Show GARIBALDI I 1 the following is a ae description of garibaldi given in a communication from lombardy he is of lofty stature broad shouldered the head of a lion on the shoulders of an athlete his long black grizzly uncombed beard heard his eyes flashing with lightning glance his black felt hat ornamented with dark plumes his scarlet mantle tied round his throat present to you a personage of no ordinary stamp I 1 am everywhere assured that he is really a gentleman gallant to ladies severe to men more severe to himself sober to excess animated anti and cold at the same time he ie spires inspires in his little army a confidence only equalled equal led bythe by the terror b he e I 1 inspires ir e a in his enemies ever the foremost in the be figh fight it I 1 urging his charger into the thickest battal lions i dismounting now to seize a musket sharing with the meanest follower the labor of the march he gives an evidence alike of courage and coolness that astonishes all it is said that be he issued the following address to his hia soldiers alk aik my aly children you are one to five before you is death behind the muskets of your comrades who will shoot like a dog the first who retreats cannon we have none we will take them let us die what matters it italy must auit be free behold your recompense the following account of Gari baldis volunteers ts Is taken from a letter in the paris siccle 1 I do not know if it you have read in some foreign journals the strange exaggerations on the subject of garibalde Gari balds volunteers it has been said that this little army corps is the refuge of persons more or less compromised these have been represented as so many and lanz glanz knechts knechtl soldiers of the wallet and cord who despise all discipline and are only fit to make a bold stroke in enterprises by ni night not a word of it is true there is not a regiment t in europe where discipline is more s severely carried out than in the company of volunteers Gi garibaldi ribald chooses the men and when he be does not personally know those who come and offer their services to him be dees does not accept them without good references this volunteer corps is is composed r besides in great part of young men belonging to the best families of naples Bolo bologna gnas gnap mo modena dena parma and especially 0 of f milan there is at this moment at the great britain hotel in turin a very rich milanese countess whose two sons are volunteers the elder ia is twenty two and the younger nineteen the tha mother of these two young soldiers has taken up her residence in turin that she may be near her children she cannot see them for they are fighting at the front posts but she receives news from them every day and will not return to lombardy until the fran franco co sardinian army shall hav have entered at the point of bayonet do not suppose this lady to be a matron of ancient rome all her days are passed in dread and tears at every moment she is afraid of some disastrous news and every unexpected letter makes her tremble being baini very pious ahe aha has two masses said every morning mornings that god may turn aside from the breasts of her sons song the austrian bullets we are not made of such bich sorry stuff you see aa as the journals friendly to austria would fain have it believed to speak to you frankly our scapegraces graces would not have frightened me from the moment especially when fighting with goulais Gyu gyn lais lails soldiers was in question and on my first journey to turin on meeting under the arcades all these young fellows I 1 was going to say sax striplings strip lings who were getting ready to go and eight fight under gari baldis orders I 1 asked myself if it would not have been better for the papers I 1 spoke of but now to have stated the truth now however there is no longer a doubt about the courage the moral strength and determination of these nobles so 80 young indeed who have flocked in from all parts of italy full of confidence in their chosen choser chief they follow him wherever fie wishes wi to lead them and harrass incessantly the enemy night and day not an hour at rest always on the march and with the musket forever on the shoulder in less than a month those children have become old soi sol soldiers goldiere diere diers they have abandoned everything they theys the inheritors of great names and large fortunes for servitude servit udes the tie platter and the hard camp couch these dukes marquises counts these latest scions of the thy noblest pair patrician c ian lan stocks have become simple soldiers warring for independence spare then these proud children who are followed by the anxious eyes of their thein mothers all disdain and insult let calumny u m a at t least respect such noble hearts baarts who w will hilll be a an n eternal honor to italy their country AN al EAR FOR music two irishmen in crossing a field came in contact with a donkey who was making day hideous with his unearthly braying jemmy stood a moment in as astonishment but turning to pat who seemed as much enraptured aa as himself remarked its a fine large ear that bird has for music pat but sure ashes got an awful cold refinement r A boarding school miss deem ing eat a word too vui vulgar vular 7 ar for refined ears eara de f fines it thus to inse insert ingert rt nutritious I 1 pabulum into the orifice below the profil berance which being masticated peregrinates peregrin ates through the cartilaginous cartilage carti lagi cavities of the larynx and 1 Is final finai finally ay domi domicilla ciliated ted in the receptacle for digestible particles RAISED FROM THE zhe SEED are these pure canaries canari est esl asked a gentleman of a bird dealer with whom he was wag negotiating fora 1 hit fair yes sir said the deater deader n bially 1 I raised hem them ere ere erf birds froni from aea lea seed it was deemed sufficient proof oft ott of thein their or pully 4 |