Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 November 1894 — Carious Epitaphs. [ARTICLE]

Carious Epitaphs.

One of the moat remarkable and confusing epitaphs ever written is to be seen on a weather-beaten stone in the quiet churchyard of Culmote, a few miles fro n Londonderry, Ireland: ‘Here lie# the remains of Thomas Nloholls, who died in Philadelphia, Maroh, 1873. lied he lived, he would have been buried here.” This is equaled, perhaps, by an epitaph from a tombstone in Ulster, recently copied by,h traveler in that country:, , , t , “To the memory of Thomas Kelly, who was accidentally fchotby his brother as a mark of respect.” Another curious epitaph is legible on a tombstone in "the churchyard of Woodbridge, Suffolk, England: lie re lies the body ot ItenjanrtW 'Brlakley, Who thought Lustle and Mrpog. was one That by misfortune. £hot >" llttteelf Wlth’s Gun In 23d year of his Age, Mde.Llfo lo the Grief of his Parents, Spectators and wife.