GENESEE .giNgilig. 7 --Whole No. 746. lade phis correspondent sends us the lowing;Nehich he thinks - sontitetat - Opal vas of the instonoeslareught to liighti in , ' . r:nals of the Pons" . b' stun' 44 italways interest, the record . ..of 'B's' _.evangi the suffering in the eitys' ORM TUB WAY. Aorees *warty there attinde.a-tivrollin .Neither,gloomy e grand, , or . ,:gay; 'Net eitraetive. not repelling— You have passed knietty,a'dey. Kota note of joy or swinges To my hearing ever flovied; Sorrow'splaisti . or musie's gladness, From Mit 4Met,,,oeita 'abode. b • : • Deteaa, gaily.g • ding, 'Mid her purple, like a star. But within the window ever, ..Morning, evening, shine,• or-rain, A maiden, pale from /Ong endeavor, • The needle plies with might and main. Needless of the joy that dashett O'er the pavement•by her door, Or the glare that furtune flashes, Tiles that•needlii evermore. •Save, perchance, whop summer blazes, And the zephyrs faintly play, Iler gentle hand the•window raises, In the house across the way. And with thoughtful.care she places; Near.tbe sash an elbow chair, Then, with slow and tottering paces Leads a feeble mother there. Still but short the time she lingers, Though to pious dut,f true, 'Soon again heti:amble - fingers Whirl. the rapid f stitches througL What sustains her patient spirit the,dearth ofjoy and hope? Where the world extols our merit, All with evils well may cope. But when toil is linked with itotirow, °are, and solitu4e, an 4,000112, nd 'tis known the coming morrow Will no brighterroy assume, There, with those who baffet longest, Longest atom tniefortune'i ware.; 'Where the warfare tasks the strangest, ,Feeble woman ehatnee the bran! Virtue, with befitting glory, Crowned, rewarded, all willeee, When with heroev, known in story, High ehall woman's record be. Bet, slat! her gentle giusei, Shrinking still from mortel,Big4l6 Glowing pencil never traces,' Poet's pee will never write. '• Yet Oambright immortal Veriults Ridden 'virtues shalt dieplity Tuna; if not on arch or colonial, : Lives ttte,name aormalzo ' ' gooAn MASQUE. 3VOlttqlOititsiteS. Tor me.Amegietwitteaboion. UTTER. FROM TEE N. T. WILDERNESS. :Mclntyre, MO= CINO N 4 lry• .Auguat eth, .1860. My last letter left our party asleep in'Walton 'Club Camp on Baguette Lake, August-2d. The next morning .was to restive the companyinto two divisioni, the , one porpoeing to•retnain a few .days longer, and.thett pass out by-either ,thetgara ,tuto route, or by Broern'sTract r as they had come .—the other, consistingof Messrs. 'Fowler, Board -maw, Dewey, and your oorrespondent, - intending to ;make 'the foot tour of .the Adirmidacks, and reach home ultimately by way of Lake:Champlain. Although a division of the tarty bad been con templated from the trat, yet when the time came, the thought of taking two different pathe„ and of no longer enjoying the lively and pleasant inter course of the whole band, was not an agreeable one. Those whom we were te leave behind, though acquaintanees before, had grown upon our appreciation as we saw them in the free, and natural, and spontaneous character of woodsmen. They had been honored as citizens, as Christians, as business -or. professional men'; but we knew -them now no longer at a distance, and under stiff, social forms, but in all those fresh, boy-like ha pulses, which, after all, no man can afford to lose. A FOOT ZOVEINEY or 180 MILES-Not) SYMVATHY ASK .D. With hearty good wishes on all sides, .the part ing hand was given, a salute of two guns rang out over the lake, and we moved off to the inter section of the Roquette, with the so-called - " Black River road," which was to lead us to thnAdira dack lower iron works, and thence to Crown Point. This with the contemplated detour to .Mt. Marcy and the Indian Pass, would make a foot journey of one hundred and thirty Miles. The Black. River vottglovhich extends , ftdm Crown Point through theentire wilderness to Lowville, in Lewis. Co., was laid out sometyearnsincennder the patronage of the State. From the Raquette westward fifty-five miles it is seldom used, has no settlements, and has almost ceased to be a road. From the , same point eastward it runs mostly through a denso remit, though a clearing `and a borne may be . founiff every: few miles, and, some large tracts by the way•side--thousanda of acres in extent have been desolated by accidental fires. The soil of this mountain range being very poor, and the climate at such' altitudeelielbg Coo cold for wheat or corn, or any kind of orchard-fruits, the rewards -of the farmer's toil- Ate of course scanty, and, he is compelled to eke out the re sources of the. plough and hoe, by:those of the rifle awl the Roll ;rod. We set out on.this wilderness road , Angwit with knapsacks of from fifteen to twenty pounds each, besides guns: and rads, Let no one who has been. panting under , the fervors of an August sun in the cities, waste Oifyupon us as way-Worn travellers, well nigh overcome with dust and heat; for these mountain forests are cool and dank, our path is overshadowed, or only.ideppled with cm ("anal gleams of, the sunk, instead of dust the air is laden with the peculiar and refreshing smell of the woods, and at short intervals n;clear and beautiful spring flows at , our feet We move-on leisurely; free from All care and' all.restraint, 'en joying a wide range of cheerful conversation in which the past is reviewed, authon3 discussed, and the great religious and political interests of the present and the future presented in various lights. Now a flock of partridges, or a trout brook, de mands a temporarildigression, and now we turn aside to a snug lothousefor dinner,: and with knapsaokfor a pillow stretch ourse/ves upon the ground, while the ample but abundant. mipast 'is . made ready. Notwithstanding the 'lucky/heat ,and the ,sugar maple I, tin combined product , otthese, .jurtapositionWhiehoery reader ~. is 'never to 111- refitted, hrtlie When the good Itouse4tife , has delieiotta maples BYrup , ,With Jan iltnlY "hnmezmade sugar," ;the it t r n tilkany;pardohed , end geeoi4l ) speckledt, , trOut ;hat% .:beett :ac cepted .without remonatrapciel s.a ,tolerable sub etitute for " boughtenv mackerel andteeddek. We have invariably. faredsumptubusly. :Even when we have foul 'no houses 'on our route and heen oompeljed -to. enkindle our own fire in. the woods, ;au boll coffee in our,' only cooking R44.7-401mal« s d broil l out trmison. on a'rp s ,and v 0 ; birch bark plate, and then adjourn to the neighbor ing raspberry bushes fora dessert, we lave kieatly eulgyed the repast—seasoned as it was with that best of condiments, a backwoods appetite. !wing CIJATUOTEIt OF THE I'oPITLATION — RELIGION IN On the whole we hare been .pleased with these scattered families whom we have found in various localities on our way. They are little affected by the commercial anxieties,,or political excitement, or social ambitions which disturb the citizen's breast. They follow their own fashions of dress and manner, with no thanks to Paris or New York. They are hosPitable and obliging, and are certainly `not eiorbitant, as they often hesitate between a charge of twelve, or of eighteen cents for dinner. 'They are natural and self-posiessed in tl:tir course with strangers of whatever rank or pre tension, andmany of them are acquainted with experimental piety, and are members of a Metho -dist cheiell Which has existed for some years at Long Lake: On each 'Sabbath we haVe met a handful of these people at.BolllB place of religious worship, and seine ones Of our party has preached to them the simple truth of the gospel.. In two instance; we have found little Sabbath schpois of a dozen petals, taught by two or three faithful women.. In whit 'corner of the world where the , not "find` has been made known at all, will you not 'find' the influence of `the' Christian woman? She is the true pioneer: ' She is first and hilt in _her the .11"lestei's` cause. 'W"herever the field is 'most hopeless, end_ the beginnings of religious influence - legblest, and the 'diaeOuragement and rppositiOn' of the world greaten, her prayer will *teed aline 'need he, and gentle hand. will put forth to id* the seeds ,of the, truth. She - Will gather the - prayer:•cirele and fortu 'tic 'little Sallbith schonl, and lai the foundation's of the church. " idlater generations the honored'names of•iitla Men will perhaps appear conspicuously in the earthly history of that church, but in the last great day she, whose gentler and humbler in fluence welftrat vatifltqdttree3tal t thoughdong since forgotten„ shall he placed high in honor among iedeemed,und shine as the stars in the firina intent • forever. We could but revere theie few mothers and sisters in Christ, as in the _presence of several men, some of whom were strangers, they endeavored faithfully to instruct their little Clesset; the word of life. lire did not fail to speak words of encoutagemerit - M 'them and unite - our prayers with theirs'for their success. The simple areas and Manners which appear in theselittle gatherings, are of course very far from conformity to the styles of high life. Instead of the- rustle of :oostly 'silks, and the rich:display of ".snoop-shovelthuts," you tee'tire plain dalico dress with