la U . _ T . F READ & E. FRAZIER, ipr - PORS. , - - - '.' A MYSTERY-. Wi TEN PO It THE IHTErENDENT REPFEL STRAYING from tie portals bright-. . - Ora summer sunset proud, ~ Softly stole the mellow light %. 1 ' 9 Through a fleecy,`, purple cloud, • .. i iklli‘ tl u i n e d p • Wreathed a transient crown of gold. ' flow. the tender ivies clung : • • .' . ' ;- nd the dewy moss-rose stilling; • ' 1 ltailinetittu.err:etpsiihyrsighsigu:-:-_ ''', Whereet a castle grim and old, ~ • . .Tv the brtiken lichen wall ; '' . I BluAling, from its eui'rahl thrall. ; ' . \ o, , . 1 ,tiftly.through th,ose silentlshades, . - Stole the biboklet's limpidinotes, Breathing oldie forest glades - -' -Where the song of wood-bird floats. .., Lady Agtom still and cold, - ~ t .: . 1 Like a bn3kenllly, lay, I Shroirded,in that flood 4,0 d, , . ... • At-uittifil-deplay . • - ; ; Of the breezes o'er her brow,, , Or upon the shattered strings ~• - - r Of her lute, or, sometimes, liolv i .' • Angels swept them with tlifr4ings: - Flushed for aye was loves faint sigh; Bounding pulse, and tender word ; 'Paled the deep carnation dye—. ' - - • • Hope no more her•tiosom stirred: - Whoh_altdone the - tragic deed, , • , We, ini earth, may never knoti.; . - - . • 'But 'tWAs`aid, a dashing steed - \• CroaSed the draw-bridge—white as snow,-=, Bearing off the haugiity Lord ; • WO had sought in vain her hand,- Never t .io the festive beard. Came again Lord Altamand. ' Drinock,rPa.lna Arrow. _ OUR CH.Ats,,E"y'. • --'• 1-4*E years ago we parted 'tram our 'Char e. y, bound for thel i P.a.st, the blithest, bright, est, bravest - lad that ever drew • breath. I, who hive been his mother, as he says, these - ourteen years„ have a ,right to boast of him ; ut all our island - knows him'. ; . He was., out • list sixteen upon the night of the great storm, • When I and all of us thought in our, hearts that we should never livetb . tee another day!' the Whole Atlantic-raging' at.:, our feet, and the south-wett. wind,. in its unbroken fury, • I poinang• •upbn our low - -roofea cottage--,-the ifirst opponent,..save a few mastless ships, that it had mit for a thousand nines. The !dark ness and:the noise were hideous; but, worie ei still, the, pauses, when, the. powers. of air fteeined• to be gathering .'strength fur some ilinore.-fremendims'eff'ortkand when the light -4 Ining showed for an instant 1.1!t3 , long line .of ''.white kind ahuddea . rin eliff,!: and the black • Mass of waters. rising in wrath to overwhelm • it, \\ - .-e. women were,all up, and in the. par -i...;;,., .. 14 - or; the supper table was yet „ispread there, lat which four hours_ before ,k-il., had. sat, ar.d laughed, and' eaten, lisfeninito - the rising - `tempest, not without a selfistritort. of comfort —God forgiVe us !—,to think that WQ , we-re -• safe and warm on land. , - There is'a strange i - ditTeretre observable under alhcireumstances• bet Wren hours, whatever they May be, devot ; _ ed to wakefulness' and. those.,given to rest. _ Iletweeh, twA ve 'o'clock, 'for instance, to the V. lady of fashion; and. three o'clock, it sbe hap peb`te,,be awakened at'such 4 time; and be 1-4-ween ten and one to persons who live domes tic, quiet lives tire,. our§elVes; .quite, apart from the contrast, which' the ,eaiety and brightness of the one, and the loneliness , and - dirtiness which the other;Must of course pre sent—they seem periods .of two separate. ex-. istenees,.one of Which is not . - without ' - it cer tain terror fur us. Whenever I have:-clianeed to be Calle4 up at night, frOm illness in, the' house or other cause, although I soon get my 'brain,lo order for working purpotes, I am a .lonviine coming tb, myself: the business • that I have been in such tunes . set to do his I ' always apPeared, in a: mea:ure, Weired-like, .. the familiar places .unnatural,'Una my friends themselves what the Scotch, call t' uncanny." z . I thinkanost people will feel What 1- mean: On this night of the tempest .we were all .ex-, --- Wash;ely terrified. - It.wast long before the candles Could be-lit, (the wind got in so eve- rywhere;)-and, when that .as done, we were . ' 'the more frightened with looking in each oth -1 er's faces,- Poor Janet—but fourteen then, .--4ith her brown hair hanging about her , Shoulders, and, her large, eyes starting out s of. . their bed! lierbert—thirteen4--very pale, • 'with his mouth)iet in an arlificialamile;,poor • little fellow, while his teeth chattered 'with • horror.! ' Small Alice, _ia: fits of , tears and screaming; ro as to be • beard even. through that tempest, and' both themaids-pictorea of - abject terror. ! Presently, ' while the . house :: was rocking to and fro like'a tree, in rushed .;' Master Chiarley, - 4Lessed, and with This Glen gai-y cap tao.----7w, girl*" crieoe, "who - will shut the from door after me?"`' _ • - "Good heavens,: Charley,''' I exclaimed, "you are not surely mad enough to venture out in such - a night asthis l" .• . • "Nes, mother, I am; why not? _ • ' . • • : • "In such a night as this ` . • ; . When the sireetwind did 'gently kiss the trees, '. - Did Jessica—" = . . . , We bead it, you know theothet night.. I am • , going-after J essica—Phcebe Taylor, that is— i or she will be drowned else. kam certain i. that,this spring' tide, with sucha'gale to help -- it, will more titan reach their cottage, :arid the old man can never Carry her a'way- with- out, help." • - _ - 1 - I ' lle.Spolte of the bedridden' wife:of a super- I annualed fisherman; whb, in defiance of the Wartings•of hiseompaniont, had , get up his I . oftl' boat by. gray; ofa. house,. in the corner of I I. ' the bay, just'ahOvehighWater - ,Mark. Directly Charley mentioned ilit, we knew :. . atbnee the danger to which this aged couple . 4 mulct already_be exposed, for it wanted. but an hoar or so to full tide;, but, the dangers of a rescue °were not less. . • - ' • ' 1 " Remember, Charles," cried I, " that these three. children ye nobodY.-to look :to fur • . Protection iu,J.he ,world; save you." ' • . . . " Qh, • yes," laughed he' gaily; •" there s , Herbert; ain't there, Herbert? .Besides which, 'you will not get rid of me, so easily ; . you Will see rue again anon; bearing. the love ' .%ly Phoebe in my twins." -'. ; • • ,•' .A,tremendous erash, occasioned by the fly.: jag open of the ball doori_and its being , jam, . Mea againg the wall•hy the-blast, announced the buy 4 departure.. - Then we felt deserted' • indeed.- ' 'file' tWo • inaid s were 'blown down -.in the ; passage; in their„attempt ' to shut the .doer again, ,and the rush of, wind• - intO all parts of the house beeime so violent, that I via_s•itt inomentary,exfieetation of its lilting' the roof off. Out; - only ebittrort seemed -to - Le gazing at'lle lighthouse.. We, bad been inside it but a r ,. days xf6re.;.and it ' was, , in a manner • cletrino• to, know that there Wefe.4ying.beings there ten engaged in their . trituti ticcupittiOn,:and-ettitt.counteratiting .to 1 IP , - - 4 • ,__- _ . , .. i tt A z. . ~ . . . 1 ... • . _ . , .. . m _ . . \ ... _ • ~ .4,1 • . . . ...., ...,....... _...„„.„,,,, . \ 0 ~. , . t .'"''`'S,=- . , • _ ,” ... , I ' • , • _ , - t . _ \ ..--- ~_:......'• ... '-. I :: ::, :• . t i, • : ''" . . 1 t 1 1 14 " I '' - 5 - -:' I. . , • : z. - N. ' . f _ :1.. -- '' # : .. i L'''...l 1 t . I ye —.. + l,„, , -----. ...,..-....„...s- -- ;,-• ... la . . • , \ . . 0,,,a,„...„....„....,......_..:___ . . , ..„,„ ~...r, ~. . , . • . . 1 - . t . • , . . . . some eitenithe awful effects of the ; storm. In the Meantime, walking edgeways; its he afterwards affirtried,-in,order to offer as little. resistance to the wind as pessible,-and. abso lutely feeling his way foot by foot, ur Char ley had reached. the path - that winds down to the beach.. Here, away from the.tr es; and in the open, it was not so 'pitchy a, rk, and 1 the gust being dead against him, oti pnaileii him to the cliff without danger of sweeping , himiromiiif it, which, had it. !changed to a point or two more westward, r it would .have done at once, like a knife. The tuult be -Ipw him sounded so . near and awful,' that he seethed to be descending into the sea ; a slip, Eviese turn, a sprain of b the ' hand or ankle, wonld now have been certain death! to him. I - Theie was a light still burning in the wood en hut, however, which guided hint aright, amigave him spirit, for it told himl that he was-not too late. He found the old man sit ting by his wife, with' whom he fad fully made up his mind to die, since he could not saim her..• -He had attempted to do so, how everjor the poor woman was partly dressed and had been lifted on to a`chairt She was trying, as Charles entered the hut, to per suade her husband to leave her toter. fate ; "hut, since it is your time to die, Phcebe," -said the old man, " I seem to have, lived- in - this world long enough:" No two ' young -lovers, eharcoal burning to death tag ether at: ter - the French fashion, were ever half so no j ble a spectaele,as that-of this ancient couple. There was no doubt whatever about theJreal ' ity Of their heroism, for the spray of the still risiii“.tide had already tiepin to patter against their ,, refuge, and -, they ' knew that the end must be-very near indeed. Charles and the old man' togethei .had to wade very deep be fore they got poor.Thebe to the foot of the pat i h,up which, with such a burden, they were quite umtble to .make-their .way. But our Charley was not the only angel abroad that night-: the two coast-guard men haalso be thought them of the perilous situati n of the . 1 3 Taylors, and had corne from the st. tion with lanterns, to see what could he doily for them. They: dared hot, in such a night as ibis, how ever, take the shortest way which lay across the own; and had been much delayed, so That the light in the little room was quenched,- and the but itself far.out to sea, - when they arrived; but they were'in time ,to assist' in bringing Phebe up the•diff. We heard noth ing of them until the'party were in the little hall, and at the parlor door- , -all safe-- I *lll tell you one thing mere oft eilaricT, to proVe" to you how brave a boy . e' was. One of his chief pleasures Was to fisher lads in theif perilous ex j oedit the nests of the eider duck, and for of cutet• sea fowl. With the aid a, 13331 bat' altd a rope, he would swing hi the fiiee of the steepestcliffs, and ii which one would have 'thought nt.. Could have entered save with vi n ••• n. Uprui one occasion, he went out with ano ther youth, with only one strong rope between them, and, instead -of one remaining above th:t precipice bile the other went below, they thought it would be excellent i fun' to go dowti together. They chose, -too, for this - :atnutement, otie of the loftiest and least freqbented c itrs'of all, midway in which, however, they had seen from their boat once , a great cave much haunt ed by the sea-fowl. They, fixed , their biir firmer than'usiil, and took to . the 'rope to gather, the fisher lad being undermost; they laughed and chattered in air; with the sea four hundred feet beneath them, as town bred lads would laugh and chatter in a swing ; but they found nomeanS easy to reach the cavern with their doadeloact, being afraid tti make a pen.' dulutn of the ropefor fear - it should _wear away from the increased friction at the sum 'mit: At last the boy_ beneath 'obtained a footing, and held the rope fast while Charles . slid on - into the hole: But attracted by the cry which the latter raised at sight of the I ,myriads of nests which lay within, and con fused, perhaps, besides, with the swinging, the fisher had let- the rope slip through his fingers; -once only -it swung within distance, btxt,in hi§ agitation he made a futile graspat it and af ter one or:two..vibrations, succeeding one an other more rapidly -than I can write of them, the two boys were left in their living tomb, Avith the means ofrescape indeed within sight, but only to tantalize them with, its proximity: seven or eight feet of fathomless , space lay between them _and it—a situation to them. who well understood it,-more . awfully peril ous even than it seems. No vessel ever came near enough, on account di the break ers, to see any signal such as they ' could make from the sea; they had left no word at home Of whereaboUts they-were *going, and; even should they'be found, It was very improbable that means ccnild be-devised for their rescue. While they had.still the strength and' spirit to take advantage of them. : The boy; looked at One another in blank dismay, as they thought of all these thinas. "My poor dear mother," said the fisher lad, with a groan, for he was her only hope. " uppo§ing one dropped," asked_Charley, thoughtfully, after ti few mo ments, " would this* carry one for:Certain onto the shore in'tlia hingb bay'?" "Yes," - said the other, "and Within the nefct hour to ' a certainty, but it would be only . as a dead corpse Master Charles." "-Godlalone knows ,'that," quoth. Charl i fy ; "we Must dust in 1:Him:" He wrote own upon al slip of pa per (which I now posseSs, - *ith 'the writing pist a little, a very little shaken, poor fellow, Iwhen it gets to the last message;) some such words as these: " Robert Harris is in the Gull's Hole upon Wadden Cliff he has lost holti of the. rope, and '.tiMst have ,Itelp at once: my . dearest love to all at homel.,Charley." He put this up in his-case bottle, taking the cup off at:the bottom, so that the writing might be seen ilobee through the glass, and buttoned it ttp . in - his 'Coat- pocket: "My people are richer than yours,. Bpb, and can better spare me," cried be.' 4t II am going to leap at the rope, old fellow, -let us shake bands" The lad tried s to persuade him not to risk it,- but rather to hope for rescue by. ineans'less desperate... But-'-'--"tn't unnerve )ire; Bob," was the- simple he, i s answer; "once, twice,-thrice, and here' fides. " - The other hid his face while the spring, was-taken, 1 listening for the far off splash, Perhaps, that , should. tell .him hii friend. Was dead, who had spoken to him the instant before. 'But when be looked up, our Charley welt holding well on to the rope, only he was dely pale. He t : two' to the cave again. in safety and the tw rescued lads came-up to life ain,- with their -pocket§ stuffed- with eider -down. Charles was abeave boy—his widoWed mother's dar ling and mine, in whose care . she,left him, and beloVed by all. He did not new her long,-but loved her deitrly,i and had the 'strangest r:thought about. her allays. He • ._ - __ _ - 66 I FRIEEDO thought that she us near to him, and upon the eve• of any •, lal pefil,' he seemed to a grow conscious of her presence. The night, -beforwhe left.ui, as we wandered in and out the roOs by the sea shore, and round the leafy paths that hread the copse, and up and down the level ndi, all grown so doubly _ _. dear t 4) him at Perliatn it wasl long npon they stroke togethel hanging dim en memory, that Wit Lour eyeSl waters darkeniit ternity greaking softly on ars, nlonei nd in that beautiful spot, it iatural, I , that we 'should speak of Toyed den Ihi that our e. Was fl the be ~ N other"—! r t , she isi 01 see hei k close tf Lffed hiii i n thatit il then "1 sh is qui 1h ed hi ay," sai d the. Paw a Us in climb bebin stars. ;Co you," S id 'he, when we had reached i , Immit, "4 , n steadtitst lights on ocelm ? rides a ighty fleet the .guardian an f our lan, and all night long they keep i watch an ward because . of us. There khey, still, though hid frtim view, until ined the h adland, and there will they illen we deg end again. .So it is, as I i with so rt of i , -.: few sonli but have spirit wilt ,hing over them, although utt save, halil ', .when a more, than common r threaten-, when heavenly stoops to ly, and the fleet sails round td us." to not men. ion this becauselairik such :ef was tell harles's credit—er I believe be a falsd, nd weak one,—but to prove he was no -1 terc satnphire gatherer and 4er of gull' nests, a youth of nerves and iis.only. I ad-he been so, would Janet, ;lithusitiStib the poetess, have ever loved So dearly la. she did ? Would, gentle , for whon I have heard him weave full a fairy ( t- e? Would Herby, whose ik head' hd Ile:d with visions of tilt and Itey ? was terrib • the parting from a lad ,like but he ffrght th'e Fusabad 'appoint iw as too g od to be let slip, for our ; althdl4r.4l. for himself, be woutd bate !tpreferree thi!, military _service. We ied the mi hty vessel that bore him out, iiling the lit int and speeding into space, ter thair au . other dewy eyes in -Britain. roof. I- thin•, •• is the last English home .• , xile sees, , , id the first speck which, alter • years gr ws gradual to the sight on his n. Throe h all the wnr ;la the 0. iatlea i t w the ver • litst.of every squadron, the ke cloutis streaming on the horizon's F, and the first glimmering of those t.less saik, -Inch brought up from the war4ing " und'e -World," our wounded thou sands. If the' •ind was fitvortible, we could head the tnarti tl band-inusic, nay, even the cheeks themsel -es, of the -gallant soldiers, in the : --essek out -ard bound ; and in the home ward,lf the sk• -s were clear, we could see, i With teleseopc ' the very beds of the wound ed, ay, and perrips the dead, brought-up up on the decks ft disembarkation. We were sad 'enough iii.eed, but we had no miseries. of this kind•th•n to dread fur Charley. The Ea.st was the at peace, whither he was 'bOubd ; the vessel that bore him' was cle.av , ingranquil s s. 'The next letter, however, whi- 1. h we goti rom him was 'from Spain.— Th ship had , een wrecked with awful loss of life-P-himself ' icked tip exhausted ; but " all's well," he wrot , "as,far as I am concerned, except for my kit, and I hope to Stag from Gihralter in a , tickler vessel.' A 'slip of Env periwas etfelos d for me : ' " I told you that a peril threate me; remember our last talk upon the shoe " There was not a word in his.ltieeount of he shipwreck of this incident, which we re d of in the -newspapers: - - "Among Othe deeds : tic heroism during the confusion, and when it was plain thatihe ship must go to pikes in a few minutes, that of a Mrs Charles . rooke, E. I. C: S., deserves es pecial -ffientici . Observing a young lady— Missi Claud, 3 ughter of Lieutenant-General Claud, of the' engal army, who was on her way to joinh.jr father in Calcutta—unprovid- , ed with a lif e preserver, he removed his own froin his waiS , and fastened it around her ; and in- the. wa er afterwards perceiving her to be I 3rifting oti to sea, he brought her by in er ible exert ons tinder the protection of the he dland, ark, into the bay, Where she was re, cued.- .Mr Brooke was picked up subse qu nay - it - ie; ible; but we are happy to state thl d t this nobl y youngfellow has since entire. _ the st Thera gels strict were we g. he w• think some )oun tour thic; men oak• ; mut.. a•ate roun "join the ons; after the eggs f an iron self fug h Our 1 the *ea retu %se s, CMS :to caverns creature MB verg j cow ecovered rs later, proceedi •r that,iy4 Ibis .letters kretimfame ry l i wrote u . s . ' thtir little 4 !I already he nckiee." Li Next C ye hope nd, Where g To, break And, ca Tumbles ' Where unk The ships,l And on I Glimmer : We have ; •iu see, up: almost as i f ilized a t ._ en is ere,. ; eL me le :ing or yo 1. ild." • Not mor re! Ho :iting wh ,ropered, ;ould bet 'e loved:A ., and,da c antieipat i L imself: 'be !, ould he h 1 . 1 „ sence !' ' would su ; Then ca ow di'. !rowded s.. amp RtIONIr anamau esLawa'av Qa MONTROSE, THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1858. Mrting, he was full of this:— ; bin natural--having dwelt so appy past, and stroke by 'etouched many a picture gh in the long gallery 'of should come at last to her. upon that boundless world of as t4e night drew on, with ,t called me "mother" even ittening to tks now," he said. ,in my dreams to-night; she of t 8 talk: thus, and remind s time , to go within. he, but let us once more " So we toiled up the steep ice, under the innumerable If this had happened ,two le should not have Considered ' so ,entirely disinterested, as' od Miss Claud began to figure pretty frequently under the title of "dearest Ellen." In were inarried. and last Janua- ;a most enthusiastic account of y, then exactly a month old, and innig to take a great deal o lis p ing," wrote our Chajy, three to spend- in the beloved , I es'of pine on either band 1 e blasts of winter, stand, , and West, the hoary Channel 'maker on chalk and sand ; :ertienth the milky steep, battle .elowly cCeePt hrough zones of light and shadow, ay to the lonely deep." the latest poetic accounts of you, 1 sere it Fusabad, which, indeed, such in the World, and quite as wn as your Southampton. 44 Ar • :nd will Cake his leave at the with us for England. How I .. all to see dear Ellen and the than Nye longed for them, be • we pleased ourselves with im• sort of person—pretty and good e were certain—Charles's Ellen And that sweet baby, too, whom advance ever so much, and kiss led, and made much of, already in ! Whdther would our Charley changed or no? 116 w much ye to tell us, after his five years' hat a merry, merry Christmas ely be ! e the first rumors of revolt to fair picture. Again the soldief ps began to, pass in - quick mimes- siln . before us over the eastward sea; but this time, how much more of our selfish hearts they bore with them ! How prayerfully, women tho' we were, we wished God-Speed to the rifle-ball and bayonet ! One -day we got a letter from our Charley, confirrdifig our worst fears; words which, from him who al ways took the most cheering view of mat ters, filled us with - gruel grief. "It is folly," wrote he, ".to disguise our position any loiter. The irregular cavalry here are not to be trusted, and our lives are in their hands ; the general cannot afford us any addition to our little band df European soldiers; there is Mutiny all around us; and this is probably the last dawk that will go safe to its destination, so I write in haste to catch it. Dave looked death in the face be fore now, mother, but never with such dear ones in my company : this is what makes it terrible. Some Of as here think better of our situation, and Cod grant that they . may be right . ; but I—l saw her last night, and you know wtuit 1 hold such a, sight to mean.— You-Will not soon fiwfret me-and mine, what ever happens, I Well know. heaven bless you all." Our Charley never wrote to us again. The 'very next telegraph ran thus :—" An out ,break of the I. C, at 'Fusaliaii ; their officers were fired upon ; all the civilians in the sta tion m assacred save hree . .." Never, surely, had oracle of old the ' pOwer to east in despair, to excite to passionate hope, to. ngOnise by suspense, its credulous believers; that this world-traversing. dupib sibyl . possesses' in these days. it.Ovires are as thersery threads of este, on which-hang human lives; our heart strings havi.(becpme electric too, and. with them shudder in; unison. "Save three." -In these two words, and their interpretation, all happiness or misery seemed for us to centre : Father, mother,: child ! Two of them ! ono of them at least, iu mercy; must be amongst those " three !" After ne4rly two-months of wearing hopes and fears,thdliames were pub lisited, giving joy to other households—to ours. despair. They were all three strangers. Captain Arden, poor ,Charley's friend, was one of the few oflicers.who escaped with life; he wrote us a sad letter, with but one cold gleam of hope, inn report - that he'had heard of some Europeans of Filsaftaid being still alive m the revolted district, under the protection of a native rajah; but we were sunk too deep in sorrow to he buoyed by such a floating straw as this. Wig-wive the writer credit forgotti intenticitis, but were not more wretched when we read, in his swond letter; "Our last spark of hope has, I tear, died out. I come to Eng land by (the earliest packet, and my first - visit will be to you." Ile had things to tell us of a fiery terrible interest. -By this time all tunmAad.ladi, and Winter was spreading over .us his snow-white pall; lightly and ten derly, as in our island he ever sPreads.it, like a father covering thAface of his dead child. But the seasons theriusetves 4..-0...ik t, Ing no such change upon nature as it seemed, in the sadaess of our hearts, to have already suffer. ed. The breeze that swept our lofty down lands was no longer blithe and spirii-stirring, but rose in gusts of lamentation, and died in Melancholy sighs : the laughing sea had be come it waste of waters ; and our favorite paths, where the ,evergreens flourish as in 1 spring, might.' have. been full of withered leaves, o loth were we to walk there; be- cause o r Charley seemed to be associated with all these things, as the scent with: the flower, or as-the soul with its beautifurform. If this seems to be exaggeration; it _mulct be remembered that our *tie household is a very simple one, and alone in the world, end that of - Charley was all in all to us. The time had now arrived When the steam er that was to, bring Captain Arden'tnight be expected, and we watched for it attentively, but without_impatience; with eyes less tear ful than had followed that retreating vessel years_ago, but with hearts far _heavier. - _ Herbert• had been'despatched to -South ampton to await the Captain; and bring him on to 'us at once; so that, when the black ship went'by at dawn, W'e knew • that we should see him that same evening. As the after noon wore on, we got to be so unaccountably wistful and-anxious, that the girls and I de termined to walk up the cliff -road to meet our guest. "There comes the. carriage," exclaimed thoughtless Alice, presently, clapping her hands. A look from her sister reminded her at once of the-tidings which our visitor must needs have to tell us, and the poor girl (who has as Iclvinu a heart as any of us) hung her . r. head down and let Nil- her veil. She must have been - mistaken,hoWever, about the car riage, as It. must have by thii time emerged round the corner of the rock. Instead of this, a solitary horseman,Herbert,skowed himself: " Arden is not come on," crit'd he,," but I have seen him ; he has brought the best of 1 news, .the very best : the baby. is saved—El len is saved—Charley is saved : the rajah took the very greatest care of the whole faniily. Now don't get white and foolish, Janet, or I will tell you no more news." • '" They are here," murmuredltnet, faintly; „they. are all here; I know." " Vii . r,l4l, dearest, I was going to tell you that Myself: they are waiting round the cliff yonder,,, till you have quite made up your minds•th see them." • _', .. And there' in very truth they were—the three: the crowing baby, the fair wife, and our own Charley; safe in their island home. Thanki be to Heaven,' we had indeed a time Of great joy. I would that by every English hearth, this year, the vacant•chais had been as ,blithely filled ! Titan. , .. - A '3l.tosxsisious .lltisnasii.-Not long since, a widow; one of those whom. we are in the habit of calling well preserved, by the name of Madame IL ' ardent solicitationi of one of yielding then to erary, of Paris, married him. Qn returning from the church and the mayor's office; the lady took her husband aside, and said, " Pardon me, my dear, for I have .deceived you !" 'Mn - what?" Said the young man of letters, much troubled. ' l s' I told you tha t 4 had two hundred thownd frc.nes, " Well, and yOu have not? Never mind; its-ail the same to me."' " No, that is not it exactly ; I have two millions I" 'The husband forgave Ater. • - ller When we think of the labor required to rear the few that are in our household theweariness, the anxiety, the burden of life , —how wonderful seems God's workl for her carries heaven, and earth, and alt realms' in his bosom, ~ . .1, ~.... Period of Hum M. FLOURENS, the dis physiologist, has recently in which he announces tha od of the life of man is o The grounds on which he 'philosophic conclusion ma It is, we believe, a fact i dint the length of each ani act proportion to the peric Buffon was aware of this i servations led him to cone in different species of anin times as long as the perk Fluurens, from his own those of his predecessors, it may be more safely to When BufTon wrote, th which animals leave off g more correctly, the pr which indicates that the, was not known. M. FIG ed that period, and there theory. "It consists," s ion of the bones to. their as the bones's , e not unit ses, the animal ggowsi are 'united to the epiphy es to grow." Now, in n bones and the epiphyses ing to 111:Floutens, at tb and, consequently, he pr oral duration of life is -years. "It is_now 'fiftet 1' since I commenced rest siological law of thesdur man-and in some of our -and I have arri v ed at the ma! duration of a man's, Yes, a century's life is meant to g ive us.'.' App inlaid; M. Flouren's the I been proved correct. bones with the epiphyse place in the camel at eig he lives forty years,; in and he lives twenty-five four years, and he lives -ty years; in the dog at lives from ten to twelve lion at four years, and h a necessary consequence of life to which 111, Flo is entitled, he modifies different ages. " I prod infancy," says he, "up it io tr.. j o in to ten th tion is terminated. I, , up to twenty years, be that the development and consequently the in length. I prolong yont forty, becau.e,it is only increase of the body in ! After forty, the bOdy d i erly speaking; the augi um., which then takes , blo .r L ,-niiic. developrileti mulation of fat. After , 'exactly speaking, the d• and bulk has terminat what I call the period is, when all our parts b and firmer, our functioi the whole organisnism riod lasts to sixty-five therr begins old age ; years." But thbugh M. ens man's days, lie wu once, that the pry:Amiga Iv be obtained, on one 'r that of good conduct, occupied—of labor, of - of sobrieLy -in all this I may be disposed•to as destined to live a hung so, M. Flourens ans " Witb our manners, ments, man_does not d -And he speaks pt great -Lessius, and mentions 'show that by prudence, ety, life, can easily be or more. he Wealth of JetTsor.' died cons deed, if Congress had brary, and given for i he would with difficult! from his door. Madison saited mon tively rich. To add t or rathet to those of put chased, his manusc thirty thousand.dollar James Monroe, the United States, died so, found a resting place.tl one of the citizens. II John‘Quiney AdaMs left some hundred and fifty thousand dollars, the reililtof indus try,- prudence and inheritence He with . ' a man of method and economy. Uartin Van Buren is very rich. • Through out his political life he has studiously looked out for his own interest. It is not . believed he ever spent thirty billitigs in polities.— His party shook the lush, and he caught the bird. Daniei Webster' s ions in his lifetime, t ion and his pulitical s leaving his property debts to his friends. less than twenty thou - exceeded' two hundr • Henry Clay left a It probably exceeded dollars. He was a pi scrupulously honest James. K. Polk left fifty thousand doll i which he saved from years: John Tyler is wor Before he reached t bankrupt. In office, and - then married a Zachary Taylor le thousand dollars. Millard Fillmore keeps his money in box. ' Ex-President Pie sand dollars from hi he had a way of his ME Spriggles is no such thing as country, there is a Quills are taken froin the pinis the opinions of snot 2) V7ROHIO." Life. \ • inguishea ri T nch ~üblished a book the normal peri 7 kundred , years:' me. 4 - to this new " ettnnStalce," of the New York Sun, perpetrates he following:— • TR settle the Kansas imbroglio, one day, The House and the &nate were 'worried ; \ The one answered yes, and the other said nay, \ And . "Old Ducks' was distressedly flurried. be briefly stated : natural histni l y, ;mays life, is in ex- Billy English appears—and unfolds in his hands A 'plan, 'steeped in cunning and knavery; lie saYs k " Give the Kansas folks millions of lands. If they swallow Lecompton and Slavery I" Even so, altthe kingdoms of earth to Messiah Were shoWnby the Spirit of Evil ; " All these will tgive," said the hdastingold liar, " Only fall dowh and worship the Devil t" , 4,1 ' e is in:growing. rah and .his ob !hide that' the life als is six or seven of 'growth, - 111: bservations and is of opinion that en at five times.— ',precise period at owing, or, to speak BENTON ON IME ADMINISTRATION. Letter from 1 1 : P. Moir, Sen. To the Edi'or of tke'N. Y. Tribune.. Six : I - enclose you my fatheeti reply to , the card' of Williath Carey Jones , in relation to the opinions of the late Mr. Benton. It is proper that I should say that I communica ted to your reporter the particulars of the interview between Col. Benton and my fitther; and requested him to publish Lthem. I had I previously asked my father's consent fct.their publication, which he cheerfully gave, in the belief that it was honorable to Col. Bentop to make it known that at such' a moment he should be forgetful, of himself and conceited only fur . the public safety. At the same time. I stated to your reporter that I had held fre quent conversations with Col. Benton, in Which he had expressedrsimilar tentirnenti4,in language equally emphatic. Among other conversations,l recollect distinctly, when I saw him soon after Mr. Buchanan 's message on the Lecompton Constitution was submit ted to Congress, he said, alluding to the President and his followers,'' Sir, Providence and their own crimes hive delivered them ;nto our hands." Respectfully,', FRANK P. BLAIR. Washington City, May 22, 1858:. ;Ise circumstance 4rowth has ceased, ( rens has ascertain n lies his present ys he, "in the.un epipktses. As lung d to their epiphy- 1- soon as the bones es,,the animal teas• an the union of the ekes place, accord e age of twenty ; sClaims that the nat- five times . twenty n Vearg,". he r. says, :arelies into the phy tiou of life, both in • domestic 'animals, ; result that the nor- Ile is one century. r what Providence plied to domestic an ry _has, .he tells us; "The unitsk of the he says, ''tikes t years of age, itnd e horse at five yeara - ': ears ; in the ox at roin fifteen to twen T two years, and he 'years•; and in the lives twenty." As of the prolongation rens assures man he ery considerably his ng the' duration of • ten years, 'becauTie tho second denti- , rolong adolescence use it is at that age .f the bones ceases, rette of the bOdy in t Alp to the age o ht that age. that the bulk terminates.— es not a-ow / prop ientation of its ,vot• rlace, is not a srrita but a simple am the-growth, or more velopment, in length. man enters into .f invigftition—that ' come mure complete I s more assured, and to perfect. This pe r seventy, years, and ich lasts for thirty . Flourens thus length- I ns him, more • than L ion of them can on rigorous condition— of existence always study, of moderation,, t gs." To those who why it is that of men ~ .ed years, so few do ers triumphantly— ur passions, our Aor tic, he kills himself!" length, of Cutnaro,of Parr- and others, to . .and above all, sobri (tench& to a century. ur Statesmen. l iaratiN•ely poor. In ot purchased his li.; lye times its value, ha:ire'kept the wolf F y, and was eompara [his fortunes,however,• his widow,'Congr.!ss I pt: paper's,. and .paid , . E - for therd: Ith ._, Presiderit of the .00r that his remains -ougtr the charity of [ uandered some mal o product of his profess. • eculation•=. lie died, o hi§ children; and 'his The former sold for 1 -and dollars—the latter and fifty thousand. ' •ery handsome ,estate.: one hundred thousand; uth.nt manager, and ti? an. _ about one hundred and rs—fifty atonsa - nd of his Presidency of four_ th fifty thousand dollars.:. ;be Presidency he was ; he husbanded his means,' rich wife. _ _ Otie'hundred and fifty s a wealthy man, and very strong and safe I ce vectsome fifty thou-, term of service. But, lown.—N. l ys, that:- although there nuzzling the press in this ilenty of book anuslin. ings that are sometimes, ns of one goose to spread, . l ~- 1 H. H. FRAZIER, PUBLISHER-VOL. 4. NO. 22.. • -1 • THE TWO PROPOSITIONS. • To the Pane. Mr:Ruehanan's organ, the Union newspa per, publiAtes what it calls "An "interesting card relating to the opinions of the-late Mr., Renton," bringing into question a slitentent . derived from. me. This card refers to a con- Versation between Ca Benton and myself, a few days before his death, of which I spoke to ses'eral members of Congress, and was i mentioned by one of them to a correspon dent of the Tribune, who , reported its sub stance to that press. The olonet's'stropg est and most characteristic expressions were, however, not given in That report—the pur port only, ve j ithout the vigor of the language, being,retained ; and I regret that I • cantint -now recall what We uttered with the vivid ntss I could have:given it to the reporter had .1 conversed With hitii personally at the time he prepared his letter for the press. • Mr. Jones begin's his • 2!xplicit contradie tionS" that he may not "allovt , a fal - sity,to go with apparent_ authority into .history," by saying: - :.• , " First, on ;the occasion described' in' the beginning paragraph of the piece, there was notsany old snd intimate friend from Missou ri a participator in . the conversation. "-.. Mr. Jones, as is evident from his card, was-aware that the interview. described was with me, end that the - mistake of the Tribune's corres pondent was mere inference, from my rela tions with Col. Mineral, that I was an "old and intimate Misiburi friend," he being a stringer to 'both of us ; iind yet this is the on ly point on which Mr. Buchanan's press can :hang its positive charge of malice and men tacity," which it insidiously aims to bring ',home to me, for . Mr. Jones's - only other at -tempt at contradiction antountsi merely to .a negatiVe that he was privy to the remarks attributed to GA. Benton. He says, second: "No such remarks,as those set .out in . the' last paragraph, nor those in the previous one, which imply an invidious sectional distinction were ever made by Gil. Benton in my pres -1 ence ;" and to corroborate these itnporlant, 'contradictions, Mr. Jones calls Mr. Jacob, Hall as a witriesi, as the only person to Whom (as he believed) , the description tan pply- of an old and intimate, friend from' Missouri who had a • conversation with Gil. Benton during the last'week of .his ,life. Al. he thus formerly adduces Mr. Hall to testify that he had no such conversation with him, he well knew from the minutede scription of the scene by the correspondent .of the Tribune that I was the "old and inti mate friend" to whom allusion was made;—, and, in fact, in describing it himself, he al ludes to me expressly when . he says : • "A _visitor was -in—a gentleman whose pros= ence was calculaied-to, stir still deeper the fountains of menuiry, and was gladly wel 'corned by Col. Benton, and conversed with him for some time and with much animation. The effect was too much for the, exhausted frame and exhitusted voice, and a moment or two after the visitor, retired, the labor was _obliged to be desisted front.", Mr. Jones who was at, work some distance from the bed over which I leaned. to catch the whispers of Col. Benton's "exhausted voice" in my ear, can, as safely as Mr. Hall, who was not, in the house,' declare ,that the remarks made to me were not made in his presence. - < • • Mr. Jones believes ;hat after ,he reached Washington, ten days, betae' his'y.deith, he (Col. B.) was " too - much -inclined to good will to say anything that could woutifor' ir ritate ;" and' Mr. I-911's corroborating testi mony may be true that no. such sentiments as thoSe attributed to Col. Renton by the -writer of that article (the article in the Tri bune denied by jones) ," Were expressed l; him during any of those interostina D conver sations" Mr. Haltheld. with him. _CA Ben- • ton understood, too, well what. belonged to pro priety "to wound, or irritate" the feelings of Mr. Jones, or Mr. - Hall by _denouncing an Administration to persons who. were •its ben eficiaries.: Mr. Jones was • just, returned from a foreign employment ; Lie. had -his ac.- counts to settle in the Department, ho was grateful for the patronage he had received, and might receive more. Mr. Hall is-a large Mail contractor, and 'has. great expectations from an Administration which'grants favors to none but its devotees. It would have,been ‘ unpardonable, - then, in Col. Benton to ,make either.of these gentletnert listeners to denun ciations, of an Adeninistralion w icli, they would he obliged to receive in silence, *hile it wounded their feelings and might possibly affect their interest. But to .me and to ninny of his friends 1. CongresS he was under`no such restraint,*d - to them and the - .,puhlie generally hegatlii vent to the - strongest emo tions of his.patrTotie heart and powerful in . .r .; ..? 7 .. . 1. / telleet. misterly , philippie Vitinst - the whale' ; policmf the Administibuili up= on the DreVcott decision—iiis,4oorOni• •• • the whole hatd. of conspirators.• ighifist the Union, designated under the name of NMI& ers, to whom he ascribes all the troul3lesoi.: the country for years, and on•whorn he char ges, in his examination of that deeision,'llt& •: packing of the Supreine Court to assist - them in the destruction of the;;principlea - of tIO: • Constitution and.overthrow. of the' Govern ment„i proves that even• tiker struck \ awir with disease he was not so tamed its to be incapable of making what MiP.JOnei eat:. " the invidious sectional . distinetiOir of de claring his respect for "'thetireat se ice Mr. Clay had rendered to the Republic at, that • time (1850) by baffling and putting:down , ' the traitorous Secessionists of the SoUth." That this feeling, manifest throughout the volume Published after he was struck . deVrti. . and Whichhe declared - Was his. last will land • testament, • was the 'ruling passion , in death, '; was most strikingly shown in the con Versa:, , - don I had with him oI the occasion referie6 . • to by Mr. _Rides, the lasthutene 4411;w-hi de:oh. It'was my habit to cheer him alway ,- with happy views of thesuccess of oar cause. and the defeat of the machinatiens: against the Vnion. At this interview, I bent over : him and told' him Of the `good creek. Mr. Crittenden's measure would have; that,eom ing froni him,, and, being perfectly -"fair; it • • made it impossible that4he agitators Of. the South could excite a flietAng there to promote • • their designs. This animated him, 'and mind recurred .with fervor. to the contest Mr . •.' • Cldy had with the nullifiers , in 1850, whieli le.' • had then under review in closing his viterlt and his life and, . although he could. - - 4peak above his breath, he gave to_lii'stitter- •. anchihe emphasivhich,distinguisliodtusi ins passioned conversation. He extolled Mt , , Clay, and denounced his adversaries, - as ilt,t" • Tribune's as tide states. hlis bosom atrd eyt• • seemed to dilate with she expression he Ic bored to give to his sense of what he calle , !' the noble ,patriotism and glorious eloquene- , of Mi. Clay- in his straggle against - the ent-t -mien of the Union. The spot op' his. face. ,produced by the burning . - eanceir. gloWed as his - .excitement increased.t Hit burst- of rapture over—which carried hint back to the scenes in the Senate—he his'familiar tune with roe, and tidded" Sir he throttled the 'rascals l he throttled' them•o!'', and as-if to call my attention to it„ lie said, i Rhea particularly." I have recurred/ Ix/ the debate since, and find the following creme to Mr. Rhett; -which was :extortet: frOm Mr: Clay by Mr, Barnwell. tllfr/Clay, • after lie had. named lthett, addid4L" If k pronounced the sentiMent attributed ; to of raisings.fhe standard of disunion aml t't resistance to the cot ton Government, what- •. ever he has beep, if he follows up. thaty die • laration by overt acts; .hewill-be feaittt'r!• • and 1 hope will meet the fate of,, a trair"%:: t• [Great applause in tile 'gallery,..with_.difiltaii iy suppressed by the Chair.] .\ • • I never thought of-giving an acenteit rd this interview •to the Press. Others thought that such, an instance of the utter forgel fel nes4 of •himself on the part Of Col. Benton Millis dying condition, of the-total surrender • _aids thoughts to a work which he wished to make useful to his country, of the ardor With which he entered .(while the band'-o dath was on hini) into conflicts for the pub lic welfare, requiring-all the vigor of his fife deserved commemoration. Nelson, who wat , • cheered-as his life ebbed awiiy at .every cessive atnoutacement Of a flag being' struck • to him by, the enemy at Trafalgar; who died happy in the arms of vietc4:on the nights of Abraham, did not die'inore exult- • ingly s than Benton, when convinced-that th , plots - and. lopes of tire nullifiers were. con founded.- • .. • I am sensible that after a minds dead eve ry statement in regard ;to his :political opir ions made by any individual engaged iu iii, public ContrOversy should be scrupulony sifted and receive no absolute' .credence , less corroborated by proof incapable - of Version, , Now, although ,my statemeirt,. nt•• Col. Benton's remarks las-made. four c! :c -' before his death, mid was published in ;Tribune before. the event, I will bring test to settle the controverspinto Which 1•••. dragged by those who would serve the A.d . .‘t Ministration, and wherthetefore have atten - ip! ed a, contradiction of. thithostiliti to it,whici• the conversation with. Col. Benton 1 have re, counted would evidence was.felt by_ him.— Mr. Jones and. Mr. Hall unite in the -effort to make the impression that he was a friond of the Presidentrthe ,latter *hiring tha-i• " heexpressed himself in unmistakable tertos• of friendship. oward the President, commetei in his honesty and uprightness of purpose'.' ' The former speaks of "a further exatople of which was Shown in the satisfaction Which r expressed at interviews subsequent to time' (my visit) with the Presidents:and:sec retary of State," and s both these. , •.testitior• agree in the *stereotyped phraseology Used in recommending the executive measure, that with respect to-the ,partiCular .luestion (t LecoMpton -fraud) then Vexing Coi - igt ess and the country, his own desire' was that it shotilw.,. be speedily settled in away to proinote what, with him was the dominant idea—peace : tar union'among.the States." Every body kn0v. , ; , .. thaithe only way then or now left open .by the President, through which the. - vexiit.. , question. could be "speedily Setil s eil," nd is the adoption. of the Ilecotripton Stitution. i .... . . 1 will now proctfed to,sbow, from reco - tder; . _ evidence in Col. Benton 4 s own liandWrilinc . • that he was opposed to Mr. ;Buchanan enc . . his administration ! that. he was opposed: i.e.. the .- speedy settlement of the. Territorial question in relation.to Slavery in the titn.de,! '. proposed by Mr, Buchanan, but, on the con. .. trary, he was resolved on the•agitetion.of thr - Subjeet, until the-opinion of the Supreme' ' Court, opening all. the Territorjes to the ir.- troduCtion of slaves, was,rendered . abcirtivk!- by the . ction of CongresOn: the mainteitanthi of the political rights' of the people. That , he Was opposed. to Mr. Buchanatt,,not i merely on the, score of his Pending: measaies but, because he his recently gifen in his.adhcsien !, 'to principles adverse to Gen.. JacksenTs. card . . • inal doCtrine in reference. to theindepbndiaiep ::of the legislative and executive. departments ' of political deeisions of itniSupreme Court. and because'he believed . him anti-Democratic' lat heart. •• - ; --- „ ' - : • ~. . . . In proof of tbe first position, I give • Alio. !. fol lo wino' eitract of - a 'biographi&al notice of ' , him 'prepared by an intiljiale personal filen6, which was subjected - to lat Benton's 'revi ! :. • ion. bears the,mark of it.froin his own „ pea, and wliich in givincrtte prWitto tnotives-Aild =I