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CIIASE, PROP New Year's Address liF ra CAD:III:a OF IRE NONITOSE DE3IOCRAT: Eighteen Fifty-One! twelve months mono , hailed thee as the ,glad new year, And crowned thy front of frost and snoW • -' With offerings that spoke our cheer Whidom gave the welcoming words, • !'And Beauty's sunniest smiles ,were thine, And poesy's harmonious Ivre ,p o uted forth its songs almost Dithinking childhood's gleeful vole° " 'Lisped out the "Happy New Year Irish, whet' age, made young again, •Br such excess of happiness lot;ent the brow of gloom and care, And joined the merry grou at lay; Bat I.elsneholy, urged out- d oor s tiougbt other where to spend the day. hope's promise-bow was o'er thee flung, And zoldemseemed the tningled braid, Ai it life's chequered scenes, for once, OS sunbeams only might be made— Net c louds. nor storms, should rise again, in obscure the dial-plate of Time— And truth's pure incense might be shed. Our fancies of the soul sublime. ' 16re all um:vet:this lower life• ielli but joy's unwaking rirentris, tirre man would give to earthly things, The pure affection heaven Claillls r . — Intl for ‘oin trifles wld'eli &ay, Of its proud birthright cheat his soul. triseTv God ordains, his rod shall the rebellions will control. town existence's tide we float, (int fcrht and shade are on our way ; i,les that cheek the ricer's force, m the stern dories of to-day— yikh the eettl crows stroti to dare le worst the world may haw in store, t tam that action—tuagic word— an“ open sesame" at faith's door. env and friends, since last we met, ",,,% boors crown Colinnbin's name, hard; {ducked from tnerev's shrine,. ircbrizhter luster to her gone: l . fcriot chief, the famed Kossuth— ellie from his fatherland— r thid. with us brothers beloved, ith friendly heart and helping hand. • Pheltered in our quiet homes, 'here Peace looked on with love-lit eye, head the din of strifefrom far, J priced to Him. who rules cm high, Turd the cause of innocence, n 4 let the olive's I:ldeless- wre:..th idmlin wave o'er every realm, Lilst freeborn Ireart s should beat ben mitt) ~Fr, Hang:try—land of the brave-- A-II know her day of trial past, :1, 1 , Nand's bends Le rent in twain. - her fetters east: lilst ; Ftnee shall lift - her hands-on high, Lad parifv her altar fires, tftarts' laws o'er all the earth - P - Sive but to light their funeral urn. the search . in Northern seas, For Sir John Franklin and his,. men, ,redall in vain: old ocean's depths - Yield not their prey to earth azain. d ninny a loving heart shill wait, hod ini - stin2,lvatch a quick retnrn, hone shall die. and fear prove trae, And lease the stricken heart to mourn.. 6 Sightinnale" of Swedish birth, • • And otairous song, came o'er the sea, Chaim coytausie-Toving souls- With u I her thrilling . melody. her. came a "Swan" from Erin too, And hocr.rti oar hearts seemed fell before nitehin raptors! beam of day ! • Thy seraph tones made room for more. of enterprize is on'ils, Awl Strange inventions, very ; r mat ban set his brain to work, That hands need nit get weary. d time and distance, worst of fors, lave.round themselves Outwitted, faiaoed,by a ruse de pram ha like bond servants treated. a;e of progress dawns on us, nen weak, retiring woman, e!ri idmulder alt the carts of State, Ike any sturdy ye:prnan--. mint the stump for public speech, . \or blush to cause a racket, dtithemodest, lenzh3- skirts., or pettiloons and jacket. cm itte of wonders ! Who can doubt; 7 neiCspirits—(new don't ehockie)— btek to tr. n, knock a Asir ',they'd io wowodenand knock les ?out, 1 amsip of the world below, Witicany crone who'll call them, • 4 tell their fortune—What has pass'd; 'Ad What shall yet befall titan. i' , dl)4 back lettcrs.from the Ilead,. • - :As ifthey'd mail bags plenty; In as-they claim enormous fees, '1 guss their purse is scanty. hi • merli beside, your Carrier 1 1 alas not the skill to unravel, nt set thepeople's mouths slape, Tillilieir wits escaed—what man-ell' ed still our 'Union "is intact, . • ,10 spite of Southern tuggers, - • • lid knavish politicians; who . ~ liismveziltils:;eiNeut;orthteiretnir d'asnticeiglgir;ornui To my them for their v croaking,..: . ...; latch ;he-Slipper fugitives, ; kith surely - provoking v o - 15 . . . vinous world Iris been afloat, • ; To see he -Exhibition'," . int irares from me condition foreign port, Were shown in prirne , condition, ;. - v CrAlal l'alce that might Alumna • ; - halls of ancient itorY ; ,htOnt titlfont magic aid s 4ea rtilhisitt all its glory. lifunia still 'mains tit Ellrado of youni and old,' tt 4;andi, like the. Astounds, v. ... ,Utth to seek the fleece of go ld ; -. .k1i,ir6a they think to "clasp z4;lisstore that so tempting-sootns mr Nttitie's whr ' • ' • i feel will . take a turn, cP.I-5-.seate kick tho end F: 4l 3'•One! i I go er,n Afb the past' 'lcon' who dons not?--L. , _ „ ~,1 - ' e Yle . widi its deeds i . -- ' .3 and, lA "'' • . ' . . 4 :litill.bv i'44 ti lEtern,l ,stwlnne, I outranno worm has wytteti . a4.7sin.- m , ~... ;141 qu;* 4 hsor°l°ge, Stll/41irtiXtrlita beforii_heaKen and-n - 204 . 011i, tt iou , art c a greaterinatne than thine! lone cannot find ifinifjelf beside thci fotni Alit'it dick, hi,i! i r li ' The dirksonie" Tian, ..; one° shooks Eurcipeivitilltit tread; a:itliotdOie :i sA it 1 - 'mr° tips each Passing year,' tprbroundest::-emotiorts: : - .l3nt.the aini -that ltd. hag gathered'all , - nri land, :4 - nd the wprld liee - sfill,andl)le•thofightial fore.. ,'0 which tlioS didat giv i i' d'' it tiousrdis read heir des * * eus Jere. .1 len on sibe na _ 4' ill . iilid th ' ' . " * 4 ' 4 tin . 'iS now onli aVI lored4l- i <1:!(** Secret l*eithl r illowin i ;::.. r ( .: i , , .. , NAPOLEOW '' ! • '•,-• • • :. •, 1 ihin that' wiles! the home of sueliWildatabition,llle who . - IMdraised himself loacaeliserably - . IA - : . . . . ' • -'- ' - - •• - -""-• .--' '' ' -' - 1 ; ' -1 1 is tell °lashes: , - -..- .: -, ..'. -. ~: , - , : I alio4) his race-Stvliemust have been regarded - " . , i I - , _,_. isttgod, lINI J. T. ISEADLE. -._ ~. -• ' , ,-;,.:j ~ • The grave' reckless leveller. and he who l by his telloWn as little kss than a' who ! Truth -is strange—Stidnger than fctioit:" -I .- - '- ' - ---". :.. • :-: • , t -' . i ' - -,; !root at .last , god's thunder,' is only:one of thirl had inscribed, his Dam on , the. very heavens, . Under' thii , heading, - The Leng Island Star I I 1 One 'morning as I strolled f rom ih o :lf o i c i, thousands be len: on his, battle-Mile: liii . and had: written in the sin, mitt a "pen of publishes an Interesting talc, cur the extended r de lleutiCe..(tbe Astor 'House .of ,!farts,) in fierce onsees t -and terrible'paSsngcs, and Wag.• iron, and the -point of a diatnotur—eved this' , details of yvhich. we cannot; find room,.(eays . search of rooms,l stumbled on an object which lug carnage; and Waterloo defeats are all over.; one has perished from' the earth--name, ' age, lan exchange) but must content ourselves with i ' , for a moment held ire - b,a deeper_ sPell ' than 1 Crumbling back tr . , dust amid a few "old; so!- reentry, arc all swept into, oblivion ; bet the 1 giving the leading . facts in a coudynsed form, I anything I had seen in ,ra nee:. .To this Rife (tiers, le ft as a, mockery oldie magni fi cent le- P rou d achievement stands: ' The; monument for the benefit of our riniders.- • - ---' ; pa et s o -the ' Vietoire,clesd beside th&prinei' Ib'li - f gions he wag wont to lead te-battte,;he reads I reared to-his hon or stands; ..and although. thu 1_• A young grocer of geed ieharacter omelette. , ,_L city, stands a small house abveral • rods' titan . a I silent, most impressive lesson en ambition j to uch o fTinto has effaced the lettering of his led business in a good_ and jiinproxed neighbor the-street, and appitached. 'by a narrow, lane., to the world. I turned awali.dn the deep ening I name, ft is powerless, and cannotdestroy, the hood. His stock ,was sindll, as were also his It is situated in the - midst. of::-a_ „garden, 'and tWtlight, feeling that ;I would not sleep in Bo- fruits of 'his victory. ; -;1' ' . • . means, and his Stock, of :Oustliners was still ' , „. ea , the resid ence. -, ot Joseph i ne wheel , th • naparte'S grave for Bonaparte's fame, ~ . , - A thousand years roll , byt.tho • astronomer smaller: ' Eli Seek hardlY met his expenses, i 'young Napoleon first yielded his heart to her' , 1 --- ; - ' - , stands on the watch=tower - tir old Babylon, and; lie_ tvascvidently,going '' down. hill," and - , , , . charats. : The young soldier had then never :PrOdieltiOrt. Of the • First .Eclipse-iStid writes for posterity' .the records . of an an old grocer on.the opponite corner predicted dreamed of the wondrous-destiny that nivnited jI - - • - -*. •' - ; • •1 eclipse ; this record escapes destruction And he would soon-be at the bottom. . • 1 him,nethad Surrendered his Soul telbat Waist. ' ...,' ' ' 'ir - itoto . r. o.' ittirent.t.: :' - ' 'l' is safely. wafted down the stream of time. But . That th e young grocer'hadreasonto regret _' ... irig, ambition which consumed every generoui •-• V . " ' - '. . . thousand' years roll away: the old ;astronomer, this opinion of the old grocer ` will appe a r. i quaity; of hi nature, and army pure' , feeling To those Who hare; given bat little ationtionl surrounded by the ftree,-Itutwondering, Arab, The latter had a daughtea who; had von•the i , lof his heart.. Filled with other thoughts th an t h e suject, eveir in onr_oWn . .day;with-all 1 Agars Writes, and marks .tka a 4 ii d a t wi t . heartiof . the former. ,He ofilled himself :.to I , 1 those of unlimited dominion, and -dreaMing cif' the aids of modern selencethe prediction of anitmsses the sun's. decay. A t housand years ; her and Wai rejected. It was done, howereij.. I other things than fi erce battle- fi eld& he Nvould ecliPse seems sufficiently Mysterious and ; um. I roll heavilY away:: dime chore the aStronomer 1 -with the assurance t that he was the nian of, her I tern his footsteps hither, to poor the.ttall of intelligible.. ; How, then, it was possible, thou- I writes, from amidst the gay throng .111:it crow& 1 °mit+, buttlist she acted in (kcaI:NU:CU her' hisaffections in Josephine'S ear. - 1' His - heart' sands _of years a ,.., :0, to. necoMplish this . rmie . 1- the 'capital of 'Europe. ltecerd. is - coinpared I tethers commands.; . ' . , . - , • . . ~ . ' I.with record, date-with. date, revolution with 1 AsOred of . tire alli"etionl of the WOnlan; of i th robbed more violently before a Single rook - 0r t ii . - 4 '' -' tr t - .a okm„ w 1 mu any pis views *I . the ; • ' . ' and 1• - • than • ' did amid brevelation, the past and present- to,gether.,--an-• his choice, he set himself ibout reinaving .the Ia sing.e N mee, Lan it ever 1 roar of arti ll ery :Ind the sound !failing armies:4 ibfe. Folk,* Me, tlipn,yhile I attempt to re- ' lother struggle tommeiwei—nnother, triumph ;only . Obstacle in the way of their Union—the I. The eye. before Which tho•world 'ildied at.l vent the trairi_of reatrOninr,, , which - led to thet. is won: Little did the Babylonian dream that' father's objection to his pecuniary prespeet f j tag, and the pride of kings went,' dOwn,fell :Al prediction of the first eclipse of the sun, the ' he. was observino for one 'vim, alter the lapse ! A year ' had plapsed, add lo! wluit a change! I the pie or a single woman, and her tiute-like I most daring, prophecy ever Made by Inman of thr e elh etm"nd e ' years, should rest upon this . IThe young grocer was non! going uphill with (voice stirred his youthful blood wilier than ] genies.; Follow, in imaftination, this bold id- ! very record . the summssfur re-solution of ono the poss•er of a loemirotive. Customers flock -1 the shout of " Vire r Einpereur . :',- from from-rho terrog,ator of the skies to .hid solitary moon- - i •of NatUre's 'darkest Mysteries. • led td his store. from alt quarters, - and even enthusiastic_ legions, that' cheered hire as he, taiii Suunnit..."-witliclrawn from the world—sue-; - - 1 advanced. Those Wcre this purest days of his / mended by his mvsterkies circles, there tot , opposite , corner, fertile young liworite. ' There I 1 ' ' . HAPPINESS. i was m mystery abed this Which. puzzled the 1 existence, and we believe the only happy ones., watch and ponder through the long nights of 1 .._._. ..• _ ' , 1 old groeer surely, but which he could not,Ml - ever passed. When the crown of an einp-1 many—many years. But hope cheerS him on t tror pressed his thoughtful forehead; he must land sm.:mills his rugged pathway. Dark and 1 . -.or As onsot.ETr.-,Nenrrral., ! ravel.! He at length bottime nearly siCk ndili lintve felt that it was better to-beloved by one deeires is -the problem, he sternly grapples I- !rosseS and ions,aggravatioad vain attempts to I I devoted heart, than feared: by nstore of kings: with it, and resolves never to give over tint ' There probably was -Hater an ago of the! discotler th e secret his•neightior's suCcess. lAs I stood before the !nimble dwelling, -and victory crowns his e ff orts. . " .. i world in which - so much pains were r 'taken to '; At this juncture, Angelica—fur that was the thought of the monuments of Bonappe'.s _ lie has already remarked that the; moon's . :,inake mankind utter and happier ; and y e t, i daughter's mune— contrived to bring about an , itime that covered France and the , wo Id, I track in the heaven's crossed ; the sun's, and ' front the experience of e long lif e , as we lt as apparently aceidentil interview between the i could not but feel how poor a choice he tmide that this point of crossing. , was tit some way ! pretty extensive acquaintance with past gm . ; partie& After the old man bad becOme, i after 'all.- Surrendering the pure joy that immediately 'connected with the comino of and ; etati " s; durit.e'l from hisMiY;l- doubt whetit- t the intervention of the daughter, 4,1,1.3(41 i springs ,froin offection, and, the heaven ol a dread eclipse: ...//e determines to watch and 'er the present has much to boast of in corn-„good huniored, he inquired with great 'earnost- I quiet home for the - him - eft-of armies and the learo whether the point;of erossino' was imed, I prison, with the past. In morals we certainly : !less 'of th e young man, how he had contrived ) rown of thorns wbicli unholy ambition weark ,dr whether the moon, in leach . succesAlve rm.! have alit improved upon the ,pittriarchs of the to effe'et so meal' inn single year, to thus.ex- i Ihe wrecked his own hap) Mid - .sant • to - 1 elution, crossed the sun's path' at-a clifferer.stj Scripture; and as regards happiness, the out. i tend, Ids business mid draw off the customers ' ' igether. lie made life one great hattle-field,l poipt. ,If the sun-in. his annual - reeoletion / ward condition of a large portion of the lint . ti n the older stands. i and drOve his 'chariot of war ever heaps ofi could leave behind Win a trick of fi rei walk- I man race, in countries that boast of the_ higial The young man-evaded an answer—but in-; • I slaiii, and rip the ailetroes in. human bleed; mug his journey among. tht, Stars it is ' (mind marl[-test degree of civilization and refinement, will 1 quired if he had any further objet ion to his 1 --,, , . !derive no triumph from a Comp:wiser, with . union I with .i,ln,geliea. !" None," replied lie, , Tha iir ' t W him' to gain at last,--a grare, He &add I toave had that this seine track wail followed f• ' ' • loin 3, ear , inure • ISSIOII. - 0 - - as gton-- that witliout such. labor, :awl .one, , over Ito ye:Mend from center; to century with un I periods of pastoral simplicity which, :"provided provided yeu reveal the secret of your sue- ; which does not hang such darkness and g loom deviating precision.. But it was see ' ' e ir discov-1 . I however embellished by poetry, certainly once : cess.7 I l'his the young nnin premised wheel '- -- Tinion - anionglle4. las rest on his. How often, in the Midst of his I Med that it was far different with the moon. extsted in the world. t . '. ; I his h a tiaras was made complete. • The old.; ..' k Ipower, most that voice of singular melody, i In.base.she;too; emild leave behind her a sill After all, however, hajofi'ness, nithetr , h . the 1 man commended his prudence on this 'Iola! _. 4 whose tones, it is said,' would arrest hint in ver thread of , light, sweeping, ; round the h 1 rou e env- universal pursuit of k . ~ • not identified 6 ; The affitir was _ad settled, cud. the marriage , man 111e,LS - . with.ay conditions 0 of , :my iliac _ etcu . soon took pliee. , . - , - , ' .1 . , For . mirky six thousand years wbrlda the midst 0 the gayest ass e m bl y haee fallen ens, in com p letin g one revolution,crosgin g the . youn•-• - ropte Were all"-nais without one - pure patriot • for - nearly six I The friends of the . . ~, . . ~ ,- , • •- . . {on his ear like a rebuking .spirit, telling liim I snu•S fi ery track ata. point Welt of the previ.'Joyment, ,or any adv.ine t e r s in mere human ) - ~ a ssembled; and nutong..- there many of the vim.; thousand d - sears ear ravelled been liiikittg pro. lof his baseness, and bringing back faint Mims ohs crossing. These points' Of crossing were 1 knowledge. It is a creature of the mind more ?'.co mers of the two stores. Ang,elieMand Irionn.lgrss before it &educed a soldiermithout rum [of that life he never could'iive at. - cain. ,i . called the moons rind" s.' .At each h-revolutiOn I than the body,. and the must common error vu e ' looked as happy as well could he, and the; biti r oma d statesinan d witliout guile, .n ruler who 1 The Christian cannot tuns& over his many the node occurred 'furthet treat; mail, after ' Ommit is that of estitantin,g the happiness of 'i a l d gentlemanly:is, a .pos § i} ? le, happier than r ore erre to i five . m . i er equal lawSratlier , than fieldS of blood without the' deepest execration olcle of about nineteen- yeare,„it - years - eircula. I men by their POssession of what, we suppose • The bridal cskewMi AMA to be mit, 1, 1 tle law ninselt, . lof Bonapartes chancier The warrior .nine - is in the same direction .entirely around' the the Means of tieing happy. If it were puss[ .l tlic Y' , when the old mall called out for "as-sweet." , ' He had been leoked for: . through the long 1 !recount the deeds u•rought in that mirdd coli- • . 3 . i eeliptie. , Long and patiently did the nstreno- i ble - for us to be content with our 'condition in ' "Ave the secret" "the Secret" excla'aried "Years of injustice; and i .ni srule,-.of fraud. and , i flietibutthe_Chri/;4 eva • le a k % r,rti0,...;.t0.....tuer.-=tch.andsv.aittut e ,4l,, , } ...1e., .I,lout_enhinginto utter listlessness and i gh. ,.. .S . '. 1 • , .' S 1r .. • • •' , . • °rm, nis expected oming. had a. hope lir the 1 th, hinken hearts arias made, and to the fenri se,rveni ana Its attendant eireomstances are re:l - a - Piti.Yiq ,o4 -19 0.15 5 15 1, col irtr. le• - •--triat'''-‘etrar e ,,.....,___•• ' - _...„- , ,;' • ~-•,, „„" ' - 1 fld retributions of the -judgment. --I\'o will not I ccirded,' - when, 4t Lot, the .darknc , sa . begins-, to 1 anything stimmum &num %villa,. go • I nZeed. I „1 jaw ' - -- - ••",;,. r•-•iaa„.‘ter,,., 5a.i...,L,,..1.,ii Thorns, ?. hearts of Men. All 4 often ft seemed that be - , spee.k of the plivsicil Suffering- crowiled.into give wav, and a ray of lig,lit'breakS in upon ' the aocient philosophers. , sunsE - ;„ . , , ~.------ ..- - :. ..lhad omit, f 1)ilt they who ran tO Meet him and I . Thus old gentleman was very, r'eri . ol4 fish. I laidefferinosnt-hi . r. t . ' . with . 3 4ii t ~,t 1, 7 13 Othete _non this one day, fur we cannot appreciate it. Th e ,liiii mind. He finds that no:cclipSe . .of the 1: - One day, as - the Den•ish Almon% the 'Wis. i toned, and while he shook Thomas heartilv lit •1 rods„andgi; • I su ff er ings, o f one s i n gl e man with his,shatter-1 sun ever occurs unless the sera-moon is in ilie 1 est'ol - 111 1 the - folloir ers of the Prophet, and the ; th e h a nd, a nd ki sse d A nge li m fir t , - . ti,i,„ ( ;, , ,; 1 . still Ibis .homgatiiered strengtll,l4the ! led bones ,piercing Idso imlii straggle s in his; act of crossing the sun's -trash: . :HOe wins a; oracle of the chief Mufti of 'Stairibord, wlis Ihe merely muttered, " lily f/ d• k .did ,Y ra 'd- n • ' time tt •Ir tof 1 - it ~ se- re ens . t 'it . ee,a ,ta CL in - le a n it es am u o pain; his suffocation-, :Ind thirst, - :Ma "bitters grand discos:Ay: • lie holds the hey: Aillich lie: sitting in - a shadY grove by the side of 'a ! j*, Mi l & .(4" dr a t - ? " . ' , .. . .„ . „ ~ ..;. iNtnie to redeeM it frees its fallen estate. ! prayers drowned amid the roar ofickttle ; hiS believes' will Unlock. -the dread „mystery,. and i. 'bubbling founLain on the shores of the' Bos- - • * ' The Lord planted garde,a d• ' ' . -- i • , mental agony as he thinks of his Wile and , now, with redoubled energy, here Solves to : phonas, trying to find out the true road to hap- Eerier -4 .-t - Notliii;2- in it r s:ty , ..' the for. , - Eden," and them!! he, pMan formed hi ail lehildren ; his last death-shriek, are utterly if,..1 thrust it into tIM Wards,. and drive I:rtek. the 1 piness, 'in order that lie might bene fi t his; fill , order, - • • "•- -- ' --•• ••• • • .w throwing detVd the paper wh ic h cos t , own image,the posscs•sor of•lifeandhappiness. • I conceivable.' Multiply th e , so t o „ o f, ..thi s man i s l bolts. •..,, , - , _ . . . . f low creatures by communicating the discovery, , ! hours oflabor, wh e n -he perhaps • was asleeri, ' But Inc was tempted fend felt„ and his estate suffering by_ twenty thousand, and l thenogr, e. t To predict an cellpse.of the sun. 'he must; his speculations, were interrupted - .by n• man because it contains nothing .of freights midi . forfeited ; aiid,,*ith 4 curse upon his head, he gate who could tell? Then charue :ill. tins sweep forward fromnew Moon tatieit -, moori,l fierily ekitket i, .! i vhe , aPPl'l'aellisg , sat: down i prices helmv.' - 1, -'' ' • ' : • - 1; wes drii•ed froni ' panidise. - Urtitittisnia, his' over to one meas. . anibition, and rwlio shalt 1 Until he firtds - suraenew-,Moon,- which should , l and sighed heavily,...erYibg out at 'the seine 1 Nothin g. ' t,'' I - ' the " I .. ' I‘ bel ies, 'l' ce WaSset.;-arst weqtward , his children teem , In i :exc. anns le over o ,• “ .. -. . . .. . measure his ill ; dr Say bow dark mid terri.; i oecor.while.theinoon. was in the net lof cros s - I time, . •''' -.- • , .- .• -- ' 1 after a vain - search for a paragniph that tiMglit I.laill. driven kitting .their- patent:ll-estate, . the ble his doom should be 1 - Bonaparte was a Log from foreside,te the other. of: the sun's ; `Oh! Allah ! I beseech thee to ralieVe me ; throw hint into co n en t s i ons ,T- .. .... -. , . ~ ! happy- msnsiorr of their Either behind.. - -- • man of - great intellect, but he - stands tharged -1 track; Tid.s ecrLdniy: Was f invisible:: lie lOf life, - or the burdens with which it is laden. "1, ' Nothing in it? sneers the * politieihn wliO! , • WestirariVitill - westviard. they' continued With crimes that blacken and' torture the soul knew the4eadet,peried from new moon te'new 1 'Alcnoraii,'-wlia was it sort of ' amateur "43f i , dreams the coun t ry Can't be Safe withent hini Hto go; but though they were ever testing i forever, and. his accusers- and :witnesses:: Will 1131.00 n, atil from ene crossing, - of the: cii i iiie. to misery, because it afforded-him the Pleasure 1 when he finds little the paper'regarding the' jheir aneestrairabodestill - farther in 'the - rear,l Irise from almost. every field .I n ;E repo- ar id, canother.. With eager eyeS,h.e seizes the rooon'e. of administering consolation, approached the state ofthe nation..-..i - -± . : , .- . :.- - - :'.- . „-. ;,:tk.y. - tvore:all the -tinrecornirig, near the eendi; I come in crowds from the. banks: of the Nited Placosin the heavens, and her age, Midiapidly man of sorrow , and kindly inquired ,the cause `Nothing in it!' lan guidly saysilie maiden -lion- which tures;onee'. there enjoyed. -,- Theirl ;He met and .conquered - Many armies, but 'er -leoteliateSwbeie She crosses at her nex:t eliange.l of US - griefs': -,. - - . ' 1 Who souolit the' poet's- corner . and .founit a I!t*iiii was gned,id ehititen, sot ten, and pm, i f •- . i ., .•--• 1 i He finds the new moon occurring firlfro 1e;• -. i. - • discovered ' -' ' ' ;''' doss '"'t'-' ' " ' ; ; ' 1 er stoo d ace to lace n h such uteri-dile t ar. ; ~ ;-In h , . Art, thou in vu ant o .food, -- of of l the miscellany, and an e s,..rify their corm() ed natures; and at eiteli,re... l ray as.when lie, shall bei-unimmieffroM this ; sun's track ; he-looks 'arena . another revole- - 1, h ea lth,- or ' any of those comforts of 'life that .say on - Wool Growing or Grump: . -' ' - 1-- •" '- , inore,,l•insterid of dragging 'it - heaVier chain, I .0,!, [gereet - au 7 The hcpii'or.lijuiyieiti:*ett,..:reeelle4.—iti liecttoni4end- 116 I)4ll63i:elide& lotteiVere' tl E into 1110049 re; fuVealle This eu ' I :40140d gpii. thews his liertittf; blessing.' mitt?*.hie dylntc . 01,1 t,heet 119%y I - . 1 youliE.) . .N;: -- :.m.BRRI- tier had gained, aid how they had paned it;; ursf hei told them how- - -they could retain the blessings they had aelli*ed. I- • ; His eye surveyed:We extent, tho beautyand gt - catuess trthe.eountrY Which had Imen po t 7 tiidly mdeesued - from the muse procioutift , d Adam r earnestly' and: afieetionately gazed at the busy and.hoppy thrisigs that watched "for his, kit bettedictiew; and his heart swellea within; him us ho solemnly uttered the Last promplinga -of ltis patriotic , spirit, " B 0 mato& and free!" and•thea passed forever him the abodo2:of mortale, . Se far weltaie obeyed his' : monctioti'An d' inherited Ids bleising. ',The wilderness ha/ Oven dray to fields and tnetdoinand guide* - cities and • towns and iillageei rover - all .thee litunts!of the deer , and ltufrtlipi our: rivers am • crowded with ships and' boats,!our,people: fly j from province: to province, ou the ; Finn of stumn r citir thoughts mat wishes are comiatt tiie.tted to Oat trtendS seattercd allover this. j fair land, by the vietrlisi niesiengers of 'the. eler.tki We are thrifty-r-weaMlice—vre'lliti! increasing with tantizinzt - Mpidity' in• strength; arid substance, and:eptufort.. ,:la them:lids% tf ourahnisionee, we aro si,:etire ,tre am, soter:: , con, ove:alleglance, to,nd trut*and , pay, trila;, rgo to 11COlkal. .We 11144 laws terrnitt oar: selveii--!-IrO fight no inan's. battle* n'ere:rsp; tvln:re . Ve t3o")v, and' go , ritithei. w fist.' A. be6.l4.lvigorouis, and intrepid -,Tn sprung front and taken 4he plaee Hui de: ceased bruised.bodies that iderid the eye itv ether/Inds; and it has spread its thrifty dies to the limits of ther - eontrneht-. • - . I said that at each remove (4' ?in !ace iron; its birth-place, its condition 'eras 'unproved; that tkoin the beginning al, exae it had tOCCII *lowly reg+fining soma of tho•procions things; lost by : Cm grand shipwreck:of lidion. Modem science has revealed another !fact: wo now know that in our progresswestward we , have been in Ext on the - road - -a . long weary ono ii haft been—but we haVer.ettutifyteen oft the roadto the cast. = And now, from the bor.. ders of the welter!) sea; the l cliiidren of Wash:. it tan extend to the Southern - or Prteifie; and,` lustbeyond this Vaeific iis the east, the stmt. - !. big point. We hare arrived in view of thin. our first abode; we have made the circuit of I the earth in exile, and' now are Apo-Melling the' paternal heard ) redeemed; regenerated; f and disentliralled. Happy! and proud, erect 1 and hopeful, the children orAdam gaze across, the Pacific, upon the acenee•of their fathers' glory and disgrace; rind, - with freo limbs, and Irenovatellhearts and joyful recollections' of ' perils , past, or dangers overcome, and crimes* expatiateiN hail' the old ancestral home. Ns., ture there still glows in all her ancient &ries; there are stills the golden akies,-the spier groves and the tin fading flowers of paradise:, But a brooding curse inflicts the air; the flow-. err still bear the stain of Abel's blood. Ana, they who have lingered there are still branded with tho marts of Cain; deatk, !Mint death; still hovers - over and about them, and the dreadful doom pronounced im the firat sinning, manund woman has, with- agota b rated horrors, been their constant portion. ' But now, front 1.-..--,...... Lo rif i e m , ft light, has dawned ,upon them, ir0m,an0,..,.. 1 ,,,,-- „„.... ~ ..+1.w... - 1 1 0. dawned upon - their long lotig - ti k k,o,wor firciouil' And "u ith the naive-ot_christ and the Clint. , Berea hope conies anew name; and it is Whis; t pored iit the dungeons andel:ales, in thri'dens. of wretchedness_and the places of pridel It. kindles an unwonted' glow in ;,the - winkled heart of phitanthrOpy; it strings the nerveless larm of patriotisin, mid awakens a now song on • thu lips of eastern bnrds. : . Like thoshadoW of a great sock hi a Weary! land it is`a forage and n eoinfort; and they: who have heard it, look oat and 'lwo amazed. I They'seo a eilent coast become soddenly alive' 1 with 'a new and noisy rindb us tling race qt peo.L plei butliPng cities, coveri n g the waters with I, travelling palaces, found ) g greet states, and admin4tcring justice endkee ping ;order! with 4. not Vile -aid , of:armies' 'or of soidieng. 1 And. thely see mtiong these people with some, thing of the' erect beating and Majestic, prest eacc of Adam and women in whose faces shine glimpses of that spiritual light ef those; morn-1 nig Imes which graced the first !Mishits Or Eden. • ' • •. -•-•;,, These are the people Who Airlift, that name! I which has n)vakened holm in the . ast the peo., i Plo in whose , hearts is engmied the'great name rof Washington. , In. the centre of their eons. Itry stands the city called for him ;rind from:it to the remotest extremes Of that extended country, radiate -,lawand s justice, protecting 1 governing ? and supporting all tho • vast multi - I lodes 'of people. - whouovor that-)wide country with the improvements, the comforts; tourer", I Menet* and, ornaments of art and science: . And over thetwfloats'n: Meteor: ling, which none , dam insult or touch- With irreverent!. 1 hoes P wfitig which on,the Andeivand Llitw.l ovitayalt iiiiiiontuins, • in the deserts ,ot Arabia,. I and in the polar wastes, render& scents from the hostile or plundering hand of, man, savage , ' 10f civilized 1111 wlia.repose beneath it. _ Ii 15 a. ! charthed flag; on its `starry folds, is fixed ma ! chanwmore powerful ever-adhered to Med ritone or relic, to 'letters or 'slit-mans - or'," pritafPorta of kings and potentates; i Itts'Wonk which mimic us, free; it is the. troll' which' heti , ' led pa to glory and to power—it is, the °Vet* I blessed; the all-pewerfid,, the/,all-conquering;, B Pluribur Mum; that isja its motto! ' Ohir of i ! out man, Chet'-is the- tidismanic.sentinee"' 1 which protects ; the American. ti titon,.the citi-' i rem of the United ~ , Welie,s, in all quarters of the.' ! anti. Ito isrmver riloile,te 13 lever utignati , ' I el/ ). Tito a great moil:itch, Protecting hosts: ! marelt -by his sidediosts that:are better' than 1 the guards , of. hinga, for they are hosti' of d -M ,filii: brethren." An hei roes, his c , intereste'pr his inelinntiont lead him: ho push.- ! es ltia.researches in, all ; the miners, and nopktkv and holei.Uf thia.pranct,l -he plants lilinsolr, and `lii"'customs, e nd' takeshis einurol'Anik: followilda 'delites; ft - free, aggions, and inn Ventin,, o.; noutaging,' cheerful , M 341; rateldl i eik4 - andinctspendout, in all -zones/sad:al 'lititudek,? till Miring, nispectiavand , kiving ' st;etteticer', te Itiin veer whose head-ht emit! Med 444 wiuming petite/we,;••E Plit'lna Mum S- Ham- Idin oot i , ror ; lioja OnalMantbn g gPril' iTh lli t I .la•the linignako which our ; bannerapeaksptl4, Wthifanly,tiage - whickthedis.ide d. and alm. o htia frifico of tho Bast look on withw p Onder , and iterightl - ••With %midi- ied *lli Aio,..bloolt: Of brethren, -With lejecleil Mk* 'hnd'-800'lltoit" faeckbncuricastots stattediilt Iheiroxile mast.' won:lt/ 0 M Am:Pleasant bito , ..of Nile' rap of thejop4;!'.ovitit,batAirof music tin elmerfat, .7, n esvuthe „..a . songs, ellii-•91111. . s tri d e,: ivitir°44 :Rica a illeir paternal hoti "Ion!? = _ ►e '' b„-,•' r their flaunting banners flash' the Wkirds, I" j ert , Y midlialoni ontilta imieVasktiloiticnr 4 i t i onrm ~/,,:,:--•,. :,,,,:, --:1t,,-..7,',.-;'... Vic inkfc'bi:ol,4 9f, hive Itil-ttPk_ticat iittt lqpihor." - • • • •••-• lEEE