Wisconsin Enquirer (Newspaper) - May 13, 1840, Madison, Wisconsin MISCELLANY IN A TALK Of Hi mil ruin and tie ol tw of- y f J y ly oil with u hi rd uf J J hi i luf In lint ro c a uod wuh f Iho tell r w M tmi el M i li n t IH wn i 14 to wia fir in f a lung and rr I'M liy aur i itm dreary of fin mountain T JIB In in id lilt J of human A m itu WISCONSIN ENQUIRER IN THIS PAPER LAW AND PUBLIC OF THE STATES ARE PUBLISHED BV and by Imd ten lured lo itr me fir nl I ITU km by of i ft m ten pine rcn I 1 c I I'd tin man ie I IV 1 in -i t ot II ire mrr 1 I 10 Jf ti ly th ui l if I n h I i1 It In it r In nml r iv u ti ll rl -U BY A NOON AN MADISON W MAY 13 1840 25 think ft wny em tM lei is perfectly convinced his own feed M principles All imaginary caution certainly BM Init afl era of son tea lime IK art it t- o on ihu I around but all irn j i i a lli i -ir u 1 i -I it i i i t i f u r b- en ir l r in II n i i n J i n i n r T low Ti h ll III Hit I r ll I on t i Hi nil t I in I i 1 it I fi r in n I t-i rii in- t i wil In i r tdi t KV tj ih widow I u i nn i I V i i I l t u 1 I He tii r u- H in I ill I II i i d n t I i i 11 H I I PL 1 I HI 1 1 it I n i 1 u ln In IHT i I An i n I i I ul I I'M II Hi lit I till t Mil ll III i tu ri ill hi t ia i r i i inl i 01 fei n a T 1 t n >-r ir In r til ii til d i l fin I u 1 d with i tli i uli vaia a nik ol where no I'D n iti Unl r it In r i if tni until i n i l r a In r he nut Ji li m id 1J Tiro if u I I ju n iii HI I ir hint In oil i in in h il f- j inn I so and bright to my fears hut I turned from view as 0110 turns from a selfish person wliohaa piiy fur our misfortunes and I back to the housa to seek comfort in looking at my child Oh n lot g night was thought it wru the nuit I ever should pass b it I havu passed many a more wretched one since for then I had hope I bi red ugh weary hours how ho he said He stood on hu was never mare to buck on us with a smile which I ai itm thought too gay u one when lo but which when I recalled it my rnitinory in thai night seemed r limn if vor witi luv t thought uf that smile since I inn n few und kissed hint I c me il was for tho lasl rno because the lenrs into my eyes But his chiding was 10 r was and when he got lo lust pi Itu turned round and liu lint to Ah neighbors who thought that I never more 10 him Tuuri nor did flow fui too each I not so much the n from sorrow for poor whom could not re- Iho of his von wuh no com- m ni growth nnd with Ail no ions of tho wuro with ami of n m save when i iii hi In i hi which re- nl fr lo ihu ol lie mid tin ul her nl 1 I so a in nl lor ill all pll will ol tt in I lined in their own lite ol children will satisfaction li id liu of both n l i und ill il cd should pring en an warm i M it was Motives of li id lo defer the in nl till people j n and tint hail Iho i i ol by him und Ins 1 on thn young of ini thu still or a cold in the part winter it hy mm y that to his a narrow i in the i wus attracted by the t and on approaching thu 1 thu Hound came n in ti of insensibility over 111 I animal was uttering his It wus not without Mif dil Hint liu succeeded in d to the j and slowly Iuil him lo humble j his him in l ii i i lion In render tho visit of their e HH as their 1 TUc warmth of sonic goal's milk Imd a n i- on tho invalid that hu able to nnd to i linn lint ho in I thu and n ol lot il i thul i nni leail Un n af I it v 11 UW nod h T 1 1 t I fur III tn tot j a n I till rt J lo ri- r nn lit i i ut In- Vw 1 s U of ii i d d o bn ii i i i K I ul inn t I- t n j if i i pri nl Mi til i i nl the ami uf in m nn III it li J ih i i I of 1 in IIP w rth nl in 4 Vl l W I I t I b v n It h- r h t ifi la V i i h ul I 1 1C by Hi in d i u o II nil I r l i f ll t I t-r MM i r i s a if IKI 1 it t I ill 1 i for ho All u 1 Iu 1 d rv HiJ i lu v Iv lur n 1 hi ft 10 ano a li c a in tin a i I u 11 t poor u ih it u ng otar I ir d to bul tho i fr m they u 1 upei ei tU dour and oa i ht it to fot ha 1 wai neier again in hoar dry win lie to j I'urlhur into mountains i had lost his way in my houri parsed in j i to regain it had at last sunk uxh a whence in all i itv hu might from tho intense tu whir wui havo not buen rescued by M oun was pressed by his poor it o to continue with them it dny or two until he Imd recovered ci i i i tu unsure A sale return to his He portfolio and de- eyes with that have claimed from accustomed to sou the A wun culled to in ill their display d tx und grace i v led tn in young liu ma lo a portrait of it t uf d her with juy and c nf u i I he y of inhabited by y r nl wo such attractive bl ii i ilia ti n M vi davi fur of J iii MWi would hanti a M ii i liU drawings and listen i mil to the songs Se in t 1.1 I h r them Sim u i 11 I 11 nit hour or two after i K 110 ir of seeking repose to hear art of the towna mil winch be had dwell tiul had -i ih to oak reta- 10 scene of which she bad j tj n m perfu -I ignorance At firm shared in the interest w win in her mind but MI-HI a occasioned by iii m which nnd sprung up i tier the look of bis mind He became moody and hurch to her towards whom j lir never ft um of nor This mdden and to in aod ihr in now liko per the cause that lend to and simple girl by her I eacl time that Me drew him will her wonted and lock refuge io the and of the young compelled to w UM chain ia watch ff kad the H wme evident that tor ami when re- i Crown Wpa of umr b right foce uf tlie roata ana a dark t U on I kMw aw t WM but a my my a turned it was increased almost to frenzy by finding Annette sealed by the stranger listening with unconcealed delight to his songs or the stories ha related U her The whole character of Michal became changed No longer tho gay youth whose cheerfulness had been tho life of the chalets his ill-humor was now a source of chagrin to alt its inhabitants none of wham owing lo their simplicity suspected its Often in the of his when stung into anger by some innocent ity exhibited towards the stranger by An- nette he almost cm the hour when he laved him from death and led lum to the chalet to fascinate her who hitherto had never lent her eyes or ears with pleasure to aught savo alone Sketches of Annette multiplied hour found irr figure so graceful and picturesque and it such a charm to his drawings that he vas never lired of copying it and to say An- nette with all her simplicity hud of woman's vanity in her heart to DO if not proud of the artist's evident tion of her At this time 100 Ihp young painter who sometimes amused himself in tion of simple songs tits ing one to and this of rustic gallantry excited the jealousy of lur lover into still greater violence Beautiful maiden aa pure aa thu On own native mountains wherever I go I'll think of thee artless und lair Though BOOH ub Ion 1 from thee must de- part think of its now wirh t And thy innocent converse aid beguile The and uf thy That wild mountain so love to prolong ull blast be thy lot Wuh the who hoa won 1 be forgot My prayer ahull to the Heavem for thee When distant thy sweet face no more I can toe One evening when Michel returned to tho ho found the platting liu long of Annette who cently laughing at thn with which he formed the operation Michel had from her infancy always reserved thin tusk as a labor of love for himself ami his could not have been more wounded Imd lio discovered her in the annis of the stranger How girl exclaimed lie and is it corny to this 1 Is all shame gonu that you let a stranger touch those trustees that my hands alone have heretofore And yon ungrateful man! is it thus you repay nit for having saved your Bul 1 will lly from you both So saying lie from the chalet with the frantic haste of a maniac Tlie stranger alarmed by his violence impetuosity the cause of which he for thu first time clearly and ly pained liu should havn furnished the occasion for the of a passim which now raged with such fury fled in pursuit of Michel leaving AnneKe over- whelmed will surprise and grief ful wore the of tho poor girl as hour after hour departed bringing with them no tidings of her lover or his pursuer At early dawn after a night of such as slie had ever previously a stranger to she stood in front of the straining her eyes in the hope of her lover when hor young ter descried a figure in the distance and pointed it out to her The most fearful apprehensions filled her breast for there but one figure to be and thai with the quick sight of ove tho discerned was not his A tho loars of Annette wore but too founded thu artist only to prepare for the reception of the of tiie Michel which after a long search was to the barking of his dog in the very spot whence but a few days before lie had cued him who was the innocent cause of the groundless jealousy that lad to his own destruction Whether the unhappy youth had wilfully precipitated himself into the yawning gulf or in the rapidity of his flight he had overlooked his of it and BO had accidently fallen in was never bruin did all she WHS told to ought to have known that eren then tha evil spirits that haunt these wild mountains were planning his destruction So raved the poor woman in all tho in coherence of grief that unsettled her son until some of the inhabitants of the nearest hamlet came to remove for interment whet uttering n piercing shriek and clasping it in her arms she senseless on the comn and when raised was found to be deac Annette had lost all consciousness of misery around her in a brain fever which kept her hovering between life and death during many days When health once more began to tinge her pale cheek it was discovered with sorrow by who had watched over her with unceasing and cure 1 not its empire in her nnd gentle she docility of the most obedient was utterly reflection of sf If government considered he was the rauMe though the innocent one of the afflictions that had these poor families insisted on be corning their support for the future He prevailed on the helpless old Martin Vig j nolles to accompany him his two daughters lo Paris establish ed them in his home he left nothing un done to their comfort Fortune too favoured worthy young man who so religiously impost d duties for his tures justly admired produced such high prices that afier a few years he secured a handsome competence and became the happy husband of the pretty Fanchon the poor Annette to whom he had given an education that her every wny suitable to bo the companion of a son who hud a cultivated Old tin lived to marriage of hia Fanchon and died blessing his children And poor Annette still survives innocent gentle and fondly by sinter and with whose little children she de lights to play nnd offering subjects for his pencil the of draws crowds of around them in tho gallery of the Louvre gradual reform and anon I y the sive shock of revolution the few to the many But ages must yet elapse be- fore the effects of the old of tilings shall be effaced from the mi and ings of the whole people I have not forgotten that there are ses at work in our own coui try to degrade the true nobility of labor I have not for- A In the number of in tely we find a paper of to internal s ate of Austria and Hungary being a of works recently published English oilers visited iho e countries Thn pride and pomp of the Hungarian nobility are wall known The House of i I i n n Ir in loan ul j s I ot ir mid Iii 2 mm Fo tlie is in uf on FO gotten the ambition of sorm to import the I Esterhazy is said ta he pri hahly ideas and lo npe tho habits of European lifa This however though aided by the constant circulation of English tales of fashionable and of other things in same stylo can have but liitle efficacy in counteracting the tendency of tho great inly ID facts of our condition Th fact that nero magnificent nnd of my in the of my H I P of name hus eti nut i once where he n bui mo ei jacket nf the cultivators of the soil ar the lord of the soil will in Blackwood's n i i ooti f tally s stubby or h ve i and a rich man lo ma te himself un THE or LABOR BX With the sentiments already noticed and with the structure of society ders them the sentiment of contempt for labor and poverty la connected society is inio by cluss lo possess to to to be and another to obtain by toil a scanty or in mora furtunato a humble competency is of course There those tyho are born lo labor fael that their lot is degradation they ure feel it by ull tho arrangements in society man nature avery where and all institutions is prone enough to de- spise labor and to honor aa the favorites of fortune or of Providence those who have nothing to do but in the state of society of which ure are speaking propensity instead of being the author of our nature designed it should be is to a monstrous growth Man WHS made for employment made to provide for and to enjoy what he hna the more for its being tho fruit of his industry and that constitution of society only is in cordance with constitution of individual man in which each individual has scope for tho exercise of his powers and is to a wholesome activity Society is not yet so in the old world though by successive changes it is ally approximating towards such a Meanwhile tho oKJ for labor remains acting and between two great classes into which society is mere consumers despising tho producers and the producers therefore despising unproductive consjmors blessing as the of heaven and tlie on the other hand envying tha consumers and ever learning to hate them In our own country different sorts of happy by living iu tho and pomp of aristocratic laziness And BO in spite ol all such influences the fact will stund here all the political power i in the hands of those who live by indus ry and thai other fact that the few who can live out labor are too few and too scattered lo constitute a class and that of them not one in five is willing to live without some active and useful t Nor have I forgotten that by a mournful anomaly in the political organization of i onie portions of our country an anomaly contradictory to all the principles and tendencies of the American civilization labor is in Tho of the few persons collected from the baring hamlets were disposed lo adopt the latter supposition while those luss gou tured declared their conviction that thu deceased driven to madness by jealousy had thrown himself into the chasm where mutilated remains were found a belief in which they were strengthened by the frantic of the wi etched Annette who with piercing cries declared herself to be the of Fearful was the picture presented at the two chalets so lately the scene oi peace nnd content Tho poor old mother of Michel rendered nearly insane by this last oat by corpse of her son and fondly on the face murmured liom lo time Yes there he Hes as his lather did before him twenty ago Gone from mo a parting word a embrace culd never word of to rat not return the kiss i imprint on them Ah ray son never before did they thu touch of mine without returning pressure How often in my dreams bava 1 you as you now lia without lifu and 1 have awoke in to bluss God that it was but i But now oh my son who will tte ewes of your wretched mother who will tay her in the Toe of dreary mountains first ms the of my poor and him from me and now they have torn away my SOD I seen a too bright for merial room whan he slept us if mowi itself had his casement and cast all iu beams around his at it wal W do that of his poor I ought to have known U no gaod but 1 darad think that ray child would from I haw board such and too fa night w wind hM UM duta and torn the wilh tint HM to I labor greea are of course held in different de of honor Those employments which require high intellectual and moral qualifications cannot but be regarded among us as more honorable than mere muscular drudgery for it is naturally pre- that man is furnished with those personal qualities which are necessary in his employment Still with us no sort of honest lubor is dishonorable Our try has thousands of legislators and trates who cultivate their own acres with their own hands and who think none the less of on that aro none the less thought of by their But under other systems the different kinds of tabor instead of being more or leas honorable are more or less dishonorable highest class is supposed to its honor and its felicity in dome nothing there the ty of earning one's bread in order te eat it is a dishonor a mark of inferiority and each particular kind of I ibor is higher or lower on the scale of respectability not in proportion to the deman i which il makes for a higher or lower of qualification but in proportion as it brings men nearer lo the lerel and secures from them patron age or the deference of the unlaboring aristocracy Even in middle ages the man of science or of letters the physician tha earned clerk the skilful could command from peer and king something of due to and personal superiority but still the superiority of knowledge and of aa nothing before the greatness of hereditary wealth and power As civilization advances clam becomes more educated to itself no re closely with the intellectual class Thus the dignity of idleness placed with the dignity of intellectual tilt by degrees men begin to we toe And while idleness tt thus losing its honors to be delivered turn its reproach for spreading wider tower among the laboring and political power w by localities dishonorable and f I were com- ti believe that such an anomaly will be permanent upon the American soil out- living or subduing the influences with which it is at war I never should have thought of speculating but with upon the probable character and of American literature That anomaly must pass away or all that adorns this land with the promise of a new era of freedom for mankind must perish before it and society itself must be con- upon other principles those which are now recognized aa its foundation principles more preposterous than monarchy and bi than feudalism The American structure of society must predominate her J to the ex- of every hostile or its very foundation must be subverted The soil of freedom must cultivated by the hands of freemen or the time will come when fro in each traditionary hill and from each sacred battle field the voices of the dian genii will be heard in lories of grief Let us depart Where is he man ing himself an American who docs not in his heart believe that this dark anomaly will puss away ami that I he tune will coine no spot in our ahull be faned by a fettered step or ly the stroke of an unwilling hand out ry where o- cund lubor shall look up lo I in conscious nobleness of freedom ICELANDIC These marshes often produces ve good grass and only expense and more industry lo them into capital grazing land but thu almost in surmountable difficulties thrown in trie way of any attempt of the kind by tho limited number of hands and the vigor of tha mate would check the ardor a more peoples than we are now ering short summer ces for the lubor ie or up land peasant depends an ihu fur subsistence Small is is his crop of hayt he is obliged lo call in the aid ot those who live on the coast ami are princi pally occupied in Ashing latter soon us ilia fishing season is o go up to the Northern Aral for what is railed K or hired labor and assist in the which takes about six weeks and then return to their former The winter rapidly sets during ten months of its the ty of the cold the tempestuous of thu weather and more than either uf these the shortness of their days render the care of their flocks a and often a gerous employment Fo loss of sons in quest of sheep is by nc niuans nn unusual occurrence and on c storm sing it ia absolutely necessary to collect them in hovels built for their the farm house At such times it is im possible to see or hear for tht wind passes in any idea that can be for- med of it ia to this wind the shep herd must trust as a guide Marking iis direction he dashes into the dis- tance lo be accomplished is i haps should ho from tho right way deviation ia sure to bn falal and woe to him should tho wind chop iu the least while on this such a change will inevitably s hia fate and he will in the dark ill numbed by the cold lie will fall ioto a will soon become that of death Nor wife nor children more behold Hor nor tacred On The winter seme And o'er inmou vilate creeping culd him mlong tlie anow id oat and blanching in northern Instances of such ire not un- known even in tho immediate neighborhood of About u young woman imprudently church alone before the service was with the intention of nursing a child iho she had left at home Before he Imd goi out of tha town a violent storm was raging which rendered it impossible to i uc an inch before her however overcome her tears and she on towards her house which not than a quarter of a mile shu iost her way and wandered tit becoming she asleep Upw irdi of ant hundred poisons w quest of her for many successive days mid the search was repented several during ttm winter it ed unavailing till the end of the following March when a partial thaw discovered tier 10 m ting posture a few ner own borne and The uV els in tho wny of tn i we aru not informed ol account fur Hie and ornaments bcdizfiinii-nls a- lo make no co It not a jacket and bat and a jacket A li storian where says a u may of- ten to convey to tho n ind of thu der a more impressive u thing than could u particular n in This remaik is as applicable to the Prince's jacket as it hu in tl oi a town It is said the owner of this garment put il on it cost him m on account of the rubbing oil of jewels und oilier cosily adornments The proprietor of a should of course have nn tn Ji that the Prince does not dress beyond Ins means His estates con- tain one hundred and villages forty towns and cantos tins four magnificent country houses within an hour's ride of ono another 0110 of idem three and sixty rooms for visitors and n tin atre tlw WHS in a land nt n um }r MUI told tin i ni i i n K IKI n UM uini 1 m ih r u hi i 10 mi w men ll ti wiuld hu a lothi DIM ren llin wen ID of of alt t land unii fiom to poh and louini it lump af jure mid golu Thm il price il iii fingers and tin pinions tor the ami ihu lo ano hor ill It mid by Ihu deep brow nnd the Hie wild mountain's wont to lira holder in the country u lock sheep and show so on his i replied the than your hint if he could My sliep nre more nu numbered iwo thousand fivi the adier guard in nay jud nold the right of life and on their afier the genuine old feudal fashion Tiie family of the Es house ia in keeping with vital wealth in i and that shone in the In one says Mr mi who noticed thu gt lue nil Hie in winch it ai idu out clearly Ui possible he Adam who reclines in a tude ut the bottom of the u e through every name Jewish us well as from in nil they find lucy nt w ire Win ill moie thure is a lung nf traits ot war fiom stvo their and iu ami imd down to the But thn of hlu for more Jl first ihu opum iu oi HAYDN and who pn norm until it il into 1 e Iuil i dor of Thu had a on 1 oi sion und scarcely me pi not through the first whe i ihu pun i interrupted to author of so i The mad est trembling HAYDN dunged fiom corner of the room into w IIB hud und presented lo him liu ite coin He became a and as a mark of the high esit in he was held it was him to his own hair and plain ul a period when curling wigs and rich were considered ut cott t battle field find lust drop of tho young HS Im swik iti in ina ef liberty With that and other gems u M rue It us pin ons once man but at gau its of- luting being A nan Pen to find gem Il ter many while ing in autumnal huu a It ind ihu in nd ihu und ef ill ID hoar il off ae tin bunj of such is kingdom ul when a dark and the the sad stood bending over sleeping J her robber with silent mid ol lu's own when he us pun child Ilia vn lih With me rill hm nia uyes i d 1 i Ol 01 sume that of the it musician in its connection with ine will shed a richer luslie upn i ihu than all the jewels on the et THE BASENESS OF WITH Honor and integrity ought It be the load ing principles of every notion it life These arts virtues highly they are too disregarded Whatever individuals are in quett of sincerity in profession in and punctuality in discharging engagements are incumbent A man of honest integrity and upright in his dealings with his fellow es is sure to gam the confidence and ap lause of all good men whilst he who acti i ruin ensl or designing principles ol tains ved contempt No one aught to make effort or to win a lady before he it in a great measure certain that hor her per and her suit his circum- ami agree perfectly w th hm own temper and way of thinking Fur urn ity of and u ry ry lo render the bonds of permanent and uf marriage happy Marriage the stale uf hie be were where 1 j The man of upr am heart not only observe ht tlie of i n dignity of ill the ol wit but will seek lo fix n drain on such permanent nc pledges his to any lady He looks upon marriage as of tlie in FlX I 4 IX Wl II tl unlv t tiKui in II In till i f i u i I M u I -i now ii I ol il l i l ll 1 il im i f i ti it K M isr 11 II k H Ill nu p n n in ru IN uli n 1 i i I ui lii i MUI 1 lui i Nn I Hid tu v i ii J 11 in t mind it well t in n lulm und 1 li w Hie tin und he with v of sain uf 1 in ol ihy a d i thou curli the of and to up s of infinite in collar and then mnyi m thou kick up Itl Dim hi are ing 10 the soul uyo the arch of soaring thought Aim must bu ns broad and less as of Heaven surely thou thou live re wisely Life for piety Sense it a good to 1 our it ii our lo m LABOK occupations chiefly of u laborious and arc lo apt lo draw iho uf their own anil thai of Unite at who principally nd tlm of lur Mui nothing can be more or more to tiy opinion U in in hot quite unworthy of any inun lo com- mon for n n only tiy oi bv working mmi in with n nnd tc port la lie w it i a ife and a IN lie of by change of that be under- o earth the takoo wuh too much j commercial mart t ii the ut fore it i t i to carry ut inv of in il to f ami i a part and oomfons and tee