fIE D3LLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA : Thursday Morning, October 9, 1862. Jhletteb jpactn). THE HEART'S GUESTS. feoft falls through the gathering twilight The rain from the dripping eaves, And stirs with a tremulous rustle The dead and the dying leaves ; While afar, in the midst of the shadows, t hear the sweet voices of bells Come borne on the winds of autumn, That litfully rises and swells. The call and they answer each other— They answer and mingle again— As the deep and the shrill iu au authcnl Make harmony still in their strain ; As the voices ot sentinels mingle In mountainous regions of snow, Till Irom hill top to hill top a chorus Floats down to the valleys below. The shadows, the tire-light of even, The sound of the rain's distant chime, Come bringing, with rain softly dropping, Sweet thoughts of a shadowy time ; The slumberous sense of seclusiou> From storm and intruders aloof. We I vol when we hear in the midnight The patter of rain on the roof. When tiie spirit goes forth iu it:s yearnings To take all it.s'Tr.tiiderers home, Or, alter iu the regions of faucy, Delights on swilt pi onions to roam> J quietly sit by tiie lire-light— This lire-light so bright and so warm For 1 know ti* those only who love me Will seek me through shadow aud storm. ii.it should they be a'o.-eut 11 is evening, Should even the hoii.-vh dd depart, Deserted, J should not be lonely— There .-till would be guests in my heart. The laces oi friends that 1 cherish, The smile, and the glance, and the tone, Will haunt me wherever 1 wander, And thus 1 aui never alone. While those who have left far behind them T e joys ami the sorrows ot time Who sing the sweet - mgs of the angels, lu a purer and holier clime. Then darkly, oil! evening of autumn, Your rain and your shadows may hill, My loved and my lost ones y >u bring we— My heart holds a least with them ail. HI iS 11 11 it It eOU 5, The Cry of the Human, BY SA 1.1.1 E BRIDGES. A young child sat lonely in a hot school room one sultry day in June. A difficult sum, which, over and over again, she had failed to bring right, had wearied her own and her leather's patience, until she was condemned, as a punishment, to remain in continued study while her companions enjoyed their recess in the garden btiovv. She was neither a stupid r.or obstinate child ; tiie task bad needed some necessary explanation to render it compara tively easy, which the heat of the day and an irritability produced by some outside causes made her instructress indisposed to bestow ; or, perhaps, she forced herself to believe that the pupil's advancement would be aided by the unassisted working out by her own efforts of the problems whose elucidation formed part of the educational plan. Be it as it uiay, she sut below, superintending the restricted play of her ether <. barges, while, in front of an open window above, the offending scholar sobbed herself iuto a headache. She dared not change her seat, and the summer sunshine glared in upon her desk, aud the long rows of blurred figures on the neglected slate ; opposite, end limiting the view, stood a high brick wall, be tween whose bu>e and the garden fence ran one of those small city streets reeking with filth and swarming with population. The gar den was too small to extend within the range of her vision, even as she leaned forward to catch one breath of a hoped for breez.*, and there only flo ,ted up to her fevered senses the odors of the alley mingling with the sickening and heavy scent of some blossoming plant. She crossed her bauds on tbe green ba : ze before her, and rested the throbbing temples on the palms. i'ain, the closeness of the air, u sense of injustice, rendered her mentally and physically as miserable as uiauy a sufferer of larger growth under more aggravated evils ; for our sorrows are proportioned to our strength —the trial of a child is as sharp to the child, as keen in endurance, as is the agony of a man to a man's susceptibility. Suddenly, as she sat there with her thoughts all in a whirl, there rose, through the sileuee of noonday, hitherto broken only by the tones of her school fellows, a solitary human voice : one of those sounds that float coutiuuully through the sum mer air ot large cities—a cry of the streets, die caii of some itinerant salesman, or the bar gains for the ofiscoui itigs of our homes —rags or old iron. There was in the deep and pro longed notes that element of mourufuluess and pathos that we frequently cannot fail to no tice in the outcast voices that assail our hear tug with such coarse and vulgar associations ; u something of crushing want mingling with uppeai ; an indefinable melancholy of expres sion, as if the hidden soul was struggling to send up through hunger, crime and degrada lion, a vailed pclitiou for brotherhood with the higher race, that also suffer and starve in their hearts, unconsciously echoing again to the Highest of all the prayer for h( lp, for wherewithal to sustain lite, spiritual and phys ical-.-the great, the universal " Cry of the •Human." The child listened ; slowly there penetrated through the tbrobbings of her weary brain the dim perception of meaning in those frag mentary tones—a dim meaning that her analyt "