ISTMMB N7EO TiOW&YZ7DiLs WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1845 Gas. Jscrsos's Mcarcar.—The following monody to the memory of Gen. Jackson, written and spoken by WALTT.P. M. LEX.Car, at the Walnut Street Theatre, on. Thursday evening, June 26th, is the best among the numberless pieces of poetry, occasioned by and written upon, the death of the ma Hero. It portrays in beauti ful language the martial and social qualities of the .de caved veteran, lately departed for the spirit land, and whose obsequies are ever yet occupying the attention of this people. Monody to the Memory of General Jackson. Whatmeans the sad and solemn sound of woe That eames upon us What vindictive foe Bath =shed a people's spirit, and repressed The throb of joy within a nation's breast 'Tis Death's dark angel ! His insatiate dart Bath reached and quivers in a noble heft, At last the hour come—the bolt has filiwn, And the Great Spirit bath reclaimed his own; 'ie firmest, truest, noblest one that trod The earth, bath goite on high to meet his God. That eye, whose glance no foeman dared to brave Is dimmed forever ; and the mruldgring grave Has closed Upon that stern and vialL'y form, That never feared to breast the rauling storm Of battle, viihe'n 'twas fiercest : cold and still Is that tree arm : that stern and IRON WILL, Whose adamantine nerve alike defied The soldier's STEEL and the civilian's rains, When Albion thundered, and intestine foes Added THEIR TREACHERY LO his countrY's weep. le quelled—that mighty heart than beat no more, For Life's eventful pilgmmage is o'er. Well may Colombia bow the h'ead and mourn. The Patriot—Hero--Statesman—Sage, is gone. Born of a sire who scorned oppresion's power, And crossed the main, ere Freedom's natal hour, And reared by one, within whose fragile breast The crsas en virtues blended with the' BEST That live in wox.rs's sour., the impetuous youth Burned for the hour to 'move his zeal and truth. Where freedom's banners courted first the air Of freedom's land the 6.1.1.4t.as BOY was there; And when, in riper years, the savage yell, And the loud war-whoop rang the dying knell Of murdered wives and mothers, Jackson came To turn the tide of battle, and his name, Lite a TOTINADO, swept the .torest Cowering and crushed, hack to his native wild But see I again the tempest lowers! The foe Comes o'er the main The last and deadlie,t blow Must now be met and parried; wno shall stand In the dark breach 1 Wnosr. firm and steady hand Shall stay the tempest ! Wno has power to Fare " Beauty and Booty" from a common grave ! Tia Jackson !--ay--he's ready at the call ; He comes to win the battle, he to fa!} In the last ditch. Hark! hark ! that cannon's boom Tells the dread tale!—the bloody strifeis come ; The serried ranks of England's brarest sons Are swept to death, while o'er the brazen guns His tall majestic form is seen to tower, Unharmed, tinirmeh:d, In Victory ' s chosen hoer Then swells the cry from mountain to the sea, . And thousands join the shout—Orrisvsats rasa! Such was he in the field:—the council board Attests his wisdom ; and the great reward, Colnmbia tenders to her chosen sons, Was given to him—none worthier! While runs 'limes everlasting course, shall surely stand The seal his genius, stamped upon the land. But he is gone for ever ! Earthly love Stays not the mighty mandate from above; And while the nation gathers round to weep, And Infancy, and Youth,and Manhood keep Their vigils at his tomb—if in one heart The thought shall rise that lips may not impart— That words or actions in his high career Were rashly sato or DONE—the falling tear Shall blot their record; for that heart willows The toys or COENTILT prompted them alone; And while that country's flai`wrives o'er the free, The PEOPLE'S LOVE will guard his memory. 'Wigwam versus Almack's. [CONCLUDED.] Miss Trevanion (ci-devant Plymton) took myrarm. Her companion w..s engaged to dance. Our meeting at Alinack's was certain ty one of the last events either could have ex pected when we parted—llut Almack's is not the place to-express strong emotions. ‘Ve walked leisurely' down the sides of the quad rilles to the tea-room, and between her bows and greetings to her acquaintances, she put me au courant of her movements for the last two years--Miss Trevanion beihg the name she inherited with the fortune from her mother's family, and her mother's high but distant con nexions having recognized and taken her by the hand in England. She had come abroad with the representative of her country, who. had been at the trouble to see her installed in her rights, and 'had but lately left her on his return to America. A house in May Fair, and a chaperon in the shape of a cardplaying and aristocratic aunt, were the other principal points in her parenthetical narration. Her communi cativeness, of course, was very gracious, and indeed her whole manner was softened and mellowed down, from the sharpness and hau teur of Miss Plymton. Prosperity had improv ed even her voice. As she bent over her tea, in the ante room. I could not but remark how beautiful she was by the change usually wrought by the soft moisture of the English air, on persons from dry climates—Americans particularly. That filling out and rounding of the features, and freshening of the skin, becoming and improv ing to all, had to her been like Juno's bath.— Then who does not know the miracles of dress? k circlet cif diamonds whose water" was light itself, -followed the fine bend on either side backward from hei brows, supporting; at the parting of her, Jiair, one larq emerald.— • . . . t :' . , . . . . , • ,+7 ... . . . , . - -, ... .._.. . ... . . .. . . . . ... _, . , . , ..„ .... .. ... . ... . _ •, . . . . . . . . .. . . , ... , . . . .. . . , .., ~. . ,„ #., .• - . . . , . . . . . . . .. . _ .. . - '': '. . -1 - 4 REGAILDLEeIi OP IitirtiNCIATIOS , iISX, ANY QYARYNN." , . . I i I ' I And on what neck (ay—even of age) is not a diamond necklace beautiful ? Miss Trevanion was superb. The house in Grosvenor place, at which I knocked the next morning, I well remembered as one of the most elegant, and sumptuous in London. Lady L— had ruined herself in completing and : furnishing it, and her parties in my time " were called, by the most apa thetic blase, truly delightful. I bought this house of Lady L---," said Miss Trevanion, as we sat down to breakfast, •• with all its furniture, pictures, books, incurn btances, and trifles, even to the horses in the stables, and the coachman in his wig; for I had too many things to learn, to study furni ture and appointments, and in this very short life, time Is sadly wasted in beginnings. Peo ple are for ever getting ready to live. W hat think you ? Is it not true in everything ?"_ in love, certainly." "Ah ! very true !" And she became'sud denly thoughtful, and for some minutes sipped her coffee in silence. I did not interrupt it. for I- was thinking of Shahatan, and our thoughts very possibly were on the same long journey.. „ You are quite right,” said I, looking round at the exquisitely-furnished room in which we were breakfasting, " you have bought these things at their intrinsic value, and you have all Lady—'s taste, trouble, and vexation otf twenty years, thrown into the bargain. It is a matter of a lifetime to complete a house like this, and just as it is all done, Lady L— re tires, an old woman, and you come all the way from a country-inn on the Susquehanna to enjoy it. What . ,a whimsical world we live in !" " Yes !" she said, in a sort of soliloquizing tone, "I do enjoy it. It is a delightful sensa tion to take a long stride at once in the art of life—to have lived for years believing that the wants you felt could only he supplied in fairy land, and suddenly to change your sphere. and discover that not'only these wants, but a thou sand others, more unreasonable, and more im aginary, had been the subject of human inge nuity and talent, till those who live in luxury have no wants—that science and chyn,istry and mechanics have left no nerve in the human system, no recess in human sense, unquestion ed of its desire, and that every desire is sup plied! What mistaken ideas most people have of luxury ! They fancy the senses of the rich are over-pampered, that their zest of pleasure, is always dull with too much gratifi cation, that their health is ruined with excess, and their tempers spoiled with ease and sub serviency. It is a picture drawn by the poets in times when money could buy - nothing but excess, and when those who were prodigal I could only be gaudy and intemperate. It was necessary to practi4e upon the reverse, too ; and hence all the world is convinced of the su perior happiness of the ploughman, the abso lute necessity of early rising and t:oarse food to health, and the pride that rust come with the flaunting of silk and satin." • I could not but smile at this cool upset of all the received philosophy of the poets. You laugh." she continued," but is it not true that in England, at this moment. luxury is the science of keeping up the zest of the senses rather than of pampering them—that the children of the wealthy are the, healthiest and fairest, and the sons of the aristocracy are the most athletic and rational, as well as the most carefully nurtured and expensive of all classel—that the most rosily dinners are the most digestible, the most expensive wines the least injurious, the most sumptuous houses the be'st ventilated and Wholesome, and the most aristocratic habits of life the moit conducive to the preservation of the constitution and conse quent long life. There will be excesses, of course, in all spheres, but is not this true?" "I am wondering how so gay a life as yours could furnish such very grave reflec tions." `• Pshaw ! I am the very person' to make them. N.IY aunt (who. by-the-way, never rises till four in the afternoon) has always lived in this sublimated sphere,' and takes all these luxuries to be matters of course, as much as I take them to be miracles. She thinks a good cook as natural a circumstance as a fine tree. and would be as n uch surprised and shocked at the absence of wax candles, as site would at the . ', -going out of the stars: She talks as if good dentists, good milliners, opera-singers. perfumers, etc., were the common supply of nature, like dew and sunshine to the flowers. My surprise and delight amuse her,. as'the child's 'wonder at the moon amuses the nurse." " Yetiyou call this dull unconsciousness the perfection of bivilzed life." " I think my aunt altogether is not n had specimen of it, certainly. You haveseen her, I think." " Frequently." • • Well, you will allow that she is still a very handsome woman. She is past fifty, entities every faculty in perfect preservation ; an erect. figure, undiminished delicacy and quickness in all her senses and tastes, and is still an orna ment to society, and an attractive person in appearance and conversation. Contrast her (and she is but one of a class) with the women past fifty in the middle and lower walks of life in America. At that age. with us, they are old wonlen in the commonest acceptation of the term. Their teeth are gone or defective from neglect, their faces are wrinkled, their backs bent, their feet enlarged, their voices cracked, their senies impired, their relish in the joys of the young entirely gone by. IN hat makes the difference? Costly tare. The physician has watched over her health at a guinea a visit. The dentist has examined her teeth at twenty a year. Expensive annual visits to the sea. side have renewed her skin. The friction of tlieweary hands of her maid has kept down the swelling of her feet and preserved their delicacy of shape. Close and open carriages at will, have given her dilly exercise, either protected-from the damp, or refreshed with the fine air of the country. A good kook has PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA, BRIO kept her digestion un)axed, and good wines have invigorated withont poisoning her coma lotion.” " This is taking very unusual care of onesell, however." Not at all. My aunt gives it no more thought than the drawing on of her glove. It is another advantage of wealth, too, that your physician and dentist aie distinguished persons who meet yau in society, and call on you pro professionally, see when they are needed,. and detect the approach of disease before you are aware of it yourself. My- aunt, though "na turally delicate," has never been ill. She was watched in childhood with great cost and pains, and, -with the habit of common caution her self, she is taken such care of by l her phy sician and servants, that nothing but some extraordinary fatality could bring disease near her." .• Blessed are the rich, by your showing." Why, the beatitudes were not written in our times. if long life, prolonged youth and beauty, and almost perennial health, are . bles sings. certainly, now-a-days, blessed are the rich." But is there no drawback to all this?— Where people have surrounded themselves with such costly and indispensable luxuries, are they not made selfish by the necessity of preserving them ? Would any exigence of hospitality, for instance, induce your aunt to give up her bed, and the comforts of her own room, to a stranger ?" Oh dear; no !" •• Would she eat her dinner cold for the sake of listenii.g to an appeal to her charity ?". now can you fancy such a thing !" Would she take a wet and dirty, but perish ing beggar-woinan into her chariot on her way to a dinner-party, to save her from dying by the roadside 1" •• lim—why, I fear she would be very near sighted till she got fairly tiy." •• Vet these are charities that require no great effort in those whose chambers are less costly, whose stomachs are less carefully watch ed, and whose ,carriages and dresses are of a plainer fashion." " Very true !" " So far, then, " blessed are the, poor !" But is not the heart slower in all its sympa thies among the rich ? Are not friends chosen and discarded, because their friendSbip is con venient or the contrary ? Arc not many wor thy people ineligible' acquaintances, many near relations unwelcome visitors, because they are cut of keeping with these costly cireum stanets, or involve some sacrifice of personal luxiir ? Are not people, who would not pre serve their circle choice and aristocratic. &d ig .. ed to inflict cruel insults on sensitive minds, to slight, to repulse, to neglect, to equivocate ai d play the unfeeling and ungrateful, at the same tune that to their sureriors they must often sacrifice dignity. and contrive, and flatter, and tccei re—all to preserve the magic charm of the life you have painted so attractive and enviable 1" Ileigho ! it's a bad world, I believe l" said Miss Trevanion, betraying by that ready sigh. that even while drawing the attractions of high life, she had not been blind to this more unfa vorable side of the picture. .` And, rather more important. query still, for an heiress," I said, does not an intimate acquaintance with these luxurious necessities, and the habit of thinking them indispensable, make all lovers in this class mercenary, and their admiration, where there is wealth, sub ject, at least, to scrutiny and suspicion ?" A quick flush almost crimsoned Miss Tre canton's face, and she fixed her eyes upon me so inquisitively as to leave me in no doubt that I had inadvertently touched upon a delicate subjoct. Embarrassed by . a searching look, and not seeing how 1 could.explain that I mean) no allusion, I said hastily,. F- was thinking of swimming across the Susquehanna by moon light." Puck is at the door, if you please, miss !" said the butler. entering at the moment. Perhaps while I am putting on my riding hat," said Miss Trevanion, with a laugh, 1 may discover the connexion between your last two observations. It certainly is riot very clear at present." I tuck up my hat. :Stay—you mu - t ride with me. You shall have the groom's horse, and we will go with out him. •1 hate to be chased through the park by a flying servant—one Englizh fashion, at least, Mat! think-uncomfortable. They man age it better where I learned to ride," she ad ded with a laugh. Yes, indeed ! Ido not know which they would first starve to death m the backwoods— the master for his insolence in requiring the servant to follow him, or the servant to; being such a slave as to obey." I never remember to have seen a more,beam tipl animal than the high-bred blood-mare on which my ci-devant hostess of the Plymton inn rode through the park gate, and took the ser. pentine path at a free gallop. I was as well moonier' myself as I had ever been in my life, and delighted, for once, not to fret a hundred yards behind ; the ambitious animal seemed to have wings to his feet. " Who ever rode such a horse as this." said my companion, " without confessing the hap piness of rirhes ! It is the one luxury of this new life that I should find it misery to forego. Look at the eagerness of his ears! See his fine limbs as he strikes forward ! What nos trils ! What glossy shoulders ! W hat bound ing lightness of action ! Beautiful Puck ! I could never live without you! What a shame to nature that there are no such horses in the wilderness !" " I remember seeing an Indian pony," said T. watching her face for the effect of my obser vation, " which had as many fine qualities, though of a different kind—at least when his Master was cm him." She looked at me inquiringly. • " By-the-way, too, it was at your house on the gusquehanna," I added, " you must re member - the horse—a black, double-joint ed'," ORII COUNTY, PA.. BY E, GOODRICH & SON. eii! I knovir. I remember. Shall opr pace t I hear some one over n4 to be passed with such horses e a shame indeed." Yes, we quick taking us, as ours a', We 100 d our bridles and snd flew away like the ‘V . d ; but a bright tear was presently i c, Inssed fro ' her dark eyelash, and fell glitter ing on th dappled shoulder of her horse.— ".Her hea is Shahatan's," thought I, "what ever cbanc here may be that the gay honora ble who is t our heels may dazzle her into throwing at y her hand." Mounted on a magnificent hunter, whose pOwerful ant staightforward leaps soon told agnirnt the lavislit and high action of our more shoWy horses, \ the Hon. Charles (the gentleman rho ltd engrossed the attention of Miss Tre van ion the night before at Almack's) was soop beside .kty comfianion, and leaning from hj Saddle, was taking pains to address eonver. tion to her in a tone not meant for my ear. the lady picked out her path with a marke. reference for his side of the road, I of con • rode with a free rein on the other, rather scontented, however, I must own, to be fila g Monsieur de Trop. The Hon. Charle I very well knew, was enjoying a tempo y relief from the most pressing °flits itcquai ..nces•by the prospect of his marrying an hej s, and in a two years' gay tile in Lon don I I . d traversed his threads too often to belies , : hat he had a heart to be redeemed front dissip. on, or a soul to appreciate the virtues of a ht. -minded woman. 1 found myself, be sides; "thout wishing it, attorney for Shaha tan in • case. Ob i s; ing that I ~ sulked," Miss Trevan inn, in , e next round, turned her horse's head toward ,e Serpentine Bridge, and we entered ~. into Ke ington Gardens. The band was playing the other side of the halia,...and fashions C London was divided between the equestrea on the road, and the promenaders on th e g ns ward. We drew up in the thick est of the rowd, and presuming that, by Miss Trevanio s tactics. I was to find some other aequaintaire to chat with while our horses drew breda, I spurred to a little distance, and sat mum it my saddle with forty or-fifty horse-, men betwien me and herself. Her other com : anion haiput his horse as close by the side of Pock cis possible ; but there were other dancei'S siAlmack's who had an eye upon the .; heiress, of their fete-a-lete was interrupted presentl Iv the how-d'ye-do's and attentions of a hall dozen of the gayest men about town. After lo 'ng back at them for a moment, Charles drew bridle, and backing out of the press ther uneeremomously, rode to the side of a I y who sat in her saddle with a mounted s cant behind her, separated from me by only he trunk of a superb lime-tree. I was fated t ee all the workings of Miss Tre vanion'Sde "Yon sel what I endure for you !" he said, h Nile and went in los pale fare. arefalse !" was the answer. " I saw in—iyour eyes fastened to hers—your wh watching for her words—your a f i'm with your agitated and ner ng.l Never call her a giraffe, or laugh .gait, Charles ! She is handsome o hi loved for herself, and you love as a flu " Yo you rid lips op horse 1 E=El MEE enough, her !" by Heaven !" dy made a gesture of impatience and her stirrup through the folds of her ias till it was heard even above the iangle of the band. "N.l The whippe riding-t 1 "No . he continued. " and you are less clever tha you think, if you interpret my ex citement itto love. I am excited—most ea ger in my d:asi after this good woman. You shall krrow;t.h . ?), But for herself—good heav ens yon have never heard her speak ! She is never dot . wondering at silver forks, never done with estatics 'about finger:glasses and pastilles. =Se is a boor—and you are silly enough to ptk her beside yourself !^ The lady's frocin softened, and she gave him her whip to htld while she imprisoned a stray rino,ln. Keep an eye ot her, while I am talking to you," he conttntt•d, " for I must - stick to her like hcr shadoW t She is full of mistrust, and if I lose her for 'ant of attention for a sin gle hour, that hoar gill cost me yourself, dear est, first and most iniportant of all, and it will cost me England of my liberty—for filing this. I hare not a chtnce." “Go! go !” said the lady, in a nett , and now anxious tone, couching his horse at the same time with the Whip he had just restored to her, " she is pill!' Adieu !" And with half a do en attendants, Miss Tre vanion took the mat at a gallop, white her contented rival folloped at a pensive amble. apparently quite contnt to waste the time as she best might Ulf dinner. The handsome fortune-hunter watched his opportunity and regained his place al Miss Trevanion's side, and with an acquainunce, who was one of her self-selected troop. I kept in the rear, chatting of the opera. and eMoving, the movement of a horse of as free andhdmirable action as I had ever felt cornmunicfled, like inspirationoltro' my blocid. I was resumed ai sole cavalier and attendant at Hyde Park gate; "Do you knowthe Haroness— ?" I ask ed, as we walked our horses slowly down Grosvenor Place. " Not personally," she replied. " butl have heard ' my aunt speak of her, and I know she is a wpinan-V most 'seductive manners, tho' said to he orie of very bad morals. But from what Mr. Charles tells me. I fancy high play is her only vice. And nreantimrshe is received verywhere." "1 fang," said I, " that the Hon. Charles —re.— is gr'pd authority for the number of her vices, and begging you, as a parting request, to make its remark the key to your next month's o servation, I have the honor to re. turn thisi file horse to yoo,and make my itdien." " But you willoorne to dinner ! And, by the-by. you have not explained to me what you meant by swimming across the Susque hanna,' in the Fiddle of your breakfast, this morning,", 'While Miss Trevanion gathered up her dress. to mount the steps. I told her the story which -- 1 have already told the reader. of my involun tary discovery, while lying in that moonlit ri ver, of Shahatan's unfortunate passion. Vio lently agitated by the few words in which 1 con.reyed it, she insisted on my entering the howle, and waiting while she recovered herself sutii rientiv to talk to me on the subject. But I ha d no fancy for mach-making or breaking I reiterated my caution touching the intimacy of her fashionable admirer with the harmless, and said a word of plaise of the noble swinge who laved her. CHAPTER II In the autumn of the year after the events outlin td in the previous chapter. I received a visit at.my residence on the Susquehanna, from. a friend I hart never before seen a mile front St. Jai ne's:street,--a May-fair man of fashion whoitaok tue in his way back from Santa Fe. He elayed a few days to brush the cobwebs from a fishing-rod and gun which he found in inglorh ms retirement in the lumber-room of my cottage.. and, over our dinners. embellished with his trout and woodcock, the relations of his adventures (compared, as everything was, wtiltlrindon - experienee exclusively) were as delight(gl to me as the tales of Scheherezade to the c I have saved to the last," he said, pushing me the 'mule, the evening before his departurz, •• a bit of romance which I stumbled over in the prairie, and I dare swear it will surprise you as lunch as it did me, for I think you will remember having seen the heroine at Al mack's." " At Almack's!" " You may well stare. I have been afraid to tell you the story, lest you should think I drew too long a how. I certainly should ne ver be believed in London." •• Well—the story ?" •• I told you of my leai•ing St. Louis witii a trading party .for Santa Fe. Our leader Was a rough chap, big-boned, and ill put together. but honestly fond of fight, and never content with a stranger till he had settled the question of which was the better man. Ile refused at first to take me into his party, assuming me that his exclusive services and those of his company had been engaged at a high price, by another gentleman. By dint of drinking •ju leps ' with him, however, and git'ing him a thorough • mill' (for though strong as a rhino ceros, he knew nothing of • the mnence'), he at last elected me to the 'honor of his friend ship, and took me into the party as one of his own men. " I bought a strong horse, and on a bright May mnroing, the party set forward, bag and ba,rage, the leader havic cr stolen a march up on us. however, and gone ahead with the per son ullo hired his guidance. It was line fun at fir.t. as I have told yu, to gallop away over the prairie without 'fence or ditch. but I soon tired of the slow pace and the monotony of the scenery, and began to wonder why the deuce our letder kept himself so carefully nut of sight—for in three day's travel I had seen him but once, and then at our bivouac lire on the second evening. The men knew or would tell nothing, except that he had one man and packhorse with him, and that the gentleman ' and he encamped farther on. I was under promise to perform only the part of the hired carriers of the party, or I should soon have made a pueblo penetrate' the gentleman's' mystery. "I think it w• s on the tenth day of our tra vels that the men began to talk of falling in with a tribe of Indians, whose hunting-grounds we were close upon, and at whose village, up on the hank of a river, they usually not fish and buffalo-hump. and other lu xuries i not pick ed up on the wing. We encamped about sun set that night as usual, and after picketing my horse. I strolled oil to a round ; mound not far from the fire, and sat down upon the top to see the moon rise. The east was brigntening,and the evening was delicious. "Up came the moon, looking like one of the_ duke of Devonshire's gold plates (excuse the poetry of the comparison.) an still the rosy color hung on in the west. and turning my-eyes from one to the other. I at last perceived, over the southwestern horizon, a mist slowly com ing up, which indicated the course of a river. It was just in our track, and the Aim struck me to saddle my horse and ride on in search of the Indian village. which,by their description, must be on its banks. " The men were singing songs over their supper, and with a flask of brandy in my pocket. I got off unobserved, and was soon in a flourishing gallop over the wild prairie, with out guide or compass. It was a silly freak, and might have ended in an unpleasant adven ture. Pass the bottle and have no apprehen sions. however. ~ For an hour or so, 1 was very much cla- tad with my independence. and my horse too seemed delighted to get out of the slow pare of the caravan. It was as light as day with the wonderful clearness of the atmesphere.and the full moon and the coolness of the evening air made exercise very exhilarating. I rode on, locking up occasionally to the mist. which retreated long after I thought I,plionld have reached the river, till I began tri feel uneasy at last, and wondered whether I had not em barked in a very mao adventure. As 1 had lost sight of our own fires, and might•mies my way in iryiog to retrace my preps, I determined to push on. •• My horse was in a walk. and I 'was be ginning to feel very grave, When suddenly the beast pricked op his ears and gave a loud neigh. I rose in my stirrups, and looked round in vain for the secret of his improved spirits. till with a second glance forward, I discovered what seemed the faint lisZht reflect ed upon the smoke of a concealed fire. The horse took his own counsel, and set up a sharp I gallop for the spot, and a few minutes brought me in sight of a fire half concealed by a clump of shrubs, and a white object near it. which to my surprise developed to a tent. Two horses picketed near, and a man sitting by the fire with his hands crossed before his shins, and his chin on his knees, ,completed the very agreeable picture. Who goes • there ?' shouted this chap, springing to his rifle as lie heard my, horse's feet sliding through the grass. I gave the name of the leader.cornprebend ing at once that this was the advanced guard of our party ; hut though the fellow- lowered tits rifle, he gave me a very scant welcome, and motioned me away from the tent-side of the fire. There was no turning a man out of doors in the midst of a prairie ; so, without ceremony. I tethered my :horse to his stake, and getting out toy dried beef and brandy, made a second supper with quite as good an appetite as had done honor to the first. My brandy-flask tined the lips of my sul ky friend after a while, though he kept his carcass very obstinately between me and the tent, and I learned that the leader (his name was Rolfe, by-the-by.) had gone on to the In dian village, and that the gentleman 'had dropped the curtain of his tent at my Approach, and was probablv asleeep. My word of hon or to Rolfe that I. would cut no capers' (his own phrase in administering the obligation.) kept down my excited curiosity, and prevent. ed me. of course, from even-pumping the man beside me, though I might have done so with a little more of the contents of my flask. • " The moon was pretty well overhead when Rolfe ret u rned, and f.mnd me fast asleep by the fire. I awoke with the trampling and neighing of horses, and. springing to my feet, I saw an Indian dismounting, and Rolfe and the tire-tender conversing together while pick eting their horses. The Indian hail a tall fea ther in his cap. and trinkets "on his breast, which glittered in the moon-light ; but he was dressed otherwise like a' white man, with a hunting-frork and very loose large trowsers.— By the way, lie had moccasins, too, and a wampum belt; but lie was a clean-limbed, lithe, agile-looking devil, with an eye like a coal of tire. You've broke your contract, mister !' said Rolfe, coming up to me ; • but stand by and say nothing. " Ile then went to the tent, gave an'ehem!' by way of a knock, and entered. •• • It's a fine night !' said the Indian. coming up to the fire and touching a brand with the tee of his moccasin. •' I was so sorprised at the honest English in which he delivered himself, that I stared at him without answer. •• • Do you speak English r he said. " • Tolerably well; said I. • but I beg your pardon for being so surprised at your own se ..ent that I forgot to reply to you. And now I look at you more closely. I see that you are rather Spanish than Indian.' '• Uy mother's blond,' be answered rather. coldly. ' but my father v. as an Indian, and I am a hief.'. •• • Well, Rolfe.' he continued, turning the nett bistant to the trader. who came toward us, • who is this that would see Shahamn ?' •• The trader pointed to the tent. The cur tain was put aside, and a smart-looking youth, in a blue cap and cloak, 'stepped out and took his way off into the prairie, motioning to the duel to follow. .6. Go along! he won't eat ye :' said Rolfe, as the Indian hesitated, from pride or distrust; and laid his hand on his.tomahawk. 6. I wish I could tell you what was said at that interview. for my curiosity was never so strongly excited. Rolfe seemed bent on pre venting both interference and observation, however, and in his loud and coarse voice commenced singing and making preparations for his supper ; and, persuading me into the drinking part of it. 1 listened to his stories and toasted my shits till I was too sleepy to feel either romance or curiosity; and leaving the moon to waste its silver on the wilderness, and the mysterious collogaists to ramble and fin ish their conference as they liked, I rolled over on my bullalo-skin and dropped off to sleep. 6. 'Flue next morning I rubbed my eyes to discover whether all I have been telling you was not a dream, for. tent and demoiselle had evaporated, and I lay with my feet to the smouldering fire. and all the trading party pre paring for breakfast around me. Alarme4.l.--trt my absence, they had mails a stattbefore sun rise to overtake Rolfe, and had come up while I slept. The leader after a while save me slip of paper from the chief, saying that hi. Arnold be happy td give me r. specimen of In than hospitality at the Shawanee village, o my return from Santa Fe—a neat hint that was not to intrude upon hint ai present." •• Which you took r •• Rolfe seemed to hare had a hint whit was probably in some more decided shape, since he took it for us all. The men grumble at passing the vdlage Without stopping for flit but the leader was inexorable, and we left t i to the right and. • made tracks,' as the hunte say. for our destination. Two days from thee we saw a buffalo-.---" " Which you • deninlished. You told m l that story last night. • Come, get back to th i Shawanees !_ You called on the village your return ?". .! Yes and , alrodd pUee it was. We came 411!)- o n it II:dm-the west, ahlfe having made a beid to the westward, on his return back.. We 11 been travelling all day over a long plain, woo ed in clumps, looking very much like an itri mertse park, and I began M think that the trader intended to cheat me out of my . visit—for lie said we should sup with the Shawanees th l pt night, and I did not in the least recognize the outline of the country. We struck the bed of a small and very beautiful river presently, hower. er, and after following it throught a wood foi mile, came to a sharp brow where the river suddenly descended 16 a plain at least two hint: - dred feet lower than the table-land on which 44, had been travellioc. The country below look ed as if it might have been the bed of an im mense lake, and we stood on the shore of it. "-I at on my horse geologizing in fan • about this singular formation land, till, heari a shout, I found the party had gone on, a Roife was hallooing to me to follow.. As I w trying to get a glimpse of him through the wee [SEE FOVRTII PAGE. ] ...z=mark, (50