. _ - ... _____ .., • • . • . , .• - . , , 1 • , ~ . - --•. . . . . ..„.. :., • . . . . s • -..1 . _ .• ..o.la .: , ..:-.... ~. .. ._ ~.... .... .‘,.... -,:.. ~:.:,:,,i . ,..: . : . ,.......,:,:,:•,46,.: : :1 1 _,.,_:: : ,0_,,:„.;.,.,...3,7 . ,,. ," 17 . ':: ' -:' :'• -;: ,-::- ,‘; ::-.:, . r ... ': -- , 1 1"1 : ! - . : 1." - - '''. '''-- :.:... . :.. .'. ' l:l ' l ''' ' 7 7 .:. :. -- . • ' . , 4117 ,4, , 1 171 -' ' 1 - ~, • - . ,-.... : --,' ~.:. - -, --!C. , ..- '. -., .:.-- ; ~.., • -..•-:;•.•".: ,ii:: ‘,. ..i•.: -. , ...•t :,.. . ••• •. • -- --...' 'i -. 1 :1 , . -: i ';'-.-;-,` !.! -': - 'l---`• ,:',...•-;; - *:; :- ' - .' . ' ••••• ' - ' .'. --- • _____________ ==A StCotla nt 6erritson, Proprietors. c seittt V)ottrg, From the Soothoro Literary !demister. WOMAN. ,411., LADY OF VIRGINIA., 'Not thine! not thine! ig.the glittering cleat An d the glance of the treow white ph:time-- Nor the badge , that .gleams from the worrier's breast , , Like a star 'mid the battle'a gloom! -. Nor is thy pie 'mid thy 'country's host, Wh e re the war steeds Chimp the rode— Where wav ing, plumes are like sea foam tart, • And the toil wears a gcry stain. Not these! not these are thy glorious dower! But a holier gift, is thine, - • 'When the proud hare fallen triumph's hem, And the red blood, flowed like wine, To wipe the dew front the clammy brow— To raise the drooping head— To cool the parched lips' feveredglow— And to smooth down tho lowly bed! Not thine! not thine! is the towering height, Where ambition makes his throne— The timid dove wines not herilight Where the eagle soars alone— Bat in the hall,,and in the tower, And by the humblest hearth, Man feels thy charm, and owns the power That binds him still to earth. Yes, theses?* thine! and who can say His is a blighter dooli; Who wins Fames's gory wreath of bay, Round an aching brow to bloom Oh! to watch death's livid hues depart— . To soothe' etch pang of woe— And to whisper hope to the fainting heart— h the proudest mead below! TILE WINTERS. We did not fear them once—the dull gray morn Rigs • No cheerless burden on oar spirits laid ; The long might watches did not bring us warn ings That we were tenants of a ;house decayed• The early snows like dreams , to Ws descended, The frost did Miry work on paise and bough Beauty, and power,aud aronderharenot ended How is it that we fear the Winters now? Their house fires fail as bright on hearth and chamber Their northern starlight shines as coldly clear ; ,The woods still keep their holly for December; The world a welcome yet for the new year. . And far away in old yetneMbered places The snow-drop rises and robin sings; , The sun and moon look out with loving faceir— Why have our days forgot such good ly' things l• is that now the north-wind Inds - us shaken By tempest fiercer than its bit er blast Ate' fair beliefs and friendships- have forsaken, Like Summer's beauty,as that tempest passed ; And life grows leafless in - its pleasant valleys,. The light of promise wsnix from its day, Till mists meet even in its inwerd palace,— Not, like the outer mists, to melt away , ? It is 'not ihus - • when dreams of love and laurels Gave sunshine to the Winters of our youth, Before 'its hopes had fallen in fortune's quarrels. Or time had bowed them with his heavy truth— Ere vet the twilightfouttd us strange and qonely. Withishatiows coining when the fire burns low, 'To tell - of distal:it graves and losses only— The pat that cannot change end will not go. -Alasi3ear frUnds, the Winter is within 'us; • Hod is the let that gathers Mudd The heart, of pretty fares and - Ivain tegrets•ean win as Erotn Life'struelieritage and 'better pot.' lessons and skiesisjoi4,yei, 4 sorship rither ; +But nations toil and trenibtoleren'as We"; - Hoping for harvests they !rill never gather. And dreading Winteri they may fever see. ji istillatttats HENRIETTA.CIAL BY J. st.: CEIAPTER , L there is something lovely in the 'came of sister, and its ntterinee rarely faits tb call up ' the warm afFections of the gentleheirt. The thenghts thavoircle round it' are' all (inlet, teatitifbl and pure. Passion has no place - with its assotiations. The hopes and fears of love; those strong ertietion4, povrerfnl enough to shatter and, e.itiegiiisti life •itself, Slid no home there.. The hritie is ilia star, the talisman of the heart, the . dikiiion above *ll price, bright and; hiaziegie theWoottciat• stint a sister; the gets' Ortailder light, - calm as the Oaellowinoon, arid ietiti a coronet of t: ear la , It was late in the itifilin or 18—, when a Pan! of yoting gentlefolks were asseiribled at the mansion of Doctor Gray, in one of the principal streets of the city of Boston. The house-was large, and -w-4: ;furnished; and all the arrangements fOr.the little - fete, and the rete - itself were conducted with that simplici ty and propriety, which are tier' evidences of taste and deliCaey. - At a Ifitxliratiliotr; the happy guests -departed, pie:steed :With - their hostess, the entertainment; and with-thern-: selves. One onirlingered - behind, a very :youthful gentl' an; who iri h ho stood withsind .3.1 *pan the dm "tog-looro thaor;:in . cutworm tion with Mrs. 'ray -and her - yousg; Aaron- . 4rig daughter. Mrs. Grav- - .rensarked , ths,t . 'it vatstill . caAy; 'and theinearietai end taw self. would sit up- for .theDactor; and his own wishes thus seconded, the young.-man' again reamed hiachair. - ';• ienrietus Gray, et ,tbia period, was thir teens half girl and half-woman; eat age-when the maiden slops - it : her ekildistrairierte % eird Wonders why they harielliaayainterestedher so deeply ; and i -awsise inuselysees is 'the dia _ ism*, fairy palitiosomd green andlioinery looks, and smooth, tirae&cftt tivers- r the Ilona end the tough warm rof , the ft*** aiti the:tally hirkkm from:herr?' Mk Us fart handsome t her features' wme :itoffrigular ) taw tate was too Pale, taw ifwrat-tooaligitt. )3itt then the ,totthilled 'expire/obit ist Alie *bole was ?termini. /ler lealeate A iiitild !!!!!!I=ll=:==N= blue, her countenance intelligent; and, above all, kindness beamed in every. feature; and when she spoke, her voice was like the sooth ing ripple of - a gentle stream. . Arthur Diane, the youth who had secured a few additional minutes for the enjoyment. of ilenrietta's society, was about two sears her senior; a lair haired, rosy lad, df modest manners; who, as be finally bade her good night, looked into her e)ea and trembled ; and his voice sunk to a cadence almost as mellow as her own; so true it is, that gentle ness begets gentleness, and tends to subdue all things to itself. And Arthur Filene's footsteps had hardly died away on' the stairs, when they were heard again in rapid asemt; and rushing into the s presence of Henrietta and her mother. psie and affrighted, in a few broken words, but tenderly as possible, he. informed them that - as, accident bad befallen the Doctor. 'the, brief announcement, was hardly ended, when the ghastiv person of Doctor Gray, senseless and . bleeding, was borne into the house. The explanation of the causally was, that in retutning from a professional visit, in a dark and narrow street, his carriage had been overturndd by striking against a post. The sodden transformation - of Doctor Gray's elegant and happy mansion to a house of. mourning ; , the wild grief of Mts. Ginty; the heart.broken signs of Henrietta; and tivp attempts of Arthur 131aue, and other friends hastily sunimoned at midnight,- with con sternation pictured in - their faces, to adminis ter hope and consolation ; the Doctor's grad ual return. to cOn,ciuusness; and the doubts and apprehensions of his medical attendants as to the anal ,result; ate of a nature too painful to dwell on. Suffice it, that - with the - morning the family were permitted to hOpe; and the ,DoCtor entered on a period of slow and painful convalescence. Dr. Gray- was, or had been, one of the. most skillful atid popular physicians of the sits. lie was now fifty years old; and, un fortunately, having remained a bachelor 'until thirty-five, during the period of his sin gle life he had acquired habits of convivality and late hours, which he had never found the resolution to abandon. He was in the main a kind husband, and an affectionate parent; but as evil habits, if not vanquish ed, in the end are uhnost certain to vanquish, so the Doctor's relish fur his boon companions and the bottle had grown upon him, until-it had nearly made its last demand, in a claim for liis lire• Another evil still bad followed in the wake of the Doctor's 'course of life. It lost him the confidence of his friend's; and for several• years, while the expenses of his- family had been increasing, his business had been di- - minishing. His accident and the confine tnent-of several months which followed, turn ed the attention of his creditors to his affairs; and he recovered only to find himself a bank rupt. and his wife and Children reduced to beggary. • At this distre4ing period in the history of the Gray family,. ithe Doctor and his three younger childretb:Suddenly disappeared; and no trace of them could be discovered. After a time of wonder; of grief and dispair, Mrs. Gray and Henrietta, the sole remaining metn 'tiers of the household, retired to cheap and narrow quarters in the suburbs of the ton n, where the mother, oretcorne by the succes sive shocks of 'her seyere destiny, sunk ;ntu a condition of imbecility,. - • Net so with Henrietta. rf-Though a shadow rested on her pale face. and the. sorrows of her young' life had sunk deeply into - , her heart, a kind Providence had not suffered her to be - hroken by their unusual weight. She was still gentle as ever, 'but misfortune is rapid in the development of .character; and to gentleness were now added an ithilooked-• for fortitude and- energy. Het mother, en tirely incapable of effort., and herself, were to he fed. She laid her case at the foot of Omnipotence; and received strength. Friends, it is true,' were kind and some. relations there were, who' did not utterly' forget the bereaved ones in their - Erfiliction:;' but in the main, the wants of ,both mother and daugh ter were to be supplied, and for a period of weary Months and years, were supplied; by the labors of Henrietta. 'When not occupied with the care of her sick parent, her needle was fin active requisition; and early and late she toiled, and toiled cheerftilly, for bread; and thanked God thatit was daily given her. Among her kind friends, none were more constant cr . thoughful, than Mr. and Mrs. Diane. Neither.did Arthur forget her; and, to the great scandal of the prying ones, he the leisure of his College vacation pretty equaly between his father's and . the homely tenentwn: of the Glays; and .as he was an only son, of large expectations, to the, fatale! 'scandal of the gossip his parents seemed to, view his singular conduct with a total unconCertt. Indeed, in these visits, his mother was almost ,his constant companion.. When not diversified with the society of these friends, life, with Henrietta, presented little else than one , unvarying toilsome round. Her. household duties, her struggle for suste nance, and her care of her half idiotic and often. captious parent, occupied her hands, her tlictighte, and _her heart; and yet she bad roma fur other sorrows; and withal, was not unhappy._ The inscrutable and mysterious fate of her fatber and,. her little brothers, was of itself a burthen hard to ; be• borne ; and yet, with all these causes of depression bearing upon her, the.cOnsciousness. of a' daily effort to perform her _duty, and, above all, a humble: end sincere reliance on. the goodness and care 'of Heaven, lightened 'her heart 'and ftxttstops, and clothed, her brow. with serenity.. While the.ills of life are scattered with great appa rent :irregularity, its happiness is dispensed irithii far more - eqtial balance than ie gener .. allv imisoined. .N e a t ly four ~years thus wore away, when the...thread of life, sr !dolt fur sethe months :had been growing wealer and weaken . with Mrs. Gray, parted; and fieurietta *Jose, of ail the family, war left. Me Blanes were with .her in' her affliction, and drowbed - their generous kadttem , by sdre,ring her 'a 'home. The !Ins patittoja :of her own relatiet, too, were so far awakened by this Nit even:; and the desolate itionditisn of theateicken orphaa k , that bet' *wit Touga i tuade hers like offer, which, for ob. lricaSmwtotta, ilAmtietts preferred Ateept. tier twins. m•te aceordingly given stp,.. the henthle:.hrtlittireilliSpfed ofj and alsr:he,. can* donipAtittated at her mines.; • , .About Sionill'iafter this event, Mrs,-Tot ton'a isremorning tell 'n , tottide, - ci levier* mitift.- Mane:. One add reused :to lam Blsiteow4 419 0* 19 Arthur; and they " WE .L9E ALL EQUAL BEFORE GOD t, Sontrost, ttsqulartua gratea, Clittrsiti: ji 18-57. proved to be from Henrietta. The one to Arthur was unsealed, and as follows; **Dear Autbur i —At a moment like this when I am to be separated - from you for is time, and possibly forever, no feeling of deli cacy must prevent my treating you with the. frankness due to your noble and generous nature. That I love you, you will not doubt; and I am ready, so far as my heart is con cerned, to become your wife. But I have first another and imperative duty to discharge. My inquiries after my lost father and brothers, have at length, as I have reason to believe, been crowned with success. I must go to them. Do not seek to follow me, or to trace me out; and if Heaven preserve me, the de votion of my life shall repay you. But if thi, be too hard, dear Arthur, take back your plighted troth, and be only my brother again. When these letters arrived, Arthur Blanc was atisent from the, city; and on his, re turn, he hastened 'to Mrs. Totten's. From that discretelady he obtained little additional intelligence. Henrietta was gone; but where, if she was in possellsion of the secret, Mrs. Talton was-too guarded to disclose. His en quiries at the several stage-offices and else where, with the view to ascertain the direc tion she had taken were . equally unsuccess ful ; and as his hope faded, gradually Arthur Blanes handsome and happy face assumed a 'lengthened and woe-begone 'expression. His only relief was iu travel ; and what excited a much greater *aniount of . remark was the circu.nstance that his parents, in their old are, was also seized. _with a monia to see the World. During these peregrinations, the three, often in company, visited most of the towns in New England, explored a large part of Nevi•York,•and penetrated. at several points, the interminable West beyond. CIIA.PTER, IL The %cent) of our little history Dowclioi,g -es to the atnall viliage of in the lute riot of the atate of Neiv the period, about two years after the tudien disappear- :thee of Dr. Gray and hia children from Boa- ton. The village was Of no great preteusiou. h lay in a wide valley, encouipased by mas sive, but not abrupt hills ;- and to tlie north aud.east doted small meandering, iivers.-- It was of sufficient age to be freefroni stumps and the immediate encroachments orthe for- gists ; 'possessed an.nir of thrift and comfort, several respectable tenements, and a goodly number of neat, white cottages, surrounded with ample grounds, and en bosomed in shrubbery. but it .was laid out absolutely without plan. Its principal streets were thrice the width u;ualiy granted to avenues of the kind ; and from in northern extremi ty, iu wild irregularity, diverged other streets towards every conceivable point of the nom- pass. ItsTrincipal ornaments, in.the way of buildings, were its churches and halls of learning. Two respectable structures, one. of Atme and the other of brick, we'e devoted to the purliofts of an academy ; while several nisssive collegiate etlific= crowned a hill at the south. - The" Brick Aeaderav," the germ of the two noble institutions of learning, in the poverty of a new settlement, had been built and sustained as' a classic sehool and its infancy, by a voluntary mottgage on the property of the principal inhabit:tuts. of the place. These; it is hardly necessary to add, were staid. New-Englanders. it was spring -time, and the buds and foli age of village and -country were just bursting into a rejoicing g.teen—wben, one morning. the inhabitants of li became aware of an accession to tneir numbers. A little di lapidated hotel, standing on a 'common, and fur a long period untenanted, had during the night btien accommodated occupants. A rti.or broken-down horse,bitched to a•brok en weather-beaten cart, stood by the shatter ed door-way ; and as elderly, - square-built man . was endeavoring , with refuse -boards and paper, tti patch pp the open windowa.— In . the appearance of this indivitlual there was something peculiar. He wore a faded lion-skin coat., of large dimensions, and emir: mous pockets ; and an old slouch hat to [Patch. He was of middle height, but thick set. and muscular, with a must massive chest and head. His face was pale and wrinkled. surmounted with a heaVy Romani . nose, and shaded by an aboralance of short grizzly hair. His eyebrows were heavy and projecting, and beneath them were a pair of cold, keen gray . eves. His head he - carried a little on one Fide, as thong!' his neck was stiff; and all his movements were made with great delib eration, and an obtruhive. self-possession.— His companions—fur he 10}S not alone - -were three lads of; perhaps, twelve, tea, and eight years of age,- ragged and filthy, without .shoes or hat ; their long,- tangled locks sticking oat in every direction, and bleached almost white by exposure.to the weather; and with scarcely clothes enough, suck as then were, to cover their nakedness. Ti-e eldest was robust in appearance; the next in size less m; and the third painfully frail. . It is, perhaps, needless to, say,. that these individuals were Dr. Gray and his children. 'He had consented to the - loss of of his stand ing-.in life, and to the disruption . and degra dation of his family, as be flattered himself, tram a feelitigOf excusable pride;' an inabil ity to brave the reverses' of fortune amid the scenes of-his prosperity, and to bear up under the sneer of rivals and the pity of sunshine friends; But bad be probed his heart deep er, lie would bae discovered there a conscious ness, that in order to ; regain his lost ground and retrieve his fortunes, it was necessary to relinquish the bottle . ; and that for a axed fice so great as this, he was not 'qnite ready— not yet.- -.lt isunnecessary to trace him tine the two years of intervening _time,. Buffnee it, that he changed his place of abode more -than once, each - time sinking lower in ,the scale of respectability; until the little rem nant of available! be-had managed to smug gle from the city having become , exhituated, he tad his children were reduced to the Con ditioa in which they -hare been :described. The inhabitants kieked on him With some wonder and curiosity, but nobody molested-him A end wain he. became. known, -on whirl authority nb ;me. wetly. knew..we br. Glegg. Ere long the but 'he , occupied Weenie a charmed precinct to. all the chil dren ; for.the door witSkept . ,citelidlyseloied against - itaiudeist 'and - hi to windows. lbw* -writ hot:8041W vf"glasts 'in my ate or theta; or other •cautri mice for Abe' adashisimi of Arm a (ear "toggling , -patches di oiled Impels ardeolgiilntaies s - : it isAree,.hadlbeem caught:by the morecuriouswf .41a urchins, through the door way, 'of a box, or large === chest; and it was cantionslY 'whispered around, and at length among "the grown-up and gray-headed children of the, place,. that Doctor Glegg was a miser; .and that the chest in question contained his gold. ' But the Doctor wat poor enough ; so poor that his miserable and cheerless tenement was rarely out of the reachof bsolute want. Indeed, it is surprising bow he and his wretched children managed to live,at all.— Unfitted by the habiti of hie life for manual labor; and neintaining, even in his most alject degradation, a sort of personal respect, which forbade a tesort to menial offices; his sphere of exertion was limited. Instead, thereof, of resorting to day's works, he plant ed corn and potatoei, on shares; and se 'cured a little hay in the same manner, :for the benefit of his famished horse; And in µlace, of the carriage to which he had been accustomed, he rode to and from the field in his cart; while his • elfin •boys scoured the commons for refuse wood, and, bare headed and bare ;egged, waded and fished in the streams. As time passed on, Dr..Gligg became more and morelan. object of curiosity . It was ev ident to all, that he was intemperate ; but be was never seen drunk, and was never vulgar or profane, It was pereeivell that he was a man of learning and parts; and that'his con versation was a singular mist and wisdom, of bombast and simplicity, According to thn circumstances under which he was accosted, With men of wite 'he tAeil sense with scholars he was scholaStic t' with fools; bom- biotic; and to those twhp pressed him with impertinent curiosity, bel l wa.4 utterly unintel- To the last clads his replies were somewhat after this sort " Mon Dieu ! man is a curious tiped,made up of the most beteiogeneons and incompre hensible parts. Proof!! procul! scat ? Neither him nor his concomitants have I any derire tc know ; but consign them all, in one contclomerated mass to the erortt: acclicatu3 ;?,f the common cent." Others, however, who fell into casual con- Versation with him, and did nos attempt to pry :into his circumstances, or the :events of his life, found his mind well stored with a va riety of information, ,•whiCh he was capable of imparting - in forcible 'and appropriate lan; guage. A student of the Academy haring politely accosted him; Dr. Gray - said: " You are in pursuit of knowledge, .my young sir: and among all the attainments 4fier which the scholar should strive, nothing .3:s more limportrint than a just appreciation cif his mother tongue. Allow me to inquire of you, what is the chief element of a good Composition r " redlied the student "The question is well answered i " contin ued the doctor, -" Dewitt ,Clinton him-elf could not have replieritnore justly. To know what we wish to. communicate, nod then to make the communication in just those exact words necessary to convey the whole idea, constitutes the chief excellence of style." A ron.Th person having taken it upon him to abuse7Dr. Gray, ring to heap on hint a volume of oaths and profane epithets, the old man listened for some time in adeace.. At length he quietly remarked : • • "Sir, you cannot swizar." "Swear, old curmudgeon?—what do you mean r• " It requires sense, sir," continued the doc tor, ," to sweat. You rutty use the wo!ds,but you cannot swear." Thus lived, or rather, existed Dr. Gray and his Children, in the village of K--, for a period of two years; when an event occur red which wrought a gradual change in their condition. There arrived in the stage froth) the East, a pale, and delicate, but sweet-eyed young woman dressed in deep black ; who , having attendedto the safe disposition of her baggage at the hotel, inquired for the residence of the Rev. Mr. Trimble. It . snown to her, and she at once bent her step. in that direction. The strange lady-approached the dwelling of the clergyman, not without trepidation. Brushing an unbidden tear from her eve, she raised the knocker with a shaking hand, but her .heart and her determination were con-, staut, for it was none other .than Henrietta Gray. She found Mr. Trimble at home ; and mere than that, a kind hearted and feeling man. She told him her little story ; anti ex hibitied to him her certificate of member ship in one of the-churches in Boston, as a voucher for her honesty, if, indeed, anything else were wanting than ler 'sweet .counte mince and modest deportment. • The good , man, entered heartily into,.the object of her mission; infot riled her that Dr. Glegg and the three children were still in' 'K---; andirom his aecount of them, she becatne more fully confirmed in the supposi tion that they were no other -then her lost father and brothers.. To change probability into certainty, however, with a.small daugh tet of Mr. Trimble as her cicerone, she strolled into the quarter of the village where stood Dr: Glegg's but,and saw and recognized her parent, She passed quit near one or two of the boys; but in their changed condition, she faile.i to discover anything which bore:resemblance to the well-fed and well-clothed and happy' ehiltiten she bad known. ,In greatawitation of feeling,. she returned to Mr. T7inible's house; and accepted a ,cordial (tom him and his kind lady, to pass the night with them. : On the following mottling Henrietta found herself refreshed from the fatigue of berjouro7 cy j andin a condion of „mind and body "to proceed in the accomplishment of her pu'r poses. Her Dew friend, Mr. Trimble, intro- - duced he into a highly - respectable family, where she took a room and board; and him self arranged an interview between her and her brothers. Her baggage - was Insidly trans ported from the hotel to her- new. 'griatterir, before they strived t and ragged_ and dirty as . they were, were l_elesped over . alai OVe'r again to ber beart, and bathed in het rears.. Sbi found them as wild as the. _Untamed - colts the deiert.' Dick; the" eldest, - after some tittle conversation; ?membered • her; and she perceive:l, on studying has sauna buses, that aome ofhis former- features '-:re maitiet.lk, Dalt with .the others, „William and aeiry, them was _nO . recogattion on either side; and - the twOlittie . Mitoti? antlered - her Carerwes in - Pullen tilinee;fts though lolotit: of tile•sholo, : pinoaelling., : , ; • An hour was derotad to thejoy and sor. row of the U3SOIDC. lied then Henrietta as ===i CHAPTER 111. aimed - her brothers to 'cleanse themselves, hathieg-thorn thorough from head to foot, and cutting and -smoothing their ziataai hair: This done, she put on her bonnet and ahead,. and taking them by the hied *allied out into the business street .orthe village. From her slender means she furnished theist with bats and shoes, and - purchased cloth - fer , gars merits, all of a cheap but sabstantial quality, appropriate .to their condition :.And telling them to come again on Abe - morrow; with . good advice and soothing words of encour agement and tenderness, she sent them home.' For a large portion of the succeeditig night Henrietta, happy and even joyous, plied her busy needle ; and on the follewiag day, sev eral of. the garments came from her - hand; finished ; . but , the children did not appear.— Restless, in consequence, as night approach ed, she walked into the street, and naturally turned her footsteps toward the .quarters in which they resided. From the first she would have seen her father,` have iuclud ed him in her mission of love and mercy.— Bin this she feared to do. He had never been familiar . with his children; she well understood the pride and selfish stubborness of his character; and in studying her plans, she had determined it safest for their a Uccess. not to intrude upon him, but to' leave him to make the first a:advances, or chance, to bring them together. She suspected that he had fordidden the. children to see her, but for this she , was prepared. Passing the but, she discovered Dick in the-road beyond, and no cOstieg him, learned that her suspicions were correot. Her father, on hearing of her pres ence in • K , and interview with het brothers, had manifested considerable unea sinesßad peremptorily , forbidden them to see her again. Placing the garments she bad brought in her brother's hands, she ex pressed an Ardent hope that her father would recall the prohibition, and even that he wo'd , soon allow her to see him •, and retired. BLit the next day brought no change; and on the following morning, having completed the rest of the garments, she again walked toward the hut. This time she found her fa ther in the road, harnessing his poor old horse, and was - obliged either to turn back or passtitn. She chose the latter altirua tive ; and as she came 'near, he turned sus piciously upon her, and regarded her coldly and sternly, but without speaking. Greatly agitated, Henrietta extended her arms to ward him, and uttered the word " father." Dr. Gray serried away, add walked toward his door. I " Niv dear father !" said she, in the most beseeching tone, " will you not own me f" Dr. Gray leaned against the gate, with his back toward her, apparently as Entree affect ed as herself. He shook as though with an ague fit: and with a strong effort at last managed to say, in a broken, hollow voice: "Go awa it . ! I know not, and will not know you." -..,. Poor Henrietta hung bee gifts for he out- 1 east brothers upon the broken fence, near her wretched father, and departed with a sad heart. But her constancy was rewarded.— That afternoon her little brothers were per mitted to visit bar azain ; and from that tim e forward their intercourse was uninter upted. She bad all her plans, for their bene fit in successful operation.. Her industry and skill ulth her needle, aided, perhaps,by ay mpathyiand the little air of romance which surrounded her, gave her an abundance of etuPloyment : her three brothers spent much of each day with her ; anti as she worked, she heard their lessons, conversed with them, I and gave - them instruction, so far as she was able, in every department of - knowledge which she deemed necessary to their suc cess in life. Her little workshop became a school of the most practical and valuable . I kind:: . • Neither did Henrietta forget her father, or ceaseher efforts to ameliorrte his condition. Though shelield no intercourse with him, through her prudently exerted influence he was inouced to remove tolnore comfortable quarters, where she managed to surround him with most of the necessaries, and, even tually, to supply him with' many of the com forts of life, to which, lately be hadbeen a stranger. She - even • visited -his rooms in his absence, attended to their eleauliness, and conferred upon them those little .graces and, finishing, touches which women alone can bestow. She als3 attended to his wardrobe, kept it in repair, and added to it, from: lma time, as her own means. 'permitted, and his wants required. He, meanwhile, though he stilt refuse to see her, regarded her, not in his superficial mind so clearly' but in his in nermost soul, as a Ministering' angel, and , blessed her. Thus nearly three yenis passed away. During this period _Henrietta had heard several times from her aunt Totton,, and through her,-of the uneasiness of her good Mends, the Blanes. This she deeply regretted, and would gladly have relieved, had her own strong sense of propriety and duty permitted. Bat to have informed them of her ,plans, would have been to defeat them. It is not to be supposed that Arthur .I.3lane would have consented to remain in quiet expectance of a wire, while she sbofild devote two or three yeara of her life to the care of ber dissolute 111 and thankless father, and to the. uncertain task of rescuing and reclaiming her vagbond brothers. Yet to the mind of Henrietta, when she had once succeeded in discovering . where they were, this was her first duty; in comparison with Which, all else, her own hop" afrd prospects in life, nod even the temporary happiness ef him she loved-most faithfully and deeply, sun!.- into irisignificance. In the rescuing and training of those helpless _children, there was a great work to be done; and to her it was clear, that it/belonged to herself, their sister, and the eldeit, to do it.; and further, that it she shrunk ,froto • the undertaking, it never would beaccomplisbed. SO Strong in the consciouSiteas of the recti tude of her heart rind her actions, she . looked .. back without regret, if not always Without 'sorrow, as she theughtof bar almost dissipated dreams ef,,life and • loye with &riot, Matte; and with that_cheatiope , which the just hnd trustful have Heaven. At thill,period Dr. prosiru tbd a indde ,stroke of paralysis, aid hest longer:, She Hastened' to his . bed*e, sod pft him the watchful Gartland , :tender solicitude-of a danghter.„-.)34 never reoirteied "stifliolentlyito iMtt be linew. tar stnikixim heart, viasat last isofienecl. Efe afpressid , signs; and -pressing heir band in hisi'axpired. Thivevent released' Henrietta from a: tte.- cmary confinement to the 'tillage of lieti brotheri were now 'greatly improved; and; .under :her Akilful tniinhig, had -made ? resoeotable adva_nees in mannem, morale, and education. They bad proved: apt,, with kind and affectionate natures; and theif, sister's unwonted love and purity had askinii• lated them much and readily o'h terself. 134 in case of her own return, she did - not pro: pose to take 7 , them to the.city: . A country life she : ‘;milidered most conducive to,their - haPpiness, virtue, and ; and accord inglyest tibout providing them with . suitable homes. Dick chose to be . a farmer; and Williani and Henry now grown to 'be robust ladctelected mechanical occupations.. Aided y the kind rico, ;tad interest of the most reaper- ' able citizens_ of X- 7 —, good places were soon found, and the boys were properly be stowed. • The death of her-father was announced by 'Henrietta to her aunt Tottnn very soon after its occurrence; and that hitherto, discreet lady at once " took the responsibilite of con sulting the Blanes as to the future movements Of her niece. The consequence -- of:this un authorized nrocmaling was the arrival in the village of X—, in a very few anys, of a broache, containing the whole Blane Arthur's handsome face, so his Mother 'de dared, within a week, had shed. a moat sol emn bevy of incipient wrinkles, - and shorten eci half an inch ; and the - crimson Which 'mantled on . the cheek a Henrietta,ns they met,.ilid not, by any means; detract from the grace Of ber meek, but nowblooming and mature beauty. .• -A day or two later; through the agency of the Blanes, who all at once became active io affairs a the little village of E--r--701, coun cil was held at the Rev. Mr. Tritrible's, at which it was decided, that, under the peculiar circumstances of the present case, it wt ,s meet and proper that Henrietta Gray. should le tura to ,Boston in no other capacity than as Mrs. Arthur Wane. - On .the morning of their departure, accordingly,- the .. marriage _ ceremony was solernaiied. The principal iiersonages'in this little his tory, we believe, are still living. Henrietta is a happy wife, surrounded with as interesting family ; and her . three brothers, who have learned so.well to know the depth and purity of a sister's love, are respelitable citizens of one of the western States. From the &stem Traveller. . REV. DR. MATTHEW KYLES ON . PREACHING POLITICS. The eccentric, witty Dr. Byles, the first pas tor of the Ilolli-street Church, Bosten - , among other rich things from his pen, has reft on record, in his own sharp Words, his opinion on the propriety of- ministers 'of . the gospel preaching politics. In this day, when so.ma nyi clergymen 'of different denominatiqns ate coming down from the great workornificnow ing and making known so nisny other atitigs besides "Jesus Christ and him crucified," it may be well for them respectfully to consider the wisdom of Dr.Byles' words en this sub- ject. • - • In that incomparable work of .Rev. Dr. Cp - risgmtc, just pu " A salna.l. tf.a MEV. jean Pulpit," it is said in the -.biographical notice of Dr. Boles, that. on being asked, why be did not preach politics, he replied : " I have thrown up four breast Works, behind which I have entrenched myself, neither of which eau be forced. In the first place Ido not under stand politics; in the second place, 'you an do, every man and mother's son . of you; in the third place ; you have politics all the week—pray let one day out of seven be de voted to religion; and in the fourth . place, I am engaged in a work of infinitely greater importance. Give me any subject le. preach upon of, more consequence tban the truths I bring to you, and I will preach it on the next Sabbath." ' I am a clergyman, and the pastor of a church in Massachusetts, and during all the excitement of the Presidential campaign just pa.sed, as well as during It pastorate of •-niore than ten rears, I have follower! the course pointed out by Dr. 13cles. I have, with anx iety and grief, seen my brethren in the minis try, whom I honor and love, coming doin from the pulpit to the political caucus--be corning political wire-pullers behind the.cui tain—taking party politics,. into :that sacred place, the pulpit--preachhig about men and civil government, rather than of - Jesus Christ and Lis kingdom which is not of this ; world. I have Seen them 'excited, 'and com promising their dignity' as ,ministers on the political stump, at the elections, in ecclesias tical meetings, at political rallies, • and even in player meetings. • • I have ioterproted my instructions from Christ differently. Taking Ilia words, exam ining my commission from him to preach the gospel; noting the' Way in which :Jesiei'hitni self preached his gospel _in the, midst of terri ble social evils, wicked national customs and oppressive governments, noting the way In which the apostle dealt with' -slavery, gladia tonal. sports, polygamy, writs and other vice.., I have felt that many brethren are departing from the principles of the gospel, and the pre cedents furnished by the (heat Teacher ,and Ms Apostles, as to the way preachers are to promote social reforms, and apply'the gespel to the evils in society. I look at the example of the Apostle Paul in this matter, 7 (presum ing that he understoorl , the 'Attire of the gos pel, aunt how to preach it,) mad *ea him -as a, reformer, as a' preacher et' that religion which has been,givett te.' regenerate society and bring peace on'earth, , migaged in his work at Corinth—that corrupt city of ancient Grasse, where the government. wits' despotic, where slavery exfsted In . forms far more true' and India than . it has ever Liea.seen io this conntry—Wbere - nil cluseti Were ficentioas and torrtipk'Whiite' the tick Were -proud' and . -cruel to the poorituid the Ivor , abject and vicious, ;and OAS the women; had .no righta"---but I ;to not sec nt in his preach ing there, notin Ilia atibeetitient /lades to,the chu reit. he planted'there, denoiinct ng'ibe eminent; nailing the'slaveholdere pirateivnut throats, vipers ;, I da.not find. bin,-attacking :the tich c infiaming,olo4oftianaien nf,dtepoori: urging woman to Iwamoto' thn r!gitta„of (end 'Ana render herself acorn . . - seekinclor iiil9itetice itict*air 'the sphere-that , ' Gtailiattittidnined her,)" ittir 'preaching.to dui sisici *boat': their political rights.: Bii he Arlipie,?..lo7o w Ah a kch r t s . tinnity Was - nvielieioitsr , a4 gunknWer to bliiintecOttiing :tit' Pik* *ll7 and aneWy ttinatandelliAiffeltiliaitinf ancietivith its putifiriminfhancog ;Iletunit that the gospel was van inicsarilv to folumil4;._....P4kio_ll; eueiftharibier; to ,ravtutrate.ancl airSkAnti-, as individuals. lie . kiwa that just so far, aid, - only so far, ealudi.nitr , ..l member* •of nor c0n: 1 91414y were brought under _titt - ,Lre .rattidn ing and . power -Of - Christianity, would tlie - derrupt, practi c es ittel evil euSteMs of that community .be, feint-mod, li e kw* that the 'would riicitiVe see isintetilsaid. remodW soctety., -- But 24 knesr. Jt must de ilds i n directly - securing 'the - repentance and regeneration of - • viticahi. Accordingly we find UM, Corinth preaching to individuals at *int' personal /ins, urging them,-eanhfor'hinisel - f i r • to forsake., , the api'rit:„.noi,- of . ,de nuncistion, but of love, he preached directly ; • to men the great truth; of redetriptiocie_'- - ;,` lu..lntitatioe of. St. Paul and in adep7., tion of his principles, his' theoiryof-preaching-;' has been from the beginning the theorY the New England clergy. Bat of late, it _ would seem.. thili Was become with inanymin. • - isters nothing but ,o thcory—an abandened r . , superauuated theory, But It-am paictidly 4 convinced that the departure, ..even for a little time from this theory, is working local culhble evil. I fear' the -great hods- of - the_. clergy of New England have, for the last tea; years, under the load ot -rash, - ambitious, ir-' reverent men, - gone.astray from the , prinei. plow( the fathers.' The , evil influence &GC the reaction in coining upon us like:a flood in disrespect for the elergy_aut tint in the prevalence of a spirit of relf-nghteotirti: , : , -1, denunciation—in :dis c ords in churches and;: societies;—in contempt for the great names to - our nation's history, and in the crippled' power of the pulpit for the spiritual good 'of- - the people—and in the mistaken •fellowabip- . _ of ministers-with-those ammorlieltal wbo,by that , fellowship, have gained new power-to oppose the Bible, the church and the minis._ B h etter will it be ft;r the Clew tl etriselves;',. and for the gospel they love; acid ihe of human freedotiv .they advocate, for then to.come back to the wisdom of Dr.i - Byles, • and let pulities,alone. Better for all tbat.we all come back to the preaohing t oot ou the Sabbath, but atio on thailktgivints ands Fasts, the pure, suntile'linihs that relm,e..o , ilitslingdow of 'Christ, ' and to the' pentonil and ever:asting, salvation of individual , • ..For tie Democrat.. Plata Talk: • "I do not wish . to soil my hands in diSh- water, until they become a gazing stock,foe, the whole town," was the language ofa young_ Miss (who no doubt really thought herself a . '',-. young, lady) to„her Mother, which we. aces. ;lentallY ovefbeard, whilst dealing out a-prill, scription in an adjOining r00m.. . Poor thine, - we involuntarly exclaimed to _ourselves; psi -- do not wish to "soil ,yourhands in - dishwater,",_ but your mother ..can do it, can -she;_yourL poor old - mother, who even now is hegira:dug. to •bend tinder the weight of " years, ethos& - brow is wrinkled With sorrow, • and.-oare for, you, whose days bevebeen toil and drudget7 2 .---" and nights watchful care for.you--to whim you - owe 7 ... as .7-r..akirs - tetice, and all yea are:` You do not wish to soil your. hands, but you: can sit in the 'pallor, as a "conspaitiott fire. the !nit norel," witl& your whimpering face, „. pale, sickly - white hands; and fingers ctiverek : with a maps of clumsy gold rings; which:are .. only fit for Hottentots, and squWws to wear, - •- or, trying - to -diplay that awkward gold: chain, which .things; waiters, liostlete, 2 and "even, . boot blacks at '? medium Ulase bititet are nokslow,to imitatef—sittirig theta Its 3-Orte, silk dress, and satin slippers, that tea ointrams to one, are yet unpaid for, whilst your inotheri a half invalid, is toiling indirt rind gressit'to keep you in sinful idleness.:- Conic., soil yoiti hands in dislzouter - 1 Poor, silly' enratuVel You have yet to learn - the merits , of - a seta-`. burnt coustenance, and" blistered bands, brought on -by honest industry. You hive yet to learn that your sex, who frown one Calloused Londe and blistered , fingers, ire, Some bow, awfully deficient, and that }in - ," who goes into the parlor instead of theiritolt: en to get a wife, lacks ‘s much in tbe uppet.. story." ' - ' Dit: W. - ~. , . Great Bend, Feb. 241101357: The G•Xlou of Pleasuie.” ' The "Nan of - Pleasure.r--The" following graphic portrait of dui "Man of Pleastre"Ja taken from a sermon on "Chriitisit Man: hood,!' delivered list 'Sunday. week, - itilgave York, byltev. Mr. Cuyler. . "I trust that no young man here will need to be warned against rthat .wretchedly :false ' idea of 'manhood' which is so rife in certain, eirelei- of this million-peopled ; city. The 'manhood' of an oath antra cigar —a bottle of brindy and a peek of cards—a box - ler the theatre, and a,- bet on'the .tace course. 'Hundreds of young -men are con-. - steady aspiring to such badges of social no- a bility its these ! You may sea thesaimbi thins youths ordering, with -a consetitteaial " swaggettheir wine-supperaat the faxboriable %ells: You may detect them at the midnight,- hour pullingthe door-bells of haunts.pf my, and whispering falft names ;through the iron latiee; you. may - discover an Adel book in the') trunk', locked up:with -.in . scene picture, a revolver, a sportingealender. directory to bro th els, a few. French novels,' and—no Bible. Young woman besti4,44 - such ser p ents the Si. They OWill en lei your houses att..their "fathers entered, Eden, 'only to . .nedUCO and':_ destroy. - ilew York has here full share of there cherantete; , they pass for 'men of gallautri:_ , Dien G u st o,— it.,!ateu of pleasure." _ _ • Erer,y noir.and then there is a,trenteeditus explosion in our conunitnity; which:blows:off__ the covering , and lets uo all took injuptin rotten heart of certain 'style er-itity During the last Week we have 4111 been_ kbok t . jog In with loathing and 'With); cerniteriatiettio ,Wkhave stood- in the obantiPtir- whoatt , Wak. were hotpot:tend With hloOtis and the bittet end` ofinereer,::irlttelt out *OW sweet restrains* of domestic punti lotingearras ‘rif - - , the %tillage weettia., - -r.AIW horn , s iteen-.:111 - '1exesykablti Apittigixt aceend. !hat aerrltykusid.-114 1 0,0441 , t51.01104, ill - tinted uOr:itoto, Web, couriastin testifying 'than of plovers' • 1,14 . tt had fling)* Ow* 014 1 ether_ stoll I the offte.er of juitieemggiriii Ism