Hagers-Town Torch Light & Public Advertiser (Newspaper) - November 16, 1843, Hagerstown, Maryland TORCH 3 1C, 8843. Vol. 6. Krom the York OUR Onr girls they are And and As any the ever Talk not about Circassian or Or Greek's summer skies blue me our AnJ fresh as the is When sprinkled willi roses and dew Each lip i; like Each swelling As white as the high snow With eyes Like bubbles dashing hill rocks to valleys below All smiling with All their shall we loj lovelier 20? ours arc the The the The purest I Their an- Their eyes are the spirits so noble and free O Rive me no other True Our own are the chosen mo MISCELLANEOUS The Coquette the Coquette T a m e r Mabel Gray was most but her beauty was of that sort which vrc gaze upon admiringly and She was it struck me as odd that 1 always linii the happy chain of the precise length that j left doubtless a mere coincidence my dear Miss continued jesting conversation must serve as a nary to a more serious communication 1 have to Are you willing to Let us have your by all said astonished at this abrupt Pearson drew his chair said poor know how many rivals he contends and how many smiles and favors arc lavished on would lie esteem this chain as a love though by the fair hands of Mabel Gray said slightly the best judge of his own and will estimate any gift of mine at its er .it have no right to assume the character of if I have ever given you you must forget the silly whim of the is on this very subject that 1 would speak to said sentiments toward you have been declared loo long and too unchanged to be doubted for one 1 was dull enough once to ine that you loved and heaven knows with what rapture 1 believed so but soon others were smiled Gray be- came the idol of a few I found myself treated as one of the This I will I have now come to a resolution on the and firmly intend to act upon 'A very dreadful one said do let me hear it. Something that will astonish and break the nous lovemaking of my other 'A simple said one I have brought by n long course of mental lo the power of ing as I I intend to dream every slight that you are the most constant of your sex mtv 01 your Her complexion dark but clear that you me nny lady ever ing with a delicate To these adored knight in the old that our slender and perfectly Her eyes j will set your coldness at were and Her hair of the same fell in luxuriant 01: her Her eyebrows were strongly marked and Her lips were rosy and Her nose was and im and peculiarities her character She was capacious and Fond of she despised any short of absolute love and seemingly desirous of dominion over she really wished only for the undivided mage of as she knew herself of a deep and lasting so demanded nothing less ihc one on whom she should beslow her in order to prove she resolved to the least token of encouragement until his entire love and constancy were beyond 11 he could remain true while she smiles and attentions on his then she would relent raid make up liv warmth sincerity for previous coldness and Mabel Gray was a likely to be- come something It not possible for a girl lo live and when I that she was orphan with a larne fortune at her own dis- it may be supposed that her lovers rather Amongst those who professed themselves enamored of her charms was Oliver a young man of St pre- possessing His person was com- manding and his features He was gifted with a readiness and pliancy of which enabled him lo adapt self to anv and lo turn it to He could be grave or sentimental or all with apparently equal Oliver Pearson was just the man with a all with Maori She treated him with lens favour than because she suspected she beheld him with she feared to examine herself strictly on this subject lest she should discover too plainly how feigned was her in- And what was reason for playing this hypocritical part. Slic was not convinced that Pearson was as de- voted to her as she considered her merits de- flc had not humbled himself low and sufficiently long. Before she could deign to evince ihe least sign ol she must feel she was loved as deeply as human creature was ever in world She committed a but common inordinate vanity she considered proper One morning she working whilst ver Pearson sat by her side looking The work on which Mabel Gray was employed very characteristic of She was king a silken chain fora lover whom she de- in order to vex a lover whom ad- Never did she touch that chain un- less Oliver His known knock was ihe signal for her taking it his departure for her putt ing it Its ostensible as a was quite secondary to its real as an engine of Probable had no intention of ever finishing if satisfied believed she would have been contented the ingenious triumph of piquing one lover and not committing herself with was provokingly fie seldom alluded to when ho it was usually with a as if he were er amused than Could he have the impudence to think that she preferred him to his rivals or to suppose that the chain was not intended for the person she said it lie might find himself mistaken after On the present occasion he had sat for full half an talking about love in the old and had not once mentioned the chain though ihe had shown a and had worn all the air of being absorbed in aa interesting Ai taking hold of it lie said the chain comes on I My fnend must friend Mordant may be impatient if he said or im- he must wait until I choose to give will not be said we consider how great a favorite he is to Miss But I confess thr matter puzzles me if he making a chain he is certainly worthy of having it made for him a little It does not seem altogether a labor of I taking hold of the chain a- gain and looking mischievously at declare it seems exactly as if you only ed on this when i am said should lather say that you always happen be here n I am working on it. What has your ence or absence to do with my that this be of days glide on in one delicious stream of un- interrupted and that our mutual con- duct is a pattern worthy of imitation by every couple in ihe said affecting to is your pretty is Given with so much parade with so grave it You shall see what the reality will will treat you with greater coldness than my dear Miss said throwing carelessly bank in the contrast will be and in the meantime 1 will console myself with your imaginary is really quite said you will so far as tell me your in order that I may see how very I have 'The identical thing I was about said Yes I will stive you an account of them every and you shall But no when you think you have been too kind to me il a said is my nnd if you be content with such a phantom 1 almost think 1 will give you leave to dream of me night for twelve Whether Mabel Gray was as much amused as she 1 cannot pretend to but certain it is that she was much for the next morning she was sitting fully alone in the breakfast and ing anxiously towards the door every as if expecting the entrance of a At length the door waj and Mr. Pearson was in a stalely manner lo receive but Pearson shook her hand with a seated her in a and ly drew another close beside said was love like What devotion have I found at length ir. bosom which was so said my said of 1 meant in my 1 sat in an arbour with vine Mabel Gray was by my nnd smiling on inc. A delicate repast was be- fore handed us flagons of The fruits I love best were me by Mabel's own I was happy beyond Suddenly the a- the table were filled with men that amongst the faces 1 re- that of Mabel Gray immediately left MIC and attended to those new To some she poured out wine others she handed their favorite talking and laughing with each other in and scarcely bestowing a look on me. In the midst of this festivity a thick smoke which after curling round many by degrees the form of a large ready in one moment to dart upon its All were seized with fear and but none had power to And then thought the tiger and Gray yon have twelve Eleven arc and must Make of one to be saved and see that you choose as you not one of the ers shall survive youi Mabel Gray grew deadly Intense anxiety was depicted on the countenance of Noj a moment was to be She threw herself upon my me imprinting a burning kiss upon my A said suddenly starting 'a in my said Ro- you were not to I have lor with the kiss I so whether the liger devoured the others or not 1 have really no means of 'A said and with the bloom on her cheek brightened in is and shows the truth of the old that dreams con- But Mr. 1 have lost so much time with your silly that 1 am quite forgetting the chain for poor Mr. Mor on the and heaved a found said Mabel seem Have 1 been in your be treated coldly night and day bv the only being 1 ever loved is too much to 1 have tasked be- yond my 1 imagined 1 could force myself to dream that you loved me but last night proved the Not content with rejecting you actually laughed at my Methought that but I dare not trust myself to relate my Suffice it to that my doom is and 1 have nothing now to hope row I start for the said why should I You have pronounced my sentence of ishment and I obey your said should not this is But I own 1 pity and to show come and 1 will tell yon a dream I had last Pearson drew his chair close her said that I was standing at an as a The portraits of all my admirers were passed be- fore so that I might as soon as 1 had done the original was to present himself before said almost breathless with you choose said 'the portraits moved slowly and I anxiously awaited the appearance of one of him who alone possession of my At length it 1 uttered the name but alas the original came the said name said looking and 'The original is here before said rapturously taking her do dreams always go by said sinking into his love me said Pearson I am not treated with this confirm said taking the doubtful chain from her and hanging it mind his was intended for in- quired said was intended for no one A coquette cannot render her dupes more unhappy and than she renders and as they sillier from be- lief in her so does she suffer from the nothing of eaid Here she busied herself in searching for the neglected and having found immediately commenced working upon it in a most industrious and praiseworthy until Mr. Oliver Pearson had taken his Then she threw it her face on her hand and in a few moment was buried in At the same time the next morning Mr. Pearson was but his appearance had undergone a complete He no longer wore a joyous did he en- ter the room draw his chair close to Miss He seated TRIAL HY you ever serve on a my dear I don't to a nor a grand nor a jury in the criminal are well enough in their to the case where character and property are where justice in matters civil is confined in the dis- cretion of ones ihe theory of the trial by is a beautiful A citizen of the Slates to be tried by his looks ly well on there is something in the very sound that excites ones American But my dear is one And why? the word is a very ambiguous signification in this free and glorious The theory saith that a litigation between merchants involving thousands of pounds shall arbitrated by merchants possessing thousands of that mechanics meet out justice to gentlemen of leisure lo of anil so this earned would secure the end anil aim of But look the The the the man of be his disregards the summons the court to attend as a and his lino because he can The poor man on the who has quite as little ure as his tich and can far less ford to spare that obeys the summons because he nevertheless has no money io pay The result is obvious The jury frequently not being tho peers of the parties and not from a deficiency of sense but from a diversity of lo judge intelligibly of the relative rights of the parties meet in the jury room and look at their arc we all for the r Three jurors ut of it's a clear let us assess the How you thousand Second Third hundred and nine Fourth Fifth Sixth hundred and thirty-five Seventh hundred Ninth Tenth Eleventh hundred Foreman this won't Wo shall at this is almost three Fourth will never First I. I'll starve Eleventh will 1 am sorry to hear The ed in the and he looks to this jury of his peers for Me has a as we all he has rights as we as I have already it is ly three I that we add up our several and upon their average as our I congratulate you on deliberation to a to be must be 1 have cast up the amounts and find the aggregate to be three thousand six hundred and ty of this is three dred and one dollars und sixty-seven Are you all agreed upon this as your Jurors Exeunt my dear what sort of justice do vou call From the Glory and Shame of The last 1 found poet in a weak and rather lable but lie treated me with the utmost lie said that at the time J first led upon all strangers and most of his friends were excluded from his said I known an American at the you should not have been I love your sir it is the land of the only God's green earth not desecrated by In our 1 alluded to the pathy at that time felt in America for gling AH he at that time said in re- ply was the richest land on knows 1 have tried to help will remember that but a little while before Marco had When mentioned his Byron lie was as brave as nn ancient Perhaps he had the blood of in his veins I presume he But of I am hs had as good blood as er this At his request the servant then brought him a from which he took a icr written to himself by that gallant It was a warm hearted welcome of Byron to said the author of as he handed the precious relic to me. would not part with that but to sec the That glorious hero but a few moments before he led his to his last battle wrote this letter to me in his As he spoke these a heroic smile lit up his pale I am sure 1 never such an on the face of a mortal man as at that moment flashed from he fell back upon his and wiping the cold sweat from his lofty once more Greece God bless thee awl I only ask Heaven two things Heaven ought to Greece may become and Ada cherish my ory when I am was surprised that Byron should so ly express his sentiments to a a Hula knowledge of the man explained it lie was one concealed from friend or he was fearless of the world and open and independent to a In a few days 1 received another note from him requesting me to call and bring with me Sketch Book if 1 had or could get it for As it is a book I always carried with I took it in my hand and went once more to the illustrious author's lie rose from his couch when I and pressing my hand yon brought the Sketch Book I handed it to when seizing it with ed to the said he is one of the finest things ever written on earth and 1 want to hear an American read it. But you know Irving 1 replied that I had never seen bless exclaimed is a he has something better than genius a 1 wish I could see but fear 1 never Well read the heart yes the Broken What a 1 closed the first confess iir I believe in broken does everybody but 1 whenever he ed until he requested me to go on lor although the text yet I care more for the commentary which came fresh from Byron's While I was residing one of the touching portions of the mournful pieces 1 observed Byron He turned line eyes upon me and said see me weep living himself never wrote that story without nor can I hear it without I have not wept much in this for trouble never brings tears to my but I always have tears lor Ihe Broken 1 read the last lines of ses at the close of the Byron said a being that Tom Moore and and Emmet and his beautiful love What beings how many such men as ing are there in America God don't send many such spirits in this world 1 want to go tj America lor five reasons I want to see your stupendous scenery I want to go to Washington's 1 wunt to the sic form of living and I want to get your to recognise Greece as an independent nation I have always been anxious lo see and this scone to lie does not need even Byron's praise I still I think it would please him but in this wish I never have been saw the Great Poet and never was with him half an hour without hearing him speak of Greece and his child of both with the deepest Byron was a very strange if he had only been as good as lie was But ho was good sometimes and always better ihan the world have thought Boston Post says a man ought to be ashamed of himself lo run away with an o- ther man's when there arc so many maiden ladies with their trunks all for T he ravages of ihe yellow fever have been great in Mobile for the and we have noticed several instances where whole circles have been broken up by the ruthless hand of which we copy from the is a picture sad to look will hourly in the day we hear of some instance of real which is sufficient to wring from a heait of where some unfortunate being has lost by death all that bound him to and the last tie which held their affections are A day or two the most ing instance of affliction and calm despair was told which we ever to have H is this Some two or three weeks a lady of this city gave birth lo a and while still on het bed with she was taken with the yellow Her child and her husband and mother weie seized with ihe In a day or two a er brother was taken as ail of the with the exception of one was taken the last one was carried to the house of a In a few days ihe who was first taken her husband followed her shortly The j aged recovered so fir as lo be to j go and nurse her sick ihe time the elder of she was also seized with the The mother watched with a mother's ebbing life of her youngest who was sinking into death's long lie loo in a few when his bereaved parent saw her she observed in a Certain lone which loo plainly told of that he is will go home muse my last and when he is will lay me and who can who can picture the agony of that bereaved and Words cannot do and none but a can feel What an ful chasm has in bnr never this world to be A Too the items of Hie foreign our readers mav re- nil of the death of a Mr. i a circus The North Adams Transcript gives the following account of the the news on his is resident of that Mr. Aymer formerly resided in this and left here engaged in his profession a year He has with her a beautiful and lovely wife of lo whom the intelligence of his awful end was communicated by means of the above extract on Friday She read shed terr over and into the wild laugh of the It was one of the most heart-rending f the eye ever lo look upon ihe tal ruins of this ter that wild and frantic to listen to the incoherent and conversation of one whose reason has On ihe Sabbath she herself ID her bridal and wandered over tlie fields plucking and decking with fantastic piercing the ear and the heart with her frantic calls for her Mrs. mer buried her only child in New York the past and is now verily alone on the bleak waste of without a star to guide her frail and shattered and without a beacon light to wain her of quicksands and A HOME Hill was celebrated for his his his piety and his He would never suppress his or ify his language through fuar of giving and was never known lo omit an ty of illustrating a or ing a deserved however sing it might to individuals who to be It is related but that on onu when speaking of the sin upon and conformity lo the ble fooleries of the he am well aware many of you are ready look at at your own It is all at isf and then applying himself to in the presence of the with astonishing Mrs. I have often pointed out to you the nnd folly of pursuing extravagance when you could relieve so many of your fellow in place of wasting your in this is Richmond Compiler lias a correspondent who is travelling ami who is all he sees and lie relates the following as it was tokt to him at a wedding The conversation turned on the hard and to rally the groom I remarked that times were so hard in Virginia that young though ever so loving and matrimonially dis- could not get But our lord remarked that the years and 1S22, in Indiana and were if for he then had to perform the marriage ceremony and take liis fees in I twelve skins was his as lie a hatter by j and it soon became known that he would I mairy for he did a j at halting and Many a away couple the from have I married for They frequently brought them on rolled up and behind like a great We were all in a roar of and thought him but he firmed it to be literally that he had ried at least fifty couples for and that he had more ceremonies lo form than any oilier from this lo use his own got all the because I would take A Dutch who was warmly in vor of the lory parly the ary happened once to ican on a and was ly called upon for a sermon and a from force of commenced the with pless ihe there was considerable excitement among the when he with ad- mirable presence of mind 1 Got pless the him init plenty him mil a him mi: defeats on and on tc him mil all kinds of bad him mil him mil may we no more of illustrate a some editor tells a of a couple had been married for years but whose union had been blessed with no the good man in consoling her we had a little when he had got old to run he had come up to breakfast had upset the full ten into his audit had scalded him to death After shedding tears over the melancholy imaginary they both agreed it would have been ing worse than if thay had never had a litile Sour few years when the late of Leicester had his al meetings at u sheep was ed in the the wool spun and the made into a coat and worn at dinner the as a proof of the industry anil ingenuity of A similar instance of effort is mentioned in a late lish as having been accomplished ly in A farmer of Walcot had wheat out at nine in the At one some ol the morning's duce was in one of which the farmer personally presented to his as a sample of the season's A An ejectment case tried on tho Western Circuit of Now presented this singular which we find detailed in the The paid for a piece of land by the There was a dispute about the and his neighbor sued It was found he had the whole quantity he had without coming on the disputed Ho was lie then recovered from his on his pan of his purchase A new trial was obtained in the ejectment sun. and he is now successful in In the first eels land which he did not in the next makes another man pay him for and finally holds the and the This beyond the celebrated in which the borrower said ho would prove that lie never had it that it was cracked when he got and that it was whole when he returned AN UPRIGHT do says a late English writer on there is in nature ft more heavenly sight than an knowing judge ting in If God ever man ter bis own I he must have made him in that As burn silent with unconscious So modest easo in beauty slimes most bright Unaiming charms with resistless And she who means no mischief does it ill. On the all the buildings on the south side of Public Square in were destroyed by The loss must be very though is not truly unless il be out of and with a good Cleveland Banner contains the following singular ing that joking sometimes brings with il ry serious consequences those Martha of chillis 10 have been married to the undersigned on Thursday the 2oth of May may desire to pass self as my ihe public are hereby med that 1 never was married to the said Martha nor is she my The that on the night of the she and by happened at a tavern a- mong a company of young were amusing themselves and for the sport of the and without any serious intention I either on her part or a marriage mony was which I have since been in- formed she intends to regard as legal which she did not so regard at the lime j as I prove I all persons against trusting her on my or with the hope of making re- for her as she is not my and 1 will never pay one cent of debt of MOSES We think that Moses has a and Marlh to hang on him j like a loving wife till A pretty thing lo marry in Moses Wise is the exclamation of the editor of the phis Eagle on reading the 'The infant daughter of the Queen of tugal is to be Donna Anna Fernanda Leopoldina Michael Id Amonia Julia Victoria Ganzaga tie Bourbon Saxe bourg and If all that it must have an awful good people of Adams are making great preparations lor n giand Agricultural to be held at on Friday ami of next In allusion to the fair Ihe of the Trader inserts the following paragraph in his which he requests his lady readers to has been privately whispered inlo our and we now communicate it to our ders in the most confidential trusting il will go no further ried friends will of course not tell that a very pretty cup is in the course of lo be given as a ium for the prettiest Great pulling of cups is A conjunction a union or meeting An ill-assorted is a comical lint our arc used to con- have nothing to do with twins found a singular A tin pot fastened to a dog's tail is a disagreeable conjunction to tlie A happy pair may be ed as nn uncommon tions connect similar moods and tenses of and cases of nouns and 'A coat of arms suspended on a wall is like an executed it is and you continue thus to drink brandy and water and to smoke you will be like the who lakrs wherever he goes and always a when it comes in his you think theie is any thine be- tween him and he and she are engaged fallowing is represented lo have taken place between farmer nnd an Irish latter being considerably tinner the common want any body for the Fai yc take you're too and do ye cutyer corn at ihe A GOOD has your daughter Pretty I 1 thank Mrs. Her husband wears on Ilia tailed leads the singing at and expects to be made a captain of TASSO'S that he had an opportunity of taking advantage of a very wish not to plunder there aro things which I wish to take from not his his nor his his ill make books out of my why do you ask such u ish only I read the o- thcr day about nn immense volume of Ladies in the habit of lacing their slays to an tension injurious to their says the should take It will prevent them from gelling There is a man down south who celebrates his by paying for all his Let's make him Why are editors like Because they are often in wont of n He lives in true who bridles his 13 Stays later front INTERESTING The steamer Britannia arrived at Boston late on Saturday having left pool on the 16th The Government has at length thought proper to take some active steps repressive of the Irish agitation for the Repeal of the On Sunday the 8th a creat Repeal demonstration was to have taken place at Conquer about three miles north of Tile Repeal ation issued rules lo be observed by the peal Regulation wands and ades were to be furnished to those who and the which was drawn up to resemble a military general laid down rules for the formation of for march ami so as to prepare as soldierly a display as In order to prevent this meeting a mation was which concluded thus Lord by Si with the of her Majesty's being satisfied that the said intended meeting so proposed to be held aj 01 near can only tend lo serve the ends of factious and seditious and to the of the public do hereby ly caution and forewarn all persons ever that they abstain from attendance it the meeting and we do hereby give notice that in defiance of this our ihc said meeting shall take persona attending the same shall be proceeded against according to we hereby order and enjoin and officers entrusted with ihe ol ihc public peace and others whom it may to he aiding and assisting in the execution of the law in preventing ihe said and in the effectual dispersion and suppression of ihe and in tlie detection and prosecution of those after this no- tice shall offend in the respect aforesaid the Council Chamber this 7lh Jay of God save the As soon as this Mr. O'Connell called a special meeting of the of the Repeal which was numerously when il was re- j solved on advice strenuously by Mr. that the meeting should be and every menus used to prevent the people from disobeying the order of the Lord At the same Mr. Connell declared the Government were j now for repeal more vigorously than he had and that nothing was more to assist his views than the present I lie avowed his intention of remaining in Dublin to continue the agitation instead of proceeding to his as he had Tha Repeat Association issued ing counter proclamation with this tho Committee of the Loyal al Repeal do most and entreat that all well sons immediately on receiving this repair to their own end not place themselves in peril of any or of receiving any treatment we do further inform such without yielding in unfounded allegations in alleged wo it prudent and and above all things to declare that said meeting is abandoned and is not to be hy DAN'L 3 1-2 P. M. Extensive military precautions taken on The guards at the places where they are usually stationed in ihe cily were with the exception of the soldiers required for that and for a reserved force stationed in by ten the whole garrison was drawn up at and the of the was garrisoned several companies of foot and were turned so as to sweep the road to The were so arranged as lo prevent any bodies of people from ing the road to which all were strictly nnd ail persons were compelled to keep so that no was On com- ing to the of aboul two miles from Dublin and half n mile from the place of the became very dense and tlie many cars and vehicles to the scene of action made their through with much cing a few hundred yards the brass of the dragoons glittered in the and the orderly endeavoring to clear ihe path and keep an open space along the were visible over the dense mass of frieze nnd broadcloth that it- Tha picket was supported by all the disposable force of their Fifth about hundred and fifty were drawn up in double tiles on cither side of the In support of these Appeared the whole of the 5lth their arms being lounged along the which protects the road from tlie or amused themselves by throwing pebbles into the while the were taking it easy smoking their cigars on the Then appeared the red rmd white tufts of the 5vh the majority of judging from their the touch of the brogue in their appeared to be as indeed many of the both of ihe dragoons and 54ih also appeared to The full force of regiment was also on the ground and directly opposite to them were the whole amount of the County Con- to the number of three or four dred with Si thirty rounds of ball These green coated seemed to incur the particular of the the manifestations of which they bore with great good Immediately in rear of the ed the months of two more pieces pound which some fifty of the mounted in blae and red weic nnd in port of which were drawn of the Light en under the command of The selected for the meeting was a large with a ing to the left of the seaward wall of and said to have keen the place on the great Irish Brian defeated ihe Danes and though with the loss of his own The appearance of so Urge a least or 3.000 was extremely the people assembled noi seem to tear them press any of k 1