Democratic Banner (Newspaper) - February 20, 1852, Davenport, Iowa DEMO 1C By is of per VOLUME FEBRUARY 20, 185.2. NUMBER 16. During my residence in became acquainted with a young Scotchman by the He one of the ed mea who followed Sir George McGregor to his empire in the marshes of the to for a. grand name they call it not to mount the high horse of and will therefore observe that he was not of high as most of the characters io modern stories are sure to He was no relation to Dr. Johnson's nsr to of with -Us fortunate Sir Alexander of famous preachers in the time of Charles I; but was in truth nothing more than the son of a small Lanarkshire though born in humble was not without visions of future quite as where the liberty to hope is the birthright of the pillow ofthe lowborn as of the ler and far He truth a built a larger number those mansions without led in the than Don Quixote relieved distressed How sweet vision of beauty and merit and dispelled by the very un- poetical call from bis father to fold the The being a day cared little for the aversions of the and the consequence was that in rin and enlisted as a- volunteer in Sir George's with the promise ot becoming Earl do Bayou des or Riviere dcs in the ery of I shall not enter into the details of his passage to the theatre of his anticipated ex- and Finding hia at that he had been made the dupe of an as weak and drivelling as he was unprincipled and he left and proceeded to the city of His until he ed that exhibits nothing worth remarking soon after his an incident occurred that bade fair to in- volve him in serious This nothing less than falling in love with the beautiful daughter of the a prominent member of that ly disinterested band of Mexican in the effervescence of patriotic threw away their from motives ration al as those which induced Uou to liberate the My renders are undoubtedly aware of the many obstacles exist m old to the otherwise than by of the the higher but they be told that it in perfect boundless compared with what is im- posed upon the patrician order in throughout Spanish In the regulated indeed by liable tu terminated upon the wildcat and the unreasonable is in some the latter tlie sexes seldom each other till marriage They ore Jess together than any Christian land with which 1 am ed; than in spite of manners and and and and bolts and and all that sort of the is by no means so hazardous a business as I had supposed A slight blow at a small side which After this amicable adjustment of a ily they all returned to the Tobasco and spent the night in The i led to the aroused the who events predicted by Juan actually taken conducted them into the At the the palace was tenanted by his tar stood a venerable whose garb Within ten days Capt. and his spoke his though it was the immediate wife set out for Vera and at that port observation of the young Scotchman that embarked for Arrived he his eye was lighted a beautiful villa with extensive as might best suit the beholder to in and atthe time gard it. Viewing the lovers for a j 1 visited so busy in improving them with an impatience kept under with l that he had no time for save to re- he j late the foregoing 1 have come hitherto be joined I er in the holy bonds of matrimony V I answered the a priest of the Holy Catholic and as a good member of the Mexican Sweet Marion Sho was the best beloved of old and rod as a good member of the Mexican of I require to bo informed of the 0J0 WM a favorite with the family and fortune of the dren she could scarcely stir I should bo wanting in my duty both to Abroad without having two or three and my if I to like on tho true character of who under her And she loved the dear young an her especial as -a hut spiritually if I may may be to smalt answer I am Kobin a your questions as poor as -a out spiritually it A j so In person she was rather below an from low and j the but delicately and as a kirk I metrically Her countenance did not ter of the house of going to be was in her gentle and looked from her married to a beggarly in the ob- and all loved scure church of St. accompanied by i could help loving a lying waiting maid and a ragged was one a I iv i i i moro ardent passion than the and that I mother the terrified was Mark a falling upon her my T0 He was the eldest son of l Robert it is my Join dear To many it was a cause of crt in my that he will spare our I that Marion should yield her heart to i the fascinations of one like so op- never do that m Scotland till we have in character in every But tried the temper of our said the and bounds which was by Ins father to study law with the various disguises assumed to de- with an counsellor of that I shamo tho boasted sagacity of my Uero llis social drew him into j Of young men as fond ot pleasure am my master's answered the as and he from the throwing off his sable rather a free Sis months after leaving ges of and for he and on tho who arc you to same day called over to sec There i am still Pedro the replied wai southing the appearance of Mark laughing as unconcernedly as if nothing that the pure hearted maiden with had is not much disguise ain tiie 8ne looked at about and I repel with disdain the bent close tu kiss and breathed thet in her the odor oL brandy was so strong give me that said produced a momentary the When thov after a brief replied the bold I know up to her what conditions are to be imposed upon the sat down and wept id insisted the dnor of the vestibule and a the TO men MIV The in her mind not the know bow tu the honor nnd of his house froni tho assaults It is my turn to Contra- o r ws BY 'Tis holy The evening shades Steal with a soft control O'er as u thought ot heaven Steals o'er tho humble And every ray from yonder And drop of Seem to bring down to human woes From heaven a message or O'er you rock the solemn A shadowy incline Like gentle sorrow bowed Around their holy And them now the night winds So calm and stilL music low Seems the fio is voice prayer Soit echoed on tie The like Rose to a And o'er the w The Holy Spi The torrent's vo Seem the far no And all Their song of The gentle Rend low the move as erst ii tiie low hymn of voices raise love and lood of lovely Or gaze tears of Up to the hoi And the pure Like eet and Bright signals To guard the There is a spiri st gaze on And not kneel With nature's the rs come out things of iie dome ed spirit if blessedness In air and uxi t and And nature j the blessed look Of a young s nt forgiven an hour ot .vn upon the L to God tm Carpet DY In Manchester ia Her name her hair was And she as cc by good judges to in of a mile trom frequented by pleasure parties from thu Out to this Mark soon he your tarn to the beautiful garden laid oat said apd he save three for the accommodation of stamps with his heel upon the the ho called u servant and soon see majie up the scarcely a Df Already ho had been ed its last a hundred to give his spirits .in clothed in as many different styles of of u fuct perceived by nnd exhibiting the much to they be by nil odds the Her was Her eyes were A very lovely fir And for about bi en man pa 01 ben Now R uben w girl in le and a half there had I attention to bv in e yo of the fair who so fur forgot her and the ol all her line's as to confess her love to its delighted and to promise to ily with him from his present something than a. Love is not famous for the phrase in low shall get along well supplying the full stock of pre- caution and They named the night for the and provided the assistants and the lady's that com promoter and in- dispensable appendage to a Spanish a crafty and waiting the a following the ate trade of The latter was not of a calling to inspire and yet instances of fidelity and good faith are not uncommon in men of this Dirk murderer and arch fiend as ho to his owners for the last Men who disregard all luw but their own are very apt to entertain a creed of their some of the provisions of shame thete regularly Tho night fixed for the elopement nnd the to the lodgings of the enamoured Knowing better than his employer the that attend the stealing of a Mexican he brought with him a a fellow of enormous and with a complexion little lighter than those Indians who figure in the vegetable market of the city of He was indeed a formidable looking His coal-black whiskers were as large as those preserved in the Cathedral church of ing to St. Thomas the and his the color and shadowed eves as fierce as those of u Altogether looked and moved a most appalling Carlo the Swarthy might be Carlo the It is not always that a savage appearance denotes a savage nor a mild one a ponding Commodus and acalla were not feminine and delicate in and the monster while sat fiddling to the flames that were de- the Eternal his mild beautiful Lave been taken for a kind down to arrest their Armud in the prevailing style of Mexican bach a pair of heavy horse a sword and the latter unhappily the most frequently and fatally the principal and his two aids found just .as the great clock in the Church of Mary Magdalen was tolling little wicket gardens of the Tobasco The reader will doubtless demand how they gained so facile an admittance I know nor was the torso easy an duction into walled and triply barricaded but the contrabandists to the various gates as ly as if he were the authentic A dim burning in a low window on the ern side of the acquainted them with the apartment occupied by the fair No scaling of or wrenching ty the lovely enveloped in a large Spanish soon made and in less than twenty they were all standing at the Church of St. in the extreme northern verge of the this be thought our variety of with an bv tlin of hive thought in nt dozen shillings had nut Nay toll me that the goblet drowns One charm ot feeling and fond Ne'er hath a beam Been lost in the stream That ever was shed from form or That ot Tht balm of thy Slill float on the anJ hallow my Then fancy that wine con steal One dream ot the heart from me Like that awaken ihe The bowl but brightens my love for Marion listened until he was tiom an impulse of the not? a bottle of jour and the I he On- best de's seeing much were out- The sen ant girl and Mark would have to the cj to Morion with jesting but wero enough to look through tho 1 you thought vou smile she had forced to her and exclaimed 1'i'ilrii, with sadness that was in which many of Ins goon were and pleased to understand act was to fill a glass and offer it that when yon stole upon the lovers in the bock in the Tobasco and I will drink two glasses for every overheard their plan of I was at ono j for and your that when your scoundrel of a. for replied gaily who shall yet for his the glass to his emptied contrived a confederate tjie plan it at a second and third glass of a which has done so much to ami the deep sadness bring his master's wisdom into that the face of the sweet and to disqualify him for the post of chief ne and commenced rascal to a I overheard that thc Of Be assured thaf no part of your plan has caned my I even know in what cell of rour spacious dungeons you would have only crime is He would have occupied tho same dreadful cell in dreary vou confined your poor brother the name of the Holy how did you learn all demanded tho astonished with horror depicted in his Yon must be well acquainted with the secrets of the should for Iwas born in ed tho arc t de and throwing off his ing farther and farther from while the various he stood before them a shadows deepened on her as love's swarthy eclipse i indeed whom T me said ejaculated the as he finished his drinking And she stricken spoke in a voice that half sobered the young 1 your brother you thought and caused him to return the glass he provide such was from tho a death replied thanks to do you really wish to go home a faithful friend in niv f I i that do to in the ear of Take me I must go the usurper of my wealth an I ere back at i the legitimite proprietor of both is in Xot a word more was Marion 1 possession of his own And ed away from the and Mark walked it is my pleasure that you bestow silently by her Brief were the my pretty niece upon this brave young ces they uttered as they rode back to whoso honesty and courage I have And when they parted at Marion's even when he himself was not aware of door it was in must be as yon I replied Whether Mark was angry or not the did not she did not think of have answered it must ho as 1 He was and she lelt an in- i Call Father light was leather Mark was and soon united suddenly the Mark did not visit Marion again during said T will his stay of a week in Shame i show you of what different stuff ther than anger kept him for ho Willed by my father to inherit as his clearly the moaning of her sudden son the chief part of his fair shrinking from him when he sung the by the aid of u set of the greatest ing tho words when he re- i wretches that ever disgraced con- fleeted on them in his sober he saw to I trived to incarcerate me for seven of the best be far different from those he should address years of my life in the dungeons of the to mine own by right and My wealth A year Mark Wilford stood you wasted in revolutionary or in still above a grassy hillock in the grave yard at more disreputable and unworthy my Beneath reposed all that was I name vou dishonored by a well-contrived mortal of Marion Tears were in his i report that I had perished in a loathsome in- for the form of Marion was before Be this my only You shall as love's eclipse fell upon her gentle j within twenty-four to the and she turned from him in the tate onr father possessed at the pass of St. wreathed together with ten A long sigh fluttered up from the breast thousand bo on of. tho young and he turned and condition that you turn honest nnd re- walked slowly of Temperance main so. 1 will myself the and my fortune shall 09 the dowry which my little niece shall carry to If we were not proud wa should i I her i not of of As any jn the An on lie imr it a he agree ble to Mr. and HIT cruel l arenta u A lich in And old l rown I rather than h n e his d. he'd kn the Democratic I not to be taken for an untried but for something of a practical Certainly it is the duty of an editor to in- Mr. Sanders the people he thinks about the proposition of but by stigmatizing The Editor of the of the doctrina as and the 12th' of 1S52, communicating the millions of Americans who under the title of some have already adopted this as remarka of New York correspondent of the he cannot gain much credit for his Journal of thinks following judgment or timely suggestions well worthy of being uni- j is the KOSSUTH The great The remarks of the cor- i Magyar has two principal objects in whom were and that trine requires even a greater is u ed for sending an army into conquest of 03 Trad intended b'y might require shoB three dred thousand But been the madman to recommend an tion for conquering if the United States were to go to war against they would hardly send an army but would use their is fai rior to the Russian bai hit this of ing Think only of the Black and of Sund of will not to in- if you And if she only generous people of be raised by in order to feed and tavor ot Hungarian It have some provide for my brave equip an army thousand could get five millions of about a that they may have and to buy or build Barter of a dollar from every free sels to to thp coast of it t 1 t j on wll soon gee Hungarians ranged sets to transport army to me coast pt that would to his own dec- calmly shouting come sure the generous people of the United States answer these hopes of respondent run carry out practically the what would have to bo the first step must be something like A resolution must be offered by some one of He wants money of the individuals and the the support of tho United States against sian We have not heard any objection against the material the members of big with love oE which demands from tho liberty for all mankind that they are ready who certainly can as a free to to this I people dispose of a part of their property in That of dollars i L raised by in order to feed and favor of the Hungarian If in order to carry on the Hungarian people to him to that effect in the battle field Tlic liOTer Now remember that Bonaparte entered Russia with an army of three hundred But aid from the and of which hardly a remnant was left Government against Hussion tell the story of its and that Have the United States the means to support in Marvel thus with the means of filling up him in this And is it a good policy es in and with those self- to use such means How far will they go We think i; not but very im- to debate this Concerning the right of the United States the blanks in the above If ting down to fill up these blanks will not bring every who is Kossuth to his then he is Let us give to Kossuth all our sympathy as individuals and all the moral aid to his but for Heaven's sake do not let us make selves ridiculous in the eyes of the world by to prevent Kussian wo have uot auy reasonable All dis- about Quixotic which American and European writers humanizing incidents which havo ever gained the laughter and good will of the the lover and the newly married grow unusually amiable and kind you are earnest in your search of friends vou shake hands your office as he were your second You joke fully with the stout and give her a and insist upon are utterly even if they were thilt has a right to govem hcr and merry at the founded upon just and sufficient We are indeed struck with astonishment at seeing an Editor carrying the opposition itself as it may think that the garian declaration of independence his been just as righteous 03 the American in 1776, against the great Kossum in such a that has no more right to subdue Hungary to Austria than to conquer the U- States for the English that sia infringed upon the law of nations by her interfering in But there being no supreme court over independent who shall enforce the international law Certainly every tion is entitled to the Executive power con- that if not If it is to grant w hat de- certainly madness has likewise befel in asking what is not to be ed without must ingly be also a in the eyes of Mr. and people preferring speeches to the remarks of SAN doubtless are The for can only be to put him in a would be a mere shadow of a The A- This certainly is the quence of tho quoted and people accordingly would act But con- m repelling Russian intervention by whatever means are It is only a mutter of. what steps approved by Mr. what we muj judge there can be madness in his In the New York a Whig Count FRANCIS one of the Hungarian speaks about in the United States will take in supporting being himself declared that ter m iriy him in the But She 1 not A sfo Re ul e d h t a for tin bnu e and than fifty times of he didn't hole race of that national which will tainly attempt to violate a second v r. America can tte is to Kossuth m y could surmise the deep are of opinion that the GQ nobody could surmise the deep sion he lias made upon the The cause of Hungary seemed and the no- ble hearts which had alread shed a tear United having protested against I Kussian are bound in honor to fai th a f F m tho on the to the and to offer a home a resolution giving to Kossuth a welcome er the grave of the once so mighty Hungarian F were ready to bid a ol m a sPeech safe and a table for the m thrust by the of was error can be greater or more The protests and of on the shores of are matters uf in electric spark thrilling the diplomatic ot the through the and the power of bis laud put upon record her protest against 1 the purity of tho cool occupation of to record to with which hei steered through her disapprobation of that act of all the Ivies thrown in his kindled and of violence But she rested She So Phebe Determined ai Tu ey started to be uniti though it nine Hike the Oil But Captain He loaded And then He half way to the started off Old Brown d Wright would it Tuesday Parson de the holy bands of mat tremendous am T- rn was wide awake the loving n they'd abou and then Reuben and the took a deadly aim Towards Reuben's But it MI bleeding He made and shut his he unspeakable anguish and seeing her drop Then And veni He drew And pli or that its very doubtful about his ever The Reuben's eyes In tonis He up the ghost and And i manner tcr old Captain iit down stone lied young Reuben's crazed his jacknife out J it into old Brown about fifty his melancholy and heart-rending the history of Reuben anc When I marl As Then i Arthurs Home w. H. 'twas a blessed in my calendar with it type of its all pure I in my heart music ir sunshine malted through the ve's unconquerable And of thee at L only Twas as a ray ily kindled in a darkened I in the a fountain on the If love joy oft hy exquisite pain pc more clear the waters of the well being is XT BY fv mother's how oft doth creep Its cadence on my lonely ike sent on wings of Or dew on the unconscious I might forget her melting prayer While pulses madly But in the unbroken Her gentle tones come stealing Anil years of sad And leave mo at my mother's a fire of enthusiasm in all hearts unknown did not think that tho circumstances called in history since the time of Peter the for And within the current it progress through America known that both France and England made was a series of triumphs never witnessed be- representations against the demands of the people turned out wherever he ar- rived by thousands and hundreds of ands all the internal party feuds were for- sia and Austria that the Sultan should dc liver up to their tender mercies the nate Hungarian What the protest recollection of it. You tup on the shoulder very and tell he is a capital and don't allow him to whip his when driving to the You even ask him to take a glass of facor with you upon some chilly You to the health of bis says he has no you think him a very miserable and linn a by way of think all the editorials in the ing papers are remarkably well whether upon your side or upon You think the market has a very ful which you are a large to You wonder why admired or or any of the give a. pleasant twirl to your as you saunter along the and not so loud as to be is is wondor if Frank ever in the ovations prepared for and jug have had this inso tne leading though differing in lent demand we do not J he boldly proclaimed his principles Modern history is full of am and his and tho nations listened to they arc familiar to I that his voice with respectful attention and we shall do in cases where we find it neces ed him as the man of tho as the sary to pursue this method of expressing cr of freedom's next battle on the our is a mere question o It was not the horn they cheered for and if we do hnt put oar his past struggles and but tho selves right by this process of a disapproval apostle of who had the ear of the we OUT dignity nor ou tions to act upon his eloquent nut our views upon and Who is the man who has produced such then we are Iree to act at any time Tho European high aristocracy as we have called him a Finding no reasonable arguments agains an of a a village of Gen. we think but this editor and tod States will at least protest against a yer has ruled not only the Hungarian people at but also a great deal of the proud and rich Hungarian high aristocracy have ond Russian The farther question will the in case do more bowed themselves before the and in several has his faculties of this prodigiously en- dowed and eminently com- bines with the genius and ideality a with tho enthusiasm and heroism of a noble a thorough practical which has enabled him to make as that the people of the United bj merely showing their decided will not to mit any further Kussian probably check such In one of his he has said that Russia should aid Austria in her long as she was not betrayed by the battles against then the United crous a match oven for the States must go to a Count at he has forces of Austria and this opinion by that there would the was Kossuth at the time be other means than a for when Count Louia Batthyany left Hungary Congress could abolish tha I without the means of provided for that ower the defence of the betrayed when Jellachich entered and the Arch- law duke and Count Louis it was single sanction abolition of the ihe eloquence of Kossuth which gathered the I neutrality added to your people on the plains of led them b our own generous feelings to At the time when the Hungarian ej u i armies were defeated and the capital I confidently to that tho and the country invaded from nine different pie of the United in their private and there were no arms in would soon settle the account of all and no powder for the oppressed of all the Czara of the to manufacture the and no ney to pay the nnd no hope in the this is not demanded by of the it was who i second By substituting the firmness of his will and and debating other of his raised and clothed fight not and armed and organized and j rv the eole with confidence and led a second the people with confidence and led hem from victory to till the symbol or tho children of your own double-faced Tho New of the hastily from the Theiss to the Davenport Gazette is such a Dos very frontiers of L in one of his speechs at j about controlled the finances of the by debating i about Quixotic which are forhis remark ed on the people of Hungary in the glorious entered Hossia with perhaps ao much credit thousand greatest of er loved Nelly one half as well as you love Madge V You feel quite sure he never You can hardly conceive how it that Madge has not been seized before scores of enamored and borne like tho Sabine women in Komish You chuckle over your like a boy who has found a guinea in. groping for You read over the marriage of the tiina when you will take her and slip the ring upon her and repeat after the for A great deal of there will be about you you heart cleaves to that swoot image of tho beloved as light cleaves to The weeks leap with a and the months only grow long when you proach that day which is to make her There are no flowers rare enough to bouquets for diamonds are too dint for bur to pearls are And after the weeks are even than yon wonder why on earth all the single men in the world do not rush to the you loot upon them as a traveled will look upon some conceited Dutch who has never been beyond the limits of hii Married on the you regard as and look upon their as they may better than blush a little nt first telling your butcher what would yon bargain with the grocer for sugar and and wonder if he that you are a ried man You practice your new way of talk upon your tell him that expects yon home to and are astonished that he does not stare to hear you say wonder if tho people in the omnibus know that Madge and you are just and if the driver knows that the shilling you to him is for and You wonder if anybody was ever so happy or ever will be so happy again You cuter j our name upon the hotel books as and and come back to look at if any else has noticed thinking that it looks remarkably You cannot help thinking that every third man you meet in the wishes he possessed your nor do you think sinful in him to wish it. You fear it is placing temptation in the way of some to little ers outside the at when it is is just what it should be everything she and nothing more than sho The snu strikes u in the possible piano is the sweetest toned in the library is stocked to a that sed is and giving life to it To of her possible is a suffering you class with the in- tortures of tho You grow iwain of heart and Smiles seem made for and you wonder how ever wore them a sigh is many a heart is many a is by the terrible infatuation parents often evince in choosing life for thair How it for happiness result from inion of two principles so diametrically op- to each other in every point of view M is to And yet how ii wealth considered a better recommendation o a young man than virtue How often ii lie nnt question which is asked respecting a- tritor of a he Is he rich abounds in nt does that afford any evidence that a kind Affectionate Is lie ha has thousands ng on every bat do not riches 80IM- iines take winga to and fly you consent that your ball a man who has nothing to him but hij wealth