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What Othea, do !need not rLiii; Enongtilor' tne, I'know my task 'T is tiSeek-for lth , -- • I inset rtil Man's store-- I think tay God for health; I ink for noihing more,. - 14y daily itantS re soon supplied, Or whSt I do . ni)t need, defiled. Let others seek for faine,, The homage of on how?' I care not for ot name, Fo - r.glorrot for power, ' The'race I lea'ye to others free— Such transient _ Wiss is not for roe. Pleasure, that siren fair, Has lost her: power to _harm -Her joys are empty air, "-.• I bwn pa more their charm ; For other accents seem to say, - " StUy not butt work while yet'tis day." T2,cipe.the tremblinn. tear, POW* P 1 1 .0 4. To Soooe , tha anxious fear, . - Or bush die, rising ie.:- • .• • This is a bliis to live, • )1; joy that weltith can never give. To ;trice against the wrong, `• Which takes the name of right Tootle will the strong,. And conquer in the fight. Things truer iilippiness than could The warrior's wreath if bathed in blood. rm - isitolvoG OLD. I'm growing old—'tis surely so, And yet how short ii seems, Since I was but n. sEiortiie Enjoying dreams, I cannot see the ehapge that come* sure and even pace ; I ma i tk.not When the w r .wrinkles fall'' :Upon my fading film. • knoivina:old;and yet.my borat . • Isjost as young sad gay - A e'er wa4 before my locks ; • Of bright brown turned to gray I.know these eyes, to other eyes, Look not so bright and , glad As 'once . they did ; and yel- 'tis Because my heart's mire sad. r never watched v.ith purer joy The floatig.eleuds and glowing skies, While glistening tears of rapture fill" These old and fading eyes-. Aid wheta mark the ebeek, where - once The bright rose used to grow; 4t gri eves me now t 6 see instead .The almond crown my brow. . Tve seen theillower grow old and pile, And withered mote thin 1 ; Tve seen it lose its every -charm,' • Then droop away and die. , - • And then I've seen it rive again, Bright as the hennaing : s . ky, And Toting and pure and beantif of— And felt, t hat so shall .1,. i • • Then what, if Lam growing old— My heart is changeless still, And God hai given me enough This losing heart to fill. • I lore•to ape, the sun go dolt And. len , !thenin7.siiadt;ws thrOw Along the gonad, while o'er my held The cloutts in crimson glow. I see, beyond those georgeous clottds, A country bright and, fair, !Which needs no sttn--tiOd and - the Laub Its light and beauty are. seem to beAr the Fonareus song Redeemed sinners sing, And-my heart leaps it* join the throng' To praisethe 'Heavenly King: isttliantrius. THE -CLERMIAA'S. ADMIN. A cir#AL I'it.V.SSIAN STORY. F ~r, On a dreary day, in the ,reigti of Frederie William, a beavy travel ling; evriage Was slow ly lumbering "along the muddy road from. Potsdam to Berlin. Within it was one per son only, who took heed of the. slowness of the travelling; but leaning-back in a cor ner, was arrairging : a 'multiplicity of -pn . pers contained in a small : ocket-bOok. Si nce he was dressed in a plain dark military uniform, it was fair to sapposethat this gentleman be longed to the Prussian army, but to what tide of it nobody could determine, as all tokatur of rank had been aroided. N ovenLeoovening was closing in, and though 'the rain had ior . a time ceased, yet dark mass " of'clonds - flyingthnaugh the sky gay! warn' i ng " 81 4 41 dit s koes vas hadd. PT * 4 r The road grew- heavier, at leastAs it.nhould have seemed ton foottraveller who wasigow jog his way 1110500 the mire; and so doubt ices it did seeni 4 to the carriage' limes,' who. floundered islOng?so slowly that -the wheat they had overtaken kept easily 4,34 side of the .coa