A. J. GERRITSON, PUBLISHER. , enlargerg from-a-central pointa o should - man I fo reignforce, the more have you leuened the - • ' progress, hut in nivel-ending cYnles. :, power.ottoOtamotion.; Whatever eXereise, is , iE.J.IVEREDIII:I-01tETILETSACIIEnS. xerrrrees, ! The luseioui fruits,-tile r e repel the perielee proper; and right,, arid conionanvvritletean'e —lir— - thesipple,lthe pear, etc., each . emanated from Nconstit video, is pleasurable—is the source of . - 1. A. WcSTON‘ ES In , el s • 'letter eseriugeht, worthies, wild Varieties ,of J•delight. The true atimulus to action is the T. P ' t - . theirlind. And they have not yet arrived' legitimate .reward of that action, The stimu- AT I - MOOKINN. l'e„ MARCII,•,I2, 185 . 9 - ; .at the teitirinus of their improveMenefor their tus to research and Mvestigationes the Vont Nan rrinsearattintatrihis msant s i culture-ia constantly eat developing new, ex- remises saiisfsetion of knowing: and - under . - • boodsb a t pars-,n.1 by 'proxy i eellencies.- Most of oor grains 'awl eavielent standing. 'Ds the benumbing sad deaden in the opera:run of a complicated machine, ' roots here Fp : rung from a 'Rte . :origin. - • The ;in of the,power to understand that creates the-el - Wee of a wheel or a spring, tho' of ' coftesponding thirty- is true lof domestic' th e supposed necessity- or goads. The bride mirror catrortnoce in it-elf,:rlevanges the en- :animals. - t:- ' requireeleed.• Buteenthout the proper appe tite et - Teel: Mantuttst. be ei heenn integer or' 'Tie natisree s plen, the -• pet fee-t wisdom oft tits. food 'would prove injurious. Knowledge a i n etiati ;if the latter, he is lacking or in- , which none can doubt, that ter, things at l is the pabulum of the meld, Wbeb the cc,mplete% To Produee a - healthful, and ifi etappeer in the state of perfeCtion: which i mind asks bread, only sets that a "stone" cr a vigorous, and perfect tree,—a tree that shall! th e y afterwatd attain. This is true of iecli- i r scorpion"- be not given it ire end. Kind fulfil- the purposes ;of its being, that shall ; videel production*, and o ft en, aliei, - Ofstieces- . nets is reformatory ;force is for defence. But ramify its roots and anchor them firmly in ; sive - generatione: And the dieration of this' it must further be renactiihered that the pro the earth, that - shall send tip 4.5 perpendicular; t eriod of progresefeem incipiencyltosmaturity, i develops -of the hot-bed and forcing-house truck i n eetfortniey with the law of granite- : indicates the term of after durettrate,eo that l resemble nature's products in little else than thin,-that shall pet forth its evenly balanced "trite ripe, late rotten," has liaised into a I name. The re is a mystery iu lifer which we branches now on this side and then on that ' prover. Ephenieral plants and animals I cannot imitate our explain. It is invent _....,setree that shall eracefally yield to the ' begin, develope, and end their existence in a I prehensible, like Deity whence it emanated,. ' breeze, and vet stand defiant of the raging : s:tigle.lieur, a single Melte or day. Others i l Want of method. may also be an iwpredi -wind and etrerme that shall by its shade, its ' advance through a-single sees; ; others, merit . "Order ia - Leav e n'a first law." Through eraerettee, an d es protection , add to thecome through a period of yeers. And s we- know ; out nature'S domain, atom is joined to atom fort of heist, and bard, and man, that sha•l . no limit to the prog-ess of the mind, we with' the utmost regularity, to form the ob beautify tire laud with its-foliage and nitres.,. thehc e infer its perpetuity. . 1 , i jecta ;shish weltehold. The elements which and that-shell yield itsabuntlant end delivieus ' - Whatever speculations may lal i entertained i enter into the composition of theearth'ssur . fruit for the sustenance and gratification of • as- towhether man has, en the lt s rhulessadet face, and of everything upon it, are very few. - ' :inured lite., mill for the rep . oduction slid ' winced or retrograded since his first creation, ; The almost infinite and the pleasing variety ' - .multiplication or itertown s pe e iee—to reresere : there can be Ito doubt that- progress ie a law in form, and texture, and colur,and character, such a tr e eeel the requiretnerl'a'ssf it s growth ,of his being, and if lie has riot ridranced he ; which tve see around us, is-due to diversity _ tet ' e t he comp! ed with: It most have origin ; should have advanced. Perhaps in some l in tnitleetalar arrangement. Substances sue ' in a Wattly germ, te a med in . a • goajai soil. respects he has advanced, while in 'others he I often composed of the same eletneuts and in Alleh e c e re sierents eleeli its rdots take in: has made war °Alan crab like prpgrese.But e t h eaarue pruportioos,aud yet di ff er materially throuelt \ their'enyriad of litt l e moutlis, must • the fault i;t . hi elem . ,- Yet, fur ages past, it in their nature in consequence of a difference •b e T r u i,pli e rl in-due prom lion . and in proper i ears but be admitted that tire !rumen race has in the arrangement, of their particles. Reverse i f orm . It Must have unrestristed .access to zone - fere-erre • "The world does Move." _ In the order of the roost cogent mathematical i t h e :S ee air . here is leaves breathe in the : proof', we have the fact that the treerance e of of, demonstration and you render it confused., Val boll ' that geves it seeming, and constitutes . the sentiment does _ not jeopardize', the life oft end unintelligible. Without order and sit , its . sold porfiens. , It must have, with no the utterer, as first it 'did. We s4e the sure' Limit nature's edmira s itle and rigid economy ot h ers e n t tlverehat which nature has pre- • decline of 'srer, cruelty, hicerdshedlti4 creed- would turn to prodigality. _ a...rthed. the lib -Myrna and myste - eiees lefts voracity ;or idolatry and supere . tiii)n and / Thus comes die false se-stem of proxy. Says em .„, of ,e e t e e ie ly and nigh'. It most be ' SAllg;:111;t1ri_ religious rites ; of eYeanny, Op e l Dr. Franklin, eif you would have your bu watered by 'la.!, mill a nd th e dew. It must l pie-scin and slavery. We are teemed with i gjataj dope,g(); if nor,send." The interchange bar e 44 stated. period of sotivity, and - its '' hope and encouragement to the 'fadt drat old.i of the products of labor, muscular and men . I t..gular‘te-t and rev'-e. -• eriereree.not, so much as forinerli, regarded ' sal, accords with natural principles-,. But in no does 1. tre le reece or of ,min's (.1111r1(.1(t-r , as i enerable on amount of their rentiquity ; I this work of developing the energies and ILlA dtkellq 111,41 ;Ile 113.111 ,I I ! US delelotrement . while' neeteneted thine are noell impheitly I paeilicS with which- mankind has been en- M t e e l-weane d (dal/ h c is normal faak•ss ieand „rem ived in 'consequence efeheir ntivelty ; but dowel, the great. rule is, "do it Yourself. - peeeere . Truesone treeerneVier iNdal3l.l mote' the tendency insreaseeto refer all to the test 1 , Would you be independent,- would 'you he - "fur i -,fruit. another-14 its tinitrZ.r, tar,ane of truth and reason.' The more general die a men ars 'God ordained, work fur yourself. for-its Miele and 61.) oil : :: and so of man, and senipaCete of ens itelogical .knowiedge luo_ke / Supply yore- owe wants with the means which bieeseetneerees. ISA ':woula le a futile ask in the ri ght qTerlti - 4n. - Know tinsel(, " illnY 1 rho tf'reator has placed at your disposal. ; • to attetor-to le odurer•-i;bet: roots, cr steur! vet by Jested andetalized. At.ikomasi. tile- Aerp.be wisdom and knowledge fur yourself. or bark, o r l.rattchts,or leaves, er II Twers, or ;graphs, and ate en •hips have vastly. Ymyroved lie good and true fur yourself. Do not be frilit :via; tnt as ii-a. test. S 3 .iti, -man. It% : V...... - ..:;:itsillid. 6 . ;toitte,eial relit'-ins (.f man.- reenselle!.. Do not let others do it, for yon. ; this I%i-di:at-ran arse., there i., p,, t -i ins „ nn 'need ' ki..1 . 11, while a erheap effietienereteseri.diffe-ing , i ler i: reins-alf. Profit. by the counsel s Limit t.i-m-ge tic fact that. our S.-4100.1 VI/GI:AM/a • cis artaiiittlti!nd Intelligence. 'Tice .10eiicsi eTTlrerestee find skilful instructions or -others, I rd aru ld be. soinewhat Intall.6edwref,:renee to T A i ,grittllueirt::e:uf a , ti , nil science and irMen• , but, ' r at) it parSt IC AN you value your the empleviventeit 4.1".-11 we ex ! 4tU ener i ffr . • 1 t t i.'n - Wire ireser 'beri)fe so vvid&spreV. Labor-. honor and your''reenboes , l, spurn the thought 1 No'r is these tiece. , .ity to say that -um ttriug i saving machinety•adds to . the leisure petite I laekeys, promptuts, and confessols. Du it se- . ate tinie," is a Tpe or r ale .; that tin& rid- i toiling. Mildoi;s. Ti e practical -, sebseantiael r e a l lie.f! s , I . 1 e d- u tt e tat ,n ;Md. rer•l-tea . , a r ,11,1. , n4 1-11",r .t . ! ti:,,eid ~7 of i—n, ham inal: it. .ii(6-ent--Ilie in one direct .. .46s ih r brew ef stares- in that, toertrum-r of tleptrue "golden. a4te." Tire ! t , -..,-, r .. 11 .-:- i , , , , , e ,,-e z A t i ;muggir, , dtteelitgl. , Vet the •rell -remains, that-, if i truth - :lot manrlFrivrs his s.nstena i nee turn;. —,tot.--L -you nealert el:her-trot bodily, time tflefl-al, ti-e 1 the soil,ind,that be Lass rigid (eqaally,Clenr A Thrilling Story. • moral, Or 11. e soo1:11 enp.eln, of o:-in, yter t f with th-ut . ef the mir and water„autt situ light',) ..• - --.:0:-- . have viler or-trried rind stunted the tee s -et a strife inner iir.iiii To . ii , i , "PEW% a".l in ' "It matters little; when, or-bow, I picked _.!rare M ,d, i t ere h.avy aol .1 spropnet'imate. ' rude -sell s lteiencye-isbeirig IliQe.e. Orally up this b r i e f history. If I Were to -relate ' .imtre giteti ;t=atrctrfc'tx and tfrundvd tlvrt, established. _ • r i'-, its the oelte in which it. leached me, I hate - , , • or 111.4..1 It gin sy 11X - ry, iii II an l4-i../ 1 - i The privelenee of, estelimetv'..Sehdele. with I should commence iu the middle, and when I ' arced, MAI 1111/K/Iclii-ril/I•I i led head. Yew / - efforta fur theitimprevement, befi , kWi: geed i bad arse el et the conclusion, go back for a 11AVe triOs the. le;rel ,f eiteil4l.b and b ee nty tto h em seite,...p o l, ieslly s. and geeitrille ; • begin - Mug,. It is enough fur me to my that and usefulti,e-s, which - olh raise See alight i poll ieally, as 1r -i r alira.e4 eleeree'deney of ' sumo of its circumstances passed before my !ravel, . l'ily,i , a; ttlis'ett4e more or 0.....; t g9ternmerits to foster kroxledge a..i d virtue own eyes; for the remainder, I know them deran• e srel enervates the !mind, seers fire I . as the - best Menus of pr e vei s et e e at e com e ; to h ave eappaiere; and t e en are some far . di, i ,,,, „,, sod renders the! temper to raw. : qtwittres of ignorance, vice and crime, and of ' tons vet living, who will remember them but dnondeed el es ..rna3 rile ito objects' other : Net:ming die peace-and good order of se.iety; • too well, . th an ma t ttitoon an wounsbilttie. ; So, 04 the i —and;;e uerilly, as it implies a. tri:opitiinal "In the Borough Welt Street, rear St. other html, if itbe wind langtsiOtes. the body of; be duty of burnau improvement ;and ele-George's Church, and on the same side oldie leek; entree. i.j.tet worst etteitatiere 11:1;t: . ! 1 VAi ; 0 1 ). And 'spells a . way fie i a partial 11.- ! ' wave eel res as MaSi people kuow,the sturdiest insole te th e • tt fuel: I f beeitS and ietelleet. tainment. - Dig prOMOIOn of nirieUltural i o f 0 t i r d e b l ,,,,,' prisons—this Maistedsea.. Al- The, c care s i le should Le dpveloped and ; and tie +attic pursuits, i; nee step ttivrer I the l i tough iii later times it has beeet a very differ ! regeess . tereeilier. Tie-it-sphere - see aceon !be e tittle me-dieted. Manual-lateit Schools e n( place from elle sink of fi!th and dirt it . may lister eery , detsts;;; 11; . 111r-,1olit ot17: 1 ; LIMA ;.fie - ei - vt±a better- suceess thee that %IVO which once was, even its iinprered condition Leeds leid '•••• art esPect ve!,‘ ata. nod, their nepete_: they meet. Pair; riad ill atesetreingi seen in , out but little temptation to the extravagant , C l ' 'le et rte ii.. t h at of corre. z sdant progies-iutt. ; theirttre liete and character, as thelpenaltjes t o r trithe improvident. The con- I Nothing else accosts oi:dt the 'Deal ge e ef t of viulated laweeepfurndng •-its tbete- lean' e 1 donned felon has as good a yard reefer and t- • ie unive.se 'T : oilllti •. Ns liti r h .g e l '' . ' r r'' C W 4.l= str i ct l Y- 10 the nature of the transgression, or COD . I exercise in Newgete, as the insolvent debtor wilt the neer.sotie‘ of our b e in g . Without.; and not He mysteriamsdispensations izif Dim f,n I to t he er are me ses re sole life, without intellig e ece, whet enperiori V i Previdence r andministered -at - random for the 1"It may be my faney, or it may he that I i could we elainterbeve tee indue tot rock that e'reineeitnete. -of sin in gee. rill- • Thi4eputa the I cermet sepreate the place from Ile od recol steads for age, oe -13'i-sire ildj , et o f inertia: evil, the Ca*, and theeeinerly, ie s tercli rte'' lections as,vciated with it, bet ' tl.is pert id alone, coterlmtilg to the rebutlesta dinibleg ,i parent end true COtineet:lol:l, As Le i50114_ mutt LOll4Oll 1 cannot hear. The street is broad, rating reeve: of feir_e and rain, only Dole sa d ;ere, nly to refirroation. The social d emands ! the shsee are spacious , the miler of passing ... .e ~,D~►R.F~~~, 601 14 pliliClll Or 1,3111.1 to fertilize. timadjecent Anil what are lire and intellect and Foul, 'dillsat their exercise I What pleasure, , whit nobility woubrthefeontt ! Above us, an d around a ., on - every - hand, we 'tee the principle of lirtrmonioui pro2ression illustrat ed and enfore'.94.., Nothing_ stands still. Ever . ) . wheie %oil! ."catvlr.sd." We otrezlkrried . frop _night. to day and frorn. day t) nkritt at the rate (.4' over 'pj - 00 runes pet hour; and fr.ln3 rseison 'to seWv.An at the t ;Ai of GB,OOO utile, per hour. The e ursit , rintillgg .ti te:u It froth the operation uf.ty (awl that - wolk iuhartiinnr. Ity one o'f-the.e. the earth is:recut:) , bell in' its tontt.-int eoul-se .bv 'the poker of aitrae tiou exerted . hy34ll:l"r‘wo,Lis, wire ours, iu turn, perforruf.; a -kindred 41Eee for Ilia re. 4, and all for eaehl - Should ono- refuse. • -11. f ' And fl th, ttine.confusinta might resell.; _nd fr,en these t shout, to- their Itusiness7 qs tI r, cvctes of yrrogi'ession others follow. In the l'aud, that another class €1100(1Sollow ibire:mit darkness of Mita, all 'animate • creation boils tingly , , in tellecitial : ,:employment„ Willa' • an ruguiaLde-And a nim a l chahges its action. Rest ! oilier rill ptisiilpuirnettsly and most] inglor. days astir- limply 'claims exemption from either; is re- , rind sleep Preparelor the coming its , . • Spring and smuttier, autumn and wititer preliensihle. - _ •• bring,atrout suoceialive bulges in the pingre's Er'rery : nom •shireld supply Lis' Physical of the vegetable kingdom.. Some, • during.- necessities by his own tmemeailar exertiomarict these . rnuteri.M.:'have sprung, tip; devikiped ' every. trian'slioulJ sittisfy the mental tr sire theit beatitil, and perfectionst,and hare finish- } inents of his, being, by his own Mental labor. eri the cycle or tb,ir exi:tence. Others have.: of the 'acme character Jathe practice Oaf put completed ,ItutAgth cycle of . the compound }'oath cud' childhood through en imps-_ "cycle of tih4i kcitig.- The mustard seed has times ooutso of education, while in after years burst its little shell and : _iby , d e grees has es- iin el:ectual ttainiug is to be wholy raid a patided ditnetaicins,. till the birds mayd m en i li i and muscular, effort combined; lord. it it,•hr a n e ile% White the soil . ° 'hint I teturn each other. - andi add of l'nlearb; compleed but one singe of the x . . entuti s rl and at no 'petted this more impoitant and growth that chat! mate it the' Maimed' of the necessary than •duiing the early yerirs pf life. forest._ Mania asSems - one form,•aecoeiplisti- S udv, woik (1 Pier a re al l .r."i' 44 es our purpose or. tiiir .chyle of ptirpo.'s'es, and elildreri. A a the arliole of life fair too then re - toxic to Ilmeornrucia illasb•of eletuentri4 short to 'explore • the cenfines, even, of the to perfurni anpther circle of progression : The t fields of knorileige.—Then vre .bare tys en riga:able u Odd samports_ the animal, and ttm I emniter 114 enormous burdenclaid uponlus by. annual wort.l suirenance • fOr the - ! ti me ,ipp o i e d r ev irern e nta of health and, elms' vegetable. flee exhaled breath c f the t r„ r rt--the requirettients' of prides niisparn, mat is eppopitate the %*. tsh., A varice a .1. prescribed appetite, mctre l ,theis. n gaia- miele puielit,breathing. Water ;Ii If which are only causes, calatuitie A...entiornted ,ftv.rtit, the PiT,an awl that land,and t fic iA irges - w Ore: s In 'sheep's clothing, tel prey the vapor and eh-aids fall iu rain arid dew to upon -bur besLsb. arui 4.rigatr.ilre ground and •agairt-form rills and I —Then wesmeerisitii the . great moral imp ! st.ottn4 nt , d supply the malree,ofeviVonstiort• ' rent.—lhe greitt morel (Olney of the lwhip Tn-s heart, 'one of th e .cc r i e ttant mina:lea of and the *per. - may be true that“neeessity 01,0 . the iii•alter of ifiVepll,)ll." ' nifty tr tree' circles.circles.'rt.° rust y-"IT slain, r kkeepskrOlXlßC.ll oo l. relOncS lei: east, 4341, landaus out.{ .may rottifwfieetnin.Y - Butveliest.liou.iitiCtion bodi e s, haling nettotr.pli t hed its work, is trar slaktt-irqdiv-• chatiged for a.new rine. " Atvms which were i 'eviiii,%ixelois4 - sierified orate arranged t deer/fate the 'Genie!' Tal are rushing dtalis P;"4300"e• Eden, may, perehenet, be flourisbingFere in Whilo.the_ pressure is on, you May go ahead. the rege: tad& of 10-:tit9'. Like ci feting wavei; u t, tliti further )-ou Move.exterual. t tiled .• - , 1 . - . . . • 1 -1.1.' .. .. . '. 1 , : . • . ..-. i . . . k , -..• • • •• • , , . •••.• "WE 4911 e OURSELVES PARTY 'TEM* 'DOES - N0T0.6211Y.-7= =act AND Kam - MUSIC Or THE UNION", • iltan's nature are being {,lotcsed - r u4Oti - their proper basis, ti....00t Conkrtoced -of t;toic, her. suetit-4, or monastic austerity on OLIO tiatia r nor of sheer conviriatit'y on the othir:' The: in:Tor:Haug of the ce-edneation: of the sees, nail the beneficial healthful iulluencat xhich their reciprocal intercourse and socitry wort upon Oa other, is quite generally atlitii ted. The enrta of woman to enhance leer; ! eltetitl tier u..efutnes.s, and elevate her .; level, is no Lad omen.—llut there ate ;smany formidable. obstacles to be overcome ' beftre she•vymuwArical developments of all man's faculties can be at-lair:et!, even: among nations, whose social, „political, and i t n - Ja l. condition is Most- favo'r Able. - Prominent among these is the institution of caste in all it- greater and teas degreeo.. The assntnptitin that one claw: should he iiianual-laboiekand ;flout(' 1 ;tick r heir 10 qtly vehicles, the fout,tepti 91 a ,iterpetual ;stream of people-- 7 -atl the Lucy sounds of traffic. re essuspl lii it from mem •Ap Jobluiglit, but the streets around sne are mean and Buse poe 7 erty and debauchery lie kstering in the crowded want and sniefostune aro pent . , - . u p i n th e n ot raw N is o u'; att ai r o f gloom and lips moved, and A mile play e d ...do sh e 'fi ece 1 hi s eye's own father—the man who he'd oast in— death. Rein_hint, seiza arid ;ell bin Niels t ir c s,ine.ss seems, in my eyes at ledo,t,to tongl het ate lip wetepallid, and, th e smile faded i him into prison , and who, wheu his - daughter an.l goods, 'hive Wm (tont house . nd. home, about the scene, and to impart to it a sickly 4 into a rigid and ghastly star. Ile.waS alone I atid, her child sued at his feet. for mercy, haeand drag him. forth a begga' in his old age,' sarisqualidhue. .I in the world. • . , I spurned them front his -door. Oh; how he to dirtin a common jail.' • ' . "Ma n y e s na,. Op, hare l ong since been 1 "That night. in the since and desolation I cursed the weakness that prevented him "' But the - eosts, my dear sir, the costa l of 1 closed'M the grave, tare looked round upon lef his miserable room, the wretched man , from being up, and active, in his snhetne • of all this,' resumed the - attorney, -when' ,bo had''' that scene lightly enough, irhetpeutteng - the i kutsh, izy the dead body of his wife, and call- i vengeance ! I recovered from I:is momentary surptise--If late of the Sirtsta'tea Prison for rthk first fed on Ged to wi*iss a dreadful oath,-. that 1 "'lle caused himrolf to-be carried from the I the defendant tre - -ri man of straw, 0161 s M time; for despair s,eldern come; with the 'first 1 from that hour,lsdelked-Litmself :o revenge scene of his loss and misery, and oonveyod par- the costs,: . sir r '. , ' ; , , shock' of misfortune. A rtlan• has confidence her death and that of his Child ; that from to a quiet residence on the JCS coast—not in ,:' • Name Fri/ sum; 'said the Stranger; his in untried friends, he remembers the many bencgtorth to tbillaAt moment, of his life, his the hypo of recovering, his peace of mind or blind trembling to Violently with excitetvint, offers of service so freely made by his boon , whole energieashOult ho directed to ibis one t happiness, for both were Vet! for ever ; but to that he could scarcely hold, thelibri- be seized companteria when ite wanted theM • not he 1 °Went ;that his wenßh-should he: protracted restore his prostrate energies, and mediate on' l as ho spoltie` tihyreitti, - and it is yoUls-i. Don't 'he ho" fli ' - - ! and to-rAie ; ttl3,t tale hotreti,sitculd be an- his- darling object. And here,some evil spirit !be that, to own if, min. I shell scit'think _. . • ' ' has hope—the hope of happy experience-- and however he may bent. beneath the first shock, it spring ups his bosuns, and flour ishes there for a brief space, until it droops beneath the blight • of• disappointment eyes neglect., Flow soon have -those same eyes deeply sunken in the head, glared from faces wasted with famine, and sallow from continC meacin days alien it„was no figure of' speech to say that debtor. rotted , with no, hope of release, and no prospect of liberty. Th e a t roc ity in its ful! extent. 110 lung exl4ts e hut ihrre 14 enough of it left, to gate rifle to ooeurenees 11 a: make the ;heart bleed, "Iwenty years ago, that pa ament was worn `with the footstep ors mother and ehild,who, day,by day, so surely as the morning- came, presented themselves at the ptis us gate; often a fter a night of restless misery and Anxious thoughts were they there. a full hour too soon and then the )outtg mother turning mee kly a w a y, would lead the child to the old luidges and raising hiris in her arms to show him the gl atoning srate'r,, tinted with f he 1104 of the tuotning'a sun, and stirring . with 'jai the bes tial prepsrations - for business and pleasure that ton s river presents at that. early hour, en deavour to interest hio thoughts in the objects before him. But she would quickly set 'him down, and, hiding• beef c= in her shawl, gite iont to the tears that blinded het% for Uh,ea. pli,s4ori . ,,of interest or amusement lighted 'up his thin and sickly face. Ilia reeolleu ions were few enough, but tbeywere all of one kind •• —all cooties-red the poverty andmisery 'of his pirents. ; Boor after hour, Ma lie sat mothera knee, and with childisksym ' paths latched the tears that ,stole down her ittee,•antithen crept quietly away into rouse MONTROSEy , PA., MARCH 24,1859.. corner, aed sobbed himself to sleep: - ~The 1 The turnkeya in the . prison !Lobby took o ff bard realitiea'sithe world, with many of. ifs 1 their hats as it pre.ead through, and in an- I worstprirationa--truoger and thirst,and cold other moment the heavy ;gate, closed behind : an& trant—hed all come homeao him from ' it. lie looked vacantly upon the crowd and ,i the finit dawniegs of reason; and though the I fell heavily to the ground. - form of childhood wait there, its light heart, , Although for manyweeks after this ho was its merry ;laugh and oriarkling eyes were watched night and dav,in the Mildest ravings 1 wanting. : . , --1 of fever, neither the consciousness of, his_ loss, , "The father end mother looked on upon , not,the recollection dile vow he bad male this And upon each other with thought's of i ever left him for a moment. Scenes Oen. agony they daunt) , not breathe in words. The jed before his eyev, place succeeded place,and healthy strong made - man who could have I event followed event, in all the hurry of Mir borne almost say. fatigue of active. exertion, I turn; but they were all connected in some was wasting beneath the close confinement 1 way with the great object of his mind. Lie and unhealthy attnoapbereofa crowded prison. was sailing over a boundless expanse of sea, The slight . and i delicate.woman was sinking i with a blood-red sky above, and the angry beaeath the combined effects of mental and( Ureters lashed into fury betwath„boiling and bodily illness; ,the child's young heart was , eddying.up on every side. There was an breaking. - . I other vessel before them,. toiling and laboring "Winter Owe, and with it weeks of cold ' in the howling storm ; her canvass fluttering and heavy rain, The poor girl had removed j in ribauds from the mast And terdeck throng to a wretched apartmeniclese, to the spot of , ed with figures who were lashed to the sides, her husband's imprisonment; and though the I over which huge waves every instant burst, change had-beat rendered absoltrOy neces- I sweeping away-some devoted creatures into vary- by their increasing poverty, she was , the fuming, sea. Onward they bore, amidst happier now for she was neural. him. 'Fcr : the roaring mass of water, with a speed and two months, she and her liale companion force, which nothing could resist; and strik watched the opening of the gate as usual-1 big the stern of the foremost vessel, crushed One day she failed to come, fur the first' time. her berme:lt their keel. From Lthe huge Another morning arrived, abe. crime alone. whirlpool which the sinking wrect: occasion- The child was dead. • ed, arose a shriek so loud and shrill—the . "They little know, who coldly talk of the :deads..ry of a hundred drowning-wretches, poor man's bereaiements,a b ud aappy release ' blended into one fierce yell—that it rung from pain to the departed, and a merciful re- frr above the war-cry of the elements,_ and lease from expense to the survivor—they little - echoed, and re-echoed, till it seemed to pierce know, I Say, what the agony of those bereave-' air, sky, rind wean. But what was that ments is. A silent look of- affection and re-' that old g'ay head that rose aboe tho wat- i glad when all other eyes are turned oddly , er's surface, and with looks of agony, and ' away—the COLIS01001:18.SA that we possess the' sere:tins for aids butteited with the wave I sympathy and affection of one being when all ' One lo ,k, and lie had- sprung from the... „ yes. - others have deserted da—is a bold, a rtay, sell side, and with vigerou . o strokes were a comfort in the deepest affliction' which no swimming towards it. He reached it, and . wealth -could purchase, or- power bestow. , %voodoo° upon it. They were his features. The child had sat at his-pareota'feet fur hours ; The old man saw bin coming, and vainly together, with hit little hie& patiently : strove to elude his grasp. But he clasped folded in each otber,and his t h ia wan face' him tied, and , dragged him beneath the raised toward's them. -They bad seen him : water. Duren. down with him fifty fathoms pine aWay from day to day •,, andahough deep, his struggles grew fainter and fainter, brief existence hadlreen a joyoue one, autl t he' until they - whAly °used. He was dead; was now removed to that peace and ma': ha bad kilted him, and had kept hia wtacn, cntrd at lle was, he had -never known ' oath. lin this world, they were bill parkas,. and hie j "He was t-aversing the scorching sands- of loss sunk deep upon their souls. , a mighty desert, barefooted and alone. The "It: was' plain to thorn, who looked ,upon leand dbbcked and blinded him ; its fine thin . the mother ' s altered. (see, that death 'must j groins entered into the very pore; of his skin soon clot's the scene of her edveteity and trial. ' and stung him almost to mashie... Ulbraiitin Her husband's fellow prisoners shrunk from i CU 6.1%. a , Use same material, carried forward i obtruding wilds grief end s tnisery„ - and left 'by the wind, and shone j through by the i him to himself alone, in the small room be burning SUI/1, stalked in the distance like i bad previously . freupied in common with . pillars of living fire. The bonds of men, who two companions. She shared it. with him ; i had perished fettle dreary waste, lay seatt:er • and lingering on without pain, but Without ; cred at his feet; a fearful light tell on every- I hope, her_lif e ebbed °lowly away. .. ' thing around, and so far as the eye could l "'She. had fainted one. evening in- her has- ' teach,Autiriog but objects of dread and hea -1 hand'e arms, and.he .-had borne her to the , rorpreseareabLs emzeivea.. - - Vniiify atriving -to open window to., : renriss r her f arittr the air, when ' utters' ory of terror with his tongue clearing -the light of the 'Moon falling full -.upon her to his month, he rushed madly; forward. ; Qcashowed bit* a,elotege upon her features, Armed with supernatural strength, he waded i whieh made hfreett ,g7r beneath herweight !affrough-the sand,until exhanstod with fatigue , like a helpless infant. and thirst, he fell senseless on . the earth. "'Set me down„George,'-abe said, &May.. ‘Vbas fragrant coolness revived him 1 what Ile did so, and seating himself beside her, ; gushing bound was that I Water I It was covered his face with his Lands, and burst it- j indeed a well .; and a clear - ,--fresh stream -was ta tears. . - , I running at his feet. Ile drank deeply of it u•lts very hard to leave your, George.' she 1 and throwing his aching baths upon thebank. I said, 'bin- it's, God'S- will, ,and yob must bear :stink into a delicious trance. - The sound of it for my sake. Oh I, bow I thank him for j approaching footsteps roused him.- An old ;having taken our boy I. He is happy, and in l gray-headed man tottered forward to slake ! heaven now. What would be havedonehers ! his burning thirst. It wait he again. lie• n . v.hout his mother I' - . i wound his arms rouok the old man's body, "You shall nut die, Mory, yob shall not ; and held him back. lie struggled in power -1 die,' said the husband, starring up.. He r ful convulsions and shrieked for water—for paced hurriedly to and fro, rcriking -Ms bead I but one drop of water to save his life; but he with his fist,-then reseating Liers e li b e sid e her, I held the old man firmly, and watched -his and supporting her in his arm!, added More Agonies with greedy eyes ; and wben.Lis life calmly, 'Rouse yourself. my dear girl—pray, 1 lers e head j fell forward on his bosom, he rolled pray Jo,„ -Tau will retire net:.- 1 the corpse from Lim with-his foot. - - ' ''''Never Again, George, never again,' said 1 "When the fever loft him, and`comudour the dying Woman.. 'Let them lay. me by nay I ness returned,-be awoke to find himself rids poor boy, now, but promise me, that if ever i and free, to hear that-the ,parent 'who Wi:mid you leave this, dreadful place, and should I bare let him die in . ; :sail—worty ! who had grow rich, you will have us removed to some I let those who were far dearer to hint than his quiet country church-yard, n long, long wayn own existence, die of want and the- sickness off—very far from here, wl,re Ives-cued of heart-thatmedieirre CAD never cure--diad rest in peace. Dear George, ifromikan eou I been found dead in his 134 r00m...- He had *ill.' . - :k. i all the heart to leave Hs con 'a- beggar, but. "•I di', I ' Uo,' said the Mau, throw him- ' , prourt - eveu of his health and rttength he had . . ! r self passionately, on Lis itoets _bake her. •Speak to me, Mary, entailer **kook— Lut oue-- 9 14 1 ' irk N. • • 'lie eased to speak; 10 min tlutt:clasp ed his neck.grerr std. deepsigh escaped (Runt:be wasted totrn rehire; the ilr,iug,and aujeafirgo ishatilis;uud should hunt I oast in bis - waY the opportunitrfor his fist, I its object tbroug,l) the .World.% , • _1 most borritile, reyssoge, •., . . •,, • - l ' "The Idt: s epeet +pit', and passim! scarcely ~ "It was GUIDMet time; and wiippod in Ws 1 btnau, had ;widened) fiarCe ravagra OD his rglpomy thopglits, he would issue from his l face and form, in.:ilintape night, that his i sod ary lodgings early in the evening, and I companions in mtliurtilln shrunk affrighted 1 wandering along a narrow path beneath the from him de he pitied be , ills eyes were cliff. o a wild and lonely spot tat had struck bloodshot and bevy . % face deadly white, 1 , his fancy ip his ramblings, seatAiroself on and his bay he it with age. lie had l some 'alien fragments of the rock, and bury- I i p bitten his '. wader . ,. ' 'early, thiough in the l tug his face in .. ,. bis 'bands, remain there for I violence of his sil autimiug, and the I tiours—icenelinnea till night .hati.completely t blood which had 100'm-110 0m the wound had 1 Olosed in, and, the lung-ihadows of tilie-frown- piekled doWb his chieNsed stained his shirt I tag cliffs *bore hi: heed, east if thick, black I and neekerelisieCffesller, or sopud of corn- I darkness op every object pear him.' I plaint esesped hilulbut the oh - settied look, ' '44 mats seated bete, one asim e‘oniaff in and disorderd hi with which he paced up! li s old position, eow and then rasing his and down the yar4 , denoted the fever which head to watch theiliglit. of a seagu h l,or carry' was. burning withii, . i . his eye along tilb glorious crimson path, "It was 4e ,.. t ,,,A e y that hi s wires body' iihich, croon:farming id the.. middle of the I should tie, reipoiredfrom the prison, without I ocean, Seemed to lead to i a very verge where delay. pi t received. the. cominurdestion the sun was,„setting, when the profound sil-1 eith perfisertialinatep, snit ampieseel in the . etice of the spot wan broken by, a loud cry for' liNpriety. dearly ; all the 'waives of thr i help; he listened v doubtfut of liiiliasing heard , prison be.! na-latildid ho witness its removal ; I aright, when the cry. wakrepeated with even I they -fell back on ether side whey the widow- I greater vehemence than befOre, And•stiarting er appeared.; be walked • hurriedly forward. to his fee.; he hastened itithe direition how and stationed bitsisrlf, alone, inr, a little railed whence it proceeded. ~ . - area close to toe lobe gate ; from whetiee the , pie taie told - its it.oece ;some scattered crowd,with andustiactiya feelisrg of delicaily, garments lay on the' beach ; a human head had retired,: Ihe,.. rude -coffin was borne was just visible above the waves at- a'little slo'oly for wait! on men's altPulders. A dead , di-tauce from the, aborts,. and an old man, silence pervaded Vie throng; broken only by wringing his Laude in agony, was running to the audible laiseutatioint of the .women, and and fro, shrieking for assistance. The shuffirng steps of:the hearers on the stone/ lid; whose strength was now .autlitiently re pavement.'Met. retched the spot where the. stored, thiew oil his Coat, and ritstisd tc bereaved .bushend atOod ; era Stopped... fje , wardStlie,aea, with the intention to ..plinage 'laid' hi ilia tid apoti the coffin, and. mechanic- j himself: in, eg4 . to dtaie the droZtroing -man !ally adjusted this pallth which it *vast ailtur,..,e• , „.., ' out ered, o nus then tuoticit l ed the t 0 CD VlArtit'. I " `uag ea here, ..r ,in God's name ; help, ~.. ' put etr the Rot until too late, and now he might trnali his, teeth in the other worht-st tbeihonglit of the wealth,.,his.rentisme:aliad left him behind. He woke to this, and be more. To recollect the purpose for.which be lived, end to remember that his enemy was help Sir; fur the love of- Heaven. lle is' my son, Sir, my only son,' said the old sitan.fren ticallv, as he advaiCed to meet him; 'My on ly spit, sir, and be is dying before his father's eye'.' "At the first word the old man uttered, the stranger checked himself 'ld his Career, !and folding his arms, stood perfectly motion ! less. • . "'Great God exclaimed the old man, re ! coiling --sileyling • "The stranger smiled and•Wasailent. "'Hey ling!' said the old man, Wildly, 'my boy, Heyting, my dear boy, look, look,' and gasping for breath,the miseiable:father point ed to the -spot where the young man was i struggling for life. ! "'Hark I' said the old, Man —'heeries once more..::!lle is alive yet ;•illeyling, save him,", savetim- V. • • a • "The stranger smiled again and retained ithmoirthle as a stone. . • . "'I have wronged you:- cried the old man, falling.on his knees, and - clasping his bands together—` be revenged ; take my life, !my all, east me into the water at your feet,: and, • i if lonnen nature can rapress a struggle, I will die Without stirring band• or foot. Do it, Heyling, do it, but save my Lop, ho is so young ; Heyling, so young to die.' '' Listen,' said the stranger, empire; the old man firmly by thearist—' i will have life for life, and here is •Olse. My child died '_before•hit father's eyes ri far more agonizing andtpainfel death than that young . slanderer of his sister's worth is meeting while rape - ak. You laughed—laughed in your daughter's !face, where death had .alreadyeset-hisband— ,at our Suffering thee. What think you of them.hovi 1 See there, see these.' , " As the straier spoke he pointed to the s-a. A faint cry died away upon its surface, ! the last ,powtiful wangle of the dying man agitated the rippling waves fora few seconds; and the slim where be had gone down fete t his early grave, was undistingLishatile from the Su:rounding water. * • * "Three.yearafind elapsed, when a gentle ! man alighted from a private carriage at the _dour of a London attorney, then well known ; to the public as a man of no great nicety .ih his pcofeseiontil dealings, and requested a psi. i'vate interview on profes,ional business of Ma -1 penance. Although ,evidently not past the lui.a of life, his face Was pale d haggard, and d.jected, and it did not nequite the most :,care perception of the man of business : Co, discover at a glance, that disease or suffer, ing had done more-to work a change in . his apparance; than tire mere hand of time could have accomplished io twice the period of his whole life. wish you to undertake some legal leisiness for me,', 'said-the - stranger. • , "The attorney bowed obsequiously, and glanced at a large packet which the gentle man carried in his band. His visitor ob :•erve,l thelook;:.and proceeded. • "'lt is no common business,' said be; I nor have these papers reached my•hands without long troube and great expa . nse: "The. C•ternev ca-t a Still more anxious look at the packet; and his visitor, untying the string that bound, it, diSclosel a quantity of eiromisory notes, with some copies of deeds, and other documents. i •"` Upon tirtse papers,' said the client, 'the than who;e name they bear, has raised, as I you will see large slims of money,: for years past. Therts was a tacit tiodernlaildiegbe tweenlim and the men in whose hands they I originally went—sid from • whom I hare by degrees purchased tlre svhoftirfoi; trbbin and quad, ebb, their nominal. valise—that these loans shenid b_ from time to time renewed, until; a given period had elapsed. He has sustained many tosses of-late; and thesaeb ligittionsuccumalatincr en him at once, could . crush him - to the earth.' "• The' whole amount is some thousands of pounds,' said the atterneydooking over the papa's. *_ It is';' said the client. • ‘" What ; are we to do,' enquired the man orbUrher.„. i• • "' Do!' Tardier] time client,' with. sudden . . veheriience•—• Pot every engine . 61 dm law in I. force, pvery trick that ingenuity can devim and Tr..vealty eieOute T floc. means, and 'foul i the °pin otqw;;ssion of the irtw; torred iry ill 1 the craft of it recut. ibgenioue 'practitioneis. I would have him die a harrassinw and lingei- it dear, if•youtain my object. - - "The attorney named a large surf at liar ' ar d, as the hilvanee he should require to,mi cure himself against the • possibility of loss; but more whits-11re view of aseertaihing bow far his client was disposed to 'go, than. with any idea that he would comply with the de. nand The s: ranger wrote a check upon' his 1 banker and left..bitn: . . . - i "Tile draft was duly .honored, and the at i iorney finding.tbat.his client might - be Safely i relied upon, e'ommenced his work in earn eat. 1 '.r more than 'two years afterwirds, Mr. illeyling would *it whole daps together, in the office, pouting over the Pipers as they Nceurnulate4,uand reading again' and again, i•hiseyes gleaming • inth joy, the ledera of re -1 monstrance. the prayers far alittle•delay, the rep , esen t a rion - .,,:0f the certain rein in which' the . opposite pal ty , must be ityr,p(yed/that poured, in, as snit after. snit, rind prodess of--' 1 ter firoces*, was commenced,' To all applica tions for,a'btief indulgence, them wmi but one l, reply-.-the money must be pirid.: , .Land, house, furniture, each in its turn, watt taken under some one of the numerous executioto which were i