- 4i-. M A 4'. „ t 4f • : CIIARL'OIS REIAD ice: H. H. EItA,!.IE - ti, •EDITQIIS. ?oeiM. • What ma th the Fol!nts.inl, What with the fountain, • • JIM in the glade, Wbere the tall mountain - • Throweth its sinule?l "Deep in my welevs, refleired !serene, Ail the soft beauty of ,Heaven is seen ; Tnusllet thy bosom, freznivild!passions free r . Ever 'the mirror of purity be." l• • . • ; ' What saith the iitreamlet, Flowing so bright, - Clear WA beamlet - • .! • Of•fiiii`ei7 4 11 ' 1 4 2. • " Morning and evening still floating along, Cpwlird 'forever iistiendeth my song , ; . Be thou contented, witatifer may befall , Cheerful in knowing that God is o'er Wbat Majestic in , midi the river, ' . • Moving forever 7 • ' Calmly and slow ,? . ,• ' • "-Over my snrfaee the great vessels glide, • Ocean-waid borne by my strong bearing tide ; Toil on, my brother, life vanishes fast, Labor unwearied, rest comet!' at last." . , What saith the ocean Boundless as night, Ce.iselfts in motion, . • Resistless in might! _ .. . 1 . "Fountain to streamlet, streantlet to river, .All in my Itn,um commingle foicver ; , _Morning to noontide; noontide to night, • Soon will eternity veil thee fr ont AOC. 14 1 .e(s 4 1 0 Ske, - From Putnam's Mon Y THREE CONVERSATION CHESTER. (Con.qudeyl.) CHAPTER THIRD ion ai_ht 1. to ari(49gize fi ing , arui ',imprudent Manner' in suddenly bet-onie etiamore whom !awl seen tic only; aeter, most transient oppurtutlitie,.s o haps so:. The_ thoughts, hom‘e ed through my. mind While little 'vont, and meditited - u ter, my aNuaintanee With herl -if any apology .neec . )..d .or wpplr it. .1 refleetedi -there-, t;41,,W; . 4: - Gloriously beantifut , ..: • Tio!fl . can see..-=-4,- uhil - ain front to:-..be ,fiEstidious . , .even to ,the implicatioa of affect at 0... i. • Pily sn i- ly -tr,fll.f. and healthy : The :: easy ,graee of tO ii,.n. the pure compleidon. . the perfect .out lines, assure me of that; - Intelleettially ; even inv ideal -mine; the hypereritfra!, the dream -o.r: -. F<4. the scope .or her . tln nights. their di. rectiem gild combinatiOn. even in little things, , were such as those in which I had specially and mostiovitiglyspraCtieed trips -cif. t " Moral iv—how admirable, to ine--silkelied with - the, l lean righteousnessof business honor, the mm distinguishable rialiteousitess l of . churches' choking With wi ,rd ly weeds...ithe titter non righteousness' of politicians' drid editors in conceivaldy sot 110.4, 4iaked l'nd seasoned. in foulest •falFzehood until their co iginal ‘ flavor, not in - itselfthe most delicate had disappear. ed under the gross stiPeritilisisition (if 'Lillie-, tical life '—to me, wearied awl sickened with sVh, howl bright. and - noble }PT. VII retr'ained, flashing. sareasin, her,; steady . flaiiiitiganger; against little. men! ;Was; it not even' super-. duously demonstrated that in reading,, in study, in thought,.word and work,. We might be true and hopefulsynkefelltiws.?: Desiri ng things noble and•true,,and wocking for them' And that she. ;load be trulli.n . help--tiot in . .the assuniption to her elf ofdily-drudgeris,- and in details and the freeing rne„lberefrOin (fur hOW..pleasafit to shoulder . my proper moiety . of...such burtheliss!); , lout inthinking with paralleland eoequal.viinr, in the sane field of thOught ;- in writing, talking, studying, the same Pursuit. ° Whitt .al t imitle dreani‘ of true union and interfusi,in of spirits! ... . But, a prudent elder miglitiobjeet, I didn't know it; I . - was - merely hypothetizing. • That means that . my .methods of !observing then and women, my - . :rules) for managing my in ductions,,:my synthesis . and rnalysis, are at . fault. - .. But aSiong-as my ,experiments.do not. deceive .me, i shall (mei • s h ins` . !Mitts.. vel mutilate ialterest) rely upon them, in - prefer- - sate to the 'chilly vaticinations •of .an-unfor ttuiate'senior, whose i . owil . -fititillessnesis has wrought . its '.like,. viuist. probably, in those with whoa . ' - he dealt, .i and so' governed hiei opinions of them 'all. I Moreolver, I was. ar rogant or'icild enough : W. bell eve; within . iny ' secret soul, that the instinctive delight, • and the pew and strange lttimultiv, antithetically . I stirred. within 'nip- bv', this .+oublous Irene, this war-arousing. Peace, were , alone premi ses amply . justificatory of my deliCious•con- elusion. And it must and ,Itall, be so, if in deed she , , will embark 'with use—l itinuld chant to her; despitel the .eild . old man, - .as 60 +Thincrly as did the -damsel to Thalabei ihe'Destr;yee:.,- . . :•.,,'' ' ' 1 • I' -' • .- • , • - ' 'The morn is youn' .g.,the min Is fair; 1 .:: i _ .And pleasantly, through pleasant banks '... :',.i . The quiet streamflows on-!. - . • Wilt:thou embark*ithin i e y t . . - . Thou km:west- ? rot tbe'wate way— , -- ' The' day is fair, yet night- nanfst eiene. ' : Dar'st - thou ebibark with me? .. ._. , - - . Thrdugh fekrful perils thou piay'llt pass,- • non Wilt imbarkl with mew . • . 1 - • -r. • - --- • li47lten .1, .shall -speak so o her,with the 'loving assurance of thelast •ords,. assuming, and ..s6 in - part, at least,- .sha ing, -the direa reply, ..shall-I -nOt,lav'e it 'I : • - . • ' , think yes ' Sildrined , it . . ations inust.su .e for apology._ I. sought.ont a caribUs old ,'‘•olutue which I had' fontid at n is , " stall_ lie,:only hibllu s graphicnllieastu. 44 m s k 4 y potisr on . F or i t wa:s n,, this book i that I- 06.:irti) to 'read a passage to Miis Plie?ter . . 7 , -a; quaint and . nui-,. siL:ll chapter, hiddewatilongitue tnY•stical tau: sings, of:i the, natneleita old Gytalau author. 11'- utnelcls,.. fits 4 .i 1 471 5 -4ce atia . colc•ph , ;ll were both gone, aud,. tuy), hililiO raOsitit% .lord: iii-d uut st.ds6e me, to diseOver t writer..- What .Miss.cher.. trout say, or .how 4e. would ,reucive the doetrin of the ociverles*. old book 1