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999490.
VOLUME I.
rtTHE GREATEST PUsSIBLk: GOOD TO THE GREATEST POSSIBLE NUMBER."
1,600,000 ACRES OF LAND
FOR SALE IN •
CANADA WEST.
rrHE CANADA COMPANY have for
disposal, about 1,800,000 ACRES OF
LAND dispersed throughout most of the
Townships In Upper Canada—nearly 500,-
000 Acres are situated In the Harem Trace,
welt know. as one of the moot fertile parte
of the Province—it has trebled He payola -
lion in fiveears, and now up-
wards of 90,t inhabitants.
Tbe LANDS ere offered by wty of
L B A 8 E, for Tea Year,, or for
Sal., CASH MOWN—lie pianrf
ese flk GLak, and Ike balance is instal -
agents being dons away wilt.
The Bents payable 1st February each
year, are about the Interest at Ste Per
Cent.upon the price of the Land. Upon most
of the Lots, when 1,E.-I.SED, NO MONEY
10 REQ.UiRED DOWN—whilst upon the
others, seeordiDg to locality, one, two, or
three yeses Rent, must be paid in advance,
—but these payouts will free the Settler
from further calls until ind, 3rd or 4tb year
of bit term of lease.
The right to PURCiIASE the FREE-
HOLD during the term, is secured to the
Leases, at • fixed sum named in [ware, led
an allowance is male according to rattcl-
pated payesost.'
Lists of Land., and say further informa-
tion can be obtaised, (by application, it by
letter post-paid) at the Cowr•ev sOruro*,
Toreaee and Goderich ; of R. &atesALL,
Esq., Asphodel, Cotburse District ; Dr.
AL4ne, L
Guelph, or 1. C. W. DAT,- Esq.,
Seraefird, Hero! D etriet.
Goderieh, March 17, 1848. 7
BRITISH HOTEL,
GODERiC11.
LAT$LV *RVPIWr Si ata. IMAc aa1T&PRD•T,
.UODEM.1U1I, HURON DIS'T'RICT, (C. W.) FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1848.
r
FOREIGN PRRIODICALB.
RE -PUBLICATION OF THE
LONDON QUARTERLY REVIEW,
FAH el BURGH REVIEW,
FOREIGN QUARTERLY REVIEW,
WES'T'MINSTER REVIEW, and
BLACKWOOD'S EDIN'G MAGAZINE.
rrIHE above Periodicals are reprinted in
1 New York, iinmediately on their ar-
rival by the British Steamer*, is a beauti-
ful clear type, on fine whits paper, and are
faithful copies of the originals—L U•rckieod's
Magazine being an enact fac-marls of the
Edinburgh edition.
The wide -spread fame of these splendid
Periodicals renders it needless to say much
in their praise, As literary organs, they
stand far in advance of any works of a ei.
milar stamp now published, while the poli-
tical complexion of each is marked by a
dignity, candour, and torbarance not often
found to works of a party character.
They embrace the views of the three
great parties On England—Whig, Turv,
and Radical—Blackwood and the London
1aarterly are Tory ; the Ediwbegh Re-
ster. Whig ; and the frestietinreer, Radical.
The Foreign ftearterly is purely literary,
being devoted priecipally to criticisms o0
foreign Continental Works.
I ,ha
WIVE )Subscribers having Leased the above
A' SUPERIOR HOTEL, beg leave res-
pectfully to Ottawas to their friends and they tb. public is general, that have opened
for the reception and accommodation of
Boarders sod Travellers, where they will
thoube happy to receive thou who may honour
them with their patronage: it will always
be their likely to furnish the Table with an
ample portion of the beet productiose of
the season, and to keep their Bar supplied
with Wine. sad Liquors of the best de-
s'sription, so as to merit the approval of
their customers.
• J: K. GOO1)ING,
JOHN LANCASTER. _
Goderich, Jan, 28, 1848. - -- 11f
N. B.—Exe.11est Stabile' will* Ward -
.d, and an active and attentive Gloom will
be always is atuau
sdce.
STRACIHAN & LIZARS,
BARRISTERS and Attornie. tea Law,
Solicitors in Chancery, and Bankrupt-
cy, Notary Public and Conveyancers, Gode-
rich aod'Stratford, Huron District, C. W.
Jose STh*cMAN, Goderich.
rn
Daer. Howe Lisa's, Stratford.
Ooderich, April 90, 1848. e.. 601
The prices of the Re -prints are s
one•tbtrd of those of the foreign copies, and
*fele Cory are equally well get up, tbej<
afford all that adrsntage to the American
over the English reader.
TERMS.
PATMINT TO sit *ADe IN ADVA*Ca.
Fri say coed the foes Reviews, $3,00 per an.
Fee any two d. do 5.00 "
Fee ssy thew do do 7.00 "
Fes all boor of tbe Reviews.... 8,00 "
For Bl.ckw.ed'. Maga:tee.... 3,00 "
For Blackwood and the 4 Reviews, 10,00 "
CLUBBING.
Four copies of any or at1 of the above
works will be sent to one address on pay-
ment of the regular .ubscrtptioo for three—
the fourth copy being gratis.
07 .Remtttaaees and communications
must be made in all cases without expense
to the publishers. The former may always
be done through a Postmaster, by handing
him the amount to be remitted taking his
receipt, and forwarding it by mail, post-
paid ; or the money may be enclose,: in a
letter, poet -paid, directed tb the publisher*.
N. B.—The postage on theme Periodicals
is reduced by the late Post Office Law to
about one-third the former rates, making a
very important saving On the expense to
mad .ub.citberi.
(C7•in all the principal cities and towns
throughout the United States to which
there is a direct Railroad or Water com-
monicatton from the City of New York.
these periodicals will be delivered free of
postage.
LEONARD SCOTT k Co.,
Pabfikers, 112, Follow -sl., Y.
Subscribers in Canada may receive
their numbers at the nearest American Post
Mee..
.Goderich, Jan. 18, 1848. 1
poet:
"FRIENDSHIP LOVE AIYD?MITH."
I've poadrred a these myelic weeks,
*soothing is their mu;
Aad wondered wby, in this werid's cooed,
1 am alcor—.l... 1
1 wander beck. In t►.egb,. to yeses,
O( bright rad trusting 'melt ;
Whets hopes were bigh, aid I'd se fears
For Friendship, Love tad Trask.
To childhood's pare sod happy hour,
Its careless, restless ioy.:
When pain and linefeed iro b!e. tears ,.
Were toss'd aside like toys :
When all was bright and beautifid—
When p1 knew •o death,
My cap was fall, and all was well,
With Friendship, Love and Truth.
But sew the tattering stories of life,
Have quenched my .pint's fire;
Youth's hopes are clouded by its slits,
And childhood's days expire. •
The sunshine of my early days.
The young hurt's dauntless faith,
Are dimmed 'and eaddeoed,—where's the Asir
Of Frieid.hip, Love aad Troth.
But ram happy still to know
Thai eorroW'a ..metim esessab•d t. --'• -
Oer rugged, tborsy paths below,
By CAerim are smoothed,
Ob ! could 1 claim, amid life's ears.,
1:s treachery and truth,
The sympathy of those who bear
fright Friendship, Love e.d Truth.
Hail, brothers of the mystic tie—
Heaven on thy mission smiles.;
As often at thy magic touch
The widow's woe beguiles—
As often as the orphan's tears
Are (.Mowed by hope's growth, M
A. often as the sad one share.
Thy Friendship, Love and Truth.
Ob ! earth, by vis ss dreary.m•de,
With few bright spot. between ;
Odd•FeUswsbip has pleated ben
Boris flowers still fruit tad glees. l
Some hopes to cheer the -weary ase.
Whose pilgrimage lased.
For Friesdsbip, Leve and Truth, are aims
Which maks tbe heart feel glad
NOTICE.
APPLICATION will be made to the next
Session of the Provincial Legislature,
for leave to bring in a Bill to constitute and
form the following Tuweships sod Gore,
and Block of Land, viz :—North Easthope,
,bath Easthnpc, Downie and Gore,—Ellice,
Blausbsrd, Fullerton, Logan and Hubbert,—
W.11..ley, Morningtoe and Maryborougb,
aad Western ballot* Wilmot, and tbe Block
of Land *lead Logan,—i•to a new Dis-
trict_ ALEX. MITCHELL.
Secy of Committee.
$ulford, {Huron),
let of April, 1848. 10m6
FARM FOR SALE.
T1Seteerwer entire for .ale Lot No.
1 ens s the euMesith Coseesulos of the
Tewoehir ei Ciphers b West Division.
Time wen the pwbisse a small Log Baro,
with 1S Moss wader good cultivation, and
well fueeed. The Land Is of excellent
y, ed within 6 miles of the Tow. of
esw4ietag 160 scree.
8 of Sats will be made known by
N Winkel Robertson, Esq., ('an -
w, u 08.., Gordeeek, or to the
DAViD SMITH.
0481/604. Yseah la` 1648. 6t1
FOR SALE,
BY the subscriber, that valuable property
situated in -the township of Grtdencb,
on Lot 19, 4th concession, within Si miles
of the town of Gudertch ; there is a good
Saw Mill omit an d 80 acres of land, 20
acres cleared. It fs a never (ailing stream
well adapted for any Machinery, such as
Carding and Fulling Machinery, Dretlllery,
and Grist Mill.
N. B.—Will be sold cheap for east, or
part of the money may bio for a few years.
Apply to the proprietor.
W 5. ALLiGHEM .
Godericb, Feb. 18, 1848. 3
TO THOSE 1T MAY OOWCIIIIN.
M` OLIVER, having left the winds of
Me .n..ttled accounts with the perk
etlie fit Division Court, Goderieb, advlees
peeler adobes/ to 84. to see that ttww--
a before the 10th of next
wA j iafemstiee requited, will M girlie at
the
eke eatjy wham s pesos will be at -
Met i,. .
Joe* se.
30H R 1. E. LMTOah
vote a T
•01,1104issioster rti
s
TWELVE .ONO SIX PENt.E
AT TMs am or Tie troth.
NUMI3I,R 26.
•
they essay eyes .round on the and holds,
and up to the sky, that seemed to grow
wkly to them from hour to hour; awaking
1t the motnlug. without a morsel to greet
them; watching through the Jay, counting
minute after wit.ite, awaiting the possible
relief that never carne, or that came loo
late; clasping each other on the filthy straw,
or bare cold door, through the miserable
night; sleeping to dream ut feasting, awak-
ing to die of lawiee. Aad yet we have nut
reached the wurst part of tb. case. Tne
meat fatal pain Lee here, not in the appe-
tites, but in the affections. Lcuk at the
emaciated father, who comes in after ram
search all day for food, and bar nothing to
offer his wife and little ones but a meal of
use bolesume herbs, picked out of the
ditches; look at him when he can find even
these no longer,—whoa competition his
consumed them. Has it entered into the
FFfteart to conceive of his aflction ? Yet is
Mat of the wife and mother even greater,
,who beholds the manly form bent and wast-
ed, of loin that bad bees ooce ber strength
and her guide; who bebulds- her chickens
clustering about her, opening their craving
mouths for food, and drooping as they get
sone. This picture is pale to-irhat the
"coley must have been; and of such tub-
ber, there was so small number. --lt Is to
be feared that they have sot yet passed;
,ay, It is to be feared that some are now
edema is there; but It to apaUe us, that we l We would pen ss ebtllint word respecting
are ...able to inquire or to discuss how It the imputes of nationa!lty that nowaeemr
came to be there, and the babble of discus astir in Deland. We huneur everywhere
.ton on bypotbeses to account ler hunger
and revolt, by mem alio feed amply and feed
at ease, is as oHeu.ite to our mete as the
affliction itself it painful to our feel:s,;m.—
Whatever series u( causes has issued is
the effects which we ..00template, we see
evidently and with alarm that it cannot
stop, that it is not exhausted In these
effects. We hope and trust that all these
unit ting elements may be lust io peaceful
.m>lftoration. The British power has many
and grave crimes to answer fur; but we
should lament with nu common lawentetio•
the wound that civilization must receive,
not merely in the disruption of the Botieb
empire, but In any revere shock to it. The
the eptnt of sationaLly. We heaver the
glorious heroism which fur in idea and a
conviction, if It cannot do, can ;Salty* dare
and die. Much there is in Ireland that we
must dearly love. We love Ur music;
sweet and sad, and Iuw sad lonely, it comes
with a pat**, a melancholy, a melody, on
the pules of the hears, that no other music
breathes, and while it 'neves, It soothes.—
It nems to flow with lung cuu.plaint over
the course ages, 0r to gasp with broken
rouble through the ruins and (regiments of
historic' thought. We ere glad frith the
humour of Ireland, so buoyant and yet so
tender, gtwtnt with smiles, quivering with
sentiment, pursing up the lips aha* it be -
shower of lava that buries • stngk city, the dews the eyelids. We admire the bravery
earthquake that shakes one to pieces, hu- of Ireland, which may have been bruken,
tory notes down in words of -pathos sed but never bad been beat,—which has often
sadness that, move the heart for ever —
But the disorder which should tear to
• tome Inc.. lettere, culture, customer--
which
ustomer—which should crumble to duet beautiful
structures of public and private taste,—
which should reduce to chaos arts of fancy
and utility,—all of which It ham taken cen-
turies to rear,—would be a calamity to be
compared, not with • shower of lava, a tor-
rent, a hurricane, to earthquake, but with
past g.
The Irish peasant in (saner days had a
pat, each as tJ war,put in these days his
Mater bunts him out of it, omit he natio a -
rat, and the land reflmes him a bole for
sbelter. The workhouse is full; the jail
would be relief, and be breaks the law for
refuge in a prison: but by and by crime
itself will be as fruitless as charity, and the
.prisons will not bear the throngs that seek
them. In former days the Irish peasant sat
down to his potatoes, and while they
Laughed in he face, his partner and
lite offspring laughed around bim. Hs
sabis was of mud, covered with sods or
skew; but gave hem • home, end, in gene-
*!, love and peace abode in it. Nor was
hospitality absent. No poor -laws existed,
et were beggars fed; no workhouses were
being,. yet were beggars lodged; the
(pauper had him meat at the peasant's meal,
Ms bad his covering order the peasant's
foot.
If his condition even then was physically
0411 below_ that of the Russian serf or the
negro slave, what shall we say of hie pre-
sent condition 1 The Russian is a filthy
mature OW11 his habits; but his filth }►
exists with catlnfort and abundance. Ms
filth is of his own creation, and he remains
filthy because he chooses to do so. His
dwelling is rude, but it is -warm; his food
is coarse, but it is plentiful. Ile is in no
tear that any landlord will turn bim out, for
bel has the right to continue where he toils,
and to die wbere he was born. If be must
serve the emperor when the emperor corn- I though the tenant, spending time and labour
mabda, be know. what his lot is, and he and money, Irae not sub.uteuce. Tee best
does not complain of it. la general, he of the produce, animal and vegetable, Is ex -
glories an it; for to be changed from being ported to meet our landlord's demand; the
a serf ,quo a soldier a to rise in hs own worst Is retained to supply the euluvator'a
esteem. Without overlooking the degra- wants. The cultivator mum pay or quit.—
dation of humanity and the sorrow which
slavery inflicts upon the negro, in the mere
matter of bodily well-being there is no com-
panion between his state and that of the
Irish peasant. It u• the Interest of his mas-
ter that be shall have at least so much ears
as shall render him a salable article or a
profitable laborer. His master is induced
to give Mm ■ healthy yeah, and he is
bound to prowl le for him in age; it i. his
THE HEART MAY BREAK BUT NOT
FORGET.
011 give me that oblivious draught
Thu comes from Lethe's "lent shore,
That w -hen the charmed cap is evailad,
1 may forget—ad love ns more.
Forget ! forget ! aid can it be?
Aad then w aught beneath the sun .
Can wean my constant heart from thee, ,
Thou lovely and beloved one
Ah to ! Remembrance ma but choose
To hold thy preeiosa image fast :
Asd Time—whatever els I low
Will spare me that till all is past.
Lug nights o f sorrow may elap.e,
And all the sun of Soy may set—
Thia heart may bend, may beak perhaps,
Bet sever, sever, ca forget.
TO PRINTERS.
TYPE FOUNDRY AND PRiNTERS'
FURNISHING WARE HOUSE.
t'rHE Subscribers have opened a New
1 Type Fosndry in the City of New
York, when they ere reedy to supply orders
to any extent, foe .ay lead of Jeb Fleecy
Tile, let, Paper, Chases. Ga icy., Brass
Rules, Steel. Column Rules, Composts(
Sucks, Cues, and every article ■ece.eary
for • Printing Office.
Tbe Type, which are east in sew moulds,
from an entirety oew sett of Matrixes,
with deep counters, sed werraeted to be
uneurpeasod by any, will be void at prime
to sat the ovines. All the type furnished
by nets" hand cut."
Printing Pressley furnished, and also,
Steam Engines of the most approved pat-
terns.
Composition Rollin cast for printer*.
Q7 Editors of Newspapers who will
buy "t times as neck type es their hill.
amount to, may give the above nx reeetbe'
Meanies in shim pipes,, sat) send their
papers coetaiaiag it to the 8wkecrtlera
COCKCROFT k OVUEND
7Yo 78, Awn Mend Maar Park.
December 7111 1647. 016
DR. HAMILTON,
WURO$ON,
wweT •71111,
10DER1CR.
INC, MO. 17
I. LI.WIS,
icy A', 1' .4 NC E R P, ANS
oe• — *,ID COUAj..i , CONV1YAt O1NIL S"'a
MOO tit.* 111111417411 6. • " ys Abb. •
From the Christian Examiner.
PRESENT CONDITION OF IRELAND.
[corm:thee snow oca ease.)
been unfortunate, but-which-neverhad beim
craven. %Ve have much affection for this
Inch character. We give unfeigned prairie
le that purity of feeling which surround's
Irish women 10 the humblest class, and
amidst the coarsest occup.,uuos, with an
atmosphere of sanctity. We acknowledge
with heart felt satisfaction that kindred
love in the Irish pour, that no distance cats
weaken, aid that no tame can chill. We
• deluge which should conte down from the feel ratified with our humanity, whes we
black wrath of heaven, and bury in its flood, see tbe lowly servaut girl calling for ber
not millions only, but the works of millions wages, or drawing on the .rings bank for
acro for -a thuusand years. Yelowe tool that fowl", to take tears from the eyes of a
id the Brush telawd affairs cannot. ea/alums wwiowa►d arutlas W Ccwnaugby, or fpf►fp .-
as they are. la no part of them are the from the soul of an aged father in IUunater.
people contented; in belted they are mad. We behold a radiance of grandeur aroused
They are in the extremity of wretchednere; the head of the railroad labourer, as be
It is no wonder they should be in the ex- bounds, tbreethuusarrl miles away, at tke
tremity of desperation. The Irirb people sound of repeal, at the 051110 of O'Connell,
are starving, and yet the Irish soil is not and yet awe. ad hi, lased shakes; ane he lakes
barren. With all the dl -treatment which a letter from the post_oltice, which, rude as
it has to bear, it yet continues rich; the It Iney be 111 superscription, it a messenger
•
clouds pour down fatness and the earUt from the cut to which tits chilbood lay, 1
gives forth abuodaoce, yet multitudes do ae angel from the fie!de, the hill., the
not so much live as wither. Thu soil rs etrearw, the mountains, and the moon
vital while the people die. wherein hu boyhood "ported. We 'remem-
11 seemed a mystery to the inhabitants of ber with many memories of dehg lt, too,
this country how thousands should expire the beauties of Irelapd'e scenery. We re -
o( hunger at • time when provisions were collet' the fields that are ever green; the
sent away from every port; and why, whole buile that bloom to the summit; the.tream-
tbe was -ship went se with chanty, the ear- feu that to sweeties. eecm to sing her
chant -ship 'should go out for gain, both legends; the valley where the (airier play;
freighted witb the staff• of lee. 'l'be mys- the voices among her girds, that sound
tory is easily explained. The manufacture fromjherwinds as with the spirits of bet
and the cllfsmerce of Ireland consist gene• 'bards; tbe shadows of her ruins at moos -
rally in the pruductton of food and sir ex- light, that in pale and melancholy splendour
portatio0. ')'tie manufacturers are the appear like :he ghosts of ter ancient he -
tillers of the soil, who give in their labour roe.. We would, could we choose our
•
all the capital, and pay high rents beside* theme, rather Unger on the beats: iful songs
for that us which they 1011. .(Phe landlords of Moore than on the prosecutions of
are the owners of the soil, who expend no Meagher or of Mitchell; aol if in this paper
capital, and who take even more than the we have dwelt more upon the physical and
profit. 1'be hold cannot support these two
social want. of Ireland than un h titer
classes, a they are at present related.— and more ideal quaLltes, it it b ;use the
The lacdtord must have state and luxury, immediate pre.sure of present vents has
out expending time or labour or money, left us neither soul our strength to Jo
ulhcrwi*e.
But what re to come out of this pressure
We ask the question with tear and doubt.
I. Ireland tar come In conflict with Eng-
land? We cannot always trust rumor, but
rumor is at pre.estdark and ominous. The
event, we hope, may not come; but the very
sound et it es fearful, War, I0 any way, ie
a monstrous calamity; but civil war is a
calaunty that transcends imagination.—
War between England and Ireland would
be a civil war,—utero is no disguising it,—
and a civil war of the worst deecriptwn.—
We ask net which party would be right, but
,still we reiterate lbatthis would be among
the greatest of calamities. We do not in-
quire what talc Engltbd has to govern Ire -
'laud, but we do ark what weans Ireland has
to combat England.
(-Co Dui Lunt r:IUKD 1t OUR p6IT.j
Ho sell„ his wheat, his oats, ler stock, to
pay; he reserves the putato on which to
eru.t. 1'he potato bails; the cultivator be-
comes a pauper or a corpse. But all are
sot thus at once, aed •u, while wheat le
gulag out tram Cork from stone to pay the
landlord, maize is cuwtng Iu fur alms to
others, who have already paid him. A
man will feed his pig with puratoei, but he
may never feed himself with pig. Tho
Interest even that he shall enjoy mental man feeds the pig but to sell it, and he
quiet and conteatsveet, for the more cheer- sells it to pay unit who had never had
fol be is, the more usefel. No deobi be is trouble m rearog u. Rent nut only take.
often subjected to cruelty; but eves to the the surplus production of the inlet's labour,
slave Christianity e a protection, for it in. but wnstantly anticipates even more thou
led the whole. t may, thea, easily be seen
fuses a sentiment into the moral heart, a
creates a power of social opinion, which is bow the mass of a plentiful general pro
-
ductivedess may be gutng out !rote a even
try, while the mus ot its producers are
running to the workhouse or famishing m
their cabled.
We writs practically and prosaically.—
We should more delight ourselves, in writ-
ing upon Irelaud, to write poetically; ter
Ireland has much, indeed, to stir the spirit
of poetry. Ireland s a land u( poetry.—
Phe power of the Put there over every
Imagination renders it a land of romance.—
The pat is yet an aewahty to Ireland; in
all the other puts of the Bnlstt island* it
is a sung. '1'be tragedy of Fluddeu-field
moves a $cotchman's leelioge, but it does
not disturb bis busloesa; the battle of Biu•
nockburn calls up his enthusiasm, but,
though it keeps him late at the bottle, 11
never keeps him late from the counting•
house. The unpnronwent of the poet -
twig Jamie soness his affections, but it
leaves bis judgment perfectly clear on bide
ot eacbange and the price of stocks. Even
the battle or Culloden is gone lung ago to
the calm impartiality of things that were.
The Welshmen take English money with-
out remorse, and say not a word about the
aesasuo, King Edwa'd, and the murder of
their bards. Even the English themselves
have but faint remembrance sit the hepler-
chy, the revolt of the barups, tbe wars til
the rosea, the death of the first Chutes, and
the abdication of the second James. But
events do not pass so rapidly in Ireland.—
Imitated s a country .d tradition, of medita-
tion, and of groat Ideelutsu. It has moth 0t
the Esters teeliag of passion cited to •
faacy, with coutuwrty til habil, as in the
East, connected with both passion and
fleecy. Monuments of»war, of pnoc, ,m,
and religion cover the 4urtace of the I nJ.
Tbe meanest man tinge under the sh ow
of piles which tell bim that his Where were
not staves. He tell.. In the Meld er he walks
on the highways with structure, bemire bra
that have .Wed the storms of time, through
Which limo wind relines with a v.neu of coo
tunes, and that voice is to hi. heart the
voice of soldier., ot .cholera, end 011 sante,
There is but one stet from the anstocra- stronger than law stronger than tyranny;
d thatstep:and these, if they Jo net break 'tbe yoke,
i over a *est. the (nab pe 's homes uneertann,
irdl.enhe►k, of onim•gmaole desolation, and it is his master's deters not to keep
ey to the
peasantry is selene, an t a alleviate bondage.Unlike the Rosman
is fearful precipice into an abyss ofi
T1ere are but few interlwedeate g• --a- -, bim off; and while all the power a on one
Moak the view, or to soften the contrast ; ride there s oo aeksowledged claim om the
it r e yawateg gulf, exposed in all to bur-
rore, from which the gazer shrinks back other. Uobke the negro .brei the Irish
affrighted, with a reeling bead and with petust has no bold on the interest of his
qulvenog nerves. Yet mut we, however ; ford, as .he certainly has nn hold on bis s( -
loath, ask•our readers to leas with us for al
fecuoem. Ile has ao pobbc opimos is the
moment our it. clue to which his lord belongs to shield
The physical state of the irisA peas.etry him from oppression, and tbe sympathy.
did not is past times seem capable of being which be has among his own is such as
lower Oise it was. Even take, It was the
tempts him often to revenge' himself by
towest wbteb ay region of the civmsed methods always to be lamented. He may
world could preeeat. Their dwellings eland in manhood or sink in age, there is
were hoopla; their clothing, rags; sad their seam bot Ood on whop u he can cast the
food, an almost useeaauned root. But all b.ed...1 his ear,, for among men those
wb het for hum and with bim immense
n * help-
lses u himself.
We have already staled a sad ease, but
we know from every week'. report, that,
at peasant, other terrible elements are at
work. T1e potato withered last year; this
year 11e pike is forged and whetted.—
Fierce end dark partitions are boiling In the
breasts of men, and thmten to bent out
in the tempest of civil, bloody stnfe,witb all
its hatreds and tenon. Despair has cs,s-
ha to M gen-- s1; 11 has started op la
wddsees from its lair, and 'bakes its Gor-
ewers,. wag* law .a" a, . r, bek Me,J stEaY![ M' ..r
40_-qd aorl1.-0" . .. $11.1.44111 .t; "w ,r.' ese' rt elan
lit
this was paradise to what their state has
been .rode,—to what it is now. The very
root which was w despised we hang come
to segue slowest with .-...re ; as coma
we res hew, by the withering of the single
root, heedreds of tbon.ands of human W-
aage withered along with 11, we can under.
stabil bow the heathen Eg bees bowed
down to lesk. ma worship. '111. (rave of
the potato -seed was the grave of men,
woe's, and children; but the petit° died
kaew'e( •.t it. own .:stews., while the
awn, we0ea, and chalices that perished
with it expired to ghastly ant cen.umrog goa locks in deadly anger; it kis ceased to
torture, with Wank despair of this iohospt- wail, 11 thunder.; and if it does not strike,
Oki world,—yet, thank God ! cot entrust.
(al of a bat.,. Far off though It was, we
bird the low moaning of that despair, tot
it the etareetiti.e .f earth t►ai bears a4 maw
res 160 ,the w paeu.g. of soother heat
mufti*., eel. ewe where it crane' glv re-
bid, 11 fade not to give pup. What we
could, we did; bet the woo was so huge ss
almost to paralyse cornpsi
s»n into hope-
Ieeene.s. it surpassed all that the wealth fon this spechaele, abstract questions 1o.e
ol,pyfeb aeighboor rental afford, and all that all their 'Menet. Ohne gave m fascinated
OS charity of settees ee.M dispense co by the esker! whisk re be4.r* oo, which
arer1s it. Whet eon fek.' ly psetere what stares ma ea with Weld ova, as/ from wbwb
hues .se laelily mesa have ..d.rsd 'a a. Ivo ;menet tare away. Nough we look on it
45110101111110884 Thie4 of Were teams .wNitleephlog. The plata, .poo wretch
it irrupt Its weapon.
111 wee, vein to enter specially into entree
which bee. ,redwood effects ouch as these
we have been de.erib.ag. Whatever canes,
we height snags, remote or promotive,
there is still an actuality before us of • most
appalling ebarseter,--a whole people
tog amidst fertility, tied arising to madnees
to look for hope in the (ace of death. He -
+nit 1e m'*''e it•:.'; +,. i N, .. .
t *6* NM ar110111010041./".4
Oalelf or Ten ELwcruc TnLnauartt.—
Upwards of sixty years. (or in 17m1' S'J.)
when Arthur Young was travehifg Its
France, he rnet with* Monsieur Lomond,
'a very ingenious and inventttmg mechanic,'
who had made a remarkable dn.c,.v cry 10
electricity. "1'ou write two or three words
on a paper." says Young : " be taker it
with hire into a room, and turns a machine
enclosed on a cylindrical care, at the top of
which is an electrometer, a smell, fine, pith
ball; a wire connects with a similar cylin-
der and electrumelcr in a distant apartment;
and his wife, by remmrking the curreepund-
tng ....,tions of this ball, writer down this
words they indicate, from which it appears
he has formed an alphabet of motions. Ar
the length of the wire make* no difference
in the effect, a correspondence might be
carried on at any distance. Whatever the
nee may be, the invention is beautiful."-
1'his discovery, however, lay unnoticed no-
el about three years since ; though the ap-
paratus was demened to elfxt the wane
end as the electric telegraph.—I.owdea
Telegraph.
t
LAromao.—it is not contrary to good
breeding to laugh In 'ompeny, and even to
laugh heartily when there I• anything amu-
sing gm az on ; this is nothing more thaw
being sociable. To remain prior and precise
on .i,rh orea*tude is .hater affectation.—
Avoid, ho ever, *halt a called a " hur e -
ads views
l t.tltl r pointe a ›, •• r 1a veamri,,..
. s4
laugh. {{
Hese, 11eunt, van Slime... -A• Eo-
gh.army Burg n said he could always telt
the native coon y of his soldier patiente
ghatsliensthe assayer o the question—" Whit
.Ila you 1" "1 c in't eat, sir !" says the
6.hgissi.uae. ".A eeir heed, air !" says the
Scotch m..n. " A pain about the heart,
sir:' relates the Irichmaw.
lrate.wst Clurowe.- -Set VAAAAAI.'r.
L.rr.—In Indra 1M Riots Mee
'eddy. le Ireland, .e that contrary, Pad -
dye tai-. Ream.
w
i.
1