Pi e: 4,4rg4gt..=-lAll • • ME =WM 1113151 t 1 a..l. i i-I,VI . AP • & H • For ikt bulependeric(Rfitgolizau. THE 'rlt•YST:' 2 111" u& ',WM 15,1}1 . 0 MOFS,A." ish An& t bilges: blu with ti' pride, ' There the ging rills du= beucat the aweety of t heligeoping . wpows,An4 'onward ' Through time mystic .shaArrii. . • .Of the forest-glatles 'And -the ilnhilng ; • - Of the Falriek beat • , O'er - the clover Worn, to Their limpid notes, As their aily'ry laugh through tho !light-air _floats, •• 0, the mirthikukciliA, In the twinklittg . er oa r. of a snorting From the pansy's heart they Al:quaff their wine, And begun their brows with - the dainty - sprays, Of the jasmine nikite . , - .singing, Heine, "Dna wo-weave ourspedis; ms,vie Chani,our • . And, they daueed all night, - 'Till the. morning/ bright, Shod]; bci nisi' pail. , - O'er the ein'rald dale But they-left no trace of their elfin hand, O'er the purple bights, ten-their Faht land And the queenly.bmw , Of the morn, as n., _ no With her jewels gleamed. - - - Front the .21T .Y. ilerrziry LOVE AND RATI;LESRAK.ES. • " i3rsrAnur - said my' undo to me, the veryfirst day. of iny is situatedsat. de foot of one of the mount- ;tins in the western part.of the, town .of -Ater- 1 _ __ , iden_t.Onnt.cticut. " There's neighbo'r-ltiorn- e 'I tin, 'Nor York:Tintit's. im an article on the .• . , :eon; dead, as a nit, the doctor, hardly • knows I lamented :PereiVal, neves us' an insight into 0 - of what disease ;. but lam well satisfied in his private lift., as fi7ilolvs: - my own mind that it all e contk o' that 'ere 1 , Percival was onesid the MOSt• remarkable bite he received . hret,',BPring : front . 'a cussed 11(4 % 1 of his time:. As a - linguist and as amen - logger, in the Swamp: -• All riht Itmcl, kerea.., of Seierice herwas.'neore eminent:: than as a' bouts, IS hat?tited by - the' infernal tribe, and I : poet, and yet his prietim - I .. faCulty 'eval -- mar. . you may as well keep your eyes open, if-you' f velously brilliant - arid pri.difle'; 'He was a intend to mareli around herein - those gaiters ! geologist end a geographer; 'he understoed and them linen trousers r'! - ; • - `the strrictitre, of bib: earth :we 'five on, ami Pereeiving that there: was-a. tattlemake , kte.Wiell the highways and .. by Ways of its taut -...skin drying on the fence,..witich . my uncle had I-face-Lrtr_tds . , iivers,:and eanale—as'familierly taken from et: animal, killed by hifn n- - fewlas most Men know their •oitet domicile or the' . days before, I theagarell iip - the - admonition I Way- to market.. 'His: habitSi of study Were Of my uncle, and took - especial pains - tteifind I peculiar. - Tie would;take - up:a volume at it out what was . the first'Step a person-Ought to I_ bookseiler's - coinitereand stand till he lied take, if he should' be 4:unfortunate as to get-1 read it through. Ile never cut the leaves of bitten by one of those deadly reptiles. i his books. • For many, years -he occupied ' "Nothing in the. World Will sat e yo* life." i roentis at the HoSpital at New' H AVCII, , and said my aunt, 4 but ter - cut it picee". right out, ; during the whole teriod- those Towne were the very moment you ereldtteh—before you -entered only Once by a visitor. ,He lied ne kill the varrnint, mind you, fora moment's ' food cooked during thee tiree,:but lived frti dela would be fatal' There was parr Pith- I Bally ten dried beefherring, bread, - with ap ardliendersori" '. pies and other fruit when they were rahund . Oh! the - deVil . . take Die!: Henderson;" met in the market. lie read all day and all interrupted My uncle. . 0 He was a cold war night—throwing himself on his bed in this ter Man, and, in - course, he couldn't stand the clothee,. when' nature hisheted op reptheK— smallest grain of - Visen in his . systi.ni-e-not When his bedroom was opened, after his • :L! Take one Of yOur-regular old - bruisers, ,tieuth; it was coxercel more then an ink h - such as Trout Wright; for example, - end the e , title!: with dust, except a path that bad been snake would die . ; while "the . person-. bitten : kept free front the door to the Led. . • would pot cxperits.nce any trouble whatever. 1 . A n enecdote is told pf him in \ this cotmee . Lieker is wh t does the husinese 'm y . boy, tion that curves to illtaArate his character.— fur alake bi ' kills and deadens all the j Tie law contemplating the etervey, _prof hied 7 tarns of the reptile in n(514116. If I should that tile geologist should receive his reinueer• ever .e favored by one pf - the filfernal erit: 4tij3n after . he had made his report and it - lets, rd take a quart of fourth proof, and if had been approved by the Governer. . Per that wasn't enough, another quart, to keep it . civil waited unon_Gavernor Ellsworth wish . - ... company. You kno*, or ought to linr,-.v. i , tlre report; wi l d was very courteouslyre that you .can't get drimh.as long as' the - nor- ! cc:yea. The Governor took - the report, and erns is in your veins." , t . For atihniber of days after . receiving all; ' . :..ed when he - had examined it as the law "ro• -thininformation,' . l.did not care - to visit, any -:, quired, would inaVe - the necessary rerini-;it ioli places on the firth where it, Wil,S possible for if itevere - satisfactory. Percival milled up • a iliiike to ititlC,.. :At last, hoWever,, I was' his report, and withdrew. He insisted that temirteAf-to visita nice field - of red raepoer. ' neither the Governor - tier anyone else wa.. ries, on the 'eastern declivity of 'the e mount- 1 competent to: pass - upon 'the merits of his ree on, though not without, resolvire to be upon t port, and he would not submit to the. inelie% my gnat& agaiiist. the peril th . w bleb I thus) city. H, was desperately in,-smut of the exposed myself=thatipart of the mouotaini money that the report svoteld _bring him, but ' being notorious for the hutriber amid size of the would not, take it on touch conditions.— its snakes. ` - N I Some of his friends .finally procured the re . Th e party consisted . of - Myself, Thomas, t port from him by an innocent stratagem, and the hired man, 'and any eouSine-eyoung and it received, of course, the, fennel approba pretty, as cousins alwayi:uree, very fond of tion of the Governor, who admitted his in me, as no other cousin ever was, and, Withal, 'onmpetence to revise a geological work 1)f a-lively and interesting - specimen of : her sex, 14../r: Percival, but was too food an officer not With only_ a - few touches too much of dare-; to yield due obedience to the - law. devil wildness iii her nature.. ~ ' • 1 We all reinember - the story told of the • "Bell," said Ito- her,',While• we Ture. pick- i pair of new - shoes left at Dr. Johnson's door, lug and eating the delicious berrieat'arete , when he Was a young man, and had not a which. would have astonished, if not alarmed, i decent pen to-his fee.. A similar anecdote -tilooker.on l froni_the city, "look out fer-those lis related of Dr. Percival, A friend naked sly and treacherous serpeuts I" - -, ' . ~ that the cap which had so lotag peered above !d'heanly.sly 4d treacherous serpent I tithe eloak' in which the Doctor enveloped am afraid of,"- she replied, .with' au arch ! himself, was becoming altogethetetoo shabby, male, "is . yourself: 4 -, , • ' i and left Word with it-hatter on Mein street -Ait I. Bell, how Can ion be so cruel ?—; i Cu present him with a more-appropriate, tho' ion know I ama more honorable than those ; less peetical covering. In the most delicate r . reptiles.' I will give youair warning ere I I way- possible, the st i optuan intimated to the inflict the - fatal ,wound..'. - - j t peet that, any hat on the counter was_ at hi; .. . -. , "The snakes geherally, give you warnin7 ; service—.bur the- poet turned on his heel with. enough, unless you:come upon theta too sta. I contempt. Ire would never accept a pecu- . aeni v But come! it 'is - ilreadir dusk, and i marl - favor of Any description. Being at one . • we_shallJose our way if we don'l'set.out for time somewhat embarrassed byllis expend!. the house- without - further delay. For my, tures oft phis books, some of •hisends made • part, I've eaten raspberries enoughto last lup a parse-of 41,400, which: the tendered me the - remaidder of theyea - r." 'him to relieve his-diffieultias.. He would on-. 'So have I, :Belt; if you had only sogared j ly accept it as a loan,•and pot only insisted them with a felt words could so easily' upon givingsecurity, but_actually`gave it in utter. Now, tell me," and 1 darted - abrupt- a mortgage On'his' library - , from which his ly toward her, " - answer ine'truly ~ in regard'' , friends. were 'ultimately reimbursed, princi ... ..... - the proposal, of marriage I've made you 1, pal and interest. 7 -will you become---l 7 • ,' _ -'• • .. ,Of his poetical - reputation, Dr. Percival My foot eaughti&a . briar bush, and 1 was took no care._ -If he . .had. managed- bisgro precipitated .h.e.dlon - n• '..At'tbe 'same instant duclicins' with a tithe of the art pOssessedkby an awful rattle smote apcni my- excited seas-, some - Of Ifys - Parbaseian brethren, be might es, and a. sharp, stinging blow-was given me - Int - VitaCquired money as well as :fame' from in .the Calf of tho leg.- •.-It,!would,bitripossi- I his writings: Had he sttidied the secrets of . ble. for me to _till you bow quickly 1 'arose, , l hot-press aid embellishment, orCream col. drew up the leg of toy ,pantaloons. -saw ,the I -area .paper - liti l l•bet Weer! •diab covers, orteen blOottclezing forth, „Yelled, drew. a`-knife from I familiar with' the - effiTts of hltie and.•gold in my pocket,, and cut `out a , piece of flesh, giving popularity - to -inspiration, Percival . which in bulk might_ have_ readily satisfied , would have become a favorite, and the favor tbg dc.rnands -of ! ~Shylo9k, . • l'of the people would have reacted on his . se - ``.l will:endeavor to - gd deep g.'ugh to re- I.lection of topics and fainiliarized- his' style.. : rioye-thpoibc . 92," said I, desperately, ln..r- I-Those few poems of:his-in which be treated plyito the eiclainatiob_of horrof-uttered by I common and dutneste'subjeets, met2' Lira • Bell, while abe became as 'pale las tbe white I . vernal acceptance'with-the lovers, of. ftetry, hindkerchief•she bad, boupd.around her latir.., and all-of them deserve a, farlarger popular madPl luck wouldbare it, moreover, r had rity. titan' they enjoy'. As lo hia., library, we e sad . havoc with i vein Of - respectable t apprehend it will be biceitained bet to uil.. dimensions. and was bleeding, with profuse; Las a city library for ChicagoOand. - thiat it will Tress, which was, in itself, enough to render iii ire more usefully - disperseatimong the Carl person considerablyalarmed. -- : • . - -. io6 institutions of the land, amording 'tct "ICI die," said 1 to'Bell, who irnd already 1 their several requirements. - \,,' hursirato tears, while endetivorbel• to bind her handkerchief ground .my leg, in such .a •nulttneras: -. .t o pre•Vitit"; too: great. a loss of brood,.i,irpniember; Bell, qiii.t... I lovtal• 'you' better tinufanythilig4lss iu fhe'Cworld." • - ' - , "•91i--.0 "-::'sbe. iabtki(t . throwing herself 11, 44 t . into Ans-. - .E . s_i a nd 4000419 toe with a ler venct• which map PaC . .iiii::.:litipPY,,; AS a boy : . witki*,,*,. ;I: ..-, ,, lfOtii - ,',terrible I" ,a 4 it seemsdlairtittitVierlivuld.'peimit her to uff'kr. ;';',." , ._,'- - :: -. .. 1- ;• . ,::,: , '.::' . .:', ,, ,I. : ; , ,._ - ,The litoa.o4i, - ** . ..,*;:i:iiiiini,#ls, with ... 'terror apt)iiittOty - i4e , ,--. ~ .•ilk.:lll3' . feataiit t , ' 14 h' 3 had r!f<dlibt:. . 1 '- god frt.m . our' cries . • ;44 AgtinilaAbit - wart-t*. Atio'.nfiliolitut whiOti Ala Wien iii,on . tis,, ,- : - - _,..... , . .. ... .. s • . , .-- , , . .. . . . . . • • , _ ... , . . - . . . . . . ...,, 4 . • r , - - r .. T r- .----„,.•:_..., -- :::•-•-•....• -:::: :2 - ....••• - .- - , - --'.-.•: --- 2::--._ .. -- ,.:.:' - ,:.•........r.:: .:,'•:•:,:. : ...7:, ' 7T, .--••••";^-::,:-:-•: : : ..- ' ...,•2 : ': - . 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'': • • ; :) ' l l .. :im.:l2'"? 7:1 '; -. -, u ` ** ' rr ' BER'' 2 .deirianded. "In..the)eg - • .)_'• • • n the'speaker thusciire I..wareing rattle. *as -heard,- eloge..,belliie, Fancl ilk ex jelarnalloas of increased alarm. , - 1, .`:•Take close before.)ou, mat . , for 'another ,4ing,. 1 130 wa'teleful-1•• Can't \ yen ;eta stick and kill / The hint wit. actect upon. hones reached hickory braileh,:nearly4arge,elionglir, for al cart tongtte, ritnOng the bustle's:. •• ' • Still another'ratile was heard, as Thomas tlins swept his weapon over' the bushes, and when he again paisett the. stair over the buSh e,• the •sam e 'rattlitig schnd s 'repeated - . " Whitt! ""be springing farward, Mid l thrishirig 'right ittid left; . while - th,e • ' rat tling grew terriffie, " ble4s' 'the !" and he burst into a litiglOwhich • restinned far - and near, over ilie•moutitain..:' isn't a snake at MI, atittli; - it's those cussed. eeekles !"' It was true:- I had iaken trite a morsel'i of god .flesh.out• of •irly calf ; Just .I,,ecausil I ene,of "the. thOrns upon:: Nt hiek. I had fallen pyre me a greeting. ifor:a.'nunifier of weeks. I was a:martyr to the bantering. jokes and laughs of my friends, - ,but Sell finally pair .me. and she • and • I .•ate • nnv , gelling along • v. cell tegathpr, 4siurtli .you. There is an 'Eastern stO 'y'of a per.. son Who taught his- parrot, to r peat. - only; these'words : -"What doubt .is there of that?:', .earried'it to the . rna?ket for sale, fixing' the priee'fit Ickti - rupees.-: - A Mogul asked the _parrot-. Are - you worth 100 rupees? „ The parrot.-answered , 404 there of, that?" The-,tllOgul. was delighted, and hought . the bird.: 1-le - -.oon :found ~ o f.it that , Ails was -Ali - it e6Uld'.say„ , , , -;.:Aehaniedoaow bar. ;.gain, he said .to-himself:- tool to The f pariWnaelaitned,.as u Lsaft . z 4 !W-6,t actubr4l:llTi*jitthatl7,,-,.... in a ll at 84 ** n Avni P54#0 1 , 4 4 at bi4Y• .ti!.a-:. , .. ME THE-POET PERCIVAL. RE How We,Look to _theWan in the. Moon .., Tm#:.side.of the : moon, which, is turned tll,v4y)oni Itsjins, a night,,,of nearly fifteen l l' days . , ' te ; stfirs,onlv,aud.plitneta i sliine on its ver...Y , ,4factt sk3e... : The- site, we see,. 01lrille 4111 ,I`3 Ily,•101q,.119 pight; the earth lights it with neveo:telOng earth-shine; a,„light four teqn,,ti vs strimger,than that which" we re, .celve: •otn, the . moon.. We •yeeognize our i owet4i ht lent to our,fri,clo,inthefaint,gray- . , ish gr Mer - ,of that., portion of the moon I.Wlttch eforc. and after the new moon 1 re ceive 4 to light from the sun,. but only from i tlie,em i th, and reflects it hack again upon us. liorniiig,s in .Vall, show-it inure brilliant than I evengs prittg, 'because in. Autumn the 1 ; contini ni llas. of the earth , with their stronger light illumine the moon, wGile in Sprir , she I only receives, it- litimer light from our eceans. ; i jOur orb appears-to the man in the mooty 1 as chaiW,elible al. his hoine to us,and he‘mity, quite ils correctly sneak 'of the first or last, quartet.-of the earth, of neW- earth and full,' l 'earth. i i Ti*whole heaven mores before hint' once .i , twtnty.nine days around its^ axis;— I.tlie stM and stars rise, and set-regularly once l•iirthelong,day.; but the vast orb *of cur t earth i r snearly immovable. All around is in slow, unceasing motion ; the mild face of 1 the eartlx‘alonei a gorgeous.i*n of immense . i magnitude, never sets. nor rises: but remains, ever- tilted in his zenith. • It there- appears sixteen times la'rger than the moon. to us, and daily exhibits its vast panorama of oceak continents, and islands. - lirig,ht lights l and dok shadows aye seen, in' every ‘liried i change, as land or water, and different at 1 difierehe seasons. . • . 1 The man in the moon has thus net only his watch and his almanac daily before him I in the level'-clanging lace of the earth, but i he ra,c , ,- for all we know, have maps of .our i globe which mangy f eographers . would envy on neetaunt of their fullness and accuracy.— il.:Ong - before Columbus discovered America, • and 'Ciok New Holland, our lunar neighbor .itnew most correctly the form and ()mimes 1 :of thel new continents. --There Was no -new tiNvorldifor him, and there is• no, left. Ile -- could hell us the secrets of the, interior of Africa.. andrevearto us the fearful myster ies of pie Polar seas. But how - -lie on his side Must tamyel at our vast - fields - of , now, -ourv4icanoo - and tropical sterols and 'inn pest4he who know neither tire, nor snow, nor &buds! i • 'What strange &hies he may have invent ed to lexplain the shadows of our elonclz as they cihase each other over set and land, and -hide li-oin him in an-instant the sunlit land- 1 eiiiiti I! And stranger still, on the side -of the alien which is turned from the earfC he . linowl, nothing at all about us, unless news reachlim from the happier side. th• h„ : nery t!tudertako—the great event in his 1:1.•• —a linp , and TAinful journey to the bright ' hidf o r his globe,-to stare at the wondrously , brilliant earth tar, with its unread .oii'ster ies and marvelous changes - of flitting lights and shadows. Who Lows what inrnest prayeb, may rase troth tire' I.lll.A)it also, 111;1 of thank for the floods of light and heat we :pour-npon them, or of ardent ‘‘i , lies that : their Sails not i,` hereafter ho allim 0d to 'dwe!li in the-bright homes if the beattxrois , earthstar.—De l'ae. ----• ..._ • ~;,.—____ l, . m o emrable a thing before G.el, as he who " t r o Ix TV;E: - --The , residents of N'orl h : l e t s g o a golden-orbed though` t dio rull,through I Watdr street were atlllirded to littl e amuse- ' tit:. g - eheratiolet of titnt.. militia few days since. be the incidents nar- i i I t i s a j o y t o know, that there is - a realm ratii‘h to it in substance as follows: ,Iyhere all those aspirations which. have beto• A eountryntan. the owner - of a large. but kened us, only to err wn us still with thorns,' usually good-natured dog. drove into town t shall be realized, and where there is no bud on thi , day stated. Near the R-lilroad eri-is- ' whiela shall fall witliodt being filled into fruit. sin , * 4in Water street. t• Tiger" MI into 1. id ' Fa bell were hung high in bevel, which com[tany. and a regplar muss en-ned. Ta ; ' th e ar ot e ls swung whenever a man was lost, ken . 4l•l.lcnly almos6. unawares, the country- how ineessantly would it toll M ilayslof pros man dog seemed hardly to comprehend p,-site for men gone down, for honor lost, fur ‘vbetler it was a'" free-fight in eernesi, or on integrity lost, and for manhooa lust beyond ly thh rout7l) sort of play of village tt hounds," recall! . until dhe found himself in a " tilt-oat-VI-mouth" ' As prisoners in castles look out of their •COTiliist with a regular fighting character in the I ttrated win4ows at the smiling landscape shape of a trained -builllog. and getting Oct where the sun comes and goes, so we, from worst, of it. Ills master, itnweveri by tins this life, as from dungeon bars, look forth to tirnelcompreheuded the nature of the muss, ' the, heavenly land, and arc' refreshed with and 4prlrTing from his wagon 4:;,aught the bull- 1 swee t Vi s i o ns ofibe home that shall be ours di sg lliy hi; " narrative . ' and- endeavored to „.1,,- a we are f„,, - . seral!:ite the combatants. , : As birds in the hour of transmigrationsfeel I.et9that dog alone, or I'll /um you "er ' the influence of Southern lands,' and gladly the headr growled a rough and excited look- ! spread their witi , s fir the realin of light and .ing dustomer standing by—who 'proved to be ! bloom, so may owner of the Bull. I th e sweet solicitations of we, in the hour of death, feel the _ . the life beyond, and " Oh, - theft you want ' C m t o ,fight, do yererj.,vfolly soar _Tr, m the chili and ..shadow of ejactilated'homespnn, dropping the end; and ~ earth to fold onr wings and sing in the, salt. tlkenlat the top of his voice, shouted "Go in Mar of an ett.Arnal home. Tik , el". ~ Do you ask me Whether I would help a -Aild Tike did "go in." luslavemtly the time slave to ga i n hi s ti-eedotti 7 I answer. I of battle was turned. Tige secured 'N•rid was j would help him with 'heart, and- hand, and, - 'making gobd use of his vantage ground. when Btills owner suddenly became converted to a Wice. I 'would do for him. what I shall wish I had done, When having lust his dusky skin pence 111 41 , .er. Suiting -the• action to the idea, 1 and blossomed into the light of Eternity, he he made a feint to - release his dog fr')m the and I shall stand before our. master, . . . viceilike jaws of Tiger. There are many 'Christirtis who, all their "Let that dog alone, or I'll Gan rut over life long, carry their hope as , a boy marries a the head!" shouted the country man ; and he bird's nest containing itn unfledged bird that straightened up and swelled out to snch huge scarcely peeps, mach less sings—e, poor proportions; that " Rock street" desisted, ter ; fl e ,d gn f es h ope. roe-stricken at the menace.! A' babels a lumber's anchor. She cannot Tiger, pursued his work hi hand until the swing far from the mooring. And yet a true pits us c'ki-yiel" of }4s assailant seemed to mother never lives so little in. the present, as produce pity in the dog's hcatt of the fiqmer, w h en by the side ofthe cradle... Her thoughts for he relaxed hiS 'hold and the latter slunk follow the imaged-feture of her child ; that away, with the appearance of three legs be. hid. ~ , . • . babe is the boldest of pilots, and guides her fearless thoughts‘down through corning years. •As the countryman jumped into his wag- I . ' . ..._.--- - on, lie called out to the Bull dog's master- 7 l " Whenever yOu want another fight, just say the ;ward, as me and Tige - alters. travel toleth errl Geared Gazette. 14X,pleAL INIE . !: AT FUNERALS.-SUCII WAS the custom in rnanyparts Of Great .Britain Until theLchise of 'the last century. The fol low)ng circumstance- caused -it to be general li discontinued : In Cork, Dr. Lotig,field, thPn an:eminent physician, as as usual attending L , e t:llr.i funeral of one of iiis otients,' going to. be interred at Chtist 'Church. As the mournfull c6iiege passed by the exch. • a witty cobler . owned Bounce, whose habitat was in this lo allty, suddenly popped his head out of his stall, an d_thus iiddresiied the doctor : " Fine .rntining,].)Ocit4; I percr-ive you are'earcr: .1 - n0 home-your ‘vorti."' • Idedicalrnen 'have -noti,sinee Attended 'f‘ineralS'bi that city. - L, _is - usual in-Some - of the towing' in Ireland for thiinpotheearies'aS'well as the dneiOrs to at-. tr,lia, wearing,searfs and hatbands of w hit e . liqn tied - :vithiblaek Or - whitellitestrings, Ac• cording as the deecised may have been, mar: - ' - ried-orvat.:" :-., . , • .. 1 .•,-- 1.....•,' . : -----..—.7.7--r-- . • :.-.1111 - 67 ,It. 6 11) . ,._<, pini (4 - 4 of' a NV ei.t.ern editor, 1 tbrit'wnoid goeifut titer when. left oat of doors t i :n.4hek.yiell housed. ' ire si'.... iptne of -I),Otit kalta naile„ ' -' =I -Tll E TWO P Ai,. -Nr...74P"..4F1,4PW •--- Two :Inge_ „'Otte p_ . .41) -- ooe k_t r,. Pith:ea - bier atiet - illept rex the inlmlttinirtrolee The down .tios;int The.sornieri hons.As,heatgo , ,v4klAplpinep! Olpolio? ,Their attinadeind ai!peet;:vretvitte inmn,-/,: . '.. - . Ana Limit': fviiiilre4And t!lielt , Mbgnilf whi4l; . • ' But cote . p!t_si evop , nefi,pit.h,noutrantit., as %yid; Aline; '.Artil tine, n'itlt pspliodelS, like flalies'otgliA.:, ...• r!.; , ;....-•;..,.?, 1 , 1 , 4 , .. , „:::,-1 -41, •,; - , - I Fan - •betn pae p their eeleltial n;ay,„. —I. - Tlien said 1, us nith'deeriteai and'ilOptit, oppfeased,' • a Beui,nor siYintid'; p 'iny heaft.lesi kiiiliz iietrq . , , • The iilee6 ndiere thy-below - al-ate ue 'rest!" '-'. -, . . . . , And he l'ilio r ivi-,tje thec,lowtt of'npll'oftel74,, 1 Descending, nt nil - Descending, door began to knock, And my.sopi,sitnk ‘v.ithin':ule; , Asi imwellse: , -: 'i i The raters sink befpre an earthquakes snook . . i I reeognizi3d thernatnelemagony., I The teriorltnd, the -tremor had the pain, That oft bAldre had 11114 or haunted, in, • A;ul-Pow returned with three-fold strength again., iThe door, I opened to Ant peaxenly guest,. ,:. . . 1 And IlStened,:for I , ,Otottkiir I heard - Glid's.roipt, 1 And. lenowins.; ‘Ahni'zfitoer Ile 'simiwahliet r i ' I•' Datddneither-talarrnint nor tore,joiee.• - ~.. i • Then witli l a stitile that filled the bough n-iih light, " Jfp errandis` not. Bondi:Ltd Life." he said And, ewe I anHw6red,'lms,inr.... ,out tf-sighti On his celdstial einbamy ,h4spe4. 'Twits at the doily, - ah , friontlA and not at tame . The aligcl.wkth;the , tananutriline wreck*, pausing, destebtlitig., nutl with voice word that had a' aogiiii like death; Then fell.nßon. thehenzeo. ondden.,gloom, ; . shodoW foir and And softly from that limbed and darkened 1:oom, Two ningell isstied s where but ono went in. • All Goli ! ;the bet wove Ills hula ' The niiBo collect,. the rift fell 3 thick awl lied; Till with a hinile of light oil fla awl loud, ' Lo ! lie looks back :&rout the departiva cloud. Angela of Life and. Death ulito,are his-; • itho4.lr - ei leave they 0n...54 on:Quihold o'er; Who Olen would wick or darc, I).2lievlog- Abtinq his rueficuge7'lo shop•thc door vsr, • 0- LIF.E-THOUGETS; • 1:Y .11.NNICY IvAIID Gut. pardons like a mother, who ki s ses the offence into ON I;PAs.ting, 'Ye go to the ; ;racy of a z 'frielitl, 1 a it s p " A ii is dead t" but angels thtuug about " ;Ilan is burn." Of, all earthly that ruches the l'arthest into heaven, is the 0(a hieing heart Some triett ar• l like pyrititiiils, which .tire very broad where they t.ottelt the ground, nar- . row as they reach the sky. Every Christian should begin to d. nut se!l, it he finds, after ten year:, tlutt al as as hrJ in the same thing as. it %vat at ' `,,Vh e n thive is lo•ke in the heart, then: are bows in . the !.ye , , cover. every w i th gorgeous hues. We sleep,. but the hmin•uflife LiCver sups; i and the pattern which was weaving whei, the the Sun went ddwlt is weavhig• when it reifies • lip ti . .-nt,rrow. W e h it e e the prornies of God as thick as da'•,-ics similner dhat which tli 1 clad 1..-3 t r, 171 - 7 ,, A of expctionee , iewe trust in him. It 411ZIN might frame and let :.1 its orl'it, an..l yet. nut 'have cio o s 9 Ora Enousit liAt.p..--The Dublin , Re- view, a Itoinish publication, speaksas follows iof the English version of dip Scriptures. It i reminds one of the involuntary and beautiful utterance-of Balsam, when lie tried to curse Israel and Wll3 not able: " Who -will say that the beauty, and mar- velowl 'English ofthe Brotii4tant Bible is not one-of the great strongholds of heresy in this, country I It lives ott - the tir like music that ran never he forgotten—like the sound of a chureh:bell.which .a convert knows he. can hardly forego. Its felicities seem to be nil most things rot - m.4lm mere. woids. It IS ! part of the natienal mind, and the auchts'e of nittiouat,EoolltqlesS.. ; The -mentory of - the : desd:passes.into it. The ,potent, : traditions of childhood are st e reotyped in its verses.— (lie_dower 0f .. .,51l th.; giftssand trials.of a man is-hidden•heneath its Words. :,lt is' the,repre: 1 sentative, Of his hest tnotnents; and 'ill ;there. has.been about hit - n,.of sOft, mid . ,geOe,.... arid ! poor, al,l4peo4eiit: . and good,.ipt:tks to. hiM out of the English ifitiln. - It" is, his, Stiereid ' l'thing, Which dotiht - has - i - te - r - -iiiintile'd,. and controversy never soiled. - - Ii this length nll4 breadth - . cif the land:therels n - OCa PrOtettant iwith one,spark of righteoustieSS aboitt"lni i . ` ,lir.n..Spii . itu4lWOl,74ot;lS 'Il:Ot - 'l' , l 1 , te,ri 11l "knigaXou' 0 itito. ) '' ' «.fi , ~ En An . • fr i ut, tericfm.,„_tr 0. , merles : 1 1°`Yrrs , i*ebrifte , 4Aitglils•iiret song. , iI I :,hEY:PMNII I !! 2 I I Y*9O*P- ( P,4 our uipt...tkople.and ! theyhsv,e gltieFal l)ert exaltocl4l4 , -..praise,aboyo the1r,,r.ea1,,M , ..:!- its. We read, faith in 'prose and 4 verse, the praises .of the—European Lark,. LiMtet, •aud; i ght ingald; 1 / 2 :thth the .1 gl Robtf • Red-47 hrea.st has heen.ispAtortalixtatpr : sentfoillut_ i ['the I...kiner,fean j fiol l dtb thoukh,luptatrked,,Red lo•east, is, bird,pf a difrerpni;vt\ei4'andaii . ; farent 'Little' has 'l4l - t 4jhYs - I hut" I i he I I 'Ws neve and, I, though., universal! n'ariit t o, : zebu i tI ;they are . tiiiXtakaff'hi their Ju l dgenten ;and are. iiii,tiit flieitlvityilintion'tiOif tin gltreet that is unwoi thy of it, and whose true litterifs.fall: i• 0 0 , 4 :- their , 9,.,:es • , 7. I shall not ak . , • nardon,,ot,those critiea whe : tiro always - eantin3 abditt,',gonitni-Latid - who Wotildititiebably-d'eq•llils;gift •lieeatise lieeaanotery like tiehielieri'brlsqualy like a eat, and beenuse with his eitaiming , strainshgl 4 4;l?FAlßcst,:utln44ltrall sorts of disv,, cords ati4T - tnF f nginous seunds- 7 ,fer,sssigning 'ff) 'the hlkhesf. 144..4 as a si,ugitig . Let thetij Say ;lhe•dint of mislern criticism; thatliispeqer:ltnattees eau: not great, beeatfie they are:fatiltles l s ;it is enough fo,rime„that,,l his inello.`ii4 'pOtes, heard at the eatliest gash . 'Of ; Mop!, in the,niore Int T , sy hour-of noott,'or the quiet' falli?feVenin,„„o, -come epee, the ear in a stream of unqualified melody, as if ballad learhecl; to..sirtg under _the dircdOnstruction of that; beatitilid Dryad who taught the Lark and the, INightinuale.— the Robin is stitpassed.hy .eertaul Lirds in some partietflat: qualities. : The • Isfoilir.g- , bird has More power,. the Red Thriish more variety, the Vetltalrbird snore execution.,, and . the Bobolihk,more animation; but 'each -Of these birds have more hilts . than. th'e l;obl a, and' would be less 'eStet4nied` as. a ,eonstant companion, a vocalist,for. all hours, whose strains never tire and'neveroirend. - • )I =I .. ' There 'aril thousands Who - ndinite the Mock ing bird hcatnw, after pouring forth a con tinued stream of ridiculous and disagreeable sounds; or a series of two or three mites, re rated more than a hundred times in uninter- 1 rupted and monotonons succession, hetoruh•- seends to utter a'single delightf.dly modulat ed strain. He often brings his tiresome ez-1 trumgonzas to a magnificent climax of mel-,- ' dy and just as oftenconcludes an inimitable I chant with a most \ conternittible bathos. But th , t notes of the Robin are all melodious, ail delightful—loud without vociferation, _mel-• Mw without monotony, fervent without -ec stasy, and combiningmore of mellowness yr i tone, plaintivenes§, - ch erfurriess, and propri 'etv of execution that hose of anrot tier bird. Tne Robin is the hi omei of our Spring and Summer mornings in New' England, and "in all - the country north and west of these States. Without his sweet notes, the morn ing., would be like a'vernal landscape with : out flowers, or h Snmmer evening sky with- out tints. lie is the chief performer in the delightful anthem that weleotnes the rising, t (Tay, t)r the others, the best are but ac !. eompaniments rf more or less importance. Renvive the Robin from this woodland or chestra, and. it would be left without a so prano.. Over all the northern parts of this continent, wherever there are any human settlements, these birds . are titmerous and familiar.. There is rtbbably not an' orchard. in *all New England that is not supplied with several of these musicians. -Wh e n we en . side'. the millions thus distributed over this. broad eJuntry, we can unagine.tbe sublimity of that chorus whicl\ , from the middle of %.tar to April until the last of`Juiv, must daily. as- i - rend to heaven from the voices of these t,- . - Tlit TRIPLET S. ltirci, nots, one male of which is Silent, °flatly ! MADAMES LVDDINGTON, BUSUNELL; AND GREN-, pleasaut morning; from the earliest flush of Nst.t.„-sEvENT); YISAiS OF AGE, MARCH ".26 . ru, dawn - until sunrise. • 1 ISZiS. . . • In my boyhood, en early morning, walk I, :Mrs. Sybil Luddingtrin, Mrs: Sara% Bush: :was one of my favorite recreations, and nev-: nell, and Mrs.• Susan Grennell :were all seti-: er ran I „forget those delightful - matins that env years of-age on'the 2ath of March, 'SS. awaited me at °veil , turn. Even then I They are three,sisters,.triplet born, and were,, wondered that so little, admiration was ex- in July, visiting in tronesdalg; Pe. after a. pressed for the song - of- - the. • Robin,. who separation of -several 'years.;'; . They' were .. seemed to me to be worthy:fel-. the • highest horn in Goshen; Litchfield county,' Conn., in regard. The Robin, Whet. reared in. confine- 1788. Their.parents.Were Gideon Alurlburt 1 tnent, is one of the most affectionate and in- and Anna Ilurlburt, ,whose. maiden,. name teresiing of birds. His powerts of song arc N . yas Beach. Their father ?was ,accidentally bkewise shseeptible of great improvement. killed, by heing drawn into the cag T :wheels of Though not prone to imitation, .he ' may be a grist-mill, when they were nine trionthS old. taught to sin g tunes, and to imitate the notes - Their motheris deceased. She was married of other birds. -I have heard one whiStle thir 7 c times. 'llurtiourt--.Was . her 'first hus. ' Over the water to Charlie" as well .as it band. - - could be played with a fife. Indeed., the bird-is so tractable, that 1 - belice any well directed efforts Would never fail of teaching _him to sing any.simple melody. - . • • - But what d.o.we care about. his. -power of learning artificial music? Even if he could be taught to perform like a maestro this wo'd not enhance his value as a minstrel,bf the woods. We are concerned with , the birds only as they are in a state of nature. It is the simplicity of the - songs of birds, as I have before remarked, that constitutes their prim cipal charni ; and were the : Robins. so chang ed in their nature as to selitiquish - their na tive notes; and; sing only tunes hereafter, we, should listen'ta them With,as much:•indiffee-' 'once as to the ,whistling ,of. boys .1n: the streets. . TrE Tnirn LtINATIPS.A good joke is perambulating the' *odd 'at:3;1111p clarke's expense. .Some time ago that learned func tionary eaid ] ina.specch that he looked upon the editors of the Tribune.as. : ,nothing better: than lunatics. The other day Mr. RiPley, of that:long:haired eviabliihinent, was summon=- ed .ft-belni'very inconvenient attend, he wrote on the back of the,inlipcenti• the words, 'Mr. IlipleyY.requests to be expu; , sad on the ground of lunacy ; in support of his . plea, he'vill merely.mention the fact that he . is•one of the editors of :the NIA' , York Trib. Judge.Clarke,Wha.was on the bench, - took the document; and after reading the en; dotsement said,' The. plea is rebignized by the Court. The. juror. is: excused.' The un fortunate individual then, unattendegi by' his keepers, made` his:way - - home: : %Thehist' we , beard of him he-was .doi ell. as was:to bc.expected - ,igetting;rid of, his eurpfils.ireliZy by .writing. , for ...AppletotN. Encyclopedia.-' , -; There ht•cerrainlyjoethed.it,-,his:rrieduess..'... 'The following notice is posted in • the nevrS,ruinn of a country . tavern : " Gen- Aleineu learning tii - spell are regneited to use yesterday s paper, - •, .arTo some 'Oen ;to =he Wbt tk tiloneY, - for' without ft they' 4. ould, be 7!or,ttiiOthing;-- „I 1 -TER. ROBIN: ' =I .1 ,4 ;m0T404k44 , 7 1 0",: , the'ehilreVtis' life \Vat Wit - dis. •tre';'B'red• Itiftll4 . 'nfitiette * Mtikiii'ilkehti W. Paul were eseitingl - htliv end .*Diriaiked 1)A#11) Oki ttl k i :oY2iimi t L t i f tli l 9l 4 4o 3 9thi T i s P,§Ps'i 6 d In 'is . the ttiost,gyiev,cipil:l; To- -jet his. 't!diniiie#C l efa' - iliCgttitty of tilloWid ; for.: gets;nridsiiiediVittaqiiirediuchttrcifig.letity•tts" :4:A t rß i iger d'crce"of the' ihtei7rriy,„ in his seventy:fiftli jiettf;lio*its by c 9 mpapy Glit,zgilyt; as to, .the, mode of rAmye-yintr water ftstttfazpeoinfiula'aeio4 the icly de: to ,iyo--mottkpany7s-eugittak - atillalmar: ' . witleh . ,,.appeargA: i .:to,. them I . a.lionst itistit;iaoutmkte': 77 thq..-...platt 'saggesteo . : that his fe*trliatle: '14 , " Was tii.' .c..essary , to fit Ahe-pitties,thiot#Whi4ll the wa ltp passed 4oc o.eit 441! gthiftitwbed of .00 .I.k 11 , r+ktk., the rohstO'lik his:timael,,'ll?rwarttett. a Thin of • ',obi: of ii:On sliti;ilafiy‘aititOlateif,.whiai was ,'etteeuleil:tinil lard dociti:Vitit'conifolet6 site 1 teat " „. ~.4. few, year later,, when, elti;e:: upon his, eioliti 3 Ola year, the aged_ meehaniehmi formed P r a a '' Edinburgh,' . one o. a pirty, assem ,c hi' at, giiilii;ll . SiPiAraltet'' Scot wgg'.'i,i4echt . . -. , Ere , . 'delightedithe northern life rati'‘vith'liiSiltiml ly- theerfulnesis, - .not less than he astonished ,j them by, ; the.exfont and profundity of his in forraation.,... ” The alert ; kind, beuevolent old . Mitn," ftY.4 Biott, "chad,,lfial,attenttonalive to, -ei'ery one s'epicAionlhig'infdrination at e.v,-, cry one's command. His talents nildjancY overflowed ..oirevtry;slsubject. One • gentle. man :was -a :deep phi lologid-"-.-liir tall: 0 with hi Itt,?n tibo.Origin .of the ,alphabeti as if he had been coeval .with (adutus;.another a,e,elektra 'ted4ritici---you would havti said the Olt Matt, l• had' Stild led political e`eorio my and telleisdel l ores all his life iN4if science it'is unnecessary 10 speukt-it,:w as his own" distinguished walk:" The vast extent of his knowledge was remark- , ed by all who came, in ,contact witlf•hitn.-,-,-. `k It-seeinild," saYs Scifrey; ii as if every stib-,. jest that was easually started had „been that, wilieh he hat:theist occupied in ' studying.": let, though no mart,was..more platly io corn nuinicate, knoAvfedg,e, none- could.,be, less am bit ions of displaying it. " "11 - 6 - ,was," s,' ayS Mrs., , Shimmel-Pamicir. in the yivid '' portrait .she. drawn of him hi. hcf - Itutcybiography,." one of i the most 'Complete: .specimens 'of the melan cholic tei9pera went. His head was general- Ily bet - it forward or leaning on his 'hand in I Meditation, his shoulders stooping and his , chest falling in, his limbs lank and unmuscu i ler, and his complexion sallow. nisi utter -1 ante slow and unimpassioned, deep and low iin tone. ; with a broad Scottish accent; his . 1 niantirs gentle, modest and alas:fuming. In ! a company Where he was not known, unless. 51'>oken to, he might . 'hik , ie •tratignitly.vassed . I the whole. time in pnrsinilg,lils, own inedite- . Guns. When he entered a robin, men of let , ters, men of sciene, nay, military men, art-. i i,ts,, ladies, even little childrep thronged round him. I remember a celebrated Swedish art ist having been iii:‘ - trusted by him that rats' whi,kers makethe.most pliant paint brushes; ladies Iv' old appeal to him on the best means of devising grates,. curing smoking chimme3Ni, Warming their houses, and obtaining fast col ors. " I can speak from experience of his teach, int); me how to make a dulcimer and Improve a Jew's tarp:" What 'Jeffrey 'Said of the steatn.engine may be applied , to the conver sation of its parent—that like the trunk elan etephant it could picric up a pin or rend an oak.. —(2?ta rierly Aeu:cre... Mrs. s Gtenbell has had. four Children—two, ' sons and iviaci'diughters . ; '',..Mrs:l3uShnell nine childeeri 7 --four snag:and •fi ee daughters; akd 'Mrs. Luddingtoti; One - &tighter,— • Mrs. Grennell- lust her • huslialld, • Michael (ir rennell,..Nov..3oth r ltss7.;...Mrs. 7 . Bashnell'ea. husband, Pppe - BA/nell, is still'living, and, is bah 'and 'hearty ; and taidelike,toti lost -her husband, Theron' laiddingtorr, 'roily-ono years ago; . . The.three siAers2moved - ,away from the. ,plan; of their nativity when they .were about eighteen. y earS - Of age:, ....Since - tfleti -.they. ; bait! in different. patres - pf the country, Moat ly ,if net. entirely upon None of them ilatve been, married . biii 3 Once. At olio time, frojafifteen - to ,twenty alt lived within &tin - on-shot inf . , each other, at ; Bethany', Wayne ne 9dunty,.,Pa, '`,Mrs,'Vrep nell is the largest, 104 "Addington the smallest, of the,three.' .71'04er - sopa) , ream blincels:Nery strikinir:; Mrs, Preftnill and Mrs. lliishnell ,resellibte - each:bilierrse - ihncb, 'that even Mrs,lLUddingtbil'haal - ,rnistalien.cne .toe the-other, 16'.ippot411 diem -apitit; 'and faille often' taioli Other l though _Well netylaintnd . with bilth:2, - Z%irs., - Grennell now iesidea ia "Insh - ville:SUSqaehatiliapauh- and Mrs; Lud d b gton. s irt , ""exa tOwa:shi Wayne Ceouaii, Pat. ' . 'They; 11 cojoY ,exeelletifjitc44,tli;„*ltich, I Su pflosc . l4::oWing, -. conAad- - 6ply; and the fact, that , they,arti Thdugh . ' cern fortalda 'elronnialanc,ei • they. are al ways busy aho,ut,sorne, N prOfitilblit - and dn.ily - a - Vocations of honsehOld WOlc"" t ialay rbe -- rtl)OWed - ,the lilitnely Orfeetly soin.u ] ;' ,. ai4 ll #l l iWyWi 4 i: ' l l : l 4.:! : i t . 1 )4 1 tisir far icany inure ytiots'Of.usetarksi. -; •i "loacsnAtz,'n' • ••-"'" 1.1; bPO I * I ' , " Im ' P ht. 4,0 kopwf !\ ek" snid ,UPOP IJ V L hereI yot! ,ke9l% Ale: 1 ;-. 1 ,P,‘I,1 1 : 1 1 , ,,!f',- ••' ybu 'l to is—but't 04 t. EMM!iI T , o4coulwxit,alocuma . ' "SltigC.Olittri s er _ _ _ • 7 Ar IV hiTiiiin:tiMiatlleAglii FtEcinnati, ' . '- i... -. ltr,li . eiltol4'9,l9sWillr'Elnator 4I" gh's dnetrineimikty 9t.tivtd, id I thts . kame video , Iti 'the - rot to*lnritorhoioink,and'rpointed . '=manner o f ,l , :: :i1,.. "..,i 7:;:•,. ; •17 I_ .0 ... , ,. ..,c , ,T . " Let irto consider thegekidaliigji 'o f par. 4if.s, ..: . .- ~, .. • ..:.., „...rz is .oi„1/:.%. ,{says, • aij, g° oo, l4, lo .4'enairp.,,rugt4 that n': old+ Rip NaptWinklo; siif.thek. ricOeCor To tn. orivin;. has jtit ' t ikaltol: lip' ; sifter: . "an •.- eight • ' v .6 -1 1 e - 's!cii':-1 1 pil'1 1 .* 45 111inlk„itiuTt;-' 4 siii:' 4 , \i‘agl `, tLangilter.] - ' 01i6,...r ,00ik w. ppmaz:i;soir r ereignty-, a nag or mettle and °l' 'l49O'd ;' the lother is. that old, : vjud,hroken,Zl.,s, parined • honie; the Wilinot:Proirso. - • ..ToNtr:there is , some truth - hi wha r f lie e SitYs..'". I' tad ril Ire that horse of ,PopolafBtcvereig,nty; and I think. that - if I ihould - hiddlo-r'ecittfetetiee - iiifietingt - 'ellt4s ineetiag w,itb , -,bfotherl'ugti, - ; Iyshotild poirkt,putthe IMI/ets Ape- D emocratic. Tarty' has ut in itiat horse. - I thin - ICI - MO(4d hring him, as tl4 Meth6 - dist preacbers - SOY; 'to a suitable Sep - sgliffililidifolth:ifiess.'. "(Laugh- I.thirik i conti.::cOnvinee?, , eirerY , -iroriartial Tap tha of ii'opyltsm.,§overcignty was, n dead hors - ol=blow.o ".Y.l)em oeriiiie, guns, fnr that . Win4:broken,ipay. ined'pony; Witt - ant PrOviikho'iras sired by Moines Jefferson. - - blinself; land \. it's- the hiirs• I ,mentr.to ride ',while thete's itil , tiair in his r,[l4l9•gpeT,4o • • T • tioeDerll(Nrilts,,jaroiapcl.stnall-1 hope' they'll. excase Elle, if say, ineaning..no disre. Sped' to any of filed]; that iiime.rit'thgra are iz_triailer than otharteli iffeliet i )Olettiit this Deniocratie partrill the lineal '44l7altiatit Uf ,Thotnes. Jetfetson; whosii,provi*:),;Seuator Ptigh4leppnnges as ~:,41nti,t1,k14e4 _ ,4 1 p4A 'hied Jeffeyscn Arew,* . itti his own hand that - artiele . thiit'fiiißd'e'Wnvely in the NOrthweit:TerritaiSr,;frOnk which have come - five great - Wnsteit States. w hich wrote with his own hand this 9ld •wind-hroketi,spay= fined horse! Apd,' i yet,'senator ;:Pugh. says Ailey_ are his lineal descendints! We think a.sjeferson thought,have-the 'noelreligion and philosophy that • 'Jefferson had.' • And t hey •• cal l his proviso 'old and spavined, and bid you beware of the Opposi tion ticket; for that's Fedetalisin; ~.: iLaugh ter.] , _ - What a queer flintily that:Jefferson fami l:y Must be ! It is a progresSiVii &redly, an improving, family., Minima' Jefferson,, said that-slayery was the greatest evil that ever cursed a countryonci that when . he looked up to God, the equaLkather of the black nian and the white malt,, and saw hdw in this countrk the white! man held the black in ' slavery, lie trembled' for the white man ! 'Andliis lineal (t&ieendant's call that pr o viso ~ _by which he hoped to 'prevent the spread of this:, ee4se, a -broken:down; old, spavined. /la" 7 - Jefferson, like some ',of. us, actually fie lieved that Moses :told the truth; ':when he . said that the :Mini - 0)(y sent - mail : abroad into a world of thorns' nd thistles; and told him, I.either for a blessing or a curse, to go and ! earn his - bread by :the sweat.of his -brow... Thomas JeffersOn thought this was, a true oceount, : and-since4he White man had - stolen' r I the black man; he-hoped the Merciful - Father • would find some Way to -remove the evil where It existed, ring hims - elf endeavored to . prevent its growth. . Jefferson thought labor o-as good for the white man. Jefferson was a than, who rea 's Pied. • Not, to be 'sive, - so' smiirt S man-as 'Senator Pugh,. [lti;rnerise laughter] but still . a man not le be sneezed: at—a considerable • . marl in hisday . , - . . ~ . . Well, Jefferson reasoned when he looked on a 'sheep:and taw' the wool.: on his '`back, and WaS-aWaie that in our eliinate, men-needed coats made . from , Wool—he reit- - soned, I say, that if man was not..,liinant to labor, the sheen was not rnade - right.:) . .le man r wasn't intended, to cut and wriOrand'eard the. Wool, turd - spin 'it "and . Weave'it inte'elotiond have it'ent into a emit-by:a 'tailor - , - then' the -.sheep wasn't made right by. any • means. It those gentlemen who- believe, man should not lab 4, had had the making of the, sheep, they -would. haVe - mado*it Wirt) a blue _Oat on its `baek, - thi3 bright metarlinticinW hinging down in front.:-.[Langhter.l - -:• ,•:' '-,'- .:•-'-•.--,.' :Now, 1 - believe.that labor is , a :good- thing for man and - woman, and : that .it, will. _lie found that, in the plan s. ef•thel.Anighty it has worked - or restilts, -- tendinit - to the. pereeetability of -man 'and Woman.. : 'The first prohibitory elauss against-shivery. ever writ ten,. was penned ,by ThOmas Jefferson.. It is callekthe Wilmot Proyipo,hecanselit'Avan re ofiered,te Congress by a gentlerparr'-ite- that *Me; and the; inen'who eallthemselves , the • followers' and 'Worshippers' 'Of 4effersori and profess to lie, of' the , true f-Demonratioblood s ,call it,-wind-broken and. spavitied. , :...-. -, Now, you know that in the-history ,;of our wicked rite, it often happens that a .man is ktiowri by ti.nanie rihieh Wai mithis - father's, , and that's man(i - inietimes'elttinis•one for his father.- who. wasi--not-,• really . such.. -"I -think there, roustave been some sirallling :, i n that, Must h. Jefferson inlly, trod Some i 'strange - : 6•14 - B . ,4 it h i ..e' leaed the fences - - got in among tme sheep. [Prolonged : rind excessive laugliter.] , -.l ". - .• :' - -:..,-•:: * • - l slionld like to see' the father, 'old `.Jeffers son, acid all, his fainily;*,praying"."eogetilier--\-- He would pray that the ektetiSion' of Oatery -- might be - pretrented . , mid -Would pray : : for Hi exthiction ;.,and',Wonld thank God,that in His benev,olent'PnifOSC.4',' ;He,. had:l - decreed that man and - Woman should cart- their bread by the sweat of their . britikik; ~- ~.: 7 - P4,ll:WOuld' probahlY:pray, - as he now.- aotS., with:4 pkiqy ,th,4t.:i.ofi,oo,sif4 - to free --la- - bar, and in. favor orhiavn laboit. ' -- . `I thank Thee, O'Leird; : l'irat.,`'l', - Wheti, - Thou didst saY-trictiti : ..firnt:.Oretitrii: - gei-Ahread - intei • a - worlit,tht: Ithornir.:arid Alnatlei,- and ',Can't your bread .I).y ..thi),:myeat., of • your brOWs, Then_ ►salt,:only joking with 4dam.iand .Eve '''foilittile - artitZlinie;''Thos (lidpt - jiiiilo .Cue fee - tinil Dinah;' Whh!shnu Find all :OS , '''work, and.iii Adiininfi'd Eiri:;ilicnilir; 1t0t , ,-wkiat at - all.',`lt o angliter:_and:i.elt‘eraila,:k . think . the, old pi an . .W9UI(I, - have annut,Onllitt, : :_nf . * Pr - - OR - Aoki 'Of: that prayer'.! r' '; '- ''''': tar" ?Una/ Wa l t a cat. entitled.. Father AilullljulPlegraPh-,t, as a .N9piane, z aitired ; as an old OindP, ,i 4 In it iekulni - wash.tuk witb`•tlPgiti.bot. tie find dram:east near at fiand.,; , llltitrldent, place ereCt, seiVis sAPPolillatt . ;Rable, :#l4l ll, w4ielk variqtY,-QC W e aring, i,atel is few fish are floating ;45ut.... g-i - . Met A jektf. never-gairisaik. enemy; but often loses a friend. BIM .1 1? ; a . !•' HEE =9
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