3 o - ‘ } ®5 im BRREZBRBEIRNRN 20 mg ny En 5 § : Bs; l GE Patio, GSTS T SSS pop I pL T Sr FSF PSSST Eloguence the soul, song charms the sense BLT IIS I LST SESS IE LG IT TIE SIT BELLEFONTE, may 1822, ——— SELECTED. To Pleasure. Oh pleasure | I have fondly woo’d But never wore thy fleeting favour My early suit was wild and rude, And, startled, thou didst fly forever, Awhile, I deeply sorrow’d o’er, The wreck of all that peiish’d then; But wilder, sweeter than before, Thy smile the’ distant beain’d again. And, my sad heart, tho’ deeply chill'd, Still panting, sought thy lov’d embrace, Trac’d eyery path, thy volaries hil’d To meet thee in thy resting place. I saw thee, mantling warm in wine, And deeply bath’d my fever’d lip; I saw thee pause at beauty’s shrine, And suieiy hoped thy sweets to sip, But wine and beauty both conspir’d To fill my soul with dark regret ; For scarceiy now, their sweets expired, And pleasure, fleeting *scap’d me yet. And noty ;—with scarce a feeling warm, When all should bloom in hearts unwasted, turn me, from thy lovely form, Thy joys unknown, thy sweets untasteds Then fare thee well, deceitful shade! Tho’ bright the charms that still adorn thee ; Too fondly press’d they withering fade, And all who {ollow soon must scorn thee smn SLID 10 Se 3 CER nnn From Mboor’s Melodies. ROBERT RUMBLE. Robert Rumble; a poet of lyric renown Hey, scribble—hy, scribble, ho! Was invited to dine with a squire out of town, With his heyy scribbicm=hy, scribble, ho ! His nag bad a string bait, as well as bis Igre, So he mounted and rode to the house of the squire, Who was one of these kind-hearted men, (hat keep hounds Just to hunt off the vermin from ether men’s grounds With my hey, scribble=hy, scribble, ho ! The huntsmen that morning had brought an cld hack, Hey, scribble~~hby, scribble, ho ! To cut up, as a delicate lunch for the pack With my hey, scribble—hy scribble ho ! But who can describe Robert Rumble’s dis may, When the squ to say, That instead of the dog-horse some hard-heart- ed wag ¥ad cut up, by mistake, Robert Rumble’s lean nag, With my hey, scribble—hy, scribble, ho ! ) . rp ire, after dinner came smirking But «comfort yourself,” said the squire to the bard, Hey, scribble-~hy, scribble, ho ! 8 Uhere’s the dog-horse still standing alive in the yard, With my hey, scribble—hy, scrihble, ho! Then taey saddied the dog-horse and home- ward he set, So suspiciously ey’d by each dog he met, That you'd swear, notwithstanding his cavalry airs, They sespected the stead he was on should be theirs, With my hey, scribble—hy, scribble, ho ! Artiv’d safe at home; to his pillow he 10gs, Hey, scribble~~hy, rcribbie, ho ! And dreams®all the nightabout critics & dogs, With my bey, scribble— hy, scribble, ho ! His nag scem’d a pegasus, toush’d in the wind, And the curs were all wits of the true Cypic kind, Who when press’d for a supper must bite arc they sop And who ate Robert Rumble’s Poor pegasus up With my hey, scribbie—by, scribble, ho! —h SD I Te Oa industry in Youth. Diligence, industry and proper improvemen of time are material duties of the young. * ities, if they want activity for exerting thc my. —| Unavailing in this case, will be every direcilon that can be given them, either for their temno. ral or spiritual welfare. In youth the habits of industry are most easily acquired. In vouth, the incentives to it ale strongest, from ambition £ » n 4 and from duty, from emulation and hope, from i . . . 1 in ihe Little ce or : he lcircumstinces. Lis residence is the mind, aed] fellow ; but your kinduess will be lost on me |light in the ttle ccll dazzles the eyes ofthe | : 1 bats, which often kill these birds.” ail the prospects which (he beginning of if affords. If; indeed to these calls, you already tanguish in slothful inaction, what wil be ] to quicken tl ai r able WAT IFAT _ Yaucing years 3 Aan. Itisthe indispen Se Industry is not ‘only the instrument of im. Nothing 15 so opposite to the true enjoyment of Bide as tbe relaxed and feeble state of an lent pind. He who is a stranger to industry may posseis but be cannot enjoy. For it is Jabous only which gives the relish to pleasure. It is the appointed vehicle of every good to sible condition of our indo NE Rg | l | Tol Do purpose ave those endowed with the best abil] ‘© J 4 possessing a sound mind in 5 sound body. Sloth is 80 inconsistent with both, that 1t is hard to determine whether 1t be a greater foe to virtue, or to health and happiness. Inactive as it is in itself, its effects ave fatally poweifal. Though ‘tappeais a slowly flowing stream yet it under nines all that is stable and flourishing. It not oply saps the foundation of every wirtye, but pours upon you a deluge of crim:s and evils. [t is like water which fist puuilies by stagna- tion and then sends up aoxious vapours, and fills tht atmosphere with death. Fly therefore, trom idleness, as the certam parent both of gailt and ruin, And under idle: ne:s I conclude, not mere inaction only, but ali that circle of trifling occupations, in which too many sauniers away their youth ; perpetually engaged in frivolous society or public amuse- merit In the labours of dressy or the ostentation of their persons, Is this the foundation which you lay tor future usefuloess and esieem ? by such accomplishments, do you hope to recom. mend yourselves to the thinking part of the world, and to answer the expectations of your friends and your country ? Amusements youth requires, It were vain, it were cruel to prohib- it them. But though allowable as the relaxa- tioh, they are most culpable as the business of the young. For they then become the gall of time, and the poison of the mind. They foment bad passions. They weaken the manly powers They sink the nauve vigor of youth, into con temptibie c¢ffeminacy. Redeem your time from such dangerous waste, to fill it with employments which you may review with satisfac ion. The acquisition of knowledge is one of the most honorable oc- cupations of youth. The desire of it discovers a liberal mind, and is connected with many ac- complishments, and many virtues. Dut thoug i your train of lie shoul! not lead you to study, the course of education always furnishes prope. employments to a weil disposed mind. What- ever you pursue be emulousto excel. Gener ous ambition, and sensibiliiy to praise, are es pecially at your age, among the marks of virtue. Thivk not that any affluence of fortune, or any elevation of rank, exempt you irom the duties of application and industry. Indusiry 1s the law cf our being ; it is the demand of nature, of reason and of God. Remember always that the years which tow pass over your heads, leave perma. nent memorials bebind them. From you {thoughtless minds they may escape ; bat they {remain in the remembrance of God. They [orm an important part of the register of your fate. y will hercafier bear testimony ; eith- [er for or against you, at that day, when for all your sections, but “particularly for the employ ment of youth, you must give an account to Gnd. "he ——t GD —— Look on Greatness—say where greatness lies. Pork. Greatness is a thing much talked of, though itle understood, The world entertains about this, as itdoes 1bout many other things, very wrong notions. Itis usual to judge of the great- acess of men, from the circumstances in which they are placed. A general at the head of an army, is a very conspicuous and interesting ob- jecty and whether placed (here because of his birth, sycophkancy, or merit, will by the wor): be called great. The cud for which be is in vested with office; the power attached to tha: office, encircle his character with a splendour that dazzles the fancy, and gives an impropes The tion ef king have some thing in them, which bias to the judgment name and situa- inspi:es with awe ; end although those that bear that title have not one single quality, which considered as mere men, would recommend them to our respect, bui perhaps many, which would make them tlie objects of our contempt yet as Kings we regard them as a superior or’ der ofbeings. The dinnity of noble birth, and the pomp of wealth, affect us in a similar man ner ; and cause us to consider their, perhaps merely fortunate, possessors,as born to com mand fiom us our utmost deference and res- nect | Ck ‘Lhe Imptop ¢ influence which such intrinsic vances huve over our minds, is accom fo 'y many cvs: It causes us ip many ty aiid Inst view acts of vice, injustice and vil tiny, as te more excercise ofa lawful preroga- 1ve 3 to imitate mile with complicency on acts which we what we otght to detest; and; and heroes, fade An act ofthis kind howeve anless it comes recommended to their notice by the distinction of the performer, will not by its own intrinsic merit, have any great effec, apon the minds of men. If the agent is hum ble and obscure, the act itself will be unnoticed ; or at most be the subiect of trancient admira- tion, or a passing topic of idle conversation, and then be forgotten, That clevati:n of mind which rises above the grovelling spite for inju- vies received 3 which prompts to pity, where mankind mn general would be solicitous for re- venge, only, as it is a thing, that few can un derstand few can properly appreciate. He whe bas no other claims to respect than such as are ‘ounded upon this alone, must rest satisfied with the reward which it alone can bestow. rt (CA — A young gentleman and lady, happening on Sunday to sit in one pew. During the course of the sermon, the youth read something in the eyes of the fair, which made a much deeper im- pression on his soul than the pious lecture of the parson ; as love is seldom at a loss for an expedient, he presented her with the following verse in the second epistle of John ; ¢ And now [ besecch thee, Lady, not as though I wrote a new commandment unto thee, but that which we had from the beginning, that we love one another.” Afier perusal she opencd at the first . that she might not err in her performances; this was done, and she well observed her rules; wheb one day going a mile or two (0 visit ga friend, the good man got hght-headed, on his return home he reeled inte a ditch, calling to his wife to help him out. ¢ Indeed husband.” said she, « 1 remetnber no such article in my orders, Lut Vil go home and see if there be, I’) come and help you out.” ; ii, Se From the Vermont Intelligencer, ADVERTISEMENT LXTRA, © Dr. Botherum Smokum, having quitted his former occupation of Rrazor Grinding, now cars rics onthe business of inventing and prepacing hie much approved mineral, vegetable and ani- mal go to-bed ical, getting-up-ical, £0-10-5¢a~ cal and stzy-at.home-ical medicine, His pat- ent cut-and-thrust phlebotomizing, pleasing and innocent unmedicinal sudorific, acphritic, great-loe-2ic, narcotic, broken-shinic alterant 4 atringent, stowmacte, belly-achic, diaphoretic, apericnt, emollient, carminative, sedative, ruby facelent, antispasmotic, spectoral, crural, back bone-ical emmenagopne. Itisa sovereign spe- cific and instantaneous remedy for distempers acute, chronic, nervous, general, local reas and imaginary epidemic disorders; for eun.shot wounds, single and compound fractures, cosy alities of all kinds and complexions. Jt operaiea equally on the body, mind, estate real and pers sonal and place of residence in the patient, Ig is efficacious and safe cosmeric, rendering the skin clear and smooth to a fault. It clears the bile and gastric juices frond the brain, and pros duces a calm tiain offideas. It removes obe structions in the capilliary tubes, thoratie duct. gesophagus and caccum, and exlirpates the spiral marrow, which is the cause of such frequent and fatal cémplaints, It dissipates ugly tumor and is ap effectual remedy 2gainsg old age. It assists nature in her attempts at amputation, in diseases in the head and (hroat. From i's stypic qualities it is eminently useful chapter in Ruth,and 16th verse, ¢ And Ruth said, entreat me not to leave thee, or to return trom following after thee, for whither thou go- est I will go ; and whither thou Jodgest, I will lodge ; thy people shall be my people and thy God my God.” Thus was the treaty proposed which in a lite time was fully ratifisd by the paison. tills TE I Ses The love of retirement has in all ages adher- ed closely to those minds which have been mos: enlarged by knowledge, or elevated by genius When a king asked Euclid, the mathematician whether he could not explain his art to him in a more compendous manner, he was answered « There was no royal way to geometry,” Other things may be seized by might, or purchased by money ; but knowledge is to be gained only by study, and study to be prosecuted only in retirement. —— Ds Et When the unfortunate Lydians resolved to perish in the flames that were devouring thei; city of Xanthius, nothing could exceed the dis tress-of Brutus their beseiger ; he melted into cars and offered a reward to every soldier wlio How differ ent was this from the conduct of Nero, who ex- would bring bim a Lydian alive. pressed his delight, while Rome was sinking beneath the devouring element, tT GD 11D Pe Anecdote of two officers who fell before Quebec. io promoting excessive hemor hages, by which surgical operations become unnecessary ~Ap- plied to the eye it etadicates the optic nerves, and mn disorders of the cars, it will be found use~ ful in perforating the tympanum. In extreme. watchinlness and lay-awake-ible writakiilty it induces a permanent and never ending uninter- rupted sleep. In cudden attacks from the enemy’s cavalry, itbrirgs on am instentanects come; which may save the pationts Ife. From iis dying qualities it is useful in cases of drowning : and hanging yields io its elevated s'imulus. *.* Price ten dollars a bottle, There ave three requisites to our proper en- joyment of every carthly blessing which God bestows on us: A thankful reflection on the goodness of the giver a deep sense of the une worthiness of the recerver; and a sober recol- lection of the precaious tenure by which we hold it, The first would make us grateful the second humble the last raoderate, ty SE SS ee / Modern Hermit, | Some years ago, Mr. Powyes, of More near Preston, in Laucashirs, England, adver- ti ed a reward of an annu ty of (50, tor life to avy man who would uncertake to live seven, years under ground, with(ut secing any thingy human, and to let h s toe and finger nails gro with his hair and beard during the whole Gme. Apartments weie prep ued under ground, very commodious with a cold bath, a chamber organ, 1s many books as the occupier pleased, and provision fiom Mr, Powycs’s own table. Whenever the recluse wanted any refreshment he was to ring a bell, and it was provided for bim. Singular as this residence may appear, an occupicr offered himself, and actually staid in ity observing the required conditions, for four years. —eiith I CD Sn Two chiefs of the Cughnawaga’s with their cook going to visit Albany, stopped by the way at the house of an attorney, who treated them freely with cider. They had not drank long In the first unsucceesful attack on the enemy’s intrenchments near Quebec, July al Americans, were left wounded, a little dis-! tance from each other, on the ficld of balite : the captain mortally, but the ensign having In. | diap came running down, in order to scalp the] ouly his knece-pan shattered. Soon afier an former, which the latter perceiving, made chit] 0 crawl to a musket, which lay near bim and] which, not having been discharged, he tock aim with it and shot the savage, The like dan. Indian ; him he wounded with the bayonets } lought to reprobate ;—to fawn ‘and ‘where we ought to despise, and to submit pa_| jtiently to wrongs, which we ought prompily to resent. True greatness is not peculiar to any is 1tuation, nor appendant to any combinaiion of ic more sluggish current of ad-be manifested in its higher excellence in the|5¢2/PIng Knife would be now a mercy. but take i ; . common cccurrences of hife—He who puts in i provement, but the foundation of pleasure.— Practice that sublime and godlike precept of} { ‘ . . v tour Saviour which inculcates the forgiveaess of {injuries, and the retarn of good for evily mani. lests greatoess, in comparison with which the blaze of wealth and power are lost, and the ib loodstained Jaurels of the greatest conquerers cringe bot ud ; : lit is characteristic of the mind alone. It may] but as he still persisted, he was forced in a At ranadier came back to the captain in order to last ~ “ ‘manner, to pin him to the ground. i {or 5 o ! | carry him off the field ; which bowever he re } ! ! ‘ased in these words :—<« Thou art a brave) . i I am mortally wounded and the bayonet or the ensign Peyton and carry him off, he may live’ The soldier obeyed, took up the ensign and brought him off through a severe fire, by which they were both slightly wounded. —t FD Dee A woman bavicg a cross grained husbane bard to please, she desired him to write dow; what she should do, and what she sk ot d a CO 31, Captain| . ’ 4 it z » 0 C10 Ocliterlony and ensign Peycon both of the roy-| Who they were. & You know me, (said language. before they began to feel their imporiance > lard lest their cirtainer should dake them to be common peaple, they undertook to tell him Joseph) —I great man} gentleman” « | greajer as Fim, (said the other)—1 gentleman too—but I Bold Peter.” “ And what are you ? (said the at'orney to the cook) are you gentleman too? « No, sir, (replied Clans, smiling at his own in= significance )—no sit, I no gentleman— I-n-not. = ing but a lawyer CED Ee The following very singular fact in patural History, is t.ken from Pierson’s life of Di. Buobm:n—cne of the most entertaming and interesting Biogra 13 Tell H that I wiite this atthe bottom of ger threatened him by the approach of another|ihe | ty mountain, called Cape Cornovin, whose rockey h:ad seems to overhang 1s base. The birds which build their pendulous pests are numerous. At night each of their little habita- tions is lighted up, as if to see company. The sagacious littie bird fastens a bit of clay to the top of the nest, and then picks up a fire fiy, and sticks it to the clay io slustraie the dwelling, which consists of two rooms. Sometimes there are three or four fice flies, and their blaze of —— C— Zhe Philosopher Ourdone A learned Philoso Mis study, a bittle girl : yal came to ask him for tire. “But,” sa ©» Says the doctor, € yoy have noth- ing to put it In 5” and as he was roing to fetzh something for that purpose, the little wir] stoops ed down at the fire place, and to 7 cold ashes in ope hand : on them with the other. The 2s'onished doce ‘or threw down bis books saying, “with g ¢ learning I shold never have found out phical works in the English © king soma re 3 Ag » she put the live cubers wi ~ < ¥ PN Nr len a pher being very busy i 5 some