The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, January 02, 1851, Image 1

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S. B. k E, B, CHASE, PROPRIETORS,
W@2 - Te.r.
ion rue 981tOCIlla. :
A Carol for the ?few roar.
happy-New Year" is the song wit - sing,
With lope gaily pinioned on fluttering wing,
lint the spirit seems floating all spotleesind clear.
Far hack in the past of the dying Old Year.. . •
In a vision I saw something more than ideal,
/lope, Faith, Love, and Truth,!twes a d ream of
the real,
Ss it bidding farewell to the weary old weeper,
Wlto.bel4 on hie bosom the lovely young sleeper.'
Anti Memory, -half etailing throsigh, tears stood
apart, .
Vittra book in her hand which was 'ahaped like
'4l, heart, -
Twaa peociled with ann-light and clasped by a
tear,
All lettered before her the hopes 041ast year.
Some pages were spdltsa and white as a shroud,
Unstained by a sorrow—andiran'd by a cloud,
Rut many—too many the leati.ets ' l traced,
Ouse mirrored in smiles, but by tears , now ef
faced.
['heie were tracings of eadness on cheeks that
were wet,
At pLgt ar,c cata rtever-for.get,
Ah ! ba:ro , w had biosstmled from seeds of pure
Hope's smiling bad proved but a treacherous kiss
The vows lightly made like the breath of the air,
And as easily brokeu were all letteied there;
The flowers that had perished—the lights that had
fled,
And tressel of hiair,from the brows af the dead
As I viewed diets, strange blendingsof raptures
and fears, -
One page rose before me all blinded hy teats,
'Twee written with blood which the poor pen had
dip'd
From hearts which of sorrow tho bitterest dregs
'Twasof one who was with Ins a short year ago,
In beauty and youth still a mounter below,
She met ma in sadness and crushed back a tear,
While sweetly she wished me a ‘! Happy New
Year."
Cat she arooped, sank, and tried, and we laid ber
Lo rest.,
rted placed the turf lightly upon her point; breast
Woile we tried to look upward forgetting the clod,
For our Saviour before the dark valley hod trod.
Alt: sometimes in fancy on pinions of love,
Through the stars I can see her bend down from
above,
As though she would chide the heart swelling
dispair,
Of the loved ones on earth who would follow' her
there. •
And in this struts vision I caught jnst a gleam
Of the coming 4•Neir Year," and 'twas bright Loa
dream,
Of the Sammer's sweet softtiess--the . young
pane' pure brepth—
Of the Aztumu's sad hiding—and Winter's cold
death. -
All! grant when this "New Yen?' shall bid us
farewell
And the same merry echo shall joyously swell
That heavenly lesson we better may knew,
Ot pat lent endurance while lingering below.
But again we remember the song ti-e
And a joyous wish to oar friends we bring.
For the Present a smile—for:the Past not a trar—
Brute hearts for the Future, and a 4. Happy,New
Prom the Tribune.
PLEASURE AND VETT.
BY IL S. CIIILTON.
Ws [net, and loved, and parted—the old story ;
A bright-eyed maiden the. and I a youth
Who worshipped at her shrine, and thought the
. glory
That dwelt about her was the light of truth.
0, the vas fair as aughlof poet's dreaming,
And harlarge eyes were lustrous as the light
That stream's frorn-Ere's first Start whose gentle
. beaming
Poore a mild radiance romid the brow of night.
lisr speech was soft and 'musical as singing,
Aid even now, after long, weary years;
1 bear its Over tones—like sweet bells ringing
In the far Chapel or my wasted years.
'But she was false as fair—the" maid leherished—
And in my hour of sorest need she lied,
'And left me in a maxi where I lied perished,
flit for au angel who my footatops led:
An angel woman, in whose large calm eyes
Deemed the pure lutes of a spotless soul,
-rued as the star that Mimi in Northernskie-:
The God-fed Pharos of the frosty pole.
Thoeth cold at first, seen through the clearer air
In alba! I breathe, a matchless beauty now ' -
Lives in her-perfect form, and flowing hair,
And in the whiteness of her ample brow.
0, ye who worship Pleasure, know that beauty
Flews (torn within, and'inakes the features fair;
Bee well, and in the plainerface of Duty
Thou'lt find each race as angel faces wear!,
Tennyson contrpmtes the foltowing
,
'Stam m to one of the ten. Annualslor
. , Itisl
Come not, when I am dead,*
To drop thy foolish tears' upon my grave,
To temple round my' falling head, •
And rex the unhappy dust.thoutvoldst not'
- save,
Them let the wind sweep, and the plovertry ;,
But go, thou by.
Child; if it were thine error-or thi crime
I cre.no longer being all noblest;
Wed nhom Thou wilff but lutu sick Oritime,
_lnd I desire to
,rest;..
Pation, weak heart, and leave inn ivbtit
Go by -- 13 0 ! ) ,Y l . •
DrawavlD vo Pc:mum Tylvm iloVlaton2l,
UMtII I I.M.
POI% TUC DEM
-rmeo tr,guonamo
A Tale oil the, Texan nevelutlon.
BY CHARLEY CRAYON.
.
•
- - (comsurn.)
. .
Clara was, is yet, gneonseions" of her eons"-
ins feelings, while, within her heart, raged 4
flam:of affection that she• strove in .vain to
subdue The lofty spirit of Aumbis ; his wild
enthueiasm, his every thought flashing with
the inspiration of Nature and his every heart
throb swelling high with - sympathy; all, all
conspired ter increase the fervor of her afree=
tion-more and still, more. • Ber 'wishes, the'ts
and impulses took the 'impress of his, thougii
herself uneenselous of the fact. tie WAS what
her fancy had ever pictured as the Pay excel-
loco of nobleness, of virtue, of man. Not a
thought, he uttered that did . not soon to bass
pure as though dropped from an angere lips;
not a word spoke he that, did not fall an her
ear sweeter than .music. When :he sat and
gazed silently into her mildly . floating oyes,
she sometimes fancied she could read in that
gaze a multitude of deep emotions struggling
for utterance: And then, as though.,to divert
his mind froin what site thought to be unwel
dome,' glo4i)my thoughts; In the artlessness of
- -
innocence itself, by a witching smile or a des-
ture all facination; or perchance by the out
burst ofsome enthusiastic thought, she
would break the spell that bound him, and en
exclamation of half unmeaning .adiuiration
would escape his lips. . - . •
Thus these two beings grew up together,
till their whole natures seemed run together
in onemould of congeniality. As 'before' inti
mated, Clara possessed something more than
Mere personal attractions: ihtellectuhf
zo6oiripliments . 7ere.of.itie 4i4ht or*:
She was emphatically' Natures own 01Id:.
Every tbou'alit breathed of nobleness- of a
proud:spirit : and a loftypubition,, .;11 . odestand
gentle, sbe was dignified; gTaeeful land enthu
siastic. Though - Atnulus by natilia :inherited
many of thesn qualities,' his constant attenil
ance with Clara imbued him still .tiore with
these characteristics. She inspir.4 his natti7
rally ambitiogs,temperament riitt .ict9:re fer
venev—a mOre ardent emulation, be . great.
She taught . him to despisethe..grt;velling in
instinct that governs the 'great ma. ? of Man
kind, imd hinds them fasti.c . the:fetter; ti*i":
Eersiency ; knowing no loftier alto, no hiller
;aspirations than'those that govern the brtite
creation,—to all the baser passions,
rand die without leaving ri record that they
have been,=—not one deed as an offspring, wor
thy of immortal minds. The language of her
heart found a response in his, and ho caught
up the inspirations of her lofty mind as they
dropped in
.words;—they found a lodging
place in his tnemory—they influenced his thols
and actions. •
Amulus now grew 'sad and theughtful.—
Ile was unhappy. HiS mind was - o'ereherp;Od
and he laaew of no perion an earth to whom
he could summon courage sufileient to. reveal
the emotions that struggldd in hiS . boiem; in
deed, there was but one whom be 'would have
know the secret, and te.that one he could eon
fide every. thing else, save t./i4, which .haunted
his waking hours and 'drop:: sleep from: his
presence. thoUghthe:ihat she might
know the whole; but nhp-;sueh s :wish for
then Wonldlife . bnbittei indeed.-' , Tier)-prond
spirit would 'neverlo4ou
. roe,7as:other - than,
the boyish eeinpanlon'efleigirlish days;-and
the stern rebuke, the cold repulse would ipiiie
OrerwlielnicwOuld rive any soul asundei:;shoula
it fall front her lips or be met in her reproach.;
ful gaze. She cannot, shall not know it; it
shall never escape my lips; she shall 'ever re
*in ignorant of a truth, stranger indeed thazt ,
fiction; and, if possible, stringer than the re
ality itself. Hush then, my heart this Wild
tumult of wild 'emotioni; be still the herte
purest affection '
and let not love,- but friend
.ship only dwell there. • •
Vain efrort, to 4rives Love from its throne
and valuer still the attempt to seat friearlship
in its place. That - is 100 inferior in its order;
by far-too little tinged with * sympathy to fill
the void that's roade by smothered nffection.--1
Crush, if you will the fondest, the first . , hope of
nut; sever the strongest tier rob tht heart of
sympathy and' drive from it the •affeetions that
like fatality have been nursed; then fill- the
'home of all these With cold, calculating, con
ventionsa friendship. ; Hurl' the planets from'
their course and supply .the void with sand
grains!' • • - •
Clara noticed -the change that had so re
leently tome over the spirit of her "cousin;, yet
!knew not its cause ; She - taw that: be was
melancholy, was unhappy, .and tbis 'threw a
shade over her feeling' Every means !Yu, I
resorted to' by.the - artless; minding girl,,:toe.
move the - dark shadows from mind; to
spire: lam with courage, ith.liappinesa--
I'4hen 'Amulus Weill - retire by himself/it som
bre'rilood, to muse on the unweleome c thqughts
that crowded men him with"crashing .weight;
they:et:ad often
• unbidden tit liepritseuee,
rate his drooping henti,
_implant carelesskiss
nn "Lis cheelt;ltken'Aarits utaaliii i e .
end ngitated, with fondness of s
'jean. - And th ; 4 0%! mbe'sa7: Qf;iore•-•
moment: ed_?/9 11 i,1 6 YiPg 0111 4_ Te4ureiszi*Wad
for, oFegtlits:lykole cfnuOnlince - ,axid then
half sadly away; leavinghispale
andlrow alliCillitlea*d lest climeisii ,l 44i,
be= ar s tadY' woofing .1411-/tit46itig4 *rid ; AI",
ere ' ll ig - '0 , ..1" 6 # 1 4,#0144 11 0t;:41ft4;iit
tie same
eat ' 6 0 6 1 4 4 1 0 11 .0WP:1-#;v0 4 t isit* -' o;*
that nor' Milne** vi*:
.' :'; • - r ••' CII/LPTEIt-lIL .
",,A-ettike emotion stir s within
. linl—more ".
, . 70,4 mpre, F orapssipnerer waled before."
r :
One evening Aniulris 'was sitting, alone on
,the . plaz.r,alin 'front . of his father's 'dwelling,'
watching ilie-glorious day-king air. he dropped
to rest hOlird the western mountains, tinging
the bro* - e(eir'en:with a flood 'of gorgeous
golden 110 ' Fixed as a- statue; motionless;
1 and pale as imarble ;- his ' cies seemed riveted] -
. ..
on the disfa n t heavens, and through his :brain
(coursed a `rifultitirde'of Arangethou,ghts..• ..-
, .
`.'
:
[ The stut dii;appearcd—was, gone—and the
irilf crloornSqusk shadow; 'flitted lbont fan- I
t.istically, Ice* hovering,nearer quite.darkenedl
the air and throw a hard-like spell on all around;
and still them lie saf,_ unmoved, gazing on va..
enity. .The' oft breath of evening flOated 1
noiselessly , carelessly playing among the
bight-bleomi g flowers, then eddying up, rus- 1
b i
tied merrily '/among the noble old ekes and
orange trees,that adorned the green spreading
lawn' - From the dlitint pil l age choir, rose the
• •''
solemn Vesper hyran,lnoatin,r; out on the pleas.;
, ant wind and echoin dirge-like through, the
hollow air, as its plain‘ive numbers died- away,l
full, solemn and mearnfully in the distahee
The hunt OfNature tnitkled with the dashing
music of the waterfall, and the low,' complain-,
ing murmurs of the wantlering-' rill, tumbling ;
along its pebbly bed; idpi the' whipperwili
struck up a glad cherus fr&.m the' depths of his
'forest home. These:ill fell ifuliCoded on the ear
olAniulus,', and bound'him in 'with a mesmeric
spell: Strange power of hurttan thought!'
limy long he would hive renained thus it is
impossible to divine. Soft steps glided *near ;
a form that looked half-angel, in the shadows
of evenini, npproaChed amia gentle Land
was placed . on his brow; sweet,kailvely,topes
saluted him.' He started lika 4e.racail;neil
from a troubled, dreamy sleep; at for rao . '
ment,looked wildly around, when :s eyesinet
the soft bewitching gaze'of Clara. ',With the
sudden impulse of a madman dm clasped her
hlsinisom in a rude and eisionate embrace.
She Struggled froth his gr:.sp, and her,queenly
form, ,
_seemed flit up with more than 14 accus
tomed dfg%ity.. Her eyes, fora momenktiash
ea with.pcsgon, then o cold' haughtinc,4 play
ed on her feature.s.,Amulus ;wed on herfor
,
bidd i ng:face an instant,thensank, back tooth:m
icas as death.. His brain reeled and /Ls haart
grewisielt waa-to him r.slhou,gh the inoi.
tal iger.y of a whole waa„ .ctrwled an
one moment lie stanoriered out the name'ot
Clara. - Her looks assumed their wonted love
•
For well do. vanished frotrns enhance
The charms of every brightened dance;
And dearer seems each dawning
For having last its light awhile."
She, rushed forward, threw heiself upon his
bosom - and wept convulsively—shti knew not
why ! .
The silence was broken by the musical voice
of Clara. "Forgive me; dearest cousin, if I
have •pained you.; I would not cause one sigh
to embitter a moment of your existence."
"Noble girl," 'responded Amulna, "your
heart is the abode of loveliness, the home of
the g,faies—tifey'color your every thought and
•
constitute your being.' ;
"Come Amulus," said she, in a beseeching
tone;" dust melancholy to , the, winds, and „let
us stroll .to our lovely rtreat yonder, for in
truth .this is. a lovely eve; and I'll strike 'the
g 'Oar foryou. and we'll Inf. so happy."
knaulus rose from his seat Without making j
ni l 'reply with . Clara t caning on his arm,
turned towards the arbor.- . 1 Sha ;seemed More
thcM.ttsnalfly buoYant in splrits, and whea they
arrivtid nttlie dear 'old spot,. the rich, mellow
tone of her voice rang onithe empty air More
full, Moro free than ever.
4 - I . ol'o list cousin while lu strike these sound
ing strings,7 mellifluous strains of that
Llone: harp rose fult ...Of 'Sweetest melody, and
floated - Out on. the pa sing'zepher so bland
and-plaintive, that Arintlus felt his whole soul
enraptured. ther(brelte fcrth the clear, sweet
tones ef tiara's voice; 4fit accomPinintent :to
a seraph's lyre. • ' • •
O Love i in such a Wilderness as this,
%There transport and security entwine ;
Here is the empire of thrperfeil bliss,
And bere than art a god indeed divine. , ~
Hera shall no forms abridge, no'hoors confine '
The views, the walks, that boundless joy inspire,
Roll on, ye days of - raptured inflaence, shine !
Nor blind with ecstasy's celestial fire'
Shall lots -behold the .park of i earth-born_ brae
expire. , i , : I
The ichoittgs of her voiee - died .alvay in soft,
blandirig cadences, and then all was still as the,
abode of death-spirits. The full moon poured a
Good or mellow light o'er the; i earth; and her
scintilated beams streamed through the latticed
roof, of the old 'arbor, covero only- by the'
creeping vines:flu-a wove it over like a net
'work.. The blending star rays Spread with
( chry4aline the dew-petaled flowers, and gloss
ed their folding leaves with silver. Amulus
spoke not, moved not,land in the dewy light of
thati plesmat ':eve, Clam gazed 'on him. '; No
sound was heard savethe wil&lieatip,,r , of his,
bursfing heart. The iflence 11-0 'bro'en, yi
clai..
• l, ~., : ,- , ~
. -a 4 11 * w ii i . t*E54l -- P.t.th opes4o- 1 1
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MONTROSE' PA ,r THURSDAY, JANUARY% 1851
I
ry ill; 'whether iniaged Or real; thatl dixrkaned
, y4l; aspirations; were known .to `me. ir•You .
heaitated not then to pour out the 4e*st .6..1
eret. of your heart ; whileo? , iiii, and you alone I
Were a witness of that Which , burled 'rano.'
Mow often .in this lovely bower have 'we re
.vettled- heart-seerets to each other,hen grief
.
i we ighed down our spirits, tut . then, as our sym
pathies Miligleefogetifer, IiAW light grew our
i hearts, even like as the StenalLeloml; that over-I
spreads. the sky with thickest gloom is chased
'tiivaiby the breath of theWhirlwink' revealing 1
the glorious sunlight in grea6' lieu' uq•,.'so have'
enr apiritS often felt lichterand still More joy
-1 ous when their gushing waters have fliwed free
ly together. 'The heart musthave a confidant or
tis unhappy; and now my oWn partakes deep-,
ly of your sombre mood.
~.peak, cousin, l nd ,
tell me, can I not as of. yer,:;:by some means
assuage Your grief and Coles the storm that
.• - I
c rabs in your breast." SIM was tatinuing
when she was interrupted by Amulu.s., , '
:. " Clam, dearest Clara; yen shall know the
W 1
.le for lis your right tO know it.' But I i i
feel that you'll elide my foelishness land load{
Me down with reproaches. This mental agony i
I can endure no longer, and life can bo no more
intolerable though .I know the wort; for sus-,
tense ia.agony of itself, and bears with crush-1
ing weight." ' 1
I His tongue was loosed; and all reserve van-1
ished. ,He poured out his &Mil ; he told her of ;
This love with eloquence, made more ;eloquence ,
by the throng_of lent up plosions to vhich he I
had new given vent.
r "The ocean has its ebbingsr:eo has grief--
! • Taus - .vent to anguish if!ttvae not relief." '
Continued ho; "blame uric not, turn not on
melhat coldlook you gave me•yonder:twonld I
freeze my blood. 'Blame Mc not, I say, foil's! ,
that noble spirit of yours I:lave. 'TiSthat has
chained me, and thegtmerow.,iinpulseS of your :
heart that' have , draWit - out lhe purest :ace. ;
lions of mine. lem the sb . :vi) to a passion of
•
which , I
never drearned, and the strength oil
which I never knew till noiy. It is stronger !
than the, strings of life,, and Wants only to be;
deprivoroltheiobject around which it, twines ;
_.,
to snap them - esunder'. '
He added iruchlnore,ond when he: conclu- I
clod, rose tip; crossed the arbor and seated him I
'self by tiMside - of the astonished maiden, aisli
I tears of job; and kisses blended there, rind An
ulna was happy: ,' Need 144:that Clara's bap..
L,l)iiiei9;too. :ol 4 l ie tueits:ai - V , k . :,Lk, , ; his,.:;
.' It was late that 'night When those two joy
ous'hearts lcft,that old arbor, that had been
the lone witness of otrang,e events. The Past,
the eventful Past occupied fora tong time,
their thoughts and engrossed their eonversa
tion.' Then Up came the futere as tho Ugh sail
ing on pinions of lil,iht; - and what a host 'of
'airy castles were .builded there; - for,. fancy's'
'busy hand was present and wove many a fairy 1
guilded web. Net a thought that did not seem I
all joy, all fondness. No anticipations so wild,
so tanciful as. not to Seem reality, of ;which the 1
world was a wide.reahm and theMagain the!
vital. was struck and the seraph-like Voice of
Clara warbled forth the language of lie F soul.
~ flow sweetly cloth the . , moon-beams smile !
TO'night upon yen leafy isle:
Oft in my. fancy's•wanderinge,
I've Wished that little isle had wings !.
And we within its fairy bowers
Were wafted off to seas unknown,
Where not a pulse should beat but ours;
, . And we might litre, love; die alone.
Far from the cruel and the cold—
.. Whore the bright eyes of angels only
! !I , Should come around us to behold
A paredire so pure and.lonely!" • i
—Thus: passed the happy hours awaY, when,
rising from the old, now doubly endeared arbor,
like angel lovers, they sought the Mansion
where they had Passed their childhood days,
and gave themsclres r.why to pleasant dreams.
• [ro , an c0n.u.1.4..n.] : ' • '
ry Who can be surprised Mat the. Masses
of Great Britain, are in a state of destitution
and misery . ? With a population of $l,OOO
- in England, Ireland, and Seotlancl, Great
Britain paid, in 184.7, .C 56,000,000 or 8280,-
000,000 taxes. Of t is €45,000,000 Ukas de
rived from property= the tax of aristocracy and
gentry—while' $235,030,000 MIS deriveil from
trade :and industry, or rather from the sweat
and blood of the la:Lasses. William, the blor.
man, who founded. in the. tenth century, the
system of English takationt is generally i called
a robber, but in. the Period o'f centuries,andl
from his conquest to 4600, Ituglish tate..4never
rose in a single year above $3,000,000. George
I. raised them to $'20, 1 000,00t - ); George 4, the
odious tyrant,who sought to'sftangle our. liber.
- ty, raised them to $15,0150)00; Geprga IV,
in 1820, raised them to $270,000,000,11-03
1847, they were increased lor.$280;000,000,
Which, divided among the:Poittlition of Gi:A.At
Britain is 840 30 - to everyman, woMan, and
-1. As Van angel spoke, -
I hear the &ileum sound."
It is a siptal demanding despatch t, causing
man's hopes and fears Pa start up Err* fliel r
repose; and amid thu bright:mu told- hkssing,s
of anopening yar, lidding idarbe tbonghtfal
pin' his 'rejoicings, -• ,' ,•.; • • 1:-.•„, , ,04
The New Yearalso bideVlarf venom* end
nothing ii-perminm4 here 11' 4 3borir- * ia
P°thing constant Int chaage,:",f The'y ra,is
• modeN. ofre.rolfte) .: ** B itt
Lts;WORDS OP 'W 4 ISMINGII L i" -I l t 11- ef 41%8 'pa . itottill*Y l 4. l inKlik B 4 -
* macp!hajvidat'si•
.40 41 4 414, ) s f attc o l.*
infinite Moment that on shcadd piverlY, cod- w he'4,,k i i? ' - - '.11+,04-Asa
mate the immense vain ot 'your mational tie. andowsco i
'' - 'l . l l /0
ion to your u?llective tuul intliidna' li,aP* moo ley
pegs; that4uu should chi ireut t l 4, 4 1 : 81 tfigek.„
tud and Immovable gitahMeg tO :j6i 4 irie: ~ 7 '',
tailing ioursaves t° *II* " 6 "l"it 44 lel° ii7Clivi•
thellalhaum or rYoUr. political arity #4,+ ,1
mg
perity.Avatchifor its pr o'" -1` +
'ens anus i dble°'4 3l tenaPg'i*, 3l o iio al4 ,
*nate , evei 15 :ifig*kni 4 1 0 'lt '' ,113 ;141, 10 In 'are i r''rbO-- -
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ViLIE NOV; PA UIS -Tit lit StIOLD.
"':
, k.srt AD Lf."4".1
,Ties threshold of-a, New -Year is ti pausing
spot in `Mates , esistence;where ho can scan the
past and ponder the futute..Up to this thresh:
old the old Year'comessand taring foro mo
ment cht,thOfuture,` which` it Cannot
. entei', it
turns away to lie' dawn With' the years' that 1
haVe alrelidy 'Mandrel! round the earth. As,
We look on its retiring, form, .wo see-its giant
shadowliung ..over'the past, as it slowly, sinks
into its grave. , to wait its resurrection with-
"the years beyond the flood." Wine we look,
and muse, - the New Year, approaches fresh
from the hand of Time, With, its brow unsea
ted and unwrinkled by the Months that must
, leave their furrows there t` and 'With On'tye
bright With the light of hope and promise, ex
tends its welcome hand to ,the Weary genera.:
tions that conic to meet it.
• Say what men will oflife,' the 'voice of the,
New Year is Cheerful mid con, atulatory.-:-. 1
The Old Year is sad with tnemoriestheNcW.
cheerful with hope, and with the - sante! Spirit
and the same cheerfulness'.do Ice extend the
'hand to our friends, and echo Its voice o f eon
gratulation—reiterate its,words of promise.—
There is "a time .to weep and a time to-laugh,"
land if one spot in our existence is ,more prop
er than any other for .the formeriit is when we
bury the Old Year.. The monuments that line
its pathway stand over lost-friends, disappoint.
od hopes and 'broken promiSea. There - is
so the good that could' have been done • and
was not—the error eotnmitt,sd that, can never
be recalled—the pleasure we received" gone,
with : the objects -that, creat4 the'
hourithat we squandered, • lost beyond, the!
power, of redemption, and, why should no not ;
Ibe sad ? , But as we turn to the New Year, we!
may smile at its words of encouragement: Its
lap is full of blessings, mind life again offers us
the power of doing good. -With! our animosi
ties buried, we may start, with fresh resolu
dohs and fresh encouragements.- : We can, if
we will, help, the• weary, feed the hungry,
cheer the lonely-hearted,
! brighten the hut 'of
'poverty,. and turn the erring and the wicked
'to paths of truth. and happiness. ! The. warm
'grasp of thoserWe love tells of the pleasures of
I friendship that era !in store; %while the' glad
countenances about us are but indices of the
blessings with which the - year promises 'to
'!!These'gitli are to 'tc,fa cir
to our bosoms with hope, in order ta'Strength-'
en us for the struggles we. arelia enter upon.
Cheerful hope is ,as Powerful* ally as stern
resolve in accomplishing good, both to our
selves and others, therefore let the heart bright,
en up with the. encouraging words the New
Year whispers, in our ears: Besides, the plans
of Deity are to move . on towards their eon
summation, and we are reserved to: aid their
progress and receive in our bwn hearts the
reward- of doing good. 'The weary earth
staggers blindly on in its Path, yet'eaelt ye.sr
breaks one of the linksof its fetters, l lHrtens
- s
up one new star in its henven, and sends it one
step farther on tow,arai the paradise it lost.—
All hail, then, the New Year, with , its untried
scenes "and neWekperienees! '
Still it is with thoug,htful feelings wa should
cast our eye btiforeus. The great;thitigS of
this life do'tiot , hap Pen in cycles, but in!single
years.. In a single year the !ied swept tin) world,
and a new year ;rose race , and a
new earth. In a single year the Son,of God
was born on the plains of Asia. ' Within - each
year transpire all the events that go :to raake
IM the history of man. In.some single year
19ve occurred all the famines and pestilences
and earthquakes that, have sWept, men 'into
eternity, ln a single year did Christ die to
redeem n World. ' In a single year has each
man entered upon. his changeless state..'.
then, in some one year all thkgrent events of
life have transpired, and all that Makes
epa to tis..trpl.transpire, how appropriate, to
mal, the threshold of the New Year a breath
. .
and
hurried
spot—a thinking place in oar feverish and
hurried existence. Akwe'pass thrinigh , tirne;
it is to ns as if a bell was 'suspended in the
dome of the vast sky. Through the revolving
year it Kann motionless and silent, but as the
rear departs it swings, seeding its deep and
solemn peal round the :wide -earth echoing
uA.yetir 110 near
.. ,
IT3 riotlumultuons and-alarming to : the pui-1 the air its , richest perfumo; .strike;dowa•leilit
ward senses . The„uprear of battle 7 —tia sound )hood as he inflater!' his fran bark on the event-
of fulling armies—the terror of the advancing fulwaters of life:' and'whttrtheiieat warrior
earthquake, and all the din and' jar of outward returns frem the Ound - Of his esploitsyceveiedl
life, ire not. after all, the solcuinities•of life.— ,Kith glory, conquer hini, oliviirioiler; Mai halal
The changes that ought to- atrrest thought and third thy
. prisdner ! ' •'• ' ',' •l'• •,;:- I' ;'-' ,, i
-awaken emotion are unobtrusive and noiseless 44 The tiercc the stareinais ids",:i . l - 44 - 3 :'1; i,i,,,ii';''l
Alt his cares bow, are hvir, his Tait bilttli *a;
ea a passing breath. The old yeir dies rith
out a 'struggle, and the 'new eary is born in si- N A ,Ti l e k eettY p h = mtu if t ai t icacilairc ia d a ' a ,„ fi a ,i t s "C f
knee, We see not the' thresheld over which '„.i .. nr ,
77 4 ,1.,,,........ di .,:, --- --- ,,,,tr: - ' "
we step, br the reSponsibilities on which' we ' - 7:T:' a t '""l B44 ," ' .,l ' . . `r ,v., " ,_ 4 , ` ' ' .. 9! .e l___ . i c , " of_, ree—
-1
are to - cuter. The change _ptises over:us ° ,..°1"-,. ° `
~v`i.v".:'`` station= ".•''''' 9° ``eal e ' 4 ` et i t
with the new life that is begun, as well as the '.`'''''. `.." ° •! °l " for.._ i . .i. , , !V" ' ilF.. ri ttartl,dclit ' AO:ra
piano
of artinct cartel:lust thou shalt reiline. Lilla.4oo
change that has passed over all the
Deity from their progress , are not: seen and
matter ll'n7 brilliant his career, or hw a r " 44C1 '
cannot be felt, unless the - soul win . stop to molt splendid his. taleasorrust •In pro.,At
time, be encircled within_the2mitir of - :Ogee)
think of itself, and of the life that is fluctuat.
~ , , spot. of earth :-,- : .•.. - •:'l. ; -; I •;'...', l •-.. -
ing around us. ' '
„ The boast of haiitt
The New l'eur 'should alio; remind us that
-And an that beauty, 11 i: 1 h :e t * tf - rete -, :.
the number of years are limited, and their sol- Await alike MeaftMe l ho a ri k r 77! ,-- j13 ,.. , 5 . r !,777
elan revolution is soon to cease. Soon the Ttl.O paths of gloty'leitti bottoltse Otis.: -,:,"..
archangerivho stands and .pres on the dials Slt.ep on, noblir,dead of 'IMO; teel'ig i n ' l - 11 '
face, which yonder stands before, the San of Your 1 14 rest, and lain& Your dot ,vfdth AO
I Ilighicousnesa, and , , free soil of Columbia, . falba iranewedgirries
where Americans have . laid:*. ' Sleepoti,
while in; the inmost recesses ototrihearli,Yeiti
'names are cherished! • ; -:i '<'- • 7 ":t.,
",compates
Timea,.seasons, years, deetinies,
Anti slowly numbers o'er the Mighty cycler;
Of Eternity—" ' I •
shall see the last ray - that :fills on l‘the: gn0.. 1
mon Of Time," and seiiina his 'rtruttipet: and
sending it; rapid' blast over the i earth, shall
swear that "Time shall be no longer."
The threshold of the New yeai.it a t4'puoilt
-0
ful place, full of hope und.promise, but full of
reflection too.. It bids man ,"•throw empires
away and, be
..bhameless," but Ilene :squander
his.hdurri. ' • '
I asked nn:aged man, withloary hair, as he
Stood trembling betiveen tWil years, }Ottawas
time?--"Time (Im‘teplied) is the warp Of life;
oli tell the young and gay to weave it
The New . Year speaks also"ofa resurrection.
When charges shall cease, :tad Time;,nliieh
thelast thing that diei;altall cease'to be, the
triMlife, cif man begins. As. from the grave l
of the gm, the New Year, arises, so' from the
grave - of Time itself shall ,the spirit of man
ascend to a life that is perma.neut as-the throne
it surrounds, - Amid the changes and losses
and dismtointments and discouragementa that
envelope and confuse as here, this thought
comes like the Saviour's voice ovttr'the turbn
lent waters of Galilee, saying, "Peace be still"
--“ there is a birth which never dies, a piam.,,
ise which hexer disppoints, and 'a, life Which
never ends.". : _ . - _
TUE DISTEVGC/STIEUDEAD OF ISbO.
They have fallen! Nay, not tilien in the es
timation of their countrymen—,for their mem
,ories will ever flourish in grateful remenlbrance
—but their names have been stricken frotn..the
roll of
. living gmutness, and the tomb, that
loted teneme.ntiif mortality, ,has claimed;
its
own.
-Death, clad in his gloomy 'robes, ha.' s wan
dered in the midst of eloquence,of valor, of
erudition, and of Worth, Spreading .disrMay
around. -Wherever . ix? .has roamed he hae
uiused havoc. On ' the brosv of talent he
staMped his signet, and powerless :heearne the
lips of eloquence;_ he grasped the hand or. the
warrior, and closed his ears to the sound of the
drum and the tumult of battle, 7 • !
They have fallonl—but not until 'Fam6 had
enrolled their names high, 'very high, in her
Temple,' so grand and so towering--the Moues
of TaylOr,-Calhorin, Elmore, Prentiss, King,
Mason, Osgood; Fuller and Jones.
Twelve short moats ago, and Zachary Tay
lor stockl• before the world 14' the illustrican;
chief of o mighty nation, blessed with the love
and reerence of millions of freemen; and in
the tranquil enjoyment of every earthly bliss,—
a few more weeks glide away and becoine lost
in the revolution of time, and all that is left of
1 the President and the Hero, bid dust mtivis'on
to the last.resting,place of inortality, i t n :rep!
magnificenceoYl hi more than kingly splendtir
for his mound IS)ianored by thp . iisier i imd;tbe
lunnble; and moiiteno . by
_,lte terii, Otriff(Se
gait.' -- -, - . ; '..... ':.-,: ,•.;/ : •
Cll after all the toile of 5014 . i .:. - .l' l t 1 1
" . lbw hlebt the tqlive mau iiyg ll lhu 4 0 F0,4 J
Ilia bieris's tritimilmOsi— , r, - ) ;,
libigfiiii-liglottliskii>gotits 1 1, , ,
ro
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tilt tomb othei*olitil , Ok*Pßion.). o *
itioisittpint v ibotuhipxt, , ittgei,iiiii
giiiiio . 44.4***submart,i,be ,
iiiiidi s cOmtki:ttai: Itsiltmed
iiiiiiiilarthiand istr "iriss , bird Otiti 4 ,
ii . tiiiirlAnie, :,,,.;;', : :,f,...-:-:, -12Siti..7. -
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11.
Such is mortal's flontinibreath
Such fa WS and sualvii death.
His sword was in his hind, -
Still.warm With_ recent 'fight
Ready that moment at command..
Through rock and steel to smite
. 7
ty.-..rp t..t' - . : , ,i . w.trq': , .=:.
' ir1:0 efl.!
JlLflt'll fr.
.;.; .:,'.. , 10171 .!,:i ,i"
voLumE 'III. nun
"Bury me la ttis coriteun
. 0 ,;. -
, There - 'was sorrow 'there,pird, tel*vrereArt,
every eye; and there' werciA ow, halt,s4rgicp
ed sobbing's, heard from ` every; coiner. of , the
roan ; but the -.little sufferer :ryas :still OM
young spirit was just onthe verge: of depart
ure:. The mother imp bez,tding'oor:it• le ( all
the Speechless yearnings of nutternailo4,ivgla
one irm , under its pillow, and, with 'tihioti'e%
unconsciously drawing 'the' littlejilyi,iHiP,'4ll
clOser and' cIOSer to herb;';emn, ; r,eor, 'thfogf •
in: the bright and dewyrnoriting:if It:4-4'oll6n
"Cii out Wand itft pher,iiite . t he : fie 4; mut.
, .... ,.
white he was there engaged. inisjahor,ltiW •
patted around among the tneado!* Anvers, and
had ;duck its bosom' full, t alt lits brunisbcd '
tresses, withi t emmine-and. lily-tidal , , thin ,
and, returning tired tolls father's side,the /Md.
lifted it upon the, loaded cart;' but 'tll`titiettlill
the road had • shaken , it • fi.orn Its ;Seat; and i ihe
ponderous, iron rimmed wheelti . hadgrauhdvit
down into the yery . e.dri'PatliLluni'' the' 'We
Crushed, creature was iiiihit f i - '''`'!:''` i '! 7 l
We bad all gatheredmi:eiosety,l),,e4-
side, and mere banging 0v0.0e4.91 1 : 1 E 941•40
see it it yet breathed, when
c o slight aigv . ep l e g t
came' over its lips, and its eyes Nitilt 24=4
,ThPU-W.as to vnieni.butithetii isras-sometilliag
'beneath its eyelidi which Smother could alorte
interpret. Its lips trerabled agsin, nnii , Wi.'iill •
held our breath-4ts eyes opened -a little Thi
ther, and'then we heard the: deParting "spirit
whisper in that ear Which touched'th4e4ah'y
lips : ,( Mother ! ' metheri• don't lefth`erit' , , , 4
ry meaway down to thei&li;oold.grayO,ya4.
but b ury me in :the g a r ain-L-ii, the iirden
mother." • v
A little -. sister, 'who*, eyes. t werg „raining
sim . 7.-n with the, melting of the hearti bad:lentil.
up to,the bed-side, Int, 'taking up• the haraliEf
the dying girl,m'obbed.aloud in itS.,leari-.:Altt
lia! Julia! can'tkliu speakteatntoinette 1 1 4 _
: The last flattering Pulsation 'of •bifidring•rai
ture struggled hard to enable that: little'
,iiiiiilt
to utter one more wishi'aq a word
—*A •86,1 was on its lips'as if Wilts ii!ired: a goln a :
Burt/ riieln the iarded,'MOther4briry me itl
the- r .", multi' quivering One' ,ever its
.Ilinbs: 77
one feeble : struggle,endPil viraP4ititrv-.44;1741:
Nes. Pirernm•roks :'Liisi. "..:—Reitardetlie '
newspaper praises of JennyJand'SlfliiiimOlett
disposition, - Igrs.' Partington'eamp . :a . t/Ce coin,
Plimen t u7'exPre,"i?fi.iti 7e4P11 to ,the i`ifcl
- in her_bosioin," Which the. Sw
nightingale cherished toWarhs the•ii.ifcirt
%-•
and needy. Infoluntarily,,raising .per
cle:s, and looking the very- personifieati • iof.
amazement, the good old lady repeated....;
"A feller feeling in her bosom! - 'lii . . -dr. '
that aint just the way the fellemusediti s. lito • ,
when I was a girl r. :• • ' ' • • i'' • I''' 1• ":..
And then she re44tcpited kiteefittudibilid ' •
k e pt on reading: re. ::,- .it:,• ! t....?...ke0i-til-r; .hor.
. • • • ' - --' .• •tt, tfi !,i • nili 94.t a- i4r,,
. s ..A- drunken ANYer.PACIA9O O IO 0/ 11 04 -
was oWerved irttheznhilSon,
him thus," I will:beim wltce.eiii:a . ti-
the day oojutmote 4'4l,ll44titeifilliOd;WS : ::.`:l
fisid Withdrunkei ' ,;; ' t
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