THE STAR OF THE NORTH. . B. JACOB!, Croprklor.J VOLUME 11. ©IF PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY BY Wit. 11. JACOBY, Office on Main St., Jrd Square below Market, TERMS :—Two Dollars per annum if paid within six months from the time of subscrib ing: two dollars and filly cts. if not paid with in the year. No subscription taken for a less period than six months; no discontinuance permitted until all arrearages are paid, un less at the option of the editor. The terms of advertising wilt he as follows: One square, twelve lines, three times, $1 00 Every subsequent insertion, 25 One square, three months, 3 00 One year, 8 00 l£l)oite JJoelrn. HIE RIVER'S BANK. BV FRANK LEE BENEDICT. So many untold years have passed, As birds with bright wings flee, Since we beside that river's edge Sat down in childish glee. The day was beautiful and calm, We happy as the day, The very waters seemed to laugh Like children in their play. You sat and told me fairy tales, And both believed them true, You from your faith in all things bright, I from my trust in you. You told nie that in after years We'd dwell beside that stream, And all the while the waters laughed, So pleasant was the dream, 1 asked you if an elfin queen Had made your eyes so blue— And then the waters louder laughed, As if they thought it true. The sunlight played amid your hair— It loved you as its child— And if 1 had a childish pain, I lost it when you smiled. We launched our barks upon the waves, And marked them dance and shine ; Yours safely gained the other shore— The waters buried mine I Your face was like an angel's then, lis look has scarcely changed, Yon dwell beside that river yet While 1 afar have ranged. You might believe in fairies still, Your life has been so fair— Some vestal nun serenely calm Might have the look you wear. The hopes which blossom o'er your heart, Are like the flowers of yore— You still fling roses on the tide, And still they gain the shore 1 The laughing glee of that bright day Departed trom me long, Perchance those dreaming waters keep j The echo of its song. Ah no ! the throbbing of my heart Would hnsh its pleasant tone. To hear the summer music there Is left for you alone. Country Churches. There is something grand and impressive in a fashionable city church, notwithstand ing the frivolities that are said to prosper in satin and broad-cloth, and under vaulted roofs. The slender and graceful columns supporting the roofs, the pictured windows, and, above all, the tones of the organ swel ling in triumphal rejoicings, or dying away in mournful cadences. The deep hnsh that falls suddenly upon a multitude during the prayer: the grave silence which attends the discourse, broken now and then by a half smothered cough, or the slight shuffling of a foot, grown restless with long quiet, and which increases rather than detracts from its inipressiveness; the eloquent tones of the preacher, and the deep solemnity of the subject which has called them together—all these unite in aweing the attendants and wakening, with sublimity of the surround ing circumstances, a feeling of heartfelt ap preciation of that unnamed Power, whose throne is bounded on morality, which rises with inconceivable magnificence into the vastness of the immortal. Notwithstanding all these, we believe that our hearts turn with far tenderer recollections and more earnest devotion to the Creator, in the little churches that are dropped down, in beautiful places in every village and on every country side. In the former we may be more impressed with the majesty of God, but in the latter we seem to feel his tender care as nearer to us. Me seems the more loving God when surrounded by the every day exhibitions of his hand. It is no long er the Creator to dread, but the Heavenly father to love. Our recollections go back to them, and dwell about them with eve ry sunshinny Sabbath in the city. The per fume of the trees and the growing grass is ; Strangely associated with them. The brook gfilose at hand has a murmur like the soumfr jpf Sunday bells; and we remember the quiet Bhttle aisles, the hard benches, and even the VHbgarmon with a feeling of the tenderest SBL. The balmy air, blowing fresh from "that turned the hymn-books' the bright faces, once so full ofVpes, but now grave and tender, as if a w