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' ~~ VOLUME 2. ^ ^ CAM I)KN, ^jOUTI1-C A ROLLS"A SEPTEMBER 20, 1851. S UMBER 76. THE CAMDEN JOURNAL. PUBLISHED HY THOMAS J. WARKEA. THE SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL * * " ' ' * rni ?r*/1 Fifti? r<?n?vi if nniJ in ! la-DUOIISIieil BI ? nrcc .o/o?.? . ... . ? .. r_ i advam-e, or Four Dollars if payment is delaved for three [ months. j THE WEEKLY JOURNAL Is published at Two Dollars if paid in advance, or Two Dollars and Fifty Cents, if payment Is delayed for Six j months, and Three Dollars, if not paid until the end of the ! year. ADVERTISEMENTS will be inserted at the following ' rates: For one square (14 lines or less) in the semi-weekly, [ one dollar for the first, and twenty-five cents for each i subsequent insertion. In the weekly, severity-five rents per square for the first, j and thirty-seven and a half rents for each subsequent insertion Single insertions one dollar per square. The numfter of insertions desired, ami the edition to < be published in, must be noted on the margin of all adver- ! tisements, or they will be inserted semi-weekly until or- | dered to Tie discontinued, aw! charged accordingly. Semi-nwnthly. monthlv and quarterly advertisements | charged the same as for a single insertion. tETAIl communications by mail must be post-paid to I secure attention. -* ? *? ? mil i.tkirx v fe 1/ tTl .A *. 21 B'i , BANK AGENT. J At hm old stand opposite Davis's Hotel i b. w. c;haSbersT Receiving and Forwarding Merchant, AND Borer of Cotton and other Country Produce, , CAMDEN, S. C. J WILLIAM C.MOOKK, BANK AGENT, And Receiving and Forwarding Merchant CAMDEN, S. C. Rfffrencks?W. E. Johnson, Esq. Maj. J. M DeSaussure, T. J. Warren, JS.sq. A. G. BASHIN, j Camdi:n, S. C. j A.G.BASKIN, Attorney at Law, and Solicitor in Equity, Office in Rear of Court House, Camdkn, S. C. W?H practice in the Courts of Kershaw* and I adjoining Districts. j J S. B. KE itSIIA W, Attorney at Law and Solicitor in Equity, j CAMDEN, s. c. Will attend the ? ourts of Kershaw, Sumter, i Fairfield, Darlington and Lancaster Districts. W. H. R WORKMAN, Attorney at Law, and Solicitor in Equity, k CAMDEN. S. C. f Office nearly opposite A. Young's Book Store.) j WILL ATTKSD TilK COURTS Of Dariingtou ami Sumter Districts. Business entrusted to him wi). meet with prompt I and careful attention. Juiyiitj. c. s. wks;iv. Attorney at Law. Office in Rear of the Court House, Camden, 3. C. June 17 4S_ gtns | Saddlery aud Hnrucw itiuHitiacturcr, Opposite Ma tonic Hall, camdkn, s. c. S, ?. UALLFORD, Dry Ooods Groceries Crockery, Ac. AND GENERAL AGENT, Camden, S. i R. JVmcCRSIGKT, ~~ COTTON GIN MAKER. Rutledge St., one door cast of AJ. Drucker &. Co. j Camdkn. S. C. I Charles A. McDonald, FASHION A III. K TAILOR, j Camdkn, S. C. V "ROOT. CAMDEN, S. C. RICE 0UL1N, FACTOR AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, CENTRAL WHARF, CHARLES I'ON, S. C. May35 tt Z. J. DeHAY, DRUGGIST AND APOTHECARY, Camden, S. C "waasm" Fashionable Boot Vlaker, CAMDEN. S. C. ~wko ?Co Fashionable Tailor, Camden, S. C. Clovers & davis, nml F^llll IIIOCIAI1 \l 0 ? /? ll f> fl t ?i! rutinis uiiu i/vjiiuuooivu iuvivhuui.') CHARLESTON, S. C. ^ Aug. 8 62 ^in PAVILION HOTEL" (BY U. L. BUTTERFIELD.) Corner ok MErriNr, and Haset.l Streets, and in the immediate vicinity of haVNE and Kino Streets, Charleston, y. (_*. ROBERT LATTA'S GROCERY AND PROVISION STORE, Camden, S. C. j % -4. .. W?' J* ^ **%? * .4 1 From the South Carolinian. I l To Col. John S. Preston. i No. 5. I Sir: In proceeding with the task of cstah- ? lishing the justification of that portion o I your ' fellow-citizens of Richland, lately in < orres- 1 pondence with you on the great political top- 1 ic of the day. in whose minds the appearance 8 of your Barnwell letter first excited uneasiness j 1 as to the ' soundness of your principles,' it he- i 1 comes necessary to call attention to son e oth- j 1 er points it developed before its valedictory be \ finally pronounced, and, in doing so, tilcon- 1 tradictions to the '"ground they suppose d you ; to occupy" before its publication become abso- ; } lutely and painfully certain. j s I'uquestionnhly, on the 22d of .Marc! last,,' you and the "immediate State action m< i," as j ' you have been pleased to style them, (nil I they j ; have no objections to the designation when i ' nrnnotlv understood.! of your own District and ; r I ? I J , throughout the State, stood upon a en union j ' platform, and avowed allegiance to tlx same : s great policy. That platform and that >olicy ' ' were disunion with the co-operation of th?: other ' States of the South if it could bo obtaiise i; if it j 1 could not be obtained, tlien disunion with i ' South Carolina, alone, actint. tiii oi.iai i I VIRIt ALREADY ELECTED CONVENTION, 1 ROVI- j 1 DED FOR RY LAW AND REFORE ITS FtNA . AD- 1 joi'rnment. This is Trefutable^tnitli, str lding J-1 upon the record in characters of nnextin ;uish- ' v able light, and, as such, challenging deni: ; and i J it is respectfully asserted, that you can lever 1 escape from its persevering pursuit, and. stand j s uuimpoached in }'our consistency as a j uldic | man. If additional proof on this subject jould 11 be required by honorable and intelligent men, ; ' ..??nr -i /?ini)id review of what lias already been f adduced, it is abundantly supplied in the Itato. '' inents of " A Secessionist and .Member o' the j Legislature," in bis card of nomination In do- i ^ ptities to the Southern Congress of the 2i d of ' May last, a correspondent whom you j tstly ; " compliment as a 'lending member' of that t cxly, jc' and 'as noble a gentleman as the onrtl af. j fords." Of course he heard your speech ii the !* House of Representatives, and doubtless had 0 participated in your less public consulat ons. 1 o In ft nned fully, tiicreforc, as to your view s of the line of policy which the safety and lioix.r of n the State demanded at the hands of those vho ' assumed the helm of affairs, "A Secessionist.1 and .Member of the Legislature" launched your :| nomination as a deputy to the Southern Con- 'J "gress in .May. Now, sir, leaving the courtesy - ~ ? ? -....* "-O.nlA,e i\C miftfiMnn f UI UH' IllUVt'lllUilt V'lllllV'lJ 1>UI< *?i IUV j a- , upon what grounds was the nomination of ytuir- (1 self and your respected co-nominee, Colonel ' Chesnut,' placed and so earnest!}' reeouiended s by that correspondent? The answer shall be j ' given in tlit* very language of die ca'd itself: } "If they fail.(that is, in the Southern Congress,) 1 which it is now almost certain that they will do. 1 to accomplish any thing for the honor and sale- ' ty of the South, then 1 pledge my life they will ~ co-operate most heartily with us in taking South I Carolina single handed and alone out of this j} accursad I'uion before the final adjournment of j I the State (huiventioa. To this they are pled- ( ged by their votesof the last session and by tiieir | 1 known disunion sentiments, if not by their p:i- | * vate declaration"." And a:.ain: "If it the South- i ' eru Congress) fail, then 1 repeat they will help *' us. Let us, then, foiget that we are divided " by a hair, and give them a hearty and unani- : 1 mous support for the sake of Carolina?for the 1 sake of the cause?for the sake of the sucks- i ' sio\.' Tins language is not susceptible of two i ' constructions; your elevated moral senses ren- !J dels you superior to any attempt perversion; j 1 and whilst the people of South Carolina are j worth} of all commendation of their generous s I:I.lr\ viid.d -in itOi>rnr<>f .-if ion of if ill Sllll- ! - i j port of your consistency, would he an exercise j of charity that would go far to convict tliem.nl | a gross imbecility, or the practice of a syeo- ! pliancy derogatory alike to their common sense ! and independence. Your relation to the nomination of the 22d of May is equally unequivocal with the language in which it is couched, and is as indisputable as the grounds were explicit upon which it was pre.li j en ted. It went before the public upon the an 1 thority of a geutlman, as you know, whose j spirit had been made "red with uncommon i wrath' by the federal usurper, lustful of despotic j power and impelled by the infuriated disciples < of abolition, obedient to the tint of the "higher law." You knew him, therefore, to be a seeos sionist, ready himself to stand the " hazard of the die," wholly uninfluenced by fears, interest or ambition, and without circuity or guile.? \ ou weli style him "as noble a gentleman as the earth affords." Previous, then, to the publication of your Barnwell letter, how did you stand before your fellow citizens in view ot tint nomination? Why, sir, plainly, palpably, and undeniably, in body and mind, committed and pledged to the principles and p licy which it embodies. It is not necessary to remind von of the maxim tliat "silence gives consent;" it would be an imputation upon your candor as a i public man, which all scorn to make, to iuti- < mate thai yon could he guilty of cunning prnc- t tices to obtain a distinguished dignity, involving an io?j o tant political trust. No, sir,?no, t sir; the platform of the nominating card was ( avowedly your platform?you confessed your ' complete acquiescence in it, as a whole, and in i all its parts, when you incorporated it in your ; reply to the recent interrogative note of some t of your fellow-citizens of Richland in proof of : your consistency. Von could not repudiate it, | ( because its repudiation would have inflicted a j i wound upon a irictitt too cruel lor endurance, and left room for an implication at least, that t j that friend, with all his opportunities for infor- < niation, was destitute of sufficient intelligence i to understand your meaning, ha 1 misconceived ( your principles, had over-estimated your pa- I triolism and public spirit, and had incorporated i into your political creed objectionable ele- j nents without competent authority. Such an : inputation is wholly inadmissible, and it would | >e treating you with unpardonable injustice to j inppose that you would allow it to exist for a norucnt; and had you submitted that card oi lomir.atiot} to your follow citizens of the State J iction party who lately addressed you in an- | iwer to tfce interrogatories they propounded, j hey would have hailed if with delight as satisactory evidence that they had not been mista- J ion in "confiding in the soundness of your prin- ! iples, that you agreed with them in the main n your principles, and were prepared to act vith them." They were prepared to stand by -nn in rlufonnn of tlm nricition that the (Treat TB* .istancc party in the State, the people, through heir representatives in the l:\st General Assembly, bravely marched up alioost in solid phalinx; and that platform is faithfully delineated n the card of nomination; upon it they were esolved to stand in triumph or to (all in honor, uid upon ail the responsibilities of their coniciences they now declare that they regarded oil as one of their banner-bearers; and in the irmest convictions of their judgments, after a eview of the whole ground, voti have abanloued that glorious standard, which from your . lands would have kissed the -'ust, had they lot caught it as you cast it from you. It is now proper to open the inquiry how far nid in what respects your Barnwell letter, viiich gave rise to the late correspondence he wi'i'ii yourself :111a some 01 your icuow ciu^c.ia, 5 at war with your previous political laith as , tamped upon the face of your nomination in i Jay last, as a deputy to the Southern Congress, j 11 the closing paragraph of which, that faith, as sir as it relates to the present action and duios of South Carolina, is pronounced as fol- . mvs: " Such, then, gentlemen, is inv belief, that S. 'arolinn should devote herself now, and pa- ! ienlly to seek the co-operation of other States -to do this by the sentiments of the people \pressed in their primary associations, by the ,cts of her legislature, and most especially by he solemn ordinance of the people's supreme rgan now existing, in all honor to use all argument and solicitation." It is not to be disguised that this is taking lew and totally different ground as lo the aeion of the "people's supreme organ now exising," t.hc convention, from that so explicitly 1 ssumed for you, and so undeniably sanctioned ! py yourself, in the nominating card of .May.? j According to the latter, the convention was to , ip a body of action ?of practical, decided, j omplete, and final action. It was to perform he great business of taking .South Carolina 1 . . . ...... , , ingle liann?u and nlnno, out 01 uus accurseu nion before its final adjournment? and that on would li.'iji lis in this mortal adhio.votnent, u the event of your failure to ellect any tiling i>r the safety ami honor of flic* South. The il'e of your noble friend stands pledged, ami he talced that life on the ground that you were dodge (I l?y y niir votes of the last session, by | rour known disunion sentiments, if not by your irivate declarations. Vastly, immeasurably lilleient is the line of conduct you now so ear- ' lestly recommend that that body should purine. Yon would now strip <t of all its ctfieuut y and dignity; you would now have it pass in ordinance of so'tcitimi instead of secession ? to register an august, argumentative decree, nstead of "taking South Carolina single hand- 1 d and w.onk, out of this accursed Union"? t is imagined that the style of the preamble, iikI title ci the most imposing decree which on would have the " people's supreme organ" J o promulgate might be Mimcthing like this:-- , Whereas, the other Southern Slates hocr, by the t entiments of their people, "She acts of their Lc- j fislalnre," ootl ordinances of their conventions, > . ' ? J - , ? l_ V IIO.Sl snienimy resmrrn urn to vo-iiperiu; nun o. ? (irnjinn iii the effectual Measures of' resistance, f n the encroachments of an abolition Federal \ lore rumen', but to submit thereto: Ho it tliero* ore ordained by the People's Supreme Organ j >1 this Slate, that it becomes her, to use. all or- i nnnriit and solicitation to ejfrrt a change in t'icir j opinion, anil then?to adjourn. How arc the ! nighty fallen! How have the injured, iusul'ed rave suc< ninhed! Sir, none of your fellow itizons are ambitions of the glories of martyr- . loin, "if indeed, glory can he predicated of; martyrdom at all;" hut there are thousands, j vith 'no piohility about tlieiu except of heart ' ind soul, of mind and spirit, who are ready now o meet its bloody or burning tortures, and the j Irene of its cruel and revolting death, rather ban he what they are and what they must ho 11 an early future, to a more damning degree i ?the degraded vassals of an infuriated, domiiceiing, and usurping Central Abolition GovTurnout. Depend upon it, there are those who ivill not permit that Government to "bestride ' lie narrow world" of their sovereign State, | i " l.kc a CoIosm-s ; <ml tlicy. petty tnen, Walk under its huge legs and peep about To find themselves dishonorable graves." And if they be compelled to strike vour , lame from the catalogue of such glorious sons j f South Carolina, the eve shall be averted at lie inauspicious moment of the erasure. It cannot be said with justice that any por- i ion of your fellow.citizens of this State either lesiro or intend, as \*ou seem to imagine, to 'give strength to the weakness of our foes, to I nvito or drive our friends to join them, or by ; toy means to make a glorious, a vital cause, i ho sport of chances which are all against us." Such they deny to be their motives or the ten--a' .?I: _..a ;r .in0ichm5iti.lv .HIV I j "i iijcii |ium;y , ?'iiivi ii v ""V jf them 110 blind with liu v, or in:ul with "rage" ? il tliey, or any of thorn, aro ready to encnmi : er the fa to of martyrs, whether it be glorious ! ir ignoble, (and yon seem to doubt w! tth -r it .voidd be the one or the other,) you cannot es .ape from your proper share of the responsi)ility of producing such a state of the public iiind. You cannot point your linger at them ind cry out, "Ihou canst nut say I did it."? They "confided in the soundness of your principles, admired the briliancy of your talents," trusted to the invincibility of your political courage, and rejoiced in you as one of their most reliable and available leaders. Ion assisted to launch their little vessel of State on the waters; and if the element is about to become enveloped in storm and darkness, and to 1 engulpli it, tlioy have a light to expect you to | stand at the helm till the final catastrophe shall occur, bravely and heroically sharing their fate. I'pon an occasion well remembered by your fellow-citizens of ltichlnnd, your one our a genus eloquence inspirited the timid, anil brought hack to hoary years the patriot tires of youth, when you declared, with impressive solemnity, that "we were enacting history," atitS that our forms of procedure should he characterized by a corresponding dignity. In you was then recognised our leader and our tower of strength, from which should fly in triumph, the colors of siNOLb-M andkd secb-ston, on tile failure of proper efforts io secure co-operation. Sir, where are you now ? Where has your Burnwell am! othe>* letters carried you ! Where has your letter of reply to some of the citizens of Richland carried you? in which you declare that "von deem it due to yourself to say th?t yon believe that the convention may honorably and patriotically terminate its own existence without perpetrating the act of secession." You have answered for youself. You are a co-operatiomst?that is your party now, which will sweep you on irresistibly from position to position; and planetary motion is not more certain than that vonr destination is but I forbear; I will not spf!fk the word. The operations of the human mind are, in ' ' < >.,! ?!?/? ciirinnrc nl" it?J action nre often so sulitio llint t!i??v escape its own observation. Influences not uufrequently in trude themselves upon it unknown to itself, operating. however, with n power equally hidden and controlling; and if unhappily yours has been seized upon bv such occult agencies, whoso effect h:i? been to render you oblivious of the past and to mislead you as to the luture, the broad mantle ot charity must be thrown over your errors whose sudden and unlucky mischiefs our reinvigorated energies; will struggle to repair. 1WLMKTTO. NO. 5. " nothing extenuate. Nor set down auglil in malice Sin: I am about to relieve you from my intrusive addresses, and at parting have only a word to add. The liimiib'ty of my position, as well as of my fMwlnwrnoiit*. murht well have deterred inc from entering upon the tank of exhibiting what appeared to me to be the irreconcilcablc iricon-i>tencies io wliieh yonr short, hut by no means unattractive, public career abounds; and considering the very extraordinary advantages of social relations, wealth, connections, and abilities, of which you are possessed, and all of which, in my best judgment, 1 thought I saw were about to he suddenly and unexpectedly lost to a glorious cause, nothing could have induced me to employ mv pen as I have in ad- j dressing to yon, arid through you to the public, i my previous communications, except a strong i and overmastering impulse of duty. I I'raniily confess to von that your divergence from that line of policy, which your countrymen had every ground to believe von had firmly adopted at the present perilous and all important juncture of public a flairs, previous to the appearance ofj your ill-omened Barnwell letter, was so manifest, and at the same time so alarming, that I thought that even one as little fitted as myself might easily expose it, and thereby avert in some degree its threatened mischief. If I have succeeded, I have real cause for rejoicing, as I seek no other reward for my la-1 hor than the approbation of 1113' fellow-citizens and of my own conscience; and if I have failed, the superior intelligence of the former will * * -on-i ? 1.. ,i i.e..: IllinillUIV SU|?|ny UIU m'licil'licica UI injr aijju- , nient, so that you cannot finally escape from a just retribution. It would lie in vain for you to attempt to vindicate your consistency, for the array of evidence against you is command- i ing and ovenvelming; it stands invulnerable j and ineffaceable in the solidity of the record :j it is found in a force and power which defy j overthrow in your public writing, public speaking, and public acting?in the whole tenor and spirit of vour private conferences, consultations, and conversations, up to a certain period already designated. Until the advent of vour | Barnwell letter, by the undisguised and loftytoned committal of all these, you were a re- \ cognised secessionist, standing on the platform of your December speech, on the platform of the resolution of the Richland Southern Rights Association of the 2?d of March last, and finally on the platform assumed for you, j and, I eyondall disputation, sanctioned by you, in the card of "A Secessionist and Member of the Legislature," of the 2'-M of May last, nominating you as a deputy to the Southern Congress This body of evidence you can neither overleap nor undermine. Its stability puts at defiance alike the ingenuity and desparation of attack, and has carried conviction to all minds of all parties?co operationists, snbmissionists, and secessionists?which no appeals, no tropes or figures, no promises, protestations, or sophistry can in the least disturb. The celebrated limine mi <inf> occasion. iustlv remarked, that "a question once decided was no longer open for argumentand in this light the question ol your consistency must ho regarded by a just and enlightened public opinion. It is to be sincerely regretted, therefore, that yon made the question of your consistency at all before your fellow.citizens in your late correspondents. A far higher and more independent ground was open for your occupancy, as I am sure, on reflection, you will at once per ceivc, anu one wmcn a generous puoiiu wuwu readily liave tolerated. Deeply implicated as you were deemed to be in the doctrine ol secession by the convention provided for by law, and before its final adjournment, whilst support would certainly have been withdrawn, no one would have denied to you the right to change your opinions on that subject upon any evidence satisfactory to yourself, and a ready rebuke would have been administered to that proscriptive illiberally which might have questioned that right. Had you placed yourself before your fellow-citizens in that attitude, its dej fen-ibility as a personal privilege would have j been admitted at once ami by all, and the war - ? ' J.I 111 J *.L~ liCiween vnu nr.u mem wouki navf zibsuiucu uio complexion of an elevated am! honorable contest concerning great principles of public policy. Xo motives would have been inquired after ! ?r.o alien and controlling interests would have ! been alluded to? \oti would have been believ* j ed entirely sincere upon your own declaration, ! and your former political allies, though parting j with you in sorrow, would have commended your truth and frankness. The controversy : between us would have been a manly warfare, j worthy of intelligent and enlarged minds, capai hie of appreciating and handling momentous' ! questions involving the very profoundest public considerations; and if you should signally fail, j as you heritably will, in the effort to sustain I your consistency, it will, after nil, afford to ho* j nornble men with whom you have come into i rnlltcinn tin rnrtl ticfrwtinn f~n KnlinM nnn cn valuable to the State broken and disconifitted | at tln'ir feet, were it not tor the consciousness j that in prostrating you they had advanced the great principles, upon which, in their estirna' tion, the public honor and welfare rest. They J can find no other ground of*gratulatton in j*our misfortune?no other source of exultation in : the extinguishment of your well founded ambi, tious pretensions; and you are entreated to allow lliein to indub'p the hone that the onnortu. i uity " ill nnt be long deferred of healing the mortification they may have inflicted on you in the performance of a present paramount pub, lie duty. In the indulgence of this feeling be assured all of us delight. You have the respectful adieu of PALMETTO. Distance of the Sun.--Imagine a railway ! from here to the sun. How many hours is the ' sun from us? Why, if we were to send a baby | in an express train, going incessantly a hundred miles an hour, without making^any stoppages, the baby would grow to be a boy?the boy ! would grow to be a man?the man would grow old and die?without seeing the sun, for it is distant more than a huiulr?Ml years from us.? But what is this compared to Neptune's disI tnnce? Had Adam and Eve started, by our railway, at the creation, to go from Neptune to the Sun, at the rate of fifty miles an hour, they would not have been there vet; Neptune is more than six thousand years from the centre of onr system.?Household Words. One of the Witnesses.?The late J. S., a man of infinite wit and humor, and who had probably seen as much of life in America as any one, useil to toil the following stnrv, which is too good to ho lost, though probably no one but ho cculd do full justice to it. II we err not, it ran thus: What rail road stock is in the east, steamboat shares are in the west, and as almost every body owns more or less, if is impossible to procure a judgment against any company lor injury, carelessness, or even loss of life. Such suits are yet very frequent, and give rise to some strange cart/re temp*. Not long since, it seems, a steamboat called tho "Old Kentuck," blew up near tho Trinity, at the mouth of tho Ohio, where it is a well established fact, that a great many of the mosquitoes will weigh a pound, by which accident a lady rejoicing in the name of Mrs. Jones, lost her husband and her trunk, for both of which an notion was brought. There was, strange to say, great difficulty in proving that Mr. Jones had been on the boat at the time of the collapse, that worthy having notoriously been very drunk on the wharf boat just as the steamer left Trinity. Many witnesses were examined to prove the fact until finally a Mr. Dietzmar, a German was placed on the stand. Our friend J. S. was attorney for the boat, and elicited from Mr. Dietzmar this testimony: "Mr. Dietzmar, did you know the Old Kentuck?" "Yah, 1 was blowed up mit her." I j.\if .1 i _i. - _ _u _ ii a _ ? " \> ere you mere wnen sue cnuapsea ner uue? "When she hust tie bile? yah, I wash dere." "Did you know Mr. Jones?" "To be sure?Mr. Jones and I took passage togedder." "You did? When did you last see Mr. Jones on board the boat?" "Well! I did not see Mr. Jones aboard de last time." J.S. fancied his case was safe, and with a most triumphant glance at the jury, said, You did not? Well Mr. Dietzmnr, when last did you see Mr. Jones?" " Well, when de schmolce. pipe and me was going tip, we met Mr. Jones coming downl" CHOICE OF A HUSBAND. Ofbeautv just enough to hear inspection; Of candor, sense, and wit, a good collection ; F U A.lA H.liA TjIlOUgll l?l IUVP VIIV liV IICCIIO UlCTL I IUI1| To scorn the words?"I'll keep her in subjection;" Wisdom t? keep him right in each diiection, Nor claim a weaker vessel's imperfection. Should I e'er meet with ?uch in my connection, I ?it Itim nrnnn?5P. I'll nffpr no nkippfinn * l""l - " - " 03~Vanity not malice, is the prevalent r??ason why men take so little pleasir_> in the praise and gilte of other*.