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Jaxuary 24 1846 THE NORTHERN STAR. « ^^^...
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foetrg*
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BEAUTIES OF BIRON. X-. XXVI. "THE Guova....
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BYKOX DEFESDED: Thanks, , vo your honest...
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SOXGS FOR THE PEOPLE. 1 xo. II. I TO Til...
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*ieinc&s»
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f "AbE'S l/'X-iCX 11KV1EW. London: C. E....
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HOW'S ILLUSTRATED BOOK OF BRITISH SO- N'...
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PICTORIAL I-ElNWy BALLAWST-1'Ani IV. PIC...
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THE LOSDOX ESTEHTAHSISG MAGAZINE. Vols. ...
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REES' IMPnoVED DIARY AND ALMANACK FOR IS...
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THE PATtttOT. Iluwbly inserikdlo the Vet...
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MR. COOPER AXD THE PROJECTED CHAIl-TlbT ...
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EnAnronn.—On Sunday nignt last some pers...
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MEETINGS IN BEHALF.OF THE C11AIUTST EXIL...
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Hktwood.—FnosT, Williams, and Joxks.—A p...
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MiiiiDEn c->* as Isfast.—An ii«im-st was...
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m mt&
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Um-uhlisiiko Luiij.«s or tiik Duiir- of ...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Jaxuary 24 1846 The Northern Star. « ^^^...
_Jaxuary 24 1846 THE NORTHERN STAR . « _^^^^^^ m _~^^*~~—~*~ ' _~~^^ m _' _^^^***^*^^*^^ m" _^ — ¦ ¦ i _¦¦ -- ' ¦ _-., , ___ - _^ , ¦ - ¦ ——— - _^^^^^ _WMt- __ - __ - __ - __ _--------* _MMIi-----fc _^^^**^^*^**^ ' ' l _^^^^^^^^ _M _^^ _WMW _* i _**«» - _« _- _-t _« _MM _« _''M _''» - _» - _««^ _i- _^^— , . . _
Foetrg*
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Beauties Of Biron. X-. Xxvi. "The Guova....
BEAUTIES OF BIRON . _X-. XXVI . "THE Guova . " _TTe pass over tlie main portion of tbis story , for flinch vv must refer the reader to tbe work " itself , _jnd if be -roaid know the rictiois to the Giaour s love s hale , be will do well to make tb . it reference . Tue story is thrillingly interesting from the commencement to the close . Tht nrstappearanceof tbe ft ' _tftW . _"* -a _scf 11 " ? the narrator of the tale , a Turkish . _i-ueraisn ; tte lovely picture of Leila , and t > dark = _i- ? rv of her death ; the enconnter of the
_pvals— -i . e : r temuc combat and death © t / _fass 3 n ; fhe _Je-vlatiun of Hassan ' s hall and domains ; lie _uni > r £ ea ; i « ns of the story-teller against tbe ' * _accursed _Gif-jnr : " these , with other _parssages abpundlP _£ wlih minute and beautiful descriptions , _laajaagc tiie mosi luxuriant , aud poetry of the highest _onlertiesc _poniojis of tbe poem must be read to rightly appreciate the extract we give below . As the confession of the I'i ' _tov . r on his death-bed give * a resume of tbe storv . we prefer extracting it . This portion ot " the poem has ats » thc merit of _containing some of the most """ earful and beautiful passages to be found in tbe worn .
THE COXfESSlOS . "Father _^ thy days hare p .-is .- * d in peace , "ilid ctmiited beads , aud _eouutlessyrajer ; To bid the -ins eif _olliers Cease , Thyself witbr-at a crime or care , Save transit nt ills that all must bear _. Has bceu thy lot from youth to ag ,. ; _^ yA _tlunJ wil t bless tliee from th * _rag » _yf jv v « we . < * _-tree * azid uncontroil'd , : _? - __ _cli a . * _*•'•? Ve _-nitriits unfold , "Whose sec . "*' t -bis and sorrows rest "V . ' ithin tby p _ . ' - * : _*« d inlying breast . My days , _tbt-iy :: i _ w . _baveyassed below " Ia muej of joy , but -mftr . of . Mr j Yet _stili ia hours of love or strife , 1 ' re scar « l the _nvarineas of life ' ,
_ _N _" ow leaj ; ' : ru with friends , now girt by faei , 1 loathed the languor of repose . Sow nothing left t _«» lore or hate , So more with hope or pride elate , I'd rather be the thing that crawls Most noxious o cr a dungeon - wails , Than pass my dull . _ m _*__ Tjing days , Condemn ' -- to meditate and gaze . Tct , lurk- a wish iritlrin my breast i ' or _ren—but not to feel ' tis rest . Soon * ball my fate that _wi-h fulfil ; Aud 1 sladl sleep without tbe dream Af whit I was . and would be _stili ,
DaTs a * to thee ray deeds may seem : My memory now is but the tomb Of jovs l , __> ag dead ; my hope , their doom Though better to have died with tbose Thau bear a _HiV of lingering noes . My spirit * _litt __ -k not to sustain The _£ a . ir « . ai » ij throes of ceaseless pain ; Sor so * -g bt th * self-accorded grave Of _anrirn _* - fool and moderu knave : Yet death I have not rear'd to meet ; And iu the _ , «_ U liad been sweet , Had _danger «» o'd me on to move The slav - of glory , not oi love . l '» - _brave-1 i : —notfor honoursboast ; 1 smile at laurels won or lost :
To _s _ cV . Vet o __«~ carve _tiie-c way , For _ _i- _* fc reno ¦ a , or hireliug pay : But place _azun before : ay eyes Aught that 1 deem a worthy prize ; Tiie maid I love , die man I hate , Aud I « _i-l aunt th- steps of fate , To save or slay , as these require , Through readme steel , and rolling fire : 5 or neeust thou doubt tlds speech _troa one WLo won ! A b = i do—wl . _ t lie _toth _ilcns . Heath ii but what tbe haughty brave _. The weak must bear , thc wretch must crave ; Thin let life go to Him who gave _: $ have not qu ail * J to danger * - brow _"flTii-n hig h and nappy—ne ed 1 » 3 » ? # * » *
- 'I loved her , Friar ! nay , adored—But these arc words that ail can u * e—I proved it more in deed than word ; There ' s blood _uj-on that dinted sword , A stair , _its steel can never lose ; 'Iwas _.. _ > - - _ for her . who died forme _. It war-i'd the heart of one _a-horr'd : Say , start not—r . o—nor bend thy Idee , > " or midst my sins such act record ; Thou wilt absoiv- me from the deed , for he " . vas liosale to thy creed ! The _vi-ry name of _ S ___ z _ _reue * H * as worm wo . d to his _Taynim _sp _' _eeo . _Ua-Taieful tool ! since hut for bi _a-ds "Wei ! wielded in some hardy hands ,
Aad wounds by Galileans given , The _iiwer _t j » a ~ s to Turkish heaven . F __ _. _r him his Hoiais still mi _ . hr wait _Inipsti . nt at the Proriirf _' s _i'ate . I loved her—love will find its way Through paths where wolves would fear to _jwy ; A-jwi if it dares cuough , ' t were hard If passion met not some reward—So _lnatt _. r how , or where , or why , I did not vainly Seek , nor sigh ; Yet so ___ _eXi : j . es , with remorse , in vain I wish _Ae had not loved again . Shi- died—I dare not tell thee how ; Bat lock— * t is mine * on my brow ! There riad of Cain the curse and crime , In ch __ r __ r _ti . rs unworn by time :
StiU , ere thou dost condemn me , pause ; Sot misie tlie act , though I the cause _. Yet did he hut what I nad * _-o _ e Had she been false t « more than on .: faithless to _hiu ) . hi- save tlie blow ; Hat tree to mr . I laid him low : Howe _' er _deserved her doom might be , Her treachery was trulli to me ; To me ib ? gswe ber heart , that all "Which tyranny can ne ' er enthral ; Aud I , & la «! too h » te to save ! Y « all 1 then could give I gave , * Twa * _soii-. _c _Teljcf , our ioe a . _? rave . His death sits lightly ; but her fate Has made me—what thou well may ' stbate . ** Tie * ' Confes-wn" will be continued in our next number _.
Bykox Defesded: Thanks, , Vo Your Honest...
BYKOX _DEFESDED : Thanks , , vo your honest pen , That truth and Uyron has _drft-ded _, And _si-M-ii " . ' the ait-- cf little men , Who with their praises malice blended . The well-paid _prints for sordid gain VviHd fain have _crush'd him with their thunder ; 1 were priests who forged tlie very chain T 3 ; at Eyron strove to read asunder . ¦ Wj . m _viill this v . arid have done with cast Ahd hu _*^ : ;> i _« _priests call " true relipon V Sever , while ihey are paid to rant , And mystify our _uiviital vision . I never cared for "holy" things—Those _cl- _ ribani 5 ou _fountain " Zioa ;" 1 _sig ' . i not ior a pa i r of wins ? , And yet 1 love the "Lord "—Lord Byron ! I loVd him in ai . - earlv Tears ,
"Whin _faiiitly was hi _> _praisss earoll'd , And now _wht-ii prtii _' _s- with many cares , I wander wilh tlie " l ' _i gr . m Harold . " V «\ L . _TTiBez . v ,
Soxgs For The People. 1 Xo. Ii. I To Til...
SOXGS FOR THE PEOPLE . 1 xo . II . I TO Till . MES OF _ESOLASD . I ST _3-X--CT _ilSiHE _SHZtL-I . ilea of England , wherefore plough E For tae Jor'is wlm lay ye low ? I V . 'iitJcforc * v _« _jk , with toil and care , g The ricu _rolws jour _tyrants wear ? \ 7 h * Ti _.-foTfc ie-. _*« l , - _- « nA t _ _-V-. i *_ : e , and save , I From the cra'ik _¦« tht grave , T ! : 0 » _-e _ttaspatefui drones _wi . o would £ Dr ; an your sweat—aay , drink your blood ! I _AVherefore , 3 ' ees of England , fir _-e % _ilaay a w \ a ; _-m , chain , and scourge , That _tiiose > r _;* - _'j ..-.-ss drones may spoil _tJ The forced jit-dace of your toil i
1- Have vc ieiaire . o-tufort _. calm , I _Shilttr , _fosd , _!<>* . v ' s _stutle la _* . v __ 1 % Or what i > it ye !; uy so dear , •| With vour paiu and with your fear ? I Th .- seed ye sow _another _reaps—? TU- wealth ye Imd another heeps—Ti ; t-nA _^ _-i _% t- » icare _anoth' -r wears—-5 Th .- _arais ye i > rze another bears . S _* _. jw _jeed , hut ; __ -t no tyrant reap—1 Find _iH-. 3 t 3-, bt nobiipoitor _hiaitj V . _' ea _^ e rolt . . < . let net the idle neara _F'Tse arm * , in \ our defence to bear .
*Ieinc&S»
_* _ieinc _& _s _»
F "Abe's L/'X-Icx 11kv1ew. London: C. E....
f _"AbE'S _l / _'X-iCX 11 KV 1 EW . London : C . E . j _Cbristhiii , _Wl » _jU'friai _* s- ___ u-eet , Fleet-street . I ( fcico _> n :, _OTH- ; c ] I TLe _Jai ; ii _^ . _* y _niiiiU- ; _ceuinencC- tbe third volume i « " l _^~ " _l- * - ~ * - " _- _* " / ' w ] . jc " n we ait- glad to learn has passed tn _ i ! i ; _. _ : ;_ i _ iiy" ih > j or . " : < : tl of intrcduction to I the public , " - _ iiU , " _ _« i > s tbe _5- * . _ditj > r , " for once a : | _sttieotyptd _f _l'iasn : is true and appiieable—we can 4 _coi-i-Ily iLank a ' _nawrovs public . * " The Editor
I adds : "Uu ;* _sitcii- !* , buwi-ver , lias only served to K vtiidir Uh _ni-:-re dt _* i i _* . i _ _s ¦ _¦ £ i . _ _-.- _ Hint ; it . * ffe y _^ jm ,. _lotions of i . y . . stii * . ii : * to -.. ur _fritiuis a Itcview atd ' . _g-Mag & ziji _^ _v-bii-b , ir < in ibe _sicrlijjg natwe of its _^ _-Outeuts , tt .- - . r _. _lv . _sUe _iiiioiuuitu-n it shall contain in ; ie * eiy ( li :. f . - t _;^ t-i _. i _<» f i . i _ i ;» ii _ Ki , u . vled » e , and the louuty oVhs rtc « i-. _; soi ] _s __> . - 3 ng events and Sterat" _* "c , sbaii _ii ' _te a _j-cnuaneut place in the library cf : _tbeseboiar , - . _lie-.. ]; ii . _! o : kr , ibe maii ofthe world , aswt _!_ a , ik- _aiM- !_ J _i-sikr /' lure _ ac a-veiai wul-written and interesting
F "Abe's L/'X-Icx 11kv1ew. London: C. E....
articles in this _UUJhC'er . The Editorco _iumences with a new lomanee , e _ _i ! it-P _< l " The Phases of Love " whieh opens with some just reflection- on the character and condition of woniM in oil _ present social itate . The story itself we desire to see more of before * _e further notice it . tThe " Lift of Liszt , the _celcbrgeu Piaimt and Composer , " is _interestimr . "ttcoing , Wedding , and _ilepenting" by tl * e authoress of "Leaves torn from a _Ifceord of Life " is one of her homely but truthful -torics whieh never , ? _n _v _¥ _? * _b _* wg impnaBUa on the raider . Our Political Pn » pectV * is , we thiuk , a aomewliat inflated article and not wb 0 ] jy to our taste . A number of " _renews" alsd "theatricalnotices" are conta _; n .. d in this inimber . The article which has l « _at _phased u _= is tliat entitled » 1 ' « m » and lier 1 oets I his article ha _* i afforded us great _plcassre ; _lromit w « iv « _tb < , _iilhwxns s _^ tetcii ol the life of tbe -Persian poet : —
_ABCI . KASIH _FIBD-SI Has born in the vilia-eof Slwdab , in the _dittrict of Tus , in _Kliorassan , about the year S 4 C . His father was a gardener , and woilicd , it is said , in the domains of the governor of Tus . II * aud his brother JIahsoud both * eem-tl to have worked as husbandmen ; but in consequence of tho _iusuits of au enemy , the hi £ li- * pitited port UI _* _3 . d his _lirotlicr to lenve tlie spot , and Seek nilotlier Uqw \ c elsewhere Mahsoml , _ho-nevrr , refused , _preferriti'jalifeofiit'r-secatiou and insult , with certain g ins , to one of uuc-rtauity and danger . _Eirduai , however , was no _waven-r ; his whole life U that of a stormy , iron-willed being , too proud iu the consciousness of gtniu * to bow to either the _dictates of matt or th * uUtvt *< K . & «{
fortune ; and he _foithnith departed trom Tus alone , to _cin-e out a fairer _d-.-stiuy hy himself , lie bent his steps towards ( . 'ii . i-. ni , where -Mahuivud held his court , and had _gath-. rcd round him all the _intvllect of the land . Here he formed aa _acquaiutanM with tbe three j , rtat posts ofthe day , Unsari , Usjudi and Furro-i , and was introduced hy them to the monarch , _wliogavcbiui a favouraWcreceplion . _Malmioud ' s great ambition was to leave a histoiyofall fhe legends of Persia , as a monument of his patronage of literature . Au old chronicle , called the _llastan Xanieli ( something similar to that mentioned ir . Esther vi . i . ) , had been lately discovered , and _Firdusi was appointed to make a series ot poems , embodyiug all the various legends of Persian history . lie was promised a magnificent reward ( a thousand gold pieces for every
thousand couplet *) , and for thirty years he laboured nt tbat great _worls . At length it was completed in G 9 , 000 ccHp ' ete , and thc poet _ssnt tbe copy to __ -hin « ud , and waited for a reply . But he waited in vain . He had had the ill fortune _tooflind _aiavourhs of the king , one Aiyah , who resolved on his ruin . He accordingly studiously represented to tbe king that his poetry was full ol tlie most dangerous heresies , aad that the poet bad endeavoured to set the religion oi Zoroaster above that of Mahomet . Mahi-ioud _, alas ! was too ready to _hclievi ' , and tlie poor post was left to wait in vain . After some mouths of a , _ si «_ . s expectation , ne sent an epigram , in which he compares the Sultan ' s liberality to a sea without a shore _, •' aud what though I have dived in it and fouud no pearls ! It is thu fault ofiuv nature , not o f the sea . "
hut , as Sir W . Jon . s says , " where an epic poem had failed , how cauld au epigram succeed f The maliguity ofAiyah had poisoned the royal wind , and ilahmoud resolved to add insult to neglect , aud he sent tlie poet SO . OOO din-liems instead of pieces of gold . Firdu-i was iu tee bath at tb « time that the present arrived , and his p .-oud soul lircd at thciudignity . He immediately dis-V- ibuted the money among the attendants , and exclaimed in tha bitterness afliis heart , "tbe Sultan shall learn tliat I did not spend my thirty years to be paid in dirrhems . " Hi . ; iiold words wero repeated ( doubtless with exaggerations ) to the monarch , who ordered him , with true Oriental despotism , to be trampled to death by au elephant . Firdusi . however , after many solicitations , obtained a _remission of this cruel sentence , and then returned tohis liouse , and wrote the bitterest satire that aver injured genius _detised , aud sent it to one of the Courtiers , telling him to give it to the Sultan whenever pulil _' e _bsuiiu-s- sliould disturb him jnore tliau usual . 111
_tbemeainvbllel'efltdfroui Ghazni , and took refuge m Hazindaran . Hut lis soon had to fly elsewhere , as Mali- jnoud _' . vengeance tracked him . and he sought slu-lter j _atXUgdad . There the Caliph , Kader Uillali , received bim with hospitality , till a stei u message from tlw Su ' . _taa coaipelled _hiiti to db-miss the fugitive fromiiis court , aud send liim again an «_ i ! e on the earth . He was considerably more than seventy years old when he was again driven from his hiding place . It is not known whither , after this , he bent his steps ; « hen Imtory next sees him hci « li-. ing iiiw _ ijuaud _olscnrity at his native place Hi « = uu , indeed , went down in darkness . Voverty _, old age , and the insults of _friends and fortune , envrleped his _decUning years in sorrow and Mtterncss . There he died , aad one feels glad _> o learn that when _ _la ! _-moud , in tardy justice and _remm ye on hea _. ing ofhis death , sent the longpromised fiO _. OGO pieces of gold to his _fami'v , his _daughter , will : the true spirit of her father , refused the gift , e _ - c ! aH 5 _* . in _*_ :, ""What bave 1 to do now with the wealth of _kingsf '
How's Illustrated Book Of British So- N'...
HOW'S ILLUSTRATED BOOK OF BRITISH SO- _N'G . Loudon : J . How , 209 , Piccadilly . Vs . have received the concluding numbere o _» " _tbia truly national work , which we bave _beloretime _spi'ken of iu terms of ihe h ; _ghc-t commendation . Thi » e numbers , 25 , 20 , 27 , 2 a , 29 , and 30 , contain the whole uf Lcck ' s beautiful music in Macbeth ; the popular " 1 _' _i-ay Goody , " from tlie burletta of Midas ; and the woild-wide famous * ' Rule Bi : ita > xia . " As the authorship of tbis national anthem is not _generally known , we may be permitted to state that the
poetry is ¦ _supj . _dS-d to have been the work of _Ynonsos , the _auth-. r of " The Seasons . " Its _ovigiual appearance was in a _masque entitled Alfred , first performed on thc 1 st of August , 174 *' , in ths garden of Cliefdeii , Berks , in honour of the birth-day of the Princess of Brunswick , and in commemoration of the aecessioii of George 1 . This masque was the joint production of _Tnc-Msos . the ] oet , and _Davui Mallet ; of these two , however , to Tuomsox is Jissirued tbe honour of tbe authorship of ** ltule Britannia . " For tbe music of this famous song tbe £ n » l » h people are indebted to the celebrated composer Dr . Arse .
Wc cannot take leave of this Uuly splendid work wiiboat offering mr humble tribute of thanks both to the enterprising publisher and to the talented and highly accomplished editor ( _Geoiioe Hogarth , Esq . ) , tor this their noble attempt to rescue from obscurity , if not oblivion , the _treasures of our national melody . l > ritUb \« calni \ isi-, _ii 5 Mr . _UooiEiHreiuarks , _''isrieb in the lushest beauties of the art , rich in melody , rich in explosion , rich in the poetry to wliich it is united . It is the fitting language of every variety of passion and sentiment . l > y turns sublime , vigorous , tender , and gay ; it is alwayssimple , natural , and unaffected . Onr most cherished music is ' married to imiuurtal verse ; and at lhe social board , or in the family circle , where tbe character of a nation ' s music is best _ui . _iieiitood and seen , it is the strain wherein dwells
' Thai _majjc _symp . _t . _-hy of sense with sound _YTlm-li picture- all it sings , * ar . d is followed by that heartfelt , yet silent admiration , which is m < -st dear to the poet and composer . " This wi-ik is but a selection from the gems of British melody , bat in tbat se ' _iction is coniaiimd _g .-rae of the mo .-t Wautiful compositions in the cation ' s _language and music . We trust that the success of tins volume will lie snell as to warrant at no distant day the publication of a work on a still _larger scale , based on the same principle , and with the same « 1 ject in view as this . Let us add , to be aUo conducted by the same able-qualified editor .
The biographical notices ol " eminent _compoi-ers and dramatic authors contained iu this work , and the beauty of its _Hlustratii . ns , add greatly to its worth . Lastly , its exceeding cbcaj . ne . s-, placing it within the reach of all , makes Iku s Iijoh of British Sony-a book for the people , to whom we beartiiy retonimenu it .
Pictorial I-Elnwy Ballawst-1'Ani Iv. Pic...
PICTORIAL _I-ElNWy BALLAWST-1 ' _Ani IV . PICTORIAL PEN . NY SHAKSPE . IlK—Paki IV . London : J . C . Moore , 12 , AVellingtou-stieet _Kortb , Strand . The part i * f * . rc us , ot the " Pictorial Balladist " contain-., first , ihe deal- , _delightful , diverting _nwrative of "John Gilpin , " v . rhtcn by tbe Feet L ' owpei .. The story oil wbicb Vise ballad is founded , _wasroau-d to _Cowrsu by Lady Acstes , who had heard it in her childhood , and made so vivid an _imprc-sion upon the pert , that the nest morning he told her the ludicrous incident had kept hira awake with laughter during the night , aud that iie hud converted it iut <> a ballad . It iirsi- appeared auunymcus ' y , in the i ' vblic _Advirti * er , in 17 r 2 . It was lirst published , as _Cownn ' s avc-wed lirouucti n , iu ti . e second volume of bis
PC-cms . . _Second , Um paii CDut .-un-s lhe Lnstowe "Tradgcilic ; or the Death of Sir i . 'harles Bav . itiu , " written by the " marveJlous b :: y , " 1 _' _uomas _Ciiat-Tfci .-n .. v , whv died _)< y _iiis own hand , a victim to the world ' s cracky , iu 1770 , acid seventeen years , nine math .-, and some days . Thi-. - is one of the poems which Chats _ im . x _wie io the world under tbe pretence of having been written b y KoWLET , the " _parisii _pu-ote . " This ballad is most pathetic and beautiful . ' Tie Fea .-. t of All Deuiles , " and " 'i'i _ie Child of Ei _ e . " _.-u e ais _; . * contained jn this part . Part IV . of the " Pictorial _Shakspeare" contains tits ' coni-lusiva 'A the " Comedy ofLrror . _s , " ami four acts of " Much ado _alxrnt _iNOihi ; _.... " The ' * Balladist , "
as we have ' . < _;< . _!>_ said , is a _u-. * .: st praiseworthy _wotk —well woii ' _.-y the public ' s _suj-jtort . In the jii _* esei ; t day , when . _* _-.- > _saaaj _exa-i-eut edi _: ion 3 of the works cf Si ! AK _ : i r .. _- . ; U _ are in existence , it may seem unfair to moittiiitud any _particuhr edition ; but this wc may say , thai _Ahioi-s ' _ij . rmiy edition is i . ne thai the piM . ire .-i can _t . _il ' onl to _jiurciiiise , and has , therefore , claims ujon tiie _working ; _chases , of whom large i !_ a !> sts are _uu-icquaiulcd wiih thc _subiime works of ihe _tver . t « l : _* . * _unatirt _, because their pecuniary means wili not allow them to purchaie the more _expeiis ' _ivc cuhions . To all classes wc recommend both the " Shakspeare" and the " Baliadisr , " part _cuiaily to the working class . Every Englishman should _possess _tbtae two excellent works .
The Losdox Estehtahsisg Magazine. Vols. ...
THE _LOSDOX ESTEHTAHSISG MAGAZINE . Vols . 11 . and 111 . Londou : B . D . _Cousiiis , IH , Dukc- * : treet , Lincoln ' s-in-P * ich ! s . - _, These two volumes corajdeie tbis remarkably cheap and entertaining publication . The second volume : contains tbe finishing portion of _Euoexe Sue ' s famous work , Matilda ( _cyixinienced in , and _occupying j
The Losdox Estehtahsisg Magazine. Vols. ...
a large portion of vol . i . ) _,, with _h _vastianety of other novels , talcs , lomanoes < fcc . _AmO- _- _* the novels and tales contained in the third _rohrtfle _, tllere 5 s a 11 ex _" cellcnt translation of that thriHin _* rv ' ' " ' , Regent ' s _Bauyhkr , " front the French of tv . - _Crated ALr . x . v . _N-niiB DtxiAS . The _Yi : htines arc ' _^ _"' _•^ ilully printed , elegantly bouiul , and published at ft . ' ' MU >' Bi-hinsJy _hiw price . They eonUiiii an almost i .. '" x 7 haustib . e fund of entertainment , and must _commax * _*' _- a hii ' -e circulation . '¦
Rees' Impnoved Diary And Almanack For Is...
REES' IMPnoVED DIARY AND _ALMANACK FOR ISiG . Llandovery : \ l . Rees . We owe an apology to Hie publisher of this A . _m-v nack . fornot belore this time noticing his excellent sixpein _. _yworth of information . Air . _IIeks' Diary and AluMiiack has , we nudcratand , been published _aunttall y i or the last fifteen years , and judgimr by the specimen _befoe ns , wis tbVnk there can be no doubt that the proprietor wili find it profitable to continue its publication for even a still longer period as regards lhe future . Amidst the great variety of almanacks now published every year , it is somewhat
difficult to assign superiority to any one of so many able coiupct . tors , but we may safely say that tins little annual will War comparison Willi lllC bl _' -t ot its riv _* i ! . __ . The mass oi jittbrnwtiou contained in this work is well selected , and , we think , leaves _nothing wanting necessary iu such a publication ; besides whieh , it possesses certain distinctive featuics ofa _veiy usefdl character . The Diary portion Is well _an-angi-d , each day in the year having a blank space . - . Hotted to it for the insertion of ommences , remarks , tte . This Diary and Almanack reallv does credit to thc Welsh press . It i < one of the bust aud cheapest works of the kind nublishcd .
The Pattttot. Iluwbly Inserikdlo The Vet...
THE _PATtttOT . Iluwbly inserikdlo the Veteran Batrtoi Fund Committee , by their mv . ch ottiged brother _UAonte f . Allks _DAV-aroitT . The patriot . , ' tis a glorious name , Th « pride of nations _aod the pet of fame ! What _dos . i he not deserve , who , ' midst the storm , Sum Js f » r « nwst in the hauls of Reform ? And *> lio , _witiipriuciplds of freedom r . U , To free his country- nobly risks hia life . Such was young Emmett , though incautious , bold , Whose free-bora spirit ieorned to be cuiKrol . ' ed By the proud _tyriuiti of UU _ . » _tiv- land , 'Gainst _wlu-m he bravely raised his during band !
Aad when coiidemnad to die a traitor ' * detth _,-Hurled back tbe sentence with his _lat-st breath , _Ujion the _hireliui ; judge who tried his c « use , Aud _gained a verdict by distorted laws : By witnesses suborned , in _an-eai-in _^ bold , _Ani juries labelled , "To be l _ t oa sold !" Sneh L _' aine , whose birthday now is drawing near , A name to every friand o . iVeedom dear . His graphic pen defined ibe Uigiits of Mas , And liberty hur _ylmioui march _bewail : Before whose liglil Kuropeuu _tyr * nts lied ! It dashed through Prance , and struck a monarch dead ; And had JVapoieou had the soul of l ' aine , Xot one crowned head would now in Europe reign t _ Sor must we _jiass by Williams ,. ) ones , and . Frost ,
And other } ia not * a numerous host ; l _' erhnp * evrr banished from the British shore _. And doomed to sue tlie r native laud no more . ' Condemned to labour and to groan iu chains , Iu peuul M __ _-ttlem « uts where torture reigns ! Aud tliere are others still tbat I _ e . nl- name , IVhose virtuous lives are not _utiknowu to fame , Whene ' er their country shall tlieir aid require , _IV-uM march witli arms of steel rod souls of lire , To wrench : ivrny the chains that bind tlie slave , Or nobly fall , aud fill a patriot ' s grave ! Then let such spirits wheresoever J ' uiind , _VTi-. « tker uu English ot on Irish ground , - Se _cherished and sustained , tVr they are _gCma , -lore briiiiaut than all kingl y _dm-ems ' ,
Mr. Cooper Axd The Projected Chail-Tlbt ...
MR . COOPER AXD THE PROJECTED CHAIl-TlbT _SU-NG ANl > _llYMN-UOOli . TO THE EOlTOn OF TUK XOItTHl . RX STAR . Sin , —Mr . Jobs _^ Matthias says 1 hare " surprised and _grieved" him , " asa Chartist . " lean only say that I wiil never grieve any Chartist willirgly . 1 give i'p the project which 1 had formed , and purposed to carry out , solely for tbe good of others , and at tlic risk of pecuniary loss , together with expenditure of valuable time . I iuai ; e no comments on Mr . Matthias ' s charge of "despotism , " further than to say tbat Lam re *< lved to bear insult from working nun , but will never insult them in return . 1 beseech Mr . M ., since he claims to be considered " a man ol thought , " to think a little farther , when , 1 humbly opine , he will see the dift .. reiice between one man arrogating to himself the right to " legitime for ail , " and a j ; oor rhymer _oiibring to select from the contributions of bis brother rhymers pieces proper to form
a volume . 1 beg to return most respectful acknowledgments to all who have forwarded to me copies of _versu * , and i cannot omit expressing regret that sueh poetry as that whieh bas been sent jnc by _Alb'ii _Davenportand Thomas Raynor Smart , —( veteran patriots who have passed their seventieth year ) , together with tlie ono splendid song furnished b y the patriotic Irishman , M'Kowen , of Lembeg , —should not be , at once , given to the world . Under the circumstances of objection , however , I positively decline the project altogether . 1 can certainly spend my time ' much more beneficially , in a pecuniary and personal _sem-e—though 1 could cheerfully have undertaken tlie labour requisite for getting out a volume which 1 , and hundreds more , thiuk is much wanted . I am , Sir , yours respectfully , Thomas _CooI'Ek .
Enanronn.—On Sunday Nignt Last Some Pers...
_EnAnronn . —On Sunday nignt last some person or persons broke iuto the Chartist Council Room , and broke open the box , and destroyed thc ininutc-book , the cash-book , andregister-book . Some " _dialogues , " and six collecting hooka of the Veterans' and Exiles ' funds were also destroyed . A quire of paper and some old newspapers , ami various other artu _ l __ . shared the same late . There was no money fur the rascals to get , _though that , no doubt , Vfas their object . Melancholy Death from Fuse . —It is our painful duty to record tbe death of Miss Augusta Jane Drewf , of Woodlands , Kilton , near Bristol , who ivas found burnt to death in her dressing-room on Tuesday morning week . An inquest was held on the body of the deceased lady , by W . _Moinkton , Esq .,
deputy coroner , when the following facts were asc « rtained . It appears that the unfurtuuate lad y on the night iu question slept with her little nephew , Master J . F . Luttrell , who deposed as follows : — " 1 was awnke about six o ' clock on Tuesday h y a noise , and missing my aunt , got out of bed and went to the adjoining dressing-room , which I found full of smoke , and where 1 also found decease * .: burnt to death , lying ou her back near tbe dressing-table ; tlie Hour and washing-stand were very _miii-h burn ,. / ' It is supposed dcc-a _^ ed had occasion to go into her divsjing-roi'in with a li ghted candle , and 1 V 11 down in a Ik , ut the same time igniting her dressing-gown . Vciaict , Accidental Death . The deceased lady was sister-in-law to Colonel Luttrell , of Kilve-court . IIcr loss will lie severely felt and lamented by thc whole neighbourhood .
Death from the _Iscautiois Use of Lamas cm . — On Monday forenoon an inquiry took place before Mr . Carter , at the Black Do- ; , \'; mxhall-waik , Lambeth , respecting the deatli of a female child , aged two months , thc il ' egi irnate offspring of Kiiitua Kent , residing at No . 44 , _Walcot-square , Lamb-Inroad , who died from thv eft ' ects of pws'm . Mary Ann Lloyd , of No . 51 , Wickhamsticct , Vauxhall , deposed thatthe _daecased was born at the residence of Mrs . Manual , a nurse , living in the samo street , who had the care of several children . On the evening of Sunday , the lltli inst ., witne .-s was _calh-tl to seethe deceased , _whuni she found iu a dying state . Mrs . _Mamml said lliat _* -hc had aiven it admit three drops ol" luv . dfUium to compose it . "V / _iliirs--
remonstrated with her as to the impropriety ol using such _daticeious medicine , but she said _sheli-id been in the habit of viving it to Iter own children when they were ivstlcs . The deceased expired at eleven o ' clock the same night . Witness had several times seen Mrs . Manual ailniinister tho laudauuin to the deceased when it was unwell . The coroner remarked on the danger of using such improper medicine for childreii , and lie _trttited that it _ti - . _- . _- _' . l act as a waming to _oihcrs fur lhe future . Tlie jury returned a verdict , " That the deceased died from tlie effects ot laudanum administered inadvertently b y its nurse ;" and stvosiiiy reprimanded Mrs . Manna ) for . _idministering such dangerous medicine , of the poisoimus effects of _nJiicit she appeared to be total ! . - ignorant .
_ " _ISunTiu : ] : _, _Hiiothkii , wk auk hoth ix the _Wkoso . "—Tlie Courier de / .. _Muscllc relates , as authentic , thc following anecdote , which circulates throughout Rhenish Germany . The King of Prussia andthe K ing of Havana took occasion t . fgivc each other mutual advice . The former , who all ' ccts a certain superiority over Louis Charles , coimnenml by saying , with an affected air of good nature : —Come " , my dear brother , make no move verses ; either they are uot lead , or they arc laughed at wheu theyare looked at by chance . " Tlie port-king of Havana , whose vanity was stung i » ilie quick by this _konie- * thrust , quickly retorted : — " Sire , your piece of good advice demands another : awl tus wehave each our monomania , 1 » _-i ! _ls-iy to you inmy turn , —make no more constitutional speeches or promises lo grant a constitution , for nobody believes you . " One is in the right , ami the other is not in the wrong !
Extensive Pius i . _v 0 xKHin-sTiii . ET . ~ -0 n Sunday morning . -ii extensive fire broke cut in the shop of Jlr . Wilson , straw bonnet manufacturer , Oxi _onlsireel , near _MaiyJeboiie-laiic . hiti . iin . it . uu wus soon forwarded to the several bri gade stations , and only a few minutes elapsed before four engines , wish a sir Jug body ofthe London establishment , were present . Tbe engines wercably worked , ami _ihen- was no want of water , but before tiie firemen hud obtained their objeet the entire stock of the shop was destroyed . Mr . Wilson is insured .
Meetings In Behalf.Of The C11aiutst Exil...
MEETINGS IN BEHALF . OF THE C _11 AIUTST EXILES . ' _ilBKTISO AT CABLISI . B . , A public meeting of tlie _wording classes , for tlie : above-muned object , convened bv placard , was held on _WednasJny evening week , in tho To _. vn Ilall . About a quarter past ei ght thc _prcceedincs were commenced b y i ., Mi * . Richardson taking the chair , who said they j hat ) - ' ccn -al' -tl together that evening to discharge a _, most iiii ,. ' _yi'tonf duty , to petition Parliament for the [ _restoration of John 1 * rust , _Zephaniah Williams * , Wil-; _jjjv , _* ii J onus , bud William Eilis . Many persons prc-SCiU , might not know the particulars how they ciune to in ' - 'hide a fourth man in the petition ; he would slg { _4 » „ it to them briefly . Eilis was a young man , a potter * a " ativc _° _* Staffordshire ; he hud ' entered
vcrv eaii " ltt "' c Ult 0 P olmcs > iUut ' * -tooirpvominuntlv Ion _* * ou s ? ? _' _" m' occasions , in aiiv ,. eating thc r _*«* lrt » « ma su _^' ei'i ' e _ftl'ow men , in a innnnei not to the Ui . ' ••»!? ot s ? vera ! _l-evs ? "s " , ' liis - _hb-iurliootl con _"" - '• l _'"? ' _" . _' _* ' a tra "ad been set to ensnare him , L _'•« , Wils i _}^ _^ . at ' _**™* fov arson , and the tri . ' _' . ul' V 11 d "f _tytoriny , _*** iu kw favour , _wlicnhispe . isectiU « -, . 'lai _* ing Sumhty sought out one witness , by wlllJS , L' 8 _* 111 * j le _ev _« _Il _- _» _'C' _- he was convicted , and _senfiB . m ? tu . be transported ; and ! or what ? Why , '' lb * b . "rig mnocent , as hud teen clearly proved since _Eifh . ! ra » bcen _spt . ibroml . Ilia innocence had even been' \ _™™™&< _d hy the verj parties who then _evMe , | C _*' ' _" " dth _? i _* e , ' > 10
gaver _, ; y . [ iropcrly considered that h « _^ " > e included in then * petition . lie wwiW » o _* ilciiun them longer , but would conclude bv _mtii A - tho bl 11 caIl L _" ¦ meeting . He might as well A ate t ])! it > _, 0 I j _»»••* - ' »? evening last , a very large _neeS & _¦«««? held , . _I' _- point a deputation to wait on P . u - _\^ _' _» ta , lisq ., MP ., to ascertain whether he- ft 0 l , 1 { 1 s « P ° rt _" ° prayer of tlie petition , and _itiiuVrtffJ-* ' t 0 r _"* » ; Parliament . Mr . Howard had tea , " c ff _/ t 0 """ - " Restoration Committee" the _followin , ' leltcl ' ~ Corby _Caatie , Carlisle , 14 th i _* M u :, ri ' ' f . Sib , —I am sorry tobe unable to attend . _™ _" ' ,, Wlmb you inform nie is to take place at tbe , ' _* _*"'
_CfivVwW , tins _evewmg . . The _circutustaticc of tlio Royal clemency hull ° exiended to those _implicated iu the Canadian . " " ' _rcctioii , would uiipear to be a precedent and si pl-f * 01 mercy . 1 remain , your obedient servant , rum p H . _HowAan . Mr . J . B . _liansfiTi then came _for-A'jiri ! to move thefirst resolution . He sai _; l he well recollected the Inst occasion thev had met in _tiat hall for a similar purpose : party _animesities thei ? ran hi gh ,-tlie working , and middle , and upper classes were at daggers drawn . The motion brought forward by their champion , 'i homas Slingsby Duncombe , fov tlic re- call of these men from their" incarceration , was lust in the liouse of _Commsns by the cawing
vote of the Speaker , Charles Shaw Lefevre , who never had n drop of tbe milk of human ki * . th _ e !) . < in his bosnin . They owed their defeat on tliat occasion to that greatest of all political humbugs , Daniel O'Connell , who bad promised to be at bis post and vote for their motion , but he had betrayed them . Since that period a great change had taken p lace in tlic public mind , * there was no longer the same estrangement of feeling between the working and otlier classes—a brighter dawn had shone forth among them , and he thought they could not have a better opportunity than the present for demanding the- restoration of their _expatriated fellow countrymen , —men who had been iUcg- ' -Uy convicted , as he could prove from one of the highest
authorities of the day—Lord Brougham , who had declared in the House of Lords , on the 3 rd of February , 1840 , that these men hail been illegally sent out of the country . Then , on what grounds , he would ask , should these patriots not be nstored t _<^ their homes and tlic bosoms of their families ? Tbe Canadian insurgents hud been pardoned , whose crime was much more iiiiqiiit _« _. iis than that of Frost , Williams , anil Jones . Tim crime of the Canadians , as openly professed by their leaders , was to shake oft tbe yoke vf the government of the mother country am ' , establish a government of their own , in accordamc with that of the United States : this was openly proclaimed b y Papiueau and Lyon Mackenzie . Not so John Frost and his exiled brethren . Tlieysou _ j . it
to give move constitutional liberty to then * oppressed fellow-countrymen . It was , then , their bounden duty to endeavour to effect their recall ; ami if they remained , he should " consider it io be the fault of the people of this country , ami not tlie government , as lie was oue of those who believed all power proceeded from the people . _IJ-id they not , in the events that were passing , seen the effects of public opinion ? Win * , it had broken up one government , and in twenty-four hours displaced another . The present , lie said , was a favourable opportunity for them . There was not such a deadly feeling in thc Tories against the working classes as win experienced in the Whigs . As a proof of thi * , he need only refer them to the conduct of the two parties in ' 39 and ' 42 . The IV'bigs bail sent these men out of the countrv , ami
imprisoned most of _thaiv leaders , iu' 8 ' 3 . In ' 42 , the luries _, after a mysterious outbreak , caused by none knew whom , — . onus attributed it to the Chartists , others to the Anti-Corn Law League—59 were prosecuted , yet not one was sent to prison . Tliis showed » different feeling ou the _jvAvto . ' the Tories , tothe working classes , than was exhibited by tho Whigs . lie was sure tiie Queen had more of the milk of human kindness in her bosom than that cunning monarch , Louis Phili ppe , who had on more than one occasion granted a general amnesty to ail political offenders * , and if left to her he doubted not the result , as they were all aware that the brightest gem of the Briti _.-Ji crown was mevey . in the course of Mr . Hanson ' s address he read an extract ot a letter lately received from Mr . Frost , in which he entertained great hopes of _seeiHg old England again , and that at no distant period . lie concluded by moviug the following
_resolution- : — That tin ' s _meeting ' s of op inion that it is a duty wbicb tliey arc called upoii to _diacliarge _, to petitiou _Parlianuiut to _HR-mori : iIiso lier Majesty to _piirtlon Messrs . Frost , Williams , J ones , ami Ellis ; and that tlit-y fee ! thtmselvfs more _espt-ciiill y bound to _taKC this Step , inasmuch _HS 111 ' ) Majesty has been graciously pleased to extend her Royal clemeney to those jicrsons _concerned in the Canadian out break , this uieetiii ); _, therefore , fondly anticipates Hint her Majesty will be pleased to grant a similar act ol ' mercy lo tlie above-named individuals .
Mr . John Gilberfson seconded tbe resolution , if being thc only legitimate way of making ti ) em > e ) ves heard before tile Legislature , lie knew that petitions from the working classes hail very little weig ht in Parliament , because the members of tke house , not being sent by tlicm , had little interest in their deliiumls . Had Frost and his brethren in exile belonged to any other party than that of the [ _iconic , he felt _coiiviiiciVi they would never huvu been sent out of tliis country , lint if tlieir crime . -, were as great as their persecutors thought tbein to be , _stireiy tliey liad , by their inc _i-. _rcerati- ' . n , atoned for tl . em . __ The _present he considered a most lining opportunity for the accomplishment of their _oi-joct , as thoy were all aware a . cucral election was at hami , ami members sometimes granted to expediency what they denied to justice , lie had great pleasure in seconding the resolution .
Mr . John Armstrong moved the adoption ol the petition , lie was glad a butter state of things was _appearing among them—by tiic uniting generally of the middle and working classes . Frost , and his expatriated companions , wis .. ed not to change the constitution , ns inthe case of tlic Canadian patriots , but to overthrow the yoke that binds iho working classes , John _Frost was a truly patriotic character . In coming forward as i . e did , be sacrificed his own interest , as lie might bc suid to e _.-joy eveiy comfort that could bc desired . Philanthropy alone i ' or his i _' ellowcountrvmeu had induced him to take part in their
movement , llew . i . soue of the v . _wst cautious men who sat in the People ' s Convention , which evinced to them tbat thc most cautious might err . If tlie mode ihey adopted to eflect their object was wrong , as he thought itwas , they hud siiiiicieiitly atoned for it . lie had great p leasure in moving the adoption of the following petition , ami as it would be sent round for signatures , lie hoped all _parties would unite and sign it , as it would bc a further omen of the better feeling that was evincing itself among the middle and working classes , and lend greatly to cement the bond of fi _ibiulshi p of the two classes , lie then read the following petition : —
To tke / mioiic « l'k the Cow-no ; :, o . r _Hre-tt Britain and lcd' . ntd in jf ' _urliuwfiil assembled . Tbe petition ol' the inhabitants of thc borough of Carlisle and its snviroiis , iu puiiiic meeting _ isM .-ml . led , Slioweth—That yinir pelbiuii' _-rs , availing themselves of ill- peaceful and _rou .-ntuiiomd ri _*;) i _> , the _ilisiiu _. tive piivilege of every cump . irat . vcly free state—thu right of peliiion ' mg—lift the voice of sympathy in behalf of four of their expatriated _coima-tut tt . J , That your petiti . _iiifi-s , emboldened Toy the act of Koyal mercy exhibited in the liberation of tiie _mi- _; iiitle , l l > . n » - dian insurgents , o _.-tnusil y ; ray that a . similar act of
mescy be _ext-. _iuk-d to , I „ h : i Frost , Zephaniah « _illiainn _, William Joins , vmi William Kllis , by re toring tliem to the land of their birth aad the bosom of their families . That , while your petitioners deeply _deplore lhe e . ustenee of the exeiVm ; , ' eausvs which led io tlie e \ p . ilriation Ol the ohjeets uf ii eir itituwe-s ' wu , they _apitvoacli i * . »> . y _.-uir _hoimiu-.-ibi- bouse hi the spirit of imp _.-riuiisiiess they _arraign not thejii-. _tie-j of oilVnded law ; hut they rest iu tlie full consciousness that , should tlieir prayer be responded i « , the most _jirateftil feelings iioilld _l-eaviakened in tbe bosoms ot" the happy recipients ofthe lloyal elc meney , which would be .-bared in and long cherished hy their 8 Viiip » tl < isi"gcoiiMryim . n .
Your petitioners , therefore , pray tbat yonr honourable Ilouse will implore her Majesty to he graciously pleased to liberal- Use above-named individual- ! . Andyour petitioner : ' , :: s in du : _\ bound , will ever pray . Mr . John . Mooney cconded the adoption of tho petition . Ali * . Kobcrt Graham then moved tlic following _resolution : — That tin petition just _adapted , lie entrusted to 1 * . II . Howard , li-ip , M . P ., ibrprc-intntion ; and that his eolle-S __ e , W . Marshall , _Ksij _., M . P . aud thewholeot ' ouveouniy
Meetings In Behalf.Of The C11aiutst Exil...
members , bs requested to support Thomas S . Buncombe , K » ., M . P ., in his motion fer the restoration of John i ' rost , Zephaniah Williams , William Jones , and William Elli . _5 . Mr . John Lowry seconded it , and it wns adopted . A vote of tlniiiks to the . Mayor , for granting the use of tiic Town-hall , was carried by acclamation , _* and _alsonvoteol ' thanks to the chairman , after which the meeting broke up , about ten o clock .
MKETINO AT _SHKl-FIKM _) . A respectable and enthusiastic meeting was held in the large room , Fig Tree-lane , on Tuesday evening , Jaw . 13 th , to petition Parliament for the restoration , ol Lrost , William .. , Junes , and Ellis . The speaking was excellent and very impressive . The petition has already received S _. oOO . signatures , ami we arc m hopes of realising in tho whole 15 , 000 . lhe women are going tothe _shopkeepers with money in one hand ami the petition in the other . One woman has already brought in two sheets containing 400 signatures .
DAI 1 LI . N 0 T 0 . V . It is with _feelings of _iJcasiii-e I announce to you . shut nfter rending the letter of that patriot and exile , John Frost , in tin * Northern Star , itwas immediately resolved by a few 'Chartists , to get up a petition to the _Ilous _. of Commons , in accordance with tlio advice given by the Executive . As there is no society in tlic town , a few of the right sort set to work iu right good earnest in getting petition sheets , ami canvassing the town for signatures , and I am happy to inform you that wc are succeeding well . It _sewns to be almost a prevalent opinion here that they arc injured men , and ought to be immediately restored to the bosoms of their loving wives and families .
_UAllNSLKY . A public meeting , ca . Jed by placard , has this week been holden in the Odd Fellows' Hall , Darnsloy , when a petition and memorial for Frost , Williams , and JoiU' 3 were unanimously adopted . Mr . Frank Aiirlield vf as ' in th . chair . A . letter was read from air . Gully , late M . P . tor Pontcfract , stilting his regret at the unfortunate situation of the exiles , who , he said , were transported contrary to the laws of England . Tho meeting was very ably addressed by Messrs . Gill , Arkniomivright , Vailance , Stacey , and others . The petition was ordered to be sent to Mr . Duncombe ; and it was resolved that thc _West Hiding members be desired to support its prayer .
I . ITTLKT 0 WN , _VOnKSlllHE . On Monday evening last a public meeting was hold , j _^ _' . ittletowu , in the township of Liver-edge , for Hie Wm . ' se ot' - * _oning the House of Commons to adilreM . h e _f _^ J . es _* y » _Pfaj'ing her to grant a free pardon to _I'Yoifc '' ' _^' _^' iams i _"""d " Jones . At thc time aupointcti , " * _^ ** v , a , " _Charlfswartli , a Chartist of the klit _atai-i _' . ' wa _» unanimousi y called to the chair . T _, * e > _-csoiiij ' l £ ' ( three in niuutcr ; were _inm-il _, sccoiki ' _* " - < 'U 11 * »* _- _* P orte '* h > ' tJ , e _folioiTjnff _fieiitloin- ' _-ii _' - _^ ' bram Scli _^ h _^ eld , Mr . SuckMUill _' , - Mr . , Summcrskiir ¦ Mr _H « f _^' W _Mr . _^ Lncy , and Mr . _WJiitei . y . Thenso l - . ' _* _- ' 0113 wc _* r 0 _^ m »» i » uu . _* il , v adopled , a ? were : ilso petition " i iu hehalfoi ' the Welsh exiles , anu the exile Eilis . _/* ' Vfts n _^ _rosolvOll that the petition ! t _** sent ta Mr . Dm'v- 'nhc for presentation .
KIUMRCIIA . _V . A publie meeting ?'; is held in the Chartist Church here , on Saturday _. V _" i"st ., to consider on tbe propriety of petitioning i . _' urliaiiient for a free pardon to Messrs . I ' rost , Williams , andJonCB . Mi * . Alexander Maxwell was called to _tiid'hair , who mado a few appropriate anu pointed reim . ' rJis on the object , of the meeting . Mr . it . Dixon then' nioveo _, md Mr . W . Lindsay _seuvnileil , the followi . _vp resolution , which ivas carried unanimously : — " _Tn'ofc it _i-J the opii . ' _-wn of this meeting : tbnt the sentence of _tlciiisportaubn for life passed on John Frost , _Ze _/> bajii *~ b Williiims ) mill William Jones , was cruel , unjust , and illegal ; which opinion has subsenuentlv been _coalirmcil by j
the decision of the House of Lwds , in the case oi _TucJtet v . _Cardigan , ' and , more _recently , in tiie case of ' the liuieu v . Gray , O'Connell , and others . ' This meeting , therefore , resolve to u _.-e all legal and constitutional means within their power to obtain the restoriUion of the said John Frost , Zephaniah Williams , and William Jones to their wives and families . "—A _) _eiil _' i' _-n was then adopicd , which it was agreed should bc signed by ihe chairman and sent to Mi * . P . M . Steward , M . P . i ' or thi-county , wi . o pledged himself at the last _eleetiini to Mr . J . Erskine ( a Chartist elector ) , that he would not only piesent a petition , but do ali that lay iu itis power toscefhe . se num restored to their homes . On tho
_lailh ol this promise , Mr . J . _Er-kine gava him liu vote ; to him , therefore , our petition is _eiitrustul .
_IilHMI . NCHAM . Ou Monday evening , tin- _JDtli install-., a most important public meeting of the people of Birmingham , to petition Parliament for the immediate free pardon of Frost , _AViiiiams , Jones , and all the political olfeuders , was held in the People ' s Hall . Tht' immense number present , and the ardent feeling which pervaded the meeting , rendered it au munUtakeable demonstration of the strong _feeliniis of sympathy which exist in the publie mind ot this country io wards the exiled patriot .-:, whose case the people Sun met to . consider . Jt cannot now be supposed that the government ; will resist , the unauiiuoua prayers of the nation at this period , and the more _especially , when royal clemency has been extended to the
Canadian political olfeuders . At allevcnts , if tbis in still further opposed , wc I ' _.-el confident ( or we formed a very incorrect-estimate of the character of [ his meeting ) that the tide of public feeling will , before auothcr twelve months , assume a lone that the government may not think advisable to meet eiilur with ' . fncial or Parliamentary discouragement . We , however , feel assured that tiie present Ministers will not exhibit the obduracy of tyrants , in reiiiMug compliance with the public voice , " or in disappointing thc hopes and expectations of tho country ; for the qiiKSTioK oi * _MEitcY to the unfortunate _cxiies is no longer to he taunted as one of imkty , it is now tlie public ' s and initio .. ' s demand . Mr . _( _Joiiiiscilor Paso occupied the chair with much ability _. ' and discharged fin' linties ot' liis _cfh'i-i ; with tho ardnui- of a man
whose heart was in the cause for _whieh the _meeting had met- to promote . Mr . Mason , Mr . Linuev , Mr . _Pttssell , Mr . _U'iXeil , Mr . _Th-nie , Mr . 11 : 11 , Mr . Linden , Mr . Parker , Mr . Mainly , and Mr . Goodwin _respectively proposed thc p . ti'ions to Pariiun . ent iif . d memorials to Sir James Graham and Sir R . i ' eel . From the peculiar position cf _Binningham , relaiivc to local victims , a double unty as wll as ib . ui / : c work lias devolved upon the friends ' ol liberty here . Lint i : »•;•!] be gratifying 11 the country to lca ' iv , that there is every probability that a deputation ul ' a vevy influential character is likely to be induced lo wait upon the . Home Secretary to uiocuru site pardon oi
Huberts , Howell , ar . d Jones . Mr . Mason and Mr , Pons bave been ili-puted to wait ujun _scvcivd parties in tiiis town for that purpose , and have lvreivcd assuranees alieady _, th _.-u one of the magistrates who held power at tli _« time of iheir ( ihe exiles ) iran _** _.-pi _. _tation , will compose part of the _depulalion io tin-Howe Minister . Jf possible , we wiil ai ™ get the members for lhe biirengh to present _il . e i . _ieiiu > riiil . _*> ncrsonali y to the Minister !* , liirmii . ghaui , however , lias , and is doing its duty , for lhe vie ims . Could thc men in tho Potteries not get up a deputation , to back ine petitions and memorials lor Ellis ? 'i he . cans pursued io obtain his conviction were without parallel in thehiaturv o . 'h . cai persecution .
Hktwood.—Fnost, Williams, And Joxks.—A P...
Hktwood . —FnosT , Williams , and Joxks . —A public _meeting will be hold ou Monday evening next , Jan . 20 ih , in Mr . _Duttenvorth ' s school-room , I ' m * ti . e _purpose of adopting a petition to the lhuise of Commons , on bciialt of Frost , _Wiliiams , and Jones . Clmir to ! k taken as _ci- _^' it o ' clock . The mecliiig will bc addressed by Mr . _TaUevsal ! , of linrnley ; Mr . A . Hurst , of Oldham ; and Mr . W . ii-U , » t Heywood . w-J . _* . lj _ _. _* -i _ _-t _» irc « - _ -in- » _¦ __¦_>>¦¦ ¦¦ _.-i
Miiiiden C->* As Isfast.—An Ii«Im-St Was...
_MiiiiDEn _c- >* as Isfast . —An ii « _im-st was held b . _- - Ibro Mr . Wiiiiin _.-ir .-h , on Monday week , afc the Cricklade and Wootinn _liassctt Union Werkhonse , Piirtuu , ou the body of Ann ilnteiier _, four weeks old , the daushter of Elizabeth Dmc ' ier , a _sin-le wiimau . iappeared in evidence that the mother ( who b / . cuged to _Tockeiiiiiim ) left- tne union on Friday men . ing week , about eleven oY . oi . k , for tlic _purjiose of going home , when thu child was _smp-. od oi ' the _tink-ii clothes , according to the rules ui ihe house , and the mother not being provided with any , it , wa- wrapped up naked ( with tin : exception of a pair of socks mi it _^ feet , which the nurse proved to bu those the chili ! lia . i on leaving ) in a shawl . She also stated thai tho body then shown before the _ini-uest jury was Hint ot Ann _lluteSier . Harriet Coward drposed _' _that heiwecn one and two o ' eloeit in the afieruooii of the same day she met the niutlicr on the _turnpike-road , about a mile ami a half Irom the biuok where the _deceaseii
was found , bw . had an infant in her arm . - , whieh was crymg very much . Alter a _shari eiinvcri . _iiion , the mother winked on at a last pa- « . Mr . 0 . _llrowi :, a farmer , was piiiceeding _alimgc ' ic row ! fivui Aliuety to Wootton _llaMi'tt- , about twoo ' _eluck thcsanusiite ; - noon nnd mot the mnlhor _, who passed mi , wit Smut ;> . child . Soon alternants , on coming to a brook by ' . ' m road . side , he discovered tin ; dccca-cd lhmtii . g on the water , and having procured assistance irom ucoliauu eloss :: by , tiic _cbil-i was tai _. cn out _ijiiilc dead . It wa .-, naked , with ibe exception » l Use seek .- .. On examination of tiic body externally , there were no marks oi violence on the same , and from lhe _Atatemviii of Mr , Dixon , _siii'geoii , lie _h-uiid , ii | . ' 0 ii a '(¦•« ¦ __ . _. _..-tiriVinexamination , that . thechild had been heaiiiiv and free irom
' . _i-. oase . After a long ilivestigtitiou , winch lasted hem morning till night , tiic jury , who were _liicldy ve _> _pt _ ctab ' ie , _re' . iirncii the fo ' iiowiug veniict : — "' Wilful miivdw * against Elizabeth _Ijiiicin-r . And the _jtity _.. iijiimt but _express their _stupn .-i .- tl _' . i _. t _tbc-d * - eensed infaiu _shonlii have been stripped os iier _i _-U-i . hiug , and _sijiered to leave ihe _woi-kliouse in i \ _i-tate of _iuikcdnes !' , with its _niollur ulu _::-iy de « titViUi t \ ud unable to _sliei-cr it i ' roin thu inclemency of the _wciiihcr ; and are also grieved to add . that tin *} - fimi otlier causes of thi'siuiie _" cha ! _-ituicr have been _aiiiiilarl . treated before _fjiiitiin , . . ' tiie _vvoi-kiunisc . by _or-. ier ol llw board of _guardiiiiis . " E !> . _- . u . vtii _iiute : * ei * was then uommitted by the coruuw * to Devizes gaol t _' uK th , * _Sulisburv _assizes .
M Mt&
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Um-Uhlisiiko Luiij.«S Or Tiik Duiir- Of ...
_Um-uhlisiiko Luiij . « s or tiik _Duiir- of Wj'lu . sotox . —( From the _Almwrnek of ihe Month . ]— " It is well known that the DnkL * of _Wchintrton answers every letter he receives . His habits are such _thzthe acknowledges even every circular . We have been Invoured with the _following letters . , which , we are proud to say , hava never been _j . _ubii _^ icd belore , Ihey have all the Wellington stamp of authenticity about them . 1 here cannot be ? . doubt Hint they are original—very original : ~ Field-lumbal Duke of Wcliinston i resents his compliments to . Mrs . Si mill's , aud must have-wove starch in _liia collars .
P . M . _Diihi ) of _VTellington _jirc-c-i . _-tj- his compliments to Messrs , Heine , and in answer to their Ietur _, never dabbles in lotteries . He thinks them a swindle upon the public , _avd _hegi they may send him no m ... o letters . As for the prizes , liu never wen one , and never heard of any body who did . 'l'lmy are a fiction—a snare—a take in . r . M . Duke of Wellington has _raceivcil Mu « r * . _V _. _osts and Son ' s circular . Thu i ) u ! co has cv-iy reason to ba sutislicd with his own tailor , and ii' he had not , he certainly should not p . stroiiist * Moses and Son . The Duke lne . tin _ilrmii'f ! to he t _ ike . il for a Gent .
1 " . _ I . Dakoof Wellington begs to return the enclosed bitter . Ho cannot understand" why _anything should be sent to him headed " To Persons about to . Marry . " Tlw l )\ ike has no intention ot' _inavryliijr , and if he imd , it is no business of Messrs . IJewetson and Co . It ' any more letters are s _,- _;)» to him _ihej- will bu torn up . I ' . M . Uuke of Wellington has just received a long communication from Mr . Ei _^ _enbers ; . Tlie Duke b _ gs to suy he litis no corns , and never weans to have any . Thc Duke never wore a tiyht boot in Ids life . It is liis opinion , that if tliey wore no hoots there- would be r . o corns . The . Duke t ' etl .. no interest whaler , i- in knowing the persons who have hud corns—quit ¦ the contrary . Every man who lias them deserves to luivu ihem . Tho Duke begs to contradict an eiror of Ilr . Hisenbcrgh _' s . lie cuu safely say , _Cluessn Charlotte n _. vsi * had a sin-la com .
THE SOSli OF THE _FIIIST ' LOUD OF THE ADMIRALTY , *" Ye mariners of England , IT ! _tluvnk you if you phase To camu and tell me something of The service of the seas : I ' ve something bea : d of horse marine ? , _JJut nothing do 1 ' nmiv ; Though a trip in a - «!; i p I to India once did _i jo . If enemies oppose me ' _~ And say I ' m very far From hems ' _*¦** _" 1 Ol _'^ ht to , I'll jay that others are . So come , bravo tars , and _tcacl - me A vessel fur t , » know : If tU _. heel is tlie ke _ _-i— .
Or - . _ib-ift means down below . Then courage , all , ion admirals , And never he _dismay-M , J ' ' m a bold adventurer , That nevtr _iearstt my trade . Our miui . ilcrs emplo ** _m-i To _vo-e for them you know : ¦ then ! _ii bold , when yoa Vr told That by . interest tiling ., go . Tiieii'h- _* - ' * a h . _* , 'i ! : h ; o _IVkllisciov , Who made of me the choice ; And to hi > _woriiiy colleagues bold , Who scor . - _* - the public voic-. Tell Prance _imA ivil America Thoy i _. _i : iv l . _c- _^ i _:, * * ' > erow ;~ WuilQ 1 re . _jstto _' e- _i . _' _ionin-ii 1 * the time to strike * a blow . —Fundi
_Puo- _'erty Qu .. i . _ikic . it 2 , _w . — _L'Ooloi' I _' j' _^ _nkiln , crn demniiigthc _pi-epricty ol ' _requirijijt a j . if > jir _* i _; y quail _firyiJion ' lav the exercise ct ' tbe _risjlie i > l ' ' _-lci-ti _* . v * li _* : * n chine , said , " I will put ; . cat-c : , _loi . _* j i S _.-nith ow ? us « t _Jackasff wonh three hundred dollars ; > , e h thon en " *' titled to vote . His Jack , i .. s dies , and he js than disfranchised ; _inJ . v , was John Smith , or was ihe Jackass , the real yoti r ?" _Aoiuci . 'Ufiu _ Puksomkxo . w—Mr . Tout Sheepshank .- ' , of Botany ijay , near Knh ' eid , _recei-s -d Irani . " Mr . _Pcttiifrew- sever . il _grains of ' wheat , _wlii ' _i-. '; _¦;« hai 2 ' found in unrolling it mummy . Theso _weiu- dulysown , and the re .-ulfc Ji . _- _is boen truly wonderful '; : tor Mr . Sheepshank * , on _fli _.-tcrim . ' the lield last , _iitits-nm ,. discovered to his surprise an abundant crop of _lUBaimics . —Almanack for the J on .. '; .
THE _I'UOVISIOSAL WBECTOll . _Provisional _Diivclurct ' tha ' * Duiv and _Jiron-I _^ _. v * ' line , Ul ' tlie "Caucasus am ! Ararat , with a -ranch to _I'ale : _* _- tine , " Of the "Cork and Sink , " and many more , whose tuur . es - leave _uiituid , And _whiiso scrip is left unpaid for , _though , like thyself , ' lis » oid . Provisional Director , why di >? t thon shirk thy _g ! _as ? Art ibou _thinkinc , ' mill our drinking , on what Dills ara _liks u > p ; _iss ' . Let not the _Standing Ord . rs o _'« r thy _spirit have such power , And keep the bottle _standing thus before tliee for an hytir .
Provisional Director , a cloud i _* _,, *) ihy >> _i-yiv _, Thy cheek was like the ru y w . e— . ' tis dim an tin y now . Where :, m t ! w gems to rich r . ud _tara . that once your lingers _bi . _ie , The _jtfwrllsd bro » cli , the diamond studs you glittered with of yore ? I meet then in tlu streets afoot ; though well I call to _finiml Thy _sbony cab , and natty hid that _u-cil to bang behind . Oil Mire , th-.-world is ending , and ail Na ' _tuv ' s instincts flag , When thus we see the Tiger cease fro ' _-n following the Stag . I know they ' ve ueiii * _, . ' _il ihe markets , friend ; but ce : ite from .
tlii > u _ : htj _v > f dreud' . To luiotbcr tu : n » ilie bears shall _ilanci b « fOvetlltt wiutei '' _- lied . Get the _sttam up on jour s _;) irit 3 ; into : letpcrs turn your carts ; So here ' s a toast—down with your wine—and hey , boy ? , " Up with Si _. _-.- . _-i-is !" " Oh talk _iifct of the price of " Shares ? ' the _Sx-uirector cried , ( _Doivii da _.-hing and loud sii : as ! . i ; : g ths decanter at hLj side)—" I alv ; v . \* _huled v _iv _.-. e _.-uy , and _voti-0 . it v . _tovo , Dm 1 uewr knew . _juo' _-. i _' . i : n » half _.--o ; _rtt , Ll _,- > . nie 1 _'tfore . " No lor . _gc-r for _allnimi nt- _:-. m i _lann-. _t "; upon by _lVtrs , Uut I ' m _liiiii-. h ! ii ; i : e ; ui i ; _v p ; i ; _ijr-iiieii and Imnid
engineers . That _postmau , ? o _tteitiiiitl ' ul _or . ve . I _U-s-mil ,.- at hi :- call ; And I think bow : ;«_ : * is < _- '; : ;« _.-i-coui _* ' t _« . lhe stivt t oi'D _.-iSing-hail . ' ¦ Oh my _Liiu-s , my Lines of _Ileauty they wov . ld ¦ l > t y _» _-u out ill Vain ; Stiil I fed you witli your Iraciig _. _,-iiid your sections : ' u my _tn-. iin . Oh my darling ' l'ow and _llii-miiy , ' my faii \ st and my * first , Oh ! _wouhi my heart were like thee , aid c . Id like » bubble burs -, _l " Oh say not _things will mend again , nor bid me _lij-j-la ytr , To disguise oiiv ' s-i ; _-U' i « _d-. _ii-. U is nu dissui . vr . g oat ' s rvgv . t . Talk not of iV . rti . i- * purc' . _issi-s—1 may liave hi en a Ihit—• 1 mav have _singed try whiskers , Uii I ' m m-i so greiii ;* . _& that . " C . * 3 . _ -.
" Fact i * onTiPiM . ; _-: i : s . " - — A new Vi . vk _j-. nner slates that a man _i ; . _' :. n'i-Wviik * is in _custody mr i . _* t ! _'i i | s " a drop too mm-, ' :, "— . _'lameiy iniirryiu _^ ; i ! i .-s Amc . tit l ' rop , whilst he had another w . l ' e Uvin . v . Tiik Militia—It- iijje . _-. i . s ii . ; it ihe __ _possession ot two cbihiiim _i-. \ iiijj ;' _- _*! - . ' - man i _.-i-in militia service , tiiousj htbc haviiii : a pair _oi'k-i . _' s _i-n hi .- hands due ** not . To mcci :. io v . ani ot " _iinhh-v _' _-cd _iiu _*_; _.-ands , l ! : u _^ _li'i . _'iigrocci-s nf _iluiicvi-. i _ni-ii-ailiLi i . _* . _* i _>' esuspciiUtd iu tucii * windows— " Fain . Ins .-iii _. _' . _' . _ie-l _iiciv . " _riifSTivlt _*;* ius _.. ;; s . i ' n ' H ' . on m _> ! _-ps _litioii . cr ki .-s . The pit *! ure o : thy j .-5 nv . _- _ _- ; _-p _i-as- ' o :. Nay , this _viu ., ' i _&—v . mi- \\\ .- _—«>< ¦ ; * _-V , U — Hut miw—Ay , thai . ' . , u _, , ; V _. o . r "i . M > rt _.-s _.-. ii .
OS l . r . A ' . ' _-lsa TilL _ABUVli . Dill yet , me !! iuU > _, il v . ' . i _$ \;\ he u _. _iUi . i . d—• Oil ye _> , 1 .-ev il in _tlui . e eye- ; Our li _;« s a . cair . lo _^ el ! _-. , r li om e . _l Wiii m _.-. lii' v ; ' _ini-n _.-s'Oii . _*•* , w # . I _' _-sei ! . —When ihe . , ; i' _.-i' , i ' 5 _:- /( . _-. ' . t , i \ i ; c came _lorn-c thu roast , we ii _' ud cur -riend _i _' m . vi : still ai iicad-( -u . 'ii'tcrs . to is time in the .- ! . _- •; e ol . _^ rar ; : >;¦ . A .- _.-uch , be _kcj't the ci _.-tiri _,-ilivi : ii : i tiiat o . _ . " ! .. _" : •;; _hecame { aa ids wile Judy Mi ' _ii !) _, io _Ioii _' _ji _.-i * ( . iniiiS :. b : c ; _iihcreuiiou hc cast- abont- for a c !;; . i : ; . _; , . _- , : iiic ; _- ; .: ; _- . i _:- _; belnevii fc ' _nghind _, _livittnd , and _l- tam-. ' . Si : tiie son of a halter , iiu ' c / _ictii . coi < _.-i .-ii ! an t'lciWr , and eiookcn as a _n-oie of _intentifii ; _- . n , be _foiiiiii n _i ' . u . _-A . lab , r . _' . _'m-ii _* ,
_iitul out came tlte Duuciail _id the _c-ny . in Swift we tenanted " _tin-deai . ciy '' ui ' S . i . i ''; iti _* _ii-k '» _awnili-, _ii . _en , alter _-.. _riuiiiny fer _i-. _cki * y a _cLotury t . _-. m C ., v . _ i _*> iivMi « v lantern jaws- of _Viiitaiii- . was _^ _-. _unlvii "iii at iho _Vrciicli iievi . ih .: it . n , a _» ii wi . _* _.-.: ; .. _| _i :: _^ . ' ; :, _i-i _.-Ui _* . wi , n . u . iiy ior iu the ciiib-s ' m'leii ii : ; _lunai _:-- ' .- ' in ; _cyiiiui , witft grave buit ' _ooiiejy , he _er-ui : ; ucd ' _., _> _i-iiicrtic now and iiien , thrti _it _^ h _c-. idi _siicc _.-rsive rear -i ' _li-. _t _tciiiiic uialiistivm , do _^ u to ihe ipiei _d-yso _; tiic _liiubctiitennis Lutiis l _' hi'ijijic . S- ' . ' . > _o ' . ' uw . / . ' i . i \\ : im-.: ' . _' . aUin blcs .-cd odour . ; . _1 _' i ' _iiicj-eiy _, a _cti ' . _i-:: •¦; St . ! V . u ! - . * : _ : d _i'oiniid to tin : _buiiai i \ _- _ . ; Mcr oi ' Um _lh-v . _^ i \ _' ;' .: _i-y Sniith ; _btitjtisl _tlicii , ai _t-iic i . " it ,. ; : ! ' •; ' Ltn . _itraie-hiii , le _iluny aside ihe _Ici . _g-wi-Mi ti . _- i : i ; : ;• _!*• _« . ¦! I _.- _-A-. . _- . ht . ' _tKe' > _. i : ifo , _vui' . s ill ids _proper c ! _-:. v .. cicv—as i u ; ci . —i 5 _remI't _ieim'tie , _iv-a-sert-i'V hi- : ;; .. _'io : ' : iii ;! _i : i : : _¦ . ; ., ! :
' . i-pWi ' . _-. uic in--narci _* . m ii :: > _,:-: \ C _< .. _i . i , , . _:-. _i ;> l i , ; : _> _.. i . i . ' . _soi'ld . Of ibis i _' lrtcutMc or i 1 : 1- > v . iy . il _wiii . _' t _Oo to suy _aiie _,- _; ; . iu ui _»; _-i ; n ' _-.-. _wu ; t . _licre , iu _si-t li " , is . * i . _i-o-: _iiet-hood of wr . _ltrs _who-. _y _tHiuynimus : ewer i * _iiulv now _bi' _-iiii _.-iiij ; to be ; i . _- i . _-,-:. ! .: _v-u , Ibo . -its _a-d _siucsuf l _' _oi ' t , Uuyal had m > surb _iii ' . lueu-e __ : « _ti-eiP dav , nor had the proiirci . _*;! _iMiasmu _' . _* _- * . oi I atcat half _i-uclt circulation . —/'/ _ww _* ' - iU' •/' ¦ < - '
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Jan. 24, 1846, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_24011846/page/3/
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