{ title: 'Cherry Valley gazette. volume (Cherry Valley, N.Y.) 1857-186?, February 11, 1858, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031269/1858-02-11/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031269/1858-02-11/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031269/1858-02-11/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031269/1858-02-11/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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d; Jn. -a ~ fow moment 'of tli¢ flo‘ndjidg 'but the memory in moro than.] NI YHAIDT S.d¥o Ux vs P éued: the bnfifi ; ited \ithe vessel'astde, nud-staod k aly-in thio presenca of t : fon oak out of- spirits. ou:the 'quarter-deo m nanders ~. he-dsaltopeth- era venerable ~mhin; with a har Bootch Trisk face, 'goftened in i ceus tlirough-Hirl Gate $\. - i. him.. \His hair ; -MAgwol) as my father if tall, thin, and angi 'these thirty - years,!\ -was. the u-very much of: Old Hick feat fran 1 n bet is honest, no. ond.dgubts: he has sncrificed:to his fatalism bi : est hopes 'of-political advancentérit-has offered pon the shrine' of that necessity which, he worships all that can.excite ambition-even: the' Presidency. of the United States.. : Bub to: my. story. at the: breakfast tabldy where I, on uno served spectator, happoned to be'present; Calhoun was observed to gaze frequently at his right band, 'and brush if twith his loft in a butricd.and nervous mgnner.- Ho did this so often that he exited at- At-length; .one.of the {persons composing the breakfast party~-his uname, |-- must s- Pooutbs; and -a member- af Congréks from 'Géorgin-took upon himself to ask the Gécasion of Mr. Ci houn's disqnigtude. >- ' \Duces your hand pain you?\ ho faked ho has 'been'n Hbsrémind; o reflexiof. ly woman can: - usp ee ud \ gky of perrlzéomfgzm Nera don's hy did 'he nob come but histead of Al shadow, gid..sun y like you in a blow as frosh roy: is dead in the SE chi osak be is laid: up with the zhou: matism,sir; andithen be «knows I-can pi- lot you through 'as well. as ho can: Horry Clinton knows me; sir!\ - ° \Ab I does ho-well that is' have risked. much | bub... for-your-sake, be almost willing toidieinNathan's 05 sthat: Sveithy wod Soe - : brighten:his dreaming, Ct ar 1 Ehe. other.mornin, f know I el-fatel When; is Abe to ?\ There maybe wome hope of bis cue, ,) Ho was a favorite with Wash- agton, and lib is at White will go and see him.\ » SAlus! my .c . ”Grail, org e © -not within .au hour-till the. tide tuns ebb,\ ; i 2s ~ \That fo , bad-this gale keops:rising, Ts: thére no anchorage hereabouts ?\\ 'No, : air, not within twenty miles about, where your anclor would hold.\ hild,\ anid the father, \nerve yourself 'for the news. <It is al- bady tob Jute ®\ ~ . o _+ L7, Dand, dead |!~shrickpd_the Spoor girl, | Oh, father, say that is nok ao 1\ _ - |_ \Alas my child-T cannot! He wis \| gunridc; .and\ was : even refoged n bible to look nt.ore he.. forohis Maker\ > -: Form moment the- poor girl st it terricame from her eyes; bub i d (1mm; n fish as feolf ; gathored ~qver botli> aud) brow -ahg clinched Jber fair 'habde togother until the mails seemed to , and with cold, bittor'toncs - \Life bir life. I shall bo reven 568, deuply revonged {,' «Yes, air, as soon as the tide comes.- I would not risk it till then, for if the corrent. should catch... you on »cither sidd bow, you'd go on the rocks, sure !\ That is true, young man. know the very earliest mowont we can go 'through,\ \Aye ayo, sir.\ tho turned off to speak to one of his officers, the patrivt pilot calinly wont-to the. main gangway, and Tooked-over <the side, as if watchingfor the cliange of tide, But what was passing to her heart thon? There was botweon three oud four him; alo-in-that-fated br Ca M F je my, gorroiy, ... was simmoned, bo- «'To this Mr. Gulboun replied, inrath» er a furried manuer : - ci \Psliow.! Itis nothing! Oulga.dream. Tlind lastnight; and which imakes mo seo perpetually a largo | black spot, like an \nk bloteb; upon the back of iy 'right hand, An optical illusion, I suppose.\ ~, Of course theso.words excited the ou- riosity: of the coimpany, but no ons ven- tured to heg theo details of this singular h. comminnder cuter thd flesh onable Pastoral. _ 'bly dead slive of. that visuge. | After holding 'my hand fora momett, he look- ¢d \me steadily, and seid. in aquict WAY bus ;s has w . with- this right hand, Senator from _ South ~ Caroling, would sign your tame to & paper deo g the Union dissolved?\ 8,0 _ 0 1000 >' . \I answered in the afirmat ative, ayes\): T said, if a certain conthigency frists, I will sign my \name to agI) {Iai- ~| Dissolution.\ . But: at thas moment a tuck bloteh-nppeargd on the back of my hand ; ah foky blotch; which I . seem to see oven now, - \What fs that?\ said T, alarmed, I knew'not why, at the blotch on my hand, ' . 'That,\ gaid be, dropping. my hand, \is the mafk by which Benediat Arnold | is known io the next world.\ __ \He said; no more, drew from , beneath.. hi which .be laid upon the, table-laid.it-on the very paper op which I was writing.- That object, gentleman, was a akéletop \There said be,.\aze:-the bones of } Ieanc Hayno, who was hung at Charles ton, by the British. «He gave his life in order- to. establish the Union, When you put your fame to & Declaration of Dissolution, why. you, may ad well have the bones of Tsanc Hayne before you;. he was , a, South Carolinian, and.so are. you), But there .was. no. blotch on «hin right hand.\ . ege \With. these words the intruder loft the room, . T started.\ back from the-con: tact with the / dend man'g botes, and woke, - Qvor-worh by labor, I had fallen astegp, and bad 'been dreaming, | Was it nat. Aingular dream?\ ; hol . All the company answered in tho:afir: mative; and Poombs muttered, singular; very singular,\ at tho same tima looking curionsly at the back of his 'right hand, while Mr. Calhoun placed bis head bo- iv]. Jegsté who had again sunk on the groun | deed, 'but the Campbells: are coming! l- D'ye hear ? d'ya hear ?\ At. that mo:| & ation of igentlemen, but oak an object pabse, of this agonizing hope, sprang to\ her feet . and-oried, in n voice: #6 clear and piercing thatit was heard along! the' ' whole line:-Will yo no he: Heve it:noo ?.. The slogan has ceased, in- ment we gcomed indogd 'to hear the yoice of 'God in \the ' distance, when the bag- pipes of the Highlanders brought us Hid ing:of deliverance; for now there wis no longer any- doubt: '6f the fact. That shrill, penetrating; ceascless sound, which rose above all 'other soutids, conld-come neither:from the: advance of the enemy; nor, from the work of the suppers. - No, it-wag indeed the blast of the Scottish bagpipes, now shrill and harsh, as threat- ening vengeance on the foe; then in sof- ter tones, seemed. to\ promise 'succor to their \friends in- need. Never, surely, was there such: a scene as that which followed. Not a heart in the residency of Lucknow but.bowed itself before God: All, by one simultaréous impulse, fell upon their knees,. and nothing was beard but'bursting, subs and the. murmured voice .of prayer. . Then ;all> arose, ond there- rang, ont from a thousand lips s great shout of joy,- which resounded far and wide, and lent new yigor. to. thab blessed bagpipe. To our cheer of \God 'save: the Queen.!\ they. replied in the well-known strdin thak moves every Scot to tears-\«Bhould. auld. nequaintance be forgot,\ &o, After that, nothing else made any tmpréssion me, I searcoly remembered what- followed, Jessie was presented to the Geberal on his outrance into the fort, and at the-officers' banque$ her\ bealth' was drank by all present, while the . pipers marched round the ta- ble; playtpg once 'more the familiar nit of \Auld lag syne.\ - > Western lafilience. . ing about his shoulders,, In th 'his head is- a seam or partition, fer tho. of the Nazarite foreherd is plain and delicaté, without spot orwrrinkle, beautiful with comely: red ; his hose: and mouth 'exhofly formed. His beard is.thick, of thé color of his hair; not of any great. Tength; but forked. - being for his singular beauty the children of men;\ ger to our daughters in the prefiei; ; ig the negleot of- domestic edupatiqn Not only-to- themselves; but-to-fysha virtue;, named Jesus \Ohrist ~ lie i6 'f living and-of:the Gentileh is mo» ° cepted for a prophat .of the trath;-but his .own disciples call-him tie fon 'of God. the dead and 'cureth all:-mar« ner-of diseases. A ninn:of stature some; what-tall and comely; and in proportions; of his body well shaped, :and. his- hands, and. arms delectable to behold; with a ° very reverend countenance, such. as the beholder thay both. love: ind hear... Hig hair is of the colar of a Albert fully to his ears, whence downwards it is\ mor® orient of color, somewhat curling.or. m e mideh 9 F‘kflf} \gig of Iuith §\ is - look - i innoceot 'and \ mas ture: | His-eyes groy, olear and quicki=z In reproving he is awful; in admonibhing | courteous and friendly ;- in- speakingy very | temperate, modeat=and. wise: It:cannot be remembered that any have seewhim' laugh, but many. have seen him: meep.: ~A; -u}x‘rpgssing Our -The, gre m- | tween his-hands-and-seemed~ buriod in thought, .. S ' ' Scenes at Lucknow. The deliverance of Lucknow by the timely,arrival of the Highland . troops sent a thrill of joy through, the civilized world. . The following graphite descrip- tion-is from the pen-of- an Baglish lady who was one of the irescued.party: To understand fully. the 'aituation of the besieged, it should bo remembered that Gen, Havelodk was not an. hour.too goon in the relief, as tho advauco of the enemy's batteries and mines had settled. Gentlemen of the jury,\ said a ven- tern lawyer; \it-is-with-feelings of no or- dinary commotion that I rise to defend my injured clint from the-attacks which have been mado: on his heretofore unap- proachable I feel, goutlemen, that though a great doalstarter than any of you; evén the Judge himself, yet Iam utterly. incompetent to presont this case in thot magnanimous, and. beartrondin light. which its importance. demands ; nus T-trust, gentlemen, that whatever L lack in presenting the subject, will be imme- di¢toly made up by, your good sense and | discernment, if you hive got any. \The counsel for the proscoution, gen- tlomam, will- wndoubtedly~ heave dustin 2. dreampuntil~Ivombm used quriutly=- \W hat was your dream like? | I'm riot very ghpérélitious .obout dréams; but gometimes they have a groat deal of trath alo-in-that-fated-végect; e ouly loving. thin father, on tho earth- whon was hung na a spy onthat morning. ~She was not thinking how many,. liearts would: bo by her? \aot; sho was not tifuking of the qiothets fnd staters and wites in Eagland, who would, ston mourn for her deed-sho yas only think» ing. that goon sho would join him-in. the spirit land, :and. that. dearly. would his loss be avenged. For her \own lifo sho cared not, though ~not--not eved did sho think of- that woraliping ~fithor,, who sadly paced his room, believing..that sho \ ing. for. patiencg, to: bear her 'Genties have you aden, - £1131; {imphjs we nol ‘ . Iam ealii-vory calml- du n rsygflnuw tho. Calm-as ho is, almost. And: I awear ho shall be revenged, if iy own hands have to 'reach the' tyrant's heart that sealed dis T: Oh I how I.loved him- betrothal yows pli; hod? widow-as the widow of a 'But this was such a pedulitrly abs sard dream,\ said Mr. Calhoun, ngaio brushing the- back of his right hand; \however if it does not intrude too much on the:time of our friend * mAb oyster shéll Itis'sald \s ~~ ~ an Ircstep with if comphres. 'w Téa no eyo can block, +1 =Ttaruso too 3. >* »ilt bat imparts a bareficed look;, - rd. foAnd. brinke much chock to view. please the wall © | © or its swol'n exubsrance ? '. '. s, Twill relate .: AMy. dear .d : upon-our heads, \*> ot upon yours fat hild; you will bring ruin oce Pos , m a company wore. profuse in their profession of anxisty. to Know all about. the- dream, In his singalar-swoet voice, Mz. Calhoun related it; ' « + a late hour last night, ad I was sitting fo my -room engaged in writing, T was astonished -by the entrance of t vial- tor, who> entered and- without. a'word took s s¢at opposite mo nt the table- This surprised we, és L had given pare ticular orders to the servant that | should on no account be disturbed. 'Themanner in which tha intruderentered; ly self-possersed; taking» his seat bpposite ind, withoik i word, as though my room and all within it beloviged to him; axcited in me as mich surprise neffudigtation.- As E inised my bead to- look into his featates, over the top of my shaded lamp, I discovered that he was. wraptina thin cloaky which effectually conctiled 'his face ond*'featares from m as I raiked my hand he spoke for og writing, Sensfor from South Caroling? ; «I did hol. think of his im A at first,, but answered him voluitarily- - \I am writing /a plao of th tion of the American Union, \(ya know, ntlemen, that I sur expected to pro- o a plan. of dissolation in th certain contiagenties) | >> «To this the intrades replied,. In the coolest Harner possibles. --. . \Senator from: South- Carolits, allow me to- Took iad your sigh \ \He vose, the clock fell, and T behold his fire, | Gentlemen, Abe-sight ofthat Taco strock me like a thonderclap, It 6} was the face of a dead man, whom extra- ary everits had 'ealled back foclife, *. | The features were those of Gesital Gen poecta il Of course, th hor; but: to mo,\ * {what ds rui bow!. (Bub Iwill: fot be rash,\ I will go 't , SNW. ubd think . of him who now 'Tays cold in {mg : pray ing. re. was these threo or four bundred - bearts beating with glad ness that they Bad: got over a lop voyagaiand soin would in front ' of' the gheen of green, even though the storm hovered over them. . At lost,. after Looking: towards the howein which:sfo 'was born-abe know it would be \horlast Took-sho turned aud went to the compiander and said : ./ \The'tide is slack, it\ chaoges sudden: ly. and. wa had better fll away at once.\ ., The communder gave tha necessary or- der tohis lieatenant, and. the. next mo- ment. the malo top-sail, which had been Iain aback, was braced around, the head beats eased away, and the vessel headed For the partow chaunel, where a thousand have | ere this laid their oaken . Ag they approached the and saw the binggdcks, 1a whirling eddies, the | the taunting .. breakers, dashing: high on ifack every hand, the officers and crew looked 'out uport thedanger: . fearless seemed \th assurance Had a Kome clear the gale his bugl a. he give the ord steady so-laff a por hk - Whey were. more thanhalf thro The tumbling. breakers of the \pooch bowl\ and \hog's back\ had bees passed f, undred. fathoms im ct glance Mm?! Resven, She turned ond lofe the room, whilo| Meantime; the : the father still stood looking from the ; window out tipoo: the waters, which were dashed with arising atorm,and tho trees; | which already began to wreatho beteath the forded of the Hsing gale, like aome ; | huge giantwreatling with some unforseen A ; yells P Meanwhile the: davighter. Bad gone up 'to her.room fwone of the cheerfal gables < | of the old-fashioned house; and forget» ting to. pray in the mad tumult .of her s ulso gariog out upon the drm Which was fot wilder than the (d- malt of her own heart. '.- . lovated , posi wie t Till *or Til her io th Ml aw- might find it 'baby in. ©. 0 tion sho could. \ view. :Aud 0\ tree-lops. and the seired ke w battling host marshaled *: to thecharge, amid sulphorous flamed and :: btmokay they rose and spread wthwark the sky. | Shocculd ase thoeddring of Hurl ig with whirls the foans caps? hite drftisg snow, tn the, air-the brégefi $2?in 5111 -| Focks, ai. they: wor i6 botd ‘uin’egiq views > raked upon theSound, gpr‘ofia'i hove to of the Gate. ~A: er figure may be good, |_ % “134m min can tell} dress ae well. ._ q - iferUinedce as i kids her fet; t \ble ct. c their danger . : ybang pilot, that re- {eir}. my compinton To avery heart==so § fais beard, and, wsshe. * [alie saw - that a ship above the narrow gorge Gate. © signal for a pilot wasfiying at the foretop, and hated ross of St, Gearge flow :| from thespank : it bognded from the ress, ssh: - - ¢ Life-Nithanicl Hole beavenged.® onl 91000 c toom If the Rouse - a brother, who bad « nader thesod; a> n- Calhoun parsed, apparently | es. | I tmfifi J \- oor $2355 there ates a pon # power Texte=\ed <a ';f§%§é§§a§§m bra mesiegt bei» \s os Arent) % An's 1% a $5“ i iss M3335 ws\a Have (e Pe\ 1 hoes te anim nne ariry tative -< a; tit fats of the garrison : and 16 should be known tlint in the dontinuaL-uproar of tho enunonade, and tho <obstructions of buildings . ond | military works, - the be- leagured and devotéd 'gartison. did not hear or aco any thing of the advancing re- lief until the battle had been fought out- gide, and the reliaving force was march: ing-up to the gates: . > - Death stared us in- the face. - We were» fully persunded\ that 'for éwonty- four botfés all wouldbe 'over. Thé-en-| ginders had said. so, aid allknew. the woret, . Wa women, atrove to encourage cach other, and to .perform the light dus ties which had- beon-assigned - to- us; such as cbnvojing orders,to the batteries; and supplyiog. the men with \provisions ts» pecially:.cips of coffee, which we prepared day-and might _ T had gone out to fry. and mako myself useful in company with Jessio Brown. the wife of a corporal in my | £4 husband's regiment. Poor.Jessio had been in & state of restless oxbitoimontall through the siege, and. bad fallen away visibly within the last few days.\ A con- stanb' fever consumed her, and her mind wandered occasionally, especially on that day, when the- recollections of home scemed powerfully present to her. At last; orercome with fatigue, sho laid down ox the ground, ripped up -in herplaid. I sat beside her, promising to wwakeo her, whew, she sald, \her fith- er should tetura from the ploughing.\ Shq at length fell into & profoond slum» ét, motionless and appritently breathless, ber:head resting in my lsp. -I myself could no longes resist the inclination to sleep, imspite of the continual roar «off the cannon. © Suddenly I wis aroused by # wild, 'unsarthly scream, close to my stood upright beside wey, her arin# raised asd herbead bent forward to the attitude of, listening. . A look of 6221155353 larch; avg: dig: tountedance, she grasped my hand, tne towards her, and. exclaimed, \Dinns gehesrit? Dinos yehearit? Ay, I' bo dreamiu', it's the slogan of the High- laaderaf . WereSired, we're saved ['- Then flinging herself on cher knoes, sha thinked God. with passionate fervor. . \L felt. atteriy. bewildered s diy Ro- cars heard only the roar of aruillery, tbeaght my poordeste tavidg, but she darted to tha batfent Mite-ta her 'try toecssafly tuabe ted, 'Oparage! . bark to tho slogas-t: H, office all side o of my bonor of. making a friend of bicvatd all bis relations and you regard f Ht raoght my St reciarks; ked fitch batferies, | bits gagiéfiméffig$§i higesuf Zea- your oyes.. He will tell you 'that his client i« pro-ominently a man- of function '-that bo is a man of undoubted aod im\ placable vorncity-that he would scorn to fetoh au action against another merely to gratify his own corporosity; but, gentle» men, let mo caution you bow to rely upon such spacious reasoning like this. I, my- self;: apprebond: that this suit bas been wilfully and maliciously foot, gentlemen; forthe solo.rnd only purpost of 'brow- beating my alfent in an eminont manner grinding the face of the poor; and I apprehond, Also, if you could but look foto that man's beart, aud read there the. motives that have impelled him to fotch this suit, such a picture of moral turpentine and beartfolt gratitude -would be brought to light as has never before been exhibited the Falls of - Nin- ra. , \Now gentlemen, I wank to make a brillinot appéal to the kind stiometrics oE your mature, and see if I cant warp your judgment a little in favor of my un- fortanate dlicnt hore, and then I shall fotch my argument to a dlose. \Hare gentleman, is ia poor man with a numerous wife and child, depending upon him for their daily bread and but- ter, wantonly foiched up here and ar- ranged before an intellectual jury on the charge of ignominfously hooking-yés, hooking six quarts of new cider,. You, gentlemen, haye been placed in the same situation, and. I humbly calculate that you will not permit the Telling; of your. sympathising bearts to be«quenched in the bud by the surraptious and superoga ting arguments of my ignorant opponent maize fiber side.x aed , I“, il e law expre éclares, gentlettien, in the beautiful w y (Shakspeate, that where no doubts existe of the guilt of the prigcuery it is yourduty to Tea . the, justice and fateh him fo innocent. de- fast In view. im the case ersen, you will hare the yaad you can allers look apen this occasion and reflect with pleasure bat you did as you would have been done byt butif on the other hand, you dis regard this groat prineiple of Inw, andset will follow yea over every far T reckod, a=d vy Infured asd own-trodd cheat will be apt to yea Cx a anser of ser fik.\ families, and the community . At: does the évil ortend,. By far tho' est amount of happiness in ciyilived'li plans. for their education. ) they cannot be, at least for men of, intol | ligence, without mental clilturd} nod mothers thay: corfain it; and nore than 'this 'they-canhot-bd such wives as man need, unless thdy,are good Ahougekeopors 3, without a thotdtigh © and practical training to that ead. Out- daughters should be practically thopht 18 | bake, wash, sweep, cook, sct thy table; and do everything appertaining to therord der, neatness, economy' atid. : bapplicsy of the houschold, r as well as mot, and better tlian not: ] need not fatarfete 18 the Toast with- thgtg\ intellectus} educdtion, nor with thbhight ast style of refinetnont, On the ddrtraryy it shall greatly contribute thereto; : Ohly, let that time which is: worse that wasted in idlénees, sauntering .gossipy frivplof rendiug, and the various modern dissipations, which kill tind and heal be devoted to domestic daties and . tion, and' our dauglifers would soph bd all that tha highert . interests ~of abcigty; demand.. A benign, elevating influtrca would go forth through all the families of the laud. Health and nos sparkle tn maty a Tust bloom would return to- beautify nhiny @ ° faded check and-doctor's bills would give. way to bills of: wheat and dofnt--S%, Louis Advertispr. _ .>. rich now was very poorwhen be Was boy. \When usked how he got his riches, he . replied :- \My) hever to play Hill my work was and never to spend my money wht I had carted it. - If F had bie ond work. in a-day, L must do that theirstshing, and in an hour, and after this . was al lowed to play } and I with much more pie the thought of unfinished task before my fold.. : I early formed the habit of doing every thing iv. dic becatis perfectly easy £121 this I owe my prosperity.\ * BEC k few days a rongh, souns* t | New York Banks, and march the copter L want e s ees mz‘zfiswfi ferther be The noxt day ibesiteedistomer vittered the time, be walk same st fos payable three dave «her aan __ _ _ Ar, a is found in.. the, domestic rglétgofi'giggé most of this depends on the onl, tute and habits of the wife ain‘t Let our daughters be intelléctu cated as highly as possibl moral and gocial est graces of vigor -an along with these, lot find a prominnt place. mother, ally edu- e fio but domest We cannot say much abot dniight tors being hereafter wiver and mothers} but we -ought to-think much of it,and give the- thourht .promirionce in ...all aus GQood wiyes - inly cannot bo filififitfi Al} this. they. can'] J this they asthma}? femur; ' Uf sppiness woul esv.eye, Aid ma. A Goon Rontdl-A man who ir very asa father BAdglt aad n could pla Thais I bad and it acon so. This to- ty: locking fellow <atered agave! the Zur £. to tates far took st same words, und digeps _' sit mrad £4\ Geile € ape Tntecie aa pes of asd the. PUB forces, for ai the byes eon 4 I ge thn ghotal Exched) Bo acd 00 ats _ ). RECT : ma of there rights, as my _ Eetentue o Aera o Afters p Heini o rain tap sad ta- wast the mosey fo vhes Fess stale bres ® b \6p\ * sits Lefeirek . geaye aes ma three tong I nti ¥ 50