-MARLES REA iioeff,s eokoa. trumnrs. NT EDGAR ALLAN POE The skies Wey.were ashen and sober; The leaves they were crisped. and sere— The leaves they were withering and sere; ft was night in the lonesome October Of my most immemorial year; It was hard by the dim lakeof Anber, In the misty mid region of Weif--- It was down by the dank tarn of Anber, In the ghoul-haunted woodland of 'Weir. here once, through an' alley Titanic, Of cypress, I roamed with my Soul— Of cypress, with Psyche, my Sottl. - These were days when my heart was volcanic As the scoriae rivers that roll— As the lavas that restlessly roll Their. sulphurous currents down Yaneek In the ultimate dim& of-the pole-- That groan as they roll down Mount Yaneek - In the realms of the boreal pole. Our talk had been serious and sober, But ouriboughts they were palsied and - sere— Our memories were treacherous and sere— For we knew not.the month was October, And we marked not the night of the year— • (Ab, night of all nights in the year!). • We noted not the dim bike, of Auber-- (Though oncywe had journied down here).— Remembered iSot the dark tarn of -tuber, • Nor the ghould-haunted woodland of Weir. And now, as the night was_seneseent, And the stardials pointed to morn— And the stardiats hinted of morn— At the end of our path a liquescent And nebulous lustre was born; ' - Oat s of which a miraculous crescent Arose'rith a duplicate horn— Astarte's bediamonded crescent Distinct with ita duplicate horn. And I said—" She is warmer than Dian : She rolls through an ether of sighs— - ,She revels in a region of sighs : • She has seen that the tears are not dry on These eheeks where the worm never dies, And has come past the stars of the Lion To point us ,the path of the skies— To the Leaman peace of the sides— Come - hp, in despite of the Lion, ,To shine on us with her bright eyes— - Come up through the lair of the Lion, With lov . e in her luminous eyes." But Psyche, uplifting her finger, • • - Said-" Sadly this star I nustrust— Iler pallor I strangely mistrust:- 0, hasten !-0, let us not lingo! 0, fly!=let us 'fly!—for we must." In terror she spoke, letting sink her • Wings until they trained in the dust— lu agony sobbed, letting sink her Plumes till thy trailed in the dust-;-- Till they sorrowftilly trailed in the dust. rePlied—" This is nothing but dreaming : Let mg" on by this tremulous light ! Let us bathe in this crystalline light! • Its Scbalic splendor is beaming With, lope and in Beauty to-night:— Seel—it flickers up the sky through the night! Ah, we safely may trust to its gleaming, And be sure it will lead•us might-- We safely may trust t 6 a gleaming . - That cannot but guide us aright, Since it Sicken up to Heaven through the night." Thus I pacified Psyche and kissed her, And tempted her out of her gloom— And conquered her scruples and gloom ; As we passed to the end of the vista; But we stopped at the door of a tomb— By tlic4loor of a legended tomb: And I said—" What is written, sw'et sister, On the door Of this legended tomb?' . • She replied---‘, rlalume—tialume-- 'Tis the vault of the lost Ulabtme !" Then my heart it grew ashen and sober ,P As the leaves that were crisped and sere— ..As the leaves that were withering and sere, , And I cried—" It was surely October - - On this very night of last year, That / journeyed-1 journeyed down here— That I brought a dead burden down here— On this night of all nights in the year, - Ah, what demon has tempted me here? Well I kaow, now; this dim lake of Auber— This mbly mid region of Weir— . Well I know, now, this dark tarn Of Auber, This ghoul-haunted woodland of WUr." 14i0 qqa skefelle,.. I JOHN SMITH ABD HIS SOB JOHN. BY CLEDIENT WEBItTER. I Wish my hero's name was anything but Smith=-anything. but John Smith ; Tor I know the reader will pronounce the story I. may relate, a fiction at first sight. Else why, (haiarill ask,) did the writer `select for his prominent character a name so common, and hence so void of meaning ?' But I pru. test on -my honor, that my solo purpose in using a name so unpoetical, is to give the reader a: plain, unvarnished tale of trail?, withonfeven the semblance ofdisguise. My hero's name - iv/7.a John Smith ; he ct•uld not helri it, audj can% help it. • Veryiikely some member of the skeptic family will arise up here.and aver that plain'. John Smith has been dead these twenty vears. 4 He fell into the river and was 'drowned,' one will say.. "-tie was thrown from a horse and - killed2_l'a salanothen— `lle was hung for Murder, will-say a third'; -and He Cut his own throat in a _fit if deS-. pair,' will say a fourth.: Gentlemen, i know better. John Smith and his soli John are both alive. Read my story and tell me.then :why 'even .4 wish to die should enter the breast of either of them 1 - It was a 'snug little log cabin, that of John Smith, when he built it; and it was a de cent place to live in when John Smith, jun ior, was born. - But time cuts up his capers xith almost everything, and amongst other_ things Vi - log cabins. In the-course of years he came very near upsetting that of John Smith. He made 'leaks' in the roof so that John had to'get up nights, when it ruin ed, and move his bed first to this and . then to that corner of the room, to 'dodge the Atreams that came pouring down upon it- Then be pulled the batons off, and let the snow come drifting in, in dead of winter time between - the hewn or half hewn logs. And then he sent a rain storm ; and the water camepottring down thebill on the side of which John Smith's house stood. A. smart man, in two hours, might have urned the torrent in adireetion.where it would have done no harFn ; but John chose' to let it come - and do its Worst ; the result was nearly - One-half of the underpinning of his house was piled up 'in the cellar. Didn't he put it back again ? Not he. There was a grogslop within ,a mile and a half of his house—and there Se thol much ;:rather spend his firms; than',- in building stone valL Idleneesi is the. parent of vice.' I have read somewhere. Drink ing is the parent of idleness, I know,. Smith had no _near. neighbor, but.vile. - llis name was Churchill ;. and be had settled it the woods there only one or two Years •in ' . -, • , • - _ • . . - ; ••• 1-' ' .:.... ' -• , 1 : - •, . .• . 1 . . :,: , ~• .. , . •, . - • - • . 1 , !. - ' s- : : . ..: ' • :: :1; ... v ; : - : ::: - , : - :- , 1 • _ , _ . , • • •_ . . . : . . I ' l , • : t . - i .. . • ' •:-' : I; : . -: , „ • - • : _ i I - . . P •. . -, _ ,; 7 -. • , : ' .' 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He Was anl industrious, late mice since I wae large'enough to work in hard winking and kind man. Every body the field; 17,itt with all I mini(' do, - all my toyed him ;land never Le clergy Man traveled poor ,Bother could, we have Obtained only a that, any who wouldn'f leave, WS road a coup-, tolerable living. We have not got before." , leOf miles tlo stop all night with Joh.Churel,- hand enetigh tohuild a new, barn or . repair . ill: There. ItY as .so- much hospitality about our old log house. Now we learn—my moth. hitn ! 4-"stO mJeh of the 'help yourself in -Wel- er learned it yesterday--•-that lenge, barn, come' tone in his von, that] they felt at `lited, - lind all are mortgaged to &rhino'. the • home lichen they•got tinder his roof and sat grocei for nearly their full value. ' My.fath down toitishandsoMelare. ' Yea, everybody cr ha.4..dmnkrthem 1. - The mortgage,how. lorea him, everyby—es od' xeept John Smith.", ever,.bas'yet more an four years to- run; And.whyrdid MA Mir Man . Sinithdove him and. 1 have thought, if I could get work in also; I•11oW could .he_fielp loving eij goner- some ,',Of the large towns on the seaboard, .I otis and noble az friend ? That'sL a' secret. I might/ possibly, in that time, redeem our .never Pried into::. Trne I hav•e heard• people homeland save us from utter ruin. Perhaps guess at the ts'4xtise i but their guesOng bad so if I -. Wkre awaY,"fathets would.do . better . ; at touch to do! with bonds and probate doings least I think hi -would hart the crops I that I never troubled invselfto understand 'lt. have t; Labored, eso hard to secure. I-shall SMithlwas Schlott' heard to speak ref his neigh. t speaki;to . hint and 'to mother! to-morrow ; and i boy; tievesi, in iukitively ' good !, terms.. iI it thee ar e willine. 1 - stall fOl bound to - try , ``guess lie':.l a gitoil - Methodist,' „ r lit, would his fir' - u;• f•elieWhere else: It is our only ! ifu.siover son V. tiptoe;, wh:.tit interrogatts , d as, to• 1„, 1 -„ t ,,t, It I his eh: met, r;. w,, orbs he would ! , give a pe- _ ITii - lt lust I,t-ti :•, painful 4ilence. Site had tI 1 ctrliar , wisti - 16 Ili;' fit - •.•. :nal sav-1---, , Ask the - lievcr il ii i te t - 6 t t• . l'o,i ttratit at i before ; it (lune II i i tt • • t I ministiTs ;I illu..e •i,ii - elic-up there, and I eitoi-s 'torriiiiv leittle to littr- voting heart noir. 130tII t , - I they knowllall Ithol ut Ititn.• , i f ', ,he ~ .I,W in li:il, !•14%itl'et of her lover:sontethingd I - I.l.utd.allitSmith's liatrttd atid Lititeftdnes NYortib• ottgr,-atttcs-t, and ,Ite determinedmot , I I could not keep little !John from visiting at to g,i-, e han aildit;en'al pain iliv raising ollice.: , Hietglibor Churchill's. l i When he Iliad a leis. ei oes .l, . ure ho t ter he was Sure to spend - it there, even •., Gil, she said. as this litit tears now . Coors-tl. -at the risklUf a Smart scolding'.wltee •he get e e l freely-down her pale cheek—' go, - and I! •J . J borne. I . 1,1 :1 1 - i • ' will lace you nittl pray for - ',)ott.' -. 'i Ellett -Churchill dilly . one tsar young- . Te , :;i /I.' s ' Lit gas nary gAtherill , " •in the valleys , - - • - I i er thartiiirnsele4 and he ,loved d(l3ri.Y to be and nbieit the hill o;ps.. r' 'The notes of the , , ' ' hp. • :. with. ‘. 1 And WhO•Wontlers ? .he was one ..1 • ' .-ii titre: begot -. ii , p . t . ~ . nil , I A nepormi .. la , ic I l`• .1.11 et• // I , of te isweieest,i, prttiest, sprig' tliest crea- the * volinerlovers were warned -it. wa:: , time'', L 1.. tures in th e ,whele s'• }0 She -as a xecte to nc .i nnn .. in.,me, .Just /11,11. they b ea m_ :m i. , little hit ofa thing !when John fts;t got ae - Ai g hi; rustling ' iii the -thicket on the other!. ; , quamtleu With.l&.;r ;Ihht even then, she would ISicte 151 the..stream. .1 ()As! h 2, it was E... ,--, 'Clnirehill, ft ii,'Elleit found bite not at hemp; ehai.e.a bUtterfly the Whole afternoon in the 7saniC . fiel-d where he Was, workiig, or sing wher(she arrived there. .. ,Heil the hit,i kit pretty slings Ire him •• as int ' 1 'l'll next day John spoke to his mother et hoe Sinoute•t del ; weedt , , 'Yining -fts he wa'', li is plan l e . redeeming the - farm, and- thieigh • John loved here.--and ,she loved Jtcilm. ~ he could nut inspire her-with muchfaith in hen Ji.lin iii' W -as siiteeil • rears' .!,, Of age; he , its success. he did finally'ettain her. consent ,beganito take it!good deal of intere4 in things.l to h ii . making a trial, The flotier . .wita ti. 4 aboUthis home Ilia fattier spelt.. most :if sti scum to give wiiy, fin' hl, knew that if lii!i his time away, ,and he was left to ; . _do nearly soli -wits absent. he tint lat more at home i all the-work about the little firm. :. lie grew bin lii , opposition was not r violent, titid he at thoughtful, but [not like hit father,l indolent. last Wits coaxed to say that ' Juhn is it' good . I.l e:':tO i iletl..ineeSkintl'y and t o il e d surd. iii. troy, 'an may go wh;•re he' plete--;_ts.: • tried to make his mother hapy,'.and would t- 1 On the followirT MOndaY morning Johly• speak! eneouraOingly—,bravely and nobl y ' took' , ' what clothes his mother had preptti•cd . for a boy—whln - she looked sad or.spoke cif I r I ', ...., „ r li . tied . 1 .,- , . ~ or.. 1.,,,, c., i. n y ,.e. rit in a large hand- . • • , her s: i d -lot. . i . to i .kerchn-f, hi ug';liem to a stick cut for the pun. - , To yards evening, he would walk •OVLT i Faro er.Churebill's, and.niking tiliei by the i i : E) ; i q ii , :i .c , , b i e d - ( . l i , , i •':. c . l , l; t o,, l ;... v ii l l ' , i' , " % ` ‘ ', l i ' t ' ll l i ' l l' i i s ` i . i i, . i l h ' e ' l r l i i hand,rthey : won:id trip aeriesa the .field, aud kisstld his mother, 1 withas sthut a heart am. Over to the banks of the little bikiik, which ..a c.-Juld be exneeted -iii one-Of hi l s yean , , left rill! . *ougt. : t ..1, : : pasture. The would r, they tlietild log cabin-in • which he was borte-4 • sit, sOmetimes rin animated: conversation, and A. the 11)(4 - of - tile 'hill, andlild from the view sometimes in thoughtful silence, till the whip. H of .i.4ther « motge.' he , ! neat. Elicit, who had 'poorWilla eon'imet:Ced their night songs.- 7 - noms. here to -.give hini.a.parting word : Mid it Thetil they wkaild walk slowly nael , ; again.— parting hiss:: She rigs tait all griii•t),.nol•- JohtiLwould kiits Eden' s pretty ' Siilite fo re ' . was,`i , Cte all in tears; but With a streugth be e head!at the'gate, promising to 141r,e her till coming weinanhood, she it"Pred - !dui to kee they 4net agahl, - and then trip gitily home,- Up aigood heart, -an 9'l d ,rely ' her constaney Whisling as .lie went,. some sprightly tune, till his returo: Ilii answered her with an :vi and think . in„e . 1 the little treasure he had just surance of his nu - dying affection, ;titl e the e.'-' left lien id hi, prc*ion ht his Leterttnnatton to return. home. 't Ot!te night John came hutiteilt a!latei hoar at the,endof tour ve:irs Whether .he should than lustitl, and found his Mother lit tears.— !levet accomplished - his obj.r..: or not: 'll4 It was no newt thing to see her Weep ; .but 1 then embraced and. parted,. - - • her grief seenied now more intcnsi than ev- - .e„ Lien John came oppOsite the neat cot er hel knew it'fbefOre,: and he felt ausious to.. , -.. !age. of Farmer Chureltill,lhe tound the giioil -know its valise}, Still he did not • rtke , to so farther himself standing at the gate. He ap far iiltrude uphn it, as toins . k any Iquestions. . et. , t_ him .1 p a rting shake 1 1 4 He sat down by.iiis tuother s. side, took .her Prulielie• him to e'' .l ! ~ .the-hand. Uncle Job, as . he was called, drew handim .his, own,. and !begged her not, to. .I. -. ' I , ;- . i ► turn,: gently . ... aside, to a isomer atilt, yard, - crye i ,-,, • , andthey conversed together ler some tiret. "Be or stout - brut, dear mother; father -.. . - .i. .. , • 1. .: 3 . ..•r: i• ' 1 N'lll 4Rthe) said," might tell tx.e • rtaucr, .it 1 will -t.ottie Itott!te by- and Vey, and then, .. ,:. . 1 . la loc ; but when they tried, Unele,Jeli was' beg int. not . b igo td Serilmer's any . more: seen to slip a couple of sliver &liars into the '.,1 fear, it is tau later', replied . the - mother,. s , c . 1, _b„.,,ir s band. and wa , heard to tell bin to tic. ber . sobs incre.vshig, r yolk._ • father; I fear . is wa'ti'e of bad - , ecimptinv, to trust in God, and liist. forever.. II have{ Iteap this evening chat. to .ttittmeinbel• his old iiee ter. • : T. all sir aiiv fil%e_. to _...C . tl_tler, an our little farrd is - itnirt„ dS ! purl' which John wtts ti 6 touch affected tO . thltt jibe suinl tt is tieortgAged for IS so laFge - .L : , , ,)l t, , . ~., ~ . tithe , ......: , 1 thatlyour to ier nas i no expeetatieu or hope. . ~, m nii.!: e . an ) r t ,p).. hi a. , nett ii.. ii,as &r:14.1 OD his W,ll-V tOWlird..4 the bit,tling eitii., , Lit Me seabiqtrd, in sinne Of Whiell he ,hiped oCrLdeetnin it.'. I - Ifta clap 4) thunder 41 broke Upon' T . l' • tk . i...arti the Money that - !shouldße preserve to '' I . eou - t ea' ear from - A el,miiteSsl?ltyi it r%nilkli not have Ile sat _ a .11 ' iuir,i i eil , t ,, iii. hisnie.ither her home. astonished lain mot. t Now, John Smith, thekenior, bestir.yOur -1 breathless . silent*: Tears . were; struggl irig Seal . Your. only boy, and one of-the -best between his el'elidsi but he strove to :sup ho's that ere, sunned himself On a New Eti. Anithem and he initeeeded. • His •m6th er gli‘thill side, has left yOn . to . harvest your led crying and 11.44 .ike4) him! in . the ,:ace. on'! grain gram and get ready! fur- winter. Ket.p !What -shall we 4 Q , Ipha 3 , , 1 • - I . 4,w il,,y- fr u In the grog shcip, and you . will do I'll tell you what I Wtill do,' said Jobe, af well enough. '' Go there,Hltind everything, lie- ter a moment's ' hesitattOn—' I Will ;redeem At wilt be netdected! 0 Tarsi . . I can dot, - it, seung as 1' ant, and. 1 At the , time 1 6 srnelk of; I do :not know its . i, ere wa . . enerali iii . r .l, , ;7:siiiwei . iii ... ti ii, ngihr h is .. J ,, olitt . Salt!! WI , I , uId . ;MVC 'heeded- the,,cauttot l / 4 '' ~ d • • Ill' . and' . t z oui ai.M.A.: Ill! •• ;it.. •:4f..114 ~ own n , .„ u t ,... T ile '', '"*".` "'"'","-Y 1--''''Ll-• side : 14 " : 7 7 7 ,' e ben ;hi,: ei '1114• fact ,salt any one, it is sel t kh Dtg i tuougat,t Viere,.111CP. , ,V.p . ',...V0i . :1:14; in, the ni:nt , •i (3,41, 1, iat , ,_,,,„ i :id „.i..„. ~, ..: L l , aoything. wh b o of,lur l'ule 11er".. , ." 4:l * ''',' I T \Va l ' .; I, L . N. ~- be i.T.:". (JJ,:r fl il: 1 /ICl'''. ZIIII ILI, :/;:' en the folly :"of - ,--1 he next day Jotm svfor , ;v" ar' 1 1 '!"" '"" 1;.;;;:-Iii:io , ig., 'Ali'', ftr::l buss! ;_not now.i--- one could' ave toldi trdt,t his tt-ppt i •tirliwe• . :1"; ! ...., i i i '';, :i i ~ , , .., : lt iih.,, ,.. 1 -, ,, . I L , h.r.pt. .. away . from. I I he struggled away itt hip labor, thlit faiyt , innf , . hid, occurred to chaegt: . the . curieui, (~ le-- ' s , 1 ,-,'''.'''',''', r .'" . I ';''' r . e „ fl . ;:"•- - )' . 4 . rf; g '" l . ) ,'.' , i l o h n " h t e i 3 !,4.1,11. i-ii, lie 1t. i .,,....0et. met grainbison . - tiliOughts. Half an lioueafter sunset he_stine, , k. i _ .. , t . 1..1.. i ~but the very . la ell .:411:1 p.i.lit, ~, cii iik .. .l i,, . at the gate of Farmer dhurchill:. jEli,:eti met -• t ., i next year his fences were left mire-paired, and hint, and they sauntered : acrosse ground unplanted. .I Weeds sprung hp then. favorite resting-place; herT grouil l tso U. U , . ~ . tkl l i fi e u j i.d 67t .. ' . I v , li l ere turn'had . •• , I. I i riantly and down.- , ; •I I ~. matter'J h 9' asked Ellen.*: - • i'. - • What's the , oit .i evtrvthing:about the twee thrifty farm look- , i i k , L • li. h •,.. we 1 ,4 fed Itke ruin. His wife fenced and planted, a 1 oticelou oat* not t' po en since 1 _ , •I. - , i ,sinall garden patch; but beyond this little the gat.' .: i i . , • i .*. •- -, I t nntil John'Stitith had lbeetime a poor Mi.,- '' . : .• ' Ellee, said John, ssilb.. . , . rio, ~ ,4 w.ss ~1 34 you 110 . th e a l 'f othj ' l ' l4l .of " 2 " . fv‘lk ilti Ci d cn st ie ; things, went op for three long years arc tium a hundred:, times bef . irel the. man , i:ertibie ieeliria,,•e, with scarcely a : coat to lti-• „Ellen 'told John that :she loved hitei 'But it or a pair of shoe); to his feet. A burn. bed been When they-wt ke . in a pleyful m i o d, ' ' . bli" -, ititt thirst was in himoatilling fur alcohol. A :mid, as one ebild openst its heart to - another.. - No*, she web' called upon to speak l in a dife , t e, 'iTible. ceinscience was haunting him. lies fierit strain: ]: She;knew that sheireftl4 Ivy .. ,., p4r:seeined i written in his face ; and on his cool. - I, •-, , • - - i,'ed him;almost'as iihe loved her 'I °Wm being -, 0ne ,1.. day Farmer. Churchill met hiiii;— t she was happy t.iti-bis presence, and h,„ amitn was' too far gone4---too. loin down-÷to even at heart, whett he was iway. : think of farther enmity ; and when .the -far alMost.worahiped him and yet !what co S ei r d r . offered his hand, I Smith took . it, and 'sib ' say. to this ahru?tiquestion 'li She hung steal- *look it heartily'. . He ifelt that 'Uncle Job d . ° , o n ve k 7 he li r ilad il i to iiid _ j i a e ' a h t n l 4 a r i t t ,: k i e l, a : s . a ' l: • - it - " , I. 7as.rcally' a good man,l- and that there bad triv no . iletual catilie for , his hostility to • one . ano It was euough. Tie e!apsecl her in his ~,. 'and . - ...., i T kindgenerous. - arms, and hugged her Moser to hishreast, a And new,'" said Uncle Job; ' I wane.you Yes, I knew Youllor i ve me, deal .tif).lll,l.en. But." ifrl ' ul, comea4 my house this - evening.. An old 'end; a Clergyman, Nrill be 'there,. and will l'aratit to 1 ask one . nirc. Conld you - love Very glad tot seeyou.' .. . . „ . Me four 'years without seeing : met' ! •. -.., Smith - Lucas' taken by storm. BefOre: he This was a strange question,..end ...and; is .no et'li,uld think what he was about, be promiSed matterof Wonder that, Ellen healtated to an- : .. . suer it. , - . ....r: ' : . trkt go. , And sethOw could he go, • all rags • f What can yoti mean,' john . '" she asked of er a niOnient's eilenle.- ' . Yeti knoa.. that r I ould hive you' even . forty years, - .-should i - ~! wbe separated so. Pang, and should our ;ti - aticl • tatters be was ? . He went home and told WS wife' what he had dOne,. - and. for • the firs time in three years asked'heradvice. / f Said • ;-' Where there's - a will there's a way,' ' ' li es-Le spared :. But wrist can you mean by i the good -inEnap, , and . site Set , about - mending atikiug so terrible a q 'estion 1 '., It cannot be ' 1 0 i torn garenta. - . you think of.leavi tg me to be gone four i• . 413 y the ititne.t6e . sun had gone down„; he . , .: Certainly! .yo ,would' ; not do .that lIS Jrnr., .. -1. - '• - - i.O urchill's—a threshiAd -he hadn't crossed • . „ , . . For. a::triCiment, Jam - found it bard tt.i .. • . • Hisl wife ,rent; -- nrith him; speak ; .bUt.*•surnmo4eii allkikeourav t and .... !. : l e_Y *TO tr e a ted . .. w 4 t he utmost kindness,. 'Or twelve . years. , ~ . .h.i4 thoughts' it last ~found.uttotianiee. .. . l ' AO d John V. 11 6,,. 1 : 1 : 011 gh , with the e.lergyitian: ~-1 IA/Deat.El44,',.:inkid bk.. - _tout, '1 tarp:4:7 4 4!,. Ilia expected t° find ab4a g lit ti u P FA4l.4l.- . : -lay longer l e s t . i '1 .1 4 ive, t ot _ . ou t ) , An d A ing anstoerst. - Instead of tbat h:43. - fonnti ;it 4; ..1 ..) - ' _, • P .- i , 'mast - cif humanity ; wan who &il& Teel for him; a man all kinfitiess of tisith himself could hardly tell' how 41bottc but before leaving Karmer 6 he prnmised that clergyman he w7Ou l ''drink any. more. And. he never did--:—never,.at leas , to' iny knowledge. - Ile setabOut mending! his fen 6:s,.repairina.his hotise, and . gettin4rjkaid and 'elothing, for himself and wife; Mid when f.pring,eame, he sewed and planted ns.he had hot before in years. Everything went Well with him, and but for that mortgage hanging Over ;his hettilje mild have been happy. , Where was his son A few months after his . departure from .home, a drover. witiiar iiyed hack from Boston, md who'kneAi - hint, {,aid he saw hitn in that city, and Hutt he hills engaged in hoisting 96iton *Hitt) iVeari afterwards, another ainuaint nee sitst him inry b }vl ole - sale store• though in what ea . itaeity he could not say. And then a - year lifterward.s . somebody had seen hin as bead in a large .wholesale- establi. hment.-- ME Thtti was all the people . in his, lit& knesi' of him. Whither his rtiotLerl inerkhurehill, and Elicit . knew l .17Ocatioii or employmtlit, I frill tfirit ; to say ;, but Mrs. Sinith went( to Seribner's_and• i paid the. interesi inotlgake in Boston- bank notes ; - 1 ini r, Churchill oceaSionaltv had a le,' the got till Fame spinee; and -that always, l i.)nei Ellen would rejtliee over, itto cried am very gladwess. * * . . IHily.years have, passed since his bundle Qn his toward the boa rd fiLow s.cventeen „years of age.; twentc-cinc. In this Imig t . t.( l 4:i . rdeti 'wk.!! the advice of his frit-hd, the farmer ? rein, inothtkr, afitl thought -oriel' of hi s orEllult ? Perhaps ; NVe Shan • .• pi: i.n NN MI our story. , . 1111 .3 ... has (!oilit.. The grainiis - lyaving io t?eauty in the Ilehh. nioWer.; a:T[O. ill .the theadows.• The yitow 'E•orn leavtis are rti , ll . •Tz in the gentle breez... _ . _ . • ..civer there 'stands Ben .Seribner's grog . shop; ju t where - it stood four velars ago,— ' Bet the doors and, shuttei's are-el4sekl:`Ben's en:4omers have left him ; - and Oiliello'd melt. "pafion's gone.. Look over the hilt ,cinder! Th4 e comes a pretty one horse- nggyl eon ti ring a single individual—a g, iitleMan; I should judge from his appearance.'' Helooks ~ yi,n t ,, and yet he looks Manly; A 'noble herirt r iooks out from his beaming eetinteinince. I.Wilat is raised that hisbigh forehead may eatilt the cooling breeze. , 'He gazes `about him half Iluniliarly, as though ' ht recognized in these old hills . and valleys the acquaint anks of past years. ; 4 1 . , ... He di:iyes straight to flue dour'of Ben;Scrib nel.,' and leaps from.-his carriage. _ Ben is CoOling himself in the little back ipaiiiir, but tmtcts the stranger at the gate. - lAfteii. a few Wqr4s in. a low voice they enter the InVtise to gether, and Ben turns to li.is desk.: In a sting little drawer he finds what he-is Search ingfor, and-evidently with som& relubtance,. hands it to the stranger: The utter looks ()Vet' Ihe -paper- carefully, folds it 4 up, puts it into his pocket-book and hands Bea a roll of bank notes. Then he leaves the house, jumps into his Carriage and is away. I'll bet my inkstand-that was the rtiortga e of John St lith's farm.. . IFiti. nier Churchill has risen fr im his din ndr,and is sitting in his chair for ,a riament's reSt on the piazza .Of his pretty. white tiottage. Ellen is there. She is not less b..antiful than ,lie %%as four years ago . . She is singing; but she stops to,:heiir . a remark of dier father's. 'i:' It 'is just four yearS to-day,' said the good fritter; ' since your JtrhnSrnith left', us. I Vqaddift wonder if. we should see !dui „along beet! bet - bre-the month is out,' 1 , Why not today, father ?' asked Ellen.— ' Ile promised he would return a foil ! years whether tie was successful or no .". ,:. • il The filmier had-uoatir t • . tO 1-..t: i ply, ilt ! t. just . then Mrs. Churchill - appeared and:said . a car riage was coming with a single i.kentleniati. in it She had seen it from her wilialoW ; , - enter the valley a little way south of Ithe Cottage. Only a moment elapsed and the leari*e. was , - at the door. •: The yoUng stranger Within it tinned his eye fora moment toWard the piaz -zu, and then sprang to the ground. :Ellen's eye had- caught .the stranger'sl With the :agility `of a fawir, she ran to the gateivay,and was in hiS: arms: • John Smith's son John liaa.got baek again! . - 1 .t' Farmer Churehill was smreelly lesS happy gang his daughter, for he loved John 'already as.if.he were his own son. - Buthisj4y found 4ther channels•thro' which.; to display itself than in kisses and embraces. .II e gave John's hand a hearty shake, welcomed. liksil to his house, ordered his herse to be put in, the sta ble, and himself walked with him over to the: ittg cabin, to see : his -4not her.; ..OA the way . i'here, he told John of _the reeoHiliapin be• Cvreen himself and hisfigher,Of i t heeprnple . to reformation . of the .- litter,,and I assured. him that -abundance of happiness InoW reigned IWhere- before was strife mid it isery. John had not lost all his beyislit.ess, tid. he plat,- 1 H his minds for . joy when.-he reeei'ved this. Intelligence.. • He felt even 'Mote Ike doing. -the same_ thing, when, Oft rem:lung li)s.hotne, andafter - being covered with kid-:e.:, lie, lward ihe same Story front hi S,` mother's lips, and saw the bright smile on ': her happyl counte nance. His-father - Soon vane i in, and with !.tearful eyes, he in deep . sthankful4ss,..wel- Coined batik again—back, to a better 'home fhan he left—his long absent see.. Just then Ellen carae-'rtishing in, and declared sho. mould not stay away from where there was inuchhappinem :Young •Jti.lan. now -took - from his !pocketbook the mortgag4 be had )Ust purchased from Scribner, and - proposed . that, it beleonsigned to 'the Barites, Ins -father "took it gently from hia hand, read lit aloud to the little company,. and after imploring his kind .Fatber •in• Heaven ; that there might be ;kept no more durable-record of hialvicee,and his follies did - with it siaJobn desired him. . , That evening John Ana 'Ellen putt at - .the . , ;old retreaV by the' broOk. side 1 andlromwed ,the"..erObrie; with which - they'had -parted „Obi. liars before. Not the.lettat pleasing of Aheir'deelartitiorii - this'tiitte; Was thq one that came Weal or Wee; their- days I of - -eeparation - werd'al'att - end:''' ;--- 1 ' • 4 ' - ' -I - .:'" In the, course of a feW.'weeks'ajoTolis wed-: Aix* . party, af , sernbl4At . thei: cottage - of Ear !tier Churchill, and;tllb;f sante *kind- hearted !clergy Man . , ;Who: reelititnedc:his father, ':noir '-,,j01;0. AIM %Ain bitti4 ofire'! loek;With the vi ,iitinit he'hh;ed' better thin' h . 'maeltc. '.:-. ;1 , • For the ,Republican. • -' THE INVITATION. • tb(i'mloon looks over ( a mountain • • 1 Into a quiet vale, •n s . Where sleeps a silver linintnin, . rndcr-the moonlight pale. " • I . - 0 • 'X'here bows the lithe-limbed willow. As head when the sad Winds sigh, . And the wild bees diowsy - t the blue flower bloss4ining nigh. 1 4 'Murmur comes down frem the forest, , 11 low whisper creeps through the air; • As;nne by one, thou restorest, t,l 0, Even,jhe gems in thy hair. [Where the sycamores dark form tower* Above the rushingAream, hidden !nnig,,grass and flowers, pity. Lind heart:i— lit C a i" d Dever The.wandering night-bteeze has made a 114rp of this sycamore iree. - i 1001, come and share, hotly-Ada, - . Mid hour of beauty with me. August,- 105 k. ; H i ice emyn Ind hir- I ytlthig. of 1! not ,' - ven. (regularly it on tltt, that ;Far.- Itter from I ' 1 ! h i Erma Ilte." Warren: News, , . AILBTTER FROM 0. 4. BRONSON. , • We . , ilitve received, and . publish below,' a 1 letter ftiOm Mr. A. O. Brotison, of BroiisOn?s: Retiile 4,0 a citizen of thiS place,: who h.d' writien to Mr: B. requesting the numbers of, his Revi i ewwherein 'he mentions the eivil au- - thority t i ?f . the Pop,b in , this country. The: const:ull Of Mr. 1.1.. has been i 'obtained to make: what , - - tile -ofit an be deemed proper; al i though was not written for the.public eye. . : !But itsM . i.r. Branch has - used the letter in vis I ean% l is4,l‘6.l think it itel,t ter, publish it entire. • • ti _L I . , 13o:4011,4one 12, 1855. 31 - y - i)e - or Sir :HI. have received - this too• meter yours of thOthinsi.; : with its encl Ls.; ore.' .I . l t ani a little. at a toss to deter-I:nine what felmise to-take. There are no numbers 1.4 - my ievievi Wherein '1 IniVe maintained the civil authority: of the Pope in this eilentry, but las there are several numbers in' which l ha.ve. ditieussed the' relations of the two or 7 dersHtemporal and spiritual 1-1, think I i shall, npon.thdwhole, be:t answer your wish es by tending ;limn. 1 will thereti.re Order toy puililisher to send yoti all the number:ill . for 1853 -and 1854; • You: Willl tied in the articles entitled '•Tteol Order4,!' Jcmuitry, '1853. ‘The,Spiritnal not; ' l i forth LTentp;rat,'l April, and "The Spiritu- i al Sok eine," July, of the. same :Year, the slam - hint of lily doetrine on the subject; and! ! in '71114 Go Too . l'ar,'lJattuary, 1854, "Dail Temporal Potter of .the Pope," April, 1854; and, "U,ncle 4 el: and . his } ,-Nrephew," fur Octe. ber, of the wine year, my explanation Sandi dafenqe of tnyt, doctrine. i .-. : : .i , - May . Ittisk :Volt to read - these articles in the; order viii whieb.l have ironed theirs? If von will, zilthough you _will - Alubtless find-Winch' `which; if a .nine-Cathi',lie, you will object .to; and I lain sure yon will - find no suchdoctrine • I as I ant accused Of hulling. The subject I trcitt. has Lech mtielt obsettred by eontrover sy,l Ad _ I tun liable to MisapprAension but thOselwho bare , !nit studied it somewhat proi f o undly felon l- the ;Catholic point ofview. I, treat Ithe subject . Only under certain aspects': and fitti Catholics; tint!. many of the terms I .usci - have iniCatholic. theology a techniCal , :, ., r , .. sense. which those inefitritiliar With that the; ' i : olorrv: May mlsapPrehend. I soy this; it , e,4 cu, r `e - 4if thosciwbo!have Misrepresented nte..i, t': • - I claim (tind bevy have claimed_ for the Pijoet (I.ut of the Eeclesiastieal States of Which. he rislthe temporal soccri.iign) no temporal'Or eiviiljtirisdiction, power;.Or authoiitv, proper;-. 13- Ism,e n lied.4 The only power the Pope haS in t.l4;;eonittry.is 'his ptiwer crvencutholics aS the Si.iritual bead of the k' , lturch. 'lt is.purelY spiritual: poweivand can only be exercised fir, a spirit \ t . tiil end, and.'even . ihen only over Cat Indies, tor 'the ehurch does not judge those , , . • \ who are without. ~ - • . In innuters purely temporal, I, as a cath4- 1 - lief oyile :no lowrilepciVtri) ~ the Pope, beeause lielluis, received front Jesus Christ no autho -ity-t al; 't a.ternporal sovereign over me. He ent i mi)ti make or 'undertake the rirhts of the soyetOgn or the duties of the subject—abre-' grate ithe further or abSolve from the latter. i I '. - !.Tl4:' far 'all Catholics, whether the so-called 1 ultrai•Montanes 'or the so;called Gallicans, are agreed. The. dispute lies not , here. All neiree that the State is suprerne and independ enttl t in its own - Order—that is to say, in tile ten4oral order.? But - - vlittt.. I maintain h, that; the temporal orderkis not supreme and, independent, but!in'the eery nature of thintis subordinated to the, Spiritual, sincethe - end in . :. . ritzuH-the end for .which God' made him,. di rei.l4 'and governs-him by his providence lies !in, the spiritual orde'r, not iii the ten-TO rid, Every 'Hiatt who believes in religion at all,- Whether Catholic Or unteCatholic, floes and 'pest admit this-; for it is only .ayitig thirty we, must ;obey God :rather than man, and li%'-e!tor the' Creator rather than the creature. I 1 • This premised, l`think (can_state to you in. - y , , [a Pl motes the 't.lnetrine I de'really hold. i,- ittasinitch .at the teni,27oral order is stdidt-1 di/lilted to the , sy2irituat 4 it follows that - - del state IS under tlli law ofjnstice ; consegyvit- 1 ly therrinee bads his powers. as a trust, nbt a 4 an indefelviible rilettottid therefore forfeits I thein When he abuses ithem, and. loses . his right to reign. This is the enmtnifirr . doetrine, 4.11 "by all of us. Arnerieans, and all Catholic dectors teach and always taught it: : It.. lies . sit time foundation of all true - liberty, and is the , My doctrine that cult ever jlstify,resiit ance.to.the temporal pdwers.. • This right of resit , :tance - of poWer, • .When i becomes tyran nlea 1, l 'and oppressive, I. take it for granted '.ts' held by -every American.. ' . •' ' ' • But here is aidiffictiliv. The _Church; fel : ... lowing - the Holy Seriptitres, makes civil elle glanee; a,religioiti duty, and says . with St. Poi', Rom. ;iii; 1.-2: "Let every - soul be sUbleet to the highest . powers; for there is nel POwer but from God,. ' ; TherefOre, fid that Iv- . sisti•th the power •resisteth the ordinance itif Crod; and they that' resist purchase dame. Vint to themselves." 'Here you sii.. tarn fp r,_, bid, en - by 'the law of God to*resist theixtu - - - ,er • land commanded, en the peril of; demna... . tlort, to obey: - Here - is mycouseieoohtittnd to Obedience,. and My - onscienee. ag4t.Catho lie•Cati•. be released - i,oidy by a 'deepliiratiO:4 . of ritylchurch, as the divinely OPpolfitcd :direct or Of conscience; that the-prin.ceby -Iris ty can ny Irtuid - oppresSion . Pith forfeited Ile .righte, ''fallbn 'front dig,nity,trtid_teated:'.46 - :reign4--- ,- -10tat'l .claim - -for the pOpe;:ps visible head ot - ithe - dmreh,-is-the-tiower:lei.. release: My - entiseiettee•tiont this:Teligiotts.bon4l;-and to phieti me ,1 IV liberty to; realet,7-. t he , prittee o r , , ,7 7 .• 1.-;,: - -- .2 - ', ', :., 7;•- ? I - - . ' : - • when he the event sing .T4,hn t 4 his e w4snut hc.! . is 'me liC has glloii old itlwriNi his Lnin& EIMIE - flpa u se to reitiittl .dream. ITlie whippoorwill's voice through the Valley, !At intervals cOmes and goeP; • iAtitl.Echo most *musically If;epeats thele of her woes. ' • , -..--- I: . • 1 1 - heed o a tyrant.2_ This 'is all . - 1 understand I THE NAVY ,Or. THE ,VNITEW STAA;St ... , . . by th , deposing power. ' . .; - . : I . .I n ,s‘t c ,i, per :i s •r4 a i nt i Hi sto • r -i r o t i t t ie ......rp ot i4i..f- Th: 'power , itself, everybody ' nut a tyrant 4 Staies i " highly . interesting factstiiii;staW. : - oi• a s ave, asserts. ~The American- .Congress We learn ,that the- first - decked ~V isieg.iiiitt';s.r- --- of I 1 6 asserted 'it, and deposed-George the built within the.limita• - eit the . ••11..01.teiiStatet!, .. Third' The only difference is, i some yive it to' was constructed on the banks of the:Thia,Sort . 4. .--: - the pe ple, some ta.the individual, and I claim l . by Adrian - Brock, iti-the,sutnirters - 0f 7 1014. -- a Tor the Church; and the,Pope . as . head' of §h o w i ts pat, and her.lfiriftioinie - Wasitia4e; - c li Me . Ch urch ; ' .- 1 ' • . • - . . -' • ~. - through Hell Gate,iiito.the 0c:1040104i far'. 'Th ,. lPope,does not in this exercise a civ- east as Cape Cod, bY:tbe Vihefard4 . paisage., , , ~ it po er or jurisdiction, and it is called his fit-was in this voyage that 'Black - '1441 jj; was :. . t:eni , n -r 01 power only fiecsuse it is a .power 'first discovered: :Within - the first 46 :years. exer''csed over temporal sovereigns, er in re,- r a fter fter the settlement of MassnehnSetts f Ahere ~ - . , - Talon to the obligation of the•subject to obe , .were built in Boston-and its vieittity , 736Ves; i \ the' pfince. But even here the, Pope dOes• s" - Sets, varying froin 0.'t0 . 2.10 tens ., :tillideti. • . _not r liel.'e from civil allegiance, for that the: One o f . theSe, the . .Bleasing••• ; Or - theT. fliii"l .- . -- ,i princ had forfeitoi by hi's tyranny- ,4/e - barque • of-40 tons,. was buileio:l63l:l•'.'Y': - . : --.--., - rek s the subject only from. the spiritual or -- The celebrated English patriot-tinddivitte. • religious obligation, tuperaddid.by christion, Hugh Peters' cawed a vessel Of 400 tons t.9', - ity td the civil, and this - only in case of. the' -he construetect-at Salem, in 1641 . ... !The-first! - - eathiAlic conscience'. 1 ..; - - - - ' schooner OVer. buinched is. Said-tn. hay - I:bees? - i; e Pope is the proper authority to (Wide bilk at Cape Ann in - 1714. - tt. , 11. 1 ., ' -1 ' 1613 -- 6i .1 • . forte whaher the ConstitUtion of this coup, neetieut had but 2 - brig..2.o. sloo ps, and aleW . . - try i or is not repugnant to Me laws of God. smaller .craft, `employing • but 120 : seatnen;, - i ill lic.,deeide;i that it is not, as he has decided, I while Maliachnsetts, - abotit the saMetime hid; : ~. thenil am bound in •e,bnscience to obey every 1 462 veisels, the:tonnageof which Wtu.24;4064- : law fnade in accordance with it; and under : and employed' 3498, seamen; - The - first- 9.9=,. • n, u et i munistanet. can he absolve me from my ! -sign ever Shown s hy a regular man-o. iritri . i ohlinlation to obey, or interfere. with the, ail : .oWas hoisted on board the frigate - Alfr , • int -' !ini4tratio' nof gi,vernment under it,',fq the, the Delaware,•.bY ille4anas . of- Paul 12 es 1 ' • leiviligovernlient is free to do according tii 'ln the latter part . ofDeCem be . r,1775; . hat --; , its ejnstitution whatever it pleases,lthat is this ensign was,.is,' is -'not:: itne . , 84 . •-' . if not repugnant to the laws of God, or 0 !mu- the present.national-Colprawere not formally liral justice:, That-it ) is free to do more than adopted until 1777.. ~ •‘--. -- r. .i. '. . li that i I presinue no man* in this country will . The first - . regular American .cruiset. : that - - li pretp»d. ' .... . .---4 .- . went to sea, - iviis the L e xi ngton, a little 'brig < i 1i 1 have made these remarks . to aid i you to orl4 gues,:continanded by Capt; Joint! : , - Bar-- . - . 1 , end 41. st aod the doctrine of the.. article's to ry,. of Philadelphia. -- She-sailed. Some 'time which 1 h a ve called - yodr attention. i • , ('in tliaivinter. of 1775: '-'-' The firist-American„ .- 1 V i ou are a stranger to me, but .1 qtke you:I man-of that got to sea after tlieldoption . - lio fie a 'serious-minded . ..man, and glover of t °lour present for of government; was the - . truth vie' . justice ; as Stich: I have addressed - i •Ganges.• •.she Was - ,orginally - an . : Indian, - but t , y. 01.14 I have.no doctrines or opinions thnt I' was pnrehased by the Cieveirmient, and . con.. wish to conceal. .I ant. ai Catholic.. .As such versed. into a - cruiser. ; having.wartnametit,ot . . I ait!ii• to he true to my God and to my fel- 24. guns. . She sailed in - May,- 1798,..undeu • lowhoien. .., • , . . - • . the cortiinand Of Captain Richard Dale; ivlsi. 1I have the honorto be your obedient sere- was first Lieutenant Of the.flen,Hofnme . Rich; ant, ' . 0. A. Biowssox. ' arft,'When that:ship captuled.the Serapis.l,"- liliigh J. Davis, Esq. . • The Con . - stellation was - tli6. -first of new. built-vessels that wentio sea, under Captain. i Trox ton.- - , She. smiled,' June, 110, and . wa. - -:: ' - folloired by the United .Sblt 0,-06. a little later, ; liy . the Constitution . ; both these latter . sailed •in July the same year.' The first priZo under -our preSent naval nrganktation was the- French Privateer, La Croyable..,L,She : Wite9.•• schociner.of 14 (inns, and „waseaptureirby:t.tie sloop of war eelaWare, Captain-Decatur. - . ' C iii "The Sappiest Da y of my Tafe.": t... the ancients certainly made - a great . this:. il tal4 in not choosing Niobe fin. the ,G,oddess Jof MarrineJ Hymen is far trio jolly :be is all 41 - niles—more of the hyena than the. eroc-' °dile ; whilst Niobe is . just as she ought to 1 be-Fall tears,;.; There never - yet was a "tnar I,riage that was not a•perfect St. Swithin af: fahl. ' No one--unless he has the soul.:of.l on tita pereha, th, >roughly Water-proof—sVuld e 'thitik of going to a wedding with less than , 1 MS poeketAandkerehiefs!; and, even then, a I sponge isibetter adapted to the "joyful (Tea- ! sill." Men take wives aS they di - i pills, with plenty of water,. exeepting,, indeed,.whili,the " Utile, j thingS" are well gilt If a kind of matrunom • al.Barometern Wcire• kept in each {wlily, and its daily indieations a;- .to the state of the weather at the fireside accurate= lyfregistered, we have .no'doubt that bli the aqrage,'-,being•-taken, tll ~. following results (p) w 'uld be arrived at': 1 .'-• --, . '• • efore marriage, .j ' ' • Fair: - ' , ming marriage, 'I , - Wet. Afr '-' ---'— - ' - 1 , _ Meteorologically marriage, ..:4--_. .. . . -.- . • - ..Stormy. . speaking, it would .he highly interesting could - ‘6 arrive at a know], edge of the exact amount of " - doO" prevail ing-during courtship. Nobody can feel more trbly wretched than on' the happiest day of hi. lite. A-wedding is 'even more . metal eqoly than a funeral. ° 'the bride Weeps . for . eV i erythingand`nothing. • ,At first she is heart broken because she is about to leave her Ma I • arid Par; then because she hope and trusts .GOrge will.:always4ove her; and when ne other excuse tis,left, she bursts into tears be- eairse she is afraid he will net bring the ring with him., • Mamina,. too, • is determined to city fir the least thino. e . ' Her dear, dearsirl is going away, and she :is certain something , dit•adlul is about to happen. - ' , ' - I At . church - the `water : is laid on ' at 'cyr- stirvice; ' indeed, the whole party look._.so W'retelied„ no. one would imagine there was a, " happy-pair ," among . t twin. : ...When, PaPa • gi!ves away his darlina e child, he does, it with . al many sobs as though tie were banding her i over to 'the 'fiercest polygamist since Henry' '011; instead.of heStowing her on one' whit . )(Ives, hiss" lamb," regardless of the `!. mint" sauce that aeCompanies her. The bridegroom: 1 ' snivels either beemise crying is catching, or I bpeausehe - thinks, that for decency ' s sake i he ought to apPear deePly moved ; and the h; lf-dozen bride s maids are sure to be all Weeping, - because everybody else- - .AveePs.'—. When the party return- hoine,showever, the thoughts of the breaktaSt ....Aeett...enT aii alit: tie; , iind_ the bridesmaids, in particular, feel .4lfite resigned" to their. fate. • As ifihev 'bad grown hungry by crying,. or" the . tears had /Raped their, appetite, they drawn their cares. ta while in - the' white soup tureen: •* * * ' lien the' father goes' up, and, - after -a - short , iiiid pathetic-eulogiuni' upon 'the Virtues of that.,," sweet girl " wham - he "luVeS aftiis_, awn flesh and - blood," thtimps the table, and .1 *lls the company that "tiny one Who would not treat her properly would be a Erountbvi." Upon this; every ono present tarns round ' ti.) lOok and froWn atjhe - wretehed villain of .bridegrootli f acid then they .all fall 'to weep % ilig _again. But so strongly has the - feeling : S i ct - iii against the . new•son-in.law'that, .it is. .only by : a speech of , the .deepest illathoS' that : lie can - perinuide - the CeMpany thittlbe has not OW least thought of murdering or indeed - even assaulting - his• wife. ..At - last, the mother,.l • • ride :and bridesmaids - retire to sai,-:" Geed. ye," and' have a goOd - -Cry„ all thgether up Itairs. - Then the-blessing :and the weeping egin again with renewed vigor, lbe't4ides: , laida cry- till ' their' raises are 'qiiita'red; and, (heir hair is *as straight as theilrad hein. bathing. : And when. the-time comes forthe t happy pair" to leave, in order to catch:•the train tbr Baltimore, then the mother, fathet,,' iister=' ,-. brothers; bride ,, • brideri - . brides- Maids,-and . 'every soul in the houie - ,_ all cry; eyed-down to' the .old cook; who - ".knowed l i ter lever slam • she-'were ..a babbyln long clothea,"-=.tisif the young.Couple•yeraabout t• eine transpOrted for life" in`. ' the .literal' tither ,thatt the figuratiVe . .ectise of - the•term.- 43a eht/or' .:]*.- ' - ' ' '.. ' : ' - i - ' • ' ' '' .• :-. S X It 1 4 . POO ! ? 12t- , EXTVCILY.---e• e n t er-- S. ..., ricnd, is the re ,soy thin . g to shoot abouti re Boy--"Wal, nothing just about` !io-re,stisiik pr-, but dm .6ehoolmaster is 49wil tiw hin t , rotidet : you - "c-an pop him ,Lord Hawn says, "11e is .01044ate'st i,b1fosopher who adheres - Au* elcktiity_po - iiiir; - ....-..:: ,:!.-;-'4',is 013' FA ERS----VOL. I. No. as. SOIgTIIING I'OeTIE L an _ es . in e 4 L on d on on Gazette contains some information for-the lit-, dies in regard, to thelnanner of klaci n g their -. lips when they desire to look amiable, digni fied, &c. It Says that when a ;lady - would compose her month to a bland t artd serene character, she-should, just before , entering the room, say Besein, and: iceep ..thii expressimi into which the mouth subsides, until „the -de 'sired effect upon the company-is evident.,„'' . .li, on the other hand, 'she wishe:s to \ assume: IL distinguished; and somewhat noble'-bearing, not suggestive of ,sweetness, - the should say Brush, the rult ofwhich is -infallible.. lf she. would makeheemo.ufit small and pretty,she must say Flip,; hitt if the mouth be already small,. and - needs enlirgingi she.must ' say Cabbage. Ladies, whee having their daguer reotypes taken, may observelhe. rules with . softie advantitge. -). •, • -t., ~ - ,:- A friend otolirs, who . is one of those invet - crate fellows that never reads or •hears any - thing like .the above_ but that, it reminds' hi tii, of a story, bcgs us; add thefollowing user: - illustrative anecdote : A lady of his acquaint ance, somewhat turned of 40,.was unfortunate ly favored' with a month Of vertunuinal, cal pacity, and ; with lips of such retharkable globosity as ; to heighten the _efrectof her; de- 7 . fortuity : She was accustomed, on .nauLsiOns of special exposure to the gaze of \ the- fitih ionnble world, to prepare herselt,for,,,thk; • emergency. by putting,as good a - tabu as pas= Bible upon her misfortnne, or, as she termecl it, " puckering, up' her mouth. . .42 . kne. 44, hay ina a thus atvanged for a \ public promenade,. she was arrested by her dutiful cook with thr. queition, whether the mutton, 9 - r ,the- pork with which`the-larder was provided, should be served 'up for dinner.:Afterrepeated un .,. successful attempts to '!indicate her'ivishesby various signs - and.contortions of epuntignatice_, 'she at length despairingly burst epert-'the carefully closed aperture of her; head with the broad and- unmistakable Cry sif ' po 7 -'-ark ; and then basted her epoli . ro'undly for having imposed upon her the laboriouS'Opemtion of puckering up her mouth again. -,:- - .--.- . " Yon Foßoor good joke is told at the expense of one of our church pinggh liens-, who:is the &titer of an interesting fam• fly of ehildreti, and aniong Them a biight-pyed boy numbering four or rfive summers, the , pet, of the household, and unanimously ;.voted-the. . drollest - little mischief - 1 On Saturday night:he had. been bribed ..to -keep peace and retire;tohedan hour earlier than usual, with,the . promise itai on'theinnr row he might - get with'tbe fetidly - to :.chureh. " On Sunday Amorning: it wasloundloconven. I lent to. put the youngest.through the regular ) course of. washing and dressing ACcessary for bis proper appearaned at the sanctuary, and 'the family ~slipped off withontAitn. They had not, however; , more , than- become cam - - 1 fortably seated in.their pel,---when in walked _ I the youngest with nothing_ on .Jout- a night wrapper and a cloth 'city. .-- , , -•- , .. "You'ftirgOt me," said he;in a tone loud enough'to be heard all over the' chtireh.-' 1- -The feelings of the,' parents can be morts'ea oily imagined than described;—Lafarite (Ind.), Journal: :- , - ' '-. -- - - , WRITING FOR TIIE Panes.— e following eiteellent'directions Tor those' - who' write - for the press nre;takeu fioin one of our exchn4- ,es. If they' were universally followed, p r int_ • ers would - be:relieve& from a died of _AO their days in tjulland nftheliying would - be prolonged : - 'Write ati your ••01tinlutdelitions - nT Very plain hand. .Properly capitalize and pauctiv ato !hat every, comma and ,period:tmeded 214 4 4 * int* ; :it.q - Ptaat?- - With thi,tuilne's of, persona places,:that 4111 the letters of the p a rsons fled. ; because 'We cannot` depend on the sense of a. tenteneo to decipher:a tsdkr ivrittnik. an tic. 'u o k e oontractioi of `wOlda.;. might jo•proteed tP:Yirito fol!-tt!ft . ,Pretis:Ittho - cailtkot Prerre -thi *4104; eu iblifif" Pial )6 rlY if'Priiitatd - !tafslOttite'' l 3 l- - Let all this •beilimeitheriNthe Ware "sentni , nndlneriv in-thelirtiele r st n t fiiir.ghanc*An' , .4- ME MEE ME SEEM ISM =1 MO OM