111 11)1'1E 1 151173 TOWANDA,: turn bap illorninp, gebrnaryl 18, 18M. 'elero 'V ottrg. THE COTTAGE DOOR TT T. IL RARY.II2, How sweet the rest that labor yields The humble and the poor, Where rats the patriarch of the fields Before his cottage door: The lark is singing in the sky, The swallow in the eaves, And love is beaming in each eye Beneath the summer leaves ! The air amid the fragrant bowers supplies unpurchased health, And hearts are bounding 'mid the flowers More dear to him than wealth ! Peace, like the blessed sunlight, plays Around his humble cot. And happy nights and cheerful days Divide his Jowly lot. And when the village Sabbath bell Rings out upon the gale, The father bows hia head to tell The music of its tale— A fresher verdure seems to fill The-fair and-dewy sod, And every infant tongue instill, To hear the word of God! 0, happy hearts !—to Him a,ho stills The ravens when they tryt, - And makes the lily 'neath the hills . l!lo glorious to the eye— The trusting patriarch prays, to bless His labors with increase ; Such" ways are ways of pleasantness," And all such '• paths are peace l" ,Stiettt THE T E A CIIER'S TRIAL AND REWARD. BY MARY IRVINt Oh, it is a thankless task to teach !" exclaimed Slary, aP she drew off her school bonnet, alter a rammer day's bard toil. "What now Mary?" asked her hostese„getitlb i..oking up wi:h an inquiring smile. Mary tossed herself into the beckoning arms of . .e rnitson-cui-hioned rocking-chair, at, t shook 400 . a her curls orer hor flushed cheeks. Nothing so very new nor strange to - be •sure. A ieacher's trials are like—like these troublesome mosquitoes," the said, crushing, as she spoke, one of the melodious insects upon her hand, impatient, r;'• they are little to meet and conquer singly, but, :uming in swarms, and without cessation, they ng one's nerves to distraction !" She grew eiryzeril as she recovered breath, and rent on: There is a fine drapery of romance thrown Coca the ;deal of teaching, that will bear little of e tough handling of reality. It is delightful in per tpective—thisr enthroning 3 ourself on a pyramid of rmaig hearts, whose upgushings are to waft you in le seventh heaven of self-cornplacency. It is de xious to fancy yourselt the prime mover of an electrical battery, whose wires shall vibrate simul reotisly in a hundred small breasts, at youslight e iouch But delusion is written on all those day ' Imams You seat yourself on that magic platform, queen, at.d you are disenchanted into a servant ..ierrants. The eyes which you pictured turtling tipo, as the sunflower to the sun, are wande . ring an desk and bench in search of paper balls, quill .e•de, or what note of mischievous contrivance.— he 'young aflectinns' are bestowed upon jack tnres and long-tailed kites; and the ' youthful am : Munn' works itse:f out through heels and hands, tread of head. You hammer away upon your ars longs, with little enough impression upon peb gy Noels belore ycu ! Don't shake you head so agerly, .Aunt Hannah! I know my duty, and I rill not shrink from it for these obstacles; but some mes theYdo swell mountain high Anti Hannah," as Mary called her by the re leaorahip of affection, not of kindred blood, was a elang-hearted spinster—yea, a veritable 4 old maid' "el filly years or more. She was calm and 'Qua ker -like in her manners and in her dress; but her Yeelments were furnished in a style ot comfortable elegance, that made them peculiarly attractive to Yew; eyes Being a lone woman,' and a woman of fortune, she usually bound to her hearth some glad, warm, young heart, and kept her own soul bathed in its fountain of fresh life. Her house 111401 ahwae tot the homeless; and who is so homeless us , young teacher in a strange city' So thought the kind old lady ; at least when she took Mary to her hew and home as a daughter. /hey was a sunny-spirited creators, not often eh/dewed by an eclipse of discouragement; but 'then the cloud came, the shower must follow. So, she suddenly dropped her face on her at th-e lam sentence 01 her little oration, and burst into tears, like a homesick child. Aunt Hannah quietly laid aside her darning-nee dle and basket, pushed . her., bpectades op on her forehead, and eat kicking at the crying girl with a unile, half-arch, halt sympathizing. ' "Cheer-op, my bird I", she exelaimed, at last, kuntng forward. " Why, you should tois ofl your burden at the schoolroom door." "I know I should not bring it home, to plague you with it, dear, kind aunt. But do let me cry; does me good, once in a while!" "Not a moment !" insisted the old lady, good Lumoredly, , " or I shall write to Frank to morrow, tellin g him that you are tired of school-:,re in New England, and wood prefer a touch of life in the "Oh nonsense 1" interrupted Mary, looking up, kishing, and laughing in spite of herself, as she baths corner of her handkerchief. 4 ' will be l ore of a woman, there! But the childish feeling "Leonia overme in some moments. You. don'i atop anything about the tnalh of . 1 trablic school, . . .. - -_ g.. - s, 1 17N0 . . i.,c7 :11.. 7. 77 .....„. ...- 0 : - . • •••• ..i - . 14 •-' , .,''t ' ..17;•;•! .1 — .• i•• 1-2 ,••• - -, tv,---, ,o, _. __,— ..., ........."77---ri,",-0 ? , 1.--:.,- , ... 1 ....y. , .1-- , . 4 ,, ,,; -1(11 f , , .- T: , . . n ' a r . ;•; 7 i::l-7.1.- " , ..r.. -- - ----- -, :: -•. . 4 5 .- , Z-.:trg'- - -1., , rt:IY - • -t ' '-" . , • ~1 - • ' ',,-.4 ~ ...„,---•," -- - • • - ! . . , , ' . . ...... 1 , . . at . , 1r • . ^ . . Lt ~, ' ' ' t“ , .1.1::, •••=• 7 . - 1 , 7 T 4 -- ; .I - ' ' i .::1: • • , in -- - • . . . --1 , ..1 , .r, 4 . 1. , vr, ~ ..:-.1, ,-..,;, -, .•, -.:, F ' 1... , ~) .., -.. ~ .. , . ._ .....: „• „,i,..,q,,„ r. "',t' 7 ,:.:f.',l";' Tl 7 ....1 4•••,.Sfii ro:','slci,; —:'•--' I ' " ' • ' . „.... „,„ ~ r/i..; ,•. , .rr.t .0,, ' • . .. • -....“). "' ' •'•'• "J ' 1;.; l•-•-111•.:' , .1 '••..';'•••• r 1'''...!;•'... , "•; ", ' ' -; - ..!..-• '' '-:..--.---.: '; '-- .. 1 '' . . i —.........—....-_-........ .-- ____ _......—......—.............-..--..............,.._.........._ .....e.....;;W:di aunt. Really, you cannot uoderetand this ciao tinually droppings of vexation;, that wanld wear out Abe patience of a atone acboolinistresa,-1 be. lieve !' "And what if you were Rigtaken, Nary I" said Aunt Hannah, laying herhand on her shod!. der. " Why! Did you aver Leach, Aunt Hanrushi I am sure there was no need of ii ; you were rich, and"--- She glanced around her, without finiShing her sentence. " And you think teaching a penance, which nonei but the penniless would go throug,b," said the lady, laugiving. She grew grave as she added-- " Shall I give you a leaf of my own life's expe rience, May , You may distil some balsam tram "Oh! yes, aunt," answered Mary, with deep >interest, bending over until_ her Curls rested on The old lady's brown silk apron. " But first tell .me how you came to teach? If it was tom the love of teaching, you can never sympathise with me!" .1 Aunt Hannah stroked Mary's soft hatr i and looked steadily, almost sadly, into her havel eyes for a few minutes, without speaking. " I see a dreaM within these eyes, Mary," she said, at last in a low deep aline—" a dream that ties in your heart's core ! No, do not drop the lashes; let me read, and recollect thus the dream that bud• ded and grew in my heart, once—transplanted to heaven long ago!" " 1 did not mean to pain you, aunt," whispered Mary, pressing her lips to the withered hand that rested on her aunt's lap. 4, Forgive my inquisitive• ness." \" It does not pain me, Mary,'' she answered, cheerfully ; " for why should the thought of that which is immortal pain? But I will not sadden you with what your young loving, and loved heart would call a sad story to-night. 1 will only say that at the,age of nineteen I found myself, by one stroke, cut aloof from IBA jays and hopes,and driven to file's duties for the support of an exis tence that was long like a withered rose leaf." She drew herselt up, took ottthej knitting and commenced her story with anirfittliod:—. " I-- became in short, Mary, a district school ma'am, in a small country village, actually itolll choice. But it was in none of your romantic little country school houses that I found myself en sconsed—no white, green blinded elm-shaded nook of science—uor even a neat corn field. N'o; a bare, bland, and weather-blackened establishment, unshaded by,shruli, tree, or blind, in the exact mi. angle formed by three dusty roads, was my seat of empire. "It was a sommer•school—ladies at that day taught only in the melting season. Jly scholars were generally the lesser try,' whose brothers and sisters were detained at home, meanwhile, to cul tivate domestic science iii the cbeese•room or hat field. Small as they were, however, they were large erruu_•h to embody the imps of mischief that always lurk about the walls of the school-house.— But I pass them and thrir pranks lonk since re• membered only to be smiled- at. The two largest of my pupils shall be the heroes of my story.-- They were only sizable scions in my nursery of shooting ideas, and, as such, naturally assumed im portance. One was the minister's son—a high-browed and high-smile,' boy of fifteen—pale and preco cious, enthusiastic in his love of the beautiful, arid his love of his books He was a boy 'among a thou sand. The snows of the Jungfrau,' whose legend you were last night reading, cannot be purer of con tamination from the world beneath; than was his young soul of that world's debasing influences.— But he was not cold hearted paragon of perfection, carved in ice—my gentle, loving Eddie ! His blue eye-1 can see it now, looking up at me from his brown pine desk, over which he was bending close ly---alas too closely ! and always poured a brighter gleam from ice inner fountain of light as it met mine. His faults—if they could be called' faults— were all involuntary. it 1 telt constrained, by eon istency, to rep rove him for the work of some musing moment, my voice unconsciously took a softer tone, arid my eye catching the reflection' of his winning glance, contradicted the reprimand Such was Eddie Carroll—my prodigy, my pride, "A very different youngster was Master Walter Raleigh R—, a year the senior of Eddie, bet scarcely towering abcve the tall, slender boy.-. Walter was the only child of the widow cf a tia vat.officer, who was,passing the summer in the country air for the reatoiation 7 of her health, and who wished to have Itearilful but darling boy cut. (listing the talents which he was disposed to squan der. He had been reared among city influences, and ipdulged, as I then thought, to his ruin. I scarcely wondered at this, for his face was one stamped by Nature beautiful and noble, and his turbulent will was quite enough to bear down the judgment of a grief. bowed invalid like Iris mother, He bad, as the saying is, r seen a little of the world' .....oits t too much tor his years—and fancied him self equal to all exigences, superior to all authority. Yet, when his cloak of obstinacy was thrown off, he could be as generous and gallant as his namesake of old. "0! course, Sir Walter' was not going . to sur render, unconai:ionally, his citadel of pride , anl perverseness to a country schoolmistress—one, too, urge whom he could literally look down) fle was a most provoking thistle in my careltilly-tehrl ed garden, springing up everywhere to annoy and bailie me, .Was a caricature chalked pn the block board-1 knew the band ni a glance. Was an un fortunate puppy tethered to' my dePk, or a sign of Blackeinithing' posted over the school•rdorn door --each bore witness to my own mind (tithe p,erpe trator, although be managed adroitly to elude proof. if a laugh went around the school•rooni, 1 could never turn My eyes so quickly to the 'corner raid' it canny:wed, nat to find .itlaster.,Walttat tten'T PUBLISHED EVERYSATtfiIjAr. At: 'TOWANDA,. ,BRADFORD COUNTY, PA:, BY E. 0' HEARA GOODRI ,•' 1 , a,se4.4toss OY DENuriciar Tao* Ant .faupyrs".." 1 - f ing svi!h,,rnest imperturbable gravity over his slate or boa;nbiitieiliii;ohirciiiicierit* And When 'call. ed op' for these of other nffeaces, he t would swagger impertinently, lhough r not ungracefully, te my desk, and look me in the lace with as air that said, ss plainly as words, lam a lord of creation—who are you P Reasoning and reproof fell on him like hail-stones on an Alpine glacier; they slid off, leaving the !lame unhumbled smile upon his half curved lips. With &cool nod he would toss back his dark curls' e give a•wink to the, Khoo!, and stalk to his seat. • , e became a sort of omnipresent nuisance to my peace. I WAS ashametlito complain of him, and thus confess that I hail failed in management; but he haunted My dreams at night, and my thoughts by day. I used, at last, fairly to tremble at his entrance,.and almost fear to lilt my , eyes to him. At length he ventured upon a nick of more con sequence. "One morning after the thoi July, when I walk ed into the school-room, I found the children clus tered about a heap of fragments of fire-works, on the hearth. They had evidently been tossed down the low chimney, and had flown hither and thither, at no little tick, blackening the walls and desks in many places. " Who did this!" I exclaimed, in dismay, tho' with little hope of any answer. " It was Walter R—, ma'am," exclaimed two of the little boys together; "I saw him climb the root, and fire down the squibs and crackers," add ed one, " and he said, too, Who cares for that little 11Iiss 1V Ohs !' " sly womanly dignity and indignation were fully aroused. At the instant Walter entered, whist• ling' Yankee Doodle' as he moved to his seat, I called the school to order•and silence. "The boy that caused tins disorder please remove the fragments," said I. Not a muscle stirred. I turned deliberately to the offender, and; hieing his daring look, said -44 Walter, you sit ounvicted cif this act, by the testimony of your schoohmates. Have you any ex• mum to give ?" There was a moment's pause, in . which Walter studied the expression of my fixed eye; then clear and calm as a bell, his voice rang ont-- " No ma'am !" '• Then your sense of honor will tell you what is expected of you, Walter ! No ohe else is to re move this rubbish," I added, turning to the other .scholars. His lips pressed each other more firmly; but he turned with apparent indifference, to his books, with something now and then, between a smile and a sneer. f 100 k note of all, but took no notice, by word of him or of his lessons. Dutingthe noon intermission I thought he might relent. But no; the hour of two brought us both to our places in the yet untidy shoot room. I grew desperate. 1 felt that a crisis had come in my reign, and it must be met • " Weller R— will please stop a moment after Reboot," said I, as I disbanded my little army for the night. He kept his seat, while the othere Walked away. Eddie wee the last to lease, and, as ho passed through the doorway, he scn back tome a look of mingled anxiety and sympathy, that soothed and strengther.ed my heart. My culprit came up, boltl• ly, to my side and confronted me with his wtllyl black - eyes. " Walter,'' I began, quietly, t , this is worthy of a hero: A mighty chevalier a boy of sixteen must be, who undertakes to dispute the authority of a young lady, shorter than himself, and mistress of some thirty little country children .littkassurance was rather taken aback by this unexpec,ed torte, and the first shade of a blush marked a niumentory confusion. " I vrould be your friend, if I could, Walter. You see, very well, that in this room I must and shed be obeyed. If you choose to absent yourself from this room, very well. I have nothing to do with boys too old to be gentlemen 1" I saw his lips arch slightly, and added— "IT you really wish my assistance in, ymr studies, Walter, should you not make we some re turn.7.' No answer. His hand played w ith the leaves of my Atlas." • " Do.you not owe me the assistance of your ex ample, in maintaining law and order among the younger ones? Wouki you think little of the obe dience and tho tweet of your oldest scholar ? I leave this-to your conscience and to your honor We parted -without another word. "I was not surprised, although I was greatly re. lieved, on entering rry premises the next morning, to find the swept and garnished!' The scholars had assembled. I rang the bell immediately, to prevent all needless observations. %Vatter was soon in his seal, with a bright spot under each eye, and Ips that seemed struggling to regain their usual expression of pride. I saw and pitied the conflict, especially when I took a sealed paper from my desk and read— "I beg pardon, Miss Willis, for my offence against law and order. You shall hod me a sup porter of both." 1 . At the first moment of recess, the boys sprang tumultuously out. I stepped near the door to listen. "lia, ha! so. you had to clear up, after all, air!" cried the boy who had been my first infor. ram , 4 What's that to you, picaninny Pete retorter) the sharp tone of Wisher ; " babies may mind their own business." ' 4, And big boy b etter mind their own brag Drawled the other, ith a hectoring chuckle. "Harsh words followed last, acd blows were A. ready on {he way. I called suddenly from theatone steph.. ' ' '“ Walter! will you bring me s sprig °Atm wild hinieystickle in 'he fit It o onder f I want it tor my bcWariurn:u , "Nothing restoretsell-respect-and good humor to a culprit so eflectually as•the commission of an 'errand,-be it ever sashight. Walter came back with a countenance almost cleared, bringing a -quintity .ol the fragrant flowers. I opened my Botany, and willed him to stay, while I found the description oldie plant, and explained the hard, dry terms that defined it. Then, as I laid it between papers to press; his wondering eyes followed every motion. " I don't think I should like a herbarium," he said, bluntly, at last looking down rft a fresh flower which lie was yet twirling in his fingers. • " Why not ?" said I. "The flower moo ire hold will lade—the flowers which you lett on the stalk, will lade. This one, though it is crushed for a lit tie while, will not fade, but will keep its forma and remnant of its beauty." " Well, I think I should like to study flowers, at any rate," he said, with interest. "-If will teach you as far as I can, with a great deal of pleasure," I said as I arose to ring the bell. When I passed him, in returning to my seat, I whispered', " Is it hard to keep good resolutions, Walter!" He started and blushed deeply, for the first time, but took his seat in silence. " From that day I found little rotroublemy peace in Walter. He redeemed his pledge most honora bly ; and still he kept aloof trom me, as though ashamed of his former conduct, and yet afraid to show that shame. He did not glow to my heart as did Eddie. But I mourned the day of his return to the distant city of snares and temptatinns, and sigh ed, as I said to myself. " Would that noble boy might be saved ! "Three years later found me in the sunny Sou* I was passing the winter in the uplands ol Georgia. when I received a letter from Mr. Carroll, tddle's father. Ile informed me that his poor boy had left college, apparetity "far gone in a consumption," and that he had been ordered South, as a forlorn hope. " My heart bleeds that I cannot g, with him,'• the letter ran, "and pillow his head oa a father's breast, in the struggle which I fear is too near. But you know why that cannot be. littea great conso lation to feel that he will be in the neighborhood cf one kind friend. I know how yoti have tefriended My precious boy, and I am sure you will not with. draw your kind offices now, when they will be his only solace in a strange land." " A few weeks later I met the invalid himself.— He eat propped up by sofa cushions; with the lurid hectic on his cheeks, and that:unnatural light in his eyes which seems to pierce the shadow of death. Was it my Eddie, indeed? that tail ematiciateJ, spiritualized beingel. His voice was all that remind ed me of the school-boy, as he started up with le verish animation, and h exclaiming," Miss Willis!" sank back an his couch of cushions. I did not then ask him any questions; for evidently the sight of my face had awakened thoughts which. distressed him. These he afterwards cohfided to me, in one of the many evenings that I spent in soothing his sulleringa and restlessness. " Oh, Miss !" he exclaimed seizing my hand, acid pressing it against his burning forehead —"to die so young!" " Words of comfort would have done no good, and I only pressed his thin hand, in token of sym- pathy. " Do you remember." and he smiled sadly ashe looked up, " what an ambitious boy I was, when I used to sit upon that bench just before your desk, in that old school-house at home I You did not know half the dreams that dazzled me, - half the plans 1 formed, and have since formed for life—and now my life is ended !" tt Did not your plan reach beyond hfe, Edward V winipereil. A spasm shook his alight frame, us he again covered his face and was silent. " Ambition had:been the idol to which:poor Eddie had given himself a living sacrifice. h was hard to say " Thy will be done !" • " But he did say it, as he lay in child-like help lessness, not many days after, waiting patiently for the Anger of Death to unlock the gate of a new lite that has no sickness, no disappointment, no end ! " I pla tied a laurel on Eddie's grave, and a sen •itive plant beside it—mute emblems of the spiri, that had struggled in the frail form below. " Why was he taken 1 1 asked with tears, as I turned from it the last time ; " had the wicked world no need of his pure spirit ? How many hundreds it might of spared before him!" Thus we complain, short sighted gropers along the shore of eiernily!" Aunt Hannah paused for the first time, and sat poising her needles upon her idle fingers, as though buried in reverie, Mary drew a deep breath and asked, softlt , at last— " And what of your self-willed boy, aunt, your Walter? Did he never cross your track again " My Walter !" exclaimed the old lady, bright ening up. " You shall heat ! I was thinking how many years had passed since my first journey to the Westeru country. It seems more than twenty; and yet tt can hardly be," she said as if reckoning, with her eyes fixed ,on Mary. "Well, twenty years ago I was floating down the Ohio, on a fine steamboat ; that is, fide for those day.. I was alone, and rather adventurous. But I had 'an unconquerable curiosity to see the grand old woods of " the West" in theirglory. They were'all around me then. I suppose I should to forced to sail many a long m ile i beyond the Ohio, now a-days, to find the West, I was standing by the railing of the griards,.enjoying the waving pane ram; when a little'boy about four years old, came running by me. His soft hair_ streamed back on the wind, and his from his nurse in the cabin. Fnuity I" called a shrill voice, and a woolly head" was timid through the cabin doorway,— wCome here, Franky, rogue." " No, no! don't want to: 'exclaimed rr Franky, rogue," in high glee; backing towards the tailing of the boat, se she pursued him. All at once be knocked a - pail 'of thit guard, elms& by 'Ole gaiigway, that had been carelessly' Tastened. It.gaveway, and; dam Ming back h'e' Was just 'falling over the boat's side , :rhea I ,calkht h velvet frock by. oho Mil okut, and behl_him hangit Nurseand child each gal to bring crew and passenge Among them was a yoring 1 ing gown, with her long streaming, to her waist. S startled punbesuu than anyt ed through the crowd with cauglied her boy in breathed, folding him to hs. told her the story, and, turn my hand, and looking up te father will bless you for t 1 met him with one chili wal 1 to recover c on sciousness o f ed back into her mate-roo ' About an hour afierwa countenances that moved Master Frar.ky's bead peer lain, and soon he made 14 fastened by one finger to h gained her composure. dress, with a face above ttii beauty, she seemed a patio ful dignity. The nurse foll baby with peachy cheeks, j pled hands. " I lured the little boy to! mother's permission to takd seemed restless from contir "Certainly I can trust hii take the trouble of watchin i " Franky is a sad rogue!" her face as she said this, ail head that accompanied it "So you are a minister's of the little fellow, of er about his father, whom he in a few hours. " No," said he shaking " What then, a doctor' " ' No, no!" he shouted, lessor's boy, that's what I d rope tree. I don't want tol " I found my task of gut Tor the little fellow insisted the Whole boat, and gettin and one clro:1 questions. The supper bell rang, an er escorted to the head of tlemanly captain, who, w seemed assiduous in tti was called to her side, an " I next caught sight c cased ilea blue cap with I my side, where I was star{ ed " Here she is, mammal "His mother came feral ready for !ending at the nearing. A bright glow laid ber tiny gloved hand " My husband ritu,t beJ will permit to introduce yt board. What name I gave her my name. " I shall always remerr energy. " Franky, dear, side of the boat. You hal , all day. There ! papa me and look out for papal " Our boat struck the and confusion of landing Suddenly a tall gentlemal the army of Irishmen ott deck with one bound " Franky clapped his h flds and screamed with delight ; the baby crowed an echo of his glee, though he knew not why. The young wile was al ready in the arms of her husband. "L zzie! ' he exclaims I, but she did not speak a word. She had forgottO me, I saw, and heeling myeell quite an inn utter, l was turning away, when she caught my sleeve. " Oh ! Miss Willis eta • ! Walter you must thank this lady, lor I cannot ! he has saved our boy Irom rowning !" " Miqs Willis! exclai ed the gentlemen, quiek ly, seizing my hand, and scrutinizing my lace , with a pair of keen dark eyes-.-the same, the very same ! My dear lady what chance seta you in this quarter of the globe! Why, dO you not recognise your plague of schooldays, yo pr thorn in the spirit, your culprit V 1, Can it be Walter ' I staring at him in a kind of incredulous surprise, "Nobody but hint self, dear Miss Willis, and es great a rogue as ever, as Lizzie there can testify.— Nit this is no place for perley ! Come ! you are not going on to.night f Yoir shall not ! Here, fellow. take oil these trunk• r he called to a porter. '• I shall settle the question of your desimation to-night, leave or no leave, bliss Willis," he exclaimed archly, as he turned to search for my trunk. " You see Walter R----has nod forgotten his disregard of all powers that he !' • " I never passed an ed,ening of more unalloyed pleasure than the first evening in the home of toy former scholar, now Professor UIII veil:II, and his girlish wile %Vatter had redeem ed the rich promise of genius that his 'youth had given, in the face of temptations that had beset his path in no common degree. I saw at a glance the lawless vehemence of his boyhood had been tam ed into the broad eunent of l upeful energy, and wa s working mightily for hilnoelt and for the world. I asked him. one ritty.-tor I was detained a cr close prisoner" by hi hearth not a few days— when it was Alai he hadlchangedArom the idle - , to the aver-busy-from the warrant to the euthusias tic being that he was. pansed . a moment, and men with a look into which bia sourpooted a woilti of meaning, sanl--- g!.;11 wet, Mies Willis when . 1 !aid a paper upon year desk, pledged my apportion. and indef.-• that bleu yon,•my tette art my Mend, Moral). a d guY haulkwarmin'tppeil iir and went beefily out. 13 over die ilauk blue wa- re a scream loud enough ,411 to our assistance Woman in a while theaP• a hair hall braided, half , a looked, mare like a tug else, as she bouod mother's energy, and tiller armi. "Oh!" she i heart. The nurse soon i ng to me, she caught awfully, she said, " His 's! Oh! could I have tinting V' Then seeming her di,habille, she gild. , carrying tier iteasute iltis, as I sat studying the p and down rho cabin, ped from behind a cur appearance in l fuld, and s mother, whO hi il re• ow, in a neat travelling ia order of a 'common to embodiment of grace mowed with a year old dark' blue eyes and dim- my Fide, and aFked Ilia him upon deck , a 8 he emem. with you, it you will him," she replied.— he smile that dimpled nulled the shake Lit the . boy, are you?" I a.ked otne remark from trim expected lo meet at L its curls archly b 3) gleefully, " I'm a pro m ! I Want to Climb that sit still." rdian no very easy onti on being escorted over answers to a thousand 41 1 saw the young moth , a long table by the gen ith knot of gentlemen, Lentions to her. Freaky .d 1 lost him for a time clinground, catty pate, 1.1 tel as ran to ding ou deck, and shout. I've catched her !' lard, in bonnet and shawl, hatt:ot the city we were tOke over her lace as, Ole n my arm, and said— : you, madame, it you u. He will soon be oil I give him r ' F. he gait!, With ber it, n't go qui . e mbar the ,re made me tremuleome coming soon. S:an,ll3) l l ' hair soon, and :the ibuzgle and unlanding began pushed his way through aie pier, and sprang upon MINEM I will not weary you with a much l un ge s erugy my patient Mary. It is enough to say that the hap piest days—yes, morchs, of my Wet lifechave been passed in ificlitirily ill Professor since t h e ,, removed to a • cOrresprardirrg pore of u-efulness at the East, or in the rociely of his ih.cious chil.ften, who came, like angels, to ;gladden my hearth and heart." Mary looked up with nu ingniry on her gurprise. partod lips. Aunt Minnati laid her finger on them with a smile of much 'meaning and much love, while with the other hand pht gently drew a lock • et from HS neAlog place over the blushiog gill's heart." In bhort, let me 6ni4l my t•iory in pope; ogle, Mary. In short, you have met them here, have loved them here—and" she amuck a spring of the locket, and held op a bright manly face before Ma• ry's Sparkling Elea. " And my Mary, to-day, is the chosen bride of ihe rogish Flanky, whose steps I have watched on more than the one day's brief voyage of his childir , h memory. God guide him through Earths wilde itess to heaven—child of my adoption—son of my heart! Mary, the teacher's trial was light ; has not her reward been great?" Mary dropped her tear sprinkled cheek on her hientl's shoulder, put her arm around her, and witis• pered—" Dear aunt, mother of my heart ! your les son shall not be lost!" lit due season ye shall reap, if ye faint not !" said the old lady, as she raid her hand on theiore• head of the young teacher, where the last lay of summer sunlight had just gone out in glory. A Beauviret. Ptcroat: —The ntan who stands upon his own soil, who feels that by the lawsot the laud in which he lives—by the fault of civilized natinns—he is the rightlul and exclusive owner ut land he tills, is by the constitution of our nature under a wholesome influence t.ut ea ity imbibed by any other source. lie feels—other things being Niue—more strongly than another, the *racier of a man as the lord of an inanimate would. Of 01 . 1,4 great and wonderful, sphere which, fashioned by the hand of God and upheld by his power, is rolling through the heaven; a part is hisl--his from the centre of the sky. It is the space on which the generation before moved in Its round of duties / at d its !eels himself connected by a link vi ith those who hollow him, and to whom he is to tinnamit a home. Perhaps his farm has conic down to' him hum his father. 7 hey have gone to their last home! but he can trace their footsteps over the scenes of his daily labors. The roof which thebers t.im was reared by those to-whom he owes his being. Some interest ing domestic tradition is connected with every en closure. The favorite burl nee aas f. anted by his Libel's baud. lie sported in be) hood beside the brook Much still winds through the meadow...- fhrough the fields lies the path to the village st-notal of earlier days. He still hears from the window the voice of the Sabba h bell which called his fa. flier to the house of Goa; and near at hand ls.tlio spot a here Iris parents lai I down to rest, and a4tere, when his time has come, he shall be laid by his children. These are the feelings of ,he owner of the soil Words cannot paint them ; they (low 'out of the deepest fountains of the heart, they are the life aping of a fresh healthy and gerterous Ira 'tonal character.—Edtrard Eve., ell In- The name " lady'' is an abbreviation of the Saxon " leulday," which signifies "bread gi r. er." The Mistress,.ol a manor, at a time when affluent families resided constantly at their country man:dons, was accustomed, once a week or oftener, to distribute among the poor a certain quantity of bread. She bestowed the gilt her own hand, and made the heatts of the needy glad by the colt words and gentle actions which accompanied her benevolence. The widow and the orphan "loco up and called her blessed the destitute and int) afflicted recounted her praises; all clause', of the poor embalmed tier in their affections as the" leot daY," the giver of bread and ilivertser of comlurt a sort of minist_ring spirit in A world of sorrow. Who is a lady now ! " tit HAS NOT AN ENEMY IN THE WORL.D."7 Hasn't he! Well, tae are sorry tor him! Fot be has a mighty little character who has no enemies. He is no body who has not got pluck etiough.to get an enemy. Give us rather, ns our ideal of virtue and manliness, one who has many enemies—one who has candor, and fearless lose of the thing he sees to be right. The man of earnest purposes, viten will, and love of principle for its own take, must have enemies. But this, so far from being ill, is to him a good The strong tree is mote deeply rooted and Iw:tenet! inithe Soil by the blast than the summer breeze. A man never knows how much there is of him until he has . confrontej and braved bi.ter opposition The followity4, horn the ‘Varsaw Mirror, if decidedly the beet thin in the wood line we hare seen this winter: • " SlNUCLARTaktnnnoN.—One day of last week, a man, who lives not a great witylmm this village, drew us two hinds of wool', calling each load three• quarters of a cord. tir,piling it, we found that each load measured three..qoarters of ,cord plump. The case is ao singular, that we think it worthy of pubic notice. • We would give the man's name, but fear all the village will be alter him for wood. RA'rLK'e Sonetu3tn.-4 lady at Columbus, in Ohio ' recently inquiied of the .spirii rappers how many children she had? " Four," rapped the spirit. " The husband, started at the reply, stepped up and enquired : . " many .children hare f?'r t; Ttcv i" ansiereil the rapping medium. "The bul.band and wife looked at each ether, with an odd !mile in their feces, ht a mument s anil Mon . remained non believers. Time lua beep- a niisl.:.ke made 101PCUhcre.'' Mail IS Ircxm 3S te.