TOWANDA: , a n filorninn, Alan 1%, 1853. ( ititrti Vothz 'THE SONO OF THE SABBATH. 1 , 1 :I+ol,ol day —the gracious day ! artigine the gills of peace, Done life's rudest cares away, Letting tired labor cease. like sunshine on the earth, .j2..ng rain shadows flee, f , ,, riz tor praise and sinless mirth, ttst g the bondman free. r6t Ssltltath Jay—the priceless boon ! sot the sordid deem e 0 no estn, it comes too socßi, $,: light esteem ! : sternly say li,•ealf,:e claim: , it alt: ,ha„ Imprison Mercy's ray W :hat ;hat narrow wall! ;it Sibbath day—the separate ! T o r wh,ch yearning sighs vreanet: workers patient wait, kri joy To see 'it rise : 'Dr arbtrg hand, the o'ertasked brain, kl,te May find repose, k: , ! either strength to toil again, BEd strength to conquer woes. Le Sabbath day—the gift divine I that, whstsoe'er our creed, • hpp:les with bounteousness benign Le,sure for every need; Fir prayer, fi..r prarse, for soothing rest, For thought of boundless scope, For heed of Charity's behest, For love, for joi, for hope. The Sabbath day—the g,torion. , day! Beyond the City pale Le: ten , of thousands wmt their way, ‘t here breeze and sunshine wan; kr them 'See the streamlets flow, !re.1,1 the darted sod. 1,,0k upon ihe buds that - blow, search and find out God. Sal lath day—the buckler strong Tnat ituards 'he poor an.l meek, in :he desolate from wrong, roz the tyrant weak. `alka•h day-0 prize it well, tn :earn t scan 1, pr n •emf!e. field. or cell, -The Sabbath made for man.'' ''Al i - s tcliant oil 5. The Soldier's,Story. ras a ti me of the Duke of Wellington's French had, retreated through Fa la.-is had Hien, and we had driven y over the Spanish frontier, the light di - ai.4,:r.ieled on a few of their long leagues xcepy a Ilne of posts among _the moan over the northern banks of the A tew•companies of our regiment ad ,oe. I: occupy a village which the French had 1 , 1 ~,red 1 1 . 71 a brisk march over a scorched and rug n which had already been ransacked of have supplied us with provisions; r L 3 :Etrt days since we had heard the creak of Terdssary wagon, and we had been on very ::rr,rnons There was no reason to expect ..e village we were now ordered to The :ost, marched out, and would of course, r be;Nd themselves to whatever was portable, E- dust have previously well drained the place. Fr trade a search, however, judging that possibly ctrt.tieng m,...eht have been concealed from them peasan's , and we actually soon discovered excel, houses where skins of wine had been se. so:dier. sir. I take it, after hot service seldom thinks 01 midi beyond the corn• to excess ; and I freely own that ta rash party soon caused a sad scene of code- =EI ISM Ere' LOOS* and hovel was searched, and many I ?''')f fellow, who had contrived to hide his last tc of ume from his enemies, was obliged to it to his allies. You might see the poor s rp s 3r, all vides running away ; come with e vise of food. others with a skin of wine in their folsowed by the menaces and staggering cr?saf the weary anal half drunken soldier*. ' :t.).'" was the cry in every part of the , 4e Ar. English soldier, err, may be for months a foreign land, and have a pride in not I:ow to ask for anything 'but liquor. I was ,hat, the rest. rrno ?" Eaid I, to a 'poor,half-siarv• ta.-ged nmice, who ‘ras stealing off, and Tte•liina under his torn cloak: " Tint oz rourel ! give me vino ! said 1. tw: ; , he cried, es he broke from tae r,rma and ratl quickly and fearfully away ver7 had not bad above halt lily clur' 'y—and I pv.aned him up a street. But thefimer and I should have lost him,had mare a rudden turn and cane upon him in a b - raken. a:;ey, Where I suppose the poor thing