Wilmingtonian And Delaware Advertiser, The (Newspaper) - September 6, 1827, Wilmington, Delaware by WILLIAM the acts from his friend's he v VV 14J place of and to those ration of the Subscription will be discontinued unless twp given andall pleasure tothe happiness of a i. i tures of those whom 1 had any wrongs that 1 or i some others made me for a time But j roost ai sacrifice is my to keep i because the I But there were still som sacrifice has given a new pleasure to i to grief I until his twenty-second afterwards an eminent From the Connecticut Young he left he left Emerald cloud thee and Here he but Ireland ever his heart and his son of Erin never his heart and it by Liffey's lowly f Broad of darkly by leaping and kindred Here he and all Blest his warni and honest Here he died as first we found h Lovei how selfish is only those who are swayed by the passion but he who by the sentiment in all its purity they are The loyer of his he Now I can only remember that I felt a knows that byy he and felt it the different 8uflfering which of sensation or if they do not but unheard of fashion of his hooted and had learned to my heart a and in it bury chief biography is highly of enjoyed a large share of state George i tn l 4 This gratifies are lost to for in her and her will bring sorrow to his own I upon And even as it may is Assailed by Were there would devotion be Wiere there no future would we from And were there in a future how few would cross and deal justly with roistering confusedly stealin as Even in thrown off my g of dSi placed in it the implicit confidence of a JounKer and better but 'the I have sometimes rd by a kind expression but now with death's cold Here he walks with us no ever will the woman of good ble disposition and pleasing was seduced from the path of virtue and by the promise of immediate riage from her perfidious She bore her sometime with fortitude and at becoming neglected and left dependent an the charity of an unfeeling she resigned M3 to end As stretched forth herself to her life by her hand to grasp the cup containing the M- quid her eye by accident glanced on a BIBLE which lay open on the The holy book had been opened by which she then to her This sentence attracted her be of good thy sins are forgiven Hope revived in and the angel of mercy stayed the arm of on my thy sleep is Though on Sleep on and sip that bosom Which lulls thy little woes to But my thou dost not hear The howling or rattling Thou dost not know a mother's No pangs like thy breast Then sleep thee Nor wake again Till she who sleeps in sleep thee on thy bed of Till heaven demands thy fleeting I cannot though tears would Forever blot my sins from I cannot pray O heavy Though angels sins thou rosy poison For thou calm this bosom's swell Once the world will cease to Then my She before her eye The book of full open Which her sweet babe it knew not Had left in frolic She and while her heart was Yet scarcely dared to think of A voice pronounced 'twas Mercy's tongue thou art Her babe a cheerful smile O'er all its lovely features She the cup sweet peace And death's uplifted arm was From the European LOST wish not springs I wish not I only wish for feelings To and and feel As I become I grow conscious that some feeling of my youth is that some cherished tie is and that a change has taken place in my passions and I am sorry that it is for change has been an unhappy Instead ef the I them of I have gained nothing now but the knowledge that they were with the anticipation of happi- for the gloomy certainty of there is nothing like tlie imaginary joys of They are the blossoms of tence which but too seldom ripen into flow as it roll heavily breathes their passing the world injures their freshness and their m isery of others falls a blight upon manhood kills Day by some leaf falls withered from the stem of arid then comes bitterness of with fear of future and sad but vain regrets for past What I not give to as I used to by that hiH which seemed placed by the hand of that man might stand upon its and gaze on But I must have back my and see as I then saw I could look in ler fair with a heart as pure as the in- nocent flowers in her There must be on these 9 1 have often had to repent of my sudden an unquestioning A- bout four years 1- wandered some friends the and stopped to re- fresh at a little the landlord was 4V an efficient and f their His biography foil and Deeming their outrageous 1 for his he j condition of his ami V right hand round top Wisdom wealthy and glory i Benjamin as a physician which went scaling across the smooth wave but his irr and FUGITIVE We are all To the hearties who a penny for the relief j of a fellow none hesitate to ply that But to him also who re- the of this term is likewise to gratify his own that the former re- fuses to pive aught to the wants of and it assuredly from the same motive that the latter is prompted to relieve an echo in my breast to the song of the larks children of the the ity which once vied with the tranquil surface of that little river which lay before me sleeping in the green arms of I must have my of I must have back those whom I with a boy's warm whom in this world I shall never see I must have him who was a part of my own heart I felt as if a portion of it died when he was taken from me. Without these feelings and lost that scene would be a I am is a theory of youth which manhood seldom for I re as if it were how my heart opened to a sense of it. Sorrow was a name but pleasure a My gradually awakened from its which is reversed I ed and thought no harm of a single ing for I was as my friend Clare beautifully expresses almost fearfully at a very rent was a little boy ently of about six of age in a corner of the whose countenance struck me as the most beautiful expression I had ever beheld in a By degrees crouched towards and in a whisper told us that his mother was suffering under tal which had been partly of bis beat her cruelly at The less manner in which the child spoke of its mother's interested us and him a few pieces of silver on ing the The day after we made some and found that the boy had spoken the truth with regard to the conduct of his but to Estate that his own infant bands had also been raised against his parent in her It was a bitter pang to me when I thought the had reached his very manhood in and seemed as if he had imbibed hypocrisy and guilt from his It set aside a ory in which I had long and weakened my confidence in It was like finding venom in a spring I began to doubt whether I had myself been quite so innocent in childhood as I had im- for I found that my suspicions of the world had robbed me of many of my sweetest and I almost cied that some had given rise to the and that memory had preserved ot soft first as author omni laude A hat of legs bolt upright a mass a successful practitioner of above surface naught surgeon before the a lib 1 C tUC onus person remained but and of the provincial His visiters halted upon the more Supreme man solid they have riddled his hide continued to practice physi with scores of or pummelled his wrote essays for to a pummice witb paving arid prepared a 3 i I f- died in his eighty-ninth William Whipple of originally a cabin boy and a c at the age of 21; then a IB who with arranged the judge of the supreme says his Wlw solid they have riddled his hide continued to practice physic i I his belligerent attitude excited he eighty more of curiosity than They as to eating such an they would sooner .by far dine upon lobsters and But waxed and in his to spatter sundry of filth upon and around the copper faced they were not a little Presently a sturdy youngster threatened to when losing ail manner of uttered a dons High Dutch distorted his tenance into its ugliest the fronts of his jaws so as to ble the anterior edge of a hard shelled and howled for help in a tone of agony dered doubly dismal by its chromatic Still his principal assailant con and coming within arms grappled the Hollander's queue that dangled so formidably over his expanded the rest of the tribe ranged themselves in single file behind their by dint of whose hold upon Derick's they dragged his unwieldy corporation fairly above A nlv the highest rank in his as he was circumspect and as a as a commander he was he was as a member of subordinate public he was alert and He all his honors with dignity and Dr. of New eminent and profound president Nassau Hall a force and a statesman great His biography is ample that my mind could go back again to its that my heart could revert to the juvenile affections ind innocent associations of my What have I since learned that can at ail water Here the exhausted victim sunk into a state of while in this his uncivil with a sharp stone rudely sawed off the nance by which they had extricated and bore away the trophy in deed f and Robert of a the unrivalled of this 1 the pecuniary of the like that of ethers but it is interesting and Abraham of New a lawyer who gave gratuitous raught with harrowing f an i iU compensate for their The man has 2s the Seeing them added a little to the child's stock of general his who had but the blissful feelings and the j f from the ea a boat to his in ignorance of loved every and seemed to think that there was but one heart which beat for all I knew nothing of conflicting in- of of love The whole world seemed like and the human race like could not then distinguish the weeds that grew amongst would that it were o Would that I could look upon the as brothers ani the aged is as then I Would that I could banish the remembrance of injuries as ly as I have buried the resentment they at first awakened within and be again the happy unsuspecting boy I But scenes have opened upon and intercourse with the world has made me I cannot faith in every smiling face as I once nor trust to although they stem soft as nightingale or woman's lip despatch a boat to his red loomed up from thf beach like an Egyptian served to de- signate the point of their which they soon and they conveyed the body on four One hundred and eighty-seven years have to thence to the But nearly elapsed since Derick Von Derick awoke until the blessed perg landed at the westernmost point propitious reached the little happiness of the child are lost to the man for- From the Nantucket THE DUTCH Nantucket He was fresh from the region ot dykes and and was seek settlement of New now in the overgrown city of New it ing the goods and chattels of a rich uncle re- become an for and Col- cently defunct at Newe The ship in which had taken driven to the eastward of her proper and lay so near the that he and daily to put forth large printed sheets ycleped Von in course of came to himself and hi was fain to go on shore in the and be- The on comparing hold for the first time a sample the new with description con- He had scarcely when in the old twenty or thirty young and half tamed refused to admit his One lying concealed to his view on the accoutrement was ID ny declivity of a sandy happened to the unfortunate Dutchman Appeal et forth a broad horse laugh their own Ito accompanying for okes after the manner ot more dence that the identical of hair now civilised which startled his less ad- actually belonged to his occiput at venturous who had not yet that they leaving poor Derick utterly tip to his knees in weed and conch Recovering from his Derick Perceived himself and the recovery of that instrument his fortune depended in vain their departure from Rotterdam n vain did they relate the story of his cruel he could in vain did pack off with bribes and to treat with the island ne n whom I have thought my have shrunk from from a stream in who were somewhat older than ly delivered a most piercing yell of J uPon cation towards the treacherous swore now rowing furiously for the heavy that lolled lazily upon the drowsy deep like a drowned fly in a bowl of At the new he was sound of this strange the in- j te finders at the voluntarily sprung and beheld a round possession of an immense figure waddling violently along the distillery as surest means of re- Francis of New a merchant and soldier before the useful as a his fine estate on Long destroyed by the and hist wife carried off a she died soda from the ill treatment which was He was ruined by the part which i he took on the in 90th year of his John of North ed in early became a and James of a lawyer of rare and of surpassing faculties as a speaker and and efficient ical the principal advocate of the constitution of 1787, in the Pennsylvania professor of and a the Supreme Court of the United His biography replete with valuable mation Carter of a became lost and died of a broken heart John Morton of a speaker of the General Assembly of judge of the Supreme Court of the gave the casting rote of the Pennsylvania for the dec- of Stephen of Rhode a became of the chief then Governor of thode a man of superior sense and a good and successful a distinguished and natural hough bis education was aod a American Philosophical f SKM i he matter j His signature to the Declaration is the only contrast with the bold Yet perhaps the may not always act to please There are some who arc ruled by These have naturally a sensibility of heart will have a hand as day to melting From the exercise of such I who had appeared to love me I j ern they derive their own as i loved and that was and at give to act tame sooner initiated into the of despised me for my The green and undisguised feelings of youth were waddling in a short blue thought of with contempt by the They from a But thote who have not this to another's the the may be as active in the discharge of these duties as one of more They therefore act from a tense nf duty and in them it becomes a Yet they are still governed by the same the of to me by the doing well they hare their without me in my Still I continued to think as recompense they wonld not hare well of human but the con- ed. Thus they too arc of the boy was and the it be of the purest is subjected tion of the man succeeded it. I mingled in so this Row maty a romantic with the and half with monstrous pearl long vest parted at the nether clothes of brown and boots of form similar the buckets used by our Both arms were swinging with prodigious gy rat at the end of one f appeared a of drab ment have the unfavorable irit of Mr. He down amongst his ancestors in the nite sepulchre of the It may be necessary to thet the brash in was carefully us an invaluable relic by the and when he at which he was to guide hand with his of a lion of terror and From the f i t I that they had ever felt rear of his bare a and confounded mature mass of resembling a hure car mahons of with ignorance swathed in a casing of rope ram I saw thof e. who were the of the body to m. 7 ff ttt Signers of the Declaration 't Moved at this the barbarians cracked the air with unruly of and with instructive James of lawyer and for practised upwards oi 60 a His article very Chancellor of Thomas a judge of the purest morals and an opulent active lole and until thirty commander in thief of the he first j ginia whom he bravely and slef to lawj the preceptor of fy at the of York of of