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**'v written tfc prmnVaVtlhfc fashf-ms
i.a.iresaly nteniione-1, ar rtf-rred to ia tli
<eh*ptcrllf tb* Kv:in|gcli*ts, slfts
when we take the frets disclosed by
tt-trailers, end tha sensibility displayed b
#U literare men to learn something more of
Palestine: when we-eomp ire t> etn with the
disposition au.nif *teti by saig'ity kiting md
potentates, to recover4h*t -'onsefruted'Spot
from the b inds of the infidels—when ‘we
rv.”i,id r wbat is denon.iu.iUd the holy
\ r.i u'- in which the divinity of oar Sa
vior is Ycroguiz *d, we ean t ut believe, that
ts a Lie :*s*on of the Turks lVora Palestine)
: ‘< -ouacqueuUy the return of the Jews to
J ‘/asaleni, is an event near at Land,
Even the marauding pavers ct Barbary
are, although unconsciously, doing all in
their power to accelerate this event, They
vender, by their piracies on the commerce
of civilized nations, tn isr.rrs of this kind
aectissary on the principle of self-defence.
Thus, amidst all the revolutions of kirjsrdotna,
states and empires, where nmhLy monarch*,
iron motives of revenge, avarice or ambi
tion, are dls‘uriiiq the repose of the world;
tipy arc but instruments ia an Almighty
hiu and, for the accomplishment of his own
pu pejes. Although they tno_’ laugh and
&?. fY .f. the vnl ‘Ui'e of divine prophecy, they
are ("iviring for its accomplishment; er
iru: is the passage, that “ Vie wrath of man
shall work Jus praise , and the remainder of
i at width he will restrain ln tl.e a<*
of tbre grrut work, lour gov
ernment have alrcndy borne a part. Dun;
tiedo ’ Decatur w.. sent to demand, ami j
1-r r> ‘ iin?d redress of the Barhary powers. J
:i,r the capture of our countrymen. The j
”f tnlto ir .’ it I were so favorable, that j
i'i ,'seite.l :iu repeals envy. It was more ad |
•••■e-i. n ; ■}<* :h*n any Whi-h bed ever beeru
•j it v.eii before,and it r a net tube especi
al! t.V s the areat n*vie of Fur* pc, ia
’thne of profound pe e. would not oe cm
ployed to ot-’-sn least s*. honore.ble ‘ --fin*
.far the powers of Chriatendoita. it was
*n it rep-ouch urn-i them, and it stimuli*’- 1 - f
ih : \r jealousy to ester ire. the since; eb. |
liev ft r hks therefore reason to rejoice; b- |
s-.r behold, in n‘l the troubles and turmoil |
v.*'"i' , h oppress the vreirhL the dialaiu irae?* j
oft e Vlmtgk'y hand•; lie ean beheld ao !
Adore.
%} douhk con*newness / or, duality of per- j
son i.i the same individual.
The Medicsl Repository, furnishes the
‘following singular orii le—communicated
by Dr. Mi tv hell to :he Rev. Dr. Kelt, da- .
led J in. 1816. _ j
Where J was employed, early in Dec. j
*lßls, with several other gentlemen,it* doing 1
?b< duty of a visitor in ih? Doited States-
Military Academy, at W'*st-Poin, a very
extraordinary vase of double consciousness.
in a worn an j vie related to me by one of the
V. cfossors. M•*jor EU>oit, vv h o so worthi
ly occupies the mathematical chair, in that
Seminary, vouched for the corrc; tritsi of the
folio wins: Narrative, the subject of v i**h
is related to fcitn by blood, and, an inhubi*
tani of r.a of the Western Counties of Penn
sylvania ,
Miss&—— possessed, naturally, a very
gosid ; eosti utiun, and arrived at adult age,
vifhoiit h-vvihg it imp.ircd by disease.—
S; possessed an oj. ellent capacity, and
erjo r ied f‘ I: opportuoite* to acquire know*-
b'Ago Beside* the dome,-.ls: arts, end so
; iit ii?iHii;>o2eiitß,she h -tl improved ?o-r mind •
’;y reading and cni'versdvioo, and was well
V.- ited i- ;) ; *uo■i.nship. Her memory Vo's
tab :ia iaec — l ( vesifg*--*, bo h of words and
ti. w -re .... (iterated, and -gn. It w-;*
ion ■: .>•£ Vv for btr u> loam every tbur*
jtg*. iu. Blie c -*v quired, i>y-new efforts,
ih nf of fprl’i g, ic*-djrg. uirithig sad.
cab u’n t end, gredu. I'.y, - crease ae-
C'iu def* with .h ‘ {jfrsi'.v > wr;d ofejoct* a-*
y. i .(j, ,u;f : ng for th’ trst Ornc brought
oih wf id To rh*.se ... tonjes. s’ < made .
to !* and Id* p,*ofit*iv-si.y. Bui, after a few (
r:o'aui, i iioif-; 6. n? somroleocy invaded )
Per ()u r-uis’n'i: htr from *it, she found
her? ‘lf r etc ted lu the slits eke whs before
tbe ‘a at pavexysm j hut, war wholly igr-c
----rauf of e?ery ev. nt and oecurrehee, that had
h i'Jien her a!\rrwarda. The former coc
d .; : on of her exirteuee., aha now ca’ls ilia
old state ; and th lalter, the new state ; j
• 4 ud aho i as unconscious oi her double char-:
w ter, t two d : eline't persona are oi their ;
ycfcoeettvc tnunre*. For ex'-mple—in hr
old rtotc, she puie*sed all her original
kao ledge ; in her new state, only what tbs
a< c utred tdi,ii.e. 11 ft gentlcaifin or iadv be
introduced to her, in the old state, and rttS
wr. s, and so of *ll other matter 6 ; a. k- o\y
theru saliafaetofily, ahe must lorn thein ni
both state*, la the old stale,she possesses
Sue powerr# of poumanship 5 while if* the
Qew.slie wiiiestt p(,ur and awkward LasrJ,
Sisvingnot h.id time nor mean# to become
expnrt. During four y'ars end upwards,
ahe has undergone periodica! traisitious
from fine of these staler, to the other : ihe
alter.vtiomi are always e.ontequent upon •’
Joug .vnd sound sleep. Bath the lady ard
her family, are now capable of comftie.tiag
the 8/faif, without e®]Rrrasmeot. R)
simply v'inowiMg whether she ir> in tbs old
wrnew t, tale, they regulate, the intercourse
gove ru them* ©lves aeeordiugly. A hi**
lory of hor eurir ui cu*e, s now di wim* u*>,
by Us Hisv. Tiiy&tlv A.’dio, o? JZmdiitt*
JL O iL'% J?j £Car •
Paris, May li.
War soon between England
God -knows who are her allies i |
on one sidej and Russia, Prussia,
and the Netherlands on the other.
{£j° The allies have taken from
Wellington the command of their j
joint armies in France.
The English will be driven
from the continent. Prussia will
take Hanover, and the whole of
the territory and navigation of the
Ems,of which England swindled
her in the time of her distress.
To support their pretentions
in Germany, the English cannot
but evacuate France, and they
must make haste . one event —&
they will be but a breakfast for
Frenchmen.
The Orange party in Prance Pi
Germany, is no longer a mystery.
It is supposed England will send
j the duke of Orleans to France,
j who was very popular last year.
| if he came from any where else,
| ne might -neutralise the Orange
;arty, if you can call that a party
vbich is composed of all tht re
publicans, ah constutrionahsis and
.hi the bonapartists— in a word,
| ii all France (excepting the old
I -obits, valets oi priests.) France
i perceives that the house of Or
: ange, at this day, offers her the
| yiky means of ridding itself of its
| present tyrants, and restoring a
ny thing* like vigor or health.
If this great <k glorious change
takes place, it will immortalise
the emperor of Russia* His .sis
ter the present princess royal of
the Netherlands, is both able and
amiable. She has inherited the ‘
mind of a Catharine, and is a great
man in the frame of a woman, j
Her husband, a'brave and skilful |
general, fought against the!
French, for a while, with Wei- 1
ling ion ; he however, appreciates
the two nations, and may be the j
means of restoring France to hen- j
our and liberty.
Ffow, that Louis the great [a
present hue legros ccckon j and his
amiable family, see they are to be (
abandoned by the English, they’
are quite active in making money.
The tygress of AngouFme is
mad!! She foams in rage. On iront
CrS Montres lathes tt foroces ?
One l Its ter res assez dost efts les ca
xheront'? They are sending mo
jriey to America by an agent, fkc.
! he. ] for in England the indigna
tion against them is as great as in
France and in the rest of Europe.
GeneraJ Carnot, and the other
distinguished fnen who hadbeen
jin Russia, were expected at Brus
iseis by the beginning of May
marshal Soult, generals Vandam-1
me, Merlin, he Monsieur Mer-
Bn, M Seyes, and other eminent
characters, are treated there with
j distinction; and as these things
are now understood in France the
families of the refugees are crow
ded with visitors in spite of po
lice officers or the struggles oi au
expiring government.
The head quarters cf the Aus
trian army are in the neighbor
| hood of Grenoble. In all that pro
vince, in Lyonias, in Burgundy,
• the national flag is flying, S& the
| Austrians permit it*
The English Kftfk impolitic c
nough tio put to death fin a mor
al sense) Napoleon Bonaparte.
At present all Europe think on
j ly to disembarrass themselves of
them. The^power bf France is
in her soil and population—it is
intrinsical. That of England is
altogether artificial.
The count D’Artois is accused
by the Duke ofßichlieu, to have
wished to have dethroned his
brother in order to take his place.
You recollect the picture of the
damned, reproaching each other
■with their crimes M!
‘ Havre, May 12, (Meaning.)
I have this instant arrived from
Paris. All is consternation among
the royalists. The breath
nothing but vengeance.
The tribunals of blood dare no
longer to assemble There has
been within three days more than
SCO persons -arrested, but they
are air aid to try them in their
halls. We are on the eve of a
great explosion—our seperation
wiT not be as long as we expect*
! ed six months ago.
LATEST EROM ENGLAND.
wV<??r Yoflc , Jvhj 2.
to oar attentive forr spordvnt At Barton,
we iie indebted tor ektraets trow London
papers to til* StO'h of 51#t, itstl ‘Lloyds
j Lists to the Sl it, both nwinsive. i hey
j were received at Boston by the ship Mar*
gurrt, <*pi .in M-Leilan, which anived
j there S.VJivday night, in thirty Tear day*
irutn L.ivffpf •>?.
“LONDON, May 5 16.
The'fciorm&f; utter the a -tion .A GrSnobUe
I'tipw T< j iof h.[v of the rebels wore brought
j ioto town and received by the wLa?e popu*
i iatior with s vies of Vive la Rfii. An ifio*
I'keeper of Lh-ans, who lodged the chiei o?
i (hi ir.rnri'pct*, a~ ; d >vrs ttimself eooeerned
‘inti'* (i ‘ot, \v*s t.?'k n Vi) by order of tiie
pr f’ t. end rve ftu<:b important informit
* on es en blc and the prevotal (tftlrt to follow
i the litre- and of the fonrspiraey nod fiseertoio
ithe individOf l* tivat <;reel<*'d it- In the
ote .n time the troops of (he line ore in pur*
; 9i; of the rent of the rob I*, whilst those
i ih&f bßve'btten taken are upon trial.
vVau it. The Fr'ench papers nature us;
tbftt perfect tfarqniliiy hds been Vesture ii to i
the deparimeot of tbelsere, but measures of
vigcf ar.d preeatsCioo cn*itiue to be ttdopt
ed. All tho* v ‘Vho give asylum to the rebels
are to be eouaidered ks oTc- omplLes. As*
semblwges co the public squares, stress &
retnobrfs, are peonihitted. aiuler the n est
rigorous penalties. ‘Particular orders are
jm ea wh'h re-poet fb ioreigaers rcßideot at
Greiic ‘e. Meanwhile, tVocps are pouring
inio ihe departmeut of the Isere from ail
quarters.
Jloy 13. The ihsurrectiob at Grenoble
continues to Form the principal features of
the iotefligeo * contained in our French pa
pers, Government have published iw the
Motuteur solbo u-ffieial by which it
appeafs that the reb* U were divided into
two bunds, one of whi'h ws !o attack the
town from without, whilst tSir oilier was (and
rise upon the iLiliftbltants within. 2he lat-,
ter had partiztirm in the town, attd the at-1
tack from without was to be tbe signal for’
rising. General Dorikctteu and the , prefect I
received on the 4 b, in the evening, advices ;
which let! 5:0 doubt of the intentions of the,
disaffected, and measures of view were in- j
stonily adopted. These the rebels did not
expect; they had anticipated an easy ton-’
iquest, and conceived that the place would (
bo takah by surprise. What their ulterior!
projects were after getting possession of
Grenoble, we know not. The Moniteur
s’jys, that important rereiatious had Oecn
wade, auil the ehiefs -f tfca conspiracy have
beeu tried. Aceording to the uffirial ac
count in the Moniteur, the rebels have been
completely put down $ the neighboring
communes, whkh had been misled by tbe
false declaration of tbe rebels, having sub
mitted and requested forgiveness. Lbe
neighboring depurtmenta w ere eager to send
troop* and adopt every measure eXleulated
to put dowo (he rebellion and prove their
own loyalty. General Donadieu has been
| created a viscount, the colonel of tbe de
partment legion a baron, and two grenadiers
rewarded with the cross of the legion of
honor—one o/thra© who had accompanied
Bonaparte to Elba, upon brio* hiSed by
one of the rebels with cries of Vive bEmpv
retiVf replied by exclaiming J ivc lc lloiy
cuttioc’ down at the same time one of the
rebel'chiefs. During these events, the
French funds have remained steady, a proof
that UiO jehclliea wa* aot t.*Qsidered aft at
‘aft daaferoGu l fciz rttlalilf X&w tcAdidf
o's the government. * . •
j May 20. The Pari# Journals to th#-
“Ifill tring no ftirthrr ileiaila oi the iisorrsc*
tion at Grenoble. It has been rompietely
: crushed, and tlLwps tranquiHn that quar
ter. The principal iu*tieftt#r of tflis mad
scheme wao a lawyer, nt m tt d ILd-er, one of
those worthless being* wlnm <fce weak poli
cy of the king’s government in 1814 loaded
Vith honors ufcd preferm-nts. A reward of
j twenty thousand front s is now offered set
j hie apprehension, arid it is thought that he
•will soon he eeiteed. The E’rer ch govern*
!merit, we are happy to ffud, acts with ener
gy and firmness. To a man who wtrs con
demned to dentil by the prevotal court at
Grenoble, end by that t6urt (not r un rkabla
for its unidnei s) reeoir.tntndtd to merey, tho ’
king has refused a patdon.
Some of the private letters speak o? cobi
motious, and indiiations of (onimoiion, hi
various parts oi France. This probably is
the fiet. Tbe insurrection at Grenoble, ,’i
the reports circulated by tbe j&robius, wou 1
entourage tire disaffetied to abet* (Lem
selves.
At Paris the government is on the alert
displaying vigilant e, derision and strength.
Tbe tivenfy-ouc individuals, arrested Ly the
police, have been banded over to the royal
court of Paris, where (be proceedings &-
gainst tlisin are in tmn. ‘I be military
iruard are increas'd, ’he sidifSt/us groups
iaspeeted and disperaed. Let the romistiy
thus manifest ti sir power, ami il wili ajxe
diiy be Conciliated. These are not lta
times in France to talk of gentleness .
Power alone must gtiveic s> umlitne* ; kni
ty is denpist dn Ihe I ’ em b have so long
been in and to obey .Diy ihe (*uiilotina
blade of Robespierre, or tile sv. ord of Bour
pvrte, that it will’be sumo (iim* before they
bow the wand of tbe eivil officer,
P.\njfc, May I*.
Bowie are said to have taken
•place at Dijon, but 2 know not ’wifb Wbat
truth. At Lyons the disaffected enterfehl
; ed new hopes, p'stis werel&id for iiitmep
j ting the dispat At es of tovernment, su'd s di
! tious proebimariona were s-*fnon the walls.
No precailuon is neglc-eted 1o insure iha
trar*iA[uilH?y of ihia immense metrepdis
! The regiments of the guard are ready night
| and day, their horses saddled and bridled,,
, Ail tbe tetivily of the police l used ia
< oumerfiet e.ny plots of ti e disv.ffeeted w
i His majesty having so often exerted Li®
eieu)fetw y ih vain, h>s refused extending (la
royal p rdoti to David, condemned by this
-prevotal court at Gretsoble, for being con
cerned ia ffei late ibsorrettioa, and rfcecua
mended to snerey by that, tribunal.
From, the Boston Evening Gazette.
Lurclon papers to the l6i!i My, vr&
are indebted to a mercantile friend end to
Mr. Topliff*of Merchants’ RuIL On per<*
nsuig them we tiud they afford,
1, 1 he Russian pew Tariff.
2 Parts newspaper and letter account#
of the insurrection at Grenoble, and pleua
at P .ris.
3. The general ortlor issued by order of
the prince regent, containing a decided ex
pression of his tnya : i highness’s most severe}
reprehension of major general sir R. Wil
son’s and eaptoin fluh ninsm-’s conduct for
having a engaged in the tneasurfc [Lavs*
lotted escapej[ the declared omect of which
was to counteract the laws and cl feat this;
public justice” of France. It is a moderate*
reproT—-tad they are l4t off without the
loss of tileir ec Emissions.
4. The congratul itory addresses of th
houses of lords end commons and the city
of London, to the royal family on the mar*
riage fifths heiress to the throne, and the!
answers of the prince and princess of Co
kourg, her majesty, &e.
5 The proceedings at the anniversary
meeting id the Grand British Institution, c?
School of All } at which we notice the am
bassador, Mr. Adams, attended, and wae eta
applauded spokesman, in favof of the ad
vantages of educating the poor. “ Bduca
tion,”lie said, is “ know ledge, and it lead®
to virtue. The truth he knew would coma
home to every British bosom. Id Ainemta
there vvasazeel for the education of tha
poor, and be regarded it as one of the most
cJorious of the hU ssings derived from their
British ancestors.” The proposing of
thanks to the royal cliakmn having beta
put by Mr. Adams, and received with ee*
demotion, his r< yai high aces the duke cf
XCetit said, “I feel gratified that this moo
tion came from the minister of the United
States. 1 h*ve long lived iu the neighbor*
hood of the Unite and States and it was ever a
grief to me that the two couulri. s should ha
at variance. Their language and their in*
tereal is the same, and their friendship}
should be inviolable.”
6. A letter from Sierra Leon, dated that
‘26th January, stating the capture of schoo
ner Rosa, formerly the American privateer
Perry, of Baltimore, under Spanish colors*
manned by Americans, with two hundred
and fifty slaves; that the coast was lull of
American vessels under Spanish colors*
! from Havana ; that two of her consorts*
’ with from three hundred to five hundred’
I slaves had departed ; that a ship cf twenty
j guns and one hundred and twenty n®d wa*