The people's journal. (Coudersport, Pa.) 1850-1857, January 17, 1856, Image 1

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    VOL VIII.
THE JOURNAL.
Terms—in Advaiice
One copy per annum,
Village subeeribers,
TEP'tS OF ADVERTISING
I square, of 12 lines or tes.e, I insertion,- $0.50
3 insertions, L. 50
ererr vth , equent in s ertion, :25
;Rule and figlre work, per sq., 3 insertions, 3.00
'verr .obievicut insertion,' .50
I column, one year, ,25A-}0
1 column, six mouths,
Xduili.trator . or F.xecutori' Notices, 2.110
Sheriirs Sales. per tract, 1.50
Profevtion-t1 Card. not eKceeding eight lines
inserted for ti5.%:1 per annum..
rr .411 le•ters on INgineis. to secure at
ention, shn•t•.d be addressed (post puid) to.
111 Publisher. . •
Srlrrt •partry
"AS YE SOW, SD SHALL YE REAP."
ET MRS. ►. GAGE
Satter we must, and scatter we will,
Streming at broadcast all the dry long-,
Tirouglt the valley or through the hill,
The Need.: or right or seeds or wrong,
Every thought is in embryo ;
Every word is n planted's ;
Look to it well !hit the seeds ye s'etw
Are for the flower and not the weed
Foil• and vice pity' snwn in spring,
0! trn4t- tne, when harve4t class hive come
• Will tinthing,, to In tottood:s storehouse bring,
To make g!ad shouli_ for the hlrve3:
Too ot.en a prec'oli how *44 spent •
is seeming p!eavare4 in rofchill time,
Thit makes ni a wh''e !ire lon's regent;
For tEe-frtrii or sowin g i; sin and crime
Scatter we meat. and . scatter 'we will.
Strewing at brwmica:t where'er we go
le life's galley, or nn ite hilt,
Seeds for hoot Inity's weal or woe.
Beware! beware ! le4t the seed 4 ye sow
Be le;xed.Wi , h ;nalice, end pride, and Itrice
For the wheat and tare 4 toge•her grow,
Till the revere bind in the field of life:
Cull the good Reed for the coaling hour,
Tirtt all thy days m ty be c Rio, and free-,
r.rermore pincki !g the planted flower,
Binding golden ‘ltearits for eterni'r.
From Arquir's hems 31t izine
THE LIN Lif THE AFTERNOON.
BY ♦IRGI\TA F. TOWNSEND
On the many joys of life he gazed still, with
eße eyes_ of childhood.—llyperim.
"Rowena! Rowena!"
.' Well. uncle Harry 1"
The voice, soft and clear, wandered
throrgh the long hall, and down the
broad snit cage, to the gentleman who
stood at it 4 font
" It's going to rain, and the air's
very damp. Voti mu,tn't ride out thin
afternoon. Now mind what I say,
child." And a moment after, the
twinain , .; back of the street door sent
a sullen echo throuzii the buildintr.
"'Now, if that icri't too bad," ejacula
ted Rowena Strong, as she pettishly
tossed down on the table the new fall
tat, which for the last half hour had
invrosgedher attention, and walked
to the window.
Juct look at her a moment, as she
stand's them wilt the crimson Curtains
throwing a tich artistic glow over the
face she has drawn close to the window
pane. It is not a handsnm3 fret—no
heightening colors—no harmony of
surroundings can make it this ; hut. it
is piqUant and interesting. and, I am
half inclined t..) think, the pout aat
um; the full red lips is rather lie-
corning than otherwise.
, Rowena Strong is an orphan, and
tigr rich uncle's pet and heiress. Her
memory can look over sofne half score .
.pcyeare, to the time when she lived in.
p. little
,brown house in the country,.
with het widowed mother.
Mfrs. Strong had mirried in oprisi
to the r will of the ,arnu), mitt for
many, years there Was but liuli inter
criu—rsei,etieeen them. Wnen her his.
t , iand died: and left her in poor lealtb,
with scarcely. any Means for suppiwt,
the widow was too proud to appeal to
her relatives for the aid she needed.
Two years went by, and Mrs. Strong
lay on her dying bed ; and, ‘i'hett she
on Rowena, the' woman's. pride
yielded -to the mother's heart. She
. •
wrote to. her brother. A few weeks
before, he had lain his 7 young wife un
dei the summer 'grass ; and it was
with d softened heart that ho hastened
to the death bed of his eibter. Prom
her dying ban& he receised• Rowena,
and pledged hitaaelfto In in deed and
i=2lll
•
_ - -
•." "I.*
'•; "
•• - W:. 1 . 7 ' 1.3 " ti ; ft r. " i
- •
z-1,3,371,
pi.„ f.••et.l - . 7 2I:
• I '
. ,
:'_;•!1 3: • ".. .- A
• - : „
fif, ,
i i truth a fathet , to' her... :. •'
-, i , .-hen, ; to :fre * 4yaUt.oM.ti:ights .' ::ttie ' y:
:He fhadjulfilled bis:.promise well. breakout of the bur.s 1 N . Ta. ll, Klia' .6
Rottiena had.. became:the itiol of the a sad s'l'M to_ tell you of.Mattle: r:
rich tnerchar.t; audlier life flowed up .. "After, her father.died, the prOperty
to it;i'iv, : entieiti - yeah, pictuf- - . was found very MUehinVelVell,'"aiid it
. .• .
esque,,peaceful iiyer. - is known that fer, several years past;
~..
Rowena,was by. no.. means. a ;nova
.Mrs. EngliSh" and h , ei: 'daughter have'
writer's incarnation of all irenosSilile. livid Mostly ' be' mortgage's of their
sweettiess . andgoodnessl She had het hetne; whiCh yOu, are' aware 'was the
I faults; and her petted,
,Itix.nrious • life 1 former'.; doWery. 'Last . month' she'
was not calculated to evolVe the noble was
takeii . 'severelY ill ; "indeed, 'her'
. ,
el.atacteilstic of het: nature. - paPa .
I Bet underneath all the accidental or i says:" The mortgages ()tithe old place
indigenous faults of her nature, lay ai, are guile ekhan;ted; . and they have
warm, true heart, and a substratum of j now no means4'f subsistence: I tie .
good coinmou sense.. Rowena- Stood.' lieve' it would kill prier Mrs. English
a few moments, . dubiously Searching out-right to le tie her old home, though
I the clouds with her blue eyes, and then i how they 'can Ton' stay' there, is 'a
,g.., ,
the large' di tips began to patter on the -1 mystery to me: ' • - ' '
roofs. . .1 4. " And now I-have a secret to con
! " Nell, there's tie use fretting about .'• fide " to' you, — Maclrcre I ' "Matt'e's
3 it," she said, draWitig the curtains to- ; 1 beauty his more than fulfilled the rare
I
gether with a. sigh.: 4 .t.l.t's going to j p"romise of her'childhoo r d, aiid'her face'
pour; that's plain enough \ to be seen,* + is a pictUre ; a: Sweet, but rather sad
and I Must make the.b . est of it. How ' one; ivith its Clear, Grecian - contour.:
( provoking, though, when I Wanted to its lips like Juno-rose-lin& filled with
[wear out my :beauty . , gala neW liar so ! meadow deiv, and' her hair and-:eyes
lbadly ! Not. a soul will come hei - e lof br o wn..: 7 bronze and hazel brown....'
Ithis afternoon, : either, and it'll be as i •' Well; Squire Allan—you remem
! dull as Sate-prison all the afternoon. l'ber him—has taken afancs to her !
+ I must get hold of something to read; ' Did ever hear anything so. _ üb- .
you • ..•.,
-f, or 1 shall certainly,die of ennui. before : surd I 'There are - only fifty years dif
iuncle Harry getS• back."• And. she ; ference in their .ages ! Two weeks, {
I went to the table and whirled over ago. the gra.y-haired gentleman pro-.
the uncut leaves of several mapzines + posed to Mattie, as he did finty-five
I that lay thereon. As she. liAlesslY ', nears ago . to her &rood ni.oher. YOu
'I glanced among - the pages, her
,eyes ! know he is iMinenselY. Weaithy, and
lighted tot a French sentence, and she ; would.surroum Mrs. English and her .
{ paused to translate the latter portion daughter with all the luxu:ies whi . eli
aft : "Et ?nil soit . dit flue jai rendu their, previous lives render necessary.
1 nit Rooms heurcu' xinm I a rte. i " I don't know but for her mother's
. i
I " I wonder ifthat can be raid of me." ; sake Mattie English will marry old
1 murmured the young lady. as she laid i 'Squire Allen ; but I do know she had
I down the book ; and, folding her hands rather die than do this. Poor girt!
I behind her, she walked thoughtfully i My heart aches Whenever I look into
_ . .
lup a:id down the reign.. • 1 her pale, Sad face. -. . ,
-.
j " Let's see ; here lam twenty years j " But, dear me, 'Rowena, I've gotten
lold, aid yet I can't think I've 'ever to the bottom my fourth page, and
.made one being really happy in all my not . comarnce4 telling, yen all I have to
1 life. It multea me feel tad to say, it, i tan, si.--:— . -"
. .
. .
I for I don't lietievsl'in any more self- : But, reader, we 'charitably infer
isli than other people.: I've given. a , you areSaanliar with the cenclUsionS
i good deal to beggars, now and then ;' lof sche -l-airl letters. Suffice it, this
iand there's that poor family that lived i one, did not lack the usual Saccharine
round the all 4: Didn't I chthe up elements. 'Rowena read over the last
all the children in nice, warm, shilling page twice. Then, she reunied her
.I 1 delaines ? They looked just as dirty walk. . .
$l.OO
L 25
EOM
in two ssieeks though, as if I. hadn't
touched them. And that threw cold
water on, all my benevolent projects.
It wasn't right to de discouraged so
ca•ily, I s' pose ; but now I should
really like to feel as if I'd performe . d
one reaCy good act—something that
would require sell-ilenialand exertion
on my pa; t, and—" I „
Jtit then there . ivas a knock at the
chamber door, and domestic put her
head inside, f' Here's a letter as has
just come fur ye, Miss Ruuy !"
The young lady caught it eagerly,
and, with a little scream of delight,
recognized the hand-writing: 'it wt
tLat abet old schoolmate', Julia Gil
wan, between whom and Rowena had
always existed a warm intimacy.
They had known each other when
the former lived with her widowed
mother, in the ltttle brown cottage in
the country, and the child-afrectinn had
strengthened with their yeao3. Julia
was the daughter of the village doctor,
of course, her stCial . p')sition was then
so p t , H ,w - to R.-wena's ; had in
uo ‘Vie influenced her choice of her
,
fi as h en the 'brow n cottage
was (3c.itanged.for the luxurious city .
hi,me, .disinterestedness, %yds
fully repaid. • -
Eve' y year, the people Who' lived
opposite:, saw the sweet j face 'of the
doctor's daughter beaming out of RO
wena's chamber windows, .and - when.
the wind carried. their'i4iices , across
the street, it seemed lilac b. sudden Ufa
break of .music, , .
. . .
Rowena . brnke the , , seal, utaniturfill
of its filiwety device; and read eageily,
the letter ; but the latter- part especi:
ally rim acted lier attention, aitd thus it
"You,remen3ber, darling gowena,
our. old Achoolmate, Mani('
. .Eoglish.
Can you not tee . het now, with' her
bronze biowii and her; eyes'
wearing just the color of ihertnute,
EISIO
6=12M11
Dplio:ro'.l'6 . .tfit PUNCH' LES -OP. DEMO C RACY, AND TH . E: D I sg.St,LNATIoy, ; OTERAT ME: . AID 'NEWS.
7 , - ,c - QppE4§To. - try . i,RAt.;:f.tiii' .-I .ci3p,t,ikiyy,:rA.;:'
. JANUARY '' 17,--1856
E
‘`lio'W I wish I could help her—
dear. little, Matti° Eaglish. _:How
clearly her ":sweet .seems
looking down on me now ; and 1 can
almosl feel myfingeTswindingthrough
Lher rich calls! To. think of her rn -
t rying that gray . -haired, beiit-over,l
wrinkled-face.- Squire Allen—giving
her . swe . et youth to his age. It makes
me shudder. • If I could only prevent
it in some wl—even a few hundied
dollars might y do some good fbr a lit
tle while. Uncle Harry would give
the this for myself, hat come to asking
.it for other • people"—and Rowena
shook her bead doubtfully.
a I h'aven't but fifty dollars by- me ;
—stop—yes I have ! There's that
five hUndred, uncle Harry g-rve me to
buy a difiminid set: If I 'should tell
him I'd concluded to wear the obi
pearls, and keep the Money for anoth . - .
er purpose, he'd only pinch my ear,
and say "'I W,w a' changeable
minx," and" emltd easily inchse' the
bills and send them' to Mattie; -"and
neither . she nor any Wily ele 'WOuld-
IJa the But' I want the- dia:
mond set terribly, 'to iwoar ' , Mrs:
CliaPinan's P'aitY' next Week—
HoW'cliarring 4 w‘iiuld . look : .With the
.bitiehrocade' . pnelel'Hacry prorilise'd
me ! • Ilk tiien i;OOi:' .l lklkf.tte 7
EngliSh., :How couTjl L,lio. ao„selfish
as:tn think
.of. diamotas, wheizi- her,'
life's happiness -is -at stake And
here, too; is die 'opportunity I' was
louglng . for;.:of doiti g;ii4 'liefOre
Julia's,letter came. Godhas, sent..it
me, I -know: not -wait
another moment." • t
- R.svena StiimOnyned - bastily to
tier irriting desk and inere 'vi'as• a
light in'her blue eyes, and - 'a
uess rising over het whole face Nithich
no diamond's could tiave girma it.. ,
-She'stclod at •the window,- looking
out sadly onihe sun, that *as' going
=SO
: .
in ea) ry liekind the' liars hilt tisim:: 're
had teen one Of those Novembe'it' s daYie
that tang their gray, glnomy bordering
dn . the 'iithite ;skirls cif winter, and "rcrfr
the wind crak'begniniqi . th take epthi .
the Tear: - With a Mir .
the • 'rrintirner Caine"
dnwntrinni:the mpuntains,' and wand
ered th'reliL'r,l) the short, dry'grass
mead nc . and up . .1? -. 1*" . ..5:0g1,1 the,- forests.
The gray cl'on - Lis thirkened I
Nfil‘i•nader {ace out at:
the %%i . nciovi arew • -
• •
I coula ilecritie it. with its
clearly - cut profile, its large, Tong=
laoled, melti;'w eyes, its . flill.drunping
and the rich 'cues 'tliat hung :ail
dhout, it. Ab s . Me!: this a faint" sug-
g.esstipn . (if its beauty • .."
The_hiyti - ie, a large; Cisbioned;
bnti:ery respectable wooden
stood insome . iii‘staece from the road;
hot the whale had -a 'bare, .desertecT
kind of a..forA, which the season alone
shiwnld'imt bave g.iven
1T will he here to
mired . Mattie" English; still looking off'
at the clouds: — " And I must decide .
my rate. d-od help 'me ! tWoulttrath
er doWri hitt') same' kitchen, and
toil there the:Veriest driidge, all the
clayS of inflife, than marry. that rich, its attractions. • .
oldßUt pilot. mother; she Julia qilman's small figure and
• ..-
will starve, or he dependent ortTitri- sweet face are . opposite . her. The
ty, if Ido not do this; h know the delicate - Saxon features, 'the small ,
neighbors (Dr. Gilman especially,) mouth i the slightly tinted cheeks,•with
havetiecretly,helPeif fOr months, the blue eys,and rich. yellow hair,
and we' haven't money in the house alt, ether, seem like an incarnation of
buy another meal. dear. moth- ; young, beautiful girl-hood.
er ! When /: think :of her failing "Now; Reeuy, darling, itis too bad,"
heaith,her,former life of ease and 114-
in the first vauseof the con
versation. which. had. set. between. them,
ury, : l know I ought, to srcrifice my
'an uninterrupted current for the lait
self for. her; It would • kill me CO see
her suffer; and she cannot brave pew- two' hours; " I must not stay here any
erty with the strong heart and. young longer, : in this dusty traveling dress.,
health that I hare. But to think of
.1 t
i . isn't 'treating you with proper res
that. old man's being my Ausband I shall go and charge it this
How it makes me shudder.
"Our home shOuld he; the • mornent."
proudest
_either," laughed
in all Meadaw. Brook," he said", " and noWeita, as she pushed- ba'ck her fiend
intP the chair, and then seating herself
"silks and should add new lustre .
to my beauty. .
on its arm, she continued, " Now, I.
" And with these I' shall be bought have told-you' all about Coarfte, and
and sold." There was. a scornful .it is settled"you ale tti be bride's-maid.
working of the pale, proud 'face, but I
I. want to hear about sof nebocly else's
the next moment is, softened, for an- - matrimonial affairs. YOU remember,
other memory had come up to her
you wrote me you'd 'a long st:s
heart.
tell, when you came, about Kittle
English and Paul Stebbins.
Julia's face brightened: "O'a. yes,
I remember; but it's a great 'secret.,
I You'll promise,, -solemnly, never to,
divulge r
"Solemnly, never."*: •
" Well, you know that some two
. years .ago.: Mettle refused 'Squire Al
len., All of a' sudden' she seemed to
become . Very happy,
,and went about
the house singing like a May bii ti, and
making preparations for her brother
to go doWII to Maryland, and pass the
winter.' Everybody wondered, but
nobody knew where they obtained . the
money tu.do this ; but, at all events,
Mrs:. English :went South, the old
house was closed up, and Mattie ob
tained a. situation as governess ih Mrs.
family fur, the • winter. She
studied, too, very hard, all ber.letstiti;;
and in the, sp ring there was an opening - 1
in the Academy for an assistant teach—
er.' • Mattieacceptedllie situation, and
last Tune her'mOther retained from
the South with greatly iiminved
as papa predicted. They rented the.
old homestead, for it •was theirs no
"Oh! what will Pizut say, when he
returns and hears of it!" And now
she has lain hey forehead against the
window, and the tears are struggling
up to the long!a , died eyes. "He nev
er told me he loved roe, with his lips,
but his eyes have a thousand times.—
I know, too, if was bee au..m. his uncle
wanted him to marry that Bristot. bei
ret,iA; that he went on this long. journey.
Pone fellow ! He did not like to of
fend his rich old uncle by refhsing.
'Win ; and then Paul is poor, and had
no home to offer me.. Ent -he meant
to, before he returned,'andthen--Oh !
hoUr happy we might Irave been !"
Great sobs were • shaking the :poor
girl's' frame, now;. for a -feiv years up
the future, Ole saw 'a
little Avhite -cot
tage, green vines over-rapping
it, and the great stone Souse of the
milliOnabe, with its Gothic front, and
Grecian ,tatnes, seerivid likea prison
as it loomed up before her.
At that moment, a quick, emphatic
cllfof the hid house-knocker rotised-
Mattie, and with an exclamation. It
tviil wakeif mamMa,". she hurried to
the door, careless of • hoc , tear-stained
UM
".Here's a letter for.. y0u,.1 ma'am,7'
said thepoithoy, aihe held it: up, eye
ing the wet cheeks curiously.
It was: is crop New .York, and
Made. could :: notreeoguize the delicate
bait , disguiied. airogra pby of the ad
dress.- ;She hurried back: to the
.half
darkenod sitting • room, and opeoe4,
her letter .by the, light of e eriudow - ,
Several bills fell at her feet. There
were only ; these ,word
_on a. sh e et of
note paper:
"Use ?lee:e t :and do not riff 'Siuiie
Allen." .• •
Halt believing it was all a dream,
she
,gathered - Theie
were five' liuiicied dollais. SVOIeri . Y•;
bTes
•sea tnitif; Eiii4
MEZ
lish•
~Oh,t if Rowena Strong could. tilty
have ;united iuta.that •chl: room, with
the,night shadows choking. up ;he, grin ;
nets, :and seen Mattie English, asfaint ,
with,that otierwliuirniog joy, she stink
dotvn.nnherkneesp mOrniuritig!'SavO!
saved! • Vatherja4eaven,,how
,••
I thank thee . •
.T%ioyeariltad . passed. It was in
the late bla;,,autl , , one•_of..those days,
that arc the. Spring'ls,
The fresh, fragrantwindeame up from
the fa7roftfield, and circulated through
the great heart of the city, sad the
sunshine . golden folds all over it.
13y .: the openeharnher window, o f
handsome brick dwelling,in oneof.tlre.
pleasantest streets, .two yauag ladies
were siiting,,and the wind often drew
aside,the curtaius; and:mhowad them,
to the .people. opposite ? . or
..earsied
down to the paiser 7 by, ,-some sweet,
sudden outbreak of_girli.4.l) laughter.
Xon -would . have kow _ Rowena
.gki.ong ; at once,. reale=r; . but, though
her face, ha.d•pot lust its bright, piqu
ant.character, it lad. toned down into
an expression. of womanly 'feeling and
eardestnes;'which greatly' heightened
longer, and'Alattie's lips were alwzys
foil' of smiles as ; h.c.r brown eyes
were efliglit. • ...
Mu. the • Cream: of ...my story is to
contd. - . Last winter Paul Stebbins
came tiorne:—[YintromembeePatil; Ro-
Wenal He - was' the handSoinest boy
rt 'the
. academy', wheUyeutirld I went
to,the district, school.: lie soon be
came a•daily visiter at • Mrs -
HiS uncle•was terribly • aligrj , when it
camp ' •tri his ears, and', threatened to
.cut .Paul off With a sriillinb. Bid his
spirited nephew informed,,him .he had
obtained- a situation .at.the South, in
some mercantile-business,-which would
sup Ply.-all his arid Mattie's wants.
"So the orusty - old - :baehelcir had to
swallow his chagrin as:bestihe might,
:attltittPaul ii his fitTorite,- will doubt-
~-~'
!MIEM
less stake him hie brit : Thaj►'will liis~
married
reason Mattis could nut accept Jdiirj
invitation rci Jitte•hd . your wedding
" You know 'SqUire Allen lilt'
nisi riot! a - 'B beau . . People i*y
it's the one Paul's uncle de4nea fir?
Last week. Niattie - awl nods
•
past their `new, splendid stone dwelt
, , •
4 , 2 _„ t
- "1 In ugbed, Anti whi ' .
. .
you might, Nava
,beeu mi s tres s of
that magni4eence r
•. : ;
answered. with a siiadder.,:.
• an4 . :l ..3140u14 have bus:
fur on e . na meles s , unknoivn &lona."
....What do you irkeari,•Mitttie
looked rna . Am&
. •
her eyes filled. Wiiiktears. haver .
.•
ricver breathed' it to a
ny, . she said,, "
'but - mamma and Paul; but licit/ trustr:
you, Julia. It ,V:1.3 just at stindpyru . „. ,
(how well I remember 41} and wa expecting 'squire s"
it
that evening..
(for it wai the one be bad ; spec'lfieid,l„,.
to he:tr my:decision whether Iwoulii'
be bis wife:
"'My 'tnatiler‘ . va,i - dying slowly
starvation was staring tui in the
and Isaid, in : my dasporithm,
save my mailer; I will tell him
be. his wife. . . .
"'Just then,. a letter map. for
-1 opeued.it,and _found five lAundre.r.,
dollars : witlt taese wards, ." Use this. ;
and do not ingrrij Squire Allen." Ths:,.:
letter bore no• other "date or namo-..
That money was my earthly sal vatiori-
You know, Julia, all that enabled cow.:
to do. And to that unknown - friend d. so:
I owe, it, that I am not this day. flub-. a'
wretched wife of thatgray-hairiid,oll'r.
man, 'the; miserable mistress - of yondo4-;/
great mansion 1. •
...Oa, howl
. have prayed - for - th-jri
giver of that gift; how I-have iongecArt
to Gee him °rimy, and sarvihat
and know to whom L owe and -- all.
bliss of the present; all the ecitacy
thiAing I shall be Paurs• wife?
, 4.And don't ycni eipect evertaknoio;
this lqattiel'
• Hardly, Julia, till T learn• it
there,' avid her eyes-- -.thy, Reetta...
pan are crying!'
" i can't help it; Julia," and Ruv►a
na's head dropped on her' friend' r
shoulder, while teais of exquisite joy.
rolled dawn her elie'elci. ' -
. Julia had a sympathetic-little hew.
•.
and the . sobs cane
,up. to . herthrua~
so fast she could not finish 'her story.. -
At lant the door bell rang loudly. R
walla sprang up., with blushefro9ini,
over her cheeks. "That io Charlo." . ,
she said;." I always know his ring,'"
" And here's my traveling . 'clies
can't he preseatea .to him in ,
criel*Julia, and with a liitle
the Dare contemidation terri bl
an occurrence; she bounded iew4r,l;
het trunks in the next room.:
Constaßt occupriuu piemits tau:
tam
How to do much. -Locke says tits'
way is, to do one think at a time. -
He shall become immortal woo lip
etit to be stoned by one without taut.,)
Levity iu rneauer, leads to laxityit,
principle.
A great man_wil! neithor trany7ar
on a worm, not cringe before a kin r"
r
Glid heard the 6eatt without -that
words; blit he never hears 'tile :vrol l ddr:
withoutthil heart. • '• 4':•"11."
Excess of , ceretuouy.rhown:_rcant oft
breeding; that civility is the ...1144,«
which excludes all soperPtuJus form
ality. . . .
not. the tio %TUN grow when !bet,
drink in the, ruin. drops So,.
viitues flourish when they are
ed by , tears. 4 "
•
"If !k(thristiao is a shoe-black," 4. 4
Jahn Newton," tie
. ought to be th.p r
bast ib the. village."
He that doiti good _ without
pod, pulls down with,9uolll,ll3loll
be. UP tiai other
-••- -
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