The New York Herald Newspaper, January 25, 1859, Page 8

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eS es THE BURNS FESTIVALS. ansient and fleeting festivities of the hour poy oti interest, which takes place to- Tt is the centennial anniversary of the birtnday hom Scotland justly calls her and most honored, but a poet with whom al! countries claim kindred—a man born not for a faction nor even for a nation, but for universal mankind. He is pre-eminently the poet of humanity, with up from a great from its depths sympathizes not only with his own kind, te and inanimate nature, whose meanest ets his genius clothes with poetic imagery men wonder they did not discover those bea ust ag thoe t9 whom Columbu: waking the egg own eimplicity in not perceiving ‘we find one of e1 Robert Burns, @ poet wl own, her greatest, t00, emotions welling auties before— showed the problem of stand on its end felt astonished at their it without his demonstra- It is peculiarly Otting that the anuiversaries of ald be celebrated ju this land of freedom and democracy, for he sprung from the people, remaine. to and his heart was ever with the democratic institutions of the United French democrat Beranger, whose genius 80 strongly resembles own, in its alternate pathos and satire, its gaiety and gravity, deep passion and jocand humor, glowing patriot- jam, fierce war gongs, and softest lays of love, he painted with a pencil of light and of fire the manners of tbe peo; sheir cycry day parsuits, and the scenes of their Jabors, «¢ Their homely joys and destiny obscure.” Ho buried bis lightning against “thrones and domin- fons,’” nnd was an enthusiast in the cause of the national Tue union with England sug- gested to him the bitter burning strains of reproach ‘opening with the line «Fareweel to a’ our Scottish fame.” He sympathized strongly with both the American and When Dumourier, the republican General of France, deserted the democrasy, Burns open. dy chaunted the song— “You are welcome to despots, Dumourier.”” At a private dinger, in 1798, when the host proposed the health of William Pitt, the poet said, sharp! @rink the health of a greater and better man— The toast of Washington was not and Boros was sullen for the rest of the evening yotion to freedom, to which he sings so swee:!y in his jon of Liberty at Lincluden,” in his situation as an exciseman, which be held under He was called to account, and sarrowly escaped “‘decapitation,” in our American sense. In reference to the severity threatened against his free speech, he says, in a letter to Erekine:— I not a more precious stake in my country’s wi farc than the richest dakedom in it? Ihave a large family of children, and the prospect of many more. I hay gone, who, I gcc already, have brought into the world souls ill qualified to inkabi Glorious Borns! aadependence of Scotland. Freneb revolutions. the British government. he bodies of elaves, t, child of nature, deoy mysteries without books; simple farmer, composing his sangs while holding his plough—of su’ felt for the “mountain daisy” turned u di wept for the mouse through whose v “the cruel coulter passed,” the latter incide him to write those lines of inimitable tendernes ,fow'rin, tim’rous beastie yet of such a noble courage that he grappled w by pen and tongue, and in his immortal verses y It is no wonder, therefore, that the name of Robert Burns should be poptlar in the United iependentiy of bis merits as a poet, which make him weicome to the homes and firesides of all nations. Au this country, and particularly in New York, the Empire sity of America, the celebration of bis anniversary is al- ways carried on with grea} éclat, By his own fellow is observed in every part of the world. year, which happens to be his eince-his birth, will be cele- brated with more than onlinary festivity in Great Britain, the Britieh American pro o featival in Edin the rights of man, countrymen it eentennary, or the hund aud the United 4 Brougham is to take the Io London another distinguished personage is to he Crystal Palace Company offer $250 for Mr. Monckton Milnes; M. P., fom Taylor, and Mr. Tpeodore Martin, to act as judges of e number of works received upto +.—the period named in the conditions—amount Here, in New York, the Burns arrangements to render the celebration y of the occasion and the man. he Astor House, with appropriate cere- monies, cod t@egraphic excbanges will be made with similar oiabs throughout the st poem on Burns, ‘ne poems fobm A festival dinner American Union and the » celebration was firet Jed tosend gratolatory messages and s wing to England and Scotland. and to receive responses by the same swift messenger: but the failure of the Atlantic telegraph dashed this idea, to earth, ae it has done the hopes of the shareholders, For this disappointment, however, there will be ample amends in the arrangements made to give additiona eclat to the occasion on the American conti ed the following invitation: — Borxs’ Cucn oF THe Ciry or New York, Astor Hoves, Nov. 29, 1858 iy invited to attend nat the Astor Houge, January 25, 185 ‘extennial anniversary of the ‘birth of VAIR CLIREHUGH, Jr., Cor. seo'y. “The Avid Tang Syne Associati¢ contennary festival at thelr rooms, No. 683 E At Mozart Hall, too, a dinner will be giv Burns’ Anniversary Aésociag.on, and at Canavan’s, in Wil- corner of Pine, a select few of will celebrate the birthday of the immortal poct. rooklyn, also, and Jersey City, similar honor will be done to his name At most of these celebrations cakes of oaten meal, “bannocks 0’ bean-meal, b together with the renowned of the most savoury morsels in will celebrate the cottieh cookery, and mait, or a8 Burns would call it, Sp which it was the poet’s most indulged too freely nfortenate failing that , Which led him to exclaim in moments ‘of sober reflection, “Occasional hard drinking is tho devil te me;"’ and again, after being drawn into this : bis boon companions and his own convivial he says in a letter toa friend, “I writa j9" from the re gions of Leil, amid the horrors of the dam: it ie weil that the sous of Caledonia and the rest of mait- tice to the memory of aman aud a po 1 with neglect in his day and generation, ountry, this prophet of human onored as he deserved. kind should do irty-veven years, He had his frailties tand weak points—what great mac ever Ived who had cidental to hie genias. din honor of his memory. reatest and most enduring monument, that which will outjast the Pyramids of Egypt, is his poems and gongs ‘When Time's effacing fingers shall have crumbled these giant tombs of kings into to his Army, to a Mouse,” “ Verses to “The Holy Fair,” and his « will tive, and be forever the adm Boteven theee creations of the peasant poct's guose are but fragments of the man—indications of what and might Lave been bad pot deato cut short ir cau the more anacquainted with the Sco:tish dialect, ever fully appreciate we genius of Burns. Abita whiversally 80 popular, in ‘uho iwepiration, the fire, the 1 which his verses are invtnci. ‘vader them all; bis head was ae etrony as bis heart. Among the balle taking place within a few days are thoro of the “ Firemen,” last evening, of the © Your ene Hebrew Benevolent Assoviation,” 4 ing, at Nibio’s theatre; of the “ Heady vartors Gow d.? this eveniag, at Nivlo’s alow ut t., at the Academy of s1 wot?—out they were ments have been er ‘nie toor'a) Career in ti) Englieh reater spite of this dificalty iter and the meaning with Natural good sense per- Goard,” on the Bist fourth andual bell @ the “ Allon agri spol) Reome, and the noc * at the same ¢ © with then ai) @ good Meprvary 2, ac the | Bfadbory A “teat February and acappy wwe On with the davce | Jet joy No alenp Wil me 2d pleasure meet, BEECHER'S ORATION. ——eeee SHE THRONG AT THE COOPER INSITUTE— Benry Ward Beecher’s Oration om Barns | penny WARD BEECHER O® ROBERT at the Cooper Institute—An Immense ¢rowd—The Grand Festivals To- pight—The Centennary of the Great Poet of Scotland, BURNS. ‘The promised oration by tbe well known preacher, the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, on the distinguished Scottish poct, Robert Burns, wag delivered at the Cooper Institute last evening, before Yhe Burns Club of the City of New. ‘York and @ large and brilliant auditory. The doors of the Instigute were thrown open to the public at seven o’clock, ‘and in half an hour after every available seat in the audito- rium was eccupied, as well as tho special seats prepared ‘on the platform. Among the audience we noticed some of our most pro- minent and intellectual citizens, and from one end of the Jarge ball to the other there scintillated the bright eyes of resprendent female beauty. The Scottish element was everywhere conspicuous, many of tho gentlemen and members of the Club wearing badges with miniatures of the honored bard, while the ladies disported plaid and tar- tan ribbons, arranged with artistic care. The lecturer made bis appearance on the platform at eight o'clock, and was received with warm applause. The President of the Society, in introducing Mr. Beecher, said thatthe Burns Ciub of this city were. desirous of celebrating ina proper manner the birth of the Scottish Poet, Robert Burng, and resolved upon having a lecture dehyered. For that purpose they visited the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, and induced him to prepare an oration, which he would now deliver:— THE ORATION. Rey, Hexry Warp Brecugrspoke as follows: come upon'your invitation, gentlemen of the Burns Club, friends and fellow citizens, to celebrate with one baif of the civilized world, and with the whole world of letters, the birth of a farmer’s boy, who became a ploughman, a flax-dresser, an excise man and a ganger, and who was reputed also to have become a poet. One hun«red years ago, January 25, 1159, Agnes Brown Burness gaye to the world her son Robert Burns, The father and the mother were Scotch; the son only took Scotland on his way into the whole world. (Applause.) While we allow Scotchmen a suita- ble national pride in their chief poet, we cannot allow the world to be robbed of their right and interest in Burs. And yet there never was born to that land, so fertile in men, a truer Scotchman; and it is the peculiar admiration and glory of the man that, in spite of obscurity, bred to all the local influences—Scotch in bone, in muscle, in culture and dialect—be rose uigher than the special and national, and achieved his glory in those elements which unite mankind and make ail pations of one blood. (Applause.) While men of ‘ence are groping about the signs of external man, and ‘vating the origin and unity of races, a poet strikes the fundamental cords, and all races, peoples and tongues bear, understand and agree, so that the poet ig, after all, the true ethnologist. The human heart is his harp, and he that knows how to touch that with ekill belongs to no country, can be shut in by no language, nor sequestered by apy age, but belongs to the world and to the race. ‘The father of Burns, William Burnees (the poet contracted his name when he published his first volume), was a genyine man in his way. This father of Burns, this Wil- iam Burhess, had a head, a heart and a pair of hands, all of which were kept exceedingly busy in prolonging a des- perate fight for life and comfort. He was a man of stern probity, of the deepest religious atfections, of an indomit- able will. He expected much of ail his family, but was erner with himself than with any other. His only amusement was speculative theology; but it did uot injure ghter)—for he was a man of scrupulous integrity to the last—clean to the very fountain of ho- ple, and, when unduly thyarted, lent im temper. He held up his head like a brave immer in a rough sea, till the waves fairly beat him own. William Burness never prospered. His son says of “stubborn, ungamly integrity, and headiong, ungov- rrascibility, are disqualifying circumstances in the path of fortune.” It is not the rigor integrity that stands in any man’s way; it is the indiscriminate stiffen- ng of everything by the rigor of pride saturated with con- science; for God has built the man firm, to com.ne the utmost stiffness with the utmost lifences. ‘There are bones for stifluees, and there are joints for limbernese. Xo the character i8 to be built upon the strongest elements of truth and justice; but somewhere there must be lifeness and pliableness. "If there are no joints in the character, no supple motions, but all tastes, opinions, prejudices, likes and dishkes are ali soliditied into multiplex wishes, no man cap get along in life. A little too much of this os. sification made William Burness too stiff to Gght well. Some parents seem to be the mere antecedents of their children, a sbips sometimes are built far up the stream where timber bends and only floats down ahead ef the estuary. So it would seem that men often owe ticir nature to their great grandparents or somebody far up the stream of generations. But Burne’ father was very much Like him, and occasionally the same moral honesty, the same pride, the same violence of feeling, the same penetration of men, the same breadth of understanding, the same ambitious spirit of restraint from without, the same untitness for thrift in social matters, the same longing for weaith for its independence, aud the con- tempt of the means of getting wealth, belonged to the father and the more illustrious son, only besides deal of mother, and if be had carried more he would have been better; for the father is the bush and the mo- ther is the blossom, and the fruit germ is always in or under, the blossom. Agnes Brown was a woman of hum- ble birth, She was born as everybody else iz born. (Lavghter.) It will not do to say “a king's baby” and “a beggars baby,” for being bora is a very humble basi- ness at aby rate—(laugbter)—and there is very little dif- ference in it—in crying, in @leeping, in eating, and in cra- dled uncensciousness of babies, the’ world over, there is very much of a sameness. It je very plain that’ she was effectually born, however. It is thought by some that men bave lived in a world before this, and that they are set out @ second time here; and thongh it would be difficult to imagine in many cases wha: they had to grow in, in the world before this, if this was the se cond growing Agnes Brown was an exception. It is con ceded that she possessed many rare and precious facol- ties, Central and strong was her heart. It had that deep nature which religion always gives. Itis faith in the invisible and in the imfinite that reaches ont and sees nto an unclouded ocean, She was caim and gentle, and of a heavenly temper. She was a good housekeep:r; and this is a very brave and noble thing a woman—s thing olten requiring more mind and tact than to govern aDation, as nations are governed. (Langh er.) But while she wrought and arranged she chanted and sung, for Burns’ mother was the mother of Burns’ poctry. Her songs and ballads were in great store, bai all of a moral aim. The song which she loved most to sing aud Burns most loved to hear, was the life and age of man, compar- ing the periods of human hfe to the months of the year. Barns says of a grand uncle, that during many yeare of blindness he had no greater enjoyment than that of cry- ing when bis mother sung that ballad to him, And yet how many sweet sounds there are in this world!—bow many sounds we bear of water!—how many son of birds and sounds of musical instruments! But when all 8 said, no man has invented any musical instrament, hor bas mature set in ail ber choir anything which for ewe ‘a bke a mother’s voice singing around the while she lavors, and children are failing to sleep singing byrne and ballads—children sleeping and dream of angels and awake and eay “mother!” With euch a father and euch @ mother Burns could not help himself, and of course ke must be an Apollo's arrow. With euch 2 mother for a bow and such a t tor @ string—and the bow abides in strength—and the strength of his naked arrow still fies and sounds in flying. The father of Burns had just built a poorly built clay cottage on the tue Doon, county of Ayr; and ‘scarcely had the arned lo live—that is to cry—before a torm broke down the tenement, and that etorm uever spent iteeif, but blew after him all his life lang. He was wont iv the days of his trouble, with gloomy pln fuinese, to attribute the follies of his parsionz to the fh usbered him into this world. These pas 4 in blowing down the difficult built tens me h be dwelt. As achild we have of him, except eome reminiscences found in b He was not precocious, and bis early intellectual eff were purely recept is education was a good one. There was no Latin or Greek in it, buat did not intend to sing in those tongues, there for learning them. They ’ wer but be waea living man, a living sing! ony Wilson, took charge of bis im”, it with such a collection of tales, ghost av 4 giants and other trumpery as, I suppose efore received or since. Bat Burns’ ’ magina superstitions, notwithstanding such a be Was eminently natural, simple au’ tranaparent, 8 only stimulated but did not suvdue nor te is imagination. They fell upon his own fancy as coarse fertilizers upon a farmer's field, which enter the “earth Wlack and nojsome, but reappear as flowers. | secde and fruit, Nature’ was also at work in | his edueation=1 mean physical world without him— whien beid up to him clouds 0° jeae passions more ingand evening, rivers, thickete, LUrooks and ravines, bide flowere and harvest fields, woode and Lille, upon’ which be gazed with wonder. There are gome who gain nothing Torn this great schoolmaster—Nature; they are like dogs i Aaphael’s study or Michac! Angelo & nonse; they could meet thero, but never learn to pain’ or ‘grave. Yet oluer Men ere a sensit've to What nature does as if God swod visibly before them, showing his bands ing the forms and laying the oolots. And Burne was one of those But great pains was taken with young Burns to give him the advantaye of such echoo! learning ne the t.me, the neighvorhood and his parent's ecamt means ld supply. A Scotch farmer's home 4s itself no mean ehoo}, There is learned at least a deal of local history and legendary lore which boo<s are not apt w conten. There the child is taught to ponder and,diapate in epecuta tire theolog: factice which, in an éducational point of view, is Denedoral for, whatever wo may think of the teubh A wisdom of the Calvin theology, no man from hte 0 rth ob Unowe w we of divine g e N destiny with the deep re 083 Cab cOMlemplate the do and divine deerece, elevated ax he all comwion grommd, without gubing bore and some routing of the imvgivation Burne dectin Mf we kirk aud weaned towards ti e breached in an act xp! nok In bis sixty ag i i BB! le 5 i ii j turous hich the reverend gentleman applause, during w! e 8 having been voted by acclam- oI ated. 8 of the meeting ‘mation to Mr, Beecher, the vast assemblage separated. spirit caught the flax, and the w burnt in as many minutes. (| again to his father’s at the age of four. He wrote poetry, but it was as a resource from unprofitable life. siong, when overwrought, raged like #0 many devils, and verses Hke a spall ansned I that flood of soul within biin— that rebounding from » Lanes conyiviality into the lowest despondency—with yea knew Dot what—with a sensibility caused to tremble—with an ambition uw all that tossed him as the ocean swell tosees the boats ant ships in the bay, he was trying to make himself think he was afarmer, and he bitterly felt whattwo years after he blind- ly expressed, 0, for a tittie of the cart. man nature.’? We must understand his character. was one of the most wonderful men that ever was born. He never dreamed of his real place; be never aszerted for himeelf a tithe of what the world now upon him. At twenty-five his father dies, and Gilbert and his mother take the farm. this vexed question and be a farmer. He says, I read farming books, I valculated crops, Tattended markets, and he beleves be should have been a successful farmer had it not been for buying bad seed the first year and alate harvest th not be afarmer first and then a poet, Ho thrive till his real genius had fall opportunity for expres- 1@ had poured his love forth in its true channel and felt that at length he had touched the ‘aim of his bemg, then he might have become a secondary ‘and good farmer, but not now. And thus while he bougiit poor seed for the farm he was ‘At length, when 26 years of age, he ventured to ;? for the first time he writes even then it was buta title of honor, and not his real name; even now, his being a poct is something aside from the pur; Ist of August, 1786, be publian poems, by which he realized $100. Many an enterprising publisher would be glad to give him a thousand—for that matter ten thousand—for one of great trouble; the mother of his babes was not his wife; ‘osecutions ‘hung over him; his farming lavors. were trous, and he determined, as the last resort of a Jamaica as an overseer bert Burns on a planta. Obsequtes of the Victims of Love in Boston. THE 84ME CLERGYMAN OFFICIATES AT BOTH FU- NERALS. [From the Boston Traveller, Jan. 22.) ‘THX FUNERAL OF SURAN ¥. WHITING. The funeral of Miss Susan V. Whiting Thursday at 11 o'clock A. M., at the church (not Union Baptist) every nook and corner, and several hun Some estimate that 1 600: ‘The funeral services were ‘ev, Wm. M. Thayer, who resides town, and who has sometimes su Franklin when the people were without ‘The exercises commenced by selections of Scripture, and prayer bi who was providenti ‘When blooming vouth is snatched away. ‘Mr. Thayer then began his remarks by alluding to the solemn circumstances under whicl of God bad called them together, it being au event that occurs scarcely once in the life time of any person, and announced, ag appropriate wordsto introduce what he had to say, the following passage from Psalms lv., 12, 14. For it wag not au enemy that reproached me; then I comld have borne St; neither was it him Laughter.) He if ‘ifomty- arco as a relaxation, eays:— “My pas- then the conning attended on all into quiet.’”” Union Evangelical The house was’ filled in indreds ble to gain access, centre of the pplied the pupit at South a , uncongenial to his poetical temperament. But I must not anticipate. Burns is now at twenty, and the sad life of a glorious man has begun—a man full of noble imy stumbling in a rough way; one of the most genial an tender, atfectionate natures, seeking by it to grasp man- the reading of ap Rev. Mr. Warren, r which was sung kind by the heart, and aiming in crown the buman heart wit venture upon that career of mi must stop and ask what Burns. wi who spoke of the scen and some who as rashly « ‘his essential works to goodness. But before wo ingled good and ill, we jas; for there are some ith too much severity fended him at the expense ol errors were, bis own moral sense, his solemn and bitter words do show. No enemy can equal Barns’ remorseless words, He carried conviviality to exe lated his own principles of virtue and gratified Burvs is not helped either when we means to settle ty He is full of reso- the providence He could never wat hated me that did ma. ‘Sgatnst me; then I would have hid myseit from ‘ag thou, & man mine equal, m; fe took aweet counsel tog God in company. It seems as if these words, Mr. T. remarked, were writ- spiration for this occasion. &@ beloved one, whose life was taken Yet he was not ao eferred death to life with- 'o him the world was dark, affection for her was not And this renders the event strange and David was not surprised that avowed and acknoweledged enemies ehonld vex his soul, and this ho “could have borne;”’ but “troubles occasioned b; friends were among the darkest and eaddest experiences So here, some of us would have been so much astorighed if this light hearted girl had been ‘That she lost her life by the hand of one who loved her, and who declared that without her band and heart ‘his énjoyment and happiness would be blasted forever,” makes the affair strange in- deed, and harder to be borne. hated her,” who discharged the fatal shot; for then she “would have hid” from his presence. hy Id she hide from one who was willing to sacrifice his life for her? Why should she flee from his coming when such tender words of love had dropped from his lips? “It was thou"’—yes, here was reason for an unsuspecting heart. “Tt was thou, mine equal,” more than ‘equal’? in respect to age and experience—“imy guide”’—old enough and well known enough to be her “guide” and protector, “and mine acquaintance’’—one whom she had ever known, an “acquaintance” whose name was familiar as a house- hold word, and whose smiting countenance had ofwn cheered her father’s fireside. mysterious is tho tragic r ter some further remarks upon this of caution about losing sight of the exclusive thought of the agent of this melancholy death, Mr. T. proceeded to draw some lessons trom the event as He was his own Rodamanthus. aide, and min» acquaintance, W. er, and walke | tiousness upon love. Tinto the house of deny this mournful phase pall them toa degree which shall make them less guilty ina poet than in every man. Let them stand; they are defects; ise them in drawing his character. the lights, we must not shrink at the sha- immoralities are not to be ex- from the plea of what a man is not, what a man is f our condemnation. How aship bebaves upon the sea depends as much upon th: manner in which it is built as upon Burns was endowed with extraordinary un- derstanding, clear and penetrating, that saw things by their whole—not intuitively, not in detail, gradually. His mind was logical, thinker than as an actor, pal mind which has the ground instinct, which gives management and tact and tbrift in common things of life, was hot eminent in him. He inherited a pride which ‘wrought in him a most intense sense of personality, which gave nim a very high ideal of mafiliness, which inspired well earned glory, which made him suspicious of all above him, but a patron and protec- tor toall below him; a pride which acting in one way sustained hiin under a Joad of ill success, but which turn- ing inward in his heart, caused intense hatred to I know not from which parent he took his heart— from both I think. It had a large generous nature like the father’a, but it had the deptli of and tenderness of his mo- ther’s. It has been the fashion to speak of Burns as being of alight fancy, easily kindled by beauty and as easily extinguished. Nothing can be more untrue. No one was deeper, truer, more enduring in his affections. was another link in that long chain of which bis heart was He loved men and animals, what- if it only grew in Scotland. (Laughter.) No man can form any ten by the pen by the violent hand of another. enemy—he was a lover, who out the woman of his choice, and the grave welcome, if his write “Robert his own name “poet, determine the severit the firet volume of his ho pel ead them. He had got into broken, discouraged of a plantation. I think I tion with a whip under his arm—(laughter)—I think I see a ig “A man’s a man Great laughter.) Poor Burns was in a ver, ‘as bad asthat yet. struck down by a bleod; uy that bad way, but he was ‘Neither was it him A new era dawned, He was summoned from the south to , and for nearly a year ho was courted, honored in the metropolis of the north bj existed’ then and attracted universal attention, and who were more marked for being the friend of Burns. (Ap- plause.) His modesty, bis #elf-sacriflces, his wonderful convereations, and, indeed, his whole life, showed what he was. Had Borns ‘been placed circumstancee—had he found as many friends to esteem to be found after his decease to build his monument and claim him as the child of genivs—then they would have seen in by gone times what Burns was. Burns then, with the his books, takes tno farm at Elliston whom he should have married long ago previous. He turns to agricultural pursuits, and is a farmer. clouds are to sail melodiously over his head. brooks are to rush under the overhanging bushes. more birds are to sing over leave poetry and attend to the casks. We then conic to the year 1789, and we find yet the poetic oul truly developed, and, In December, 1 an undying longing fo in favorable How strange and sad and ult in view of such facts. an immovable staple. ever thing grew. His loving nature was wonderful. estimate, either of the good or bad which was in him, who does not study hig heart, whose tides were as deep asthe ocean and sometimes as teinpostuoue, wae more susceptible to woman than toman is not strange. The same thing has happened somgtimes before. But though he best loved woman, that was uot his Universal being circled into the affections of culiar quality of heart which i imagination, ideality, pootic vision—tbat divine element in the sou! which reaches out to see the soul of things and not their literal beauties— which clothes whatever it looks upon with beauty and ith forms, with. movements, and evolves the subtle grace in them all—the soul that has this divine element is a& adivine wardrobe, and the eye, the ear, the mind are almoners going forth and clothing ail Desides these faculties there were two other elements which largely influenced his life and determined is character. trait of melaucholy, the other his temperament, his earliest life in all his poems we see that dark despond- ing tone, which so wonderfully contrasts with the other. At times it is somewhat as if the great world of Geepair had swung round between him and the sun, and he lay in fatal eclipse—hopeless, Had his life been suc may be believed that, with vigorous health, with a praise that so gratified his pride, and with a full heart to forth bis powers, he would have risen above this malady, Nor is it less important that weshould consider his tem: yer, for ou that depeads much of the credit some men ave for prudence and Kelf-control or the reverse, lieve later physiologists are more agreed that in the human sysiem there is a whose function is him. Burns is going to | “7. ‘The affections of the young, which lead to perzonal attachments and alliances, should be treated with be- coming seriousness. ‘Too often they are made a subject of Jest and laughter in youthful cireles—too often parents do hot appreciate that the happiness and destinies of their children depend upon the course their aifections take. (We can only indicate the points of his remarks. ) 2. The dearest bleseings often become the occasion of the keenest sorrow. What object is dearer to a parent than the child? ‘The bleeding hearts of these parents say, that for the life of the stricken one they would have parted with hoose and land, and much more that is yery Had they bore no love for her, then tears would have been few at her departure. Their sorrow is deop le, becouse they found such a blessing in alvhough a far- mer, yet he is the poet. 89, he writes to a friend that his mind is in agony, and yet he composes “A man’s a man fora’ that;” aud there is somothing even more touching than that when he writes, “1 wanta dictionary.” (Laughter.) But we cannot follow him in detail to-night in ail the episodes of bis life and his miseries. We will just glance at his removal from El'iston to Dumfries, and to his entering upon the duties of excisemon, After vividly describing the sufferings and trials of the poet whilst engaged as exciseman, reverend gentleman proceeded:—Burns, bimseif, has said in some of his lines, “I have no heart for sueh scenes.” Yet he paseed day after day the views of nature as he went upon bie rides and accepted maty a “gude” soul. ged domestic difficulties still pon ¢ last letters be wrote were to his friends, beseeching them for some emall loans to saye himself from the jail and bis family from starvation. And yet the money was refused, although no man was more scrupnlous in his ex- penses, and at the time of his death he did notowe any mana penny. At length, on the 2let of July, 1796, Burns was permitted to depart out of this clement, and to give up that body which he had borne. the most wonderful natures that time has ever known. ‘Has any one ever dreamed of ‘any one has ever attempted to paint found that the picture will pale before the side of his owa opinion. There is no more sincere confession, no wails more agonizing, no Sorrow moro complete, no su He bas himself given a heartfelt confession of those sutferings and feelings which wrung his bleeting heart, and no ove can add anything to those things whicn eclipsed his joys and at last ended his career. part, my duty isa plain and a simple one, requested as I have been to appear here in this position by the country- men of Burns, who are now also mine. duty and in following the course of the poet’s life, I often had to linger between light and darkness—! But Iam to pay reverence and not to condémn; and in glancing over the sbady side of his carcer, let us imitaie the example of the ancients and draw acurtain over them. But amid al) this, from the begin- ning of this work, the memory and the thought of Burns have grown upon my heart, and I have felt more and more tenderly towards him, as one whom I loved and towards whom my heart melted; and’when at last I came to the end ¢ grave, it was with the foe! @ brother and a friend. sometimes called Shakspere and an English grace—which works things in radiant apparel. One was a hereditary test troubles usually come in unexpected . Whoever thougbt that the affctions of the human soul would result in such aftliction to these families and this community? Thongh somo may have been singularly im- pressed that sorrow was in store, who dreamed th would come in this fearful way? proeperity we ought to prepare for his truth, but comparatively few re They wait'until the bitter experience is theirs, the heavy stroke, the cap “trom But whilst Burns was 80 eo- ‘Let us trace his character. wretched, demented. and then sigh and repine un 5, In lite we should prepare for death. to live.” Beyond this passing state there is another ife, for which this ehonld be a ed and pallid lips be open witb how much emphasis—“there is but a step” between His was one of “It is not all of eparation. Could those a saint of Burns? If , they would eay—alas! failings, it will be portion of the nervous to produce generai ress to the parents, brothers and sisters, com- panions and associates of the deceased closed the remarks, after which Mr. T. offered a prayer, and then the choir sang from the byman— Hark! from tho tombs a doleful sound. The large assembly then viewed the corpee, and thus took leave of one whom they had known and loved. THR FUNERAL OF JONATHAN WALLS, The funeral of Sir. Wales was attended on Friday, at 11 o’clock A. M., at the church. house, but at the earnest golicitation of changed. A large covcourse of people assembled, now the storm; nearly a8 many, it was ghought, on the previous day. ondueted by the same clergyman, of appropriate selections of Scripture, the hymn Was supg— Stoop down my thor Converse awbile wit the ar ‘will Gil one with thrilling sensibility, while arother will receive it calmly. The nervous sytem of ves the impression more largely than tite other. becomes apparent in morbid conditions of life, when sounds, of no consequence at other times, fill the 4 with exciting emotion of feeling in any mind, we must look into t waities of the mind and their normal power, and next 40 the general sensibility of the whole : ce of which the special 0 with strong minds are in general sensibility. clouded and So in estimatin, tions and eeparate fi In pursuing the the father, Robert Burns carried ih him a great’ em, under the influe faculties are tempered. Some not well tempered and are deti Tueir feclings are gradual! cool and collected nature, smiles and tears. services were y heat as iron heats. Othe men heat as powder heats—it is a touch and an explosion. It is no trouble to some to maintain an equal, temperate of £0 equal, unimpaszione: The sins of sach men are not-doing side. are unfit judges of those who have an acute sen: Men who hear thunder as if ocking at the door are not fit jndges of the ac. coustics of men to whom any small sound upon the door Burns was a man who had this excessive sensibility. His capacity for generating sensi- lis one nature carried enough for of mere force of feeling. y; he gushed. He never ran a sien- der thread of silver water; he came down booming all abroad like one of bie own streams when a shower has broke and burst upon the mountain. ortion between the cause and effect. ad him ip their which went under his ploughshare. ture were gubject to this grand overflow. though fiends possessed him, carried him in their bosom. Tt tain of bis own land, often capped with storms and oftener sbrouded with mists, often thundering with the sound of waters which rolled down, tearing up roads and sweep- bridges; but there also birds brooded and sung, 80 sweet flowers found foot room. how shall this very sensitive creature, with a everybody could kindle, but nobody could put out, make bis way up into life from pov ness into success? It i#’not the question how well a man can carry acup baif fuil of water without spilling, but bow well he can carry aquart cup brim full over stormy, rough road at night; it ts not‘how a well com chine can raise Just enough draught to get along, but how hat makes more steam than it ever can as it runs with jisses at steam—how ehal! juestion we pro- pound to you night—what is right? what is duty?—all are agreed az to that; but what él Barns h that nature, compounded of guch astonishing op- posites—of profoundest melancholy and sociality— pride as high and etern as the most vith the moet clear and practical understanding that th imagination 0 strong that ‘erything, with a conscience #0 ner die than’ speak a bey that ali tuings were magnified nda argels, his enemies common natures divine, vory ed—with 80 keen a relish for the bis compavions with merri- the ‘world and walking yearning for remarkable histories tert, his elder brother, | Ki more’ than it wll cu medium; they are inexcitable a nature. ite ba tee | Then followed the remarks of Mr. T. relating to the awful tragedy that had been enacted, after which he an- | Esai a8 a text to guide their reflections Psalm ixxxviii | from the Hib of December io of my task and laid bim in pod of Decem!es the time of i ing of one who has parted wit! lauge.) Burns was indeed a remarkable man; his ity was beyond all example, Ever; wrote was regular and bold, and cloth ness and vitality that is beyond .ail praise. Even in your criticism upon him you’ felt that you were fiuding There was médre pnt ino Barns than into any other man in any age; what be has given of himself does not by any means express what he Was really capable of doing. In him were mines of undug gold—of inwashed diamonds; and the stray thoughts be Gave to the world were like the scattered particles of ore on our Californian shores, which seem t give an idea of the rich veins from which they have been disintogr Would that the genius of Burns had been appreciated in his day. While ati the world was paying homage to that gnarled old osk, Johnson, there was no thought of ove ‘who was greatly endowed with faculties of the highest order, and whose convereation was stamped with the ac- But for the most part it fell on tho eare of those who were unfit to judge of ite worth and beauty, and like crystals and white deep caves of earth, are unable to shine forth in their pure resplendency in the light of day, so the geme of his thoughts wore allowed in bis own lifetime. puatehos tit le ; | tonal condition of dir”. Whitney's system with an earncet sounds ke thunder, Lover and friend bast thot: put far from me, and mine ac- qnaintance into darkness. After some remarks application as a ke observed in the couri young man who has enjo the community is atten bility was prod: twenty common me trickled drop by drop fault with a superior. fhe word “lover,” and ite i transaction, be said—I have my ministry that the death of a ed the respect and cont ence of led with peculiar exhibitions of regret. This ‘may arise from the fact that thie class are expected to fll the places of the fathers pursuits and filling the responsible offic There was no ‘A moute, a flow: His heart was upon the daisy ‘All parts of his na- He suffered as » enjoyed as though angels ero be stands, like a moun- in following the ces of life.” On account of this important relation of this class to the | inetitutions and progress of the age their loss may be Be that as it may, the death of a peculiar regrets. dies by his own hand? the sacrifice of his own How do we feel then more seriously felt, respected young man awakens how is it when the deceased How is it when, in addition to life, he takes that of another ? In our surprise and horror we are dumb aud sileut | while our anxious bearta inquire how ia it We desire to unravel the mystery. Wo woul workings of that mind before we judge him hat Come, view these lifeless remains, other day that his manly at your firesides and that strong right arm has wiel destroy himself and the maid can we account for the bloody deed? ‘The answer is found in the fact of his being a lover. incispensable servant, but a ter: day we asked what God meant come speedily relieved irom thear diliculties by the medicadon ica, tivity of his mind. dorged by Dr Mott, of tbe weament in this casa, from 1 P.M, of the 14th of Decembor. he case, aa presented, isfully nated in be Meral of th ahh of Janney and we ind intiiee po nt, with umercus ol Ferely from iritaton and severe palin tie Resa eae y als lactites hid in the comparatively un- ‘Such was the that there was not a spot of earth on which be placed his foot that wag not made to that were dear with his ink and reflect that it was | 19,4 hoarse and unm) form was in your midst, Social gatherings, and yet ded the deadiy weapon to len whom he joved. e rem the instant, Radway's Keaay ise ief, spring with flowers. the desired reguit, pots glory and with the richness of his soul have long been deserted, and have bad no such tenant since the last Alive, he would not wring ten m any source to save himself from ruin; dead, he has Ave, he could not command the means of existence for himself and his family, having from very necessity to take the office of exciseman; but rave, be bas filled men with sturdy courage. Death, which overthrew him, came like autumnal winds scattering the farted leayes of jhe forest trees: scattered abroad, carrying will I be could Lave known what would bave been the judg ment of posterity, it would have formed an agroeabie epleode in bis toillng and strugglin pothing left for him to grieve for. of bis manhood, but yet now he walks crowued with with sympathy. inseparable companion of the Scotchman wherever he that the Scotchman his fortune, and to jountain ‘and in the town, in nthe camp; he swings in the bhammiook ani © glare Of torchos and Love is @ pleasant ana | rible master. As yester- to teach us by the death gir}, so now letus ask What he would teach weilhstonding the creat ’ wR Pulse at (1d the doctor ‘adil a pre ot ‘antinony and morphine, for the yy t the pain, exciting the skin to a more watwen ay OF ore natura! ; P= Ing the ‘vervoun excitariity of the, patient wise appisa work—that trembi 4 that sings at y rivet with an overcharge made many rich. now that he lies in the 1. The most deiivate and tender emotion of the soul Ticbes ana with the food of may Work put fearfal results. What is more tender and parently harmless than loye? Observe it in parent or id, in Husband or wife, In lover or loved, and how in- What terrible consequences have’ resulted from (Here the speaker ahiowed that through parently harmlesy often armed with dies howevs medication he Molment.” If doctor he sould have spol four hours earsicr. Il this Robert and thus were his thoughts them the seeds of genius. it the past week! no shane could deceive, w! ali the works of God the invisible an agents, as electricity and caloric, terrible power, and 80 with love. 2. Dieappomted ‘affection may unbalance the mind and {On this point the remarks were woo ¢ but he showed that @ wetimony of a tricnd as t the deranged by such disappointment, rendered imbecile, Workings of his mind at a time whe ton dernugetuer' of the digestive orang: aud. tor kt he wowels,’ Ww 1» in other we 4 Tuore is now memele, we words, Imply adinordared sondition OF le bas left the scenes tender that he would soo ‘but with euch a distorted—his fri faces handsome, steel the heart, "Tea Kanway's Feuutatiny Pills previonnoperation of tue owen the Ciflerent—the derangeuient of the liver woul, have Beeh cor rected, and ‘Anainral sist ae bowel d will goes; and where facts, and cited des not go he made an unsos pi vidence in this case eve that the min’ was es the affair With the past, ovberwiee it is an n the home: he is read hy ight of the aurora borealis m the north; ded city and the quiet village. There is not'a pl in Scotiond that he je not known: and in the heart of hi conntrymen he is dear to them i8 their joys and in thoir sorrows; and be {#as much known throngh the earth, Strange power of the unfleshed gpirit! remarked in the ¢ pot ‘The sad and distressing and trust, serve axa w theis lived in the bards tick tn the uncorscions alee ot death on. ® 2 & we before wiated, we are not prey are cane of Mr. Whituey'e denth wae ‘directly omtig to the treat. ment of the Green rystem: and we far hormone belleve, Dr, Beales employed Kid and Resoivent in bis treatment of the ease, hey Would have been proonued. am w the cage of Mr. White; He was ag little known to ie plain—be was no sen j 3. We are taught the need of a good Christian hope. orate struggle for ouble may unbalance the mind, it cannot do it ircen if cast apon the Lori, feels the Lord is on the throne ordering li tings for the dest, and sending trials te fit the soul for heaven, will oung man folt that God at it was designed for There ig ove thing or of Burne, and of those great hts which he breathed—thougbts like those which d, if it could have 1 a bandsome cast of the «nae worked on the npetitor at the ploogh. the nicer shades of japguage, and Wiilie driving to Scotch ballads, av hand for sowing eeeds never lose its baiance, ordered bis disappon.tment, and his spiritual goo, and that he would bow in meok submia- sion to the ailoument, he would pot have been driven to this desperation. some farthor remarks upon the genoral subject, T. adrosged the parenté aud other members of the Ling them t God as the only source of conso- hour like thie. He closed with an appeal to the young meb in the community, They might think that (heir own hearts would never be driven into such a fren- to were written carly, His most exquisite songs and esful epistles were the frait of his later Life. to speak of a i period in which many others do bat commence. Burne bad been three years dead when forty years were numbered from bis birth, and he th world in the moi brought to} have heen killed off thro iy learn surveying. trange things of » his wovla! natare haracter displays itee!f; ng of his daye. If it had pleased y shine forth in i: full resplendenc # have been greater jighte a life had reached as far an hie father's or now be speaking of ¥ us tbe more Grst fruits of is Iahors, They are like his own barebells, banging upon the thorns. £'ven to Mit up the low and gross enperstitions of There was no Sher genios to delineate the up the lower thoughts of * sometimes danced with the witches in the ; and followed with them throu be even Lung some flowers on the brow of But some think that tue boldaess of the ono 8 eq Al 10 the Irrevercnce of the other, These fights of Zarns’ geuiys were what sometimes gave his writings imprisoned like other criminals undergoing sentences for false prelencer, stopped short a roetrate them. But the heart m a great why can fathom, There is no satety Dut in placing your hearts in the hand of God, to be sealed controlled by Hig grace. ‘Thus has closed one of the most appalling tragedies on ‘The truth is stranger than fiction, hat not on!y casi two respectable fam:kos intothe deepest sorrow, bul epread a gloom over the neighborhood and He goee home & be syle by vary dil! see with every taa ho Mls soni was ‘stengeliugs home on bis father's acing Mackenzie art dewp whiet no pay thereto sa well known th! ih ‘Was ht a Joes 10 define the cuuee of death from. (os prewented, joclera were often purzled how te si ie Recor { 1) eoriaten forthe Gly Imager, The ready Mauer wh ed cl forme of patore it Lad n9 heiper Himnent 1 Medicine, Jan. ab the air; and Satan—ae Ml. ir" that gait Ww him, Ore KU our three remedier—than all PORN. The following, icttor wit! sho 1 gehen loved by the megiou inex: ‘We now, since ine ot nenieene: ‘Tue Rrovianon to what extent the regulation uniform may be varied. is nddyeseed wo the commandant of the vow Hig gitnent organizes in the city of New York:— ADIUTANT GuNkRaL's Once, AMaNy, Jan. 20, 1869, Tnowas N, McLesny, Req. Jonw Mason, Bsq., New Yorke der-in-chiet wll approve of a f five tundred men which om are Dor to be a Param Lit uaderstanding, ¢0- him toe kind of lite that And ia it to be 1 bet reat sometimes, and It je not the tree that a8 the yusand obd wheb enables itv wae Cott une” ja snppoued that naturp ‘Wat Borde ‘pb bs soci Abd wit gave him eoperior sometimes overdow, dressing ubder te father inet we mu ee ‘uces of fraternity, will, in add't eamgin era, wl wen he am $25,000 re i iamietdiniarectath ats ith air gee wrote wan remarkable for a great fh THe cpitating the world, for FRNDLEMEN— FUe cup member of the academy of 3 CRADWAY ‘G0.'8 Mediont Omen, 102 Sra ork. lon bat an’ ornaments, £00 Cost for the Light Artiliery, which drew versions ag’ a inl! payable on Peis tation, apd good evarywhure in the hadgee ater viet atone of rank ascording to the re ' np for the light Artillery. CDCTONVNBEND, 4)" Genoral, ened by Exorement From Wore.inc.—The other e fellow named Thomas Kane eloped from wi y aio nce opt ped in destitate cir ‘@ wife and several children, bem Ba { were two grown up daughters, At lastaccounts the guilty pair were en route for . MISCELLANEOTS. ‘ A ANGE or acexoy— JULES MUMM & 00.’8 CHAMPAGNE. We beg to the trade and the public in he between | Gas. ohey,2 news emsting 5 eee om ‘Decew! bay ted Samesseyer dr, our sole agrat forthe Ustad Sates or our bouses at e and Johann! CARD TO THE TRADE AND THE PUBLIv IN GENERAL, ‘Since the dissolution of onr old well known house of P. A. Mumm & Co., our bracd bas been somewhat neglected 1 America, and we are now determined, all cf our and ampie means, to porltion chang 8 to rt ib } they find the te | 'JULEB MUMM & CO.'R “VERZENAY CABINET? JULES MUMM & CO.'S Ee, DB SILLEKY VINS DB | JULES MUMM & CO,'s “ IMPERIAL:” And we respectfully request the proprietors of hotele and ree taurents to print our frm’s name, Jules Mumro 4 Co., ia fully on their bills of fare in order to Avoid confusion with other st first mentioned wine, “ Verzenay Cabinet,” is a new brand expressly got up to combine our Verzeney with our Ca- ality whic ines that have been rent to ‘Our “iusperiay” f'n favorite als 1 known and r Wve we! no recommendation. Our former Cabinet, in consequence of the above mentioned junction with our Verzenay, we will not- ‘ny unless ular request or order, e beg ip beet that in order to distinguish our new: im- ertations trom the former anes, the labels wit! boar the name of our present james Meyer, Jr., with our autograp siguatare cn ‘cach fora sea i 6 ‘will send not oniy for the future, but have already sent ‘shipments op the Fultom and Willtam Tell, all of uur brands, A hrc Myra rine in cases to your country. Our house in Cologne is the mhouse of all (be Mumm’ id. ite existence is peat peculiar; our cellars there are w: provided with the best and Moselle wines; besides we own some of the finest vineyards of the Jobanvisberg, the vineyards ede ‘Metternich. ‘We ly recommend our wines to the patronage our old frlends and (o the publle in genera i Bae MUN © OO Referring to ove advertisement and card of Messrs. Julen Mumm’ & Co. and B.A. Mutam, T beg to intone ie- trade tht T have ahibinenia ‘oi the Fulton aud William Ty hich will soo be ia port, for whieh Tam now prepared wi take orders. J. MEYER, JR., mtreet, ‘44 Broad IAMOND JEWELRY SELLING OFF. ‘This most beantivul lot of diamond jewelry of all kinds: inust be cleared by the firs: of next month; also, several splen= 1d full pear! sets, at @ great sacrifice. This lot’ of goods. cons taining some articies matchless beanty and o1 ity, will’ be found well worthy of an inspection. -M UNGER, £12 Broadway, opposite St Nicbolas Hotel N. B.—Remember, up two pair of states, ORE MEDICAL JUGGLING. GREAT EXCITEMENT AT THE ACA MEDICINE. rags FALSE THEORIES EXPOSED. MEDICAL INCOMPETENCY PROVED. THE CAUSE OF WHITNEY’S DEATH SHROUDED IN MYBIERY, THE TRUE ENCE REVEALED. CONDITION AND FEELING OF MK. WHITNEY BETWEEN HIS LAST TREATMENT BY D&. GREEN AND HIS DEATH. “Dao. 14, 1858.— About one in the aiternoon I was called tor see Samuel ¥. Whitsey; J found him surrounded by several members of his faintly, in a state of the mos: iatenseexcite- ment, suffering and terror; fn answer to my inquiries as to what had happened. be answered, 'Sitdown, Seales, aud f ‘will tell you the truth; 1 was such h fool as t> go to Dr, Green to be operated upon, and the d—d villain bas killed me P” Ir. Beale’s suatement before the zexdemy of Medicin Jn the ‘elly of New York, aw published in the N, ¥. ‘Herald jan. ‘The unfortunate death of Mr. Whitney is another svidence of theuncertainty aod unrellanility of the trextment, for the euro of the sick as practised by the medicsl faculty.’ The death of this eminent and well known chizen created an excitement of such magnitude as toindnce the Academy of Medicine to de- an Investigation of the treatment the deceased had been under, and of the immoviate cause of his death. Yet, afler a thoroveh and tearctine post mortem examination by ihe most able, ekilled and eruinent physictans of the regular ‘practice— the members of the academy were unable to decide am to the “immediate canse of death;” and, ia thelr report to the Con« gress of wise physicians there assembled, admitted their in- competercy of solving this ifienit problem ‘the sad case presented to us in the pain’u) death of Mr. Whimey is by no means an uncommon dccurrecce. Thousand of human who trust thetr lives in the hands of physicians, whose treats ment apd pracilce 18 based upon \éa followed by the me- ical faculty, are suderviy lnurriedt to that anderen country from whose bourne uo travelier returua.” From. testimony produced betore the Academy of Mi we aro Pot prepared to assert that the immediate cause of Mr. White ney’s death was pr viuced by the applization of the nisrate oF silver throngh the tube or vy the probaog. but we do emphatically agser: thst the death of the lamented Whitney was hastened by this ireaunent. We have always opposed ha method of t com ad ig our papers and Aunual almanae nt it hee our Almanac tor !>57, paged. THE GREEN SYSTEM. “There ia anotker system of practice becomin in tho treatment of °cousumpton namely tual oe tee Ge or burning method—which cousisia of aycingiag dswn the throat solution of nitrate of silver, for the purpose af burning tie y ve there formed mM this practice as dangers: ss baling: for, iteteed of healing ihe Iuggs; ie, exe ring oe tone or tubercles, tt (rr! snd produces sore, y ina blind, uosa‘e ond cancerous uethod of treataceak aad wat © tis notour design ie this article to discuss th correct: of mediention in th case of Mr. Whitney, unucr the wertoee of Drs. Mott and Beales in tae varioun 'sytapioms exiibiied: hactaas} do mort religiously nd «rally bolleve, inking De, Braleet statement—who, is appenrs from the evidence g'en before tes ficaderms of Sedicice, koe care of the ply leat and came y an any one elae— that Radway’s Keady Relief, Negulating Pi and ‘Kenovaiing: Kesolvent would have saved bis tite = 7 STATEMENT OF DR. BEALES. “Dr, Beales said: ‘There are thousands and wns of thousar United States who have been similarly alli irom their dificuiti Uy ts use of Radway Kegulating Pile and Resoivent. In tact, ev: visited by patients, compinining of the same. |, and relieved iteady Relief, ery day we are iments, who be~ of these remeu! ‘Let us again refer to the statement of Dr. Reales, and en- taroat; occasionally trreguiar, and almost spasmoiio; = oat Inersaauily: spe sbing with great diliculty and i ral tone Of voice. Dr. nitent medicine ior the purpose of produong a eee ee given, it seems, ntuerly fated, ie c he would have secured Six hours later ihe doo’or found his patie win, “described to be in the lai mx down the eee the ‘achea to the chest, and round to the cervical vertebree.,” Note meut, ne Radway’s ieady Kellel he would bave succeeded; fever, hikd the opposite effect Ligtit hours this ed to the throat of the pauent an “anodyne iway's Ready Reef was obnoxious to the ied “the anodyne Hoiment twenty- Dr, Beales states he bas for a long time been mbjected: 'f this critica! condition of the n he bowels “in thren ayn waa ree ven, whieh {alied; after whieh & us operated goin? hours after- Ae are after Ng the patien e from the bowels the result it causing Weekness “oF in nny manaer cabauetiag wae ase of ir Whitney will, we hope og to the public against trusting tig \hvtare Senda it tbe iif oiscert Wat te 'e Kenrly Relief, Re Coe, the {ite ‘A warm debate then ensued, during which Dp, dto stale the cane of Mr. Whitney's v0 he stated that it ‘ot Dr. mott desectb Ayn ptomy ba Tmnent."—Bee ark of Dr. Mol's defence: wcagemng Cf, Some few weeks elos0 we invited the ris) of kill in the tive: inet nea af jecesaful in the tre it and cure of ry unt add, ‘ork, cure two cases to one, and jn O ton street, New REMITEARCES LONDON OMPANY, LHL a De SCOTLAND, Svattw op the ahoon hacks io sume to watt, irom f pwert c BELFAST BANK iw NATIONAL BANE NOLAN) KOOTLAY BBLAN Dar wae Cre a Ro.

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