Western Sun & General Advertiser, Volume 13, Number 46, Vincennes, Knox County, 14 December 1822 — Page 4

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TO , TliniRli red the rose that on thy lip. With dewy odours bathed, is plowing:, I will not drink where all may ip. Whence sweets to all alike are flowing. The form that yields to all Its sweets. To mc can ne'er be worth ca.rcssir.vj, Ad, if thy heart for numbers beats. Oh tell mc, is it worth possessing ? Then fare thee well, and let us pru t, Since my short dream of Love is over ; I have but lost a thine; of art, While thou hast lost a faithful lover. FOKGKT MK NOT. Forget me not, as thro life's giddy maze, ImpeUM by joy and anxious hope, you move, F latter'd and plcas'd by never ceasing praise, Ador'd by Friendship andcaressM by Love ! Whether deckM out bv fond alluring care In g iv assemblies crowd you gracctul shine, Whether vour soul is tortured by despair

And worn" with pain & anguish you repine Whate'er capricious Fortune forms thy lot,

Or blessed or wretched oh forget mc not.

Written at Jthensbij Duron. The spell is broke, the charm is flown Thus is it with Fifes fitful fever : We madly smile when we should groan ; Dclerium is our best deceiver. Each lucid interval cf thought Hecalls the woes of nature's charter, And he that acts as wise men ought, Hut lives (as saints have died) a martyr.

A Frenchman once called at a

tavern for Jacob ; "there is no such person here," said the Landlord: "it is no person 1 vont sare but de beer make vid de poker," well answered the Landlord, that jl'th : Ah yes sare, you are in de right, I mean Philip " The following article from Irving's Sketch Hook, was handed us by a Lady, with a request that it might be published we cheerfully comply. To a man the disappointment of love may occasion some bitter

dreams "dry sorrow clrinks her blood," until her enfeebled frame

sinks under the least external assailment. Look for her after a

little while, and you find friendship weeping over her untimely grave, and wondering that one

who but lately glowed with all

the radiance of health and beauty should now be brought down to "darkness and the worm " You

will be told of some wintry chill; some slight indisposition, that laid her low; but no one knows the mental malady that previously sapped her stiength and made her

so easy a pray to the spoiler. " Ik was well dressed " So much attention has been paid to the outside ornaments of the body that the internal ornaments of many people have been wholly neglected, and remain in a state of total invisibility. In fact, people are judged by their dress in many instances; if a meagre, silly looking and ill bred beau, walks the street with a fine coat, he is immediately declared to be a great gentlemen ; no

matter whether he has abilities

suitable for his dress or not.

If a celebrated character passes

thro' town and if the circumstances is the topic of conversation, it will be generally asked by the people, who are informed of it in the first place, whether "he was dressed well " If a stranger is seen at a meeting, at a ball or any public day, and the person who saw him in

forms another of it, it will generally occur as a previous enquiry, by the informed, whether he was

; dressed well. If a gentleman arrives in totvn, and purposes to reside therein for some time, and a friend endeavors to introduce him into company, he must be very well satisfied as to his dress, because his compan ions never fail to enquire whether he was "dressed well." If a physician wishes to enter into business, and for that purpose takes up his abode in some town at a distance from his place of nativity ; the most necessary recommendation that is requisit for him

ought to be gaudy clothes, for th

'pangs; it wounds some feelings of tenderness it blasts some prospects of felicity; but he is an active being he can dispute his own thoughts in the whirl of different occupations, or plunge into the tide of pleasure ; or if the scene of disappointment be too full of painful associations, he can shift his abode at will, taking, as it were the wings of morning, can fly to the uttermost parts of the earth and be at rest. But woman's is comparitively a fixed, a secluded and a mediative life. She is more the companion of her thoughts and feeliii!T: and if thev are turned to

ministers of sorrow, where shall & in killing or curing; provi 1 1

she look for consolation: Her lot i ued he only dresses well.

is to be wooed and won; and if

vention. It is a new mode of tan- ter fault than snlkincss and never ning skins, combining such rapid ends so ill. An honest gentleman ity and economy as promise to may stop his cars, but he cannot the public an immediate and im- see through a fog Archbishop mense advantage. Haw hides Cranmcr proposed to make a sulhitherto lying 12 months in the len temper a claim for divorce, tan pit, & subjected to a process because he thought a silent woothcrwise defective and prccan man a thing not fit to enter heaous, are now perfect leather with- vcn. ''For," says he "we are nein six weeks, and at less than half vcr told that angels hold their the expense The gentleman who tongues They must be women, bought the invention, is a noted for they are always talking and opposition member and contrac- singing " tor; and, from the terms of his sti- Nobody knows her mind. She pulation, we may form some is not to blame for knowing more judgment of the probable magni than other people. Woman's

tude ol the results, lie nas paid mina should never be seen except him ten thousand pounds down, in profile, for she is wisest when he has given obligatory deeds, se she shews only half her graces and cured him 5.000. on the 1st of her thoughts. What should we January, 5.000 per annum for the think of ajeweller if he never shut four years next succeeding, and his windows? And as some great afterwards eleven thousand a year man said on a similar occasion, for life ! It is expected the pi ice "It proves she might be trusted of a pair of boots will not exceed with a secret." eight shillings, and a correspon She brings no money There ding fall will be produced in all is comfort instead. Kext to mararticles of leather manufacture.1' ryingan heiress, a pennylcss girl N'des. is the best, for you may have the . jr-"""". credit and authority of an obliger, Consolations for Husbands and and she the servitude of an oblif Fives. gCC most probably, if you Ik is odd, So much the bet- please, she willsnend vour fortune

ten There are lew oddities with mote fancy and glee than which may not claim nohle pre ten heiresses. Only take her far cedents. The Emperor Julian off or you must marry all her reinked his fingers on purpose, lations. Commodus powdered his wig Sie is jealous. A certain cure with gold dust, and Julius Cfesar for a other plagues, because, like wore a green one. Fontenelle Aaron's rod. it swallows them up. cared tor nothing but asparagus Of all the 2500 diseases acknowlfned in oil; Sir Isaac Newton for- cjscd by physicians, it is the got his dinner, and M olierc con- most painf, but the most consulted an old gentlcnvoman omi(.a li-oritsparesnotimc.it lie isa sloven.--Better still-he l,mls no amusement, and takes

"u " u,sc " eR' or ten icar- no food exccpt of its own makins. ned men now living, and half a lt cures a)1 delight ;n drcss? atl hundred dead. It is a sign he love of f(.asts and company anil does not admire himself loo much makcs a)i lhc scnses sharp cxc t and a conilortable security that comm0n sense, which it has no

e

people care but little about his

nobody else will.

Ik is always abroad. He will come home wnen he is tired Birds return to their nests, but sel

dom to their cages.

concern with. She loves flattery Best of all; it is the cheapest, the plcasantest, and may be the most elegant

taste that is, it she knows how

Ik loves bustle.- Good ! to administer as well as to receive People in a huryare like hail- it. Fr it is to the temper like stones, which leap about with oil poured on the sea, not only great noise, and then settle very smoothing, but giving it a thotlqu.etly. Hustle is healthy exer- sand bti coiours.

unhappy in her love, her heart is like some fortress that has been captured, and sacked, and abandoned and left desolate. How many bright eyes grow dim; how many soft cheeks grow

pale ? how many lovely forms

Thus it appears that dress is the

main chance with the inhabitants of the present age. If a fop, an ideot, rogue or a dunce, have hanging otT their shoulders, a gaudy piece of cloth and other cloths accordingly, it is a matter of no

great consequence, in the minds

fade away into the tomb, and ; .f many PeoPle; if, they are defl'

none can tell the cause that bligh

ted their loveliness ; as the dove

cient of a good character, good

cise in all climates, even savaes

have their game, called -worree."

Besides, a unletting person is on- Smith & Bolton, of Indianapolis ly an idle one in lever. He has , , . ,. . y . . - . . , Have now in press, Sc will shortly publish

iusi an uuur in mc morning, and runs after it ttie whole day. Ik loves money That is a great comfort. Flints yield oil sometimes, and the greatest misers

maybe talked OUt of it. Old correct forms of Deeds, Mortg

Ewes Used tO say, VOUIlo- Pitt scs Releases, Discharges. Pow

could have pei suaded him to emp ty tiis purse at any time; -besides, the money itselt is good and a mi ser is no more to be considered

press, be will shortly pub;

The IXDE1XJ JUSTICE and F.I R ME It's SCRIVEXER. Containing The office and duty of Justices of the Peace, H.crilTs, Cieiks, Coroners, Constables, Township Ofiiccrs,

Jurymen and Jailors. .ilto The most

tgages.Lcawers ot At- y , Notes

torncv, LJuiids, Obligations,

Hand, Bills of Exchange, Jcc. Sec.

To which will be added the CONSTITUTION of the state of Indiana.

breeding, honestv

or sense; the than tnc bao which holds it. One

1 a I . - . ii ni'iir tiiwl tint .1 l

.;n : o., danger mat must naturally occur i ""v " ""'s 11 ue can. Conditions To

'i u.f from such principles as those to I He lu wme Another com- paper, u

: the peace of society, is very easi v to, t; !uI the money will not ,orm

i mi nil: i) ii us lluib, aO 1L la Liic , , , " ' , , t. i... ......... r i i ires T

Tint orp ol n worn nn In in c mm ; lu "u ' vv V1 . ' " ' 7 .. MV" be R

- - - - f a x. mm m m

the uorld the pang of vvound. d ' common sense-ana 1 expect, , ! '.' ,, , ',. rV , " alV-rtion. The love of a delicate fhat Pc".PIft' S6?61' w" 1 so,011 :7. V ?. C ,. Bef,deS-

be convinced that it is not the line " " '' ininseii 10 a unite

coat that makes the Gentleman. I llc can luu e 110 reasonable obiec-

female is always shy and silent.

Kven when fortunate, she scarcely whispers it to herself; but when otherwise, she buries it in the re-

TANNING.

tion to being beaien.

She is a slirew. Very consol-

A late London pa

cesses of her bosom, and there let per (the Globe) announces the &mcu iaiwas a good it cover and brood among the ru- following highly important dis- mail?Ser ana a "tile ea'er. Keep insol her peace. With her the covcry; "Six weeks since appli- f "hieous dog and a stupid desire of the heart has failed. The cation was made to a person for loutKv, and her anger will never

great charm of existence is at an the loan of one hundred pounds to end. She neglects all the cheer- a young chemist, who had made ful exercises that gladden the spir- a discovery he was too poor to

its, quicken the pulses and send i substantiate by experiment. The the tide of life in healthful currents money was obtained, and. ina few

days repaid by the borrower, al-

tonge is the

tue steam engine.

through the

veins Her rest is

bioken the sneet refreshment of ready raised to sudden affluence sleep is poisoned by melancholy by the private disposal of his in-

u .. t r

uouuie you. iier

satety-vaive of

bhe is too busy Better still

Busy people aieapt to be short sighted, which preserves peace in families. Bees tee only an inch beiore their noses.

bhe talks too much. 'Tis a bet-

By a Gentleman of the Bar.

be printed cn rood

ith a new pica tvpc, .in octavo

and to contain upwards of 200 pa-

he puce, bound in boards, will

50 cents per cony or SI 121 cts.

litched. fCT"Persons wishing to procure a co- ...

py ol tins work, will leave their names

with the publishers, or their agents, as soon as possible, as there will be but a few copies printed over the number subscribed for. C7Subscriptions received at this office

BLACKSMITHS. "VJTANTEl) immediately, a rc V y industrious, jjood vorl;mr.r: take charge of a Blacksmitli-s Shop, about one rr.iic h a half from Vir.r': on the state read constat. t nn;.! ;;. Kood wrcs will he riven ::r;:!v if-

to

and the

subscriber living r.c.r. the lie v. iiamuei T. hcott's

n 4 t'tn vin!M''i:

IJ. IU .. Uii i-

August Z9,