1 - - r V0L. VIII THIRD SERIES SALISBURY, BT. G, OCTOBER, 18, 1877. NO 52 Carol! 1 rv IL JLuk iL JL Ji. lL dJL o HEW (YORK'S OPPORTUNITY. ,fAWM Y WE SECURE AN OBELISK FIXER THAN THAT NOW GOING TO ENGLAND. 1 MONtHKVT OF WHICH, INDEED, AMER ICA MIGHT BE JUSTLY PROUD. Tlte story of liCleopttra?8 Xeedl fifV U'ntorkni ra'ue and ich;one of them is making a great Voyage. We invite the attention of oar readers ' to-day to an event which is not merely of interest iu itself but upon t:ie way to a nossibility f tl,e livest importance for 5fev York. Nothing but a comparative lv slight effort ot public spirit here i3 nceiwl to secure for our own metropolis an ornament fully equal to that which is now on it way to London eagerly ex pecfed by the whole British people. We are authorized to State that His Highness, - tbe Khedive of Egpyt, has signified his willingness to preseut to the city of New York,-'up"" a proper application being made to him the noble obelisk seventy ' feet i height, which now stands "solitary , aud alone" near the railway station of Ramlet, at Alexandria, its companion baviug been accepted by England, and provisiou made for its transportation thither by a public-spirited Scottish gen tleman. And we are further able to say that the enterprising contractors who are now conveying the English obelisk to its - 'destination are prepared to agree to bring - the-companion monolith from Egypt to America and to erect it in any site which may he selected for it at a price not ex ceeding 8 100,000, the whole risk of the en terprise being taken by them against a de posit ef the sum agreed upon in the hands of some leading American banker. f or nearly 2,000 years there have stood on the ghores of the Levant" two obelisks of rose-colored syenite known as "Cleopa tra's Needles." Egyptologists tell us bow these great monoliths, nearly seveu- o ty feet high, were taken from the granite .quarries at Syene by the skillful work men of aufiquity and conveyed thence to Karnac and Heliopolis. In order , to move them the stone was marked the whole length required, and metal wedges were driven into the line. Another plan which showed wonderful ingenuity was to insert wedges of extremely dry wood aud then to pour w ater upon them till they split and displaced the stone. Pliny says that they wero transported to the Nile witlrthe aid of flat-bottomed boatsfloat jng in canaYs specially prepared for the purpose. Sharpe says that they were placed in an erect position by cutting a groove in the pedestal, in which the lower edge of the monolith might turn as if it' were a hinge, the top of the obelisk being elevated by means of a mound of earth, cut to the. necessary size, and when m thesizeof hich was continually increas- Jroduced was to be laid upon a beel of , , , -, large blocks of Timber, forming a plat ed till the stone stood securely erect. forni upon the Keel of the sllipt go a8 to From Heliopolis, where they stood before keep this immense weight of solid sub- theentranccofthfctenipleof the god Turn, stance exactly a midship, and to prevent or the Setting Sun, they were transported f.rai" V?g KfL U?i place,i !" tle 1 ... . , . . hold ot the Ship, the Needle was to be toAlexaHdiuulunngthereignof Hbenns, secured iu its bed, so as to preclude the but bear their popular name because of a possibility of its being moved therefrom tradition that thpv wppm bioiiirht. to AIpt- bv the motiou of the ship at sea. As the flndria iu the time of Cleopatra. A-great deal of controversy has raged among the learned in regard to their meaning, but notwithstanding all that has been said 'and written about them, as well as .about other similar nfouumeuts which" still stand in Eyypt or have been transferred to , Some, Aries,. Paris and Loudon, no abso- lute certainty as to their import has yet been reached. Pliny supposed them to i he symbols of the sun's rays; other writ ers have identified them with the Jachin at Jerusalem, apparently duly because the obelisks were placed in pairs before the entrance of an Egyptian temple!. They have, been regarded as identical with the Hindu Lingam and a scoreof opinions, more f t les reasonable, have been advanced by, , speculative inquirers, but there still is quite as much difficulty iu arriving at their true meauing aud origin as there is iu interpreting the story of the round towers of Ireland, or, to compare small things with great, the origin of the New port mill. Mr. Bononii, who is a better authority than most writers, inasmuch as! 'he has speut a longeriod en the kinks of the Nile in unwearied, and intelligent research, says: "As regards the original sits of obelisks, it should be mentioned that there are none on the western bank of the river proper the obelisk appear ing to be a decoration of the: cities of the living, symbolized by the rising sun, us the pyramid is of those of the dead, sym bolized bv the setting of that luminarv " aken jn connection with the fact that at Heliopolis the monoliths now known as Cleopatra's Needles stood at the entrance of the temple of the Setting Sun, this ex- planation rather shows the diffieiiltieji surrounding the question of their mean- mi . . . ... . . . j - - j ing and origin than throws any decisive light on the subject. Nevertheless a study of the heii'Gglypbies with which the Need . les are covered seems to confirm the view of Mr, Bdnomi. These inscriptionsgen- erally describe the greatness, magnificence and glory of the pjop&wh in whose reign they were erected, On the olwdisk which "VvilUoon be erecte4 W Landau appears the name of Thothmes III,, Jin? date of whose reign, according to Sir Gardner Wilkinson, is a about the miaVile of the fourteenth century before the Christian era, or some 3,300 years ago. On the other hand, and touching the theory that obelisks were raised for the living alone, t should be remarked that dwarf obelisks were employed in Egypt from the earliest times and were placed before the doors of sepulchres at least 4,000 years ago- Obe lisks Are squared columns tapering slight ly from base to apex, the proportions of the base being one-tenth of the height of the shaft up to the foot of the pyramidian or pyranmidal top, which in later tunes wan sometimes capped with gold, iron or copper. It wag probebly during the twelfth dynasty of the Egyptian kings that they ceased to be sepulchral adorn ments or symbols and were placed before jhe temples. In 1801, at the termination of the cam paign of England against Napoleon in Egypt, General the Earl of Cavan was left in command of that portion of the British forces which was ordered to re main in the country. In this portion" was included the auxiliary corps seat from In dia under the command of General Sir David Baird, the captive first and then the captor of Seringa pa tarn. Lord Ca van's rattention was drawn to theolndisk known as Cleopatra's Needle, which lay upon the ground at Alexandria close to its own pedestal and io the other, which, as shown iu our plate, is yet standing, aud is be lieved by some persons to be. the true and distinctive Needle. He conceived the no tion of obtaining a grantof the fallen mono lith for the purpose of conveying it to London, to be erected there as both an illustration of ancient history, most in teresting in itself, and as a monument of British successes in Egypt. He obtained a grant from the Turkish authorities, and at once proceeded to carry his purpose into excecutiou. In connection with Maj Bryce, the chief engineer on the spot, he prepared a plan for the embarkation and conve5Tance of the obelisk to England. A manuscript now in the British Museum dated March 8, 1841, and apparently writ ten by General Macdonald, says that troops then remaining in Egypt were invited by their Othcers to subscribe a certain number of days' pay to meet the Expenses ot an undertaking m which their feelings were deeply interested, an invitation which was eagerly accepted, so that Lord Cavan instantly found the neccessary Funds for his Purpose at his disposal. Officers, Non-Commissioned Officers and Soldiers vied with each other in offering their Contributions to tire fnrthcr'infiu tf nn rinf ca rrvn ti fVi n nr trfc their Xational and to their "professional pride, and work was withforth put in progress in the following manner: One of the largest of the French -Frigates ( El Carso) captured at Alexandria was pur chased, of the Prize Agent, from the Fund thus, contributed, to convey the fallen Needle to Englaud. A Stone Pier or Jetty was commenced, alongside of which,'' When completed, the Frigate was to be brought, to receive the Needle, which was to be introduced into the Ship upon rollers, through a Stern Port, to be falleu Needle lay close to the Sea, the moving it upon Rollers' from where it lay, to the Ship, became a very easy opera tion." Considerable progress was made with the jetty, and all the officers of the Royal Navy then at Alexandria entered heartily into the project, which would have been successful had it not been abandoned in consequence of orders received from Lord Keith and General Fox, who were then in command of the fleet and the troops serving in the Mediterranean. The work ing parties were discontinued, the bar gain with the prize agent for the ship was rescinded and the funds yet undisbursed were returned to the subscribers. The objections to Hie wort seem to have been those which would be expec ted from two commonplace martinets. General Fox held that the employment of soldiers in such work was detrimental to their dis cipline and destructive to their equip ments; Lord Keith thought it unbecom ing that the-Iioyal Navy should be em ployed in such an undertaking. In 1319 Mehemet Ali offered the obelisk to the Prince Regent, aud the British Government accepted the gift. Then rose the question of the expense of its removal, and as the estimated cost was put at 50,t)00 the Government which lavished ten times that sum on the Prince's follies declined to act in the matter. Subse quently, in 1851, the subject was revived, when even that watch-dog of the Treaa ury, Mr. Joseph Hume, strongly advocaN " ' ei jts rem0val to England, in the House of Commons, but it was still deferred, al- though the estimated cost had been re- dnced t 33,000. It was- offered to the Crystaf Palace Company, which being in financial straits, shrank from the outlay. The upshot was that the Admirality sent a commission to Alexandria to examine the shaft and report upon its condition aud the feasibility of transporting it to England. In-lS32 it was examined by Mr. Scott Tucker, and a fragment of it was placed in the British Museum.- The subject its removal was again brought under the notice of the Government, in consequence of a notification froni the Khedive, who had let the ground on which it stood to a Greek merchant, whp demanded that it should be removed as an incumbrance. It was taken away, and consequently, in order to be rid of it, the merchant buried it in the ground, finally in 1876 Gener- Sir James. Edward Alexander, the well- known Orientalist, a kinsman of the Alex- 1 anders of Sterling, revived the question of the obelisk in England, and Mr. John Dixon, a welUknown engineer and con tractor, offered to undertake the work, the whole expense Wing assumed by Professor Erasmus Wilson, to whose munificence and public (spirit England is indebted for its preseut real ownership of the far-famed Cleopatra's Needle, Seeing that there was but slight prospect that the nation would ever obtain the obelisk through any action on the part of the Government, Mr. Wilson stirred in the matter, and the result is that the fallen monolith has been removed from the trench in which the Greek merchant bur ied it, placed iu a specially constructed iron vessel', or floating case, and is now actually at sea, being towed to England by Messrs. William Johnson .Co.' Liverpool steamer the Olga. In floating the obelisk a novel plan was used which would doubtless have sur prised the ancient engineers who origin ally brought it to Alexandria. The stone is inclosed in an iron cylinder with ends shaped like wedges, which was built around it as it lay on the shore. Sixty tons of iron were used in its construction. It took about two months to inclose the monolith. The inclosing cylinder is 92 feet long and has a diameter of 15 feet ; planks were arranged and fastened around the box, and after all was ready the whole was rolled down to the sea with the aid of ropes fastened on winches in vessels iu the water, while other ropes on winches on the shore kept it from rolling too rap idly. At first it was a struggle as to which should be set in motion by this apparatus the vessel or the obelisk. The obelisk got entirely the better of the strain, so that the boat, instead of pulling the stone down to the shore, was itself borne to wards the laud. It was only when steam- J tugs were substituted and put under full headway that the enormous mass was finally made to move; When, after two days of labor, the obelisk reached the sea, the cylinder filled with water because of a leak, and a powerful pump failed to emp ty the air spaces. Divers were employed, who found that a stone had broken a large hole in the cylinder aud was wedg ed in it so tightly that it could not be re moved under water. The cylinder was turned over, the injury repaired, aud soon this remarkable boat, with its still more wonderful contents, was floating safely in the Mediterranean. "From the position," says Engineering of the 21st September, "where the obelisk had rcmaiued durinc twenty certuiies to the dry-dock iu the harbor is a distauce of about eight miles by sea, and a consid erable proportion of this length lies out side the new breakwater, where the rollers of the Mediterranean tumble in with no inconsiderableforce. It will be interest ing to all students of naval architecture to learn how the cylindrical ship behaved K i... a.. ..i r i. ,i uuuer iuee cjicuiusiauces. ju iiic iiaj of the passage the sea was high for the time of year, and thick waves, impelled by the northly wind, rolled on parallel to the breakwater, seudiDg columns of spray high into the air. The two tugs iu charge of the Needle rolled, continuously gppjjsous under, making it impossible to stand on the bridge without clinging to the rail, while the Needle ship came along grandly after them, with some forty or fifty Arabs and Maltese sitting unconcernedly on the plain cylindrical top, with nothing to save them if the ship made a roll which she never once did, so far as ceuld be determ ined by the senses of those on board her or the tugs. Although she behaved ex actly as theory indicates, and was pre dicted by the engineer, it nevertheless struck every one with the sensation of a surprise to see that two powerful tugs tossing violently with their floats fanning the air at every roll whilst the little cyl indrical ship just let the rollers pass un der her without answering to them in the slightest degree, merely bringing her for ward and occasionally into the waves and charging the water right and left off her arched buck. She would have pitched less than she did had she been in sea going trim, but she was rudderless and was towed stern foremost, though inten tionally trimmed down by the stern one foot aud by accident somewhat more, as she had a considerable quantity of water in her at the time. It was no easy task to tow her, under these circumstances, round the breakwater, and after sunset through the dangerous Boghos Pass in to Alexandria harbor ; and the manage ment of Messrs. Greenfield's tug by her commander was beyond praise. The rudderless cylinder would appear first on one side aud then on the other, and again apparently prepared to charge savagely into the broadside of the tug, so that the skipper generally had his wheel going opposite ways, either to coax along the Needle or to git out of her way when she charged. Captain Clark was busier per haps than he had ever been before towing a craft, but the Arab pilot of course sat crosslegged on the paddle-box smoking cigarettes aud looking dreamily ahead, as if he had done nothing since his child hood than sit in tug and tow 'Needles' round to Alexandria harbor." Now that three-quarters of a century after it was first offered to her, England finally sees Cleopatra's Needle on its way to her shores, the new question has arisen what is she to do with it? The matter was left in the hands of the London Merropol itan Board of Works, and the Chief Com- missioner has already submitted two or three sites on any of which he thinks that the monolith might be placed to advan tage. But the London public seem una ble to decide upon the exact place in which to put it, Mr. Noel set up a wooden mod el near St. Margaret's, Westminister, in the immediate neighborhood of Westmin ister Abbey, but no sooner had he done so than evil was predicted. The founda tion of a monument so situated would be immediately over the Metropolitan Dis trict Railway, and so heavy a mass as Cleopatra's Needle might break through into the tunnel. Besides this, either a new street must be closed or the flower beds would have to be removed, while the statues of eminent men near the Houses of Parliament would bwarfed into pig mies by this colossal monument from Egypt, which no true Britons could tol erate. Sir Charles Barry's enormous eight-day clock-tower, which rises to a height of 320 feet above the House of Commons, would,, in its turn, dwarf the Needle, so why should it be placed there? Sir Charles Barry sees this, aud loudly protest against Jhe site at Westminister; he desires to place the monolith at a spot "remote, unfriended, melancholy, low near the top of Portland place. Others suggest that it should stand iu the court yard of the British Museum. Another sit and a fiie one which has been thought of is the upper end of the noble Thames Em bankment; still another is Lincoln's Inn Fields, and another still is Primrose Hill. Some people insist that the ouly proper place for it is within the railings of St. James's Park, where a monud would have to be raised for it after the manner of that whereon the statute of Achilles in Hyde Park is mounted, foi; which some enthusi- tic ladies gave a commission that it might cownenorate forever the battle and the victor of Waterloo. As to St. James's Park, some objections not of an artistic but of a highly practical nature are urged. The ground was originally swampy, and is thought to be still treacherous, so that it is within the limits of possibility that, should the Needle be placed there, Lon don might awake some fine morning to find it, like the Amsterdam Stadt-Huys, sunken and gone. Similar doubts exist with regard to the site on which the wood en model stands in Parliament square. Not only does the Metropolitan District Railway run under it, but beneath this spot of old the water flowed around Thorny Island and Westmister Abbey, Another site which has been spoken of is Greenwich Hospital, but the obelisk might almost as well be placed on Salisbury Plain. It will be seen that there is a great variety iu the views of the English public as to where the Egyptian relic of the times of Thothmes III. should stand, the subject having been taken up with the liveliest and keenest interest by the Lon don people of all classes, from the scholars and divines down to the smallest shop- keepers, who are quickwitted enough to see how much new grist will be brought t their mills by this new and unprecc- dented addition to the attractions of the great metropolis. These obelisks posses a very great his toric value aside from that sentimental estimate which enlightened nations place ipon all monumeuts of antiquity. WThen the one now on its way to England was unearthed on the grounds of M. Dimitri, the Greek merchant already spoken of, it was covered with three feet of sand and was fouud to be just sixty -eight feet long. The hieroglyphics which cover all of its four sides were prepared for deciphering by by washing the stoue from the water-skin of a water-carrier. They were then studied by Brugsch Bey, the eminent German Egyptologist, who visited this country at the time of the Ceutennial. He found that they referred to the lives qf two kings, Thoth-n.es III. aud Rameses II. The central inscriptions recounted the deeds of Thothmes aud the others those of Rameses. The weight of the whole block was 200 tons. So far as is known, the hieroglyphics ou the obelisk which remains standing at Alexandria, and which as we elsewhere show may one day be transferred to New York, have not been deciphered, but as they are of the same age and came origi nally from the same city and temple, it is not unlikely that they refer to the same, or at least to similar subjects. The temple at Helipolis, where the Monoliths first stood, is of intense iuter- est to Biblical Students as boing supposed to be the one In which .Moses, the Hebrew law-giver, became learned in all the wis dom of the Egyptians. Thothmes III. was one of the greatest of the Egyptian Kings, and in his day the power of Egypt was extended over Ahyssinia, Nubia, Arabia, Syria, Mesopotamia, Kurdistan and Armenia. Notwithstanding the tra ditional hatred of the Egyptians for the sea, he had a powerful fleet on the Med iterranean with which he conquered Cyprus and Crete and the islands of the Archipelago, the southern coast of Greece, and perhaps evon the south of Italy. All of northern Africa where his monumeuts are found, were certainly brought into snbjection by him. Rameses II., whose name is recorded on the English Cleo- patra's Needle, was the greatest builder of all the Pharaohs. Many of the mag- nlficont Temples at Karnak and Luxor 1 are his work, as are also the two snbter- ranean Temples at Ipsambul in Nobis, I and the Rameseum at Thebes. He also was a great warrior, and it was upon the story of his campaigns and those of Seti and Thotnmes that the Greeks built I up their legends Sesostris. When the hieroglyphicsupon the second obelisk shall Jtm t tff-B . y wind and weather further liirht ma be cast upon the history of the remote I past in Egypt, which is so profoundly tuuuuicu nuu iuo wuuio rine auu pro gress of the religions, the philosophies and the arts of our own race and our own times. From the Lnthertn Visitor. LETTER FROM REV. G. D. BERNHEIM FROM LONDON. Exglaxd, Aug. 12, 1877. Dear Visitor, I left Switzerland on my I homeward journey .the 7th of August, and stopped once more in Manheim and May- ence, to bid my relatives farewell. Had a pleasant surprise at a railroad station in the Black Forest mountains, in meet- ing another family of my relatives, on their way to Switzerland on a pleasure trip. I sailed down the Rhine to Dussel- dorf, where I stayed a couple of days with the rest of my relatives, from whom it was very difficult, to part. Had a pleasant visit to Baden-Baden, and enjoyed the baths there very much. This is the most renowned and fashionable bathing place in all Europe. The water is hot, and has minerals in it. They have a baud of urn- sic playing morning or evening every day, Last night I went to hear the music, and there saw the fashionable world as- seinbled in. the open air, in the gardeq promenade ; and I assure you the glitter of this world dazzled my eyes, and I therefore returned early to my hotel, and retired for the night. I On my arrival in Dusseldorf, I found everything in a commotion, as the Em- peror was expected there on the 5th of September, in order to hold a grand re- view. All visits to Switzerland, Schwarz- burg and other places are cut short, so that the citizens may be back at the ap preaching great event. Everywhere great preparations were being made for the Emperor's reception : arches were erect- ed, troops were drilled laboriously each day, an elaborate platform or stage tor the review had been built ; all to welcome and receive their great earthly sovereign, but the heavenly king of glory bh, how he is forgotten ! I was very much press- i ed to remain there until after the Emper- ! or arrival, and indeed would have i enjoyed it greatly, but my time was too limited. j From Dusseldorf my route took me through Holland. I was astonished that I could understand so much of the lan guage, which, in fact, greatly resembles the German. At Flushing we took the steamship for Queensboro. We had head winds all the time, but not much motion of the ship, which caused very little sea sickness; and the trip was made iu eleven hours. Took the cars at Queensboro, and rode with great rapidity to London, a dis- tance of 65 miles in one and a-half hours. Visited St. Paul's cathedral, and attended sejiviee there on the evening of my arrj- val, and was much pleased with the mu sic and intonations of the prayers, creed, &c. ; also with the singing of the amen responses. The choristers w ere all dressed in white, and walked in procession to their places, with the minister in the lear, The reading clergyman wore a shawl-like covering of red over his white surplice, and the preacher a similar one of black. llic sermon was very long, ana o no means an able one ; but I must say I did not hear very clearly, for the echo in this immense edifice destroys the distinctness of utterance. I was delighted with the interior architecture of the church, but the exterior is too much blackened by age and the smoke of the city to please tlie eye. There is no display of dross and fashion among the worshippers; all were apparelled m good clothing, Out notnmg more, the English being an exceedingly sensible people in this respect, caring more for substantiate, aud less for finery and outward spow. London is a smoky city ; so much soft, bituminous coal is burnt here in the houses, factories, &c, tlifiV the buildings are all discolored, and I have to keep my window closed, to keep out the soot and sulphurous air, that makes one poagh in voluntarily. I should dislike to live here ou that account ; but 0, what a change between England and the Continent! Here everything is quiet on Sunday ; 6tores all closed, and the Lord's day not profaned. For this I like England it is so much like my own country. The next day I visited Westminster Abbey, which is located near Westmin ster bridge, and almost adjoining the Parliament edifice. I arrived just at the time of evening service, the music of which sounded inexpressibly sweet through the vaulted arches of the Abbey, softened by distance, for I was in another transept of the building. The service here is intoned, like that iu St, Paul's cathe dral, and is certainly an improvement upon the services in some Episcopal churches iu America. An immense crowd was gathered in the Abbey for sight-see- ing, and at the conclusion ot the service a general rush was made to the various parts of the edifice. Some of the visitors were evidently from the coarser and low- er walks of life. Mothers were there with their, infants in their arms; and the thoughtless and meaningless faces of some of the visitors showed but too plainly that they but little understood where they were, or what they saw. The Abbey more than comes up to all my expecta tions. It is a noble building; not quite m large M St. Paurg cathedral, purely W a and magnificence. In one of the divisions may be seen, suspended from on hitrh. gome of the mutilated battle-flags of past nges, either as trophies of victories, or as honorable vestiges of the faithful per formance of duty. But what pained me exceedingly, is the unpardonable sacrilege of which relic-hunters have made them selves guilty in mutilating the sacred monuments of the honored dead ; here a part of an arabesque monument is want- ing, there an entire hand of a marble ef- figy is broken off, on another but one or two fingers are remaining, some of the Anted collar of Queen Elizabeth's dress taken away. 0, I could most severely chastise such sacrilegious, theft. The ashes of Mary Queen of Scorts repose opposite those of Elizabeth ; the chancel is between them, and the ashes of eacli are in a separate apartment on each side of the chancel. Their effigies on their tombs are as though they were arrayed in the clothing they wore in those days. I was surprised to find so few of the Eng- lish sovereigns entombed here. The most of the monuments are erected in honor of England's illustrious dead outside of the ranks of royalty. In the poets' cor- ner are names as familiar to us as house- hold words Shakspearc. Milton. Gold- smith, Gray, Dryden, the two Johnsons, Chaucer, and a host of others, with Macaulay, Thackery and Dickens as the newest additions to those of a past age. All honorable professions seem to be rep- resented here among the illustrious dead men of science, like Sir Isaac Newton and the two Herschells ; statesmen, like. Pitt, Palmerston, and others; warriors bv land aud sea, like Nelson and Mont- gomery ; authors, theologians, novelist, comedians like Garrick, and even his wife; inventors such as Watt, explorers like Sir John Franklin and Livingstone ; mu- sicians. like Handel and others. The lamented Major Andre has a most touch jnr monument and epitaph, and even John and Charles Wesley, the founders of J 4- ' Methodism, have bas-relief portraits in marble, with inscriptions quoted from their works. And then, upon them all fau8 ue "dim religious light" of the Ab bey as it passes through the stained windows. A decriptive placard, in each part or division of the Abbey, sometimes more than one, so that one can very readily find the tomb and monument of each one buried or honored here, with other cards, all of which are hung up some giving quotations from authors am5 poets respecting Westminster Abbey, and others warning against mutilations, and requesting the detection of such sacrileg ious persons. The impressions made upon my mind were more of a pleasing nature than otherwise. One communes not simply with the dead, but with past events and honorable deeds, of which those illustrious dead were the partakers -ant promoters. And although "the patn ot glory leads but to the grave," neverthe less it is a happy thought, that England thus honors the memory of her great men and incites her sons and daughters of every age to make England jret more re nowned bv future deeds of valor. WTould that republics could also learn the im- p0rtant lesson here given, and cease to ,wrv(, tli oft-renited st ?ma. that tnev arc cencrallv ungrateful. What most surprised me was the coronation chair of ancient and mod ern royalty, in use for a period of over 600 years even Queen Victoria was crowned in it. It is a very rough and ordinary armchair, made of wood, and so indiflereat aud unornamented is it, that I wouid not give it room in mv house, if it eredeprived of its historical associations TTjnderneath it .is fixed the stone, which is i;ke.Tjse vefv ordinary, on which the kinrs of ccotiaud were crowned. A sim ilar chair was made when uliam and Mary were crowned together, and stands side by side with its more ancient com panion. But such is the hallowed vener- i ation of the English for ancient things and usage, that this "old arm cliair," dirty, discolored, nnpainted, and even mutilated as it appears, is sacredly pre served for all future coronation occasions, and I admire them foJL it. Yours truly, G. D. Berxheim. ERUPTION OF pOTpPAXI. More Than One Thousand fjives Lost. Ecnador Correspondent X. V. !Jaton. The last eruption, of the volcano of CoT Ltopaxi, the tenth according to my compnr tation, took place on the 12th of Junelasb, with every circumstance that could in crease its horror utterdarkness in broad day, thuuder and lightning, fearful explo sions that made the earth-tremble sub terranean noises and wild gusts of wind, accompanied Vy a rain of ashes. An eye ipitnuai tilil mo that. tliA volcano nnnred out a cataract of ten times the bulk of! Niagara, which carried all before it in its ' headlong course, and submerged the whole surrounding country. The torrent divid- ed itself in two opposite directions, as if to give greater scope to its devastation and make confusion still more dire. One branch took a southerly course toward the city of Latacunga, situated twelve miles rom Cotopaxi., On its way the current converted the plain of Callao into an im mense lake. There is but little hope that the ruins of the palace of the Incas, de scribed by Humbolt, and all other travel- ; era through the central valley of the r equatorial Andes, have escaped the rav ageof flood. Near Latacunga the furi ous torrent tore up from the very founda tion the cotton factory of Don Jose Villa-. goracz, venose value was estimated at $300,000 ; crops, cattle and buildings were swept away ; the massive bridges of Cat uche and Pan salvo were destroyed as well as a part of the fine carriage road (scarce equaled even in Europe), which connets Quito with the towns iu the South of the Republic, u . THE TORRENTS QF BOILIKG WATER, The torrent that beaded toward the south of Cotopaxi devastated the prosper ous and enchanting valley j)f Chillo, and in particular the estate of the Senor Agu- irre, noted for having been the residence of Humbolt. There, too. as in Latacuntra. arose the building of a thriving factory, - which, only the year before, had been -de stroyed by fire, and had been repaired at great expense. The torrent rooted it from the ground, and bore it away in a thou sand fragments. It is asserted that a mill of Don Eanuel Palacios floated on the wa ter like a ship at sea until shattered by the current. The loss in the valley of Chillo alone is estimated . at over two millions of dollarsr-and in the other sections is equally great. It is likewise calculated that the number of the dead exceeds 1,000. Although the surround ings of Quito have been laid waste, the city itself suffered.from only a rain of ashes and a complete darkness, which be gan on the 26th of June, at three in the afternoon. At Machache and other places the night lasted for thirty consecutive hours. In the midst of t his opaque gloom one could hear the bellowing of cattle and the cries of other animals, who, deprived of their usual food by the shower of ashes, sought, iu a species of frenzy, for the means of satisfying their hunger. Other beasts frantic with terror, careered hither and thither as if in dispair, and the pite ous howling of the dogs pierced the ear with its ominous sound. Iu Quito the darkness was as that of night ; it was like that described by the younger Pliny in a letter to Taeitus, in which he relates the eruption of Vesuvius and the destruction of -Pompeii. "It was," he says, "as if the lights in a room liad leen extinguished." At Quito the shower at first was of coarse heavy sand, which subsequently turned 7 into ashes so fine and impalpable that they penetrated not ouly into apartments, but into the most carefully closed recep tacles. In the depth of the darkness men and women, braving the rain of ash es, sallied forth into the streets, screening themselves with umbrellas, and lighting their way with lautems, and all the while these strange apparitions rent the air with their cries aud prayers for mercy. The umbrellas, as well as the green eye-glasses used here on journeys, were no superflu--ous precaution, although they afforded but scanty protection against the subtle powder ; which, it vas remembered, had in many cases produced' blindness during the eruption of 1843, during the rain of ashes of thirty hours that attended it. SLTEUSTITIOUS FREXZV OF THE PEOPLE. From the outset the people had unani mously ascribed the disaster to a chastise ment of heaven, brought down by the irreligion of the Government, which had arbitrarily closed the churches, aud de prived the people" of those spiritual conso lations that were made doubly necessary by the sad condition of things in general. The idea of a divine punishment spread like wildfire, and as the tempest raged more wildly, this conviction gathered inr tensity until, at last, groups of men, with out a leader, without any concerted plan, and without arms, threw themselves upon, the guard of the military hospital, while others attacked the guard stationed at the powder magazine on the hill of Javira. There were but few troops in the garrison, the greater part having been sent to supr press the insurrection in Inibabura; but the assailants, lacking arms and direction, were promptly overpowered, with no fur ther loss than that of two soldiers and two citizens. On the day following, before C city had recovered from its con sterna ti' auiTwhile clouds of asheSlstill hovereu ... the air and pervaded the streets, five of the unhappy prisoners who had been ta ken during the tumult, suffered the bar barous punishment of five hundred lashes, some had died in consequence. The facts peed no comment. A numlier of respect able citizens haveJjeen arrested, and are to lw' subiected to a court-martial. In the present wretched condition of Ecua dor, rupd as it is by a series of disasters, the recent eruption is the culmination of jts woes. Ten years of peace and pros perity, fcf which there 1$ Unt prospect now, will not suffice to repair the eyjl$ which a few lioius have wroujh$ in this unfortunate laud. Miss Frances Fjsher, of Salisbury, N .G., t,,e authoress of "Morton House' audoth, r Z dler C onei fisher, of North "Carolina", who was killed in the first battle-of Manassas. Bait. Qatette. 4 fit HI- n -1 -