LE W ISiilG J cl RO N I C LE, AND THE WEST BRA1CH TA'R'MER. ft.t utocptnotnt JomUj flqpcr ituoiei to Nciws, itcrotarc, Politics CiflricaUarV. Science mi& fftoralilnJ BY 0. N. WORDEN. The Lettisbnrg I'hrottirle: raUisbed Wednesday Afternoon at Lewi.burg. L'uioo county, Pennsylvania. Tmxk.- g'i.Otf for a year, To be paid in the first half year; $'.50, if payment be net mad within the year ; single numbers 3 eta. Subscriptions for nil moniha or less to be paid in advance. Discontinuance tptiona! with the Publisher, except when arrearages are paid. Advertisements handsomely inserted at SO etc. per square one week, 21,00 for a month. 85.00 a rear. A reduction of these rates for larger or longstr ndvtints. Casual advertisements and Job work In be raid for when performed. All communications by mail mutt enme post-pv.id, accompanied by the address of the writer, to receive attention. Oftice.Market street between Second and Third. O. N. WoBDtx, Publisher. HIE CHRONICLE. ... i. SATFRDlT, WOT. 17. PF"Our reader will with us be glad la hear agsin from tba long-silent pen, whoaa laat offer ing wa present beloar tinged though k be with tli melancholy of this saddest eeason of the yaar. Fur the LfuUburg Chrvniclt. In my Brother, on leaving Home BY MRS- SARAH H. IIAVKS. A when soma harp, white quiv'ring chorda .Have rung to nought but glee. Thrills on tbe listening eat in traina Of mournful harmony. Awl wskes wilbin ibe throbbing bread The griefs which then unburied rest F. e'en ami J our festive hours, Like tome writ, sadd'uing knrll. Thnueh bieallird in tone we fondly prise. Cnim the low, faint fiirtwell. . IV hr)f ing of forms no mute we view Of many a lung and last adieu. And we bare breathed thai touching word; Like Noah' beauteous dove. To Imbtc the world' unkiudly lor ate You Icare an ik of love, And weary yrar must darkly roll Ere thou atsy'st reach tby deatinej goal ; Km waiting erowda may 'roon.l the press, Err quenched cmhilion'a fire. Ere in.tu hli reach tbe diuy height To which tby b aapire. And pi are a proud and honored narno High on the dralhlcs scroll of feme. The! brow may wear an envied braid, Dut lurking shade of ear Mwl dim i be pure and jnyoue light Which lavea lo linger there. While wilb'ring griete tliat aadly press V ill acll earib'e treasure may ool bless. Ter go and Ah! 'mid heartless acenea Recall thoaa hour of glee. Whrn 'roonrl the dtar domestic hearth Each apot t waa aha red by llire. And tum, when all unkindly prove. To friend who claimed iby earliest love. Anil when before our father.' God Tba suppliant knee we bend. That He may bie thy pathway her Khali hewl-frlt prayer ascend, nd that, whale'er tby lot he given, Farru te repose a trust in Heaven. A favorite and gifted brother who died young 'Constructive Mileage. h appears that Mr. Comptroller Whittle av has just put his veto upon the account rendered by Mr. Dickens, the Secretary ol tbe Senate.of about $40,000, which he paid ta the members of the Senate, as construe. free mileage: thnt i, he paid all of them, but three who had scruples in the matter. the mileage for going home on the 4tb of March last, and returning the name day. It is stated that Mr. Whittlesey submitted the mutter to the president, who promptly requested him to d- what he believed to be rithl, and lei the consequences take care of themselves ! Mr.Dickens wiit.therefore have lo aak Cungress to make up the expen ded aum. The ( aid Senators wili hardly refund any part of the 40,0a0 they have received, according to precednce, though not according to law and justice. We hope Mr. Whittlesey will be sustained. A fcold. la the Court ol Quarter Sessions of Berks county, last week, Catharine Eisen bise was convicted of being a common scold. This offence was formerly punish ed with inching, and as late as 1824 the Court of Quarter Sessions ol this city, sentenced a certain Nancy James " to be placed in a certain engine of correction, railed a ducking stool, on Wednesday, the third day of November, then next ensuing between the hours of 10 anJ 12 o'clock in the morning, and si being placed therein, to be plunged three times into the water ; te pay the coats of prosecution, and to stand committed until the sentence is com plied with." The Supreme Court decided, however, that this punishment, so far from mn calculated to reform the offender, oj'.d only make her scold to the end of her life and the only punishment was fin, or fine and imprisonment, at the d in ert;1.!, d of the Court. ' C7Tiie centlcmsn who doe up Editorials for the Luzerne Democrat, occasionally laya open the weak poinla of human character with a caustic but good humored pen as witness (ha following, which bat a bit or two for us all around : (except tbe Priotera.who as tbey hava nought to be proud of are of course exempt from that failing?) P1UDK. There is a vast deal of many kinds of pride in this world, which seems to grow spontaneously, and to gain upon the wor thv efforts of the humbly inclined to put it down. It has been preached against, lime out of mind, but the preaching has been attended with indifferent success. Il seems as though some people couldn't lielp being proud they take to it as naturally as some folks take to drink. Some imbibe the subtle passion from their loving moth ers ; in their earliest days, their very sus tenance is spiced with il, and their veins swell big with the poison, which increases with their growth. Aa a general thing, we hate a proud man, and we don't think him entitled to any gentler regard from the world at large, for, lo our ootion, no man has a right to be proud of anything in this world, unless it be, ear gratia, a handsome daughter. But we see men, every day, proud of trifles ; and we sea many sorts of pride. "A pride there is of rank a pride of birth. A pride of leatniug, and a pride of purse A spiritual pride in abort there be on earth A host of prides, soma batter, and some worse." There are, even in this great demociaiic country ,a pride of rank.and a pride of birlh. Anti-republican as il may seem in a land where all men are acknowledged to be free and equal, and the women, too, there are those and plenty of them, who would be .looked upon as the "Exclusive lords Of thie world's aristocracy," men who perhaps were taught aa to feci in their early youth, whose aristocratic moth J era perhaps gave "them lessons in lordly iwaggering witlf their earliest trowsers. Some happen to be descended from hon orable men of olden times,and of this they are proud to a degree. It is true, that "targe streams from Utile fountains flow," and, that "Tall oaka from little acorns grow;" but the converse is no leas true, that In vast bins aoms "small potatoes" grow ; and the intefcrence is,that a man who is so mall th it he has nothing else to be proud of but his ancestry, is but a poor thoot, of whom the old stock would never have been proud. Some are descended trom the "revolutionary heroes.'' If their grandla there were generals or colnels,they them selves are looked to with respect, and their ancestors' names are sounded loud in eve ry fourth of July oration, whilst the descen dant of the humble private aoldicr hears no echo of his ancestor's fame, and gets no credit for being descended from honorable en. There are men in our own community hose ancestors were fortunate enough to possess many broad acres of the virgin soil of this valley. Wyomiog Valley- par exetUence MTht Valley" is classic ground : in fact, it is the only truly classic dirt yet d.scovered this side of Italy, though perhaps the former proprietors had not found it out ; neither indued did the old Romans consider themselves and Rome cUssic iu the palmy days when they dined on peacock' brains, which seem so classic a dish to u. Well, some of tbe descendants of the old proprietors of Wyoming consider themselves classic, too. They look upon the one Ives as hereditary sons of the sod. inheriting their honorable fathers' virtues as well as their acres, and therefore, with the consequential air of a family grocer when butter is dear and "eggs is eggs," they move about the world for the vulgar to gaze at ; honorable, because their lands would sell high; and parieiani by birth oot born in Rome, but in the next best and only other classic place under heaven. And these are proud. Having sprung from ucA pure "Attic soil," they look upon the rest of mankind as poor clod, fit for noth ing better than plain uuglazed earthenware. There are many who arc proud of their learning. We see il in the old and the young, among both men and women ; and a most ridiculous pride it is. We see il in tbe old learned lawyer, whose wise head is fortified by spectacles, and the gray-haired experience ofmany years, sod whoquibbles and quirks with the honorable Court and his brethren at the bar, with a loud voice and peremptory lone, which frighten the timid, and per ha pa cause the sacrifice of justice to impudence ; aod all to gain tbe admiration of the crowd. We see it in the young quibbler, w ho talks by the hour ab out nothing at all, or something he does not understand, quoting "wise saws and I modern instances,'' full of fine words with- out a meaning, which make up what the world calls a fine speech. We see it in the youngcollegiate,who,fresh from the schools, with all his gilded honors dangling from his pockets.sroilea profusely on the women, and quote Lad Greek to unlearned men. We see it in the physician, whose learning and experience have made him respected at borne and abroad. e perhaps feel that without his assistance), in sickness our lives would be io jeoja.dy ; but "to make assur ance doubly sure," with the fire of learn iug in his ee, he will ring il in your on nerved ears, ' there is no other way under heaven whereby ye cao be saved but thro me," and many a poor fellow believes it. And we see this pri Je even among those whose holy calling is ordained of God. Some, not content with the humble vet ex alted duty of leading souls to the proper fold, bring themselves before the public even in newspapers lo maintain contmver sies with each other about what is of no consequence lo the world, nor to thn great Cause in which they were sent lo work Much time is spent, and much sectarian bitterness ia shown with pious learning,but neither ptrty ever yet acknowledged him self vnrxjuished. The purse proud man is still another character. You may see him standing on the Court House steps, or in the door of his store or office, looking around lo see if here is another in that region worth as much as himself. He wear a "fair round belly," decorated with to or three huge watch seals, and he is always well shaved and smootb,and oily looking, with a proud consequence in bis eye, aod a smirk of sa. tisfactino on his face when he shakes hands with a man who has'ao 'purse. He is so accustomed to humble deference from the poorer clas'slaMre'can not live without it it's a part of his sustenance. And he gets enough of it, too. If he gives a few dollars towards a public enterprise, people wonder at his liberality, whilst the poorer man who gives less in dollars, but more in proportion to his ability, hears nnthing ab out his contribution. Tho man worth filty thousand dollars, who gives five hundred towards building a church, is smiled upon, aod posted in the newspapers under the head of "liberal donation," or "noble gen erosity,'' wtth the amount given curried out in full at the end of hi name ; whilst one worth five hundred dollars, who gives five dollars, it being in the same proportion to what tbe rich man gave, is not thanked perhaps for his mile, and the charitable world exclaim, "Poor devil ! why didn't he give more T" and thus they feed the al ready puffed up pride of the rich. "But of all pride sines Lucifer's attaint. The proudest aweU 'a a self-elected saint." This apiritual pride is the offspring of that hypocritical profession of piety, by which some men make their religion a lie. There are those, some even high in tin church, and who are looked up to as the patterns of piety, and who sit within I he in ner pale of the lemple.who pride themselves on their godliness, and seem to thank God that "they are not as other men are," nor as tbe poor publicans and sinners who look up to them and wonder how they came there. They would make the way of holi ness a turnpike mad, and the church a toll house, whereby all may go to heaven who pay, though none can be considered pillars directors in the concern but themselves, the saints elect. - - There are many of these spiritually min ded people in tbe world, men and women. who are proud of their virtue.piety, humiU ty and all that,and who would take offence if their strict piety were ever questioned. We have heard a blue slocking who pro fessed the most unbounded zeal as a mem ber of Christ's church, run on by the hour calling herself a poor, simple, unhandsome, uninteresting, wicked girl, whom nobody cared for, yet who would have blown any one out of water, who would have taken her at her word, and spoken of her to any one else in another light than as the moat intelligent, good looking, interesting aad pi ous yoang lady then known. We all re member the remark of ibeQuaker to anoth er, "You sea I am not proud. I wear lea ther buttons," and the other's reply, "Some folks are proud of their humility." ' How much of this we see ! We know a ."plain sort of man, worth- some money, who carries a gold watch worth a bundre and fifty dollars.and who takes occasion to look at the time of day pretty often. Vf ben his neighbors stare at the richly chased gold, he puts it up with an bumble air, and no one can say that be is proud, for t' e wrteh guard is a atrip of eeUkio- But the tough est pride to get along with is that of the WEDNESDAY, NOV.. 21, 1849. proud saint, who cali his eihr-.r neretie j for not thinking as h! , ud who keeps, wondering wni the eor.d . owing to,and when it iil begin to turn 'round ihe other way, and when all n.en will ti.ni from the evil of iheir waye and become as pious a lie. He never think hi fc!l-mun hu broiiier, unless he Ltloogs to the same church, and looks grave on Sundnvs. In stead of welcoming you to the house of pr er in the hope of reforming n sinner, he seems to fuel annoyed by your presence. and wonder why you dnu'i go lo another church. We always shrink when we pass such a man in the street, and feel some what as the poet fell when he sung "Close, cities your ejes with holy dread. And weave circle 'round him thrice. For he on honey dew hath fed, Aod drunk tile milk of paradise. And we stand aside and let him puss in his pious grimness, and then go on our way rejoicing.thankful that we were not kicked. Interesting Incident. t,L . . 1 a ai wa xne stnoe in wnicn .Mr. Ulav was com ing to the Et, was upset at Uniontown, Pa. the passengers very narrowly escaping serious njury. Mr. Clay, while another coach was being got ready, was quietly smoking his cigar at the residence of Mr. Samuel Y. Campbell not having relin quished it in tbe excitement and alarm which the accident bad occasioned and amusing the friends who had flocked around him with his charateristic free dom of conversation. . In speaking of the rapid march of improvement in Uuiontown and the country in the vicinity, he said it hud undergone sf truly marvelous change since ho first passed through it ; and then, as if old and pleasant recollections had been revived, related an amusing incident which, .had . occurred.resieting him in passing through Uniontown, soon after tlie passage by Congress of the famous compensation law. IJe had taken very little part in the passage of that law, but had somehow said " he found it diffi cult at the end of the session of Congress to make both end meet.'' He was him self traveling with a very plain carriage and a very ordinary pair of horses, but in company with him were the families ol others having more splendid equipages. In passing through Unioniow n.ho had gone in advance of the carriages for ih- purpose of buying some sweetmeats far tho chil Jien and was in a shop making the t.'irchise wnen ine carriages pas-c-a it. i here was I . L , . .... in the store a boy. wh.j, obnerving the carriage passing.and supping them to be long to the man who matle this remark, bjt of whose immediate pretence he wa ign orant, said " it ia ii j wonder tlml feliow can't make both ends meet." During the narration of this anecdote, (says the Uniontown Democrat,) Mr. Campbell stood a moit atientive listener, immediately facing Mr. Cl iy, and the in stant it was concluded stepped forward and bowing In Mr. Clay, said, " I, sir, am that boy." The effect was electrical. The whole company was convulsed with laughter. Many of them were familiar with the anecdote, for they had. long be fore, heard it from Mr. Campbell himself. Of course, the revival of the remembrance of this incident of early life, in Mr. Camp bell's own parlor, alter an interval of more than thirty years, was as pleasant as it was amusing. Tbe boy and the youthful statesman are both " silvered o'er with age and nowhere in the Union has the distinguished statesman a more ardent.de voted, and long tried friend aud admirer than Samuel Y. Campbell. -'Trading on Borrowed Capital." During the ten months just closed of the present year, the Commerce of our City compares with the same months of the pre ceding year as follow : Imported Bt than last year EiporMd Lisa wan mat year $'.080,000 $5,suo,ooo Total $13,580,000 This, according io Free Trade logic, is a most delightful summing up. We have so much more value in the country, than we should have bad if we had bought only as much as we sold. Unluckily for that logic, thia value is not in the country we have eaten and drank it up, worn it ont, and otherwise consumed it, while our Labor which should have produced it has stood idle for want of employment And, while the value has disappeared, the obli gation to pay for it remains. We have sent abroad our coin to the amount of sev eral Millions in payment of commercial balances.and, worse sill,our Public Stocks or promises to pay Millions on Millions more with interest for tba' nest 6&n t iven'y years, have been sent out by the ream, ihu mere interest thereon forming of itself a balance agrinat us for tears to come. Prudeut, careful men i.f business ! how long can this lait l-.V. Y. TriLune FEHftUS. pi JACttB A11BJTT. It whs a stern y afternoon in Jtnuary ; but the interior of the rude workshop to which we must fiist introduce our renders, presented a very cheerful appearance. There wns a vast fireplace in one side ol it.io which was a blazing fire, made of chips, ends of hoards and shavings, though the space between the jtms wus so wide tha' the snow flakes were descending on eaeh side of the fire, d n the straight, short chimney. A boy of twelve years of age. with a culm, intellectual looking fice, was sitting on a block, in the corner, at work upon a little hand-sled. One window of the shop looked ofl upon wi.d forest scene, ry, and the other across a nest, sheltered little farm yard to a wmall hnue opposite. At this second window wus a work bench. with a variety of tools upon and near. it. A short thick man was sented at this bench, upon a three legged stool, inient upon some w heel work. The snow braving tigninst the window, and the wind moaned in the cbimnev. " Father." said the boy, 6 Tier both had been working some time in silence, 1 don't believe yo-j wili get the clock dune at six to-nichr, hot then it it so stormy, Mr. James will not coiv.e after u.' i It was to-morrow, child, that I was to have il done." " wby, is not this Thursday !' . " No, it is Wednesday." h . said the boy, end went oil -with "Then, father," s.iid the "boy opsin. after a little pi use, why are you hurrying solo got it done tonigh: I Thore 's al! to-morrow." I don't know about to-morrow ; I am ; afraid little Bemiy may be very sick to- morrow, and I ahall want lostay with him. jing forward, caught bright glimpses offu 1 wish you would go io und see whet hT 1 ur pr'fper::y (.;" framed house, with he is asleep." j two r-nnns.sjmcluus barns,and smooth mow "Well father, il you will just let mej io.: nr.;? Georgv a rich fanner, and per bore tiiis hole. ! 'i'V. when the ;on houlJ be inenrpora- Th father assented by silence, und the boy plnnteJ his centre bit, and lowly car ried the bit stock round and round, until the curioiH instrument had cut its wav through ; he lookod lor a mom'-iit wrh evident satisfaction at the sinoo'h, clean hole, and then, liying down his work, hounded out of the shop. In a few minutes the shop dour opened again, but instead of Fergus, there entered a woman of middle age, hi mother ; and as she stood a', the door, shaking and brushing otf the snow, hei huslvind looked up a moment from hi work and said, . " Well wife, how is Benny t" The spectator, in comparing the two faces now turned towards one another, would have been struck with a remarkable difference between them. The wife was slender, her hair and eye d;trk, and her countenance was strongly expressive of thought and feeling. The husband was short, thick act, with a round pi icid face. indicative of good humor and content ; though i here was a decided expression nl anxiety upon it as he inquired after Benny. Iu fact there was a solicitude in both coun tenances, and yet '.here was a contrast. On the mother's face anxiety seemed to be at home. It harmonised with the whole cast and character of the features. O.. the father's it appeared to be a stranger. Ii had obtained temporary and unnatu'al possession. The look of contentment and happiness seemed rightly lo belong there. In a word, there was a difference in temperament. Christian principle taught them both the duty of resignation and con tent, but the mother found it very difficult lo keep pace with the father in the practice of the.-n. But to return to the dialogue : How ia Benny, wife?' said the workman, look ing towards her as she siocd at the door. " O George, he is getting very sick ; he moans all the time, aud keeps calling for drink." As she said ibis she walked towards him, and stood by his side, leaning her elbow on the bench, and her cheek on her hand. " Do you think Fergus could get across the pond, aod back before dark ?" she asked. She was thinking of his going lor the doctor, who lived on the o: her side of a pood which spread itself out in the valley VOL. George, as she called him, turned round Owarrls l.er on his stool, ar.J then, for the first time the observer mijjht see that he nas a cripple. Bo'.h limb had been am pi.fateil just lelow the knee, and paiches of cCirsej leather had been fastened upon thf rxtremities, which served him for shoes; be. could thus stump about hi shop and yard a little, but for all purposes of a lengthened walk he was hoi pies. Ten years before, George had bought tbe Jot ol wild land on which he lived, for a farm ; and af.er putting up a smtll log house, brought his wife there to aid him : in forming, by year of labor, a home for their old age. Tbey had spent the early year of their lives, in the usual course of ungodliness and selfishness ; but they had been changed, and when they came into their comfortable log dwelling, the first evening of their married life, they both j solemnly gave themselves up to God, and expressed a desire to do his will, and lo be dealt with according to his good pleasure. " Now Mary.'Vaid George that evening. we must be honest in lliis, we must not talk of our submission to (ioJ in sunshine. iar;d then resist the strugg'e, when it comes j to storm." j M try saw that this was very good chris- tian philosophy ; but the characteristics of the heart, based on innate qualities, and long established habits, are not to be bro ken up at once by ihe crceptitn of a principle of sound philosophy. Mary made resolution, moreover, that she would be resigned and submissive if a storm should come ; but then thse inherent tendencies ;of the soul do not always give way to a leood resolution. At anv rate thim looked " j r. Jvery bright and pleasant thn. They had j "a beautiful lot of land,'' as George called his tract of sturdy forest. He had a very 1 - j - "WX; i rut I il r they ncrded, food enough in tho loftandia the cellar for the present, and srd enough in the gruuud for the future and a large ; pile of vw.od at the door, w hich furnished maple lo ih fire, and pi:cbpiue strips for candli-s. Then her itraginatisn in look- tec, a "selectm.in." Und -i these circum s'ances Mary found it v.-ry emy to feel re I'ri'-J nod submissive to G , anJ the thought it would always be eay to be so. A few years after this.wl.'je Gorge was making son.e clearings at a litte distance from the house, a tree fell upon him, and after months of sickness and suffering, be walked out one sunny spring morning in o his door yard for the first time, bu; it was on his knees. Mary had watched over him wish great fiJeiiiy nod luve, but with rather too much restlessness and solicitude to be consistent with her previous resolu tion, to lie in all cases entirely resigned to tbe divine will. When she thought of the greatness and wisdom and benevolence ol God, and his past kiudiiess to herself and husband, she knew that all was right, but then when she thought of the farm the va.t amount of severe labor it required. and of her husband's inevitable helpless ness, and also of their utter want of any other means of support, and of iho loneli ness and destitution of such a home for a hopeless cripple, she could not help Jeeling that all was wrong. George himself was patient and contented ; and he seemed to have no anxity for the future. Tempe rament clone could not have effected this. Piety alone, ordinarily d s not ; but piety aiiled by a happy temperament seemed to have maJe him entirely submissive and re sined.and (of course when the booity pain wxs assuaged) contented and happy. As we have said, he came out, for the first time, one pleasant spring morning. with his crutches, upon the great fl it stone which lay at bis door. His little son Fergus was trying to cut wood with a heavy axe, laboriously lifting it and then letting it fall by its own weight upon tbe log. George looked around upon his fields and1 clearings and then upon bia son. Fergus laid down his axe, and came running to meet bis crippled parent, esclaimin. 'Why, father, are yow coming out V Yes, 1 am coming to look at my farm. You will have o be farmer now it's all over with me "Well father, said Fercus "when I am a little bigger. I can cut wood pretty well now." "Yes. I see you are at work. But let me go and try. I believe I can cut wood a little myself, after all. I lie slowly worked his way across tha VI., NO. 34-294; yard and struck the axe a lew times iUo rho green maple log. lie geve those blown with hearty good will, as if be flit a kind of satisfaction in demonstrating to b.nueif thai his arms were safe at any rate. He was still, however, weak from tbe ef fects of his long confinement, and he soon laid down the axe aod turned 'round tow ard the house. Mary sat at the window. She had been watching her husband's movements and the whole scene brought so vividly to her view iheir utterly helpless condition, thai she turned away in tears. George tried to lighten her despondence. He lold her she ought to put ber trust io God. . , "I know,' said she, "1 ought to trust in God, but what thull we do I You cannot work any more, and we shall starve." " Not to-day, a; aoy rate," said George,, by the looks ol your bowl of potatoes. was a bowl of potatoes which Mary was just about -putting into the athes to roast for their dinner. "I did not mean to-dsT," said Mary, a' little piqued, " but the poiatoes will not laat us looj." " That is true," said he, " but we will not worry ourselves about that now. The Savior says we 'mnst not borrow trouble from to-morrow, for every day has sorrow enough of its own." Mary was a little nettled. Nubody likes to have Scripture quoted against them, especially if the quotation m such that, under the circumstances, it dies not con vince, and yet is so apparentry applicable, as to admit of no ready reply, Mary said that she did not think that people ought to sit down quietly and let ruin come upon them without taking any measures' to avoid it, under the plea of trusting in God. Now the truth was that George was nat. evil ; w bst be objected to was anxiety. Ha and Mary had been accustomed to talk every day about iheir future plana of life, and they were as prudent and economical as they could be. This he considered waa doing all he could do, in their present cir cumstances. Thus be was willing to take, thought for the morrow in the sense of planning and contriving for it, but not in the s nse of being anxioua aod unhappy abcut it. His temperament made thia easy. B n Mrv tt-s always running forward iii.d h-ivering over tuture imaginary sor-r..-.vs. Hrr temperament made this natu- , rl to bus. She found in it a sort of painful pleasure, or pleasant pain, which evtr expression the reader may consider least paradoxical. Anticipating trouble is generally very superfluous suffering, for, as every one wi'l observe, in looking back upon his past li e, the evils we look forward to, and ex pect, very generally do not come ; and off the other hand, those which actually coma are those we did not expect. A: any rata it was so in this case, for George never came near to actual want. He bad soma' t l . t . I 1 ; ' lieciiauiiTNi latent, aiiu mis lugfruuiiy wee stimulated by his situation ; so his neigh- -bors used to bring bim at Prst their utensils' and implements to repair, paying him ia' labor on his land, or in the produce of their own. He sold off a large part ol his own' farm, reserving only a garden spot near the house, which he and Mary cultivated.' and the proceeds were gradually invested Wns Illlcu u y will, 9d.iri0, unit a.u,9 mn.nui.it K!a llllttlnjSS i ff rOlt M A St nil ' cit i .... U I.. mw.l i k- r . - . he sat, day after day, at his shop window, which looked across his yard to his house, i , t . L : I r or movea NOWiy nuoui ins g,aiuen, iiiuw Fergus by his side, and Mary presiding nr a scene of neatness and plenty within.' J it was thought mat tnere waa noi a nappier family within five miles or the WirMinaf-. Pond. In fact, George used to sy he"; believed that be had got on irt the worlds better without his tegs, than be stooia base dona with them. This Winding Pond was a long irr gr- t nAn nf ..1 . m. n rt r n ,NWiin k,iK - wooded promontories, and ioto dark val leys ; its shores) indented' with bay, and" ' its surlace spotted with picturesque ialsndsv It was in tha midst of a grand ampbitbea- tre of mountain end forest scerJery, from among which the little groups of farm buildings peeped our here and there in tba openings. At the dis'anceof a few miles the towering crags of the mnontams frown- i ed upon the whole. In the winter season', the peiiodat which thi story commences thmuohout the whose wf its irreg- ... --, ular extension, was wmie low iwnwi chiefly evergreen, were dark, and tha ai"V lain summits gray. v V(bf tbe bouse.