Newspaper Page Text
A question w* then laid before the
meeting, whether it were .expedient to
take any measured to raise a school-fend
for orphan children. This wa* new to
many; but unobjectionable. Decided in
the affirmative*; and a committee was ap
pointed to recommend a plan for that pur
pose. Adjourned.
This was doubtless the first meeting of
the kind, that has ever been held in these
islands. Whatever might be the feeling*
of some of the number, it was truly animat
ing to see the chiefs of the islands, the
principal foreigners who are settletThere.
with a number of intelligent gentlemen of
business now in port, assembled to. concert
in aid of the missionary catlse, plans of
usefulness, the happy influence of which
will doubtless be as lasting as time, and
the fruits of which can be tally known only
in eternity.-
Agitation o f Hanaroorah.
11. To day the village of Hanaroorah
has been in an uproar; but we have been
unmolested. There has been considera
ble commotion in the streets; but our hab
itations have enjoyed peace. We are hap
py in the assurance that neithersve, nor
the efforts which were made yesterday to
promote our benevolent objects, were the
cause of this commotion : though the lion
might take to roar, at this time,
to prevent the good intended. The pre
valence of multiplied jealousies gives cur
rency to invidious declarations and reports;
and the collision of opposite interests is
often followed, by agitation and violence.
Correspondence nrith the South-Sea Missiotis.
12. Sent letters, books, and clothes
washed here, to our friends at Owhyhee, by
capt. Gyzelaar, of the American brig Cla
rion. This gentleman has often called on
ns x and treated us politely. He ofTers to
carry letters, books, or baggage, gratis, for
missionaries wherever they :nay wish to
send by him. He will probably soon go to
Otaheite and. return. By him we also
wrote to our missionary brethren at the
Society Islands, and sent them copies of our
* Instructions,’ of Reports, Missionary Ser
mons, &c. [The journal here enumerates
many pamphlets.] Thus we have tlje
vpportunity and the happiness early to
make them acquainted with the Christian
operations in our own country; our arrival
and prospects; and the late interesting
events in these islands. We gladly avail
ourselves of the privilege 6f requesting
them to correspond, to favour us with cop
ies of their important papers and pamph
lets, elementary books, and their transac
tions, together with such information and
friendly counsel, as we need, and hope to
receive from their superiour wisdom and
experience. With fond anticipation we
cherish the desire, that this may be the
commencemen* of a long and happy cor
respondence between the two establish
ments.
, Visit to a dying Countryman.
To day Mr. Bingham was called to visit
Mr. Hamjin, a young man of Yarmouth,
Ms. apparently in the last stages of the
consumption;—to lead his mind to the
Great Physician, and communicate to him
the opinion of ms friends, that he cannot
con'inur- many days. He, seems resigned
to hiJin>ation ; bnt fears to have his moth
er kr -v it, lest it should break her heart.
The affecting interview closed with prayer.
13. Today capt. Best, of the Princess
Mary, took leave-of ns. He has our warm
est thanks fop his attention and kindness.
[To be continued.]
MISSION AMONG THE CHOCTAWS.
Letter from Mr. Kingsbury to the Treasurer
of the A. B. C. F. M.
Mayherto, March 26, 18'21.
My Dear Sir—On my arrival here last
Saturday evening from Elliot, I found a let
ter, in your hand writing, to brother Wash
burn. As he had left the nation, 1 took the
liberty so open the letter, that I might
know whether it must be forwarded, or
whether a duplicate had been sent to the
Arkansaw. If 1 transgressed the bounds of
propriety in doing so. f hope it will not be
without its use to the cause.
This was the direct information I have
had of the very great embarrassments,
which threaten the Treasury of thff Board.
Judging from the receipts for a few months
past, and knownir.g the heavy drafts which
were made rt n you for the Arkansaw mis
sion,—and that much money was wanted
for the other missions, I had in part antici
pated the result. But the-Mow has fallen
heavier than 1 expected. We are indeed
into difficulty,—and know not what
to do. We would wish to do that, which,
on the whole shall be thought best. Isl
know my own heart, I have not a single
desire shat our missions should be support
ed at the expense of the other great be
nevolent objects of the present day.
It is mhst evident, that all these objects
might be supported, if all the professed
followers of Christ would make those exer
tions which they might make without any
sn ioos diminution of their property. Bui
admitting that some self-denial is to be prac
tised j—that some temporal advantages
are to he given up ; is not the cause wor
thy of such an effort ?
1 hope the present embarrassing circum
stances, into which we are brought, will
make us better missionaries; more eco
nomical, more willing to conform to any
circumstances, in which the providence of
God may place us. And happy would it
he, if Christians should he brought to fee!
.that the kingdom of Christ is not to be!
established on the ruins of Satan’s empir e, 1
without a struggle, —without a sacrifice ’
and that this sacrifice ought to be, and must
he, made.
, lam confident, that if the friends ofipis
fltnew our situation, they would cheer
fully grant that aid we so much need. But
llr y cannot fully know it* unless they were I
ILiix ihlhnJ v ; ew oflhe circumstan
ces in which we are pieced.
I, ?o feeble has been our strength of late,
and so completely has our time been occu
pied ih keeping along the indispensable la
bours of the mission, that it has not been
possible for us to make our coalition known
as it might otherwise have bwn.
After a long and fatiguing journey, and
many unexpected delays, a part of our help
ers have arrived, and the others are ex
pected shortly. These dear brethren and
sisters have come with hands and hearts
prepared to do any thing, and to submit to
any circumstances, which necessity may re
quire. We havA been greatly strengthen
ed and encouraged by their arrival.—At
this very moment, —when every arm was
nerved with fresh vigour for the work, —
we learnt, that the pecuniary aid, on which
we relied, was likely to fail; at least, no
far as greatly to embarrass our operations,
and render doubtful our ultimate succes--.
At Elliot we have a flourishing school of
80 children, who are improving very fast;
and we should soon be in a situation to pro
vide fortbein with mfleh less expense than
heretofore. At May hew we have ten
buildings, for various purposes, erected,
and nearly completed ; —and boards, shin
gles, &c. in readiness for the school-house,
dining-room, and kitchen. We have also
about 70 acres of excellent land inclosed,
and partly ploughed; and we have made
every preparation, which our‘circumstan
ces would admit, to commence a school in
the autumn, with such a number of scholars,’
as we would be able to support.
During the six months past, a considera
ble debt has been accumulated. Several
’ hundred dollars will also be needed to pay
| the freight of our applies from Tfew Or
leans and Ohio. Two or three more hors
es must be purchased, in order to till our
plantations the ensuing season. In short,
this is the season when our great expenses
for the current year,except for labour must
be increased. If we are not able to procure
our supplies at New Orleans and Mobile, at
the time when they can be brought up the
river, we must purchase next summer, at
double the expense.
To meet all these demands, It would
seem necessary to draw on you for at least
$2,000. But, under existing circumstances,
all payments, which can be deferred, will
be j and every kind of business, not indis
pensable to the existence of the mission,
will be suspended. I shall not draw on
you, except in case of absolute necessity.
As to our own personal circumstances,
we feci no anxiety. So far as our tempo
ral comfort is concerned, we should consider
it a sweet relief, to leave all the buildings
and improvements we have made, and to
retire to some part ofthe forest, where we
could begin anew, and with our own hands
supply our wants—But to the cause, in
which we are engaged, we feel a strong
attachment. It would be painful to see
that property, which has been intrusted to
us by the hand of Christian charity, and
which we have been labouring for years to !
improve for the education of these chil
dren; —sacrificed and lost, for want ofa lit
tle more aid to keep it in successful opera
tion. It would rend our hearts to see these
children sent back again to roam their na
tive forests, without one friendly hand to
guide them. Should we not give the Indi
ans reason to suspect, that we came only to
deceive them? And that instead of doing
them the good we had promised, we had
only discovered to them more of their
wretchedness ?
It must be evident, that unless we have
the means of paying our debts, and obtain
ing provisions tor the family, and of making
such Anther preparations at Mayhew, as
will enable us to commence a small school
in the autumn, we cannot retain our pre
sent standing. We must also make vigor,
ous exertions to raise provisions for both
establishments. It wc lose our present
advantages, they must be regained by more
vigorous efforts and additional expense, or
the missions, in their present form at least,
must be given up.
We are still confident in the opinion,
tnat when the buildings are completed, and
the plantations in full cultivation, thee
missions may be supported without drawing
large sums of money. We believe, that
with the common blessing of Providence ‘
the appropriation of the natives, together
wilh the aid, which may be expected from
the government, and the donations in cloth
mg and provisions, will go far towards sup
plymg our wants. We shall look with
anxiety to the indication* of Providence, to
know whether we shall be considered wor
u °. cc “Py onr present station. Will
the Christian publick see those, whohave
volunteered to wear out their days in a
sickly climate, sinking under a burden,
whicn alone they cannot sustain—but which
with the assistance of their brethren through
out the country, could be easily borne ? Shall
we be hurried to an untimely grave for
want ofthat friendly aid, which might so
well be afforded? We are certain this
would not be the case, could our circum
stances be fully known. ,
—-aozo:-;;<-;oro
PE NILS OF THE FOREFATHERS.
From the New-York Advertiser.
A short time since, we informed oar rea
ders, that the family of the late President
Dwight, of Yale College, intended in the
ensumfg manner to publish his travels in
he state of New-York, and the New-Eng
and States; and stated that we should pub
lish, occasionally, some extracts from the
manuscripts 9 specimens of the manner in
which the work is executed. The author
took great pains m the course of his vari
liirjr' 0115 , to col, ect as much informa
tion of the early history of our country, and
as many facts and anecdoles of the inhabi
tants, particularly during the period of In
dian warfare, as was in hie power. In this
he was ooro successful than could have I
been ejected ,’ and it will probably be oil
ing to his exertions, that m=oy very intep
eating events, which occurred mine first
century after the settlement of the country
by white inhabitants, are not in great
measure lost even to the present genera
tion. The following accoust of the suffer
ings and heroism of one family in Massachu
setts, will, we have no doubt, be read with
interest. The qvtnts here narrated took
place a little more than one hundred and
twenty years ago. The mint 1 cnr. scarcely
realize the fact, that the oldest parts of our
country were, even at that period, liable
to these savage invasions. And yet, such
was the case ma<y years subsequently to
the time here mentioned. One <jrcat ob
ject of the author of these travels was, to
shew the progress of our country, in all the
interests and circumstances of civilization
and improvenent, from its first settlement
to the date of’ his observations.
STORY OF MR. AND MRS. DUSTAN.
From President Dwight's Travels.
[l 01. I. Letter XL.]
“ Maverlilt wns settled in the year 1637,
and incorpvrated in 1645. During the first
seventy-five .years from its settlement, it
suffered often, and greatly, by savage dep
redations. The story of these depredations
is, however, imperfectly known at the
present tine. Even the facts which are
still knotvu, are so dispersed in the
possession of different persons, as to
render it very difficult to obtain them
correctly. This kind of knowledge is daily
becoming less, and wilßoon be lost. It is
much to be wished, tint inquisitive men
throughout this countr would glean and
preserve the little whici is left. It is a se
rious and unfortunate erour of men in gen
eral to suppose, that cents, familiarized
to themselves by firesidi repetition, will be
uninteresting to others; and that efforts to
preserve them will be mnsideed as either
trifling or arrogant.
In no country, probably are the inhabitants
more inquisitive than in New-England.
But their inquiries termnate, or have until
latuly terminated chiefly in things remote
in time or place ; and have been very little
occupied by subjects pertaining to their
own country. It is peihaps natural to man
to teej, that his owa concerns, or any con
cerns which are familiar to him, will be
little regarded by those who come after
him. Few parents are solicitous to have
their own portraits taken ; yet, after their
decease, scarcely any legacy is thought
more valuable by their children.
In the year 1697, on the sth day ofMarch,
a body of Indians attacked this town ; burnt
a small number of houses; and killed, and
captivated about forty of the inhabitants.
A party of them, arrayed in all the terrors
of the Indian war dress, carrying with them
the multiplied horrours of a savage invasion,
approached near to the house of Mr. Dus
tan. This man was abroad at his usual la
bour. Upon the first alarm he flew to the
house, with a hops of hurrying to a place i
of safety his family, consisting of bis wife,!
i ,v h° had been confined a week only in child-;
bed; her nurse, a Mrs. Mary Tuff, a wid
ow from the neighbourhood, and eight chil
dren.—beven of his children he ordered
to flee with the utmost expedition, in the !
course opposite to that in which the danger
was approaching; and went himself to assist
his wife. Before shecould leave her bed,
the savages were upon them. Her hus-j
band despairing of rendering her any sei**?)
vice, flew to the door, mounted his horse,
and determined to snatch up the child with
which he was unahle to part, when he
should overtake the little flock. When he
came up to them, about two Infndred yards
from his house, he was unable to make a
choice, or to leave any one of the number.
He therefore determined to take his lot
wilh them, and to defend them from their
murderers, or die by their side. A body
nfthe Indians pursued, and came up with
him; and from near distances fired at him
and his little company. He returned the
fire, and retreated alternately.—For more
than a mile, he kept so resolute a face to
his enemy, retiring in the rear of his charge;
returned the fire of the savagps so often,
and with so good success; end sheltered so j
effectually his terrified companions,that he
finally lodged them all, safe from the pur- !
suing butchers, in a distant house. When
it is remembered how numerous bis assail-1
ants were ; how bold when an overmatch
for their enemies;*how active, and what!
excellent marksmen; a devout mind will
consider the hand of Providence as unusu- 1
ally vi.jhle in preserving this family.
Another party of the Indians entered the
house immediately after Mr. Dustan had
quitted it; and found Mrs. Dustan and her!
nurse, who was attempting to fly with the
infant in her arms. Mrs. Dustan they or
dered to rise instantly; and before she j
could completely dress herself, obliged her
and her companion to quit therhouse ; after- 1
ward they plundered it and set it on fire. In j
company with several other captives, they .
began their march into the wilderness ; she |
feeble, sick, terrified heyond measure, par
tially clad, one of her feet'hare, and the 1
■ season utterly unfit for comfortable travel
ling. The air was chilly and keen, and
the earth covered, olternately with snow
and deep mud. Her conductors were Un
feeling, insolent and revengeful. Mtirder
was their glory, and torture their sport.
Her infant was ia her nursti’s arms : and
infants were the customary victims of sav
; age barbarity.
r^'^e company had proceeded but a short
distance, when an Indian, thinking it an in*
I cumbrance, took the child out of tne nurse’s
tfr?*’ 3n< * <^as * * ts head against a tree. |
What were then the feelings of the
j mother?
I Such of the other captives as began to
;° e to lag, the Indians toma
i hawked. The slaughter was not at* act of
.revenge, nor of cruelty. It was a mere
I conve,,| cnce ; an effort so familiar m uot
ever to excite an emotion,
1 Feeble as Mrs. Dujtun was, the and!
her nurse su t,lined* without the
ftftjgle of the journgy. Thljtr iatemoHlra*
tress for the death wUi*
companions ; anxiety for those whom they
had left behind, and unceasing terror for
themselves, raised these unhappy women
to such a degree of vigour, that, notwith
standing their fatigue, their exposure to
cold, (heir sufferance of hunger, and their
sleeping on damp ground under an inclem
ent sky, they finished an expedition of about
one hundred and fifty miles, without losing
their spirits or injuring their health.
The wigwam to which they were con
ducted, and which belonged to the savnge
who had claimed them as his property, was
inhabited by twelve persons. In the month
of April this family set out with their cap
; tives for a settlement still more remote;
i and informed them, that when they arrived
at the settlement, they must be slripped,
scourged, and run the gauntlet, naked, be
tween two files of Indians, containing the
whole number found in the settlement; for
such they declared was the standing custom
of their nation. This information, you will
believe; made a deep impression on the
minds of the captive women, and led them
irresistibly to devise all possible means of
escape. On the 31st of the same month,
very early in the morning, Mrs. Dnstan,
while the Indians were asleep, having awa
ked her nurse, and a fellow prisoner, (a
youth taken some time before from Wor
cester) despatched, with the assistance of
her companions, ten of the twelve Indians.
The other two escaped. With the scalps
of these savages they returned through
the wilderness; aqd having arrived safely
at Haverhill, and afterwards at Boston, re
ceived a handsome reward foMheir intrep
id conduct, from the Legislature.
Whether all their sufferings, and all the
danger of suffering anew, justified this
slaughter, may probably be questioned by
you, or some other exact moralist. Prece
dents ii.rumerable, and of high authority,
may indeed be urged in bebalfof these cap
tives ; but the moralist will equally ques
tion the rectitude of these. Few persons,
however, agonizing as Mrs. Dustan did,
under the evils she had already suffered,
and in the full apprehension of those which
she was destined to suffer, would have been
able to act the part of nice casuists; and
fewer still, perhaps, would have exercised
her intrepidity. That she herself approv
ed of the conduct which was applauded by
the Magistrates and Divines of the day, in
the cool hour of deliberation, cannot be
doubted. The truth is, the season of In
dian invasion, burning, butchering, captivi
ty, threatening, and torture, is an unfortu
nate time for nice investigation and critical
moralizing. A wife tvho had just seen her
house burnt, her infant dashed against a
tree, and her companions coldly murdered,
one by one; who supposed her husband
and her remaining children had shared the
same fate ; who was threatened with tor
tore, and indecency more painful than tor-1
ture; and who did not entertain a doubt
that (he threatening would* W; fulfilled;
would probably feel no..necessity, when
she found it in her power to despatch the
authirs of her sufferings, of asking ques
tions concerning any thiqg but the success
of the enterprise.
But, whatever may be thought of the
rectitude of her conduct, that of her hus
band is in every view honourable. A finer
succession of scenes for the pencil was
hardly ever presented to (he eye, than was
furnished by the efforts of this gallant man,
with their interesting appendages. The
artist must be destitute indeed of talents,
who could not engross every heart, as well
as every eye, by exhibitions of this husband
and father, flying to rescue his wife, her
infant, and hor nurse, from the approaching
horde of savages; attempting on his horse
to select from his flying family the child
which be was the least able to spare, and
unable to make the selection; facing in
I their rear, the horde of hell-hounds; alter
nately, and sternly retreating behind his
inestimable charge, and fronting the enemy
j again; receiving and returning their fire,
j and presenting himself equally as a barrier
against murderers, and a shelter to the
flight of innocence and anguish. In the
back ground of some or other of these pic
tures, might be exhibited with powerful
| impression, the kindled dwelling; the sick-
Ily mother; the terrified nurse, with the
new-born infant in her arms ; and the furi
! ous natives surrounding them, driving them
| forward, and displaying the trophies of
savage victory and the insolence of savage
triumph.”
Scraps from History. —ln the former part of
the reign of Henry VII. there did not grow in
England, cabbage, carrot, turnip, or other edible
root ; and it has been noted that even Queen
Catharine herself could not command a saljad for
dinner, until the king bro’t over a gardener from
the Netherlands. About the same time the ar
tichoke, the apricot, the damask rose, made their
first appearance in England. Turkies, carps and
hops were first known there in the year 1524
The currant shrub was brought from the island of
Zante, anno 1553, and in the year 1540, cherry
.trees from Flanders were first planted in Kent
It was in the year 1503, that knives were first
made in England. Pocket watches were brought
there from Germany, anno 1577. About the
year 1580 coaches were introduced ; before which
time Queen Elizabeth, on publick occasions, rode
behind her chamberlain. A saw-mill was erected
near London, anno 1633, but afterwards demo)-
ished, that it might not deprive the labouring
poor of employment. ■ How crude was the sci
ence of politicks, even in this late age'!
A tat. Ini.
A French journal asserts, that there is a peri
odical paper published at Ceuta, in Africa, called
the Liberal African, and another at Tripoli, on
the Kadishka, eighty miles from Damascus, in Sy
ria, called the Hermit of Mount Libanvs.
The Students of-Darmouth College have ob
tained afield which they propose to cultivate the
ensuing season, and appropriate the avails to
Missianary purposes.
THE MISSIONARY
..... . mb w.—
h*/MOlftiTlsK>N, MAY 30.
NOTICE.
The subscribers, farmer proprietors of “ The
Missionary,” having sold out their interest to N.
S. SHBeman & Cos. do this day, by mutual con
sent, dissolve their copartnership, benjamin
Gilderslceve and Jssac M. Wales are to settle all
the business relative to the paper during the first
two years of its publication.
Demands of money duo from the office, may be
made of Isaac M. Wales, at Mount Zion, and mo
ifes due to'the office may be paid to him or to
the several agents heretofore appointed.
NATHAN S. S. BEMAN,
BENJ. GILDERSLEEVE,
ISAAC M. WALES.
May 29th, 1820.
- NOTICE.
A Copartnership for continuing the publication
of “ The Missionary,” is this day formed betweeu
the Subscribers, under the firm of N. S. S. Be
man & Cos. They have purchased the Printiug
Establishment, and will conduct the paper as
heretofore. Desiriousof supporting the existence
and reputation of “ The Missionary,” they look
to a liberal publick for patronage.
Advertising and Job Work will be executed on
ns reasonable terms as at any press in the State, i
NATHANS. S. BgMAN,
JACOB P. NORTON,
EBENEZER COOPER.
Is the prosecution of our labours for the pub
lick, we this day present our readers with the
First Number of the Third Volume of The Mis
sionary. Every station in life is attended with
.its peculiar duties ami trials: but few persons
have more difficulties to -encounter than the cor.
due tor* of Weekly Journals. The pursuits, opin
ions and tastes of men are so various and discor
dant, that to please all would be a hopeless un
dertaking. Could a writer or printer so far re
nounce bis self-respect and the convictions of his
own understanding as to present to the eye of
the publick only what their conflicting sentiments
would appear to demand, he might without
aid of inspiration predict, that the same produc
tion which would be elevated by the approbation
of one, would be depressed by the reprobation of
another. This remark is equally true in relation
to matters of science, taste and morals. The first
grand requisite, then, in one who moves in this
sphere of life, is to secure the correctness of his
own deductions and to increase the stock of his
ana information, and then to present to others
the deep lines and the bold features of truth and
propriety as they are drawn upon his own mind.
Aud to - please ourselves is not always an easy at
tainment. ,
But when instruction, and that of a religious
character, is to be combined with amusement, or,
to speak more pertinently, to reign as the pre
dominant spirit of the work, the impediments to a
successful execution are multiplied rather than
diminished. The more we multiply the subjects
of discussion, the njore numerous are the points
on which men will be found to entertain a mate
rial and essential difference of opinion. Cut the
bustle of business—the prejudices of opiuion—the
diversities of taste—and the fastidiousness of crit
icism, are not the only obstacles which hedge up
the way to publick attention and confidence..
The motives presented to those who write or com
pile for the perusal of others, are often too weak
arid inefficient to overcome the languor of indo
lence, and tp inspire that intellectual activity
requisite to impart an uniform merit to a publica
tion which must issue weekly from thd press.
The pledges of honour, profit or usefulness, are
, alone adequate to give to our mental labours an
intrinsick and sterling value. And these pledges
j are not given, with competent vouchers, to every
1 wight who can stand at the case or hold a pen.
, The brows of few writers, indeed, are entwined
with wreaths—with too many the printer’s bill is
I the last which becomes due—and to dream of
’ being the successful instructed of men without
, the prerequisites of experience, information and
taste, is to undertake a wilder crusade than that,
once prosecuted against the Holy City. The
press is every day crammed with too n./ip
crude materials for the intellectual and mom
health of (he land. ,
The present age, especially in our own country,
is the age of business rather than of mental re
finement ; and if it be asserted, that a taste for
reading is general, this Assertion must be accom
panied with the acknowledgement, that it is only
reading of the lighter kind vvhich has usurped the
throne and received the sanctions of fashion.
Fancies are more easily pursued than facts; and
a Novel or a Drama are read and disposed of with
greater facility than a volume on national policy,
or a treatise on Christian benevolence. Shhuld
the present fashionable reading produce its legiti- and
mate and full effect, we might expect most?of onr
young men—we mean those of sup eriour genius—
to turn out downright knights-errant, fully quali
! fied for the achievement of the most surpassing
wonders. And if we add to this the influence oj
> certain Exercises better known in our county
’ villagas than elsewhere, and which appear, at the i
present period, to be floating on upon a full tide to
perfection, not a few of our brilliant youth may io
time become male and female actors on the stage,
i Perhaps future generations are to look back upon
the present period as the Augustan Age of out
Republick! But we retrace the steps of this in
voluntary digression.
The writers who now enjoy the greatest ce
lebrity, are the authors of Fictions which con
tain, it is true, in many traits, a fair delineation of
human character, and exhibit the features of real |
life : —these are followed, in the order of publick i,
estimation, by the spinners of poems either of a J
sprightly, or blasphemous or licentious cast;—and l
the triumvirate is completed by the Reviewers I
who have seated themselves upon their self-erect- ft
ed tribunal of criticism, and surveying the extend-1
ed field of morals and of letters with a single I
glance of the inteNectuU eye, enjoy the. iautanl.l