111 I E I ' • • _ thk.A. .P.:*rab dsc. " Poefs' - .1 - - , • • • I • - -: - Au .ApritDay. • • i -- 1 - - -- • -. Ifid-p.oe't ever pen lines *re beautifully'descriP . , .. , tire of the Season than those of Clare in his " Wid -1 Pw's "Walk?' . You, can hear. 'the pattering rainidreops, . i and alMost Smell the rich 'filagrarice l of the. honey suCkle buds: ' f ' -' . •:".• . o', • • • - -.., . k . Al! day like low-hung clitads hake dropt i . , • Their galikeredfulines down, , 1 '-- All day that soTt_gray 'mist hath wrapt • 1 -,- '- •• Elill, valley, grove and, town. • ' ~.1 , 1 . ".There has not been a sound to-day..,! . i To.break the calm of, nature; . lik '.-- i ~ . - . " k . kir - • kuptk,n, I might alfuost say, : 1 . . o,f fife or living creature; • . . .. 01.,„!wating hougl - or ware *ng.bird, -; • / • 'Eh; cattle faintly .lowing , "- • " • ' - ! li p I Could_ have half believed' heard - . ' , • The leaves and blEts.snMa.grekwing. : r. f • I itood to hear.- I love it, Well,•,"" 1- • " i , '• The rain's, cOntinuous siind4. " ;" .. , •• i Stutfil drops, but thiclztaild fast they'fikil, . ', • ',Ditwit straight into tbe - grounil: " Forileafy thiekne.ss is .not.yet .kf-- t - •-, i iEartli's naked' bt east to screen, ,',-,-- . •,,. Though, every dripping branch IS! set -'• • a • !- t - Withshoots - oftender-green. - - : : . Simi , . since Ileoked at early morn,. - ' . 1 ~. "'• '• i These honeysuckili bti4s - - . • '.. . ' . ,I -' ,Ilave swelled to doubly growth. ' That thorn Q Bath put. forth larger,studs studs; " - i That lilac's cleaving tones, haye'burist, t . i The milk-white tiros revealing ; Even now up_ry-kay senses first Methinks' their sweet:s'4re stealing, l• . ,-The very caith, the stetting air . • i . -- Is all with.fmgrance' rife ;. • , I . Ami,grace and heautfeverywhere -- i Are flushing into life:,, Lln - tre, down they conic--those fruitful storls! - 1 Those earth-rejoicing drops!: . .". .i. A mamentary deluge pouts, • - . Then thins, decrease:?; stops; ,' - And:efe the dimples du the stream; . . ! liave circled out offi.ight, r - to! , from the West a;parting gleam . Breakscd her mfUrt to berS lfand a else V' and/ ve hoped / would dawn k ive fnight • God. aphid that ;We e of curchildren . l—' rciur hearts area pare /,bve may be watered 'our love linked with 1 , : I fur the mother's bu { netuary to pay Our . on the aged stranger.; fur five her memory a tear,' 1 children .had none to i. - lE .. , 8,, -. ' 11 I , 36 1 , . 1,1U131,715ti)F,3Ft57,,if.T9119.7,,,1,i..q....[: FR • she has ;been bp you Of.late When fougo back to Your banes; be carefulnf your Words and ynnrnxarnPle your own children,: for the ft uit .of your own doing you will sure ly reaplfrom them when you yourselves tot ter on the b.rinkl of the grave. • entreat you as - a frie,ro, as One who . has - himself - entered the "iev j ening o life," that, yoti' may Say; :in . the pi,thee of your -families nor of heaven, Our InOther haseutlived lieniusefulnesS--, she waS a burd'ep to us.;' Aslever,-neVer a mother eannot live .so long as.that No; when std can no longer labor for her;children, nor yet- care Mr herself; she Can fall like a preciolis weight, on their bosoms, and call furtl o . ydwr - helplessness all . .he noble, gen erouSl'eelings of their nature.T. Ndi}.-n; then,lpoor, toil-worn mother . ; there. are Poi More Skeple§s nights, no (Imre days cif paill . ,for thee. I.llldying . 'vigor . ond ever lastingrusefidness a'ro part of the inheritance of the redeeM i ed: - - - Fecble as thou wert on earth. ,t.hon be no burden on, the; bosom of Infinite Lovp, but there ..shalt, thou ' find thy longed-for rest„ and. receive gloriousthy Jesus and his ransomed fold. • Horace Greeley's Apprenticeship., • it iv:ls : 4a a fine spring inoriilng.in the year 18'26,1-about 19 'o'clock when gr. Antos Bliss, the„r4niger find one' of the -proprietors of the/Noilliern i Spectator, in 'Riot Poilltney, Tf.„ I,Might• have been seen" - in the 'garden ehindf his house planting .potatoes:' . He hetird the gat open behind hini, - and, without turning or to king round, became dimly.con seemis of the presence of a bevy. But, the bdys i cif coon ry Villages go into whosesoever garden their ; nuderinp udcy' impels them, and istipposing this boy to be one of his own' neighbors, - s)lr.'fiwliss - Ccintinuedihis work and Trickly forgdt that he' was not alone. few ;Minutes he-heard. a voice close; behind voice; high piteln..ll and whin -1 '‘ . 1 ; Iti said ' - Are.you the Man that carries 91 lie printing office .1 • Ap.. Bliss then ;turned, • and restina upon his ,hee, .suryeyed the - persPii.who bad thus addressed him. He; saw standing before_ hini • - apparenily abOut fifteen years of age, Ofd . light, toil, and slender' form,. dresTed in the' plain, firtner's cloth of the time, his gar-.l inents cut with an utter disregard to ele,,e . ance . l itndl fit. trousers were exceedingly short, and v himinon's ' • L he Wore no stockings; trisl shoes wi3reof the kind denomi*.ed 'high- 1 ' and nuich worn down his hat was of $ one Oplie olitstamp, with .so . srmill a Ibr z i,nr, that it looked more like a twe-quart lirreasure inverted than anything else ;' forst it, IW:isworn far back On his head; hiS hair- waS ' Whire, with a tinge of orange. at its CXtrerni ties; and it lay thinly upon , a broad forehead over ahetict.' rocking 61 shoulders whiCh Seemed too slender , to . support the 'weight of a ,inember so disproportioned to the general The general effect ofthefigurennd its .costume was so oldie, they presented such sicombination of the rustic and the ludicrous, :and the iipparition had come . unpn him so suddenly, that the amiable gar43.l.o.pourd sijarcely keep froth laughing. restrained .!himself, however; and re: plied; 'Yes; ['in the man.' ,•.: • Whereupon the.' stranger asked, 'Don't yen •• .1 iwant bey to learn the trade?' . .1. I " Well," said Mr. Bliss,. .have- been of it. ,DO . you want to- learn .to print ? • - • I've .had some notion Of it,' said the .boy n i t true iyankee failfion, as though he:hail not ilieen dreaming about it andi 911gi,. for it •• I for , years.. ' Mr; Bliss was both astonished and puzzled -I-HastoniAed that .sUch ;a fellow as: 'the boy ;iohiced to be, should 'have. ever -. thought Of • learning.to.print, and puzzled how. to convey. to him an idea of the absurdity of the notion. Sci With an expression . in his. countenance, such as .that of a tender-hearted dry-goods inerehant might be supposed ta,..assume if a• hdd-carrier should apply for a' place in 'the t la'ce department, he said, Well,' iriy . t ' •now • ,• ou.k, it. takes;considerable learnirig tc be.a printer. . Have, you, been to Sehoel • fnuch l'• • • - I 'No,' said 'the boy, I haven't had, much 'chance itselrout. I've read- some., • • 1 ' What, have you. read I' riskedfr.• Bliss I've read some history, and some 1 travels,. end a little of most. everything.' •• • • •1 1 t Where do you - • . We-S,thaveio , 7 . 4 3 Flow did you come over..?' I.' 1 I mine on • • . • --' What s you name' Horace Greeley,' , . • II t Now it happened that Mr. Amos Bliss had ; thieen for the last three years an Inspector 'of IlQuin . mon . Selidols, and in fulfilling the duties 114 his office—examining rind licensing. teach- . ;rs—he had noiluired ..an 'uncommon facilty asking' questions, and a fondness for - that exereise -which men generally entertain' for an employment in which they:SuppoSe therh-. slelves to excel. The youth before. him. was in the language of 'medical' -students---a 'fresh subject;'• and the• Inspector proceeded . to try all his skill upon him, advangiit from. easy questions to 'hard ones, up . to L-those 'knotty l'probleins with 'which had been, .Wont stump' candidates' for the . ,.ollice of. teacher, 1 The boy.' was a- ri:atalr.. for tile answered everyquestion promptly, cleatts -)y and modestly. .- He could not be. - .•-stti inP=- ed'. in the "ordinary School 'studies, and, of the doks he had read .he cold give a Cerrect arid hompletanalisis. In. I count of interview, he Ay's; 'On - entering into conversation, and a- rtial..exarianation of the qualifications of•niy___ttti . new !required but little time - to :discover that :he possessed a mind-of ne'conimon 'Order„ and . an "acquiredintelligerice . far heyond'lliiYears., ,He had, but little opportunity nt:the 'com-1 - 71.norrs'ehtxtl, but he said ':he had: read some,' 'and what .he had read he ,WellUnderstoOd and, remembered. In addition to the ripe !meth gem ,manifested yin•One - soYonng,and'W boSe ! !instruction had been, ho limit* there -wrisi•,a;. Singl . 4tnindedness,' a thithfulnesi and erie*. monlense in what ho said; that" epee Voiii ! mended ••••,.;.:, • After; bail hour conversation 'with.,the boy, Mr. - would do,";andAcilit:bini.to•go:into the prin't• - •` , tug office:arid-talk to.:the - foreman. . -NVOlt ‘ tiffice,•and...*twe pearAnce pri - Aucied, ,Olbot utin6 therein,.*lfieh can'tag ;better' imagliii;d , tbaii rieSeribed: and *bleb:lS 'Membered ,by thetwe-,wheijrarviyi . ,ri..Tortge: ! foreman Horace add ressed regardttiss bertainly,obliOonaproliabfyi,of, - the stare and - ' the remarks of:the- tfro.).B?l_';7;4o-gir,,, etnanl first„ , was inclined,to - leousleA- that 4r . , - ~.p ihould, for -one tnntnent3" .triWfi- es 1 that a boy got 4 in that•atyl6,cpuld:Or the most ordinary dud* of :e.:OttitAes prentice. Ten :,tninutei talk with ; hitif,'-, ever, effected a partial . Trevioltition - nkhis! ' iii the' bby'S favor, and - tei)lc." Wai!" ... givati .r .. i t want of another appretifice;''he 'Vtaa',:not dined to be over particular. lic:rtuie c : ' : :a slip of Proof - PaPer, wrOte r afewvicirdziAilien it haatilylwith a ; pencil, - And tbld,the„ - bok 2l tot take it to Mr:Bliss. .1 his. Plegeofrpar was his fate.; The words were'::'' Guess tcre'dl bi:t ler- tiy him.' Away went liorace t6thiger den, and presented-Ins paper. i Mr.: bil4s,. whose curiosity had :heet4 exalted. to a high pitch by the extraordinary..tontrast .betwvrt the appearance of the boy . _ and hit real.q all- ty, now entering into alo ig eeuversation pith him, queStionifig hint respecting hiS •liis ay, . his past employments, his :parents, - thei :dr- .cumsninees, his own intention ..and wishes; - and the longer he talkedl-the,niore_ his admi ration grew. The result was, that lie aktreid to aceqt Ilorace . .as an aptikentice, proided' his father would agree' . to the Initial 'to - ' and then, with eageristeps, 4nd alight I the happy boy took the dusty ;road, ths to his home in Westhaven. • , TN,,. A Country- of Contiarietie3. California, including - that; perlion of Platt lying betvien the :Sierra Naradernauntaifis and the deserts on theeitst;.is Ofitipotherka _- - land of contra:l(4;es.! .For six 'oiz; eight . , wionths of the year.our Clirnate (we are.Spe.ak- • i i ng, -4.).,t the mountain ,cohn try 'of :,California.) is - , one of ge.nial mildness and alhaost uiainterrap- i . .ted"sunshine,folloWed layttiOntir, , weelOitid ',.. dayi of ilternate rain or cloud and ,unsliitie, • and-this makes ourivititer;:and yerth '•teni•- - • " _.:,r, Perature is so mild that, it seldom; re z.. 1.-- = . Some seasons .we get much more, of_ reneh ing rains than we,have the past tiyinte ",;bat . '" when it does rain, or Snow even, we live, lit- tie Or no wind to give force _or terro to the ' .- stot • : '.- ~ ~, The. whole,' earth `"for months . - tog ther is. '-- either one continuous bed of flower ~a 411 - and arid .waste, (exiiept where fore t,,tfeeS ,abound) ordrenchedi with soaking r ini..—, . '..- There is really-no half way work•atio t it.:=- - - . .. -.;.: And yetwithhardly a. shower for six lohths .• ,•• in summer, Califorma produces the largest .--• trees . in ,the world..-.lts largest : lak Llie al- . . -most upon - the Njeryl Stiliamie of its highest " •'- mountains, and thou la surroundedb eternal snows, their waters never freeze.' bd•the ii east of the Sierras, a rivers .run inland - and instead of dischargihg their, waters.into;tlie ~., ~,_ ocean they_ are dried up. With a Eittiatit__2 ' unequaNd 'fbr. i its Salubrity,' and an Etpo. sar 4, '• endless forest.of great' eauty, we ha :ge . .`ArY 1 few birds, and such as , we have;"seldOrialf ." ever. Sing', high, among. the .' Ilia 11 - 1 face of the country is one,uninterru tea Sue- S cession, of ups and downs, there .1.4 very little - , level laud here. Nigh bills, deepL,ro gesend i cations charact4rize; the mountain, s open,' .On . , , either. side. - Our:valleys are - alias ft: level wjth the waters or the ocean, mid -hair , iilttiailla.ora _so ihigh that - theY irk Alter ~,,, I decked With snow., c - .., . L ,--;:44.-''''f -------" '-•- -=.1,-17.:".'"; • The extremes al rhutallty and - diisipp, are seen every whetle, andSanday'is their business and haarkq- day: '• Our wornett.l4... - -, -• either transcendentitbeautiful or le mely*Y.':'"::•' Diggers. Our peOple are , ,rich 'and making:- money, or miserably ' hard .up; or ono..day - poor and the next. counting their -gold.:by. pounds. ' Ainan may be'`-without Oldie iia. `i his pocket, and yet be treadingupo,g - or(l'at ~ - every step..;.H He - may:have' no:-wife, :or he ' may have a dozenj just aslhechooies, and a whole church to sustain him in. his,pririleges ' and principles; - Animals, supposed to,havo attained their full! growth' in - thetates, on being 'brought 'here, increase, in siiii' and weight.. Nor is this phenomena wit rely;cOn- , fined to the s'pecies,whilst lumber Made into furniture_ of altiatt,ul.7ery dese.r4Vl4 04i panda andshrinksrlargelv endwise.l" ..- . , ~, Thousands - lire in the - enjoym'ent'of ,per r,.. feet health from year to-year;"matty , dieltinia disease or violent 4. Kind friends maymiu. inter to the dying; or tile taunts and, jeers of fiendish men may mock at the dying, throe* of their vihitti: Sevin are buried in, thi..q,ut-•--- et tomb, others upon the burning pyrate hastily' resolved iteto-their original 'eleineilts, and acne in theiri last Tepose . oceuipp. - pliees unknown so men iiwhile.thormildslhas.i - other. .thoosands may, return -to I.4eltr.vg . 4t* homes, and_with their families around Aem, r . pass down three& life, ever grateful to a kind/ --- Providence for hiving difeeted fheir thought's and guidedlheir footstep 4 to thelaiid &gold, extrepicsan conOltrieties.—Picteervilte Amer- ' ' 'can. -TOE FIRST MA 11 .1.10 X —. itAn S —An. English journal,' the Brittanli amusit g article tlyde.r tlai'llead ( . 'sfr Weddliig.7 - the: - ..editor;'saY !thtil short eOurtships', , and in this. Adam' tizetisihleman--4,htifell 'itsleep a' hi] awokezio-find hints& a - -nultried ' appeari;to have .`!Pripped,:tho•titie mediately after, meeting ' 2 . l a'artv and ,she; witinin - flirtatiou ..iir..tilt) hini tt.-i:;i3S'and herself. Of that-fi 1 this w2oild we .hase' had, -!u wave tilOughts,. and sometimes iiPpbe have wished we'lwerif - thi'inapc - t . But the deed is or wea.donei the Adam's mid ho improved It, -- 1 ' notion 'of gettingluarrieif,nit :g in. good trOe. Weli.)te l _ a' r ,iirlia and Adani's wailistrietlf-priiit otis beaux were there no etvitkin; -no itgoiteritig atint#,,ttn.d gr:l4t mothers..'!:' The;. hirdilif heaven titrels,;and the glad" sky 'ehed' itiki the seitie:' One thing Atiec tite4 , , brings .. queee\ideai into'9llr - , lteo scriptural;. truth!. Adele; 4149V_Iti rather young 4.. ;be. mat irk - three years 4 ., ) 43 ,1tiej. 1) 0 14 ,1.:t4....t1/101 llations` of. theologiatineril4 but not older.4:ivithont It-Ildni pot or-ketUe--'netttinglutzkivel IAYNCIanu! CitrYa•-krA 1 1 -se'd OY am:fur: ali • pAij eveii v for*lniait , tow dill dui passion tor iettiOiiiiit,their - 'Nick 'break down your gateslo ptrl t l its.::_l:6 o k;! , there iv to utoi tr, a 4114keOWI:it Pco4-04tiaig I ( ` IN4/ 1 1U ,* ita4 t eSl tO Arr t rj 14.56 irtisthh!!- - *n tho ; -1 •irleikreis po how: rtherit -- ry hatelhoit ken .sine I -put it: til ; bar fields," Ei t t , ! at :blo s's . • ns - en‘h- 1 : - : likt.l nual;'.,llo stitiii" Inf.! wile: ness,,,,gave Irst.: , k.;„ - 1: v47 0 1 1 ehtmeowite re like -the Filep e ' old eodas, • - 444204 1!1. 1 4,; /iglA 1- 1V, 1 4 *Cl.lr`eilddig Etai -OA* f It - AO wore tfo nestppeci mahout it illaT4en =`• ' ; ..-* 4 ; .:, • '- ' l.-1 ,: , * L OY a n ti& r . 1 4- 4.1 .9 4 1. 1 :*4-,-... - mat 4 11908 la 41 , ' -beenii.'t64 — 'v . , mLgi:.9rtktet • 10 -44 11 4 1 1 , :: ,Jigt4t - fiv ,&:,, ) . iilurgh iiil ",ft ate, . y,. f., 0. . In 41.1 m. - , EN Ca V CI E I 15