Show WHAT A SOURCE FOR tenderness I 1 that childhood youth and even early manhood do not always indicate the instincts and inclinations of tue matured human being will be is iu in no instance more clearly shown than in the life of Bobea pierre the french beadsman whose rule itile eve i i at this late day cannot be thought of without a shu Bh udler dier it is said that the future tyrant when a young you an man amiable that he be and was so good wais hafi the darling of allabe all the old women of the ibe town and that he had so kind and nd sensitive a he rt that he wept on finding hla his aunts canary des deal I 1 in a cage these tender peculiarities which wort were so soon to rive give place to passions paa one both brutal and bloodthirsty fe b rought brought to view by the publication of some of WS poems by a modern admirer the collection was treas ared by an old maid sister of the author miss charlotte who was in ber later lifetime a pensioner upon the of nt louis Phllip pe he be king thus thua showing rare charity to the sister sifter of the man who had out cut off his bia brother brothers Is head at alias ales charlottes Char Chr lottes death the poems along ng with other relies relics of the deceased decease d tyrant passed to a collateral branch of the family and they are now after the lapse of a century cen tury to see the light in the form of a published volume A critic who has read the manuscript says one of the poems is to ito a turtle dove that be gave to his hia sister ister for no he was especially conj of animals and when he was absent from home the canaries mourned him to they refused to stag slug it is shown that the youth wept much aswell as well as wrote verses whet when at school in paris he be was appointed to welcome the king that saine same king he afterward had headed beheaded be by some verses when the king visited the college where he was at school As he was colebr celebrating biting the virtues of the now new monarch they the young ou ng became so eo much affected with disown eloquence he broke down entirely another time he be was sent bent to greet rousseau boisseau Bous seau with some sime verses verges of his own making he fell to crying until he started rou Bousso we uld AUd te arsand they finished by weeping on one an others shoulder he then wrote some more poetry about this incident and sent it to his sister charlotte all this will no doubt give the volume quite a sale for it constitutes a most acceptable kind of advertising the merit of the poetry will cut a smaller figure with the purchaser than the opportunity its perusal will give for studying an unknown phase of one ot the most terrible characters the world worl I ever saw |