£ DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: nirsday Morning, November 28,1861. JSrlttttb poctrn. FAREWELL TO THE SWALLOWS. Swallows, sitting on the eaves, K ,,. je not the ftalher'd sheaves. Sue jc not the falling leaves 7 Farewell 1 Is it not time to go 1 , that fair litnd ve know ? The I n ezes as tliey swell. Of coining winter tell. And from the trees shake down The brown And withered leaves. Farewell! . Swallows, it is time to Hy ; See uot ye the allered sky ? Know ye not that winter's nigh 7 Farewell 1 Co ; fly in noisy bauds Tn tlnu-e far distant lands Of geld and pearl, and shell. And gem (of which they tell In books of travel strange :) There range In happiness. FureweL. Swallows, on your pinions glide O'fTthe re-t/ess r dling tide Of the ocean deep and wide ; Fare* a 1 •' I In groves far. far sway, I In (lie summer's sunny ray, In the wanner rcgious dwell! ■ A: d llien return to tell Strange talcs of foreigu lands, Jvr il on the eaves. Farewell! swallows, I could almost pray That 1. like yon, might fly away, H \n>l to each coming evil say— ■ Farewell! ■ Y et'tis my fate to like V Ik-re, and with cares to strive. I And I some day may tell How they be!.ire luc fill A'onf down the check a little way, paused, ■a a little farther, waited, trembled, and ~welliiig as the bosom swells with sighs, B iwii the maiden's cheek, and fell upon W .! d chintz. Through and through, and i gh again, slipp, (1 the needle, shining with \ ■ ii■■ vereintiag attrition of muslin and litiiu j •:Ik. The Argus-eyed thimble—nothing' I er tlian steel, though worn to the polish I % iver—clicked against tic needle, pressing I through the close fabrics into the calloused I r's tp, fretted m J notched and blacke ed I many another needle point, during many 1. nary day and many a weary night. I V rooking stove, one chair, two beds, a few I >■ hi a shelf in Ihe corner, a broom a large I v.- jlitrlicr, a bonnet and a shawl, a few I >; no furniture, half a dozen plants, B. ngli wooden boxes on the window sill, B .: o- live books ou the one table—these Br iujii, i] t!ie furniture. , I 1; ■ r n was elevated far above the noise i'l jst of the dirty street—above the usual B v pigeons even ; in the fifth story ; I • •r"i in stooping had cut off a corner I ..'ceiling The little low window a pair B • i'.ttd ones—did the best they could with l'inlig!it, but were too much crowded by I iliing roof to accomplish much. I ilsd you slipped uoiselessly in—which you : not have done, in fact, for the sagging ■ loor and its heavy scraping upon the ; I .—you wold have been struck first by H ikreoi'ss, and theu by the singular neat ■' of the attic room. B i black and white kitten would liaTe *iup at voa from a soft bed of cotton '*n corner, or skipped, frightfully, upon '"'mailer bed of the two ; and a still figure *im]nvv wonld have presented only a H 1 '• head, but busy fiugers, and a worn and ifyonr tread had been lieard on the I r ' and mistaken for that of nn old man,! W 're you reached the threshold, you ■ heard a springing step npon the " the door would have scraped open V ;l good natored growl, a pair of black ■ ;;. ,V 0! ! have shown at yon from a face ■ liu .'iniies, and possibly in the shadow , H Un 'c, you might have got a pair of arms j j Jr neck. At any rate yon would have ■ " 11 tai ! little figure into the room, and | H : your seat, would have found yourself with a< expressive and proud a face : 'O ie from voluptuous blush.airy face, i and sparkling diamonds. '. while the tear-drops were falling; ■ , P res ure of thoughts which the heart 1 ■ , possibly hide under its lifting lids, . •' heard upon the stairs, the stair ' "i ak like the stage driver's born, H; of a coming ; the door did a pair of white arras were flung v around the neck of a white haired ■ !,eut it brought no relief to the van quisled. The pitiless pursuit was uninterrupted. In whatever direction the shattered columns fled, they were met by the troops which Napoleou had sent anticipa ting the movement. The king himseif nar rowly escaped capture during the rout of that night. Accompanied by a few companions on horseback, he leaped hedges and fences, and plunged through forrests and fields, until ho j reached a place of safety. The l'rusians lost I in this one disastrous tight twenty thousand i killed and wouuded, while twenty thousand more were tuken prisoners. No military chieftain has ever manifested so much skill in following np a victory as Na poleoD. In less than fourteen days every rem nants of the Prussian army was taken, and ail the fortresses of Prussia were in the hands of the French. The king, a woestricken fugitive j dtiven Irom his realms, fled for refuge to the army of Alexander. Never before in the his tory of the world was so formidably a power j so speedily and utterly annihilated, j But one month had now elapsed since Na poleou left Paris. An army of two hundred thousand men, in thorough disipline and drill, had, in that time, been either killed, taken prisouers, or dispersed. Not a hostile regi ment remained. A large number of fortresses, strengthened by the labor of ages, and which had been deemed impregnable, had fallen into ; the hands of the victor, and he was reposing in security in Berlin, in the place of Fredrick the Great. The story of this wonderful ! achievement passed over Europe like the won ' ders of the Arabian tale, exciting uuiversal amazement. "In nssailing this man," said the Emperor Alexander, " we are but children at tacking a giaut. 1 ' PAKTIXOTOJJXAN.—" What are yoa going to do, you bad woman's boy !" said Mrs. Parting ton, as Ike passed through the kitchen into the garden. " Down with the seceshersl" he shonted.and she looked out just in season to see the top of a beautiful plant fall before the artillery sword of Paul that the youngster held in his hand. I " You'd better go to Molasses Jugtion if ' you want to do that," she said, restraining bis hand us it wos lifted against her fuschia,ready to decapitate the plant that she had watched with almost a mother's care for three winters. " Dear me 1" she murmured half to herself, "what a terrible thing war is when even the ; children show snch signs of eoDsangninity, and brother is pitied against brother. I can't bear to think ot it. Isaac, dear, go down and hny me an extradition of the paper." Ike depart ed with half a dime, and from the fact that no change came back, Mrs. Partington supposed the price was raised. Mas. SWISSHELM ox BABIES.— Mrs. Swiss helm does not ecem to like the way in which mothers now a days bring up their babies. In an article on the subject, in which there Is more truth than poetry, she says : " A majority of babies are to their mothers what a doll is to a little girl—something to dress—a means of displaying odds and ends of finery, exhibiting one's tastes. If infants were treated ou the plan npoa which a farmer treats lambs, goslings, chickens, pigs, Ac., viz: well fed and kept warm, they would live and grow ; aud we never knew one to die. Dutch babies wear caps, and bow could any lady of taste have her baby look like the Dutch ? Just so ; aud the Dutch babies live, laugh and grow fat, for they arc 'smothered in flannel'and feathers, and kept all iu 'a sweat.' Dutch mothers do not keep their babies for model artists exhibitions. They cover them np, keep them warm and quiet,and raise a wonder ful number of sturdy boys and gfds. WARI.IKS Wrr.—Why are the Seceding States like the plagnes of Egypt ? Bccausu seven went out, and " they were exeeedio*g grievous to be borne with." The insurgents proteßt that they won't pay their debts to the people of the United States and yet the United States troops are deter mined to draw npon them at sight 1 A Chicago paper gravely remirk3 that 'the longer the present war lasts, the more public opinion begins to settle down in the belief that it will be a short one." The editor is quite firm in this belief. Why is a sailor's sword like a girl discarded by her beau ? Because it's a cat-lass. Price to be marked down—Price of Missou ri. Expected fight between Cruisers. The Span ish cruisers are abont to pitch into the Vera Crnzers. The reason given by Garabaldi for declining to play a part in our great war drama is, that he is engaged to act the principal character lei " Venice Preserved.'* llow EVENTS Kcsn ON !— The Rebellion is uot a year old and yet what a page has been added to the World a history ! A Republic of thirty millions of souls plunged into Ciril War : eleven States revolted from the Fed eral Union, with three others trembling in the balance ; seven hundred thoasand soldiers in the field ; and a fleet larger than the Span ish Armaria swooping down npon the Southern Coast. Truly men grow old rapidly iu su< U times as these.