Indiana Palladium, Volume 9, Number 29, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 3 August 1833 — Page 4

From the JVctc-YorJc Mirror. 1 An Appeal. Why chooso the crowd's ignoble doom, And waste the morn, of pleasures dreaming Should Genius idly fold his plume, hen all things bright for h 'un are beaming I pray thee, by youth's glorious pride, By every hope men fondly cherish By ail the hearts to thine allied Gain xoisdnn, ere life's verdure perish! Oh, many a lip condemns thy past! Long hast thou seemed a wayward rover; Iow from thy ume the shadow cast A new, a stainless raira turn over!

Proud friends are watching, hoping yet, Wii-ii link in pleasure's fragile chain Rath kept thee mid her victims toiling Know'st thou not every spell is vain, The serpents 'neath her bowers are coiling Thou'st worshipped at her Protcus-:-;hrine, In many a scene of haughty splendour; A.nd many a land of chirms divine, Hath seen theo to her power surrender: She'll haunt thee long! Thy danger know Lest honor droop affection weary, And earth at last a deport gr6w, No fount to cheer its sameness drearv! Thy genius' blight, thy spirit's death, " For these her wealth the siren scatters, Tor these her cup her song's ricli breath For these thy wildest dream she Hatters. Like spring-flowers mid ungenial mow, Sleep "noaih thy pride the germs of feeling! Few deem such priceless treasures glow, "When lip and brow wear scorn congealing: Oh, to thyself one hour be just! Men c all thee yet the uiurLlc-hcarteJ; Away with pride and cold distrust, Prove feeling pure has not departed. On, on, and rather knowledge now. Let wisdom check thy sou-it's rdvin. iaro one irau leal desert Lie s boiii. Hjjirsr mm glory s tavor d movmg! Thou bear'stu name o'er whicli is:shed The light that from her temple beamcth And yet, as sunshine on the dead, O'er thy young heart the radiance streamed. On, on! farewell accept my prayer, That grief may never darken o'er thee, That sunbeam, fount and fiow'ret fair, May bless each path that gleams before thee! May no rude storm hope's anchor move May holy fame no more be shaded; And may "the passion-leaves of love," Breathe fragrance when all bloom has faded. From Ike 'JVew-York JItrror Masa, er the ZZcfovnmiiGn. BY J. K. PAULDINO. "3lAsnALi.An!" exclaimed Musa, the broken merchant of Pera, as he sat smoking his pipe in the graveyard of Scutari, and pondering on the errors and disappointments of his past life; "Mashallah ! if I could only begin the world again, with the advantage of the experience I have gained at so dear a price, what a difforent man I would be!" It was tho cool of the evening, and Musa, looking around, saw no one near him. Nothing but little mounds, marking the narrovr house of the poor; and stately tombs, covering the mouldering remains of the rich and great, was near, lie sat alone, the only living being among millions of those who had paid the last debt of mortality. A dead silence, a numb and senseless quiet, reigned all around, contrasted with the busy motion of a thousand bouts plying at a distance, atiiwart the sea cf Marmora; the groups of danch-g Greeks, scattered along the shores of the XJosphorus; and the myriads of busy breathing beings, who inhabited the vast city of Constantinople, and the delightful villages, in which that great metropolis is set, like a rich diamond in a ccronet of sparkling jewels. The proud domes of St. Sophia, and its rival rnosques, rose into the air, with a serene, imposing grandeur; and, in the distance, the Giants' mountain was seen fading away in the mists of twilight. On one hand were the shores of Asia, on the other those of Europe; the two rival worlds seemed to have forgotten their ancient enmities, and to smile on each other in peaceful serenity. The scene and the occasion were calculated to awaken the past, and to invite to speculations on the future. Musa reviewed his life, which prorented little else than a series cf errors, followed by a train of misfortunes, and sent his mind, on errands, from whence it returned like the dove to the ark, without the olive branch cf peace. He was poor, crippled and without friends; and too old to hooe to live to benefit by the revolutions cf the wheel of time. As lie rcnected on his iorlcrn and desolate condition, the shadows cf evening gathered around, and his last pipe of tobacco being consumed, he was about to leave the habitations of the dead, with the exclamation he had often uttered before, "Mashallah! if I could only li ve my life over again!" Scarcely had lie uttered these words, when a low whispering voice issaoal, as it were, from the tomb of Sidi Hamed, a famous santon, who had Iain buried for more than a hundred vears, and who was second only to the prophet himseli in the performance of miracles, and the estimation cf all true believers. "What wculdst tliou do, 3Iusa, if thou wcrt 'Crmitted to live thy life over again?" said I tue voice. Musa was struck dumb for a moment; but, the question being repeated, he at length replied, in a low and opuivering tone, t liy the aid of Allah and his prophet, and the experience of my past life, 1 would try to be a better, a happier, and a wiser man." "Dost thou really believe it!" asked the voice. "i am certain it would be so," replied Musa. "I have always thought it an impeachment of the wisdom and the justice of Allah, that men should die at the moment they become fit to live." nou rs;:ed the voice from the tomb of Sidi Hamed , scornfully. Weil, thy doubts shall be satisfied. Go" to the ancient city of Prusa, ia Aria Minor; tlnd out the tomb of Sultan Orkhan, by the side of which

Hoping tnat soon thou it shine in stcry, 'hat when youth's clouded star has set, Thy manhood's sun shall rise in nlorv.

taou wut see a sparing fountain. Brink ; trmt. He resolved to put aim to tho test bethrice, repeat thrice the name cf the prophet, I fore ho chose him lor his heir, .aid than shalt become young again, ac thou j Accordingly one day he t"ek ccoarion tr

wast when thou first weJJt Laughter of I LraLi m of Pera . the beautiful

"Rut" replied Musa. "lie silent," exclaimed the voice. "Thou

hast nothing to leave behind thee; nobody will j notice thy departure, and, if they do, nobody j will care. The beggar can go where he listetb. Away,anddVasIbidthee,orvorej Wlil lUiOW. Musa obeyed. lie travelled to Prusa, the ii n n ancient capital of the Turkish empire; sought the tomb cfOrkhan, drank of the fountain thrice, thrice called on the name ot the prophet, and fell into a sleep, like that of death, When he awoke the sun was mst gilding the snowy summit of Mount Olympus, and shed(un? its yellow lustre over the hundreds ot lofty domes and minarets that adorned the ! city. lie proceeded to the fountain, to perform his morning ablutions and say Irs- prayers, vi'hen what was his astonishment at beholding in its pure mirror the reflection of a beautiful I youth, with a ruddy face, without a single j wrinkle; an eye sparkling and cleir as the j waters themselves, and a form upright as the palm. At fnt he stirted back, and tamed j around to see if any one but himself was pre- i sent; but he stood alone. Again he locked into the fountain, and again ho behcia tue i beautiful youth, lie rubbed his eyes, and proceeded to another soring close 1 y, where the same image presented itself as he leaned over the grassy waters. "Am T in a dream, cr am I not myself!" cried he, in indescribable perplexity. liy this time the vcung female slaves were bi ginning to come up from the city to fill their J rs with the pure cod writer of there foun- J jar, tains of the liilis, and many ot them i ergot to return, while they stood gazing on tae IianUsome vcutabeiore t!:cm. "Wilt thou permit a poor, vreary eld man the use of thy vessel thai he may drink!" cried. Musa. "Old man!" replied the damsel, bursting j into loud and loEg-oontinuekl liuguter; v;hno : .Musa stood astcnished at the strengia anu steadiness of his voice, whieh had long trem- j bled with the weakness of age and infirmity, j "It is not soemly," said he, "lor the young , to make game of the aged, to make game oi tiio aged." j "Aged!" cried the damsels, again laugh- i ing aloud, and departing from the fountain, J sometimes turning their heads to look at the j youth, and renewing their merriment "Strange!" thought Musa, "the nature of the women of Prasa niuit bo different from ( that of the rest cf the sex, for they are not accustomed to liiK'h at the misfortunes of their fellow-creatures, cr deny a cup oi water to the inlirmities cf age." He proceeded, as lie thought, with feeble steps to descend the rugged path oi the mountain, and was creeping cautiously on his v.ay, j when he met a peasant driving his mule towards the place he had left. As they passed each other, the peasant said, joeringly, "Art thou walking on eggs, that thou step pest so carefully, young man!" and went on his way, laughing like the young girls. Musa waxed wroth, and, mending hi.' pace unconsciously, discovered, to his astonishment, that "the weakness of his limbs had given place to strength and activity. Py degrees the recollection of the scene in the grave-yard of Scutari came over his mind, and he perceived the promise of the voice from the tomb of Sidi Hamed had been accomplish ed, lie was once more a young man, and tae world was before mm. "It remains now," thought Musa, "that I begin life again, and avail myself of the experience of the past." So thinking, he entered the city, and proi- i i .. . t. I ceeuou to. un uaisumvu i:au a.i!ui v , nuui entered, and sat down in a corner by himself to smoke his pipe, to ruminate on his future life, and course he should pursue in order to escape the disasters of the past. Ke called to mind that these had principally originated in an imprudent confidence in his friends; a credulous belief in the virtues of mankind; an indiscriminate generosity in relieving distress; and in the choice ot a

young, fascinating, imprudent wife, whose j of Blount Olympus, and bogged l-'is ciiarity. j mightily; and he was, alove all, delihtefi understanding was weak, and who, though "I have already sulfored enough by giving ! to ilad that she !tad a will cf her own, for she she possessed a good heart, as well as aa to every one, I will now redeem my "error by ; maintained her oainiens with ol.athr.iey, alamiable disposition, was continually indulging j giving to none," thought alas i. j though she was wiiiimr to be Ids slave." Iter! in extravagances that materially assisted in So be solemnly assured the disguised sul- : sentiments wer?, moreover, tho:e cf a staid J bringing him to poverty. tan that he was as much aber.'ar as himself, . and frugal woman, ai d t i c ever and amien 1

"1 have only to avoid taese errors, ana my less eld man, with none to cheer his lopelimess, or assist him in the transaction of his ausjuess. IJc approached TTlusa, and addressed to him some kind inquiries as to whence lie came, what was his business in the city, and whith er he was going, concluded with odors cf sortae old man, and disclosed his present per T3 7 plexities, saying nothing of the transformation ho had undergone, lest he should not be -T " i O 1 t.ltltvUI The childless old man took pity on him, carried him heme, and, alter employing him lainteif with V.. " ' a sufficient time to become acqn his business, made him his partner. Musa now thought to himself he was on the high road to prosperity, and that nothing was ! required to ensure it but to keep in mind th j errors of his past life, and pursue a cours diametrically opposite that which had once brought Iran to ruin. "I will trust no one," thought he; "I will believe every man with whom 1 deal a rogue; I will give nothing away; and, if I marry, it shall be neither a beauty, a fool, nor a predi11. The old merchant in a short time became fond of Musa, and determined to adopt him as his son. He reposed in him the most perfect confidence, but was mortified to perceive, as he thought at times, that this confidence was not retained; for the young man often acted without consulting him beforehand, or apprising him afterwards of what he had dene. This species of ingratitude rankled in the heart cf the old merchant, for there is nothing that wounds us deeper than the discovery that - wo are net trusted bv those whom we lore and inq; cf tiiC how much rn aeI he had saved in the course cf their partner-

n s in sni. t is ) r i in no ." .. i s i r . h '! .,.i it.nn . oi.ri i ir vr'nu.- i l i :,r i . . : - r r ',...-.,, v ..... : .1 - . 1

possessing appearance, joined to an air of j ing thirsty as well as fatigued, drank at the ; ami that of the vluol-- Leant v I have r, l leil. ! fr.lt.t ..,-.tj ui.0t sadness and perplexity, arising from tho re- fountain by the tomb of Orkhan, and sitting ; There is no room for doubt or he; it it ion. ! '. 1.7', a i '' . t..'r,' ilection that he was in a strange place, with- himself down, soon sunk into a deep .deep. ! have suffered too n:uch bv 1 eauti -s, ih ds rad I , ' " -. ''' ' ' ' ' out money or friends, attracted the attention On awakening, he discovered tint he had j s-endthriits. ( wnl i;Ira.;T this s..a ii do, ! l'U" lxXl'S il ' ,W ,,x of a merchant of Prusa, who had, not long been robbed of all he had in tho world by some ! prudent and economical wh'Jw, o.;d 1 ave the , since, lo.t his only son, and was now a child-1 dexterous thief, who had unlet! v opened his ! other to 'ot over her tl;-i.- Kdnf-.vnt ::sv.fdi .my 0, 1. 1'h

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vice; for the youth and beauty ot tho stranger i " ; t;,()ft;.; ! V. - - Mc vtl! . t, Vi- i -i - u-011 there but a tow moments v.vucii tue om- wonuu, w::u aa (.;;. .on .t h.v ana i '. . recalled las son to his maid. ?.ius.i vras tu , C(Jrs of Uuticc bro,:.lt in a man of infamous ; who will not be driven ah,, t at lee , reo oi 1 : 1 1 J V" ' hrst mchned to answer evasively, recollect- ch,rac v;ho, kno,vn to be noor all I every acenhmt d imnuh,. hallV';! She , s';t 1 U'! 4 mg that one grea cause ot lus misior uaes 1H e,riv til, raorni,a. been disov- i is no by..uty, and so 'much the l-et." ' l' . U - V' was an imprudent coniidence in mankind; ered h;di aun cf inonov ing. Men l,t tho exult -ion c f oiaa coithomd mdv t: a ilV, , bu rellectmg tor a momeiit, nat he had now in -1C oftho loil,lv rocCsses of Mount a sheit time, h i e widow bad : , U,: 1 eon , , , .

ship. Musa immediately thought to himself, he wants to borrow it, on some pretence or

other, and if I lend him my money I shall fare as 1 always have done I shall never see it more, lie equivocated, and named a sum so small that it did not amount to one-tenth nart of what he was rcallv worth. "I had thought thou wcrt richer by fir than this," said the old man; "but, nevertheless. what thou Inst will bo of service in hoping i me to pav lor an estate 1 ara about to pur- i chase, luring it to me, mv foal" would witli all mv heart, for thy servant hath nothing bat what he owes to thy beaifi- j cence; but, unfortauately, it is not in mv j power. I have lent it ail to my good friend j Osman, who yesterday departed for Smyrna, 1 whence lie is going on a voya go to Venice." "That is unfortunate," replied the old mer-! chant drily; end notliingme.ro wr.ssaid on the ! subject. A few minutes ciler. yard, Musawss truck vrith dismay, at seeing Osn.an e:der the habitation of the merchant, lie seized! him by the arm, under somo pvetenee or ot!i or, j c.n-d attenipt-od to load him lo;t, tut Iio had ; come, he said, to take leave of his old friend, having been detained from commencing his jonrney tao day beicro by uuavoidalio uceident. "I wish to speak with thee in private," said Osman to the merchant; and they proceeded into another room, leavir,: iua to i anticipate tao uisecverv o: ais tale:ioou and deception. When they returned, and Osman had bidden them farewell, the eld merchant bent his eye, in mingled sorrow and anger, on Musa for a little while, and then addressed him follows: "Mua, dost tliou recollect what thou wast vruen I lound tnce sitting alone and u4seon.v lato in the caravansary;" " t do, rephcu e.iusa. "Dost thou comprehend what I have done for thee thice!" do." ' "Det thou know what I v.'as about to do for thee!" "Aha.' "I was going to adopt thee as my son and heir, but before I did what would have been past recall, 1 determined to ascertain if some suspicions which have lately crossed my mind w .ro true. I have tried and found theo wanting. Thou hast lent no money to Osman; thou has-1 ten times as much as thou pretendest; thou art no longer my partner; thoa wilt ; never bo my son; thou hast boon guilty of falsehood, deception raid ingratitaae. ('oi thy ways, and nooer let jr.c see thee more." Olusa obeyed, and as he departed f;om the I presence of the old merchant, thought to him-'; ! self, ".Strange! that in ,atterarting to avoid one error, I h.tvo fallen into three crimes! - la - sh-'llah! who would have thought it!" 15eing in possession of a considerable sum of money, he was at a less what to do with it. lie had determined to trust no one, recollecting the losses he had sustained ly his former imprudent confidence, lie had once thought ,11. ' 11 1 1- !... nu nuuiKinu noneti; nnu, cusooern:;r m.- crror, persuaded himself the opposite extreme must be right. So he determined to treat them as if they were ail knaves. Accordingiy he sowed his gold in a sash, which lie tied under his garment, considering that the only ; safe place. About this time the great saltan, Solyman the magnificent, came to visit the ancient ca pital of tho musselnian empire. He was a sort of Ilaroua ai Uaschld,and oRen amused himself by going about , with one or two oi bus iavorites, hi disguise; sometimes playing shrewd tricks on his subjects; sometimes putting their virtue to the test, bv appealing to taeir c-uarity, or demanding tae aid ol their courage and generosity; and sometimes ata . 1 , i . . a icnumg mo courts, to sec n justice was v. ta administered. It happened one evening at twilight that the sulian, disguised iu the habit of a beggar, encountered 'Musa nif -it one of the fountains for he had not a para in tho wo.hl. i ae suitan, alter ta:nng note oi mo count onance ot Oil usa, i)asse(l on, proving Allah to j garment, and united the sash containing the I golden pieces. j 3Iusa tore his hair, and, dier wandering about the mountain all night, like one t.istracted, went early in tb.o morning to the cadi, to complain cf the robber, and re-pa est his aid in (ltsooveiara? tho tinei. lie had I Mcttl'itlJ j, iiiau..The whole was at once clamorously claim - cd by Musa, who named the sun, "and the coins in which it consisted. Th? money found on the thief being counted, tallied exactlv with that which had been stolen, and I the "pieces wore cf the same description, Tho v.-ic; nWit ti. r.i.anw i)-.pv to a:t'S1. io cam was about to restore taem to rausa, wnen a person ttanmng among the crowd ot j spectators cried oat, "top!" and at iho same time advancing, placed himself cn the cushion where tho caul it to administer iust:ce. viiO an tnoui asaeutiie cam nvaajnaui 1,1 1 1.1 - I" A 1 V . The intruder whisperil sonic-thing in his ear, that caused the cadi t3 tarn pale, and he would have cast himself on his face to the ''.i- n tr--t tOniiif -r rr-tv . .i'.t '. 'lie tt,' cried the straa-er. Ve:tord.;y evedieoaased as a beaTar, I encountered th is man, wao m-etoncs to nave lost xaroe mousanu tlaoats in g aa, an ivi. u-: - vi iue vi l 4 i. Ju ; JiJ.ii.Mv tis;.ii"a ino iiu i.'.'i ir .-.i 1-, ., ...-.a . . . me he was net wort! i a para, and that he was much a beggar as myeolA lie cannot, un liar, be the owner cf what he ci'.: cos ho is a :; end if h o is a liar, his wor-i 'ai h aoiumg cam; at !. 1 - . ! here. The posseer o ! have come bv i ..oi.oiiy, ana inus u le-a-a :,s to neither of these men. Pet it ro: aha k. the hands of the cadi until the real owner is found; 1 t tiio possessor of the uac; ey ro--.jlve -ho bastinado, tmd Pais lfor p) ubci.t'las la:aees, with tho ceniollation of ha via - fo.t three

thousand ducats, because ho refused n para - to his sovereign." ifowlr.g this, the stranger : throw off his disgui.-e, and the inultit'tde : shouted, and foil on their fu. es in the pre. euro

oi the most illustrious ot all the commanders ' of the faithful. Masa took advantage of the confusion to make himself tearee, leaving the money in possession of the cadi, who kept it a reasonable time, ami, fading no owner, put in his claim, quietly appropriated it Ij his own use, e:.en:miu g. "Mashaliah! great is Mahomet, groat, the aid: me sultan rolrinan the miv ;ai:leo:.t, m:d rv.;t tho good fo.lume of Mmftpka ti e cadi, 1 will keep this tao.iev, raid, when I die, booaeath it to the mosque, for Allah is great and Mahomet is his prophet." Musa was o.;ce more a wanderer, whVnt money, friends or a home; and, as he broiled awav fioio the hcuie of tiro cadi in di.-' late wretchedness, could :u.t avoid caving uato bins A: "Strange! that I j-lxuM lose as much by, confiding in no one, ami giving nothing away, ' as i did by mucraam :te cair.ty a. d ti a bounded cenf.dence! 1-y the beard vi' .ua Tirod at length with wandering, ard ihlnt with hunger, he sot himself down at the thvr of a splendid mosque, t which the people wore hastening from all quait-ers, to jira.r.a their tlovoth:u at the call of muaeiim. , mle hero, t;-e beauty o; ins lace and ei. ta excited the attention cf those tit at were g ' ia and out; and m ...v 1 lack and sparhimg eyes darted their rays through silken ve.is , ! asthov were bent iven hia. i no mosque aai. .caree coon umt, anateo people departed, who a, at on moment, t.a ; -lack slaves cam 3 from di.Vnvnt quarters. an., eaea (.envcred a ;.:C: he should fellow then. o, piupor; io v.a-s s. ug ia.it a w .a a pa: puaaled rhichto oboo, vrh oa on? t ft ! h-d I'.'M flVd.'V. r V ; : t i : 1 dl.al'-.1' , I ' was , ceo; - . U v- w. J v. !.-. . ..it. ducted through maay ri h nr-:rtmeat.;-, a.:! : ilnally leil alone in a garden, the perfumes c-f . j whose dowers al:no.t overpowered his scm eo. j as he sat in s-veCidvs pcr.nv'X -tv, n it ! I Knowing wnat to aUiCipat-, tae 1; aire v j seraph suddenly emerged from t at a lahyruth ' ofrcees, and np'proaclto-g, addressed him ia o. ; j voice of the i wc-te..t ma.:ie. i "1 have seen theo, i have lived thee; wilt ! thou love me in return! If thou wilt, 5 wiilj i be thy wile. The lahfesj ia" t of laeso gardens and of unbounded Vvuilh, ; will be tay slave." j They sat down on a bank of vhd ts, a: d : co!ivers.cd tc-rrthcr. The 1 uly had a tcveet '; o;ce, a l V ink and lively manner, and :u-i, j either by nvident or de.-i i'. was euaidc ii o !discoer, thruuh tho t!iseo:t.osure i.f Iter' , veil, that she was yearn and beantlftl. j : Ihit her conversation was rather sim; l-.- than ! j intelligent, cud the you.: man thought tl: -t j j she oiicov .eJ a tzt le for i-p-lendour md o.':- j ! t: a.ga: ce. This remin.d- d iiim of t!ta e.ala , j brought on him by his former wife, and j was balancing in his mind wb.-ther to marry j j tl--? iady at once, m.d tnut to Providence lor 1 I I 1. ...I 1 1 ,.i 1 1 n:u rcsmi, v. mm lie OD.-crve.; tae siave v.a.o had br aight him the other message, eagerly i beckoning him from behind a cluter of odor-! j iferous 1 k irrofu ;.. . .o. j scorned to govern him, and he left the vo.lk- j i'ul beauty, with a promise s.on to return. j j x lie sl ave led him to a buiioim O'l!, magniikviit as the other, into a garden equalt ly abounding in flowers and foagraace. Here he was rooa joined bvastotelv and majesfo; j female ibure, who, cn comtm'ncar, thus ad - dressed him: "I have seen thee, 1 have loved thee; if then wilt, 1 will bo thy wife. The mistress of this palace, cf these gardens, and of boimij lose wealth, will betl-v H ive." i hey sat and conversed together. ITusa lit! . i .1 xc.imea mat sao was v:i;.nv oi a iin-a :w, ; ! and not young, lor she pleaded guilty to it.y. j There vas a decisive tone and maimer, and j j a vein cihtrcng cease as well as acute shrewd1 ness in her conversation, that ile.ncdhimi j gave utterance to tome maxims of prudence ami oconomy. i -'ilow ti ucrent!' tho:v--ht irom ainaly he married tho widow, and ' "id to hm if, J i "I have now readied mv ov-h-lp-ahm--, 1 1 j have applied the experience f-ih..v p" t ii.e to j ; tl-o govornant of mv i r.- at oi: ml Id I i ; am tlf? lanb:!?id c i: ri'O, ; j t .w.- '!' own mistress that not nag but imb: ami .at ; s-v.aiy over her hm band and k -r !.( :!:.:!!; j vrouU content her. She wa- n cai, ara a-, i vuma and iat dor ait of : 11 n' or coePa 1; ' 1 an.., what was worse, g a , an ! -a muforrt imlmg, that j letter of Musa, ecn when he v.a? cvrtaiu si i V.'as hi til? WTOi:"'. f in ta? wroa-r. a ho most aid ct slave o: Ixus-aVld v.-a its ma.-to.-; in ; i o . v a t . : 1 ' t , . . ' ni ..a. noe i.cf c hint mm v. ao cu-cvt to h ;ve b j the midst ci '"outward : . the crdia i oa of I was prescri! to him, i I 1 , - , nicL; and eve n th . i op res. , too con .3 o . ; '. ai ;i ii l - fot dm- d 1 : hi. j : a .a t infori.-rity to his ;-.tel!. t:A . l; tie y, hilVlrs a ita.h; be a:.:e , ii-,-, unl a tO - S for h k VIA - r ' . .: no; recalie.! tae ring of Ids i re :- v. : c a a.-h as t:i t li'.l of t! made no the euat cf t. i i.a . ! -r. , i hi - . i, i i . . .--r;e O-lV Jl wrought himr i;i. u ::t ran1" " a ''a: ; bet she cifoj af t ma!:o a aet the tyraued to iaauy !--t, and c ver- ; i .-'i i.e. i . i i- . .t ( f el pi- , . " ... i : J moct srvrlted r: j na r ci ins v.-it ai - t--a ib . 1.1 lv'.. . i-dt a welgi ,'- - fo in de..-.l: 'I if V. ' 1 e a.o ' P r i. a , aea; .- . i taere v. u i ii . ..'.iii

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