THE BRADFORD REPORTER. MLLW KB ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. Ij^OW-AJST^DA.: ftlir sday Morning, June 2, 1869. f gtletttb loeirg. _ I LIVE FOR SOMETHING. | BY CHARLES SWAIN. I Lr something, be not idle— | [ t about thee for employ I I fit n down to useless drewsto*— I litr is the sweetest joy. # - I hands am ev*. I hearts u > , i y ( B Life ft thee j Acti* be. „ -ou may. ■ uyp thw&y! 1 f . cheei ing smiles, II - ,tur dm -Jd or si'ver, | With t ir dispelling wiles. HAs the t sunshine falleth I Etc , the grateful earth, and kindness W well the darken*- h "th. fre oppresseu * ear/, ' at of sympathy, V 1 srds of hope and eomfwflk " i thy reward shall be V . ;e soul returning. J fi 9 perfect fonutain head, i F thou freely givest, $ stclla nt Tiy di the Governs Faint! W, werell ritttajtwil* fa '¥ """/"ft .d nv sistj Fann'had b*" reading aloud ie hid recall tl politic* articles, and all tout bus*', tille had s*d he had heard tm"\ an there as nothi/g in the papers a-.i thin lid left t ro °m- iSo Fanny looked ofer the mrriagesnd death, aud read about toe tveathtf in NeYork fid Cjncago and me otherthings it she iought w*ou d in terest us mile we ere se*tig. Suddenly I sed up towardfhere Jfss Ajs il(iS t>as sit ur, far aVnv at e otherind of the room. She was leaning b< in hefchair, and. all in moment, 1 thght sheboked white, as Iktttrh she had feted. 1 I not say a word, bat got up and vit quietj towards her. I found she had faied quite Way, and her lips were pnie, and 1 ey s sbl 1 opened the window bv her ;or the flit was cool, and sil the windows' ere close There came in little breeze o'frcsh air,fid then I ran to fttch a alass of atcr. \V*n I returned, I i'ocr.d Miss Apes reviviik little. The air and water serrd to refresjer, and very grad ually she cam jack to heif. As she opened hr eves, sheiooked at mionderingly, then rcncd tiie mom-then iiudder came over her as if w/fi a ridden | jful memory. "I'm better —hank u for the water," Kid she ; and ten she it up and went to the window, andeaned i ,nst the casement I had a glimpse f her f $ so sad a face I had never seen tfore. For Mi>s Agnss was often sad, though the was quiet inler way nd manners. She nuld be gay, whn it wt me to be gay. She our governes—thai she taught Mary and Sophy and ne. Fif was too old to be j night by her, aid had (Italian master and ■ f ench teacher; but 3practiced duets for : taepiano with Iliss Ad, and rend with her -aid she made visits j her, for Miss Ag nes was a favorite el*here. She had a tied ivrd f or everyboind listened kindly to ail Uiat was saidjlier. She talked to "erybody at thesewinjieties.had something to say to everyone, nrihen she came home she hnd alvays sometl to tell that was en tertaining. j often /ted I could be one- T-arUr as amisiitg, never could sue eed to my little exttrienc t all agreeable in the Wtt y Miss A guvs di I have tried it often since, but I always f Only the other day, I quite prhied mysell it I had found out ali stout Airs. Endieo to Europe, and cntae home delight* ith my piece of news. \ ,ie goiig with husband ; two of the children shewas Have behind, and take inebaby wit) her ; ' were to be gone six audi even!' the name of the vcasel P J gong in, the day they were to My inteHfLjUtrenifcaa very quickly told ; M Agnes ami many others would have idea good deal npre of it. I had no soon cooij to tl.e end ban Fanny said : "Who is :ng p take care the children she leaves at , aef' I had ne\tr thought to ask ! I was I -pointed;—my jews was quite imperfect ;! as well nit have tried to bring any j But it was liever so with Miss Agnes. f eve 11 w s beciuse she was really inter-' f' n *hat concerned others, that they al ■s her wHlingy about themselves ; and ug i she never vus inquisitive about oth affairs, yet sh e knew very well all that ; ?oing on. rit . w j' s a valuable member of our IJtjjircle, and wasvelcomed also among oar p n 'e thtught her beautifal, too. [ Very tall aid slender, and her light- X 6? K Pre l ' e color of her liglit-brown dJt *° Se her come into the room, j a '' ,lce nude sunshine there ; and <-'lnore to us tian a governess—she was irie jf'Cnd. &it '°oktd round at me, pale and ►re c suddenly saw that I looked aston t , r > ar 'd she said : " I ain not well, "we wiil not say anything about it. j N3fl to >▼ ro °ni ; to-morrow 1 shall be I ,e held her hand to her head, and ih f^, cre raust be some heavy pain 'A \U looked so sad and pale. She ". iMt, WA d ni ght and went away. the others what had happened S ! i!;v!nv , said| 1 was ~ot in the when- he witi at 8 J a ? P arl 'y because they '* for BUTTER : "id not observed what J. B TH found the paper PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'IIEARA GOODRICH. were anything in what she had read that could have moved Miss Agnes so much. I had not been paying much attention to the reading,but I knew upon which side of the paper to look. Fanny told me it was time for me to go to bed, however, and I left my search before I could find anything that seemed to concern Miss Ag nes. I stoped at her door, aud bade her good night again ; and she came out to me, and kissed me, and said—l was a good child, and I must not trouble myself about her. The next day she seemed quiet, yet the same as ever. Though I said nothing to anybody else about her fainting, I could not help tell ing my friend Jessie of it—for I always told i Jessie everything. Fanny called us the two I Jays, we chattered so when we were together. I knew she would not tell anybody, so I could not help sharing my wonder with her—what could have made Miss Agnes faint so sudden i Iv ? She thought it must have been something ' in the newspaper—perhaps the death of some j friend, or the marriage of some oLher. I was willing to look again, aud this time remember ed three things that Fanny had just been read ing when I had looked up at Miss Agnes.— One was about Paul Shuttuek—in descending from a haycart, he had fallen upon a pitchfork, and had seriously wounded his thigh. Anoth er was the marriage of Mr. Abraham Black to Miss Su3an Whiteomb, and Fanny had won- i dered if she were related to the Whitcorobs of i Hadley. Then she had read a singular adver tisement for a lost ring, a seal ring, with some Arabic letters engraved upon it. I was of opi nion that Miss Agnes was somehow connected with this signet-ring—that it had some influ ence over her fate. Jessie thought that Miss Agnes must have been formerly engaged to Mr. Abraham Black, and that when she heard of his marriage but I interrupied her in this suggestion. Iu the first place, she could never have been engaged to a Mr. Abraham Black ; and then, nobody who could marry Miss Agnes would think of taking up with a Susan Whiteomb. So Jessie fell back upou Paul Shattuck, and, to tell the truth, we had some warm discussions on the subject. Time passed ou, and it was June. One lovely afternoon, we had quite a frolic with the hay, the grass having been cut on the lawn in front of the house. Miss Agnes had been with us. We had made nests iu the hay, and had huried each other in deep mounds of it, and had all played till we were quite tired. I went into the house in search of Miss Agues, after she had gone in, and found her stting at one of the side windows. I came near, then wish ed to draw back again, for 1 saw tears in her eyes. But when I found she had seen me, 1 tried to speak as if I had seen nothing. " How high the cat has to step, to walk over the grass," said I, as I looked out of the win dow. Miss Agnes put her arms about me. "You wonder, because you see me crying," said she, and looked into my face. " I never before saw anybody cry that was grown up," said I. Miss Agnes smiled and said, " They tell children it is naughty to cry ; but sometimes yon can't help crying, can you ?" And her tears came dropping down. " Yes, it is very bad,'" she said, as she held me in her arms, " it is very bad ; but you do help me. You shall be my little friend." That was all. She did not tell me anything —yet I felt as if she had said a great deal,aud I did not speak of this to Jessie. A few days after, as I was passing the door of the parlor, I fancied I heard a little cry,and it sounded to me as if I heard the voice of Miss Agues. I hurried in. A stranger had just entered the room. But before me stood Miss Agnes, pale, erect, her lips quivering. She held fast a chair, which she had drawn up in i front of her, as one would place a shield be ! tween one's self and some wild animal. llow slender and defenceless she loooked ! 1 fol ; lowed the terrified glance of her eyes. There, i in the middle of the loom stood a stranger— not so terrible to look upon, for he was young, ■ and it seemed to me I had never seen so hand j some a man. His black hair and and eyes ! rpiite pictured my romance, lie was strongly built, and directly showed his strength by seiz | ing a large marble table that stood near the i centre of the room, and wheeling it between j himself and Miss Agnes. "If you are afraid of me," he said, " I will ; build up a barrier between us. Poor lamb, you would like to be free from the clutches of i the wolf !" " I am afraid of you," said Miss Agnes, slowly—atid the color came to her checks.— " Your know your power over me. I begged you, if you loved me, not to coine to me." "AM for that foolish ring ! And the spir its of mischief betrayed its loss to you,; it was none of my work that published it in the pa pers. Can you let a fancy, an old story in a ring, disturb your faith in me ?" "If the faith is disturbed," answered Mirs Ajrnes, " what use in asking what has distur bed it ? Earnest, as you stand there, yon cannot say you love me as you once professed to love me !" " I can say that yon are my guiding star— that, if you fail me, I fall away into ruin." " Can my little light keep you fronf ruin ?" said Miss Agnes, shoddering. "Do not talk to me 60 ? Alas, you know how weak I ana !" 44 I know that yon are an angel, and that 1 am too a wretch to dare to speak to yon. I came hero to tell you I was worthy of yonr deepest hatred. But, Agnes, when yon speak to me of my power over yon, it tempts me to wield it a little longer, before I fall below your contempt." He walked up and down the room, and pre sently saw me standing there. " A listener !" he exclaimed, "you are afraid to be alone with rae !" I was aboot to leave the room, bnt he called me back. "Stay, child P he said, " if I can speak in ktr presence, it makes little difference that any one else shoold hear me. Agnes, little Agnes, yon woold like to be qnito alone ; —let the child stay. Yet yoa know already that I am faithless to yon. Too know wfcgt Tam going "Pic-oloßaini Ptyle.** MI U., .. .. . leat the ok/ii. KI*BTOKE STORE. Ibe " REGARDLESS OF DENVNCIATIOS FROM ANY QUARTER." to tell you. I love vou, as I have always loved you. But there are other passions hold to me tighter. Money, and position—l need them—l cannot live without them. The first I have already, and the claims I have to reputation will follow soon. lam mad. iam flinging away happiness for the sake of its mask. Next week I marry riches—a fortune. With a golden lady, I go to Europe. I for sake home—my better self. I leave you, Ag nes ; —and may thank God that I do leave you ; I am unworthy of you." She lifted herself from the chair on which she was leaning, and walked towards him. She luid her hand upon his shoulder, aud, white aud pale, looked into his face. "Do not go, Ernest I" said she. " You are mine. A promise canuot be broken—you are promised to me Stay, do not go away 1" " My beautiful Agnes !" said he, " do you come to lay your pure self down in the scale against my follies and all my passions ? You stand before uie too fair, too lovely for me. It is only iu your presence that I can appear no ble enough for you. Even here, by your side, I see the life I must lead with you, the strug gle that you must share. Iu that life you would only see me fail. I am weak ; I can never be strong. Let me go down the current. Your heart will not break ; —I am not worth such a sacrifice." " You are desperate," said she. "You say these cold, bitter words, and you must know that each word cuts me. Oh, Ernest, you ure false, indeed, if you come to taunt me with your faithlessless !" " I needed to see you once more," he said, imperiously—" I needed it. But you were true, Agnes—the ring was a true talisman. It seemed to me that its letters had changed col or. I carried it to an old Eastern scholar. He declared that the letters could never have formed the word " Faith,"—that the word was some black word that meant death. I left it with him, that he might study it. When I saw him again, he declared he had lost it, and had had advertised it. You see you can trust your talisman soouer than you can trust me." At this moment the outer door opened, and presently Fanny came in, with one of her friends. Miss Agnes looked bewildered, but her visitor recovered his composure directly. " Miss Fanny, I believe ; —I have met you before. 1 have just been bidding good-bye to Miss Agnes, before leaving for Europe. Cau I be of service to you ?" Before we had time to think, he had said something to each one of us, and had ieft the house. Fanny turned to speak to Miss Agnes, but she had fallen to the ground before we could reach her. She was ill, very ill, for a long time. She had the brain fever—so the doctor said. They let me stay with her—she liked to have me with her. I was glad to sit in the darkened room all the long day. I never was a " handy" child, but I learned to be useful to her. I waited on all her wants. I held her hand when she reached it out as if to meet some kindly touch. In the quiet of her room, I had not heard the great piece of news, —of the terrible rail road accident ; that Mr. Carr, the Ernest who had been to see Miss Agnes, was among those who were suddenly killed—the very day he left our house ? I had not heard it ; so I wasuot; able to warn Fanny, when she came into the sick room of Miss Agnes, the first day she was able to talk—J could not warn Fanny that she must not speak of it But she did. How could she be so thoughtless ? Miss Agnes, it is true, looked almost well, as she was lying on her couch, a soft color in her cheeks. But then Fanny need not have told her anything so pain ful. Miss Agnes looked quite wild, and turned to me to as if to know whether it were true. I could not say anything to her, but knelt by her—and she seemed almost calm, as she ask ed to know all that was known, all the terrible j particulars that Fanny knew so well. She was worse after that. We thought she would die, one night. But she did not die.— Either she was to weak or too strong to die of a broken heart. Perhaps she w u s not strong enough to love so earnestly such a one as Mr. Carr, or else she had such strength as could bear the trial that was given her to bear. She lived, but life seemed very feeble iu her for a long time. One day she began to talk with ir.e. " Yon would like to know, Jennie, thestory of that ring," she said. 1 told her I was afraid to have her talk about it, but she went on : "It is an old heirloom, and all our family history is full of stories about this ring. There are so many tales connected with it, that every one of us has looked upon it with a sort of su perstition, and cherished it as a tulisman con nected with our lives. It was always a test of constancy, and the stories of these occasions when it has detected falsehood have always been remembered. I suppose there are many when it has been quietly worn, undisturbed, that have heeuforgotten. It has told many a sad tale in my owu family. It came back, bro ken, to my brother Arthur, and he died of a broken heart. My sister Eveline gave it to her young cousin, to whom she had engaged herself. But afterwards, when she went to live with a gay and heartless aunt of mine, she broke her promise to him for the sake of a richer match. The day that she was married, onr cousin far away saw the black letter turn red upon the signet ring." " Oh, Miss Agnes ?" I exclaimed. " And why should not letters change ?" she asked, abruptly ; and I saw her eyes look out dreamily, as if loooking at something I did not see. " The letter clothes the spirit ; and the spirit gives life to the form. A face grows lovely or unlovely with the spirit that lies be hind it. I cannot say if there be a spirit iu snch things. Yet what we have worn we give value to. It has an expression in onr eyes. Do we give it all that expression, or has it some life of its own 1" She interrupted herself, and went on : " I had known that Ernest was not true to toe. I had known it by the words he wrote to use. Tbey did not bave the risg of pure sil ver ; there wae e dang to tbera. Then Fan Raysrille, Sfarth 8, WJ3. I ii v read aloud the loss of that ring, it spoke to a suspicion that was lying in the depth of my heart, and roused it into iifc. My little Jeauie, I was very sad then. " You do not know how deeply I loved Er nest Carr. You do not know how I might have loved your brother George—yes, the no ble, upright George. He loved me, and trea ted me most tenderly ; lie found this home for me I did not banish him from it—he would have stayed all these years in Calcutta, if had not been for me—so he said. You cannot un derstand how it was thut Eruest Carr, whom I had known before, should nave impressed me more. You do not know yet, that we cauuot command our love—that it does not follow where our admiration leads. I loved Ernest for his very faults. The fascinations that made the world, its prizes, its money, its fame, so at tractive to him, won me as I saw tliera in him. It is terrible to think of ruy last meeting with him ; but his fate seems to me not so awful as the fate towards which he was hurrying—the life which could never have satisfied him." She left off speaking, and dreamed ou, her eyes aud thoughts fur away. And I, too, dreamed. I fancied niv brother George com ing home, aud that he would meet with that ring somehow. I knew it must come back to her. And it did ; and he came with it. PATIENCE.—" Patience !" It is a lesson taught us by winter. The wind whispers it through the branches of fir and pine, where, by and by, the oriole and the red bird shall flutter their bright plu mage The winds bring now no songs ol birds, uo breath of roses, but the medicine of the cold, wholesome air not less needful than the perfume of the summer breeze. Patience !be willing to be bardeued into vigor—be willing to be made strong, that so every season may minister to thee its owu keen aud peculiar de light. " Patience 1" The bare twigs of oak, and maple, and willow, shape themselves into hire oglyphics, to spell out the worJ. Every bough imprisons a colony of living buds, sleeping calmly iu their fetters tiil the appointed time to unfurl the flag of liberty upon the sunny air. Why should the untimely bud hurry out to meet the death dealing frost ? Patience, heart, neither were it well for ihte always to be in leaf aud flower. For thee is the time of biossomiug and fruitage fixed, as surely as for the tree. " Patience !" It is written upon the earth's face, as she lies looking placidly up to the heavens, through her veil of snow. Uow calm she is, with her white mantle folded over her bosom—over the seeds and roots she is keep ing quiet for the festival time of spring—over the graves where he our sealedup promises of Paradise. Patience, soul ! Hold thy life germs pure and sound through the loug days of silence aud cold, content, since heaven is above thee still, with its earnestness of truth, is open radiance of love. Patience ! for the seeds will burst, the buds will unfold, the graves will open ! Wait in quietness and confidence ! Let thy snow robes of endurance lie light and beautiful about tliee till winter passes, and up from the deeus of thy being comes a murmur und per fume of life ! Then patience may change into joy, for it is tliy redemption that draweth nigh 1 Congregatiunaiist. MORAL SUASION ON A llAM. —When a friend of ours, whom we call Airricola, was a boy, lie lived on a farm in Berkshire county, the owner of which was troubled by dog Wolf. The cur killed his sheep, knowing, perhaps, that he was conscientiously opposed to capital punishment, and he could devise no means to prevent it.— " I can break him of it," said Agrieola, "if you will give nie leave." "Thou art permit ted," said the honest farmer ; and we will let Agrieola tell the story in his own words.— "There was a rain on the farm as notorious for butting as Wolf was for sheep stealing, and who stood in as much need of moral suasion as the dog. I shut Woit up in the barn with this old fellow, and the consequence was that the dog never looked a sheep in the face again.— The rain broke every bone in his body, literally. Wonderfully uplifted was the ram aforesaid, by his exploit ; his insolence became intolerable ; he was sure to pitch into whomsoever went nigh him. 'l'll fix him,' said I, and so 1 did. I rigged an iron crowbar out of a hole in the baru, point foremost, and hung an old hat on the end of it You can't always tell when you see a hat whether there is a head in it or not ; how then should a rain ? Aries made at it full butt, and being a good marksman from long practice, the bar broke iu between his horns, and came out under his tail. This little ad monition effectually cured hiiu of butting." THE BUCKET. —It is much easier fo to get into a quarrel than to get out of it. In the year 1005, some soldier of the Commonwealth of Modena ran away with a bucket from a well belonging to the State of Bologna. This im plement might be worth a shilling, but it pro duced a quarrel which was worked up into a long and sanguinary war. Henry, the King of Sardinia, assisted the Modcnese to keep pos session of the bucket, and in one of the battles he was made prisoner. His father, the Empe ror, offered a chain of gold that would encircle Bologna, which is ten miles in compass, for his son's ransom, but in vain. After twenty two years of imprisonment he pined away. His monument is now extant In the Church of the Dominicans. This fatal bucket is still exhibited in the tower of the cathedral of Modena, en closed in an iron cage. A " HANDY" ARTICLE. —Adam S'onaker, a nnmber of years ago, came to Huntingdon Fur nace, and seeing there, for the first time, a pair of snuffers, he asked : "What's them for?" 1 "To snuff the candle." The candle just then needed Adam, with his thumb and unuf tbe SDOFF, and carefully h baud*." ffi, eaviug, " W*" , —4L CO., dwego, W. Y. I A Freaks of a Willicnalre. William Beckford, oce of the most remarka ble men of modern times, was the only son of Alderman Beckford, of London, who died when his son was only ten years of age, bo qucothing him West India and other property which yielded an annual income equal to hull a million dollars. Young Beckford's mental powers were good and uo pains were spared in cultivating them by a refined education. Sir William Chambers instructed him in architec ture, while the great Mozart instructed him in music. At twenty-one, with the income of a prince, and accumulations in ready money to the amount of about a million sterling (five million dollars,) he launched upon the wide world. The great talent for promoting bureau happiness was placed within his reach ; but he threw the goldeu opportunity away. Proud and haughty, the youthful Beckford withdrew from the active business of life, and retiring to Portugal, there devoted himself to a life of luxurious ease The firat outlay of his wealth there, was the erection of a gorgeous palace. During his residence in Portugal he visited, under royal sanction, some of the wealthy and luxuriant monasteries of that country. It is difficult to convey an idea of the pomp aud splendor of this journey, which resembled more the calvacade of an eastern prince than the tour of a private individual. "Everything," he himself says, " that could be thought or dreamed of, lor our convenience or relaxation, was carried iu our train—no thing was left behind but care and sorrow." " The ceiling of my apartment iu the monas tery," he adds, " was gilded and painted ; the floor was spread with Persian carpets of the finest texture ; the tables decked with superb ewers and basins, of cliused silver." The kitcheu iu which the dinner WHS pre pared is thus described. " A stream of water flowed through it, from which were formed reservoirs containing every kind of river fish. On one side were heaped up loads of game and venison ; on the other side were vegetables and fruit in endless va riety. Beyoud a loug line of stores, extended a row of ovens, and ciose to them hillocks of wheatcn flour, finer than snow, blocks of sugar, und jars of the purest oil, and pastry in various abundance."' The dinner which followed the preparations was served in a magnificent saloon, covered with pictures and lighted up with a profusion of wax tapers in sconces of silver. " The ban quet," he adds, "consisted of rurities and deli cacies of every season from distaut countries." Confectionary and fruits awaited the party in a room still more sumptuous, where vessels of Goa filigree containing the purest and most fragrant spices, were handed round. Such was Beckford's mode of life during this day. Returning at the commencement of the pre sent centurv, to his native country, Becktord again abandoned himself to the selfish enjoy ment of his wealth. Taking o capricious dis like to a splendid mansion on his estate, which had been erected by his father at a cost of $1,400,000. he oidertd it to be pulled down. He resolved that, phoenix like, there should arise from its ruins a building which should surpass in magnificence all that hitherto had been known in English art. Fouthill Abbey, once one of the wonders of the west of Eng land, was the result of this determination.— Whole galleries of the vast pile were erected, solely for the purpose of enabling Beckford to emblazon on their windows the crests of the families from whom he boasted his descent.— The wonder of tiie fabric, however, was a tow er of colossal dimensions and great height, erected somewhat in the manner and spirit of those who once reared a similar structure on the plains of JShiiuar : "Go to, let us ouild a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven ; and let us make us a name." To complete the erection of Becktord's tow er, 400 men were employed both night and day through an entire winter, the torches u-ed by the nocturnal workmen being visible to the as tonished travelers at miles distant. Beckford's principal enjoyment was watching the erection of this structure. At nightfall he would re pair to some elevate ! part of his grounds, and there iu solitude would feast his senses for hours with the singular spectacle presented by the dancing of the lights and the reflection ol their glare on the surrounding woods. The building was indeed Beckford's idol—the ob ject for which lie lived. He devoted the whole of his energies to make it realize the most fas cinating vicious of a vain imagination. The tower was finally erected, but as might have been expected, the mortar and cement used had no time to set properly, ere a violent gale of vind brought the vast structure to the ground. Merely remarking that he should have been glad to witness the sublime fall of such a mass of materials, lie gave orders for the erection of another tower of 267 feet in height ; this also fell to the ground in 1835 ' After the completion Beckford's conduct was still more extraordinary. A wall nearly two miles in circumference surrounded his man sion, and within this circle scarcely any visitors were allowed to pass. In sullen grandeur he dwelt alone, shunning converse with the whole world. Majesty itself was desirous of visiting this wonderful domain, but was refused admit tance. Strangers would disguise themselves as servants, as peasants, or as pedlers, in the hope of catching a glimpse ot its giories. Nor was its interior unworthy of this curiosity. All that art and wealth could give, to produce ef fect, was there. "Gold and silver vases and cups," says one who saw the place, "are so nu merous here that they dazzle the eye ; and when one looks round at the cabinets, candela bra?, and ornaments which decorate the room, we may nlmo-t imagine that wc stand in the treasury of some oriental prince, whose richg* consist entirely in vessels of gold anij t f' rom richea with precious stones o* ~ ' the ruby to the Such wj^ ore tj uin 100,000 par annom, he iJWfffied above the reach of adverse fortune.— Who would rentnred to have styled all this etMnesv* at as the mirage 1 A 1 sadduk 'liou of ludia propertv iril . VOL. XIX.—XO. 52. took place. Some law suits terminated nufu ▼orably, embarrassments poured in like a flood on the princely owner. The gate* which bud refused admittance to a monarch were rudely thrust open by a sheriff's officer. The mansion erected at so vast an expense, was sold. The greater part of its costly treasures were scat tered by the hammer of' the auctioneer ; and Beckford driven, with the shattered fragments of his fortune, to spend a solitary old age at a watering place—there to moralize on the ina bility of wealth, there to feel how little plea sure the retrospect of neglected talents can give, and to paint the oft-told moral of the vanity of human affairs. lie fell, it is said, unpitied by any. Tho tower which he had erected at so great a cost fell to the ground, and Fontbiii Abbey was pulled down by its new owner. Thus melted away, like frostwork before tho sun, the ex travagant production of a man of wealth. HU whole life had been a sad misapplication of tha talent committed to his care, and in the end he discovered that he had been cheated by the mirage. Though Beck'ord's princely lavishness had caused him to be talked about a!! over the world, his true claim to remembrance rests up on his talents us an author, and his genius as displayed in the wild and singular Oriental tale of " Yathek," which is so splendid in de scription, true to eastern costume, so wild aud vivid in imagination, that Lord Byron consid tred it d ili. ult to credit that it was written by a European, and said, "even Dr. Johnson's Rassclas must bow before it." Mr. Beckford was the author of numerous other works. Ho died in 1844, aged 84 years, leaving two daugh ters, one of whom is the preseut Duchess of Hamilton. His wife was Lady Margaret Uor dou, daughter of the Earl of Aboyue. SfSf A waggish chap whose vixen wife, drowning, 10-l her precious lile, called out hia neighbors ail around, and told them that his spouse was drowned. He knew he 6aid the very nook, where she had tumbled in the brook. And he had dragged along the shore, above the place a mile or more. Above the placa the people cried. Above the place, the man replied. Of course yon don't suppose I'd go, uuil waste the time to look below. I've known the woman quite a spell, and learnt her fash ions very well ; alive or dead, she'd go, 1 know, against the current anyhow. THIS BEACTIFCL WORLD. —" Ah 1 thid beau tiful world ? Sometimes it is all sunshine and gladness, and heaven lies not far off—and then it suddenly changes, and is dark and sorrow ful, and the clouds shut out the day. In the lives of tiie saddest of us there are bright days like this when we feel as if we could take the great world in our anus. Then coma gloomy hours when the fire will not bum on our hearts, and all within is dismal, cold and dark Believe me. every heart has its secret 60irows which the world knows tot, and often times we call a man cold when he is only sad." Lovgftllow. POWKR OK PRUTKR — A minister whose naraa is not necessary to give, had a son who waa quite a rogue, and withal something of a wag. One day the boy hud been guilty of some mis demeanor, for which the father called him to on account, when the following dialogue took place "John, you have done wrong and I must punish you." "Very well s : r. just as you say." "Thou take off your coat." " Certainly, sir." " Now take off your vest." "Just as you please sir." " Now, my dear son, it is my duty to flog yon " " Yes sir ; but. father, would it not be besl first to engage in prayer ? " This was ti o much for the minister, the wag gery of the son completely overcame him, rn without either prayer or flogging, he dismissed the boy, while he turned away to relieve hit risibles. Mrs. Partington says that, just before tho last war with England, "circumstances were seen around the moon nightly, shooting stara perambulated the earth, the desk of the snu was c overed with dark spots of ink, and com ments swept the horizon wi h their operie tails. Evc.ybodv said it profligafed war, and sure enonaJi it did come. Its costiveness wna frit throughout the hind, but the bravery of General Jackson expiated the x\merican citi zens, ntic foreign dominces soou became a bye word." llow little is known of what is in the bo soms of those around us ! We might explain many a coldness could we look into the heart concealed from ns : we should often, where we hate, love, when we curl the lip with scorn and indignation. To judge without reserve of any human action is a culpable temerity, and of all our sins the most nnferl.ng and frequent. PTT" An old unloved Deacon in his last hour# was visited by a neighbor, who said :—" Well Deacon I hope you (eel resigned in going."— "Ye-es," saul the Deacon, "II think I I am resigned." " Well," other, " I tho't ]it might be consoling to to know that all the neighborhood ore rcsigued also." Q&r Yon may insert a thousand excellent ! things in a newspaper, and never hear a wor^ '• of approbation front the readers, b' * I paragraph slip in, (byacrit)*-') one °rtwo ! lines, not suited to * 1 ""* ou , sure to he®* ** ,l * ( i A STCDY FOR LAIHFS —Every girl who in i tends to qualify for marriage, should go through a course of cookery. Unfortunately, but few wivrs are able to dress anything but themselves. —Fit-nth. IST" Birds are the poor man'e music, flow ers the poor man's poetry. Strawberries are se!liuj for 10 ceata per quart it Nashville.