C. T. READ &.:11.13. rn,AtiEPILFIDITC)3IB* Poo the Loulnge Jortal. tarnitoteura WI sty. t, nxxrarg►a. „ Zarth bath is thousand ton,gmes that sing An =minded melody, And many a loatidy, creeping thing Seth besity that we cannot see, _ , A Yelled Weighted Isudty sa— . • A slow-paced worm that allgeride, • A look, a breeze may Ptah aside • . Tbi arm of miens* the crown ot peas ; breath too/faint to lift the flower ' A noonbeam'or a tone bath power To crush us ihthe ecil hour, • As bold. sad thoughtful men will teil, Who thread the wild and pierce the dell; And climb the cliffs and splinteed rocks .Rent by the old-world yuleati-shocks, Where throe, dread mountain king, duet lie, With spotted mall and daining eye, And thy Inige quiveringyolume Med pnrplc spire and bristling fold, - Within the walls of matted brake, ..- - Grim-conehant, terrible Rattlesnake! 0 fair and bmntiftti itiearth: With boating eyes and loving worth, And daneopf leaves andjoy of birds, t ie mu with myriad formi•of death; • Ti gentS, her seasons, growth and birth, Tier rest, her change, her tears and mirth Are pn,s;tges for human breath • To flee the fiver, rack an strife; • . The splendor and the gloom &life ; tennmberid as the wrinkled shells • • - That glearwin oeean's secret cells, • swing evermore the viewless gates, At which:;, grizzly wtoiler waits To waft the 'exiled soaaway ; • , From home and the dear tiFfit of Bay; A n o n , as gently. softly eotpat The Reaper, as the That lifts the Mid-Ilay's yellOw blooms •Or nines the glass of-Sunni:6. seas; Tha footsteps noiseless as the sound •• ' *Of buds in . spiky nights' of Spring, Which pierce the folding irallithat round In waxen flake. and fibre cling— Yet Death•hath,Many a niightydoor Whose hinges grate a dismal mar That rtmi along the shivering seat,., In shriek :Mid wail and sexton-tOll, To hail the portals . qt the gram,. 'Midst roaring gam and ringing glaire, `Midst limbs, hyStruning chargers trod, And grappling hands and slippely And long, hand - bolted cannon-ode- To hear the hold, the hiss and clash Of wares en Wares that madly dash„ Then to bur beast foam-conch leap From blue Niagara's thunder-steep; " To see at midnight, Bashing nigh, Powerleis to parley or to fly, • The coucham tiger's eye, - Then meet the quick, tremendous bound That.dashes out our gasping breath In pattering blood-gouts o'er the ground—. ' Oh, this is' horror, this is death, • Which he who blanchlemt tneets„ inust feel His brain engirt with triple steel. And earth .hath Many, a gloomy path • Steep:slanting.to the ball of Death, Less Mighty than the whirlwind'ri wrath Or tiger's bound or volley'd 'path Of bettle's blue.,, vindictive breath ;- And in our dellsi and by the rills, . And on, the rock-embattled hills, And deep within the lonely wood, Where die `young panther moans for food, ;There have been shrieks, and eyes grew dim, Thatieur, thelorauchess round them swim, - And felt a sudden shadow fall • As from the concaves vestal wall, And mossy plain - and vaulted blue. Go rocking from their dizzy view, Where thou beside the mouldering trunk That in the tnoist e dark earth- bath sunk, And by thicleit thy bower dost snake, Death.dartissg„ fiery - Batt/make dweller 'midst the rocky : glades, And lonely, damp, enormous *Watt ,Of hoary oaks and clarion pin* And chaos of gigantie vines, ' That when the nightrwinda on the. rear, Their leafy balhislalts pour, - As if, upon thee golden cars, .. • To chain the car Of rushing stars— - Appalling worm!' thy home is where , The wild wolf maces hit dreary bk.:. 'Midst crimson moss and cypress shade, And brambles. thorny pallsade--- The 'muter from: his pathway stem -` -Wu pulses with srUder bound, As tby fierce eye - upon him darte Like lightzungleaping from the mend, - Where through the sundeed houghs in pH, A blush from Morning's cheek bath rerd, In which, 'with trickling Ventan . wann, Gleams, lace a brand, thy lur=n, " While thy quick settle, quick en keen, Rings through theloindyi Atm - But if, of dangerensentrec • . • His foot impinge thy. curtain'd . Thy Lingdiscloe'd, thy firm dilate With kindling ire &nth:steal:Este, Thou lannehest on the unheeding fa; 'Gal ;what si last, elect:lo3loin -That sends& the rocks, the hills and sky • in misty ruin reeling by! • - • ' Thy glittering coils to men discloser A symixil of all mortal woes ; •Down through 'the long, dim ages gone, , Thoight „roves in 000131 and silence, on To`whero the Van ells and bowers To rapture eltarM'd the rsulisetatotne, - - And where beside the =Yale Tree, Lay one who wore' shape like thee, And chaiu'd with letus-words the war Of her who could not choose bet hear. - • - Set, reptile, round whose aavap,, tome, lien pause and shudder as they team, Upon thy fiery' chaps I gaze - • • lin reverent awe of Him whose ways Arlvs are with the infants woes, And Earthquake's Lonnie, Tzfautic &foes: And in thy folds and burning eyes, bike brevring storms in Tropie,sklea, ' A fierce, barbmic beanty And tells that He whose hand lath pi rd . Andes' serene, tremendous lafows ~ 111 domes of everlaining snows, , , Amidst the swoop, the growl and clang - 'Of whirlwind's wings warmest In hang; Bath made Ike, terrible and wM And tipp'd with death thy eleseeinefinze r • Two Kiwi now . nOPAL - Judg e Burke, of South Varolina,rodefrom circuit to circuit on horseback, accompanied by a servant, who was directed to keep close behind him, while he meditated as pleased ',himself, by the way. Jogging along in thiswitty # o6 43C- Amnion, the servant pressed op 'too 'exit* the horse, which he rude, and which happened to. be at ill-naturedW - ne s - and' the - Consegnence was that the" home' kicked 'the - hegtO: On the leg, who, ibserVing that it `did not intereapt his tniuttertestudy, flonag of his, horse,: and jacking up a stone threw it at thetorakwhich tt unluckily missed Ant - thole -erect isetiees the. Juderabouldete, : - The - inatantthe gra tow what had hien. done; he fill :In the road with his hands ela"ped around his ieg, and crying out in apparent 'agony.; as 'noon aq• the' Judge could straighten ltimtelf, be turned around and said twthe -penetrate ne gro. Stephen,ehild,Wrkiatellsylittl" "' Lard master,' was the reply Weir hare jest how kicked meta the leg, and almost inoke " Wekehild," said the-Judg*:,bejust how kicked . me between the two eltchtldairs,ind almost broke my hack , t 0)." • ; r As bustr leave aud , - beireathe to ray heloved wife'Bridget, the whole ormy riperty, mil, personal -and - One ' refthe retttainderto vey oldest- aoli':Pitt, tick. the baianee tb Inv yonnpat lam Pavie, the blackguard ; and sliould there .he anything [Wit goos to ToplaKte 2401217-4, :...._,r:.,. :r ,, ,, ,. .... , . - r , ..._ : -.. ,.. •.-:: , 4 ,- ai : - i . , , : . -, . , :-i t : . , .•;;: :;::;: ::_ , T . ;.:_--_i.:. ::: ; .:1 . iz i , •_ :: ; : : ; :.,: ,;.: i- ‘.i .::;.:- .( : .;„ :s,: :_. ,, -.: : .' .,, -- ,.. - - :::* , - ., ,.. ,, ... ' , ..........,'". ~ _~ '.. ~ .. , ..,......• , .-1 - , .., ~ n .., _ lt - .. as . ....:--- ... ~..,.• ....:....„ ..: •. i 2 .. ~.• _........:. ~a • ... .. . ,.... :,....„.... . • .., , .. .. .• ....,..._ . , . . . , .•, ~. . ~ .. . , .. , , PADLINA- ARNOLD was a beauty, and the possemr of a large &dime. She bad been left an orphan at an early age, and at eight een,-by the terms of her Either's will, came •into possession of a large estate which he had partly Inherited, partly accumulated. Of coutse, she became,a belle, at her entree in to society ; of averse, she was besieged by crowds of fortune hunters, by adventurers, by foreign quasi noblemen, by dashing spend thrifts of good family and empty pockets.— Few cared for he i r bright, young beauty ; still fewer for her warm, loving heart—it was the heireis they sought, not the graceful, affection , ate gill—not the lofty, noble woman. She had not ; but yesterday she read some .of the letters in her mother's escritoire, and she had become' interested in the writers— her mother's ftiends and relatives. She was going at 'once to' „seek them, out. They were , quiet country folks, and she should go alone, without servants and , in her simplest dress. in her istonishtnent,•Mrs. EneoUrt forgot to inquire where was her destination. The 'carriage, which Pautina had sent her maid to order before coining down to breakfast, was alreadY at the door. The maid• came down with her Carpet-Iv; the footman fol lowed with a little trunk ; Pauline, tied of her bonnet and cloak, and was gone before Mrs. Enoourt recovered sufficiently to ask any questions. In an hour the earriage returned, driven by the footman. Paulina had concluded to take the . coachtnan,an- old man 'who had been in her father's service before she', was born, with her until she melted, the last litage of her journey. Then she would send him ' , back. She sent a message to Mrs Encourt, requesting her to let all things • go on at borne as if she were not absent, giving directions about some mat ters of business, money, &c. In three days the coachman returned.— He bad aewmpan'ed his mistress to Boston ; , from thence to i large inland city, where she ' left the railroad and holed seen her seated in the stage-coach, which 'was to convey her to the New Hampshire I , :rillage which was her, destination. ; lie did ot, think Miss Pau- Una mentioned its name, but, she wouid write to Mrs. Encoiart very soda. . - ' B ut , o h, sa d 'rnyatifisaiion 1 Where was the heiress/ Her leuer* each and all, were post-marked 'at: Concord ;• but she was not, very near Concord, for Nobody there knew her cousin, Mr. IthoOes„'` ith whom she was ' staying. Evidently;she• did not intend that ‘;:, the secret of her ;retreat s told be discovered, and had therefiim oontrited some means of getting her letters posted In Concord. What Ayala's" did, 'whe t, she saw and felt can be better told by the pages of the journal which she commenced during her seclusion, than in any Abet way. The day after she arrived abot wrote thus: . • , • From the New To Ledger PAULMVS RUSE. How the Best Wealth was Gained. LT ~~Rt E, tJCO~!f So, one morning, she announced to the lady who resided with her, as_ companion and chaperone, that: she wastoing on a short visit to the country, to see out-some distant and almost forr.ttenifrie da of her mother. Mrs.. Eneourtlif up her hands and eyes in astonishment. ree great parties were announced for the next week. It Ards the height of the opera season; Mrs. Fanshaw's fitney ball was to come air in ten days—had' not Paulina forgotten her engagements at diesel . • N.,. New Hampnhire. r im/nary 18, 18—. Last evening I. reached. .e quiet spot from whence lam mew writ/1;14. l came into this I t household an str " e utter r. As ' the sleigh, driven by a ruddy curly *red rand), Whom I hired at =the stage-ho In the village to l a.t.ti bring tee here, turned in the yard, through 'I the open gates, caught , red glimmer of, fire-Tigiat through the nil ' 'fled windows; and is sia circred the hoot, I saw the group gathered 'around the Sul* hearth in the kitchen. I had time but fuss glance, for the sound orthe sleigh-bells s ibrolght them all to the door, Mr. Rhodes foitenk/st, the children L i crowding arm/4 him, an co/sin Mary hold ing the candle aloft in th bats ground. Ina moment I statndx, n.. he threshold; with cousin .Ma4's Awl beanbag upon me. She looked so kind and I.lu/timely that 1 long ed to feel ter arias encircling tre, and to lay my head upon her bosom ;- . • "Ism Panlina Arnoldr I mil, simply.— "' am Anna Wilmer's ebild." In a moment•l lay ifi c iher arm, and she b was sobbing , out her wel me. %1 ben I mir ed my head I saw the children standing in a wondering group, Cousin i Rhodes wiping his eyes ally with his • coat*leeve, aid holding out the other luand, while the boy. who bad a brought . me there, s just inside the threshold, stamping oil . e snow, sad gazing stupidin astonishment , the scene., . , " We - are _glad to_ see you, Ansa," said, Mr.. Rhodes, simply, hut-'th such hearty welcome in his tones that I no diffic.ulty In believing what be said, . when I told ‘4 4 § l 'him, that my name was Paulit . m, not Aims, be said ; .1 looked so:much like my.' tether that be could almost have believed that she bed returned to her old mountain borne, en.: ebanged by- the'ittrenty-fiVe . years that h a d pined since she left it. 'lt made -me glad to heir that I .resembled my :mother, Whom, I scarce remember,' but who was a beautiff,ul . woman, and good as beautiful . . lam glad to be `beautiful, but I hope - they will . find . tie lace lnyinotber'in - sheart. end mind,„ se well ...as in face. .1 . ' ' - —' - .1 -.:_l..wasitreseetly introdened to , - all any young spesins."-a .fuae4 healthy :handsome ..group, 1 same near : - .menthoodi...ao .-in the. bloott of , inaidenhand.andik row ch ildren of all ages down . to 4141440e,,-2`. ' b aby ' Latil4.though ilia 45. - thrue,lieera:olo , ' -presently supper was'realy and we. all ea ti down. I was sur.. - ' sidle:hear - My drink - invited to. a seat'- beide y, cousin Migii4,ldesideuilitei, ..-: ..,Butbe came :assiteettiir or,ccourse. -.. 1 pea. *trek' Wile; . 03*. ~ 7 -.: . t * . iiitt:i Of 'clasieeln this. i.u.out.._ region . ./ . s apper was over he **lig . ..V. - 10ffiiii , ..;:,:-.-- i7ihouglit;.irith *eineieiuttfietkee: - . 7 . - : 1 , ~ >i lite whet •101.:1Otid 41.0- o n lii.-:"f o ' r - 'b .' ia.' . - as ,I: . h i '• & nodes ilit would le, o'l 14_114 be 'answered,'f - '''':-' : ; '''' . 72 - ".. " Weiiil - didrieealkailate on : tailit any .:. . I -pay; -, I thought Id .Isini you over. to Leedom tmxlate colenel Jones at" • tavern . ' , !Plant 1 Immeh:out.W , :lny,way.r.-,r. --':' `,/isf44oeft It. ~ to, pal iheltindfSsd to scud i, ryou. 1.-Tequested imici o one,:iind expeotal, papi roam IS ,i - ' of 4 . kmini,"ito pais' "*G Wed 4 if -pa Want 6 . 6 VREEpqa A . O.p notwilia'ania.mol,,,atuaVigt.::Akg goNTRoSE, - .T . 11pRSpAY; -41T0U5T.13,„..1857/,_ York 11 be enough. I sipose 191 have to give old Grey an extra feed Of natio when I get home. Butt hadn't the least objection to comire here." cast n sly glance at Lucy Rhodes that made the blushes rise -to her fair-forehead, while the children tittered. I handed him' a much larger sum than he demanded, and af -ter thanking. me, `llO withdrew, and .1 noticed that Lucy followed him to the outer door, " Frank and Lucy think a great dial of each other," said 'CA/Wain Miry, as, they went out.' On question inz her I learned' that Frank was the son of a neighboring farmer, Deacon. Lee, and at his fiithev's death Would probably be the owner of some hundreds `of - acres of the finest land in New Hampshire: Evident ly, Cousin Mary and her husband are very , well pleased at the attachment. that has grown up between Frank and Lucy. Cousin Mary took me to an. . my room at early hour, ur what seemed so to me, and I showed bit my inotho's . miniature and sonic packages of letters, many of them -her own. We had a long chat-together, When. she left me - she ki4sed me affectionately, called me her dear child, - and bade me remember that this was my home as , long as I chose •to stay With them. She knows nothing of the petted belle and heiress. •To her I am only the orphan child of her dead friend and cons: in, Anna Minter. 1 - have told heethat my fattier left me. means of support, and that is enough fur her to know at:present. I will not tell her that I ant rich, unless I see that my- riches caii.be made servia eable . to her or; her household. . . . I have - a delightful room.• It is large, and simply though tastefully furnished. A bright warm carpet upon the floor, a snowy/ted, a dark antique cheat of drawers, that Cousin Mary says once belonged to my g'randmOth er; tables, chairs, a.stovu that trakes it sum mer-like here, though the wide • landscape is white with snow as tar es eye can reach, and the wintry winds are whistling past•the win: dews., lam sure I shall .he very happy here. April 10, Is—. , I have bee; here almost three months:the•Most quietly happy mouths that I remember. since my dear .father's death ? l'hayelearned to love all Oils dear fiimily, andi• that: I might .not be the only drone in the hive, lhave . been teaching Lucy to ilt7.w; hearing the younger children read; embfoidering pretty frocks for ' little Anna, who,lbecause she hi a lovely .child, and be qua? she lumrsiily an ' name,,shall be my Peculiar protege. In the evenings I road to the family. as they gather round, while Coullin Mary si',Orks; and Cousin Rhodes oftekinterrupts Me with his shrewd,..keen re mar It, that show the native furce of his un cult vated mind. - -. - ' nk Lee went to Concord fast week, 4 andpe brought me i batch' of . letters. from Mrsi Erricourt ;..One also from Carrie Pitge;. fullrpf news, and gossip, and tattle.. How' it . sieki , ned me. ' twondereAl how I had ever . found .ran interect in snit matters. Now, amidst the freshness of a natural, rural life, they seem like the veriest chaff, so light and worthless are they' all. ' - - . Mrs. Erncourt sent ma a sum of troppy also, fi.ir which 1 was very glad when, next day, I heard Cousin Rhodes say to Cousin Mary that he had a large payment to make, and as the firm to whom 'he sold . his grain had become somewhat ernharrassed,:he had to Wait for his pay, though he thought he should . ultimately receive it. 14; ow he, must take from the 'bank' tha hundred dollars which he bad deposited-ithere for Hubert—his dd. est son—who is studying for the ministry, and he feared that he should not be able to replace it.so that Hubert could go op with his studies, as he had planned. .I saw the teara'come into Cousin Mary's eyes ay she turned silently away. Hebert is her darling son,.and she earnestly desires to see him or dained to the service be has chosen. I be lieve if she ebuld oncestee him ministering at the altar, she would he , 00ntent, to die and feel every wish fulfilled. _ I slipped out, and went to my own room to get my puree. When I returned I saw by Cousin Mary's reddened 'eyes that she bad been , weeping, but 1 said nothing. I waited until . Mr. Mesita came in, and then I went, up to him and laid the two one-hundred dollar . bank notes that- Mrs. Erricourt sent, in his Lind. " Cousin Samuel," I said, " please use what you require for your payment out of these notes, and put the remainder ib the bank for Hubert. I. am very glad it ,came last. night, that I may offer it to you," • . . "My own child 1 .. said Clain Rhodes, starting up in an agitated manner, when he saw th e value of the notes--" my, dear Pau lina, what does this mean I I cannot take your money. Itis all you have. is it notl" " Not quite," I answered, - " I have twenty or thirty 40Iats besides, which I brought hero, and Ica get more at any time. I beg you will accept that. I have had no expen ses since I have been here, and that is hon estly your due for helping such an idle girl so long. I should have spent" --"twice that sum for trifles in New York,", I was about to add, but checked mvself when I re metnbered that they thoughtl was poor, and that - the sum seemed so large to them who never hive flinch money, but gain most of their comforts from the farm, or from the exchange of commodities. Cousin Samuel took it, at last, with many :thanks and much reluctance, saying he would accept one hundred as tilean until the grain was paid for, and the other hundred he would place in the bank for me, instead of Eftibert. May sth. The spring is opening in • beau ty at last. ' The tenderest green leaves clothe all . th e trees; the: tun . shines - warmly upon teemellow' earth In which they are planting - seeds of 'grains and vegetables; the einni triurtnur, all looiened. as they ero Atm their icy thraldlim ; even the blrdsare returning, and are building their taests in the esl trees that stand about the bine. 4 Ilow; wantiful, bow intensely joyotia is thisataalt ening of Nature I . „lifre,*rnwnrt : urges me to mum borne, list I am determined to re tisk herb, 11101' Si it . child, to these eacel lent PeOlae..4 I love thorn as-Kthey were my paregs—wily should not iny mp this be -hai. t Just, 04111„, 3 I have hapm :very hippy hems all the 'Fria& imitil Dow..: tbiiiki.wiil, go hack ti)l§tew York ; take M Fitiourt, and make the novel round of the watering pqces., I thought- - :Brats secluded here 'from all - the stolid, but, these primitive, un4histiested, people...: : 'And now Mrs. bee proposes to take city - hasrdera, and two of them--zen ar. -tist from %dot:yen& hie cousin, -who is said to bes New Yorker, have already arrived.— 'if ens i. *New Yorker z And is is axisty , al all, I shall be discovered; for Miss Arnold; the heiress, the belle, Is too widely known to remain . long unrecognised by sorb an one. - July sth. I had contrived to escape eott.l tact with Mrs. Lee's boarders until ester day, though they had been hm.e and Benedict had 'even sketched LM, in bet; i bloomer hat and that pretty bitie muslin', that I made Mrs. -Ernconet bey Or betr+ j They bad heard of me, of Motel, bet I me: mained obstinately Invisible. I have remain ed bees because Hubert was looMise bome,l and was to deliver the oration, on the Fowl)+, at the village. For the'world 1 *veld ioti have disappointed Ccnisin Mary in her desire 1 that Hubert and I should meet, that I should , see her darling, and above all, listen to his' eloquent words. I went and : was 'amply re. paid. My cousin Hubert is a noble speet;, men of the talented New Fallander. To. 1 tally unpretending, he makM himself felt ass soon as heard or seen. Lem proud , of, him,i and glad beyond expresSion that I 60w ..him,: and have the.power tO aid -him, to free him from the. long strnggle with 'his poverty they . , he thinks _is - before him ere he rain gain,a ', knowledge of Wprofession. Ilubert was/not well. Ile wase.ahausted . by his longimmey and his efrorte, eo we re. tprned- henie at one from the citiurch.— 1,,, g' Mr. "P e and Claude Benedict, who wish ed to rake Hubert's acquaintance, followed ) us o horseback. I saw that an introduction was unavoidable, so went at once tofthe par ras soon as I had laid aside my bat and shawl. Cousin Mary introduced me to'her guests,- and I noticed that Mr. Pegei4tarted when he saw me, while I fill that I had seen him before rather than treognized hi*Yeaturts. " He knows me," I thought, "and Allis over, If these good friends learn that. I. am- rich, I fear that they, too, will turn sycophants. I must at all risks preserve myself .from the eclairchtsement until- I have gone affray."-- Pretty soon Mr. Page approached nie. "Miss Arnold." he said, "I think tam not mistaken in the idea that I have rnek.; you in New York. You are an intimate friend of my cousin Carrie.--yon ere Miss Paulhui .Arnold—" " the belle and heiress" hi might have added, but I interrupted him. 1.- , , "Mr. Page," I said, "you are right, but these kind, unsophisticated friends lit mine know me only as a desolate orphan fo' limit-' ' ed means. I beg of you not to utidecelve them, fur they are the only persons ; ; inthe world who love Pauline Arnold for herself and not for her gold," ;• .' . .. _ "You shall _ be obeyed," answered Mr. Page, bowing profoundly. "1 gues , tod that I should find you here. but is' you were hid den I thought you bad some m i tre i ; t tor the . '• seclusion, and so kept silent. 'wrote me that you were somewhere in the! ,t neigh borhrx-sd of Concord." . ~ "When have you heard from Carrlar I inquired. • . " I hear from her :Almon daily," he answer-. ed,- and front his proud, happy mariner I learned that he was,rarrkeia accepted lover. "I -think 1 undeistand you, Mr. - )Page," I said. "Let me congratulate you. Carrie is a noble girl ; one whom fashionable frivolity has not been able to spoil. lam glad to know that she is SQ happy." ",j - He bowed again over my extended liand, and looked very handsome with theta* of gratified feeling upon his fait ace.. `,; Benedict came up. - • " What is all this aboutl" he said. f‘Are you so recreant to your lady-love as to be al ready bowing in allegiance to another t' • Mr. Page smiled. " Miss Arnold knows our Carrie," ha said, "and has been saying something very pleas ant for me to bear!" "Wilt you not tell what you said a Car rier said Mr. Benedict: "She is mrecins• hi also, as well 'as Arthur's, and I love her only less than he. lam only a poor artist, with reputation yet to gain, and so cannot afford to fall in love, except in a collie:lily way, with Carrie and her sisters." told him what I had said, and this we fell Into easy conversation. Be is very , _ in teresting,full Of anecdote , of high- toned sett timent, f varied information. We **lied together in the garden after tea, and I enjoy- ed the evening exceedingly. Six months' se clusion from contact with cultivated Minds (Ares an added zest to such communioni; am still at N. Hubert has gone back to the setoinary, but !linger here. Mr. Page keeps my secret, and I need nis go for that, and Mr. Benedict haspromised to paint my portrait. can give the time, to it here, bZtter than in the city, and I anOinx ions that he should paint It, not only that I may set the fashion of paying him Mimi& cently, but that, when he comes to thOicity next winter, I may set the fashion of emPloy ing him. He is anxious to go to Baropis to study, and Mr. Page tells the be is too proud to accept aid. How I would like to help the fulfilment of his wish, with some of less wealth, if I but knew haw. • It; Sep. I.—Tbe portrait has long been finish ed, but still I have lingered in such a triince of happiness that I have feared 'to break it. lam every happy.. Claude Benedict is tibiae, my affianced husband. He thinks me §uly the poor orphan, and .speaks mournfully of the weary years of waiting that are before us. Thi s happiness would never have Come to the great heiress: •He is too prinal,to have wooed cos whose charms are Widen, had he , known it. To-morrow we will, go back to the kity, and not until we arrive there • will. his !kern my secret. I know nut bow be will ter it, but trust only to tbe great lovathat . tie-or each other. Sept. 4.—This afternoon we arrived a Llity carriage was waiting st the depot. de [oohed puzzled when be saw the liveries bat I ssid;simply, "Aid I see. Mrs. Ernaourt has teat the carriage' We got in aid die homeward. - He seemed ratber surpueed again when be saw -the mune Arnold" osi the dociw a Arnold I" he meld, 41 ,001% wide% num, I suppose. Do joe &Willett? i answered yes, and be sled minors, IW G went bito- dee drawistrixen where -lira. iknoberairas waiting -to erekorna - Mho expressed her pkimust--at weft -tae-(treat agate--the sotielpsted prof tbe server* at ry.arrind she dwe r k upon I . lgbily4 and 5 tarn* M to edi Iola! to apiece" Irv: sedusion; of how 1 hid been mimed la • _ sty; of the bidlesund • pieties- from .widrOr l made MV- amps - hat wbster. that Ciaiida was. , growing more and i =s surprised, end I was glad when she won not oftho room. . The moineetsho Otis he turned to use.- - • - - • e - - ,4 M j What does this now, dearest"! ; tharght . you a dependent tripbse, wooed _you. Are yin so much of shells as Mrs. Erneourt ',presents! My Pauline is beautiful enough; but —tg--" " It meat,' dear Claude," I aid, placing my band plsyfully upon his lips, "it means that I am,not what you thought me—Pa Arnold he poor ocean; but Pauline A.r. Dold pe heiress. Alt this that you see, and much more, is mine; hut , it did not hinder and from Wog very desolate till I ,W(4l jive heart Now', 4)h, nowt Made, I am eery rich." - He did not speak. I wound my. arms around him, and waited toe. a reply.: Ile looked at me sadly, and even gravely.— "Pauline," he said, "Ayes this well 1 - You have deceived me. I have learned to love' you, -and in pining yiaur heart, I have lost y' / Claude what mean your I asked, ap palled by his manner. "The poor artist," ho answered, "should never wed with the rich beitess. The world will say that I sought yoti forlyour gold." "And shall we care whai the world says,. dear Claude 1 When' the heiress gives you her hand, you will she plonger poor, because shegives you all She is or has. And tell.nte which you value most—her love, her heart, or her gold 1" 1 I need not attempt to , write down what he answered. Indeed, his answer was couched in language not articulate, nor capable of be ing translated into Or written in words. It is enough that I understood it, and anr satisfied. I think I can manage the sensitiveness of my beloved. friend, until the, time when I shall have but his love, while all that I have and am will be laid—my precious free offering— at his feet. June 18.—Surnmer in Italy ! Claude and I have been married just six months =— such happy, -happy months! . We came_ here at osi c e„ here to "Rome ;•4nd Claude is studying his -beautiful, beloved art. : _ Already he has achieved some reputation: When ho returns, with the.prestige of his European studies, I shall have no -fears kir him. He fears his wealth will win him favor, and studies twice as bhrd as if be were poor, as - sometimes I almost wish he were.: But we wall try. to, make good use of our abundance. Already we look upon our mutual love as more price less by far than. all our Wealth. Every day thless that sweet seclusion, in the midst of which I found true friends, and: one levog heart. • Hubert came to pronounce over us the nuptial blessing. He has been ordained, and has settled near his Mother and his home.— Lucy, and Frank Lee are married, and little Anna, my pet and pnitege ' is e with me here. I shalt keep her always„ if her parents will consent, I cannot 'write here bow rich in happineis I pm. !leer Claude's footstep on the marble stair, and I must. hasten to his side where, of all places on earth, I find my best joy. Cesseco or vur..R.tvxv.—ln the narrative a-of the Arctic Voyage of Capt. Moaure, of the British Navy, is the following story of two Ravens, which. became domicillated on board the Investigator. The Raven, it ap pears, iefthe only bird that willingly braves a Polar winter ; and in the depth of the sea son, be is seen to flit through the' cold and' sunless atmosphere like an evil spirit, his sul len croak alone breaking the silence of the death•likelextie. No one Of the crew at tempted to shootthe ravens, and they conse quently became very bold, as will be some from the following story : Two , ravens now, established themselves as friends of the family in Mercy Bay, living mainly by what little scraps the men might have thrown away after meal. times. The ship's dog, however, looked upon these as his especial perquisites, and exhibited con siderable energy in maintaining his rights against the ravens, who nevertheless outwit ted him .in A way which amused every one. Observing that be appeared quite • willing to make a inouthful of their own sable persons, they used to throw themselves intentionally in his way, just as the mess-tins were being cleaned out on the dirtheap outside the ship. The dog would immediately run r et them, and they would just fly a few yards; the dog then, made another run, and again they would ap pear -te escape him but by an inch, and so on, until tly had tempted and provoked him to the shore, a considerable distance oft. Then the raves would make &direct flight for the ship, and had generally done good execution before the mortified-looking dog detected the imposition that bad been practiced upon him, and rushed back again." Panrrcus'MisrAxxs.—During the Mexi. can war, one of the English newspapers bur• riedly announced as an important item of news from Mexico, that General Pillow and thirty. seven Of his men had been lost in a bottle (battle.) Some other' paper informed the public, not long ago, that a , man in a brown surtout us yesterday brought before thepo. lire-court - on a charge of having stolen a small ox (box) from a lady's work.bag.' The stolen property was found' in bis wristcoat pocket. A rat (raft) says another paper, de. scending the river, came in contact with $ steamboat; and, so serious was the injury to the boat, that great exertions were necessary to save it. An English papet .Onie stated that the Russian General -- Backinoffkcrwsky was found dead With.a long word (sword) in his mouth. It was, perhaps, the same paper that, in giving a description •of a battle be. tween the Peles and Russia* said.that the conduit was dreadful, and the enemy was re pulsed withgrmt laughter (slaughter.) Again gentleman watt yesterday brought up to answer the charge of having eaten (beat t) a stage driver,fotthknanding more than his , fare. At the laterth July dinner in ' the town oftlarlestovro; mate of the poultry were eatable except the owls (fowls.) , , _ t ar litikusidast's wife Um is' great: fancy 160 country life, and Insists on keeping's ben in the bank yard, 'al Hood ea^ *to ihinivh milk, butter find egga," - for the The other air she cane , telfirikitenhat ki: gm; trapidatkim'' *My destr,”eidd she, thaben feeseemmeeded to set. I took theen. a rty from ben and - she is setting iinsriwttlinigiri tier of the: etad-hini on an old 'a Well, in,'-dear' reipended Kraut ehtink in hilt subdued igloo'lran ifthir Annie set: lug On an old isaheed, it minis finite ty atiatnny - Fir An old gentleman 'was _sitting -uptst the briult,of a river -fishing utast psientiy. Suddenly a vicious 'little dogatole ug 14/nd him; and gave him !a irpiteful snap through his pentaloormk: " BYheavens r - exchdmed ilia old ftsbottunip .rie got: ti bite gotleat," EMI EROINGa 99 H. H.. FRAZIER, PIIBIAISHER....?Vcck 8.43. 81. :TA') lilt - -11 •ct s :7,9111 A young couple from Southern Illinois, or . Egypt, came ' to this city the other' day for the avowed purpose of getting, hitched togeth er irl,the traces of matrithony. The bride was a. full-grown, :red-checked, sandidiaired maiden, with a well l deielOped bust, sod a foot lilte'the Onciunati platferubroad e nough to cosier the Whole Country. Her gallant waif 'six feet and "tut' inch, - wtth fists liked sledge hammer, and a shock of: hair like the remains oft.a small' hurricane. He was rather verdant to be so far from home; hilt is love can transmogrify an oyster into a . sword-fish, it was working wonders in the en amored Suet:cr. lie put- up with his intiitid ed, at a boarding house up town, and imme diately started to get a shave and a Justice of the Peace. The barber' took off his wiry beard in short order; and gently hinted that he wanted shampooning. ' "Sham what 1" said the Illinoisan; .never luiving heard the term used before. On be ing told what shampooning meant, he conseo • ted to undergo the operation. - His.huad was thoroughly scoured and scrubbed, lathered and rubbed, washed and squeezed, and he felt like a new man. But the shampooning had so bewildered his brain, that when he left the barber's he Wail perfi*tly oblivious as to the course he should steer to,,return.to his bride. Ile wandered" about the city in perfect bewilderment, and' has not . been seen . • since. . The lady, in the' meantime, had Waited in. great anxiety for the return of. her switio, and finding he did not_ come, concluded tha he had, incontinently.. absquatulated. Stikde• dared, however, that she Would never go back to Egypt without. a "feller" Of 'some sort, and hinted they she I.wi.sn't over particu lar by what name she went hereafter. A good looking youn g boatman, who 'Was stop ping at the house, ieatiring of the young lady's. distress, concluded to "buck up" himself.— He was not long in making known his inten tion, and ,his advances were' received In about the same spirit that:a pet eat'submits to the caresses of a soft hand. When' the boatman put the important question, the-girl replied: " - Well, I don't care ef 1 do. I was foeht over here to git married, and I'm bound`to marry somebody afore Igo back. The gals in the bottom would never git done laughing at me ef I went home without a fellerf... The maple were accordingly united in due forni t and when last - Ward from,were the hap piest pair - this side of Salt Lake.—St. Zara. Herald. . • GOOD BACKERS-4x INCIDZIT OF &girt- ALISIL-A tong-bearded custnrner recently entered a spiritual book-store in this city aiid applied fur an agency. Ile proposed to take a large quantity of books to his part of the country, "away out West," where he repre, seated that he could soon' sell them, as he . was assured by thC "Invisibles." The' cuter prising bookseller was of course delighted wish this prspect of a sale; but bis enthusi asm was somewhat dampened When the limp,: bearded gentleman remarked that he had no money; and wanted the bouks entirely upon credit... . ." Are you responsible?".- e ras the natural inquiry °file merchant. -- - : -::'. -,- • ' Perfectly," . .• • • .. - - .." . " .. ' -" What evidenc e of . yo - uf_reliability can . . vou furnish?" . _ ...- - . :. .- ' ... •- -.- "I have the best of backers, men whose names you know well." The merchant's countenance brightened.-- " Very Well" said he, "let us see your pa pers." • . Thereurm the customer presented the fol lowing document: " To whom it may cowers: , the un dersigned, having been acqueintedspiritnally with Air:- -, of--„ Wisconsin, for many years, recommend him 'as perfectly . rerkable,Ll a 'would no!. be atisdil to trait him to any Groans Wearily:mos, THOMAS JET/MIMS, Hamm CLAY, • TIIOIfAS PAYS'S, -• • Jona linalis,and others. "Through Jane medium." .. The bookseller remarked that , the ,backers were good if the medium was reliable; but ho thought, on the whole, he would prefer to keili the books. The customer hereupon de flounced the bOetiseller as an imposter, tell ing him that he did not believe his own doc trines, and that the spirits Would expose his duplicity to the world. Of this he felt as intred,,by the spirit of , prophecy within him. The booliseller was not convinced.---Y. F. Post. A ROMANTW RNOWIT••••Co - wOUS TRENS..--P The editor of the Abingdon .Virgisian re• cently spent a for days in the White Top Mountain; end other - peeks in that range,tied "in all the region round about." In, giving. his experience, be says: _ - "The .White Top is th'e peak in the 'whole Apalachian range ; and frOni it summit the Mostextensive and magnificent view is obtained it has ever been our.fortune to wit ness. The trees upon its , summit are just beginning to bud, and the whole face of the mountains is darted with wild flowers, rich in fragrance andgorgeous to Colors, we were upon the summit, and looking out westward with a glass, at Abingdon and the farms many miles beyond, a cloud carne roll ing up to the -mountain, which -soon' swept . across the top; careering # the wind whistling mournfully and - whiter,. like through the naked limbo, and the vacier hiding our company from each other. -1: the southeastern slope, flortions` of . h -Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia ail. Ca law in the soaps of natural vision, and from the northwestern elope the bold outline of old. Kentucky nutrkellthe hereison; • The molt remark4le thing.iro.iaw 1 1 P' White:Top,-was,crosida , sCilretsimilea Lsvhhorn. These tnies arer:ef ttlt heights', 'll'oEoll.oe shilibs Op to ISO .f . e4,14411irt `ere Antos/ invariably' &siloooV)Ki - i: A t io to Inseam-kr closalrintarivava*thei.iier, ons min :Mullet wallrnpon them% thiriont. pony; cone_ieting of nine 'pepootKbsd-thit en. friesitypecend to the ftefer#;ofltaaa trees, jtheietraitibmi.„. 4 1 '01r-VirtheCikt the keel platforinit foliageoltene-25 ;satin , _ diameter, and two tor - three et-seetrAtl.Pail , iiettudiy mietrio*ohe top; tri#.1,11 . 11:4 . 040#y#, peenfier to:thcpealc., The thubOr t .nesr :the summit and gtoirlddi-bot.it the base the trees are giants,' -We saw - and measured one whip oak !Bi- feet in cireunifennO, with 70 feat trunk without a REES 11==1 i :rst . ;T At 4 - - Lzi; I's; El = : , " MEE =ME E== Anzamit TEE' °us WORLD." . _ "It is a circumstance` quite' eatritOrdinary and unexpected",saY B Agas stz `pro foundly interiating worli - ontAe' " that the plantiOf the Tertiary . .lreds of Oeningete - relinnblii -More closely the trees and shrubs whicliginw resent` in the east ern parts or 'North' Arrierrek. dart:those of -any other parts of the world; thus allowing us Wearer corre ctly the difg.ce between the opposite coasts of. EUrcipezi-tuta :America, by saying that the pronent eastern American flora; and„Ll may add, the fauna; also, hair.° a more ancient characterthan - those or Europe. The plants, especially the trees and _shrubs, growing the--Va 4 a,',Stt.ito*, aro, AS it Were, old fashioned:4a the Charac teristicgenera Lagomys, and the large Sala manders with permanent gills, that remind us, of ,the rosaili of Oennigen, are at least, ! equally so ; r 4lieibear ' the marks of former ages. - How Strange o fact ! Not only are we accustomed to speak of the eastern conti nents as the Old World, in- contradistinction to the great' continent ,of therrest, but to speak of - the World befero the flood as the Old Werld, in contradistinction te that pest dil avian world which succeededit: Arid yet egnally, if,'we receiii6.the terin in - either of its:lteceptations, ! ..s America- an :older world still,—an older world than that of the eitst-_ ern iYmtineets—an older world in the Fashion and type of , its productions than the world. before the flood. And when the iiiimigrant zettler takes axe, amid, tbe - deetybackwoods, to lay open for the first time .what he deems. a new conntrY, the great trees that fall before him—the brushwood whiph he , lops away one sweep of hia. tool-4he unfamiliar herbs which he tramplea..under rook—the lazy fish-like reptile that scarce stirs .eiut of his. path as he descends to the - neOilibringereek to drink,—,the fierce :alligator-like, tortoise with the large limbs and small capace, that he sees watching among .the -reeds ,for fish and frogs, just as he reaches , the , water,—and the little hare-like rodent,,wlthout a tail, that he startles by the attest, by thei antiqueness of the mould in ; ; which they are east, how a country the- seemingly' need one really country r t tstly older in type 'at least, than - that Of the aotedilorianie and the patriarchs, and , only to.be,compared with that one which flourished on the eastern aide of the Atlantic 'long ere the appearance of man, and the remains of whose perished pro ductions' we find locked up in the king of the Rhine, or ,amid the lignites of Nassau. A merica is emphatically the Old Vorld. ORME—THE New SVIELVITUTZ FOR GOLD.. .--The manufacture of this new metal, oreidep under tiaeFreucb.patent of IL Iligeon, grant ed in tins country .Idarch`3, 1857, has been commenced on - a largasole 1a... Waterbury, Co;,nn` and 'it will undoubtedly soon be' in . i use,. - as it s already in France ; fer various articles of domestic economy and all sorts of ornainentation, as it bears relation ••to gold similat to that of German, silver to pure sil ver ; like German silver, it dr ay - be-used in a pure cOndition, or as-A bas e ofgold plating. It bears so strung eresembAnce to gold th at. when manufactured into-Anb articles, Such as we have becOmeaccustonited teseei'made on ly of gold, wears at on convincedthitt the 'article we are haredling is really 'the pure mewl, yet it is made of e nUttekial . thatoo.sts only eighty cents a pounds* it wanes trom the furnace whop. the- leieralinetals ..of Its composition have ••trifiefuted into ingots. The oreide-is not anti* Metal-4t is Only a new compound of old: meta* so refined in the process as to have donsi,,away.-...With great part ` of their disposition' to oxidise, as it onlyjsrnishes abodt the' same degree as silver, awl therigh!ebididon Mites place, if tested - with nitric acid, it does not leave a black.spot, bellies' it may be actually_ ,clean ed With acidsi which would destroy such met *la as copper' or brass. .We have' examined the metal); In bait and. aheeta,. poPared` Air the inatinqteture of various articles, and: else en its manufacttired state--4usponnsi Ituger„, tongs; napkin-ritigik - Oblets' buttens, - 'watch chains, various articles of plain and chased -jewelry and cast oritamentaoind plates of various thiciiness froth tin friil to-the six teenth of an inch thick,Combined _with - .gold, so as to show gold up o n one side and' the. oreide - iiPon the other, it . was certainly very difficult to tell• Which was ‘goldund - which was oreide. That it la =an improvement in - the arts there.can be no dbnbt ; and ~that it so Much resembles_ gold as to make it necess ary for our Legislatures at once to require, as in France,Altat., , all', articles- should leis stamped " oreide"-,to prevent great frauds, will. protobly be found out , After A great . Many people., havi . been pretty severely cheated.—N..Y. Trauste„ FME-Ettiß'S'AfiliatoOTlll or, Gov.. WAT.r- - IM—OSE 'AVALICIreIe "DratrathO'SS:s l —: For, ourael ourselves We, acknowledge an,injthility to discriminate between the _ public and private *meter of .ait individual, in so- far is Jo agrep - ithaehe *I . be a scoundrel in.; one ca pacity,-,and a patriot theether..l'hat GOv. Walker. is, not a man of , the hip it pie pcison4 honer‘4lllsiffieiceitry.appeor from the following narriiiiro cr,, one' among • many similar expioiti,r7:° What - Robert: - 1, - 7 iiiaa train MiiiiisiPpc ho,aideriabied: that on 'Old. - gentledutit,WW4leiteSPennty; in this State, was &to - yelled - to sell alai* estate in negross. Accerdhiiii,- - in*nipany with a colleague in the'llonsiof iterifeientatlves;Valiter made the old :gentleman , iiskesetd;nititt - ` a ; otiation,',sucoce slives., 4 And bogtottheokon4o4. terms.. ..fii,:the;.-0 1 411eigaPau -,- AkAoc44,-Perooert -wadschikrtue4 bXiherisor4l4 , o;i4iefo:49ll Of the dia4ogotuluskiiinotor7bkaOrtlOto price - 6 C tba . s'74l- something ' more than- 40000, for whki‘Yraikei,avn_Uele 'o44oe4ereerilieetti.:;64 , egti, hiel*es' ex. 'te's tte*artkef fNit' be IS.fiCtotelliii; 4 4 -3 0tiii0 - 401n`=04 South. went the 4110ii ii mare pulv-sponclitie*blickfiiitidisiorim4 tc: the ;bur -4044...46 , 4muclaseir40411siiiir ' no te tonaidinhbi 400 trim* otatit i o ." ~4 4 aWylaiktit***`,Pie*uted ;:for paytneut k ;sumi - ,pietsstedvluid:frmu. that tolhorlowak#lllll-114 been received outlet:Jr 14.444 - toatieosi - or, his heitollor4 s 9;o,W. ; 111 1VOYakr ,1 1$10 1 14i 11 - 11411 **. maul is believed poW.i i.tio_i of Walker's atitiksgUto impeach ihe-ivrrflet storft-: Let ?tiliA , pflit,:'< , Tho substantial Initti - of WIC its** vorified bar teettalony whit ItPhodilearl q ua ' tkgim.ktehliond &talk • ■ ME 0 ME =I =Si