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M=E!!Mitli PERSEVERE. rd notgice- .. it grim despair Should n ever forge a chain for Me, While thus I breathed my nalire air, . Within a land of liberty! ige! dastard were the s3ul that c,oweis • , • Within a free-born land like ours. v . • `Fd,taot-give it Up—though every frown' ; Tbatiortune's face is wont to wear, ShQald iob me of the small renown • That may have beett my bumble Share— :.-"ShOuld thniait my every wish and Poisriniu, through-all, I'd *do thee stilt! _ Shame on the weak and craven heart • • Thakbows beneath each transionrsorrovi, Without the nerve to pluck.the dart, • And greet the- sunrise of the morrow! Without the will—for will is pow e r— To Oink the thorn, and cull -the flower?! ' For what is man to manhood gitenl For what his varied poweriof mind „ • For What his every hope of Maven ;When earth's gifts have been resigne d o • If.not to brave misfortune's thrall, <. , And-rise :uperior to them mill Then raise that drooping brow of thinel Resolve--and then-rsnevortl Give sofroivl6 the laughing "Ind, With fear rni doubt, forever! PreAs nal:rani; and desOold no more— Thy metta he "Excttpon." Visaflattens. Oliver Cromwell's Head.. &correspondent of the New York Express, whole isttow traveling in England, has seen the headOf the Great protector, of which .he gives• the folloWing description , - "13.efore leaving England, I had an oppor tunity of seeing »great curiosity; a relic of antiquity, %chick-few Englishmen have seen. You will be iturptised; and - perhaps' in - credulots, when I say 1 have seen the head of Oliver Cromwell—not the mere skull, but. the 'head entire, and in a state of remarkable preservation. - Its history- is authentic, and there is verbal :and'.historical evidence to -place the thing „beyond cavil. Cromwell died, at Hampt s on Court in 1658, gibing the strong= est evidence of his religious convictions, and. his sincerity as a Christian. After, an im posing funeral pageant, the body having been embalmed," he" was 'buried at Westramiater _Abbey. On the restoration of the Stuarts, be was taken lap ' s and huttg.'at Tyburn. After ward' his head, seas cat oil, .ft pit:A omen sip through the neck and . skull, and exposed on We.strrenistex Ball. It remained there a long while, until,-by-some violence. the pike WAS • broken alid the bead thr and down. - It vai picked up by a soldierrlnd concealed, and afterward conveyed to some friend, Who kept it carefully for - years.% Throut a .succession -of families-which -calm easily be traced, it has come into the it. sse.ssion of the daughter of Bon. Mr. Wilkinson, s ex-mernber of Parlia-_ , tnent from Buckingham an' .13roomley. It -is at the residence of this gentleman that I saw the head • and his datiolarer, a lady-of tin manners and great culture, exhibite I it to Rev. Mr. Ferrell, she pastor of the Broom= ley Dissenting Chapel, and myself. • ‘.‘ This:head - of Cromwell is almost- entire. The 9esh.is h'aek and. Jim:ken, but the fea tures are veiny perfect, the hair is still re- , Maining, and even. the large wart over one of - the eyes-such V. , .ing a distinctive mark on his face—is yet' perfectly visible." LunrCitors SENSIAILITi - .—Flowers .have tlleir spells and their perils. A young French lady, ,endowed with the most delicate nerves, mentidnetl one evening, to a few friends as. sembleaka her drawing _room, that she had a horror' of • the rose, "The perfume of this flower Isaid she, " gives,rne the vertigo. ll The conversation was interrupted by the vistrZof a'rair friend who was going .o a_ball, and Wore a rose bud in her head-dress. Our Ssir heroine turned pale directly,' tossed her arm:, and fell gracefully into a byncope upon the -ottoman. , "Wftat. a strange nervous susceptibility. What a delicate and impresibleorganiza tion" -, Ole spectators. " For - .bfaten's sake', madam, go away PoiFt - vOu_see you liave.caused this spasm " I" • " Ye,c,oT course—it is the pa rfuirio of that rose-bud in. your' hair.". , - _ , - - -" - if it is tit), Lwillsairifice the guilty froweit7Bitt judge bc.6re.you sentence," _ The.llower,' detached-froth; the head-dresPi was passed from baud - to baud among the spectators.; but theli solicitMligays way to, a dittrint emqtion.. The 4,,tal folit'latd• was ,an s artificial - onej . Berg =o6r A'cica TouN - O - '"CAae.--Atriong tbe company of a &arid fivorclollar ball given at Orleanslast sprink green 'un from - tbe cp.intry, wile had never before seen anything of the kind upon so grand a .scale, and was totally at a loss . tcrtmderstanci the ridiculous nelr dances .which prevail ed.' Paran a an enormous price for a tioket, "Wd-11 . " b " saing een- astin&esorne trerte4n ttgl ici patioit-7of the supper - his Whale thoughts were directssi to the:enjoyment in that line io storo.for • ,and - , d0w0.4.4e baiiioo. with his 'hands in his fi)ocke`,:ttecostink every :waiter .he_epcountered with : • .. kh — ft ere s supper mos t ready ?" las ;itippert was, attnotisced, and in rue ed ' `