VOL. LV. 'iY~it i Y'rl r:~ y;~; ~c . PIT/LIM= tViIT SITUDAY 1110:43111fh BT GIEO. SANDERSON. TERMS SUBSCRIPTION.—Two Dollars per annum, payable in advance ,• two twenty - five, if not paid within six months; and two fifty, if not paid within the year: No subscription discontinued until all arrearages are paid unless at the option of the Editor. finvnanssistitirs—Accompanied by the CASH, and not exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for one dollar, and twenty-five cents for each additional insertion. Those of a greater length in proportiOn. Joe-Parxrnro —Soch as Hand Bills, Posting Bill!, Pain ph.ete. Planks, Labels Occ.,. &c., executed with ao curacy and at the shortest notiCti. SY CILAIACII N EWZOA He vainly toils, who toils to make his life, A Babel Tower, whereby to reach the skies— Aims are confounded, passions fall to strife, \Visdom is but the folk of the wise, And the soul's deeds comes short of her empire So is she mocked and darkness :named, and led To hunger in earth's deserts for Heaven's bread Bring, Sculptor, all the art that in thee lies, Bring all of thine heart's lave and thy soul's thot' That to thin brave life-statue may be wrought, Give me all thy days unto the toil—than see No bright God-image beaming from the stone- 7 It lies a limbless Dagon, overthrown Upon the bare plains of eternity. All things drink gladness with their breath, Sadness, unrest, have in their lives no•parh The bird , i wild song, untuned to pain or death, Springs from the hidden pleasure of the heart. None empty from life's festal halls depart. The violet dies not from the woodland side, Till all the soul it hath is satisfied. But man inter earth's banquet chamber led Feeds upon Dead Sea fruits, or is not fed; Or, grasping the pure food too long .denied— Lo, the pale stranger with the shadowy hand Stands beckoning to him from the palace door ! He follows—out into the silent land, Unblest, unsated—to return no more. The natire that to smallest aims aspires, May in the smallest sphere complete its bliss; But for the great heart with its groat desires Another life fulfils the hope of bliss. As science links the nations with her chain, And flashes lightning thought beneath the main, So this hearty yearning upon earth began ' Shall flash through other spheres through death's dark sea; nd as the eagle, from its earth-nest free, Wears high to feed its vision at the snn, • So shall it mount the eager path above, I Past suns from which the eagle's gaze would cow or. Until it reach that Wisdom which is Love, That Love which is Eternity aha Power. I Wouldn't! Would You ? I wouldn't give mute 'r a girl with a bonnet That cost fifty dollars when it was new , Who sports a largn muff• with a hairy tail on it, That hangs doyen in front of it Just as it grew; • I wouldn't give much for this female! Would you S. I wouldn't give much fur a female who prances, Promenading all the thorotthiare through ; Giving thanks to th• clerks, or else amorous glances, Enough to turn her eyes all askew ! . I wouldn't give much for this female ! Would You 1 Icr The following in a reply to the above, sent by a lady: I Wouldn't Wouldn't You I wouldn't give much for a chap who has