At)‘.files.”
The Late Fearful Rail Road Accident.
The Rev. Mr. Fuller, of Manchester,
N. H. was in the car al the time of
the accident, and furnishes the editor of
the Mirror with the following interesting
account of the late fearful railroad acci
dent at Andover:
I was looking out at the window, when
! .ve felt a severe shock, at*! the car was
-ifrogyed for a few seconds.} the
tne front wheel being broken. Perfectly
conscious of our situation, I remember
thinking what was the .matter. 1 retain
ed through the whole mv consciousness.
In another second, the coupling which
joined our car with the other, broke, and
our car was whirled violently round, so
as to reverse thefends, and we were swung
down the. rocky ledge. For once I had
no hope of escaping death. ’ 1 shall never
forget the breathless horror which came
over us during our fall. There w’as not
a shriek, nor an exclamation, till the
progress of the car, after having turned
over twice on the rocks,’ Was arrested,
and with a violent concussion, having |
parted in the middle, -anil being broken
into many thousand fragments. I recei
ved personally a few Jiruises and flesh
cuts, of no particular moment, and found
myself amid a mass of broken glass and
splintered vvood, and groaning men and
women, with no limbs broken, and with
a heart pfaise God for his sparing mer
cy. I had no need to get out at any door .
or wdndow, for the car was a fragmentary
ruin. The next moment, ?t nnan covered
with blood himself—a noble fellow said
‘we arc alive, let us help others.’ I pas
sed from one frightful part of the scene
to another, an 4 the whole is before me
now as a fearful vision. Men came un
on every side dripping with biped, and
few escaped without some cutsand bruises.
Before all were rescued, the top, covered
with oil cloih, took fire from the stove,
aud added to the general horror and suf
fering.
Iwo incidents, among the many ter
rible ones, are especially present to mv
memory. On the hank sat a mother,
(Mrs. Stokes of this city,) clasping her
little bov, of some three or four years of
age; he had been rescued from the ruin
which had strewn the rock with splinter
ed fragments, and her own person was
considerably burned by the fire, hut she
was shedding tears of gratitude over her
rescued child, and rejoicing in his safety,
unmindful of her own pain. But a few
steps from her I saw the most appalling
scene of all. There was another mother,
whose agony passes beyond any descrip
tion. She could shed no tears, hut over
whelmed with grief, uttered such affect
ing words as I never can forget. It was
Mrs. Pierce, the wife of the President
elect; and near her, in that ruin of shiver
ed wood and iron, lay a more terrible
ruin—her only son—one minute before
.*-a beautiful, so full of life and hope.—
she was supported by her husband and
Prof. Packard.
Gen. Pierce was himself bruised in the
back, ho* pot severely, and the wounds
of the spirit far exceeded any bodily
sering; yet, while deeply affected, he
showed all the self-possession and nerve
which only characterizes great-hearted
and noble men, ami which few would
manifest under similar circumstances.—
He gave all needful directions about the
recovery of his little boy, still entangled
in the wreck about him, and then afforded
all that comfort and sympathy to his part
ner in sorrow which was appropriate to
the time. She was conveyed to a house
near, and there she gave vent to the grief
which rent her heart, while he consoled
and comforted. I may not draw the veil
from that picture. Sacred .is the holgr
privacy of sorrow, and the hearts of those
who have suffered can fee! what my pen
must not describe.
Soon we were able to convey the wound-’
ed and the dead to the. nearest house,
which happened to be that connected
with the poor farm in Andover, where
every possible kindness and attention w r as
rendered. Go with me, Mr. Editor, to
that house, and look with me awhile on
that scene of suffering and sorrow. In
one room were Gen. Pieiceand his lady;
in the opposite apartment lay the mortal
remains of iheir little boy—and oh! so
sad a sight! The blow, by which he w'as
instantly killed, struck his forehead, and
was so violent as to remove the upper
portion of leaving a part -jf bne
brain exposed. The face, with the ex
ception of a bruise about the right eve,
still remained uninjured, hut bathed in
blood. Gen. Pierce and lady,meanwhile,
retired to the house of Mr. Aiken.
In the room was a la;ly, Mrs. Newel,
of Hillsborough, considerably bruised,
and her face cut. Her little daughter,
twelve years of age, lay near, with her
foot so badly injured, that amputation will
be necessary. She bore her pains sweet
ly and patiently. In another room Mr.
Kittridge, of Pelham, lay with his leg
broken, and a Mr. Childs, of Henniker,
sat bravely up, though with a face cov
ered with blood. Others, much bruised,
had gone on the train which returned for
us from Lawrence. Every attention
whch couid possibly be paid to those in
jured was given at this house, where
most of the wounded were parried. The
physicians were prompt in their services,
calm, kind, and, as far as one not of the
profession can judge, judicious. After
the head of the little boy had been ten
derly cared for by the physicians, and all
possible done to restore the look of life,
be was carried by qs to the house where
his afil cted parents were. I shall never
forget the look of extreme pain that child’s
face wore, and yet there was something
resigned and tender impressed even by
the awful band of death. He was not
vet cold when he was in the room of Mr
Aiken’s house, dressed just as he had been
at the moment of the calamity. The
form which left that house but little more
than art hour before, lull of life and hap
piness, with a heart full of hope and
bright aspirations, was born back to those
who had parted from him—that heart
noWtfhushed and still—that form motion
less, and tiie limbs fast growing rigid un
der the icy touch of death.
In closing his nairation of the sad acci
dent, Mr. Fuller says:
“And now, Mr. Editor, I have stated
all which you desire from me, very im
• perfectly of course, but I believe as cor
rectly as any one can immediately after
so heart-rending and confused a scene.—
I'o me the greatest cause of wonder and
gratitude is that any escaped who were
in that car. When I looked down that
jagged, rocky steep, while sympathizing
with the bereaved 1 felt that all who
stood -tli(.-i to liao catisi so- (gratitude
that we were yet among the living.
I o the whole nation how appalling
would have been stroke, had he, so
recently chosen by them, to the highest
office in the world, perishefr'there by the
fearful disaster. May the wounded re
cover from their severe bruises, and may
the bereaved ones obtain that real conso
lation which the Gospel affords in such a
calamity.*’ I heir only child has been ta
ken away, but there is a balm in the
thought that our Saviour declared of child
ren, ‘Of such is the kingdom of Heaven.’
Terrible is such a grief, and a mother’s
heart is now wrung with anguish, while
the father feels deeply his bereavement.
On entering the scene of his future public
labors, this personal grief must cast a
shade of sadness over his spirit, and keep
constantly before his mind and heart the
solemn thought of mortality. May he he
spared further sorrows, and fh*e feeble ,
health of his wife not fail beneath this
heavy grief. In efforts for his country’s
welfare, and consecration to her service,
may he find some alleviation of his sor
rows.”
From the Richmond Enquirer.
A Strange Story.
The following singular statement is
published in the Belfast (Ireland) Chron
icle, —a journal which is said to be one
of tbs most trustM’orthy and reliable in
the United Kingdom. If true,it discloses
the character of the new Emperor of the
French in anew light, and summarily dis
sipates whatever suspicions maj’ have been
innocently entertained that the “Empire’’
is really to be “Peace.” If false—why
it is but another of the many newspaper
romances of which the “Nephew of his
Uncle” has been the Hero, since his ac
cession to power. There lias been so
much of the wonderful already in the ex
traordinary career of this man, that per
haps we.shoukl cease to marvel at what
we are now told are veritable facts, and
yet we presume it will be a difficult mat
ter to persuade one reader in ten that the
revelations in the Belfast paper are not
of the Slipvegammon texture :
There lives in Paris a gentleman, who
in December, 1547, wrote—“l can see
with clearness that Louis Phillippe will
not be three months on the throne of
France.”’ Louis Phillippe was exiled in
February, IS4S. That gentleman wrote
shortly after the Presidential election
“This Bonaparte scion is a traitor. Not
a man looks’at him but ih instinct
of avoiding him as a treicherous man.
He will strike for the Consulate—for the
Dictatorship; and God knows what will
follow.” .He struck. The coup d'etat
of December, ISSI, tells in history how
he struck. The same gentleman wrote
in March of the present year—“ The
tyrant aims at the empire. His gaze is
fixed upan the crown. Before a vear
there will be a revival of the Bonapartean
dynasty, and the French will knepl be
fore Napoleon the Third.” The empire
has come.
The man who predicted these events
is no common man. He thinks and
looks around him. He perticipites in
miny movements quietly, and gathers
knowledge which, in our view, no other
man at this moment, in or out of Paris,
could find means to nCCplire. His previ
ous predictions give us confidence in
what he states. In fact we know him,
and know that he . would not detail as
truth what he did not know to be true,
for he is generally one of the least spec
ulative individuals we have ever met.
Well, that gentleman -we would give
his name if we were permitted writes
the subjoined on Thursday last, and all
before whom it comes can measure its
worth, and the amount of credence to be
attached to it from what they have al
ready learned. The revelation will seem
curious to many; to us it is by no means
so; as we ere aware of the sources from
which his information is derived, and
how he derives it. That it is true we
are convinced, and ui.lt the British gov
ernment are “up” to the machinations of
the French Emperor, is evident from the
revived state of our defences, from the
embodiment of our militia, from the addi
tion to our maritime hands* and from the
establishment, of a Channel Fleet.
The following is the communication re
ferred to :
“In a secluded part of the wood of
Bologne, at a place called Madria, whi
lome the residence of Lamartine, is a
house surrounded by trees, and the win
dows of which are never opened, except
sometimes at dawn, as if to let in fresh
air This house, all day, and many
nights, has the air of being uninhabited;
but oftentimes at night there comes about
suspicious looking characters, who take
up their post in the thickets, and then
about twelve or one up come several
carriages, with the blinds close down,
the porle cochere is opened mysteriously,
they drive in and the door closes after
them.
What is this place ?
It is lire residence of Virginia la Sabo
tiere.
This for many persons, indeed, nearly
all —is no explanation. But let us enter
one evening last week, and perhaps what
may be going on may enlighten us.
In an apartment sumptuously furnished,
is a grand supper laid out, resplendent
with plate and brilliant with lights, and
around sit half a dozen men and as many
women, who, while sipping their cham
pagne are talking animatedly of conquest
and empire, of aggression and rapine.
“Ves,” says one, striking his fist on
the table—a man with heavy moustache,
hooked nose and saturnine bilious coun
tenance —“yes, when once I am crowned
I will proclaim Jerome King of Holland,
and not only proclaim him King, but
make him lying, while Belgium shall
reign as my vassel.”
“Yes, sire,” said all but one whom we
shall not mention.
“And then King of Rome and Italy,
and Protector of the Helvetic Confedera
tion shall be no empty titles—they shall
be mine.”
“But, sire, England,” observed one
gently.
“England, my eternal nightmare !
England, the assassin of my uncle! Ev
i rvVLp I take I fiud her in mv way.—
Let ner take care, perfidious and med
dling Albion. Let her beware that she
interfere not, for as surely as she inter
feres, will I land on her shores and show
them that their island is as easily made
a.Frebch Colony as was Algiers. They
fancy themselves impregnable; they will
find their mistake ”
Thus spojre Louis Napoleon in the
house of Virginie la Sabotiere.
„ I...must now explain who she is, and
how .fie. found himself there, premising
that tfye information I am giving you may
cost me deaf, though I hope ho one will
aid the rascally police of Bonaparte in
tracing the author of the news here giv
en. How I obtained it is a secret of life
and death. But every word I write is
true. Louis Napoleon may not carry
out his after-supper boas*, but the word's
were spoken by him. *
When Louis Napoleon Bonaparte was
a State prisoner in Ham, he was treated
with ver3 r great kindness and considera
tion. Amongst others who saw him for
different purposes, was Virginie, daugh
ter of an old sabet maker in Hatn. After
a while Louis made proposals, they were
accepted, and two children were the re
sult. These children.he was very much
attached to. They were provided for,
and sent to first rate schools. On his ad
vent to power in IS4S, the Prince gave
Virginie a pension, and then in December,
ISSI, he gave her the beautiful residence
above alluded to.
With a natural taste for debauchery,
resembling in character the debauchery
of the Regent and Louis XV., one of the
delights of Louis Napoleon is an orgy,
vith plenty of wine and women. In fact
his happiness is a petite souper , such as
when the Regent and Dubois lived. To
indulge in these at St. (’loud and the
Elysee would be dangerous, as there is a
certain amount of public opinion still
alive; but then there was the cozy little
house at Madria, and that has been se
lected by him as the seat of his midnight
conferences on the affairs of the Empire.
Surrounded by parasites, pimps and pros
titutes, heated by wine, he tries to arouse
himself in this despicable way to emulate
his uncle.
Not a dozen persons in Paris, apart
from his own clique, know a word of all
this. But I have told it. Was I pres
ent ? did I receive the report from one
who was present ? was the orgy revealed
to a second party and then to me ? Moro
questions f cannot answer
I give the informatian as true, exact,
and historical. It may be denied. That
will only prove its truth. As for a Bona
partist to say a thing to be, is to prove
that it is not.”
Louis Napoleon’s, Crown and ms
Wife’s Foot. — A Paris letter says, “the
coronation of Louis Napoleon will cost
much more than that of Napoleon the
great, and, consequently, than any other
public ceremony that France ever paitf
for. That of Napoleon cost somewhat
over two millions. The marriage will
cost as much more probably; and the
birth of the heir, if there is any, wilt
doubtless be made the occasion of simi
lar expenditures. The coronation robes
are to exceed any other coronation robes
ever heard of. and I heard yesterday an
indignant Orleanist say, “the creature
has had the impudence to have the crown
jewels sewed into his imperial tnanteau.”
t he crown for which M. Lemonnier, the
newly appointed court jeweler, has gone
to Russia to obtain precious stones, is al
so to go ahead of any crown yet com
posed. A model of the foot of the Prin
cess Wasa, has arrived, and has been
confided to the imperial shoemaker. A
model of the princess’ hand is expected
for the glove maker; and the necessary
moulds for the corset maker; the bonnet
maker, and the modiste. A daguerreo
type has been handed to the court painter;
and lam astonished that the likeness of
the future Empress has not appeared in
the shop windows. By the time she gets
here she will find herself an old story.”
Sneer at laziness as much as you may,
lazy people are the happiest people under
the sun. Nothing annoys them—not
even the contempt of the energetic; for
they return it with a sublime and lofty
compassion for the fretting, fuming, push
ing, toiling mortals, who pride themselves
on their industry and activity. Your
sluggard is a philosopher in his way. Ho
says to himself. “Why should I work that
other folks may enjoy?” Were Ito wear
out my life in amassing a fortune, still 1
should not be a whit richer than Lazarus
—nay, I might be as badly off as Dives
—in that undiscovered country', where
there are no banks or fancy stock.” “La
bor,” he argues, “was entailed upotuman
as a curse; he was made industrious as a
penalty for being too busy. If Adam and
Eve had been contented with loafing
about the Garden of Eden without po
king their noses into what did not con
cern them, we might be all living in clo
ver, with nothiag to do but eat, drink,
sleep, laugh and grow fat. Work being
a curse, (see Genesis,) why should l ap
propriate any more of the malediction
is absolutely necessary. Surefv
tivere is no harm in being cursed as little
as circumstances will permit*” So rea
sons vour metaphysical donothing; and
there is some logic in his argument.—
But then everything depends upon tem
perament. We, for example, could not
be happy unless our brain were in a con
tinual state of perspiration. The “curse,”
such is the force of habit, has become to
us a source of enjoyment, as dkinnrng be
comes a luxury tw eels when they are
used to it. I here is a lo,comotivo prin
ciple within us, that sfiust expend, its
force in action. it up, or tie it
down, anti we should perish hv com bus*
, lion.— fJi other JonAtlinn.
No. 3.