{ title: 'The reflector. volume (Palmyra [N.Y.]) 1828-1831, February 28, 1831, Page 7, Image 7', 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/sn83032054/1831-02-28/ed-1/seq-7/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83032054/1831-02-28/ed-1/seq-7.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83032054/1831-02-28/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83032054/1831-02-28/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Pioneer Library System
points set opposite to each oiuer, .mdl \rnved about a mouth ago from Brazil, formed the scale afterwards know n by where, like so many others, he went to the name o f the gamut.* This was fol-!set,k a forlune tj,at so few the lowed by the invention of the time-ta- French Benevolent Society had provided ble, and afterwards by regular compo-' - . . . A ■ * c - r >-4 u . tor his immediate w a n t s and at Ins tutions of music. But the exu*ci-- ol . ’ the art way for a long tim< confine ' ; > request, and v\ith a view lo the restoration sacred music, during winch |> ‘'f his. health, impaired by privations and secular music was followed by .I’.:*!-,chagrin, had placed him comfortably in ant poets and musicians, a;V r th r ’the N e w York hospital. manriei oi the nnoients. Or t:r.s de- . died three days ago, and hisunpre- seripiion were; the troubadcMr^ in , >• t- „ , _ c u j u i ^ r . Txr t i i i t tending funeral was followed by several tr a n c e , the W e l s h bards or f l . . . in England, an-1 the Scotch In-, countrymen, «ho only knew h,m sttcU.— Crabb's Dictionary o f u s j u l b-v \ 'me, and %vl.o were preparing means Knowledge. \ jl° *' :,(1 him back to France. — ; Hi'* certificate of baptism is iu the name Reverse of Fortune. The son of M:ir- nf J ^ m s Joseph M.irmontel, son of John raonfel died, as it seems, in the Hospital t . r church, walk as • fiwl v \r I. . , , ri'L i ruru'is Marmontel, Historiographer of Pr-ietsre in the city A . \ ‘ \v-\Tork,last week. 1 he ^ ° 1 rati,cl. /i r ,] . i?lat tt • re . i ; 1’ rant ■, * perpetual Secretary of the I like to see y Courier de* Elats Urns, of Saturday ruor-1„ ’ * ‘ the church as t! England, 189* in France, 201; in Italy* I ; in Spain, (5 ; in Portugal, 2 ; and in Gieece, 3. “ I HOPE I DON’T INTRUDE.” I like to see young men gallating young ladies through the streets with cigars iu their mouths. Ton. I like to see young men smoking cigars in a room without knowing whether it is a- grecablc or not. Civility. I like to see persons spiting the juice of tobacco over the floor of a house. Pretty clean. Hike to see young men and boys drink ing liquor in a bar-room. It looks well. I like to see young persons with brandy blossoms on their faces. They Wall soon bloom. I like to see persons when entering a church, walk as i f they were killing ants.— oung persons staring about f Fn nc , Academy-born at Paris. 20thr',^ ,lu:'c,' !^ lthoue1,I'heir11)e'’d# Wer° . 861 n»n\ thus r >tices the event ; — J on pivots. They wish to hear more than When xUmnonfel, for thirty-five years \“\V l7 ° 7 ' H '' <:0(ifa,her ' T\s the they see.1 r «. ' ,• Duke ol Orleans, hi* godmother was the * .e 1 the faithful friend of Voltaire, the fa-; vorite prote ge of Madam de Pom pa dour: the fortunate coadjutor of Greirv, Dutchess of Bourbon. to see young people disturb a con gregation by getting up and going out be fore its out. Gentility. [I like to see long rows of young raeEfc . . . r . * i State o f Education in various parts of parade themselves on each side of Hie was the objecto^ attention to ali the noblesL; /7 p i # r« church doors when the congregation iirpas- .u.. i i . tke world. — b rom late European p a p e r s * ™ niif t, J * J? ___ uropean papers Ling our. It gives them an opportunity to »ve have made the following statements gaze in the face of tbe ladies. Gallantry.] respecting the state of education iu tile 1 like 10 sec >'oun5 PeoPle Weighting . , * r .i hews about town, intend of minding their various parts of the globe. own business. A mere kindness. From 1S20 to ’30, the following has ^ 10 see people know more aboul ........... b«en the gradual increase of e . u W p ' rn S c i t a , “ \ “ T d° ,bei? Sorbanac had condemned printed I )..jrnei,^s ^or etlucat*ou °Q the Laneasterinn! Hike to seo people contract debts and i.-rder of the Empress Queen Maria , y “tCm- In E u ™P‘'i »0;600 schools, cal-K0^ * 0, ^ the|m - Knowing bo* to lire. m, . . H culafprl tn Pfli.noK, y) nnrt u i i • I like to see stores filled with m e n and Pher*3';, and translated into Russian by . 4,700,000 children id [boys at night puffiing their borrowed cigars the Empress Catharine II. herself— he * rudiments of education; in Asia, p ill they raise quite a clowd. They love oi the Court, placed by his cotemporari*‘s in the first rank of literature, the author of the Incas of the Zem ira and Acor, of the Morab I ales, was receiving rich presents from nil the Sovereigns of E u rope, and saw his Belisarius, which th little thought that his son, heir of a namn so distinguished, would, at a future day, go to die in a hospital, a thousand leagues from his country. Although the literary reputation of so many works, which in the middle of the 18th century, obtained snch signul success, has lost somethin* of • o brilliancy, it is with a painful emotion iu'tith’d by the «ad end 0f this uufor- tiri p< lson, thnt we cast our eves over sum* pipers touvl Jo his small pock ^ and we recalled, in running over i1.* those strik:ng verses of Gilbert, ^ ^^ him ir. j»op'less lespdir . r ! a ' I • t ' 1 < • I ^ convive, vie, » ho-ti x » '»]> :.• cs tin jour, ef jo U km ;\; • i:.t et It- -on.'iu ou lentement :u r i \ e. \ #> ♦ % * •• •••'♦I il \ 1000, With 50,000 children; in Africa, sof f i fn . 1 ‘^ft XX,an nnr\ \ -u • a *. 1 l,k° 1 SCG Pcrsons filling up t h ^ paths With 60,oqo children; m America, so that the ladies have to go in the mud.— 1000 with 380,000 children, and j» (That shows good manners. P R Y . Australia, 100, with 25,000 children. Since the year 1789 to 1S20,there have j Great men, like comets, are eccentric in been established in Europe 5,500 free their courses, and formed to do extensire schools, calculated to educate 1,650,000 good, by modes unintelligible to vulgar children. In Asia 4,000 schools educa-m *nds. Hence, like those erratic orbs in tm ^ 200,000 children of both sexes; in the firmament, it is their fate to be misr Africa, 50, with 20,000 children ; in comprehended by fools, and misrepresent America, 400, with 125,000 children ; *e<* hy knaves; to be abused for all tbs and in Australia, N e w South Wales, 10 good they actually do, and to be accused schools, instructing 500 children. of ills with which they b*ve nothing to In Denmark there have been 37 dif- r ° » Gei* ^ er *n design norllxecution ferent works published on education and The State of New-York cont morals, and the benefits to be derived by population of 1,934,490. the poorer classes iu mutual instruction ; rpi .,. . r T . in Swecden 5- in p.rtr.n, • militia o f the i nited 5 ^ 1 German.v? 34} 10.mount to 1.228.5Q2.