cnisTCTEIN '7=o NOWANDA: tUctmesbag Morning, 'April IR, 1,13-113. [From the New York Evangelist] Marla Louisa. BY REV. JOHN 8. C. ABBOTT A darker day never enveloped in its gloom - the Austrian monarchy, than when'the beleagured hosts sof Napoleon encompassed Vienna, and from their encircling batteries were showering shot and shells upon the doomed city. The armies of Austria, in repeated conflicts, bad been mown down and scat. tered by the resistless conqueror. As the eagles . of Napoleon glittered upon' the hills which over lOok the city, the Royal family, 2 ' with the " hot haste" whicli'terror inspires, bad fled far off info • the wilds of Hungary. It is midnight. The sky is streaked nith the fiery projectiles, which like me • teors of death, are descending into the thronged and dismayed mettopolis. Flames are bursting forth iu evesy tart of the city. All hearts arc frozen with 1- terror. There is no place .of refuge. Red hot balls crush their way through dwellings of 'brick . and stone. Shells explode in the .cradle of the in faiit,' and uphearing 'the most massy flwellings, bury their mangled inmates beneath their ruins.— The clamors of two hundred thousand combatants fill the midnight air, and mingle with the thunders of one of the most awful bombardjnents earth has ever e witnessed. .In one of the chambers tihq oal palace there, hief;• a maiden, sixteen ye- r r age, ,the daughter of the king. Her father axle' ether, in the eon- . sternation of their flight, IV compelled to leave behind them their sick child. Her cheek is , fluslit • ed with fever, and again paledxvi.h terror as the uproar of the assault, like an*" thunder, fills the •• air. The glare of-bniStingshellg and the flames of the spreading conflagration, portentously gleam, through the windows, upon the eye of the sick and suflerer., She itt vain buries her head be neath the bedclothes to strut out the horrid cries of the assailants and the shrieks of the wounded. In th'e midst of this most dreadful scene the gates of the city are suddenly thrown open,- and a s mall party emerge, and with a flag of truce pass through thernbattling hosts till they approach the presence of Napoleon.' They inform him of .the situation and peril of the princess. Ile instantly orders the direction of every gun to be changed, ,which might endanger her person. The flag of truce again re tires within the walls, and the awful bombardment continues. For ten tong hours this terrific storm of! .r•ci descends upon the city, till three thousand I shells have filled its streets with ruins and with blood. But Mxria Louisa remains upon her bed nnharmed, thourih•other parts of her father's palace are blown from 'their foundations. Little did she Imagine, in, the consternation of that dreadful night ; that it was her future husband who was thus rain- Int; down destruction upon her father's capital .--r And little did the plebeiati conqueror ima:4ine. he compassionately changed the direction of his guns. that this maiden was to be :the queen of nance, and by this bombardment he•was %%ooing and winning for his bride a daughterofthe Cle-zars ! What a mysterious influence there is in ancestrial • renown. Ntipoleon even, the creator of his crown, the fabricator of his own glory, was dazzled by its glare. Maria Louisa was la line l descendant of the proudest monarch offtome,, The blood which circulated in her veins had pass'ed to her from the Cx,ars, and through the heroic heart of Maria The- • rtsa. She had been cradled and mauled . amid , • ,enes of moral sublimity and regal magnificence, • which ; one would think, would give an impress of • . grandeur- even to the. meanest soul. Surely, then; her spirit must be animated with all that is lofty-and ennobling in humal character. Alas. it was not so! • She was nothing more than a mild. amiable, • pretty gid, utterly incapable of ehetishing an idea of miignanintity or rif heroism. She was endowed, • by Oatnre, only with those qualities which were iniiV commonplace and earthly, and was entirely uth;tualitied to act a noble part in the lofty drama •through 'w h ich she was destined to moVe! . N - apoleon,despairing, of offspring from Josephine, and consumed With the most intense desire to have ' an lain who shohld inherit his glory and perpetuate his name, resolves to sel'er the ties which hind him Josephine,, the wife of his youth, and to obtain a inure youthful bride from the subservient monarch ., to , around him: He hot ed thus to secure an heir in whose person should be allied all that was glo iii‘us in-his own achievements, and all that is illus . trioni in exalted descent. The repudiation of Jo sephine. strong as were the political motives which led to it, is the darkest stain upon the character of Napoleon. And, like all wrong doing, however seeinimfly pro;perous for a time, it promoted final di-aster an woe. A pique originating in this mar riage, alienated Alexander of Russia from the • French Emperor, and hence - the campaign/511,111(ns row, and the imprisonment of Napoleon upon the rock of St. Helena. When the design of 'Napoleon was known, every Court in Europe was emulous -of the honor of such an alliance. The Bourbons: in their exile, would gladly furnished a princess of .5 the blood royal, a bride for the mighty conqueror. • The .Russian Court proffers any of its high-bam • maidens to the acceptance of the master spirit, at whose frown all Europe' trembles. And the Aus trian monarchy, the proudest of all earthly dvnas e'azerly seeks alliance with the soldier'of for thrtr, who hasetwice entered its capital in triumph ; and repo:Zed.; with' his plebian marshals, in its pal aces. • illwr much deliberation, Napolecn decided to accept the alliance of Austria. Proposals were made-tor Maria Louisa, and• eagerly accepted.— was then nineteen years of ale, and was • until happy to be 'mitered as the bride of one why 1 hal fill e d the woad with his • renown. Napoleon was forty-two. On the 1:2111. of March. 1810, a[)- parfaitly without emotion, she left the palaces of 11,• I fathers, surrounded by all dig pomp the Ana ,.tan M•inarchy could confer, to her future - .1 .a RE . . . . . . . . . .: • . . . D . . . . . . BRADFOR . .. „ . . • Mai husband. As the long train Of marriages left Vien na, the people gazed mournfully upon the scene.— Maria Antoinette, the last princess Austria hakfur nishe'd for the throne of France ; but a few years be fore had perished miserably upon 'the scaffold.— ' The populace were only prevented by the soldiers, from cutting the traces of the carriages and prevent ieg the departure. The gorgeous procession pro ceeded on its way towards the frontiers of France. Napoleon had never yet seen the bride who was coming to meet him. " NH! is not beautiful," he said, as he gazed upon her minature, " but she is a daughter of the Crum; s When Maria arriged at the Rhine, her Austrian attendants left her ; and, she was 'received by. the French nation,and conducted toward's Paris with the highest possible accompaniments of imperial splendor. The bells rang their merriest peals of congratulation. The Austrian and the tri-colored flag floated in friendly embrace from every tower. Triumphal arches, illuminated cities,strid civic and . military processions greeted her progress, while the horses of her chariot buried their' hoofs in the bed. of roses which were spread over her path.— France, then in the zenith of its pride and intoxica ted with glory, from the Rhine to the Pyrenees, re sounded with all the eipressions and demonstra tions of rejoicing. Napoleon met her near corn peig.ne. Springing from his own carriage, he ea gerly leaped into that of the Empress, and. entirety regardless of all the restraints and etiquettes of' courts.Afcilded her in his embrace with the mast youthfUl impetuosity. Jim postillions were order ed to drive upon the, pallop to the palace of Corn peigne. This unexpected ardor was not at all un• welcome to !%laria, and. a few hours in the society of her imperial _husband invested her with such queenly ease and affability, that she could hardly be recognized by her former attendants. The mar riage ceremony Was celebrated with the utmost splendor at St. Cloud, and never before or since has Paris resounded with such an.uproar of rejoicing, as. when Napoleon led his youthful bride into those apartments of the Tuilleries, from which Josephine, buf three mouths,-befure, had - been so cruelly ejec ted. Four queens held the bridal train of Maria Louisa, and the ambassadors of all the Courts of Europe rerolved around her as their central 1131111- Big who can tell how dismally these rejoic ings full upon ear of Josephine, as. she sat weeping in hed deserted chambers. In one year from that time, Maria was placed .upon that mysterious couch of suffering from which no regal wealth or splendor can purchase.exemp tion. Her pains were long protracted . and her an guish dreadful. The attendant physicians, in the utmost trepidation, informed Napoleon that the life of the motheror child must be sacrificed. "Save the'mother," said Napoleon ; but, perceiving that they had It'st theirpresenee of mind, in view of the peril of so dlestrioUs a patient, he immediately ad ded. " Do as you would-with the wife of the hum blest Tradesman in the Rne St. Denis." The phy sicians', reassured, returned to their duty, and the EMI crisis was passed. • The birth of this child was an event which had been anticipated by all France, with the !post sin cere interest, It had been previously announced that the cannon of the invalids should proclaim the advent of the expected heir to the throne. If the child we're a prilicm twenty-one were to be fired if a prince, one huudied. At six o'clock in the morning of the 20th of March, 1810, all Paris was aroused by the deep booming of those heavy guns, reverberating ovili• the city in annunciation of the arrival of the welcornit stranger. Eiery window , was inst a ntaneously thrown open. Every- ear was on the alert. The slumbcrers were aroused froni their pillows, and silence prevailed all the streets oldie bray metropolis, as the vast throngs stood motionless to count the tidings which those explo sions were thundering into their ears. The heart of the great capital ceased to beat, and in all her glowing veins the current of life stood still. When the twenty-first gun had been fired, the interest was intense besond conception. The gunners delayed fora moment the next discharge, and all Paris stood breathless•in suspense. The next moment the guns, doubre loaded, pealed forth the most wel come announcement, and from the entire city one universal roar of acclamation rose and blended with their thunders. Never was an earthly mon arch greeted with a more affecting, demonstration of a nation's love and homage. The birth of the King of Rome, hew illustrious! The thcughtful mind wilt pause and muse upon the striking con trast furnished by his death. IVhocould then have imagined that his renowned father would perish a prisoner in a dilapidated stable in St. Helena, and, that this child, a nation's idat, would liter through a few shertyears of neglect and sorrow, and sink into a forgotten grave. The sisters of Alexander of Russia were mortifi ed and exceedingly irritated, that Napoleon sh,duhl hhve selected an Austrian rather than. a Hassian 'Princess for his bride. In these feelings the RM.." sian Court generally participated. Ccildness and alienation and mutual recrimination entitled. Anti cipating a rupture, Alexander began to marshal his armies. Napoleon, that he migh) , not be attacked .unprepared, als,io armed. Step by step these angry . demonstrations were continued, till the di,a.strous campaign to Moscow was arranged, to " conquer a peace." When Napoleon had made all his pre parations for this majestic enterprise, and had as. sembled his legions upon the frontiers of his almdst boundless empire, Maria Louisa, accompanied him as far as Dresden. That was the hour and that was the place where Napoleon stood upon the very pin • nicle of his glory. He had arrived at the summit of the-pyramid, and xis all eyes were riveted upon him, awe-estivieken, he •rnatle one false step tind rol led a mangled corptie, to the dust. At piesden there was literally a Congress of Kings, all doing homage to him who appeared to bold their crowns in his hands, and who could enthrone them at plea sure. The wife of Napoleon was then surrounded with more splendor and homage, than any female bad probably ever received before.. The pomp PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " itEuARDLEst Or DENUITIATION PROM AMY QtARTEL" and the pride of the Continent revolved around her, and before her youthful diadem the . oldest poten tates bowed in reverence. Queens were her maids of honor, and amid the brilliant throng of princes and of courtiers, she beamed forth the cynosure of all eyes. The luster which encircled her husband enveloped her in its blaze of glory. It was, how ever, but the intense glare of the meteor, the pre cursor of the blackness and darkness which follows its explosion. Napoleon appointed Maria Regent of France dar ing his absence. She returned from Dresden quiet ly to Paris, while the Emperor proceeded, with his glittering band of five hundred thousand warriors, in the campaign where, he lost his army and his crown. At the termination of that most disastrous enterprise Napoleon, leaving. his frozen hosts be neath the drills of a Russian winter, fled as on the wings of a storm itself, day and night, over the bleak wilds of Poland and of Germany, till, in ad vance of all hie couriers, he arrived at Paris at mid night. Unattended anti unexpected asihe was, it was with no little difficulty- that he could get the gates of his own palace open for his admission.— Maria, having heard rumors of the destruction of the army, had just retired to rest in the deepest de jection, when the voices of two men wee heard in the nntehamber, and a cry of astonishment 'from one of the maids of honor announced that some thing extraordinary had occured. The Empress in terror leaped from her bed, when the door was burst open, and she was seized and enfolded in the em brace of a man enveloped in his wintry riding drops. It was Napoleon. Their interview was tender and affecting. He was returned to his capital a fugi tive. His army was literally annihilated. And all the powers of combined Europe were preparing to pour down. upon France in resistl es s numbers.— Despair alone could nerve one energy to attempt to meet such a crisis. Never did mortal man before rouse himself to such herculean ellOrts as Napoleon made in these days of disaster. With electric energy he convuls etl every fibre of France. Not a day, not an hour, not a moment was lost. The long wars which had desolated Europe, had drained France of - its vigor ous youth. Iltindr&is of thousands of her chosen young men were now lying, frozen into blocks of ice, upon the stormswept plains of Scandinavia,. and the tempest of winter were piling over them their winding-sheets of snow. None were left bet boys arid old men, to meet the swelling flood of in vasion. Napoleon gathers around him a little band, many of them beardless youths of seventeen, and with a saddened yet determined spirit advances to stem the inundation which, like ocean billows, is rolling in upon the frontiers of France. Before set ting out from Paris on his desperate enterprise, he took a very solemn arid affecting leave of Maria and his son. It was Sabbath evening. Napoleon assembled in the apartments of the Tuileries all the principal officers of the National Guard. A re. ligious ceremony was connected with the interview, to render it additionally imposing. As the Em peror took the beautiful child, then three years of age. in 'his arms, and passing through the ranks of the officers, with a most touching address present ed him to them as their future sovereign, cries of enthusiasm filled the apartment, and those gray headed veterans wept with emotion. The hell on the towers of Notre Dame was tolling three o'clock in the morning, when Napoleon rode through the dark and deserted streets of Paris, to join the army. He never saw Maria or his son again. A sublimer scene has rarely been witnessed, than the almost superhuman struwles of Napoleon against the fearful odds which came rushing upon him. Wherever he meets his foes, he buds hiv little band upon them and scatters them - before the tempest. And still the cor•.er draw nearer and nearer to his capital. when victory is perched upon the barn Emperor, and, with his beardless boys, he is tram pling in the -dust the shaggy barbariani of Hungary and Tartary, in other parts of the interminable line the countless hosts are advancirA. They roll. on and roll on, from the north mat the east and the south, like the locusts of Syria. Often as Napoleon rode over the gory field, and Saw the slender and fragile forms with which the ground was strewn, inured as he - -^enes ofcamage. and contend ing as he was none and his liberty, he for. got himself am But it was all in vain. Eu rope had riser against a single man. The aUi soon their batteries were height which surround Paris, and to fall upon the roofs of the belea- the first drops of a tempest. Na- polerm was absent, breasting the invaders in one par( of the vast segment by which they were op /prowling. All hearts in the metropolis were fro zen with terror; and to avoid the horrors of a born bardritent the capital of Francecapitulated, and Na poleon Was ruined. It was indeed a gloomy hour ; when Maria Louisa with her son descended from the apartments of the Tuilleries to escape from Paris. In the distari#e could be heard the thunders of the approaching battle, and the young Napoleon clung screaming to the tapestry, refusing to be torn fromthe palace of his father. Pale and dejected, the unhappy Em press entered her carriage, while a Parisian crowd gazed upon the scene in melancholy silence. It was the burial hour of the Napoleon dynasty. The funeral procession in a long train of carriages pas sed slowly away, and Maria, deserting her husband in the hour of his greatest need, threwherself upon the protection of the allies. If she had' possessed one emotion of real greatness, then was the hour to have shown it, and, to have extorted the admiration of mankind. Had Paris held out three hours lon ger, Napoleon would have thrown himself behind its defences, and at least would have compelled his foes to come to reasonable terms. He felt most keenly the want of character manifested by his wife on this occasion. Once only, in the most confidential intemourse, did be allow himself to utter any expression of these feelings. " Who can calculate the effect," besaid, =I . " which would have been prodtt 4 ettd Dy YDDIH fiII consort running through the ranks of the army and the National Guard, holding her young son in her arms, presenting him to all, and placing her self and him under the Protection of their courage and their bayonets. Whenever I think of it, the anguish abridges my vile an hour." Had Maria possessed the heroic soul of Joan of Are, or of Charlotte Corday, she would nave enno bled herself and her sex in this crisis, which seem ed to invite her to achievements of magnanimity. She would have roused the enthusiasm of the na. tion, and rushing to the rescue of Napoleon, would have thrown entire France upon the invaders. But Maria was no heroine. Had Maria been capable of cherishing those deep and sacred emotions of woman's love, which glowed in the truly imperial soul of Josephine, and which have made her the idol of all true hearts, she would have clung to Na poleon with deathless fervor in these days of ad versity, and would have won the admiration of the world. Maria, following her husband to Elba, sharing his:perils at Waterloo,-and seatedby his side on the storm-washed rocks of St. Helena, would have occupied, in the eyes of all nations, a more - exalted throne than her illustrious ancestors of home ever embellished. And in her own living, glow ing, throbbing heart, she would have found a luxu ry of emotion for which one might well spurn all the baubles of pomp, pride and power. But Maria was "of the eaoh, earthy." In the poverty of her ignoble spirit, she preferred to daily with her own chambedain on voluptuous sofas, in the luxurious apartments of a ducal palace, and to leave her husband to languish a , fid die alone. Peale be with you, Maria. It was perhaps less the fault than the misfortune of Maria. that her soui ,teas incommensurate with the grandeur of her cironmstances. She was-by nature mealy a mild, amiable woman, and utterly incapable of heroic action or romantic love. There is no power upon earth by which the mind man is so perfectly 'entranced, as by the spirit or a truly noblewoman. One is constrained to Ixesr) almost with adoration, before the alliance of female love liness with the lofty attributes of the soul. The union is rare, but when encountered, the entrant... ed spirit does it willing homage. There are spirits dwelling in these mortal frames, which seem al most radiant with the %sue of heaven. But they" are seldom cradled under the canopy of a throne. It is true'that the situation of Maria. during this conflict, was peculiar, and for a feeble mind ex tremely emlßrrassing. The armies of Austria and France were arrayed against each other. Her in. tiler and her husband had crossed swords wit i the most unrelenting hostility. The affecti9Us arc plants which do not t h rive in the atmo*here of courts. Napoleon could immolate Jose,phine upon the altar of his political ambition. AM"' the Empe ror of Austria had no hesitation in sacrificing the grandeur of his daughter to prornote the grandeur of his throne. In the downfall / 6i France, the spoil ers would share the booty. And Francis was very willing to wrest territory and power from his own child, that he might anuex them to his own domin ions. It is not, perhar, strange tbat:a daughter of the Ciesars should inherit this passion of the Ciesars. As Maria saw the/empire of Napolecin falling into fragments, she / f6rgot both her husband and her son, in her ea,gemess to save what she could from the wreck for / herself. Haw different, on the contrary, was the conduct of Joselahine. She was the child of an obscure planer of blartinque. But her spirit was of celes tial/mould. In the day of Napoleon)! min, she 'lMgot herself and her heart-rending wrongs, and was eager to abandon all the luxuries with which she was surrounded, and to follow the fortunes of her former husband into poverty, obscurity and ex ile. How infinitely superior are opulence and no bility of soul, to the accidents of birth: Exalted lineage does but render more conspicuously de grading, lowness, vulgarity and dishonor. In the treaty between Napoleon and the allied powers, by which Napoleon renounced for him self and his heirs the throne of France, it was stipu lated that Maria Louisa and his sou should be per mitted to accompany him to Elba. As the day for his departure drew nigh, and Maria still remained with her father and the allies, Napoleon, supposing that she was forcibly detained, refused to move, al leging that the allied powers had violated theircorn pact, and threatening to appeal to the army to re new the war. TheAustrianCommisaioner solemn ly assured him that Diana remained behind of het own free will This most cruel desertion was felt by the Emperor *cry keenly. He, however, was never heard to speak One unkind; word of Megia. A few sentences only, which escaped his lips at St. Helena, showed how deeply his soul was wound ed. But a few days before the civilized world seemed . to revolve around him in homage. Now he was deserted nearly by all—even by his own wife and child. His old Guard who had surrounded him with their sanguinary conflicts, alone remained faithful. As the Emperor, shorn of his power, descended the great stairs of the palace of Fontainbleari, to depart alone and friendless from the scene of all his past glory, to the obscurity of Elba, his loyal Guard were drawn up before the carriages to the master whom they had loved and served with so much fidelity. Napoleon advanced into their midst, perfectly overcome with emotion. Those scared veterans of a hundred battles, gaze upon their beloved chieftain with loud sobs and impas sioned weeping. With a few tremulous words of tenderneSs be addressed them. Then, with faltering accents and a swimming eye, he exclaim ed. "Adieu, my children. I would that I could press you aft to my bean. I will at least embrace your eagle." Seizing their standard, be pressed it fervently. to his bosom, and kissed the eagle.— " Adieu once again, my old companions," he said, " may this last embrace penetrate . yoSur hearts." Again with impassioned tendemeed ha enPrlded the standard, his eyes filled with tears" sprang into his carriage and drove rapidly away. As the rat. 4 , r 1 = s ....: ~ .: ,A ..::f thug of the carriage wheels in the distance died upon the ear, the air resounded with the weepitt.: and lamentations of these stem warriors. Joseph. ine said that. Napoleon was the most fascinating of men. He certainly maw have had a warm heart of his own, or he never could hate become so per fectly the master of the affectipns of others. As Napoleon, deserted by his wife and' child, took his solitary way to Elba, open overwhelmed with the profoundest grief, and again rousing his energies to smile at the caprice of fortune, Maria with the young king of Rothe, entered her carriage to return to the palaces of. her father. She vas silent and dejected. In an hour, as it were, she had been plunged from the very pinnacle of earth tidy splendor into dependence, obscurity, friend lessness and uncertainty. She- was extremely so licitous in reference , o her future lot. By abandon ing the ruined fortunes of her husband, site hoped to secure for hensel fa tastier inheritance than had been' allowed him. Alone and ungreeted, she retraced i the route by which, four years before, she had been t conduted a bride and a queen, surrounded by more than imperial splendor, and' by the acclamations of thirty mallets of voices. The few remarks, how ever, which she made made, showed that her 1 thoughts were intent upon her own lost grandeur, and that she had almost forgotten her husband and her child. She was a daughter of the "Cassius, and longed for Ciesars share of the loaves and fishes. Having arrived in Austria, she took up her resi dence for a time at the chauteau "of Shoebum, a few miles from Vienna, a magnificent Measure palace, belonging to the Austrian kings.. Here the allied sovereigns were assembled reveling itt wine and wassail. In the midst of their imperial carous ings, with songs, and dances, and the most volup tuous licentiousness, they were quarreling about the division of their booty. The Emperors of Austria and Russia, the Kings of Prussia, Denmark, Bava ria and Wine:ill:purr; ; Sovereign Dukes and Grand Dukes without numberva4 a countless throng of ambassadors from Fm, gland, *ranee, Spain, Portu gal, Italy, and all the ( muntries and provinces of Ets. rope, hail there gathered in the scramble for the spoil of Napoleon. Jewelled courtesaus thronged the masqueriale balls of theseroyal revelers, and mingled with the gorgeous throng upon the Prater, in gilded / Chariots and glittering with diamonds. Queens/ut masquerade condescended to flirtation with / the motley yet resplendent crowd, mid all hearts were surrendered tit the d minion of rolup. thous and forbidden pleasure. It ould have been manifestly too indecerous,for Mari openly to have participated in these rejoicings ov r the, wreck of her ottn and her husband's fortunes. But ascend ing to an attic window, she solaced herself ingri zing down upon festivities in whichshe coulirnot participate. The veil of oblivion waS drawn over her imperial husband, and even over her own sor rows, as like a true daughter of Eve she watched from her peephole the flirtations of kings and am bassadors, of queens and. princesses. Here glide Metternich and Castlereagh, as guy masqueraders, more deeply absorbed for the mo ment in contemptible coquetry and faithless amours, than in the political questions for the decision of which armies were gathering and empires frown. ing. This gaudy gallant, surrendering himself to the fascinations of an unknown fair one, is the King of Prussia. That flowing pelisse and picturesque Hungarian costume envelop the person of the Em peror of Austria, who is _dancing to the tune, so edifying to his "daughter, the Downfall of Paris, Maximillian, King of Bavaria, singes in these orgies in the same brilliant costume in which Ma ne had often seen him at the levees of tiapoleon, ; doing homage to that imperial 'spirit whom ,these, banded monarchs now affect to despise. This col loesal figure is easily recognized as the kin of Wirtemburg. The magnificent domino, resplend ent with gold, which is gathered so gracefully around him, eannotailisguise his gigantic frame. And the nimble gnseue, with whom he is flirting, is that yew Duchess of Oldenburg, whose female jeal ousy- was aroused by Napoleon's rejection of her proffered hand, and by his marriage with an Au strian princess. " A Riutsian princess," she haugh tily says in her mortihcation and. chagrin, " is not to be won like a peasant girl, simply by the ask ing." Un fortunately. for her consistency, she was offered to Napoleon and , ;rejected b him. Talley rand steal th ily glides through thos : festive halls, a wily spy, listening to a eons-ennui , detecting the. masquers, and reporting each nig to the Bourbons all amours and intrigues but Lis : Upon this scene, fr om her " loophole of ret ' t," Maria ga zes with wistful eyes. Foul yea , . before, in that same hall, she had appeared in 'dal robes, the I n. central object of attraction, the de ned spouse of Napoleon, to ascend • a more ex ' ed throne than her imperial ancestors ever occu ied. Now she was forgotten. As Napoleon, from his Lilliputian realm of Elba, contemplated the carousals of his banded foes, his lip curled with contempt. His mind, so untiring in its energies for the promotion of National gran . deur ; so absorbed in devotion to enterprises which should leave a lasting, impreis upon the world, could not but regard with scorn the regal fops who were dancing away their days at Vienna: Alexan der of 'Russia had the, most elevation of character of them all. He admired the intellectual suprema cy of Napoleon, and half-regretted tluit he had join ed the alliance to dethione the most energetic mon arch who had ever swayed a sceptre. lathe Con gress, his influence was ever exerted to moderate the measures adopted; in reference to the faller. Emperor. He openly declared—" the Bourbons are now once more upon the throne. Lei them keep there. If they fall again, I shall not lift theta up." Maria was in the midst of this " mob of kings," eagerly watching her interests and urging her claims. EcaNcaxteo 151:XT RUM.) Dr. llama says, A that if Persons are always .supposing thin they are liable to a certain distemper the nerves *ll so act on the part that it is•very lad ely to contehspom theft's" 4 A - V? ' . _,.....e, Mlcellan Tue Sainte. tis you enter your school " Morn; glaned Mend and see the task before you. 'See those minds, so young and ten der, that ititeresilont are easily made, waiting for you to leave au impress there, that time thay nei er, never obliterate. Your lefleence over thettt will be street, lerit be directed for their best mom', intellectual and physical good. It is no light task, no petty responsibility with tthitth yen are entrusted. The village school in New England is thi Ord" - place .of instruction to which the majority of our youth have access ; thy. go from this toefitl the of. fices occupied by their fath e rs. And it is a gees lion every:conscientious teacher should put to him self; whether oUr district seheols are what they should be. I know they are New Englaud's boast : New Engtand's pride; they must be her bulwark and her sure defence.; .they must be the fountain whence flow the streams of intelligenc6 to enlighferi the people.. Teacher, tb you is •titrustetl that high and noble task ; then think not of it as a matter merely for pecuniarrreward, bet when all the pet ty perplexities, end endless cares of the school room throng around you, be encoinagtel by the thought that the faithful teacher has reward in the sdent but impressive language of conscience. Let your school rdom ever be illuminated will, your smiles, end apparent satisfaction. It should be a - pleasant place, and the scholar should feel each Jay that his teacher is taking a deep interest in,his improvemeot, anti even in his Pastiittc, not from any labored remarks to ere film the information, but from the manner, the tone, from the very presence of life, and harmony, pervading the room. It should be the aim of everYtt:dcher to have his school as pleasant as possible, a delightful resbrt, rather than a place to perform a dull routine of du ties. In noway, I think, are kinder, happier feel ings brought out than by singing iii Music has a soothing influence over our inures, as well as a refining power. If, through the day, aught has occurred to disturb the usual trationility, harmony is restored, and better feelings excited, by uniting in a simple sot g. TO many, what I Itae said may appear as idle fancy, but I believe there is a Prittait eltarth Irt Memory is now busy at work, it points me to the little time-worn school house IX mf native village; tiro button-woods afford prifteeting shade in sum- Me i,' on the scanty cOrenimi, yoling trees flourish, lately transplanted from their forest Home ; all, all are dear, every stone in an old friend, but eUuld I enter, and mingle with those I last met there, listen to the good-night hymn sung bt the same voices once more! 0 could I Huger there, '" And be a child again."—Practical Educator. • txr WOMAN.—The influence of woman as surely follows her presence as shade is insepara ! ble from sunshine. And that silent power has this peculiarity, that it is ever opemting for good. In our public assemblies, ih our convivial meetings, when the.heart and tongue are apt in unbridled license fo betray the more violent Contentions or sensual emo. tionS of unrestrained nature, let woman bat appear or condescend to grace our festivities unobtrusively by her presence, and instantly is soothed every an gry expression—the angel of purity chases aw s ay even a ribald thought from many bosoms : then it is that the lords of the creation eitiinate themselves most truly ; and when, by gallantry that is most de. licate,and assiduities that mingle gttn eine politeness with unaffected good breeding,they can emulate each each other in the demonstrations of all that is pure in feelirgs, taleuttain intellect, rational in apprehen sions, manly in disposition, knowing fall well that there are eyes that will mark and gentle heattstbat win reward them by their affection and their pre. ference. Tam DANCE:IL or Tsrpixti—A physician having informed -a dropsical patient thai tapping was indis pensable, and that he would perftirm the operation on a certain day, the sick man's son, a boy about nine years old, exclaimed '• Oh,' father, father, do not I.it them tap you!" " Why, my . dear it will do me good, and 1 shall live long in health to make you happy," said the afflicted parent. "No, fath er, no, you will not," rejoined the child, ' foir there never ,was anything hipped in our house that lasted l onger than a week.". Arcr.c-rixc Svitratiii-;-:—N very affecting instance of sympathy Was exhibited,. hot very long ago, by young lady; twin-boni; who was. suddenly seized with an, unaccountable horror, followed by a straiiga eonruhricin; which the doctor, , who 'was hastily cal= lei in , said exactly resembled the strngtles and suffering of a person drowning. In process of time the news attired that tier twin brother, then Amid, had been drowned precisely at that period. Vittte passions do not profoundly disturb the soul; they are like the breezes which ripple the face of the waters. Great passions, stormy tem pests, d i gitate ihd set "even to its depths; oft wreck the vessel and 'the mariner; sometimes carrying them afar off into fleshly discovered regions. As Inn-keepr Diverted thelion with only one spur, and inquired the reason.. ll Why, what would be the use of another!" said the postillion;_ if one side of the horse goes, the other cannot stand min." • . Tun butterfly is at once the symbol of inconstan cy and of immortality. This is not contiadiitory : man is incons•nat becadse he seeks be seeks be ., ; cause he is immortal. Some one enquires whether a bedstead is abed. stead is a bedstead when it is a little buggy ? A Yankee answers 'this question bj asking t o w it:—Whether a woman is a woman alien she is a linle sulky. As a looking -ewe, if is a true one, faithfully re. resents the face of hint that looks init, so a wife ought to fashion- herself to the adagio' n of her hos• dead, not to-be cheerful when he ia seas nor sad when he is cheerful. 19 CM MEN -.‘,o l j' StittYlli2 - 4to ffillM ' 4 '.