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i - .No, ?3. nAtEJGir,-(N. d.) FUl DAY, JUNE 6, 18X3. Vol. XIV . niK STAify .Mr.J - CtWpt a . e Gaztlte, - .BELL LAWRENCE ' ,Hriptina, (lire riotlifl prr an i X J IHir viH b MM witbaul at lul SO i paM ,t adraM., aa4 Moaprrrtlacwitiuiird, but at ti optH uC K1iinri,anlcM H arprawr m,i p-.i l. Advartiipniefil, aol eiceedint b( icr line, Inserted tkrrima for Siiilfcr, (Mil twiKjr-fit (, for faa aoaliaaaaaa. All tatutr to ilia editor! matt a poaUpaid." MISCELLANEOUS. from CampbeWt Magazine. ;r 4 TUB LAW, .,' ' .z ? s a raotxssiow. , . . Year s ' is just, that oar Bar is rnevou overstocked, and crowds of fresh member's flock in every term! as if far the sole purpose, and certainly with the effect, of starving one another. ' If the annual emoluments of the professiou were collectedjnto a common fund and equally distributed among the corps, the proportion of each 'would not exceed a miserable pittancesThe ordinary ex planation of this is that the profession of the law is like a lottery, where the reat prizes allure many competitors- This is true .to a certain extent even in England but, I suspect with" this dif ference. thatanEnEland, every person, before he purchases a ticket, assures himself that he has not only some chance o'f the highest prizes, but a great chance of the intermediary and smaller ones; whereas, ' with us, not ; more than . one fourth of thcholders of tickets have the slightest ground of calculating upon ei ther the one or the other. A popular charm, I should rather say a delusion,4 attaches to the name of a ' Counsellor; and parents, ; duped by certain vague and obsolete associations, continue to precipitate their sons into .this now more than precarious career, without the least advertence to their substantial prospects of success, and in utter -ignorance- of the peculiar habits ,-and talents required to obtain it.1 It is ' a common oy-woru wuu us, uiav uu uue vho really deserves to succeed at tne bar will fail. This may be very- true; OUt What a Complication wi quanues, WuLt a eourse of privation, ' what trials rf, taste1 and temper and pride" are in volved in thatfamiliaf jlind ill-understood uoertion, "... A youngbarnstet who looks to eminence throujh his own unaided merfts; must' have a mind and frame . f'.' prepared by, nature for the, endurance - It ia unnecessary to appeal to any of unremitted toil .Hemust cram his man whose heart is; not hardened into t: ffiemory with the arbitrary principles of stone, by tlie influence of bigotry ami r asom'plex and incongruous code', and be fanaticism combined,' in order to excite Mjuallyprepare'd, as occasion serves, to tle keenest indignation at the stern and apply of misapply, them ( IIe must not cruel disregard hero employed towards only Buraaslhis competitisrs in the art the feelings of a respectable matron. I of reasoning right from rignt principles r -the loinc ef common hfei bunie mu9t be equaHy an adept in reasoning right a 1 '. It-li' 1 ; I t- irom wrong principles,' anu .-wrong irom iguurauv iuu uyicu jjc ui ic wuhm, right one Ile instjearn tb glory ili a more strongly marked with every cha pernlexintf sonhisW, as m the discove- racterof daring and reckless, inhumalii- rv of immortal truth, He i must make , , up his mind and his face to demonstrate ty, that nonsense is replete with mean- innnftTunntirr wirn a i imnrinan r trrHvi - ing, anu- mat vie clearest meaning is manifestly nonsense by construction 1. A.' nri ..f . - - a- I i I 1 I . xnisis wnatis mcaui or lerai na li;t(f ihint'mo-." &to acnuire them, he - - v r- - QI (-, ' E 1 T must not 'only prepare his faCultiesby coiirse of assiduous and- direct tultj I it is an attempt to coerce men and wo Vition, but ne' must absolutely forswear menih,to a belief,1 in k particular point of aU other, studs and speculations .tljatjaoctnne, by tnoiear ot putjuc. reproacn niay , in terf ere witii tjieir perfection. land denunciation.. ?.' ;(1 '.'e'; Miercmust oe no uaiiying wivu wcru - turet tfti hankennz after comprehensive thinz i. n man kind bi buf a great collection as ilainfiffs and defendants: and must con- . swer no revoiuuou ,jh inei,rj uuitirs as f 1 r . . ;l . l ' . . comoaraoie in miei est jro tiro last term theories focth& irooil .ot mankind; , all I ucb; ".trivial fond records" must be I ' done awav. He must keen to his di- est and indexes. ." Jle must see no reportoi pom vj -practice ijanuw ive-1 uuiuiug iier uj w ui kwu auu icics - iris.' As lie" walks the jstreets he ' roust tation of ' an assembled vcongregatiort trive war to'no sentimental musin'rg.-M nere! muyt' be no.:''commercing with tlie 8kieslM Jio idle dreams of love, and rainbow-s- and'poetic forans," and all tlie bright illusion UDon which the "fancy I . free'' can ; feast 11 , If a thought of lov$ forehead,jtd be an object of horror to her V intradM,1t:.ntt'sit M Connected wifli the brethren and sisters, wfth whom she has Isf Of marriage lettleinents, and rtir been' accustomed to kneel at thi foot . clesof senaration from bed and board, stool of God. to offer un ber prayers to So of ne ither passions, and of all the , iff life he must view tliem merely with reference lo their "legal tJIect and ope- ration.w"" If a funeral passes: by,- he . atjon. to foow the mourtaers to jthe graved ? icormider hnw Tar the executor may have usi. jnsteaa oi ncrmiitinsr nis imasinr ' ; made liimstlf liable fojr s'wasteof assets 4 ,oy some supernumerary plumbs and hat badds, "beyond 'the state and circum- stances of the, deceased,n V i ' Such is a nart: and i "verv small Dart .of the probationary descipline to which vie, anaiuate or , lorensic 1 eminence . niust be prepared to subinit, and if. he '7 PlU8t be prepared to subinit, and if he if an hold out for ten or fifteen years, his ' . --.-.y- ,. ", -,....,-'j-t..'". r ! i . superior xlaims may begin to be known ami rewarded.- Bat success will bring no ' "imutioa of toil and "self-denial. The '.At ami tienUl labor of a toe- cfiii ul barrister! life would be sufficient. if known beforehand, to appal th stout- est. Besides this it hat many peculiar annoyance, ms we la paiaea in a ta rn nit of perpetual contention, and be must compound with his sensibility to Eve and receive the hardest kicks, fit i no choice of cases; he must throw himself, heart and soul, into the most unpromising that ia confided to him. lie must contend with obstreperpas witnesses; he mast hare Ions to oat- clamor the most clamorous lie must make speeches without materials, lie mast keep battering; for hour at an im kt gnable jury. He is before the nun ic, and at the mercy of public opinion. and if every nerve is not strained to the utmost to achieve what is impossible, the public, with. its usual good nature, will attribute the failure to want of real or capacity in the advocate, or to any ii ii . i i . uiing rauicr man oauncss in tne cause. finally, ne roust appear-to be san guine even after defeat, and be prepar ed to tell a knavish client, beaten out el the courts of Common Law, that his is a clear case for equity.' ';N man, with out the rarest qualifications, or tba for tuitous aid upon which few hate a right to count, can rationally expect to arrive at eminence in the profession of the law, upon less rigorous conditions. - - To the Editors of the National InteDifftfcefc ; Gentlemen:, At the risk of being class? ed among the " Infidels,? Vhere cer-. tain mild, gentle, considerate professors of Christianity, have placed you, I must beg permission to offer a few remarks on the case of Mrs. Townsand, as detailed in a late pamphlet published j$ N. York. ''Mrs. Townsena, it appears," having doubts respecting the truth of a single article of belief, professed by the'eom municants of the church to which she belonged, wrote a letter to the Pastor, statingher dissent, and respectfully r questing a ditsolulion of her connexion with the Church, without a public trial.' This request -was denied; a Committee of Conference was sent to argue the poinfwho, finding her immoveable in her belief a session was held, and the; following resolution passed, viz: . ' I " ItetaboetL That Maria Tmvntandht rrram. UwucaWrcwinAit ChwchJtmd tha the firtt iwuo avb-uvciatio this bhtici be J will venture to say that there is nothing in the history ot the pitter and mfleu ble warfare of different sects in the most i' i J U-.t-i.A u fW ty, than this case, whicht is a disgrace I to tlie ag, and a double disgrace to the iuiuiiLrv 111 wuii;ii we live "i.'' It is at ar with he mid spirit of religion; u is an ouirare uuou wfviei- I I U...n.n. ... H n rlr.n .nil uigs ui iiuuiaunj', h. is-n fiuiuu fuu cruel sporting with ihS heart of one who lbelnnrs to a sex. which none but brutes I , O if . ii T - 7' . and cowards would dare thus, to assail i v'".-'"3. uai'icBf is ikiwhicu; in a country where it is 'splemnly a- knowieugsd, nay asserted as one 01 tne fundamental principles the Constitu tion, that a difference in religious .opi- nlons shail not subject either man; wd- man, or child, to civil disability or claru cal Drsecution! I should like to know i wnait ucrcuiiuu ii tx w u uia a uivti 1 1 r .t if ." f ' ..I. . lZ: - f 1 oeiore . ine puwici iur me umuusv ui "iitliered . toorether to hear the words I of peaci and good-will mankin4 if & denounce her as an apostate from J the true faith, and. turti her adrjft, a it I weres; with the mark of Cain updu her th 5 rhrone of .-Grace -to utter "her and all her.enemies4f this w not per secjifin,f nay., tti:: keenest," the" most heart-breakmz persecution, I know jnot i wnat Dersecution is. r. Ai. uu mv imeht, and for 'tlie Remainder of herlife, I this hefoletis matron is, and will socon J tinue,an objettf indescribable hocrot to her most intimate associates; ties which ICnit her : to that circle with, whom she has bee.n accustoml pertiaps from, he"f infahev. to exchange the courtesies and good offices of .friendly, intimacy, are oroken, ,njost likely torever. one win I be. thrown upon the world anew, to form bcthrown upon the world anew, to form new conn.eotions with society, and when j. '.i-'i- :.';' .' - - ' ' ' t ' t. , she meets any of her sister coramuai-- mia f L f .1 .it it . J t cants of the cUrch, that has Ums flung her from 1u bosom, it will be their duty w pa oer wun an avrnea eve. ' , Is not this Piaitemo? b not the spint whjcW dictated this rviuo ct aaot on the feeling and the good name oi a respectable matron, the samcVhich presided at the stake of the Martvra. the auto daftti of the InnaisiUon, restrain- wiles oft crafty church discipline? Does any one believe that, but for these re straints, the persecuting spirit that dic tated this public exjKMure of a matron, for conscientiously dissentin from a particular' pmnt of faith, would hive stopped short - until it had persecuted her even unto death? ' . v It is time, tnd hiirh time, if it be not already too late, to put a stop to such open violations of the spirit ot all those constitutions under which we live, "to declare by a solemn act of the legisla ture, mat no inhabitant ot these United States, "by the blessing of God free and independent," forfeits bis rights as a citizen by dissenting from any parti cular system of belief- hia right to the protection of his' person, his property, aye and what i$ dearer than all these, of his reputation, bv entering or depar ting from a communion with any Church, as his reason and conscience dictates. Let them stay with a Church as long as thejr please, and when they request aj dismissal,' let. it hot be accompanied by I pumic disgrace as u tney naa commuiea some horrible crime. , S ' 'v 'Jk- f.- Liberty of Cmcience. ; HYDROPHOBIA. A mode of cure of the effects of the tUe r j - i r. i . In - oj a man uog, vjeawine VKriune. When Mr. Marochetti, an operator in the Hospital at Moscow, was ia the Uk raine in 1813, in one day fifteen pers6ns applied to him for cure, having been bit ten by a mad dog. Whilst he was pre paring the remedies, a deputation of se veral old men jnaue its - appearance, to request him to allow a peasant to treat them, a mart who had for some vears nast enjoyed a great reputation for the preven-, tion oi.hydrophobia,'anu or whose suc cess Pr. Marochetti had already heard much..c 'v:. .. .v:"' lie consenteat.Ui tneir request unaer these t conditions; " First; that he (Mr. Marochetti) should be present at every thing 'doneiy jtKe-'peasant-'-secondly, in 'order that he might be fully cbninc- ed that the dog-was really mad ; he, Jlr. oiarocneiti, snouia seiect one o; me pa tients, who sfiould on.iy be treated ac cording to the medical xourse dually eld in estimation; A girl of, six years Oku was cnosen lor iui uui poBcv w ? The peasant gave to his fourteen pa I J .. 5 -1 r.. lf A,: ' tients a strong " Decoct" of the "umr init,"and VFI. Genistse Juteee "Tincto- r'uB,' (about a pound and half dailf.fi ana examineu twice a nay-unuer tne tqngues, where, as he stated, small knots containing ther poison; of the madness must form themselves. ' As soon as these small knots actuallv anbeared. which Mri .Marochetti himself saw, 'they were opened, and cayterized.with a red hot needle,' after which the patient gs,rled with the decoction of the," GinistavW The result of this treatment was,' that all of them (of wjiom only two, the last bitten, did not show these knots; .were dismissed cured at the en.dof six weeks, during-, which tjme they . drank this de coction. v But the little girl, who had been treated according to the "Usual me thod, was seized with hydrophobic ac cidents .on the seventh day,' apd .was dead in eight hours after they first took place.- '1 he persons dismissed "were seen three Jtears afterwards by Mr, l .ii i j a : ; .ii : ...i and well..' a.' '-ii': t-'--' Five years aftertlus circumstance, (in 18l8,YMr; Marochetti had A newtip- portunitjirt fodolia, of confirjnyig this important discovery. ' ine treatment of tw'fintyrsix persons," ho "had. been bit(en.bv a mad doer, was confided to him; nine were men, eleven women and' six - children. He gave them at once a iiecucnoirpi iuc vreuilf uu a diligent examination of their tongues gave nits jouowing reui i ic incji, an the women, and three children, had the small knots already mentioned; those nynat KUtDn An fka tliixl 1ntr nfhprat on 1IIUOV UlblbU VI) J ' 1 w .... . "J t v the fifth seventy and ivith; and one woman: who had beeiT bitten but very superficially, -in , the ,Jg, ' only; on the twenty-first day;C The, other severf, al so, who snowed no smaii anots, urau. the ? Deeoctutn Genistte'! six weeks, and all the patients retfovered. -V Inconsequence of theSeobsfrvations, Mr. Marochetti' believes that the hy Jropliobic poisonj after rmainlhga short time iu the wound, fixesitself for, a cer tain time under tile tongue, at.theot" n- Ings'oT the .ducts of the " submaxill. r ru, inueeti, irom such. Moody excesses, by pie laws, bat still arriving at ertd,i almost as cruel, tlirouzb the circuitous gland,": which are aV each sid ojLthc tongue-string, and there ; forms those i ' ' -:v-vi ' ' . . small knot' la which may t felt with . .... a probe a fluctuatiar (laid, which is the hydrophobic poioa. The asual time of their appearance seems to be within the third and ninth day after the bite; and if they are ' aot opojped within the urn tweaiy-isur nourt alter weir lorma tion, the poison ia. reabsorbed into the body, and the patient is lost beyond the power or cure. ' - For this rri-iotV Mr. "Marochetti re commends, that such pitients should be examined under the tongue immediate ly, which should be continued for six weeks, during which time they -should take daily one pound and a half of the " Decoct. Genist." for four times a'dav tlie powder, one drachm pro dosi.) If i the knots do not appear in this time, ne madness is to be apprehended; bat, as soon' as' they appear, they, should be opened with. a lancet, and than cauter ized; and the patient should gargle assi duously with the above mentioned de coction.' " - ' ;. '- ,: . .. We hasten to communicate to our readers this important discovery, Kbits we borrow from the Petersburg Miscel laneous Treatises in "The Realm of Medical Science, ' for 1 821 ,) ' which certainly deserves the full attention of S '..' fc'aaaa su meuicai practitioners, and wtucn, u confirmed bjr experience, maj have the most nenenciai results. ',' Tnnslatl from an article io the ' Berlin - - State Gazette,? No. 20, of the lith Keb, ! Since ' the above statement appeared in the Berlin State Gazette, an official report, made to the ' Prussian govern ment, and quoted in a subsequent num ber of that newspaper, represents, that knots similar to those' described by Mr. Marochetti," were found ' 'under the tongue; of a mad dog, in, Westphalia, the W8tsprtnexTv-xr-,'-'V'--' Medical men' are anxiously solicited to set on foot inquiries and experiments, iQ order to put Mr. Marochetti's state iheni to the proof. It may be well worth inquiring also, whether the cure, if such it is, is not effected by opening an'd cau- tion of the Broom having any part in Jt. .' in the suggestion of trials of the reme dy thus described, nothing can be Jess iniesueu man , lmenerence wuu. exci sion and actual cautery, when practica ble, which ib would be highly impru dent to neglect, at any rate as far as tlie 5 resent treatment of,the bite of the mad og is aatertained. A.i- ttHk' j ' Iff 'Russia, the wolves ofteYi eft mad in winter. . , An -s English, physician jof eminence -knew an instance oi ten per -. ' il : a. a, 1 . I sons dying in the village, by hydropho bia: all bitten by the same wolt. EfktuMetL U Surf. Jour. Jan. 1823.- ;THE "CELESTIAL EjlPIRlC ? MA -Wain remarks' in liis Gcostctdm- cal view of China, that the extent of the Chinese fiohlier cannot be less than ten thou sand geographical miles; yet alon g the whofeiine the Chinese have succeed ed in defeating the many persevering at tempts which liave been made clandes tinely to enter the empire, as well as in preserving it invulnerable both by ea ami iana. t - The. rivers of Quan-hmk. the rnest considerable province i in. the southern section of China,- are covered with a multitude of boats, inhabited by a class of people calledjTa-Aoo,:Vho are con-t sidereu. a distinct race. '- .Although t'ieir origin- cannot be traced, , their original profession appears -to have been fishing: theyfioy dwell upon the wster, in float ing towns, having Hheir barksranged side bysiderandiormingiegtilar streets. They are under the charge of an officer called tlO'Posso, tlie " anchorage place officer;" and in 13r0 paid a tax ia fish. In tlie fourth century there were fiftjr tliousand boats, each of which probably contained tour or bve individuals; per mission was cranted to them bt Yuns- chinff, in i750to liveon'shore and ,cul- tivat thelanil; they have tieculiar cere: monies pf marriage, but the poor-people who live;on the land still consider it as AnemkAiTtir il mftrrv with lhm. - '. iA)n the subject of the population of China, "pltf Wain remarks-" Admit ting China proper 'to contain 1,?97,999 nuies, or pou, ciigiiDiiaticB, uiu the population to amount to 150,000,000, every, square i mile woqld cohtainj. bdt about 115 1-5 Dersons. and every uitli- . i m t n yiauai migiu.poBseaa wore ujaii a acres of land. ,B"t every,, square .mile oi. ureal uruam, uiiuhhb hjujc vioji 150people. Jn. th .kingdom of the FNetherlands, the enornibus pjoftortiod o(39 souls to each square mije, sub sists. France,' Bavaria; .Wirtemtwg LWestphalia;, SaxonyAustria, ItalrT l' possess a greaTer average r popu lation taaor inina . mnuostan, wmcn compri ses 1,020)06-' square . miles', containin! 10,000,000 of inhabitants, is proportion any aimoi, as pup'4iuu ,n vouu; jine number of persons to 'each square mile beinzonly l-7th less than in that em- n ' . I Vi4! " ii.. piret admire . v pire .Wehavft, therefore, no reasonto admire the exuberant population of Clii"; aa, bot uuntaio an t or which for ma-' jcentiries has been proTerbially ex tensive.1' 4Vof. Car. 1 . ' . r. Womg paragraph, from la hntlih Magazine of 1785, announces the first appearance of the American Ha in a BriUaknort: '-.-. - , n" Tkt ni-rfrt Stripei-Th9 Ship Bedford. Captain Moorea, belonjrmg to 1 the Massachusetts, arriveu in the Downs the Sd of February, passed Graves , end the 4th, and was rtmtrtA mk- K ' custom house the 6th inst. She was not allowed fgfthir entry intil some con-' sulUUoa had taken place between the commissioners of the customs and the lords of coancil. on arcount of thu man ' acto of parliament yet 'in force against ' the rebels in America, c She is loaded f with 487 butU of whale oil, is American . built, manned wholly by Ameiuan sea-" ' men, wears the rebel colors, and belongs ' to the island f Nantucket,' la Massa- chusetU. v This is the firat vemwl h!rSr displayed the thirteen rebellious Stripes or America in any British port. The vessel lies at Horsleydown, a little be-"-' low the Tower, and is Intended to im- - mcuiatery return to IStw England. . s-ft . , .... , , - , ' t ' " , - . ' v ' J ' V From the rsyettevills Obierver. ' Hyson Ted. The fact has been oV- . monstrated, that the genuine Hyson Tea , may be successfully cultivated in this - ; stateTh& experiment has been tried. and the result has been the most satis- factorj. " A Idy.'the- wife ofIr. John Newland; of Chathum .County, found a I seed much 'resembling that of Buckf ' wheat, ;in the bottom of'a box of Tea, which her'; husband "had purchased in v" tfiis town She planted the seed in her garden, and the produce was a plentiful ' , crop, 1. She "gave some of the seed to ' ' Mrs. Darrmgton, the ldj of Mr, John Farrington, of Chatham Couutv. who also planted the seed; and the writer of this article obtained his information ., -from Mrs. Farrington, and also obtain- , ed from her some of the Tea and Seed. v He planted.the seed !n his garden in this b town, where it can be1 seen by those 7 who are curious to witness the products , of the,, East ' Indies transferred to this ' western hemisphere..- i. ':T-',.. "The writer of this article 'has distri- v buted, of the small portion of the seed Liltta Aaaoa opiamea oy nim.to many or his tnebds - in. this town and its vicinity 4 -; " "A Treatise on the, mode of curing this ' 1 valuable plant is quite des.irable. The Saleni East India Marine SocXetri. ' ong distinguished for the excellence of ' - its constitution, and th benefits which V result from it, not only", to tlie impor- '' . tant class of the community which found ed it, but to society at large, continues to, increase rapidly in numbers and im- f portance. Its Museum long since an j object of interest to the Naturalist and Antiquarian, has recently been eniiched , by a, most valuablb onation-Yroni!' our;,;?7-i distinguished countrymanf Admirul Sir Isaac Coffin. Thil interesting donation 1 ' ooifsists of a collection of rare medals of. distinguished pessons, neaily one hun- ' dred ln numbert Kings, Queens, States- men, Warriors, Scholars, and Moralists; -comprising, amongst others, all the So vereigns of Great Britain, from William -i , the Conquerer, td George I V Locke, oacon, Newton, aiuionriti, roi, ana . Brougham; several of Napoleon Bona arte, one of which is said to be theHbest, ' ikeness of that extraordinary man iit-'Z struck: on its reverse are the dates of alt '., t - !. . - a.' iij ill h m , nis iinpuruiiii juatties one oi uenerai Washingtpri several of ancient date; comprising those' of the twelye Ccesars - , of Rome, and several of minor conse- . quence.i vfThe Value of this donation is. V magnified by the, sentiment contained in tne letter of the donor, accompanying it that "he f regents it as a testimony v othe deep Interest h feels in the wef- iare oi tn? country oi nis oiftn. ,: ane , Bociety nave aepositea tne collection m a cabinent bv itself, bearins; the name of th dqnor onA1 silver plate and tho superintendent or the Museum, to whose taste land assiduity, the Society owe the prisent scientific apu beautiful atrange- . . n.L- A lL-. ... . a . " meni oi is vayiuei, nas so ciisposea. this collection,' that both sides -of the ' several medals can be examined' with V perfect' jease te die spectator. -j'sv'' , Whilci writing this notice of Sir Isaac ,' ; Coffin, a note occurs to us in Tudor's Life of James Otis, (an excellent book, ' Wortijy. the perusal of every-American,) ; illustrative of the character of the inha- , rbttaiits of this part of the country-at the " peewit .01 tne revolution, aim apprppn- ' aej tire present subject; i:p -V t5 i: , r There was, at one time, seven na-", ' tjfea of Boston, and ,its yicinifyi who . wre uenerais or Admirals in the un-. tisjj service, some of; whom had otlicr r djtinotioni conferred upon them, and nearly as many morewho' attained very high rank ill the civil service. ' Most of fiiese gehtleme'n are now living (18"" . there is nrobablr no porti a of the i.i- tish dominions, of an equal po- lution, .. i . -. ' r : ... . . '4
The North-Carolina Star (Raleigh, N.C.)
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June 6, 1823, edition 1
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