1 1111 T ~:ft VIDIUTIEII =0 TOWANDA: Wantsbap Morning, .filardi 7, 1849. THE PHILOSOPHY OF ET camms xAeirAT Were the lonely acorn never bound in the rude cold.gra,p of the rotting ground; Did the ridged frost never harden up The mould above its bursting cup : Were it never'soak'd in rain and hail, Or chilled by the breath of the wintry gale, It would not sprout in the sunshine free, Or give the promise of • tree ; It would not spread to the summer air Its lengthening boughs and branches fair, To form a bower where, in starry nights. Young Love might dream unknown delights ; Or stand in the woods among its peers, Fed by the dews of a thousand years. Were never the dull. unseemly ore. Draggl from the depths where if slept of yore; Were it never cast into searching flame, To be purged of impurity and shame; Were it never melted !aid burning brands, Or bruised and beaten by stalwart hands, It would . never be known as a thing of worth ; It would never emerge to a noble birth ; It would never be formed into mystic ring", To letter Love's erratic wings; It would never shine amid priceless gems; Or the gilt of imperial diadems ; Nor become to the world a power and a pride, Cherish'd, adored, and deified. So thou, Oman of a noble soul, Starting in view of a glorious goal, Wert thou never exposed to the blasts, forlorn— The storms of sorrow—the sleets of scorn; Wert thou never refined in pittiless fire, From the dross of thy sloth and mean desire ; Wert thou never taught to feel and know That the truest love has its root in woe. Thou wouldst never unriddle The eomplex plan, Or reach half way to the perfect man : Thou wouldst never attain tbe tranquil height Where wisdom purifies the sight, And God unfolds to the humblest gaze The bliss and beauty of his ways. (Front the Lady's Boot, for March.) THE WEDDING DAY AN ENGLISH' STORY. BY HENRY WILLIAM HERBERT THE gray, dewy light of n soft summer morning was stealing faintly up the eastern verge of a sky FO cloudless and transparent that it could give pro mise only of as fine a day as ever shone over the green fields and gay hawthorn hedges of England in the olden time. The HAI and liquid carol of the nightingale had not yet ceased, although day had already dawned ; for so dense were the old thorn. brakes on the hill side, arid so massive the shad ows of the great lime trees in the valley, that the bird of night was there often heard to sing the whole clay long. But now he sang not alone, for from every leafy hedgerow and young coppice the music of theblackhirds and thrushes flowed out in gushes of clear melody, not Empleasingly blended with the shrill alarums of the village cocks, and the twitter ing of the swallows under the cottage eaves. it was in the neighborhood of a pleasant Kentish village that all these sweet sounds were so rife on a June morning of the year 18—; that last century of the good unsophisticated times of old England. This village, like many others of that date, and some which even to this day have resisted the pro- I• arels.of improvement, was not built in two long straight lines on either side of a dull, dusty treeless turnpike rdad ; not one house in it glittered either with bright red brick, or flaring white paint—it had no park; no court-house, no lyceum. In a word, it was as unlike as possible to a mod ern village Aywhere ; but most unlike of all to a New England village. For its houses, or cottages rattier, not one of which but had counted its him ilred years, of rough hewn sand-stone, with"thatch ea roofs all overgrown with moss, and yellow flow ering stone-crop, were scattered, het's, and there, ir regularly over a wide common of short, elastic greensward, among huge oaks that might well have witnessed the march of Cresar's brazen legionaries. There were little gardens, gay with com Mon flowers, the rose, the sweet pea, and the honey suckle, attached to every cottage; -and to one, in no way distinguished from'the reet, except that it was a little larger, and boasted an arched porch of Curiously carved stone work, there seemed to be long nearly an acre of shrubbety laid out with taste, and tended with unusual care. Still, had it not been for the square ivy tower of the old 'gray, weather-beaten Chinch, • which T se hard by it behind a screen of aged yew trees, which alniost hid its old wolf-toothed, Saxoh arch Way from the traveler on the narrow and little ,frequented mid, there .world have been nothing to mark it as thekicarage, so humble was it if regarded as the indeedli was, of a gentleman and Beyond the common and its straggling village, covering - all the level ground to the fork of a bare, dawnlike green hill, the highest summit of which was crowned by the ruins of an old tower of the Norman era, which had probably been dismantled during the bloody wars of the Roses, lay a wide woodland park, or chase, parts of which were still thick with akost priineval forest, which puts were opened to the Run in grassy glades and broad vel vet lawns. The manor house was not visible, either from the village or from' any point of the road, until it scaled the brow of the hill under the very shadow of the old keep, which had.been erected probably tocom• rnand it. If he paused there, the wayfarer could just discern the . glimpse of a gray, slated roof, pod the tall stacks ofcuriously wrought chimneys am ong the thick black woods, and the quiet waters which surrounded the hall. At about ,a mile's distance frog ihe,house a pair 01 heavy, rustic gates, Banked by a todge l or gate house, as it ws then termed, gave , adedissien into the grounds ; but even here( die eye " gained linle access to the interior of „the deemeneettreo,itill den" ly, and withswalsmpt tt tarn did the aweless disap pear amid the weedimida • ' "'' . • —....--------. - •Tret!' g fr. : ' d• t•P - - —•- - -. r - . • '• *-• •‘ i ‘ iit aP4oliiisaiiiiiiiiiiiT i iiirtiiiihiktiallßElOr •' , ;l • ii 1 — ll6ir l' l6o *ii . 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Og l er entrance there was none" to the gear- ded precincts, except by one sisall postern door, which opened into-the church, and was flanked co the right hand, as you looked northward to the bill, by the dark woods of what was . called The home park. Early as was the bout, even for those industrious and antenna' days, when the very magnates of the land were not too luxurious to rise nearly with the sun, the village was s=tir. Almoit before . it was light the old sexton. had been seen halting across the green towards the churchyard gate, followed by the half dozen handsome, athletic youths who were known through all the country round as the • bell-ringeri of Melcoinbe Regis. And ere the first rays of the sun bad tinged the few fleecy clouds, which floated motionlete in the still atmosphere, with .gold'and amber, the quick and merry chime of it festive peal had aroused the heaviest of the village aleepent from their protract. ed slumbers. When the , light streamed down long and level through the gap in the eastern hill top, and changed the panes of the cottage lattices into so many glit tering diamonds, the villagers might be` ,seen col• lectihg in little groups, some in the ganlens, or tin der the rustic porches of their humble homes, and others on the green under the fine old crake, all in their best attire. Clearly it was a festive day—a day of joy to many. Yet such, alas! is the very nature of human hap piness, that which brings bliss to one, and the crowning of hopes, and the full fruition of food pro mises, is often fraught to another with grief ] with despair, with heart-break. Such is—such, despite all the theories of dream ers and Utopians, must be while the .vouni world endures, and the law of Him who madeitthe con stitution, the condition of huitanity. And of this was that joyous morn, the day of thoughtless, in considerate mirth to the many, a great and notable example. While the merry bells were yet ringing, " in the gray, square turret swinging," in anticipation, as it seemed, of some glad event, a light and hesitating hand was laid, from within, on the: latch of the postern door, giving egress from the pait into the churchyard, ani after a moment the wicket was cautiously opened, and a bur face, half..concealed by a hood of sea green silk, peered forth as if to see that there were no spies at hand to comment an its • forthcoming. It was a very fair face, of the finest Grecian mo del, with large, soft azure eyes, and a profuSion of rich, light-brown hair, tinged with that sunny hue which the poetic ancients were wont to call golden. Ha: the fair face was now deadly pale, and the large, soft, blue eyes were dim and auffuried, and their lids heavy, as though they had been weeping; and the whole frame of the tall and delicate girl, who, seeing herself unobserved, came with a quick, light step forth from the postern gate, trembled, vi sibly, either with present fear, or the remains of past emotion. Hurriedly, and looking oft behind and coiled her with a timid eye, she took her way through the long rank grass, - which draggled more than the hem of her white killer, and among the low ridges which covered the nameless graves of the poor, unlit she reached the narrow path which. led from the r door of the little vestry to the low wick et gate of the vicarage garden. Into this, looking once more around her to see if she was observed, the young girl turned quickly, an l in apother moment was lost to eight among tbe lilac bushes, and behind the trim holly hedges of the.vicar's shrubbery, Early as was the hour, there was a lamp batwing in the'room on the ground floor, and its faint-yel low light, dimmed a little already by the increasing brightness of the morning, fell in long lines upon the turf from a g:ass door, in• those days an unusual luxury, which gave access to the apartment which she well knew to be occupied by the early student. At her light, hesitating tap, it was opened almost immediately by a tall, thin old than, wearing the bands and cassock of a priest • of the Church of Eng land, with a countenance of singular power and depth, mixed with the utmost benevolence of ez • pression. A shrewd observer of himan nature! would have decided at once that the owner of that countenance must, in early life, have been a man of violent pas sions and most energetic will, and would perhaps have added that,the ° mastery, wide/she had now acquired over,thern r had been gained only through suffering Sind sorrow. Nola?, however, Set the . expression of thir fine, pale face was.bland . Mid natural beueti4a:Me, lb& as his eyes lei upon the person of his youthful vi sitor, it instantly assumed a character of anxietyand astonishment, that was, in truth, almost painful. Evelyn !" he exclaimed, in tones, that earpress cil all tie felt— , r is it possible!—at ibis hope— dome in, my poor child, 1 was eliding . Of 'thee even now. Come in, dear Evelyn:" And 'with the words he hurriedler iuto tlib little study, surrounded on all sides with book shelves, and seated' her in his own easy chair beside the ta ble, on ; which stood the lamp by whose light he had been reading. But no tomes of grave theology, no flowers - of classic•literature had been his study; for on the board were scattered only a-number of -*letters, the palter all yellow and marbled with 'age, and the of the . beautifnllenunitte liblian wrhiug changed to .a coppery hue. But among theta lon, miniature of ivory, of axonal, fisithairerflasse 'of extraordinary loveliness, :in'which .been a 441 eye indecA resemblance, not to bet anustalum,i o Albelvicer 4 ew ly . visitor. l , • therni,and !4CC,5P 1 414. .ones, infspilitof 411 attempt 'which -theold man • maskato eunctsil • the fiCttiftr airioagibe rapets.4. " 11%lx , f t r 1", PUBLISHED EVERY , g 'WEDNESDAY , AT TOWANItA BIUDEIndi rtitisisx-X -- _ • - - -- rrii ,c...1:7=M!'411 , ..!) t".1 , 47,:t;:: I‘> . 1a.. , ...1,1,..:. ;rz , 31").. ,. '47,,71 . 3..i.7..17i - ,, :,''' ~.1..;- : , . -- . `,::::, , t—,:_'.7 . ~. • . , • ;.r....1:1 i'.-- - • A ISAV. 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"She l ita N 444ite!," TPlieitther cierlCMint in tones which al ...%etnnah:nuwa.ililitatian uc his part, than on that Es 6 the Ord speaket--v she-was, bat God's mercy and h a t' Mira initklointhess of du ty painfully performed,. l thialdni* VOW, her sorrows patiently, if not cheerfully; !adobe,- was blest in this at least, the cause of much happiness to cabala." The girl'. face Widened at.Arat, awl 'her whiole countenance Was-bilr of came* attention; but ere he had ceased Epeakli g .it wit evident ibitt her ,thoughta were CDV3II)I4:bY Ana deetieeel, idea, and-that his platter word. were spoken to want /that neither board nor heeded hint. ' 'epilcd,, tioreic;; sit 1 4 4 . 1 i 1 0E 61 in ) quickly in his face and raid— •• • • " Doty !--duty !--are yousa - asse that i ftvw duty?" "She thooghtso, at least, ETelyn'; Auld the was as wise as she was,gocid anal geotle." , " I doi-not know? - answered -the girl, with a strong emphasis. "Duty to make herself, and on• other beside beinalf, miserable cor a lifetime—do not my own eyes-look •m the missy eras oow which that duly, as you call• it, created! Daly to give hermitic one man, when her heart was full of love br another—duty to sorest before the al- tar"— " Daughter," thsauld man interrupted her, eel enmly, "rireswore to nothing which sbe did' not resolve to do—which, by the aid. of theurost High, she did not succeed in doing. If thatseif sacrifice, in this world, beduiy, then was it duly to. which she devoted"— " Two victims!" the girl interrupted him. "Her self, perhaps, she was justified ia - devoting, anoth; er she bad no right to condemn, to life-long an guish." . "Evelyn I—Evelyn I—l grieve k see you thus; I had hoped you were mignod—ecetented. Tell me, what means this passion—.-this,strauge visit, so untimely, on your wedding morning P. ' 4 Ay Iu she exclaimed, putting her hands up to her forehead and parting the rich cruiser hair which had fallen forward. a hula over her, eyes. "Ay ! that is it, my wedding morning! But I have nef, time to lose, father—no a nuartenl---il may be they have, mimed rfte4thestlY. Male away while the girls were is the ganjenagathering my bridal wreath; for they have guarded me of late that I should not consult with you." " My child !—my poor chilli! it is taints for con sultation," reelied-the, priest,, sorrowfully. a Noth ing is left to thwbut fo do ihy duty ki that stale of life to which it has pleased . God to all thee." " Never !" she answered, resolutely: 4t .Never! I may die, but I never, wallas the wife of Andrew Mildmay!" " Why did you then consent, Evelyn?—sad whence-this Jeth:rePaguancel" ,• "They have deceived me---fisat.to me ! I- con sented; and what consent is that wrung from a helpless girl by persecution such as I have suffer ed I—it is that they sworeto me Henry Fitxceborne was no longer of the living". The old man started vehemently moved. " And is he, "le exclaimed," is he of the living I", " At least," she answered, mastering apparieutly some emotion by an effort, "he is not of the dead. They bad no tidings of his death when they swore tome that they knew him dead." "Alas! my poor tlikl—my, sweet Evelyn, you but deceive yourself.' There is no hope—hie ship was lost beyond allikuestion, upon the savage coact of Barbary, whither, even to incepts. is to perish— no soul was saved of all itagellare - cterr. There is no hope! They bare not deceived you." "There are no tidings, it may be,, that a soul was saved—but this I know, that there are now that all were lost, and be, above all, as they swore to me." . • . a, Is it your last stay, my Evelyn t Alas, it is a frail one. And they, I feur, who told you this, are no true friends to you." 61 Tin truest, since they havesaved me from the guilt of perjury. Who shaL l save duals who swore they knew hint , dead , ":It .was apiouairmid, my daughter, „Themwas no doubt,. not *shadow of it, that he perished with the rest; arni.the4 th.O.Y WeteATPll:llllllMd ofi who swore as they-did, •hopiugeo Wiliam yip years of that.hopedeferred,Whielt maketh gat scestirack unto' death. 'You mrsatbe, patient, Etrielyn - A 1 ..,- • ", rental!--I have be. en ; pslieat fill . patience bath become Ai crime,; a4CFPIr-8i0 11 .4.104044 11, POW- Is this your pietrryyeant,lsoll flell•Medolm I Have Yea grown so much into lb' fatthicoo;ol thotitoo have you so far:contracted Abe. ,doottinea,of our coact and.king, lbotlou cos lead your aanotiao •to soobiuggang 1 A +ions, InmadJ •Moovelp ave the mask,J shall bear youTpotack•M l / 4 1, ammo, on mental ntservatiosount ao.htilh le keep midi .im believera.l, TholtiOr, Owoh. RE. . 1 0 4 4 Man fiery red.at Ater reproach, i5P4, 1 ,4 ;PAO/ Kirr°W. `.`, de mew eleg•T - Yee de me Wed wumg, valyn." " S a Y , TOW , ynd?-0 1 Mit giro wrong,; Mr 'Hartman. But hoar: me,, I . bar" but ten wont, to, tal l and snatch 9 time !co ' tuy s ibetn., no 04110 vieli 68 foil;all ttibttiii , inodiar; tiureat,esAted,tioireti4=iotiltnitai, K SilettOt(tt,, nitifitti qo altYtWitr4 I;34Frit4i 1 tititi "itivntik Veibined in Waieili ' thy and - if Se 1d itis ti - Iregy ti o • . i , rt v , .‘PI tit . os WISMI .1.1/r1 - -14j 1r/ WPF II P e t e MA n fAK I V I 'A P I P 'WI pay to4ive ;Ass itatret44oPm. youtt)taantittear i it ottoriptr—That.isitiattentireafy it!attheitergre:lyali n u . 11g e -- ,t..t - L ii iw c ii &ail s 4,0 0 i . , ci . - • .iqieif f eiiiiiiiiFtgiitstiiot: P . - `f :t. ; irriOr=ior „,,,,,ip,,,,ool.g-.11,400:041, hiv-zz--7k,6,),„„-N6 - ---iki.,n l ”- 440iiiiii6007VIC;;;;C: '' :."7 .: l i i i l A w r e t * it nniis w i t i i i ? 4 * Ai re i r -- t ,C : 1 Aciii , f il i m i. 47 . ;i ll 4,*iit uruo i o ri7.4 . 414 444 iiiii :like to ii./i,' . i 11)4'4 . -.. iiito. igeilLiiiei.litsiiiiiiiiililf t eriiO 4 iialoOttiniiiin- Mentign—you, ~ mydead motet's liwiltZ l / 4 : Th i . • itilifalife, beeiciliiiiigir7;iiitif:eiti; " wilt pi! Viiiiria7orii iiiiikt - deuigea 114 . 0* — ":„ ~ ~,i iii+ i tiotw • 7 ,•,.., ~ :v. - r: :, 1, , • r: a itedeintier Igis, Ingle's / 4 /164 '; 11 tie - A(0o litte . saii elaiiii Inn; had f i , mii one,-' - tiar tWttQly 1t:44 iituis*.ts ;] irauei". 0/30 . #6i; ;anti/ f lif#i - . ii#: ' In God's eye ke iiiiioiisbilig_ . :. " 041oi4; Evelyn . Is he Orel"' ' . . a AiiloOd'iii _my *lgo, f 6eliiite' be is." . ... `ii O k i' i'fkepici4e itr ,'' atire :remand:" b lllist e rs a psuse—a long, liniallaiss,' iriqz. fF On*. ft. was Initken, at liiili;tit the young girriutingligaiii—' ' abdirAii'savO met" -" ''', --'' - * r T ..A1 I'l he answered , " : I - Olifinn!." ~ a Ili 'n I iv ill save tii i isolli";l3O , Tolled, * seising to gn . c : Bat fi rst lte4 !ne, wilt nOt it cOntr4 sift- . ed and seatedbetween ilie"pzifiiiii and the parents of These POties'Filifi o tinriltesOleannizatino of .iiiiol6i iiiiiiiiiiii 7 6 ' ' - =EI r. -, z "If both the parties .were in . file, present, and .. 4niint assuredly it wool Yo~"oc~ not otherwise ' '• • " I fear, not otherwise V' I , Qnfear • 5 .. i • . a Mas k ETe4 n, I attteettaih " ; g: And were tho;e tw o pXdies 'Cribs Con!ract , presenttrdw,On A hl you unite diem, in den. pile of gcuis . s: s kidding " tither*" were no just inipediment, it were my duty id to do—l could het rettise.:"' " God help Me, then, as l will help myself," she added. And uow, Mr. blertOun, ferget that I have vilified you this thogifig, and rismetnber all that 'You said this morning .—and now, farewell, arid ',God bless you, and Pray Tor me—pray for me, I do beseech you, for on the next three hours, add what t ill t ibeql;-* 4 1 15W#cdro,- o PaPi'l • near • " Farewell, my child, and'• may (led bless you. Most surety' will I pray Col you, and-that with my void, child of my buried , love--bet oh ! for my cake,: Evelyn, and for God's sake, do nothing rashly." "Al Win," the replied," I - wili do nothing wrong ly;" and She trteasediferliell; *arm lips Open the *bite kiiioenflheibld priest, end leaving his study 'slide:tut Anther word, hurried lICTO/11 the 'Chord'. yard libtnewerd. Hour lifter hour passed, and still the merry peals rang gayly Mit froth thirold gray timer and as the day wore cniware towards noon, the village glib, with garlands to their head and' poseys in their binornsonight be seen gathering in a gay circle Molina the old' nick of the viffe' chinch and the 'young Pesi6'dptry;ell in their best kitty, went col• lecting on the green without, while over and 'anon, ' on horeetwel`cir 'on foot, the yeomanry of the neigh borhood aixithe retainers of the family came throng ing in lb Oen the jovial coneourar. hingthrhigh noon clanged from the forret, and ere long on the Outskirts of the crowd, under the huge old oaks, the cry was heard, "They're com ing!" and•anonly afterwards the roll of wheels and the thick trettiplitkef horse-itatis announced the ,A train of mowed servants in green coats, with white hitors at their button-holes and in their bats, led the earOural then a choicabend of the young gentry of the neigtdmbood; splendidly horsed 'and gotgeouslyenired, rode gallantly along, the escort otthe heide 7 Two of the heavy lumberingearriag es of the day followed, the foremost carrying the lovely Evelyn de - taey, with her anendint maid ens, .radiaih in beauty, and resplendontWith 'Many veils and orange yrreetbs, and all the brightparapb entails emblemstieshof maiden parity end nuptial promise. in the second 'tali lete-a-rote, the stem old baronet, *alter de 104,,andtiekintended hus band of his sweet Evelyn, the young' lord Andrew Mildmay. He was n heavy.. coarse, dellaktoking man, whom Mended garb sat ill on his ratgajnty figure--buCcoarteand heavy as wer his form and face, the mind within was yet colder-und mote earthy ' And me% ,even- ieuiugrb_laOlered among thermion that it-was fonhabame, and girls shuddered Is they; &Might of the tortender; the Me -0141--0 4*** so pet , 44 4 *llY 1 04to* lovely;toeemerese-soimal LOns Andrew Milthriatv AIM me ortwo:Of the' 'better elms ef *fie - thifethltittilcitig therneel*tgies: ft ,Tf 91403 J144;4444 bitter ke, Henry Fitaosbontn, bed die been lithe living! 1 U AtidvilblAr UP is ea MA* tritA eieeri ioidiAnst el thifesiik* cionigitta the ainucto • a Why illy arcaid own tie, (Faith * etke 'POW oniydr4siiimmarenc.-, "Then sit '024;444. _ k',A64‘iamivela other, a.fiotteiteeywillirtadirloung• mom ;-aand yodel see as mach ere the day,he an hour older.* HP,;:g -, 1 0 461-4 weai 140 1- ies. ...Evelyn, God blest • • Thetereeetrlout end 'beaky cheer, to; which the faifinO* l l, ll2 oloeitke l Nlir r billei OM* bead, wi th ,tho color ilaabioicrimaint to brow, cheeks and neck is the moaned ths.as to the china doh irhentitheyorni'vieiritwah4 her tins= Welly wfile ii'lfraderleired whiffet eye. ' „. 141, Ammo hidAmaine. quite .p•IIR, masiu methelee of thamanteeiceics Irbioh3beasealst. • lk itIP jetlietniefiiswastewdtit Was thr ;A1R4434100F404 n ee~lollllas.pegf.i e attt eserleue _ iibe leasfleystaerleweids-tbe Antleirodmi. war name --k i) : 46 4 l K fa i l *Ct , 61104,34 famedieß se eloe. .49 1 1 4 1104 0 04 0 _lFFanc, oNerilacig rtiosionnerrit kiipblesor _ • ',:...;Rtlt--;.11 11! !SY ? : J. 4 • .e." 4 - . sirisl. afar: tire a saithMi GerOwlaelpulto s ibikiz . risisairl-eseemiebig ,esusitesielaL r. Nediltiawy• iw(wealsei. isea orierairmiditomdma; thnutkeirbamuTliProx dud; iise*areUr. migta patHesiTt - drulaiik,;.** l :assails Matiribui arwardths.d*om*arldehtlia itintosAimug lid.ptheradigAsh* [Autpratied witit.wwides tbat 40,11sarre4,-be -Mew nitirbsoo man read slowly . ; and wendariMWomiau4sirwari. the words of that most beautiful* losehmg r cee-• =O l io; ssYeblielli)iff iireissiridal mooMui tease tallianneajdersam'ereise.....o7,-/ !trl • .t o .iStilinenteneewher: meow paeasMi4omdi die 4d.expueted en3rvidPmNifklar , looo.?s*Pir iflxtguireiAlebegap to ammo amildiusLiar rified.teapresekoa..: „ - Now Imbed seteehed the solemn adietaAnkeell mervekleoly.powerfully end striking was .60-.40- pliasie of his voice as be proneencelakted ihe wordis i a,Lat bine now speak, es atm herealeti for ever,bad-his passe Pr • • - , liespaused ?.,anti,tbere wes a deep sad. bee& legs sileumeandevery.beart appeared le matte trerablingendexpectial. - • Ear hatteditinislo erasure/Abe emmatudal,- fottenswermal treaveiLmaenta , eis.°l 6e% "P• ba^l 9 l ,' d anti insCintly,a wild and t hrice} repeateduherr hail- I ed ihe.new Wpm. The tlnick.en nt," Flanging boot and spur on the psvemetil followed t glearowd opened,, and in the archway,, 44taaer-A.arker. than he yrouttolook of roe,. hut in full,lifir and strength, Henry Fit:halo:lM stood alone, but re solved and' dauntless. ' . The (Me of Evelyn .was etiotion,,end ate clasp ed Cloth her hands upon hqc:ileart ~ . iii if, io quell its throbbing, but she *peke not a, word. Then Norman 'Merton,* farseeing what was gout to come rerated the solemn words be had just utter ed ; but now with a peculiar emphasis that made every bosom thrill, which was within a reach of human' feeling. 'Then doffing his plumed hat with his left bend, and stepping one: full pace:fmalani , into the body of the church, Henry Fitzoshoroe lifted his right hand toward Heaven, and exclaimed, solemnly and slowly—. In the name of the Nest 114,41 God, T forbid it! :She is Noy wife before Goa and before man —as such I claim, Isle !" There was a moment of strange confmioni voices were raised angrily and, bands,laid upon sword. hilts, among the youthful partisans “of either claim ant—iur.powthatepentyAnodelive7, the centre of hi neighbors, he lackeilriot emu and ; staunch friends—but the loud words of the old . baronet, ccrme t taittling dm priest to proceed. trith*service, for that the interruption was of no account and vain, overpowered al the rest. natal that instant, as silence , was restored, shah ing off all her maidenly leant, ivelyn stepped a hula 6 .7 8 4 1 from hor ikri4 l °_ 4 M 4 4 . l"Pkia;?4 clearly so ihat all could hem helr a Tr inedi, not—fix Isay ta* * Ara width at all evenisl sheuidbeve said a few miiateelate, rZI will not haiii" Lord Andrevi Ildildmai for ,my_ welded hushing ,Viritnem all minim words; for I was given,* my lather sad my mother three years since, to this Man, Henry Fiticaborne, as his wife; and if he hold icratirilifirt sa i l have, and none other." • MEM FHA .y.rtrlZqic - .4:5141itte , ;) Ac the mime initaat, Henry Fitzosbome moor} fix ward,the dlor, 4ae steel waibborded broadsword obtain on the parrossot, sad now ; k first time, all, pmeat, chimed *atlas wore a koMpn mann, and the Lord Andrewbowing deeply to the lady, to ,on his beet mad moved, milt* leave the char* But Moo Sra Wolowde lacy cried out,,aagrily -4!ldy lord I „what mean you, . Will you. do my daothterthiodishooor, to leave her staadin at - • . Failk"rePlied' hit Do Mewing 1° ,idea of a ciamot with Fesokome l 4 'l think the lady has - letl me ; and it oomportenot with my dig nity to prom a suit on an unwilling m aiden.' Ana, with . imi be 4iegir r ia from the:Church, followed by his friends, ind tilting his horse, rode sallettly away MM. lather's castle. long conversation Ibllowed in the mine study of the small vicarage .wherein EirelyaNi• Morning visit had been paid to the goof prier, and by his means it was chiefly, aide!, it matt be costarsed, by the disclaim" of Mmge things which were fall ingent in England,that theektletentif Moseltted to the celebration of his aetnatette eepies , on' the mete day;iiitlethe sametridat mild, in Me' same nuptial gratrivrithitti eltirmKieir wont - bit that of the , bridegromett. name to 'bet lobe tine - love, iemirmagerid iiseryftitseaborne. ,'• , Seaniely bad they left the chinch, where theithe ; tof the conntypraanted by a troop' of Dutch dm imitti, *Mowed by the flown of the noblemen_ IndigirritfratedtkiMitoMie utile &Veiling, Mien; an`d 'proclaitios&-lathei the tic And led ibiktbiene-Williimilberbitd'ansi'MaTY, the grace of God, king.aod queen of Gmak-lhilahl. PWIMPAI I 4I I I I O wirintwina. bappi oil" to ,Eoolyo dol•Oktr itt4:4 l )9 l tY,AßiottY , Ear 1 41 1 14 0 . 1 7 1 , 1 141,10 1 .10 0 Y,the mroke , pram sif alt. mite OlredJ e l3 4,fhfr IFeri an NOND.XIM.ra 4.149- n-r-,:. • IlitarlGin'tinsiiertr:L“Nti !Waif; *hose "Ittimiters, are his masters; can 4ierfoitri: . tbelisties ' r° ,ll othArichlefkalgtrelP 6 -0 1 7f -ntkihat OetigiPtPXto. "'AIMS, inflwqry. ,be -epolLeuricioop,lo.4wl- • *al of-viia; . sweet tothitmidspeflier, • , • 44 , iikom .gl4 W1340k 1 1 . 0 4 .ra•z1.1)t."•1 ) tClial§6 l MQ- n tli thee '61 , 4 thikelebithig i nki r ad &Agit , ‘ l4 Net 66 111 4 1 listinri, 4 1 11 1 4 C 6 1 sio4nrileis -- * l i . 4/ h,.:111 - 1› - qz^ ell. ~tri.l f ' ;11--, iirSirxt,::w,•)ll43oorp. .o :3 SMZEIiZiRi . A m m on:cars:- WsiisTAL--,chi* •,•...!/-,7** *3*w*** , t4i41.i.: 6 ,t114 • ;:tio .-44*-F;44 puns, Ilit,ilikeilir—Pir* 11 6 4 1 11 6 ,f()‘`* l befsii4mriond• 914 *hat dififlt;se* sat, what ria‘fiT4=l:_iii.iiiam isenoina- R oi - diebsett for the hoeinek;"l 'luck • wild have* . jrMent robactloftiegindivideal, sue out -or_motr, ` hose is sight The Mier comer. wag *ideally a agioneenim.lmmifilike them, bid - aka' simeWasist *diem that meant iravo He was elati - LiM - eorimshabiliniente, Addle a Ameba hiet and4llthe wrensteineem Attieg throwncation 7. and When)beady-mridea hod becnight him within hailing distance of thriven backeilontirlany Imes bic jiiniamithey • began tammheniikkradt is him to belp,themkont their ineitieed ermaiini,_' which theyno davit ,lsr ad wafted awkwastli daddy? osidassi csabaws a lift, wilt Ta r ea ,dieser bniway nbanlibas yogis; load ne yourcoatinsot, Insa-wheasa ws issatti neeoy clubs hills 7 in our ,exessivii, teal-for lib, damnation bin birdirP 44 Oh, certainly,"eackintod the heron( gmbloose met bat, and boldly stepped.lalothe meek, and one by one, even is.Warran did his latlser.-the old An chisia an hilvihoulders boar, bernilthein so shirttails& • burd.oncenewes , en. arriving- asehiettthey manied their itintibeatar that be. was '4*rib* clever," • and should *Mips unrewanted.—and inking the action to the Arord slipped, a "hoarier" into his hand, witirintair that seemed iosay,—"there tal low, take:that end-bahappy " Hut moth to their surprise 4 .the fellow' utterly refused it; whereupon the dandies began to fumble their pockeerfor more' change, but the buster of the moors refused all compensatiort. " then,P said one ot them, "let us know, my foine fellow, who to thank." • "My name js Daniel Webster," raid te. s The twoasiolits eloped, without avail another and hlr. Wahine* enjoyed-their coofianiut Cita:Lama Ilsue•--an almost an firms maybe seen patches of rail fence which have been . most accidently scorched by fire.. Such rails never *ray- Sari, wind, or rain seem to have quip or no effect upon them. Tke gnestiMi naturally arises,., wheth er in building pew fences they Might not, e,made ono e vahtable by charring. it has been shown conclusively that the hest time' for y cutting fencing timber is in May triune, immediatelyetrip 7 pea up' in order to dry. After being seasoned two or three months , take them to the bankser a small stream and having built a fire of dips Of bresli, heave on the rails. When they are sufficiently charred, they can be hauled into the stream by' means of a pot hook, or some similar implement, and when the fire is estingaistert they can be hauled out on the other side. I believe that a fence made ofelouvedirails,Mei put up with an iron rod inserted thwaro each eon* of the fence, and sol4ered mderiiiiilig stone, :Would lad fifty yearn, or five: times as long mope not charred, with no tronblb at all, slier being once pot- op. It is we . rbe filet eat Would be consiiletable, but it Would _ ebenpin Aim end. U firmer. Would lake the trouble' to Chir'iteir rails, they Would not have to spend weeks in the spring of the year mending up Old rotten fences, or Wee their crops half eaten up by unruly cattle. If any of your c:Mespondenb have had any ex - porierice in charring rails, they would confer a fa • vor by making it known through the coltimns of your roper. • A Yormo FArtmes.. Cron Fsicina-u.-A correspondent of the Boston Cultivator is reiponsible for the following: I will close this esti& by relating an -aneeflcte Of a geltletnizi in Westpoit„ hi this county, which he related te.lnirsothe six or Moen years since, ich happily illustrate:close feeding pasture binds. ' kept, .I think he mid, six Cows; having itpue nue for theist to 'run in, and a certain amount of Meal and shortepet day: One day his *ifs said to him that if he kid another Cow k would m. complete her dairy, giiinglier The imittnit of mid slot Would lbe,lo supplyibe demintin halfway for batter and Chilies. reply Was thitt be did not bin* bow be should do' it,lntiessimi sold ail one of the innither It hind. He did sit, cideckm his cows *five, and lee them hate th e same bed iMitemned by the sir , and th e rsah moght Was ob tained, limas- coifs verify and "hie daily' wilt men- Atm* &Ira soma Wollit u .maim—Jadastly is thwpareat-of weiddiond it is a bed Apt when -people.haire :nothing to do. Is each :area it is best to findernplayateacataace, in seeking it, Int in :the'mailiplisity ofthinge to bedoes in this 7 arerld,it is tereirpossible tabs- *abed were by choieWin admmothing ihs oicesze&bid built iducAt Awl ellea iinsisZ a diluents'. Cost teal &dee, isid , iwiict -eafit s •for theiriaufoneatice.. , &ielC -thaskilig to the awszini .“ Always *eve • sob* ,werk ithesei.n. weltivisin: at aia,Patiaago4kitlkt*WskijarAisa comp of for 1. bed at the eaßeficathe,clawkilliti, 'wont. to 39,000 *On* Of gime Yeats eltehatehed end twenty one days awl fifteen,. hats ; *Weft after& eight tame a dar foe eflatlY fears ;, which is ia fact the Gan* el if learyeala were "Mad J110 , 106(4 COW hValsOl which. WC RighIigNMPIRMI ;eight .bans one/ gay ke the 431 41 1 44Cgribilmind , and Aedeepekkof eur ,: *411w.;•,..1 •• , Vie fiend' without i rry n f..Z•Mly . S. 4i Fir? ere. .ftwka,r,fron ercolf wild ; • • • • • ,-„L• •; . • • th liar=ib~M FtlWlllll.llOllO POINI OR* Open the 1611 4 1411 Male,' MAO haiedeittlabor twin: *nib ipirewieteM ittofitcb.i ri ~~~ ~ ~.'f 'tl: :', r' ~ •