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Wilmingtonian and Delaware Advertiser
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Wilmingtonian and Delaware Advertiser

   Wilmingtonian And Delaware Advertiser, The (Newspaper) - July 6, 1826, Wilmington, Delaware                               square be four times and 20 each for three 50; are entitled to privilege of place of and and those do 50 before the wll be unless two all are harp's broken the commanded die But yet such a theme will I V think not must She'll bare Tct the sees it open and Hly And the snow that it in tears yanish away of aH things on earth chains most Beauty and has its Beauty vith fair so sadis the in my borrow I And where to I must lay toy and moat Bat seized The The ing the opening pT a cloud arose to mar its beau- flower was atd rEvery kiss was a pledge of every friend was blooming and my eyes glistened with But the is is the have lost their on rose I have fou nd a who were have and nothing is left tne the of joys that are fled has ihe rose from my and roy overflow with But while and my rows will be over which are now strained w ith will then thrill with I be and our affection will be impure and as ing as the paradise which we shall inhabit lively which arenow withered and will be with increased more the lily and the when sparkling with the morning be an emblem of for every gale will waft and every zephyr thy pity employ For the the the But those who my blessings Thy tears and thy pity For Such a charm as Religion has And the cheek of a belle never the smile like the of content Time's the No complexion lor beauty must yield to But I wiH not yield to the In New under the title of O- is The among other is 1st Sea O 'tis pleasant float on the the wearied waves in a deep sleep And the last fault light of the sun hath And the stars are mustering over And the night comes with its breath so O 'tis pleasant to float and While ever our dripping locks we 2nd Sea Nymph O to float on the When nothing stirs on its breast but The warden at the twilight wall of his And signs and mutters a Then Ests again to the witching air O pleasant to float and While ever our dripping locks we OMNIPRESENCE How widely and multiplied into many thousand distinct is the attention of God His eye is on every hour of my Spirit is intimately pre- sent with every thought of my inspiration gives birth purpose hand impresses a direction on every footstep of my breath I 5r drawn by an energy which God deals out to This which upon the slightest would become the prey of or woful is now at because he at this moment is ing off from me a thousand and holding the thousand movements of its com- plex and delicate presiding influence keeps by me through the whole current of my restless and ever-changing I walk by the he is a- I enter company amid all my of he never s the of the eyelids have and rits has the ob- servant eye of is on I hisi go and cares for the being who is work the domains of nature and of is also at iny hand 5ng, and to uphold rne in the of all STATE OF IN THE EAST. V necessary to have seen females in all classes of society in Heathen in order to understand fully how much their differs from that of those of their sex who have the privilege of living under the benign influence ef the principles of I have seen women in in A- and in Their situation is ly the same in all In I have known a at in the open and in the presence of many British cut off a woman's for no other than because he saw her without a and that her person was not concealed in a kind of sack which they are expected to wear out At Grand I have seen a man on the point pf ing several for no other reason than looking out of a window at some officers were passing In the and the females of their families by causing them to be sewn up in a and thrown at night into a er or a I have a rich Hindoo who was known to have destroyed several women in this and when the magistrate at- tempted to bring the weal thy culprit to he that the very parents and kindred of the victims have been bribed to in a court of that they had died a natural I have seen taken out of large wells several human the remains of murdered and I wish it to be that what I relate are facts which have come under my personal would what it is which casions females to be treated as our best and dearest given by a gracious and merciful God to soothe our and en our and cheer our in this earthly pilgrimage while the denies them and the Hindoo them as but little removed above his and formed to administer to pleasures and It when the blessed light of the Gospel shines that every one is restored to the in life designed by the Almighty and Woman a help mate for From the American On Management and Education of A lovely infant now crowns our mutual What a bond of What an incentive to tenderness Lives there a man who can look at the mother of his pretty and not feel his heart drawn ibly toward While the simple is the my should husband to his wife the dearest I in the for the parent's the is And dearer is the parent for the A little child is an uncommonly ing An immortal soul confined in a fairy a little being for the blood of Jesus was an epitome of God's noblest a mutual as the great poet Goldsmith who may be one day the guardian of the of the bulwark and our of its And when a ther sees the divine faculty of reason ling in its little and issuing in lisping cents from its ruby how fervently ought she to implore that be Shepherd of he would carry it life shelter it U vh ch vhis The first fluty which nati -e points out to t f IK a mother liet 110 gen warit of yeu endearing a of sending a distan is noW so explode most i What td in this fter death place e oi cher e but the custom be is from your and your and m in the vice 1 ings of its to I of der it inconvenient ii the house j rear pretty babe with the than of tW was for the of a even this not all J fof a of are that is to say a made wheat which a f on the succeeded the anf i a wet into isand I I in a eat it with poor from Its is and Ac not for any nor any in the fine he got Hii foster and and and the and little the which the cottage and the runs in the joining hath mote charms in than his father's Cultivated a with no one is with His more brothers sisters are all and no pretty wajs endear him to his no issue his un- taught But I will suppose better things of and so drop the subject for the pres if it can be your child till it is twelve months and when to inflict on it this its first do it neither denly I have often i thought men learn from sweet lessen qf loye and In the act of weaning has any one its in all the ness and around for our eggs atad but had no dis- missed half well roasted called fay boiled sweetened eaten more would do us filled onr plates with mutton and and made us get it as well could of. the dishes of which we had before mutton inch The satisfied if of us would eat tWo of and moderate For cuit and loaves rye served for pur drink of we were all to the that stood by usi out of than not the custom in to isit after over the wine but we had instead of to drink just as much coffee as thought proper to The coffee was extremely good and the feast but all was fop -a bowl and handed round in pretty and to every glass a If was the signal bur in order that we might have them filled drink his a task that no Englishman wight to hesitate about with though exception might be made a would .be An instance like the We were threatened with still after we should have drained this and ally were difficulty to refuse to empty could this be done but by people to boat for when concluded this extraordinary three cups of we took our and reached about ten but did not for some time recover from the effects of this perhaps an wife E him air give over this fetal and ended by all the in my He appeared te A TRUE Induced by I entered one ing a gambling house in The room into which I was shown was and contained all the different nery and implements necessary for carrying on that destructive jand nefarious In one part there was a Faro bank an- the fraternity was seated at table with a pack of cards before him ready to entrap and fleece the young and and in a third was roulette took my stand by and silently observed the 'The keeper of the wheel sat behind a little and silver and bank notes were piled up in tempting array before I viewed with astonishment the fluctuations of One man would stake a few and a short time by a lucky turn of the wheel be in of hundreds and another lose sum after until enraged and dis- appointed he would curse his luck and leave the house in The different piles of money rapidly increased and diminished and the glittering treasure every changed hands rived its support the expression bl each little the apathy with which it turns from eVery other and when it has discovered the object dearest to its the flushed the ed the shout of eager spring to reach her indicate the extacy and triumph of the interesting and one longs to lavish kissei and on him And is it love for the very object herself which causes these truly for though another appears who could just as well supply nim the beverage he is languishing he regards her with and turns away with screaming in- ICELAND Dr. Hooker in his to thus describes a dinner given bins and his com- the bad scarcely reached the extremity bf our servant came to that dinner was on the table we were obliged to though rather against our inclinations for the it not more than half past and our taken some kept us from being We found the table set out in a large and lofty room a kind It had a tolerably good borded and walls that once were we sat down to a little interruption was caused by the breaking down of the chair upon which his had seated but this was soon as thire was still a vacant one in the robm to replace it. The arranging of a dinner table is at- in with little and would scope for the abilities of an English On the cloth was nothing but a a knife and a wine and a bottle of for each except that in the middle stood a large and handsome glass tor of with a magnificent silver The natives are not in the habit of drinking malt liquor or nor is it customary to eat salt with their dishes are singly pur first vras a rene of which is a favorite addition to the dinners of the richer and is made of claret and rasins boiled up so as to become almost a were ed to two soup plates full of this which we of the the paleness of death e ate without knowing if any thing more was his and with an unsteady step he to No was the left the soup than twe large boiled I insensibly felt interested in his and cut in were brought on and with from the composure he them melted looking mixed cd under his it was not the with vinegar and pepper this ness of but the calmness of des very and we with some difficulty l he attempt rash act cleared our earnestly hoping we had and I determined to As finished our Not for there paced the lonely the bitter groans of then introduced a turrene full of the eggs anguish that from i Cree or great boiled of which a denoted his misery suffer dozen were put upon each of our anil I After walking for a square or two he for we had a large of ped under erne of large lamps that are mired with sugar in which were four spoons suspended from the corners of the so that we all ate out of the same and drawing out a appeared to ced in the middle erf the We rne the All my fears were now re- The owner of the wheel invited me in the technical language of the craft to try my I was tempted to do I lost ten dollars in about as but be- fore- it was teo late I summoned all my resolution to my aid and turned my back on the gaming table and its As I left a young man apparently about twenty eight or thirty years of and a prepossessing stepped up and laying notes of a hundred dollars each voice somewhat hurried ted requested the banker to observe his The like sum was the wheel was turned and the stranger A faint smile came over his anxious countenance as he took up the money but instantly laying it down and doubling his he declared he sprang forward and hit shook roe off in an instant and me de- manded my by you to rob said he with a yon too the gaining table bas kindly anticipated you seek my exclaimed he with increased take Confer a favor qn a ruined and hapless and prevent him from adding the crime self destruction to the black of his I naw interrupted briefly stated of my seeing lose large sums of money ind ful of the -I had followed him to prevent wy attempt he rnight make op big own or and after some hesitation Agreed to accompany me We in silence to my room thus addressed me. is but just that the who such a lively interest uX mr welfare should be made stances that brought me into My name is rather connected in trade with a man whom I placed for some years our treat on I married an interesting ly to my dashed a embezzled all the effects of the aod fed bis leaving me lo fop debta to a large figure was tta gave up all my anft received an my They appointed me to proved settle seme rf here most sanguine 1, tp a large and wai opportunity to when in an I entered ruin that here to such induced the display of the ot retrieving my broken tem I believe by thp 1 my ne andf partial successes I the house in a state but and the torments dis- of the could not exceed my I borrowed next morning from my all the money I could and in hope of regaining nty fosses ox the preceding madly returned again to the gaming and you know Unable any longer ta bear the sufferings a guilty I determined to rid self at once of them and and to that bourne from whence no when yoor interference prevented but why should I wish to and I shall only drag 6, miserable unable to look on the past without or the future Sow can I my friends and after what passed For cried interrupting are How can face how can you dare ily unprovided for and creditors and f unrequited for the km. ness they have Bo you charge ly flying from life? Arouse are yet stt and ly about work of your are of the first and be in retrieving your have uot even tW means ing I told him I cheerfully supply with any money he might for that and giving a hundred vised him to engage a passage in the ship that would he promised do me by the we p ed. I saw nor heard from the next On the morning of the as I was sitting at 'a ed me and informed that a would try his He proved i at the point of j. j lucky a second time and now appeared to debate with himself whether he should re- tire with push bis fortune evil genius He continued and in one short hour I saw him stripped of not only his previous winnings but also As he laid down of a sum his last a sigh caped and when it also shared the fate speak to me. I was much Surprised ait and unable to whom it could as I was a perfect stranger and had in H bat a few days followed the servant to an and ing the room he pointed was shocked and astonished at beholding in the of ed bard to be excused from eating the whole of the upon our but tve petitioned in are my said he I this is the first time you have done me the honour of a therefore you most do as I j have yon Jn future when yoa come I to see me you may do as you In his j own he pleaded his old age for rot i following oar to which we could and it was now too evident that he meditated After castine ft glance around him he turned into a dark I immediately nnd saw him raise the pistol to his head one ment more and I should have been too deed would have been done and the succeeding second have him Hi As he in the act the dying the same Mr. I had before As I the bed he stretched out his hand to and in a front voice is all over fatal die while the of life yet let me relate itie laid me the money you so me I madly sought the gaming driven to desperation I sewed the fatal he were not to kindness could ty had their Ml you see the the pistol performed but half its and me shortly be no more with and I already suffer I to the requests I am to believe design to (I told him I Call on my will fin'l her her of my melancholy tell her the recollection of her has soothed the of her and that my Wre for Tas before  

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