ftilase Pau> Vreprittot-s. elect Vottrg. Thoisghts On Death. I know that scion this bead will rest • • l• Beneath the damp cold - sod, ' - I know this heart soon, soon will cease Each anxious wild life•throb ; I feel that death haitiuly marked Me for his victim now, chilly hand is.on my franis • And I most meekly bow. • Itut I do not grieve--oh ! no, Iv'e Wished Thus early to depart : • • rye lived quite long enough to know Deep, deep bitterness of heart ; I've found Mit life is not all fair— A cloudless sunny day - - • Though young tee felt the tempest's breath Across my weary way . My anguished spirit cill, }ph sought Some refuge from lifu's troubled wave, ' And *here, oh ! where, can this 'he found . Save in the silent grave I • Then ask 'me not why I should smile , And calmly wait life's close, - - • Why death hail' all its Cerror lost , And I seek its deilLrepse ?, . . For why should one stiish' to live When all that made Ikar ' i g • Rath flail leaving the SAdened heart All desolate and- drear; Then welcome death—farewell vain earth, iio others thou all bright mayst be ' - To others still untold thy joys . But thou, alas bastnone for me. - , ' Evalioiwn. Eir A Southern edio has had':the follwing - pleasant vlalon,,- n We had sweet dreams the other night, When all around was i.tilz We dreamed we saw a host of folks Pay up their printer's bill: - 1 . We wish the dream would come topass, And our empty pockets fill-- Tar da ump g da to diddle dun), • Te Wrap to diddle dill: The rower.of Truth. Wealth, we are told, is power ; talent is 'power; and knowledge is power: But there is a mightier force in the ;world than either of these —a power which wealth is" not, rich enough to overreach, nor authority imposing enough to si-:: lenz.e. They all tremble in its presence. It is truth—the really most potent element of individ- Aoki life. Though tossed upon the billows of pop. , ~rlarcommotion, °Feast into the sevenfold fur rows of persecution, or trampled into the dust by the boa heel of power, truth is the one inde stractable thing in this world that loses in no conflict, suffers from no misusage or abuse, and maintains its vitality and completeneis after ev ery assault. AU kinds of conspiracies have been undertakes', to destroy and drive it from the earth; all sources of power has been 'to 'crash it, and all kinds of seduction employed to vitiate and poison it; but none has anceeded, .and none ever will. We can be confident of nothing else in the world but the safety and int; perishability of truth—for it is part of divine na ture and invested with the eternity and omnipo. tence of its author and source. It may often seem to be in danger; it is as much set upon and assaulted now, after eighteen hundred, years of successful resistance, but history and experi- -ewe ought to reassure our faith. it has never • yet tailed, and it never will. Wa may rest se; .retely on it and feel no alarm; we may antici. pate its sources, and, enjoy its triumphs. To this straggling life, what encouragement and eomfert is there in this thought--the man of truth and the cause of truth, are connected with' the most potent eleinent in the world, and have all the certainty of succeeding which God's immutable %/jure and degree..afford. _ A Beautiful Sketch. It was night. Jeru - salem slept as quietly i amid her hills as a child upon the breast of its mother. The,noiScAkss sentinel stood like I astatue• at his post and the philosopher!o,l lamp hurtled dimly in , the recess of his champ ; ber. - 'Bet w darkernight was .abroad upon the earth. A morel \ darkness involved the na tions in its unlighted shadows. Reason shed a faint glimmeridg over the minds of men, like the cold and inefficient shining of a dis finct'star. The immortality of man's.spiritu al nature was unknowa, his relations to heav en undiscovered and ' his future: destiny ob: scared in a cloud of mystery... It was at this time that two forms of etlie rial mould hovered over the eland of - chosen people:: They seemed like sister, an;", gels seat to earth upon some embassy of lore: The one was of majestic stature, and in the well formed limbs, which her snowy drapery hardy. concealed, in her meet bearing and steady eye,: exhibited the highest degree of strength and confidence. Her rightwrm was extended in an impressiv6 gesture upwards where night appeared to haiie placed her tlmitest pavilliop ; while on b alk left reclined her delicate coMpanion in form and counte nance the colitrist of the other, for. she was drooping like the . flower, , when "unmoistened by refreshing dews, and her bright but trouts: led eye scanned the air with ardent bat vary ing glances. Suddenly a light like the sup bout from the heavens, and Faith and ./3,ope hailed with exulting songs the sicend . iugSter of Bethlehem. :arena rolled away, and the stranger was Nt.ou:tro. erusaleui. He was a meek, unasso inkig man, whose happiness seemed to consist in'io n , ((benevolence to the human race.— Theti Were deep tra6es of sorrusv, his comp; telMinte, though ao one knew why 4e grieved foi: he Jived in the all of evely virtue and was loved by all the good and wise. By Mad by it wasillUßOW that the stranger work-, ,e 4 miracle% that the blind saw, and the dumb "die, awl the deutleaped to life at his touch; that ybea he commanded, the ocean mode rated its altering tide, end the e very thunders istiiipulated—he is the Son of God. Envy as ed.him with"the obarge ofiorCery, and the 'voice, of impious judges condemned him to I•4l3isath. : Slowly. and thick guarded he amend i i . ..therda of Wilily. A heavy cross bent hint the earth. , :But Faith leanedupon Maim% '1114111;q3ih Lev pions la his .blood .maa_ to th 6 t ies. ' • • , .. . . . • . . . , _ . .. . . ~ - • • .. , * I , . . . t . •'( / - . , .. - . . . • , • • ; f" , . . . . .. ; . ' . . . . • •' . • . / ' ' . . • . , 1 , \\ • .- -.' ' ' - . • - .. - -, • _ . . . . -., , .' :, ~., .‘ -• - i• .., 2 ' i : ' ....:-..--- . f. - "...,..7.2:,'L -,,,;,-.'.,,,:. _ oi, . 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'. . . • - . . ..1 ...1 . . . . - . • . • . - .. . . . ; . ~ • ' • . - • - :.',,,,-.-. '.. I - -!-i ',,.', From the Waverly. 111A11032ET. • BY rEOFEBSOII GEORGE. R. VOELTCR(. 1 "WE love - great men ; love, feherate, and bow? submissive before great . men ; nay, can . We . hdnestly bow - down to anything else! Abi. does not every ttue man' feel, that he is himself made. higher by doing reverence( to what. is {ally above ; him! NO nobler - or . more ;blessed feeling dwells in man's heart."_ These are . the words of one of the lion heatts of earth ; one who, himself high, thus Mali* that there are higher than himself, and that s Eto these. he can boW. And how truo'it is,that we reverently bow the' head to intOleet- . and greatness, let 'them come in whate'Ver i'diape they may. What car e . we If a believes in beir atitipodes-,if his soul is dreitt, ztitotig suilounding souls! There is nothing high, beautiftil, - or noble,.,hut . that We • rn,uit. lbow down, :'before, fOr the. heart compel homage, and says "this is greater ib a n itilf n lltgws.' I :; . Dialtomet, the subject of our sketch, was greater ithan fellOws, by far; and -made his mark in an untniStakable manner on his age ' making it (Me of the most noticeable ages in History. i• He Vvas,!vre believe, an honest man; end thi s i s I,said "the noblest work of God." , 'i We do not believe him au impostare or de- . ceiver,l amb That he taught the people lies, F; knoWitig them to be lies.. That Mahometan- ism-is j a gigantic phantom; whose shadows v' fall across the hearts, and blackens the souls I; of 'tw0.1.141i4 of cur race, we verily believe; li but we as truly believe that Nlaltomet labored Under an itliosyncracy whitlf 6.1 him to be lieve this :bilge Cabala..-as well as his follow , Ors. surelpx it was_ never in the power of than, by means of Impudence, to do many things !which Mahomet did in seeming bon titty, ifi lislheart Were riot right, and he at ease with himself.• The confidence of truth !,11 1 . boldlyi in most of his actions, and the inevo)encii of his big; heart led him to en 'Oavoriin eery action to benefit. his follow-. err% . Ile diaway image worship, and taught ! th:e Solis of the desert to reverence a higher, att unseen.Od, and he made them feel - tlgit ,40greater than themselves was everywhere with or against them. No man was ever ' ;Mere ,devout than -Mahomet, and none ever had stricter laws' by which to golden his ad h4ents..Hp!strode amongst those wild and irtNietuous +astern. tribes . an acknowledged sovereign, temporal and spiritual, and he .neye abused), his power. How feW• can have tins said of 'them. • • • I . ,• ;For over twelve hundred . 'yeari two bun dr,,d millions of human beings have, found . 1 their spiritual sustenance in 'the doctrines of ' 31iihotinit; end at `this - time, more people believe in this prophet, than in any set of '`tenets-in the universe. This :shows . .well for •lalioniet's influence—and i t. show s something for his doctrine, too, we opine, - - ilt dOw, -not seem possible that 4so many peOple have eristed,believing a thing, wholly untrue,, altili p mgh there_ mayl be - flaws and egregious-errors within .'the :t•ystem, as un dotibtediy tf+re are. But - we have been too Mich in the way of condenaning, Maboinet and his' religion, as imposture, and premedi tated. - deceit, land it is• time this were dene aW y with. !Ours is pre-eminently and a g e, .. of ntelligenoie, and it should be also an age of . parity, or at least.of tolerance. • I nd now,[candidly, what did Mehemet-do. which intik him to us, at this day,' greater than hiS fell wsi: and what, that we shoUld t piously hold Up our bands, and- casting -our , , eyes heavenward cry " . unelehrt l unclean ?t In the first place, then, Mahomet gave his followers a higher Intelligence to fail doWn before and Worship, instead.'Of the insensate idc& ferinoly set up as diViniii . among "them; and he founded a , religion which was the. . brOad noon-day. brightness, compared with the.. 'darkness lately „prevalent_through the land. :: Ite tried to, better Lis people, to. lead their thought to no bfe e " A d i annet,t, an d. h e, infused'h real life and. a bounding existence into old bedii,s. - .. He was. the man of a Young World, and with his liberal_ goodness, and:tender care of all Whe fell i within his circle, no Wonder crOwds folloWed his foot4ep.s and called hi m Blii. 'li e gave hi. countivmen it re ligion iipprot'iate- to them =one - they could i understand- 7 - ind its justice, and its rewards, and iiiinisbutcuts, realized their idea of a code_ made by ',an all-powerhil, all-worthy Being": They. were, willing and ready to en roll thetiaSeives beneath the banner . Of such a -Faith, -and their leader was worthy' 'of them; and of the (ialse he esponsed. -.: ' . '.. - I MahoMet was sincere; lend thus his.trutliS and 'untruths'ircanie upon the hearts of his followera with .4- sledge-hammer force, and they cotildttot but be convinced. rgincerity - covers a mabitude of sin=; and with this Mahomet set tire to. the world,. Etien6tness Aso was hh , .4,land his energy was marvellous, - And how did he. struggle, and wrtle . mith his enemies, alas 'tis the. old story—genius and greatness of heart, pitied in uneqUal warfare against enty, spite, and uncharitableness; but, for once,,after a long contest, Genii' • got the uper hand.: - -' Mahomet ws-ambitiotts, but, kirits not all ii., ambition, as any would have us Leave; and his thoughts came not from other 'men, but from living I'.4;ature—tfrom the,. pathless de serts, the tweeping simootn, the welcome water - - . Spring, the Starilof the sky, the, brightness of the sun - and moon, from the depths of his .. own heart... 1 . "The great, triy_stery pf existence glared in -upon him, With its terrors , witkits splendors. The voice -Pt Such al man iio,kvoice direct, from Nature'si)wn h rt...Meti.4o and listen,,Hutt. to ..na no: From of old, a thou sand theirghts [ in , his:pilgrimings and wan derings had been inl him. What am 11 What is this unfatholable thin i tmen live-in, and Celt .the universe, What is life! What is death I What tim. I to belieVe, and- what, am Ilto dor I • .‘ ' . ' . 1 Thegrittticicks of- onnt Bare, of Mount' Sinai; the sterni seedy . Modes answered not The great. heaven r ling silently overhead, with its glancifig suit+, answer not.. There Was no answer. • Tha man's 'own -seul, and What of Gods iruipiretton dwelt - there, had tci. I answer: - i s '- Did it. not. i nswer, and- has not a world acknowledged , this Ittstkomet's : greatness t... Who have dreaMed that the meek and black eyed[ boy of the Rovefek tribe, would make A WEEKLY 3OURNAL4-DEVaTED. TO POLffieLNi l lit, LITERATURE, AGRICULT • SCIENCE, =ANA MORALITY. , . . . • . suckle commotion in this world of ours, Seen I man,' reered . in :* savage tribe, amid the whei he was foueteen f • Ali !.even then the coarsest of social influences;: persecuted,--Out mighty soul were being stirred, and his heart lawed and data from place to place like was disgusted with - the falseness of the Idol a hunted deer,' ran we wonder when pos-. 'Worship practieefi about him; and even then sensing supreme poWer, and unlimited sway, - he was nerving himself to become the exem- his mortal instinct and mortal passions should plat of avast imbiber of human beings, • have somewhat led him• from the strict•paths Mehemet married Rndijsh when iii his Of rectitude. Alas, no! viewed with-, bur. twenty-fifth year she being forty years old; standard of social-usefulness and goodness ; and he lived with her long and happily. He Mehemet would•fall far below: many n com eid not, sieconlibg to his own account, haves mon man, but viewed and „judged with un a revelation, andidireet mission from Heaven Prejudiced eyes in his actual social pasitien, nutil forty yearold; and we are informed - we imagine he, will occupy a high place that haying withdrawn into the mountains, among the earnest benefactors of his race. near Mecca, "to,pass the month in prayer Mehemet was n man of great courage, and and ineditation ion -those great questions of the most unbounded reliance upoti himself, which he wished - solved," lie told his wife aided by i higher intelligence. • When. flying that owing to iltiaven a unspeakable favor he with Abu Bekar,from his . enemies, the latter, had found it all Out, that he was in 'darkness trembling with fear, exclaimed, •"our pus and doubt no mitre; "that these wooden gods suers ere Many, and we are but tiro P'; ati4 were of no aecuttut, that there was one Ural: MahoinetlanSwered, "nay, there is ;11•thirif, supreme and 'alolie, mid that He only was for God ilt with us:" . :.-- • great and holy:' Then came the cry of "...Utah At aniether time, a renowned warrior ap il Allah," and sobs after this . , the formula of r proaclied I Mehemet "to take him prisbner, , the faith of.lslairri; with e ,hirge number of soldiers to. assist "The . inspiration of. the Lord giveth under- him, 'found his horse stumble, when :the atauding;" and hew do we know what kind Prophet, ridvanoing, in front of the troops, so or .inspiration came upon this mighty man ? ,worked do their superstitious; • that- they He is said to have been subject to fits of sib- turned aid fled from his face. T.- • straction and - . illtiminatiore in - which" he • re- When asked for .Some•great rule of. daily . cited many strange things, and prcippunded conduct, he said, Speak evil of :to one!" doctrines, some good, and. some • bed; and For th benefit of those who think the these fits were probably what he celled in- Koran a . mass of ab.surditY, and tissue of de spiration. Ile sate queer visions too, and too ceptions ' .lwe will here give a feW short se often belieyed in them. and treated them as lections firm its pages, taken at random. ' • verities and rules of action. His vifidlolife "Post utter thy prayer with n loud voice? was•dreaM-like, and his way was a visionary, know that theme is no.need. God - knoweth tramp through the earth:- In • the early part the secret of thy hearti, yea, that which is of his career_ he 'Made many enemies, and most hidden:" •• . they cea:Zeil not to follow, him for years; they " Verily, lam God; there is none be liked not that any should : , bedeetned wiser side me. Serve me; serve none other; - offer than they.. " Who -is this that so lords it up thy prayer to.none but Me." - iT• over us all 1" • "The Ail , Merciful is throned on high ; : to .He had, at the end of three yeeis preach- Hint belongeth whatsoever is in the henYona ing, but thirteen ItilloWers. "Ilk friends tried above, and in the earth beneath, and hithe to dissuadehim him-going on in a course so regions under the earth." • • . . 'T slow, but he Said ti them, If the moon stood "Feed,the hungry, visit the•sick,.abd free on one hand, rind the sun on the other telling the captive." - • . me to stop, I . would not step." • "-Look not seornfully . on•-thy - felXiir an, He had to. hide . himself in clefs, caverns, neither walk .the earth with insolence; for and holes in •the riicks-Ldisguise himself in a God loveth not :the arrogant and. titin-e'lori thousand ways, aid fled from place to place, ous,r ; ~ a fugitive on th 4 face of the earth, till -his "Po unto thy brother as thou 'wouldst be glorious sun attained its ultimate splendor. . dealt by." , . We like his • 4rankness, of which the fu!- - "Angels come among you &eh by night 'lowing is a proof. i His young add beautiful and day; those of -the night ascend to heav wife Ayesha, married 'after the death of en,. and God asks them -hew they left his Radijah, one day questioned - him, _saying, creatures. • 'We found them,' said they, at "Am / not; better than 'Liddell ? Shr - their re- 4, and we left them at their al 2 :et ..,an z , ue-was a widow, old, and hied lost her - good looks-; you love me Bette! than you dld her 1"' No, by . Allah i' said 3h/hornet, "she believed in me when none else would believe; in the Whole world I Lad but one friend:--"and she leas that!" His iwife Radijah was his first convert. • • I The "Hegira" or T Flight of Mahomet, is an era of the greatest moment iu the eirktern countries. The fist year of this era was the fifty-third of. Mithomet's life,' and the six hundred and twenty-setond of our era. We have said rsomewhere, that l'fahom inedanitm is a reality, and ,no shadow, al though we oWn ttbt to a belief in its truth— and this is amplylevidenced in the wild ear nestness and enthusiasm of- its followers; there is nothing }dead- nor dry like in their religious ordinancis; they make no vain os tentation Or sliowiol. sanctity, but when the hours for prayer :ire struck, a world of peo-ii pie fall down to worship and adore.- , What an imposing, and y' et what a,simple thing— alone iu the wilds of the Desert, or in the midst of the crowded thoroughfares of • the busy city, 'fis all the same with the Al:thorn: .inedan':. his heart ells him'' tdpray, and lo! it is done." • i • ••' Mahottlet, after he death of his first wife . indulged in . .n plurility of Wives,. allowing by laWfour wives to :teli of his followers, but claiming more for - himself, on the ground, that a,.prophet tieing pecidittrly gifted' and privileged, was net confined. to the same miles as other mortials. !thichs• has been said , of.. his wives, butlAyesha,,wms -his best be- loved ;• and to . her he was betrothed when seven years of agJ. She,is d - es.eribed_as_het_: ins exceedingly l , cautiful. 1 ''l7ltere has been 4 great deal of Controver sy about,Mabomeds, night visit to Jerusalem, and his going there from :Versa and to the seventh Heaven in a - single -night;-someaf firm that it Was lit vision--•-others that .he I went through the detailed adventures of that night bodily.;- otinirs that it was a revelation - I to him; wind', with ithe'exccption of obscure allusionv to it in :the Koran,.he himself has said little about it : t And what a Nome is- in this vision pre sented to us; ,a - dank and awfully silent night —not the - sound 'oflan animal or living thing to be heard ; the .haters and winds hushed to fault—and - a voicel comes saying, "AWake, thou sleeper!" when the prophet finds before him. Gabriel, clad iu dazzling apparel, who presents him. with, a *glorious white . horsc, lhaving the wings ;.pf an eagle,,nnd rays of - light flashing fronihis eye.; and nostrils. The prophet essays to mount "Al Borak," who at first is not willing to bear the load, never having ,not mortal, - but the- angel upbraids him,.saying, "Them is but one God, and this is his prophet;" wliereupon"Borakis endow ed with the faculty of 'speech, and he- has Mahomet to intercede for him inyamdise— on receiving the as4urance Borak "allows 'Ma hornet•to bestride him, when they pass like '"lightning between iheaven and eattli;. twice, did the angeVorder them back to earth to pray;.but the third time, lifahometleelirrg his - heavenly missi4n. would not return, hut spurred on his wongerful 'steed.. As they fly through' the air, Many voices and ravishing maidens hold out ifflurementa, fur Mahomet to stop, but: no!. onithey ge till the holy city .is reached. Her are found Abraham,- -Moses, and Jesus, wito . pray in - company with the Prophet, and .then ascend to the first Heaven on a laddedof light; they pass suc cessively through all 66 heavens to the high est or seventh -heaven, when Mahomet is ad- Mitted into the pros'ence of - god, who gives . Out his commands fin the ruling of the Faith ful, and,. with a d ? escription of unequalled. magnificence, this eor g eous - eastern recital closes. In 3fahomet's .later 'rears, be allowed the alloy of worldly i3tut meet to mingle' with hissublime enthusiatmi and inculcated many things as rtih.4.of altion, which we are com pelletl to look upon has derogatory to his dig nity, as a man, and his supposed prophetio mission. But who bitsnot frailties, wholes not &titbit . Nay, there is not a perfect-Man; flow - thew shall .w. . look with the glass of perfection upon Nlabomet, an unlettered toitrost, cSustputanita Canntg, ii. , Oursbaa pernini . gag 17, 1455. P prayers.'" With Mahomet's poetical description of the last day, we have done:— "A day shah come when the , . sun will be shrouded, and the stars will lull from the Heavens. ' •• \Vita -the camels about to fwl will be , neglected, and vio beasts will herd together through fear. • --'" When the wanes of the ocean will boil, and the souls of the dead be again united to the bodies. - . When the heavens will pass away like a scroll, and hell will burn fierclv, and the joys of Paradise will be rade manifest. On that day shallevery .soul make known that which it bath perforated. Verily, J swear to you by the stars Which move swiftly, and are lost in the brightness of the sun, and by the darkness of the night, and by the dawning of the day, these- are :not the words of an evil spirit, .but-of an angel of diguity.antl power, who possesses - the confi dence of Allah, and is revered by - the angels under his command." Good A thrice. in a lecture upon the "Irish Emigrant," recently delivered by Robert C. Barry, Esq., before the Irish Social and Benevolent Socie ty, we find the -following passage. It con . - tains much of sound advice, appropriately and pertinently expressed : • "As an Anierican, I welcome to the soil of my country each, and every emigrant who briligs with him a reputation. for honesty, industry • and sobriety, poor though he may be. Thanks nyGod, however, poverty is not y•Tti - d'e - C - ii&rit - crinid.• - Aliirto• the newly ar rived Irish eniigrant, iii all candor, I would sa,.neithe, stop nor loiter on the seabOartl; Tather, seek a home in the healthful lair of the country; _or go Out to the fertilei and magnificent regions of the Wes; clear away the forests erect habitations., and dilligently cultivate the earth'. It. you have mechanical genius, seek Witiout delay employment; if a laborer, look vit once for work; you can ob tain it if you try. Whatsoever your calling, be not idle; for it is a_ truthful, apothegm that idleness is the parent,olall vice— " Trust no Future, howeer pleasant, : • • • Let the dead Past burry dead; Act! act! in the living liresent, • Heart within, sind_.God o'er head." • Be frugal and . temperate, with spendthrift hand scatter. not to the . winds the w'agvi. of your daily toils, and thereby become depend= ents on the public charity, educate, educate liberally - your children, for the road of"-pre ferment in this hind : is open alike for the lofty and the lowly; ever bear in mind that knowledge is fir more desirable than wealth instil not yourself, nor gullet-Others to infuse into their yonthful.minds; the poison. of re ligious ,bigotry. Enjoy:your own sectarian dogmas, frequent your own church, and kneel at the altar of . your ckildhood's faith; intetfere not, nor intermedle with the polites or ;religion of yoiir neighbors, for the Ameri can people are extremely sensitive on these tonics; eschew political and sectarian . commis for they we in truth productive of no good; be mindful of ieur own at airs. and look not after the business of others,' thereby pr4venting_ discord and ill will., Avoid all private feuds, and shun public coinmotioni; ke4p steadily in view the disgrace and pun ishiment attendant on violations of the law; draw closely around you, byltind Words and de4ds, your family, your friends and all with whom. you may 13 - C brought in contact; tetringle freely with our people,'. learn our• manners, habits and customs; become, as it were, in mind, heart, and soul nationalized, and you cannot fail iu winning your.way to their: respect, estpem tind 'confidence; and above all things " To , ,thine ownaelf he trite: And it must follow . as the night the day Thou clink not then be false to any man." Kir An exchange brags much of a - new method of!' curing" hams. Many dour (lit, izens would prefer being informed of some "trier mode &Pro -curing tbem, A Tale of The Crimea: -1 CUArisR 1. THE BAFFLE OF INKERMANN' As the gun came up; struggling with the gloom of clouds, the vanguard had given alarm of that onslaught iv hich,before the day ,was done, should make Inkerrnann second to Waterloo. Through the foggy, drizzly dark, had burst the blare bugles, and drums, and , from-sleep and r atlin g musketry ; and the transition froin-sleep to battle bad been an interval of consternation;, not-the consternation Of cow ardice however, but of sudden iurprise.; The battle of Inkermatin Would have- been . a splendid sight to see. in a broad field and a bright MM. 'But the nature of the ground. and the Ilarkbess.of the day, rendered it im possible to take .in more than.a - itnall• scene of the grand•and terrible drama at one view. -Many a heroic- deed was performed that day in obscure and solitary places, that left- no 1 - 1.40 rd but death. If you baud some, gloo-• iiny glen, a flush harvest of carnage 7 r-corpses idying as thick us sheaves after the sickle— ' you knew.there liad been great achievements Ilfe're—bat they. will not illumine the-page of history for their memory sleeps in the burial -trenches with those who died enacting thn. Thirst for glory, such as is slaked by blood had lured young Cecil. Gray from his happy Itome in old England, to the camp and to the field. He was an officer in -the 'Fifth Dra goons; and we have an interest in him now, let us watch the performance of the Fifth, on that day of Inkertnana.. Are not they yonder on the heights? Let us get nearer .therri, for this -dismal day is like twilight that We cannot distinguish the - figure on their buttons. Yes it is 5, what noble fellows! With what an air] of impa fience they lean forward, as the battle's din increases.! How their nostrils dilate, of op . • l• ‘port,unity. . , Which of them is" Cecil Gray ? Do, you see, - yonder at the right, that tall, noble young officer who is gazing with looks ofi unspeak able tenderness upon a locket miniature, which lie has just drawn from his bosom That \is he : and the miniature is of—the flame would choke his. titternnee, if be attempted to. speak it, for he is thinking of the. time—not many months ago, but oh, how long !=—when 'the original olthat . picture sobbed-on his breast, and clung to him with love's deSperation, kissing him most fondly, and pleading with him in. God's name not to go:.--4:411,n0 not .to go! Ili . slip quivers, lie brushes his hand ,across his eyes, be closes the 'locket, and - replaCes it in his bosom. The Eifth • had lost most oe their infantry in the beginning Of the battle— for the Turkish foot, their main support, bad fled at the finit onset—and there remained to them now only a small division of the Nigh- - landers, a number quite insufficient to_ l sustain them. Yet as the cannonsthurideregAind the inusketi hailed death around, the -brave fel lowsieli. it like a shaine to sit there while their comrades were winningglory, and every moment they grew more eager,, even without the support of infantry, for an . occasion to act. - ; 1 - Harkl th e tramp of cavalry. Every. rein is tightened, and every horsernan's breath is quelled with expectation. Up they come at a fierce gallop as though they . ant to sweep the heights clear at a single pa. s. It is the Muscovites! Their heavy, rusl ing billows of horik\ dash full upon the- Highlanders,- And are shocked back• by the shore of bayonets:— They rally, and advan'co more slowly. Then the tingles of.the Fifth sound, and the fiery horses Are wheeled into order for the onset. •LOok at Cecil, Gray; he, has forgotten the ininiat'itre, be has forgotten the original, 'he has forgotten the little cottage - by the Thames where slie is. sighing prayer* to Heaven for him vow--he thinks only 'of . glory.. His ;breast lieaves and pants; and his handsluteh es his hilt, waiting for the next signal twang. • Ancither blast of bugles, and the whole Fifth, instantly bustling all over with swords, like a tingle being, spring into the Charge.— `A thundering hurricane ofbattle,,they sweep right dowti_on the advancing foe with the .speedof the wiia.L God of Heaven! _what a spectacle! With what a sublimely terrif.. shock, the two hostile masses of men rid horses crash and. crash .together! , Su rd clangs on sword, horses and rider "sink, the sea of battle surges over them - . The Fifth cut the foe through and through, and when theirbitgles - sound the rally, they disregarded the signal, determined to .fight till they clear the field or die.. Horse 10.titist horse, with onset and repulse, Saxon and CAA sack they cleave one swaying anether down - I-to and fro like a stormy sea. _l- Where is Cecil Gray r . Yonder is his ',plume. Watch it. It. tosses ribove the thick ‘ef the_ fight, as if it were alive with glory'.-- There; it loses itself in the smoke of pistols.- 7 . It emerges. We lose sight of it again. Yon- . der once more it 'flies alOng the field, like some splendid bird of prey, tbatkillsits quer cry, but stops not to devour. Swords leaping above and'about it, other plumeS tied and sink around it; .riderless horses . whirl".away from it, and roll down and surge, and strug, gle;and die in the overwhelming' billows ' of battle. But that plume,. and 'the "sword that goes with it, ceases not for an instant in their sublime career. . The wounded French Clianeur who reclines on his - elbows here nigh tig, watching the plume, forgets his pain, and ejaculates, C'est rtperbe 1 .7 And iits superb, it is glories. But now that plume the dreadful; ceutre of a vortex of foes, which dashes upoO it, as upon a lone sail . of the foam-capped • whirl pool,in the sea. Other e lumes fly to the res cue. Sabres flash thick and fait, and Chop down into fiery brains, and cross and thrust, And stab, and mix in a horriblo turmoil of he roic desperation.- • . • The Russians are in total route, And the gallant Fifth in rally; with shout and hirrah. But the plume of Cecil Gray! • ;Os gone.— The payers! which have kept going up to Heaven from the cottage by the Thames have not been answered. , • In the field they found him, the eveliing of that-day, 'with a moniimelit= of slaughtered heroes piled; up to his glory. And his survi ving comrades spaded him a grave and wrap ped his clunk around him, and had him to rest. CUAPTER;/1-41 COTTAGE O THE MUM. inkermann has been fought, and the news has One tbrou,gh England. In that cottage Minute Gray sits sobbing. and , milling lei wbst she knows possible yid yet hopes 1113, possible. Weep on Minnie—the hour -is at hand, when , the blessed rellef . ottears may , be denied thee. • "Willie, go'to the town; and—and—Go ! Willie pes—he runs all the wai.' He brings back / nothing but the newspapers till ed with " Latest from the Crimea." . • " No letter, Willis!" "None." .Sue se izes the paper, and gropes tear-bliw ded, through the long columns. But she finds nothing, only that so many were killed and so, many were wounded, and the -names Of: :a few great officers that were slain: The throb bing blood almost bursts from her veins , and. her eyes go dry,- as she rends a printed letter from one .of the Fifth Dragoons. But it, says nothing of Cecil, only that the Fifth Dragoons_ had been in " Glorious - l. - 1* OM my God how can I bear this agony of suspense !" • Willie tried to soothe her--bnt she could . - hear nothing but ,the. soul-stunning thunder of battle, see nothing through her tears,... but the charge of the Fifth Diagoons! " Go' to town, .Willie and come.. not- hack till-you have brought some , word -from . hint!" The boy went sorrowfUlly. Minnie Gray watched the clock and the road to town all Any and all night, - ancrall the) . next day."' till the suri went down. 4,, - Willie was coming,' the sight . of him made. her dizzy and faint. now diddle walk were there tidings in his step t ; Yes !life or death! Ile came hurriedly while he seemed to. reel under the weight of his heart.. ,i-She staggers out to meet him ,gasps= "Any word, Willie 1 "No word, but ?"- 7 - • " - ; - She holds her-breath, and stares wildly at him, as he draws forth the locket. He pla : :ces it quitikly in her cinching hand,and turns his face away. - She unclasps it shudderingly, and. the lock of haiisprings-out and curls around her fin- get - ! A - smothered, quivering cry, a stifled, choking wail of agony .that crushed the - life . out, and Minnie gray (ell - .into her brother Willie's arms. . . .. In the little village . church-yard, there is now a new made l grave, and over it, is a mar ble slab, bearing this inseription-- '.• ' . . • ^ '.• In memory of ... - - ' CECIL and . ..MINNIE GRAY, - • whom Peace married , ..- • . ' - inlife,! . .. : • r , . . whom War wedded . - in death. .- • . . • --10-.1,,1 , .. 7 ------- _ • • %, ' How to • Marry. . _ ~ A few years ago I•made one of the seveii-. ty-nine - passengers on board the fast . steamer 'Emily Barton, bound up the Tennessee.. A pleasant intelligent go ahead captain; a good steward, and social, refined 'company, wade the trip_ one of pleasure;_ indeed, long shall I remember the saucy Emily Barton and her "superb" living , freight,, One lovely summer afternoon it ,was whispered' that we _were to have a weddii:g beforethe boat reached- ber destination; said f whisper starting first ind low nearthe ladies' cabin ' 'and speedily mak ing its . ; way .to the hail; - the boiler deck, and even to the main; like the snow balls down 'the mountain, gathering size, form and mo mentum,' , as it rolled forward, until the-prin cipals in the interesting scene were not Only, pointed out, but the TersOns- , --Some scrapes in .The history of each - fiction, fact' and stir- - arise; - all hushed up ingeniously,: leaving you' in the half pleasant, half painful suspense and doubt that opens the eyes so wide and strains the drum of the ear so tight to all transPir ing.tircinud you. Well; wo - landed to hood' at a :riagnifieent beach bottom,ibe tall henry leafed trues, with _their. silver' gray trunks, making_ a deep, cool shade,, while they, with their grassy green bank that bore:them, were in the glassy river, so clear;:so true, that version only pointed the - false 4 from. the' real. Cutting this charming j spot, in twain came, murtnuring'crystal brook, ,scarce four spa& wide 4, to lose itself in .the misses of Tennessee waut, -they in turn to be alike lost in the 'boundless sea. • • •• - No sooner was the - staging out than there emerged from the ladies' cabin a fine, manly . looking fellow,' - dressed in. faultdess., taste, ,in tellect beaming in every feature, wl#ile allover his face perfect happiness, shone like ph&pho rus on the seal and leaning On his" arm was the most loveable woman it has ever been-my . lot to behold; her fine hazel cyesi (tell tales that they were) spealting deep',.etpOittin, and her eXpressive lip quivering with ?.‘timirLsSecl excitement, while her stepi dress ; and grace was that of a queen. . , • • " There 'they are • " That's her I' - ." 0, how handsome;"burst from many a lip as we instinctly made way for - them -!pass to the altar, and where that was we lad about as clear an idea. as a" transcendentalist geaer ally Las of -whathe is • But one thing all-seem to" ..know, that there was fun .ahead, and that to fall in their wake was the Way- to see it. - As. the 'ladies' passed, 'n gallant arm was-offered to each, and. thus we marched out of the cabin, down. the stairs, across the staging, and up the slOpings bank. Seine fifty yards up the brook the pair -stop ped, and, Joining hands, they stood, with the' clear water,between them--bridged ash was with .the twining fingers and crossed by . a stream.of love as pure as itsdf. All was si lent '-still -- until by the minister, reading itf au impressive•rnanner "Anil the .rib which the Lord God had ta ken froui'a inan.rmidS . he a woman 'and brat her to the man. . And -Adam said, this is now bone.of toy bone. and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called woman becanse- she was taken out of man. Therefore shall a man leive his father and mother and cleava unto his wife, and they shall be ono flesh.". - . He closed the 'book and 'offered' a most touching and beautiful, prayer; not - a..heart b'et seemed-to feel-that vaniesit appeal• to the Throne of Grace. Then' asking: 'the - usual questions,he pronounee(l them husband and. wife. Te:little slowly sipking on her knee., raising her Leisutiful face, all covered with tears; and her clasped hands; and in'a touch-. ing-sweet, voice, tremulous with deep.emotien said : . . “ And 'now, 0 merciful tether, grant that our two lives, thus united, may peapetully flow in one, even as the - rivulet, until we reach the River of Death., and undivided in' faith or eonduct,be permitted to enjoy thin , eternal stoiles in the-laud of Ole pure and.tie, .blett.” Every pulse 8001 lied atilt, hoping, = - ffithiag for more of this beautiful drama.. Not it lettril•Pot- Ul"eincat*lnt !Bit- Aliat' thing —all, all was 'happiness.' 0.. loteiy mots- ♦; foixtme 12, Itlontra-4,1:-.,: ma, how deeply thawartgritverron thebetel The happy mars waiin'theitet4 alias on , the smiling lips of his'f..mignifkiatit wife, when the clear toriea-of a rintnlY.,lnotee, startled' all from j. pleasing reveriri; ;striver--; sal gaze rested on sr tall Teranewsii i we 'eagle eye spoke thelllllA74 . ll4i,eirissentittive he was of the State where Sleep's Jacksori,*, "I can't stand this any longer; 1 taritt;'AY Pardon ladies , - pa r don ;: havir iiprop osition to make in theirecil - faritkirrifannlo never lies or triflei. ..I muat.ritake it-or - 04;- 8o here goes. Now I 'ringlet!, thirt,spot any lady in the crowd. wlfOline face such music; look it me, Midi you' idu love me as she loves, fPointingst . '`tlrevlikrido I'll promise to , lxr a husband to yori, such. a. husband as she deserves, arid such.* husband as a true hearted man will make tci'a woman who comes tremblintindei his wirig.`. 'far ther say , that . no spot , of shame, attachan-lo my: name, nor ever shall-; and this anti- trill support and . protect the one Who , can - trust it. Who'll take me I" • • And his eye ran slowly and iteOly tiOr the crowd- of handsome women mound hiin, his earnest manner and nova': speech hid aroused an intense feeling; all was an9tis and deep sympathy with the fearless, excited orator, when to the astonishafentOnd delight of every one,"11 fawnlike; hinoeyet.igirk from tbe flowery banks of Alabama, stepped to his :side, and looking confidently up to his eyes, her hands on his am? said " I am thine I" ~. . 13y this time his arm wasaround her waist, ' , apd partly; her.curls, (black as the raven!» Ailtig, at midnight,) looked stetulfast)y in her, "Ace for a motnenkatid "signed the millrace with a kiss that all the married. Indies if pro S kit terwardsnonneed of the genuine ii4:srt- , -• - fectly satisfactory.- Raising his flashing e i with a triumphant expression from tltl. pl _ ant job just mentioned, he said— .._ - " Where is the parson I send him vie-. here—on this spot we met L atido,t, this spot, t we'll be ninde ode ;...I never let much I luck a'• this' pass me by waiting a . _ minute.. so go ahead, all's ready." - - :•- [ , And the parson did "go .ahead,"'llincl oa that spot where they first met- were . they. sol emnly united forever. When WI wettivc; " What God liath joined together;let pp =int put asunder," died away, a shout:S i rt - up that woke the echo for miles; every. hand - was extended to the happy; backyr;. .cintoro some fellow; imd - every: lady as that crowd. pressed, the lip of his -handsome wife; (for a moment I wished I were her, but / instantly recovered my self-possession, and - thrust' tlin; ,. weakness from me; women kissing each-eth er always seemed a weakness to me, blittheY know best, and laughing, shouting, - happ,y r we all returned on board:. - Our generous captain set a splendid sup per the clerk made out 'two' Iffiarriagu tiaates ; they *ere signed'y_ttielarson seventy.fonr wittxiaes, Ora 121* uutde the nine. - youlinow i ymen, siouteihand childhau all told;--everybody signed. nen iedanced, we' lauglied;..re Made children of ourseliea—=. yes, I am afraid We made fools tif - - - onrsel, Be that asiit may s When (be at the noon of night, the bluffs on the dark shores of the river returned only wobrifri- - the' eackof the - hoarse coughing of the Ai:, Ig Bart A's 'engines,' for. we alept„.. and our: dreams rainly , tried to . vie with the lovely ta— ality of the evening. Pawling Interview with Elinwell• The evening before his death, ,while!tho workmen were busy with thesettifold,aytk4 ,, lady., was ushered intel dtingeors. - was the girl whom he so fondly 10,44 . and. • who had ,now eome to hid him, itn-.ctertral farewell, ile was leaning: in .a-; melancholy mood against the window -frame of the prison, and the heavy clanking of his irons smote dismally upon her heart. — The interview was bitterly affecting, and melted even the callotti soul of the jailor. As for Emmet, he trho little ; but as he pressed his' beloved srt lenoie to his bosom, his countenance, Natural his emotions. In a low voice, - half-eholed by anguish; he besought her 'not - to . .:fOrgef. him ; he reminded her.of their former happi= ness, of the 'Ong plat days Of their ebildhOod, and concluded by requeitidg der. to visit:the scenes where their infancy was spent, antt though this world might -re.pest their - slimes with scorn, to cling..to his 'memory with' afr• • , At this %cry instant, the evening bell 'peal • from the neighborifig church.- Eimer started at:the sound,randrishe felt that. this was the lastlitne Le should - ever hear its , mid sound, he folded hja,beloved - atilt to his heart, and bent over titer-sin Ling form with his eyes streaming . With affection. Tisk turnkey entered at this. Moment ;. 'aimed of his weakness, he dashed the rising tear `imn_ his eye, arid a :frown again lowered: on . counteuance. - -The man, meanwhile, apprm: ultle• ed to tear the young lady frontrhieerabracein. Overpowered by bis feelings, be let , no resistance; but as he gloomily:r,eleand her from his hold, he gave her a littler ttitiii :; tutu of hituself, and with a-parting token of attachment, he imprinted thelsat kissei dying man upon her lipw. - doors she turned around as -if toy gase.eucA ' more upon the object of her Widowed lose.r— Ile cangla her - eye ass :sireretcred--it was but - for a moment; the . dungeondOor swang-intek upon its hinges and as It . ctosall after inr formed him toesurety that they fuet fax the last time on earth. - . f -•, • 111.3. ts ion Sztrooratootearr—.-ffy o.Prix. - ' dent ottt Gentlenseit.—Alwayssit nas to = thtt ' carver, f you can; at:diener. ' '- ' Ask no woman her age. ,- , : ~.,-.. Be civil to all riot' uncles erg *nuts. Never joke with a policeman. ,, ' . _ Take no notes' or grcoM With You,to.rifiriat baiar—notbiug but lour oldest bat, of course; for as aiming. Don't - play chess with a widow, Never contradict a-*lnt sttel stutters. Iklake frienda with tho itsiwaid on baud- a stearner- - -theres no kteowing - botr - soon- yen may be placed in bis: O wer. - . -; •.,' In every :image! hot?. it is. well to likplilMS, wbe:e the litandy Ls - kept-04ft think if : rink were-taken ill in the , itiidillo of the arlitlt. Keep your own see 'tii;ri, Urn. — nil* ii' a kire being 7otr dye' your whiskers,' r -", . ',-, . -,- Wnte n ot one morn hatter ,- '...yo!ran i , help, ii The man who e‘pv.. ups, , Aervei t r poodeoce is - 1 4 martyr ttot.'. 0. , ..htirke„., but tol ha Est. :. . f ' : - "-; , ; , , Wind, Sp your cied*s-iiii -- foiw-iii44 - ,sioewery, day, wssgiinitig.:•.u,ltWttidyz-:*hedi.P -er yin' ans*“ W I or melow:k....Pusek. IIII!1!!!=111MIZM A . 7 - • =ES _.. L~'~'~e:.~~r..