II y 337. wma:az?Di FM A Warning Cry. HT 'MISS SIIERrDL7 CARET A Toiling - from the morning gray -4 Toiling, toiling through the day, c =l l ' . '; Till the spirit faints away, .... 7:1 Bound, in triple iron,. bound ! - ilk'''si By the taper's famished light, 'failing, - wiling through the night, 'Ti!l the dimmed and aching sight :Sees hat shadows gathering round— m•ll VI tie lip's warm hue is g0ne— ,..9 TII the brew is pale and wan— Fr I r Till the pitying sun looks on— it, Gasping slaves in stupor cast;— .. - Toiling through the hours pain, V- - L Taxing !land, and heart, and brain, :r :re —and scarcely Lreod—to gain! ri ,.' Shall this—shall this every last? Shall the spoi!er seize by stealth, Youth, and hope, and strength, and health? Natu're's.dory—nature's wealth— • Shall they L—shall they ever he— Youth and hope, an April beam I strength, delusion? health, a dream? Age,—a fearful ghastly theme— Pain, and grief, and penuryl x Thou who i•eest ! thou who hearest ! Thou the mourner's heart who cheerest ! Thou who veiled in clouds appearest swift, and terrible and strong! UntO thee; with stony eye, ' 'Bloodless cheek, and boding cry, Docmcd to toil, and toil—or inc., Want aucaleth. "Lord, how lung .'" Ve, whose '''.confidence " is gold, roliacious. crafty, bold— \llA the laborer's hire withhold— Who the fruits of toil deny— Il'hu the starving Poor distress, Who the weak, the old, oppress— Treruhle'l they shall have redress, Lu ! their groans are heard on high! Tremble ! tremble! well you may— Godless tyrant of a day— Trampling on your fellow-clay ' Trampling human hearts to dust ! Vengeance is the Lords ! ben-are ! lie %%ill list the poor man's prayer, Rine the crushed, and chase despair! Tyrants, wo ! THE Loan IS JtST The Flag of Liberty., Oh! proudest symbol on the seas! - Young benne': of my native land.; Oa ecery shore, ori eceiy breeze, Thy star and staiiless fulds are fann'd. On thee the fires of Heels shine, And Andes. ice reflected gleams, • Thyshadow paints the poplar brine, ajAll Indian gulfs, all tropic streams. rrpt:',l Egypt, startled in her fen, Beholds thee fluttering on thftNile, pi And fearless tribes of naked men Hail thee froth far Tahiti's Isle. Where'er oppression's flag shall dare To carry new distress and wrong, Thy radiant heraldry shall bear A token earth bath looked for long.' • A token of the dawning day To all who yet in bondage droop, When crowns and chains must melt away, And man to man disdain to,stoop. A taken of the freeman's right To rule the land their valor won ; is title, justice—and the fight; His fit regalia, sword and gun. • - le hues of heaven's prophetic bow Less beauteous then shall seem than thine kod less of peaceful hope bestow , Than thy more fair, fulfilling sign. Oh flag of promise! unto us Thy stars foretell our country's fame, it crimsoned stripes, translated thus, Give promise to our foes, of shame. Woman's Love. True and faithful as I've found thee, Kind and tender as thou Art,,, There are tendrils twining.round thee: • Springing:from a warmer heart. Fondly be ats thy bosom, dearest. Each pulsation true to . me, Sweetly soft the smile thou wearest, Tender every look frbm thee. Still there is a bOsom got wing . • With a stonier love than thine, Still a fuller stream is flociing From this swelling heart of mine. titrong tho be thy heart's emotion, Tho' tby passions wildlyglow, Oh! there is a deep devotion Wofnan's heart alone may know. 6 weet it is that " thinking of me " Drives away each broody ill; B ut remember while you love me, Tho u art loved more fondly still. . . • . ... . . . . • . q..:. ...—.. 0 . • . - , ... • . 4 ',....,4 ) . '''' . i'i . 15 : : 1117:/ Z 4 .. .. .. • . • 41. 15.41) .:* , S, !.., • .: , • I' I 1" - ?_ . ( ;;\\ \. :;. 1' ' a i-. 1 4A' h A A ill 4 . . 4 - , f f '''' !A '''' D a pry , ? ..f. 4 7:1 • . ... fr :x 4 • . . : 1 4 1111 ' i . - Z _ e l / 40 • 4 1.- . " . ..1 , .4 4 i;• 0 l. tV . ~ ''...P ... - • 1 - The Trapper. A LEGEND OF THE WEST On the shores of the Hudson, in times long since passed away, an isola ted being lived, bearing the name of Nick Wolsey. His solitary home was ip the valley of the highlands, about a mile from the river's bank, and his oc cupation consisted in hunting and trap ping, and trading for furs with the lir dians. He was tall and gaunt, with a peculiarly stern and even melancholy expression of feature, and, from his lonely, gloomy habits, seemed to claim no kith or kindred with any living crea ture. The only companion of his hours was a grizzly deerhound, whose speed and strength often overmatched the fleetest buck—and once he closed with a silver panther, and despiite the monster's , furious struggle tore the wind ptpe from his throat. ,Crouched be fore the fire, in the log cabin, he would watch each move and gesture of his master, and be as ready as his 'shadow to obey his beck and look. year had come and gone, and still found no change in the trapper's home. One day a party • of Indians of the Mohawk tribe approached his dwelling and proffered skin's in exchange for the white man's lire water and gunpowder, Among them was a gad of singular beau . iv, and tv,th her Nick %Vol:4er became suddenly and deeply enamored. As he looked at her full, round and faultless form. his eves flashed with the fire- in his veins, and the volcano of passion burns through each fibre of his frame. No sootier was this feeling engendered, than he strove to win the brawny skin —as many a fair one has been won— by pouring gifts into her lap—and long before a cessation of his profuseness took place. dozens of strings of bead , : were twined round her fair arms and neck, and rings and baubles of all kinds bedizened her person. Then the whis key flask was ()tiered gratuitously to the company, and Nick's suit progress ed With the brightness and velocity of a sky-rocket. In a short time a de mand was made for the red man's daugli ter, accompanied by a present of a hatchet and knife to the father and a willing consent obtained. A chief, whose fiery g lance showed the effect of the potent dram, bent his brow, and winged au arrow perpendicu lady to the clouds—and as it drove in to the earth quivering with the force, directed the trapper to remain by the side of the weapon. Then he shotone some hundred yards in a direct line, and then the expectant bride was con ' ducted to the spot where it fell by the father and her friends. A third Was then driven to the ground, a few feet from where she stood, and the chief, who acted as priest in the ceremony, addressed Nick Wolsey, by saying as he again pointed ,an arrow up warth— • If my white brother would win the bird, he must catch her ere she gains her nest ;" and drawing his b9w, the arrow twanged from the string, and away rushed the trapper at the signal. For a brief second the coqUette seemed resolved to reach the goal which won!" have freed her from her plighted faith ; but stopping suddenly in her rapid path, she turned on her heel, and threw her self with a ringing laugh, into Nick's outstretched arms. .A shout of triumph announced the success of his suit ; and to all, save one, the cothpletion appeared to give great satisfaction. This was an Indian youth, an undeclared lover of the trapper's brio. In secret he had worshiped the idol of his affection, trusting that time would enable him to gain the prize, and When his hope seemed ripening, he saw her thus suddenly lost to him and lost forever. "May the Great Spirit strengthen my arm !" said he, dashing forward, with all his savage nature roused with in him—and like a tiger springing up onihis prey, he ,was -about burying his knife between the shoulders of the un• suspecting trapper, when backwards he went to the earth as if a whistling bul let had rushed through his brain, in the strong grip of Nick's deer-bound. Holloa!" exclaimed the trapper, releasing his wife from an embrace re sembling a grizzly bear in tenderness, Why, what's this about, eh ?" The drawn knife in the fallen Indian's grasp. and his ferocious aspect revealed the causes cf the dog's unexpected at tack, who continued to pin-him firmly to the ground in his torturing hold. " Art jealous, man ?" said Nick, laughing and bestowing a kick of no gentleforce . on his prostrate enemy.— Art jealous . ?" And attng him from Regardless of Denunciation from any Quarter. —Gov. l° - 0 ATER OLZMU2', 9 eIQO . 7aLMOM LZa 11:046ck the earth, and snatching the blade from him, he culled him, among the jibes and jeers of his tribe, far away from the scene of his discomfiture. Months rolled away. The maple leaf wore the brown tint of searching autumn, and Nick Wolsey.was a rough but doming father. Upon returning from examining his traps, late one even ing., he was somewhat astonished, and not a little vexed, at his wife's neglect ing to meet him, according to his won ted custom, some short distance from the log cabin. " Where is .Minamee, I wonder," said. he, striding towards the door— and as he reached the threshhold,he - stumbled heavily against something laid across it. Upon stooping to as. certain the cause he discovered the life. less body of his faithful dog. Alinainee," he shouted with sten torian lungs. Sea and earth how did this happen Minatnee, I say !" " Hush !" exclaimed a voice in a low whisper, " hush you'll wake my N Wake your child !" repeated he, nestling her infant to her bosom, as he threw open , the door, " Wake your thezentenee was unfinished. Fell hor ror petrified hint with the sight that presented itself ; his lower jaw drop ped and his eyes seemed read.; to start from their sockets—the warm blood curdled in his veins, and the checked pulse ceased its throbbing. t,•;itting, be fore the hearth upon the floor, there was the young mother bearing marks of cruel violence and her disordered dress, and pressing to her brePst the headless trunk Of her infant. Pale was her countenance—and the.fixed, glassy stare betokened madness in•all its hor rid form. Say," screamed the trapper, rush ing to the side of his demented wile— ,. say how—who has done this ?" God of Heaven ?" exclaimed he— she's • daft—gone !" and scarcely less so himself the s.trong bold hunter howled in his misery. , For days he was unable to learn the particulars of des terrible catastrophe. At length a change took }!ace in the benighted reason of his wife—but like the remaining spark in the charred em ber, it was the last effort of the mind ere death expunged its miseries. It appeared that-at sunset, Minamee was preparing- to set out to meet her husband, after rolling her little charge in a Buffalo skin, and laying him on his bed when a long shadow of a man was cast suddenly into the entrance, and as quickly disappeared. Irk:deer hound sprung from the floor on which he had been lying ; as he leaped to the door-way, followed by his mistress, the sharp crack of a rifle was heard, and the noble animal fell dead at her feet.— In an instant afterwards the form of an Indian, whom Minamee at once recog nized as the foiled assassin at her mar riage, bounded into the cabin, and de spite the mother's furious struggle, clutched her child from his couch, and brandishing his knife with savage yells, severed his head from his body. "There," pitching the headless corpse towards the frantic mother, " is my revenge. Blood to the red man's wrong is as water to lire. I am satis ged. Farewell." And turning upon his heel, he quitted the spot like one who had accomplished a noble deed, and with a slow and haughty footfall. The hitherto happy and contented home of the trapper was now desolated. It was a lon g, long time since tears had fallen fret?' Nick's eyes ; but as he watched the siulting moments of his dying wife, they chased each other down his; forrowed cheeks instreams, and shelved the flood-gates tis heart were open. As the sun rose;the spirit of Minamee fled. " Revenge!" exclaimed the trapper. rising from the side of the dead hotly of his wife. over which "he mourned for hours. " l'll have such revenge that in tale and story none can equal. I'll be more bloody than the panther--more cruel than the beast or savage,, of any kind or • time. Revenge !" centiuued he. with a convulsive laugh ; " the white man's vengeance shall at least match the red." Mounting his Pmall, but but fleet steed, caught from the wild praiiie, the trapper turned his head towards the west, and driving his heels into his flanks, gallopped, like ,one reckless of life and limb, to the valley of the Mo hawk. There, as he anticipated, he found the tribe from whom his Indian wife had been chosen. Brief was the horrid tale of his wrongs. and•as brief were his demands for justice. Give me t '? said the trapper. " the murderer, and let me deal with him as I list." The chiefs listened with that seem ing- apathy with which they listened to every relation whether of good:or evil ; and continued to send volumes of smoke, curling upwards from their lips, as they sat in a circle about the fire, without a perceptible emotion of any kind. At length the elder said, after a lung silence, my white brother says well. Let it be so. Deal with him as you list. Take him hence." The consent obtained, a howl of savage delight burst from the trapper's breast, as he pounced like a gallant ti ger upon his victim—" You're mine," clutchtna the rernoreless wretch by the throat, and lifting him from the earth in his brawny grasp like a weak puny child. " You're mine !" repeated he ; " and as ye giive no Mercy. none shall be given ve." iddina long, narrow strips of un tanned hide round the shoulders, arms and wrists of the prisoner, he bound them ti,ght to his holy, and fixing one cud to his rude stirrup, threw himself upon his horse to ri:traee his steps at a siow and leisurely pace. The trapper appeared even to select the path with care, so that the prisoner might not be injured by break or brier on their pro ,gress. In silence—without one word being spoken in that tong, long night—they contintwd on throuoli waste and wild. The unruffled Iltidson reflected 'the clear rays of the moon, bright s,nd un broken as a mirror. The refreshing mists robed along the sides of the high lands in graceful folds, and nothing broke on the ear but the wash of waters and the melancholy note of the w hip poor- will. Just as the first tinge of light streaked the east, the trapper ar rived at the door of his cabin ; and se curing his prisoner beyond the chance of escape, to the trunk of a primeval ‘vd low hard by. be at once began the task of his unparalleled, unheard of re- With a hatchet he cut long and stout branches front the willow, and tying them firmiy together with pieces of dried skin,forined a sort of rough strong b.nsket, resembling a lare cradle.— \' hen this was complete lie threw his helpless' captive into it, at lenoth and with his lace upwards, and, passing strips of hide through the apertures of the cradle from his feet to his neck, hound him fast, that not even a sinew might he moved, Then taking the copse of wife—ill fated Mipamee I he placed it face to face with his prism r. The horrified wretch clenched and grit ted his teeth as the body pressed upon his; hut no groan escaped his lips.— Ilis eves revealed the an guish of his soul, still he would not speak. In a few minutes the living and the dead were lashed together.— The breathing man and putrid corpse, festering corruption were as one.— When so much of the horrid work was finished, the trapper stood with folded arms, with a fiendish smile, surveyed the advancement of his task. " And now to complete it," said he. lifting the load lightly in his arms, and_ placing it long ways on the back of his horse, tethered on the green sward.— The animal snuffed the air, and would have plumed from his burden, had not the well known voice of his master quieted him. Still he stood with fiery eye-balls and dilated nostrils, ready to fly from his own shadow, as he smelt the offensive stench issuing from the cradle. Girding it in the same fashion as the bodies were bound together round the loins ribs and neck of the horse, he so contrived to fix it that neither jolt nor jar could move it from the firm po sition. Now my eagle of the rock," said the trapper, addressing his horse, '•my untamed unicorn, You shall, for the first rime since you left the prairie grass, feel the effects of the lash. and taking a punishing switch in bis hand, lie struck the animal sharp, until wrought In i pitch of fury and pain. Flakes'of foam dew from his mouth, and streams of perspiration rolled from every pore in the skin. Leaping in the air like a stricken nag, he strove to snap the bond which held him, and at length with one terrific plunge and cry of .terror. broke away with the speed of thought, and sWrpt through forest, swamp and wild, with madness in every stride. On, on he went. The flood was passed, the prairie gained ; still On Ite went. A wild, piercing shriek broke on the un bounded waste, and lent ,new fear to the maddened horse. On, on he went.— The noon-tioe sun darted his rays, un broken by ,leaf or bough,upon the fleet ing overloaded steed : but still his gal lop Was • unslackened. His skimming shadow became gigantic in the falling light ; and still he continued on. The pale moon tipped the thin fleecy clouds with her silver light—and yet his speed was unabated. 'Tis said—but even in a whisper— by the hunters of the far west, that /the horse may still be seen scouring the plains, where the foot fall of man is seldom heard, with the load of the liv ing and of the dead. Yankee Courtship. Jonathan Dunbar saw Prudence Feastalf at a meeting.—Jonathan sidled up to Prudence arter meeting, and she kind a sidled off. He Went-closer and axed her it she would accept the crook o' his elbow. She resolved, she could, and plumped her arm right round his'n. Jonathan felt all overish, and said he liked the text, " Seek and ye shall find," was puny gond readin. Prudence hinted that " Ask and ye shall receive," was better ; Jonathan thought so too, but this axing was a puzzler. A fellow was apt to get into a snarl when he ax ed, and snarlin warn% no fun. Pru dence guessed strawberries and cream were slick. Jonathan thought they warn't so slick as Pro's lips. Now don't," said Pru, and she guvJonathan's arm an involuntary hug.—He was a leetle started. but thought his farm want ed some female help to look arter the house. Pru knew how to make rale good bread. " Now don't," said Pro. " If 'should," said Jonathan—" Now don't." said Pru. 'Maybe you wouldn't' —and Jonathan shuck all over, and Prudence replied, "If you be coming that game, you'd better tell feyther." " That's just what I . want," said Jona th in ; and in three weeks Jonathan and Prudence were "my old man" "and my old woman." THE SCHOOLMASTER.--There is 110 office higher than that of a teacher of youth, for there is nothing on earth so precious as the mind, soul, and charac ter of the child.No office should be more respect. The first minds•in the comuni ty should be encouraged to assume it. Parents should do all but impoverish themselves-, to induce such to become the guardians and guides of their chil dren. To this good all their shoW and luxury should be sacrificed. Here they should be lavish, whilst they straighten themselves in everything else. They should wear the cheapest clothes, live on the plainest food, if they can in no other way secure to their families the best instruction. They should have no . anxiety to accumulate property for their eltili'lren, provided they can place them under influences which will awaken their faculties, inspire them with pure and high principles, and fit them to bear a manly, useful, and honorable part in the world. No kagunge can express the cruelty or folly of that economy, which, to leave a fortune to a child, starves his intellect and impoverishes his heart.— Channing. Natural Attraction. I don't like to be left alone with a gal, it's plaggy apt to set me soft saw derin' and a courtin'. There is a sort of natural attraction like in 'this world. Two ships in a calm are sure to get along side of each other if there is no wind, and they have nothing to-do but to look at each other: miff does it.— Well, even the tongs and the shovel won't stand along ; they are sure to get on the s saine side of the fire, and be sociable ; one of 'm has loadstone, and draws t'other,, that's certain.. If that's the case with hard hearted things, like oak and iron, what is it with tender hearted things like humans ? Shut me up in a- 'sarvetory with a hansum gal of a rainy day, see if I don't think she is the prettiest flower in I am glathit is the dinner bell, for I aint rea dy to marry yet, and when I am, I guess I most - get a gall where I got my boss, in old Connecticut, and that state takes the shine off all creation for geese,, gals and onions, that's a fact.—Sant Slick in En.-land. FIRESIDE CHEERFELNESS.--Culti rate a cheerful spirit. Cheerfulness is the twin sister of gratitude. They are born together. They walk baud in hand through life, and the death of the ,one breaks the heart of the other.— Gratitude is the homage which the heart gives to God for his goodness.— Cheerfulness the external manifestation of his }liaise. FOR A COLD AND IMARSENgSS.-13oil a middling sized turnip, lay it in amp mon saucer, and pout on it three table spoonsful of common -molasses—the juice of the turnip is extracted and forms a syrup, which will he found very efLaCious in removing the hoarse ness and sore throat of a common cold: EW:t fa. evocatiaota cask The First Prayer in Congress. The subjoined extract of'a character istic letter from John Adams, describ ing a Beene in the Ist Congress in , Philadelphia, in September, 1774. shews very cleaily oti what power the mighty men of old rested their cause.— Mr. Adams thus writes to a friend at the time : %V hen the Congress met, Mr. Cash ing made a motion that it should' be opened with prayer.. It was opposed by Mr. Jay of New York, -and Mr., Rutledge of South Carolina, because we were so divided in religioussentiments, some Episcopalians, some Quakers, some Atiabaptists.!iome Presbyterians, and some Congreptionalists, - that we could not join in thesame act of wor ship. Mr. Sanwa" Adams arose and said that he was no bigot, and could hear a prayer from any gentleman of piety and virtue who was at the Barrie time a friend to his country. He was a stranger in Philadelphia, but he had heard that Mr. Duche, (Dushay, they pronounced it,) deserved that character, and therefore moved that Mr. Duche, an Episcopal Clergyman, might be desired to read prayers to the Congress to-morrow morning. The motion was seconded, and passed in the affirmative. Mr. Randolph, our President, waited on . Mr. Duche, and received for an swer, that if his health would perrnit he certainly would. Accordingly, next morning he appeared with his clerk. and in his pontificals, and 'read several prayers ins the established form, and then read the collect for the 7th day of September:which was the thirty,fifth Psalm. You must remember, this was the next morning after we had heard the rumor of the horrible cannonade of Boston. It seemed as if Heaven had ordained that Psalm to be read on that morning. After this, Mr. Duche, unexpected ly to every body, struck out into an ex traordinary prayer, which filled the bosom of every man present. I Must confess I never heard a better prayer, or oneso well pronounced. Episcopa lian as he is, Dr. Cooper himself never prayed with such fervor, such ardor, such correctness and pathos, and in language. so eloquent and sublime, for America, for Congress,' for the Pro vince of the Massachusetts Bay,'es-pe cially the town of Boston. It has had an excellent effect on every body here. I must beg you to read the Psalm. .If there is any faith in the sortes,Virgili anw, or sortes liomericw, or especially the sortes Bibliep, it would be thought providential." Here was a scene worthy of the painter's art. - It was in Carpenter's Hall in Philadelphia, a building which (we learn by a recent article,) still sur vives in its original condition, though now sacrilegiously converted we be lieve, into an auction market for the sale of chairs and tables, that the forty. four individuals met to whom this ser vice. was read. Washington was kneeling there, and Henry, and Randolph, and Rutledge. and Lee, and Jay. and by their •sides stood., bowed in reverence, the Puritan patriots of New England, who at that moment had reason to believe that an armed soldiery was wasting their hum- Me households. It was •believed that Boston had been bombarded and de stroyed. They prayed fervently "'for America, for the Congress, for the Pro. vince of Massachusetts Bay, and espe cially for the town of Boston ;" and who .c.in realize the emotions with which they turned imploringly to Hea ven for divine interposition and aid ? "It was enough," says Mr. Adams, "to melt a heart of stone. I saw tears gush into the eyes of the old, grave, pacif. c Quakers of Philadelphia."— Newark Daily rldv. Eastern Anecdote. As a woman was walking, a man looked at her and followed her. Why do you follow me ?" she asked Because J have fallen in lotte with you," he replied,. Why are you in love with me, e ?" said she. -.141y sister is much hand somer she is coming after me; go and make love to her." The man turned hack, and saw a wo man with an ugly face. Being greatly displeased, he'lturned to the first one; and said. - - IV by did you tell me a.falsehOOd?", Neither did Noll speak the truth.". . replied she•; " for tivou were really; in love with me, why * did you leave me to look upon my sister ?" . ..There.is much good sense in there- mark, Sayi an e c ange. and ifS spore tr,irls weri , as' sons hie ,as there would he less incol sUtiev: • 111 MN - CIO