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Wisconsin Herald

   Wisconsin Herald (Newspaper) - January 3, 1846, Lancaster, Wisconsin                               WISCONSIN HERALD BY JAMES M PL F no to TO TO MALL TWO LANCASTER SATURDAY JANUARY 43 POETRY I Winter For W ST im daik of icy ihou foith by by ui Ou thy Scowling n i goest forth y thy eau withstand keep il br uid heaving er arctic MU ihy sceptre control thy power ihy with of hail and driving Oil Yea it replied I there'll be a intimate with the President and many j that the will from New York goes to and Africa to take any us already in the east ia regular jam and a new coat would be were trying to catch what was said the to early in the month of June part of the continent lie may please to the north without doing so likewise ia I'll end it to you to-night President presuming as Bolivar's next the west and you must let me have it in the 1 could give him i 3 therefore remain M ai morning so good-bye tion upon a certain point and not possible alternative but one which in i frir Wt the coat came home the next wishing to have the answer public Tbt fow for op u my opinion there is not the ia UM day not early in the morning as I said to the young ladies I am going j 0 69 and present cause to apprehend iM wt peeled but past meridian and I to do a very rude thing I wish to ask bcr exist at all must be last ed up ami down my in my question which not Ctpi on prt of Murder tf Kir trowsers thinking what I should like to tr except in a She muit come here to it Copt received bOte At three o'clock 1 called upon Mrs T 1 must take him away from you for a yewa go w nw We are not to go to Europe from Lawrence enclosing AIM from and kit my card went back and minute or two I beg your pardon boundary what followa and to take from her Sir William's nephew to waited two hours for the but I feel and shall be truly iron ibe pta of Hon jof Ireland force It she who in- Lidy Macnaghten and had the no invitation Called again at fire for great sacrifice you will ind left another card telling the in giving up for one moment er lhat j had not n uch society I fear the and must assume all the hax of invasion Now the British government 11 be- Ij not do Sir Robert because witnessing mAy talk largely on the subject for the tion and that there must be some will only be on my I to coming uneasy take whereupon an invitation the young ladies as I dropped their influx of emigrants into Oregon cf carrying through about an hour after my as I i arms and followed the President to a from the United Slates it that if domestic measure was putting my hat on to call vacant spot near the The events be left to themselves they will ir yain hope to lime aloft sub- and leave another card in a very fierce manner I reckon Well I went ear I I VU s question which the President put to speedily overrun the whole But England me was one which I could not well i And thc American government is on America for i black are beneath thr lv to the ball and my coat looked re- answer but he helped me out of the gay You could see that difficulty by answering it himself ac And sullen gloom on the wintry sky the velvet collar was new and the cording to his own views and then the jurisdiction two wars with us already at n time M 1 Itf M- JkA Ai I e because it cannot permit the to deciare war Bay Company to continue to she cannot to the Uni- is too de- cotton and us lightly remember how on me of informing both her and Mrs Trevor of their bands assassination over such tons but you could pealing to me if was not correct Sce that the cloth was not a little the i ige on hi all thy wrath feel that now art Sweep On all tiain Vr forest and hill and i worse for wear m short my brown with chains rivers and the coat looked very smart and I was a mam I considerable smart fellow myself IB of our mother earth is at that time gust of wind her wailing rings e warbling music of her loved ones Stilled Thy voice alone o'er nature rings ail to thee hoary of the We tat not left to weep o'er grave alone r frozen tears Ihou round her bier Around her form the winding events I found out who they were hast thrown I This won't do I as the rooms t thy chanut wheels triumphant roll ill the tertor of thy wide domain e wave thy stormy sceptre o'er the whole Glory in thy barren Patch Grove Dec 25 IdlS The Old Brown Coat AN AMERICAN TALE I of Oregon This We were I draw a veil It was a most painful meeting to us all Numerous are current That of to-day is that Sir William was to the and arraigned before a tribunal there for want of faith and that Trevor suffered from the assiduity with which he ruled the Envoy's orders AH agree that both the and in Ha Ivor's bodies arc hanging in the public Well J stood near the door at the company coming in hoping to know somebody but 1 presume I had grown out of all recollection foi nobody knew me but as thc company were announced I heard their names and if they did not know who I was at apparent there is no occasion for the region of the habitable guilty of double-dealing treating particular American became quite full I may stick against this wall till daylight but I shall er go ahead so at last perceiving a young lady speaking to the daughter of the Secretary of the after they parted I went up and bowed to Having heard her name I pretended to bean old acquaintance and accused her of having forgotten me As I was I reckon you see nothing very j very positive and very bold she pre- in this do said an it was the case and when I gave acquaintance of mine i her my name which I refused to do till Bringing out the cuff of an old j We had been talking for some nd holding it up before me dangling utes as it happened to be a very good It between his finger and thumb lone she considered it was all I can't say that I replied and in another quarter of an but I presume it has some secret hour we became very intimate I it which be explained then asked her if she knew Miss replied my the daughter of the Secretary of the ance pronouncing each syllable of the Navy She replied that she did and ivord apart yet the coat of which 1 requested her to introduce me and remaining cuff was the j offering her my arm walked up of my being just now pretty Ito the young lady together and I was considerable well to do in the introduced Now thought I I am guess I'm right continued j ing ahead a little After the he appealing to his very pretty tion I commenced a conversation with young woman who stood by him Mbs E aud a gentleman fortunately So you seem to replied relieved me of my first acquaintance hc smiling I am not whose arm I had dropped I is far as I am concerned in the ued ray attentions to Miss E and ex- ness that the coat had anything to myself to the utmost and oo the a 9 9 i question being answered You are right I winh all those about me had your discretion and high sense of replied the President who had one of my new brass buttons be- tween his thumb and finger and I by your reply that 1 was also right in my conjecture I am much obliged to you and trust I shall see you at the Government House I bowed and am going ahead now at all events thought I as every one was looking at me as 1 retreated I had been walking arm in arm with the daughters of the two first officers of State I had been in confidential com- with the President and that before all the elite of America England And the question arises what then shall be Many well meaning persons are in only in modern history has it ed to Britain to sec her armies late and lay down arms on the f h I I I 17 VII favor of submitting the question to of and tach of ton I can now venture to order new suit of clothes but will never will I forget you my old brown coat The next day the tailor came to me he had heard what had taken place at the ball and I amended my wardrobe body came to me for orders and I ordered every thing Cards were left in showers I was re- some friendly power as arbitrator 1 am not of this opinion for two sons In the first place there is no way to enforce an award between independent States Arbitration between in society is very well for those who like it because the courts stand ready to compel performance if the award be valid in form But it is in the case of Governments as to which as experience proves tration only creates new difficulties by adding to the pre-existing sy another in relation to the validity of the award In the second place I Jo not know any power in Europe which his not biases the can democracy anil if a king could be found who is perfectly impartial we should have no safety in submitting to his arbitration because the European kings do not transact the public ness themselves it is done by their it was to the Stars and Stripes of tlie United States that the cross of St George was lowered in humiliation it strength of rny introduction and my for Well then I ahall just tell my I was soon intimate with have been and leave you to said lie her and she accepted my arm As every where the President was and to submit a question to my friend and from that moment European sovereigns is to leave it to went ahead faster and every day Jsome secretary or chef de bureau or till I arn as you now see well off well in the departments whom you married and well up in the world and who however upright Now I do pertinaciously declare I his sovereign be subject to class that it WRS all to thc old brown biases or pecuniary coat and I have kept this cuff which to the integrity of his decision In To an Of it could be n wt I show now and then to my wife to private affaire we can always find j lof A Khan's pbo to hare prove arn grateful for had it not and ft T i tvi alt in and sorrow our of war in like manner the charm British invincibility on the ocean Akbar Khun and Khan at the same time In justice to a man it should be remembered that only supposed to know the ob- ject of the Envoy's going oat on the WAS Skinner who is now in the city Sultan Khan was I believe the name of the person who came in with 1 reiterate the declaration then of him with a letter from Akbar Khan on the night of the In that ter which read by a friend of mine that J think the existing panic on the j Akbar proposed that he should be made subject as idle as it ia to he was to re ble and that I have not the faintest apprehension of the imminence of war with Great thirty lakhs of rupees down and four lakhs per annum our troops to remain eight months and then only to while that when if ever it docs come go if the King wished them to do 80 it will only with the utter ex- He urgently requested the Envoy to pulsion of her power from America In conclusion permit me to say a few words concerning the value and importance of Oregon to the United Slates That a region of I he earth thrice us come and talk it over with him We iii mind lhat although wa had performed all made 011 our part given up our waggona munition forts the treaty had never been signed by the chiefs nof large as the islands na large as had fulfilled a single condition the thirteen original United which hud been specified verbally washed by the sea with great yond giving us grain in era flowing into the sea with many tiis The is that the Envoy valuable harbors in its more northern was perfectly justified far as keeping parts and unsurpassed re- j good faith went in entering into any gion possessed of a mild and Arrangement by which the condition ate climate capable of pasturing of the could be ameliorated and tie the whole winter j the honor of our country be with much fertile and productive soil I He only erred in it such a region L it is idle that Akbar Khan proverbially the to controvert and to deny most treacherous of all his turning to me You must know that paced her up and down the room 1 there was a time when I was rather asked her if she knew thc iard up and how to go ahead was the of General S who was near us business I had tried at mercantile replied in the affirmative and I re- ion and sunk an immensity of quested an introduction which was I had turned lawyer but that immediately complied with and I of- d not answer in any way I took her my other arm and paraded tutu precipitous mountains or the old coal I should which la impossible in an it is quite with her for a com- by a government Mme What remains then for the fil But said his wife round States in thia important which Khan seized and brought to a hostage It was a most decided piece of treachery on the riches which fill the southerly part of Akbar They were seated on i nation of in Mexico bank Lawrence a very whose waist he had gently encircled i if it should prove active man felt if j his arm the old brown coat would j 1 rime the great regulator of all not the amount Jwa wro and when urged to j have done nothing without the velvet in world If nothing else hMM and territory en- sil knelt In one knee he collar and new brass j occur to depose of the Oregon We flf jn tnd f Uirt up on occasion bat Certainly not my dear tion in time the of the h ineM millions mcn AnJ it and word were seized and his And they would not have effected west will do it with their axes jp business and resolved to said E do you know a little so I went south and joined did once a little but he must worthy J mm W ID f m Bolivar I fought with him for three have forgotten me since I have been in occurred and carry And its ultimate commercial value him by the right capital is that which England inn down the with which the covet the possum of it and i if Kodar For any disposition than At the moment ho wai laid K k 1 M PW life in j t j j Prudent to jears and good officer he bat South America so long re had one fault a general which The President came up us A iL nave a was his army never got paid I addressed the young I was to i ney to make sea voyage of For in the region of Oregon to were and forced el my three years and finding that a sort of half bow prevented the milts or in grow y ere many years pass away a en croup behind Here was neither pay or plunder I don't recollect Mr met a little boy about three f and who will stand in the They saw no more of the alive pt tired of it and made my way home rears old on J the States and at last arrived at the I recollect the name replied paid my and he observed that before replied I with a low Tty coat was rather that I ought indeed to feel proud Jt not appear in it I kaew that for ill thc privation well and that all he wanted was that I underwent in ejy last campaign ra IT order for another but as I had no with General for the Genera is worthy of all the fate bsd not 2 Negotiation And it deeply to our whole country and to us Khan behind whom he itn nc mio that in whole of who have rode received the cut on his own arm the street and off The ty millions of property in which went through his -j Mil I fm i T r t M J picked the castaway Srt of either South without a harbor in which Lawrence s life by hard he was smoking into the middle of paving him I though and his not trt the hbt I the sci and walked off smoking much though it no better fresh as fared id with a acw velvet collar wai I didI not say thc direction of John B onus it do very that I was to Bolivar but are actively employed in verge of honor in an Jty or The have permanent right of but he this root of between acre of land on which the Thi I the iwo no fault I repeat of warmer CAB foot i in the it the We hive Wretched retting at j depended on M the troe The and compromise to the ul- dcr the protecting folds of the banner I body we fate was for an evening party an old effort of of Union they thought proper to fancy the ing thc proposed line of the River in so long Finally not to be tolerated any the divided occupancy of If be- longer that England should consider DI r f t- ii that of the Envoy The from bed been during Prudent made me a bow as it As far ai they lave an old coat at Appeared he wanted to have some in- the favorable of an to be wholly our Or tbe field for whole of toe to Mr from that quarter and he easy and route The we the United States tamely of her insatiable thirst ef conquest Mid jof half a seer of wheat per A flare up asked me many of which lem Company arc also in thc of the colonization Is intervention ghee or dhl lor jons of Asia snd and ia of to be permit to How much moie n arni toH every I was able to answer with their extension with treat nations of Asia snd Africa and ia of Jv ill ji ery f wcr with their extension with great i R an The ul broken AS far aa quietly w nz during the room line the ar- rope here to arid rome Enough for in America he for British quarter of t of or barley Oar or that and I go   

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