ADDRESS to'raa row" or stir DESOCILITIC • WATOBLiN._ A flea (owe outward on the ireeeebeee To pia thermals! ages-paesed-hereee '- Asotber eleroutelec of • time has died, Another were been broken tni thishOwt. Row many hopes are mingled to the sore, • Which dashes outward on the boatels shore flow many *kitbag Tolosa souid the dirge Of human hearts which throbbed but s throb no Won, t _ The young act blthiminga (i►a Spring'. early • ti3/erit . llaGlpaseedaw►y Isiltives-rtsvearhig • • And rueehrhere vigor, with the Summer show'te, Been lowly‘laid beneath the duet of death. Th, a aged and Ipvble,•liba the witheed leaver, Son drcioptuNd fallen in Autumnal gloom, And o'er the duet of ill; cold Winter grieves, "And amp, bib snowy niantlelnund their tomb. Bit 1;1 the old yeaflie where 110 hen fell, No stangth of ours. can call hint bask again ; Will pails to road khe tali his record' tell, And new hie marls upon the works of men. the yore .. .lust gone-decrepit, old and gray, Alka•d! us earth the tribute of a sigh, /or all the human Itepeklui hors swiy; Ire he Agree eonquetor, war oalisrdAo dje. And now, whatnots on the slew Tear's scroll gbalthe engraved by Time's ream:skims hand? *lst tide-nuirke, - Ite the:heaving billow' roll, Ebel be. recorded la the ohenging sand, met Eye alone which its a single view Beholds all time's divisions merged in one; tin pierce ttiii future's Mystic curtain through, And know the end before the year's begun. not for me to read the future o'er, Or call Its secrete from the hidden shore ; la rants and dream-books they may seek who • will. dud nnd the mystic tont* mysterious still; I Ititititly own it t bey?tid my pgiter Aml op I 'ma, e them all, and turn to tbe pees plain record, which r . know Is try,. la sorrow look we on ouPstriclNLlM _ erttshed down to dust beno . eth the bloods bend, While despots, "damned to eve hug aMe, Reap power and OAR from our 'gentry's shame, West, "the laureled wreath which murder wears, Blood-ourred and watered with a Widow's tears," Become the prize Cur whirl' our brethren die, While wails of mortal anguish read the sky. Fierce battler ebake the laud froth shore to shore, And brother bathes his hands in brother's gore; Above the sietk'uing sight our tla • droops low, les stripes grow'pale, its stars less brightly Oosr, 1 be eulphrous smoke of battle tills dver, .And scornful nations mock at otr-deSpair ; The Samertspow our-Atari At low, _ did sombre shad4Wafrlt our homes with woe. roaaeription reaejrilsi forth, with bloody hand, To eialm thaartiongth and vigor of the laud; !bile emafidieatious threaten from afar To hehi the bolo-lires of a foreign war; .-and plunge us deeper in tbe thickiung Rlnnm WblehfeeoSS to bang around our Neiion l 's tomb Is this the land which four short yew, ago Stood proudly tip and fared no earthly foe? Whose fag unfurled on earth's remotest seas, Whose 411.11.14 on resyr °duo. IfMita the breeze; Whose power was bit and feared in et 'ry dime; Whose laws defied the changing hand of Time; Wheats people, bappy,in pursuits of peace, Saw ev'ry year their wealth and power increase, Lihe brothers 'round the country's altars stood, Whtls each one labJred for the common good -Alas I the record of these fleeting ycars,, Traced in a stricken Nation's blood and tears ! Our people, governed by a Tyrant's nod, etouping, when smitten, to embrace the rod! And rushing lull, wban murder's minions call, Da fields or strife to suffer, bleed and fall; Led war wbieb wastes us, like the bluets of Dell, Wee proof bow deep and sadly we have fell I 111► t bead has wrougbt the deed, of death , and woo, Aeoll ck,„saged,s brother to • 1E6'041 foe? What demos stirred our countrymen to strife, dud lid - Thom forth against each other's life? What brain'tionceiced the work of deadly hate Which threatens now to seal oar country's fise? Who is the monster that rust bear the bleats Tor all our people's woes, and tsars, and.shame? Oo uk olbEugloma who o'orturned her throne, And Wed it Itial a 011.0i0i of their own ? lino deluged Surope In It. children's gore, And prayed long prayers, and drank, andlebeht, and swore T Who slew their sovereign for the love of God, Then ruled the people with an iron rod ? Who dwelt In Europe till the blood stained earth Spewed forth the monsters it had given birth, Then left their Imams, and with the brand of Cain, Ina in the Mayflower o'er the trackless main, To 'scepsetern justice at the people's hand, /led stir up discord In a distant laud f • then ask the troubled ghosts oflagpof, Who smote the friendly band thg_gare' them bread ? Who burned the home' of shop who welcome g•Y• Wtisa tirst . the Pilgrims came 1141.611/ the wave; Murdered Cho monarchs of OM western Sella, Nor spared the dying Indian's wife and Shad? Then uk who kindled persecutions dire, To-vent the Pilgrim father's godly ire; Pound sanction in the law for every dud changed the word of God to suit their will; Welcomed their brethren to a martyr's fate, /Lod hated witches with a Christian hate; Yellowed wherimer superstition lodi Destroyed the llving end condemned the - dm*? She children followed whore that parau trod, Veiled God their conscience", and their conscience God; Obeyed die proMptinp of their hearts akno, Malls "blither laws" by standards of their own, Reached forth to claim our country's minima, soil, - And keR% opr borders in perpetual koti I Itecosed our brother what the compact gunk, And fought to Wad Mm as ha bound ha Aare; Cursed 'Union when its ties Were !hop and strong, To renu the States asunder labored long, And when the bonds of linniiis•soworod for, Kindled tbs Amos of fratrfeddsi •sr. Nov Sag load's kills and vibe Welk ♦peak sad 40 4 Of dads which caused a gush of share la liteU But csownhag most glitanUe crime Which stands recorded ou the scroll of lime, that which set in modem deadly strife, 4424 Marshaled boats spinet the liation'a bra *Mob Mahal bk- blood oar road litarddia's dome, An 4 mind • dailot's throne above th tomb, Vtor moribieroso of them. ott . l 'Pilgrim ELM . Have mmiiilighted Ilroot$1•10o urea; ,/fr• tan Ouf =Val UMW% SIAM from StaU .10 romlo 0,1riotyr!oo• • bola of Ws; Usk tie of fefreariblp Our lamb tors apart, • " pliimteil li•teed lwarr Allitoric4l4l o d aArlo aglow, ZEMIZI be - Ail - I • tt : ): Vol, 10. And brouglit upon our country all its woe. ,Before the god of ‘ Justice let them stand, WI-0; wrought this work of evil in our land ; And wl(en to genee our countrymen return, .. When war's devouring flames bane ceased to burn, . When led no longer by a tyrint's *all, On them a people's vengeance mare will fall. Within the year whoselasotnents are no more, Whose latest sigh has dick upon the shore, Each Friday mare I've born, with witting feet, The tirATCIII9OI mita Bellefonte, from meat to street, To want the•Deople of the deeds of those Who stand beforo the world u freedom's foes, Who,hate the hemu with a deadly hate, And seek in blood to seal our Nation' fate ; Tlitotith-etorm ind mud, through heat and wintry blast, Through all the.ehanges of the seasons put, I've brought the Ilrwronuan round, the news to Aud warn you from the pit where Union fell. To warn you of the sunning tyrant's smile Who asked you fur the power a little while'. That he might seise the rights our charter gave And bind ilia white-man's limbs to free the slave. lle asked your vote that be might rule again, And , bed the life-blood of our fellow-men; • wrought, While millions of our brothers bravely fought: That he night out our freedom's altars down, And rarely wear a tyrant's bloody crown. V ho wonsin voice dl run • In vain, it swiftly sped trout tongue toilongue; The people say that Abraham shalt tele Though vulgar tyrant, barleco6l and fool; That blood shall llow,,thfOugh yell a decade more, That brother shell wadi thro' brother's gore Till worn end wasted with exhausting strife, Thar shall ceise with our Itepublie's life. One hope dill lives, to light our future way,. To lead ue through the darkness into day, . Te utodld the Union into life again, And stay the slaughter ()Lam fellow-men; To bid the raging elements be still, And bind the ty rant to the y eople'a will, Two.million freemen bravely dated to stand Against the terrors of the ruling hand; Awl in their hearts the fire■ of freedom burn, Bidding tlo . atricken people to return, To rally round the altars of the sires Who lighted first our country's council tires, And leer our fellen Bog aloft -once more, Our ancient peace and Union to restore. Aud how-tind-friends take-you_by the hand, Wishing a brighter prbspeet fur our land ; With hopes that liberty Luny triumph still, _ And freemen yield not to a despot's will, tntilithe Democratic ranks inermue, Uniting all in harmony and pease. But ere we part, I'd kindly hint to you The printer's devil ought to hose his due, I'd sing in the 01a Dernoeratie time And only claim a shilling or a dime, But gold is now two hundred twenty-four, And p o ets i• l tgat to bare a trill., tunic.; I'll leave it with your gen'rous heart+ to What ought 14 be the rhyming printer's pay, And kindly hove this Scripture text with you— " Blessed are they wlid giro the Dell hia due." 'C. E. CAMBRIDGE. Ilat.t.troarrw, JAiltenT let, 1865. ROMANCE OF A KING'S LIFE. Tnr, LATE lllONAtielt OF LoYNMARY 4 Trim late monarch of Denmark was barn October 6, 1808, twelve months after the botillydment of Copenhagen by the British fleet, at.ilte time when the crowa•of Den mark did not seem to be worth malty years' purchase. Ills father, too, was but the cousin of the reigning king, And having two daughters, and being only forty years of age. had hope of still possessing male offspring. Under these circumstances, the prospects of young Prince Frederick ap pelfred to be not particularly brilliant; and his father being a proud, though singularly. unostentatious man, he was left almost en tirely to himself, and permitted to grow up amongst peasants, sailors, and soldiers, from whom he imbibed strongly democratic/ tastes. When only four years of age a great mia forums befeiNtlie poor ,bay, His parent., after several years of unhappiness, were separated by a divorce, rOhich decreed that he - should be torn from his affectionate mother and be left under the care of strangers. Among strangers, accordingly, he grew up, the father being so entirely engrossed by political affairs, in the course of nhith the crown of Norway was placed on his head for four short months, as almost to forget the existence of his son. A new marriage, which gave Freddliok a step-mother, estranged the parential fbeling Mill more, and the young prince wee glad *sough when, at the age of sixteen, he was petmitted to leave Denmark on travels through Europe, nominally to complete his *dim:teflon, in reality to begin it. He duty, made the then customary tow de 1' Earope , and thanieettriddown for several years at Geneva: Here. In the country of Jean Jacques- Roams, he Imbibed ultra-republican prin ciples, for the merlon of plileh his pre cious training, or absence of trniskiiik r itail already well fitted him. With these ideas Prince Frederick went back to Denmark. at -the age of twenty. Things, meanwhile, had "changed sit— the Danish court in regard to the enecession to the throng. The reigning king, now sixty years old, had given up all hope of hair* male offspring, and Prince Christian, cousin of the monarch, had become heir apparent le the,arowe. The aged king was exceed-. ugly anitiotue . to marry 'Eh is two &ugh** —the eldest past thirty t said no suitors' coating from &breed, he gored thee to the only disposable male reliable* se the one the young mettles( iitutfteit front fiemtvit, the other his tuvele,.Prince Xerdt i. • • - BELLEFONTE, PA., FitlDAt, ,JANUA, nand. The young iepublioan prince Would fain hark declined the honor of being united to a king's daughter; but a rerusal was not permitted to hi m, and by orders of his father and , ttio King he was married, under strong mibtdry escort, to his cousin, Princess Wilhelmina, on thti let of November, 1828. Frederick tobk from the first a strong dis like to his wife, which was greatly increased in time by her haughty disposition/utterly foreign to his own babils.l ,Ref Ore long he left his royal spouse altogether, taking refuge at a mansion distant from the oattal, among his old friends and humble com panions., He ,bere made'tbe aequsientance tort Ate e4rfirst time, of isouise Rasmussen, aj . rigiftfii little ;Ukase' of sixteen, the dau htnt n t , poor tradesman, but• with some education, and more grate and mother wit. Such so ciety was altogether more to his tastes than . that of the sti ff court a Copenhagen, at which he did not make his appearance for a lung time. By a royal (Ito ee of Sefletn ber 19, 1837, he was banished to.sfire fortress of Fredericia, in Jutland. Old soldier and sailor friends wereurspi--illowedlOon visit to Fred •rii is nd 4 i it I. i .'.. i, 1- ninssen tould Wet find her way to'the for. trim, but - iwlth many tears, on the order of her parents, set out on a Journey to Paris, - Where she became an ornament to the corps Artear-sl , ys e ta , , • • - rival at the place of his banishment, a decree of divorce between him and Princess Withelthina was knitted at Copenhagen, The death" of the King and the ascension of his father to the throne released Prince Frederick from prison at the end of little more then two years, and he was then ap pointed governor of the island of Funen. But being inclined to fall again intd his bid ways' of living, his royal father soon after insisted that he should marry once more, and after come befit/1141one, Prlnoiss Caro linevinfecklenburg-fitrelitz, was chosen to be the second wife. In the full bloom of youth, very pretty and highly accomplished, it was hoped she would wean Prince Fred erickx,from his low born companions, an bring him back to coma, and to a sense of 1 kids crown-princely ditties. But this the young Princess signally failed to do. Fred erick, although he acknowledged her to be prettier, thought her as proud as hie drat wife, and before long absented himself more than ever from the court and his new home. What probably, greatly' contributed to this estranAlent was an accidental meeting with an old friend of his youth-w-LiMise Rasmussen. Poor Louise hail seen hard times since she left Denmark for France. Though au ornament for some years of the l'aris corps de ballet, she was soon shelved on the appearance of-geezer iienamemits, and tail to content herself with 11V...1111111g a member of a wanderini troupe of actors, disseminating dramatic art through the little towns of Germany, Hungary, and Bo hemia. The speculation, with all its hard ships and miseries ( proved very unsatisfac tory in a pecuniary sense, and Louisoltas mussen was glad to drop off the stage of a destitute Hanoverian village ; Mid to Frottepd on foot to Hamburg. The ;wealthy meroltant city gave her new friends, among whom she sojourned for another couple of years, amid returned to Copenhagen. (letting to'llie dangerous boundry of thirty Miss Rasmussen now resolved to be dome - Weedy, and accordingly settled dow as milliner and dressmaker, working for tile sops and for any proourablo private cus tomers. One evening, coining home late from her work, she was arrested—at least this is the Copenhagen story—by the sight of a tire, and pith wonted energy ranged herself among tne human chain of assistante whose hands passed the pails of water from the canal to the fire, engine. She bad not been there long when she perceived that a gentlemen opposite. busy in banding pails, stared eery hard at her tie if try'lig ti re e.ignizo an : acquaintance. She reeognisc,. • bins at once; it Was Ills Role 1144.11neLs, Prince Frederick, kelt to the throne of Den mark. The conflagration • being' subd ted, Prince Frederick gallantly offered her his arm, to accompany Ailiab Rasmussen to her humble lodging, and In a few months after tike found herself installed in a pretty little vile on the island of Amager, front Ai* at the end of a year she - emigrated 115 a Larger Malltdoll, c 'with numerous ser vants about bet. Here she Lad the satis faction of teal ping the divorce of Prince Frederick from his'eficondalfe after a union of flee' years. Princess/ Caroline returned to Mecklenburg-Strel:tz, and 141160 Ras mussen leas 'declared favorite tri iitk. ,Ring Charles VIM that off - the 20th of. January,. 1848, and the llama day his son emended the throne as Frederick Vll. One .of his first mete was ke elevate Louise Ras mussen to the Atilt of Ektrovess Danner, Which title waa'advsuced seen after to that of Countess. The matter crested some dis content at And among the people, hut was judged leas eaveroliwitea 11 was found that the royal favorite Used, whatever influence .she poseeeeed 'for the butiefit of the poor. Desidus;the king fondly deal thee enree that-he would prefer atb times styles uir his throne than lion? hie' Mead. The Countess heeamei his Code adviser, and trey influence grew to such atkeident that sits was able to persuade the King to teak. Itel his lawful wife The atemat itustennee , nra of the intentionerestel a simile esf indignation throughout Die COM*, fiadltigicpretests on )IA , perk; and to strong rersOnstrances froin4llo min isters ; .nereritteleas Predetiek , Ykk wee net to be Oaken hlfhlitlittrik* imiretf - ther 27th of Auguit; 1860 1 lei.gavait4illkaitt d • , Mil "sTapis =awn 4arat riromiva. UNION.", the church of Fredericksburg, to Lintise liatmussen.• A abort MAC after, the King, with his tome, visited' the iduthern pro-. 'vince of Denniark, and being fat her'coldly receivbd at one place, his Idajststy made a very frank speech at' a banquet in hi; honor. Ile fold the guests that, though a king, he bad by to means given up his pri vileges as a, men,.to marry the woma'b be lo%od best, and that, in' the palace is yltich he stood, be looked upon his present wife as the only true friend he possessed fn the world.' The speech, repeated from twouth to mouth, created a profound sensation, slid gradually extinguished the ill feclinplitinst the Countess. „ At ~,later pe2rj she was again oensttred for giving,tiefiself too moat the airs of a real qtestdi but tlie repro/oh was deemed vepinf, in vieW of what was generally soknowledged, that she wae,,in deed, tbedevotitil friend and consort of her " F ar' husband. She alone succeeded in chasing away the spirit of profound de jection which settled upon the King in the latter years of hie life, tinder the burden of physical ikul mental suffeTipr, as well as political cares. Frederick all was thus en:tabled to become what even his personal enemies o no .tepu e Denmark Las bad these three hundred MEI BEAU HACKETT AT LAME. We era governed too much. I have for. gotten the name of the individual who. first perpetrated this wise saying, but I think Ge must have been a man who was imprisoned on the chorgo of conspiracyjust as I ,wa., when, for a series of days, 1 couldu't putt on a clean collar without special permit from "headquarters." I was governed too muchomphatically too moth, end I began to fear that I never would be governed any less, but—`eternal vigilance is the price of liberty." Having a small quantity of eternal vigilance IM hand for which I lied no immediate nee, I paid the price of my Modem and obtained it. Once tooretagain I roam unshackeled, just like the lurk that hitavenward soars. How's that I But there is an unplentinntnesi ih the en joyment of liberty purchased al the cost of eternal vigilance. People scrutinize me in a manner that betokena foul suspicion, and my quondam friends intimate occasionally that distance lends enchantment to the view when they are gazing on the face.of a "conspirator." unfeeling female, a maid of thirty, who talked as prompously as it she"lnd been made of thousand., told me I ha i :he mark of Cain on my brow. I t old the distressingly youthful, unmarried mai den it wan no such thing it a the ro•trk of a policeman's club ; there was ne cane about it. Young unmarried maiden looked dosage, she del. She elevated the apex of her sweet little nose, and putting extra presure on the lerotor Ishii soprOkret olagicsi (that's the muscle-that Curls the lip, I've been told) she pluttered lita deep, guttural voice thit sounded like bologna sausage, "Murderer She pronounced the word as if i6rere spelt with seventeen is and ti lung splitter. I replied as follows, trying to make an expression of indignation ripple over my unsullied Countenance, "Miss," (and I felt that I ought to be,ielling s falsehtwid if 1 wasn't when I called her "Miss,") said 1,, and 1 indeavored to give naught cur ' ho my own levator labii evp—fideresiicks!—that name is too long to write again, "Alias," said I, speaking in the following language, .•I am no murderer, no far as beard from, and I think the returns are all in." 4 Metbought I had her. But no! She :snide back at me witlefenfold fury, "Mon ster!" sac thundered. (Did you ever hear an elderly young lady thunder? )ou don't want to, I reckon.) 'Monster:" she reiterated and repeated again, "you have sought to bathe your Sanguinary hands in human gore. " "What 1 ,me 1" said 1, "me? intictitht creature, my kande _don't need bathing. Moreover, I've got no gorel t out me, ex cept in my shirt. Would yo have a re spectable young man like me wear a shirt without gores 1" • • I laughed geetli, inistrusiiug tb►t I pad unwittingly got off spits. lida the—how shall 1 speak of per f Y lliought the if osild. die, but nine didu 6 , ' "0, cruel, cruel rooneter,"„ she- cried, "wouldst drive tee wad ?" I studied thoughtfully for a moment, and, replied, "ply angel, I think'l nay say with more than superhuman oand)r, 1 wouldet." She turned 11*ay (rota me - ma ly and poured out her soul in a flood of thick tears, I was sorry_for what I had said-1 began to feel aehamed-of myself. Aeshiee, I disetteered the eritosoe tinge of overwhel ming loyalty developing itself upoo hdr, nisi denly cheek. it was the indioator of that dangerous coif of loYalty tbat canoes ten der females to visit Can'ip *ogles snd pour tales of blood into tlirteornman danCe ears. Let wee tell you thitt it t rem em word g great way at Camp IM for minter: men. - are human after idlis . ..and ihould:not be blamed for being ociassioNilly tweet oath. - feminine gender. I Lrelll410: Black marks; registeretl dp.pb I emr ante's; in the llitet "dangerous poio,! l .hannted th o ir *don. every th ing I had Jl 0 _of toy lift ; I eely pe , • P • *MA . 14114620 niq I t onto* *hie ithaaileethry leffuelen'..of eali Wei". Old °Your loyal little heart ever best • apalast a twenty dollar era ?: Pat It here, r' And ifitb that I feted to prima her to icy bundfrg. t4-1,01,"..;00r11181",t—ber,1110*, . - ....,,, . , r":"..ll . ^• t flii... ~ , Co . r o + 4 -......,...........- . 17: . r (• il --- r . tir .-- I . . ~. .. . 3i, 1 11 1 ,-,' .10 , .._ . , il i .. -L. (. 1 „ lit - ...1. 7 \ V C, 1866. She fled from my preffered.embraise na if I had been her husband (Priirate—if Mn'. Haeltett is a Ilutliftriber mynas- csaperanshe probably Is ivithclat 'my knowledge, dgm't tel her have one containing this letter _foe any consideration whatever.) Elderly young lady vunisheOtrough front door, shatitiag ttEivileit'!" 1 said "JAUtlet 1" anti.putfitir4 out through 'a back window, lettalng one of my coat tails (M 4 chair jitinir. I ran fiery rapidly—faster in fast,:alian my pan can describe—and was suddenly isteipped by a man, who nipt toe as I f was issding fr mu a 'Wrote alley into a public stfEtd, with the. intelligence that I owed him twetNy -dollars for the vest I had on. That was adding insult to injury. It was more than I could stand, arid I tried to run again, but he seized hold Of remalaing coat tail, and rather than run the risk of having to appear in 'public wearing 'a im promptu romsdabout, i concluded to stay where I *as. I *Aid, "Young man," said my matter-of-fact '•1 hope you will Ancel this little bill. I don't like to have your name oh my books. You are.ragartleil as dangerous character, a conspirator I may say, end may anepect ate- of being -in complicity with you, and I may gel into eericaur trouble.4l.- "Scratch my name out," raid I, e'if you Wrftrt — Firr - 11 - 1 - YhTir — "" boo"- COtate out. rslisn't regard it as an indignity. I will lend you n piece, of rubber if it is w•ritteu ip pencil. Scratch it out by all ineani. ' "But," said my gallant croditor, "the money, the money." "0, that's all right," I said, "never mind the money. I would rather owe it to yon all my life titan to cheat you out That was a s t unner. lie knew not what to say. -My siraiotforward, honest demon= nor overcame hint like trsu'mnier cloud, and be took his departure peaceably, mithotit soyikg another word. The next man I met scrutinised my tail less coat closely, and be remarked that ho was glad I had cleared my skirts of the charges that bad been preferred against me. I despise a wretched joke ; always did. I told the individual in quesidob he must get out of my way or I would measure his length on the sidewalk. He left at oncie, and was exactly right. You see the condition lam in. My occu pation's gone. My friend - is !bun me, and my acquaintances don't know me at all. I'm a very miserable man, but, after all, I' don't think there ever was hut one great misfor tune occure , l to Inc; that was the birth of my parents. If they M c, had been born I would be all right. A few 1101a'Y PUCI young lady with a fine tenor voice called me a base verglch# another: slid I woe a „cold blooded vkliain, and a third did not hesitate to say l ilhat I was a human in fiend shape, or words to that effect. We may be happy yet. Altbourtt lam branded no a donspirator, although there is a blot upon my Ofttitaoter that all the blotttog paper in the world can't remove, yet I will struggle on, on, on (three limes) until I shall ttiuniph in the end To quote the dying words of the immortal Webster, :I'm not dead' yet.' Perhaps you may hear from me hereafter, undet more favorable circumstances than you do now. Yours, hopefully.—Bmtu lincarrv, In Chicago Tuna. FATE OF HENRY CAREY AVinOB. 01 “001) AA. Till QUZZIi " • The following extract is from a work by Charles Rende, entitled the Eighth Com mandment : lienry Carey was a man of genius. Ife wrote for the theatre with immediate and lasting success. Next he handled satire( and Pope took big verses rot tivtirt'S, atld Bitiftior Pope's. Lastly he sailed down to lyrical art; and a rare..combinalion of two rare"talenta, he invented immortal melodies, and the immortal words io theta. lie wrote the words and melody of be Na tional Anthem; for this lie deserved a pen 'sion, and a - niche in IVestmlnister Abbey. In a loose ago he wrote chastely. lie never failed to hit the public. Ile was of his age, yet immortal. No artisCoan do more. But there were no coarighte in songs. Mark the etonsequellesesdf that gap in the law. While the theatre and the street rang with his lines and his tunes, while fni4lers dreWitririiiire - fiird:Thnd The tiongstinfairg him and were richly paid ( the genius that set all those empty music pipes, tinning, a million ears listening Stith raptors, was glen, to the bone. n reaped the tre,rn bertha soWer For wh The sower was sty author. an invenkor 4,,pci so in the midst of success that enriated othrs and left him bare; in the .midst of the poor, unselfish soul's attempt to fo charily for dietressed.,4Reformers, tint Suddenly itiiiitfttader the double agony' eon full et'Argopga and an empty belly, the man halughl himself. They found,m cold, with MO on his bones, and a WW-penny in his peek* Thinker this when next you hear, 41.. save the Queen." • ' ...an . WAWA/yap .PL 11 OORll.—Then' la sometbdig beautiful and eliblinie in 'the hush of m‘id nfilit. Tbe,g(„yrild quiet 'deeper*. laying 1 down duel thilittife-bdrden, insensible alike to joy or sorro, rholplela alike—the Inning, man we the idtatind o4er all - The alnep -11" Ei'i ri ff/0 01 4 eitiire the World begaa.lkei 'Abler' bet alibi 6( ona' Rillpwvd bot. -.. hoigh•lifie flees oboe te.Ud ie our 11`ike •,•.,, Aigheiiiin within elmolt paidful in , ~. I ' ll /10T. . then eternity otilVeeeins real, =day life a Mk: , Thie ',horning clime. the stir tad hum ot life shale theta 'M de the wits': duir - drfee it the deer-drive, 4 01144,1%e tbarllboughte, per: ibractbeft heyfehigi dievioti, ercikv: de? PaiC' - CT SHIP. A ,:t4tfg, ft Pik my? ;Toy§i, • „... , 'And nQ! -- toonL—iltint rair was 5)4 :- Went aail ng. sailing; arali:g, ' Oyer a runnx rue. And emid them pat.u. Veggink— A churl of lopdegeee; And . they all went•Aniling. Over a nunny eon. • And the King said to the Kaiser, And his comrades fair !tad free. "bet us turn adrift this beggar, This churl of low degree; ' For ho lodide the balmy odors That blow to loitend me, ' As we travel—seiling, Over the sunny sea.," "The @hip is wane." said the beggar• . That churl of lots donne; "And we're all of no tuning, salUne, To the 'grove, o'er the sunny sea. AIM you may net, and you eanrol, - - (let nu of urine or we; No, not for Your crown and neeptere-- god toy name is Death !" .leoth be. —(l.nries Mucks/ THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER —When k n lady like a spoon? When she to in-tea-resting —A Washington boottnalter states an , etativel • that hOld Abe's Wit" is a ier , big thing —Several of the most respectable young ladies in Northampton, Maas , hair:recently been seized in the streets In the evening and There hare lately bben a nunlber of de serters to the enemy from the army of the POtomac, mostly from among the alien sub- 4 titut es --General Wayne, who commands one of the bodies , of rebels in Georgia, is a son of Judge Wayne of the United States Su preme Court. —A letter from China stales that when tlio iiiiporioli•itti took Nankin they. cut off the . hops of Ulu reticle to' the exteni. of nearly ten thou/nod.' —Sem; one with a Close knowledge of human nature nays, a great many persons wish to live their lives over again. because thiSi see whim they might hate sinned, and didn't. —lnformation has been received from Kansas of the destruction of two large trains of Govormbent supplies fur the In dians, and fears are entertained for the safety of the third. • • 1 —lt is reported as fact of great sig— nificance that Nfrs. Grout, (General Grant's wife) arrived at Washington .on Muratlay from :City Point, Where she left Ulysses in good health and spirits. —A company has been formed in Now York which expects to grow rich in follow ing in the wake of blockade runners and piel,; , qc up the cotton they throw ovorboard when they are sharply Chased. —The female Operators.in - tho FAtitern cotton mills are adopting the Bloomer coop 'time ass a working dress, as being less lia ble to become entangled in the machinery, and it is besides quite a novelty. , -.--"tott had better ask for mrtnners,than for money," said a finely .dressed gentle man to a beggar boy who had asked for alms. "I asked for what I thought you had the most of," was the boy's reply. —.a rebel officer imprisoned on 'John eon's Island gave birth to a boy a few d;tys since. It is hardly neccsssary to say that tile °Meer 'Was a woman. The Sandusky Repater is responsible for the story, the inith of which it affirms. --There is a Tennessee refugee at Cario who was •rnarried whey she was fifteen, and gave birtpi to eleven ehilSen, throe sets of triplets and one of twins, within the next four years. She lost her bullhorn; at Stone river. ',Miss Dr. llarriet E. Bunt,ot Boston, has issued her twelfth annual ,protest against tatation without suffrage. The natural right of woman to be wen i./ as' evident as the right of s hen to crow; there is no use in arguing the case. company has been formed in Penn sylvania with a.nullion dollars estitur, , tb make sugar and syrup from corn, under Professor Droessling's patent, the Profes sor selling out his claims for $000,000.. It is said that experinients have already , suc ceeded in the production of three and a kall _gallons _of syrup __from a_ bushel_ of - , . —VilselttftWorsen', one of the proprie tors of Gin New York Evening I'ost (Aboli tion,) one oNthe pure and fatuous sheets, hat bad eight indict - matt; round against Lill for alleged frauds while Naval Officer, and has given buil is the sum of $20,000 to answer. Henderson belongs to the "moi ul party !'"=-Tienderson belongs to time "reform. party !" Glorious party I '.---10no of our men belonging to Gm Army of the Potomac committed ,suiglileutt shipboard, in the followief extraordinary manner rhtiiiiiping himbelf with all the aocountrententa--knapsack, haversack, can teen, &c:,—and carrying his muelcpt at a ri -ht ehoulder shift , ' be remarked that lie would ite damned if he was going to lay - his. bones before Petersburg, stertben marched overboard without another Ward. , .._ ---;The Keokuk Gait Am!, chronicles a wedding Isaiah came off Ist a eabletet Po: kerlandilloiembar 1016; undei the nee phses of Esq. 41ffleta,--of. Alesindril; Ito., between a youth nf _lmmty-elittirehni a menials. of 'eleven yeah Erten. dogs. By I nalfriage "the brldn,h , to 'airlift tenth*, abe bOinithe irbtitir the gitteband'it b l ot:. *ha' anutp*kled iebitiotte It " Rein 'tbiE shifittier • - I anion: • " 7 : „ „ , • e. 0-7 MMMIEI EMM=E MEE MEM ♦~ 1 ~ Nom.. ==M 'tl= with over ffathMA clouds bekan '', Th laddbfird, and coma rolled glouttrillo - argsralle whale zdt 'eattiailig Us -*int 4 dlirm. The t In 4 uot-yet4lnestesasdatenutwee ail, ed it zroaldaet. as'fbr kite lota tiriewebks the weather bad beeervergcrlmaghs atod '4 l hands were nearly, worn oat.,, IV tiverrneltNe OW aliztAzioz-i,vegtod- alzzla'a. 6 . --- -•CounizairizzeP deck frequentlyAitb 'pea-jacket oliand cool-weeter baba*. Ida sale, be laed. . .111e•dick rapiary,' talklng' in- tines to ' 'the rnitet-with his eyes to wlndWard. TtAtl nighlgrew dark, darktir, 'Wkid-lt- war Itlnfeict impossible to See. , genet% deck. th z e to ibe; dull ,iiutpriti'Fta of 3 .0 iiiia - and eourid Of the wlftd, as 14, owegt 4¢rg4sthz, doming& gght belle struck; our wake Ilevird for thesigpntomr_lierpre.•-sle:w4 tuift toned bOlotlz Y hollrOla old Aar gee eobiei "No use turning lit toldght." •,Alkothtir growled, "I wish we were inli4.l,car-ees of dills." Sleep' had scaroely 'eletted - sitir *yes beford tbe,cry 'of "All itatedd 'on We aroused an roughly from our elzdnAkti ' alfid • many a dream of - home. , • Hastening oit deck we found tolling foot,and the wind itlowing, a v geld. The sky above 'Knoblock, but to windward blacker, gloomier. One dark mass of fro 'penetiable night spread itself like • pall over us. The order was givsn to furl the mizzen royal. I sprang aloft--eeareely reselling the end of my journey upwards before the storm burst upon tts with terrible fury. It was Impossible for me abate to furl the sail, ecrl let it flap. dealirzisbi. atTinces would permit to wait for avalatana, I began to enjoy the eoene Ii in elnvation nf an hundred and fifty feet above the raging wtme. On dletc there seemed to reign' the el , opt con mon. pie n . were gla , •ing here and there. Byer end omen could faintly be heard the boartut tense et command, And the wild ery of the men as they strained st the ropes. bnow twabliet 'reit in blinding torrents. The wind shrieked wildly. Th e *Area roller:intan Merit] heigl;t, lashing themselves inin—fente, slid dishing against our ship as if anxious for our de struction. Rolling and " pitehiug, nut' Wye ship struggled p,ml tossed about like,* chip, one tniatrute tieing on_the top of n Mountain wave, dad seeming for a few seconds* be seepedded in mia air, then pitching forsiped, the bows would be buried deep in the blank Waters, Rolling from one side,to the ether. the waves dashed over our bulwArks, wLdat the timbers groaned and 'creaked, ansl every mast, rdpe, and beam was stralne4 tolbe utmost. A sailor soon came to my help aria the sail 'was furled. - ' - 7T/ss Returning to the deck , we found the men , toiling at the pump. Our ship waeleaki4. Long we 'worked, with diffienterkefjping our feet, for the rolling of the vessel. NO ope raised a 'song as the wheel of the pomp went mini' and round, but w-t, biip gry, gloomy; Weary, we gemmed the tail rope, (a, rope fastened to the bump-brelee, by which the pumps are worked,) and still toiled on. Now a heavy booming sound startled us. Rushing , forward, we !Sued one .ot the sails torn loose, e a rl flapping madly' id the wind. Before it oould be - taken in there was nothing loft but esters. ;Li:l the Wind Idew fiercer, awl thomaess rolled higher. Day door:T.l almost • like night—dark, gloomy, oheeriL•s. With a crash the main-nail split ; all bands were ordered 'aloft to furl it. The rigging was covered With teen; and the sail kid' with ice. For 'four hours we labored, until our hands and foot nad no eonvo of life lit them, and wo struck them against each other to bring back the warm bleed. Once the sail blew over our heads ; all held fast for their laves.; one poor fellow wee dashed overboard, and found a grave In the blue, briny ocean he loved so well. No effort was made to save him. We loft bum to struggle alone, knowing d i :night be Ottr fate the next minute. At last, with greift effort,,we succeeded tj furling the toniCitali Chß returned to the, deck again ; Throughout that whole; day ' the storm raged; the waves remittently dashing over the vessel in a mass file ten feet deep,' and carrying everything before them., Often completely burried in say water, we weet-feettoid r to %ling hat to the ropes and rigging to prevent ourselves from being swept into destruction. To• wards night the gale began td abate; agd when morning again broke w i g' found our selves becalmed; not d breath of sir Nis stirring, although the sea still "an very high. !tinny" mime stormy like the' ode 'Et** thscribed, were we forted' to cm:Bunter .. .ire— . fore it'e suceeeded in doubling the deeto44 Cape ; but at last fine welt thlirclitue,_ Mi r; stitch of canvass was once more spread; 'and joyfully we steered our _eoutite "Frisco" Bay. • • ie - 11101%U1COOLE PptltliliCT.,+-Not lops ago This feuhd at ToteWittlipilci: fa i men eatery, a paper c,dithining the ii:dlttiffili prophecy: ..lu the far west; beyond thoesean, Afil rise a nation, which wlft he groat in power and wealth; and - Safew iii Ono of his' Walla to and Jim in the mirth, will - otmoisnio this moist', and determine to desstroY their itill ,- pi tiros ; nut' he will there synds wapsoositer . one to the north, Nn'd °tie to the ..sotith ! Ant he wilt ere these straw biltrieli, 1 etod ITV will snit:them, wed onstry.ot Link fepSAirtleirlr. ths,tni end after tiiiti Nile wilful! kW mkul feel a grest,Abirst, not In b; quiennhed with anything eille.lint blood. Vhrristp Aare fore pause the brother - tibial , / The 111f4sailre Lb, father to vial the Asa e• 094071 3 41 end they wilt drank the biood • o e. anti it *4ll briny ••Rimentethfire hi W. g tilthligidint tbs laniltf iiiiti*lleif e ' is tulfinod, ibeire will rilop.sitwitAhoecAsAbb ' u ra . ucrih, wif#lll mks tlintssinst 4 khettimAtt`selit,drew fltetit hit* tiba re ttlis:the deepest. al* inte444ll +t se will•ittlin i revoil tkrourlo4 Mig • is- th 11 ri k Latle tfil i g;!lifilti v 4 :40" !Manilla ili .Idifer . • • it'll! ea bertfratibtlireeverpot - , 56 , scuitigamis.. 2k l li e trelii .° .- -I . .Pkri,,k ' t he chit , = to- . - . -- ~ .-.- the .ft 44 R4414-41wAsfurikotrk..."64- Iffl ] MeV
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers