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!foken 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