IPMtJIM'Sr-d"-" THE DlSCAIlDKD. , lit LlttTE'SJNT 0. W. rATTIX, t). . i . I ii- 1 5 :.L it. timan's Jove so lightly won, bedicnt to thd call, t like the lyre ye play ujpon, , 'will clinno-o and sizliTwith alii (ell liim from thi hour, yc part,' ,d own no mutual shrine: , II not brook nnotlicr's heart hould sharo the joy's of mine. step it light my smile i gay, for yet my cyo is dim nd nccr think ofhitri; I now it eve when music's tone tomes rushing through the air, . ..... ... M..J w t.t, uiutlv, for miss bU presence there. t not love I do not hate t were on idle thing! limp'ring strain I will not prate, for yet tho gauntlet fling; ten nun lino some passing gleam . nai inu aionz ino sea. like a shadow in a stream, iis memory is to me. tire he thought with simple guile, d dwelt with cunning craft the while, jpon the st angers word; J '- t tell him when he left my side, I knew' not that he went, r shall I clothe my lips with pride, - - S'or gig- with discontent. orac wun your promptings Kinui .d has he tasted of the smart Which stings an anguish'd mind! are not for his foublcd sleep Vet whisper to liis ear, 13. I eve is not too prouu to weep, uut lrozen is the tear. id tell him through his every look, Cold distance shuns to see. 0 ign iikc a laisciy laoeii u dook, His name is now to me; id though no more like music bland, His voice may haunt my rest; 1 wear hitcivet on m if hand, lis tmage on my breast. The False One, A TALE OF WOMAN'S HEART. 'Had I never loved so kindly, "Had I never loved so blindly, "Had we never met or parted, Burks. Never shone the sun upon a lairer crea- ire than was Edith Ilesselden; and never nil nppn ti miniiiiHr H iii.irn mi): ;ui iiiii'iil- ess and ioy. Even Love, that urchin of amh nwmittAts ttn - t nMhiiiff nut nonn incc r ' O ad to endure her first trial, her lover was . . i i. ... . . - lonilis, aa nu waa auinii iu uuv u lung romtsed visit to an old friend of his fath- r's in Paris. Edith was pacing the gar- eri.- anxiously waiting his arrival. She felt v . iniluliIJYt uuyuim vim iiiu uuuuaiuu nnlmTi otin .lwl nnl rnntVi iilil1rl Crime t inr lie was too true iicrscn to suspect trcacu i ii n il n l V r r n nlinnr ltnlif 4 It n 4 it canm tiitrii a tiiiuii on aiiinav tivi j umiib otbiu ..I . nni,lil l-mr-fn. .1 r fnn nniMArihir rV r it iifna nnr n 'fin tilif ... -J ' his affection, or his constancy, that can 1 I . . . I . 'Slie -did not know Horace Seaton there were lew mat aiu. ivcn uiose iar more r .1 ' 1 T-f it p . manner, thero was hidden a cold, calcula .U 1 T ...... I, !...! Edith Hasseldcn.-as much as such a heart ever'.oves; she wasyouhg and beautiful, and that gratified his pride; sho loved him, and that pleased his vanity. He had kept his appointment with her and the moment of parting had arrived They were sitting on a garden bench, botl appeared sorrowful, his arm was round her, an i he whispered words of love, & hopes lof future happiness- "liilith, my own liuith, he said,- "you tiatc- promised to remember me, and to greet my return with pleasure; one more request this ring, and promise me, as you vaTuc my peace, that no othpr shall remove it. On my fetum, dearest; it shall be re placed by an'othcr at the altar. Will you The blushinp' fflrl hesitated -again that' vlitlling, arjue u'ne'asiness, crept .over her heart: but she banished it and plaeed hor nan 1 1 1 his. The large, dark oy.e of Edith' Woul J have been startling at that momen with its intensity of lustre, but that it was gofienrd into" mild heafrty, by the toars Avhieh trem51ed in it. Sho looker! at him v uli nn fxorejsiorr. in which love and en ' t!recorifid-ncc were blended. Horace-," she said, "I will I do prom isc", that this ring-shall never be removed, j but atrtho-alar;K.MMvillrno't!ask you .to re member mo, While' awriyj'It would bo im plying a doubt that you would not but'for me, I will think of you day aitd ninht! I wilt' hold this spot sacred; I will hold com munion with none here, bi)t Him who now sees us, and who knows the truth of false- mod of our hearts. To Him will I pray for your happiness, whatcve"? my fate may be." - ' v ' ;i They parted; and oh! how tho fond girl cherished the memory of that nartmtr scene and the words he had uttered; for days' af terwards she fancied that sho could still hear lis voice floating round hor could still feel tho pressure of his hand as ' he passed tho ring upon her finger. She little thought that they had parted forever! that the voice and hand would henceforth bo dead to her; that sho had wasted her young warm heart's best and freshest feelings, on one who would outrage them; those feelings, which the heart entertains but once; which we would give empires worlds, to enter tain again! He had promised to write to hor, and had broken that promise! Edith counted the hours each day, until the post was de livered, with a wild and throbbing heart, but each day proved him more forgetful. At length, strange rumors reached her 6X ah approaching marriage, between Horace Sea- ton and a young lady in Paris, of great for tune. They crushed and chilled her spirit and the gay the liappy Edith, was no more. We will not wo cannot describe her feelings, when first she heard these tidings; she treated them as base calumny! she wrote to hiin; her letter was unanswered! Shcaccidently met an acquaintance, who had just returned from France, and from him she learnt that it was too true. He had been for some weeks married! She heard it with calm and. composed countenance but a withered, blighted, breaking heart; The three years had elapsed, and Edith Ilesselden stood gazing from her casement upon the lake below, while the soft moon shone in unclouded loveliness. The next day was her marriage day. A gentleman, named Forlescurc, had seen and adn.irjd her: love is too strong a word; He admi red her beauty, was not repulsed by her coldness, and, after a few months acquain tance, obtained a cool, careless consent front her, to become his wife. She was strange ly altered; not the buoyant, enthusiastic girl, with looks and thoughts equally fresh and glowing; she had become the calm, un- inipassioned, dignilied woman; Tears had washed every trace of rose from her cheek, and what with her paleness, and the constant repression of every feeling on uer countenance, sne had acquired tue ap pearance of one of Conovay's statues; cold, yet wonderfully beautiful. nl . l . t one stoou sometime at tier casement in deep thought at length she murmured, 'It must be!" and turning from the window seated herself at a dcisk, from whence she removed a; small packet of letters. She trembled violently as she rose and walked towards the lire at the end of tho room She held them over the flame for an instant, and in the next they were burning. "So perish all rcmemberance of him," she said. Again she walked towards the window, and took from her bosom a minature; she appeared collecting courage to destroy that also. A pang shot over her heart as she gazed upon the picture. She pressed it convulsively to her lips; and bitter tears, in spile of her desperate effort to repiess them, uurt tortn in torrents, as u Irom a source long pent up; she passed her hand over her brow as if to ease its burning pain. "I cannot, oh no, no! I cannot destoy his picture," she s.id again, and she looked on it long and fixedly: dreams of other days flitted before her, and she sobbed as if her heart would burst' But this emotion passed away; she was again still and calm, and beautiful as Patian marble. Sho unclasped tho lock of-tho chain which supported the minature of IIo race Seaton again she gazed4upon itr The thought that at that time to-morrow it would be guilt or her so to gaze, came across her mind, and she resolved, though she could not destoy, never again to behold it. Sho placed it in a paper which she carefully sealed, and 'Ricked jih.her'dqsk.; , , . , . 'fJow, then, thank Heaven, it is over, and I ahull become another's without one thought of him lingering in my bteast," she murmured, but the tone of misery and utter' desolation was In contradiction to "her words. . - It was morning, and Edith was arrayed iti her bridal dress, Not tho quivering of a lip, not tho trembling of an; eye-lid be trayed what was passingin her heart. She walked steadily up the aisle of the church; she uttered the responses in a low yet' audi ble voice but this calm was unnatural, and was soon, to be destroyed. The ceremony was nearly over, and For- tcseuc took her hand upon which he was to place the wedding-ring. lie started at the death-like coldness, and was surprised to see a jewelled one which he had noticed her constantly wearing, was not removed. She had forgotten that. And noi'v the re collection of the vow she had made never to let another remove it than he who, howt ever false he had proved,, was still Horace Seaton the playmate of her childhood, the idol of her first affections, flashed upon lier. The long, long interval, of weary days and sleepless nights, and wasted years, fa ded away, and she remembered only their parting hour and his parting words, "I will replace it with another at the altar!" At this moment the bridegroom attempted to withdraw the r.ng; but it was too niuch, the, bow was overb'ent and snapped; it was the last feather that broke the camel's back, and this last stroke overcome poor fragile Edith Ilesselden. 'Never! never!" she murmured, as she struggled to release her hand. In the strug gle the ring was removed, and fell on the marble steps of the altar. She gazed upon it for a moment, in speechless misery, and then a loud wild scream escaped her; so loud, so wild, that the hearers felt the blood run cold in their hearts. She fell. For icscue thought she had fainted, and he raised her head from the floor, but it fell heavily on his arm. He shuddered; the color had forsaken her lips, those bright, beautiful eyes were closed for ever; Edith Ilessel den was dead! GOOD LUUK. The following from the London Sport ing Alagazine for August, furnishes a stri king instance of good luck: The late Luke White, the celebrated Irish millionaire, commenced life as an er rand boy to a book stall, and finished it by representing in his own person and those of his three sons, four counties in Parlia ment; Having succeeded in scraping to gether as much as enabled him to pur chase a few pamphlets, as trifles of sta tionary, he tied a wallet to his back and set up himself as a pedlar. His tour per formed, and his merchandise disposed of, he turned his steps once more towards Dublin, to replenish his knapsack and add to his store. When some thirty miles short of his destination, he retired into a field adjoining the high road, to dine off a crust, and wash it down from tho rivulet upon whose banks his humble meal had been made. That over, he renewed his journey, arriving towards the evfinm'g of the following day at his destination. The succeeding morning saw him sally forth in quest of new merchandize, when lo! his bitter-won earnings were gone! The grca sy canvass bag, his then strong box, had vanished, and he was again a beggar Almost in despair, his desperate search was made' in the cellar wherein he had slept, but in vain; at length the idea fla'she'd upon him, "could he have dropped it where, by the river side, ho had dined and stooped to drink from the stream?" Instantly the road was rctraced,'and at the end of tho fifth day, half starved and dead with travel, the bag and its contents were found upon the brink of a public path, within a few yards of the turnpike road. After this, it is not surprising that in a few years we find him in prosperous business as a bookseller in Dublin'. It was during the period when the mania for lottery speculation was at its height. Like dtlicrs in his line, he dealt in tickets, and, upon the particular occa sion to which this alludes, he had disposed of all his shares, save two half tickets, which he was in the act oT enclosing back, as un sold,- to London, when' young woman cn- tcrcd his shop anil inquired for a sixteenth , He told her how tho case' stood, that ho had but two halves remaining, which he was about sending off af that moment After interchanging some badinage, 'Come, said tho biblidpolc, "you shall buy one of tho halves and I will keep the other, and should the ticket turn up to be a prize, wo will marry and join ourselves and our tick ets together.' So it was; and tho ticket was a twenty thousand pound prize, and they -were married, the ftultofthc union being the thrc'o senators already spoken of. A scene in' Nashville Tennessee. ;E1- bow room has been quite scarce m Nash ville during the past week. Such scroug ing, gouging, twisting, turning in, and turning out has seldom before been wit nessed. Instance tho following. rravellor dismounts at a 'tavern. "IIil- oa landlord, can I get lodgings here to Landlord "No sir, every room in tho house is engaged." Traveller "Cant you even give me a blanket, and a bunch of shavings for a pil low in vour barroom!" , Landlord "No sir, there's not a square foot of space unoccupied any where's in the house." j Traveller "Then I'll tha'nk you sir to shove a pole, well secured, out of yoitr sec ond story window, and I'll roost on that." Singular. A star little inferior in bril- iancy to tho most luminous that arc visible in tho heavens, has been observed several times, by many of our citizens, moving in various directions, with considerable vc- ocity. Its position is nearly west at first, where it moves towards the meridian, and then descends and sinks below the horizon for a few minutes and rises again. fVhccl- ing Gazette, Giving ff'aming. A geritlcman unfor tunately linked for life Jo one who made him feel the weight of his chain, was one day told by the maid that she was going to give her mistress warning as she kept scolding lier from morning till night, Ah! happy girl!' said the master, "I wish I could give her tvarning loo'." Definitions found in uo Dictionary. Anatomical The gross mistake of giv ing to Anna the name Tom JirislocratsA palpable error in pneu matic chemistry, generally made use of when we are speaking of anti-republicans. Air-is-stock-rats is inaccurate. The atmos phere is composed of oxygen, nitrogen arid carHonic acid. Crisis Weep' sister if you like. A la mentable expression. Cincinnati Nathaniel twice requested to transgress "Sin! S'n! Natty." Decorus Having the deck above us. When eight persons arc in a lower cabin we always say decoYatc. Explain .The letter X legibly written. Analyze An attack on Anna's veracity. Jlnuhjst Pay attention Anna! Allegory A bloody Alley. Enlarge A capital letter: Mollify O, fie upon you Molly! Salutary Stay you here Sally! You tary, Sally! Sal-u-tary means Sally you are no Whig. Wilful William a little tipsey. Damnation Tho mother nation. Our mother country England. ' Jnnosence In no sense of the word. Inquire Put up in 21 sheets. Patrolling Patrick turning on his ax is. iv. 0. Pickayuiic. Declaration of the reclaimed Infidel. Dr. John E. Coohu, Professor of the The ory and Practice of Physic in. Transylvania University, though once a member of the infidel corps, thus concludes an Introduclo ry Lecture to n medical Class: "I unhesitatingly say, not only that I am perfectly convinced of the truth of the Christian Itcvelation, from a close and pa tient examination of its claims on the testi mnny presented, but that I believe that belter testimony could not be offered, could not be devised in support of it, arid that no man is left unconvinced, who has given the subject a thorough investigation, unless he is kept from it by a state of mind the most deplorable which wo ean eoriceive, a state of enmity against the God that made him, and the Saviour who redeomed him not letting him come to the light, because his deeds are evil." "Tho design of this Lecture was to show that flic study of medicine has no skepticle tendency Petersburg Intelligencer: Anecdote. "Wo must ho unanimous," observcd'John Hancock, on the occasion Of signing tho Declaration of Independence, "Thero must l6 no pulling different ways we must all hang together." "Yes," added Franklin, "we must all hang togeth 1 er, or most assuredly we shall all hang sep-cratelyi" THE INFLUENCE OF WOMAN, , May be illustrated by,' the same beautiful figure which an elegant writer has applied to anothor subject., . It is like the beautify ing effect of concealed but bountiful springs, silently and unperccivedly irrigating the hill side and the meadow, and making the andscapc smilo with a power as bencfi- eient and silent as it is potent; visible only in its effect, Wiicn we draw woman for ward into the public eye, and constant pub lic collision with the stormy elements which constitute society, the same notoriety which robs her of her character defrauds her of her influence. "Monsters are admired, and not esleemcd." People may like, from curiosity, or from admiration of tal ent, wherever it dcvclopes itself, to listen the language of talented women hut i arc not those among whom the wise look for partners of their joys, their cares, and their sorrows. .When we speak thus, we Would not bar from our affections tho female who possesses genius and cultiva tion. When sho makes her natural and ac quired ability the ornament of her fireside, and the charm of the social circle, woman is doubly dear, and doubly enc'ianting. How blest may be the lot of woman! Engrossed in cares which carry their own' reward with them, her life shodld n.iss. ns. I ' all who deserve, the name of men would have it, in quiet and delightful usefulness. It is of course, subject to the circumstances which may mar ot lesson all human happi ness but we are yet to learn that these may be avoided by forcing her into an un natural sphere. Contemplate the "evert tenor of her way" from infancy. The re lations of daughter, and sister arc among tho most delightful and confiding in the world. Her lather's success is hers her brother's fortune is her own properly. Tho affection which nature has made a charac teristic of the female mind, identifies her with the course of those with whom she is connected. That she shares sorrow as well as joy, is true; but hers is the power to pour balm into the wounded spirit and successful relief or assuagement of sorrow confers a reciprocal pleasure. Follow her to the delightful situation of a blushing' bride thence to that holiest of all earthly relations, a happy mother. In lier hands' afc, it may almost be said, the issues of the life and death of her oflspriiiff. To her in an especial manner is confided that most delightful of all employments and privile ges, the observation of tho devclopcment of mind, and its progress from infancy to ma turity. New objects of interest absorbing interest spring up about her path as life wanes, arid when she herself has arrived at that point where the pleasures of life be cpme tasteless by repetition, she may enjoy them anew by sympathy with herehildren. The last sweet task remains the support of her partner down the declivity of years.' It is a wise provision of Providence that the fortitude, the patience, the capacity of endu rance, in which she exceeds the ruder sex, permit her to wear longer. In how many,' many instances wc may daily see the ivy which twined around the youthful oak, and drew its support from it, becoming in turn no small supportor of the falling tree. Yet there are those who hold the doc trine that woman's sphere is too circum scribed. They would do away the depenr dence of the weaker sex upon the stronger, and place woman upon' a political equality with the lords of creation. Tho thought is monstrous. Woman was made "to temper man." Such a ehango would rob her of the gentleness and delicacy which enablo her to abate the rudeness of thb other sex. It would impart to her perhaps more ener gy but it would rob her of loveliness.' Worse than all, it. would divert her attention from that imperative of all duties, the edu cation of children. Men may teaeh wo man educate; If any change is desirable, it is that wo man, instead of being taught to sigh for change to come out 6? her retirement and interfere with politics and other matters in man's proper sphere, should bo made sen sible of tho full weight of responsibility which pertains toher r ex. And man, par ticularly yoting men should he taught pioperiy to estimate the advantages of refi ncil fema!e'8ocicly. They should go to tho faircrsex to learn to bo taught tho cour tesies of life and its purity. Thd worst ob jection to our colleges and schools tho rea son why insubordination so abounds in them, may be traced to the fact that young men thero collected together, retrogato to a stato of comparative barbarism, from the ab sence offemalo society and female example. 4