i =to u NNY' z, nEONEsDAY. MARCH 10, 1847 The Tear of Gratitude- There is a gem more purely bright,. More dear to merecy's eye. Than lure's sweet star, whose mellow! light Fist direr* the mning sky : - A liquid pearl that gl turn where, No sorrows now intrude, A ocher gem than monarch'a wear-- The tear of gratitude. But oe'er shall narrow lore at wealth Invite this tribute forth: Nor cao the sordid stare of pelf - Appel:iota its worth; But ye who soothe the widow's wo,. Attd gire the orphan Good, For you 'fa liquid purl shall Howes The teat af gratitude. Ye who but slake an infant's third lo heavenly mercy's name . Or proffer penury a crust, The sweet reward may claim; Then. while you rove life's sunny banks, V. att sweetest floiemt strewed, , SO mt.v you claim the whluar's thinks, The orilutra's gratitude. I Kindly Ward. MIS thy brother andly erred, In the path of Irma and ain I Sprak to him a kindly Word, If you would to virtue win. When he sees the inward pain, %%loch thy. tearful eyes reveal— Li-ten to Lose's melting strain— It wtlt turn his bean OE4E4. Words of tintiness! 0, how sweet! Nothing tiss such wonders wrought; To meet virtue's rant seat Sz ire+ of sr inierers they have brought. ;from the New York Observer.] Lectures on the Antiquities of Egypt. BY MR. RLIDDO.3I. ESZOIEM A.,6••ugh exploratioos were made of the py r. m a ne 17S8 to 1823. it was subsequent Lauer period. that under the instructoms ne,:v eel lof Chainpollion and his e• ,, juiorsth..t the rtiost important discoveries s•••‘. ul.7r. and t•• Col. -Ilowsrd Vyse is the , A • r••• t-t:Llt , :cd for the mostesact and complete. (11 , 111 aW! d.scriptions. The great py r• oi was built over a small roeLy , •••••i, .1-511,g 111 height remi t 22 NI 70 fret, a 5 1 t..Erd on the lower platform of the Ly- lite,' smite fire Miles distant ,r 1 ran uirLtr, at aest-rt. It is etitistrueted of - t ,, tcL , 01 luoest•ntu trim the L titan •ai -titled with efitl.tle tiviuiett Uwe the • cflaraels „f the Nile a dt,tawe of 640 tth w hue Itme*itme • %;,••1•11 ut•,unucut to the wtettlity. %Thud, he. .; • nh !he nt.nost ttl.dl and rare, pr.-St - fie the tnuun.tlent Inra•V -r7 , lasn nbaa,,inn, and gave it an alninsl snow •.e C.l.lng o. the depth /'•.ball 3J lee( has been rein..ved for budding re , dl3. - Ing 1.1 that extritt the size ••,d height of the Inrututt. and -exposing to the waist blocks of terin.-h the great mss struetnre is twined. 'Pins - ryrnms.l is as base 746 feet square, at•d 430 6,1 9 Inclw rs 'beet ht (II •vuio hero ortgloatly 4811 feet.) nil r•mtams 59.0'26.000 euhit fret of oia.o,o1; E -7 .1 6.346.000 lon., Weight ••( hmrst• n n•. however. 11 to be deducted the praline ,icks used 1 , 1 hoop: the onert4r. This Fovea co.! (-users 13 aura• anti a practral builder ~•s said t at sere the materta,s euesertetl into :mei.. they would he s,tfteient to build the Phitai.!elphis s , leaving at the *amt. lime t. toe grAnne tloek.,enouth to construct all cturehrs and other publtr huthhngs. The tn , Ls of t.rtrstotie vary from 2 to 5 feet square. Thr ca4n•g stones of white ii-nestones (of le , ch s ',sr at the found.tion were drscorermf !!‘ Co:. VI ,e,) were 8 fret 3 inches long. 4 treta nches in height. and 4 feet 1 I inches in 'e¢. h. Mr. Gliddon described the measur ..4. rod of Egi; pt. holding in his hand an exact of one bound at Thebes. from which it i;‘;o.lred that the ordinary Egyptian cubit was 2 4 and the rot al cubit 23 inches. and by . '•" 1 1 measurement. (supposed to be that of Dtid and Solomon) the great pyramid was °Z.- - .1 Cubits high and the proportion of its base • hinzh t as 8 to 5. The pyramids were at the centre of the base, and smoothed z.) , rz froM the top. The granite lining of the ;triz.d s ss well as the cor..ring was finished • the greatest possthle skill and beauty. so e)I TiF fined together that hardly the width of of paper could pass between them. aod remetted that the stone might be as readily t4 e 3 , a another place as at that of the junco " s 'Some of these blocks were 33 feet long. 12 '.' 3m S dock. One chamber has a pointed 'a,.4 with rune blocks of granite IP feet long. Mat pyramid alone would furnish mate t./:'1-r-inore than a thousand monuments like of Bunter Hill. With admirable drawings to illustrate his rations, Mr. Gliddon described the serer- L . :. 4 =taers which have been opened and the "'lnert' to them. These chambers were in ; ? ' s:l lxssitions in the pyramids. sometimes ow the foundations. Two air passages-one tort'. and the other from the south ":". • e . ra.inmunicate with the central chamber. ' l ie are but a few inches in diameter. and acmdectally discovered. They were all .' e L'e•L and the names of many if Dot all bc.e.ders have been ascertained. Nine still et : at Gheesah. and Col. Vyse. has discover _ ' 44 U:es of foundations of thirty mote in the virinity. The second in size es slitter the most ancient, and the great pc is 11 4.11 in Ouse. Vie hare discorere•l then n tae or two tu-tanees two tints I??4:12 have °erupted as a tomb the same THE BRADFORD REPORTER. MEI pyramid) the tombs of at least 28 kings, all be., longing to ' the early dynasties of Manetho, FOng Shoofho or Cheops. the builder of the grcat pyramid, being the second king of the fourth dynasty of Manettro. The time of Menes Mr. Gliddon supposes was about 2750 years B. C., and all the pyramids of Gheesah to have been finished between hui reign and that of the thirteenth dynasty some 2300. i. 8. 1 C. The 130 smaller pyramids of Heron and its vicinity are now ascertained to be of compare lively recent origin. and not to extend back be yond the first century B. C. Ali is estimated that the pyramids of Egypt contain as great an amount of materials as would be required to construct all the buildings in the State.of Pennsylvania. and could hardly have been erected but for the fact that the inunda tion!, of the Nile leave the Egyptian people un employed during 3 month§ of the year. Mr. Gliddon amounted in this lecture that the Merophite pyramids were constructed in that'antelustorical period between the delUge _and the era of Abraham and Muses. a period of high civilization and of general peace : that the country was. near the tune of Abraham. mead ' ed by the Hykshos or Shepherd Kings. from some region of the East. who ransacked the tombs and pyramids, and forced the Egyptiani to the north, who built Thebes as their chief city. *1 his occurred, it is ascertained, between tke 13th and 18th dynasties--an uncertain pe riod. probably a thousand years in which oc curred the great events connected' with the abode of the Israelites in Egypt. This is the debateable ground in chronclugy. Joseph was prime mini-ter to one of these invading king's. and when the. Egyptians drove out these for etgovra there rose up another Pharaoh, who knew not Joseph. We have clear and authen tic,history- from the commencement of the 18th dynasty. say 1722 years before Christ. Then was erected the famous sphinx—not at the time of the pyramids, not long after—probably dei.igned to commemorate the restoration of the In g-subverted power or the most ancient EgVpnans. The last of the Memphite pyra mids was constructed 300 years before Atm him. 700 before Muse-a. After this restoration. Thebes towered above Nlemplits,though Mem phis was still regarded as a second capital, and the kings were crowned there. But the fact of the opening and ransacking of the pyramids induced a total change in the mode of sepulture and ,hence the excavations and tombs in the Valley of the Kings. so beautiful, still in per fect. and adorned with so many important frog. ~,eats of hieroglyphical history. When. a king ascended the throne, he commenced the prenaration of his tomb, which in extent cur responded to the leng.h of his reign, and front this'ascertained fact in regard to the royal sep ulchres of l'hehes. was 'drawn the conclusion that the size' of the Meinphite pyramids was to correspondenre 'with the same custom or kawr. The Greek historians represent thirty years as the time orcupied in the eonstruettrin oldie great pyramid. and 100.000 men em ployed upon it at least several iniviths to the year. There are io the vaci.iity of the pyra mids countless thoovands of private tombs ris me '2O feet above ground and descending 30 feet hel .w—ransacked. man. of them, by the invading kings. and sum' of them now coo tit-mg MUM oies of the Greek and Roman pe riod. leiwius and the Prussians have exam ined inane , arloch have for ages been filled with sand, and found the walls adorned with g!ephtes. giving the genealogies of the original tenants. and mans lustonral facts of the high est value. Vast numbers of drawings and an ogle specimens have hero hrought to Prussia from these tombs. One of these was found to he that of the architect of the great pyra inn% In one were discoiered the names of eight kings—those of the Elephantine Dynas ty, arti:ch had been sn;ipresseti in correspond- Cure wort popular views of Chronology. Mr. Gliiklon described the great dike of Morris, by ar hich the waters 01 a natural lake had hren conveaed to lower Egypt. and thus fertilizing, 375.000 arres of land. ss one of the highest evidences of ancient Egyptian wisdom and civiliz.tion. This was the work of the first king of the sixth dynasty. And the won derful hihyrintb (uf which a drawl, g was ex: hihtted) the work of one of the last kings prior to the incursion of the Ht lislieds, in the 12th or 13th dynasty. was a magnificent palace in which delegates from the twenty seven depart ments of Egypt were aerustomed to assemble. This palace has 3.000 apartments, and was a„ p.dmeal and religious shrine, where the great festival was celebrated and imperial tr. fain. transacted. The conclusion of this leeiore was an elo quent exposition and defence of the objects of the pyramids. and a vindication of the charge that they were but monuments of oppression. • 11 was maintained that they were built by a free and civilized race—monuments of art and power intended to do for their roundels what books do for us : that only agood king was b 7 ! law entitled to sepulture 'within these tombs : that as the 'pi:politico of Egypt daring three months of the year were unertiployed.their la ,bor cn these works was of great 'benefit to the people :—that while the goof might thus be rewarded, the guilty might be punished z--that they were evidences of immense wealth r and a surplus population. proud monuments of archi tectural knowledge and wise legislation, yet possibly embodying some hints of a purpose in the sacerdotal and aristocratic elutes to orea- • pc the popular mind with objects of common I national grandeur, kit it might be directed too deeply and stiflingly to human rights and de mocratic liberty. ROW TO DO rr.--A• What a pretty little child that is," said the sehoolatatter to Mis -*les countenance is so eguessise. Why madam. hits. eery . mach it looks Rite you !" Our sehooloaster said he cellr bad a better boardinimplsee after that. ' Trieill*are like Penmen , . thr let* ado cat amt.. 3tsont them, the hewer--for y.ics eatery will only bring oat the whole swarm opoo you. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY' PL, BY E. S. GOODRICH & SON. NIIIIBEB VIII " REGARDLESS or DENUNCIATION FROM .ART QUARTER." [Prom Saes Weekly Piper.) TUE TORT'S REVENGE. I =3 • It rag a lovely. still ravine. attired in all the rich livery -of summer. with a dimp ed. laugh ing stream gliding sweetly through its centre, borderd with a sloping grassy.sod. A stern. holy quiet was in'this green glen. and the old -time forests the crowned Its heights. so thrilling. and deep. and solemn. that - the lowest whistle of a roving hird come loudly to the ear; the - air murmured amid the leases with a warm gush. scented with the wild wood rose, and the sunshine fused dreamily from the fair sky. A most beautiful rural spot. was. and yet is that valley of the Wissahickon. The declining beams of the broad. blood hued sun. were retiring from the landscape with•. purple gloom, leaving on the greensward a subdued rich light. and bathing the blue west, that was blushing like some coy girl receiving her lover's suit salute, its I mist of glittering gold•dust. 0n a beetling rock. high above the rippling aiream. whose purling mu: is was sweetly au, dible. as it came singing upward with its silver voice ; under the shadow of a beachen tree, stood two young forms. the one a pretty maid en. and the other a tall, robust youth. with a square sunburnt brow, keen cold gray eyes. a moderate arquiline nose, and a thin lip quiver. ing with passion. A rap of coarse Feb. with a drooping buektail plume. was slouched over his chesnut lucks. 'a hunting shirt clothed his iron frame. and deer-skin leggin'. rude and stiff. were handed around his musrulsr legs with horn buttons. Ills left ham/. hard and sinewy. parsed through the refit of a horse beside him, was pressed savagely on the han dle of a long knife that hung to his horse left in a sheath of black leather ; add his right hand nervously clenched the barrel of his old The mellow cheeks of the once lovely girl lacked their once rose-bud color, and were pale as snow, and sunken with sorrow, while a wild gleaming Bash glittered from her large eyes of melting blue. " Olt ! no, nn. Philip! brother." she cried. " no ! it cannot be so, it is not true ! recall that word. sar—" •• I tell thee, girl, 'Ti! true; he is as ha'e as a dog, and false as hell. hut Ate shall rue his deed. Annie, he shall rue it r gmund nut the trooper from his shut teeth. 'Twas hut this morn. I heard him boast of the crime in his room aping his comrades. 3ItO he laughed at it as if a maiden's honor were hut a bauble to be used in jest over the wine cup. He used thy name ton. Alpine, but how ! oh. I may not tell thee ! .By hell. to stung m• In the quirk ! sprang to his done. dashed (nob my knife, and the next moment it would Ive been in his heart, hut with a thought. I wa• drew hark—l swine tn spare him -till I should he alone, then. with blade to blade, we'll fight it mi l first, ample shall he hi• reirdni lion; he shill go on his knee before thee. and then. girl. THEN' !” •• What them Philip! speak !" •• No co m er , now; ho t at midnight he shall learn the', what it is to repay hospitality with ' , own and ingratitude. Did I 1111,1 core him from a pmvineral hand I' Did he'bl int my eyeswirh gold and his popinjay speeches. -hat I might not get a glimpse of his design Then last—oh. heaven !—he had to roh our- quiet home in these wilds of its only joy—to bof thy pure name—to sink our hoary sire to the grave of wretchedness!" A tear hung on his eyelash; his burly frame shook with mealy• grnet and indignalon. then all the rase of t he . moat brutal nature came nit his swarth? brow with a malignant frown ; be curled his livid lip keenly upon his teeth, and yelling with a boos* voice his threat 01 re sense. he threw himself in the saddle of his bu'd iron gray sired. •• Be thou her.•." he erietl. as -he bent the 6ery anitn,l around. •• be thOu here beneath this tree at midnight. Annie. and I will humble h.in to thy feet—so. away. now. away !" Annie . 01 the spot. and the wow'', tore stand husking after her beautiful fnno as she hound. ed like a sylph nwer the runts ; with a sigh and a h•asc curse. then vying his horse the spur. vale wildly from the clif f tuward the - , Philip Brady was of high English descent. His father had ones been a wealthy !whir. but hi estate was suddenly overwhelmed and borne away by the meth of an idle speculation. and. stooping to forgery. he was accidentally detected and compelled to fly_ immediately if he would escape with life and his family—a wife and son. He came to America. and tot ried himself in a romantic glade of the Wissa hickon. where he resided with ease and even luxury. for he had been able to seeur- a mas sive casket of gold and jewels ere he sailed. the only remnant of his once profuse wealth. which supplied him with a competence for life. Here. in this spot. among the sylvan haunts that seemed the emerald realm of fairy wood-nymphs. was born sweet Annie Brad,. and here, beside the limpid summer streaadet, was laid the cold body .of her mother in its chill repose. Philip. resigned to his own wild inclination, sped away every morn with his rifle. skiff and hound, upon the Wissahickon. and the sportive hours soon flitted past him like some magnificent dream. softly vanishing from the memory that yet might retain a faint. delectable recollection. He named everti• where. as if be were monarch of all the gor. genus views which every day . unfolded to his pleased eye: Bold. fearless and retitle's. be was entirely, relieved from any eireurnspeetino on the part of his father. and his passions were lelituachicled and Unbridled,. and ennsequendy yielded to the slightest impulse. bursting out at owe like a sudden , hurricane. and lasting till his wish was granted. or his anger wreaked upon that with which it was at variance. He became lite a whiles brigand. end at the as tremptice nf a martial nosionn ht. theentemists. he longed t-1 hare at his command a whale troop, with which. being exempt from the man- dates of a superior ()Meer: ho might poor at his pleasure on the rebels, for, he was a staunch royalist. and persisted. with others, thit the continentalsq should be ground down till they proffered allegiance to' the king. Those with whom his first companionship was made, were a set of hardened., worthless toties, and they chose him their leader. He once rescued an English officer, when hotly chased by, a parti san band of Americans. and hid him in his forest home with his sister, and thoughtlessly left him there when he departed with his free band. Col. Marston, charmed with the beauty and simplicity of Annie. wooed her with a ;glee love.and made her the toy of his passion till he grew weary of her, then he suddenly left her. Philip soon encountered him again, and affecting - a close intimacy with him, pretending to forget his sister. joined his men with Mars ton's, and rendezvoused with him in a solitary mansion on the Schuylkill. - toward which he was now going. His steed named on gallantly at thi rowel's prick. He was a large. beautiful blond bay, of iron brawn and sinew, with clean glossy flanks. and ao elegant chest and slender limbs; and appeared to career along without the least fatigue. The sun had set in a lurid glow of glory, but a small aim storm-cloud was now com ing over the sky. from behind this golden pa gentry. Onward it came. sable and surly, like the foremost crowding legions of an advancing ar my with a fork of Baring lightning, and a dis charge of deaf ,nine thunder. buisting ever and anon from its jet lined body. The tory maw galloped quickly ahead, but without any pertuhation, and apparently heed less and careless of the fearfully pretended combat. The wind rushed from forest and plain. dile. ing circling eddies of yellow dust toward the Inured finuament, and catching in the foliage of the trees as it swept by in a whirlwind, it bent the broad trunks nearly double like reeds. and eve it snapped sharply some like a Child would a twig. On—on it e-tne. groaning and tearing, roll ing •he hitherto smooth surface of the river. along whose banks Brady was riding, towards the beach' to immense waves that broke there ?pan the breast of the cliffs with a lashing thump. at ring upward a crest of silver foam—then quivering hark—pausing for a second and more severe outset, and spending then its double - farce on the iron barrier, like a mighty batter ing-ram. As the blast met the tort's horse, he recoil ed, sunning, upon his haunches, but barring tom onward,. Philip (tours il him through the pelting rain to his barracks. a lone, 'livery building of two stories. whirh he *horde reaelt ed. Not a light glimmersd from the eaartnenta.• and all was sad, still and gloomy. The clat tering of the steed was heard by a sentinel at th- , haae of the wooded lawn that flanked the house. and leaving before the chieftain, and opposing his advance with his rifle, he demand. ed of him the pass. Bride gave it. then mak- _ ing himself known to the sullies—one of his -She is nought to me, sir prater, and how tr aipers—he added, I wo befall thee if thou dare lay hand on me •• Get thee w, G urney. get thee in. I will again," and he bounded-back from the - y.auth. remain here. and stand guard the rest of the 1H t ! say you so '—say you so !" growl collo. Retire." led die tory, -then look to yourself. Marston. for The tory ranger disappeared. and dismount- you are in pent." ing. Philip threw hurne.i beneath the porch at He threw away his petronel as he spoke. the door, alter tethering his horse. flung his rap and thick locks froin his forehead. He lay quietly on the broad oaken bench for and da-hed tremendously on his foe. Manua -1 a tang whale. then resting his ride against the ton remained like the 'mountain -oak. but the wait, tie spas , . loo sing his lifaile m its sheath, tory grappled with him about the neck, and ' ar•tl revs silently ici the portal. lie placed -bending his supple limbs, hurled him heavily his ear against it f,.r a moment, then satisfied on the'ground- tie stepped bark. the officer Iron the heavy breathings within that all was rose, and Brady was juinpping on him again. asleep. he (-anion:sly put his finger on the : when the girl flaw to his side• and snatching Well, and lifting it, he opened ti just wide his long knife from his waist, she threw her clones to adiust the entranee of his sr-deform. : self before her Inver, and brandished the steel and closing it slier him. he stintil in a long at her brother. mum. Twenty stout bodes were east o'er the I •• Stand aside. Arnie !" he roared with the flame i n a deep slumber. with their right hands yell of a lion. - stand aside. I say again or by grasping their rifles. The tory carefully step- my faith. you both shall penal. I have sworn ' peal between them on tip toe• till he got to the: to slay your paramour, and' now back. back hearth, whlch was poorly lit ter the dying flame • with ye, or—ha! do you mock me !—then of a small rushlight. He took a little dirk ; DIE lent from the mantel, and stooping to the can- I With his face as dark almost as his curls and die, tie ignited it. - He paused a minute• turned his gritting teeth churning big drops of foam. to see if all was net. then went on hi. way , he bounded forward, wrenched away the blade stealing along till he curie to the opposite end from the maid. and drove a blow with his of the plate where there was an old oak stair. ; clenched fist at the trooper's chest, and ere he ease. Re mounted this, wound to the upper could avoid it. it struck him with the sward. st o ry, and came t o a narrow l an di ng w h ere ! breathless. Annie sprang to the tory, and were two doors. He pressed faintly upon the I strove to stay his hand, but his fearful fire was one on the right, and curing slowly, it slid now wildly aroused ; and seeing the knife fall back, and he was in a spacious. but cool, damp •at the heart of the dragoon. she cast her whole "1 AIN . T angora TO DO aterrorco Etas." apartment. The walls and tiling w e re cover. length on his swelling breast, and• the steel . —There are certain phrases. thin' once fair ed with tarnished amis, soiled and moth eaten I shot down like a quarry, and clove through the I lv under way , are for a time all the rage.— and full of rents. through Which rushed the air ! fflrl.down to the vers gaseous of her lover. and lost now, the expression above is the faith with an awe-striking moan ; while 'the floor locked the two forms together. There was a i iiinage reply to almost every question that was covered with adinduet of years, in which moan, a flashing of the eyes; a contracting of I asked. his footsteps left a broad trace. He opened the brow, and writhing of the body under the Not long since a minister stepped into a his lantern until a feeble gleam of light broke i agonizing pain, then they lay stiff and dead ! house—so the paper says—and be found a lady out. and moved towards a large bed that stood i Philip with a bound, sat on his charter.— I makin g a hustle ' lie asked her what she was near the western wainaeny 'Beside it was a , One glance at the object of his vengeance—then making that bozos for She said she intended deep arm chair I;i:sled with a- pair of spurred ,he thundered off with an iron clang, as fast as to wear it to preaching next Sunday. and burnished jack boots, a chapeau with a his steed could bear him from the knoll, shout- o You intend to wear that bustle to church!" snow white crest, a nets scarlet uniform with in& asked the " man of Israel." goldea aisisele. and a thick huge sabre. The I o Now. now for the American camp ! Tors.. •• I don't intend to wear anything else," re wry stopped, drew a petruael from his girdle. lam no more, and-henceforth, my sabre shill `plied the fats one. and-cockangit, he pushed aside the curtains of be stained alone in fighting with the true and l ss Well.'" responds the preacher: •• I should the bed. and' the full gleam of the lantern broke 1 , hay cause r' like to see you at church without anything else redly on a fins handsome face. The sudden I He sprang down the hill-side. and his seam- on but that bustle." burst of glaring light.awote the officer. and he i lire figure soon left behind in peace the sweet BE • N • VAN atras.—l have ever observed. raised himself hastily and half awake from the glens of the Wissahickon. • that he sahib solicits charity foranother. or Fres couch. He gazed in terror at the dark visage of the trooper, relieved by his clustering ebon RavoLcitossaY Asecoore.—M. a mar- I I sed by ne-11 essays to sell what is his own, is locks. and the bright lamp. with:his iron pistol ehaat of Providence. Rhode Island. and a man I- most successful when he rather stirs our admi wakened by ob- I . quite celebrated afterwards for his liberality ' Kea n n pi s ekes a Poised steadily at the dragoon's brain. It was public spirit. was the owner of a most for- we k e e le guests a t the hear. i themselves agreeable. are ever more a stern. bold picture—the young ranger stretch and than those whiah ing with an angry - brow. and otembling nostrils. tunate privateer which sailed out of the port of cam e rely to claimant criograssion.—Hence above his Ateman. holduag high the Mad,' Providence. On one occasion when she tiad Ina mend h tieoftenerbe . /it is. that rich y . et a., flame. while the tr i o lmed back as if • h- - e d • o f just ons 'pea a cargo sneer. etc .. taken • nee d, t h e i r estates to the even than the poor. shrinking from the asctss wespon. I fiere e . from a cen rich prize, i n „Alin the I - robbing into I What a miserable afmeall, is human ma smile. and hums of rage and disgust curled the r yard. one of the h 'beadsand og stove, a mien- E e we ! tory's mouth as he hissed— I U • ty of sugar fell out. A poor woman in the "So. so. sir! thou shakest. and an abashed ; neighborhood seeing the disaster, ran and filled Associatirtiot or lacas.—Bishop &Mined eel at meeting the look of one whom alma blasts° her apron. Mr. B. from the loft *ibis store tells as a story of a clergyman who was age:- deeply wronged. The time of any vengeance ' called out. " What are you doing there r— ly engaged m a fox chase. When the fax took is Dow here. so ewe Bird% or this pistol shall The poor wromailooking op.answered. Prid to earth- on which he cried OM. ° Gentlemen. in a ne e mad Ina" "elf in thy hanln•" I vatoetint. sir." The noon was so forcible. I mess leave you. This pats me in mind that "tow Dow. sirrab I—why darnine. Brady. that the nierehaatimmeffccely made her a pre- I have a corpse to bury at [nor o'clpek thus is it aou I! what the devil's in the wind now of dos entire beishead. - • ea - ening. and I fcar 'ball be an hoer too late." come boy, you must be • certainly mad. Ha! ha!" whined the officer with•a sad attempt to laugh the scene o 6 but it died in a luterstile in his throat, and he fell back with a chill pallor on his lips. " Mad: am 1. Marston 1- then more horrible shall be thy sworn doom if thou% in the grasp of a maniac. Hark ye. vile hound. dust re member Annie Brady, my sister ?—her deep dishonor? ha! ha !—dust remember thy false vow—thy—ha! ha! come get thee up, villain. don thy clothes or I'll throttle thee." He seizrd the paralysed dragoon by the wrists, and jerked him from the bed. Ile dis played a stout. size. form powerful, muscular make, but he was struck with fright at Philip Brady's threat. With the petrouel within an inch of his scull,-he hastily dressed birtisell. and then went from the room by the aide of the avenger. They descended the flight of stairs, and were passing among the slumbering soldiers when the tory detected /Marston at tempting to rouse one of them. and halting, he pushed the cold muzzle of the pistol on his brow. and clicking the lock ready to fire, he whispered in a firm deep voice. " Do it. sir! awaken him! and by heaven. the next instant you are in eternity. My men are the most numerous. so it will be fruitless. On! we do but delay. The trooper strode out on the greensward— the tory led his victim to the stable—saw him on his horse, after he had mounted his, and bound the harness of the two tightly together. so that he could not escape. Marston beheld all this in silence, but the paleness of his brow. and the stare of his glittering eye betrayed hie consternation. 'They cantered away. The thunt:er storm Was over, the stars were freck ling the soft blue of the sky. and the oval moon hung amid a mass of spreading silver clouds like a resplendant lamp beaming richly over the green earth, and polishing with her lambent rays the restless wavelets of the broad river. The two riders moved onward without ex changing a word, sod soon their sight caught the beeehentree that stood on the summit of the eta, beneath whose umbrage the outlaw surmised he saw the flutter of a white dress. The swift horses ambled gently over the turf. and soon thew up at the aged tree wheie stood a frail girlish figure, oh ! how lovely : her blue eyes gazing sweetly, yet sadly, from their beautiful depths: her loose, sunny hair, of a deep, rich, brown hue, floating on the night air; her brow, smooth and fair is a snow flake. and her symmetrical limbs garbed io a plain white vestment. " Oh, Marston ! haat thou indeed . come again ?" exrlattned the girl with a - - thrill of de light, and returning love, and rushing to his side she east her young bode at the trooper's feet. Marston gazed on her with a sneering lip and a cold glassy eye—at that gaze the tory's face grew clouds and terrible. "Nay, nay. Annie. cnuge not I tell thee." , he cried. "at the dastard's feet, he shall rather bend to thine, so vault off, sirrah down beilre yon dishonored girl. and say you will wed— you— I Site For the her Thank of the wroe,ed room Of the embers Quing low Think of the scanty garb, Of the child of want and woe; Ye, whose bright-cup of life Wilt" wraith iirOnning o ' er ; Think of dour brother moo— Relieve him from your Awe, lithe widow's bumble smile Receive.* the Saviour's praise, Shall not your gifts be bleat In these our lattet days I Aye!earry deed of love las bright and sparkling pm. To be wreathed b., angel hands In our heavenly diadem. Practical ') Brunolepet A man lived by 14hur ; himself. his wife. and his tittle ones ; and as he had good health and strung arms, and easily found employment. he met with no great difficulty in providing subsistence for himself and those who were dear to him. But it happened that the country experi enced great commercial difficulties. and the demand for labor diminished. because it could no longer be profitably employed. and Mean while the necessaries of life to-creased in price. The laborer and his family began to suffer. Having exhausted his n u merate savings. hs was c , mipelled to sell his furniture piece by piece. and then aruc'es of clnthing ; and when all hail thus gone, having no other resources. hunger stared him in the face. Nor did Langer enter his cottage unattended ; sickness came with it. Now this man bad two neighbors. the one very rich. the other less so. He went to the first, and said : •• We are in want of the necessaries of life; thyself. my wife and children ; have pity on u..'' The rich man replied : What can Ido in the case ? W hen on labored fur me. did I either refuse or defer payment 1 I have nev er wronged you. nor any one : my Hands are pure from iniquity. Yonr sufferings afflict me, but every one must look out fur himself these hard times ; who knows how long they will last ?" The poor rattier answerminot. but with an aching heart was slowly returning to his deso late home. when he met his other neighbor who was less rich. The latter, seeing that he was pensive and sad, thus i aerosted hon: What 19 the matter with you ? There are cares upon your brow, and tears in your eyes?' The father. will a faltenng voice, explained to hum his unhappy situation. Mi hen he had finished. Why." said the ether to hill. •• do you grieve so much for this ? Are we not brothers And how aban don my brother in distress Come and share with me that which I bold from the gotchtess of God " The sutrenng family was thus sustained un til they could provide for their own wants. Alter several years bad passed, the two rich men appeared towhee defure the m Sovereign Judge of human arti3ns. And the Judge said to the first : "My eye has followed theme on the earth thou has ab stained from injuring others, from violating their rights, thou has rigorously fulfilled the strict law of justice ; hut. in fueling, it. thou bast lived only for thyself ; thy impenetrable pout has not comprehended the law Of love. - ' A 41 now, in this new world, where thou en terest poor and naked, it shall be done to thee !Iwo has done to'others. Thou bast reser ved to thtself all the goods that have been lav ished on thee ; thou has' given nothing to thy 1 brother ; neither shall anything be given to thee. Th , a bast thought but of thyself. thou hest loved but thyself : gu, and in solitude live • by thyself. Then, taming to the second, the Judge said to him : •• Because thou has not been just alone, but charity has penetrated thy h-art because thy hand has been open to scatter among thy less happy brethren the wealth of which thou were the depository, that the tears of them that wept might be wiped away— greater good shall he given thee. Go. and re ceive the recompense of there that have folly accomplished their duty, the law ofjustiets and the law of love?' W=11312, ECla