111 El ~. ~ ~ Irommai .ano TOW ANDA: Sambag filsmoo, Slag 10, °Obi. Zistill'anzuns. A TALE OF - WYOMING' VALLEY. - i , Do you see that landscape .?" Bed The old man to me, as we paused uporithe edge of the moun tain road, and looked down into the Wyoming be oenth us. " Well, that spot, calm ahtt beautiful as it now is, was once the scene of massacre. God help me ! the agonies of that Jay almost wring my heart to thing of them, even after the lapse of fifty years."' / " I hat'tt heard it was a fearful time, and you have often promised to tell melte tale of your oWn connection with it. Yet lithe subject be so painful to you, I darescareely make the request." " No, boy, no," said the old man, sadly ; "I will tell it, for &ti promise hi of long standingand - I feel to-day as it I could narrate that tragedy with teas emotion thairesual. .Sitdown on this rock and give me a Moment to rest; I will then commence my story: ) . - Whiie rice old man wiped away the perspiration from his brow, and eat fanning himself with his broad-rimmed summer-ha+, I took the place paint ed out by him, near his side, and spent - tha mo ' menus thatelapsed beim *be begun his narrative in gazinvon , the landscape tieforefernri. Sitting on a huge boulder, on the head of a mountain,: just 'Where the hill began to slope down into the valley, viet commanded a view of one ofthe most unrival.. ,ed landscapes in the , world, Teter left rose up "the mountain; bold, _rugged, and barren, like the ba'ck of some vast monster reared against the sky —but on the tight interposed to prevent the view; Whose loveliness so far exceeded my ;expectations that for some minutes I gated upon the scene in mute.admiratien. Beneath me stretched the valley diversed with gently sloping elevaiona, and sprink led .with hells of gotilett grain; *tale here and there a patch of woodlaitl, with its dark green hue lay slumbering on the landscape—the surface of i the forest ever and anou i varying to a lighter tint as the wind swept ovelthatreentops Right through the centre oithe valleyinaatidered the river, now ' , riffling betwixt blufl-banks, and now stealing gent ly among the rich meidovr4ands in the diitance, until at Seugth it turned to tie left, andlstriking the toot of the far hills, was lost behind the profile of the mountain before us. In the centre of the vale 'eras the village, with its White houses -and airy church-steeple, smiling ore the sceno4 Far away on the-horizon stretched a • &of hills, their dark blue summa hill hid by° theielouds which *tap ped thernin a veil of gauze. No sound came from 1 hivalley.lOccazgonally the twitter of a bird would be heard through the surrounding trees, while the low twinkle of a tiny waterfall on the left, kept monotonously sounding cia our eats. The morn ing rays of a summer% van poured, down upon the landscape, and every thing around was bright and gay. and beautiful. 'I was still lost in admire- Ikon lathe loveliness of.the scene, when the old =au signified his readiness to commence the tale, "it is now filly years ago," be-began,'" since I came lathes country a 'young frontier man, with" a hardy Constitution, a love of adventure, and the reputation of: being - the best shin on the herder; the place wali r at that time seuhni_principally by fainilies horn Connecticut, and even then bore :nano( ot,natprasent luxuriant cultivation. Many of the families were in good circumstances, others had seen better - days; and altogether the A l ciety 'was more refined than was usual on the fronuer.i.- Among ahl the families, however in. the Tenet, none pleased me so much as tbat' \ of Mr. Beverly-:- and of his fireside circ'e his second daughter, Kate was, in buy eyes, the sera. How shall I describe ter bunny! Lorely, witheat being beautiful, with -a sylph-like twin, a laugh as joy o us as the carol of U biid, a step Wiser than ;that of e young fawn. in sportive play; itaeputitiotose amiable as to win ir testi*, the lave dal who met hers Kate Bever ly wet *cartel) , seventeen, before she had a boat i , of adtairers, and might Itave wan any youth in tbel valley. Whzii:was that ate planed metwer all) the rest, 4 caailgt say s perhaps it was the.ccesciv onsnessbfabate mysteyieas eympathy linking us together, or perhaps 'it was that are - bailteareeirom she same place in Connecticut, and had been itteelmates in childhoOd--so it was, however. It soon began to be known throughout the valley that before another season should elapse, Kate Bever- is would become my wife, ",,Ohl 'hoar'happy were *those days—ton happy indeed, to last. I will not dwell upon •t hint, for they 101 my soul with' asouy. 'Suffice it to any, that while dreaming of Riss such as mortal never 1 being exceriencedne war of the revolution broke out—and, after a hard stra gg le between.mr pas sion and my duty, the latter conquered, and if jolt ed the army. Kate did not attempt to dissuade me trorn the actabe rather loved tee the more for it Thoth tter woman's Ratans caused fmtlosshed , tears at my departure, her reason told her I was tight, and she bid me-God speed. , _ • " neaten bless you flarl," l she said, !rand bring this war to a, speedy cot4lusiotal I tiara , 'bid you stay, bat I pray that - the stecess4y. . et your absence may soon cease." ' ' ', ' , -:' " Time ratted by—the American cinsvi Was still doubiftit, and the war bid fair tabs protrac t ed into .year. , 1 had to be a captain in, this---regiment; , When i received-in that illa.tatieaand In -aims intended making a descent op the valley of Wyoming. I knew thew gnateeted'aituation of m y , adopted &strict, and trembled for the' Oft of those I-held most dear. Al fi cs a ( * cr edi te d t h e parstor..chatice, however, threVr in my way-an cig• pu t umity of tist:ett aiming the reality tif the reported :,,ltweat, and I became convinced • that ;11 moment wont* to be lost, ; it. would ,aee the ikes.of -.those Dared at Maw 'My determination: wit at once saran-1 salidied bale at abash' is _ ••••••".'"•----" I • 'l7kfell :5.,11;:f11:3.547M4if. ,7 i. , 7 1MT 7.rt . 7 ' ~. ..•,:, 1 0. 46 ; 1,3 , • - _ • I * - - - ' `3 `-vo r ' t11.•":;;"?Z4tt47-7?:;1'.. - •s . ,;:•; It 21; • . 1 . '•=;1 . , ♦ .„ • J , I 11.. 11.'• kV_ li'l q, Al ' to • • A A" - rS tr..- 7'i!! • H• j 1,0 • • • ,• ••• • • • • OM =I was refused; I then resigned my commission s and act fonh to Wyoming. " I never shall forget my emotions when 'l drew near that ill•fated place; it was .pr the very day of thelnassafre—and the first intimation I had of the calamity liras the mangled bodrof one of the irs habitants,lWbom I bad known, floating down the gleam. A. cold; shiver ran through everreeie as I gazed on the terrible skibt, and a thousand fears agitated of bosom ; but my worst surmises lell far short ot the truth. When, hours alter, I met some of the fugitives, and they' rehearsed to me that tale of horror, I stood by a moment thunder. amok, refusing to believe Ahe't beings in human form could perpetrate such deeds—but it was all too true. , " Almost my first inquiry was for late—no one knew, alas! what had -become of her. One of those who had escaped' the fight told me that her father had been killed at the beginning of the con flict—and that 'deprived of a protector, she had probably fallen a victim to the infuriated savages, while ilia other inhabitants were Severally engaged in protecting themselves. Howl cursed them fort this ielflstines4! And yet could I expect ought else of human nature, than that each should protect those dearest to.them, even to the.deseition of oth era ? • 14 But my , mind' as soon made up. ,, I resolved, Came what might, to ascertain , clearly the fate of Kate—ao.that if dead, I might revenge her, and if living 1. might rescue her. Bidding farewell to the flying group, I shouldered my rifle, and 'struck oat bslilty into the forest~,: trusting to the guidance o that God who never deserts us in our extremities. I will riot tire you.hy a protracted narrative : I will only say, after numerous inquiries frocthe In. gitives - rrnet, I learned that sate had been last teen in the hands of a party of savages. TAis was sulticiett cluer-I once more began to hope.— I 'waited ruing nightfall, when I sought the ,poi which had been described to me, as the onewhent Kate had been last seen- r and nerer shall I forget my feelings _ :.of almost rapturous pleasure, When 1 bound M. in the 'neighboring forest a fragnent of her dress sticking on a blob, by which it haildoubt. less been tarn from her in passing. I was now satisfied that kale had been the oft captives— Fortunately, I had met in the groupe offugitives, a hunter who had been under some obligations to her Emily, and he was easily persuaded to loin me in the - seaich. together vre now began a pursuit of the savages. 11e was an adept in the forest war fare—could follow the trail as a hound the chase— knew the course which wonla most likely be cho. Alen by a flying party of Indians, and withal was one of the keenest shots that carried a rifle on the bonier. "It's my cipinion," said he,' "that these Var mints did cot belong to the regal . f body of Indians who [(dialed Bader, though even they were bad enough'. I think, however, he wouldn'esoffer a deed like this. These villains seemettm have act ed on their ou n behalf—and iT so i they would fly to the back country as quick as possible. You may depend upon it we shall overtake them if we per- See that way?' ." I felt the truth of these remarks, and assented to them at once. In less than a quarter •of kn hour after we first discovered the trail , we were in of the **Tapia. " Let me hasten to the close. Hour after hour all through Ike livelong day, we pursued the flying savages—crossing swamps, clambering over rocks, affording streams, and picking our w i tty, until nightfall, we reached the edge an open space, or, as, it were, a meadow, shot in by gently sloping bads. " Hist," 'said my companion, "we are upon them. Do you not see that thin thread of smoke coding upward over the top of yonder hemlock !" " Ay, it mast be them—let as on " &illy, or we lose all., We know not cer. taiaiy, that this is the party we seek..-let u:srecon omits." 4 Slowly and stealthily, krernbfmg, lest a twig should crack under bar feet, we crept up towards ibeedge of the meadow, act! peeping cautiously through the naerwood, bekeld the of:00s et our search in eis tall swaiihy savages, sitting Smakirg round the remains of a fire. At a Inge &mines, with her hands bound and her eyes upraised Bo to heaven, sat' vny own Kate. Oh, blewany bean leaped at the sight. I raised my rifle convulvely and, was about to fire; when sr4ompasitm caught I my hand and - said— • "Softy or you spoil all. Let us get the varmints in a axle, and •we shall fire With some 'taste.-- Hist!" . , . u. This last exclamation was occasioned by the sodden rising of one of the savages. Ilei / gazed a momenteautioosly around, and theri.advaimed to wards, the thicket where we layconrcaled. I drew My breath in and trembled at the bercirg of my own heart. The savage still approached. My Companion did his band upon my arm, and point tronsuiy rifle to one of the Indians. I understood him. At thisjunctute,lhe advancing savage waiv ed or.rmir presence by theicracklug of an unlucky twig ; between my companion's feet, sprang back with aloud yell towards the fire. "Now," said my eomPanion glumly;' 'Quick as Idirninz t raised My piece andfired. y companion did the - sante. The rentatir . gxar 7 age fell dead upon the ground. • Each of us then sprang to a tree, loading, nose ran. "It Was well we did, for in an instant the . enemy =tripoli us. Shaltl dmieritie that dreadhxl tight. *emotion foibids it. A few minrites - decidud it. .F:c„htiiig born tree to tree—d'odgiOg r !oaring and eldeittrr- Mg to get alright an a hie, we kept up V. fi~aht for nearly five minutes-at the end, ef, which. lime I found myself wounded, while tetzUr five saes lay prostrate on the griemd.. The other two„-liod iug_thiirsamPattims dadl and 'iiesPOlV of bOn able lo • can y ( 4 1 their priaterM,'sedOeulirnibed.o ll ?her, end before we Could interpose, hadtreized the *O 3 l Adam.: I bad only teen retested, hith erto; irofi rescuing Ktio'brtie titindedis . POLISHED HWY SATURDAY TOWRIDA-, BRADFORD lu ll :BY E. WXLittl. dOoDill:61 ME art attempt or the kind, while the aticag,es waved!' numerically superiour to us,- Would end in the cowl taro dealt of Its both; but 'Worlds could not restrain tins, and, clubbing my rifle,' lor the pleat was tto• loaded, I dashed out from my covert, :shouting to Jny companion— " On! on! In' 'Gees name, on P' . . • "Take care of the taller. catmint!" thundered my companion. gf The warning camoto late. In the - tumult of my feelings , I had not observed that the savage far thereat frrn me had his piece loaded, and before could avail myself of my cornpanion'acooler °biter ration, 1 received the ball in myf4htarm,and my rifle dropped powerless , by my side; had I not pprang involuntary aside al my companion's cry, 1 should have been shot through the heart. "On ! on!" I roared in agony, as I seized my tomahawk in my almost useless lett band. "Stoop" said my companion, "stoop lower." And as I did so, his rifle cracked on the still air and the Indian telldead. • All this did not occupy an instant. I was now within a few feet of her I loved, who was strug. gling in the grasp of the other; Indian. „Ile bad al ready entwined his hand in her long bait—his tomahawk was already gleaming in the setting sun. Never shall I forget the demoniac lut3r with which the wretch glared on his victim. A second only eras left for hope:. My companion was far behind, with his rifle unloaded. I made adesperate spring forward, and hurled my tomahawk at the savage's head. God of my fathers: the weapon whizzed harmlessly. by the wretch, and buried itself in the trunk of a neighboring tree. I groaned aloud in I agony. There was a yell of triumph on the air—a sudden flashing in the sun, like a glancing knife, and—but I cannot go on. She as I loved as my own life—she who was the purest and loveliest of her sex—she with whom I promised rapid, a long life of happiness—oh, must I say itt--she lay a mangled corpse at my feel! But her murderer— ay, he waseloven to the breast by a blow from his own tomahawk, which 1 had wrenched from him with the strength of a dozen men." The old man ceased. Big tears rolled down his furrowed face, and his frame shook with emotion. I saw the remembrance of the past was too much for him, aad I sat by his side in silence. .1 satice quently Learned his sad tale from others, and then learned the manner in Which Hate had been card. ed off. The old Man's companion was right—she had been made a prisoner by a predatory band of Indians, who had followed Butler, and deserted him directly atter the' massacre. Beamanl as the Valley of Wyoming is, Uneverlave seen iy from let day to this, without thinking of the sad fate of 1 KATZ BEVERLY. Ttu Foui 'hump 800r..--11 is a TWlNlnFitael and most interesting fact, that the very first use to which the disco Very of printing was applied, was the proddction of the Holy Bible. This was ac complished at Mentz - a :between the yeaw 1450, 1455. Guttenberg was the inventor of the art, and Faust, a go:amid' furnished the - necessary funds. Had it been a single page or even an entire - sheet which was then prdduced, there Might have been less oc casion to have noticed it; but there was something in the whole character of The affair, which if not unprecedented rendered it singlilar in the Ostiateur rent of human event". This Bible was. in tfro tolip volumes which have been justly praised for the strength and beauty of the paper, the . exactr.eos of the register, and the lustre of the ink. The ;cork contamed twelve hundred and sixty two pages, and being the first ever printed,' of course involved a long period of iime;and an immense amount of mental, manual ; and mechanical labor ; and yet, for a long time after ithad been finished, ant! Offer ed fur sale, Lot a single human being save the ar tists themselves knew how it had beea accomplish ed.' 01 the, first printed Bible, eighteen coplei are now known to be in existence, tour of which are vellum. Two of these are 'in England, one being in the Grenville collection: One is in the Royal lablaty of iSedin, and one in the Royal Lillacy of Paris.— Of the fouiieen remaining copies, ten are in Eng land-z -there being a copy m thialibpitee of "Waal -Edinburgh and London, andseven in itevollectious dI 'different 'isoblemeir. Ilte vellum copy has been add as hies'as Thus, as if to mark ilie noblest purpose 'to which the art would ever be applied, the, rst book printed *rids moveable metal Ives was the Bible.—Neu' York. Sun. ' _ , tssase"iVrr.-a-An insane woman, in ogre of nor hospital's, became tta Maruty thati - Irdrer bay, that it was necessary to confine her in a room' by herself. This was more easily said than done, however. It was -mat urttilsbehad untamed several of she M. tendants, that she wati foreibly lifted up and cam. ed by lour of them toward the mom, Finding her, self oveapoweted, her whole demeanor instantly chaner., and with A' hook of comic resiVaiion the said Well,l'actietter offihan my - master was. /le was carried bye ass, bat la cassia' 1 byfinsr.zi Gmtoe.-:•-rhey say of poets, that tbey most be "borne aces ; so mast thathrneticians, so mast great generals, and so must lawyers, and they should en eel; but withirhateser fircultie' s we are born, and "to whitever studies Our veins may" direct ns, stud ies they siillinnst . be. Nature gieeiwbias to res pective innanits; and th - T i strotsp,-poveasity. is wbat we mean by genies. Milton did not write. his 1 g Paradise taCt, 77 - nor Homer his fz Iliad," nor Newton his ra Prisciplai" without inane labor. - . urns Team-Goal near Botilbay;thenp is a shOiat setatsti 44e1l 601101 th l; lilgel because R unty ticft:ti'shes ia , the eight. *Rosati as Borers axe to bet seen, and yet, hattahhota at ter, it is quite full of theta They iield lei dive stue;butihe sou hiiioeuef beams to ipoa 44 011144 =0ns oil.them,bk an 4 - 01141!' ilgee /RN; sad thus it mitigates thrinuits tbe-,afthl datikthe vhcie par. ' =EI MEE= MM . . PPCIFNCI4TION PROU AZtlf QQABTER =MI ENE smut & TAM Ot At the commencement of the last year's fishery, there wasp Man whom, go *herever I wouhl,_ I was always sere te meet. Like myself, he was ,e diver, apd like myself, moreover, he pretendel t to have no surname , but went simply by the, num of Rafael At.the cleansing trough, beneath the sur face of the, sea, no matter where it was, we were always thrown tor:titer, so thetwe quickly became' intimate; and his reinatkable skill as u diver bad inspired me with considerable, esteem for birtr,—,- Alike courageous as skillful, he mapped his fingers at the sharks, declarieg his power to intimidate them by a, particular expression of the eye., In fine, he was a fearless diver, au industrious work man, and, above all, s most jovial comrade. , • Matters went smoothly enough between us, till the day , wheriegirl and her moths; took up their abode at the island Espiritu Sante. Some business that I had to transaft with the dealers in this_island afforded me an opportunity of seeing her. I fell desperately in love; and as I enjoyed a certain amount of reputation, neither she nor her , mother , looked with an unfavorable eye ou my suit or my presents. When my day's work wasover, and everybody supposed me asleep in my hut, I swam across to the island, whence I returned about an hour after midnight without my absence being at all surmised. Some days had elapsed since my first nocturnal visit to Espiritu Sante, when, as I was one morning going to the fishery just before daybreak, I met one of those old crones who pretend to be able to chum the sharks by their spells. She was seated near my hut, and appeared to be watching my arrival. As she perceived me, she exclaimed: " How fares it with my son, Jose Juan I" - " Good morning, Mother!" I replied, and . was "passing on, wfien she approached me, and said, "Listen to me, Jose Juan; I have to speak to you of that which nearly concerns yen." gi Nearly concerns we,!" 1 repeated, in Brea surprise. " Yes. Do you deny that your heart is in the I'- land of Espiritu Sante, or that yeu cross the strait every night to see and converse with her on:whom you have bestowed your love!" r• Bow know you that!" " No matter; I know it well, Jose Juan, ( or you this voyage is traught with a twofold peril. The foes whom my charms can hold harmless durieg the day, only lie in wait for you each night beneath the waves. On the shore, foes more dangerous will, and over whom my arts are powerless, 'dog your steps. I come to oiler you my aid to' combat these double dangers." answer was by a loud laugh of con tempt. The old Indian's eyes sparkled with fiend. ish fury as she isrlaimed : " And because you are without faith, you deem me without power? Be it so; thereare those who believe in the influence you but scoff at." As she spoke, she drew from her pocket a little case of printed eloth,itmll - Plisducing amid pearls of interior value, one of a very laws size sod brit hunt water, she replied: " Know yowl aught of thisr' It was one f hail given to Jesuits; for soda eras the girl's mane. "How camiyos byir!"eried-t.._ _ , ,The with gateme a look of hatred. " Bow came Ibyit 1 Why, 'twos given me by a damsel, the fairest that ever set foot on these shores ; a damsel who would be the glory and hap piness of a yontv man s - and who came tolerate my protection-=t h at protection yon hold so dump—for one she fondly lcries2l the name t" I exclainnhi, faith tearful eiuir.iir, at toy heart. “ What matters it'!" jeeringly returned the hag, "since his oleo is not the one you bear r I hardly knot; boll, resisted die livelier to crash the curved witch beneath my feet - bat after a MO meat's reflection, I tamed thy to her, thashe might not real in my lace the anguish of my soul, and cooly saying, " You ate a Ifugold dotant," I walked on to the fishery. Chi the eveningof that day, which seemed as if it would never cicise, 1 went as usual, to •Jesuita, and the arekornestiegare me soon dispelled all • lint - inauspicious. 1 Teh - no doubt but that the eld womcn, in resentment or my contempttaks treat ment, hackpurposely ileo.,eired me es to the sane of him for whom Jesata hid vatoral that protection which I •Itail despised. I - had utterly forgoiten znyreese -with the witch, when one night, I was as anal ,crossing the strait on my roam home: Tlitp - sky was dank :and low ering, yet Prot so , citoady bother I could distaguish amid the waves"Ornetbing which, from its manner of swimatiag, I could make out to be a mai. The object was along side of• me._ The old prose's words rushed upon my memory, and I telt thrill ofagony eremitic 'My frame. ' For an enemy_ 1 cared but flute phis. idea-thalharl a rival unnerv ed no at genre. „ I determined to sucertain..rho the unknown midis be; wadi not; wishing to be seen, 'sworn en der waterin hiadirection - When, arudiegto tor rakelation, we mast hare crossed . fait' other, he above and I belowthe rterfaCe, I rosenhovis the wa ter: The OW had rathed to my head with such Iriolence mtD render toe unablefor some time to distirvuith aught azoida do darkness,- beyond the pliosphorement light that Saled upon the crest of the WarestrnerrinE miss' of a e 9 fflin g ietcPrm- -- Nevertheless ; I held priirtyylierse in the direction of EspiritirEante; t Some blur *therm elapsed ere' I again-beheld the swimmer's head.' ;He chteethe waves 'With inch rapidity that IcooW trinity keep Pam ¶ith Hut .40815 amps 4 1 : 1- kacc! coati Tie with ins in - awittnemi' I tedoutted ray and soca . jaired to meth on Maas obliged tee to sisikelais Ole* joie - if:4'4 In* Willa:id ara a iac't aiat aad i - aa itht- I ° 4 slYeduNat sea and shOte reset. the Sace-011Weer elealiiieKteetetrettooirk- ES2I 1 =ME _ ed. to crass eaeb Otber i n path . ; A fe e of Inured, deadly and ietense; was',llusy at my basic amuse thnught it were well are oriel brit once again. -Soar; ever, we were destined to, eieet'Ori one Snore occa sion than I had reciimed'uport i At first I determined upon calling him by name and dircoverinimy presets; : but there are mo ments in one's tits wheti Our actions refuse to sec ond the will. spite of inytielf, I sufhsredi tam, to pursue hts way s /thirst I gaitiettlhe eminence he had just *itted.' Thence i f was easy for me ib watch trispaurse. I obseried himlake the: same direction I was so went to take, then knock at the door of that but I knew so Well. 1 He entered, and disappeared. ' I fancied, for a rnoment,i I beard, bomealong the howling of the gale, the ora witch's seoffing'laugh as she croaked oat; Whit matters it to you;sirce his name is not the one ylu bear!" and, looming amid the dulness, methouglit ('saw her shriveled tifffl stretched out in the di'rection of Jesuita'sdwel lirig : and I rushed forward knife in hand. A few strides, and I stood before the door, and stioped down to listen; but I heard naught beyond indis tinct murinurinps. I had now partially recovered my umgfroicf,And bent trig whole thoughts 'upon revenge. =SE ; ,tI, - , : f.,..,,,,Tt ;, • :;:iai.;:.;:,,.1.1..; EM= . I drew my knife, and passed it along a stone to rissure its edge; but I alit' so with auchcarelessness or agitation that it shivered to die hilt. Thus de- , prived of the sole weapon that I could, rely , upon for my revenge, I felt than I had not an instant to lure. 1 ran in all haste t, the beach, and anrnoor ed a boat that lay alonOide. Dly rage renewed my energies; I crossed the strait, rushed to my but, procured another knife, and again, set 9 4 ,1.. to Espiritu Sante. The ,gale increased hiriolence.--7 The sea gleamed like &Fiery lake. The gavista's (seaniew) wailing cry re-echoed along the rocks; the sea-wolfs bowl was heard amid the da s ticners. All at once sounds of another kind broke upon my ear; they seemed to proceed from the very bcsiour of the ocean. I listened ; but a sudden squall over powered the confused manna/111p of the waves,' and I fancied my senses had deceived me, when, some seconds afterwards, the cry was repealed.— ' rhis time I Was not mistaken ; the cry I heard was that of a human being in the very extremity of an guish yid despair. 4 As the woke proceeded from .the direction of the island, lat once conjectured it was Rafael who wasealling, for help. I looked oat, but looked in vain ; the obscurity-was too thick, and I could distinguish nothing. Suddenly,' I again heard the voice exclaim : " Boat ahoy, for God's blessed sake !" . It was Raisers . voice. 'Tis all very well in have sworn to do your enemy to death, to wreak your just revenge on him who has so bitterly: aggrieved ,ynn; yet when, on a night murkey and dark as that, his tones arise forth from a sea swarming with monsters, and when those tones are uttered by a fearless man, and albeil y wreatliug in mmtal peril, there is in that cry °Piet anguish somewhat that mites awe to the very souL I could. not repress a Shudder. • But my emotion was of short duration. 1 heard the bounds ofp strong arm buffeting the wave, and 1 rowed in that direction. Airidst a leminous shower of spray and (cam I direovered Rafael— Singular enough, instead derailing himself of his I _ to gain the boai, be remained stationary.— quiekly perceived the cause, At mess distance ifam him, a littleifieleni thri seduce of the water, them was a strong phosptuarie light; this light was slowly making way towanda ItafaeL Right 1411 1 knew what that tight portended; it streamed from a tratorera to species of shark utost especially dreaded by divers for pearls,. whose Intrepidity is such tha: they fearlessly snack all other species) of the Largest Size. 003 stroke of the oar, and / was dose to Ealael; he uttered ecru, he perceiv ed ns, but wisloo Enrich exhausted to speak. He seised the gunwale of the boat by an eflint of dm.- pair, but his arms too wearied to enable him to raise , his ball. His eyes, though glazed with tear, yet bore so expressive a gLinceas they encounter ed mine, hat I seized his hands in my own; au -- pealed them forcibly against the eidetic( the boat The ;Waterers still gradually advanced. For a mo meat, but one brit moment, Rafael's legs bang itotipalessl he uttered a piercing shriek, his eyes closed, his hand/ let loose their hold, and•the °p ectin% ofillis trolly Mt back into the sea.. Ate shark bad bitten him in two, • Ah ! rmight, penthanee, havegraspedlnslimbs too ffnnly in mine, possibly I prevented him from I I I getting into the boat, tett my knife was innocent of Ibis brood; besides,ztvas hems my lira—perchance my itnecessful , rivall nowelper, Namely bad he disappeared, ,ffian I 'pliegeilsthybitn; for although the ruittisers, bad fildes23AntipLahated lee; still I hove' it V,ixt4 42 *:itil - Inninklinn;lings ' in lb" etumnatffy,disposire arm! -Wm'. Besides, the tinntr efaintn nrAveriVras at' Stake,— Hang nnen,ti*ll:hinnniifielhallin sha d e foula -dPubd, rgr. attack ,- Me in- *it,/ - Web, nOthirc so mmeh escites the Bsociiyeittie'titterers, ail such tercifeAvors nk.112 theZtivii ititt bore its" silerii utninony, to my Oral's fate_ **:nun 'r +tant 4 thaitouzes horn pcirous holee,sromat the' - month diffuses itself over the 'exufeee' of renkletiiiithiiiiii 'luminous ailie-flies, 5 , Pat#colatly doting a thundes-stotm. ' ossppearanee is the mote visible in theridatknms of the night. By a Mete meant of name, they are alunal might ,Ilithe silent "swimmer his at least One Dreg them. Moreover they eannoteeill , tri*M tu rn ing on their backs 4 so that it 1 eel to imaginethat avoursgeous Man and 46 lid s aiinrmershas some chances it:Chia - 14o+ , dived ..to talt 4 4esaerk - la — ouler. to husband glad,, and ale 9 ten a hirtr , ;Au= j ~above, deal" aid Ms grandmother 10 boy; who `beneath, and around - :The waves named aboTe Preliatoin dm awl aziacisdniuMre 'nei ate r e:m4i er tirinildett r3' &gni' cce 7; gentleman who araeLayi.4 a risk cateroll drain - amend 14e disi before tfte witais - ssud par e s _te„, x , t of *43 imuta rfir immediue i r t ' sdqr ail %mai:gin: 4":‘,06 4 4.4{ e uia g thy . man see .sail ¢e `A . „ l3l ack tasbaerka ttenisitrank Yria as • poilaitg to tha .vottesnao fotimps wattakkitikto I l 4 l its-} ist - tay,lancy ftcl*'; -Ttlesal„,3ll. think he OM!" ~ •••; , i1 ,f. t.. - .. 7,?.:;:: ~,-.`;.-:''j: =I =EI MEE '", i that was- tett ofltafael: Surely it was. written% ht the lapeb of doomfhat I. should uliwaka• find, that man in my path. rsurrn.sed that the brute ' , was in questrofVroaß be, at no great distance; for the fiery streak I had Teixeira waxed huger and larger: The- linemen and InTaailmnst , iiireried, be , at equal but the phark was preparing to rise. s "aly breath begat to fail, and I was unwilling to sUoWthemour titer lb get above me r as then be canine,e made me share Itafael's fate without troubling bitnseltto. turn on his back. My hopes of obtaining the victo V over it depended upon the time it required' te• eiecnte this nituanvre. 'The tintorera swam dime.' miry towards me with such rapidity that at coo time I was near enough to distin,guiih the mem. brane that half covered its eyes, and; to feel its des. ky finsgraze my body Gobbets of human flesh still clung iitcarnd the lower jaw. The monster gazed on me wi.h its dim, glassy eye. My head had at that moment attained the level of its 0wn.... I arid in the air vrith a gurgle could not 'supplies*, and 'struck out a lusty stroke in a parallel, direction and turned round; well for me I did so. The moon lighted op for asingle instant the whitish -gray eel ored belly of the tintorera—that instant eras enough:; for, as it 'opened its enoirnoas mouth, bristling with its double m* of long pointed teeth, I plunged' the dagger I had reserved for Rafael into its body, and drew it lengthwise forth. The drainers, morally wounded, spmng several feet out of the water, and fell striking out furiously with its tail, which lode. nately did not reach me. For a space 1 stmggled, half blinded by the crimson loam that beat against my face; but as I beheld the huge carcass of the enemy floating - 1 lifeless Massirpon the surface, I *ire vent to a' triumphant shouti...,which, -spite of the storm, :night be heard on either coast. Daylight began to dawn as I gained the shove, in a state of otter exhaustation from the exertion I hail undergone. The fishermen were raisingtfaeir nets, and, as 1 arrived, the tide washed upon, the milt the tintorera and BafaeOtzhastly remains. It was . boon spread abroad thit had endeavored to rescue my friend from thus horrible fate, and my . heroic conduct was lauded to the echo. Bnt one person, ankone alone suspected the trutlahat person is now `guy wife. monster's 1113 skin, 1 this totoin ton to litfer4- ee; so =Lige is prey i dart- WM i- r * '~ . :.~,~ of ~~,. m u m 4114 =I °Rimer:iv vim PitaJP3C ' Buotuta Gen Washingion.placed great confidence in the good sense 'mot patriotism of Jonathan Trumbull, who at an early period of the American revolution, was governor of the State of to;nnectieut tainfrmergency, \ yfien a measure of -great import. ance was under discussion, Washington remarked tt We must consult,bother Jonathan on the subject" The result of that emmittltation was favorable, and words, .of the commander-in-chief passed into a common kihrase, applied indiscriminately by offi cers and men in all cases of which aftsr wards °caned during the 'war. Thus from the constant use of the expression,' " We Must consult brother Jonathan," which sooti , ,passed hem the army to the people at large, the gmericans to eeiv ed from the English that appe:latiou which has stuck as closely as their " John Bill" to them. Breen TO Sem—Thee pious Mr. Begiege says, ins teem- to Mrs. Wilbettotee saga rare \gas in dyingeinnenstances--" Live as *ear to Jesim - •as .yee possibly ean, tatrtia, die to rims. 'TisOai Verret...Yds a hard work.- find - myself to \be Me Mt ins mountain, or a perpendift. tar rook that most be overcome ! t have slot got over it, nor hail way oilier • Sell is like a 1130110 . - ain 3 . Jews is a sen that shines on the other side of thermatudain; and now and then asantemenshines over the top.; , we get *glimpse, a sort of twilight apprehension of the brightness of the ann;"bat self must be more subdued w ins before 1 enit bask in the Mmbistras df the ever blessed Jews, or say- itt everything, "Thy will be done." As the vine which has long twined its graceful foliage about the oak, and had been lifted by it in to sunshine, will, when the hardy place has bees tilted by the thunderbolt,. cling round it with its caressing tendnis, and bind spits shaitered,boughs so it is beautifully ordered by Providence, that. wo man; who is the arms dependent and °rainiest of roan in his haipierlotn should bo his stay and solace, whin smitten With midden ity ; herself into the rugged reclis of his nature, tenderly supporting, the druopiziesd, and binding op the broken heart. PtuVeit :Ritcottaoso Go — ll How _does yourlalyship," said the famous Lool &dim broke to - Lok nUaliAool3, " 119/XMCila payer to God for particular blessings, which absolute ope r to the Divine Wall" "Very easity,"acswentd eke; + 4 just as if I was to oiler Wpetitton to a manueb,st whose) kindness and wisdom I hive the highest opytion. In such a case my WO:we wound be, I< wish y$ to be sus; aa vie such a bwor; but your maim* knows better than f how fu it would-be *vestigial° yon,_ or itht, es grant m y-desire—l therefore con tent. myself with humblyfresentin my petitio' tkattl leive the event entirety io you." 'ant Dasiasr Hoyt or Au,—An obi "Retrolo tioner," atm 68A been throrgit all of the hardest fv,hta ebbe war of 1 76, once said that the daskesq and mow solemn hour of all to him, was that awn. pied in wing home one auk night fioat the widow Beane, after . being Mkt by her ilaughterSalley that there Vas no earthly use in cotriin; !Dirk any more. LErrocc, ttuT s Stract,La 4 What' are you ;abont, _ x . a.-.: IMO