• i7V2O2D.t.Toi MI Errors; in that shlimer state, yi:s our souls shall onci r attain, r .7' of earth, and time, and f a te, a n before our eyes aga in, , re view our life's slow way, ts atal4reariness beholding, begens purer noon Survey es es l ihm twilight now is folding t , too s4rous change will pass @itst here hath seemed and been so see , as through -a glass, d l 1-rhea shall face' to face be seen; .iingness of all we prized, 'ilsehood of tho love we sought, eless truth of hearts despised, orth of all we valued not ! ce, it shattuot then be seen this, our earthly path of tears, , late a waste bath been a the mourner's eye appeats4 lelearer light around us breaks,. eyes eyes Eta read their cotuse tteloW,. line of long mistakesi by many a needle s s wo. th sFas pawl visions fair, zhing the wealth ' f heart; • had the harder-care :bing all those dreinas 4ePart. there left of arid Old age, useless grief to roe a pilgrimage " - Id not, if we woiald, renew ! dyes t he, evil lay; ,!.ak - ratificer -of Fro! len were mane ofclay, our hand that made them so, le diviner call, Jur hearts alike to'abun • fault of trusting all, •sin of trusting none.. lot then withvairt:disgust ice betrayed and faith Oceived, hearts forget to trust, ey are wounded, wrung, and grieved, e this lesson—it is such life'sdarßess into 'light : • , iever love too much, only love'arightl Youth null:Age. I each tottering form • Ips along m life's decline, heart as young, as warm, of idle thoughts as mine ! las had his dreams of joy, anequalrd puma - ronrancei mg when the blushing boy • at lovely woman's glance. could tell his tale of youth, think its scenes of love evince In . more unearthly truth, tale before or since. could tell of tender lays • Light permed in classic shades, :more bright than Modem daya4- pnids more fair than modem maids. 40 in villiog ear, sees one blashiog cheek"; lien each Nshisper far tot? dear, • modern lips to give and veldt • ions too untimely crossed, ions slighted or'betr ayed-;- spirits early lost, • • - that blossomed but to fade. (es and tresses gay, '• - sad noblek brow, If all have passed away, • ft them what we see thern,now! thus ; is human ince. . and light a think! path's brightest visions move Time's restlesS wing ? ie. eyes that still i . .)rtitltt; the lips that talk of bliss ;_- ' (onus so fait to sight, /sly come to this? .:earth's best vision worth, length must lckse them thus 1 *alas most•ou earth . , must fade away from us ? TionnoPYke. eveted, but undying; tit their Denies seemed 'sighing; airreiried of iheir name; • were peopled with their fume; lar, tone and pair,: . with their social clay; wrapt the dusky mountain; I sparkled o'er-the fowl* ; rill, the inighfiest river, • with their ram; for ever. rery yoka i she bears, iClory's and' theirs! • watchword to the•earth;--• Fedi do &deed ?I' worth, , _' • !Mee, and turns to tnutil. • on the tyrant's head ; • left mai rushes on low or feeedom won. t " •1 • k • ' •.';' , 7•• : - 1 1 ::. it.. - ... "t :1-:.:-: ' ' ' : • , -• ' Iv . . , _ ... .-,, - -.. .- ~.. "f`i' . ~. - .-,..* "• ... -:, ~- ..:-4 , • '-' -......;..,..-.. Q v .. ' ''' , '' .6*- '' "- ''' ' ' '' ' i ' ;-: 0, k '--. ": , ' - 0 :.,,, '' s ' ':-- ,_?!',- .. . ~ '.. r , 0 ...... '2 'r'. ' "` - ' '''''• ' . - '',7 *: '-''' 1 ' "' ' —i ' t '••• (s ; s. , ' !. :' ."''' '`J ' ' ' '''''' ' '.', ":'" i • ' . l' ''' '11 ' 1 ! ''' -,....: :'. '' . ' ' '.. t , '' ~ ' ' —.. ''. ' .4 ..' 1 - ' ; r.‘ - ' '',., ; I'. ' I . :: : ' ';'`''.• l. -' ,' 1 I, ‘ .' ' ---',. ''''' • ' i ' l'7 ' ;'s ' -'1 , ' . : .'•' - . -- i - ~,,..._, l ', ~ , . , . ; ~, ~, , , : i.. , .. _ ,„, ',.:, ."-• :. , .. : .. i , : ..: ~ 'I .. ,-7 , ~-.. ".,.' ' '' w _ ~ ~:;(, ..,' ~,.• .. ~ , ,. - 1 , ,, ,:, -,- , , * ' ~-': ~,C ,:ii: , . ..:, . Ilk . . , : 'r 0 l'•• - • .... , . " , ....„ . . ..., • . • • ~ ,-.-,, i 7, •,' „: - : ...,: - ''.'. ':"--..- -- =- , ..' ,—. •.; , ~-• ;‘,.• 0• - • -'-i •• , ",,1 ", 1 . ',"- - . '.' ' • -,'.! -`_ . ''' ....<,. : , '',. . . , . __ , • . ~ . , ~• , - . " .. '. ,; , . :. . .., _, -"",* ~ `l - • -,' '; . ';- 'i ..'..: .-- .'. ..,',' ,' - , :... : ;" . :.' , '' ,. : l `' " ' •.... . . ._ . , • • . , . _ . Introllutho to an, Heir_. is; .By POKEY Beaus, ESQ. " Bob, said my uncle rushing into my room " I'm ruined !" r.' • " Really," said I, knocking the ashes off my third and last cikrar. • "Yes ruined, irredeeably,so r —my speculations, bets, and all have blown up together and 'here r l am at sixty, fair ly done up—diddled-cleaned out." Drivilish pity !—what must we do ? I'm as badly off BS you, and lost all toy expectations which were the capital on which I traded in society." , My .uncle looked` grave*for the Erst time. His philpsophy being Epicu rean: according to the practice of the nineteenth century, he lived in the pre sent. moment, enjoying life at the races 'the clubs, and dabbing now and then (adding, so to speak, red ' pepper to brandy,), in those successors of defunct lotteries,--fancy stocks. He had bith erto flourished on th'em, and I °Aim, as his heir and favorite. After making his standing announce ment, a silence of sortie moments en sued, thiring which l ime I finished smoking, and my uncle broke forth=.. .4 Bob, you are thirty-one years old ?" "Worse than that thirty-three." And you hare a glimmering Of grey hairs." Too true, uncle." "Non must get married:' It's full time to give up your vagabond fife." Fine talk, uncle, but who is to sup port me?" Your wife ; marry an beiress." " That's just what I have been, with all my seeming indifference to mar triage, ready to do. But anAeiress is like a ghost , or griffin—spoken and written of, but never. Seen. , " Try, try, my,boy Ouraffiirs are desperate. The whOle pandemonium . of tradesnien will beconie yet more irn portunatei when they learn• the full ex tent of my losses, Which will be before many weeks,--your 'character will come down with my purse, so go to work without a moment's delay." Well, uncle, I'll try." -That evening I dressed and went . to a Concert at the Theatre ; Ole Bull was extracting- rapture from cat-gut, and just as he was finishing his first part, I essayed to change my. position in or der to get a nearer view of a new beau ty, a divinity outright, in the boxes,'' when, whom should I espy but my tailor, to Whom I owed an old bill of precisely 'six hundred and thirty dol l lars. I could not dodge him. Pas est, ab hoste tlaceri, which being literally interpreted means': It is 'wise to ask the .opinion of your tailor; so going-up to him and extending , my hand, I ex claimed: " This liirwSgian. : nionwr wonderful V : - " Quite 'so,"l said,. Mr. - Mortimer. Shears, an tlfirettp.on we discussed the fiddle strings .al length. . "Pray; Mr. , Shears," said 1, " can you tell me the name of that lady,';' . pointing at •the same time -to the un known beauty: •• ' - " PerfeCtly well. It is Miss ----- of Carolina. :The old gentleman with. her is he j . father.- They : live in Wal nut street, and •I had occasion to visit him on professional businesS last week." I thougkt as much ; 'Mr. Shears, I could not Pe mistaken in your coat;" said I, eyeing, through. my glass the tipper gariatent of , the Carolina : gentle man:. . Mr.-Shears blushed and bOrved thanks and•hinted .at Ihe great wealth of the strange - patties. . Here was some gami afoot. HoW to get acquathted—tO become fairly ;in timate in j the house th.e rich lair One was- a'question. A hum-drum. intro . ordinary. visit; * these woirld , nrit suit my necessities. A bold thought struck me; I avill carry h.out.. 'lwill get into the house; not for . mi nutes, but - for days and nights' I - will j j ppear.itt- the most interesting.of posi tions to a sympatheti4 woman. I will storm the fortress. I Hill, retrieve. my. fortunes. t . SO 1-mtirMared confidently to mYSelf. The concert was breaking up.;,r . The charming Sotitherner passed by' me,, hanging oti her father's° army more lopely a close 100 k.., My love &Mt ambition were Cab, Sitri•?--Xab,Surrl—dues the gentleman. want a:Cab I" : said Jimmy Haggerty.. • :; S. 7 !'' • . 44 . Tea, trty goOdfellow-.. Do yOu,see_ that.ledi.and-grentleman getting into a n .coaohjrietbefore - • .-; ~ .Yee,.to be sere.'!-•, . Well, skive utter tliina, , and just as Thei.ere set down at their door. I wish 4o be set down ,top,,Lit ;not ; ; quite 80 _ • .gerl4alon g eidd,,of them. Regardless at DenunciatiOn from any Quarter.—Gov; E 4 OSVAWD&s, DIB&IDIMMD-0/ " The jontleman wishes to be upset ? I sees:through it . all, but diere' will be damages done tofu: cab, and--=-='. " Yes; I'll give you ten dollars." . " How can you r when your senseless on the brick pavement ?" " Well, take, it now. Drive quickly or you'll . miss your merit." In a' few minutes the 'carriage we were following slopped before a splen did-mansion. The lady and her father_ alighted, and just as they were on the warble steps, my cabman's .horse be came suddenly restive. The wheel ran against a convenient lamp-post, and the cab was thro*nagafusfthe coach, and in attempting to get out I was thrown with my head against the curb stone. In truth, Jimmy had managed so well that my fall *mina trifle. The skin OEI my forehead -'was cut, and the - blood, which tile excitement of the evening had driven an extra quantity to that re-- gion flowed with deeentprofusion. A! shriek of terror in the sweetest imagina ble tone came fronithe lady, as she was standing on the steps of her house, and she turned round op hearing the noise occasioned by ray mishap. "I-became, as in duty `bound, senseless, but con trived to understand that the fair one was Lunch agitated, and that her father,: instantly assembling several servants, had me borne into the house not for-. getting to curse my drivel. who was all contrition: I was conveyed to a cham ber and faid gently upon a velvet couch. ',Very soon a doctor appeared, who pro nounced the case, seeing the swoon so continued, a critical one, and thereupon my charmer decided to give me her best -attention; 'her humanity being strongly appealed to by my dangerous - situation. 'God of Love ! (I mean? the ancient young genttemen who wore 'no clothes and a bow and quiver.) What electri cal Shocks of passion and delight thrill• ed through every fibre of my frame, as the dear soft_ hand of my beloied one wiped 'off the gore, and gently bathed ny. wounds ! What ecstacy of joy as consciousness was returning. .How I was flattered, when' she remarked to her . father, on-my classic profile, and compared my looks to the wounded Hector. I slept by fits and starts that night.— After I had made- some don of a toilet the next morning by the aid of my host's servants, I Was ready to receive the i visit of my beautiful . nurse. She came, all sympathy. Hercongratula .. tions•were so gentle at my escape from, mortal danger; her trust so earnest and ,Soft toned that I .would gradually get better, her tender of hospitality so com - .plete, and her light morning dress so becoming,' that .she looked infinitely More lovely than before, and I -inward-. ly blessed her, the cabman, and my stars Which, gave - me such delight ! As the. physician had given,strict or ders to keep m' chamber genet, . and her attendance of my chamber was evi dently so - cheering to my sPitits,,l was fortunately freed from the visits of her father, and I' had the dear delight of see ing her alone. .Several days-passed in ibis siv.eet reverie. I began to get het ter. flow could I help myself? The young lady was still attentive, kind,soft spoken and sympathetic. I thought I had made an impression. •At the end of the fifth day I'was sere I had., and determined to speak, if occasion offer-. ed, with other.language than the grate ful glance of-an invalid's eyes. Being sa much recruited, I expressed a wish to leave-the house the pent day, feeling that my claims on the hospitali ty of mynew friends could not longer be extended to 'meet my emergency.— This being known, the father of my be loved entered' the chamber. He apolo aised for not visiting me, explaining theyeremptory nature of the physician's , order to let no :one enter my room un necessarily; as long as there Was the least show of danger. . I murmured my gratitude to him, and expressed a fear.thatl could never re-. pay the unremitting and invalnable tention ofhts,daughter. • - ." • 141v wife, Youmean;" - At thin announcement I felt like a Inan.reiliving-in a family vault. where be.has been' Put. preinaturely . by mis. take . 1. awoke to death in life. What a hideous diegpoinment for. Me! what a terrible mistake - of Mine •'and Muni! mer:heers.l A Lsar YEAR ANECDOTE.— : The ed itor of the Nantucket Telegraph over heard the , followina dialogue, on• New Year's night "Will you take rny anal " said a gallant to'a. young 1110, , after the donee broke up; • ' - • ' • La, yea; ,and you , top, seeing ,it is Jeep year," , was the quick reply„ = Aniq u irst 2 ) .a09 . .th3i1at a atigio The tat. Insurrection. 'At the time it became publicly known that Vapoleon, 'Wen on board the Bell erophorn off Plymouth, was' to bp sent ; to St. Helena, a respectable , ' looking man, caused a number of handbills to be distributed through , Cheater', id which he informed the public that, a. great number of - genteel families embark ed at Plymouth, and would '.certainly proceed with the British Reginient ap pointed to accompany Bonaparte to St. Helena. He added , further, that the island being dreadfully infested 'lwith rats,, his majestyAs ministers had deter mined that it slAlcl be forthwitleeffee tuallv cleared of these, noxious animals- To facilitate this important purpose,• he lad been deputed 'to purchase, in the source of a week; as many cats' and -thriving kittenaas could be procured for money in tjtat shOrt, space of time, and therefore, : he- publicly, offeredin his hand-bills, 16 shillingsfir every athle tic full grown tom-cat,llo shillings, or every adult 'female ins, and half a crown for every thriving, vigorous kit ten, that could swill mills, pursue a ball of thread, or fasten its young . fangs in a dying mouse. On the evening of the third day after this advertisement had , been distributed, the pe opleof Chester were astonisheo with'an eruption of a multitude of old women, boys and girls, into their streets, every one of whom carried on their shoulder either , a bag or a sack, which, appeared pregnant with some restless animal, that seemed . laboring into birth. Every'road—eve. ry lane was thronged with this comical procession—and the wondering specta tors of 'the scene were involuntarily compelled to remember the old riddle about St. Ives— , • "As I was going in St. Ices, . I rite fifty old wives, Esely wife had fifty sacks Every sack had fifty cats, Every cat had- fifty kittens. . • Kittens; cats, sacks and wives, . How many were - going to St.lces!" • Before night-fall, a congregation of nearly 3000 cats were collected. in Ches ter. The happy hearers Of these - iweet voiced creatures, preceeded all (as di. rected by the advertisement) towards one ,street with their delectable burdens. Here ,they become closely wedged to gether. A vocal ebncerraoon ensued. T.he women screamed—the cats.ignall ed—the -boys and girls shrieked treble, and the dogs' of the street howled base,. so that It soon became difficult-for the nicest ear to ascertain whether canine, feline, or the 'human tones were pre-. dominant: Some of the cat-bearingla:. dies. whoSe dispositions were not of the most placid. nature,. "finding them- Selves annoyed by. the pressure of their neighbors, soon .cast down their-bur, dens, and began to box. A. battle, royal ; ensued. i The cats sotinded the war whoop with might and'main. -Mean while the boys of the town, who seem ed•mightily to relish the .sport, were actively employed in. opening the months of the cie:. , erted sacks, and lib erating the cite from their forlorn situa tion. The enraged animals bounded imme diately on the shoulders .and .-heads of 'the combatants, and ran spitting squat-. ling, and clawing along the undulating sea of skulls, towards the walls of the houses Of the good people of`Chester. The citizens attracted' by. the tioise, had opened their windesYs to. gaze at the, fun. Into these windows the.cats in stantaneously sprang, taking possession of the rooms by a . `novel kind of 'storm s or escalade. The cats:, in their sudden assaults on the .drawing pius, and, other aparttnents of . the Chesterites, rUSbed with the rapidity of lightning up the pillars. then across: the hands ! : trades and galleries, for which thetowe. is famous. and so slap dash through the. open windows in )he apartments. , Ne ver since the days of the . celebrated Hugh Luspus, were the draWittgrooms of-Chester, filled with such a crowd of tinwelcomed guests.' Now were beard the crash of broken chinathe howling of affrighted lap dogs4the cries of dis tressed damsels,' who wept their torn faces and "diihevelle&chartilii—and the' groans of fat .old Citizens, rushieg land" tumbling forward. towards the balconies, bald: .bare, and bleeding. All Chester Was 'aeon' in arms.. , and.'dire were .the. deeds . Of vengeance - on the feline iace: It is needless to recite the variouecont7 hats that took 'place: between - the-Cats end , men. - -:§uffice it; that our, cone spondenicnunted 50 dead bodies fieat: ing..next; day on the river Pee, where they had been ignatninousiy thrOwtt the two-leeped "victors.';The ,rest of 'the invading host7having . eiacuated-the town, ~ d isperled , inuvith them, lieivever,, their acme am ' the field of battle,• .• : : Poverty. tag Wine. . .. ; I confess that it is i.a paiefulAnd bitter task to record the' humiliations, lihe wining, petty, stinging humiliations of poverty ; 'to , count the drops is they 'slowly fall, one •by One, upon. the fret ted antlindigaant heart; , to particular ize, with the scrupulous, and nice hand of indifference, the, fractional and tlivi ded' movements' in !the dial-plate" of misery ; to behold 'r.the delicacies of birth, the ,masculin e price of blood, the dignities of .intellect, the . wealth 'of knowledge, the feminanes and graces of Womanhoodall that ennoble and4oft en the stony cnase of commonplaces w,hich in our , life, frittered into, atoms, trampled into the dust and mire of the meanest thoroughflies of distress ; life and soul, the. energies and aims of man, ground into one 11 prostrating want, cramped into one(levelling sympathy with the dregs and refuse of his 'kind, blistered into ,a single gallingand fester ing sore : this is,l. own, apainful and bitter task ; but it bath its redemption : pride even in deliasement, a pleasure even in wo: and therefore that.while I have abridged, I have not shunned it. Amid all that humbles and seathes-- r amid all that shatters . from their, life its verdure, smites te the dust the 'pomp •and summit of their pride., and in the very heart of existence writeth a sudden and .. strange defeature."', they. stand erect—rivene not 1 uprooted—a monu ment less laf pity than of awe I 'There are some who, exalted by a spirit shove all casualty, and 1 we, seem to throw over the most degrading circumstances, the halo of an in' ate and consecrating power; the very things which, seen alone, are despicable and vile, associa ted with them ,become almost vulnera ble and divine ; end some portion,how ever dim and feeble.' of that intense ho liness which, in the infant God, shed . ,Majesty over the manger and the straw. not denied to those who, in the depth of affliction; - cherish.the angel virtue at ' their, hearts, dings over the meanest lo calities of earth 'an emanation from the glory of Heaven f--Bultoer. , ' Roirid ,Insects. Opposite the Venda was an open copse, covered with brushwood. Here I entered to collect insects, which abounded in 'it ;I but I was called back and warned of danger. I thought of serpents, and- made a preci pltate retreat; but I found the , danger was from l a smaller, though nearly Serious a cause. Airiong the insects of the coun try is a kind-or tick called carapatoo. This is exceedingly veno mous ;• it has six hooked Or ,sharp claws, with which it readily dints to any passing abject. and it is fainialiell with a proboscis of singular strtictUre. It consists ola pen. ell of bristles,Serrated inwards; forming a terebro or.ptercer, with, wide?' it con-. stantly penetrates the flesh of any ani malt() which it has 'adhered, and bur rows us head in the wound. When entering, the- bristles expand,' forming a triangle, of which-the base is inside, so that it oppose s a resistance to:ex traction, whiCh .it it sometimes quite impossible to } orercomo. If it is suffer-, ed to remain i it gorges itself with' blend, till ithecontes bloated to an enormous BM; if it be extracted forcibly, so as to separate the, head, it remains. - festering in the wound, and as it is exceedingly irritating and acrid in - its quality, it causes -vac) eat- inflammation, which- de generates into,a foul and dangerous ni cer.. These ` horrid insects, which are the plague. of the country, are' some times so abimdant that , herds ' of cattle .perish by. their attacks.. They' are so tough that his dank to bruise them. When I came out of the wood,bne-was found on m neck, in the act/of perlo f ,, .rating the flesh ;with its protioscis, but .had nortitne,: l as it was easily extracted.' It was- about: the size of a, large bug, with a ' 4 grey mottled skin; which was so coriacecips.i and.- leathery: - that-no bruising wonld altth's-Trav els els in Biazi4 . IVlonnireaJpoli.—An Vnglishman being-left ; alone with- Richardson, ob. served to. hint '• ,he was happy , to pay his respectd'm he autlicirof Sir Charles 'Grandison,l I f r at Paris' and ut'' the j , , Hague, and in zt very placel have visit cif; kis much dmired.-7 Richardson appeared np t th notice the cemPltmeel , but When' all the company , were as sembled addressed thetentleliani with, a. Siri think' You were sayiiie some. ~ thing:ll6o4 Sir Charles: Grandition." l ," Crii Sir.!'j ;he replied ? ..I. • drt.,not remember lever to have heardit men tiOned."• , 'ix.; HALF lit,f. :axis. — , A little girl hear ing her tria#ie 'say she:Aiis going jnhcilf j InourniOcs ! , 4 irquired, if any , oflier.rela=. tiens were 14a.ff dead. . , I ' - ' : ._ , 1 ma - 1.D 5 ,Z 1 / 5 1 aPODWa_a 44 !nab London. London-4thou Niobe,, who Attest' in stone; amid. thy Strieken anti fated then; florae of the desolate that hidest ,in thy. bosom. the shame,' the sorrows; sins of manY .sons ; in whose - arms the fallen andihe outcast shroud. their dis tresses, and shelter from the proud mans contumely; 'epitome and focus Of the dia . - parities and maddening ,contrasts of ibis wrong, World, that assembleit together in one great heap the woes, the joys, the eleVations; the debasements of the various tribes of roan !flightiest qflevellers, con founding in thy whiiipool all ranks, all minds,, the graven lab Ors of knowledge, the straws of the maniac, purple-and rage,, the 'legalities and -the loathsomeness of earth 7 -palace and lazar !dime combined I qrave of the living; where 'mingled and massed together, we.couch, but rest not —“for, in that sleep, of life, what dreams do come''-each vexed with a separate vision-- 4 4hadows" which “give' the" 'substance, heart," unreal in their a but faithful in their Warnings, flitting (rpm the eye,-bnt graving unfleeting memories on the mind, which reproduce ,new dreams, over and over, until the phantasm ceages, and the pall of a heavier torpor falls upon the'brain, and is still,-and dark and husliedl "Fm= the -stir of thy great Babel,", and the- fixed tinsel glare in Which sits pleasure like a star, ~ which shines, but warms not with its 'power less rays," welurn to thy deeper and more secret haunts. “Thy wilderness is all before us•-rwhere to choose our place ofrest ; and, to-our:eyes ; thy'mys teries are bared, sad thy hidden reces ses are pierced as with a spell.—Bul leer. Bathing in the Dead Sea. The correspondent of the New York American, gives The following notice of a visit to this standing problem in the natural history of the Holy. Land. The gentlemen of the party determined-to test the reported Irhoyaney of the waterjiy personal experience. . They state, that wherethe water was five feet deep, they could only touch the: bottom with their toes, 'Advancing to where the xi - Tater was six inches deeper, their feet were suddenly taken under them, and they were , throivn in a hori- zontal position upon the surface of the water. They could not maintain a per pndiculai position without using some effort. They then swam to where the ..wa ter, w extremelyas deep / and endeavored to to sink, whiCh they- found• impossible, even with some effort to do. They-could walk in the water .equally as well as -on • land, with their heads entirely above the surface. They found that they 'could sit and converse as easy as a divan. A strong breeze came on from the south, and with a heavy swell. They described the sen sation produced by this riding 'on the sea, without a vessel or a plank under them, as very singular. One of them had nev er before ventured ;beyond his depth =in water, While here he Was enabled, with out, the least sense Of danger, togo to any distance froin the land. They becamc convinced that' what had 'been said re specting the great specific gravity and • buoyancy . of the water of the Dead Sea is entirely correct. . Napoleon's &art. When Bonapaite died at Si. Helena, it was well known_ that his heart was ex trac,ted-with the design of being preserv ed. The British physician who bad charge: of the 'wondrous organ had de posited it in a silver basin, among water, and retired to rest, -leaving two tapers _ , burning beside it his chamber. He .often Confesses to hislriends, while nar rating the particulars, that he felt nervous ly, anxious, as the custodier of such a de po,site ; and though he reclined, he did not sleep. While lying tbui awake, he heard, during' the,-silence of the night; first a rustling noise, then a plunge among the water in the basin, and 'then the sound of 'an objectfalling , with 'a re bound on the Iloor—ail occurring:, , with the quieknese of 'thotigbi Dr; A.— sptang from his bed, and the cause of the intrusion on his repose was soon enlain ed it was an enormous rat, dragging the heart of Bonaparte to its hole. • A few moments more, and that which before bad been to' vast .in its atahition to be satisfied with the sovereignty ofetintinen -tat Europe, Would have been found even in a more degrading "position than the, dust of , Cmsar stopping • a heer-barrel —4t would have` been- devoured as the supper of a rat. ' • SVND& : GO-TO MEETING IN Lowe.-The ba t ekEi lowa are said go meeting in a ,pair. of pantaloons ' made--of hemp_ and- hop vines. -a vest made Of hornet's nests and paste. :a shirt mannfacipied of milk-weed-and cotton; and toorown all.' they- wear woltskin caps Nand go.. bare-foot. : 'What wtll AltuTtrollope say, now" I =EI ~ :) BIM MEE Mil ,SMo