THE STAR OF THE NORTH. H, 11. JACOB¥, PropriAfor.] VOLUME LI; ©ff BlEjB I'UBLISHKD F.VKKV WKDNKSDAT BY IV M. 11. JACOBV, Office on Alain St., Jrd'Squnn' below Alarkrt, , TERMS : —Two Dollars per annum if paid within six months from the lime of subserib ( ing: two dollars and filly cts. if not paid with in the year. No subscription taken lor a less 'period than six months; no discontinuance .'permitted nutil all arrearages are paid, un less at the option of the editor. The terms of advertising will he ns follows : One square, twelve lines, three times, $1 00 , Every subsequent insertion, 25 , One square, three months, 3 00 One year, 8 00 iJoclrg. Written for the Slur. IIIE LAhT INDIAN. Yes, ye must pass from eartli; It needs no hoary sage, Deep skilled in mystic lure, Your downfall to presage ; For years has hist'ry's page Mourned o'er this stern decree; But ye must pass awav, Extinct the race shall be. Your name ye have implanted On river and on lake, And though ye pass unheeded, Yet will not all forsake ; The Mississippi rolls In majesty along, Niagara's rougher sound Gives spirit to the song; The Susquehanna pours Its music on our ears, The Ohio murmurs sweet, Sad songs of lormer years. These are your monuments, They never can decay ; While time itself shall last, They shall not pass away. Ages oti ages past, Ye wandered here alone; Canoes on every lake, In every vale a throne. But now your tribes are lew, Your warriors are gone, Your watch fires blaze no mora Around the council stone. Farewell, ye pristine race, Sons of the earth and sky ! Farewell, ye proud and brave, Who would live free, or die ! The heart must throb with grief, With pain the bosom swell, To see ye pass away ! , , But—red men, Fare j l 'e well! lisD JACK er. hEVEAGED. I had heard tiie 'celebrated cavalina in "II Bar diet e di Seoiglia but never, till I then, had that delighful air been lolly un- 1 'derstood, either by myself or the singer.— But the Signora Camilla ghve it such ex pression! 'Hbw well she revealed to the soul thoughts and sensations hitherto tin 'noticed by artists except herself. Sho was a beautiful girl, about sixteen, blue eyes, and a smile at once arch and tender. At first the Song commences with an avowal oflove, [ifbfbundly fell, and solemn even in short, such an avowal as i we'ekn ifhagiue to proceed from the lips of 1 Spanish maids. Then the infantile play fulness ol Rosina's disposition resumes its accustomed sway; for serious reflection, even when it is the offspring of passion, can ever be supposed to be long tho ten ant of the giddy head of sixteen. Alter wards succeeds the fantastic capriciousness at sprightly songs. She laughs at her guardian, exults in the hope of eluding his vigilance, and thanks to au exalted imag ination, though portionless and closely watched, she can sing of happiness and lib- ertv. Near me was seated a young Italian, whose looks never wandered—no, not for an instant, from the singer. His parted lips scarcely seemed to' breathe. Tears >glistened in his eyes, and his pale features expressed even more than the enthusiasm of admiration—it was love. When the Car olina was over, and while the house re echoed with plaudits, Camilla cast a fur live glance towards him. It was plain that his passion was not unreqnitted. Oh I how I envied his felicity—for he toiust have been so happy to see thousands praise the object of his love. He must have been so happy, on looking round to tee the eager gaze of admiration ol all pres ent. And then, a sign from her, unintel ligible to all save him alone—a glance that i*tys, as plainly as eye can speak, "This glory belongs to you, with all Camilla pos sesses, for Camilla is yours." And then the recollections Of the scarcely articulated ptadearmentk— of the embrace in which the timidity of ldvo first ventured to stamp itself Oh! how I envied him—l, whom uotib ev tAt loved— none ! H To the right of the young man was a RltflUiger, whom the commencement of the Hjpsra, 1 had more than once inwardly cur sßL There was in bis dress and manner a tjjpDlling mixture of affection and want of at full length on his seat he SM elbowed his neighbors; whilst the tnUßrfh expression of his black-lustre eyes betokening intoxication, and he attracted the alMMMti