giast frogrittors. sthrt Vottrg. Fro:utile Kniekorbocker Gall ery. The snow-Shower. jr,WILLIMIC CULLEN NET* NT. Stand here tiy my side and turn, I pray, . On the lake below thy gentle eyes ; • The clouds hang over it, heavy and gray, And dark and silent the water lies ; And out of that frozen mist the snow . In W ig flakes begins to flow ; Flake affbr flake,- They sink in the dark and silent lake. See how in a living swarm they come From the chambers beyond that misty veil. Some hover awhile in air', and some • Rash prone from, the sky like summer hail. All, dropping swiftly or settling slow, Meet, sa are still in depth ' below ; • Flake after flake • Dissolved in the dark' and silent lake. .;• Here delicate snow-stars, out of the cloud . Come floating downward in airy play, Like spangles dropped from the glistening . crowd That whiten by night the milky way • There broader and burlier masses fall; The sullen water buries_them all ; Flake after flake, Alt drowned in the dark an& silent lake. And some as on tender wings they gilder • From their 'chilly birth•cloud, dim and gray, Are joined in their fall, and, side by side, Come clinging along their unsteady• way ; •As friend with friend or husband with wife , Makes hind in hand the passage of life; Each mated flake Soon sinks in the dark and silent lake. Lo! while we ire gazing, in swifter haste • Stream down the snows, till the air is white, ,As, Myriads by myriads madly cheesed, They fling themselves from their . shadowy • height. - .The heir frail creatures of middle sky, - What speed they make, with their grave so nigh; Flake after fl..ke, • , To lie in the dark and silent lake! I see in thy gentle eyes a tear; 'They turn to me in sorrowful thought; Thou thinkest of friends, the good and dear, Who were for a time and now arenot; Like these fair childien of cloud and frost, That glistens moment and then are lost, Flake after flake, All lost in the dark.and silent lake. Yet look again, for the clouds divide ; A gleam of blue on the water lies; And far away, an the mountain side, A sunbeam falls from the opening skies, But the hurrying host that flew bet ween The clbud and the water no more iv seen; Flake after flake, At rest in theilark and silent late. • Visaßaucous. -.FOR THE DEIJOBRAT LIFE. , Life! what is it? 'Tis a fitful dream of care and sorrow; a bubble cast up by the ocean of Time, to pass away again in a ino meat. Why do all men prize it' as the dear est and best boon bestowed upon man l• Why do they crave as an inestimable blessing, that their days may be lengthened, when it 'but brings a succession of scenes of misery and anguish I The word life, is ,but an echo a. ' . the groans of the milligns who crouch' be neath the lash, or bend beneath .the heavy burdens-imposed by their taskmasters. We turn in disgust from the Sickening scenes of human misery marshalled" up before 'us. We see the King in his purple robes walking on to power, over'the necks of a kneeling and down-trodden people! or the lordly priests-in' their gorgeous apparel, who bind their be-i bighted slaves in the dark fetters of superstV tion—bind, and awn crush• them in the .dust; body and soul togetherl Or the titled task-, masters who wring from the hands of the pour, ir in the name of justice, their hard earned pit tance, to su pport ?heir own grandeur, or where , idleness pensioned efts the bread that starvi ing industry earns; nor never heeds the bitter. -tears r pp shed by the perishing children of povl. fir erty, and want. Is life a boon when its only: ic,.gift is toil and strife Is it a Vait-complica ted machine that grinds blood ,from ille hu;., man, heart and coins its precioUs drops inte , il, gold—into glittering offerings to Mammon,: The wretched masses crushed by lings' Priests,qnd Gold, lire only to shriek- their cry.of despair as they ask in yain for knowl; edge, for guidance," and for food! Life I , T rneted.out to some, but to increase our insane', i ` worship at the shrine ofiwealth, while they t. exact the utmost farthing' of hopeless penury,; /1 1 . grasping —3l the -" almighty- dollar,l. while the weak and the . poor, are left to safe fer and die. We have nothing to do with the rapturous existence painted in poesy,—bu ;;life as it is, with • civilization. But another, word for falsehood and tienchery .ing. conventialisms of social life, 'countenance,' Day, inculcate the basest and worst or, ptitv: 'ciples,—that of treacherous concealment, for often, under &frank and smiling exterior r theiiil ,1 rankles hatred deadly, enough to strike the dagger home to a brother's heart. Kiwi - vs , ords, and friendly greetings are erfhanged, while in the dark heart, lurks the . bitterest en mi tr. Life, we will clothe you in the gloriomi, robes of Paradise, we will paint you in 'Oil gorgeous colors of the rainbow and bathe th; pictn \ rp in the dazzling effulgence of heavenly ; light, when you can shut our eyes to ti millions of wrongs in the shape of kingly' and y. yriestly i exprrsion, in the form of - ty mn ty4 slave holders,—broken banks, and bankrupt corporstipna, that are crying fur vengeancil 1 and filling our heart; with bitterness. We will do ii when labor and wealth sit side 'by side,—when the poor shall cease their shrieks gtr oe and misery, and have justice,—when , tA; rich, fattening on the groans of poverty, shall haVe pitnishment,—when bigoted.. se4.- ' tartans moot° war. and man cease,to press his fellow matt,—when vice and false• hood shall cease to he exalted. and *ortt) .. • - . . . . i . ' - I --- '..' -.' - . •, - , • . . --.. • .- . . , , . 1 - • - • . . .. . .. . .. , • . . i ' i • _• - " : i , 1 ' ' • . " ] 4 ', 'T , oft ift io i ' . -,, 4 ' 1 . : ,1 I C • 4.'t t. '4:',7 - ' --' . - 4 ' ' " fi'l V I ? 13 i lk . ,* \ ,-.•. . 0 0 . ;,.to • ..- .- - - -tv, . k .,., -- r Irfi 1 4 f . , . 1 X Y/ . • 11 ' ' , I ;1 ~ „ V 1„, ,1- . . , 4 i i !4P • V ~. -14 - - rii f;f, -1, ' ..- • -', - , - , ',,' 1 ,., . . ' , 4 •.. ; ' ~ : '4 . .!; ': i• - $ ''.:".. -.- i - i......'( . -,' • . 1 „ I N ,;,, i ~,,,,, ( 4., ... ,, t. ,,7 .;,, ~,.e .i. 1 i . 4 14 , ~,, , . ' • . w _ 1 '..0.• ~ . J. , . . . - K4.'i . H . ' 12:94'4 7 . .ot • \, .:" 4 .‘'-- - • ----: . • • .1 ' ' - ' - . p • 4 • , . . . . . 4 ) .7.:,, • • •- - ;'' -.- -;' - ... ' .•-brizzri . "i; . • .. .. ; . 1. i . . l• _ .. -, -.. - z- ,,,, /;:* - • . . . , . .0 , .•• 1 * ' ..; • :. . . , , . • . „ . . .. I . . . ._ . It might bea blessing if we clittld :heed the:divine teaehingt; of Him. who'came ott - ..a mission tO'the poor, the oppressed of earth.— He his worn the garb of poverty and of toil. He too' has .passed the fiery ordea of hunger, thirst and--fteglect r , and He has `pronounced hils blessing uport the poor, yes the wretched, toil-trodden paor,--He'came to Preach good tidings to' them, 'to teaCh that till men are equals, and brothers, for he is no impector of persons,:tirid if we would but :receive ibis geat truth and follow its teachings; then life MiAt. indeed be `a blessing to i man. But p why does ,Wealth, t predoutirumc'e Of paltry metal, give man the right to tread his broth er in -the dust ; ! '-What, shall We 'cringe 'to the purse proud usurper, because larnbj,tion is his!idol 1 . Shall We flatter the 'ric r 4l ' I or cater to their prejudices because Mammon is their god) Why, in se short an- exi'staluce- does. man, endeavor toi:lxiss dominion ;over his fellow i instil' ..ilcil thisis life , t h is is we 1 . . . - try ;RS it aci l w exists- and .ever has eixisted.-- We turn to the pzist,-its'se` its of blOod, its mar tyrs; its grOaning,,perishing millions, its vie -finis of bigoted stiperstition and ; fanatacistn; is the answer to the question, " Wl4 is life ?" We turn to the present, its thousandsiofslaves, languishing in the chains of servitude, send ) up their cry of misery, --its niillions of per i314n,,47 poor re-echoes the groans of anguish, the oppreSsed nations, bh.,Tdinebel ' emit tl. bloOdy latent, and iherod of oppressiOn w Ad ed by merciless invaders, rend the ¢k with . [their shrieks of desparing woe; andlthis an*. Wers .- the . question , " What is iifii"i , It is.but a picture of anrrlD , uisii/ a CpniOrtiol: on the face of time,—a cry/of terror ,, and it - r is gone .- We ; have not picturedlite to , you . . i and virtue debased,—when politics, morals and philoilophy shall cease to be fake, and the press dare expose its corruptions. . Then we will call life' hat it ought to be,,n glori- ()us boon.i as a crystal sea, whose. gentle undulations softly roCked the boa l i, and lulled the Brew into a balmy slumber, whOse surface glowing in the light WaS radient with, beauty, and ever thus calm; but a sea, lashed into.fttry by the howling tempest and goaded into! madness by th I fierq contending se wind, . who - roar dies into i a Stiller' murmur but to gitther new force f9r a.fiercer blast. We have given you a pictUre of life as it is, its ''evils, it4..miseries, and its remedy. . ly. L: E. . . • • • ?tom 0 Odey'a Ls4y Balk • , 7, y 7., r •-•, rr •=7l - . ilsa • T A " s 7i P .v, :. ^ f '!'.l " I -, VlP'''''' .4 1 - f :i k 41.,..:. . .....).;......... -..,...1.3.1.n, .LN ~....d.l. ,ii . BY PATIENCE PERKINS.. 1 ~ i , I'am the late Patience Price, inithortarbv my history of "My Brother, Toth," !published originally in this magazine, translated' and cockneyized in England, and reproduced in this country as an English airair.l I married a widower, with ten children., If you wish to know 'Ay, ask my brother Tom, and he will tell you. ;So much for my antecedents; now for "My Mother-in-Law." 1 r flatter mYself-that I have common seams; 'even my brOther Torn admits Mark as a gen eral rule, tlpugh be cites exceptional circum stances'. .li do know enough - -to retire into the louse When it rains, or to take an•omni bus, or / Spread an umbrella., I have seen claildriu before to-day. if never any of my Own, actual' own, all those of my sister's (not a few,) and my husband's ten "bv . a former connection; and I do think that my hus- , band's mother might give me credit for some capacity. :If 'marrying a man with ten chil dren is any proof of imbecility, asisome peo ple pretend, mother-in-law should, At any rate, be the last , to.reproath me with it. ' I do not; know bow goed a.meddler among fruits may be, but Ido know thatla meddler in one's household affairs is intolerable. I do not know precisely whatthe first Mrs. Per kins died .of, but if ever a coronerls jury sits upon me, or if, the doctor makesia true re turn to the superintendent of the health office, I know the verdict in the one case; or the re- i port in the other, will be=" an Overdose of mother-in-law" - 'Mr. Perkins, my dear lord and master, is well enough,' perhaps I should say, very Well. , I don't think he 'killed his first wife, but' do hope :I shall never be re . i quired to declare,.upon oath, whq are my firm convictions Upon the subject. 'At might make a disturbance in the raj:nil:v. If the woman - was born for a . plague, she is fulfilling her mission.' Such a peaked face! Such a long neck ! such lengthened sourness, long drawn. out! Such a lean and hungry look! If She were anybody.but; - my hus band's mother, .I could appeal to hitn for, pro• tectien; bat I cannot ask the man to rise in rebellion against his own flesh_ and blood, the author of-his being. I wish shtrcould be content with the original preductien, and not imagine that he needs her continual super vision, as an author Supervises net, editions, and make- alterations in every one! 1 - . My _welcome to the house Was'a damper. Perkins, before his marriage, never , let me see his. mother. Widowers are' prompt and art ful, ' Let ?hem but breathe on a maiden with intent te, capture, the ; proverb sa . a, and, the end is, sure. The fascination of a` Tent, I,e,ex erted up?n a tird, is not more ce nib. I au" half inclined to accuse: my husband - of, du plicity—iof obtaining a wife undei• false pre tences ;Able second offence; too the monster! A man's:children we ; expect to be' plagued With; and , perhaps the escape from earlynur-., sing, Godfrey's cordial, Dalby's Carminative, teething,' • and all.that 'sort of thing, is quite an sq)livalent for any inconvenience which may grow, - out-of being ; a mother at second hand, with a family capital all ready to com mence marriedlife upon. But why did not the creature tell me that htwas to be taken witikthis other ant:Lesiva incumbranee I Why is . not the niarriag,e4enice altered to meet Such Sass' thus : "I, Patiance, take 'thee, Timothy,andthy inother.) to MS' wedded husband and mother-in-law,) to have and to hold w —and the r.4t of it! I am, sure I have and hold !pore, bY two-thirths, of I the mother than of the son. Oh,:poor me! 1 . My welCome, as I said, was al l datnper.: She-kissed meheartilY enough tooheartily —for she smelt horibly of snuff 1 She tasted of it, indeed; , and if' ICould believe that any woman. ever put poW.dered toblcco in her TEK:I7 10 A EIRIAAL-.--DEVOTEII TO T-)Or'ITTEci , • {.4/ ul.l * F rri' TS l .1;IT inciuth, instead c f in the proper place—if the nose even is that proper place—Rhe is that Pelson. She turned the round and round, and looked me all over with most wonderful bwilchalance. . She wondered wh.ther my eves *ere black or dark hazel, suggested caps as part of the toilet of the - mother of-ten child ren, rind desired to know my Christian name, its . * intended to be very_ kind and very motherly. " Besides," she :said; " I am Mlle. Perkins, and one Mrs. Perkins is enough In house." Perkins winced a little at this, f6r it Was not the first time that. she had told him so. - When 'I answered that .''my name . ' Was Patience,shesaid—"Patience! - Humph 'You are well : named, for You will have a time of it. But la, dear, we must be i chcerful, araki begin with a cup of tea.', : And such a pleas lint look as she put on to second her invitay tiotr ! .Her face is the habitual - incarnation (sf [lamentations, and when she attempts' a snide, her features are so irutls , ed.to it that it &H i nts more like a twist of :pain than/fin Pre's,sion - of pleasure. i/. " You wil/ have i a timed it," she repeated. foil my encouragement, at - she placed me at (he head of the table, beliind,a/wilderness of Cups and saucers, and other/tea and .toast paraphernalia. " There's no company to night, Patience ;just ourit'lres !" . • She watched with s )t'il'e for 4.ontreiempti 'as I proceeded to tea / and, toast 'flth4 tittle mai iitude, but I survive - 0 it. 'haVe learned since (hat, with nialicep'repens, she treir.' ted to dis gust and force me to surrender to ibel..at dis cretion. The / next morning. at breakfast she hoped to reap the fruits Of - her manoeuvre. " Well,Patience," she !said" will you sit at (he war 4, or shall I r (with a mOtion toward that veted post—a dignity perhaps, - but no `iiiteenre,) "Now or ticer;" thoUght I, and jtiped into the seat, with ze.deter4tiation to assert my prerogative ete for all, l -". Well, then, I .must tell you," says mother " Mr.- Perkins does not take much eivani, Tim don't take Sugar, Tames don't take Cream, Will don't take either, Tom has milk and water, Sally has milk, Jane drink's 'rater, John musn't have icoti've, :Old you are not to.give Ruth any butter, SasV. - has milk and water, sweetened; and Liuie Musn't have hot bread," " Well;" said 1, having, dispatched Mr. Per- tins',: cup,'" what does. g,tandmother take .11 Yon should have' seen her eyes: There Were the scintillations ot fourteen furies in them: " Who ? Oh, yes' I understand. I t —oh never minfj. f . me I I'm nobody : ' — And then she sobbed and sniffled, and Mr. Perkins was in an nnwonted . state of excite- Ment, and the children exchanged winks and r niles, and I—sat still. : Ka woman with wit grandchildren in one lot; to say I nothing of (heir probable cousins, is. not entitled to y- the honored name of grandmother, pAr who is? So breakfast .pas_sed.; Mothei7-lin-law re- I covered her serenity befOre the meld was over. HuSband—dear. We, what a word that is for ive to write :—husband Went aboh't . his bit i iess, and mother-in-law undertook to invest me •• with the power of the keys; 'enlivening our progress through , the - establiShment with some very interesting retnarks. H Mr. Per kins is a very 'fine man, nay dear, I .though I am his mother who 'says it—a Very fine man: but he has a dreadful FteMper, and you must not let . him get, set. against you. Ile is very easy -to please, but yoh must be particular to, get up -his shirts carefully, for he jwill.s.torm dike's,' earthquake at:a missing beitton. He not - at all difib:tilt about his liable, hut ;thing~ must be se!re-C,lnp" right, or he.W ill not eat theni. I'm kis . an:l'.aM used to his Ways. Ile is very, neat and careful, but. Im never puts anything aWay; and, will-keep a l pers - On picking up after him all tithe time ; and he wants everythinglhe.callsiOr Drought t 6 hi'm just to a ininiAte'. Ile is not. at all "hard fb please when - onelknows hiM, - only it :.takes -all your thoughts-to do it ; I'm tsed that." - • , . This was a pleasant introduction, , t _ certainly, to niy . martial dut44.! ":thenthere"s the chil dren,". she continued ; " - a nice faintly as one I nee . e. desire. But the oldest, that's! finiotltY,.l has picked up some bad, Imbits. lie will I liswear dreadfully ; hut ;he's a good boy for all 1 l!that. And datum that's the second son, is i 1 I lad, ,a fine and willing ; but you must not ex-' llPoite him to temptation by leaving leose mon- I l'ey 'about: Willy is :i healthy and,W:ell-doing I ltoy in the main, but he likes to creep.' itito Idle store room. As sure as he eats a handfut r NA' raisins, and he will when ilte can, he goes.---1 1-into convulsions. Tom is quiet, dreadful mischievous sometimes; and-there'a no harm 1 int the girls, except that, they quarrel, - as all children will, and . won't take care: of their , clothes; iio children do. And John, he I iplagues them almost to death, and Mr. Per- I .lcins has no government over any ofthenyind I :you'll have to - do it all, Imy 'dear; but you I . Jmust net be discouraged. -rot - here, and if 'they don't mind, just turn them over to mer Do you wish . to kOon: what 1 did ? GO i ,marry yourselfto a tdower, ten children,;ind I :a mother-in-law ; place yourself, a foreign jj i substance, among . three generations of cog nate:=, and yoU'll find out. I " just tiaterally," :as they say out west, went to m y -room,threw I 'myself on.the bed, and, cried.. -Tears won't I : . provide a dinner, I know, and I kn&v it then; but I did not imagine that any one expected I that I should fall'at once into prof iding for j the household—l, a stranger; and in a strange I place—oh, how strange l• 1 dont .know how long I laid there in my : half sleeP, half sob. 1 .Presently I heard "Mother!" screamed in lchildish treble , —"-Motherr•groWled in the' i hebbletlehoy accent—'t Mother I" whined— i :" Mother I" -shouted—" Mother:- piped—, , " Mother! Mother :: Mettler :::'' . "Who is that wretch p oi' a mother?" I said, ! ' fl ' angrily, as I frombounced -the bed to the .• gla and then laved away the traces of my 'tea ;. "Who is the wretch, and ,why don't 'she r i nswer.?" - -I did not d.reatirthat J could .be meant. n What is the matter t" I asked,- :opening.othe door and running :out, to find iseven or eight of the Perkins young fry =zit titg on the stairs. " Who calls r' "It's all of us,- i t said the' oldest, as spokes man for the whole; " Grandmother- said we were to call you mother." . ! j "But she did not tell you to set up such a ,horrid concert, did she ? .7f she did; I forbid it,.. Call me mother,-and„ril ' try to be one; ;but never shout the .word again, or call me • when you are near enough-for me to hear yon japeak in your natural voice. Come to me . trilen you want, me. : Where is tour grand,' lmother r . . _ "She went out ; and said she would not be in till dinner ; and there's .no dinner getting `ready, and nothing to ot.,:and we're all bun- Nontrost, ,sasque4anna (ountn, 4.7i1 "Go then and eiiirailthini; " But everything is 104 have the keys. Grandthoth she' went out." - - "Oh,- she did, did and running down stairs,ovell, and arms. Now I taw the el pantry was speedily unlock has not been in the door,sincl children to discuss their, i lunc' to the kitchen. There Ott a I L. cook, with her feet in the ash; turned to me with an expressi "now for a battler. "Mh• paid 1,-" and what's for dinne "Sur/NI-ourself, tlint'.B- the must tell me what. The.vuld me I was to do nothing till y "D,id she! And whY di • to rne hours ago?" "Sure, and I was tould to Well, then, I do bid; you. movables and leave the: - hou exciting; and Mr. Perkins you your wages." The girl! doubting her senses . your are in toy way !".• And she d tering sorneiting. about - ap.stal not heed. Airily first order individual was obeyed; Icarel little grace she did it. I bei speak to the_ children in tN sound of -my . footsteps ap, enough, and she was olf.; -" • 9 I said, " what's to be had be. hone to dinner presently have it up in.a hurry:" Each 'did his or her part, at what they cousideredla , g did one thin„ and another The boys brought fuel and• discovered the edibles-and fine dish of ham and toggs, a —a decidedly picnic atrair to the Moment. 'Perkins cat twelve were seated in the b mor of pleased excitement. way straight to the hearts of had no fears for the rest Mother-in-law walked in a ing ourselves. A stran,„tre e' appointment came over her ft l erything so comfortable. " you an apology for heing but I made allowanek, fey• keeper, and did not think purtetual:" "No thank* to but I said nothing. i4o . soot , in-law dawn to the table th' again, and calling " Obitrlot! of the kitchen stairs. . , '• What is the matter I" I : 1 • ."That stupid girl of durs !a dirty table-cloth, and !the the steel Folks; and there's I gravy—_—and this is Stale, bret I'm sure my son can't abide "Then it Most_ bp - the wit-h. I dismissed Cliftilotte an hotir ago,"nt which time ken 'a step towards ditincr. children and I have go i (up d impromptu." . And a very good dinner, kius. "1-dOn't desirekt bat! . Mother-in-law-gave Iltim a! •and then, turning to 'Me, s: composure— • ! " YoU `don't mean that yoi girl out of dyers, withotit w 4; lived -here tire-years " I did not. use physitial - To I did employ very powerful We are too strong in yOung kitchen. impertinence." Such was the coup d'etat, - cuisine; with which I Wang It_was effectual. Mother-i pletely checkmated, and: in, established: . Perkins. a I Widowers generally arclexpe' • As a matter of prudeni-imi l recommend the-young lady lay out, to expend it uii i on -a -is to be had. Such my husband left the whoje pus went, and I must say thlt I wonderfully. The Children ; !nuisances that.their affection l-epresented 'them. Indeed come, in a couple of yorS,. , Perkins says, that. he kno' ' course. Istiek to• my, 'text ! have twenty children alb" n once, than one brother Tom. .But the mother-in-la the thorn in my - side. Ilearl as I did the girl, or mamige children. Perkins talks of annuity, that she may!skt 11 on her own account. I ffltn< —and yet I don't wanther t claim for sympathy -on:Abe separated mother and Child, of doors, ,and twenty other If she would be stare to do.' *. . • * •*; '1- It is three months ~sinee saw the prece ding-till now; I openeilimy porfolio this fine Mai. morning. Do - you 1-now the world loA.sl'ery cheerful to . ale Imw I I have a new stake in it .As I paid, opened my pa , p4' 0 ! ...; and have been - quite amused nt tnc own tionSen"se about.the old lady, which I had really forgotten. Fami/y carea put the • pen aside, and authorship, letter to friends ; even, Are quite unheeded. -But I nay just remaik by Way of conclusion; th t mother-in-h«: bas !become Useful as s ornanental i •— hel thinks herself it:diiPen ble. • Well, I've .no - Objeetion. .F.mpleynient keeps her out' of, mischief, and'l give her the baby to hot' When svO lire „ . When We are dead' the honest sorrow. A few Will_ we are robed for the grille. than we now suppose. YVe our departure will proditee cation.—But we over eatirna' small circle how soon we sln A single leaf of a boundless That.is all. • .• The gay will laugh' • When thou art gone; ttia Sole Plod on; and each one,-aa brfc His favorite phantom. The world will go ?on ivithout us May.have 'thought a ve`ry important wheel in the great Machinery will be ring(..ared. when We are gone. But the world goes clatterlng On as. - ill nothing had happened: If we filled itzipt:irtint_atitionain society ; if we have -wondered !what would, Or could be done, if ire were re ' moved yct howfoesother.: Qilk • - 1 . : .0 A M rrlyr i l ': A ITTT. m • Tyn ri r-, I Li a+ taJp aryl3.lL' ''S-: 1 13 ' ? '''• '''' TYPE Al - jD HOP:t\ T T M Y - - 4,..., 1 . 1..." Ur) 1 ...) i ,1 t , 4 . 1,4 ...i.1.-14, 1 . rsban ).11(Rititg. lfaituarg 11, s 1855. v - ou - cit - n fill our stations?" The werldlwill be- a bust ling active world withou.t.us.; It. was so before we entered it: • be s 4, when we' are gene. pp, and you r said so before id 1, laughing, a score of legs. : inspiraey. The . ' and tbe,key . I-caviar* the' b, I "walked-on! 1 . rent lump of 21 'eA - and her faee on which • ea )our are, iWhen we are dead; affection may. erect a' Monument. But the Bead that set it. up will scion be powerbls ns ours, and for the same cause.'! How seon they that weep 'over us will follow us! The monument itself' w:11 ciumble. and it will fall oti the dust that carers us. "If the marble or the granite long endures, y43t the eye of affection will not en dure to read the graven letter's. Men will give a glance at the name - of °tie they - never kbew, and pass on with not a thought of the slutnberer belOw. • On my grassy 'gra*, • • Tne men of future time will careless tread, new• - 'inusihress musthre.ss tould;-1 dirheeted." you not come And read my name upon tho seutptur(4lstone Nor -will the sound faunliar to their ears, nit till 'you bid, Recall,my vanished memory; . . When we. are dead our influence will not be dead. We leave epitaph upon indistruc tible materials. Our manner of life hits been writing them. ' We have tired up thought' aiid awakened emotion. the'wondcrful ma chinery of mind has felt out ,presence. We have pressed the stain's - of cliaraeter . into the - warm wax of our month sensibilities .around us. Our places of business. lour social - resort, may know us no inure; but iliVing accounta blebeings feel the iutluencejthat involves our persomtl departure. • Pick up your e. Call in the 'other will pay stOred,- as if F!! move! Yon itdmove, rout :.l ns, which I did and last to that not with how rd her stop to The hinr9ac was T , o ',rme, children," 'our father will It Ding reported. that a child had been recently born with . two heads' and that it was still living" we were at the pains this morning of investigating this not very un common freak of nature, a which the ana tomical museums present- Many- equally• stranee examples. On the 29th nit. the wife of Jacob Jones, a reeently r arrivedr German emigrant, lodging at 5 VA - tidewater street was attendr:d•in her confinement by a Ger man ph3sicurn, Dr. Josephs; resident- in the same locality, and through his kindness we were. permitted to see the elk. , It was instantly apparent that thisinstanee does not materially ditier - frem those =mown to the profession as "spinapfida," the, °cleft spine" of English writers, where, from some' unknown peculiarity of formation -tile medi. um line is interrupted postctriorly by.. a pro trusion of some part of the 'sheath of the spi-. nal column, or of the brain:and its coveringst . The patient's accouchment 'was perfectly eris:y And natural. - aud we mu. 4 highly amused I ftolie. One tnething -titer ; the girls •ont esti bles. cold joint, a . pi were served up tne in, •Ittal %e. St possible hu 7 lind found rn!y he children, and "we were enyof •pression of at seeing et ought to matte ate," she, sai.l l ; a young house you .could, be qo '011, " thought I, er was .motler she was up e," at the heal We found the child asleep on, w pillow, ap parently having .teaclieti the full petiod of gestation, the trunk and extretnities being quite normal in their development. As to the head, the face is natural, the frontal bone is-eonplete, but both patietal bones and the occipital bone are wantifig,land from the an terior edge of What would a the fontanelle, and occupying as a base 4ht: whole space fill ed naturally by the occipital bone, there sprinks,a tumor considerably larger than thei• foetal head. . sled. ' 1 1 She bas put I.ld I:nic....S aijd spoon_ fort lie I d—and—and-I—. t such a table I!' it he finds fatilt thr ce-ifuartera she ha(l not ta- Since then , the 1-tie,, such as it: . This unnatural protrusiOt is very thinly covered with integument; its contents are, as is usual in suck cases, quite fluid, and its sur face, being somewhat. darker in spots where. thinnest, and more lobulatthl and protruding the resemblance to tinperfectly formed eyes is a mistake very natural to an unprOfession al observer: The child eats and sleeps well. We remember a case In Which the pase of the 'tumor was the deficient, spinouS processes 'of the'vertebrae of the neck, and in that case the child lived (the tumor resting on - 'a pil low ) more than 'a twelvemonth,' The most ordinary ' . .Situation for the - protrusion is the small'of the hack; such .i*anees are by no means uncommon. Where it. occurs -about the cranium, the - anterior .Ort of the,brain is usually imperfectly developed.--N. Y. Post. Indian_ThealoOy. The precise idea which the .Western Indi ansentertain of a future life is this : I too," said'l 3 4r= angry glance, id, with for4tl hate-turned ruing, ivluflas cc certainty, Gut coral , girls to tolerite ; .; or rather coupfle rated 111 velf:- 1-law - was coin- authority Was ! ;sensible man.;'-1 iieneed and wise. lestmenli let tite. l who has' love to widower, if :one experience. !ify to my manage have succeeded ~ re not at all the rate grandparent they have be nite modelS;iso -s them best, lof I had ratlter othering" me at AS soon as the Indian threw off the flesh. he Would find himself standing on the. bank of the river, the current running - with • great rapidity. Across this river -was a slender polo, stripped of its kirk, j -and lying close down to the . water. The 'lndian will had lied a good life, then sees a bright object on the other side ; Alm. was" P l ight." Ile would then, desirous of embracing the • object- he , loved so well in the world„ walk across the pole, unmindful of the raging torrent:beneath his feet, arriving -in safety' on the opposite shore; and Right ,would then lead : him amongst mountains covered with gold and silver, into noble hunting grounds, where he would hunt for eternity. .I3ut on. the other band, the man who followed "Wrong" all .his life, when attempting to cross the: - pole, after death, would fall into the foaming stream, and be swept down into a ‘fhirlpool surround ed by rocks; :there he frOtild gradually be sucked in. towards the centre of the vortex, and finally enguiphed in the bOttomleSs• hole. What became of the unfortunate sinner, the Indians could not surmise, further than that he lived forever.:—lndian Tradition. . dear!. ShO. is it: discharge her her as I can the buying her -nn p houselteepuig [st wish he:woald o g e t up,a grand . plea that I nave turned her Out .rrid things, as ..A person who kept . art inn by the roadside went to a pa'inter, who fa time had set up his.easel not a hundred miles from Ontario, and inquired for what sum the. painter,,would paint him a bear fur a sign-hoard., 4t was to be a real good one, that woull.attract-eus .. tomers. . l , "Fifteen dollars!" replied the 'painter. "That's too much !" said the innkeeeper; "Tom Larkins - will do it fdr .ten -Tlie painter cogitated for a moment: He did not like thatliis rival should get a '.•corn misz,ion in preference to hiiiiself, although it was only for a sign-board. - ' "Is it to be'a wild or thine bear fl ho in quired. • ".A wild one, to be sure." • • ‘• With a chain or without one I" again asked the, painter. '"Without a chain?" .1 " Well, I will. paint you 'A wild,bear, with out a chain, for ten dollars," , • • The bargain was stinek,i the painter set to Work, and in' due time sent home the sign board, on which he ho had painted. a huge brown bear of a most ferocious aspect;- The sign 7 board was the admiration'.of all the neighborhood, and* drew plenty Of 'cus terriers to the inn ; and , the innkeeper. .knew not whether to congratulate himself more up on 'the•possession of so attractive a sign or. on baring seeured'itfor.the . Small sum of ton - dollars. • ' Time slipped on, his barrels. were . emptied and his pockets filled. 'f..EverYthing went on thrivingly for three weeks, when one night ' there !ITNe one of thoseriolent storms of I end. will be same e,Teally sad,l as Fewer, probirbly,. re vain to think onsiderable *ln , • it. Out of a 11 be forgottO chest has fallen: n brood- of care I to will chase, A Child With -Tit - o Meads Art of a Yankee Painter. and win(); thunder and lightning,- which are so common in North 4merica, and which puss over with almost tis lunch rapidity tii- 1 they-rise. . • i When the inkeeper awoke next inorning, the sun was shining, dui .birds singing,_ and all traces of the storm hnd passed away. He looked. up pnxionsly to 'ascertain that his sign was safe. -• I . . There.it was, sure etiOugh, , swiniri lig to and fro as usual, but the ,bolar had 4is4pcared. The innkeeper - . could hardly believe his eyes; full of anger and settpri4e he ran to the paint ,er, and related what litu.l happenpd. The painter looked up coolly from his wdrk. - ~• . Was it a wild bear lor•a, tame one?" . "< v,ikl Fear." 1 . , "Was- it ohained or pot?'" , - -., , •" I gness not ?" f \ I " Then ".cried the ; painter , triuMphnntly, I "how could you expect a wild bear to remain in such 'a storm as thati of last nighti • without : I a chain ?" . i - ~• The innkeeper bad nothing to sa)? against so conclusive an argimient, and -finatiy agreed to give the painter -fifteen, dollars Ito paint him a wild bear ivith t chain, that Fonld not - take to the woods in the next stortn . For thn benefit of on:r•unprofessiolud- read , : Pi's, it may be necessarY.to mention; . that the rogtreish painter had Tainted the fiat bear in water 'colors, which had been washed away b:s; the rain.; the sedond bear was .piiinted in oil colors, and was the i refore able to }withstand the weather. , Paradise : of 4 SportsmOM ' The shaggy ri3onarl. - of the Wesfern;.prai ries, the buffalo, was I ng since dri,,ken from, the lieritaLre of his. amiestorS, - . th.d• forced to'l seek a home beyond ate swift ,rolliiig waters I of the Mississippi. Tile race bowever,,yet ex ists, in the far west, at d in. the territory .of Minnesota, particularly at tidistance of two l hundred miles from tie bed of the 'father - of Waters, towards the head streams of Miss - ou• • ri, they are still found iir - almost, iricredifi i le numbers. Governor Steven; . during his ur vey last summer, of thp Northernllacific Rail- 1 road route,, passed several-,liundred thousand of buffaloes. In som4-.. instances they 'were forty or fifty miles in' l&igtl - i, and - extended on either side beyondl he reach of vision.• Sev eral muleg and horses became so mingled with the droves-that it was inipossibleto re take-them, and they Were consequently aban- i cloned. In,the territory- of Minnesota, r ik are found eecasionally; and - deer exists in great abundance. . Grizzly'bears are: few and far between, but the common. black bear abound in all parts of the - region—althougtt their numbers are slowly dimmishing from tear to i year before the railroadof civilization. WolVes, ' - wildcats, and Various Smaller animalS,lvalna , ble for their furs, exist in almost 'inohausti ; ble profusion.. Silo. Id the Northern Pacific Railroad beeonskructed, what A oppoktunity I\ will be here afforded for enthusiastic ainateur i - r sportsmen to indulge - their tastes. I IThe wild beast - .of the. forest; .and; plains i Nvuld soon be exterminated or driven Ito the i inaccessible fastnesses -of the'mountain4. The I bear, the buffalo and the deer, would be blot -1 ted from the prairies, which for• hundreds of years have afforded them sustenance land a home, and the place .- that..knew them ;should know them no more forever. . ~ . VALrE \ A liaNuicatr:r.=-The original manuscript of Gray 's Elegy was lately sold at auction -in London. There Wai -really a "scene" in the auction . room. Imagine. a stranger entering in the midst of a sale of some rusty lookita old . books., The auction= :_eer produces two small hatf-ftheeti of paper, written over, torn.' and Mutilated.. He. calls it" a most interesting article," and apologises for its condi*M. .Pickering bids 10 lb.— Roods, Foss, Thorpe, Bohn, - Ilolway, and Some few amateurs quietly 'remark,' twelve twenty, twenty-five, thirty; and so on, 'Oll eller° i's a paire 'at sixty three poands! The -hammer strikes. , ' - .". hold ! says Mr. Foss_ " It is mine," Says the amateur._ _ "No I bid sixty-five in time." >. • . "Then Lbid seventV." . • " Seventy--five," says Ste. Foes ; and fives are repeated again,.untit the two-bits 'of pa per are knocked down, Amidst a general cheer, to Payen,.and Foss, for one • hundreg pounds sterling „On these bits of paper are_ written the first drafts of the Elegy in a coun try church yard, by Thomas Oray, including five verses which were omitted in publiCation, and with the poet's interlinear corrections and alterations- 7 -certainly an "interesting-ar tiele;" several persons, sUpposed . it 'would call forth a ten pound note, perhaps even twenty. CARLYLE: Friend Ayer :-ln this age of quacks, charlitans.and mere windy,. gaseous pretenders to heal, who blow at every street clirtier, and in the face and Ars el, all men, their loud, blaring Jerico tru'mpets and, other noisy boisterous wind. instruments of marve lously twisted brass, in such a' woefully sham ridden epockas-this, I say, it is comforting nay even cheering to the ea rnest - well .wisher of his race to know there has arrivedriti this world a genuine Physician- 7 -to- 'lett • once more upon something besides mere Sangra dos and . Don Mercurial Jalaps,..*itli their phlebotomies loisOns and warm water. - • Your Cathartic Pills'and Cherry Pectoral carry us forward to Halcyon days}-to mille t/. nial-rharmacol eas, -when Sc,ienCe, deep 4.1,i-' ving doWn intt he principles of tbingsoliSll, with infinite cu ning, bring out tbe genuine Elixir Vitae: fo of a truth there i:s, manifest ly enough some chat : of that . Same Life Es. sence in your subtle vegetable ds distillation and compound. . ' • - I . ' - You realize to us the visions of those pain.; fulest, smoke-d ried.. Alettymists—lbootless, 4eekers--dreamers among retorts and okra: Iles, touching.the: Quintessential hidden Vir- . tue of the Cniverse, .which should antidote distemper, -and break- for man 'the wheel of Tinto. -. ' .' • . - 1 ••• . ' -, ' " Married , Veigterday." Every day in our journal that with . the' , first gleam of the sun is Hung within our portals, we read the little sentence ;—"Mar ried yesterday," so and so. Every, day there is,a wedding feast in some of the mansions of the earth ; a clasping of hands and a union, of hearts in the'dim aisles of. some holy tem-- pie ; a . pledgiag of eternal love and constan cy during all the hours that are yet to come down, like spring flowers upon lire's pethway. Edch day some , new marriage crown is put on, and she who wears it, leaning upon-him whose love is the brightest jewel set ;amidst its leaves, steals sway from the"dear. old borne," and nestles. tremblingly in the Aire _ I -' volume 12, cot where love's hand has tri;totecl,,!l'..ti,:e.hon eysuCkle over.:the latticed- ich,',.'find' p'..ac - ed. R..olian' Ivies in • all the 4.4e.metitS. - - "14ARRIEDAFESTERDAY." i. • :. ' . , I . There are :pearls 'and - , go d- shinir, no-. t amid. the flowers that fringe love's I p3.1.11*,:i_ and stars gleAming like a andeh:tr ; ip .t.!-. ornament 'of hope,. There a . harp tir.,kii7.'.:4 f i now whose melody is sweet r than Ithe_st;l2l,- of the• evening bells, .and oy , Tailing like. - ISlimier 'of 'amerhysts.upon t iii heert6 ..I . laty-...-- 1 terday - were wed. Life 'ow 114, 1.!,...:; , ..... beautiful. The'sour-soars u wards friAb 1::':.• I dustlikc dote loosed fro its cag,i. 7.1. , :f I is melodrin every - :place; ea, tbere ::,:r,l as_. 1, -gels in every path with Cm - .for - tlicse. w..i ' nre pressing onward with song and: praye.,. • , " MARRIED YESTERDAY." , • . : - it 'seems how a long 'distance to tbe-grav:!-- -- a long road to the final rest.''Bart .s. :::on -. .t . ... shadows will come and life loses its suinz,: bloOni. Then, as the patter .of tin_y . feet heard about the grandfather's Lee,, 14: who were "married yesterday," ri1ay . 1inp .. . , .7 turn back to the recprdsof.thepast,:wecii: silently"- the while,. remembering, 1.1.: - -t1 .summer is gone,their harvest ended, P: soon gatheringup their.sheaves,..ti)• , ,, pass - rreyend the gates of pearl, where but One, (marriage—that of '=the _rani I 1 hischosen people.--;Netcark l baity 41_f ~-.'# ".. —; - l' - Gutenberg , - No fact in histOry is More - interestiT the invention of the inintingpress by berg. It is ascribed indirectly to the ir of religion, as is thus set forth "-Gutenberg : traveled alone;, on fco mg a kimpsack Containing books ain" , ll like a there student 'visiting the se,;,) journeyman . looking fora !master: went _ihriough the Rhenish'. - ,province, Switerland, Germany,: and lastly, I noi„ wi ti!lout "an object,' like a .nian liirilnagination . winder at the cap 1-,:t of :. footstep, but carrying : everywhere wirtl-.,1, a flied Idea, an unchanging will leil '::- ;I 1-;1: -sentiment. This - guiding- star waillw thou'r , ... l : of spreading . the word of God rind- ti:e . .b,.,- among a vast. number of souls. ~ • Thus it -was religion which, in tl-l' - t • wandering apoStle, was seeking the s; in to sow a single seed, of Which lit!reafter. was to be alliouvaid-saric.t It is the glory of -iirinting that it vias give. the, world by religion,nothy industr ..: l'i.f.:•i . ions eniliusiism was .alone ,worth tp gi birth to the instrument of truth.". • Esghteen Ilandred and Fit nun The year Fifty-FOur, says a cote nearly at an end. A few days mo I r.; shadow will have drifted foreVer . us. It has been,l _good, Pleasa , maks- of us, strewing untold bless : i.( paths, and crowning life with unfai' ness. To Others it has brought o and-sorrows, shattering the sweet . Hope, and pulling down fruit their niches all the deities of the licinschol it_ has brought to the marriage alt) it has carried to the grave, some it ed with the halo of conquest, wlie) er's song floats over the summer others it has shrouded itthe sht feat, and rendered desolate by th Despair. Many a sttange thing fill has there been perforrtied i 1834 l The Old Year is going r —What'testimony shall it bear of Great Tribunal ? Shall it tell of pro - Ved, opportunities Wasted, , erie dered ?—or shall it speak our p est:men and true, and secure. for i dits of the angels! If we have ty in all. things throughout the not fear unfavorable testimony i Court; but if we have not yighti our, ditties, we should hasten't6 errors ere itbe too late. 'nte ye gone, and they who would earn its blessing, before it drops 'away • . , gun:kg—earnestly. There is no to spare, General Illonstares .tram, ' • ''. ,he Fame by it. - 'Tis Sma Nor ' 4 . Astura:. - - 7 1n narie of General Hduston at the ~ colanans as a candi. a te for . :the 1 113.5:6, subject only. the the deeisio plc, we. made a. trifli . - tyliogra) in the Christian or bap ... .. al nar Houston ; which_ *- -. in - not I presume that ...oplegenerally I did that Sam ut , : Ameribar. abreViation . the sacred name but Ili's:: - not . So. • Genera l . cirri is aftgr the nevolutio " Uncle Sam" was the substitut mon term used • for the . "ttnited hislather being one ; of the; pa I rather indigent circumstances, patriotism and .economy and . San), after " Uncle Sam" .feeling poor to give . him a name withigh i syllable: His mother demur"-, . being a ver i pious Presliyieria , a great veneration-for the DAM one .of the - ofd Propheti:;--birt: hibited some of- the -boyish s i and thrown off ili,the Pkvolutio , reconciled to . Ole short.naitX.o and delighted tO . Call him her d 1 Exchange. ' . - " . . - 3016; VAN BUR N'S LAST.-. 44 says that the administrai t ien is!, that has gained a, victor t 'in't 1 deletion. Bronson, the man wh from the_.oiliee of .Colleefet..o appealed to,the people- oe•fih: being a emPidate for GOvenor; is the. people have sustained the i Adininistration- . by four 'Eno. majority. r• -.-; .., • . 1 .. ,•, jar It is 'pretty evil:teat:l(k' buys a hundred ..ileltai h . _ *— duck of a wife," that he 1C 4 .9k i hail 1." . , — - JrPr A bashful printer refu in a printing Zllke where fern I piled, saying that be never i a girl in his life: tar An - editatiolypsj, 0 printing establisluiieut, suliec good urn' of victuals... 1 MI I 16 v.-1 :1 t,71 Uri SEMI MB= man Ids oi-`L". 09.1: t, - .2.e.f • pid,„f 1 e 111116 MMII MIL one r, T 2 ii the U: ; pezlorr. Ired&ln, • q. r is 1:1:1:1 And rec - must nd 11-1 placing Head uf. . . , i.of„itle. : l .phical ~ . :1r ^ ie of (.:. 7 ,1i: , ;. , t mine. .7 ought, and 1 Sar. ottstou and wilt, and cori State!' nots.;_ar i 'notated led:- ti,t, to it. nt ti of S..r rn eal iy , stie one, s . ) liA: ruing: Sarni- Ih9 he buly New Y Dl It rernc•l New Y. inol'the course of red thous:::: when a ii3tL hiaf. toy Ono of a ],,,L 11 , 4311' iere - setup," whi Leta ita;