— Far At Agitator. lIPEE. j in »n mignM - -r m**Su bSa-ftnlttre* and the ooeofcmrt grow, U $ d™*r *nWi Adowntte pebbWwfnds Itr wiy* By many «o evergreen, ebeily ***• Td the coral ware* of a hmdJoeted, toy. Dp the ttream in the swlhlnj etade, It* water* expand in a g|any pool ] And thither joe* each Typeean maid To lave in (he water* an clear and cool Form* that are east in beaoty’a mould, Dlowioj with health and in action free, A wealth of charm* more precioua than gold— Such la the maid df ilie vale of Ttks. a. w. s. OBieiNlL. For ike Agitator, History ot a Tree, BY MELANIE, Close by a babbling brook, at a little dis tance from my early home, lies an old fallen pine, .once shaded by green trees, on which 1 hare sat for hours, watching the floating clouds, the sky, and the birds that came to the brook to drink. I have often lost myself in revery while meditating upon the changes that have taken place, since that tree com menced its growth. As one of our writers has said, “what stories are treasured up in its, heart, if we could but get them.” Some things that, have happened near it we know, and with the assistance of the imagination 1 have fancied that if the tree could speak, it would tell something like the following story: Nearly four hundred years ago, I com menced the uncertain pilgrimage of life, by pushing aside the leaves and earth which covered me, ahd unfolding to the air and light about a dozen jsmall leaves. Tall trees were around me, of which, from my lowly posi tion, I could hardly see the tops. 1 knew not that I was to be like them, but well pleased with myself and all about me, I was happy. Yet I sometimes wondered what my destiny was to be, and wished for some one la ex plain to me things that I did not understand. Then a voice seemed to whisper to me, and told me what I wished to know. “L am the Angel of the Trees,” said the voice, “I am commissioned to tell you your destiny." “You shall be,” said he, “higher than the tall est tree you behold. For many years you shall flourish, until you fancy that you are too strong to be moved. Yet you shall be overthrown at last; the destroyer will not spare you. Unlike your own raqe, I was in no haste to be mighty, for 1 had happiness enough al ready, and I sometimes saw that the trees were furiously waved, and seemingly almost overthrown by the wind; once, too, during a violent storm, a gigantic pine was shivered into ten thousand pieces by the lightning’s stroke, making me even glad that it would be long before 1 should be so exposed. Yet I sometimes had cause to tear for my life, for at one time a squirrel in digging a home for bimsdlf nearly uprooted me, and sometimes the wild deer, or a passing Indian would trample me downj yet I hoped on, aud soon grew stronger for each rude buffeting I re ceived. But at length the air grew colder, and at night chill frosts settled on all around. My companions were soon disrobed of their sum mer adorning, the birds were no longer heard, the cricket and grasshopper lay dead on tho ; ground, the squirrel ceased his merry chatter and darted silently by, with his mouth filled with food for his winter store. Everything seemed dying and decaying. The mournful sound of the wind as it rustled the dry leaves, that were sometimes piled higher than my head, filled me with sadness. But 1 was not suffered to despair. The angel of the trees again appeared, and with words of kindness soothed my troubled spirit, He told me 1 must bo content with my lot, though for a time I should be shut out from the air and light, and all the pleasant sights and sounds I had learned to love. He would still be near, and watch over me, and if I trusted him 1 should be supported. Soon his words were fulfilled. The snow covered roe, I know not how deep, but through the long winter I was kept in peace. And, ns now, spring at length appeared, the trees were again clothed in green, flowers decked the earth, and birds again made the air vocal with their music. With but little variation, thus passed the first few years of my life. I steadily increased in size, and soon outstripped those who had much the start of me. I soon found myself high enough to avoid being covered with snow mwi lier. As 1 grew tall enough to see at a distance through the woods, I no longer won dered why the various inhabitants of the for est so often passed that way, or why in just such a spot the Indian’s camp-fire so often blazed. That murmuring brook you think you love so well, the Indian loved better still. When weary with the chase, he sought its hanks to erect his hut for a night’s repose, and drank from Us clear water with pleasure, for he knew nothing of tbe-desire for strong drink which has since nearly destroyed his race. The Indian maiden loved as well as you, to watch by its side for the first yellow violet and water-cress that Spring produced. But sometimes its water was stained with blood, for the red man lay in wait, watering for the deer to come and drink, then with his swift-sped arrow pierced his heart. Wild beasts of prey watched there, too, and oft the air was filled with cries and the ground lorn in the unavailing efforts of some strong, no ble slag to free himself from the claws of the ravenous panther. Thus passed three hundred years of my life. But how changed! Instead of the sprout uprooted by a squirrel, or the sapling in which the Indian boy de lighted to swing, behold p lofty tree. 1 would look abroad for miles over the forestland long would be my storyl, if 1 should attempt to tell you all I have seen. On yonder hill side, now so peaceful and so fair, the savage tribes once mingled in deadly combat. The flinty arrow-heads you sometimes find have known other uses than to pierce the bounding deer, or savage wolf. ’Twas on a lovely summer day that two tribes of red men met in battle, and from the rising to the selling sun, with (fearfbl cries and yells they rent the air, while the arrow and tomahawk did their tnf fids COBB, STURROCk « CO.’, VOL. 1. deadly work. The conflict at last was end ed, but the stars that night looked down on if fearful scene. The funeral fire blazed, high for those who )ud fallen and;boon taken pri soners. For years, that battle ground might have been known, but time has destroyed the last vestige that marked the spot. But, “passelh away" is written on ell, be low, end at length.the scene was changed again. The hupter seldom came; e Poor Mam Now if dare am enny set of critters dat am disposed more dan anodder.it am.de fel ,|er pained in dexes, not, from any fault.ob hisjieeder.too, but jist bekiasoit am so. De world look ’pon him as somfin to loth and hate, and de rich treat him wid dat sublime contempt which de bigbulefant in de catrivan bestows pon de wiffit poodles dat da ole maids fetch wid dera to de show. Railrode* hab cars speshly for deiruse, and so does de stearobotes on de forrid decks; dey aint allowed to mix wid old ruffle shirts and gold-wrist buttons no. more dan de Millerite wood mix wid de Mormons. In fashihable churches dare am a place set apart speshly for de poor, aod in odders dar am a part set a place for de same purpose. Dis universal dislike ob de poor people am, I is afraid,cotchin, fordo you know I be gin locate dera myself. It’s a fac. I got poor relations dal I nebber care to see from one year’s end to anudder, onless dey got deir Sunday close on. I nebber go to see dem, kase I was onco poor myself, and jia know what a disposed pack ob set dey am. Sum specimen ob mankind, and speshly women kind, knowing how much de poor man am snubbed, contribe by making a great deal on little means and odder false pretences, to ’pear to be as rich as their naibors, and ma by dey am, and richer too, and dat ’counts for de meny big Tailor bills and dry goods bills dat find deir way unpaid into de Sperm Court, and one half de misery in de Police office. Pride and Poverty am as sure to be found together as de toofake and bad temper.— When a man gets rich he can afford to kick pride to Belzabub, but while he am poor it slicks to him like warm tar to a bale of cot ton, besmerin and spilein him. We often hea,h de poor man, as he looks round on his wife, 20 children and 50 dogs, cuss his stars dat he was born in sich a fix, but de more he cusses de less he works; pov erty is bad enough, and pride and lazyness all togeder am jist about damnable. It aint de stars fault at all, it am selfish mankinds and nobody else. Kind Providince made dis world big enuif and lubly enuff for all do human mankind family to get a good liben on if dey go to work and make it, but as fast as de world become popelated dar was all ober it lazy debils sprung up and made up deir minds dey’d let de rest ob mankind do all ob de work, and dey’d do all de cheatin’ and skinnin’. Well, sum ob dem hab got rich, but dare aint one ob dem got huff de look for a front seat in hebben dat you fellers hab, as big debils and wicked scorpions as you know you all am. Do you sposo dat de alt wise eber intended fur one man to lay off in lavender in de Fif Abenue and all de rest turn night scavengers to support him in his laziness —ef you do you am a bigger set ob fools den you wuss lass year, when you refused to raise my salary. One haff de poverty in dis world am brought on by pepil demseffs. Sum folks hab got good wages de whole year round, but dey am no belter off from one monfs end to anudder— and wats de reason ob it—why I will tell you, and I don’t care on who’s toes 1 tread, by do in the same. " On a Saturday nile you fellers git paid off, you go home, wash up, and put on a clean shirt, and lake your market basket, and strut into Cafarine Market jinglin your ten haff dol lars all true de market-house. You come up to de butcher manj and trowin you beds back, ax him how much he sella his best porter house stake a pound ? “Twenty fibe cents,” sez de butcher man. “Well, cut me off six or eight pounds,” aes you—you put dot in your basket, den you muss hab a chicken or two, and oysters, &c., but before the followin Friday, your funds run low, end you sneak down to do market, and skulk behind the stalls, and you hail de butcher boy wid a whimper. You can’tface the butcher heseffur. ter cuttin it so fat on him only de Saturday night before, and you ox ’do boy—“ How do you sell your liver a pound to-day 1" “Three cents,” sez de boy. “Well, cut me off two pounds and put it in a piece of paper, and I'll take it home in my hat.” De moral ob dis am—don’t eat all up on Sunday, and starb tree days in de week to pay fur it. Recife fob Floating.—Any human be ing who will have the presence of mind to clasp the hands behind the back, and turn the face toward the zenith, may float at ease and in perfect safety in tolerably still water aye, and sleep there, no matter how long.— If not knowing how to swim you would es cape drowning when you find yourself in deep water, you have only to consider your self an empty pitcher —let your mouth and nose, not the top of your heavy head, be the highest part of you and your are safe.— But thrust up ode of your honey hands and down you go; turning up the handle lips over the pitcher. Having had the happiness to prevent one or two from drowning by this simple instruction we publish it for the benefit of all who cither lose aquatic sports or dread them. Unavoidable Incidents.—An editor “out west,” (of course) said that he hoped to be able to present a marriage and p death as or iginal matter for bis columns, but unfortunate ly, a thaw broke up the wedding, and the doctor got sick, so the patient recovered. Puisicians rarely take medicine, lawyers seldom go to law, and ministers steer clear of other parson’s churches. Editors, however, read ail the papers they can gat hold of. t iv> i AtllTA ■ .Vi*' t ’—. ’ L ‘ *' thk AorrATioM or thought is THS isonraiHQ or «mnx." BY FBOY. JOUIM CKSAKHAHNIBBI* THK VOKAH WOI WOWS HOW TO HAtfASX ,npiinm. “Well, hero I be;' wakegnskes, the dajri iaa breakio;”nowTseset my eyes on a good many strange things in my day, bnt ibia gellin’ married business beats everything I ever did ope.; It goes ahead of Sara Fling,; when ha wanted tb'bnydno of my cheeseto make a grindstab. When I htjd a husband —Devil's whisfeer»-~Jf he only said-heaps to me, I made him jump rtjond like a stumptail cow m fly time. But there's Mrs. Fletcher, she’s three parts a natural bora fool, and t’other part is as soft as biled cabbage. gwoman *hat don’t stand up for her rights is a disgrace to my sect.— How any man should ever want to marry such a moiassdfrcandy critter as she is, is one of the secrets of human natur. And aa to handsome—handsome never stood in her shoes. For she looks as if she’d break in two if she tried to lift a pot of potatoes. I suppose her fingers were made to play the pianny. “Now, it’s my notion, when n women gives a roan her hand, it ought to be big enough to bold her heart at (he same time.— Such a band as mine is worth giving, for I can stop a bung hole with my thumb, and I’ve done it toov 1 went 4nto Fletcher’s this morning and true as I am a virtuous women, he was abus ing on' her like a dog for lending his receipt book to Miss Brown, who’s food of reading. 1 spose he didn’t keer for the receipts that was written in the book, but it was the re ceipts that wasn’t there, and ought to be, that stuck into his crop. And Mrs. Fletcher hung down her head, and looked for all the world like a duck in a thunder storm. I just put my a;ms again my sides, and looked her man right in the eye till be looked as while as a corpse. It’s always a way everybody’s got when I fixes my eye on ’em. And the way my looks white-wash bis brazen face, was better than slacked limb. There, says Ito Mrs. Fletcher, your husband had ought to had me for a wile.“ When my man was alive, he’d no more think of saying nothing impendent to me, than he’d take the black sow by the tail when she’s nursio her pigs ; and you must laro to slick up to your man jest like a new hair-brush. I never found any debility in managing these critters, for 1 always teach em what’s sarce for the goose is sarce for the gander.— There’s no two waya with me; I’m all of a size, slob-twisted, and made of horse shoe nails. I’m chuck full of grit, and a rough post for any one to rub their backs again ; any gal like me what can take a bag of meal bn .her shoulder and tote it to mill, ought to be able to shake any man of my hell. Some think I ought to get married, and two or three has tried to spark it with me, but I nev er listen to Done of their flattery. Though there was Blarney Bob came flatterfying me like a tub of new butler. For I’ve no notion of being (ramihelled up in their halters of hymens. I likes my liberty, and wants no halters or bridles put upon me. Sam Mooney was shioin’ up to roe too; and ihen there’s Jim Sweetbread,the butcher; bu. he didn’t find me half enough for his market. It isn’t everything that 'sticks its leg through broadcloth that’s going to carry off a gall of my spirit. My charms ain’t to be had for (he bare axing. Gettin’ married is a serious thing, as I tel led my old man when I was walloping him with a leg of mutton, because he took my shoe brush to clean his teeth with. When ever there is a nose, there is a mouth not far off, and that proves that nature bos given woman her rights as well as man. Tbs foixowiito conversation is said to have passed between a venerable old lady and a certain presiding judge in——. This learned functionary was supported on his right and left by his worthy associates, when Mrs.’P. was called to give evidence. “Take off your bonnet, madam.” “I had rather not, sir.” “Zounds and brimstone, madam! take off your bonnet, I say.” “In public assemblies, sir, women gener ally cover their heads. Such, I am sure is the custom elsewhere, and, therefore, I will not take off my bonnet.” “Do you hear that, gentlemen ? She pre teds to know more about these matters than the judge himself, Had you not better come and take a seal on the bench I” “No, sir, thank! you for I really think there are old women enough there already.” Adjectitious.—A rather young and pe dantic gentleman, who was pursuing his stud ies at the University, having occasion to ask a lady to hand him the snuffers across the ta ble, concealed the impropriety of the request undre the following cataract of long waisted words; “Most beautiful and charming lady: will your ladyship, by the unmerited, undeserved condescentson of your infinite, supreme good ness, please to extend to your most obsequi ous, devoted and very humble servant, that pair of ignipolent bisectors, that I may exore,- pate the excrescence from this nocturnal cyl indrical luminary, in order that the refulgent brightness of its resplendent brilliancy may dazzle the vision of oOr ocular optics more potently," An Irishman, on arriving in America look a fancy to the Yankee girls, and wrote to bis wife as follows: "Dear Norab, these melancholy lines are to inform you that {I died yesterday, and I hope you are enjoying the same blessing. I recommend you to marry Jemmy O'Rouke, and take good caije of the children. From your affectionate bus band till death. r:r i *' i * T 61. PUBtfinteßS &' PROPRIETORS. Jk Skeepr ifcoiilalloa. A vary verdant youth,'on. the shady aide' .oi thirty, travelled out of aighUif borne for purpose* unknown, and stopped ala hotel to prdetiro refreshment*. The -usual loungers ortho bar-room, together with acoople of drovers faonndTor the eastern market with a Choice collection of sheep, were in that hap. py good humor said to be produced by a sat* ■siaetory. dinners igotag.jpifcr'anything to prolong the chew. A tip of the eye from one to the other aaJte entered indicated that they considered (hi* awkward specimen 'game* pad "mine host” , glanced inquisitively at bis Jrptigh exterior, as'though (sjting aninvenfo ry and balancing accounts for dinner, T'ha innocent object, seemingly uoeotwotoa*, stared at everything With dull satisfaction, ahd an swered the queries addressed to him, with a stuttering, foreign accent, highly amusing.— His dinner being ready he addressed himself to the “cold bile," not at all disturbed by the choice bits of conversation coming up from the bar-room below, such os “raw dulchman —fresh from Baden—capital fine fun,” &c., mingled with uproarious laughter, which sud denly ceased on his return. “Sheep, eh I” he said, addressing drover No. one. -“Yes, sheep; would’nl you like to pur* chase some four or live hundred to slock your farm with ? ha I ha !*’ “H-h-how du sell ’um 1” asked the Dutch man. .‘Seeing it’s you,’, said drover No. two, taking him by the button-hole and speaking with mock seriousness, “seeing it’s you, neighbor you may have all you can pay for at two dollars per head,’’ “P-p-pick V exclaimed the Dutchman. “Yes, have your pick, and lake all you can pay for at two dollars per head.” "Well, I g-g-guess I will look at ’em,” so off went the drovers and Dutchman, follow ed by all in the bar-room, even mine host himself, to see (he fun. “Gentlemens, you hear the bargain.” “Yes, we hear the bargain; have all you can pay for at two dollars per head. Come, hand out your money, and pick your sheep.” Dutchman rather leisurely opened his cap acious wallet, and surprised the bystanders by presenting in all twenty dollars, and pro ceeded to select his sheep. Here the drovers discovered that he knew what was mutton, and had probably learaed to distinguish wool from another article called iiair. “Hold on, man I” said drover No. one, “you’ve your number, here’s ten,” “Well, but m-mdy be M I might find enough t-t-to pay for a few more.” So he threw over in all one hundred and twenty five, than straightening up— “ H-h-here’s your money, sir: I’sposo I-I could p-pay for few more, but I guess 1-1 Ve got all the g-g-good ’uns The drovers found little satisfaction in the roars of laughter that greeted this announce ment, and they cursed the Dutchman most heartily, who proved to be a Yankee after all. Moore’s Rural New Yorker. Live Yankee in Paris. Among the Americans who attended the late ball given at the Hotel de Ville, Paris, was Jack Spicer, of Kentucky, Jack rushed the dress somewhat strong, and sported ep auletts on his shoulders large enough to start four Major Generals in business. Jack was the observed of all observers, and got mixed up with a party that his friends could not ac count. for. Wherever the marshal of France went, there went Jack; and when the mar shal sat down, Jack did the same, always taking the post, of honor. The day after the ball Jack called on bis old acquaintance, Mr. Mason, our Minister to France, who started up a little conversation in the following man ner : “I hear. Jack, you were at the ball last night I” “I was, sir, and had a high old time." “For which you are indebted, 1 suppose, to the high old company you got mixed up with 7 By the way, how came you associa ted with the marshals?” “How ? by virtue of my office—they were marshals of France, while I urn nothing else than a marshal of the Republic. 1 showed my commission and took post according ly.” “By right of office, what do you mean ?” “ Read that and sse,” Here Jack presented Mr. Mason with a whitey-brown paper, with a seal big enough for a four pound weight. “What in the name of Heaven is this ?” “My commission of“marshal”-r-I received it in 1850, when I assisted in taking the census in .Frankfort.” “You don’t mean to say that you travel on this?" “I don’t mean anything else. That makes me a “marshal” of the Republic* and i in tend to have the office duly honored.” Mr. Mason allowed that Jock was doing a large business on a very small capital. We should not wonder if the reader dill the same. A census marshal of Frankfort mixing in with the marshals of France is certainly rushing matters in a manner that j requires os much brass as epaulettes. Jack, we are happy to soy, is equal to the requirements. A young lady recently from a boarding school, being asked if she would lake tome more cabbage, replied: “By no means mad ams— gastronomies) satiety admonish me that I have arrived at the ultimate of culina ry deglutination consistent with the code of Esculapius.” Gather up knowledge with a diligent hand, it is the only earthly good that will not some times give you pain. SOMETHING HU THE MEW. ■ Civilization, the great engioe’ of baotui progjM*, baa'wrooght out walta whicb.coo •itJered as a whoie, are grantTaodcgterwia. “ baa developed the ml brtha eanli, and pbured out lla. to ennch mankind ; it baa openedtba fids domain of science for oar inr«ltiga&o,an4 lte great book of nature to grfUi : fy »wcraying*orthe imroofUln£tw:tihaa unlocked th® haagiven uaa knowledge rfthp moaaaby which we may obtain the grealeral po«jbi« amount of earthly happiness j in abort, k baa raised man from a condition scarcely above that of the brulecrealibn, to bis. present high and proud position. Tbdie, 1 say, ate the general results of civilization ; but as we lake a nearer view, we see that it. has also been attended with tome of pa opposite character, and which are greatly to be deplored. While it has developed the vast wealth of land nod sea, it baa also developed apd Jhe cupidity, the avarice, the meanbeaa of the human mind. While hihaa given uv a know* ledge of of aacnce, it has also given ua the poster of using tbat ksbw ledge to impose upon, and iDjureoarfellow man. While it haa, given' no, the means of rendering oureelvea very bappy,~H boa at the same lime given us the daogerous power of making ourpelvea oatremely miserable. Thug we may conclude that it has increased iba amount both of good and of evil, of happi ness and of misery. Under the strong light of extreme civilization the mind of man has been stimulated and quickened to almost un natural activity, and the car of progress has been hurried onward with astonishing speed, especially during the last fifty years; hut, physically, by the practice of refined vices, mankind have degenerated into imbecility, and shortened in no small degree (he average period of human life. Truly, “ihe world grows weaker and wiser !’* Many .of the customs that exist in highly civilized society, and which are considered’ refinement? d.u necessarily belong to civilization, ate, in 1V..: perversions, contrary to nature, to reason, and to common sense. The.truth of these as?<.-,i ■ lions might be shown by numerous examples, but the facts upon which they are based are so plain and obvious, standing out as they do upon the very face of society, that.proof is entirely unnecessary. I shall, therefore, men tion, in Ihe present article, tpit one of the many evils and practices that prevail in so ciety, and which I consider the wrong results of extreme civilization ; and to this one point I shall confine the remainder of my remarks. I refer to the practice that obtains so generally among men, of shaving off the hair which Nature, for wise purposes, caused to grow upon the face. The subject I have oilmen is a novel one, and has been hitherto over looked by reformers. And indeed considered wiih reference to its effect upon the ultimate happiness of the human race, it is compara tively unimportant; but as it respects the present ease, comfort, convenience, and dig. nity of the male portion of mankind, it justly merits our serious attention. The practice bf shaving is, in my opinion, a war against na ture, and hence unnecessary, unphyaiological, unprofitable, unwise, and unjustifiable by any circumstances that now exist or ever existed. It is a mark of weakness and effeminacy en tirely unworthy of the strength and dignity of manhood; one that was unknown in those ancient days of grandeur and glory—ihe days of manly strength, of dauntless cour age, of noble daring, of exalted pa'nutism— ihe days when Achilles fought and Homer sung—the days that witnessed the wonderful acts of these demi-gods and heroes, the ftmo of whose exploits has survived throughube lapse of ages;—and it belongs to the multi tude of false and foolish refinements that have had their origin and support only in the lux ury and corruption of modern limes. The beard is the distinctive sign of manhood; it is the feature peculiar to man and was evi dently given him as an obvious mark to dis tinguish him from ihe “beardless youth,” on the one hand, and woman, on the other. It is important that such a sign should exist be tween the sexes, independent of dress and other artificial distinctions that are continu ally changing to suit Ihe whims or capricea of the fashion makers; otherwise dangerous impositions might be practiced upon society. Why then should man seek to destroy this mark that was placed upon him by bis ma ker’s own band!—lf there is anything nobis in manhood, anything worthy of pride in the fact of being a “lord of creation.” why should he wish to conceal, the feature that more than all others adds dignity to his looks and distinguishes him from the weaker classes of his own species? Does he suppose that by so doing he improves upon nature, and adds to ihe external beauty of “God’s im age?’’ He does indeed make his face some what smoother and fairer—make himself look more like a woman ; bot he is greatly mista ken in supposing this to be an improvement. In the creator’s works we always look for a correspondence between the interior and ex terior; between the nature of a thing and its structure ; for without such a correspondence, nature would present on inconsistency, which would be wholly incompatible wi ti the su preme wisdom of its divine author. Woman is characterized by I’enileiip'ss and timidity ; man, by those opposite and sterner qualities that fit him to do greui deeds, 10 tame Ihe wild elements, traverse the trackless ocean, lay low tho Goliaths of the forest, and bring all things under subjection to his almighty will. Fairness of feature, then, becomes a woman, but it does not become a man, it is no part of manly beauty. The following couplet will show I tow it was viewed iu the days of Homer NO. 48. “111-fated Paris! Slave to woman-kind, At smooth of face as fraudulent of miod 1" Among ihe Greeks and Romans, and in. deed, among alt ibo nations of antiquity, men who showed signs of timidity and weakness, who were lacking in manly courage, were stigmatized aa women. The same praeiiro prevails to soma extent among the nations of modern times. Even among the American Indians, that noble but vanishing race, a mao can suffer no greater reproach than to 1$ called a woman.* Passages like the following from the llllad, abound itf Homer -and all the ancient poets:— “Oh wosirn of Acini*! men no more! Hence let us fly, and let him waste bit Store In loves and pleasures oaths Phrygian there." . Me Agiltfr. A REW WBVWRBi vv-