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'Lan d1alarge throughout the fami a phrenological'7,' tak gre as the maximum of the n * t .omparison. 'Mirth' and specially, the latter, were also b4 r ly'nd powerfully devclk p rk iaired craniums of the runior.&itnsons. They, were all sing. OWtijf the neighbors would have n you that ;Ie of information wirtjat the .sliglitesl hesitation,-a reg tmily choir ; any little imperfec e performance were cer d 1 ttributablo to inusitation. c;~9y werce emphatically a musical fam ly,--lna descendants from the son 4Clliope,' practically familiar with f er&,yknown musical instru ews.harp'. to a 'bassoon' strah'serpent,'--bginning. (as aid)ietrly,sand 'taking to it' na . his tie not ery surprising, e perlinacity and utter dis doftime and place evinced in the 4tgepe of the family propensity, t":b ar retuidkablo,-so much so Swas ordinarily an immense >4 o , maving' going on in Stin o aseicinity :every May-day. It was 1Thi4ftsiafartarveof theirs aid a stand abnjggt for remark with them, that ro forever-surrounded by un i!-people, creatures who had 'no ho had even gone so ste againsatwhat one enomiatedas their 'infern ~!oofamiliarly known in the as. the 'noisy nine!' a sum 4piless intended to be applied rsunate daughaters of 'Pier *oailed. in thezr contest with awere cruelly transform-. na ,jgpe therefor,) rather than i i 'Nine' of classical noto is, however, thybore with ysciaisimnity. Truly, as Bob Iwho wa~s so musically obtuse as - eaii xeuino thc Sfi'uo' onsix different in * * jiidering rauisance,' as . ~~$br,.uponl a certain occa eb~x~ allooed himself hoarse e itewindow in demanding cesto f what he was s complaint to the 'mayor' in niprning. ~sBt~u~busindas is with Bob, not witlrlisjssters or their accomplish. mente. In addition to the musical fa 1ty Qfthe inherent power of which whnbub three years old he could, up o~Wmnoaa covered with thin jO~9e~ypbudS so closely rosem ,bifo.94a~violin and perform cer *istesowithi such power and accura se ddtda l blind gentleman ist e~elitigincontinently to thro' out petinies .from his chamber w~4osin-thebelef tog~t it was the 4~$~vI~n.Pf some street nxiinstrol, 401ms, Tis, PQ)h would wl upon nonor,---whet4er true or not, -there could be no doubt but that he belioved it to be so then, having told it often enough to give to it the most im pheit credence by the time he arrived at man's estate. In addition, as I be fore stated, to this harmonious weak ness, Bob's distinguishing characterism, his principal 'wanity,' was 'fshing.' To hii all other activo amusements were as naught, or at any rate, subor dinate to this. Bob was a fisherman ! he had a genius for the thing, whiph de veloped itself in all his actions in that regard, He considered the somewhat precarious dominion we exercise over the 'monsters of the briny deep,' as the greatest and most important of the gifts of the Creator to his creature. He loved fishing ! was of a piscivorous hab it, and loved to eat 'em when caught: preferring 'fish' to either 'flesh or fowl.' He was predestined to an ex ceeding close affinity with the scaly tribe, being clerk in a fish store ; was marked naturally with the figure of a fish under the left arm-either a whale or a mackerel, Bob didn't know which -had a'fishy' look with him, a white looking eye, a sharply defined, attenu ated, and exceedingly straight and pointed nose, closely resembling that of a pike,-in strange contrast with the usual organs of the Misses Stimson, all of which were decidedly and ambi tiously 'snbbish,'--a pouting, oval shaped mouth, with little or no chin thereunto attached,--in fact, presented quite a 'shad-y' appearance. From very broad shoulders hung down two arms-reaching but a trifle lower than the place where the hips ought to be which in walking were not swung to and fro after the manner of ordinary mortals, but dashed out laterally; in a spasmodical sort of fashion, very much like a man swimming. This, in addi. tion to a slightly wriggling style of pedestrianism, forming a 'tout ensem ble' decidedly piscatorial. As before stated, Bob was a fisherman. The twelfth Zodiacal sign was his natal con stellation. He was born under 'Piscis Major' and had entirely abandoned him self to its influences. Bob religiously devoted all holidays to his favorite pur suit. le was deeply learned in the names, nature, habits and haunts of the entire finny tribe,---had all the marks and grounds known to old sportsmen for. thirty miles round, and considered it glorious sport to start at daylight with two dollars worth of 'soft crab' and 'shrimp' for bait, row eight or nine miles against a strong tide, sit all day in the hot sun and row back at night with a bunch of fish which might justly be considered dear at a quarter of a dollar! This was what Bob consider ed real, substantial enjoymnnt,-none of your 'wishy-washy, namby-pamby. ism' for him. Ile eschewed all danc ing, theatricals, picnics, kissing parties and the like, as weak, mawkish, and beneath the dignity of man! consider ing his favorite pnstinr.e the only real source of unalloyed amusement of an out door life, with music for domestic re. reation ; the two combined,-when possible.-the very acme of human en joyment. Bob had stored hiis mind with a col lection of 'legends' in relation to the 'gentle art,' commencing with 'Jonah's Whale,' which lie considered as being decidecdly the most authentic of the mi racles, though, as he himself remarked, it ccrtainly was curious how the whale, having succeed in getting upon 'dry land' for the purpose of vomiting uip Jo nahi, managedl to get back to his native clement, being legless and unwieldy; but Bob's organs of 'miarvellousness' was small, by no means correspondent with his musical development, not-with standing the active exercise of his Ide ality, caused him to narrate continuhl ly 'Fish Stories,' which stretched to its utmost tension thme largest organ of 'Wonder' in possession of his hearers. One of iBob's favorite stories was in re lation to the taking, in a seine, of a huge sea bass of exactly the same length as himself, to an inch, upon that portion of the shores of Staten Island where now stands the whilom 'WVater mng Place,' New Brighton. In this adventure his life wvas periled repeated ly, being dragged by the scaly 'levia than' several times beyond his depth, and though v'ery fond of 'going in a swimming.' Bob could not swim. This affnir Bob regarded as the 'chief d'ouvre' of his life; its result, as deci dodly more important than that of the Battle of Trenton, ini which his patern. al grandfather was said to have been a ptarticipant; the only picce of historical repord with which he was to any degree familiar. .MWitlhltb. atnd di's similarnarrcativesW vf --649&t $& t)k dry 'drumi= or id"teepbeud' %1 dimensions, would,, :big 18 eas= ual companion othlWspottng hoimias seated i tackelt of" which gttiolo he aIitd a liarge' ahoganybxHilt; wtih lis4doubt ess-costfhim' -'Iottiate to til6, the price of at least a grand pino. And notwithstanding the doubtful looks of an occasionasiseeptio sBdb' iv btehied in the belief that hibissh' talesf vdre generally regarded as- being; jr the mam, strictly true. Having thus py8eated" u readers with a short preli6inary 6 of Bob's peculiarities, Ish e give them the details of th t particular occasion, (a Bob was wont to term it,) on which he captured the 'iermaid' alluded: to in -our heading. 'T was in the. latter portion. of. the summer of '37, in the very height of the 'real Estate' bubble, when every rod of land, whether dry and arable, or, as in many instances, entirely, coy Bred with water, .within fifty miles of New York, was made "the subject of blind speculation; and single farins, or rinarily valued at $5,000 or thcro ibouts, were sold to the speculative gentry at prices varying from 80. to $40,000, and ifamediatoly converted into magnificent lithographic cities! (on the map,) with churches, theatres, squares and parks, with an occasional Fountain or two, located almost invari bly in spots innocent of water from time immemorial,--the whole expensively mnd elaborately surveyed and laid out in streets and avenues :pompously desig aated in imitation of the pa'ont city, as Broadway, Pearl street, Water street, Bond street, Wall street, &c. &c., and valled in by a lcng line of heavy solid stone wharves, sufficiently extensive for the ample acoommodation of the'whole United States' navy, giving (on paper,) :o the whole a singularly imposing ap. rearance, and frequenly inducing the idmiring beholder to forget the trifling irawback, that within these magnificent narine havens no vessel of more than a rundred tons could ever, by any possi Jility, find entrance, from the simple, verlooked fact, that the river channel wvas too shallow to admit a larger. When at every other steamboat anding of the adjacent rivers and Kills is they are termed, a gaudy, shinny looking gilt sign, proclaimed to the pas ienger that the little ten foot square >uilding to which it was attached was a Land Office,' of the tenant of which, iplendid and eligible lots might be pur. :based at prices varying, in accordance vith their proximity to the apocryphal 'quares, parks, and public buildings ioresaid, from one hundred to a thou mand dollars; and assurances were given the puzzled inquirer, to whnm it was ylearly and certainly demonstrated that )y such an investment of his surplus Fund handsome profit must almost im mediately accrue. A constant appeal to the 'map,' and eloquent descriptions >f the intensity of the public anxiety to obtain severally for themselves m chance in this 'the most promising pportuinit; for .avestment occurring n modern times,' too often success Eully excited the cupidity of the uinwary anid caused them to affix to certain documents their signatures, eventually depriving themselves of the use0 and benefit of hundreds and thou ands of hard-earned dollars. 'Twas during this exciting period that Bob, availing himself of his custo nary suimmer holiday, wearied with the lust and din of city life and somewhat Lired of the daily routine of salt fish ransactions, freighting his skiff with the eccessary equippage and implements ~or the exercise of his destructiveness, hvendeld his way to that peaceful por ion of the shores of New Jersey which a washed by the -waters of the 'Kill Van Kull,' immediately opposite to the northern shore of Staten (or as ho fa 3etiously termed it, Satan's) Island. Tis was a favorite spot with Bob, as in mddition to its being mn the vicinity of certamn celebrated 'drum' grounds, it p~ossessed the additional charm of being tlie home of several rosy-chocked Dutch girls in whose giood graces Bob had, dlurmg0 tho previous season, made con niderabTle ad vance. Here, then, Bob pitched his tent, having issued, to one, whorn we sh-"'I cognominate 'Nod,' an in~ vitation to aend in his amphibious socie ty, a whole fortnight, and to whom lhe had presumptuously promised any amount of fun during that happy interval. Pas sing over thre sayings and doings which then an~d there generally transpired, proceed We to narrate how Inh. a few erbn0i pr to lii eturn tOC jty cd~ , angi dat <e rm id, 'T ib two , rtsnen having conclu de4 7~tber poor day's fishing, deter Inge4 on. returning, to diverge from their iret course -for the purpose of rouiAlg a.point insNewarkld3y, some what !amous for an .excellent bathing beach, there to luxuriate, by the light o' the moon'--which was in ,its last. quarter, and nearly down to the horizon --in a glorious-swin, MaDobrproposed, 'malgre' his gnorance of tbat seful accomplislmient. Accordingly, the.bath gas dinduiwed in, tnutil the waning Queen of 1ight was upon the point of leaving her throne, when .the, coming darkcness admonished the couplesof the necessity of return. they, according ly regained the skiff, and. having: res sed, lifted the 'kedge' and pulled for hcme, Ned being oareman and Bob in charge of the tiller. They ,pulled gav in Hdence for some time, with a care''ul stroke, giving . the. reef a wide berth, it being 'now quite dark, and hugging the shore as close as possible to keep out of the swiftly running tide which was ahead. The night dark very dark-it.was impossible to distin guish objects two yaras distant, and the voyagers, though satisfied-that they had rowed long enough to be close hoine, were ina .doubt as to their precise locali ty. At Bob's suggestion,:Ned ceased pulling, and rested on his 'skulls,' with a view to an 'observation.' After looking vainly some time, he was about to resume his labor when 'Wh-i-s-h-t-sh-sh!' says Bob, 'hold on Ne4, what the deuce :is that? 'What!' '$h-sh, hark,--here, on your left.' 'Whore? I don't see anything.' 'Hush-sh-sh,-keep dark,--back water!' 'Back it is,' says. Ned. 'Hark, again'--and now Ned's ear was regaled.with sound like that of some one auppressing or suffocating an.-incli nation to ao h, and. peering into .the dark he. discovered what he atfirst supposed to o a large stake.- Closer scrutiny invested it with something of a human appearance. 'Wh-a-t t'h-e-d-o-v-i-l i a it?' gasped out. Ned, now as .much excited as hia mercurial companion Again they fan cied they heard the tittering sound. 'By thundc r!' exclaimed .Bob whose very thoughts were of a pisciv erous character,--'it 's a Mormaid!' Still, whatever it was, it - remained motionless. The boat. had drifted from the object of wonder some five or six yards, when Bob,-whose hand seized upon the body of a clam, intended for bait, which lay on the skiff's bottom, standing up n the skiff, .vowed he'd know, and before his partner could-pre vent, urled with all force the said clam at the said 'Mermaid.' The precision of his aim ,was evinced by a 'spl-i-shy' sort of sound, as of two fleshy substan ces in collision; whereupon a faint shriek went up from the 'critter,' and at the same moment Ned was made sensible of some invisible misfortune to Bob, who was by some unseen agency, vio. lently pulled over backwards into the water. 'Ned! Ned! pull-pull-for--la--h -God's--gur-g-gle--g-gle-.gur-ggle spl-a-sh- oh!-Mar-d-e-r, Ned! spl-a-sh souse, gurgl-g-g-gle, s-p-i-sh sh, s-p-a-sh, mur-d-e-r, d-mn- t-na' shrieked Bob, who had never used such an exclama tion in his life, before .--'Who-.--are ye? what-ohi-oh----sp-i-s-lh souse-gur-g-g gle-gu-g-gle-the Devil! Ned,oh! N-e-d' shouted he with all his strength, as a momentary reslpite was afforded him, as he came up at intervals from under the wvater, beneath the surface of which some three or four of the moat Amaze nian of the Mermaids were laughingly engaged in thrusting him. Whore was Ned, in the skiff? not by ajug full, the skiff was bottom upwards. Ned was in deep water where the water nymphs didn't like to venture. At the first alarm! Ned had tried his oars, but the skiff was fast: he'd pull with might and main but some invisi ble power held him, and at every pull the skiff would rebound towards shore. And now Ned could distinguish some four or five human looking creatures of gigantic size (as they appeared to him) holding on to the stern of the boat, he wvas in the hands of the Philistines! ia position was defined! and he knew' it; he'd seen the 'elephaant'---.had Ned! he'd been thiere cforec. 'Twas but a moment's work to spring Over th~o howa as far as possible and striko out for deep water. HQ knew the natureo of the brute, theydid vd. like misoheir in dep wa.. a h.. gained it, then turnted te iit u this tinie Bob''%shreks '#e -me somiething eleyid drew him. .And-no .again ho ahouteM A 'H--p Ned --e-d--lb { *i's ko!'! 'Thed ffl1]gd efiie eand with a resolve to'd9 or die,' Nfed pwam back till be dicoexeed one of .to ,e my close to hin: Nuiselesl Je 'dips. and reachin bottom 'seises a foot/ -q, tail, or--sometbing, and donoi a Mermaid, with a piercing shriek, wiichi was immediately echoed fronra -dozen throats, and then aucbA splashing-and scramperiug, such a 'digging' for shore, you never saw. Oie after notor ' Bob's perbeoutors 'amongst the rest whilst Se, poor' wretch, sat' upoi she beach, exhausted,if- to his itec'kiii the water. The unfortunate 'animal that Ned had seized was, left behind, Tob could n't imagine,.-.unless it bad been wounded in the encounter. Ned had gone for the skiff. wheh the lost ede passed Bob without noticing him. A feeling of ,vengeance s irng up in Bob's breast, and bein su cent ly restorod,-liavin.'voite about six quarts,---as he stated, of salt water, ho rose suddenly, and gave chase. rho. critter 'locomoted' rapidly. Bob .as too swift for her, ho overhauled her, and we piesumno had a battle, or an ex planation, if they talk,--or something of the kind, for, ho did nptreturn. Mean time Ned liaving [ri'ted the skiff -and1 anchored her, walked up the beach to find Bob, or home, or .both, or, either. In so doing, stumbled over a frock and hon--hem! no not exactly that; didn't know what! It ioolied .sewethinglike a, shirt, only that it wus sleeveless and longer. At any rate, Npd took it .home and madea very minu .exa nation tlhereof, but to no pp for iogI heenqired diligentl .there was pDone in that neighborhood who, owned it lie was therefore forced into the conclu sion that hereafter in the natural.histo ry of the Mermaid .it should al ay be mentioned that the creature evinces i certain degrei. of. womany del and unless in very' ok nights, clotes itself after the manner of females 'tr rene.' That this is true of the genus, imi versally,he perhaps would hesitate to aver, but of the species to be found in the waters of New Jersy he is qualified to speak positively,-as he yet retains the evidence thereof in. the garments aforesaid,-which differ in no apprecia ble degree from those worn by nymphs who ate not terrafueous. Some two years aftei this occurence he was placed in a position to speak with more certainty as to the close re semblance borne by this animal to the human race, by the receipt of an "invi tation to attend the wedding of his fishy friend, Robert Stimson, Esq., who, af ter the ceremony, took Ned aside and whispered him,in strict confidenee, so don't you mention it, dear reader to a 'living soul,'---that that the la dy was the identical Mermaid that he (bob) had chased and captured on that memorable occasion. INed assured me on his 'honor,' that she was in DO wise distinguishable from a very pretty, healthly looking woman! v-Tmes. ORIGIN AND -ANTIQUITY OF HORSE-RACING. Having shown in our paper of last week upon this subject thathorse-racing, originally derived from the East, was a portion of the ceremonies used in .ee brating.the festivities or Mithras, or the sun, and that this worship flnding is way into Greece and Rome, itas sub sequently transplanted by,th IUomans into England-that the English, have adopted many of the manners and kus tows of the Romans is very. evident to any observing reader~f thd social his tory of that pee olet ats ndw iinquire how closely wo hav0 followed them in respect of horse-racing.4 We have already said that tlie races of Romae wore run in th4 opein country till Tarquiniuis Priscus built the grand,1 circus in which the racese were after wards performed.- How far the horses ran before they' got- to the-last- meta, from the starting plae is not expressed by historineur but we are informed that the above circus is saidto be about two thousand one hundred and sixty-seven Roman feet in length,andnine.hundred and sixty broad,- Ea-semi-circular form at onerend, the .other iextending in a rightlIines bIsmt rather oiroular; and that tbe races commonly ended at. the. sev. enth turn round the metm, though nowi and then we meet with, u nextraor~ dinary. ocoasions, fewer' sn+h numbqran4 ladbret th0 besrdham ' olr'l t a + :: - od e .33 ex and t $';i D1 1 it =rt * ettsti>nilse=fir. T> ei' , j e, tis a _ > ng an <<. J np a iotti 'Qac g. -wa sign * sgive i b 1t op ! n i hun ou iota tliv' PrEi i"*p to t or': e bbi0f Abtt tf8i$ 9iL t}t ;hi ' cYIY " fY aZ. callM them 1'Iegaletasi it' a t 1. liactt' et cu1Q p . Th of t1[ia ' nt 't i' t to {tbn 1 n Tc b rr one "ab dititi ', Safi d e h 'aiul 9n a-&ct t-rtoise rv t napkin ?ha, tihd in' s'hat4ti ^ oi3= ' 'fo; t idoty se a tokr t < ' chair rr : than c od: quiet: :.; . ., ..,. : ,". . At this!_;! .also ''fie' Rmhs} i"odo: fit i ifl refit 2olbra t > tiei iY r coinpartiee' 'of c*- ioteel - t .dlehii', to themae rea. Thea?'f hr ' egg' four, 5'vis# I'rasintt '' (red;)'ttlbn'a tiitisto? hte 3hn s{bo vineta (sky or sea cd16r;)16 tli was generally the favorite c lhll tinder Cti1ibYult fro; Cd fh+ 'follow ing Etinperotr A: J gig Ii d e7d A.. D. 96 added two oioi'e'cdlsts =v'ia 'Ehe" golden'ot'ybllow+~nad the p'drpie At ur tea) brit the o" We ~ . sod 'laid aside= again by fhd foltoi ing. in e rho victb it' the spci 4 : were b-diior'&t withgarlarids, toidoote;*nd*other oirt u aientsi t ter the 'Orebk mail lex - 1Ud, ve'y often".*itwito i sideiable' reirar Het1 a Jttvdnat sg a ;r z i i, ,.;,f: s ,_ t'a*te ll:asalperrxus iti'paureto it : r The.. aplb.,of' Ronjo! wo pe t - r roar, tQ the-ra'oea At= ofeitiffties bf31ittir is," sod also afterwards fn;::. eouiplintin'; to" th r erors s who' =e i rh' th se sports, that theta: puyposo -for.;theeb=Y re s 1> t itta ins tht:.ezi pire; to which'#h ' a le, tlilo d in vast numbe4x j1'o! -glibiir' "}iaiir ouch thePohuln' wo ea ' Iterieti in: Shesegames. Juvenal Oatftl l ' their tints aim two arordsl" at*Wot rz e tinis: lbread and jfie- gat>3es) ==+thataa'to sad he bread: distribnte'drby" the Empero " w endthe games in the circus. =Theeame noet also describes, in hia'seventfi ehtiM,. ,bo'exti ordinary 'fondn of:tho-Ro nans for these;: races.v Congrei e' 1ss" .hus translated passage:L : _ "s; erhis day'au home (1(.I''tnay be s116fiied;4 Withbut: .ft .ju to augh p; qu ars ietaq rd,. To 'say 1! Rout} ii-J11 iq the a . , Ei:T'twtrreedy to,1heir' out liMett i i s he ir.tla yl: The glean has won tI$ Jim. .. ota adak ,O : houkt thrs$ siwrta bo:bat paq .. forborgA' "' ' ' ;'home would. in tear , her iorod dttc ioi Such was the fondness. too f p .favor rile horses, that Mont'auco> -tillef.,vs," tna :gives; an cngraving.iaf a ndrawing rein An ura which baa tWQ ,inao trots ipott.it, the tppermo$t regardkthehor cos, the lower the Person interred there.