11 VeaCC/11. 7 1 VllO UO'W.LBS'D.Le WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1845 DASHT.S AT Lizr..—Prom 'Willis' dew work, "Dashes at Lift with a free rencil," we extract a portion of the story—" WIGWAM is. Amtacxs," on this page. l'he remainder will be given next week. If it were not for spoiling the romance of the tale, we should add that we fear that Ruth Plymton and her father; the landlord, are creatures of Willis' fruitful ima gination. The "memory of the oldest inhabitant," how ever, may be consulted by any person wishing to posicss themselves of authentic information on the subject. The Dying ilehymist. I= The nigh; wind with a desolate moan swept by; And the wild shutters of the turret swung Screaming upon their binges ; and the moan, As the torn edges of the clouds flew past, Struggled aslant the stained and broken panes So'dimly, that the watchful gyp of death Scarcely was conscious whet it went Itnil came.. The fire beneath his crucible was low; Yet still it burned - ; and ever as his thoughts Grew insupportable, lte raised himself Upon his wasted t if„irand stirred the coals Was-difficult energy, and when the rod Fell from his nerveless fingers, and his eye Felt faint within its socket, he shrunk back Upon his pallet, and with unclosed lips Muttered a curse on death! The silent room, From its dim corners, mockingly gave back His rattling breath ; the humming in the fire Hatt the distinctness, of a knell; and when Duly the antique horologe beat one, He drew a phial from beneath his head, And drank. And instantly his lips compressed, AmLwith a shudder in his skeleton frame, He rose with supernatural strength, and sat Upright, and communed with hitnself:— I did not think to die Till I had finished what I had to do; I thought to pierce th' eternal secret through With this my immo!tal eyC; I felt—Oh God ! itaeemeth even now it This cannot ha tho death-dew on my brow ! • ' And yet it feel,. .of . this.dull sickness" at my heart afraid; And in my eyes the death-sparks flash and fade; And something seems to steal flyer my bosom like a frozen hand— l/inthog its pulses with an icy band. And this is death! But why Feel flthis wild recoil ? It cannot be , Th' initnortal spirit shuddcreth to be free ! Would it not leap to fly, Like a chain'd eaglet at his pgrent's call? 1 fear—/ fear,-th* this your life is Yet thus to pass away ! To live but for a hope Abu mocks at ,last— To agonize, to strive, to watch, to fabt, To waste the light of day, Night's better beauty, feeling, fancy, thought, All that we have and are—for this—for nought:. Grant me another year, God of my spirit !—but a clay—to win Something to satisfy this thirst within! I would know something here! Break for me but one seal that is unbroken ! .Speak for me but one word that is unspoken! Vain—vain!—my brain is turning With swift dizziness, and my heart grows sick, And these hot temple-throbs come fist and thick And I am freezing—burning— Dying! Oh God! if I might wily live! My phial-11a! it thrills me—l revive were were not man to die He were too mighty for this narrow sphere! Had he hut time to brood on knowledge here— Could he but train his eye— Might he but wait the mystic word and hour— truly his maker would transcend his power ! Earth has no mineral strange— •Th' illimitatble air no hidden wings— Water no quality in covert springs, And fire no power lo change— Seasonsno mystery, and stars no spell, Whit-11;11w unwasting soul might not compel: Oh, but fur time to track The upper stars into the pathless sky— To see th' invisible spirits, eye to cyc— To hurl the lightning back— To tread unhurt the sca's dim-lighted halls— _Tu chase Day'. chariot'. to the horizon walhi—r. And more, much mom—fi-now The life-scaled f winning of my nature move— To nurse and purify 11th human hive— To clear the - god-like brow Of weakness and mistrust, and bow it dowel Wort* atol beautiful, to the mucls•iovcd This were indeed to tee) The soul thirst slaken nt the living strewn— To live—Oh God! that life is but a dream ? And death—Aha! I reel— faint—darknesa cameleer my eye— Cover me! save me !—God of heaven ! die! Twas morning, and the old man lay alone. No friend had closed his eyelids, and his lips, Open and ashy pale, th• expression wan; Of his death struggle. ) His long silvery hair Lay on his hollow temples thin and wild, his frame was wasted, and his features wan And haggard as with want, and in his palm His nails were d riven deep, as if the throe Of the last ago had wrung him sore. The storm was raging still. The shutters swung Screaming as harshly as the fitful wind, And all without went onLas aye it will, ' Sunshine or tempest, reckless that a heart Is breaking, or has broken, in its change. The fire beneath the crucible ant out; The •essscls.of las mystic tut lay zountl,:' . - .. •. . . . . . . ..t . 1: f • . ....R ~ i ..,:..;. ..... .. , . Useless and cold as the ambitious-hand , That fashioned them, and the small rod, Foiniliur to his touch for threescore years, Lay on th' alembic's rumps if it still Might .vex the elements at its master's gill Aud thus had pa,c;sl from its unequal frau. -A soul of fire—a sun-bent eagle stricken" From his high roaring down—an instrument Broken with-its own compass.. On how poi Seems the rich gift of genius, when it lies, Like the adventurous bird that bath out-flown His strength upon the sea, ambition-wrecked - A thing the thrush might pity, as she sits Brooding in quiet on her lowly nest. Wigwam versus Ainiack's, IN one of the years not long since pass.d to your account and mine by the recording Agel, gentle reader, I was taking my fill of a delleous American June, as Ducrow takes his butte of wine, on the back of a beloved horse. If the expressive language of the raftsmen onthe streams of the West, I was " following" the Chemung—a river whose wild and peefliar loveliness is destined to be told in und:ing song, whenever America can find leisur to look up her poets. Such bathing of the eet of precipices, such kissing of flowery slu es, such winding in and out of the bosoms of ro pd meadows, such frowning amid broken mks, and smiling through smooth valleys, you world never believe Could go in this out-of-flora world, unvisited and uncelebrated. Not far from the ruins of a fortification,aid to have been built by the Spaniards beforeb.e settlement of New England by the Engl.h, the road along the Chemung dwindles - Ma a mere ledge at.the foot of a precipice, the r:er wearing into the rock at this spot by a btck and deep eddy. At the height of your lip above the carriage track, there gushes from he rock a stream of the size and steady clearnsa of a glass rod, and all around it in the snull rocky lap which it has worn away, there grove a bed of fragrant mint, kept by the shade a d moisture Of a perpetual green, bright as erne ald. Here stops every traveler who is nit upon ran errand of life or death, and While lis horse l stands ay to his fetlocks in the river, le parts the dewy stems of the mint, and drink, for once in his life, like a fay or a poet. It one of those exquisite spots which paint tlic own picture insensibly in the memory, eve: while you look on them, natural "Dagtierre types," as it were; and you are surprised years afterward, to find yourself rememberit4 every leaf and stone, and the song of even . bird that sung in the pine-trees overhead while You. were watching the curve of the spring leap. As I said before, it will be sung an. celebrated, when America sits down wear:, with her first century of toil, and calls fir her minstrels, now toilitig with her in tht fields. Within a mile of this spot, to whichl hat been looking forward with delight for soot hours, I overtook a horseman. Before Com ing up with him I had at once decided he wat .an- Indian. His relaxed limbs swaying to every motion of his horse with the grace and; ease of a wreath of smoke, his neck and shoal-; ders so cleanly shaped, and a certain watchful' look about his ears which I cannot define, but which you see in a spirited horse—were in fallible marks of the race whom we have driven from the fair land of our independence. Ile was mounted upon a small black horse—of the breed commonly called Indian ponies, now not very common ,so near the Atlantic—and rode with a slack rein and air, I thought, rather more dispirited iban indolent. The kind of morning I have described, is, RS every one must remember, of a sweetness so communicative that one would think two birds could scarce meet on the wing without exchanging a carol ; and [involuntarily raised my bridle after a minute's study of the traveler before ine,, and in a briefgallop was at his side. 1,5' :di the sound of my horse's feet, ho - wever, he changed in all his characteristics to another man—sat erect in his saddle, ;-ud assumed the earnest air of an American who Dever rides but upon some errand ; and, on his giving me back my " my good mount)" in the unexceptiona ble accent of the country, I presumed 1 had mistaken Idly man. •He was dark, but not darker than a Spaniard, of features singularly • .liandsome.and regular, dressed with no pecu liarity except an otter-skin cap of a silky and goldeti,colored fur, too expensive and rare for any bpi a fanciful, as well as a luxurious pur chaser. A slight wave in the black hair which escaped from it, aiid fell back from his temples, confirmed me in the conviction that his blood -vas of European origin. , We rode on together with some indifferent conversation, till we arrived at the spring-leap L have - described, and here my companion, throwing his right leg over the neck of his poney, jumped to the ground very actively, and applying his lips to the spring, drank a free draught. His lioree seemed to know the spot, and, with the reins on hid neck, trotted on to a shallower ledgeht .the river mu! stood ,with the- water to his knees, and - his quickeye turned on his master with an. expressive look .of satisfaction. " You have been here before," I said, my less disciplined horse to the branch of an wrerhanging shrub. " Ves=tiften:!" tray his .reply, with a tone so quick and mile, however, 'that, but for the softening quality of the day, I should have abandoned there ahl thought of further ac•_ quaituance. I took a small valise from the pommel of my saddle, and while my fellow-traveler sat On the rock-side looking moodily into the river. I drew forth a flask of wine and a leathern cup. a cold pigeon wrap.peti in amooLeabbage leaf, the bigger end of a large loaf, and as.mnch salt as could be tied up in the cup of a large water set-out of . provender Which owed its daintiness to the fair hands of my hostess of _the night before. The stranger's fast resemblance to an in ,tlian had probably given a color to tuy thoughts; PußLlsilEp EVERY WEDNESDAY,. AT T9AVANDA, .BRADFORD S,. 0001)R1C11 & 'SON. CHAPTER I REGARDLESS OR DENUNCIATION • FROM' ANY QUARTER.'' tor, as I handed hini a cup of wine, I said, " I wish the Shawnee chief to who - Se tribe this valley belongs, were here to get a cup of nay wine." • The young man sprang to his' feet . with a sudden flash through 'his eyes, and while he looked at me, he seemed to stand taller than; from my previous impresston of his height, 1, should have thought possible. Surprised as 1. was at the effect of my remark, I did not with draw the cup, and with a moment's searching look into my face, he changed his attitude, beg ged pardon rather confusedly, and, draining the cup, said with a faint smile, The Bhavira nee chief thanks you !" " Do you-know the price of land in the val ley ?" I asked, handing him a slice of bread with the half pigeon upon it, and beginning to think it was best to stick to commonplace sub jects with a stranger. " Yee !" he said, his brow clouding over again. tt It was bought from the Shawanee chief you speak of for a string of beads the acre. The tribe had their burial-place on the Susquehanna, some twenty miles from this, and they cared little about a strip of a valley which, now, 1 would rather have for my in heritance than the fortune of any white man in the land." 'Throw in the landlord's daughter at the village below," said 1, and I would take it before any half-dozen of the German princi palities. Have you heard the news of her ill' . heritance 1" Another moody look and ‘a very crisp " Yes," put a stop to all desire on my part to make further advances in my companion's ac quaintance. Gathering my pigeon bones to gether, therefore, and putting them on the top of a stone where they would be seen by the first "lucky dog " that passed, flinging my emptied water-lily on the river, .and strapping up cup and flask once more in my valise, I mounted, and with a crusty good morning, set off at et hand-gallop down the river. My :last unsuccessful topic was, at the time I write of, the subject of conversation all through the neighborhood of the village toward which I was traveling. The inost old-fash ioned and . comfortable inn on the Susquehanna, or Chemung, was kept at the junction of these two noble rivers, by a certain Reber Plymtnn, who had One fair daughter and no more."— He was a plain farmer of Connecticut, who had married the grand-daughter of an English emigrant, and got, with his wife, a chest of old papers, which he thought had better be used to mend a broken pane or wrap up gro ceries, but which hie wife, on her death-bed, told him " might turn out worth something." With this slender thread of expectation, he had kept the little chest under his bed, thinking of it perhaps once a year,and satisfying his daugh ter's inquisitive queries with a shako of his iaead, and something about " her poor mother's tantrums," concluding usually with some re minder to keep the parlor in order, or mind her housekeeping. Ruth Plymten had had some sixteen " wintere'schooling," and was known to be much " smarter" (,Bn lice„ cleverer.) than was quite necessary for the ful fillment of her manifold duties. Since twelve years of age (the period of her mother's death) she bad officiated with more and more success as bar-maid and host's daughter to the most frequented inn of the village, till now, at eigh,-, teen, she was the only ostensible keeper of the inn, the old man usually being absent in the fields with his men,or embarking his grain in on "ark," to take advantage of the first freshet. She was civil to all corners, but her manner was such as to make it perfectly plain 'even to the rudest raftsnaan and hunter, that Idle highest respect they knew how to render o a woman was her due. She was ratherun ' lopular with the Aide of the village from what hey called her pride and " keeping to herself," tut the truth was, that the cheap editions of affiances_ which Ruth look instead of money ...tr the lodging of -the itinerant book-pedlars, ere more agreeable companions to her than tie girls of the village : and the long summer irenoons, and half the long winter nights, were little enough for the busy young hostess, v ho, acetid on her bed devoured tales of hig Li e which harmonized with some secret long lag in her breast—she knew not and scarce taought of asking-herself why. 1 I I had been twice at Athens (by this classical lame is known the village I speak of,) and each time had prolonged my stay at Plynstotr's i m for a day longer than my horse or my re- iosc strictly exacted. The scenery at the jtnetion is magnificent, but it was scarce that. Aatl I cannot say that it was altogether admi reion of the host's daughter ; for though I bitakfasted late for the sake of having a clean parlor while I ate my broiled chicken, and, hiving been once to Italy, Miss Plyinton liked to pour out my tea and tear me talk of St. Peter's and the Carnival, yet there was that marked retenu and decision in her manner that elide me feel quite too much like a culprit at srlool, and large and black as her eyes were. and light and airy as were all her motions, tubed up with my propensity fort her society., masrt of dislike. In short, I never felt a ten deraess fur a woman who could *. queen it" soitasily, and -I went heart-whole on my jour net, though always with a high rearieet for Rpth Plymton . ,.and a pleasant remembrance of her conVeristion. • I The story which I had heard farther up the river was, briefly, that there had arrived at Athens an Englishman, who had !Mind ie Miss RICC I Plymion, the last surviving descendant of tle family of her mother ;that she was the heire ss to' a large fortune, if the proof of bee descent wore complete, and that the contents of the little 'chest had been the subject of a week's hard study by the stranger. who had departed after a vain attempt to persuade .old Plymtem to accompany him :to o un g land mitt' his daughter. This was the, rumor, the alio- Sion to which had been received 'with suchre- Pulsive coldness by ply dark . companien at she spring-le a p. America is so much of an asylum for de spairing younger sons and the proud and stary. ing branches of great familiesohat a discovery of heirs to property among people of very in- feriae condition, is by iienicans fincommon.--- It is a species of romance in real life, however, whiclrwe never believe upon hearsay, and I rode on to the village, expecting my usual re ception by the fair.daMsel of the inn. The old sign still hung askew as I approached, and the pillars of the old wooden stoop "or por tico, were as much off their perpendicular as before, and true to my augury, out stepped my fair acquaintance at the sound of my horses feet, and called to Reuben the ostler, and gave me an unchanged welcome. The old man was down at the river, side, and the, key of the grated bar Ining at the hostessiitirOle, and with these signs of times as they Were, my' belief in the marvellous• tale vanished•into thin atr. "So you are not gone to Engte,nd to take possession I said. Her serious .! No !"- unsoftened by any oth er remark. put a stop to the subject again, and taking myself to; task -for haviiig been all day stumbling on mittaprOpo:i subjects, I asked to be shown to. my room, and spent the hour or two before dinner in watching the chickens from the window, and wondering s great 'dial as to the whereabouts' of my friend in the otter-skin cap. The evening of that day was unusually warm, and I strolled down to the bank of. the Susquehanna, to bathe. The moon was near ly full and half way to the zenith, and between the lingering sunset and the clear splendor of the moonlight, the 'dusk of the folding hour" was forgotrn, and the night went on almost as radiant as day. I swam across the river. delighting myself with the gold rims ot" . .the ripples before my breast, and was within a yard or two of the shore on my return, when I heard a woman's voice approaching in earnest conversation. I shat forward and drew my self in bencaih a large clump of alders, and with only my head out of water, lay in perfect con gealpent. "You ace not just, Shahatan t" were the first words I distinguished, in a voice I imme diately recognized as that of my fair host..ss. You are not just. 41s far as I know myself I love you better than any one 1 ever eaw— but "-. As she hesitated, the deep low voice of my companion at the spring-leap, uttered in a sup pressed and impatient guttural, "But what ?" He stood still with his back to the moon, end while the light fell full on her face, she with drew her arm from his and went on. - " I was going to say dirt I do not yet know myself or the world sufficiently to decide that I shall always love you. I would not be too hasty in so important a thing, Shahatan 1 We have talked of it before, and therefore I may say to you, now. that the prejudices of my ta ttier and all my friends are against it." , • " My blood "—interrupted the young mart, with a movement of impatience. She laid her hand on his arm. " Stay t the objection is not mine. Your Spanish mother, besides, shows more in your look and features than the blood of your father. But it ;would still be said I married an Indian, and though I care little for what the village ;yeah' say, yet if must be certain that I shall love you with all my heart and till death, before I sat my face with yours against the prejudices of every white man and woman ,in my native land !-:- You have urged me for my secret, and dieie it Fa. t i feel relieved to have unburthened my heart of it." That secret ie but a summer old l" said -lie, half turning on his heel, and looking from her upon the moon's path across the river. " Shamel" she replied ; yob know that long before this news came, I talked with you constantly of other lands, and of my irresisti ble desire to see the people of great cities, and satisfy myself whether I was like them. That curiosity, Shahatan, is, I fear, even stronger than my love, or at least. it is more impatient; and now that 1 have the opportunity 'alien to me like a star put of the sky, shall Igo ? 1 must: Indeed I must." The lover felt that all had been said; or was too proud to answer, for they fell into the path again, side by aide, in silence, and at a . slow step were soon out of my sight and hearing.— I emerged from my compulsory hiding-place wiser ilran I went in. dressed and strolled bark to the village, and finding the old landlord smoking his pipe alone under the port; ;o, lighted a cigar, and sat down to pick his brains of the little information I wanted to fill out the story. I -I took my leave of Athens on the following morning, paying rmy bill duly to Miss Plyni ton, from whom I requested a receipt in wtit jog, for I foresaw without any very sagacious augury beside what the old man told Inc. that it might be an amusing document.by-and-by. You shall judge by the sequel of the story, dear reader, whether you would like it in your book of autographs. Not long after the adventure described in the preceding chapter, I embarked for a ramble In ; Europe: Apimfg the newspapers wlich were lying about in the cabin of the packet, was one which containmt this paragraph, extracted from a New. Orleans Gazette. The Americanread er- will nt once:remember - It : "E.XtraordetMCy attachment to savage lye. —The officers at Fort (one of the most distant outpoits jof human habitation in the weal.) extended their hospindity lately to tine of the young pivieges of government, a young Shawanee chief, who has been educated at public expense for the purpose of aidingin the civilization of his tribe. This youth, the Actti of a Shawanee chief by a Spanish mother, was put to a preparatory school in a small village on the Susquehanna, and suhsequently _was graduated at. College with the first honors of his class. He had become a most accomplished gentleman, was apparenly fond of society, and, except in a scareellistiegnirtlia ble tinge of capper color in hie skin, retained no trace, of his savage origin. Singular to re late, however. 'he disappeared suddenly from the fort, leaving behind him the clothes in' which lie had arrived, and several articles of a gentleman's toilet; and as tho sentry on duty was passed at . dawn of • the same day by a 17. f' 7 77 L -7: : ,. I t)tiVi •i • • !Mg rmunum mounted Indian in the ustial.avage dregs, %%he gave the pass-word in issuingfrom" 'he gale. it is presumed it was no other than 'the young: Shahatan, and that he'has joined his tribe, who were removed some years since beyond the Mississippi." •-• ' " The reader will agree with me that I pos sessed the key to the mystery. . As no one thinks of the thread that disep 7 pears in an intricate embroidery tilkit conies out again on the surface, 1 was too busy in weaving my own less interesting woof of: ad -venture for the two years following, to give Shehewn and his love even a passiogtheit,glit. 'summer's night in IS—; however, t found myself on a baquelle at an Almack's ball, seated beside a friend who, since we had met lest at Almack's.. had given up the' white rose of girlhood for the diamonds of the dame, timidity and blushes for self-possession and. serene -sweetness, dancing for conversation, and the promise of beautiful and admired seven teen for the perfection of more lovely and adorable twenty-two. She was there as chape : - fon to a younger sister, and it wai . delightful in that whlrt of giddy motion, and more giddy thought; to sit beside a tranquil and unfevered mind and talk 'with her of what was Passing, withont either bewilderment or, eiTowt.' " What is it," she said, "-that constitutes aristocratic beauty t—for it is of often remark ed that it is seen nowhere in such perfection as at Annuli's ; yet, I have for a half-Mier looked in vain among these handiorne foci's for a regular profile, or even a perfect figure. It is not symmetry, surely. that gives a look of ll.iglt breeding — nor regularity of feamre." " If you will take a leaf out of a travelers book." 1 replied, " we may at least have the advantage of a comparison. I remember re cording, when traveling in the East, that for months I had not seen an irregular nose or forehead in a- female face ; and, almost univer, sally, the mouth and chin . of the Cirientafs are, as welt as ihe upper features, of the most clas sic correctness. Yet where, in civilized coun tries. do women look lower-born or more de graded r "'Then it is not in the featms," said my friepd. " No, nor in the figure, strictly," I went on to say, " for the French and Italian }vomen (vide the same book of niense,) are generally remarkable for ehape and fine contour of limb, and the French are, we all Itnow lbeggiug your pardon.) much better dancersond more grace ful in their movements, than all other-. nations. . Yet what is more rare than a ...thorough-bred" looking Frenchwoman " We are comingto a eonclusort yery faal," she said, smiling. "-Perhaps we shall find the great secret in the delicacy of skin after all." Not unless you will agree that Broadway in New York is the "prat° flarilo," of aristo cratic beauty—for nowhere on the face,of the earth do you see_suchsomplexions. Yet, my fair countrywomen stoop too much, and are rather too dressy in their tastes to convey very generally the impression of high birth." "Stay !" interrupted my companion, laying 'het haml on my arm with i:loci4 'of more meaning than I quite understood ; " before you .commit yourself farther on that point, look . at this tall girl corning up thellecir, "and tell me what you thing of her, apropos to the anb iect;- . Why, that she is thovery forth shadowing of noble parentage," I replied, in step, air, form-.-everything. Rut surely the face ie fa miliar to me." It is the Miss Trevanion whom you said you had never met. Yet she is an American, and with such a fortune as hers, 1 wonder you should not have heard of her at least." "Mss Trevailion ! I never knew anybody of the name, I am perfectly sure—yet that face I have seen before, and I would stake my life I have known the lady, and not casually ei ther." My eyes were riveted to the beautiful wo man who now sailed past with a.graee and stateliness that were the subject of universal admiration, and I eagerly attempted to catch her eye ; hut on the other side of-her walked one of the most agreeable flatterers of the hour. and the crowd prevented my approaching her. even if I had solved the mystery so far as to know in what terms to address her. Yet it was marvellous that I could Aver,hnve seen such beauty and forgotten the Wheil iny,4 tv.4.rep or that such fine and unusually tustrous oyes could ever have shone on me without inscrib ing well in my memory their " whereaVont" and history. 6. W ell !" said my friend. ;6 are you making ont your theory, or arc you' 6, struejt . home " with the first impression, like many another dancer here to-night?" "Pardon me ! I shall And out. presently, who Mis s Tre,vanion is—but, meantime, re venous. 1 will tell you wheie I think lies the secret of the aristocratic beauty of Eli - gland.— It is in the lofty niainliciz of the lead and.buit —the proud carriage ; if yuu in alt these women—the head sei batik, tliechest elevated and expanded, and- Alm wtiole.ptirt and expression, that of pride and conscious so periority, This, mind you, though the result ofgualities in the character, is not the wprk of a (lay, nor pekitap,s ofeying.le ,geoeTf74ton.-' 7 The effect of expanding the breast and pre-: serving the back straight, Multhe pOsture - gen- - erally erect, is ,the high Itenlip andeonsequent beauty of those portions; of the frame-; and Om physical advantages, handed. doWit . with the pride which produced it. frcifn,nithert,o child, the race gradually .has become Peelect in those points, and the hilt of pride and'higlub.enOng , is now easy, natural, and . urico,nsclotts. Glance , your eve amid and you will see that there is not n defectivpluist, and hardly a head ill set on, in the room room. ,fn an assembly in any other part of the ,world',./ofind a perfect but,t with a gracefully carried Lead, is as difficult as here to find the exception." , What a proud race you make us out, to bosiure,"?sittil my ; companion. rather dissent ingly. " Awl so you are, etninenttrand emphatical ly proud," I replied . . „ \Vital English family does not revolt_ from any proposition of mar- ERIM their self-admiration by foreign. incre . theirs may, fairly hp dignif,e4 the na. pride. Hui what shall 1 say of the Ameri . who.are_in a„perpctual fever at the ridic English newspapers, and who receive;, derstand, with aleneral convulsion thro the states, the least slur in a reviewo smallest expression oftli - paragement in • newspaper. This is not pride, but vanit lam hit. I grant you. A home thie, I wish I could foil. Hut here. comes Trevanine, again, and I most make he or smother my curiosity. I leave you 40r." 'The drawing of the cord which enclii.es the dancers, narrowed the path of the prome..ders so effectually; that I could easily take m stand in such a position that Al ise Trevanion coals) not papa without seeing me. With my back to -one of the slight pilars of the orchestra, I stood facing her as she came down the room ;..and within a foot or two of my position, `yet -with several perlonsbetween us, her eye f r the first time rested on me,' Thrre . wis atilden flush, a look of embarrassed but morn npry curiosity, and the beautiful features cleatied up, t and I saw. with vexatious mortificatio , that she had the' advantage of me , and w'a eien pleased to remember wbere we had met.i ' She held out her hand the next moment, b t evi *ft/only .understood my reserve, for, with milt. ehievous compression of the lips, she eane4 F c over, and said in a voice intended only - rmy ear. " Reuben, take the gentleman's h mei"? _ My sensations were very much tho 'of the Irishman who fell into a pit ill a riark nigh,. and catching a straggling rout in his d scent, hung suspended by incredible exertio and streugdi of arm till morning, when d ylight discloied the bottom, at just otie inch below the points of his toes. Po easy seem d thR solution—after it was discovered. ' ECONCLUDED NEXT WEEK.) To one who has for a long time been ger milts sound of the church-going few things could be more interesting-than day in Moscow. Any one who bils r along the maritime _Alps, and- has heart' some lofty eminence the convent hells for matins. vespers, and midnight prayeli, with ni long reember" the not unpleasant noun . To me there is always something in the sound of a churchgoing bell ; in its effee , but far mere so,in its associa! nn Sunday iit the city of Most they . nre almost innumerable ; first time I happened to pass II city.. Ilay an d Jistene4 tiltiaost _ . came over me of the :day of ering for church, awl the _ nt church door. But he who' never itai heard. the ringing of bells at 111.oseo* does not' know its music. Itnagine a city containing to re than six hundred churches, and innurnerab e conr' rents, and all these sounding fogetkes, f to the sharp; quick - banner note to the loude t pea's ,that,e,ver lingered _ on the ear, struck at rig in tervals; andsweiling .tho air , as if nr.wil ing tq - die meat-. I arose and threw open my indoW p and dressed mytelf, and after breakfast joined thegirobi, caled to the respective . chti Us by their well known bells. I 'weitt.to an ngrislt . Chapel, where fir many( months, I jaineil regidasielmrch service, and listened to an.orthcir vdox sermon: lr was Surprised in see so large a congregation ; though I remarked among Ahern many grOish geiverossses frith child - English langnagctli,eing_nt that insment among Russians, and multitudes of,. climnhetralids being,.employe4 to: teach sing Russian nobility Aiie beauty of the . tongue.-81rphetts' Travels. .Jt is perhapsmit generally known th.t block pe . pper(not red) is poison for ntany oneeds. The fullowingelinple mixture is the bat des troyer:of the eontelon se fly Takla . equal po . rtioni of finn bract pepper. freflt ground. and engir sny 'enough of each to corer a ten fent 'piece ; and mix well with a spoonful of Milk. (a little cream is ..irtter.r) keep that is your mom. anti . you wiII keep down your 41ire. gine advantage or other PoiQons is that it injures nothing c lue -;! and another. that, the flies ppl; the air. and never t,40 windows being •pen. an taking down the census of a poput a lted neighborhood." as the fell' when he bwalluweti thu I....,kyppery quel . . - riage frau, n liireig,nir? For air tnglist :l4 i to marry aWrtmeliman nr an Italian, a f4i Qr a Russian. Greek', Turk, nr - Sii'aniditl; lorleit a certain elegree of-respectability; 1;., match be as brilliant as it . may. The firs I •ing on hearing of it is against thesgirl's i i of - delicacy. It extends to everything eh i in V,our.soldiers; your sailors, your tradeti en, your gentlemen, your common - people end yournobles, are all (who ever doubted it you 'are nienkaiy asking) out dal( cOmparisq bet ter than the same ranks and professions,i any' other country. John Bull is literallksur 'risia if . any one doubts this—nay, he does n t be le that any one doe' doubt it.'„ .Yet yo Ica!! li the Ami•rieana, ridiculously, vain ,becauseithPY 'believe their institutions better than you ,that their ships 'fight 'as well, their women ', e,as fair, and their men as gentlentenlk as a y in world. ' The . .. vanity' s of the Freneli,, who believe in themselves, just as the Englis I do, only inn less blind entireness of'self.glio ifica lion, is a common theme of ridicule itfE',glish newspapers; and the F'rencliMid , thMA - erj. cans, fora twentieth part of Englistrintole Ante and self-exaggeration, are written doivn daily by the English, as the two vainest natio s-on earth," .t .• Stop !" said my fair listener, who W, s be. 4. 1 , ginning to snide at my digression from f male beauty to national pride, .• let me Make\ dis tinction there. As the English and enc l are quite indifferent to the opinion .of otlierma, ; tjopa on these points, apd not at all shaken in A Sunday at Moscow. eelings were exeeedinglv fres est I should lose tht. sounds ; 4f),:sTEtq4, correspon he Ciririiiitati ; Chronicle g . tre.e - the full II MBII r M . ffg ratan is to • t tlt to* ens° =I out, vie- strata ' bell;" a Sun mbled ngtt!g n. tins he rage net off the ent: of wing : 7E21 ~ I