L IjNlILA.Ir. -THI "OWEM HOT DELEGATED TO THE tSITtll ITATF.i BY THECOXSTITCTIOX'jIOl PBOHIHITKD BY IT TO TH STATKS, ASK EESKHVED TO THE BtHfES HESPKLTIVELY, Og TO THE PEOPLE. AmenJmenti to & Constitution, Article X.- n AUSTIN & C.F. FISHER, Editors nd Proprietors.:,. A NO. XVI, OF VOL. XX. (Whole Xo: 1006.) SALISBURY, N. C, OCTOBER i, 1839. 1 TERMS OP CAROLINIAN. The Western Carolinian is published every Fai i u Two Dollars.per annum if paid in advance, or Two Dull and Fifty Cents if not paid before the ex--ration of three month. No paper will be discontinued until til arrearages .m said, anless tt the discretion of the Editor. ; tod s iuiiVt to notify the Editor of t wish to discontinue .. J, ths end of t year, will be considered m t new ea- Pfd?eruement will be conspicuously end correctly ... weKl-d.tl one Hollof per Tiere-for tfc r' nd 25 cents for each continuance. Court and Judicial . Lrertiaemenu will be charged 25 per cent more tbso Jbi above price A deduction ot 33, per cent from to, regular prices wilt be mode to yearly edvertwera. .j.... ...om aoht in fur nublictt.on. muslhavethe number of time marked on thorn, or they will btf inner- ' i ..ii r.iuA. mnd etttnred fbTacXOTulncTf idlers addressed to the Editor on business must be fa fid, or they will not bo tttonded to. MISCELLANEOUS From the Xew Yorker. ESIIBAN.-TI1E LAisT KING OF THE HOUSE OF ESAU. a MBS. p. W. L- Ephnatorg Note hy an American Traveller. gum inn in the year 1837, being impelled by thut restless desire lor novelty which urge to many to f, forego the comforts of borne for the peril of distant countries, I commenced my sojourn in the East, without an dufioite object but curiosity and a sire to behold What I had so olton seen described . I made the usual tour of observation through thp ' south of Europe, Asia Minor, and Egypt, with pro bably much the same adventures and discoveries that have befallen thousands be lore me; and 1 should - ikM. in sll pr4jability, havever iiiloruied the pub. lis of my existence and peregrinations, were it not fir the circumsunce 1 am about to relate, and of which 1 leave the saiiie sage public to judge for Mtemselves. ' ' 4-llV.cWitJWw k virons of Athens, I fell in with a young English . man of prepossessing but singular maimers, and bear tng about him the indelible marks, not only of sris--racyoTatti 1 Had not ' beeti long with him, however, before I came to the conclusion that I behold bofore me one of the sad eest ts-weH it most -magnificent rum 1 had ever teen. Ho seemed to dwell only in the long-forgot- - tea past, and appeared, by constant and fruitless ef fort, to be staving to connect it wnn me preseni. Ioim imagination, every thing seemed in its prime val freshness ; and ho leL one., who follows lhe,i trtrkof aa esrthquaKe, and finds only chaos and desolation where Jbut yesterday wa aeeo splendor sad universal prosperity. I lost sight of him in Asia Minor, and taw him but once again, which was in Evnt. amottff the nnubtv ruins of The bas. But I tound his malady waa iiicreased,insomuch, that he ''Wtmed Id lake " Utile TSognizanc'e oftlvliig" onjecTo: Ha was literally "searchinir fur the living amnnir the !oiiffnmc TorioilienueBU. When I approached hi in, he turned to me with a bewildered surprise and ex claimed, "Child of Yesterday !-oh that 1 could wake from this long and terrible dream ! Where you behold the dun memorials of a rare that has passed away, I am a conspicuous actor in a glorious pa geant in the days of the proudest Pharaoh.' Where 'S'flir1hoM--xrnV-cTOnrttt tf,rjgJLawg hkt the andof the desert.-Where isihe KHir.and the throroj-or uttendwits tOh; where IrthepeeY- less hndcran herwqmBnrmrEuTeWTJrpBOcir J Egypt's daughters I Ani ihe hridgroora who was bet Oh, Death ! Deuth I Death I how do mor tal fear thee I and yet how merciful thou art I" Here tbe poor maniac rushed from me, and I saw him do more, though 1 made diligent eesrch and inquiry for many days. 1 joined an expedition to the excavated city of Edom ; but 1 found that, by time means, the demented had arrived before me, and had found a resting place the most fitting, per haps, that the earth could have afforded. Un an ahar of the principal temple I found a manuscript which I here present, wtMiout alteration, to the pub ' lie ; but no farther traces of the writer could be dis covered. Probably in tome one of the many sepulchres his weary frame reposes ; but I would not, it I could find it, disturb its billowed repose. THE MANUSCRIPT. Ethban, of the house of Esau, king of a desolate CitVmiMiarrh of S oerished race, to the sou of o-dav : Learn from me the punishment of arro- mn. and he humble. Israel I lod I the God the i. none treat but Him. Jesus is the Saviour; in him there is mercy. Thousands of year have rolled bv. and I stand 'again in the halls ol my fath rs for the puuishmenl of roy transgression doom ed to witness the utter extinction of my people, and l,l' r.itv without an inhabitant. Alas Lr n.,r l.lnmea! Isreal. it is true, has been seal terwl nd the Btorv of Judah, thy ancient enemy eVoatied , but r,n o-giort ... I E- 1 t I . ifl m ipII of h.a fallen s-realneaa. I et it seems but now that the East, and the South, and the West and the North scntot their goodliest treasuret to enrich the City of the Rock, that enid, in her strength. "1 shall never be moved Tand thesesilenl Ml, ,rfe h,y wnh the acmitT of hundreds of! thousands. How often have I teen thit very lero pie crowded with priest and princes, who ceme to etferiheir prayer 10 the great Bel Dagon of Edom! And here it waa, 00 the threshold of this very fern tie, that the fearful malediction wa sounded w niy ears, " That Kssu hould pass away, anu inai csii. ban. the nrnudest and the last of the kings of Edom, rtmld walk in the city after the very dust of his people bad been given to the winds 1 It waa a proud dsv for Petra when Eshba brought home from Egypt bit beautiful bride, the daughter of Pharaoh. Five thousand camels and tea thousand horsemen came forth irom tne gtori-1 ous city of Egypt, led by Eshban aod bit bride ; nd Pharaoh and hia hosts came forth to honor the departure of Anah for the city of her husband, for Ehban's father had aaight to ttrengthen hit alii tcce with Egypt, and had sent messengers and costlv nreauiia in Pkaranli. and Pharaoh had given ( hi daughter to the ton of Edom. The desert waa j incra. 1 oey nau ocgun 10 cuuiu iu Uiaef 8cir, when the cry went forth io Petra r Eshban of Esau, tnd Anah of Pharaoh P Thea " ent forth all Petra to welcome the bride and bride gromn: horse and horsemen a countless i host; cam- els and their riders, priest and prince, soldier and merchant. The very mountains shook with the 1 ' , ' . ..' 1 thoutt of the people t "Eshban of Edpral Anah of Egypt I" And, io truih, Anah wat a princes worthy of Pharaoh, and first in the heart of Eshban. " Tbe night wat lovely, even for Idumea, when, Anah tnd her train having been established in the costly chamber provided for them, Eshban went forth to meet hit rejoicing people. The whole city wat illuminated ; theatre and temple, tomb and ter race, garden aud dwelling, all tent forth a flood of r light, while women, wrapped in their long, white -tretrcr the comly prflttun of Egy pt went forth be fore the prince of Edoro, tinging hit praise, and strewing flowers in hi path to the temple. Then , followed hi officer, clothed in the purple of Tyre, and the rich ceint and told of the East! then the king'i musicians the dark ton of Et6iQpiarri)otaa we see the poor, fallon child reo of JUica now, but the proud tout of a gallant race ; then followed era- Juatadors from tbo Eurf tnd from the West from Diibyton and from Greece, from Persia and from Tyre a goodly- train ; and as they approached tht temple, a captive band of our ancieut and hated enemies, the Jews, were brought to do honor to the king and to the great idol, Bel Dagon of Fetra. Slowly and tad they came fortlwhe captives of prouu jeruiaiem;anaone mere waaoi a wiuer mien than the rest, though hit garment were coarse and hi head wa bald ; yet all even I, proud, inflated as 1 was with power and prosperity cowered be- ' neath his steady and scornful look. But he halted not till he came to the threshold of the temple, where all must do reverence to Bel Dagon, or remain in bdBgeJi)reyerJever Jid tt pas from me that I looa ot defiance ana scorn wnn wnicn ne pauseu and, lifting bis voice, proclaimed "The Lord is God I there is none great but Him.", V -V 1 " Instantly that dense and heaving mass of hu man life was hushed, as by a spell ; all waa at still at if at that moment the city hadfceen desolate and dead as now. My wrath waa kindled. 1 looked around in indignation that none smote the bold reo- el to the earth ; but none moved ; and 1 rushed for- ward,jHl: withTin hifli, but he turned tome with a look that froze often threw ma mto a dreamy revery. 1 would the blood io my veins, and raising his hands and have given kingdoms to tolva the mystery ; but voice at the same time, ekcliitned : y The time wat it jet fu -'"-Tfiui taitH ibe" Lord tfous" Sly" swo ieh amdng jheni i I witnessed theirrcerem6niM j 1 be bathed in heaven behold. It, shall come down listened In breathlest eagernea to the voice of the upon Idumca, and upon the people of my curse un- Hebrew priest; and yet, the more I listened the to judgment. - From generation to generation, if more intensely I became wieresied, the toon deep, shall be waste; none shall past through it for ever ly I hated the whole race. I gloried in their de and ever. But the cormorant and the bitterr shall gradation ; I rejoiced in the malediction! which DOMKsa it : the owl also, sod the raven, shall dwell an tiniust world b"Viapon them. But when 1 in it. and he shall stretch out tlfe line of confusion . and the stones of emptiness. They shall cal the imbles thereof to the kingdom,- but none ahall be there f nj al ber princes shall be nothing. ; And thorns shall come up in her palaces nettles and brambles in the fortress thereof; and it shall be a habitation for dragons and a court" lor owls." "There waa an awful pause- The whole city was s'ii(l(KMi7y clothed In barpaLTe u'ar'kaeas ; end the voice ol thunder, pouring out its terrible denuncia tions on this devotod city r Lot thy lerriblones, hath deceived thee, and the pr.de of thy heart oh hou that dwellest ... the cleA.ot the rocks-that boldest the he.ght of the hill Though thou ahouldst make thy rnnit as high aaahejl&jtaJKUlbrtP4jh saith the Lord. And theu pr.aid son of Esau the --prouaod;tW41tl.ywa4lMh .-CimS I RMU wuuiun tirv-nirTaiiiqui joo JXI- . . . . , , . , tng uoa io o.p.HJ..ro, h u..w Uw , lur i,n- ages ; and because thou sayest in thine heart- Wkn is the Lord, that hecHndo this crest thirur The oroohrt ceased hi. terrible denunciation: butlhe.niouiiJa.in shooMojheircent that the fearful doom was about to be fulfilled.- The lightning played about the mountains till the whole mass seemed wrapped in a continuous sheet of flame. And the captives, with solemn pace, tunied from the appalled and fear-struck multitude, and walked through the magnificent portals of the city ; yet none dared stay their steps, for they felt thai a terrible power.shellered them from harm. Fears thst night that tremenJoua n took hold of every heart in Idumea ; but most on mine, for I full the awful certainty that every word should be accomplished. But rooriuug came, and men began to forgot the terrors of the night ; and business snd pleasure succeeded; tranquility and prosperity were gajn the inhabitant ofPetra. " iears passea awsy, ou ,n mil my wnm, inj k...i.r.,l Imh mmm lha wainanof m hive. - I have minM ..ih ihe s-reat ones of the world 2 I have gazed on the fairest of earth's daughters, but never have I seen a fairer or a gentler than Anther her more geiilte daughter. But Anah wss smitten by .U J..., li. It.,1 liuh n tlnilii Ilium MQIIIIO uC.v.. . ---- - . . " . . . ..ri.fl..i ...:ijj .- .: from her I . ,apie. OUS in Mom, ana a uunu.w pr... ".'rJ ll k7 11,8 t?JkS TSTLZ the hr.i where Anah reposed. I have found the - tombsbutitws. empty, only toiJWIW made hi U.r in me ?rj -P had been laid Ano 1 nave ooeu aw I l.uiiirl ihe verv teai wnoie, in my imuo, pruia, I . 1 . above n.y people, who came 'hging here in pu. -suit of pleasure. n here art mev 1 1 cannoi nnu even their very ashes. 1 went to the spanmenis . . - . . - . - , .t l:i j .r 1 1. n..,. .ofmylavoriWdaugnu iif.il and rare were the treasure oTdu placcrbul I found only the ausy stone . . mockerv a she fox had brought forth her whelps, . a . I :r and growled fiercely .1 my lnnioa. Iwen, jo the bout, of IlilJad my pmy counsel or. The broth. er of my ZTZitiZ Vf. " rrTZ Ucioaiof aaa naa neu. v -- -- the sons of Ishmael had made nis oen in mo j chamber of my friend, tnd roughly threaloned to take away my lile, as an intruder, wliere my la ik.r. bad lived and reiirned for ages. 1 havi .k. k.j I...J and reiimed for toes. I nave L.a ,k. rumili.r nlaes of mv kindred 5 but even r.-.H iha familiar olaco of mv kindred ; but evei their dusti. given to the winds-their tombe are :Jr.,..i. - - wide open and empty. . "The course of Edom is fulfilled, trflhw 1 has. but one short pilgrimsge more, llj 1 .K1.11 L .. of mv kindreiC Iolhe deso- " P. C.hnr the hoatt of Idumea met late valley of tl Uhor tne oost. 01 lauirss , .riAanf Israel. Luna- and bitter . . n - at rife between- Esau and Jacob j but I ted 1 our .treogtb for . derate cflhr We hoped ratnera lana enioaunea ner.wun coauy , - - iMttth,M. kA found to march to the very gate of Jerusalem, and car. ry fire and slaughter in our course, Fearful and long wat that dreadful strife, t taw my prince lain, and the pride of my nobility lying in heaps the dying and the (load ; but I saw no more. I remember that a ttone from a aling struck me on the temple; the earth became dark and Esau reigned no more in Fdom. . . .)'." "Of my early childhood in my second existence I have small remembrance, ftjy fiMKCQ"ICCli(mL is a feeling of bewildered rafture at tn ancient air I sung by an old wandering Gipsy., Withered, and old, and tun burnt at she was, I could have bugged to my heart that poor creature, at an old and bun iliar friend. I remember, too. of a strange sensa lion when taken to visit a greenhouse where tome young palms wore growing. Time passed. I wat regarded at a strangu and wayward boy, Tor even then my oul thirsted for something 1 knew not what distant and unattainable. I walked amongst those that men taught me to regard as my fellows With them but not of them, for 1 felt as a stran- ger. I entered the University. 1 toon became distinguished for my proficiency in the languages of the East to me there, wat in them a mysterious cnarm, a tirange lascinauon, mai t couiu urn re list that touched a hidden chord in my heart, even to rapture. The Professor called me a pro. digy. They prated of genius and intellect but 1 was not flattered; my thirst wat too intense, my feeling too deeply alive, to pause or bestow a thought on flattery.. The adulation of my fellow wat but a breath, scarcely stirring the surface of deep wa- iers. , "I waa not then religious. I had no abiding system of faith; but I delighted in some of the booki of Jhe Old TeatannuiuL Seine jf the descrip- lions there given were so vivid to my imagination, that I eouli scarcely believe t had not myself been an eye witness to them. One thing I should have observed: wbicb was tbe hatred 1 bore to the do- scendauts of Abraham. There were name among tbem that afflicted me tt rangely ; changed at they quesUonad mv Jvited Ihem, there was no snsy' if "Thai'' i called rich. I resolvou to restless wanderer oJTtheTaee ortiie earrnT 1 v ited the New, World : I plungod 4nto tht dark re cesses of the forests of America ( I visited ruins of Hie and tfinplea over which -the-atdy forest waved the erowth of ages; I explored the deepest 'efiveffiiOTW tains; I mingled with the wildest and fiercest of I the tribes of the wilderness and the mountains. I encounlered dangflr, ,nd hardshic, and wflering, fff)m hea, ,nd lnm h lod (birrt . , WM by wid t WM threatened . finon ferocious men. Three timet have 1 L; L-J -K.n -It h., mvlf .ri.hml- .... ... . " ,.. l "i a t'"-,, AljWgingi a l could not nna troauea me on ami unsaiisnea. i Riooa amia tne ruins oi The1iiJtan4;Taib3yrff:snw k... I 1 I n An M.f ,1. HWOT Ma l h l . , i lM tA IIUI, IIWI HUIUIUK1VUV WKII HlwuKiuinwiUMi.u. m lxtrW)d nd emrfcj for Egypu The de- f Lfoyin. ,ng0, M wQn ,u f WM wd A k . i t.i.- j u .u.. M " J"" ' r?.7''", nZTLZl responded to lhenarne. I knew that there my wanderings should D( j humed ,hUlK)rt x did nol wait f0f jde nof rf what wew th , im?oi. fa j b in,incible necessity t I procured . , M, w m iourney .lone , for j WM ( home in tn4) A, ewry iep ,. h( dfWned , ,iH here, on. the portal of (h(J whicn on pai ,nd MiCnlji , ,he of. Babel, the whole truth m0 tnd j MW how (retnendiHis m ro ,h() A,nighty naj been poured out, and evefy predic,io0 cf ia prophets faithfully fulfilled, , haye' numbled royief before him ; and the last Rj yM dio full of iaith ia iho last and greatest King of the House Israel." I - . . . ; y. ' til i . I uagt rawer. u J?" r" Iw". At a meeting which took place the other evening forming a north Lionoon mecn- u. n...:i u an ill,,. I u-.,,,, ---b -, 1 .. m . L -. I .lJ. U nation 01 ine maxim ma; itowrou r""i .... . u ' Wtm Snver.,1 nerwms fW bVtphuing. the mastitf1, ears, and ,byr b.ting Jr make It let go its hold, . iJ T,in.g At aft delicate and danl.fied young sentleman came up. tnd making hi. w.y through t, . . -...1 u. .u .a at - 1 . . .: . . - ..:n ito seperaie me uogs : bhsoiii was Kunu auiii, ioci , P v - . . ' , . . iravkM a iare amm-DM. ana tiBTiiis iBKcn mncn r- - - , ' M . . tnimseil, lirsenwi nis nnprrrs npim ", " 7, ?n J rp. ;.A'L. i . 1 - i ..L ...li.l mciT uciiiuciaiuiT Bpiicu 11 1 atsaa wvaaa w www i he smilt operated so pow. erfuy on the .nimalt olfactory nerves, (bat it not . 7 . . . -7 ' - JA -H. " 0--- .ve merely given you a proof 'b.1 Knowledge it power." Stimulantt of Great Men. It it interesting to notice the different articles which have been ta ken oy eminoo. Ka a. .i..nu ,.... . ...o faculties. It it interesting, bow dmrnetncally op- posite meant m.y produce iheiama nous tystems ; tnd it is interesting,- n'0Tmuch the mind mpathitea w.Ih nowj muc y roduce the same ettect in ' as showing ith the body. I liaiwr oraa P-. , hen he wish- ed for great tc'"y h is ti'.." the tamo lrpoje, osea oranoy. sue t'lmutan., . .. . fuum of ,obacco r and FnnteDella strona cJle.- Dr.1 t ;.t ... inw mnnin am) in ron laou 1 lace, wircu muunn aa toaa bw V..r.-1; ."a a grcaf wini uonnsoa -1 o, - drinker ; but in the latter part of it, found tea a good substitute. Don Jusin is mid to have been written under the influence of git and water, and it is reported that a certain lord, of learning and talent, plies himself with port when he wishes to thine. Pitt was t great drinker of wihe; Shcri dun, also, was loud of bit bottle. Dr. Paris tells us that wnon Dr. Dunning wished to make an ex. tranrdinary display of eloquence he alwav put a l(t otdvt that it might irritate the brain by sympathy during his speech. Of the following poem, bjrthe lata Thosnas Pringle, a Scotchman, who lived several yon on the border of . the British Colony of the Cape ol Good Hope, and who wrote it in reference to the desert in that part of twe world, Color id ye says " I do not hesitate to declare it among the two or three most parted lyric poems tn our language." - . , - , , '.AFAR. IN THE DESERT. I Afar in the Desert I love to ride, With U.s silent BusVboy a Ions by my side: ' When the sorrows of f ile the soul o'ercast, . And, sick ot tht Present, cling to the Past; " When the eye is suflusoi wnh regretful te.irs, From the fond recollections of former years: And shadows ot things that havs long since fled, Flit over the brain, like ghosts nf the dead : Bright visions of glory that Vanished too soon ; Day-dreams thai departed ere manhood' noon; Attachments by fate or by falsehood reft Companions of early days lust ofyeft; r And my native land whose pugical name - Thrills to the heart like eiecnic naine. The home of my childhood ; the haunts of my prime; All the passions and scenes of thai rapturous time When the feelings were young tod the-world was new, ' V Like the fresh powers of Eden unfolding to view ; . . All all now forsaken forgollco forgone IS ' And' I a tone exile remembered by none - , My high alms abandonod--my good acts undone. Awearv ot all that is under the sun. With that sadness of heart which no stranger tnav a,sn. ' .. - A 'l-fhr xo the Desert ifcrlrorawr" Afar in the Desert I lova to ride, With the silent Bush-boy alone by my side; Whenjthej With it scene oi oppression, corruption sod strife Tbe proud uiau's fruvu,'sud the base man's fear, Tbe scorncr's lsugh, and tbs sutterers tear, And malice, and meanness, and falsehood, snd folly, Dispose me io musing and dark melancholy ; When my bosom is full, and mj thoughts are high And my soul is sick with tbe bunuinau s sign Dh! then theraia frcedoui, acdLa prie, . , "Aft in lhA'rkywrt"tnnA tn rnlfit a- ..Thereis rapture to vsert on the champing keeif, And to bound away wiUi the eagle s speeuv ! With the death fraught firelock in my band , The ul law of the I rt Lind I . . -. Afar in the Desert I love to ride, . With the sjlont Bush-bov alone by my side:.. . Awav awav from the dwellings of men. By the wild deer'i haqnt, by.tJie buffslo'i glei " Bi sallera' remote where- lis wiui plsys -: Where the gnu,ihe gazelle, aouieja.jiwmalgraae,. Alio me auuuaiiu eianu unnuuiea recnns . By the skirls of grey forests o'erhung with wild-vine Where the elephant browses ai peace in ins wood, And tbe river-horse gambols unacared in (hs flood, And the mighty rhinoceros wallows st will In ths fen where the wild ass is drinking bis fill. Afar in the Desert I love to ride, With the silent Bush-boy alone by my side; .O'er the browq Karroo where the flestjngriy "Of' the" spri'ngTioi'V ; -Andthe tmiVw ttisgprshrtl whistlingineijr: Is heard by the fouuUiu it twilight grey ; Whereih sWbr wstttooly r foes his mane,-'m t, I, 1 1.1 IllWlf SfWIPill If 1 llS llrtflnlSlA tlttn fl IUI fll. .vw . And the fleet fooled ostrich ever the waste Boeeds hks a horseman who travels m haste, ' Hieinffswsv to the borne of rest, VVh.r', she and her male b.v. scooed their nert, Far hid from U.a pitiless Diiindoxei view. In the pathless depths of the parched Karroo, Afar in the D scrt I lova to ride, With the silent Bush-boy alone by my side; Away away in the witdernes vast, Where the white msn's foot hath never passed, And tbe quivered coronna or Bachuan Hsth rarely crossed with his, roving dsn : A region of' drought, where no river glides, Nor rippling brook with osiored sides ) - Where sedgy pool, nor bubbling count,- Nor tree, nor elood, nor misty mount, Appesre, to refresh the aching eye; But the barrea earth, and ths burning sky, And the blank hnrison, round and round, Spread void of living sight or sound. And here, while the night-winda round me aigh, And the star burn bright is the mid-night sky, A I sit apart by the desert (tone, Like Elijah si iforeb's cavs alone, M A still small voice " comes through the wild (Like a father consoling his fretful child,) Which bsmsne bitterness, wrath, snd tear, Saying, Mas la distant, but God m " t - On a bleak and gloomy morning in thij.rnmjjh.tiif. "tlarcl TWrt''tVelIe're walked up the aisle of the Church of St., in one of the chief towns of the Netherlands. They were evidently strangers Dot only to the place, which they gnzod at with cu- riositv. but to the manner and feeling of lha con gregation, for they were observod to walk careless- I fft9Vt UrtlfTa WIIBWrt 'PP"'5 Ifllf llffgCTw in the blessed water, nor did they bend thoir knees as they crossed before the altar "7 Still there was nothing of iudiffcrenc io their 1 manner I noinjng q Suuri.wmcu-ar- tttrorwi mrau' itl' .. ... .. ' 1 -t 1 : 1 eo devotee migni noi nave excusea in mo urorinj of two heretics, unaccustomed to Roman Catholic rites, ard from the impulses of inexperience and youth. For they were both young, under five and twenty ; and they bad that reckless and independ ent air which mark the citizen of a free country. They were in fact American, who with a full fund of health, money, and ardour of variety, bad just arrived in Lurope, and were starting im their jour ney in quest of knowledge and adventures. Tber bad landed a day or two before at Oslend, from London, aod this wat their first visit to a Ro man Catholic Church in Roman Catholic country. One of iherstranger, who was t quaker, viewed the religiout ceremonin without tny other emotion than that of a painter or a novelist, at if scanning ihe group for the effect which they would produce do rt raved on tht canvas, or ia discrirrtion ; while the other of a more sanguine tempcrmeiitrfclt . dwper monl jnlerM, ,he He wa however; afteT i short ti trmerrnriaadttT more minute and personal train'oT thought by ob- serving that uue of the nun who had moat prweu siwis to beauty, fixed bcr look upon him, with aa 'l uiicoinmou inlciiHeiwsa, and in a niannereo remaik able is to caue him, at length, considerable era. barrassntent. There wat something remarkable in Ihe expression of her countenance, sod ia the de. terinined scrutiny of her gaze, that made him al mosi ihu'ddeK She waa huudsome certainly. Her features were regular aud marked : but she was v pale (flMllowiwaiid Wdkesh4 uess ol motion, ihai seemed cauaed by aa uoquiot IIIIHU. ,. V ,! i .. , " Ha then felt his cheeks glow, and be pave to his looks (be tenderest expression of ahich ihev went " capable. Ho saw an answering flush tmw the Pallid brow of the nun,: and jamUV 4ha hnllrd -through him, but not with unmoved delight, plaei forao instant on her colourless lio. Her evn then sank do wo and bor face resumed her calm and sculptured look. . a ' 1 be service was at length concluded ; the priests had retired from the deoerted allur, and one by ms the Congregation loll tire church. Aroused fey Iim lest excttuble friend the enamored young geutieontn also arose to retire. - " V 1 hey were on the point of auitlint- their placet fid retireimr from I lie almost deserUMj chuich .'the friend of tbe young lover, lor so we must c.ll him, had turned round and made a few strps iu tbe di- rectionoi tne door, and tbe lover htmse f was bout to follow, when bis parting look at the bun was answered by, an imploring tlaoce, Irota bcr quick raised eyes, and a uiomeuiryt but an iulel-: iigiuie muuoN wnn oer auger, mat tie tttuuid re main, i Determined, of course, to comply with this invi tation, be found mean to rid himself of his fneod, and followed the fair nuo down a back stair, entered-with her a narrow; recesa, lighted by a single lamp, before a shrine contained in which, she again . resumed her kneeling posture. The lover lux, a position at a lew yards distant from tbe ubjucl of bis gazt!,aud 4eamng agaiusl a pillar, awaited her With ber head loar bent, and rnchned towardr- hun, while she turned over her beads with much per,M do you understand rreucur " lea, murmured he. " Dd vuu speak it f Noi sulTtciettiiy to express yrar tnihience wa e." ,.,:.4 ... This was answered by her wonted smikv ' ' Good biiaveos is, it satifacltoH or 4mum)Ii I" r. tboughi to American. " -" - "If you can see in mo, any thing to niterert yod," continued etie, " are you lucliiwd to da me a ' tavort" uAn I," replied he with energy uy ape put me to the proof 1 It is mv trifle," laid she solemnly. . '' Any thins; it trilling thai ceu enable ms to serve yoo f for anrlhipghort of death cwirniaod niel" '" " V .. ,Jaff Ba'TftblilfcrM'yoiir psiTSa thevuh lure t" exolainied she, with a full expressive vjice and piercing aolemmty of look., , By Iieavens I I'd even apurn that," critJ be ; " you have exalted me to a pitch of excitement, I know not how or wherefore." . " I am satisfied with you," resumed she" I believe you to be a nianjojbonorif !djihl.j.wu: .Bnangrsuu and sinkuia lace csnn.a on aniswi a-ai guohla.ouU.I -!l jnyself. ;,-i,)tjJbtdssr. You perceive that ihe rule of my order are uut lbs sUiclost 1 butlbe- discovery f f hf twfriiige-- ment is ruin ; and I am now infringing theik. 1 can speak to you no more at present 1 have run fearful risk. Uut meet me outside tbsl Htue portal to night at nine. 1 will admit you punctu ally as the clock strikes. You must uut speak; but trust to tne, Ibtiow tne and count uw my -gnat tude." At the hour of nine the young American, fol lowed by his anxious friend, rushed to the couveu The lover gained admittance, and seta after was seen returning, bearing a figure wrapped in his cloak, which from its form and duueustis was judged to be a human being. 1'be alann aud anxiety of hia friend, heightened by this occur. reuce wat aroused, sua he followed at a cutanea and in silence). ; ' . ' After a little time, io which they traversed sev eral by-streets, they reached one of those caaal with which the Iowa abounded, and tbe lover wa besilalingly descended one of the flights of steps, which facilitate ths landing of goods from the barges, and the embarkation of persons employed. " Heavens r exclaimed tbe watchful trteud Ij himself, "can be be wild enough to bear ber, Uf at night in some open boat God only knows wliere or bow this adventure will end P He placed himself close to tbe quay wall an! looked over tba parapet. He ssw bia strps; lha re was no bust of any kind Uaiinwed aeat or ia eighty yet 1 be. Wvejt ,iptnod Io 4aaoaa4J- H Wbtt can thit mean T w bat Irani ic wat caa be destined to conclude this sffur P muttered ihe cartful guardian at he watched with intense inter est 5 and aa he watched, he observed the otect fi his care 10 disencumber himself of his bordna a figure in black emerged from beneath the rfoak, aod a heavy plunge in the stagnant water at! tilg i!g nal nf its disappearance. The perpetrator of this appalling deed irnmedi- ly ascended lha steps. The allocked wiiwas folt . ihe hi(nd"Catdiing through Lis ftiia, II 1 eye seemed doubly hxed on his retreating friend, and v on the rippled surface of the water where the bo dy sank. The safetyofJii friend kept bim saute; forte call assistance was to reveal the murac-rcr! Leaving Km place, be quickly gained cpoa bis companion, wno 10 his astonisiimem, v iue tu- rect road to the hotel. I hey arrived there at the same moment and recognised each other without exchanging a word. A si mulls neou pressure of fhe hand wss the salutation ; the lnend shuddered to feel that the one he clasped wa cold and clam my, .The door opened to their tummo, aod ibey mounted together to their chamber. Tbe expUo ation given by iho young American to bis friend, is full of that source nf interest which the lovers of the Ratcliffe school delight in namely, th hor rible. The nun by whose appesraoc be bad beea captivated, had received some enfold injirr or light from a young "pripsf Ttui aaniiaieaF him in her cell. It ws for the jMirpi of ewve'tDgi sf Ihe mirrdcred lKKfy that she invited tW trav. .;,. eller to tbia fearful interview. Maddened hv her