II 19332 WreD2lo-3D&WoI 1110 70 1. The Dithered, Flower. 46 e y brought her from the city vast, To this dim forest dell; ease they said, her pain toVead The paths she loved so well. .."-They lcd her forth by bill and spring, •end down the flowery glen; 'Th e y deem'd her childhood haunts wouldbring '-'filer childhood back again. '"be flower buds glisteiicd in the grass, '1 The birds sang in the tree; few shnasertumers since, alas ! she sang as blythe as he. tell me not, in summer time, Within this happy dale, ;hat lady's eyes could long be dim, -7 Her check could long be pale! inventiy they lost their light, • like stars when day's begun—: blue bells sweet, which chill winds bright, When summer days are done. And hour by hour life's sun sank low, A sunset sad and bleak— for death crept quietly and slow, Like twilight o'er her cheek. Twas now the golden autumn time, The old ago of the day ; Each flower cop was folded up [ Beneath the patting ray ; • When, as the Sabbath's dying light , Stole through the lattice in, That lady doted her eyelids bright -! Upon the world of sin. Each flovv'ret ope'd its silken bell, When.merry morning shone; But noon and evening came—yet still h She'silently slept on The lilies grew beside her feet, The violets at her head ; Angel might not grieve to meet With such a blessed bed. • They brought her from the city vast To this dim forest dell: gere first it sprung,' and bele at last The withered flowret fell. [From the U. S. Gazette.] Children at Play. LT J. A.•USPFfIDUT. Oh! blame them not fnr their joyous strain_ Foi this is the hour of their glee--- - And soon the pall of manhood's care Will cover all their gayety. Then let their laugh be loud and clear— Chide not thy little band, Whose mirth-must soon, alas! give way, To Time's unsparing hand. I love to hear their wild clear notes Ring out on the wintry Fir, - 7 :They tell the joys which once were ours, Ere we knew this world of cave. And the lively scenes of the school-boy spot, In Memory's glass are shown, And a thousand scenes ar s e numbered now, Which we thought forever flown. Give them their fleeting hour of mirth, For the clouds are gathering now, IThich will burst in fury on their heads, And limo* each gentle brow. And are mill be where joy now sits— I And thorns where flowers appear ; 01! chide them not—oh chide them not, For soon will come life's taro. Frott the Westem Literary Messenger.] Hopes. There is a hope that soothes the fear— The dread that we must die Must leave,.ah! leave all that we love here, Fo'r sable pall and narrow bier; 'Tie hope of LIFE on high. There is a hope that peace imparts, Though want may cloud our sky, Though rugged be our path in life, And each step gained with toil and strife, is hope of ZEST on high. There is a hope—a heavenly hope, - That makes each sorrow fly, That wipei'away each falling tear— And says, though grief be our part while here, is tvDLI:SS or on high. Song of the Rkcr. I sprang, from the rock, from the MOuntain aide, Sparkllng, pure and bright, • ?.m.l I gather strength as I rapidly glide From my birth-place into light. Riches I bear to land and tree, Beauty to hill and dale, . • Beast and bird delight in me, • Drink. and we strong and hate. "-Fresh are the flowers that deck tay , banks, The itod is greenest there t Arttl the warbling winged encasing their thanks, As they think of the everywhere: lin-the only drink was given • To, man, when pure and free ; ....num, then, to the gill of Heaven, You 'rp safe when drinking' me. 0 drA\ Vit . . ra 5\ l 46 ~.,, \ . .. 4 The-'-Brilliant Locket. It . was in thenutumn of the year 1800, when the republican army under Ney. Moreau, Lamb, Cir., and other of its bravest generals, was pursuing its vic torious career, and laying waste some of the most important towns in Germa ny, the cir,cumstance that we are about to relate took place. The frequent want of stores, ammu nition, and money, lin the republican armies, and the hope of plunder, then so frequently held out to the French boliliers, as the reward of victory, aused no. inconsiderable alarm in the breast of the more peaceable inhabitants of those places which were likely to becume the theatre of hostilities. Among these, the inhabitants.of a German town of considerable impor tance—and. which foi distinction we will call Ebristien—had ample reasons for their misgivings ; the daily, almost hourly, approach of the French being expected. , The family of Paul Kinmayer, a merchant citizen of great wealth, was amongst those most agitated by the afflicting intelligence. His household cobsisted of his wife, an only daughter, and a few domestics in whom•he could place. confidence—His daughter was ' the spring which.regulated every action of the merchant's life; she was the ap ple of his eye, the sunshine of his , shady places; for her he had accumu lated his wealth, that her rare beauty might win with it a station of rank and influence ; and now the hope of a whole lifetime might be wrecked in a few brief hours. Ills wife was the first to suggest a plan for the concealment of their trea, sures. Their mansion was situated near the extremity of the town, and from it a secret passage communicated With a bower in the garden adjoining ; from thence, in the evening, a man might easily steal . unperceived to the adjacent woods ; and there she propos ed that the merchant should, at night time, bury his treasure; or, at any rate, that he should proceed through the forest and deposit° it with a relation who was to be trusted, who would not be - Suspected of possessing so much wealth, and who resided about two days' journey from the place. For.a time, Paul Kinmayer resisted every importunity of his wife. Who would protect thent should the antici pated aittack take place in his absence.? the domestics were old and infirm; and they would be too much alarmed for their own safety • to care much for others not akin to them. But when his wife spoke upon the future, when she im pressed on him that it was wealth only that would be required of them, and that, deprived of that, all for which they had so-long struggled. would be scattered in a moment, his resolution gave way'. " I go," he said " and I leave you in the trust of one whose all powerful hand will protect you ; unless indeed, in his infinite wisdom, he deems it fit ting that the innocent should fall as an example and terror to the guilty." Collecting all that was most valuable into a small packet; as the evening ap proached, the merchant was prepared to depart. One jewel only remained behind—it was his own minature, set in a locket, with diamonds of great val ue. It was his wedding gift to Ame lia, and with it he hesitate& to part ; and he placed it again 'around her neck with the same fervor and affection that he felt when he first presented it. To her and his daughter, the name-sake of her mother, he gave some necessary directions for their welfare during his absence, and taking an affectionate fare well, he departed, unknown to anv but themselves. It was on the evening of the fourth day after the merchant had departed that the roll of the drums, the shrill voice of the trumpet calling to arms, and the tumult among the inhabitants, without - proclaimed to the inmates of the mansion that the enemy was fast appreaching. The town was, indeed. filled with Austrian troops, but these had been so often and lately harrassed and defeated by the victorious arms of the French, that it was not without rea son the citizens felt strong misgivings in their prowess. All chance of the merchant being en.; abled to reach his house, or even to obtain admittance within the town pre vious to the termination, was now en tirely shut ottt. The wife had but lit tle doubt that his reputed wealth would not permit the house to pass unmolested; and after causing the doors to - be bard; cadet', and the windows and 'flutters secured, she proceeded with her daugh- Regardless of Denunciation from any Quay/en—Gov. POUTER. cOOVT,ILIZELto 311341DWOMID ZPME 1 11'51 . 9 2.&09 EiS&V ads, ilP4.ilic. ter to the innermost apartment of the mansion, On the return of the merchant, the French army was evacoating.the place, carrying with them the trophies they had wrested from the , conquered Aus trians, and a large supply of stores and plunder from the devoted town.. Paul's heart died within him as he stealthily entered the suburbs, and proceeded towards the place of his own resi dence. NVithin the town all was confusion and dismay; hero were open store houses, rifled of all their contents, the Very doors torn from their hinges ; there, the trim gardens of the richer classes broken down and trampled over; in the market places were groups of the middle and lower classes, loudly com plaining of the excesses of both Austria and France. Still, Paul stopped not to join in the general outcry ; his only anxiety was his own home. At length he reached his dwelling. With what a pang of intense anxiety he rushed through the open portal. The servants , had evidently fled ; the stairs bore the marks of heavy footsteps. Paul stop ped not to examine them or he would have seen that they were traced with gore. With the speed of thought he rushed into their accustomed sitting'room„ and there a horrid spectacle awaited him.— On the ground lay his wife, stabbed through the heart; one hand had fallen back as if to protect her from the attack of the assassin, while the other grasped tightly a few links of the slight gold chain to which had been attached the diamond mounted portrait. Of his daughter there were no traces. Loudly did he call, and wildly did he seek, first in his own house and then through the whole town, until it was whispered • abroad that he was mad ; and so, for a time he was ; but anxiety brought weariness, and repose led to reflection. How deeply . Paul Kinmayer re proached himself for not taking the miniature with the other valuables, need not be related, since he little doubted that his wife's resistance to part with it had led to the fatal catastrophe. One redeeming thought only flashed across his mind, that by its agency—if indeed she had not shared the fate of her mo ther—he might be enabled to discover the missing daughter. To this end he resolved to devote the whole of his fu ture existence; and after the funeral of his wife, he diiposed of his house, the wreck of hishousehold goods and prepared to travel whither, he knew not; but anywhere to fly from the scenes where all his hopes of earthly happiness had been blighted by the ruthless hand of the destroyer. , LAndiretie," he said, as he turned from his native town and home, "these are the deeds perpetrated under the sacred banner of liberty. Alas ! how is the divine attribute desecrated ? How little, but the name exists in the blood-thirsty dynasty of France." Shall we follow the steps orPaul Kinmayer for twelve years t Shall we relate how he traveled in strange lands, ever in-the wake of the French army— sometimes in disguise—how minute, but yet how cautious were his inquiries, and, alas ! how fruitless ? Shall we say how the hale man grew grey and feeble, as though half a century had passed over his head, in scarcely more than the tithe of one ? No ; for we could relate nothing that would interest the reader—nothing but the patient suffering of a bereaved man ; hoping, but hopeless, seeking, but finding not ; until it almost seemed that the faculties of the wanderer had ceased to embrace the original object of his mission ; but they did not—they only slumbered. It was something beyond twelve years after the scene above. related took place, that a French officer was reciting in one of the principal cafes of Paris, to an eager crowd of listeners, the par ticulars of an inglorious retreat from Russia, of which he was one - of the few survivors. His age could nothave exceeded thirty ; but the dreadful hard , ships of the Russian campaign had told fearfully upon his hardened features.— War, however, had not tamed, but had evidently added to, a naturally fero cious disposition ; for he was detailing with savage satisfaction, the horrid tor ments of the enemy, already forgetting of the severities he had just escaped, and to Which so many of his comrades had fallen a sacrifice. . Among those , who listened most at tentively was a stranger, vvho sat, al most unnoticed smelting,. in an obscute corner of the room ;- an involuntary et pression of disgtst at length- betrayed him, and' all eyes were immediately turned to where he sat. 441'11 wager a Napoleon," said the officer, - " that the old German never smelt- powder but on a review day, and never saw-more smoke - than that which proceeded from his ownmaerschaum." Better if others were like me, who, remembering only that they are soldiers, forget that they are men." " How !" exclaimed the officer, start ing on feet, " such ; sentiments. here are dangerous ; but you Germans are very mystical however', I'll tell you a German adventure, so garcon, another bottle of coil roil, and then ---=-" " Do Sou happen to know the Ger man town . OfEbristien ?" inquired the officer. The dull eye of the stranger seemed suddenly lit with a liquid tire, as he answered in the affirmative. "It was my first campaign," con tinued the other; " my father had been one of the bravest" (he meant one of the most blood-thirsty) " leaders of the revolution. His influence obtained for me a commission ; and crowned with success, I found no difficulty in earning for myself promotion. In the action alluded to we were allowed but two hours to make what pillage we could in the town of Ebristien before we pro ceeded onward to greater and more glorious victories. Well, there was a jeweller of great wealth, whose house, which was pointed out to me by an Austrian prisoner, we entered, but in which neither jewels nor portable valu ables could we find. The servants fled on our first entrance ; the wife and daughter alone remained. The latter had locked themselves in a room, which we soon burst open ; we demanded of them their valuables ; the trumpets had already sounded "To hoise l" and I was preparing to leave the house, when a gold chain around the neck of the old& female attracted my attention.— There was attached to it—" is A. portrait ?" asked the stranger, in a tone of ill-concealed anxiety.— •. Don't interupt me," said the narra tor ; the story is droller than any would imagine." The blood of the stranger came and went rapidly, and, putting down his pipe, lie was observed, for the moment, feeling about his pockets, as if in search of some missing articles. „ You're right, it was a portrait ; apd in a most valuable setting. Provoked at obtaining no booty, I demanded it \ of her ; she should have had the worthless miniature, but she was obstinate. I tried to force it from her, but she resis ted, nay, more, she tried to seize a pis tol from my belt, and in the heat of my passion—l stabbed her." Have you that portrait still ?" asked the German. " I have ; though it haq been taken from the setting in which one of my own now glitters. You said you knew Ebriestien." I did, years ago." " And probably the original of this picture ?" said the officer producing it. Well, well !" " Ah ! is he alive ?" He Is—to be the dvenger !" And before a movement was observed, Paul Kinmayer had with fatal precision, levelled a pistol at the French officer, and shot hitwin the breast. Mortally wounded, but not dead, he who had braved the heat of a hundred battles, and whom death had spared that he might make a more suitable atone ment for his guilt, was carefully remov ed to a more private apartment. Paul, who might have escaped in the confusion, did not attempt to do so; and he was, of course, taken into custody, and incarcerated in one of the dungeons of the police. The following morning he was led forth for examination; the wife of the fallen officer, he was told, ' would be his accuser. But_ he walked with a firm step and a lighter heart than usual. One portion of his mission had been accomplished—he had 'avenged his wife's murder, but he had found no traces of his daughter. On reaching the place of examination he wars commanded to stand forth ; a shriek—a Imp agonizing shriek—was hoard, and the prosecutrix fell senseless on the floor. , Restoratives were applie d,. ` and on her recovery the cause of her agitation was seen apparent. "it is my fatheil" she Said, and breaking through the crowd, she again fell senseless in his arms." The impetotypf . her fall Caused a locket to dtop from her bosom, where it was still suspended by a Chain. Paul, Kinmayer snatched it up. Yes. it was the same—the same circlet of brilliants ; but — now it contained the poitrait of whom his daughter's husband;=4 the murderer of his wife; Passing her to one of the attendants, the old man , emote his breast, and called aloud in hie trouble—` Was it for this thou wart preserved, my beautiful—my pure 1" In consequence of the state of: the witness, the examination was postpon ed, and the same evening the dying man requested that the prisoner, together with the chief of the police, might- at-' tend him. On their arrival life Wa3 ebbing fast. The Confession of the officer was brief; he admitted the murder of Paul's wife, and the justice of his retribution ; he farther confessed that the, daughter, be ing almost a child, was carried away by the common soldiers to the rear of the army ; that she was forced from the apartment previous to, and knew nothing of her mother's fate ; and that repenting of his act, he had her convey ed. to Paris, and educated at his own charge. With her years, her loveliness increased, and she knowing him as a benefactor, 'at last consented to marry him. This confession was attested and for warded to the Emperor. Meanwhile the friends of the officer came forward as prosecutors, his wife refusing to do so. The murder in the latter case was fully proved, and Paul was sentenced to death. On the morning appointed for his execution he was reprieved, and suffer-, ed to enter a monastery, where he soon sunk under a broken heart. With his wealth, which was con siderable, he founded a.convent for the Sisters of Mercy," and in the beauti ful abbess, whose piety and benevolence so many have, with jus i tice, lauded and adMired, may be discovered the unfor tunate daughter of Paul Kinmayer. The Mother's Reward. I saw a little cloud rising in the wes tern horizon. In a few moments it spread over the expanse of heaven, and watered the earth with a genial shower. I saw a little rivulet start from a moun tain, winding its way through the val ley and the meadow, receivhig , each tributary rill which it met in its c ourse, till it became a mighty stream, ; beering on its bosom the merchandize_of many nations, and the various productions of the adjacent country. I saw a little seed. drop into the earth. The dews descended, the sun rose Upon it ; it started into life. In a little time it spread its branches and became a shel ter from the heat, " and the fowls of heaven lodged in its branches." I saw a little smiling boy stand by the side of his mother, and heard hint repeat from her lips one of the sweet songs of Zion. I saw him kneel at her feet, and pray that Jesus would bless his dear parents, the world of mankind, and keep him from. ;temptation. In a little time I saw him' with the books of the classics orider , his arm, walking alone, buried in deep thought. I went into a Sabbath school, and heard him saying to a little group that surrounded him, " Suffer little children to come un to me." Ii a few months, I went into the sanctuary, and heard him reasoning of " righteousness, and temperance, and judgment to come," I looked, and saw that same mother, at whose. feet he had knelt, and from whose lips he had learned to lisp the name Immanuel.— Her hair was whitened with the frosts of winter, and on her cheek was many a furrow ; but meekness sat on her brow, and - heaven ,beamed in her dim eye glistening with a tear ; and .1 thought I saw in that tear the moving of a ino ther's heart, while she reverted to days gone by, when this Boanerges was first dawning into life, banging on her lips, listening to the voice of instruction ; and inquiring in childlike Simplicity, the way to be good ; and I said, " This is the rich harvest of a mother's toil ; these are the goodly sheaves of that precious seed which probably was sotirn in weeping, and your grey hairs Shall not be brought 'down' with sorrow to the grave, but inlhe bower of rest, you shall look' down on him who " will arise and call you blessed," and finally greet you where hope is swallowed up in fruition, and prayer in-praise. Ma. EmTou.---pati you tell me'whai is f ood for sore eves ? Certainly theitl with youi bows. Lucy, dear. Ktix Rttotrt.--4. 1 'am 'often found at, the .tablei .of ithe rich," -caid.a.coi coink to h 00 - neighbor.. 86 is a tar s head,". was the ewer: A rttax is taller in the morning than he if; at night, to the extent of a half an inch or more; owing to the relaxation of the cartilages, f• ecopamozoi 60414 i Guide to- life Workhouse: [TD 'KOVNO MARRIED c9upi.Es Sou are supposed to begin house:- keeping with a decent' coMpetence; which, with induitry and frbgality,will enable Yon to lite comfortably; and put Something by. Never, therefore, dream of saving, except of saving yourselves trouble.. Be - sure to rise very late ; you will thus 'bait, 'the less time 'to spend in minding your affairs. Also, wives particularly,---be its long as you can in dressing of a morning; whereby you will pleasantly get over two or even three hours, which might have been devoted to domestic drudgery.— On no account do anything for your selves that Servants can do for you ; and therefore, do not be, content with one servant. Bear constantly in mind the maxims following :—lt is impoisi ble for a lady to darn stockings. She can by no means makba shirt for her husband, or a dress for herself. She" must never be seen in the kitchen. As to looking after her linen; helping to make beds, or cook, the very thought of such exertions ought to kill her.— Yeti should have two dinners daily ; one for your servants at two, anttan other for yourselves at seven, until you are' blessed with a family, and then you should have three. Hot dishei every day are indispensable ; neirer, for econo my's sake put up with a cold dinner.— Have fires in every room in the house: Strictly follow the fashions ; you should not wear out an old dress if ever s 6 good. Use towels, handkerchiefs, and the like, without the 1 least r.gard to. your washing bill. In the matter of perfumes, gloves, and stationary, con; suit nothing but your senses, common senses excepted. As regards eating and drinking have the best of every thing. Give plenty of parties ; and if you doubt whether you ought to keep a carriage or not, give yourselves the benefit of the doubt and keep one.— The extreme of luxury in furniture is too obviously advisable to be dwelt up- . on ; and you will feel the advantage of it when your things come to be sold off. Indulge yourselves, generally, in every wish; awl never put up with the least inconvenience' to avoid the greatest ex pense. Do not bildle your respective wishes, or . sacrifice anything, except each others fortune, for each other ; whenever you want what you cannot have, get into an ill-humor—and show it. Accustom yourselves to call every, the smallest act of self-denial, horrid," shocking." miserable," dreadful." intolerable ;" shut your ears against advice, and let your sole considerations be your own will and pleasure, and the world's opinion. Having five hundred a year, live at the rate of a thousand, and plunge without scruples headlong into debt. You will find these direc: Lions an infallible Guide to the Work:. house." Good Advice; Netter believe, much less propagate; an ill report of your neighbor, without good evidence of its truth. Never ten to an infamous story handed you by a man who is a known enemy of the person defam,ed; or who is himself de; faming his neighbors; or who is wont to sow discord among brethren, and ex cite disturbances in society. Never utter the evil which you know or sus pect of another, till you have ah oppor; tunity to expostulate with him. Never speak evil of another while you are un der the operation of entry and malevo lence, bht tvait till yoiir spirits are cool= ed clown, that ybu may better judgb whether to utter or suppress the matter. Never express the evil which you would say to your neighbor in terms too strong; orth language which ivohld convey ad exaggerated idea of his conduct. ° No; ver throw out against a man broken hints and inuendoes, Which would leave the hearers to suspect any thing; and every thing that ill nature can km.; gest. Never speak evil of your neigh- , bor to his known enemy, who wishes for an occasion of slander, for he wilt certainly paint the image anew, 'and touch it off with batter corers: lii short, never speak evil of a matt when your speaking may probably do much butt, but cannot' posiibly do any goods . 4 DIFFERENT FORMS .-- An old lady Ealil her. hushand was fond of peaches 'gild . that waihis only fault. - Faith madam I said one, how an you call that a fault? Why because there are diffetent ways of eating them.' My husband takes then in the form of brandy; Fort zits LADIE§.--Ir its stated that if the ladies will k eep their Mignonetto from floWeriog . for a year, it becomes a shrubby, perennial plant, and Its scent . Will greatly increase. Sno 41.00