American advocate. (Louisville, Ga.) 1816-????, May 02, 1816, Image 4

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VIC lit t&VJu l ME.YT. I * ** WirK, Children Rad t'R.iENDi,” are to nearly aaoociated with . moat amiable and refined feelings of }> <nsi-ifi nature, that we feel confident the 1 !*owi ;i? p ithetie and beautiful Song, w I fi A admirers with a Urge majority of our readers.} WIFE, CHILDREN AND FRIENDS. ONE and iy when to Jove the black list was presented, The list of what site for each mortal in tends ; At the iimq; Kfiing of ills a kind Goddess re lented. And and in three blessings— cfiildt'en and friends. ia vaiii sarly Pluto declared he was cheat ed, And Justice divine couM not eompass its ends ; The t’ heme of* man's penance he swore was defeated) For earth become* heaven with wife, children and friends. It sto n Fnf our bliss is in stronger hands. Utc tiu !, ill secured, oPt in bankrutev ends, But the heart issues bills that are never protested, When drown on the firm of wife, children and friends, l * hough valor still glows in his life warrior embers. The death wounded Tar, who his color defend*, Drops . tear of regret, as he dying remeoi hers, How blest was his home with wife, chil dren and friends. The Soldier whose deeds live immortal ii story, ho\n duty to far distant latitude sends With transport would barter whole aget. o’ glory, For one happy day w ith Wife, children $ friends. Though *|>i *o breathing gales o’er his care* vnn hover, Though round him Arabia’s whole fra prance ascends, The Merchant still thinks of the woodbines I that cover The bower where h** sat with wife , ch.il- j drew and friends. The day spring of youth still unclouded by sorrow, ( Alone on itself for enjovmeut depends ; 5 But dread is the twilight of age, if it borrow No wraith from the smiles of wife, chil dren and friends. i*a*t the breath of renown ever freshen and nourish, The laurel which o’er the dead favorite bends, <D’er me wave the willow, and long may it Sourish, > Bedewed with the tears of wife, children and friends. \ Tet os drink for my song’s growing graver and tir&ver, To subjects too solemn insensibly tends; j Xet us driik, pledge-me high—love and) beauty shell flivor The glass that 1 till ic wife, children and * friends. And if iu the hope this fair land e’er to plan* der, The tyrant of Brit ia to invade uspre-j tends. Tow lists will shrink, when our arm’d freemen thunder, The w.r cry, Columbia, wife , children nind f rlends, tjtctvmryja-j mu T~ ni Tiii— m j ’ epigram. ~~ From v&e French. I-et the loud thunder roll along the skies, Clad in my virtue l the storm despise, indeed, cries Peter, how yrur lot I bless, To be so shelter ‘d in so thin a dress. MM ,m guv-rung* -r *wre“i ¥\, — TM h >UM( ~ “ LITERARY. [From the Analectic Magazine.! James V. PaAke of Philadel phia, has published in mo vol umes Bvo the life of the late Charlesßrockden Brown,togeth er with selections from tile rarest of his primed works, from his o riginal letters, aad from his man uscripts before unpublished. By William Dunlap, esq. The snbj ci of this biographi cal memoir possessed a genius - f .X. •. I. ’ * .U - was cultivated, and its efforts have procured for him a high h well established reputation among the admirers of that species of ro mance of which Mr. Godwin’s Caleb Williams was considered the best model. Caleb Williams is in fact a work of powerful tal ents, exhibiting a thorough knowl edge of the human heart,—of those passions, especially, by which it is most variously and dreadfully agitated, -and display ing in colours, painfully glowing, the evils, (perhaps unavoidable’ of a state of society, crowded in its population and far advanced in n finement This is the work oh which the reputation of Mr. God win will rest It will be read h admired when his Political Jus ticewith all its trainef upplemen ary essays will be forgotten, or remefribered only as monuments <1 the extravagancies which geni us without the guidance of judg ment so often commits. Mr. Brown in some respects does not all short of the celebrated writei whom he avowedly imitates. Hf icquaintance with the human teart was far less profound, but te knew how to excite and keef ip an interest equally strong anc fa much more agreeable nature Tis style was even better suited nan that of his model for the re gion of an interesting story. Hie language of Caleb Williams is elaborately elegant, and the rea der often pauses to admire its beauty and magnificence. The style of Arthur Mervin and Ed gar Huntley, is plain, unadorned, and Hows with uninterrupted ra pidity. The periods appear per fectly artless The words com municate the thought so simply Sc clearly that they are not them selves particularly noticed.—The reader seems to behold ideas ra ther than their symbols: the pic ture is so exact that it is not dis tinguished from the original. We peruse the pages of such a writer, a* we listen to the impressive dis course of an orator of the highest class, inattentive to his person or his gestures, and unmindful even of his language, except as the me dium through which the speaker pours the light of his mind. ‘The life of Mr. Brown was not sufficiently public, brilliant or di versified to afford subject or an interesting biography. A man of; letters conscious of his own merit, 1 modest and retiring, he shrunk j from every species of vulgar no- J toriety; while his industry, pru-1 dunce and domestic endearments preserved him from those distres ses and irregularities which too often afxlict and degrade men of literary eminence. A piece ot writing, fwhether spurious or genuine is a matter of no consequence) is believed by some French and English Jour nalists, to be the last will and tes tament of Maria Antoinette, wife oi Louis XVlth.—-Whether the celebrated cortizan ever made a will, or whether she ever had any will, but her pleasure —is a point by no means difficult to set tle, by those acquainted with her ‘'"aragter. However, |we cannot but admire the gious sentiments” which these writers say “they felt” upon the perusal of the will—and, when they add, that the manuscript co pies of it are “objects of respect and veneration,” we should not wonder if “such bulwarks of feli geon” were to offer their idola trous worship in the temples oi the Egyptian Venus—The cant bout Royal Sanctity and Royal Virtue, in the family of the Bour bons (unhappily rendered current by the eloquence of Burke) must necessarily deceive every Reader, who has not gone to the purer sources ofinformation. The his tory of that court in which Maria Antoinette shone conspicuous by her meretricous beauty her in trigues and demoralizing exess es—furnishes to the truly pious mind a group of characters capa ble of exciting nothing but con ’empt and detestation. Southern Patriot JEFFE RsOIYFITPK HI OR COURTT APRIL TERM, 1816. RULE MSI. UPON the petition of iesse Brown, praying the establish nent of a Receipt in full from on vlordica M'Lain, dated the 3 l oi April, 1814—a copy whereof a learly as can be recoil* cted by the petitioner is annexed to said petition : and pn babie c-iuse ap pearing to the Court, that the same is lost and ought to be es tablished ; It is therefore ORDERED, That at the expiration of six months, the said receipt be es tablished unless sufficient cause be shewn to the contrary —And that a copy of this order be pub fished in one of the public gazettes of this state, once a month for six months, in terms of the rules of court in such cases made and provided. Extract from ike mirutes, D. CLARKE, Clk. REVIVE "D—AGAIN. THE Subscriber informs his friends and public generally, that he has purchased the Tan yard, lately belonging to Abram Rob inson, in the town of Louisville;! Si intends carrying* on the Tanning and Currying Business, in all; their various branches. He will give the highest prices for Hides,) Deer, Sheep and Goat Skins, <&! Bark Having a small supply j of Upper Leather, on hand, he will dispose of it at the most re-, duced prices. JAMES B. HALL. March 21. Its EX ECIfTO Hs ,- S ALE. Will be sold , on the 9th day of May next, at the Cow-pens near Wood's Mills , Ail the Stock of CATTLE* belonging to the estate of Solo mon W oed, late of Jefferson coun ty, deceased. Credit will be giv en until the Ist day of January next: purchasers giving small notes with approved security.— The sale will continue from day to day until completed. Thomas Mitchell , ) f Green Wood 3 3 £ March 19,1816* GRAND LODGE. An adjourned communication of the GRAND LODGE of Georgia, will be held at the Grand Lodge room on the first Saturday in May next, at half past 6 o’clock p. m. at which the members and the different Lodges under its jurisdiction by their pro per representatives are ordered to attend By order of the M. W. Grand Master , D. D. Williams, : V Grand Sec'rj* April 13. Grand Lodge o t Georgia^ 6th April , 58 16. • Whereas it was resolved on the sth of March, 5814, “ Tnat those Lodges that are now two or more years in arrears, who shall not on or before St John the E vangelist, the 27th Drcember next, pay up such arrears, shall be stricken off the list of Lodges* their charters authorising them to give degrees in Masonry be re voked from that day, and they de dared as no longer regular Lod ges, and that notice thereof be published in the Gazettes of this tate.” And whereas no atten ion has been paid to the afore said resolution by any of the Lod ges in arrears to the westward of Effingham county, except St. Patrick’s Lodge, No. 8, Louis ville, and Social Lodge, No. 18* Augusta. Resolved tip ref ore, That a list of the Lodges so in arrears be published in the several News papers of the Mate, and that their charters be henceforth null and void, and all persons receiving Degrees hereafter in any of said Lodges are warned that they can* not be acknowledged by or recei* ved in any regular warranted Lodge whatever - And it is fur ther resolved , That no revival of said Lodges shad be granted but on payment of <ll arrears due in December last Extract from the Minutes , D D. and ILLIAMS, G. 3. {£F* The Printers of the sever* al Gazettes in this State are re quested to insert the above three times in each paper, and forward their accounts to F. S. Fell, esq. Savannah. April I !„ G EORGIA, J Jefferson county. > Personally appeared before me Isaac Ingram, who being du ly Sworn, saieth that he was in possession of a Due Bill, given by William Batty, of the town of Louisville, to this deponant, fqr two hundred and five dollars, da* ted the 27th day of October last, payable on demand.— W r hich due bill is lost or mislaid, so that he cannot find it. I ,A AC INGRAM. U Sworn to before me, ) this Bth April, 1816 3 jfno. P. Harvey, f IC. Ido hereby forewarft alt persons fiom trading for the a* bove note, as I have received pay ment m full for the same. ISAAC INGRAM, April U.