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:.~ ,, ' , ,,. :.y,ý. 'n ",p, ,, p1 . . ... -._ ý " ý ' :, . ...i~ w }" . ,ý , . .. ' . . .-n," ýý ý ,,:.. ~ -. A .ý ., -.l ... ý, ", y ...: "._ I , . .... ;q _ý w r- .... .=- .... a. -- ,- P t-- - - 'j ' " , "' ... .- ... _ 4 .... ... + ,,:._: ",l _ X .. ."yµ4 r t z _". . " .. t . , . ...L r... - , w. •R'. O T ý A ". ' "_ . . - . .., , ,Y .-..,_ ý. $, f . Y.* Shereport Weekly News. Pu iiAcery d ayp Momi.sat 4.60O Paer Aa puu. 111. DIamm84K, PROPRIETOR. JO. DICJKINi , i. II. P S. I OJce,owei eofTereaas Spriv streets, over ,aQ', ore. PEatrance od $pring stacet.g OUR TEMa6 a Specimt copisaforpej t may ad dreg. cbt asriptiaw are se received usles the money accompanies Me name. The News will be sent two years for Four aDlars. THE DAILY NE WS, serday. Thxrada Friday, and Sat xrday rorning, at 88 per year to mail subtcribcra. It contains all the late news. Any person sending Me sasses of six subscribers, aecompanied with the Cash, for the Daily or Yokly, r wil be eiled to o copy gratis, fr a year. Our Moto.-Jouac Ma nuftcture. A rretty un1a4. Oh! lightly fleets the thistle.down, Aierss the scented leos And softly sings the nightingale To midn iht and to me. O! tiny bird that warlest so, How sorrowful thy strain! Ah! thou hast lovedt, or lae thou couldst Nt voloo voe swet a' plain. And was she very. very fair, With dove-like eves thatt ell Htw street a aslpin Iagssion Ahl! fiolish ni gtingale! W'ere her rare Iltnahes tea-shell pink. Or tsunset's ritoson glow Iler trembhling bosom, was it likte White ruses or the snow ? Andi did she tell the-e how slhe loved, And thenl fterget the ta!e? Ah! thoe hau ledtvhl 4t.L ne 1 leyr, Thou flWh it ighitingale' Flcoat lightly, thistle dowu, Aeruss the scnted t lea: Fine softly, softly, nightingale, lo mtidnight and to tire. Alexandria, May 18.-T-'Lhe Walh- ingtou diploimatie corps is anxiously waiting the course of events. J' 1h expenses of Federal War DLe partnents aire enonrous. Already fears of raisin, suflicient means to! prosecute the warare arising. (Gen. HIarr, of M3asachujtsettp, a prominent actor ,at Annapolis and Baltimore, is dissatisfied. He i# dis appointed in not obtaining a higher T'he F'ederal troops are becoming mutinous. Bad fare is assigned as a reason. The celebrated New York Seventh Rlegiment. on Friday night, had a fu neral over their junk. LIon. Daniel E. Sickelh, of New York, has been made a MajoSr (4 tral. The New York Tribune is becom ing alarmed, and says that Virginia is full of troops, armed and equippef. It is reported that the Maesachn setts troops would soon retake or de stroy the Gosport Navy-yard, Philadelphia, May 18--Senator Bayard, of Delaware, proposes to re sign, concluding that civil war can not be averted. Chicago, May 18.--Senator Doug las, of Illinois, is down with the ty Ilhoid fever. His friends think lie will not recover. Fort Kearney, May IS1--The pony'( express. with dates from an Franu Fisco to the 8th, has arrived. The war was the engrossing top~p in California. 'Ihe sentiment to suts. tain the Administration is universal. Washington, May 18.-The Na tional Intelligencer construes Lord ioba R esel's Parliament speech in tlte recogntion of the right of South-1 onfederateto issue letters of marque anld bring prises into British ports. Vashington, May 18.' -It is prob able that General ]Medlellans will ter Western Virginia with Ohio and othlr Western troops simultaneously with Gen. Butler's movement on Nor folk, an attack ty column from, Washington on tliee or four points' in Virginia. AWTashingtond_¢ptch ofthe 13th to the New York erald says : It has been 'determilned by the. Government to move an immense' force down the Mississippi. Nearly the entire Northwestern forse will be lpahed in that direction. Commo-' dore Stringham, who is in command of the blockading sqauadron, will pro ceed, at once to the mouth of the Mississippi. The Minnesota is to he the lagship of the squadron. Hie lnstructions a~e said to be of thoe ost ogoroup hlniargetcr Although ,cp, paratvely an old man, he is capa ble of perfbrming more labor and enduring greater hardshinp than any other officer in the navy. lSperial Dispatch to the Delta. 3LtuiN xTojean, py J8, 286q, On Monday aresolution will be in troduced in Congress to suspend the Tariff during the blockade. The object is to encourage the running in of foreign cargoes. t is ,ikely that the resolution will pass, Letters received from Dudley Mann, now in London, indicate a wva)rm .gypnpalthy i England for the Confederate States. General Johnson, formnqly f tine United States Army, is expected here, and will, no doubt, be appointed a General in the service of the Con federate States. The 1Fourth Louisiana Regiment, Col. Barrow, has been accepted by the Secretary of War. St. Louis, May ,18.--.Tho Deno CXt learns that the encampment tin der the command of Jeff. Thompson, ltas been removed several miles east of St. Joseph, on the Hamilton and St. Joseph Railway, where batteXres have been erected. trains stopped and ;overnment stores detained. Gov. Jackson guarantees full pro tectiot to tJe yopteo agents along that road. (;en. Lyon refuses to release Mr. Dean and others arrested at Potosi, as ,ti.y were engaged in overt acts of treatson. Montgomery, May 8.-111 Con gross to-day Arkansas was admitted as a ,State in the Southern "onufeder acy. Her delegates, Messrs IL W. Johnson, A. Rust, A. II. Garland, anld W.W. Watkins, were present, and parti-ipatQ; 1 in the discussions. , The' fine steamer Ingoinar. under the,. unnand of Capt. Bryan has been tqed out for a Mississippi war steam er, by the Confederate governuent, for the protection of our commerce, and to prevent the enemy's steamers from eptering our waters. The Colunibia has arrived. She itatel that the Harriet Lane is block ing the James and Elizabeth rivers, the Montice)lo, the York river, and the Quaker city, the Chetapeke .Bay. Witns hIad oeen r;eleased, a-agree, al govern ment. He still remains in this city and has not removed to been Fort lMcHenry as reported. Brigadier General Mansfield has stopped the Adams Express carrying letters into Virginia. The entire river mail service in the secession States will probably be discontinued in a few days. The New Military Bill. An act to raise an additional Military Force. The following is the act passed by the Confederate Congress, on the 9th inst., to raise an additional military force to servo during the warn The Congress of the Confederate States do enact, That in addition to the volunteer force authorised to be Woised under existing laws, the I'resi dent be, and he is hereby authorised to accept the services of volunteers, who may offer their services, without regard to the place of enlistment, of pit.er cavalry, nounted riflentmn, atr tillery- orinfantry, to such proportion of these several arms,as he may deem expedient, to serve for and during the existing war, unless sooner discharg. ed BRa. 2. That the volunteers so of fering their services,may be accepted by the President in compamies, to be organised by him into squadrons, bat talions or regiments. Thle president shall appoint all field and staffofficers, but the teoqpany odticer shall be elec ted by the men composing the com pane, and if acceptied, the officers so elected, shall be commissioned by the S Sc. 3. Be it further e~aced, That any vacauces occurring in the ranks of the several companies, mastered i-ntoservice under thie provisions of this act, may be filled by volunteers acceted under the rls of such com ial'es. atd any vacancies oc,.ttrrin u t bdl oeuch comnqanie§, shaft be filled by electiong in accordance with the stamne riles, Sac. 4. Except as herein different ly provided, tnhevolmnteerfnrces here by aiuthorised to be raised, shall, in regards I,he sublject ti, and organisedl in,, acornlance witlh the provisions of "an act to provide for thie public de fence," and nail .ther acts tir tihe gov ernment ,,f tIe amnnies of thie 'Contid crate State,. 4 fe Teas. We are every day reeivin;g names qf .Psuleriber fro. diferent parts of Te'ss, and ditals his, thetieedful," invariably accompanies tlI .nsRPea. For this appreciation of our endear ors to 'pulish a readabte,4aily paper, at this point, by the Texans, we feel thankfuld. a, :.anot refrain from tianking tem tlrotpgh te colgmtns of our pePer. (f ie eople of Caddo (our city not inclue) would sub scribe to our daily as liberally as their neighbors, they would help the od cause amazingly. This, ,ir1 'ends, you can do, by patronizing home industry. Stop taking Nor thern Journals, and look about you for what you want, and you will find it at your doors. Don't say "I would like to tke yo.r yaper, bqt Lwi't af ford , while at tlie.ame time you are probably paying for several pa pers published in the North. I~surrectioa.-A large ,number of Ohio troops stationed 4.t C?p Harri son, near CLpeinnati, got up a "free fight" among themselves the other say. Soge five hundred participated, and being unarmed, made use of rails. pailings, stones, {c, Tents pad the enclosure suffered severely in the me lee. Order was only restored after they were confronted by an armed force, and threatened with a sprink ling ;aUllets. It is said that the greatest in Oeirb is prevailing among these hastiy made levies. [ fetpApis Appeal, 14tA. From New York. The following interesting particu lars we extract from a letter, receiuad by Mr. W.F.Buckelew from his fath er, who left our city not long since for ,ý,lif,.-nia, passing by the way of New York, from which city he writes. l'The letter bears date of the 10th in stant and was kindly placed at our disposal by the above named gentle mian. It contains intelligence that we have not as yet received, concertn iig the doings, etc., in New York,aud coming from the source it does, it is worth one thousand telegraphic dis patches. "Frong the way the govorinment and the people talk here, they intend, if they can, to wage this war with un usual vigor and without mercy-to subdue the "rebels" at all hazards, and at any cost, to blockade the ports and send twomillions of men aliover the South, kill the umeit, burn all the towns, set the negroes free, and take pssession of the land and go to farm ing on their own hook, paying no re gard to the rights of man, law or dle Cency or honesty: How far they can carry out this unnatural, diabolical scheme, time can only develop, Cer tain it is, they have the mnn,thge ships and the money, and they are all be ing freely offered. One company has been formed, consisting of the worst class of the community; rowdies.rob hers, murderers, thieves. state-prison convicts, outlaws, etc., whose sole oh ject and aim is to n.urder, pillage and plunder anybody and everybody that may be so unfortunate as to be with, in their reach. - The South should prepare for te !1 worst. Terrible times ,are ahead, and God only knows what is to be the re- st suilt. Business here is completely pros tratedl and failures continually an ,bunced Not,-s on the best men will not sell at any price. Jeff. Davis was hung in effigy in New York harbor, a few days since. Fifty thousand dollars is to be of erede for his scalp, so the papers say. MIll lard Fillmore has command of a regi- 1 ment of volunteers. Lincoln has just issued a proclama tion for 60,000 more volunteers. We have received the sixth num .er of a neat paper started at Thibo -lapx, La., by Messrs. C. L. Minon & P'. A Vanderdoes, withi the request to T"" which we do with pleasure, at the same time, wishing thegentle men success in their enterprise. Yet Anether, Old Abe, while his hand is in, ia sues another proclamation, which we publish below: Thle President has just issued a proclamnation setting forth that in atructi,on exists in the State of Flori da, by which the lives, liberty and prop,'rty of loyal citizens are in dan er. nn'l it is ;~~retrl Inrrler that all needful' measures should t gtaken for the protection of' such citizens, and all officers of the United States t'n the discharges oftheir publltc d. The President diretst ,the earn. mander of the forces of the United States on'the Florida coast, to per mit no person to exercise any office or authority upon the islands of Key 'est, the To ut sor Santa Rosa, wic-k tayr e ijconsistent ,with the laws and Constitution of the United States. .f he shall find it necessary, to suspend the writ of habeas corpus, and to remove from the vicinity of the United States forces all dantgerous or suspected per Ampnsfaetionis the Olden Te. The incisions were performed with a red-hot knife, that the vessels, sear ed and charred by the contact, might contract or be eoite ?lt(ged, and so be prevented from bleeding (,Albucasis, 11th century). Effective for the in stant, the force of the c~rculation qnickly overpowered the slender ob struction, and fatal hemorrhage, soon .en or later, toohk place. Yet this plan continu ad more or less in -ycgue down to discovery of the ligature in the 1fith century, and was practiced even later in Germany by the cele brated Hildanus (1641); although he subsequently adopted the surgeon, af t.r mplking a t djjotis division of the flesh down to the bone, with studied endeavor not to divide the arteries until the last moment, relied on ap plications of red-hot irons, or of some styptic fluid, usually a powerful acid or astringent, to arrest the b1Lceding. If these were not succesetful, a vesel of boiling pitch was at hand, ready prepared, into which the bleeding stump was plunged. Between Scyl la and Chanybdis, the patient rarely escaped with life, either he died fromn loss of blood in a few hours or less; or, if the droeadful remedies sue eeeaed, he snurvivd a dlay er two to die. of tnier or exhaustion. After an earlier method, that of Guido di Ganlico (1363), a bandage of plaster was made to encircle the member so tightly that mortification attacked all the parts below, which then, after the lapse of months, drop. ped off,' a horribly loathlsonme and ot!unmsive mnass. Another surgeon,. liotalli (16O), inv',nted a machine to sever the linmb in an instant ,by a single stro,k, ; and it was nor uncom mon at this period to eflert the same purlmose by the hatchet, or by a pow erful mallet and chihpl. It is to Ambrose fPare, the great French sur gemon, who fl...irish-ed in the ]Gth century-, that we owe the application of the ligature (used long before in ordinary wounds) to the bleeding arteries in amputation.-Ex. B. B. 1)., New Orleans, we thank you tfr your trouble. It won't do. llold on awhile. "I tay Jiummy, are ye)ich a bhla ed fool as o t;hink of buying a paper inutead of getting the whiskey ?" "Let me alone for that, Tim. Did ye not see what a poor facet that cdi tor had on whin Ed called upon him for a settlement 1" "Faith an I did." " Well, be aisy then, I'll assist hiimnw for I want the paper, an I want the whishey. ('.',te Tint, the love I ,ear ye, gets the upper hand of me; we'll drink to the editor's health. \l'hile listening to the above con- j versat'ion, we were nlot a little alnussed to see how the dime was twirled lc t??eeu the tingors of the owner. "Jon't the clouds begin to break?" insquired harriet, during yesterday's rails. Guess so, was the answer, as thi speaker glanced t'ri; tIhe window, 'giuess thevre broke, they leak bad eiougtl to be." WVe learn from the Uuiontown(Kv.) i Nws. that onu 3onday night last ,lr. etrge l'avne, of that county was oto scped on the highway by by our itn·, and robbed of 830,o00. Mfr. W. F. Buckelew will accept ' our thanks for a California paper. We learn that Mrs. Ben. Jacobs, t while out with her husband, practis ing with a pistol, on 'C'uesday, acci dlentally discharged the pistol, shoot ing herself in the fopt pr: Clark shortly afterwards, extractet the hall which did not quite penetrate through her foot. We are happy to state the lady is doing well, and it is hoped will speedily recover: YWhile we think all the fair sex should learn the use of fire-armnns in these warlike times, yet the many ac cidenta resnlting fro!u their useshould make them extremely cautious. The ~temnphis Comnmittee of safety have authoried the orgauqiation of a volunteer companyv composed of patri otic free men of color, of that city, for the coummon dtfetuce. s .i Ua; 9rp taIkr, Ojr& -. eaeterday inormnin thirty members' a of ,tew work iriah gteenta., der Co. Coeoran, -recai~ this city, from Wlghington, ean route for their' itomes, They prereseqted .s4hat their fare was so bad (hat they :eqld not eat itj Izesides which tfey mee re quired to take an oath to psrep for two years, To that thep, demurred; and preferred rather to return to their homes. They stated that between one and two hundred of the sgitment refused to take the seth, BaJltimor Smw of Mosday. Fort Piceks to be attacked....-From concurrent information, we feel as= sured that Fort Pickens will be at tacked in a few days. We have just received a letter from Mr. Cluskey, the junior editor of the Avalanche, .dated Montgomery, May 12, and be sajys, "there will certainly be a fight at Pickens within a week." Our eadoers may expect to hear important news from this point.--Mempkis Av aienche, 114i. ~repkn Gerard's # le.-"I have always considered a4vertising, liber ally and long, to be the great medi umuof success in business, and pre ludeto wealth, And I have made it an in,-veajble rele, too, advertise in the dullest times, long experience having taught me that tponey thus spent is well laid out; as keeping iy busiless contingpally before the public, it has secured me many sales tJxat I would otherwise have lostf' FIaST PaRIZE Fr A NEW OaiEAXS P'rIVAerE.--Says the N, 0. O, Delta: I'The swift low pressure steamer Cal houn, J"k Wilson, fitted out here as a privattr, sailed from this port last evening, and outside the bar cap tured a prize. A bark, the *Ocean agle," Capt. Luce, from Rockland, Maine. Cargo 3144 bbls. lime. The Calhoun is admirably equip ped for her peculiar service, having S4140 of tie bravest experienced men on bhard, and carrying large guns and an ample supply of small arms. The Oceart Eagle was putin charge of a tow-boat, and will bearsp to-night in the city. The Calhoun put out to sea, when in the oiiug was spied two other ves sels good fbr overhauling as prizes. i -o far the Calhoun has nearly paid her expenses, and the stock is up high. .Who comes next I -- =: Sdcrted Expressly for the Xews. The Boat on the Oceans AN EXTRAOSDINARY AND AFFECTING TALE. [From Haverhill.] Tho following tale, is, with trifling abridgment, the description of oc currences which took place about the time that Lynn, the hero of the tale, I and the favorite of the falmily, was intending to leave his home andl seek for honor and advancement in a mili tary life. It is in this part of his story that the author shows himself to most advantage, The exhibitions of natural affection in the different mnembers of the household-and espe cially in the mother's heart, as the time approached for the departure of her son, are very feelingly and for cibly displayed, She had been almost heart-broken with the thought that her darling Lynn was to leave themn the next day, and all the family were in great dehjection, when a sudden flood of jy burst over them on learning the detention of the vessel in which he was to sail would enable him to I All were thus in the enjoyment of 1 what seemed lerfect happiness whent it was aunounced that a fisherman; , who had been expected to lend his aaid in the boat the next day, would M not he alle to go. In consequence of this disappointment, the father ad- i dressing Lynn, inqured what he said I to taking a trip on this occasion ? His answer was, 'i will go.' 'Oh I no, dn't send him,' exclaimed his mother, 'lihe has but eight days more I to stay, let him pass them with us.' Ilis youngest brother and sisters also begged hard, but Lynn was 1 firm in his purpose. At an early hour, with a smooth sea, serene heavens, and a balmy at. mosphere, he and his brothers push- I ed their boat from the shore to row to a distant fishing ground. So un-.i usually fine, for the spason, was the weather, ihat it was a subject of re mark; and an old and experiencotd fishorman who joined the party, spoke of it rather with apprehension than1 pleasure, as inudicating a speedy tem pest. But we must hasten rto thep event.' *'A the sun neared the naonith, the signs of the appraching hurricane or equinoctial storm became more ap parent. That glorious orb seemed a ball of fire, aid to wade with diti culty through theim surcharged at mosphere. titill it was perfectly calm, and for a while smooth as the surfaee of a lake from which the winds are fenced by a thick foliage. Gradually there arose small ripplee whichl swelled into billows, and these ..;; broke iutQ sbeete of' Mii the abseizse i au wind, or other sp. parest .asse to vex thesm. . hat cause eited .Amid the other iini plicable mystesres sf npture .sathe naterii. world, thsah ie from the eyii of . en, twith a t.id other -ings, wijh, do abtlees, it is not gosd Itr ay ' f.atleA h eir 4. know. Nor were other signs-.6 should not havebeen neglected, warn ing of the approach of the tenmpest. The etstisad lbe- who'. has gawith a weederful tlon .of!proachi i da gerseemed to be truc- wit r greatcoasteraatmon and to be preparing for soue dnead ful convulsion, ·'at ABrwi d and cautiles old fellow, the ieagal,'who had bees to the fresh-water ponds for his breakfast of fish, was now, to the great joy of his bitter enemy and rival the crow, beheld winging his flight, to sea, gainingan o~ing, as is his wont when intincet informs him of an approaching burricane. Others of his tribe, a little mesetardy in their movements, but with the same purpose in view, were seen performing their spiral evolutions in the mid-heavens,---every thinggav evidence that a tempest would spee dily burst upon us. * a s It was now that old Mr. Gill, never loath to bestow the bonefit of his experience upon others, placed a waft at .the head of his little mast to warn ~s ij. A few minutes af ter he hqd departed for the shore wearing it still, ad in addition an otherhalf way up the npaat, or'half mast,' the well known sigpl of dis tress, to signify the danger we were in. Bt :e paid no attention to these signalp. We had a good boat, and were all of us exeellent rowers, and besides, were isa l" gly an bitious of the honor of being last to 'strike the sand.' Then the fish had just 'struck in,' or become plentiful, and to return with a loaded boat when others had failed, and to be able to pay with a shrug to our eomr panions, I'll give you a fish,' would be something to boast of, and pass good natured jokes about for the nert two tdas. I believe, however, that the greater part of the bbeame should rest upon myself. In the meantime the gale kept 1 increasing, but then the fish came 'thicker and faster,' and a few mini utes more,' we said to each other, ,can neither make nor break.' We hbad nearly filled our boat with fine fih, and were at the very in stant to set out for the shore, when a vessel appeared in the south-east 1 close-hatled upon the wind, to use the uantical phrase, with her star board tacks on board, which means that she was sailing with the wind upon her right hand bow. We l could see that she wore at her misen peak the customary signal for a pilot. I proposed to my brothers that we should row out to her, and as we were acquainted with all the shoals and ledges for 20 miles east, J and as many west of our hamlet, I that we should offer to conduct her into either of the adjacent harbors of ----and---.. They of course said 1 'yes,' as they always did to anything of my proposing. At the moment when the gale had increased so much that it was with great difculty that we could propel our boat to windward at all, and we could see that our companions were straining every nerve for the land, we set out to speak the unknown vessel more than a league to leeward of us, We had rowed a mile or two to wards her, when all at once we saw her take in the flag, which denoted her wish for a pilot, and shakinga the reefs out of her topsails, anand slackening her weather braces and bowlines, keep away, as if determin ed not to he spoken. This was not I a pleasant discovery to us, caught more than 12 miles from the shore, night near at hand, and a storm just ready to burst upon us. The inten tions of the object which had seduc ed us iicto this further peril-may God forgive those who directed her movements! they have lives to an swer for-were soon made more ful ly apparent. While we lay viewing her, the main top-gallant sail and the courses were loosed and set, Ier yards were squared, and she was steered away from the land, leaving us, whom her governors must have seen, to the perils and horrors of a stormy night in a boat, the keel of which was only eighteen feet in length. And now commenced our hard ships. With the greatest exertions we were capable of making, our pmrogress towards the shore was in consi lerable. The wind continued increasitng, and with it the nunber and maguitude of my own special trials. My brothers who nvyel had mnuch fortitude, were disposod to lie down and suffer themselves to bhe swalloywed by the wavme without resistanse. It required a vigorous exertion of the power I had gained over themn to rouse them to the aim plest efforts for our preservation. We continued to fomre our boat through the billows and foam, until the doing so nearly cost us our lives. A surge broke over us. and filed our not 0ve Stheovides -e Sen. 8toal dee . ,ilafththe the sandsr oa m ,. dwealling, on far mor elem .. begi- t th:a andsu - half it sui sad a-iearsr _ dicontinuve tou d the f hoad lete Pak aessair rents, and the wirtd oanessd fearit it t, i adidnight ocean. 1ts wm as language t of t e 'to ot not sdeed ayour" a b s the sands,' nlnt cm a stl dwelling, on afoot fro m uIO, element nighto thans, thisat w e were began to thunder nd ho liroe wi our shntined to do a to sfler o hour... The 0raMi- ao. 'iqess as rent, and the .wind moanthere earfu omin the eait o'rlork, that terrisc note midnight ocean. It wasno: ; by at save whire thed asistg hre, displaying t he attem to mke foingre thcrets of the ineUo;t , coseld not see yound herMat h .. tance exception of arot single: . to thisi, that wtest hedistress keep heailng incessantly, 55d r reagony of our fellow an iemprfectir x the labors and honrors which our share to do and to muffs on th .$read pia oht To add to the terr tr of thie~ si there came booming to ius%'i boat=, 4 o'clock, that terrific note -f~iglis55, battle, report of a signaldec of a ship, an;. was fired, as e axperience, for ei bseeny the ship which had asmore terrie. lead us inthis dangersound a sistea then, in the attempta to make as of our, whstranded a emong it creates before the unh of the next BoI R. i rose, swept her and her whole crew, with theno conexception of a single ito vidual,intoetarnity. It is very ory equal nit fohre, andsolemanyd awftime,tol jesti. The fir atclod thredi essa on agony of our fellow creatures-if'ia-' so amidst the dageind man the fiehas attle, or the deck of a hip, saly know from experience, for I livq seen both; but far more terrific and appalling is the sound awe tsignca.. non, heard at sea in the pausesof a the midnight mourningest. Ifor a patriottell you what a Jrndderinn it creates ia your whole frame as it come. boom,. inar thror, andugh the drtoues of tI he d have no conception of mountaingto equal it for solemn and awful mub-. jesty in Them ; irst lod they are upon the coffin of an aged man, who has died with the prospect of a happy rising, sends a thrilof awe throughad eril the Boul; and the notes of e fled drun mourning for a patriot; warrior, and the to lifing of the di taut bell at midnight-for instance, maconvent bell amonds, the mountainpresered of Spain and Italy-have much Sub-. lins ity in them ; budreadft theyul nrenothingt. To compared to the sound which tr}, vels from the deep-thurondted' cane non, to announce the cad th and peril of the mariner. I hveown eari to several times, may I never ear wast Buwet the Bein who presides over the elements, an offives to the lif d. man its metesion, and bounds, preeravi ed us through thatis dreadfulnight. To wards mokeing the thunder cesed, " though it still continued to blow hex}. and the rain to pe our down i tor rents. daylighe wind ad veeredou th cover nothing of the land wee wardly weiection for ar the sea was less agitated tan it had'been -whic we attributed to the win blowing more dioecty off the land. hAnothr supposition, and one having bnt - equal chance for correctness vjt the foragainer, was, that we Bad deifegb i.n der the lee of some shoal orbad ! which broke the force of the#i-l and hence o -ýsted rod comparatively quiet condio o't waves, - t' When daylight cane we could di `5 cover nothing of the land we 14 (on~tiauuodoiupex piia~u.) .