E\V 



1< A KM Ell. 



1834. 



From Bruinerd's Poems. 

 THE TREE TOAD. 



Tune-"/ am a jolly Pirate, saili,^ down "^^^l//;/ --';! 



I AH a iolly tree toad, upon a cljesnul tree ; 

 I chirp, because I know thai the night was made for me ; 

 The ,lng bat flies above me, the glow-worm shures b.low, 

 And U,e owlet sHs to hear me, and half forgets h,s .voe. 

 I'm lighted by the fire-fly, i" circles wheeling round j 

 The kaly-did is silent, and listens to tlie sound; 

 The iack-o'-lantern leads the wayworn traveller astray, 

 To hear the tree toad's melody until the break ot day. 

 The harvest moon hangs over me,a„d smiles upon the streams ; 

 The lights dance upward f,om the north, and cheer me w.lh 

 their beams; ,,,,,. 



The dew of heaven, it comes to me as sweet as beauty s tear , 

 The stars themselves shoot down to see what muste we have^ 



here. 

 The winds around me whisper to ev'ry flower that Wows, 

 To droop their heads, call in their sweets, and every leaf to 



close; 

 The whipperwill sings to hi» mate the mellow melodj . 

 .. Oh ! hark, and hear the notes that flow from yonder chesnut 



tree." 

 Ye katy-dids and whipperwills, come listen to me now ; 

 I am a jolly tree toad upon a chesnut bough ; 

 1 chirp because 1 know that the night was made for me- 

 And I close my proposition with a Q,. E. D. 



THE ROTIISCHII.DS. 



These Jew batikers nmy be classed among the 

 most retnarkal.le men of the .lay. They are cer- 

 tainlv the richest, and coinr„a.„l great influence 

 over' several of the Cotirts of Europe. lu some 

 instances it is believed that they have controlled 

 political events by advancing or relusing loans ; 

 and the balance of power .nay in some sort be sa.u 

 to rest with the Rothschilds ! It was remarked to 

 Solotnon not long since in Vienna, that by means 

 of his in.mense riches and influence, he might be- 

 come King of ihc Jews: he answered that he had 

 no ambition for that Imnor, he would much prefer 

 to he Jew of the Kings !—Mer. Jour. 



The following account of these singular men is 

 Tiven in the London Metropolitan ; 

 " " The financial business of the house of Roths- 

 child began to assume importance in consequence 

 ofits first loan often millions of fltuins, to the 

 Court or Dentnark in 1812. Mayer Anselmo 

 Rothschild, the father, was attacked by a mor.a 

 Hhiess. Aware of his approaching end, he had 

 his ten chrihien called to his be.lside, gave them 

 his dying benediction, and made them promise 

 never to change their religion, and always to re- 

 main united amongst them.selves on Change. 

 These promises have been religiously kept, an.l 

 ami.ly has the fable of the himtlle of slicks been 

 rerified by the five brother.. Whenever they are 

 about to undertake an alTair of importance, all the 

 uniteil brethren invoke the memory of their lalhei 

 which is venerated by them in a manner highly 

 honorable to their filial feelings. Their great po- 

 litical operations coimnenrcd in 1813, and up to 

 the present time it is computed that their house 

 has negociated in loans, subsidies, &c. upwards ol 

 one hundred and forty tlt.msand millions sterling, 

 principally for the diflerent monarchs of Europe ; 

 their profits have of course been immense. Then- 

 long and uninterrupted success was owing to their 

 tinanimity and community of interests. 



Every proposition is decided by mutual del.ber 

 ation Each operation of nitijor or minor impor- 

 wnce, is conducted upon a concerted and common 



plan; and all their individual and combined ener- 

 gies are en,(doyed to command success. AUhoufeh 

 for several years they have resitted at a distance 

 from each other, that circumstance has by no 

 means caused a distance, or discord among ihem ; 

 on the contrary it ha« proved a great atlvanlage m 

 contributing towards the prosperity of their im- 

 ,„ense undertakings, by making them o« coum,,( 

 of the state of the luincipal money markets m Eu- 

 rope, through a contimial exchange ol courieis 

 which generally precede the government messen- 

 gers ; in this manner each of the five brothers f.om 

 The point where he is place.l, possesses a great la- 

 cility for preparing and negociatittg dtfterent at- 

 fairs for the central establishment. 



The statistique of the Wondrous Five is as iol- 



^°^Anselmo resides at Frankfort-stir-le-Maine. He 

 is the senior and chief of the tami ly, age.l siMy 

 one years. At his house the general ;"-.'•"']' = 

 mad; out, from the private inventories "H';;'^^ ^ 

 ,|,e oihei' four banks. It is there also hat the 

 Congresses of the fraternity arc generally held 



Solomon, the second brother, born bept. 9, 17.4 

 has passed his professional time, <'- "«; /'f "^;^ ■ 

 years, between Berlin and Vienna, chiefly at the 



''"Ivathan, the third brother, is in his 57th year. 

 He is the London Rothschild. ■ <• .„ 



Charles, the fourth of the Ave bankers, is forty- 

 six years old. He has been established at Naples 



since 1824. -, , i 



Jacob, the youngest in years, was born May 5 h 

 1799 His consort the baroness, is the daughte 

 of his second brother, the Baron Solomon. Jacob 

 lias carried on his business since 1812 at Kaus. 



The liol^T^d^^nce is diflhsing her beams upon 

 ns that we may see more clearly the wotideitul 

 works of our Creator, and the wisdom with which 

 he has ma.le them all-and still tarther, that he bes- 

 tows on man the intellectual power whereby he 

 „,av make these discoveries. Protessor feilliman 

 was very much caressed an.l had many presents 

 while here. One gave him cloth for a suit ot 

 clothes— another a twenty dollar hearth-rug —a 

 third an in.lia-rubhercushion, filled will, an— thus, 

 „ot only treating him with son.e ol the grandest 

 speci.ne.is of the wo.ks of nature, but with some ot 

 the finest wo.Us of .-ut. 



HOLI^IS' CE1.BBRATED HORSE l.IxUME^T, 



For 8,>ra.ns Bruises, Wu.d-Galls, Old strains, 6..rt joln.s, 



S«eleTo Cracked lleMs, and lor H,M«es. hat are sl.a.n- 



ed in the back .inews, wrung ,n the "-.th-rs ic; 



The ing:::;h::::;^M::h':o^;::^''^nsl^;;l^qhave been 

 ^?S':rs:^r"ne^,r:mt^r:o-i;;l;:^tr . 



ar, 1 Ud U w I'be prelerred to any other, as .. .s dec.d- 

 edl the l"st and certaud} the most couven.ent arncle ... use. 



^r;:p"::.":dt;M^b?ifi^oiii^^io^iis,D,nggistand 



dhen.ts., No. 30, Union Street, Boston, Mass. 



lO-The Public are reciuested to observe that each label .8 



''^I'rTc'e of large Bottles one dollar, small do. 15 cents. o2-J 



BOOKS ON AGRICULTURE. 



FOR S'VLE at the New England Farmer OCSee, Nos. 61 

 and .« North Market Sireel.— Boston. 



From the Farmer and Gardener. 



GE01.0GICAL. TREAT. 



Exlrart of a letter from a female correspondent of 

 Z Portsmouth Journal, at Lowell, Massaehu- 



I HAVE just returned from an excursion^hich 

 ,,n been an intellecttnd feast. At the jdace where 



e rocks have been d.ig out for the rail roa, there 

 is one eminence, for ihe dislance of a 1^"-^^^ ^ '^ 

 where the ledge is fifty feet .leep-aud l.om thes 

 ,.„cks are take^n some of the finest ^P-'uteu » 

 ,|,e contemplation of the Geologist. I'rofe.. o. Sil- 

 liman has been lecturing here on this science, «nd 

 ,;;;i led the minds of those who are mterested very 



„„irli into this channel. fi,.„^ ;„ ,hp 



His theory is, that there are volcanic fiies in he 

 eel e of ihlealth which are continually throwing 

 ;^.,.,Us_,hat their i,a,,.,-alpo.si,ion IS hortzonta 

 ,,V the .-lain, but are thrown perp...d.c,,ar as they 

 fe . mid by this le.lge-the veh.s of difleren. sor s 

 f stone nmniiig in that way 'l;'-'f . ^ -^f ' 

 .ivesome evidence of the truth ol ""^.'-"'>' 

 und present a scene to the lover f, "'«;•="="=, ;^' 

 G..oloLry rich to behold,-whicl. of ilselt the Icaiu- 

 S Se,! pronounced as worth all Uie trou e o 

 a journey from Conuoctictit. Pfofesso S. took o, . 

 nrties of gentlemen ami ladies with him to h, 

 lie, with their hags and hainmers, to collect 

 • ,,eciniens, and there enforce his a.g»"'e ts-- 

 'riiis rendered his lectures far more '"terestu^ th 



,hey co..ld have been in «ny "'''" l''""' /'^^ f 

 .hespecin.ens I have collected are Quartz, tell- 

 spar. Mica, or isinglass, with garnets -te.spe'sed. 

 nolissor S. by his theory very sattsactoily ac- 

 counts for the formation of the beds ol coal which 

 are dug out of the earth. 



■VniericTU Farmer, S vols 

 Pluladeliihia Agnculiural So- 

 ciety, t vols 



Massachusetts do. do. It) v. 



New York Board ol Agiicul- 

 ,upe —third volu.ne, 



Youim's Letters of Agncola, 



Hints to American Husba.id- 

 men. Phila. V^il- 



Prince on Horticulture, 



(ircen on Flowers, 



MiiNon's Farrier, 



FiiiuK-r's Guide, 



Cobhei.'s Works, 

 do. Gardener, 



Mowbray on Poultry, &c. 



^,■^v American Gardener, 



Sinclair's Code of Agr.cullure, 



Fanner's Assistant, 



U ivy's ATiculturalChetnistry 



riiacher's°AmericaQ Orchard- 



ist. „ 



D.ane's N. E. Farmer, 

 Forsyth o.. Fruit Tree' 



Lorrain's Husbandry, 

 Coxe on Fruit Trees, 



English jmhlicalions. 

 Tracey^s Derbyshire. 3 vols 

 Somerville's East Lothian, 

 Douglass' Roxbury and feef 



kirk, 1 vol. 

 Uaicheler's Bedfordshire, 

 Vancouver's Devonshire, 

 Experimental Farmer, 1 vhl. 

 Duncomli's HereUirdshire, 

 B<-nlsoii's New System ol Cul 



tivalion, 2 vols. 

 Richiudsoii on Fiorn Grass, 

 Kigby's Holl-ham and *ra. 



m.iigha.n, 1 vols. 

 Wheerer's Botanist Dictionar 

 An.lerson on Draining, 

 Curtis on Grapes, 

 Scumrville on Sheep, 

 Loudon's Encyclopedia of Ai, 



riruiture, 

 Bordley's Husbandry, 



Is published every ^\« ";=■";'> l^'.^',; ^'l,a pay wi. 



d;tysfr:!;:u;ea^orsib:;,i;;:u,eentiti..dt^aded. 



''"ll'^Vo paper' -ill be sent to a distance without pay.». 

 .eii^»a.feinadvance^^^^_^^_ 



*„ York-G. C. THOKB.H« .il Libeny-street. 

 ^„„„,,_'VVm . 7""«'!^f ^' ' f;,'' H 85 Chesnut-streel. 

 i'/a7,,d,V""-l',f^^<;:„^*^f ^^M ,,,e, of American Farr 



'/''■y»"'-«""7J,f,^°ST" A Bookseller. 

 ,V,,-./-».1/P»|<-EBt^y-^« FosTKK, Book.seller. 



Woodstock. 1(.— J. A. iRAii. , 



~T7- 7^ r' uTiTkTtt bv Foiui & Damf: 



