a ~ . - _ •„1.:::,.::', -, ';,:-:. , IrC UtVrTettte94;*. • rii,j El MEM viilini theiTitoilyirb3r)7.*4 -: Ito: !ii: ..:,,T :ST XI/11 :NV" XSACIITiIa Flasion, than beatiteous rived ai ever in thy 1 1 ,84i:ea - thee; 'nesth` - yow Meriting elms and rock 37 chffis ofig4et Yes, flow - thonsm t and , in the : strength of for'. Metyears be Clad., • ' And hasten hence thy pearly waves as Ana glad*, - ; . , Ah haste iliontiencn, - thesi pare, bright stream! " mato the Ocean's breast ; i • For desun ,- not Z .there thy ,waves will find the **frets °Evict' ?or ' mighty ...winds oft raise.. their Att44,-',and drive the"billow high.; ,•• _ - 4nd,,tionie ;hitt; thy ridngled4aves shall greet 'BI,ORO-110-614 . And there, "perehance,'thon will be doomed to ace, I ?erbiath thy Pre ll 4 , • Many ,a noble heart of earthfor ever sink to rest; Bat dream, dream not that tlunt cant keep the apish of the, mind ~ , - , One instant Neath the spirMings of thy billowY breast enshrined. Bat then, glid stream ! yes, thou cant help the waters - of the deep, • Witb,ift their awes, beneath their , waves, their hidden tre" wares keep: Yet how can thy bright waved the glide from these loved scenes sway, To mingle With the Ocean's depths their spark :** ling; glittering VIII,' But yet glide On, thou pure, bright 'stream ! thou _ - ever blight and fret; Thou dreamest not a wave of thine, has e'er been lovedby zoo! ' • But oh R I learned to love them in my youth's' •• bright sunny day, • ' When on thy moss-elad. - banks I palsied frill' many an.hourAway. , And then thy eiremustling waves oft mingled with my glee, And to my young spiritliore a voicepf melody;\ A voice of melody, whose strains With gaiety were fraught, A voice in which I deenied no cliange to me 'could e'er be wrought. •' - • . Then too, I dreamed the pleasures of rayyouth would ne'er decay Until from this bright world of ours my soul . should flee away ; But those bright dreams of mine are changed though Youth has not yet flown, And.i within am forced to claim a sad heart for my bwn. • Yes, I =I foried to own that now within My breast I bear A deep and hidden fount that fainwould gush . forth its despair; But oh! thy evermstling:waves, that mingled with my glee, Do ever now in kindly tones most soothing • speak to the. Audi have learned-to look.on them . u On, lov ed, cherished friends, Whose voices tom; saddened heart low, mourn ful music Sends . • - And I will'ever look on them through weal and vro the Sarne-- • Yes, thou by me, transparent stream t shalt es er loved remain. TowisnA. PA. [The following lines wertwritten, itnprninp tu, by a'gentlemanom seeing a hidy, who had been deeply affliaedi-weeping o'er a withered rose, enfolded in a'slip of. paper containing an elegy by die Rev. Mr. Wulf, on the death of his wife, and, if ve mistaii not, alit beautiful and pathetic hymn commencing with the words 41 'id .not " The chastity of wank— Ave alive: it 3? thought„ the suilimity Of sentiment and the ,circumstance which called them forth, tomblike to throw around these lines a halo of ascreki heanty.that renders -them irresistibly twitching and impressive. • • And thou may'sf weep ! thy !Saviour wept When beading o'er the tomb, Within whose mouldering chambers slept The friend that lit life's gloat's. • And many an selling heart has sped Through sere and joyisie-years!t : And whin in resignationshedi4 •There it 110 tin in tears. , • And every eye mast - sometime weep, , Each iip mast taste'of sorrow ; If joy, today, thy. 13 / 61 ientli keeiN Thou'lt prime this irne_to - -ziorrow. And hearts as tmeiaa pure as thine, ; - Savo seen Eope's flowers all blasted;-; . !The Cup Of blisitoo, too divine,- - Snatched from tludi lips scarce tasial; But Mut is not:'Rose, to fade Wheri Muchesi by *esti of grief"' iliorVh the " &le of Elharmes".shade Hie heart may find relief; _. • . sovereign bsim, for.wonzded mhr4s, From its"sweet lames descends; Whose holy dews each merohlerends Like)leaven,=4.ohere *arrow ends. .ifArtaristrao, Pa: • -‘ Scsitz-Caows.—The best protection from crows that -we ever found, is a sheet or byight tin, suspended from 'a pole by'wire. truffieimitly high to be seen all. 'over the field. . Four ,sucb seare-movOS Will protect a 50 acre field; if placed judieiously. The breeze eturreelt, reflection AS .141)jt - c4vii - at die _flneb . - ef go* entille:*•• er falle the. f lebteseninititaki Welds:tit ;tidily asisyl, with a Cele one set wiliest elite time, lial j.~tl. C,titll;, 1 .• , fithrio 0010130 reag ;nor° MU IBM It seldoi forcible.langnage ili a ---' that to Which the - -1 ondon'Herald -deplores: tertlegfriiilid condition of the industrial 'classes of Gatßritaitw_ - - It &isnot shrink fnatn, the . Ork of ap independent journalist: rt It ,places' the;a: Meter—British wretch:. ednessfore it Milt its lideonsiess, It then demands : action, ;end,predicts. the consequenceof longer delay ` '"The litter, it boldly avers, will he suicidal. It thinkithe Crisis his come=-foiXtig- 1 lish poverty fraternizes - with friih.tegi- tatio 71: Jesnin • &mans, one of the i ettartist champion% compounds, in be-1 half . cCorie hianeh i ef the ,- five millions" of ' British &artiste, with•DANizt, Cr- Vosnim; and pledges sympathY;;liiid. ifs needs be, help ! The Cim,lterpairiot tells' the , Irish liberator that bileasking .for his down-trodden countrynien only that which the law of nature and ea- 1 tare's; God entitles 'them u:1--a local le gislature ;..---ind that the English , char tists are with their Irish brethren, heart and soul. Here is a new fe,ature in the picture of English, Iriph,,and Wel& i 'agitation. -All that are engaged in these agitations are bound - together by ,the bond 'of ' suffering' and principle; and every. move they make is seconded by everyetrike imongthe destitute mann- i ' factoring population and every meeting i of the great atiti-corn taw league.- Ad tend to one point—relief for the growing destitution of the figions, Composing the population - of Great Britain. - The London: , Herald-k-tory--thus commences: ' -,„ , " The bitter, grinding, and' increas ing poverty of the industrial classes is the disease of thilUnited Kingdom.— . " Poverty, is Becca," said a hard-work , ing Welshman the other day ; and 'pov erty is Chartism, poverty is repeal ligi lotion, poverty , is anti-corn law fury.- Ireland is afflicted, reported - in 1836 the commisaioners appointed to inquire into the condition of its poorer classes, with 2,385,000 destitute human beings. In England, stated Sii James Graham, last session of parliament, there were then 1,200,000 persons-receiving-pa te chial relief, to which inust,lie added at least an equal number of unrelieved cases'of semi -starvation. And the con dition of the poorer classes in the large towns of Scotland is rapidly becoming,: Dr. Alison assures us, Irishized, and so distressing, is the general- stake of the working people in Scotland, that 'a Om pulsory poor lenn is an evil impending' over that country. And Yet, in - spite of all this poverty and misery, our pope , lation,increases at the rate of about 800 eouls eillY,nrid year after , year ;natters become worse,' instead - of better." But this is not half the, pictureit is but the frame work.. Here is the fill ing up : • " But he must be a very superficial obseryer, and a very thoughtless politi cian, who estimates the -wretchedness of the United Kingdom - by statistics or. statements of destitution such aithese ; they are but the crying-out evils--the obvious, latent, and disgusting sores ; on their broad foundation must be heap ed the constant struggles for t life of the industrious and willing and, partially employed who wen't waste an hour in contending for a loaf of bread orunion skillagalse with boards of guardians— the spasmodie competition of the half educated for employment- 7 the ill-re manerated efforts of the petty trades man and capital-less shopkeeper to ob tain food and raimentfor his houiehold, and rent for his landlord—the Crowds of-half faniished tutors and teachers of either seitand-the incalculable . but untold sufferingsof young . women ,thrown at an early age on their needles for--not maintenance, but . existence— sufferings from , which our streets swami with prostitution in-1141 moat offensive and hideous forms ; 'and which -almost matte the, sate 'of female virtue the price of self-Preiervation. The streets of London are becOming in, the day what the saloons of our theatres once were ; while in the- _evening Our greater thoroughfares 'are, one enormous bro thel: . .. . Look, too, at the. state in this of our proviscial towns; the vice which a few years ego-was in them a hidden or subsidiary.ccupation, is now' an es- Aablished trade, openly puisned, Were= ted, and relied on for debauched sup port.••,- 'The subject will- not bear dis cussion,.- and yet it is -one of the-most fatal symptmna of our national disease. Talk,not, of the vice in Paris ; . it it vir tue and decency when compared to. E nglish obscenity.and brutal importunity ; like the corruption of Marie'. Antoinettes' court, 4 , 1% looses half its evil by losing all its grossness." L'' ' •-••; •.. ' After, going on ; iit'a similar straii;the Herald.writesss foilews.— • ' •- lis Oh! we may, be : 7 told. D'po 7 verty• shall never cease out of the laid ;','- true, Most trim ;' but the poverty ' we corn plain of is very,likelyso make the land, cease.;`the poverty we point to is rapid ly bringing milliods to - the.conviction that . revolution • would be to them a blessed change, the poverty werefer to is quickly pfiganising large -dames of the community. , It ts a poverty Which be leftto =neglect- to l - cannot . , ~ eeemosy? Amy relte6—to • 11 0 .0sr, lows-4e Young. .gnglasid moniatenes—ror' to political paittoot3s wit k LailetY..'ll It 4:Po:YeTnY which"rip historic 7"ngru -, il 0 7 Wean, Of national gikaufe* oolex Olik of p*- terial territorial development can cpu,, =I PitilieriyAihich, is* makiptthe, PeopKiay4,lS, l.brknging - **iiotiaiihil*dol 4 kKji -4 04FAr hppe„ . wpipmcitmg turfailapae,:and latlMMlng a tilmnPf di so ! `oVidifiidridft`iit Ta*olft~egicai~lo,hsri e twtltwanaeriogh :^ can,:imy, map I tkii!4;or, last year'touthrialts'intthe'reannfactur ing distriets, of eciatempomnetma 'oiderio and of present and' uti- fiaished . aginition in Ireland, and'-the n. &mai' aaAiSfj , himielf with `,'the Oie red.. ..quotation, Poverty ,s a never cease out of the lend!" Brom the coo diets: "in Lancashire, froin the Mils in Wales, and front the monster meetings in Ireland, :the same. cry.; was', to be heard:-.:= 4, We' areperiehinginThernidit of plenty; =we are starving in apife;Of . ahurndance.w'" • - • 'Mei louillY 'as the Herald pro Claims, itie'dfsease, it dees nbego to the Cease. -It does not tell the British aristocracy, *hose splendid palaces'it- visits daily, that they orellot fountains whence flow these meanie of misery; that the mon arehy and its appendages - ire like' up per and nether millstones to the indus trial poor; that the root orthe evil lies in the power which capital, by means of laW, • has acquired over labor; and that to these destitute • millions all.pro spect Of 'benefiting . eondition is j hopeless without a revelation, as the . I. men who own all the lands also do all the legislation; and That these men wilt abolish. Their infamous -'restrictive sys tem, their entail laws, their church es tablishment, their pension list, , their he reditary privileges, but -at the point-.of the bayonet. None of these startling truths go , with the - Herald into the-gild ed saloons of the powerful and rich.— But the ears That hear such details of iiretchness are tickled by the paltry proposition that some great charitable scheme 'of national education, sub 'scribed to by the , nobility ,and 'gentry in proper graciousness, or some new patch in the poor law, or, some scheme to raise wages by law, or scilne other equal ly ntinbY-pamby dose, which will be , the elire-all of this deep-seated disease ! and when some archbishop of Canter bury, out of his large daily income, subscribes his $500; or her majesty, out of her daily allowanbe of 8800 from the British Nation, 'subscribes her pit tance, the amount is chronicled as evi dence of theirfraterniiy of the destitute poor! Out upon such mockery -of re lief! And the sooner the derititute mil lions of Great Britain reel their , strength the better. • El Washington't Method of Fanning. 1 13 It gives ns pleasure to transfer t e fol lowing scrap to our- columns , fro the Massachusetts Ploughman, as iterves ni io sho,that the Father of his c ' untry was as - discerning and clear sig ted in the management of his farms' as he was in conducting armies, or the affairs of State. Whatever he underto li" was done ; well, and for the simple reason that he acted from principle, atuFl con sidered himself morally bound from his elevated position, to furnish an exam ple worthy of being followed. " 4. The first year after the, war, he ap plied himself mainly to farming opera tioSs,--with the view of restoring his neglected fields and commencing a prac tical-agriculture. He gradually aban doned the cultivation of tobacco which exhausted his land, and-he substituted *heat and griss, as , better suited to the soil, and, more profitable. He began anew method of rotation ,of crops, in which he studied the par ticular qualities of the soil f in the differ ent parts of his farms, causing wheat, maize, potatoes, oats, grass arid other crops, to succeed each other in !the same field at to times. So exact vyes he in his method, that he -drew out a scheme by which ell his fields were nuMbered,• and the eropi assigned to theplar several years in advance. It fittfved so successfid that he piirseed it to' the endef his life, with occasional slight deviations, ,by 'Way of expert meat." , '• • • - , Tbc Nitherleis. How interesting he 'appears to . every feeling mind I A child :robbed of its' mother, eicitisnniveraal commiseration end affection from every, boSom. We lool(ferivard with anxiety le every fu ture period of his life, and ,our prayer and hopes attend every step in his jour ney. We ':mingle ,our tears' with his on the areve of her: whose maternal heart hali 'ceased to beataor.we feel that he is ,bereaved of his friend, and 'guide of hie youth but cannot- supply, this loss. In vain the circle of - his ,fruinds blend their Worts to alleviate his sorres's, and to finale place occupied ity.-,./eParted worth; a mother MOM ba,missed every_ -monient,by 'a child who has everknOwn and tightly veined one, When she sleeps in-the,grave. No hand feels so soft as hers—no - voice sounds' so sireet , L4to smile, so pleaSant ! Never, ;shall; he find-again in this wide wilderness, such sympathy, such fondness, such fidelity, seek tenderness, :as he:experienced from' 'his mother. • • , ' The world Was moved:with enitpas, sion for that motherless, child,- but' the, whole world cannot supply.. her.placeta - • - • zedjter,eaya, . that he enterteinsloPO cfiettit!gOt that is owed Mai 14 'his inieseribeis "... r. . i el 7 'e '. , ._ ' iiiiiiiCit 'Chik !l'he fon' ' i , is li'll** ,- .the:140 110 -ents pia. OraYeikan„= ,ccd , C. vkiideFiii cl osely pursued hiu:liiittbhiithe'jninyiile‘ l utie& iit4; tit - 6 . '4*N felling , them a a : vi l e. -they 2 4o&iebed.;il ik eta 'imet)3**lf . .itta -Inch ,in 0** , 11;1.4. dettuThiPOP face- ttiftf _ltt!_ihiP- 1 44. d'4llhritre deaiii; . ,ilhhiit 'Tine' and'ainpera= liondlince'jrif side irnii;: he '• hewed • and `stilt iheni down .`with with the.; game ai - ,ful certairity,that. was, wont to chaFaCter ze!Mis in4omitable spirit, His position rendered,Ocissio him - utterly impossible except by; Wdireef and exposed approach ; -info:int; -tuid after) SOME' eight or-tetvor thent were laid before: him, e, feeling of awe seemed to seize hold of these pssail anti. ' ctne of them who 'Could speak: a little, broken' tnglish, -. Proliably prefer rii g to . haie,the signal honor, a capturing so noble a specimen of American valor, t to preset! •Ig his i'dr s ad master,7..eaid to Crocket t si Surrender r , ,66N0 1 I am 'an Amerian !” *Mini he spoke he sent ' a ball throukh the heart of his paralyzed foe. Reappeared for a moment like a. wounded; Tiger, strengthened and buoy i .ed by each additional wonnd ; now hew ' ing themldown with his well tried sword —next dealing death 'with his 'fire arms. His person drenched with his •Imp blood, his strength must -soon yield_ to its loss., Yet such physical power wrought to the highest degree of excitement, can perform incredible prodigies. , This was the last concentrated energy of a poiverfnl man aroused, animated and guided:by' one of the noblest attributes of man-:--love of liberty. He knetii for what his life was ,abont to be sacrificed ; that devaitation and butcherk would follow the footsteps of, his heartless foes, that; women would he sacrificed to satiate the desire of the conqueror ;_ and feeling the holy inspira tions of 'a dying patriot, he' fought man fully till the loss of blood and approach of death stayed his upraiied arm ; his ri fle was broken to - pieces,his pistol fell to the floor,' and:nothing but his faithful sword was left. In the agony of death with a terrible grasp, he brought his last weapOn upon the , head 'of the nearest as sailant, and fell victoriously across his body into the arms - Of