. . • • • • • ' , ".. A . • . . _ ••.• • • • 1114 • :SAMUEL WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXIX, NUMBER 50.1 PUBLISIIED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING (Vice in Carpet Hall, South-west corner of t...Pront and Locust streetc. 'Terms of Subscription a-Re Copy perannum,ir paidtit advance, •• • if not paid within three ...monthsfromeommenceinent of the year, 200 Coasts et. Cop - 3r. °subscription received for a Crl, tune than sill riouths; +induct paper will be di.continued unit: all 4.rrecrugesure patd,unlecs at the °put:tn.:tithe pub- fu - Nlosey.naykereraittedbymailaithepublish errs risk. Rates of Advertising. ~ quare[Olines] one week, ,t three weeks, each •übsequentinsertion, 10 [l.9.lines]one week. 50 three weeks, 1 0(1 at each iultsequentinsertion. 20 'Larger tdvertisementtin proportion A liberahliacount will be made to quarterly,hall early or: early tdvertisers,who are strictl3confined °their business. gEtEttiintz. Head of my Profession CRAPTER I. I was born in the city of Bath, in the be ginning of the present century. My earli est recollections of the hot water capital are recollections of an era of prosperity, which, though then approaching its decline, was yet vigorous and beautiful. At the period of my childhood, Bath was the winter focus of fashion, and to fashion and fashionable people it was devoted more thoroughly, per- , haps, than any other city or town in the realm. Nothing that could by any possi bility offend the visitors was allowed to ex ist; while every attraction, whatever its moral aspect, which had charms to lure them thither, was unreservedly disp/ayed. I distinctly remember that while gaming houses and worse places were encouraged, it was a high crime and misdemeanor for a little urchin to trundle a hoop on the pave ment, lest he should damage the farthingale of some lady of quality; and School boys were lugged off to prison in the town hall for playing at "cherry" in Orange Grove, to the supposed disturbance of the rheumatic tabbies. I those days there were no hire able cabs, carriages or omnibuses; and the only available locomotives were the sedan chairs, for which there were regular stands at various places throughout the city, the principal ones being near the Pump-room, and in Front of the Assembly-rooms. The chairmen were a peculiar race, long since passed away—stout, brawny, broad shoul dered fellows, clad in light-blue frock sur touts, plush breeches, white stockings, and shoes with broad shining buckles. Origi nally, they had worn cocked hats; but these, in my boyhood, began to give place to the customary cylinder, and disappeared altogether in the first years of my appren ticeship. These chairman were the tyrants of the foot-pavements, along which they ambled at a six-mile•an-hour pace, ruthlessly sweep ing into the kennel all who were not suffi ciently active in getting out of their way. The wells of the old Abbey at that day bristled with chimneys and chimney-pots; close files of shops, chiefly occupied by small traders, clung like barnacles all round the surface of the ancient structure, save at the grand western entrance flanking the Pump-room; and a thriving trade was dune in them, because here was one nucleus of the fashionable throng. Orange Grove then was a grove, crowded with ancient .elms fungous with age. The parades, North and South, were the Corso of worn out roues and courtly convalescents, who promenaded them in wheel-chairs within the shadow of the new Assembly rooms, and at an easy distance from the restoring waters. Dull, dreamy, and voiceless in the summer time, no sooner were the chills of autumn felt, than Bath was rapidly con verted into a huge caravansary. Strange faces and new equipages flocked in by hun dreds daily. Everybody then began to lot lodgings, from the hucksters in the by streets, to the speculators in the Circus and the Royal Crescent, and the price of apart ments rose suddenly from shillings to pounds. Ten guineas a week was nothing for a tradesman's upper floors, which be came the habitat of the landed gentry, whose retinue of servants had to take post in the tradesman's kitchen, along with his -family, and to stow themselves at night in oupbord, closet, or garret, wherever a shake down could be extemporised. All those vices were fashionable, winked at by the sober citizens, who made a profit .out of them, walked the streets at noonday, not without notice, without rebuke. :Scenes which were common to all eyes at ;Bath during the era of the Napoleonic wars, .could not now be describedin these columns, 7ueeause the present generation of readers mould not tolerate the description. Among .the least obvious of the vices which fashion coed made popular was that of . gambling; ;the gentry gamed in their houses nightly, -without pretermitting the Sunday; gaming .establishments flourished in all parts of the town; some select, and accessible to the .subscribers; others common to all who could ,assume the appearance of a gentlemen. Of all the modes of gambling perhaps billiards was the ,most esteemed. The game had been pronounced healthful by a distinguish ed member of the faculty, and a rage sprang up for it, which prevailed for years. What the nobility and gentry delighted in, the middle classes and lower classes would of course feel a longing for; and as a re sult, there were billiard establishments Open to all ranks, fimm the subscription tables at the upper Rooms, where the mem bers played for thousands, down to the rickety board of Old Spraggs in Union Passage, where the balls trundled over a field of green baize into pockets as wide as a church door, and the apprentice boys of the town gambled for two twopences. At ten years of age my uncle sent me to school at Old Carpenter's in George street, one of the most vigorous Buggers of the day, who aware of his strength of arm, would considerately allow a culprit to hid an an extra jacket, or even two, if he could borrow them, before submitting to punish ment. Here I made the acquaintance of Ned B—, who soon became - my bosom friend, and through him it was that I be came a billiard player. Ned's father was the proprietor of a large billiard establish ment in Milson street, where, in several rooms built over the garden in the rear of the house, billiards were played during the season at all hours of day and night. One or other of these tables were generally un occupied, and at Ned's command. Here he taught me the frame, fur which I immediate ly conceived a passion, and practised it without intermission at every possible op portunity. It is a fact that in my eleventh year I sometimes played for seven hours a day, without absenting myself from school, without fatigue, and without surfeit. Ned's father had no objection to our practice, as it was his object to make a finished player out of his son. The boy, however, was near-sighted, and I soon outstripped him in knowledge of the game. Sometimes Mr. B— would watch our play, and give in struction, which I was but too apt in re ceiving. This state of things continued un til I was fourteen years of age, by which time I could beat, and had beaten, every amateur player that frequented the rooms —not unfrequently to the considerable profit of the proprietor, who was always ready to back my play. At fourteen, my uncle bound me as out door apprentice to Mr. C— in George street. I had now but a little time in the evening for billia;ds. At first I did not care for this, thinking I had had enough enough of it; but after an interval of a few months the old passion for the game re turned stronger than ever. I had recourse to my old schoolfellow once more; but now there was an objection to my appearance at the subscription-rooms, his father not wishing his subscribers to identify me as Mr. C—'s apprentice. Iu consequence, it was only by stealth and on rareoccasions that we could resume our play. In this Alilemma, I was driven to the cheaper tables free to the public. There was one in the Borough Walls, open to all the world, and which, being opposite to the Blue School, and near the theatre, was much frequented during theatrical hours by the servants of the gentry occupying the boxes. I soon discovered that this place was the very sink of vice and blackguardism; that the most infamous transactions were carried on there by a gang of gambling Jews, who plundered the unwary at dice and hazard; that, in a word, besides being a billiard room, it was a perfect gambling-hell—and yet I could nut keep away. The best play ers I had yet seen frequented this table, and among them were some of the most consummate blackguards in existence. It was but rarely, however, that I met my match amongst them, and as I improved constantly, in process of time I could beat them all. 81 . 50 ESA I should have been speedily and irre deemably ruined by the infamous society of this place had it not been that, at about the age of sixteen I coneived a violent passion fur music, and began learning the piano, and studying counterpoint under a little humpbacked professor of the name of Albin, who taught me at a shilling a lesson. But for the music, I should certainly have thrown up.my trade and turned gambler long ere I was out of my time. As it was, the music and the billiards divided my leisure between them; now one now the other being in the ascendent. Perhaps the music would ultimately have weaned me from the l,illiard table—for I rapidly ac quired considerable skill, and could rattle off sets of quadrilles tastily enough in my second year—but about this time the science of billiards began to be talked of, and the practice of the game to assume some new phase!. Every mouth was full of the praises of Jack Carr, who had invented the side twist, and made other discoveries tending to the demonstration of phenomena hitherto unrecognized in the motion of globular bodies. All the billiard world went mad on the new discoveries, and it was not likely that I should be unaffected by the current mania. Ned B— first in doctrinated me in the new invention, and it was at his father's house I first saw Carr at play. I found him an adept at every arti fice in the game, and astonishingly skillful in the use of his own invention, to which, nevertheless, I was not disposed to accord the value he claimed for it. I noticed that he was often beaten by players whom I had beaten frequently myself, and I noticed, too, that when thus beaten, it was inva riably through reliance on his newly in vented stroke. There was no difficulty in the use of this invention, even to a stranger, as the player who once understood the new principle could master it easily in a few hours' practice. In fact, what I then sus pected has since been abundantly proved: the side-twist is of little real use to a good player, as it adds but little to his real strength, and is not at all comparable to "NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY", 1859. the capacity of making a good winning hazard—a faculty, by the way, which Carr did not possess in any extraordinary de gree. About the same time, some one else, paraphrasing Carr's invention, dis covered the top-twist, by which a still more eccentric motion is imparted to a ball. Both these discoveries, however, are rather curiosities of the players' art, than valuable additions to it, and as such they should be regarded; though there are, doubtless, cer tain situations in which they may be used with advantage. I was not long in master ing both these tours (le force, and could call then. into action when requisite. One night, whils I was playing a match with a footman in the Borough Walls' den, a young Irishman entered the room and stood looking on. He was buttoned to the chin in a seedy coat, and trod in a pair of new hob-nailed highlows. The room was crowded; and some of the insolent wags of the place began exercising their wit at the expense of the new comer. Ile bore it good humoredly enough, answering only with a ready joke and a rather smart re tort, until one of the blackguards, presum ing on his quietness, shouldered acue, and, walking backwards, brought the but-end in his face. The next moment the aggressor was sprawling on the floor, and the Irish boy in a fighting attitude, ready for whoso ever should present himself. file fallen man rose and rushed to the encounter, but in two minutes had had enough of it, leav ing the Irishman triumphant. The visitor showed the best possible tem per, apologised to the company for the interruption his presence had occasioned, and begged that the play might bo resumed; and in a few minutes, such order as was usual was restored. It appeared after wards that Pat Meagher—so was the stran ger called—had been a marker in Dublin; that lie had landed at Liverpool without a penny a fortnight before, and had tramped down to Bath, supporting himself with his cue on the route. lie soon proved himself an admirable player, beating me at our first encounters, though I was able to return the compliment after becoming acquainted with his tactics. lie bud .the peculiar faculty of bringing his ball to a dead stop, after striking another, at whatever distance —a feat often of much value, and which I never saw accomplished so surely by any other man. He played but a few nights at the den, fur he had the sense to see that if he became notorious there, his chance among the upper circles was lost. A few months after his arrival, I saw him, habited like an officer in undress, playing with a Right Honorable at B—'s subscription tables. Here he gained a certain notoriety, and no inconsiierable cash. It being an understood thing that be would play any ama teur for any amount, B—, without my knowledge, matched me against him for con testof twenty-one games. I could not refuse to play the match; and it came off on Christmas-eve, in the presence of over a hundred spectators. At the end of the nineteenth game I was the winner of eleven, and of a large amount of money which changed hands on the occasion, though I neither had nor coveted any of it. I fell into disgrace at home by playing this match. The rumor of my exploit was bruited abroad, and reached the ears of my uncle, who was violently angry, as also was, or pretended to be, my master; and they talked of punishing me by imprison ment for playing at unlawful games, in violation of the terms of my indenture. I was compelled to give a solemn promise not to enter a billiard room during the re mainder of my apprenticeship, which had still a year to run. I kept . my promise faithfully, consoling myself with my piano forte, on which I strummed away until midnight. When my term drew to a close, my uncle, who feared I should turn gamb ler if I remained in Bath, wrote to his brother in Dover, who, carrying on the same business to which I had served my time, consented to receive me as an assis tant. I was not unwilling to see the world; and accepted the situation offered. I went down by the Dover coach in April IS2I to my new appointment. I found my relative an agreeable old fellow, already prejudiced in my favor, from a liking he had conceived for me in my childhood, du ring a visit to Bath, and not at all disposed to restrict my pleasures. He hired a piano forte from Bachelor's, borrowed piles of music, and was never weary of my per formances, which he enjoyed to perfection under a cloud of tobacco smoke. Dyer was at that time all life and gay , ty. The Duke of Clarence's sons by Mrs. Jordan ruled the roast at the garrison, and led the fashion in the town and neighborhood.— Routes, balls, fetes, and dancing-parties fol lowed each other nightly. Quadrilles were the rage, and, as a consequence, I soon bo• came sought after as a pianist, and had en gagements four or five deep constantly on hand. I was paid handsomely for my ser• vices, and ate ices, quaffed champagne, and reveled in gastronomic luxuries. I relished my new position amazingly; I saw the best company, had the honor of playing to the blood royal, and, what I relished more, to the beautiful daughtres of Supervisor %V —, the sight of whose bewitching faces sometimes set my fingers blundering, and my brain a wool-gathering. As the summer drew on, this kind of oc cupation relaxed, and then ceased altogether and my way of life settled down into a rather dull routine. The summer passed and the autumn too, and November came in with its fogs and storms. I found a new pleasure in the roar of the huge breakers, and dash of the sounding surge on the peb bly beach, under the castle cliff; which was then a dreary weird-looking spot, very un like what it is now. It was my habit to walk out of an evening, through the dark ness, and take post on the old stakes of the jetty, to enjoy in solitude the din, whirl, uproar, and fury of the tempest. One evening about seven o'clock., as I WM pas sing the end of Snargate street towards the castle cliff, I heard a gentle clicking sound, which thrilled through too from head to toe like an electric shock—it was the soft crep itating kiss of billiard balls. Here was a discovery! I had net khowu that there was a table in the I felt Inv right hand grasping the cue; and the fingers of my left forming a bridge; as if by some magnetic influence. I looked round in all directions for the entrance. A dim lamp hung over a side-passage, and a few paces down there was an open door and a staircase, lighted by the merest blink from above. I stole softly up the stairs, and came at the first landing on a dour with a glass panel, but partly cur tained within; I peeped in, and saw two officers at play at a small table, and a com pany of gentleman seated round. I had been at work all day, and had my apron rolled round my waist. I knew it would nut do to enter in such a garb. I ran home and washed, indued my best suit, and in twenty minutes had returned and entered the room. No one noticed my in trusion, so I took a seat and watched the game. One of the players I recognized as a garrison officer who bad often danced to my music, and it is possible that he recog nized me. He won the game, and his ad versary declined to play any more, on the plea that he had no chance with him. The victor then challenged the room; and as no one accepted the challenge, I rose and ol ferd to play him myself. Ile eyed me from head to foot rather superciliously, and with a kind of haughty condescension, rolling the balls as he spoke, told me to lead off.— Annoyed at his pomposity, I allowed him but a single stroke, and then carelessly made the game off the balls. He was pleased to attribute this first result to acci dent, but the accident recurred again and again, to the mirth of the company, and his intense mortification. To give him some chance of winning, I proposed that he should take five of the pockets to my one; he accepted my offer, but still did not win a game, and finally left off without a momentary advantage. This affair created quite a sensation in the room; and I was asked to favor them with my company on the morrow evening, wben perhaps I might meet with a worthier antagonist. I con sented, and presented myself on the mor row accordingly, The room was full, and several of the new comers were anxious to measure their strength against me. My pride was roused, and I showed them all that they litid no chance in the contest. I had refused to play fur money from the first and it was this that puzzled them, while it secured fur me their respect. When they requested that I would come again, I de chained, on the ground that the table was not worth playing at—which was true, the pockets being twice the proper size, and the area not quite half the usual dimensions. I derided the idea of practising the science of billiards on such a toy, and refused to have anything more to do with it. Having said thus 1:131101, and made my bow to the company, I took my leave with an air of wonderful independence. • It was about nine o'clock in late Novem ber as I left the house and proceeded in the teeth of the wind towards the old jetty, whete the monster breakers were bursting in thundering peals on the masses of huge pebbles round and big as cannon balls, whose tremendous rattling, as they were dashe I to and fru, gave out a sound like the clapping of millions of giant palms, and which wrought most pow erfully and agreeably on my imagination. I had seated myself on a fragment of a beam, and was peering through the darkness at the heavy circling masses of water, when I felt a hand on my shoulder. I started to my feet; there stood a dim figure before me, motioning in show—for nu voice could be heard—and beckoning me away. I rose, nodded acqui escence, and followed, as he led on toward a shed under the cliff, where a light was burning. When under the lee of the build ing, and sheltered from the loud roaring of the billows, he turned short round, and pre sented a figure which I have good reason to remember until my dying day. lie was a man of about fifty-five years of age, not more than about five feet in height, with a prodigious hunch on" his shoulders, yet standing as upright as a dart. A long pale visage; a nose like an eagle's beak; a pair of deep sunk gray eyes; an ample brow; prominent chin, and thin, bloodless lips, such was the.aspect be turned suddenly towards me, with the not very courteous in quiry: "I say, young fellow, who the devil are your' "Really," said I, "I may return the in quiry with interest, and with more show of reason.. What is your business with me?" "You need not take offence; there is none intended I assure you—quite the contrary. Here is my card, and I am to be found at the 'Ship.' " I took the card, held it to the light, and read the,avords, "Louis Crannet" . "Your name is strange to me," I said: "I hare still to learn your blisiness with me." "I wish to know who you are, and what is your profession," he replied. "My mo tive for that is not mere curiosity. If you desire concealment, of course I say no more but it strikes me you do not." "You are right," I said? "I have no mo tixe for concealment;" and I told him my name, address and daily employment. He affected the utmost astonishment.— "Do you mean to tell me," he asked, as if utterly incredulous, "that you arc such an infatuated ass as to work at a trade fur about thirty shillings a week, and yet rlay such a game at billiards as I have seen you play?" '•P-how!" said I; "billiards are an amusement only; I could not make a living by billiards." "The deuce you could'nt! Hark ye, young man, you have the means of inde pendence in your hand, and you don't know it. Now, listen to me. With such skill at billiards as you have, and such knowledge of the world as I could teach you, you might gain any amount of wealth you choose." "Or, which is just as probable, might lose what little I bare." "Not at all. If you are afraid of that, I will make you an offer. You shall quit your trade, and place yourself under my charge. I will take you all over Europe; you shall make the grand tour at my ex pense; I will defray all charges of traveling living, and clothing; you shall visit all the capitals, shall have your own valet, and live like a lord; and I will give you a clear three hundred a year for yourself." "In return for which," said I, "I am to play where you choose, to win when you choose, and to lose when you choose." "Just so," said he. "Thank you; I will have nothing to do with it." "You will be sorry for it, my lad; and if you are such an idiot as to go grinding at a beggarly trade fur a few shillings a week, when you might realize an independence in a few years, you deserve to suffer." "Good night!" I replied, and strode away home as fast as I could. I had shaken off the tempter for a time, and felt in quite a virtuous glow as I walked homewards through the dull streets and the drizzling rain which began to fall. Next day, however, as I stood at my work in the dreary cobwebby shop, the vision which Mr. Crannel's words had conjured up to my imagination returned with double force, and in brilliant contrast to the surrounding circumstances. My avoca tion for the first time grew distasteful, and I longed for the hour of release. When it came, I sallied out to the sea-shore, at the old spot; and dreamed away an hour there to the murmur of the subsiding gale. I caught myself once or twice looking round to see if Mr. Crannel would make his ap pearance again. Ile did not conic, and I suppose I walked home that night with a feeling of disappointment. On the following day, Crannel came into the shop while I was left in charge during the temporary absence of my uncle, and bought a few trifling articles, the selection of which occupied him half an hour. He now renewed his offer, and begged me to think of it calmly at my leisure, informing me at the same time that he should remain at the "Ship" Ihr another week, and should be happy to see me at any moment. I told him that there was no probability that I should change my determination; but ho must have seen that my resolution was not so firm as it had been at our first en• counter; and it is likely that be already felt certain that I should swallow the bait. Af ter this, he waylaid me every night in my walks, and thus, in repeated interviews, from which I had not the resolution to re-I frain, at length won me over to his purpose. I accepted .his proposition in terms with which the reader is already acquainted, and we drew up a duplicate agreement at his hotel, which was mutually !de:a ed, nod .'F, which each cf us retitit.ed a copy. The agreement bound me to him co- three years though it only covenanted that I should render him my services whenever called upon, for the salary named—no reference being made to the nature of the services. 1 had to make up a tale to satisfy my old uncle, who was most unwilling to let me go; but he was appeased at last, and gave me his blessing at parting. It was the sec ond week in December when I stepped on board the steamboat with Crannel, and sailed fur Calais. I had never been to sea before; the passage proved tempestuous, and the boat nearly foundered midway. 1 was miserably sick, and longed to go at once to the bottom. Crannel watched and waited on me with almost a woman's ten derness—got me to bed as soon as we touched the shore, and could not have man ifested more care and kindness,had I been, as people thought I was, his only son." A night's repose restored me; and the next morning an "artist" ma he his appear ance, who took my measure, and in a few days sent in such a magnificent wardrobe, made in the recent Parisian fashion, as qualified me, in appearance, at least, for any society in Europe. Meanwhile Cran nel made me aware of the particulars of his plan. I was to assume the character of an English country gentleman of fortune $1,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; $2,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE on his travel.. I was to be passionately fond of billiards, and about as clever with the cue as country gentlemen generally are —playing a - N - rild game, in a reckless, can tiunless way, hut, fur obvious reasons, play: inn only for moderate stakes. It would be his part to drop in occasionally during the play, when he would make his own bets, either in my favor or against me, as he choose, and I was to win or lose according to signals agreed upon between us. In or der to avoid suspicion, I was to conceal my real strength, even when it was most re- quired, and to win, when to win was most imperative, as if by accident rather than design. With regard to the connection be tween us, it was agreed that we should not appeal- too intimate, or, on the other hand, too distant and reserved; we were to be casual acquaintances, on good terms with each other, atol sotnetinws winning each other's money at n quiet ntrni- gown. _UI tJje pelit f 1 c,aildv..4. ~ at. a FrCliell table—rite c.llllHw Ca being very different fr..an winch had been uccustomed—ia ~rder to familiar ise myself with their peculiarities; and we started by separate eunveyances. I and my valet leading the way, fur Brussels. (To at CONTINUED.] A Chapter oz Wit The author of the "Tin Trumpet" thus discourses on wit—and illustrates the sub ject: Wit consists in discovering likenesses— judgement in detecting differences. Wit is like aghost, much more often talked of than scene. To be genuine, it should haven base of truth and applicability, otherwise it de_ generates into mere flippancy; as, for in stances, when Swift says: "A very little wit is valued in a woman, as we are pleased with a few words spoken plain by a parrot;" or when Voltaire remarks, that "Ideas are like beards; woman and oung, men have none." This is a random facetiousness, if it de serves that term, which is equally despicable for its fuleshood and its facility. Where shall we discover that rarer species of wit, which, like the vine, bears the more clusters of sweet grapes the oftener it is pruned; or, like the seven-mouthed Nile, springs the faster from the head, the more copiously it,flows from the mouth ? The sensations excited by wit are de troyed, or at least impaired, if it excite the stronger emotions, or even if it be connected with purposes of utility and improvement. We may laugh where it is bitter, as the Sardinians did when they had tasted of their venomous herbs, but this is the risibility of the muscles allied to convulsions rather than to intellectual pleasure. Leigh Hunt devotes forty pages of one of his hooks—and fails to elucidate the mys tery at last. Johnson defines wit as "the faculty of associating disimilar images in an unusual manner." Sidney Smith, in his "Lectures on Moral Philosophy," shows the fallacy of this definition, gives a better, and broaches the startling doctrine that wit, so far from being necessarily a natural gift, might be studied as successfully as mathe matics. It is a question if Sheridan was witty when staggering along, half tipsy, he was eyed by a policeman, and exclaimed, confidentially, "My name is Wilberforce— I ass a religious man—don't expose me!' Talleyraud, when asked by a lady fa mous for her beauty and stupidity, how she should rid herself of some of her trouble some admirers, replied: "You have only to open your mouth, madam." This if witty, was also ill-natured. Lord Chatham rebuked a dishonest Chan cellor of the Exchequer by finishing a quo. tation the latter had commenced. The de bate turned upon some grant of money for the encouragament of art, which was op posed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, who finished his speech against Lord Chat ham's motion by saying, ••Why was not this ointment sold and the money given to the poor?" Chatham rose and said, "Why did not the noble lord coMplete the quota tation, th , npplicalion being so striking? As he has shrunk from it, I will finish the verse for him—'This Judas said, not that he cared for the poor, but because he was a thief, and carried the bag.' " It was coarse wit when Lord Byron, who was groaning with agony from a severe at tack of cholic, and exclaiming; "Lord help rue! lam dying," was told by Trelawney, "not to make such an infernal fuss about eying." Luttrell tolls a story of Sir F. Gould, who had a habit of adding the phrase "on the contrary" to everything he said; a gentle man saying to him, "So I hear, Gould, you eat three eggs every morning for breakfast?" "No," on the contrary—" "What the devil," said Luttrell, "does the contrary of eating three eggs mean?" "Llyidnj them, of course!" said Sheridan. This was ready wit. Rowland Rill compared a sinner to an oyster, which opened its shell, all month to take water; just as the sinner, with his mouth at full stretch, took in the tide of in iquity. 'heavenly grace," he said was "like a rump of beef—cut and come again —no meagre fare, my dear brethern." Lydia White, an Englih magazine writer, was an invalid, and fancied herself contin ually at death's door, and used to invite people to see'her die. A friend, who had gone several times by special invitation, and come away disappointed, at last refused to attend. pleading that he "could not afford {WHOLE NUMBER 1,507. to waste so much time on a mortuary ut.- certainty Seotehmen arc notoriously unable to ap preciate a joke. Sydney Smith, who knows them well, says: "It requires a surgical operation to get a joke into a Scotch under standing. Their only idea of wit or trot, as they call it, is laughing immoderately at stated intervals." Some of the Irish judges of olden time were equally dull. One, in giving his dic tum on a certain will case, said he "thought it very clear that the tesiteur imeudel to keep a life ilderc4 in the ehtate To it Curran frankly replied: ~‘'Very trm., my lord, very true; oyNtaturs generally .1, secure life interests to thetnell,e; , , but in this case I think your worship takes the will fur the deed." How ue "DvEn" von LuVE.—_in amusing ~tory is told, as au episode in a story in a late i• 11 eigo review, about amil.tary yon rig gentlo ,a:. v for love. The ;al:lir occurred lo 0%0., io,!ru trzi, named Do. Mersey. lie was s iolently enamoured of a very pretty WUL/IMLI winan he met ny chance in the s root, and disc... ered at temards to be the wife of a "dyer" in the Rue de Marais. Whether she was dispused to favor his addresses or acted in concert with her husband to punish hitmis not very easy to say; the result would incline to the latter supposition. At all events she gave him a rendezvous, at which they where surprised by the dyer himself—a fel low strong as Hercules, and of an ungovern able temper. lie rushed wildly on De Mar say, who defended himself fit s.ano time with his rapist.; a false thrust howerzr, broke the weapon at the hilt, and the dyer springing forward caught poor Gustave round the body and actually carried hint off over his head, and plunged him neck and heels into an enormous tank filled with dye stuff! How he escaped drowning—how ho issued from the house and ever reached his home—he never was able to tell. It is more than probable the consequences of the calam ity absorbed and obliterated all eke; for when he awoke next day he discos - et ed that he was totaly changed--his skin, from head to foot, being dyed a deep blue! It was in vain he washed and washed, boiled himself in hot baths, or essayed a hundred cleansing remedies; nothing availed in the least—in fact many thought that he came out only bluer than before. The most lea ned of the faculty were consulted, the most distin guished chemists—nil in vain. At last a dyer was sent for, who in an instant recognized the peculiar tint,and said, "Ah, there is hut one man in Paris has the secret of this color, and he lives in the line de Marais." I I Here was a terrible blow to all his hopes; and in the discouragement it inflicted three long months were passed, De Marais grow ing thin and wretched from fretting, and by his despondency occasioning his friends the deepest solicitude. At length one ef his rela tives resolved on a bold step. Ile went direct to the Rue de Marias, and demanded to speak to the dyer. It is not very easy to say how he opend a negotiation of such delicacy; that he did so with consummate tact and skill there can be no doubt, fur he so worked on the dyer's compassion by the picture of the poor young fellow, utterly ruind in his career, unable to face the world—to meet the regiment—even to appear before the en emy, being blue!—that the dyer at last con fessed his pity, but at the same time cried out, "What can I do? There is no getting it ea' agaiu!" "Nu getting it MT again!. do you really tell me that?" exclaimed the wretched no- n'otiltor . • "Impossible! that's the patent," tail' the other, with an ill-dissembled pride. "I have spent seven years in the invention. I only hit upon it last October. Its grand merit is that it resists all attempts to efface it." "And du you tell me," cries the friend in terror, "that this poor fellow must go down to his grave in that odious—well, I mean no offence—in that un holy tint?" "There is but one thing in nip power, sir," "Well, w hat is it, in the name of mtgres: Out cw•ith it, and name your mice," "1 can make him a very charming greets! bcau vert,ntonsieur." AN AMOROUS A CRONAT:T.-A late French journal relates the following story, which it will be seen is French all over, besides being immensely funny: While Mons. Godard was filling an im mense balloon in the Champ tic Mars, 1.0 amused the spectators Ly sending up a small figure of a man, the perfee.tscuiLlaoco of M. Thiers without the spectacles. The little man • being filled with gas rose majest ically into the air, and was soon lost to %iow among the clouds. His ndventures, which became known the next day, were curious. Thanks to a strong and favoring gale which impelled him on his course, tim little balloon man arrived the same after noon in the sight of a fine country house in in the neighborhood of Bievero. It was near the hour of dinner, and the latly:of the mansion, who naturally thought herself perfectly safe, was occupied in the myste ries of her toilet. It was a warm day, and she opened one of the windows which looked out upon the park, and was safe from any prying eyes. While tranquilly engaged, by the assistence of a corset-lacing, in re ducing her waist to a size and shape that would reflect credit on her husband's taste, she was suddenly startled by a strange noise, and immediately the casement was thrown open, and our little balloon-man