ITVG WANDA: Morning, November 5, 1558. itti6 Vulg. From flonsebold Words. LISTENING ANGELS. toe against the bluer heavens Stood the mountain calm and still !ro while angels, betiding earthward, Leant upon the hill. vetting leant those silent angels, tad I also longed to hear eat sweet Ptrato of earthly music rhos could charm their ear. 'Curd the sound of many trumpets, soda warlike march draw nigh ; Rlelllnif a mighty army .;:g Passed in order by. httbe clang had ceased; the echoes Soon had faded from the hill ; ni!e the angels, calm and earnest, Leant and listved still. _ :• ' !to I heard a f;inter clamor; f o rge and wheel were clashing near, it! the reapers in the meadow singlog loud and clear. Ilia the sunset came in glory, And the toil of day was o'er, Full the angels leant in silenie, lasteiung as before. jb eo ,aldaylight slowly vanished, Nti the evening mists grew dim, ft, loamy from distant voices g o I resf)er hymn. TI2 .f, Dot Mecum was done; and lingering, -. 2 T Med upon the evening air ; ~--, Ye from the hill the radiant angels Bull were listening there. ...,,, Mimi came the gatheringAarkness, Bringing with it sleep and rest ; ' - the a hdle bird was singing to her lea(; nest. Tbrnagh the sounds of war and labor title had warbled all day long, Mole the angels leant and listened Only to her song. Bat the starry night was coming, And she ceased her little lay : From :he mountaintop the angels Slowly' passed away. [From :he New York Evening Poet.] :OL. BENTON'S HISTORY. iIiCEDEOLAL ZACK SON : MS DEATH AND RETIREMENT. 's second and last term of General Jackson's .!ency expired on the 3d of March. 1837. , The %iv, as 12, he appeared with his successor on tented and spacious eastern portico of the as one of the citirens who came to witness :notation of the new President, and no way rpshed from them, except by his place on t•elhabd of the President elect. The day was 411:1=clear sky, balmy vernal son, tranquil at- Nheir .—and the assemblage immense. On in the Ist4e arena in fronrof the steps; order. rr.tant troops and closely wedged together, their • tinned to the portico—presenting to the be cri from all the eastern windows the appear. field paved with human faces—this vast . I remained ri►etted to their places, and pro iip silent, until the ceremony of the inaubra ni over. It was the stillness and silence of . nee and affection, and there was no room for ,kem to whom this mute and impressive horn- • ru rendered. For once, the rising was ectips. a. the setting sun. Though disrobed of power, inng to the shades of prnate life, it was (mi. that the great ex-President was" the absorbing y :of this intense regard. _At the moment that than to descend the broad steps of the portico 'ate he seat in the open carriage that was to to m away, the Jeep, repressed feeling of the mass broke forth, acclamations Arid cheers mg from the heart and filling the air—such as tret never commanded, nor mart in power ever wired. It was the affection, gratitude and ad imion at the living age, sainting for the lasi time IN! man. 1t was the acclaim of posterity, break- IMITI the bosoms of contemporaries. It was the rmfation of futurity—unporchaseabie homage to biers patriot, who, all his lite, and in all theca 'zratoces of his life, in peace and in war, and ;mots to each, had been the friend of his coon-. IT devoted to her, regardless of self Uncovered tilbostng, with a look of unaffected humility and ti 'kfuliters, he acknowledged in mate signs his deep sensibility to this affecting overflow of.-popu lat was looking down from a side win. ( 101, , and felt an emotion which had never passed ti ro ire) me before. I had seen the inauguration of tans Presidents, and their going away, and cur ;wed by the splendors of the first republic. But all appeared to me as pageants, brief to the .trr, unreal to the touch, and soon to vanish. But e there seemed to be a reality—a real scone-4 a and the people—he, laying down power and I :drawing through the pottels of everlastina fame; ~ Sounding . in his ears the everlasting plaudits :aborn generations. Two days after I saw the tat ex-President in the car which bore him oft his desired seclusion-1 saw him depart with look of quiet enjoyment which bespoke the in. ttril saiistaction of !haunt! at aaebanging lbe cares Bice lor the repose of home. History, poetry, 'vary, marblwand brass will hand down the milt• erplofts of Jackson : this work will cotn ammo. Me events o f his civil administration, not less Omits than his military achievements, great es 4 1 were; and this brief notice of his last appear. ke at the American capitol 14. intended to pre. are some faint memory of iscene, the grandeur z t hich was so impressive to the behtdder, and solace of which must have been so grateful to c ! . itean 0 . 1 the departing Palriol r-'Oht years afterwarJa be died at the Hermitage, . i ),,,f) 'l) , -, 7`"'i) al (it vb.)lt) t) 9. - J)4.34/1.) r) , 'v-6' A-' l O , -' il‘• ' 4 . ""- - *; :,...er - A. 1 0 5a151 7 11 ,,,1t , .1x.r) , ,,W t,, t.m.ai at•tr.• it. :Ai s.Sst. ,, ) 'Ol - 4 :i ' , Y . ''''''': ,-1,..i e..i rt) ~ .. ..9cokiti 1,, :,'mow! ) : tgi j 4.• A‘ , . , .. , ,,.. \ _.,..,-..,• - :,..!;, I „.., -. . . .., . ..... . , 1 -of( # ' 7 vt• ) .. it 4 . - - 1. - ' • Vi" 1 ' L-)4 1- 5 .r.,,,,,.., t. 1 :FL -'• l 4.... 4. 1 . ' ' l . f 4% t i ~ : II •• ta. , ....: .. ~ ~. .. , - ~ ~.„ 1, ...,.:. -, ~ H .- 7 . v.:::,.., - .,.:: t4r4l ;- : \ 1 :1 1 ,: . ,....----..i.,...it. .. • -.•,.. ..,:-..- ~ „7.f-••;:„ . ./,,- . ..., 1 ~.-:•• :, •'; 1 1 ''' : -. 1 . y • i ~. . : ;Jr Ar..)' ..: , • _. . , ~.....t.').- , 4). )") ....-:-'-- .1.." C ;:', •-'-' 1 ? - " 6 .4r: .... - -..e., 4 f. .., ...-,fr e; , •... , . -,....._ . .....a:. •.••• 0 . ' - •f - --' - --.! in the full possession of all his faculties, and strong to the last in the ruling passion of his soul—loveof country. Public history will do justice to hia pub• lie life: but a further notice is wanted of him—a notice of the domestic man—ot the man at horns, with his wife, his friends, his slaves; and this I feel some qballcation for giving, from my long and varied acquaintance with him. The first time that I saw General Jacks& was at Nashville, Tennessee, in 1799—he on the bench, a judge of the then Superior Court—and I a youth of seventeen, back in the crowd. He was then a re. markable man, and had his ascendant over all who approached him, not the elect of his high judicial station, nor 01, the senatorial rank which be had held and resigned, nor of military exploits, for he had not then been to war, but the effect of personal qualities—cordial and graceful manners, hospitable temper, elevation of mind, undaunted spirit; gen erosity and perfect integrity. In charging the jury in the impending case, he committed a slight sole cism in language, which grated on my eat, and lodged on my memory, without derogating in the least from the respect Which he had inspired, and .without awakening the slightest suspicion alit I was ever to be engaged in smoothing his diction.— The first time I spoke with him was some few years after, at a (then) frontier town in Tennessee,when he was returning from a southern visit, which bro't him through the towns and camps of the Indian tribes. lit pulling off his overcoat, I perceived on the white lining of the turning down sleeve, a dark speck which had life and motion. I brushed it oft and put the heel of my shoe upon it, little thinking that I ever was to brush away from him game of a very different kind. He smiled; and we began . a conversation, in which he very quickly revealed a leading trait of his character—that of ercouraging young•men in their laudable pursuits. Getting my name and parentage, and learning my intended profession, he manifested a regard for me, said be had received hospitality at my father's house in North Carolina, gave me kind invitations to visit him, and expressed a belief that I would do well at the br—generoos words, which had the effect of promoting what they promised. Soon after, he had a further opportunity to show his generous feelings. I was employed in a criminal case of great magni. tude, where the oldest and ablest counsel appear. ed—Haywood, Grundy, Whiteside—and the trial of which General Jackson attended through concern for the late of a friend. As junior counsel 1 had to precele my elders, and did my best; and, it being or. the side of his feelings, he found my effon to be better than it was. He complimented me great ly, and from that time our intimacy began. I soon after became his aid, he being a major general in the Tennessee militia, and atter that I was habitually at his house; and as an inmate,had opportunities to know his domestic lila, and at the period when it was least understood and most mils represented. He had resigned his place on the bench of the Superior Court, as he had previously resigned his seat in the Senate of the United States, and lived on a superb estate of some thousand acres, twelve miles from Nashville, then hardly known by its subsequent famous name of the Her mitage—a name chosen for its perfect accord with his feelings; for he had then actually withdrawn from the stage of public life, and from a state of feeling well known to belong to great talent when finding no theatre for its active employment. He was a careful farmer, overlooking everything him self, seeing that the fields and fences were in good order, the stock well attended, and the slaves corn lortably provided for. His house ass the seat of hospitality, the resort of friends and acquaintances, and of all strangers visiting the State—and the more agreeable to all from the perfect conformity of Mrs. Jackson's disposition to his own. But he needed some excitement beyond that which a farming life could afford, and found it tor some years in the ani mating sports of the turf. He loved fine horses-- racers of speed and bottom—owned several—and contested the four mile beats with the best that could be bred, or bought, or brought to the state, and for largesums. That is the nearest to gaming hat I ever knew him to come. Cards and the cock pit have been impaled to him, but most erroneous. ly. I never saw him engaged in either. Duels were usual in that lime, and be had his share o them, with their unpleasant concomitants; but they passed away with all their animosities, and he has often been seen zealously pressing the advance. ment of those against whom he had but lately been arrayed in deadly hostility. His temper was pla cable as'well as irascible, and bie recoucdiations were cordial and sincere. There was a deep seated vein of piety in him, unaffectedly showing itself in his reverence for di- vine worship, respect for the ministers of the Gos pel, their hospitable reception in his house, and constant encouragement of all the pious tendencies of Mrs Jackson. And when they both afterwards became members of a chinch, it was the natural and regular result of their early and cherished feel ings. He was gentle in his house, and alive to the tenderest emotions ; and of this 1 can give an in s:zone greatly in contrast with his supposed chat meter, and worth more than a long discourse in showing what that character malty was. I arrived at his house one wet, chilly evening in February, and came upon him in the , twilight, sitting alone .before the tire, a lamb and a child between his knees. He started a little, Galled a servant to re move the two innocents to another room, and ex plained to me bow it was. The child bad cried because the lamb was out in the cold, and begged him to bring it in-..which he bad done to please the child—his adopted son,-then not two years old.— The ferocious man does hot do that and though Jackson had his passions and his violences, they were for men and enemies...those who stood up against—and not for women and children, or the weak and hetpleu, for alt whom his feelings were those of protection and support. His hospitality was active as well as cordial, embracing the worthy in every walk of life, and seeking out deserving 'ob jects to receive it, no matter how obscure. Of this PUBLISHED -EVERY SATUfiIIAY:At totaDi t likADFOß*4lollll , lll,34tAvilY E. 011EAltA GOODRWIL MNIE=2I .:1= 2 :4 , ) , ; 4 1 W7Ei Iris tf) =MEI ”..14;taagaw ogjoimmirnost.intellhiblii 2 •4! 4'4 I -4 4'4 ;, 44 I. M=Rl I leatand ,a,ohannteristio'lpei&inlirt rebnionto , s°4fiji f luicl?0, 1 00 had come to l!laAiville, on bis Mare iinahrept, ,to be de'atold,lnme, weeks a n l* 4. 4 ffPriO, • small warn toward' •the lower part of thotowa,, Glneral ;ankson beard 01 . it-sought fiiitt:otp-7. lnitnd him, took hini lo fergt#4 as 19 1 ,4„i! bin balm** 4 e !iii".4,,11M) 4 4 .1.59 6 9 4 1. , ..MXiqh " Your father's dog, should.not:,stAry In a !event, where I have a b 005.," Ptis wu bertMdt.l had it from the young map himself, !Otitis', when he was a state senator of the General 4.asembl), of Missouri, and as such nominated roci l i foi. the Upi. led States Senate at my first electionA 11124 r—his name was Benton ltoopeouid so , named 10F. my. . father. Abhorrence of debt, public , and , PriTatli dislike of banks and love tit herd money—lose of justice, and love of country were . ruling passions with Jackson; and of these be gave constant evi dence* in all the situations of his life. Of private debts he crannied none of his own, and made any sacrifices to get out of those Incurred for often— Of this he gave a signal instance not long before the war , of 1812—selling the improved pen of i bis estate, with the beet building of the country upon it, to - pay a debt incurred.in a mercantile' adven- lure to assist a young velative,..and going into log houses irr the forest part to begin a new home and farm. He was living in these inda tenements when he vanquished the British at New Orleans; and, probably, a view of their conqueror'. domicil would have astonished the British officers as much as their defeat bad done. He wait attached to his friends, and to his Country, and never believed any story to the discredit of hitheruntil compelled by proof. He would not believe in tie first reports of the surrender of General Hull, and becauteopprecs ed and sad when forced to believe it. He never gave up a friend in a doubtful case, or from policy, or calculation. He wu a firm believer to the good ness of a superintending Providence, and in the eventual right judgment and justice of the people. I have seen him at the most desperate part of his fonunes, and never saw bim waver in the belief tltat all would come right in the end. lu the time of Cromwell be would have been a puritan. The character of his mind was that of judgment, with a rapid and almost intuitive perception, follow ed by instant and decided action. It was that which male him a General and a President for the times in which he served. lie had vigorous thoughts, but not the faculty of arranging them in a regular composition, either written or spoken ; and in for• mal papers usually gave his manuscript to en aid, a friend, or a secretary to be written over—often to the.loss of vigor. But the thoughts were his own, vigorously expressed, and without an effort, writing with a rapid pen, and never blotting or altering but as Carlyle says of Cromwell, hitting the nail upon the head as he went. I have a great deal of his writing now, some on public affairs and cover• ins several sheets of paper, and no erasures or in. erlineations arty where. His conversation was like his writing, a vigorous flowing current, apps- rentty without the trouble of thinking and always impressive. His conclusions were rapid and im. movable, when he was under strong coniictions, though often yielding, on minor points, to his friends And no man yielded quicker when he was can. winced, perfectly illustrating the difference between firmness and obstinacy. 01 all the Presidents who have done me the honor to listen to my opinions, there was no one to whom I spoke with more con- &knee when I felt myself tote in the right. Nothing could exceed his kindness and affection to Mrs. Jackson, always increasing in proportion as his elevation and culminating fortunes drew cruel attacks upon her. I knew her well, and that a more exemplary woman in all the relations of life —wife, friend, neighbor, relative, mistress of slaves —never heed, and never presented a more quiet, cheerful and admirable management of her house hold. She had not education, but she had a heart, and .a good one; and that was.always leading her to do kind thing. in the kindest manner. She had the General's own warm heart, frank manners, and hospitable temper, amino two persons could have been better suited to each other, lived more happi ly together, or made a house more attractive to visi tors. She had the faculty—a rare one—ral retaining named and titles in a throng of. viskorrotddressing each one appropriately, and dispensing , hospitality to all with a cordiality which enhanced its value. No bashful youth or plain oldmatt, whose modesty sat then down at the lower end of the,table, could escaPia her cordial attention, any, more thatt.the ti tled gentlemen on her right and !eh. Young per sons were her delight, and she always her lactate well filled with them-.eleven young women and clever young men—alt calling her, affeetiettatil,y, "Aunt Rachel." I Wall pitting, then, and was one ol that number. I owe ii to-early recollactionv,and to cherished Convictions—m this last 'nolicerbf the Hermitage—to bear this faidifit tedilMoity to the memory ol its first and long mistress, the lovedand honored wile of a great Man. Her greatestilulogy is the affection he bore her fivirig - ; Ind Ili the iror row with which he monrnedlter dead.. , Elie 'died at the moment of the General's firscelectionlo the Presidency, and every one that had a km petition to present, or -charitable request to make, tote, in her death, the surest channel to the ear and the heart of the President. Hietegud for herectrelved, and lived in the persons of her nearest relatives-- A nephew of hers wastes adopted ear and heir, taking his oien name, and neiv , the respectidemas. ter of the -Eennitage. , iutotber nephew, *Om* Jackson. Dorielson, Esq., wee hM private Secretary when President. The presidential mansion was presided over daring hie term by bar- mice% the most amiable MIL Itonelson; end all his conduct bespoke affectionate and lasting ratnambranon of ckte be had bald so dear. • The more Ignoraut a person la, tbelarder be ieto uit. Take your seat at the dinner, rebktvandieti will find that the Oman who goes Abe ,waiter the most trouble, will mot be so , exigOvewleci but oat ex-hod-carrierior anies•wood sawyer.' • NIIIMI , q_ 01;C , , ;poi I 0 • . 0 ;171 4,1-1 , r 7r. .J ,3•147 , AIWA= The late:titlildiVe -- ta4,•4ll : lllaeir ieelekAir fek , Wet ofthirreith - 144 peeeetet se s trochees" ifl the Rouse of Verde when lbw huleperideuce el Ito kinericaolColenitti . eraileitialfiecketitil4W-hi George the'„ Thi4lloletelkeet filY ll .l4t. Wawa's Journal, ands a siva picture a that intiergilleg-M1114 , 7V ' ' ."'' lla T; -Lennox, Dec. 4, 1782. 7601#14120tidi Vat PneenciMP/114 PodergaftlieslWlli AoifinnlY. ,rfA• cognized by George 111. , irrlhe presence of God and Man. Such, at last; arts the'eamed fruits of Sanguinary intleieutful contestlifeightleng—kmg years, in - whieh' period one bond' red Ihniistirid brave Americans have cemented the altar of their country, with their precious Maid, "a prize which will bless unborn millions , 'ind in' its eventful ef fects predace a new era ovit 'the entire surce of this benighted world. At an early'hoar; in conformity to previous ar rangements, I had the honor lobe colftlucted by the Earl of Ferrets, to the very entrance of the Rouse of Lords. At the small'door he whispered softly id my ear "Gal as near the foot of the 'as possible-a maintain your . position—lear not." y did so with all the assurance of a traveled Yankee, and found myseltexactly In front of the throne, elbow to el bow with the celebrated Admini: Loyd Howe, who had just returned from a successful relief of Gibral• The ladies of the cobility oecepied the lord's seal on the woolsack, so called as an emblem of the powerand wealth of ohl atglend, because it has been mainly derived from wool. The lords were standing here and there promiscuously as I entered. • It was a dark, foggy day—a proper English hang ing day. To add to its gloomy effects, the old Sax on windows stand nigh up, with leaden bars to con lain the diamond cut panes of glass. The walls al so hung with dark tapestry, representing the defeat of the great Spanish Armada in 1588, I bad the pleasure of recognizing the celebrated American painters, West and Copley, and twine American ladies in the groupe—all rebels at heart—intermix ed with many American royalists, some of whom wets my near relatives, with long dejected faces, aria rage and despair depicted in every lineament of their feature*. Aker standing for two hours in painful suspense, the approach of the king was an nounced by a tremendous roar of cannon. He en tered the, small door on the left of the throne, and inunettimly !tested himie.o in the chair of State, de• notated in his royal robes, in a graceful, formal Awl majestic posture, with his tight foot resting on a stool. He was evidently agitated; and drew slew ly from his pocket a scroll containing the humilia ting speech. 1 was exactly in his front, eta or eight tees distant, with, my left loot braced upon the last step of the throne, to sustain my position tton the pressure in my rear, and critically watched with the eye of a Lasater, in that moment, of his agitated countenance. He began My L e w s an d gen. Item.° ;" and in direct reference to our indepen dence, said I , I lost no time in giving the necessary orders to prohibit the future prosecution of offensive war upon the continent of North America. n Adopting, as my inclination will always lead me to do, with decision and effect, whatever I col lect to be the sense of my parliament, and my peo ple—! have pointed all my views and measures in Europe, as in North America, to an entire and cor- Jial:econeiliation. with the Colon lee, Finding it indispensible to the attainment of this object, I did aol hesitate to.go the full lempb of the power „vest ed in me r and therefore I now. declare them" 7— (here he paused, and hesitated for a moment, and• was in evident agitation—the' piUhe,had to swallow in the neat breath was repugnant to his digestive mane, In 1776, be repelled our humble petition with•indignity—bet in 1782 he round him self prostrate at our feet herecovered himself by a strong convulsive effort, and proceed thus ; declare them live and lodependgmt Slates. In thus admitting their separation from the crown of their kingdom, I have sacrificed every consideration of my own to the wishes and opinion of my people. I make it my humble and ardent prayer to the Al mighty .God, that Great Britain mat trot feel the evils which might result from. so great .a dtsmem tannest' of the empire, and that America may be free from calamities which have fotmerly roved •in the mother country how essential monarchy is to the eMoyment of constitutional libetty.. Religion; fanguage,interests end ottani= may, and.l hope will prove a bond of "permanent onion between ifie two countries?' • It is impassible to deeotibe the sengtion. of my rebellious mind; at the atement,srbee the kingbet timed to pronoooce. the wonle•p•Fret esti Indepon. dent tendsoifotice with. what Lica grace .heinitl swelknor.the dose ;, every artery wes; in dell play , and•best high is with, my +rood American trielingit.. • It' was impessible not to tenni soy eyes , earoseshe Athinticrend•revieerin rapid: succession the miserierread wretchedneekin.seserel stages of theinef f inier to :my leasing dimerica--the wide. spread desolation, , -resulting from the obstinacy .4 ;this urty men.umting alb:44m Wow -htueble4p peals to bie Jamie* end meter es it .Gad—butoriw , peratnite his. wt.. , In hie:speed heAellemet,in eat breath thette his sacrificed every personaleon 'ideation,. la ethic weals, not yet-maiated with in nocent-blood shed by.-hiss ndian allies; and in the next, hypocritioelitiondtmg.hett•bea4sh to guard es againstoelsmitiee, hto. The - meat drama is Dow closed, the bell wu epened.tutemingion,, where, Me British red Goals .were taught to, dance ..down ; , tb .Chulestown, to the tune of - !! Yuthaa Doodierr On this occesianit 101 l also to my lot to mulch from Providecceo with. coMpia.a . MY five well disciplined young men,ell dresudi t atsmi- . se (noway plolioniagtasi -With pealm..pc itask r e.j AM- Map tbid: belote,we ,c0;14,-mrach the omens of @Mac. ; .. • • From thellosse of Lord., I proceeded to- DM, • 4, +, .1”• •'i, V.. 1, 1 3 1f.'tr.,:t" , -; t IMILME=IIMEI _,,:y Copley's dwelling in Lieoesteusiptare to•diney amt through •my ardent solicitations birinnne the MitOl itl c•ar• 'l4 !Pei, °lil W O 0 0* i #V ie g ili q the acne day —ltte;Cust which ever , waiieti i . e. isi "mph inl &glen& ..' - • - -1 , i -fttleaving thel4buire!of LitiJi, 1 jostled aids by aide with West and Co - i ''-4 )`) . irog'ili 116'0 Ir4ic Jepa}i of the •dqv J4 l : l ,:o9l4iflii*ilh ,4 ilFßP. ,gratificitma t the angoish tuld'despair of; the scrim in dry fiewie el Certmions - Ohe lemming day, There was ho t bitter:deboo, but #,Octed 'fieil...oy so.' illn°nY• dom'Airribilson allacke'll•Cord - iiciwe's expedition to Gibraltar, because he had not ga ned a decisive viol/ivy over the combined fleet of forty five sail of the fide, With thirty-sPviii' ships. Burke . then rose, indulging in a yein Ol' 4 iii!ii4 and ridicule, a severe attack on the king's speech the dal !Fis sions on the subject of American Independence-a— saying it was a farrago id:nonsense and hypoCrisy. Young Pitt, the newly created 'Chancellor ut the Exchequer, then rose, and handled Burke wtib dig nified severity ) charging him with buffoonery and levity. .Having received from AWrinati Wood a .catd of admission into the gallery of the House olCom mons, as the House was rising, the Alderman 4who is a member,) came into the gallery and invited me to descend with lam to the flo o r of the House. I met Mr. Burke, with whom I had breakfasted;— who introdored me as a messenger of peace to Pitt, Conway, Fox, Sheridan, and two or three other members groupedon the floor. I never felt more elevated in my life. In describing this scene to a friend in•Fratiee, in a moment of exultation f sub. joined : Pignut to youreetil,my dear friend, a young Amer ican traveler ot twenty-lour, in the lull gaudy dress of a Parisian, hailed in the public papers, and stand ing in the British House of Commons, (where the destiny of dear America in its infancy has been so °fen agitated,) as a messenger of peace, surround ed by a groop ; the brightest constellation ot politi cal men that evergraced die annals at English his• tory !—and what is more gratifying to my Ameri can pride, the very men, with one exception, who have recently compelled the tyrant George to yield with a bail grace to all our jest demands, in my presence ! Not to have been thus affected at the tremendous crisis, I should hair) been more or less than a man.—Albany Register. Itioashrry.—There are many persons who pride themselves on their morality, which signifies nod). lug more than here freedom from vice. A man may possess morality, without's single virtue. We are not, therefore disposed to find a great degl of fault with those teligiooists who profess to despise mete morality.. A-person is moral, if he be not in temperate, or licentious, or 'prcilane, or addicted to lying. Vet he may be all this, and still be notori ous for ingenue's, selfishness, cruelty, malianity, cowardice, and all those vices of the hetan,l which are not punishable at a coon Of law. We despise a man, whose virtues, if they be so called, are of this negative character, picayune men, who never think of a neighbor ur.less they see a chance to make a little money out of bim. Too timid to com tnit a bold !laud, their penuriousness renders them more contemptible thou absolute knavery. When these vices of the bean-are conspicuous in a man's character, the addition of piety renders it the more detestible, like one handstong feature in a,cout.te pence that is full of loathsome- deformity. Timm —The temple of troth is indeed built of stones of itrYsial ;', but inasmocli . as men have been concerned in renting it, it has been cons•olitiated by a cement composed.of bases materials. it is deep ly to be lamented that truth itself will onset but little attention, and Ititietiiteern; nglil it ,be amal gamated with some particular patity,persuvtion, or sect.. ,Uotaired .and onaclohitrated, it too often -proves as -unfit for currency as pure gold lot circa lotion. Sir Walter Raleigh basobserved - 3.1-" That he that I •Ilowa iitatt too cloaely`ntiat take Care that he does not strike out his teeth He has hide to -fear from truth, but he has much to fear-from pre tended friends of it. He, therefore, that- ib dead to alt the frOwnd of the living alone, is equal to the hazardous task of wining a history of his own times worthy of being transmitted to times that are to come." Peat WAITR =Prof. Siftiman rays : "1f you out:, for a clear mind, strong, muscles, and quiet nerve*, and long lite and power prolonged into nld age, permit us to say, altlmugh tam not giving a Yempeilitee lecture, avoid ell drilik but wa , eir, and mild itaiipiors of trial ; shun tobacco and, Opi• pm, aciteverything elms,tlitu dieturbeethet oysen ; rely upon nutrition,' load and mild dilluent Jr ills, of which water is the b and you will !red ilk ' it - It beynnt exce resl, 'Ontl flue nm • Al reguLatear of aIP your powers, IR g.ite you, Irani. happy lord •uselut limey and a serene evening; at the close." I. If. 5 *Wise lettere 'ate Iseett:iti Calls - arc' and teiscOpal s ehinchie, aki/ ,in the „ptity t 'er; I . toolra of these seem Ttry ace abbreviationa of:the I,afin phrase .lesmt•ifouviaiam Saleator, arbicllc equitiee, " Jean. the Savior of Men." Some mak trek why the letter I is o.ydlnstead at .1 ? Because, formerly wa's,iteletter .1 in the 'Rowan- aippabet ; then I wart used where /mole )9.. Marty of our readdre van probably remain:4er bavurg _seeit_the name John, spelled Icahn. • Oz :r." If you mawy o l• said a Rotaanconsul to his son," let ii be it ivoinan wh&iisojtuNment enough iQ eupetjatenilthasettiag if a meal id siOgids, Sav e enough to dress herselfainle enough to wash be. tore breakfast, entl o uense ettougALto:boltilieLtongue .wheb.sibta list nothing to,,,yitn Otr The best thintld Tesler ride; holoare. , —The man who wotships a frtlntsmi woman, ii as impels bible te d e:iifurementa Of a wanton, s Gibiatir is to apptaduinpitnr. ' , .t 14 .fc tYk! ' r 4• 11 ti RR~ICi A Cut:gigAlL fitA awe 1 0Srli loggia 1a.,. tly bay lo an individual: Yuut countenance toms tikv the. epunt son, for it • ate wii4 a A 10e!r' 60 70 fliaLe6un tenince ie one tu, !Ise things akhici ' leteuty:Aaylos said hie ttnensies,and innieLlatanioctiatiA-Itot take. away tronaltiM:" Tbefilitimelfeidteifoltho' spend ihe!Y livq• I . ll 7' l ol d ß/0 0 r i3 l lB $ 0441 114 , 11 . lives. St shut 4uggstun, , I , PlYilhiPtAgn.aSig' gloomy and iimbidding. They,go .nutonsingnentl • crimpfsiiiing from trey hi itafthet they:fiim4o4frat tlo, and are; cenintintlfinisiii#Aiiiit aft' t tine have' shall escape out of their Alands, , TbeY look• upon the dark side, andluv .never anjny the food. Religion 'makes the' heart - cheerful,- and when its large and benevolenfpfincipleni,MiSo.ver: cisea r man w ill be happy in spitso(hlinsitjf l , 'rife industrious bee does not stop to complain that therm are so many poisonous flowers and thomylitailh• ea on its road, bet buzies On, selecting honey whet. he can find it, and passing-quietly, by Ahi.p*ra where it is not. Them is snongb itt this world to complain about and find fault with if men have the disposition We often Dalinl on illard itid uneven road; but with a cheerful spirit,' and a 61w to praise GuJ for his mercies, we may walk—therein with comfort, and come to the end of our journey vr ith peace DIGNITY OP AN INDIAN CHINT.WII doubt if the annals of ancient history famish a reply surpartstng in eloquence and grandeur the following froth an mutilated savage ;--! Ab TelCOlllBOll proudly appnaached, Geo. Hartle= rose to receive the Chief, and pointing to a bench prepared for the purpose, said— " Your white rattier requests you to be seated." Tecumseh cast upon the American General a look ipt unmitigated scorn and indignation. " You, my father?" said he, " NO, the sun," poin:ing to that luminary in the !mayor's, g‘ is my Whet ! The earth," pointing to the groom!, "is my mother ! And," throwing bimselfcm - the ground, " I vrill rest nowhere but on her bosom r' o That temptation which at first is but a littler (gond, as big as a man's hand, may quiclOy over. spread the whole heaven. Our engaging in sin is the motion of a stone down 11111—' 4 It strengthens itsell ty going," and the longer it runs, the more violently. Beware of the smallest beginnings of temptations. No wise man will neglect or slight the smallest sparks of fire, especially it he sees it among barrels of gunpowder. You carry gunpow. der show you; 0, take heed of sparks. FINDING A Whit's TONGUL.—Mr. fr. illironted his wife, who to punish him, resolved to act dumb when he was present, and so well did she main tain her resolution that a week past away and not a wortFtlid she utter in his presence. •Sheperform ed her household duties as usual, btu note wopl did She speak. He tried to coax her 081 of ber i ffiliM, but in vain. At last be tried the following plan to overcome her resolution, by working on her curios ity—the most ungovernable of female propensities. Returning one evicting from his employment, his lady aa• there, wrosnal, mute. Tne closet was ex atnirted, die bed room, drawers, boles, shelves ; everything that could be possibly thought of was overhauled. His wife was struck with astonishment at his on. accountable behaviour, and so he proceeds in his search. She becomes ,very nervously Billions k. find out what he was in search of. What-could it be? She looked in his face, if possible, togleam from his expression the object of his search; but no go, he was sober as a judge. He hfied the edge of the carpet, looked under the table cover, and final ly approached-Wirehair, looked under ii, and even going's° tar as to Fitnsh her dress partially . asideout what he sought might behidden there. Shecilidd stattd•it no.longer. She burst out— " Bob, what are you looking for:" He &frilled 'ands!netirttned : " Your tongue, *Ltd I've found it." A BEADTIII7I. lactrotwri—A naval officer being at sea in a dreadful storm,his lady was sitting in the cabin near him, and filled with alarm for the safe ty of the vessel, was so surprised at his composure and serenity, that she cried out : "My dear, are you not afraid how is it posai. ble you can be so calm in such a dreadful storm!" He rose from his chair, rushed mike deck, drew his sword and pointing it to the breast of his wife, exclaimed : '" Are you riot afraid r She insianily answered " NP." " Why,". said the °facer. " Semmes," rejoined !lie lady: " I know this ril4rd is in the hatoll'or . mi husband; and he loves nowloo well 19 hutt,ute." . . Reid he, a remember 1 know in wham I 'believe, and He ebb bivlds the . wthd in HikMae crater (be.lloW:or Fiji kende Lamy, ga. .deer.' imr-' • I Will yod erten the services !" `in q a dragon of a bicatier, rhe',Was oiatennan by trade. . "• No, thank you," said he hall waking kern' a tresig, 1. I've loft my oyster knife at llama." (gr " 1. bee much water — rnahe cistern,. Bid inquired • gentleman °this lb girl, loge cattle ulr fueu the e eller. " ICS lull at the bottom, au, but tbefe'e cone at the tap," said Biddy. . 4 Otr It is proposed to have graveyards along The timesaf•oerraiiaeyai at intervals of one mile.— bip More rapid burial of those who may be massacred. The age is pmgessive MIME The. min-who tell , bauk oo bloom& mow. ids Was toO - oally wounded. • lIM is said that canon railwayoare all to be bung in black in future—like other beanies., =II - WA :A -• • I • I 142, • ; ...P)M4 11 4, ••. IMIZEIBEiII t II ME ~7(t , . = NMI ME ME