University of South Carolina Libraries
? ?4c ' N ^^^SSRif* *?' "..-v?;. '-V - ?. .?#. ~r . .. . ?*7? . 3 ?? Ar<?' "vb- :' &t ?>?&.?? z ;. '? i- ?5^te?s"':' , NEC SmpERESSE REIPUBLICJS. PUBLISHED WEEKLY, . * :' ''-&*&?& ^.'~r Wm> k COOTM38IA, S. C. DECEMBER SI, 1836. SS PER ANNUM* waHuu.cfj> jl . > HE u . ? . ^ >7_^ JI - v^:JS' PTTBLISHBD BY -... v -:^;^.a/s. JOHlf^eoSr, 4>l> EVS8T WE p N ES t>4Y Aj*0 SATURDAY MOR>"I>G ? 7RI.VG THE SES SlOXbjf THE EXGISLATVRE. [ ' ?>*?. -tr^.TCER^?TS : I Three dollars per annum, if paid in advance, or Four dollars a: ihe end of tiie year. * Advertisements ebhspicnously inserted at 75 cents per square for the first insertion, and 37* cents for every subsequent insertion. All advertisements ?rfcred in thejSuideeyery publication ? or inserted ? btherwise than- reguiarlyv to be charged as new ior ?very insertion. Advertisements not having the j number ot insertions-marked on. rbem will, be coiitin^ ! ?y iirf tffl ordered cm, and charged accordingly. All ! ^aeconnts for advertising, above $25 and under $9#:j per cent. iecuc:;en ? above $50, 40 per cent, de 4 -a . ^0r3fe *> " ?- 'J p ie Attention ! ?TIC E TO RHEUMATIC IN VA LIDS. iERSONS suffering under Rheumatic Affection. _ -A are- respectful! y assured/ that they can obtain : #f the proprietor and" his agents, a safe "and admira remedy for Rheumaii?nBt, however obstinate the ^disorder may be. and in afl its different stages. . DR. JEBB2S RHEUMATIC UNIMENT ! -WiSaflbrd immediate relief tothe patient, and has Sometimes beea attended with such eitraordinary auc cess* as to cara the mos t .distressing Rheumatism in twenty-four hours^? e ven. when of years standing. Thia highlyvala3ble Liniment is recommended with a confidence founded On the experience o f ma ny years, not only* as a euro _ for that excrutiating 4a tease; bat an excellent ^ application for stirfness of theioints, awalfeess, sprains, chilbrtins, &c. T^his article4s>considered so superior to every thing else, and to possess such uncommon virtues, that it is ordered from distant parts of the country. An Agent recently -writes ? '' Please, send me a further supply of Jebb*s I3mmeat.- I shall probably *eQ ? considerable, quantity, as it is recommended by ? some of our Physicians very highly." " V ftic? 50 cents a bottle. * - ?o ' :J*WSE ? > .* ~ '-A ,'v y<z infill and debilitating complaint of .. . TRE PILES, ^ * p, es immediate relief? and, in numerous in jjriir been t^patoughly cured by the adminis- j 2S' SIv^EDY EOR.TEE PILES. i ..jved compound also mitigates, and re-. sytSptoms which iieguently accompany ii i nr and increase the danger of the patiem* -wf; ^eiBt in Joins ; heada Ae appetite r m- ; digestion, and other m3rk3of debility.< >- - - your ' Burnines time past, and have found ifc eminently successful j Remedy iaquite innoeent, aryTmaj^beadnnnr ' ? j^rtoftH^ages and- both sexes. Plain and ample directions, with a descri-*- ? pany each package, which consists of containing an Ointment, and the- other an Electuary. j a. Price $1 for both articles, or 50 centa where but one ; is wanted. , \*None genuine, unless signed, on the- o printed wrapper by the sole proprietor, T. B successor to the late Dr. Conway. For E the other 'Conway Medicines,' at -hij nootii, No. 99, next door to J. Kidder's Bru ?corner of <?ourt and Hanover streets, near < Hall, Bos&ml;:? and, by special appointment, by F. W. GREm Druggist, .. . Columbia, So, Ca. Apes t side ! ^nV?prt. ! 14 ? and Me^ticinc. ^SURGEON'S Instruments ? ail lands. Paints, ^fvFarndJje?i Brashes a great variety of Per iu mery, Shaving Soaps, and a general assortment of ; Chemical preparation* from the most c elebratedr French. Chemists, such as * Oil of Camvi, ^ f- * :me, a new and va luable Tonic, ?' Pure ,^Vx~v Powdered, Km * *gs*???r Citric A cid, I AroraatieVmegar, LTooth Wash, ^ do , w * jEtecttic Anodvne for the Tooth and Ear Aciie. 1 ARTICLES. Tonqua- Beans, -* - W| ? Saucers, 1 . jment, Hygeine Pills, Sian Specific, Macaboy, Scotch, and Rappee ?nuff, \ Cupping Cases, Hull's Trusses : Thermometers ; Lime Juice, _ Beer Powders, ofXemon Ts Screws ESrge x- - jIfik* Cork potters, . > Floating Tapers, LuciferMat^es,'ERS, Wakefield's CornPlastea?i The subscriber intending to decline the Drug busi ness on ^he first of January next, he will sell to Pf>y ticians and. Merchant? for Cash, at a very small ad ranee over Cost anil Charges. S. PERCTVAL. ? -r Columbia UJuJy, 1SS6 .. - \ 29 ? Chests for family use, [ Also, Common Chests for Plantations. Garden and Field Seeds. Fftiwe Sides igt received pei < may he had by \ ? ?uldecs icaree WWWLE subscriber has just returned from the North, JL and is now receiving a part of his Garden and Held Seeds, selected by himself of the best growers the North ; they will all vegetate and are of the true sorts: " "x GA&OSX SSXDS rOR. PUUtTING THIS MONTH. * T?ttiee oi all kkids, ? Large Lisbon Lemon, extra Rubarb or Pie Plam, ? - fruit, ^Spinach, cress double, Shaddoc or the forbidden Cauliflower, fruit. Onion sets for planting, Garlic sets, do. Mustard, ctfagic Onion, see Cata * ?>hak>tts do. RealCam^ifi,now'm.b!o6m 4Lee k*w do. Rumbagos^g?B* in win Field Seed in st ore, White CVver, v - Kad or alVsapIing de. Locers, Timothy er tl?rel Grass, * Orchard '?? ? BWrfr Rye anl Herb, i^vadnfess Oats,%?, \ VTulip CyLa?ses," a ptttty liiird M3et, \4 mantle jxtrarrerit, '"the Caatrjf Seed, Y roots now growing, ' Pruning Scissors, V % DahJiaGiasses, extra fine, Garden Troweb? ^hinar?43ow?*- dp.' |??L bei&gr JpS^ntal Siin&beryy j* : fiMSSaifr^Jg RoSver-Seed^ery-iare. TWi^ -^?^rte<idw6?Iyfrom Philadelphia^ the ;:S?gar._;|Scfeey;j!f g, for sale by SSBLL, \d Florist . ^ptfLOCK, SOLOMON & % \!so, 1 Boxes fre?h. Macaroni. It, 1?M ' Pgti ? ^ iflALE ACAOEMX I" AT THE LIMESTONE SP&jpSr - Subscriber wilii on Monda^:thev"9th:~of a. January next, open a boarding school. at*-, the Limestone Springs in SpartanbaEg...,. At this insti tution, it is intended to embrace a "more extensive i cotrrse of studies, than has heretofore been taught [ in Academies ixrthis State. Itf9-a .lamentable,. yet i a well known faetvthatjn Grammar Schools-out' boys are drilled long and lalwnoad^IB the. acquisi-H sition of.thejGreek.and Latin languages, to the utter neglect 6i their mother tongttfaia? well- as Natural science, MathematicSi-Higto^, &c-v Of the youth, i who are. taught in Academres, not more lharf. one fourth ever exp_ge fr to receive^ -Collegiaie education ; Lyei'the course ef studi?s^s" precis sly th^saroe'-Jpt : those who do notr as for those who io intend jo^l&r' ter'CoBcge. ..^The subscriber proposes, in our school at least, to remedy this eviL-?nd?h> adapt; -^K?. edu-~ cation of his pupil* to tfceir views-'an afi^r^fer While he will not neglect the. preparation of young gentlemen for College, (the best security for which j is the uniform success vrhich has attended the appU-r j ration of his scholars for admission there) he will- fn the instruction of others pay more especial attention to History, Natural History, Book-keeping, the more practically useful parts of Mathematics as fully and extensively as is now taught in- our College, and fo Elocution, by which i? meant, not simply Oraionf or Declamation, but especially good reading, which is so essential to every mart- as well as scholar. . -.The healthfulnesss of the . location,^ and its jremdtenesa'j from all tempta^ions' to vice or ^immorality of any ^ kind combine^vantages presented by few, perhaps no institution in -the -State. ? -\--v The scholastic year wiU^ be, divided info two equal sessions, commencing on the 1st of January and ending on^ the 1st of Nov. The, terras j>ee sessrion will be MX) dollars, payable in advances' iny eluding all the clpirges for board and tuition. , The terms fox .day .Scholars will be 17 50-iOfr dol lars per session, payable/, in advance. Books, Sta tionary, &c. supplied to those, who desireit,.. at the Columbia prices. Pupils will be; received' at any period of tbersession and charged 'according ly ; but no deduction will be made to those WhO ^ leave before the'encl of a session. Passage can .te^had in the Spar?anburg;-Stagf from Coluni^u-to the Spring. All ri? 'annhffltTOn TTtrtst. be ~ mTecfed tbv'TOft . iwu. " ~ i -o; .? r >Y~- v ?W1 letters df~app'ication mtist be airecLed to "The . subscriber at ^ColumbiaT:until tlje -New Y^af? after that time, at>the Spring?**^ J irpf>I ;HT \ it.ip* e for payment; abeth. SngIgroyer ? is^ajfc y js?t a T-T n T1 m A *f"An ^ TPi r * Ls it-V^ > - ' Jesse HaDmafif and. Wife* 4 SneJgrove,^ "- '*' v ' i Sna &ar Betty- Ann ! and> Vejbidahfa C^S-.' Ji. one of limits of this ject to the c Hazaett -iiqii&tp ?ptered of reeoid. - f ^ ; ctkwi'that Eli Snelg rove ir?atid?obr . . ; te of l . fore .the fourth coirfeejU'Wilt be psar, Wm B. Yat? and T-? - Jane his" wife. ^ vs. nr;:? .' A. Wallace & Sal ly Chesnut Taylor. ?47V*- - tibr account and Divirionij Y order of the im^> for sale' to the [cery, I will ctffe^; ' Qon Thursday* " ition of thei the Stock of prn,-- ;|s odder and iK?i" ?the 12th of January next, at late John C. Taytor^Ric " Cattle. Hogs, Mulcs^llor plantation utensils. ,v 2 :; . - ?. ?rt7n,-,.-f^ srss Terms, for all sums under" $20" cash -^ll sums over, a credit of 12 mo n t lis, interes^fromdayof-salc, purchasers giving a bankable note and-goodvpersona?; security. All the articles .will be delivered onjfc'e day of sale. . * "ijv ' JAMES !2 CLARK, C. E. Dec. 24 V --*$&#; ] ?_ ca'si. ; r .?* Large EstalefSajfc m .. . INEQUITY. Fid. B. "V ates and Jane 1 ? his wife, vs Andrew J Bill ror^vWolia^ a?i Wallace and Sally f ' Chesnut Taylor. 1 v' *??? ?zZJ&r B Y order from the Court of :Eqahy?iI*^^>flfer; for sale before the CoitttvH&use iu Columbia, on : the 2d Monday in January l^xt/^tha^Iendldipd. well known plantation on the Waterree Ri^ivTyin^ on both sides of the River, " cons istrhg bf^helo}^:vY: ing tracts of land, to . One tract of 1000 acr?$j$j ter on the East side of the same tract conveyed, by JohnJChesi C. Taylor, th<? 2^ 330 acres lyii "" River, bein^ 1 . hy J 6nn Chespiii,-tt O: 414* acres lyingj veyed by Robert Enj 29th Octr l^^al?foy"L-T,_,- , , ...v _ ^ _ adjoin cael^theii ao 11 1 ?ifons in the Also 6(TS of sale, li W lay able ann?afly, bond,^drtgage-f^d 'food personal ?inr^RE Subscnbershave receivedthetr P ??JL of Groceries, ttrdware, IrmvMAgery. G<^\ - ' . ? ' %? - ??' t?%XS?$X?fZ- 1$ M judges. _ -, ? ;? i .- v'-.; '"V '*?**" y^- . - Ihejr have also lately received dn^onsigYiment ' 200 Reams Bemi, 'Medium ?and Imperial Printing ? tron^a of~^pil^ acw bT?noh of Southern e&g| v"*1 10 r8 . for.jto^^to^.eajabhsJim^^^ifiiiIl [-prizerthe ?ame ?^2g?i|j We have a lull supp%,^d .^n eipee?;, ? general assortment of Cotton- Xajrni . XottftijL , burgs, Brown Shirtings ah<! ufaeturedbythe Saluda'iB?nuf^u nnw "taated within two miles/ of|?5c>lumbia will he reasonabjeo?^%^^-ai~^i5i^^ of S^tbep paperafe.v.prahle'to Southern their I reiers to SWbern Manufacturer :'4. -EWAft^ <fc eo.^ Bf of Ordinaif 'f'S&AROLWJc. ;P?r?i& -*sSscfc;2 ' ColumbuC.S John Bonknight and Eonknigbt, liel Boi Margaret John PapenheimT Toha M. Miller and Margaret Rmnphv IT -appearing to ntr -Kugler^ one of toe out of the limits of this . that she appearand object to the division , or the Real Lf *~4" ~ ? ? -? - late of the day in DecerabeiQBNS$t>; of record ? ii H. FORT, O. L. O. Lexington C. H. Oct. ITfcjb, 1836 43 isfaction that ^deJendantSi ?__ t h erefore, ~o r de! MO Ulia, ziONj^ApE^ Y rgpFIE exercises: of this institution will be rcsum- j JI edlon the jist Monday in January next, under ;4he care, of J. Hudson. andB.'F. Wilkinson (at present a^utoof iri' South Carolina' College) with a corapeiehC assistant. ' The sc holai tdcy ear will consist of two sessions; -the Ist^Drafrienfcingon 2ndJanuary,. ending 1st June; , the;2nd.<&mi6enring 2nd Julie, ending 1st November, j Tuition and Boarding" Including lodging, washing ! 5nd41ir^odd peVses^n;.. $100 ; TERMS Foli DA.Y SCHOLARS. - "/?*? ' ;v D^rfmevt. Latin, Creek, -Algebra^eometry^Cinclndinp practi- j f cal Surveying^) Natural Philosophy, English nnd i ^ Xatin Composition, :My>hologf, Ancient and Mod- j v. _.ern HistorjyAncieat aftd Modern Geography, per > r. session.;: . /?". - . .820 00 j L .^English Beparbkent, , Reading and Spelling.... . . .. . v. ? S3 00 f The-above with "Venting and Arithmetic 10 00 Do."- ; dQ. iSngHsbG rammar and Geography^I2 00 For fire-wood for ?&e school rooms per session .... 50 i Afc additimiaIliSSrgeP;6jr $20 per session -will be : ?raaoe fbr^uition in the French language. . ? student will be received n t. any time, and will t beeharged at the samerate-to the end of: the session; ! L^nfr^iieduction will be. made where h cleaves be ^e thip,je,nd.of'it. \\ j:/. [\ ^Boarding and Tmtion to be ipaid half-yearly in - advanCg. Hudsbn^nd B. F. Wilkinson, will 'reskle in the-builcluigsofrfeelnstihuidn, and students -Ijoarclingshete jwill be; constantly under their rare. -They pledge theraselvesthat.e-tery.exertion shall be P?? ?? P,revpt the MWM habits. toHowmg are the ?pnn^jprOIitcxt books used in w* ' ? ' ? , ; ?v Latin Grammar, (Gould's -BdR;ionf) ;La lin Reader, Pho^di^s^v.Tir eil (Ccper's, ) Hornce, Doering'a t?r Anthon's,?; Sallu?t |i Anthon^X^ero' s Orations, - Prosody, ^ Tacitus .^algeVs, i Juvenal,: Adartes Roman Arrnqmtie?;-iiobmson s; Antiquities of" Greece," Mai r*s Introduction* Ambon's edition o yalpey^j G^eek GraTumop,^3Cen?phon's CyrrpsdiaV Qreo^liWicon^BeU^^iSs ia^eierced, but Acker ik^^arkhurstsor GnJvWsmay be- used. Geomer cry^Davieg? editjon-of^iegdnd re'^.ajgebra, Davies5 emtfoD Of Bourdeo's, 'ArfthmeiiCi.^merson's - 3rd ? /part and Smi&^SUrv^ing^JDkiiVies'. aqd Flint s;) ifc#1 Synonymes^ (J)uniesnirs^r ^UViT Valpey's ^^mojogiol^DicfaPnary, A^nswort^jwtjn'Diction : a*iy,^he i^ftddn edition is bestI) Classical Dictiona ?ryfXA^onyeditxjS^SieS^^rer^Wobdbritlge^ ^?^.^|aphy and Atlas, edmlngto ' thiii ihsJitution "are requested in^ifith; them -trar sl^p^ d^an^of the Authors read insehool. Ten o^vfeiye students be sides -those alreadv engaged, ma^Qbterin boarding in ^r^Hjii^^s/am^y^ by jnakingi. immediate apphca L^tters oMhe subject to bo addressed to - . - v ----- >? /"? .. < J. W. HUDSON. , WtunsborctIgh, S. C. Nov. 4^1836,. . ?? ? J^I^ie Southern Times, The Mercury, Christian 5teraldt^C$eraw, wiH insert the above twice a week until; tSeim of ^February, and forward^dieir accounts. / to J W^fludson for pa ymert#"' - i v - j Nair&kjiiif-jfu''- . ? . . ? . *45 : ^tf ' . * j - ?" w ?' -T ? y-sr* y.% ' %r>i? Factorage and Cammi&s on i?;g? , ; EBusiness S nrXpE undersigned having established a branch &?i^f>their IIousc in&be Citjrot Charleston under tiielfiim-of EW AR3Y WiLLTAMS <fc Co., superin ^teriCeilvby our Kr 'VP\ B . .WILLIAMS, for the transaction of Fa<$omge and Commission Business, -fc-eg leavo to tender their services to their friends jp'Altfi goriprevfiy . Offlor> on Mauwo.ul's jSSaIlffiWf. , -r a large Ware House in progress of rbmMing,iriy ?afe and convenient , situation in this ; 1ft>wtti where will be established Public Scales, we -would offer ourseryices herfr also, in the. Factorage and Commission Businesa^;.^t<^ and Mother pro duce and Merchandize received ip $tore, orsoid on the m >st faxonrableterms. Every attention paid to receiving and fohvarding Merchandise to its proper : destination.-' ^p&Store w^he*^ablished forthwith at Saluda, ittnder our direction, where%e \viH -keep a general i^zrhrEI# ^ &hd l@rocerir;, uidthe sur- . f|Itifcind8~T?f r^hich'the highest ^&mT?w4rt & co ?; W ??* __ lerbecharged fta^e, the fcesi^ than ^ ses^ P c ?> r *s y washing' 5|;^the J&q wing; <1 j? ^ ...... ianctOrtliOgra- i ...$16,00 with -all th e higtier ^^^^Sei^tpliy S***'* ?* u ,','Gompo-^' . ?j v^ChemMbrt-j - Botame vGeologry v V leiatic^^;.. . . - . . ,. ; ... ./. $25,00 the Latin and - ?&C8- ?. ._. 7 ? 36,00 iarii>hV 6r- JtalianVV . JV .16,00 .-.J .-.."i .V. .25,00, ^ .. ll x v.' . .V5,00" Use of . .... . .4,00 i -EonjNeeiHe Work, Drayyingand Painting eacl*. 16,00 [, For Wax Wor^Ebohy ^orkv and Japaning . ? Fk$iO0O! incites a|ipvate charge foregoing ??. r the charg "; tinguished^ Vania, aridi >nal 8feilE| the 46th; Monday ne>ii ef-oi?t? * " ' >??5* ? >JQSJ :xt session? finale assistai *E?" P^SH ..igSeSK?Bfe pup 4B^pI>j<- v , F dC^ON?l^IN?r o?vl!XHidbnr ^re^Twist, Damas lXM:.c ,.,. co^aacfi^^iru isao,??y are'-jiistxeceived, and wall 'be &old?at low ; ??'* JP3S? f- "^'^-T^OB^T'iWADlJELL. I^rrNove-oAi^^;-^^ ? 45 ^-;"5' Fire Iissurance. "K^ITRANCE may be. effected #n| Tate of percentage, with the Angus . .ice Comperfy, on application in wri rthe Agent in tins place. Applications, (post lall cases,) must contain o minute description of tfi^joperty to be insured. fcWH.UAM CUNNINGHAM, Ag^nt <^o!umkflSi?' Jan tf 4 POETUS'. SKrThe following dashing Poem appeared origi nail y on the 1st of January 182'.), (n-; its title suffi ciently indicates,) in the London New Monthly Magazine, and was extensively re-publitdicd at that time. Its spirit has lost nothing by age, and we deem it not inferior in moral, even, to many a loftier and sadder strain : TWENTY -EJGHT AND T W E NT Y -X I N E. ? I heard a sick man's dying sigh, And an infant's idle laughter ; The Old Year went with mourning by ? The New came dancing after ! Let Sorrow shed her lonely tear, Let Revelry hold her ladle ; Bring boughs of cypress for the bier, Flisg roses on the cradle ; Mutfs to. wait on the funeral siato ! Pages to pour the wine ! ? A requiem for Twenty-Eight ? And a health to Twenty-Nine ! Alas! for human happiness ! ??? Alas ! for human sorrow ! Our yesterday is nothingness, What else will be our morrow? > Still-Beauty; must be stealing hearts," And Knavery stealing purses ; Still cooks must live by making tarts, * And^wits bj^ making verses ; . While sa?es prate and courts debate^ "r-- " The ?ame stars set andshine; / ? *- ? And the world as it rolIe:Uhrough Twenty-Eight, Must. toll through Twenty-Nine. <-'? r; r .SoiiML King will come, in Heaven's good time, T Wthe^oml) his father came'to ; ' ' V'-'. _^r Some /Thiet will wad e through blood and crime, To a crown has no-.elsim. io,v.^ '??* -=v . . Some sufTeriiigJand -will' renllin^ twain \ ^|!Traf ma ruteles - ' . . . -i- . -> AiKl ^thcr^he^ihks pfilrebrokeri 'chain, ' fr. ivTo ~fi^VcnMh^pro9^:round;r(er jr?'-' ' "5r" The gh?nd and great wll lave flftd hate, r- ? j - And. combat and combine ; i?gf&ejy And much where we were in>T wenty-Eight, . J Wc'shail be in Twenty ^fino. ' Jl ^ f 1 V-^v ' (V ' - \. O'Cpnfiell will-toil to raise the rcnV And Keriyon to sink the Nation ; , * *% And. Shiel-wiH abuse the Parliament, ?? And Peel the Association ; .... S And thought of bayonets and swords ? ' ^ WW make exrchancellors metxy ; . And jokes will be cut iri the HouseofLords, r- ?>. .v And throats in the.countvof Kerry ; y?? ? w ^.-. And- the Goddess of: Love will keep her smiles, 1 r And the Go<cl of Cups his orgies ; \ , And thepe'Ithe riots iti St. Giles' ^ ? And weddings in St. (George's ; V" And Mendicants wil. sup liko Kings, - * And Lords will swear like Lacqueys; And.b'ack eyes oft will lead to rings, U ?\. ; And rings will lead to black eyes ; *' And prettv JfCate will scold her mate, - In a dialect all divine ; . . Alas ! they, married in Twenty-Eight, ^r> They wiU part in Twenty-Nine. . My uncle will swath his gouty limbs, - And talk of his oiis and blubbers ; > My Aunt, Miss Dobbs, will play longer hymps, ?*' -1 And rather longer rubbers; . - My Cousin in parliament will prove How utterly ruined trade is: f '".sj -My brother at Eton will fall in love Witli half a hundred ladies ; My Patron will sate his pride from plate, - And his thirst from Bordeaux wine ; . ^His nose was red in Twenty-Eight, . . 'Twill be redder .n Twenty-Nino."'- ? /. r* ? *??. v i-**? -'i ' >. < , i And O! I shaU find how,day by dayj;- ^ All thoughts and tlwigs look older C How the laugh lof PJfeaaure grbtftf less gay>i 1 And'lhe he'tirt of Friendshipcd!d?r -'i 1 But still I ?bali bewhat l-tiavo been, v " 1 - . Svcom foe to I Ady5 -Keasbn, . - : ? ' -v' And^eldont troubled spleen . . j j I shall buckle ray skait, and leap my gate," ; x AnVKthrbw ond write ir^jr line . ' AtiddhenvOman I worshipped id Twenty 'Kghit, I ; I^liall worship in Twenty-Nine. . K'4 T " TRE FIELD OK WATERLOO. From the.Euiopcan Correspondence of the Portland Datiy &dvertiser. " I imvfi been PgV?eets, April 6, 1936, to Water ;o^ which i? but UV4VMW '?? ? y/" N" whereneitber of tk%m can be justly said to have conquered the other, but \yhere athirch 'partyi bpportunelj^interferirig, settled. the'day, /and beat olF arid drove into exile one of the .most astonishing men that the world has ever > rj^ocluced. /L have now followed out th*? 'pros' gi^ss-of that mighty nian from his first triumphs Summits, to the Bridge of, Lodi,v and the Brooily,' fi^Ia-bf'lttarengo, ao4. ^wiitK cfefi?h? X frave gon e o verll^^phfe^'towls that he ;!fa\ijuilt and' seed the- bridges, and ? 'harbors, arid; caUVedrals, arid; galleries of art,: Itid- school?y . that" came up under his comma nd, so 'thar-my,"Tnin3 fs -fcii^pendod in douht'wiietJKf erps;giOo<!r''wiff '''i^cqai^htm^of his evil ;; alii thus it was not" "without intercsCaparf fromihat created "hy.-t lie horrible slaughfe^ftrithis mfrrable fl^dj that I came-hefe^and witnessed tha going. 'down of the sun .- ^i'he- battle fields^ ofHannibaf in ltaiy/'and o^The Roman geueK ;a%^^laXe.l)een over, ^t^tfhagefciHi Rome ^r&^ooTW my Jiving' guide to point out > whereat he contending gen erals stood, and-opposin^ battalions- met* an# i-.-ii ii'-iis. i, ? i. "i, ? nnm^itli ? Ino /Meft-TvoBL'-anH WV Ftfzmti&rt&iS?- ? ? fL _ ? ... ' '^as?3 ?Kuinea rcouses^anu -snaviewr *&}**; th^n?and;here and -six ; t h&Usand t here^?a& ?thf guid^ jVt and you walk over the green-gras* un^tiwHibh they ai^ii^The dead were three ; feet jdeepTn (his piatev&nd you coi ;^n^pveT^he:'pilW'of.f6en a ud horse ? . continues- and agaiii jrou walk -over the green &&HSEP'" w pefcr all this wasji_^ij^^|Bi??iD 'except, short, is almost as it m created by 'Hie cannorand the musketry of the day, when uporjgtftlf morning of the 18th of June 1815^liafwfeon and?W ellington, the two geeajtes!^genera!s of the age, arrayed the best tfropsofthe ao-a one against the other. *7- ? O o We took a earring? in the morning at Brus I sols, and rode fo Waterloo, where we weru [-"WtFtouple of hours, our way pussipg through the forest of Suign?\\ into which the men, women, and children of tiic villages of Wa terloo and of .Mont ?>t Joan fled for preserva tion on I he morning of the battle. This forest was in Wellington's rear, in whiu. ? _ ? rrtTTS->P rvapo. loon drove him from the field. At Waterloo, a J guide volunteered his services, and, oshc was ; the one recommended to tjsr we took him to \ Mont St. Jean, some distance from Waterloo, ! where the battle was iri reality fought, though j Waterloo has given ft, the name, as, from I Waterloo, Wellington, thejright after the hat- ! tie, dated his despatches^ the English Gov- ; ernment. IT** Our guide, who wxuT a peasant, about 18 ' years old ihe day of^the battle, and who was ! then taken as the guide of one of the French Generals of Division, took us over the ground, and upon the several positions of the English and the Fronch^sblriiers, and explained to us their various struggles for particular points ; but, a*) military men and tourists have often related all these things, so much in detail, and j so much bettet,than I can, 1 will not recapitu late the ofl-told story. J will remark howev er, upon the battle, that the great fault of Napoleon seemed to be tie too great confi dence he reposed in the valor of his ever hith erto successful leg on3. He had been defeating the Prussi&s but a day or two before, and I he English were not Prussians, ' doubt that he should beat the i same manner. Thus over yielded to the English the su" position, and neglected to pro> own retreat. English i confi4ent periorityi vide for h The in a positii fantry: an j>f the English army was posted impregnable to musketry or in '^et^he seemed to be ignorant of tau VI JT ?-41IIVI nwj. UV ovvimvm vw vv - strength the position, and ordered his linen there to jF certain slaughter, when but a Few pieces?? cannon would have knock" ed down the cfcstle upon their beads, and beat the wall th Jp defended them into miK lions; of ' piecesj|r?gair? he fed the disad vantage of being lite attacking party, and again, he mistooraihe English character in^supposiog that Jilittle - Frenchmen, val orotis as-they^rverr^ ? net jfoi^Vftth- his field the English solAHr, who was equally as yaloi^^imatfricC aSitout, with a cavalry, in all^ probabi ft tyvja r betray horsed than the French. ? v??kv The French soldier^^S^teiquickerthan the English,'and this rapidityS^movement, it was, that gave Napoleon many of his victories over tKe Auctnans, Prussians, aftd Russians; bat the . English that stood now vvere as; impenetrable as a wall. cavalry; and without even th* English are a quickcr footed Austriansj-oi a ny of t he G eruu I have sieen. Nevertheless, man who-carefullf goes over, of battVraust <seerthat if Bin! rived with bis Prussians, have been. driven from the i with slaugHiciy but certainly if, insteatiof Blucher, Grouc1 Napoleon intahded and plai would have been slaughter, an< could bave sived an English Jeon bad directed all thhigs wj ?Vrif, but treason or misfortune him. TheRussians,he knew, were apffiHBIftjp& and the English, he also knew, must^Bacut up before they ' could unite, . ifhe. woujd serve~him^lf; Hence be resofved upob atta<^ in spite or disadvantages. . The* Prussians,'. ?e>l . thought^ were provided with an enimy ; but I the: Prussians galloped i^iIi^^nm;vand i force that he had beaten hut afew days' befor now^p roved his ruin.; The three positions that Napoleon took 'during this day are clearly' pointed out Tho last ^was net far . .from the - English line, anddirectlyi natron t of Welling.-', ton.7 \The-ihore doubtful the -battle became, j tbe more.be exposed bis own . J de-? But^jew friendly ball which -should there, have firiishidj i the field the French Jetence the than the tions whom ^prejudiced greet field aer had not ar? Sglisb must perhaps not ;';defear, but phad come, as the: defeat alone Napo r usual Jted his^reerwoald not I will venture to say that no American%ver stood upon this battle grouncT withoattlebatifl? in his o^min^ Whether tIie:io^$o?t<lto^ gamecLorlost by the triumph of Napoleon. on' that: day. As the sons of E ngfisnUic n --as meffof the same tongue, atfd.tieaame 3: new, we feel proud of the valor ofour<MWntTymenVH but yet the Englishman has so often been our ' enemy, and his taunts have "ft*** fiiflen so - "'fltfckly upb(i^^rll^^i^?^;w'?^l,' withllie;de^^j^ie ty bad map, Nappfedn> andhete, upon - the spot lowingj&Ut, as we do, in ou. exile where the English incarcerated*fuIp ?ijeg$ alippst wifir the triumph had been the other way. He whohas seen with tiis own eyes what N apoieoii' has- done {for the "people, from 'Naples to Hamburgh, upoii the Alps and thc Appenines, along the rivers arid by the' soa; -what a breath <ji life be breathed into^ torpld man;?and has/orgetten his conscriptions, the bloody slaughter of his battle fields, and the havtfe he wrought in thousands of families, . will painfully mourn over his fate, and: regrvt that* it iiad not been all other wise. Ah . A merican wno thinks considerately can alone property balance these contending emotions upon the plains of Waterloo. A Frrnchman goes o^er the. ground with tears in his eyes, rcwrsuigihe traitorsi wbo? he believes, sold Jus beloved -France, never crediting the fact that Engliejfc "tstof isra match for French on -0if fieId,ord^aniing even that it was possible ibr his demi-god Napoleon to be beaten. An Englishman goes there as upon the Held of his country's greatest triumph, mid exultation natualiy swells his heart as he traces out tfaj spots where Bis. country men stood like ro? against-the fier^Jegions of France. Je ^^naparte, our ^uide, told<j?, had shed I tears amid theVuinsofthe castle of Ilus where he ied on his soldiers in a vain "againsf^TO -English right. The Angle?ea had come there to sliow wherehe'hadlost his leg-; and aj was shown upon which a b:i nd of Ef annually dined the 18th of every French* indeed, seldom visit YV aterl Waterloo, is not far fcorn their u ' te ,ter ?nt . ftalls ana buttons, vrmuvu <> ? enough has been already bought to filT a com mon sized city. We Americans go there as uninterested spectators, & judge of the events of that great day, and of the succeeding, with greater calmness. The company the En glish were in, when they thus drove Na[o'eo;i from the field ? the band of holy despots ? we justly execrate; and even Englishmen .it tiii. day excel ate tin m too, for Russia hns nut ly devoured the wretched remnants of miaei^y hie Holland, but is threatening Engja**fin'tje East, while Prjlfisia and Austria a tii oGer ^ enemies of a nije v j red ' - '/ * m (d a!! powers whom Na] sweep. nj from the rarlh, but gland conjured up is now fear lit; r, and she must make France^ Iter pn sent ally, provided f? rcc upon l irj.'I lo i?iaf eh hci England gained nothing by till terloo, though Austria grasf Venice iii her ciu'ch'\?t the Kli the (ienoese, and Inland was anions the Northern Powers. world has gained or no!, by Napoleon 0:1 t !iat day, a merican may justly raise, was atvrant, and u murder*' r e\ faithless lo t ho principles whicl but he was oup of the noblest of Caesars whom mankind know n* love or to hate; and he was the of that great principle which j struggling all over the continci cep!ed) agains'. herjditary desj man was ever born !o-e< man, it w^s such n man as b<S$? had let him alone, he would, in tiis.^ rary way, it is true, have put th<* c century ahead of where it now is3r made all nations o\er whom he ruled tical people that the English anid i are. Indeed, J do not know whethel that he was not the victor, or' td; that he was vanqu'siied. #8 I do not know that I can give yoai ticulars of the present a ppearauce $ " of Waterloo which would be of into monuments that have becnrrectedi mausoleums rather, were somewhat by the French, when after the revolutj gium, they refnrned from the suc< of Antwerp. The French soldiers*! we were told, ran over the ground ci screaming like raging madnufl, aild" upheaving every memorial of their d< their Generals, to their credit, restrc and even put a garrison upon the mid that the Inlanders erected n the victory. -This huge mound of. < feet high, With a Hon upon tbe top, lioidii globe un<fer l\js claw, we ascended, aa?, us a fine view of all the surrounding c The Princo of Orange^ it is said, was ed upon this spot, but this spot and al um, whicli was given to the JKingpf tl therlands as his portion of the Waterli has been wrested from him since that revolution, aod Umbrom -the Prince ange, bis legal successor. The use t^' this great field is now put is the same was in June, 1810, when so many tboui of soldiers trampled the then high grtia] their feet. All open, uufenced as is the 4 of France and Belgium in general, the . batants- had no other obstructions thaft yielding grain which , readily fell b if<r~*" 1 do not see that blood ftius profusely fertilized the "soil; but if thi bodies had suffered to rest and rot ypon the grouni' greased fertility .would probably have been 9 rosult- 1 . ? ? ;!?j The alai^eiieJwrtfd in-piles, gard to form or manner, tumbled in one i soother; stripped naked as they had been 1 ?l^fsaWryi and now and then a hoist- ~ ia some of these pits, where soa n d has been examining ffcr a ? OccalBPiiiy-ft human bone is seen up< grou mCcH^jlagi^l oft<enfqEiiDjU.| eifcuUiyatiorj HpgS^ground to\ ing armies pitched baJBpI] prx tAp??n beggars.- fofiowfyou ana* wounded there. Women and girls X|K7 els. with balls and buttons (0 it wt ;er. iWJ 1-wJ *3 American^ ie'inii . ut a very good one in a Pre bwjss^s.estnnatioti. There is1" ij.rit,apdIhis ist!ie road, and f tais.streetnr^ not many, and ar. (Jhurch of Waterloo U s-ialU monuments in honor of v--^ with epitaphs comme ird*j the ? y j3ru3sels w( jeap^of> jf ienpon i ington stoods ~ taken away ince of iim Itton Ju ington met the^Belie Allii msmo Cicerones innume round", to show us - Commissions ri ilmest thronged ah ?was to be seen, Or they call th^mselv^s In this part of thdRiountry. This church, the w hole" villagap Waterloo efpn, and all Brtiri sels,- wfere fiJrd with wounded victims after the battle ^iiot a house bu: tapk in its ttfjP dior. As ffelish was our native tongue,- cod as we werogff course taken fi>r English, as alt Amcrican^p'e upon the continent (this in deed occurring so frequently that we fancy at last that We really are Englishmen;) our Ci cerones w< the Marq?u slat jake us to see where the leg of *Xhglesea was buried, and tficf nor of it ! upon it je Marquis of Anglesea hriried! ?a marble slab and an epitaph ow eminently English this is ! How perfectly characteristic of John Bull, and yet how ridiculous, how very silly ! Thoa-f sand;* of poor fellows were slaughtered ? whole hecatombs of dead were huddled promiscaoos-. ly together; and yet the Marquis of Angletiea hag a monument, and the person ?'bo owns the garden where it is buried, and the boat in which his leg was woun jed, delves quite a , revenuo from the English visitors, in showing them the place where tii-i leg- was buried, and ? the room where the leg \vj6 cut off, and thAii boot in whrclf the leg ions. A Marijui&Jrtfc would make the fortune ct'tay im land/ It is like the tooLj^)?a^SKi3nt" in Italy v Oh! Mr. Margus of AaaM^ if you af* , man ofsen*c, as ! arrU^TO you are, go to Wtt?* i erloo, buy yntrl^00*y vo ir boor, tear down j ' your mouuinfi0t?f*'sl what it may? for not S , i lravelterjrfK* rhis broad ear:;b unless he comes from land, tut gives you a laugh and r when lie se^s the grace of your rf thmks of the tnotumils and tliuusandt fl& that mighty muliijIude oi ddad lost tlietr leg*, bnt their beads, theie^flKtfip! the sam3 great struggle Whicli cost tbus high- honored !??/ ?* r asa* iu rttdtoi' 4 ?'A d.-At'-?rSe