a zmo MIMI TOW kNDA: %nut lli, 1851. irltrO rottrq. CLOVER FIELDS. Ft by me in the window seat Tbror ap the casement pane,- ,ay by that brow of ear*. and meet The fresbeued bife?c attain. ' , The rose hush at wilt call anew 'Chen fresh—tamomw awn. This eve well drink rho full rich flow Orer the ,tailocks borne. lt is tie bresti or clover fields ;-- "' No mingled. mixed perfarae ; tifat the faint smelt the gardens yields Of beers m Their bloom._ cr rap, the cocci head Thst holds the honey dew— 'rem apspribgtoe garilen bed - NI with Dame Nature glese. .the breath of cloier fields, l as the breath of old, .41,! err has scythe the mower welds Let all oar lay be told ; fr i,e 3 ,f_ream we roll with bygone glee Auathe tong coo l stems , And suck the nectar with the bee, Aei Imie our frolicl• limbs. We eaanot go to gambol now Amid that world of sweets. Bat se will raise the heated brow, Aei bless the air it greets ; And Ire wal think. this evening, hour. That & O utten climate yields So perfume borne-from fruit or flower To shame our clover fields. t Fr= ete New Tort Santlse rases.) (VAKER LADY OF THE (RAN ME. iu,,ne, narrating the many high-spirited acts, ' tsy the American women of the Bern - all ranks of life, would make one of the ; tees:zing books of our country's annals.- 1z its ♦rr'.. ''A , ~,. ' l''... -5,. - ... ~,,.::: ' - ..,' ' • • • -47,5,- * . - '"' " ,l * * P.... 4 • 41 7 .. 2-• . , ..,-.- -7: ... ri. .. s , t. .• .-.. ;T:. •.;..".-•-,-..-..". ; ....'-' ~' ' • if i) - '.... ',-,, ~.:,,f;,..; ,:t , . ; , 1 ~,,, _,.* i ? 4 ~,,,,.,..,,,,, . 0. „ 7t.t, :t0 , ~ h ~ , i„ , , - :,, ,- , , r e ,..............,- .....„.... . • . ayk: 4 4 . , : . .. -;•,- •.--,-,,:::. ~ ... :+.. ''.* -44 r k.--r , 01:.1‘.4 , 4 1 :' . -...r..1 , i • ..., ....4... , 4 t ~' .f! . ',..;.tr"..N •- • ,-.-: 1 ! ..- . - ........ . i • , ,_ .... - 4 -, ..: ~_ "A "• "' . :r7 . , , , ''.• -'111..` :• . 5 : .', 4}s :lit . 4 2±,441 (41,..!`•;, --,'' f . ,:, . 1' ' . -.' '.': • —.: ' 4 - 7 ''' ..". . :.* -.. ..: ":". - ' ...1- - - ~..- .--..., :----% . •-`• ... ......tz ~...... 4 ....: ;-r- • - - - . 4 , Madam, oar ensign, is badly wounded. . Oar captain directed es, claiming your liberality, to leave him here. 'The surgeon' will soorr "Thee has dondright The shelter God ha.' be stowed upon me shall ever be open to the unfortu nate. Poor youth' poor youth !" she exclaimedws they laid him upon the flatness. The 'young officer opened his eyes and gazed around bins. His age was not more than twenty— fair-haired and fair.skinned, but pole, ,very pale—. for the signs aides% were too strongly marked on his white . and even brow to be mistaken. His eyes were of dew blue, as they 'fixed their glance upon the fine expreisive features of the Quaker lady, he vomit:red almost inaudibly - n Mother " " Poor boy I then bast a mother living, then-- one who perhaps is now lifting he? .voice to God to save thee from the' dangers 61 the bloody calling in which thou hist fallen. Raise his head soldier a little more. He will soon be at 030 But the lait sentence was =irritated to herself. The surgeon now came rapidly op the avenue, and was soon at the side of the Youth. He felt hii pulse, opened his vest and two gun shots were seen, around which the blood was fast congealing; " Poor Dick; he has seen his last fight," said the surgeon. " Either of these wounds madam, is mor• tal—he cannot live at longest half an hour. Rollo* your companions, men, the foe is close behind.— My god lady farewell, I can be of no use here.— Let me ask of you the favor to get this poor boy buried by the enemy. whin they enter their own I deal." He bent hastily over the dying ens*rt, wiped away a tear, and rushed out after the sold. I iers. : , -,..7 ,- T,plll§oAk. : ' iiirEßy .:5xr.u04.1..,rr.. - lovviDA, .ARAUF - 014C:C4ti.NTY;1*IET E. 0' MESA GOODRICH. The good Quaker lady look one band of the youth in her own and passed her other over his clammy bro*, where the cold drops of approaching death were eAtherlng. He opened his eyes for the lit time, smiled upon the woman whose gaze was now hied upon him, murmured faintly, " Dear mother !" clasped her band convulsively, and the next instant ceased to exist I The lady said not a word. She rose from her recumbent posture, threw 'a snow-white linen sheet over the body, and, with a stifled sob, looked again down the avenue. In different portions of the open orchard appeared soldiers bearing the dying forms of their comrades, which they laid caretulty down, and then rushed rapidly towards:their r eg iments, passing down the main avenue: In the space of a moment, more than a dozen soldiers were plated in this way directly amend the mansion. Summoning her servants, we and all, the good lady wenunto the orchard to aid the poor dying soldiers as far as lay in her power. Her attention had not thus lung been given, before an officer, in the blue and buff uniform of Washington's stall, came riding at hill speed up the road, and taming without slackening his speed, toward the mansion. He reined in his steed 'as be reached the lady, ob serving her kind actions towards the 'ahem " Have I the honer of addreving Mrs. Murray!" 4 91 thee means the wife of Robert Murray, I am What thou callest me," replied the lady, [coking up- " My dear madam f pardon my mode of address. The kindnemq see 4splayed tells me I am not ofiaten. The eommander-in-chtef bas sent me to ask the laser, if possible, of .your .detaining, the advance of the British troops, by receiving Sir Wil liam Hove and bis wkcociates with year usual 'civ ilities, as they will probably stop to take? gtass at wine if revecenl 1' "My dear madam"—.and he bowed his bead nearer to the lady, as if in private conference--¢ portion of our troops are yet in the city, and they can only nape by the Bloomingdale road. Kw tray present the march of the enemy across the Is land."' "Tell your General, nag , man, that I shall of- fer General Rowe dl tiecirihries is rayporirr "limit:a, Mot. Mousy—thanks" and the aide rode,airtry Not more than fire Minutes had elapsed fronxthe time the officer departed, when the sound of mar tial mc,ric, with notes of victory, tilled the air, and proclaimed the morements of ansaucirq troops, Mrs. Murray went down to the mail, and with - two or three atteudantsawiaed their coming. t Indeed it ma brilliant spectacle ! An adranc ed corps of cavalry, in scarlet traifonam, came * lenity up thettill, their trumpets and kettle drums in front, " liscoursing most eloquent musie— nest Wowed a company a gtamadiersi then a larip number of officers in rich uniform- The inemost officer co horse beet was - &r William Howe, nom urander-in-chietof the V00:I Ferree. In frame of body and statute, Sir A - 3 0m eqvialled Washing tat, both hew. above the ."onligraip laiett. Here the ccurtparicon stopped. The countenance of the British General, so say hisuxime, was bar* dark and biltiddim., now and then lerticg up by a smile which seemed More dkwreeaNe flaw pretr.x.,m img. Outran' came the cavalcade, mud, they real eal the date at which Mn. Murray was 'Stand. hg , ; upon whom all eyes were instantly tamed. Will thee not cop and refresh thyselvm • ix- a season at my u5a.....--cion! Thee mustbe tau - cued r she said, addressing hermit to Sir William time and the cams immediately shoat him. - Rrany. Chaim ? I think ire gm as well ac cept this good Lady's iilet zir abe reoasees, The troops hate had hot limit SO Lac, am/ a genatal ret will ace be amiss. Madam we seams yuct Elul offew with Omura, aseweact ea as Wallows yea to be a tap! bleed at hisldajaisey, wheat I row hear termet4 as eotest-iie-obief of bis -6ects its Not* dazerikaY . , 411 ate *Mae the hiewil et king George and, of Cargews—erilatiarta tiloweand Gene tam becacoes•zae woe ) , a poet weak Lbirg of Gars arakkc. &sae ay of his oteroates. Se William Bette bewal, be was coo came es writ poliatirA thillets with the goalAbetkerem— ile twe Jet+ tc& - i co* ___ Oaird!sar4 a ;went ot tea aelddes eat The teherlal of the torsor„ W.crit Beery Moots, Gocire Ktiyptiattsdn, edinnaricier'nf 'the tlesSianicLnia .Percy,' Generals Leiliasind Grant, and his dal! were dismounted, and 6:Aimee& Mrs.Matray to the mansion Refreshments of cake, wine, and cold *mita were ordered obt Upon the lawn in profusikin, of which the officers" curfook freely—and tradition says that Sir Henry Clinton, who was a great bon rirant, remarked to hii'superior officer in an under lone e. that if the cellars or the mansion contained any large - quantity ol 'such madeira, he should like to be billeted there for the campaign." Tn the meantime Mrs. Murray had directed Cato, the black servant, privately to go to the top of the, mansion, and 'the instant he saw a large body of troops pass a certain point on the Bloomingdale road, to give her the inhumation by signal. 1 may as well remark, that from the hill the road cmltl not be perceived but horn the cupola of the dwell ing it was very easily seen. Nearer an hour than the ten minutes Sir William Howe gave orders kir thti hail of hie troops had passed away, yet still before the mansion he ed with his officers. Mrs. Murray had - entertained them not only with refreshments, but her conversa tion. The younger portion of the officers had en tered :the orchards and amused themselves with picking peaches and other fruit, with which the trees were bending, ripened under the sun of an early autumn and thus time had slipped away una wares. At length Cato made the requisite signal and Mrs. Murray turning to the British commander, said— "Wilt thee and thy officers step with me to the portico of the mansion ? I .have a sight for thee alfh This was uttered in soquiet and grave a tone, that merriment at their triumph over the " rebels" instantly ceased, the glasses were put down and Sir William Howe and his Generals followed the Qua kereas as requested. reeding them to the end of the portico, she stooped\ down, and !citing the sheet uncovered the body of the poor continental testa ! Handsome even in death were the features of the youth. His fair curling hair blew lightly over his marble cheek, in the soft breeze. The buff lining of his nnilorm was deeply streaked with his life blood which bad gathered in a clotted pool ppm the mattless! The sight was indeed'une to awaken emotions in the sternest breast. "Who among ye will answer !o God and this , boy's mother for the bloody deed!' said Sirs. Mur ray, raLytog her eyg calmly to the group of officers. "To horse, gentlemen ! Madam, each are the fortunes of war. 1 hanks for your touchy !--Fare !" This was the only response ot Sir William Howe: What more could he say ! hi a few mo ments the blast of the trumpets and the sound of the drums and fifes told that the troops were on the march to triumph and victory—far a scasea. Thank God, it was only for a short season_ The main facts of this sketchisre true. Mrs. Mar ray, the patriotic Quakeress, by detainn= Sir Wil tram Rowe, saved a lame body ofAmerk= —near upos three thoaand—under the command of Putnam, who would have been penned up in the city with his men it the British army had crossed the island sooner. 31"cht not the Ices of three thousand troops to Washington at that time have been sufficient to change our whole destinies, as re rards a republic It is a grave thought. At any raw, all hence to 3trs Mum% the Quaker !ay of aide* time. Mosat Comsat or lows fitarenrs.—Once beina at Washington, John was satisfied, that liquor was sod contrary to law in the basement of Capitol. Be searched out the place and found it in a rettarirri natty prepared for coal and ashest,, and kept by a man named Butler, from Texas, who obtained per - MDE4OO of the vice President on application of cer tain honorable Senator., to Tend refreshments, ardent spints be i ng etprerely prohibited. But when the veteran teetotaller called for " oysters," the keeper unwertingly set a trap for himself, by intim,- acing in a whisper that he also kept cowering ebe- Brandy was then prodceed, which Mr. Hawkins paid tor, and quietly boomed up, and with this "eri deuce in his pocket," reported the fact to Mr- Fill more. On the nest.ay, the Vice Pte J ere sent the Sergeant-atarres to summon Butler before him, when the fellow stoutly denied that he bad at any time violated his caramel: by keepitg he was "dens the business," Mr. Hawkins now refreshed his memos by relating the 'oyster and brandy" incident, in a tone something leader than a whisper, and extulted the nimbi:rat liquor ptur.based of him- Batter looked at this, as if be wished be were back in Test, and the Vice Presi kindly gave him " lease to withdraw" thither or elsewhere. here was no wore liquor saki in the capitol- I= 'Kississ at Rxr.s.—Saaieyneut lady, stoat per tens tras dootalms wade perfect . ; lays down a tale tristiev. We glee bet ward,: ''Thete is math diflerence in kisaiit as in iodi sista* and I am Roe I shordil etat bile to be his sed by every ace. No indeed, kasonie waskt give sues overwiselasist 'start, it would shwa deafente. Now hureirg ean be redrieed rules, rui Cue re o whirls I will cis,- The bead should ad ways be turned sithdy to the ribs, as meth mo tions give grace, and mama theentesigen of the alfeeraci,impin.. The lips Asada thee be primed closely and sweerly.. steelier as pia sip the nectar of the - long kiss ; bat no snack Antal be bend. I speak parteutarly acifthis se** et, because I =Sid er kisuirtpla.-t. of #24 same, sat to hew peg.. pie - appear to andenasmil the ulna oil a Lime, seal the new 'shier scats satisatioas with the Ups sbectil be retVered Ruske Pk& WaxclusJoeii Sraagrat Dass.—H+ is tomgress: n 211 : 3 '- gr 4 z l62 aS '4 I TPEgs le frail ma **the the Ateerititt traNit t * she Eatin their lames ttaletitt i fete* isit *hciiratittie Ero. iitate„ az! en the ant ed ached, iotalerietej. timed Sabo Strebm. E6AADL£S3, OF DPIFIWIATION • PROIE ANY quAnim..!, let oV** moirazAzi. DT J,T, [MADLY Mount Eioria6 Elands just without Jemmlem, is now crowned with the mosque of Si Omar whose entrance has low been forbidden to the Christian. and kept safe to the followers of Mehemet. It stands where the rude attar of Abraham roan nearly (Our thousand years ago,,. The proud city has risen and fallen beside it, the generations of wan have come and gone, and the whole dynasties of kings, disappeared one aftet another, yetthere it stands as it stood in the wilderness, when trodden only by wild beasts of the forest. The sacrifice of Atavisms; which consecrated Mount Bloriah, is to me one of the most touching events in human history. I can never read over the unostentatious, brief account given in the Bible without the profoundest emotions.t Knowing that parental and human nature aretberame in villages, my imagination immediately fills up the sketch in all its thrilling details - The shock of the an nouncement by God, the farewell with Sarah, the 'fires days lonely journey—the unconscious playful ness of Isaac on the way, and stem stsle of the father's heart to master its emotion, all rise before tee and I seem to bold my breath in suspense till the voice of the angel breaks the spell, and the up- lifted knife is stayed. Abraham had long wished and prayed for a saa who should inherit his property—bear up his name and transmit it to posterity, until it hail become the absorbing thought of his life. Isaac was the child of his old age—his only son—the single link on which every thin rested, and on him were garner ed all the love ad hopes of his noble heart. Brit if he was an object of such intense allection and priceless worth to Abraham, what must he hare been to Sarah 1 Oh, who can tell with what ab sorbing love, what inexpressible fondness, the moth• er bowed over the cradle and , watched his growing strength. Isaac!—that name was to her the em bodiment of everything beautiful and lovely, and his clear laugh never tang out on the morning air without sending a thrill through her bosom almost painful from intense delkilit. His voice without the tent would arrest her in the midst of any om-o -vation. and there was no world where her boy was not. Bat this beautiful scion was to be cut off—this bright Tooth to be slain, and the father's hand was to do the deed. So came the command horn beat en. and the bolt that then and therecrushed through Abraham's heart none that God saw eater. " Take now thy only son Isaac whom thou lovest and gm unto the land of liforiah, and offer him there for a burnt offering on one of , the mountains I shall tell thee of" The 142usin,g had fallen, and the aged tree was struck, though not shattered. The Patri arch's hair ,had come upon him, and be turned to his tent tfrit night with a cloud on his soul the light of faith could hardly pieree_ The voice °this son which had heretofore made his heart teals for joy, now sent a patig throtgh it as if it Were the last ay of suffering rather than the call of ailecnon. No sleep visited his eyes that night, yet he kept the fearftil tidings to himself, and summoned all his energies to meet the terrible trial that awaited him- What ! tell the mother that her boy was to be slain, and the father to do the deed—the lamb of her bosom, and the boy of her heart WAS to be gashed and marred by the knife, and his.body learned on a desolate mountain he was to come bark no more,—his voice was to cheer her hemlines, no more, bnt his ashes to be scattered over the bleak 'bill-side by the winds of heaven! Oh no! the burden was heavy manta atready, walked taking rya, himself the mother's grief. Beside, that boy amid never leave the tent in the morning =eon scions of his approaching fate, if the mother's hue well was to be a last one. The fatal leave-taking would be a doable sacrifice before the time. The morningbroke &arena beautiful--the awes Neer e saddled, all were ready lot departum ; yet still Isaac lingered in the tent, covered with the food carman oLbis mother. To part with him a week seemed like loving him an age-. But at length she led him forth to the door of the tent, and imprinting a lasting kiss en hisleight young foie head, bode him go. Ai Abraham saw him apt i preach with half a anditand hail a twee his Lace ; he thought of his own return without him, and her mate despair and al:gibed %mg that would meet him as he stood speechless and helpless and deso late before his wife. Who could answer her in_ genies! Who could still her cries for [sae het rely son ? ..4.11 these tho%lits rushed through the patriarcb's bean, heroin him to the earth, yet his fum roil newer betrayal his emotions; sad be tanned away to meet the strt=te before him without fdterin or delay. Hie tent disappetted is the rfutance, sad the Jan object sees os the plain eras the form of Sarah amehirr, them tram ate. For three weary days did Abraham journey on, pressed by seamier thought, crashed by axe orennasterin SINTOS% and yet arida:rola heart re sympathize with Isaac on whose pare spirit yaaag hopes lay like caomirg des-drops--to whom his was herb, joy ous, and radials, and the earth betted with rain bows—sdked anseiently of the new &yeas amt scenes that passed before him. Bat he delight innocent enjeysmuu,,Lunght only a deeper shade 00 Abraham% brow, and rt be smiled to plane his ckild, it was a swt4e axes pail:bate behold than his kink of saihress. gads answer to his id es seemed a bear Jess deception, and the weary ham a mem putiouvoion of the mockery of his youtg atlesticas, nal duitres awl joys. Al when that woo pin-owed his famail on his bosom at wroth, and Abraham too desaartioo a4eep, tioscoed to be calm Newham, alb has parposse ie slay hiss aleion faUered; and whets the nramirw broke our the busilsmie,-and when bm lambed hisastill in beas ts try. bier We, 4e. taws serind of him seemed tee geMfos i A, get she dasher the bora view, anal tam died the irmuMbiedam.es, the ttcrier bet !carpal mike oneigeoad aria. ger atm days rorbeme travel, the amoral" a ke;;th Nee beim* tlre= 4 and Abraham but lEEE his servant wait his tetumo took hiason and began to ascend its rmed sides. Like the great an'itype who bore his ourrictnes up cavalry. Wipe carried the wood for the burnt offering on his shoulders, while Abraham took the fire and knife in his hand. " Ridley both went toga, her " - requiresno vivid imagination to fill up this scene, so *tightly sketch- I ed in the Bible. Human nature is the same - the world ova. As the hour atrial appeared, Abraham became silent and sad. The fire and knife in. his hand, caused him to shudder and cry, wttkstem language, °llly son, God has chosen theitom the lanth for the burnt offering" lii.tthinks; as fear yielded to filial obedience, and to the command of heaven, end the moving wools “ffey mother, my mother," died away in indistinct marmite, find Isaac not close his eyes *vim* the fatal blow, but opened thetu instinctively on his father, his only : help in that tearful hour, and still watched the gtit tering Nets as it quivered like a serpent's . tongue above his boaome, for his lather was to strike. 801 oh! who sewed the parent's heart in that awful mo ment! As his hand put back the deeming remlets from that fair young forehead, and his glance pierc ed the depth of those eye* fixed so lovingly yet des pairingly an him, who gave steadiness to his arm. and strength to his will, as he bent to the fatal stroke! He who cried, " Abraham, Abraham! spare thy son ; lay not thy hand uporithe lad, neither do thou anything unto him, for now I know that thou fear me God, seeing that thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son from me." Fai:h was triumphant —the gold bad been tried and found pure, the fath er tasked to the uttermost and stood, and lo! Isaac bounded from the altar, in the joy of recovered freedom, and fell on hislather's neck in passionate tears. Oh, did ever a father and son bend in such overwhelming gratitude before an altar as they! or I did the smoke of sacrifice ever go up over two more devoted hearts than then and there went up from the top of Moriah ? Faith, sublime, unequaled holy faith, consecrated that mountain forever. Years after the temple of Solomon threw the son beams upon it, and the children of Israel paid their vows there, but it has no memorial like that of the offering up of Isaac The London "Juvenile Missionary Martine': contains the followin,g thrill n. 3 account of an ad venture which a boy had in India with a fierce tiger. The facts were coin manimued to that excellent little publication by Mr. Lacroix, who resides at Calcutta. The story is each a wonderful cue, that you may feel inclined to doubt its truth. Bet lam sure it is true, for Mr. Lacroix is a missionary, and his statement can be relied on. This is the stoty, as told by the missionary. Bees ate very numerous in India, but they are not kept , there in hives; for they store up their honey in hollow trees in the forest and jungles.— But although it is difficult to enter these wooded placei—and those that do so, are in great danger trona treTents and wild beast...--there are many poor men who get their living in gathering and sel ling the wild honey. A few months no, lour men and a boy eleven years old, went from one of the stations of the London Sliwionary Society for this purpose. They got into a boat, and rowed into an inlet of a river, where the banks on both sides were grown all over with high trees aad thick shrubs, which formed a part of *au is coiled in India a jungle When, they came to the place where they intend- I ed to land. dintn,en limped an atiare.am,liert toes boy Co iafe care of the boat while they were gone i after the honey. As the tide was then retuning out i of the clerk, in a link while the boat was lei dry an a bank of deep mod. The sun was hot, and the place was very silent, as the boy sat quietly in the bear looking about him, and wishing that the 1 men would come back : When, In ! all at once, the ' poor lick fellow stated and s a.rted. as he saw a very large tiger standing upon the-bask jag above ' the boat, looking right down upon him with hes . great glarirg eyes ! lion may Ency how be twit, as he beheld the savage beast first fir his fierce look upon him, and then much and crawl atom the ( prima preparing, to sprirg and make him bit prey. The boy was very mach ftglatesed, as you may rePpase, bat he had his wits about nim ; and, therefore, Wahoett hosing a moment he crept under the deck of the boat, and fortanately the teat had a deck_ act no sooner had be his hiring place, than down came the tiger, at one rat leap; and such was the force with which h4rarg. that one of his ley went th iremti the and get jamed in beta een the plant" just overlibe place where the boy lay. Witham lame of time, and with warderful premenne of mind, the lade fellow meth ed hoidof a rope which was lying near him, and twisting is quickly man& the tiff's leg, he tied it firm, end held it fast. Nat unlit this treat ment, and never having hese trained, ldte a drg. to give his paw to bay or man, the halms creature puma! and togged, avid tried is every way to get his 1, :o 001 ; bra the hew knew well that the only chance of saving lie Ida waste keep the rope fine, and therefore he bed aas tut as he J. After twickr,,, mil tares sail pain fix; keg time widens geriag away-, front the boy, Os.roe_ it was qciet cowed and laid ' .seret' ly dawn on * deck Now you may i - ;e how the puce , toy man este let, as he peeped cia thtongh the baiter i deck, and saw the led eyes acrd peat ices of this fierce ':mccotet. Bet, at tie., the Ernaey-gaSerev l bavieg finished their work in thicken*, es l adetheir apperracee ow their bank- Seeks. the stet lying epos the deck a rheii firma, *WI= 'ixote eckelmjeLl du,d * Iforl. kaoll ward *atea ri s e th e boy, am} chat thevi at PeCig: a clan sap after his dewier- 'They thirefroe railed ro - terli i sbagre, that he male ace wine 4speree*,•;ao4 as the b 6 die time was 1 , we quite so sasehlial , ea heft* beelt better don tieserjedted est his leg loom the hate, awl Wood tiea,if, ), llle deV area i:0 1 : 111 Fe 1 9 1 ,A 01 **4 a6orot iial trying to go cat of ii„ ;Leg tweinellik re-b. ed 'aCNITI wpan bits, =V with lea/ wets whit* tbry happened to have in their han&, they lared ME 1 • .-.- - .:~ EH The Boy suad the Tiger. OM MEE SIM • - away with al their might at fn. head, till !trey tit .t ptOnned, and Ott t killed hem : • , • How glad they were when they raw the toy, who they ttionibt hail been killed and eaten by ilre, tiger, quietly creeping out horn under the deck, Fate and sound, 1 - cre may eaFily:ruppore; for he leas, the son of one-of the nten, and the nephew of an ' .1 other. AbOUI the year . 1793 . CoWel IhniuTs ownei: of nearly one•fourth of • bloCk limiting [gasman; Ce dar and Liberty erects, and Broadway. He wart an eminent Lawyer, with an extensivepractwo. I . was informer( by anti of the, frofessir that his prar-, lise'at one perind teas worth ten thousand dollars a. year: T used frequently to shoo. juries ink, the. olrl City ITall "(noW the Site of the Cement Iroii#)klien when Hamilton and llurr were the, oirmit*,,, Fel. They were both arum lawyers and 'eloquent. speakers A remarkable incident toot plarsi pae day. They were trying the ialirlfiy .of a Hamilton having the will in his hand, happenerl,lo. hold it between the window and his eyes.t" He rose, and prayp the, court to stay the prt2ceetlings„ and handing the will up to the Judge, (f think it. was Brockholst Livingston,) remarked : the court please, there is a witness from Heaven that will set this matter at rest. If the Court please, hold the instrument en as to look through gripper. The water ma-k is dared five years after he wag dead." - fjf ccurse a mile! for the defendant was given at once to the year 1800 Colonel Barr was elected to the, office of Vice President of the United States. 013 the 11th of July, 1803_ he retired from political The tatal termination of the duel with Hamilton, and the veniict of withal murder" rendered the coroner's jury erased him 'to' absent himjelf, from thii part of the country. Be travelled laiongh, the Sotuhem and Western States for the purpose of getting up an eijaslitinn against Mexico, for which he was tried for high treason. He fled 10 Enzlav4 s , where his papers were seiied,4tnd himself thrown. into prisms. He was liberated soon after, travelled in France and Germany, and returned to New York in 1812. tie resumed the practice of law, at No.l, Nassau street. Being lightly esteemed by his fel the arm was unsuccessful . , and he scan fell into decay in mind, body, and eStale Matthew L Davis, his last solitary friend, slack is himcloser than a brother, and had him lodgetLin d solitary hut, with a lonely winikrec; mi a data sandbank in the wilds of Staten 4 - Md:. Ilezw thanegh the,bounty of Mr. Par* he lived eighteen mouths ; and here on the night of the et*. tember 1836, died Aaron Burr, io therllsi sear of his age, with not a friend lcitiose his eyes, :or o the dew drops of death from his brow. Vira4g,- ton, ado n;, Jay, and H =ikon died sormended by weeping friends, and their graves were bedevred by tears of a eominent_ << Re that honored! roe f i will honor; be that ilpspiteth me shall be 1 . 4h0r esteemed." with the book whose author is divine_ Burr was buried at Princeton, New Jetlef.-51. 4 1i. Tod& "STICK TO HOC Jiu r--Two.brothets from the Emerald Isle, a few years since' poieha.ed apiece of land not fa mut the Kennebec, and went to work to dear it up. Aker cutting down the large growth and barer over the underhaoh..they pro. needed to enotrive a plan In get the fallen wanks to tier in pile for the purpose of buirnng, The land lay upon a side lull, and they criotirshol mat tr they cenr.l ion a large kwh d lay near the summit anil place it about half way wad they might pile the rest against it, and thosAsecare the object. But how were they to present it, when once under way, from nautz to the hoznat, and thus defiramtg theft plan To-accompliA .has they obtained a rope, and makirg one end fast to the foz, toe of them was la, hoLl on to the other to Prevent it from going, to far ; while the ocher w as to wart tr. Fearirg that be trit not be at4e to pre vent the rope horn Wiptstrq thit.w.„ll hisitiezers.Jint my, who was the Seernran, tied' it to his bi,dy -- -- Scan him aisy, Means,' said he, aser renvinc trg himself that all was ,is and t k e.ht, P.uelim dad wan him, and as the to commenced Es pro gress, the rope caul ht Ufa rtv:pet. ; knee, and began to wind rep. It soon drew pure Jemmy , chock up. First lie wept over t_Le kg_ and then the ki went over him, and se dies- continued their Icireartyratirms and sonserneti. ?befit's winched their pmgr___s for a moment, end then stn , em, "Stark to him Jimmy--fitbk yoefte -a match tar him, any way; you're atop half the tinittP. A M*IJ or %Vmaiscrrrx — 44 Lvhor co keep Wire in Taw hintar-t that hate graft of erfete.. rattite, matrierxr,' was one of rye serves of Maxims whirls Washisqlem framed or copied fOr her meow:a when a boy. His eta adbeottee to the motel" as raeadfaort diArtte of tf:IT, his seer dtszeidonnime of a eii Lris tranesermf de%iin fa urbaiever inteerpos f mese cotorniard tc his i7ltte, meet the sigibeee o web obieb be obeyed the tease; He kerotiee / that lurk_ He rentie b irilfm' e baize Been. He Lgetileil it into * Hate which awned his vbe4, :ife_ Nocceasecom was so ineensetese, no eiteteu- games so okizateots to -Amalie him tram the fig. low; its rzaidir; ray. Ths iirtar;tirtai exptastatiraa arcones-howiL-. it erten/ :ate et;enre- of @bid wife e anneal grisa try rite ewer Aqtr' the rem tatireavy yaw. with his pavii afk.ier tititheoseir i tklisiaP 'which theesteae es ntrh;sersecers: bad coo famistres a ehanni= in•cgraSieo reA : tparier-- al exaetaeis. The tam errerr Emmet of ilfrert I irbieh bote t brand of c Get. ore, Washimcfro, SlNotrut 'i"-nroa.." was ereaspohl firts . e_.gsfaertirise oniiiatos ins%,sion is the West Tecrzi ports—that name beag ie.: \ atied a, rs a.apEe S¢rt of doe qatzif4ty aori of me =de to otteh.k sat afftseN. 7 -4appbes a mat le-a itagetr.• Pm( itsaiiris iesicthime,w--as es-v.:vs-hem spsismecui. . , • IB ll eot 3A3313e1l 2lr 3 COO eltraW cob II then, :boo gra rXri•t tto bust sem *oar Loot fare eaces. ,v,".-; se 4.;:i01,^e4, ZZa aid , ' Aaron Thiry; MI