Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 November 1878 — Page 3

'THE "WORLD" BALLADS.

TBI DXIF DEVICE OF TH* DUN.

From the New Yerk World. ......

I.

How doth the little buaydnn Improve the shining hoar, k-.,. And answers get of "Sot at home"

At every opening door! How pensively he putteth back Into his pouch his bill, And saith to the wife, maid or child, •'When do you think he will?"— When he hath answer got, "Dunno,"

And from the door hath paced, He sftith to himself at lrisure what King David said in haste.

lL

He is a dewny cove indeed, And not withonten gnile Bioiix, serpents, sixteen year-old girls,

Are not more full of wile. He feigns to be the debtor's friend

*7

Or relative nay he Saith he from Washington was Bent By the de facto President To ask would the debtor be content To take the place In the eveut That Secretary Sherman went

Out from the Traasurie. ••What! Not at jomc! 80 sad!" hcMUry— Well-knowing every word By the debtor posted on the stairs

Or in the kitchen heard, "Icamots pay him what I owe*," Come forth the debtor will, "Ahem!" I he dun goes on, "I called

About that little bill" Then the dobtor's hair doth stand on end And his teeth they chnttqr stil).

III.

It wa* a Bill Collector V' To whom was given an Account that had run long enough, 'Gainst a newly marrfe^rottn. He sought that late-made Beneitjt

Until that he was weary, But coutd no more get a glimpse of him Than of Brothe? Sam, Dundreary. Ths wife c.imo constant to the door— 8he was a winsome lass— Ahd her plump, rounded cheek it wore

The roseate hue of brass. She would look at him with limpid blue Eyes, Innocent«f sin, And In Lerlow, sweet, excellent voice

Make answer, "He's not in., Ho hath fared forth to see a mm— 5* To vend his valued pup— Surely yon ®et him on the stairs /.. I

A» yon were coming up." This, and thalike, she'd tell the dun Who hei was closely eyeing, And, 0I1, so truthful was her face

He knew that she was lying.

lv-.

M.

"Sh lictn," that dun said to himself,

1

"Liketo the place that's hot .* She lietlifHStaaanydog— At* any hoi se can trot She licth, alio 1 leth up and down, -'J

She lit th, she lieSh like sin, I uumt cast about to And her out. Llkowise to flud him in I have tt, I h:ive lt,"hecrird aloud,

With ft triumphant grju. ,,

ji

4

-''J

(Beware, my lord, of jealousy It Is a green-eyed monster Which makes the meat It feedet'i on,

And finds things it not wants te.j, Such was the excellent advice .« I ago, tho treacherous fellow, Gave unto General—I don't knovv

Ilis Christian name—Othello. Had it been ta'en, his wife had ne'er,— ,. Bung Barbara's "song of willow"— v* Beon made ill with that potent pill—, ,.

That bolster-bolus pillow.' v"' Salvini's great act had been spoiled1 v'/ jl Which used our blood to chill And this young husband whom I sing

He had not paid that bill!)

He was a goodly man, that dun, -,

9

cried,

i..,

He dressed with tasto and care, The wig-block in the barber's shop, I trow, Is not so fair He hath put oolcgne on his handkerchief,

Pomatum on his hair, On his little finger he sllppeth aring, A costly solitaire

fJ

Andof the fashionable cut Arcthp garments he doth wear*He goeth to that young man's French flab

And climbeth up the stair, And thatyoung woman she telleth him Her husband is' not there. '^vs 1 -O

VII.

•"Hooray! hurrah!" cried that false dun, "The idiot is not here Come t3 my arms! Another one!

One more sweet kiss, my dear," Then while she stares In blank amaze And cannot tell what this is, That dun imprints upon his hand

Two burning, reason ant kl89es! VIII.

"Base, perjured wretch!" the husband

And bounded through tho door "Go, get thee to a nunery, Or I will ahed thy gore, S And thou, her shameless paramour,"

Unto the dun he said,

-.^"l will wash my hands in thy heart's blood, "l»- A^d on theo put a head." did ndt flinoh, that dun, an inch,

As marble he stood still "Your wife's as good as new," he bawled "80 you an in, eh? I have called

About that little bill." .,

I, T? Tho astonished husband paid hid), S The dun he left the house

But that husband is not easy In hla mind about his spouse.'' Before hla eyes, in letters .....

Of flame, he seems to see,

A

4

"Lock to fyer Moor she hath deceived Her father, and may thee.'' •J And ever his fanoy shapeth

Ratincinations grim

$ "She fibbed to him about me,' jgi Why not to me about him?" Oh, beware, my lords, of jealousy,

It is a green-eyed monster Which makes the meat it feedeth on And finds things it not wants to. ©. T. L. New York, Autfust, 1818.

Ivlontague appeirs to have been ait ac-

{6r

with considerable genius and twenty* nine.pair of pantaloons.—[Unfeeling Ex,

FROM DEATH TO LIFE. There were six of us seated before a blazing fire which cast a generous glare into the otherwise unlighted room. Outside a winter storm bellowed over the chimneys, and beat seriously at the window panes. Afar off we could hear the gust roarine among the naked hills, now plunging shrilly through the skeleton branches of the trees, and again whirling overhead with a wierd shouting sound, that might well have proceeded from the throats of evil things riding upon the wind. The ghostly spirit of the storm seemed to have penetrated even into our comfortable circle, for we bad got, I know not how, upon that most dismal of all subjects—death.

We had canvassed the theme pretty thoroughly before we discovered that two 01 our number, the professor and the doctor, had taken no part in the conversation. They were sitting a little removed from the rest of us, gazing gloomy into the fire. The ordinarily cheerful expression of countenance had given place to a sober, troubled look, and more than once we had detected the exchange of a strangely-significant glance between them.

As may be readily supposed, we were not slow to press them for an examination their conduct. But for considerable time our efforts were fruitless. At length, after much persuasion, it wa» the professor who spoke: "Gentlemen." said he, gravely,' ""nO man cares to gain for himself the reputation of a liar or a maniac. Yet that is exactly what you are pressing both of us to do. I have no doubt that the experience which I am about to relate, and in which my friend the doctor bore no important part, will appear absolutely incredible to persons of your advanced views."

There was a touch of sarcasm in the worthy professor's tone, but in our eagerness to hear his story we found it convenient to disregard this, "However," he continued, "I shall risk it. It you choose to disbelieve it, why I shall endeavor to have chairity for your ignorance and conceit. Now, doctor, if you will hand me the tobacco and one of the pipes—the ranker and blacker the better—I will proceed."

Having filled hi$ pipe and settled himself comfortably in his chair, he began thus: ''It must be fully ten years ago that the doctor and myself were engaged upon a geological survey of the northern part of this state. We had labored diligently during the summer and fall, when toward the close of a cold November day we shouldered our knapsacks and turned our faces homeward.

Our way led through a chain of rugged hills toward a frontier town 20 miles distant, where we intended to take the railroad. A more forbidden region it has never been my misfortune to see. It was perfect chaos, blackened and warped by primeval fires and destitute of the smallest trace of vegetation. Tall cliffs towered a thousand feet above our heads, shutting out the light oi the dull November sky. Sluggish streams filtered between the crevices of the rocks and goured noiselessly into the deep and motionless turns. It seems that the blight of death had fallen upon the whole country.

Well knowing5 the peril of attempting to proceed through 6uch a region after nightfall we halted at sunset, and building afire at the foot of a crag, disposed out-selves to rest as well as, we might. Exhausted with the toils of the day the doctor was soon asleep and

tI

was not

long in following his example." "How long I slumbered I knew not, wl\en I found myself sitting upright, peering nervously In the darkness around me. It seemed to me that some one had uttered a Wild, appealing cry in the very portals of my ears. For some moments I sat so, wondering and anxious Then I reflected that as there could be. no human being in this neighborhood besides ourselves, the sound which had alarmed me must have been the shriek of some bird or ^.animal. For plaining the matter thuc, I was on the point of lying down again, when I was arrested by a repetition Of the cry. Wild, long, and, it appeared to m£, full of intolerable anguish, it re-echoed among the crags with fearful shrillness. With an uncontrollable start I turned and shook the doctor to awake him. "Be quiet,' he muUered, 'I am awake and heard all.. .. "What can it be ksked, ahkT6usly. 'Surely, nothing human no one lives in this region for miles around. Perhaps it is a wild-cat.' "No,' he said, between his teeth, 'such a sound can never come from the throat of a wild-cat. There it is again. 'Listen "The cry was repeated. It was a woman's voice, but it expressed such supreme misery ae I believe woman never felt before. It came ringing up the gorge with a weird and mournful intonation that chilled the blood in my heart. By the doctor's quick breath I cou.d tell that he was much affected as myself. Neither of us spoke or moved both waited for a renewal of the cry, in theihope of arriving at some rational explanation of it.

Again it came but now like a low. tremulous sob. I am not a supersti tious man, gentlemen, but I confess that I sat there shivering with a species of horror that was utterly new to tne. Wliat could it be? Not in an inaccessible fastness where we were morally certairi nothing unhuman dwelt. And then #hfit miseyy was it that gave itself «uch unCanny expression? Not fear, nor bodily pain, but something terrible, something nameless to us.' While we were debating these questions, in smothered tones, the cry came once again. This time in words we understood: "Help! Oh! God! help!"

At this intelligible appeal to our manhood, our superstitious weakness at once disappeared. Seizing a torch from our smouldering fire, we "made our way toward a pile of rocks a few hundred yards distant, when the sound proceeded. Scrambling up to the height we came suddenly upon a strange and mournful scene. Before us stood a small, wretched-looking hut, evidently constructed by hands unused to labor, unglazed, and without a chimney. There was a dim light within, and through the open door we saw the body of a man, apparently lifeless, lying prone upon the earthen floor. Beside him, with arms flying wildly over her head, knelt the fijpire of a ^woman, evidently the one

THE lfiKKE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

whose cries had alarmed us. It needed but a glance to assure us that some strange tragedy had taken place, and without a moment's hesitation we entered the hut. "The woman raised her eyes as we approached, but gave no further heed to us. Apparently her great sorrow had driven her distracted. She was a young creature, hardly twenty, I should judge, and, despite her features, very beautiful. Her form was light and even attenuated, but in its shabby dress preserved traces of former refinement. "Her companion, a young man of about her own aee, attired in a coarse woodman's suit, had evidently succumbed to hardship or disease and" was either insensible or dead. His pinched and ghastly countenance must have been once very handsome, but now it looked old and worn as that ot a man of 63. He had apparently fallen in his present position, and the girl had been unable to raise him. "My friend, the doctor," continued the worthy professor, "surely, uncouth and cvnical as he commonly appears, has as kind a heart as ever leat in a man's breast—no flattery, my dear fellow, for it must be confessed that you have faults that thore than counterbalance your one good trait. Well, gentlemen, he nt over the poor creature, and in a voice as gentle as a woman's endeavored to arouse the girl from her lethargy. "Who are you?" she said, "and what has happened?" "He is dead—dead: she muttered, hoarsely. "Perhaps it is tlot as bad as that," he rejoined. "Tell us all about it. We are friends, my dear, and medical men, and may be able to assist you." "He died this morning, before my very eyes,' she moaned, 'died, oh, my God! of starvation. And I never knew that he was depriving himself tor my 6ake. Oh nry husband why did you not let me die with you?" And she threw herself across the body, sobbing as if her heart would break. There were tears in the doctor's eyes as he looked at me, added the professor, with a tremor in his voice, and the rascal has always sworn that my own were not dry. That, however, is aside from the subject. "Though we knew nothing Of these two poor children—for they were but little more strange sad story of love,pride and suffering, such as is rarely told, even in this unhappy world. "The doctor stooped down and felt at at the heart of the prostrate man. "He is dead,' he whispered, motioning me to imitate his example. "Yes, dead,' I replied, after examining the corpse. "How we made the truth known to the poor wife I do not remember. It would seem that she had preserved some faint remmant of hope until onr assurance destroyed it utterly. With a low groan she fell suddenly at our feet, insensible. Although at a loss as to what course to pursue, we felt it more than our duty to remain in the hut for the night and on the morning make the best arrangements for the poor girl's comfort that were possible* "Fortunately the doctor had the mediccal case in his pocket. Administering a powerful sleeping potion to her, he placed her in 'happy unconsciousness of the events that were to follow. We then proceeded to a more careful examination of the man. "Without vanity I can say that both the doctor and myself had received some few testimonials as to our scientific ability from the world. You will probably believe that we are capable of deciding upon a very simple-case of death by starvation Hs paused and looked gravely around. "Very good, remember, then, that I assert upon my professional reputation that the man was stone dead." "Yes." added the doctor, who had hitherto remained silent, "the life must have been extinct more than five hours when we found him." "Well," continued the professor, with increased gravity, "having satisfied ourselves upon the point, we covered the corpse decently and sat down to wait for morning. Though in no mode for conversation, the startling experiences ot the evening kept us both awake for several hours. But at length, completely overcome with weariness and excitement, I fell into a light slumber. "Almost immediately, it seemed, I was awakened with a shock. The doctor was bending over me with an expression of wonder and alarm on his face. "Wake up,' he said, in a troubled whib per, 'something very strange has been going on in this room for many minutes past. "What is it?' I asked, 'I thought heard come one speaking." "You did, he replied. 'I have distinctly heard a voice close beside us, yet there is no one in the room except ourselves and these poor people." "Perhaps the woman has been talking in her sleep.'

VI

suggested,' 'or ft

may be that the man in not dead after all/' "No, I have looked to both, he return ed. 'One sleeps soundly, and the other will never speak again in this world. So satisfy yourself." "I arose, and trimming the lamp, proceeded first to the coach where the gin jay. She at least could not have spoken, for all her senses were locked in a profound stupor. I then examined the corpse and found it as we left, except that the features were more shrunken and sallow than before. No voice could have come from those rigid lips. Concluding that we had bo'.h dreamed or had mistaken some nocturnal cry for a human voice, I replaced the light, and was about to resume my seat, when my movements were at rested by a very singular voice. "There it is againl" muttered the doctor, agitatedly. "A low, confused murmur, resembling nothing that I had ever heard before, in the room, and seemed to circulate in the air for an instant and die away. Again it arose, coming from a point over our heads, and gradually descending until it appeared to emanate from some invisible source immediately beside us. I know of nothing with which to compare the intonation, except it may be the articulation of a telephone or that of a ventriloquist. "Who could have spoken them but the husband of the woman lying stupified upon the couch? Yet he had been dead for many hours. Full of repugnance of the horror of the idea, we started up, and again examined not only every nook and cranny of the hut itself, but even the

space outside for many yard* around There was no human being besides ourselves in the vicinity. "We again scrutinized the corpse. It had neither changed its position nor its apperancc. The flesh had grown perfectly cold and the muscles rigid there was not a trace of vitality in it.1 Now," continued the professor, wiping his forehead nervously, "I have arrived at what I imagine will be the limit ©f your credulitv. I do not expect you to credit what followed but I swear to you, on the word of an honest man, that I do not deviate fiom the truth as much as a syl lable when I say that while we bent over the b«dy we again heard the voice proceeding from a distant part of the room, saying audibly: "In the name of God, assist me back to life!" "With hearts beating thick and fast, we stood gazing at each other absolutely thunderstruck. An experience so terrifying, so utterly without precedent, completely unnerved us. While we remained stupefied with horror, the voice was again audible: 'Oh, have pity!" it said, "aid me to return to life." "It was some minutes before either of us could recover from our amazement sufficiently to make any reply.' 'Who is it that speaks to us?" asked the doctor, in a low tone. "The soul of the man who lies dead before you!, it replied. "It is impossible that the dead can speak," said the doctor. 'No, for the intelligence neverjdies," replied the voice. "My body is indeed dead but that with which I lived and thought and loved is still in this room." "What is it that you desire asked the doctor, carrying on this strange colloquy with increasing wonder. "To be aided to resume my former existence,' was the rejoinder. 'I dare not leave my poor wife unprotected «in this wilderness. I can not see her suffer. I love her beyond all my hopes of a future life, and by the power of my love I have remained near her, and have been able to communicate with you. I cannot, I will not be separated from her. I must return to her in my human shape."

Whether the doctor's courage deserted hirn at th.s point or not I cannot say, but he spoke no more, and as the voice was no longer audible, we remained silent in a state of mind that baffles all description. "I am morally certain that both of us would have fled instantly from the place had it not been for the poor creature sleeping upon the bed. We could not leave her to face alone the mystery that shook even nerves as toughened as ours. After a hasty consultation as to what course we ought to follow we resumed our former seats and waited in breathless expectation for what was next to occur. "Some hours had passed in this way, and the first dim traces oi dawn wen shining upon the eastern horizon, when with a simultaneous start we sprang to our feet. The voice had again spoken. This time it had proceeded, not from some indefinite point in the atmosphere, but from beneath the sheet enveloping the corpse: "Help!" it cried, in faint, but distinct, accents 'for Christ's sake help!' "For an instant we hesitated—and removed the covering. There was no alteration in its pallor and rigidity, but we perceived that the lips, from which a faint murmur was issuing, trembling slightly. Here our instincts conquered our weakness. Whatever the mystery involved in the matter, a human being was struggling to regain existence, and our impulse was to aid without question. A powerful restorative was administered, and, before many moments had pass ed we saw the color coming back to the wan cheeks and the sunken mu»cles reshaping themselves with the current of warm blood. Then with a faint sigh the eyes opened and gazed at us inquiringly. In a word, gentlemen, the dead was restored to life. "It is needless to detail what followed. In the meeting which occurred between these two young creatures, we felt ourselves more than repaid for the startling experiences of the. previous night. It can do no harm to add that we claimed and exercised the right of securing their future prosperity out of our aumle means.

We learned no more of theit former history than that the persecution of those whose wishes their marriage had opposed had driven them to hide their1 poverty and misfortune in the wilderness. We ha& heard of them since. "The young man, as we discovered on questioning him, remembered nothing of his sensations while unconscious, except a vague, dream-like, and yet intense sorrow for his young wife. He had addressed us, and appeared to believe that he had labored under a temporary suspension of animation arising from starvation. We.did not combat his belief, for we believed that he was actually dead, and he only returned to life through his great love. Who will deny that love is stronger than death, and that it goes with us even beyond the grave?"—[New York Times.

FACTS AND FANCIES. On the rail—A scolding woman.—[N. Y. Mail.

Edison has the gas-trick fever.—[Boston Post, t* 1 I 'J:t: Police court—well, they do.—fDanbuiy News. 1

Never kick an umbrella in the ribs* —[Danielsonville Sentinel. A dealer in teas—the tormentor. {Danielsonville Sentinel.

Who knows what poor poet Roe eat —[Hackensack Republican. The poetry of the plague! Plague take the poetry Kentucky New Era.

Is the fellow who tends an oyster saloon an oyster supe Whitehall. Times.

Weight for the wagon—240 pounds of mother-in-law.—[Oswego (N. Y.) Record. "Senator Bruce (colored.") Now what was ever said lb make him blush?—[New York News.

The paragrapher who heard Demoths's nese may have heard Menji-koff.—[Ed-enburg Herald.

Joseph Johnson, of Essex, raised an apple weighing 27 ounccs. He will not lecture.—[Bailey.

THE GENUINE

DR.

C.

SYMPTOMS OF WORMS.

THE

countenance is pale and lead-en-colored, with occasional flushes* or a circumscribed spot on one or both cheeks the eyes become dull the pupils dilate an azure semicircle runs along the lower eye-lid the nose is irritated, swells, and sometimes bleeds a swelling of the upper lip num ng secretion of saliva slimy or furred

occasional headache, with humming or throbbing of the ears an unusual

tongue breath very foul, particularly in the morning appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a gnawing sensation of the stomach, at others, entirely gone fleeting pains in the stomach occasional nausea and vomiting violent pains throughout the abdomen bowels irregular, at times costive stools slimy, not unfrequently tinged with blood belly swollen and hard urine turbid respiration occasionally difficult, and accompanied by hiccough cough sometimes dry and convulsive uneasy and disturbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth temper variable, but generally irritable, &c. .Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist,

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FIRST

CBRTENNIAI EXHIBITION

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Sold by all Druggists. CARTER MEDICINE CO., Prop'rs, Erie, Pa. IMra Vtala bj^mall tor one dollar.

QTTVWUimfi From Jterrona jt 1? JB JiJreJEiJSODebilltY. Lost

^JSr^cyphuis^oraiJy form ot lisease, cared at the old Western Medical Institute, 266 Vintf street, Cincinnati, by tin inly sure and reliable remedies. '~So caaric TDttl *nrcd. Callor write for free barge* loir .Hallr*t*»t«» tfca peer.'

Hi prtrot* pH

Of *U

.rtvaK Cbrvtitr A»4$«r i*l ^I'UilnAl Wr»|liftV4% Nervon« Debility, an*) Lo«t, 'WMUj.-otiy rortd. Dr.O. i» tue |A» tn Jvhoot. «nl o» Mfrory, tif iit« Ufi," ibn fc'mw |«A* reutfttffti 1

till 1

DEES rrqnMnsr IrttUtrofti wHIi fernm wml nrft

Fh

Bigni, venetive Memory, Fbf

•tcalOeeay, Plauleaor Ocnfutoa of ldeaa, I marriage I neatly eat 4ntf nadini

on Faca, ArenioB lo Boeien ef Female*, a of Saxaal Power, Ae., rendering tberaaafcly aad permapo*UlT«ly et

TEASMLE'S

or vrH«.

S*#ry tt.uvenifoce for1*1 ft* ft* MAff miAOR OCI0E: VIS mjw. ulmur.l. JttAftftlEi* &A0IK# nod ftentfwmrutv r#iii«rnrFatu|»J# «r Bu»MrGottfc and Ctrrolir oHmporum laforttMQutt by «xpr*u. Ce» nltatioo Nt u4 lUlltbl* Fill*. Bot.

DYEIMSE

.ye, O.

m«saljtnufooasbrB«pwss

Writ*for0*«aU»

THIS NEW

BLA8TICTRt/§8 Ha* a Fad OCrrfar from all othera, a capehapi, with BeU-A^aaUag Aa iaceatar, adapte Heeif te all wniie ue ta 1U

the Hernfa la held .eeorely Say and Digta. aaS radlaal eareer. lain. It i* eavr. dnntile aad ehfap. Mat by anil. Cirniarr

Egglwloo Trass Co., CMeago, III,

For 73a.«

CORRUGATED STOVE PIPS ELBO

It giyea {l«"beet aatMhctioa aad aaeeta with ready aate. M*Do not be deceived by ctrenlar «I. bow*made of four or Bve pi«K»». Bay the Comvated one piece Bbor.