330 Civdt. THE GLORIOUS PSALMS Sing me the Psalms ! the glorious Psalms of old, That sounded first upon Judea's plains ; All other music lifeless seems and cold, , Beside the melody of David's strains. Sing me the Psalms that echoed from the hills, Those favored hills, where Israel's sons had birth, Wake, wake each harmony the soul that fills With rapture, more allied to heaven than earth ! Bing Psalms of praise when• victory , is given O'er outward foes, or over hosts unseen ; Johovah Jah still reigns in earth and heaven, As strong to save as He hath ever been. Sing, when the earth is clad in softest green ; Join Psalms of gladness to the birds' sweet g ; Praise son Israel's Shepherd, when His hand is seen ' Leading Ihy steps the quiet streams along. Bing, when all nature wears a snowy shroud ; When ice-bound fountains into torrents rush; When azure skies are veiled behind the cloud, Let wondering praises from thy Psaltery gush. • Sing me the Psalms, even when the burning tear Tells of departure from the narrow way ; Oft David's song was sad when he was here ; O'erwhelmed with sin, he turned to weep and pray. Sin I though affliction swelleth like a tide. When deep to deep calls, in thine hour of woe; Thine anchor's safe within the Rock's cleft side; Billows may toss, but cannot overflow. Sing David's Psalms, when earthly light grows dim, 40 And ev'ry conflict but the last is o'er ; Bid mourners join in the triumphant hymn, That wings thy spirit to the heavenly shore! —Selected. CELESTIAL VISITORS. The following lines were written by the late Mrs. Balmer, on visiting one of the churches in London, where she was wont to worship, after a time of severe affliction in which she had lost several of her friends. "Who are these whose soft and shadowy light Falls like a sunbeatu thro' an evening cloud? Oh, they are hosts of sainted spirits bright, Who once beneath this hallowed temple bow'd, • Bat now escaped from earth away, Tread the bright pavement of the skies ; Yet love to linger, love to stay, Where first they learned to weep and pray, On wings of faith to rise. " Oh, they are those whose bosoms glowed With zeal for thy prosperity ; Whose glistening eyes with tears o'erilowed, Jerusalem thy joy to see : Thy sacred gates unseen they throng; Unheard they join the choral song ; They cleave the realms of lucid air, With cherub lyres, Seraphic choirs, The solemn joys to share. "A cloud of witnesses they stand, A diadem'd, illustrious band, And urge us to proceed ; To lead the trophied armies on, To spoil the foe, to take the crown, And win the world to God." MATCHES. BY THE MISSES WARNER, AUTHORS OF THE "WIDE, WIDE WORLD,',' "OLD HELMET," &C. Chapter 11. And where did you learn to cry matches, my boy ? I think it would take me some time to get my voice into such order,'—for Johnny's cry had rung round the streets, finding its way in a sort of wiry fashion into every corner. The speaker was a young man with a pleasant face, and a voice which certainly was good for his purposes. It was a day when Johnny had been kicked and beaten and abused till he was, as be said, 'half dead;' and now very weary and hopeless he wandered along with his basket, of matches, from which as yet people had - bought nothing. That voice was the pleasantest thing Johnny had heard to . day, and the kind face the pleasantest thing he had seen. So instead of answer big he looked up at it. ' Where did you learn ?' repeated the gentleman. Johnny's face darkened again. guess I learned it here,' he said, slapping his pooket,—'and here,'he add ed, turning back the cuff of his ragged jacket and shewing a long bruise. 'My poor fellow,' said the gentleman, is that the way you liVe ?'- ' Pretty much so, sir,' said Johnny, 'Taint so bad, times—and times it's worse.' 'Where are you going this morning ? Just round, sir,—but everybody's got matches to-day. Guess. I shan't get .home to-night.' ' I want sixpence worth,' said the gentleman, taking out a bright coin. What do you mean by your not going home to-night ?' Can't go home till I've sold my matches,' said Johnny, shaking his head. There's six of the biggest boxes, sir,- them's real full.' ' Are some fuller than the others ?' said his friend, as he put the boxes in his own coat pocket. 4 Well—they may be,' said Johnny in differently. "All customers ain't alike, neither.' 'Did you ever go to Sunday-school ?' said the gentleman. 'No school, of mil Kind; said Johnny, not since I can remember.' ''Well suppose you come to mine next Sunday ? It's in that red brick hoise on the corner.' ' Suppose I do,' said Johnny, looking up at his questioner,—'what then ?' Then I'll try to teach you that the difference in customers ought to make no difference in the match-boxes.' Ah, but it can't help it,' said Johnny. Some folks is good and I'll give you a lift, and some most puts their hands in your pockets to get what ain't there.' ' Yes, but that must not make any difference,' said Johnny's. new friend; that's not the way God deals with us.' Aint it ?' said the boy. Well I don't know,—we don't have much'to do with him any way.' Oh yes you do,' said the gentleman. He hears everything you say,and knows every thing you do.' `Think so?' said Johnny. Well,does he like to hear cursing and swearing, and lying and such like?' No indeed, it displeases him very much.' Then I don't see why he don't burn our house down,' said JOlnny, arranging his basket strap and making ready for a move. ' Ah that is just because he is so very good—so kind to us. And because Jesus pleads for us. Did you - ever hear about the Lord Jesus Christ ?' `Not much,' said Johnny, Well come to my school next Sunday and I'll teach you,' said the gentleman. And now listen. Jesus gave his life for you, that , you might live. And he wants you to be good, and is very much grieved and displeased whenever you do wrong; but if you love him and trust to him, he will take care of you for ever. Pray to him, beg him to make you his child ; and the Lord bless you!' The gentleman went on his way, and Johnny trudged along with his basket, down, down, to the' Fulton - ferry ; for this day he was going over to Brooklyn to drive his trade there. The day was pretty successful ; but as he came back at night a gentleman on the boat bought some matches from the little basket, and handed. Johnny a piece of money which proved to be a two and a half gold piece. I do not know whether the gentleman meant to give him such a sum, or whether it was an accident: however, Johnny took it home to his father, who was quite delighted to see so much money. And the next morning, Sunday though it was, he sent off for a gallon , of brandy. There was a dreadful scene in the house after that,until at last Johnny was so worn out with scolding and abuse that he got leave to g 0 out; and once in the street he started for the red brick house where his new friend kept Sunday-school. It was a mile off, but Johnny limped gladly along—anything was better than hoine! Those little children who go to Sunday school know well what beautiful things are taught there, and can guess what music the sweet words and kind voices were to Johnny's ears. And those of you who do not know, must go the very next Sunday and find out. From this time Johnny went every Sunday when his father would give him leave ; and his father—finding out that Johnny liked to go = told him that he should have leave whenever he had brought in a good- deal of money the week before ; but if he had sold few matches through the week then homust stay at home on Sunday. And soon he would not let him go at all. Then Johnny tried running away, and did not go home at all for several days and nights, he, and one of his little brothers. The first night the two boys slept in the coal box at a grocer's door, and the next night the same way ; and the next night they paid for a trip on one of the ferry boats, and then curled themselves up on the deck to sleep. But when the b )at was moored and all quiet, one of the deck hands came along and saw the two boys in the corner. And when he heard their story, he took' them down stairs and gave them some tea and bread and butter, and then bade them, go to , sleep on the floor of the engine room. How would y,ou like that, little children ? Would you think that was something to be thankful 'for?. How glad Johnny would have been to sleep so warm every night I Butt that might not be. • , Next day the boys were found and brought home, and then treated worse than ever; and ,Johnny resolved that the next time he ran away, it should be to some place where his father would not find him. 'LETTER-WRITING Did you ever think what a good thing a good letter is ? .1 was looking the, other day, over a bundle of old letters, the writer of whom is in rebeldom, and I sadly fear, a rebel, but whose. name is dear to any heart, as the fragrance of flowers, in the spring. No word has passed between us, since the dark hour when old Virginia • erased her name from her country's, roll of honor, and took, the downward step, which- plunged her so low, but here, in the sweet soulful letters of my friend, she came back to me. I seemed to hear, the low. clear voice to - See the smiling lip, and the seft, kind eyes of my darling. The little gossip abodt home, so trifling in itself, but so pleasant to 'the ear of a friend, the womanly allusions, to ribbons .and rings, and bonnets, and dresses, and the sweet er iages, wherein together we communed of the things which are beyond all price, of the Savior, whpse name is above every name, how vividly they brought back the past. And then the last letter, in which, with the blindness of a Southern woman, she exclaimed; "Many and bitter have been the wrongs of my poor South, but yet I hope, Virginia will not seqede. I hoped and-prayed that Mr. L. might not be elected, but God has willed it other wise.,, One stormy day last winter, I was looking over some old school-books. From the leaves of a grammar, there fell a tiny folded - paper. rtook it and found in the well-known hand of a beloved teacher, these words: " Whether you eat or drink, or what- .E'HILADELPHLI., 'THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1864. ever ye do, do all to the glory of, God!' Straightway I remembered, how one day I had gone to this lovely lady, the idol of my childish day's, with a case of conscience, and this had been her re ply. Years ago, " she passed through glory's morning-gate, and walked in Paradise !" but though dead, she still speaks. It is a matter of regret that married ladies so often give up their correspon dence. Engrossed in domestic cares, they gradually become weaned from the friends of girlhood, and they lose a great means of intellectual culture, besides shutting up one of those sweet springs of friendship, whose bubbling waters keep the heart ever fresh. People seem to make a bugbear of letter-writing. You shall hear a young girl, whose lively, talk and winning ways make her the life of her little circle, declare that she "never can 'write a decent letter, her ideas take flight the moment she takes the pen in her hand.". The great trouble is, that letter-writ ers usually want to produce something sentimental, or beautiful or particularly proper and correct. They appear in let ters as they do in photographs, in their best clothes, without a spot or a wrinkle, every muscle forced to rigid stillness, every hair in its place. When you get the letter and sit down to it, expecting a feast of friendship, it is as if, for bouquet of June roses, one sent you an herbarium, or for a luster of scented leaves, rustling of the Spring, a beauti fully prepared phantom. Write as you talk, friends, and Your letters will come home to the heart, as you would yourself. Write, as the mother to her soldier boy, as the wife to her husband, pacing the night long on the picket line, as the sol dier to his wife; on the eve of the battle. Write such warm breathing, earnest, " live" letters as Farragut and Sherman write, with nothing Napoleonic or stilted in their style, but with a great-deal heart whole, and American. First have some thing to say—next say it. M. E. M. A correspondent of the Bangor Whig narrates the following incident, which recently came under his observation : '‘ On the stage were seven or eight soldiers from the Bth Maine regiment— . civil, well behaved, intelligent men, as was apparent from their conversation. While at the stage-house in Lincoln, there came into the grace p"o"or old blind man—stone blind—sloWly reeling his way with his cane. He approached the soldiers and said in gentle tones, Boys, I hear you belong to the Bth regiment, I have a son in thal regiment.' What is his name ?' 'John—,' 'Oh yes, we know him well. He was a ser geant in our company ; we always liked him. He is now a lieutenant in a colored regiment, and a prisoner at Charleston.' " For a moment the old man ventured not to reply; but at last, slowly and sadly, he said: feared as much. I have not heard from him for a very long tim "Without waiting for another word, these soldiers took from their wallets a sum of money, amounting to twenty dol lars and offered it to the old•man,saying at the same time. 'lf our company was here we would give a hundred dollars.' The old man replied, ' Boys, you must put it in my wallet for me, for I am blind.' "But mark what follow,ed. Another individual in the room wholtad loOked on this scene as I had, with feelings, of pride in our citizen soldiers, advanced, and said : ' Boys this is a handsome thing, sand I. want you to drink with me.' I stand, treat for the company.' I waited, with interest, for the reply. It came— 'No sir, we thank you kindly. We ap `preciate your offer, but we never drink!' The scene was perfect—the first act was noble, was generous; the last, was grand." "We want a peculiar man at our place." Yes, and in the next town the people want a peculiar man also. There is a growing demand everywhere for peculiar ministers. Even the older churches, that have had the , reputation of being staid, and not carried about by every wind,have caught the idea. They have found out that they must ,have. a, peculiar man for their young people. And the tastes of the people have become so various that it does require a singular man to meet . them all. But what is to be done with ministers who are not peculiar?" men of common sense, sound judgment and sound learn ing,; sober, prudent, pious men; men who:are able to teach others, an are suited to be wise counsellors ? whose character and influence are unequivocal? We are aware that an eccentric man, who is given to saying odd and strange things, is more amusing and attractive to the young ; and that common sense and refined taste are not commoditieS that secure one great eclat in the world. But ought it not be considered whether the influence of the former is equally salutary, and as well suited to secure the salvation of souls ? Doubtless God has called ninety-nine sober-minded men to preach the gospel, where he has called one peculiar man. If so, it is by their instrumentality in the main that the cause of Christ is to be carried on, and sinners saved, peculiar ministers being the exception, and not the rule. Did not good sense and eminent fitness ffdertiono. WE NEVER DRINK PECULIAR MINISTERS in things characterize our Saviou'r and the religion he taught, rather than oddity and eccentricity ? Would not the churches of Christ have more dignity, and exert a more salutary and saving influence, by educating the young to pay greater deference to the ordinary and divinely appointed means of grace, than by attempting to gratify their desire for novelty and entertainment ? a desire which, the more it is fed, the less it is satisfied. Though the young might be less highly pleased, would they not be more contented? Though fewer were attracted by human means, would not more be drawn by the Spirit's power ? We do not object to peculiar ministers in their places, but do protest against a growing depreciation of, and disgontent with, the ordinary ministry of the word as God has appointed it; a depreciation and discontent which have been greatly fostered by the novel reading and popular lecturing of the day, and which are sadly affecting the stability and spiritual use fulness of the churches.- Watchman and Reflector. A STORY F.OR FATHERS I was reading lately of a little boy who was trying to be like God, by being a giver. He loved to give. He would go to his father sometimes half a dozen times in a day, with his bright eyes sparkling, and his little round face all in a glow, and say, " Pa, _I want a pen ny to give 'to a poor beggar at the door," or "to the organ-grinder," or "to the little girl that wants cold victuals." And then, on Sunday mornings he would come and ask for something for the Sunday school Missionary Society, and for many other things. His .father wanted him to form the habit of giving while he was young, and so he always let him have what he wanted. But one day when he came to ask for something, his father said to him, "My son don't you think you give away a great deal of money?" "Why, yes, pa," said he, "and I do so love to give." "But then you come to me for all you give. It's not your own money that you are so liberal with." This seemed to be a new thought to the little fellow, and he turned away to his play, perplexed a little by what his father had said to him. Presently, however, he came running back. "Papa," he asked, "rho. gives you the money that you give away ?" " I earn it by hard labor, my son." "But who gives you strength to la bor with, pa ?" asked the little fellow. "God gives us our strength," said his father. "And, pa, haven't you often told me that God gives us everything?" " Yes, my son, every good thing we have God gives us." "Well, pa, I love to give away the money God gives us ; don't you love to give away the money God gives you?" The father hugged the little boy in his arms and kissed him; gave him what he wanted and let him go. And then that father sat down to think over the question which his dear child had asked him. Like a great many other people, he had forgotten that the money which he had was not his own, but God's. All the money in the world belongs to God. In one place in the Bible God says, " The silver is mine, anti the gold is mine." (Hag. ii. 8.) God doesn't give us money to keep; he only lends it to us, to use for him, and to do good with it. And when we die he will call us to give an account of the use we have made of it. God loves to give, and he loves tcrhave his people give. God is such a wonderful giver, that when' he found we could not be saved or be happy in , any other way, " He gave his only `begotten Son" to die for us. And when we learn to give, and love to give, we become. like God in this respect." "It is more blessed to give than to receive," then, because it is more like God.—Chiltes Paper. BEAUTIFUL ANECDOTE OF A GREAT MAN Sir William Napier was one day taking along country walk near Freshford, when he met a little girl, about five years old, sobbing over a broken bowl;'she had dropped and broken it in bringing it back from the field`to which she had taken her father's dinner in it, and she said she would be beaten on her return "home for having'broken it; then, with a sudden gleam-of hope, she innocently looked up into his face said, "But ye can mend it, can't ye ?" My father , explained that he could not mend the bowl, but the trouble he could;' by the gift of a six pence ;to buy another. However, on opening his purse it was empty of silver, and he had to make amends by promising to meet his little friend in the same hour next day, and to bring• the' sixpence with him, bidding her, meanwhile, tell her mother she had seen a gentleman who would bring her the money for the bowl the next day. The child, entirely trusting him, went on her way com forted. On his return home he found an:invitation awaiting him to dine in Bath the following vening to meet some one whom he specially wished to see. He hesitated for some little time, trying to calculate the possibility of giving the meeting to his little friend of - the broken bowl, and of still being in time for the dinner party in Bath ; but finding this could not be, he wrote to decline accept ing the invitation on the plea of a "pre vious engagement," saying to us, "I can not disappoint her, she, trusted me so implicitly." DOMESTIC ECONOMY "E. H. M.,". in Moore's Rural .New Yorker, makes the following suggestions to mistresses of households : I have a slate hanging in my pantry with pencil attached, upon which we are accustomed to write down such domestic concerns as need attention. For in stance, upon one side of it is now writ ten, " Send for corn-meal, starch and lamp chimney." "Examine butter-fir kin. ' " Engage onions of Mr. Allen to-morrow." These are for my own at tention, while upon the other side the girl- is reminded to " Brown coffee; gather beans for drying." "Scald the bread box." " Wash cellar shelves." Whenever I find any little item that needs attention either from myself or the girl, I trust it to my slate, and find it much safer than to run the risk of remembering it at the right time. You often hear housekeepers exclaiming, "There,- I forgot entirely to send for 'such a thing-•—or do such a thing, and now it is too late." Try the slate. ANOTHER.—Beside the slate hangs a small blank book, also furnished with a pencil, in which I keep an account of my household expenses. The pages are variously' headed, "Flour," " Sugar," " Meat, " Butter," &c., with an extra Page for sundries. At the right hand corner of the page, above, I put the amount which I have decided by careful estimate is all we can afford to spend monthly, or yearly, (I have tried both ways) for the article designated. Then I enter every purchase made under its appropriate head, giving date, quantity, price and amount. At the close of each month it is easy to see whether we live within our income or not. You farmer's wives may think this neither possible nor useful for you, but I assure ,you if you would once try it you would find a satisfaction from it that would abundantly repay the trouble. I re commend it most earnestly, however, for the wives of salaried men, and me chanics whose income is fixed, and who purchase the staples for their family consumption. LITTLE FANNY Little Fanny was a child tenderly be loved and cherished, perhaps more so that her father filled a soldier's honored grave, and she was all to the widowed mother. When that terrible and malignant dis ease, the small-pox, broke out in the neighborhood, her mother was so anxious for her treasure that, to escape contagion, she kept her closely in the house, and helelf crept in and out through a nar row window, and scarcely dared to move, lest she should catch the infection and carry it to her darling. At last she made up her mind to send Fanny to her uncle, in another part of the city, but on communicating her intention to Fanny herself, the child asked : " Is God at Uncle Henry's, mother ?" " I hope so, Fanny," was the mother's reply. "And is God here, too, mother ?" The mother replied that he was. " Then will he not take care of me here just the same as at Uncle Henry's if he does not want me to have the small pox?" A child's faith The mother had been troubled and careful about many things, while the child leaned trustingly on the hope she held in her heart. This is not a solitary case. Many other children as.young as little Fanny, have early given their hearts to God, with a depth of love and faith that will carry safely through; and, children, it is infinitely better.to give the morning bloom; yet sparkling with the dew of innocence, than to wait for the sere and withered leaves of evening time. —Christian Times. CORRECT SPEAKING We would advise all young people to acquire, in early life, the habit of correct speaking and writing ; ar.d to abandon; as early as possible, any use of slang, words and phrases. Tie longer you live the more difficult the acquire ment, of correct language will be ; and if the golden age of youth, the proper season for the acquisition of language, be passed in its abuse, the unfortunate victim if neglected is, very properly, doomed to talk slang for life. Money is not necessary to procure this educa tion. Every man has it in his power. He has merely to use the language which he reads, instead of slang which he hears ; to form his taste from: the best speakers and poets in the country ; to treasure up choice phrases-in his memo ry, and habituate himself to their use, avoiding at the same time that pedantic precision, and bombast which show the weakness of vain ambition rather than the polish of an edueated mind. THE SECRET. There were two little sisters at one house, whom nobody could see without loving, for they were always so happy together. They had the same books and the same playthings, but never a quarrel sprung up between them—no cross words, no pouts, no slaps, no run ning away in a pet. On the green be fore the door, trundling a hoop, playing with Rover, helping mother -they were the same sweet-tempered little girls. " You never seem to quarrel," I said to them one day ; "how is it -you are al ways so happy together ? " They look ed up, and the eldest answered, "I 'spose 'tis 'cause Addie lets me and I let Addie." I thought a moment. " Ah, that is it," I said, " she lets you and you let her ; that's it." THE OYNIO. The Cynic is one who'never sees a good qu ality in a man, and never fails to sees bad one. He is the human owl, vigilant in darkness and blind to light, mousing for vermin, and never seeing noble game. The Cynic puts all human actions into only two ,classes—openly bad and se. cretly bad. All, virtue and generosity and disinterestedness are merely the op. pearance of good, but- selfish at the bot tom. He' holds that no man does a good thing except for profit. The ef fect of his conversation upon your feel ings is to chill and sear them ; to send you away sore and morose. ' His criti cisms and inuendoes fall indiscrimi nately upon every lovely thing, like frost upon flowers. If a,man is said to be pare and chaste, he answers: Yes, in the day time. If a woman is pronoun ced virtuous, he will reply:' Yes, as yet.. Mr. A. is a religious man : Yes, on bun days. Mr. B. has just joined the church: Certainly : the elections are coming on. the minister of the gospel is called an example of diligence: it is--his trade. Such a man is generous: Of other men's money : That man is obliging :To lull suspicion and cheat you. This man is up right : Because he is green. Thus his eye strains out every good quality, and takes in only the bad,—as the vulture, when in the highest heaven, will sail by living flocks and herds, but comes like an arrow down upon the smallest car cass. To him religion is hypocrisy, honesty a preparation for fraud, virtue only want of opportunity, and, undenia ble purity, asceticism. .The live-long day he will coolly sit with sneering lip, uttering sharp speeches in the quietest manner, and in polished phrase, trans fixing every character which is pre sented : _His words are softer, than oil, yet are_ they drawn swords.—Ps. lv. 21. All this, to the young, seems a won derful knowledge of human nature; they honor a man who appears to have found out mankind. They' begin to in dulge themselves in flippant sneers; and with supercilious brow, and impudent tongue, wagging to an empty brain, call to naught the wise, the long tried, and the venerable. I do believe that man is corrupt enough ; but something of good has sur vived his wreck; something of evil reli gion has restrained, and something par tially restored ; yet, I look upon the human heart as a mountain of fire. I dread the crater. I tremble when I see its lava roll the fiery stream. There fore, I am the more glad, if upon the old crust of past eruptions, I can find a. single flower springing up. A flower in a howling wilderness, is yet more pre cious to the pilgrim, because the lonely tenant of desolation. So far from re jecting appearances of virtue in the corrupt, heart of a depraved race, I am eager to see their light as ever mariner was to see a star in a stormy night. Moss will grow upon grave-stones; the ivy will cling to the mouldering pile; ,the mistletoe springs from the dying branch; and God be praised, something green, something fair to the sight and grateful to the heart, will yet twine around and grow out of the seams and cracks of the desolate temple of the human heart ! Who could walk through Thebes,. Palmyra, or Petrica, and survey the wide waste of broken arches, crumbled altars, fallen pillars, effaced cornices, toppling walls, and crushed statues, with no feelings but those of contempt? Who, unsorrowing, could see the stork's nest upon the carved pillar, satyrs danc ing on marble pavements, and hateful scorpions nestling where beauty once dwelt, and dragons the sole tenants of royal palaces ? Amid such melancholy magnificence, even the misanthrope might weep ! If here and there an altar stood unbrnised, or a graven column nnblighted, or a statue nearly perfect, he might well feel love fora man-wrought stone, so beautiful, when all else is so dreary and desolate. Thus, though man is a desolate city, and his pa4sions are as the wild beasts of the wilderness howling in kings' palaces, yet he is God's workmanship, and a thousand touches of exquisite beauty remain.. Since Christ path ` put his sovereign. band to restore man's ruin, many points are remoulded, and the fair form of a. new fabric already appears growing from the ruins, and the first faint flame glimmering upon the restored altar. It is impossible to indulge 'in such habitual severity of opinion upon our fellow men, without injuring the tender ness and delicacy of our own feelings. A man will be what his most cherishd feelings are. If he encourages appe tites, he will be not far from beastly; if he encourage a noble generosity, such will he be; 'if he nurse bitter and en-- •venomed thoughts, his own spirit will absorb the poison, and he will crawl among men as a burnished 'adder, whose life is mischief, whose errant is death. Although experience should correct the indiscriminate confidence of the young, no experience should render them callous to - goodness wherever seen. He who hunts for flowers, will find flowers; but he who Mints for vermin, will find vermin; and,- he who loves weeds, may find weeds. Let it be re membered that no naan,.Wlio is not him self mortally diseased,-will have a relish for -disease in others. A:swollen wretch, blotched all over with leprosy, may grin hideously at, every wart or excrescence upon beauty. A wholesome man will be pained atit, and seek not to notice it. Reject, then, the morbid ambition of the Cynic, or cease to call yourself a man !—.71. W. Beecher. "BEGINNING TO WALK." He's•not got his sea legs, the darling He's been in our ship but a year ; He isn't yet versed in oar lingo— Knows nothing of sailing, I fear. But he soon will hear more of the billows, .A.nd learn the salt taste of the wave, One voyage, though short, is sufficient, When our ports are the cradle and grave. —Chambers' Journal.