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TEN 8111LLINQ
IE a/nvasca.
VOLUME 11.
" Tug GREATEST PmSS18Li GOOD TO TES GREATEST POSSIBLE NOMBILR."
GODERICH, HURON DISTRICT, (C. W.) THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1849.
TWELVE AND SIX PENCE
AT Tai nee OP ?.a ease.
NUMBER XXX.
(oras.
DR. P. A. McDOUGALL,
CAN be consulted at all honer, et the
aritiiA H.fd, (Lancan•rsa'a•)
Gederieh, Sept. 130, 1844. 33-
-ALf:XANER WILKINSON,
Provincial Land Surveyor,
OFFICE AT GODERiCH,
HURON DISTRICT.
Nov. 24, 2. 43
J. K. 000DIN'G,
AUCTIONEER,
�] 'LI. shoed SALES in any part of the
• • Distriee, on reasonable Terms. Ap-
ply • .the Bruin& Hotel.
Godericb, March 9th 1849. 2v -6N
I. LEWIS,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, kC.,
Jew, 1816!0ODF,RICH. - --
JOHN J. E. LINTON,
a OTat T PUBLIC,
ConInlixsinner Qttccn',1 Bench,
AND CONVEYANCER,
STRATFOItD.
• Stokes,
CHEMIST and DRUGGIST,
WEST -STREET,
GODERICH.
Mme%8, 1E119.
ALEXANDER MITCHELL,
AUCTIONEER,
BELL'S CORNERS,
ROOTH E!1STHOPE.
Mirth, 29, 484e. ,2-448
.A. N ASM Y TH,
FASIIIONABLE TAILOR:
1BR2Y-QI 3T.
GODERICH.
Godeeteh, April 12, 1842. !v-atitf
��tt .1. R. PHILIP,
til+ {U 1141 IZ ®N y
B: ILAT FOR O.
April 1a, 1.49, .e -s10
DR. JOHN I1YDE,
(cora raps cataao,) •
11111111D IC A L IA?LL
'STRATFORD.
AMIS. lee. 20-.26
1,500,000 ACRES OF LAND
FOR SALE IN
CANADA WEST.
THE CANADA COMPANY have for
dapeal, about 1,500,000 ACRES OF
LAND dispersed throughout moat of the
Townships in Upper Canada -nearly 500.-
000 Acre. are gituated in the Huron 7'rart,
well known ti nee of the inert fertile parte
of the Provroee-it he. trebled its papule -
tree In five years, and now coolants up-
wards of 20,000 inhabitante.
The LANDS are offered by way of
1. F:.4 S 7 , for Tea Fears, ar Jor
.ale, C .1 SU Do /F N -rhe plan of
oeel/J1A Cask, and We balance in 1nstaf-
"welr brier done away trilh.
The Rants payable let February each
year, are about the Ioterest at Six Per
Cent.open the price of the Laud. Upon moot
of the Lots, v, ben LEASED, NO MONEY
iS RF.QUiREi) DOWN -whilst upon the.
others, according to locality, one, two, or
three years Reot, must be paid in advance,
-but thea payment. wall free the Settler
from further calls until 2nd, 3rd or 418 yea
of his term of Lease.
The right to PURCHASE the FREE-
HOLD during the term, ie secured to the
Len... at • filed sum named n Lease, arse
an allowance is made according to antici-
pated Nyanat.
Lots of Lands, and any (either informa-
tion can be obtained, (byapplication, if by
letter post-paid) at the o. e Orrice*,
Tommie and Oederirk : of R. Butoests,
Hos., Asphodel, Oetberwe District; -Dt.
Aurae, (!sal" or J. C. W. DALT, Req.,
.Yilrel/erd, Hems Dente.
God er,t�eb, Marini 17, iS4S. 7
FARM FOR SALE. THE BRAIN TUE MATERIAL ORGAN
BE BOLD be private bargain, Lot No. BY WHICHTUEMENTAL FACUL-
TIES ARE ! NIFESTED.
1 23. en the 6.h C.sawi.. of Godertch,
coataisiag 80 aeras, 20 of which is cleared and
,aster euliivalios: tea awes are newly under -
brushed and ready for chopping. The land is of
excellent mistily and well watered. There is a
good eabetani al log Dwelling House oo it, sod
see aereof superior halt trees in beanng condi-
tion. And u the proprietor is desirous of eater-
isg into other Miner, be will dtspow d it a
moderate terms. One-half of the price will be
REQUIRED DOWN, ad the other half in
three equal 1 imealmeats.
Q--F'orfurther particulan,apetystibis Office, fevers, we cannot doubt that the brain is
or to the Proprietor on the premieres. very similarly afecied in both cues. lo -
GEORGE ELLIOTT, Junior. sanity is knows frequently to •nee from
Goderich, 13th Oct., 1848. • 3711 blows on the head, and fevers often make
TRAVELLER'S HOME,people in.aiefor years, who are suddenly
STRAyBURG, WATERLOO, restored to the fu:Ipossession of their mes-
28th February,1819. tal powers, just as Jones was restored by
trepansln;, after remaining a year a an
►rHE Subscriber hereby intimates to his insensible state.
friends and the Travelling ['tibial gene- Numerous instance. similar to those
sally, that he has removed from New Aber- which 1 have related, are found in work. on
deep to the Village of Strasburgh, and will 'tents! derabgement, and they all tend to
mow be found in that well known house for- prove that a well-developed and sound
merly occupied by Mr. Jones, -Where he inn is absolutely necessary for correct and
will be ready end able to conduce to the powerful operation of the mind. Many of
comfort of those who may honor bim with • them are exceedingly interesting, and very
their patronage. And while be return. difficult to explain, except on the ground
thanks for put favors, be hope., by strict adopted by Gall and Spurzheim, and elo-
attention to the *ante and willies of his quently developed and illustrsted by Messrs.
customer., still iP merit a cOItrnuanee of Combe.
their patronage. I These writers divide the intellectual fa -
JOHN ABEL. • collies info two classes -the knowing and
N. B.-GeoJ STABLES and attentive the reflecting. The knowing faculties are
ar a.aatAR JIIUNA., Y. D.
['occluded frost oar last.
Numerous cases are related, of persons,
woo, from disease affecting the brain, for-
get names and event., time. and pima,
but retain a perfect recollection of peraoos
and numbers. As like symptoms ranee
from blow. on the bead, and often from
Grooms. .2-4141! ' iedisidrality, form, sire, iceigkt, ((desiring,
Ilse -alley, order, time, number, time; and
'1 O BE SOLD, ! language; the reflecting faculties are corn -
AY excellent Farm, being tat No. 12lparuon and causality. Each faculty has a
' Maitland Concession, Township of I separate and material instrument or organ
Godench, containing 100ecree-30 of which !in the brain; and memory belongs to each '
is cleared. The land is of a superior quah- j {malty: pence there are as many kind. of
ty, wed well watered. 1t is situated exact -ii semory u there are organs for the know-
ly nine miles from the town of Goderich on , tag and reflecting faculties. They say,
the Huron Road, and at the Jameson, of NZlmoreover, that memory is. only a degree of
different roads; .rid iso it)y ID aM *seta of i activity of the organs: hence from disease
a populous and prosperous locality, it u ex- icor other causes, increasing -the activity of
cel)eotly adapted for a Tams stand or a itbe organs, the recollection of things u far
Stole. Thin farm to well, entitled to the, sore vivid at oDe time than at author..
attention of persons de_eirons of an eligible This enables us to explain those caseethat
situation for business, and will be sold on frequently occur, in which, from some 'lo-
vers reasoasble' terms. For particulars jury of the brain, a person loses the memory
apply to Thomas Dark, Tavern -keeper, of words, but retains that of- thugs. Dr.
G(tderieb, or 10 the proprietor . Gregory mentions the case of a lady, who,
JONAS COPP, after an apoplectic attack, recovered her
• Village of Harpuncey. ; recollection of tbiogs, but could not name
June 15. 1849. von .t ' them; others forget the names of their moat
. intimate friends, whose persons they per -
FARM FOR- SALE. feet!), recoliect.� 1 have a patient at the
present time, whose memory a good as
THF. South hello( Lot 16, on the9ndCon - respects every thing but places: be revel -1
cession of Wawanosb, will be sold at a .ec:a perfectly, persons, names, events, kc., '
moderate price, one half of the purchase mo- but does not recollect hie own or hie neigh-
sey wall be required an hand, and the purcha- bouts houses, or the place in which he has
ser will be allowed to retain the other half reeded for many years. 1
Mr a number of years on common Interest. I Further proof of the connexion between
The land is of excellent quality and well wa- the state of the brain and that of the mind, i
tried. An undisputed tele will be given. ' might be adduced from the many instances
For further particulars apply to John' of idiots and cretins, who are as nearly den -
Stewart Eeq.. Barrister tidderub. (tuts of intellect, and defective to the or- ,
Goderich 28th May, 1849. vt-s16 - I ganization of head.. There have been
w i►rnv•s• • I many examinations of the heads of such .n-
drvtdual., says Esquire], and they have
usually bccu found' to be of vicious fotms-
tiun. The same writer ',Mathis important
remark, "that idiot. and cretins sometimes
manifest great intelligence 10 early life, the necessity of guarding this orgaq rnosf4
sense, and complete apoplexy. He died in
three days after aim attack, and, e. ex-
amining the bead, there was found engorge-
ment of blood in the sinuses, and
abaceases were observed in the substance
of the brain, sod other marks of organic
disease. M. Brousais considers this a ease
of chronic inflammation of the brain induced
by a moral cause.
The same ger,e•aI fact, that mental ex-
citement simulates the brain. is proved by
anmberleea cases, and forms the buts of
correct treatment of diseases of the brain,
and especially of insanity:
This disease s generally produced by
morbid excitement of some portions of the
brain, and requires for its cure that this die•
ordered organ should be left in absoqlute re-
pose. Hence arises the benefit of Ahylutas
Dm Lunatics, where this unhappy class of
persons have no cares, no wasts t) provide
for, and weere their minds are not excited,
but soothed by kind word. and gentle and
affectionate treatment.
Sometime. the increased flow of blood to
the head le such aa wonderfully to uureare
the power. of the mind. Pinel, and other
writers on inanity, relate case. of patient.,
who po d but weak miste when in their
usual ,tate of health, but who exhibited
very• superior powers. of intellect during
paroxysms of inanity, which determined
more blood to the head than ordinarily. -
Similar facts I have noticed in the insane:
sometimes the memory alms to be wonder-
fully increased; at other times, imagination,
or wit, Sec.; and thus many of the inane
are supposed to possess uncommonly bril-
liant mental.power.. I have known an iD-
sace person, during a paroxysm of insacity,
wh,ch usually occurred about once a month,
exhibit a very animated countenance, and
repeat correctly and with great force and
dignity, passages from Shakspeare and
other writers, but who in the intervals of
these paroxysms, appeared stupid, thought-
les-, and forgetful. .
Many instances are on record. of the
development of genies by disease during
childhood. The celebrated Novell. had
his great mind apparently created by a very
severe di.ease when be Was in his ninth
year. An increase of power may be given
to the brain by an increased determination
of blood to it, just as the sense. are often
rendered more acute, by disease and partial
toflammation; or it may arise from the re-
pose allowed the brain during disease, and
its feeble powera not being overtaaked and
injured by mental application.
I might adduce many more cases to prove
tree very intimate connexion between the
brain and the miod, that it is a defective
brain which makes the idiot, and a diseased
brain with came delirium and insanity; and
that all the various statt+, of mind produced
by alcohol or by opium, boo, arise from the
dtwrdered action which these articles pro-
duce in the brain; that the week mind retina -
(cited by the infant, and the feeble mind by
the aged, are produced by a email and un-
developed, of an enfeebled tot diseased
MARBLE FACTORY,
.SOUTH WATER ST., GALT.
D 11. 11sCULLOCH multiage* to mas-
e seriatim HSADSTONER, WOi4V;
MaNT/, oaRu€Kg, TOMB TONii,
les., in Mare. and Freeness, r Asap as
an a thewvi
PeNse, alt work wereallsd to
or�tr. er iso charge wiU he mei*.of =utile Headotos.e frya t.
,t 541
of Free.toaeom 6 to SO defiers; dwa••
sesta ke , from b dollars aperatle.,L
Written eemmwwestiose addressed to the
uadereiteed eentaieisg the leeevlptiese,
►ad et what prise. w WNW* er Froosieee,
will be pttactsaliy atteded to.
Gt11,No D. H. M.CULLOCII.
t• Soh, 1441. 42m3
U7ldw.--1 Notice, tint
my Wife ANN RICH, hr left my bed
and board, ..57th Jem., 1849, and without
any jet eases. 1 therefore caution ail per -
Dose tree trestiq er g�ivieg hoc soythinag�
on sate enema, as I will sot be respoasibie
for the ante. WTLT.TiTM BICE, Seer.
McGillivray, loth July, 1849. 2t -o24-3
♦.V laV L,
THE Subscriber baying LEASED. for'
thdlerni of Twenty years, the Proper-
ty on the North side of the Market Square, t
at present occupied by Th od R 1, Esq.
wishes to intimate to thorn who wish to I
'val. themselves of an ELIGIBLE SIT-
UATION for BUSINESS., that he will i
Leese BUILDING SiTES for ally Term
not exceeding Twenty Tears, ata moderate
Rent per annum.
HORACE HORTON.
Goderich, March i8, 1848. 2v-.8tf
Blank Deed and Memorials,
NT) all kind. of DIVISION COURT
BLANKS, and BLANK PROMIS•
SORY NOTES, for sale at the Signal
Office. Every diaeription of BOOK and
JOB Printing executed with oeatoess ,ted
e ore et
LAND FOR SALE,
cC 13AIP TOR CAAIS111I11
FIFTY -$IX Acres of eae&Ient I.ad, being
0,. Wen part of Lot 16, 7th Coteesaon of
W aw,eosh, will be sold for tem thee the Gov-
ernment prise. One half of the perebase money
will be required dews, sad two yams will be al-
lowed for payment of the reenateder. Intending
purchasers may apply to Mz JOHN ALLAN,
Tavern Keeper, Goderich.
Goderielo 13th Joly. 1849. v2-23+1
STRATFORD HOTEL.
(LAT! ZIT'S.)
frHE Subscriber informs his friends and
the Travelling Pnblie. that he ban leered
tb large BRICK TAVERN, at the Eat
end of Stratford, (now the county town of
Perth,) lately occupied by Mr. Isaac May,
-where he will be ready at all time. to
afford the usual comfort and supplies and
promote the personal convenience of his
gttevt e .
WINES and LirlITORS of the beet de-
senption. A steady Hostler always Ise
attsndssee. ALBERT G. HATCH.
klueWtd, Jct► Jely, 1149. 2v-.t8tf
TO MILL PROPRIETORS.
AYOUNG MAN waiting a bituatioe as
Mifkr-also a good Accountant. For
further merit -elms apply by hetet pest paid,
to F. 0., Teekersmitb, slurs. Dts eta,
Casella West. -
Aoguat 20th, 1849.- - 99-.1911
• BURLINGTON
t, i?1F ' ADaa!\ fO
him ACADEMIC 1'E tar 18441 and
tie, will sommooce no p, lks
fesrl8 dap „f OcroIer, wad clone on the 6 ret
Thursday of July. Circelara giving full
nsformatiom, may he obtained at the rage of
tb H,rea Atg.a/ or ly applkatles to
D. C. VAN NORMAN,
Hamilton, 7th Angell, 1949. 2p 7t
brain, and not by a change of the immaterial
Some has that if the French ester Ravine scene at Rano. Tbey spare me the grief
by vault, the peopte will be led a their which such things must necessarily caose
rage to murder the primas and recluses. In rne. But to spare of their eve 1 learn that
such case, what • glorious victory wnold the whole youth of Rome. and all men of
the Frescb obtain ! What a floe rooters- intelligence reason teas: "The Pope mem
tion of Papal Sovereignty would she effect ! to reign ever it by force. He claims for
History teaches es that in genus) restore- the church, that is for the priests, the
tions effected by forme are not durable, and sovereignty which belong. only to the peo-
that throats raised rapes dead bodies and ple, and be behaves, be says indeed, that it
blood are fated to be ove,thrown by yet is bas duty to act thus because we are
more violent coavuluons. Of all the ex- Catholics, and because Rome is the center
pedients for the restoration of the `Pope die- of Cetholienm. Very well: what is to bin -
cussed at Gaeta, they have choses the moat der us, then, from beeomi.g Protestant if
deplorable. necessary, and thea what political n ht can
But what most distresses the heart of be have over us) For le it not horrible
every Catholic is this restoration, supposing to thick of, that heeauw we are Calbolies,
it to be effected without flrmli establishing and suns of the Church, we must be mos.
the power of the Prince, will wound and tered by the Chine', abjure our rights, re -
perhaps destroy the power of the Pontiff.- eerie from the liberality of the p0ests, as a
Th. cannon now working deetructiop in the concession what is due in justice, and be
walls of Roma, is as steadily deslroviag the eondeme.d to the lot of the most miserable
Catholic faith in the hearts of ahe'Romans. of people'!"
I have already told lou what fearful impres- 1 find these sentiments have become more
.,an the• " Confetti di Pis Noss w eradati common than is generally supposed; they
a saw figkli " Dm produced upon • Roman have penetrated even into the hearts of the
people - what hatred they have excited women. 'Phan twenty years of apostolic
against the priests. But all this is nnthing labor which 1 have endured, to attach the
to the rage which tke sight of French Roman people to the church, are sacrificed
bombs bas •wakened against the church, in a few days ! Behold what i have fore-
seen against the Catholic religion. As seen and predicted In all my letters, come
most of the bombs have fallen in the en- to pm ! And even beyond my first fore--
burb., ruisiog the houses and wounding boding. 1 Protestantism le, In fact, now
the families of the poor people, it is partici,- I planted among a p.rtine of this good and
Iarly those of the suburbs, that portion o(' religious Roman people; and horrible to
the Roman people formerly the most devo- ' tell, the hes been broil/tit about by the
aedly Catholic, who now curse the Pope and , miserable politte. into which they have led
the clergy, in whose name they see theathe Pope. AD ! mie
y deer frnd ! the ides
horrors committed. I of a bishop who rain. grape -shot upon hie
I am far from believing that Pius iX,dioses-of a shepherd who cuts the throat
wishes these things, or that he even knew. f'of his sheep -of a father who devotes his
of them. I know that be is kept in such al children to death -of 0 Pope who mans to
state of isolation, that the truth in thew' reign, to ;mpome himself upon 3,000,000 of
matters cannot reach bim; everything iel eternities by force -who means to establish
perverted before he receives it. I koow his throne upon ranee, corpses and blood 1
-that the pour Pope, surrounded by wicked This idea, i say is se strange, so contrary
or imbecile men, sentenced. is it were, to to the letter am' spirit at the gospel, that
the depths of a citadel, is well nigh a there is se cooscieace which does sot revolt
prisoner, and very little master of Mansell. at it -no fatth which can bear up against It
I know that they take advantage of the -no heart which does not groan at it -no '
feebleness of his character, of the tender- toegme which is not moved by it to mrsiag,
noes of his conscience, of his state of ser- aye ! even to blasphemy 1 Ab ! better, m
roue excitement, which subjects him to thousand tunes better, have !est the twepor-
whatever influence or inapt.aiou kit come- al power, the whole world if .eeeseary, than
tiers please. to have gives such a seandal to his people!
But what I know and believe, the Roman Oh, If roue iX, hod been left to himself
people do not know nor behave. The pee- bad he only been able to wet according
ple know oily what they ase and suffer. - to the dictates of'hn own heart ! 1■ the
They see that the Austnans; with a prelate first place, he would sever have left Rome ;
Of the Pope, Monsignor Benno in thei'or, if driven to that, he would never have
midst of them, ravage the Legations, berm- quitted the Roman States. He would bears
bard cities joy/ enormous contttbet true op.
on that most peaceable citizens, exile and
shoot the moat ardent patriots, sad rees-
tablish everywhere clerical-tyraay. They
wee that the Pope has launched against the
Roman State, as against some wild beast,
four great powers. armed with all means of
destruction; and they will listen to nothing:
they rise against the Pope and the Church
in that very name, and in defence of those
i very interests by which the Pope declare.
it his duty to re -conquer forcibly hie tem-
poral power. Mr. Harcourt, in a letter
dated Gaeta, writes, "Reason and charily
are banished alike from Rome and Gaeta."
In those few words we have tie history of
the net emu months. The excesses of
'Rome, which no one pretends to justify, al-
though to a certain degree necessary is
times of revolution, have been surpassed by
the excesses of Gaeta. Not a word of
peace, of recon, of pardon. Not a promise
to maintain public liberty, such in we had
a right to expext from a Pope. and especial-
' ty from the mouth of Pius IX., has come
i from that rampart of absolution, that ces-
, dezvous of folly and wickedness, combined
i to smother the sentiment of charity and
;love in the amiable heart of Pius iX.
i I have Just read the last addrew of the
Pope to the Cardinals. What impudence !
what'folly to have put into the mouth of
�
the Holy Father pompous onlogies of Aare-
! and the Kmg of Naples -the greatest
enemies of the independence of Italy, whose
i very name horrifies every Italian ! What
!impudence to hart made the Pope say that
he himself appealed to the powers to rete -
state him on the throne which he himself
abandoned ! It was to say, " 1 intend to
wage against my own people that war
which the year before i declared I would
not wage against Croats and Amanitas, the
oppressors of Italy." Even the women
raise this reproach against him; tad now,
in witnessing the effects of thyn savage war
of four powers agatost one little elute, in
teeing their husbands and children killed
and wounder!, you cannot conceive the rage
of the women, the violent senttmgls to
which they give way, the come of fury they
rent epos the Pope, Cardinals and Priest.
en moose. From this you may well' CAR -
end,' that abs people have injured the
churches. They will nether confess, Nov
communicate, nor assist at the mass, Nor
hear the word of (3od. One mem now
preach at home for want of hearer.. No
one wuhs: Berthing et the bands of a
priest, or anything priestly.
To me Pius IX. is still and ever the Vicar
of Jesus Choat; the bead of the visible
church: the master, the teacher, infallible
mterpre'er of the rule of faith and practice.
The weaknbes, the ,Oohs even of the man,
cannot make me forget ,a him the high pre-
rogatives of ills Poatiff But cam thin pen
Me comprehend thre i Can the per pie nee to,
and abide by, thes.lheteingteal d'atreetnons I
Ahs! Te the minds of the people the heas-th.se rn
argnmu ar. now iorever
crimes and cruelties of the man are the takuen from us. Our mtnotry writ Ott -come
crimes and ereeluw of the priest; ibs welts sterile, and we shall be hooted and speedof the kind are the !sults of the P^pori: thd� where we arl� sot wetted
Md arn.sacred.
Ineemies of polities, lb. effects of toed". The Fritsch. in this frsckicndel war, have
Irises of religion. 1 left upon hist ry one of the bloody pager
My friends endeavor to conceal from me which humanity and taloa met expiate
what a aid and dome in this deprolarable through weirge
NV*. 4
mind itself. But cases enough have been
cited to prove these truths. And if We
do admit that the brain is the organ by '
which the m;nd acts, we must acknowledge
and give promise of possessing superior carefully, of exercising it with extredte
Caution, of not endangering iia delicateo
structure at any period of life by too much
labor, or preventing its full development by
too little; for the regular exercise of '411 the
orgaee of the brain is necessary to prepare,
them for the active and powerful manifesta-
tion of the mental faculties.
-The healthy condition and proper exer-
mental powers; but these premature beings
A000 become exhausted, their intellects re-
main stationary, and the hopes they eacited
won vanish."
The general propoait.on which 1 wish to
establish, is made evident, also, from the
fact that whatever excites the mind, excites
and stimulate,' the brain.
This we know from experience in a rise of the brain, are therefore far more am -
severe headach. We perceive the pain to portant then Many other organ of the body,
be increased by intense study or thinking, for we might as well expect goal digestion
and that mental application determines more with a diseased stomach, or good music
blood to the head. So true is it that from a broken instrument, as a good mind
mental ' excitement produce. an increased with
!low of blood to the Read, that aurgen;is ;developed brain And b
are very careful to preserve ah
quiet state , gard has been paid to these importaist truths,
of mind in those who.. head. are wounded. in the cultivation of the mind! While pee -
Sir Astley Cooper, speaking of such in ple are exceedingly fearful of enfeebling
juries, says, that if any mental power re- and destorying digestion, by exciting and
mains, all excitement of the brain should overtasktng the stomach, they'do not tap -
be avoided; and relates the following ease. pear to think they may enfee'le or derange
• disordered, enfeebled, or improperly
"A young gentleman was brought to me
from the north of Fogtand, who bad lost a
portion of his skull just above the eyebrow.
On examining this bead, i distinctly saw
the pulsations of tea brain. which were re-
gular and slow; but at this tune be was
agitated by some opposition to his wishes,
and directly the putwations of the brain
were increased, x44 beeeme more violent,
and more blood rushed to the brain. if
yet, ow at re -
the operauon of the mind by exciting the
brain, by tasking it when it is tender and
imperfectly developed, a it is in childhood.
From the New Tort Tribune.
ROME, SPIRITUAL AND TEMPORAL.
We have not chosen to consider, save in-
eideulally, the necessary effect of the late
•eeraton of the Roman Republic on the
therefore, you earn to keep the mind fb
rees and influence of the Catholic
from agitation, your other means will be
es.vailing ie injuries of the head." Church. That, certainly, u a topic of vain
The same author mentions another eimi- tmpertanea, but its discussion is not within
ease that of a coon wan who had an one .shore. R.Lgnon and Liberty aro es
larg ' eestially Itarmoetone; they are troth lode.
opening in hie ivkall from a wound, through 7 w for Gel wills and Man heeds their
clic brat y g peseesvation; yet they mar be temporarily
sevsyee a seeming hostility through herniae
imperfection and error, whereof the fruits
meat be calamitous. But let sone thence
richly emitted* that Clingiest Faith Of
Haman Liberty ie • sheat, or that tie see
Cot tete with the ether.
Tb. following letter by the celebrated
th
Faer Ventura, an 'velment Catholic Priest
of Rome, the solag.at of O'Co.uetl lied the
tried freed of Liberty, was translated byHerniae*Lr.. G. H. Herniae* for the last New York
£trn.gels•t
t. It le deeply Int.roing se ea-
hibit..g the infieener es
of rent erects at
Limo em the views and feeling. of the
Catbltasof ly. Reed zed poodsr.
which eoetd see an increased action in
n whenever an this om,rrel.1
oa
even In eonversatl, to agitate the mind of
the pat:est. ea
The foliowimg se is related by M.
Arouses's. M. Thavernier, a captain 10
(8. n`imest, forty-two years of
age, moderately stoat. bet well formed, re-
eelved in the middle of the Palais Royal. in
Mil, 1815, 'tatty Stye before he death, a
letter containing ked en •.. Whitt penn-
ing INbe remained ewtro; i -vs as if thunder•
striae*, and the left ride of ht. Ince became
yrrind.and drawn to the opposite ride.
as tate. to Val de Grace, and attend-
ed to. At this time he hod complete pari-
ty."'of the arm, thigh, and leg of 1he rtght
ode, tad was unable to speak. After nsing
timevarloes remedies fon more time two months,
be began to impraye, Ind became so mac+
better a to be able to stud op, sod to
speak, although with dimcuhy.
In this stats of improvement, M. Thayer -
neer reeeieed soother letter, said to be from
e wife! he milk. ad lertestty there se -
caned lose of speech, general Immobility of
ale►Ney or arwi'
ssaatn-r et news Tr -
e
tram C*THOLler...
It 1. with ?serial and bleeding heart tht
1 sow Waren you. Even u 1 writ. the
*Melt are bombarding Rome, deslfoyts
Ile tiossmetts, and raking its people with
retMot; brood -flows Treaty 00 every aide;
rube ere beeped ern rides, and Gal only
knows the issue of the lamentable conflict.
gess to Bolos& -or to Awesn, ar CI11116
Vecchia, where be would hare been verebWwd
as the mesieeger of heaven. There lis
would have rejected the deputation
sent by the city e1 Rome : thence he would
never have launched the excommunication
which has dri,en from the Constituents all
men of tarneroue conscience -all hie friends.
Counseled to provoke the armed interfereoc'b
of the powers, he would have answered :
"What is hitt indifferent in a Prince, ie
scandalous for a Pope. it shall never be
said thea Pious iX. made war upon his own
people. 1 will sever recover by force what
I can poorest. only ie love. I will never
convent that any one abed for me a drop of
the blood of my ehildrea. Exile, a thou-
sand times exile, and for life eveo, rather
than appe.l to the bayonet and cannon,
which, in subjecting my people to me, de-
prive
an. of their love, and repeal then
from the church mad religion." Oh, if Piss
IX. Rad bot held this language ! Had be
but thus addressed himself to the Roman
people, they would hate risen en mawe--
tbey would have sought out the Pontiff
-
they would have brought him back in
tnumph-cher would have been happy to
live under such a Prince. It wan the
surest, the most effective means of cre.ti5R
and eetabhehrng reaction. Bat this appeal
to war, the preeenee and the horrors of
combat, instead of producing reaction, have
enfeebled, disarmed, annthtlated it. Even
those who were formerly for the Pope, now
deem It jest and honorable to answer war
with war. They have repudiated Prue IX.
a. King, and begin ■ow to renounce him ae
Pontiff
It is probable that Rome will fall Baader
ihu attack of the French. How resist
France? It is possible that the Pope may
-enter Rome beanng a sword Meted of lbs
cross-arecedsd by soldiers, as if Rome
were Mseea, wad the Gapel the Korau.--
But he will ■ecer reign again over the
heart. of the Roman,. In this respect hie
rage in destroyed, 6ef.hed forever. lie
will be Poise but to a small number of the
faithful. The mining. majority will remain
in .east Pretestaat.. They will practice no
mein the Roman Catholic religion, so great
will be their barred of the priesthood. Our
preaching will be of no effect. It will be
impossible for us to mune the C•tbobe
Cboreh to be loved, or .well tolerated, !ay a
people who will have been *aorta to bate
and despise it in a chief rmpoeed upon chem
by force, and in a eleryy dependent upon
the chief. It will ha tmbo.anble for es to
persuade them that the Catholic relig,om w
the mother, the temrnetres., the guard's.
of the liberty of the people, and the guaran-
ty of their happiness. Time" best argn-
wale, those motet in 'ogee to day. threes
which are alone relished by the people -the
argnmeste of fen., by meas of w loch foe
V/ tears we made religion I triumph emote
w
the mnet rebellsominds s the hardest
• " The sweetmess rot by P.. IX. in Ins
iduldrve:"-a 'moue torture .pen rhe canoe
belles( rhe French, which were horns about thm
city is processor..
The news frees Unepry w On ewe --
.Another victory hes been gained under
Rein.
1