4, it A. lIVERLE.R, Burroß AND PROPRIETOR. VO L. ;, V i From the National En. WOROIII OP HOPE. erelli ye from your reterf --tlimparef-tetteeye from your sleep! -Wrong awl Vitti...in" virtue's livery, Wend ye like the serpents creep • on Ibturity-- - • ' Om *lns the day-spring bright ! Yelmayoekknow joy and purity— ' badmen may he changed to light ! Ood Arlo n ot, though sleeps humanity- MMus he Rill in Fire and Clow!: " . ''llreiteen is not it east inanity— • Eat* hi more than mankind's shroud ! • Alloed is lit our lace, though hidden— Peace is mightier far than strife e Eulls yiot yet be made like Eden-- Hiseeithet.veathed la mortal life 1 Thom Is nought so high and holy, kith, Hope which conquers Pain : rn yourselves, re Mashed and lowly, Lierierthil power to rise again ! Trust _not that which startle', reason— Good cem ne'er be gained by ill ; 'AU thatithaitis,•or clouds, is treason s - tiought is powerful but "1 wits. !" Would ye read the Eternal mystery I Uke Badmen' view the day Byes that best discern God's mystery Were anointed first with clay. Game from well-depths up to heaven, And ye see the stars at noon— Thus to lowly sense is given Reasons best and richest boon ! Piot one pain dearth's material Everwae, or will be, loot— And shall man's great soul, °Olefin!, Be to dark oblivion loot BoWty ark, reluctant Raw! Truth a appeal must mount on high : Each great word--mteh feeble whicorr— Once breathed out, can NEVER DIE From the Knickerbocker Mae to him that aakcth they! If the poor man pass thy door, (live him of thy bounteous store; Hive him food, •nd give him gold, (Jive him shelter from there'd Aid him his lone life to live, For angeblike to give. ]'hough world riche, thou hut not, Gift to third poorer lot:. Think thee of the widow'. mite, In the Holy Master'. eight : It was more, ■ thousand fold Than the rich man's hoard of gold Give ! it is the better part ; Give to hlm, the poor in heart ; Give of love in large degree, live of hope and sympathy ; Cheer to them who sigh fur corn, bight to him whose life is gone.. Give the gmy.haired wanderer room ; Lem, him gently to the tomb; • Let him not in friendless clime, Float idown the tide of time; near the mother's lonely call, Mee, the dearest one of all. And the lost, abandoned one, ihrtiy - liathwerdri Anti Of thy kindnesi she bath need ; bind with balm the bruised reed; Give and gifts above all price, t4hall be thine in Paradise. THE LITTLE GIRL There is nearly in front of our office, an old pum p—a kind of, townputnp which every one may use, and whose wet and be spattered base speaks plainer than sign lamed, could do, of water for man and horse —and a very excellent pump it is, ma-- never mit of order, easily worked, and fur nishin,g die purest, coolest water in the World. Many a thirsty school-boy, and omnibus driver has refreshed himself at that pump—the haekinen and draymen stop there, sad the old iron ladle that hangs by its sidle has been pressed to many a 'sweet and pretty lip. It is no unusual thing, just after school hours, to see some hide follow, with his satchel over his shout der, working away at the handle for ten minutes at a time, till all who have gather ed round it have been supplied with drink; but_ yesterday the old pump wad honored as though an angel had blessed it. A roity,cheeked girl, her face half hid in i'llood of glorious curls, came bouncing by, driving her hoop, as the old, decrepid apple Woman, whom every body knows, and whom no one passes without giving her a penny, was endeavoring to obtain a drink. She had sat down her basket but bent nearly' double by the weight of her years and sorrows, was still compelled to lean npOn her staff. The little plebe saw .the difficulty, and was in au instant at the handle. Holding, the ladle until it was fil led, she carried it gently to the lip of the lady,old then fi lled it again, while the warm, gratefid thanks ofthe poor woman chilled"the crimson to her 6hOck, Whieh as .a ell hurried away was deepened by the ,:C.MW4Pll 2 ness that she was observed. We shall ever remember that girl. and .The joyous satisfaction with which she performed s good and kind "action to ' Atte med. • The scene, and the hearty .theallti4 the the old lady, call forcibly to 414 ued'liot altogether inappropriately, the 00tutOul thought itt Telfourd's tragedy f tint --41 t lc a little thing o t alp or water, pit its draught, Of 904 gicibeetuneni, drained by *Tared lips, pfqand i !Pock of Measuni tq the sold thaw When necierioue juice Natima eel* of joy in happiest bone A BIikIIIIIVL EnTAPIIoT-AT•li MUM'S yrld - ht this chyle ateadstone, withthese ends; Our dear hide ilaby;" • and , shesnarble upon which affection ,has out the *solstice, is as smelt Andes pure as an infant. Surely, here, is perfection in an ,epitaph ! The age of a dying child is no• thing, and need not be recorded ; and what is there in a name when the heart.yearns :for the form. This littlq stone hag no mark.for curiosity, and cold histoiy Would . frown on it : but a parent—any parent— entering the graveyard Where that baby , reatir, and that small marble tablet may 2 44, would carfully avoid treading on the little grave, and yet would stand there, conjuring up the once bright eyes of that baby fixed on a mother's love, and its ants opening for .a fathers fondness ; and then, alas, the dimming of those eyes,. and the drooping of those arms—the si lence.and what more sad, of a dead child ; i—and the father and mother 'bereft of all hut this cry of nature—" Oar dear little Pay ."' A OCOTCHMAN'B Moritz TO HIS DAUGHTI§II,• 'Ott kaving home for a Mardi,* saw:. Now, daughtor L 'Et haet Just fimrtistals itiliiiii liii - Ediiihurg t—ye hi r e to)earrr to manage your' head, your hands, your feet, and your heart. . ,Your head will require ti little reddiug up,' baith outside and inside. Its no' the bobs and curls, the ribbons and the rose-knots, the gildot kames, and the toppings u' weel-sleekit-up•Mir , that are to stand the test for life. ' and yet these are a' t i becoming in th ir places. But there is something else mired.. -Ns maim learn to think for pot If and act (or:yourself. for ye canna always Nee ybiffiliothei and me to think and atit , fini you.' Ye main learn wade& -and-weighouttu , I io. r own actions, . f your motives of action, as well as It - .> parent motives of those wits whom yon haveto deal: and stick aye by that, my child, of which you are sure nerbr to be ashamed, either in this world, or the one that's to come. If ever ye lie spared to be a wife, there will be mair dependance on your head than your hands ; but yet. ye are nee the waur o' being able to cook your family a neat dinner, and make yourself a new gown at oura time, or a frock to a wee bit ane. • But now for the heart, daughter—that is what requires the maist care, and, the maist watching ower of all ; and there is naught else that I am so unqatified - twee advice in. Keep it aye free u' malice, ran cor and deceit; and as to the forming of any improper connexions. or youthful par tialities, it is sae dangerous at your time of life, that no advice nor guardianship can countervail. I mean, therefore, to leave it entirely to your own discretion and good sense. I might have meant the management of the tongue as another, and a separate point of attention ; but it is a mere machine, and acts only in subordination to the head and the heart, and if these are kept in pro per order, the other winna tin far wrung. But dintia be ewer the matter punctual a; bout catching the snappy English pronun ciations. It looks rather affected in a coup: try girl to be always snapping at the Eng ine; and the - sete time popping in na auld Scotch phrase that she learned in the nursery, for it is impossible to get quit o' them. But mind aye thite, my child, that good sense is well faured and becoming in whatever dialect it be spoken ; and tine's mother tongue suits always the lips of ei titer a bonny lass or an auld earl the best. —Ettrick Shepherd. ANECDOTE OF STEPHEN GIRARD following capital anecdote, illustra tive of the late Stephen Girard, si6l'llila delphia, is from the New BedfortiVercu- ry .. Mr. -Girard—had-4 -favorite—clerk, one who every way pleased him, and who, when at the age of twenty-one years ex pected Mr. Girard to say something to him in regard to his future prospects, and per haps lend him a helping hand in starting hint in the world. But Mr. Girard said nothing, carefully avoiding the subject of his escape from minority. At length, af ter the lapse of some weeks, the clerk mus tered courage enough to address Mr. Gi. rani -upon the subject: " I suppose, sir," said the clerk, "I am free, and I thought I would say something to von as to toy future course. ‘Yhat do you think I had better do?" "Yes, yes, I know you are." said Mr. Girard, "and my advice to you is that you go and learn the cooper's trade." This announcement well nigh threw the clerk off the track ; but recovering his e quilibrium, he said if Mr. Girard was in earnest, he would do so. "I am in earnest"—and the clerk rather hesitatingly sought one of the beat coopers and agreed with him upon the terms of ap prenticeship, and went at it in good earnest, and in course of time made as good a barrel as any one, He went andtold Mr—Girord that ho-had graduated with all the honors of the craft, and was ready to set up his business ; at which the old man seemed gratified, and told him to make three of the best barrels he could. The young cooper selected the best materials, and song put into shape and finish, three of the best barrels, and wtroeled them up to the old man's counting room. Mr. Girard said the barrels werefirst rate and demand ed the, price. .1 "One dollar,". said the clerk, "is as tow as I can lire by:" "Cheap enough," said his employer, "make out you bill and present it." ' And now comes the cream of the whole. Mr. Girard drew a check for twenty thow. sand dollars,-and handed it to the clerk, closing with these words : "There, take that, and invest it in the best possible way, and if you are unfortu nate and loose it, you have a good trade to fidt back upon,, which Will afford vitt a good living at all times." NeekaalTy or TROTit.--WO are so con stituted, that obedience to the law of vera city is absolutely- necessary to our happi ness. Were we to loose either our feeling of obligation to tell the truth, or our dispo 'hien to receive as truth whatervenlis told to us, there would at once be an end to all science add all knowledge, beyond that, whhli every man hadobiamed by hie own personidobservation and experience. No man could'profit by the diecoveries of his , eenteuiporariesi much less by the discov eiies of those men who have gone before idu. Language would be useless, and we should be but little removed from the brutes. Every one must be aware, upon the !slight est reflection, that a community of entire, liars could not, exist in, irstate of society. The •effects of such a course of conduct upon the whole, show us what is the. will of the Creator in the individual ease.—Dr. I fitylpml BEAUTIFUL LVISMAL.-.-.111 Longfellow's Hyperion, that casket of rare and spark ling genie, we have the following moral de duction Pam the story of the hero :—Look not mournfully into the past—it come" not back again. Wisely' irnproie the,present —it is thine. .00 forth p) meet the shad owy future, without feu, anti with tt man ly heart. '.;....a.:.E7.7T8iriT46 1 ... FA.... F..a1pA . y..' . .ty.gx.iN0i..,0.c.T.:0,81t.i15; 1847, DROWNING.- 11 .The fiiliosii4l. hang Utter ,ail , drownintikfate, I was now tortured by by Madrid trailed i to Dr. Wellastoth in the pain all over, 1R01; and though I have been of SirJeltif Bancer # jwit,i4lishail in ainee'itTounded in...twilit places, aid ,taitif beedent....... -. .~. ..._.___:-....- ... . Often, enbraitted-.10-senre. _aoszioal Aingi; - . 1 . HMany , yeare ago, .when .I. was syotmg- , Ph" , yet my antraringl- were at that time ster on board one °chi' `Majesty's ships, far greater ; at least, in general distress.. in Portsmouth Harbor, after sculling about On one occasion I war shot in the lungs, in a-very small,boat, iwas endeavoringn to and after IYaffon she deck at night for fasten her alongside the ship to one of the some hours, b leeding from other wounds, scuttle-rings ;. in foolish eagerness I step- lat length fainted. Now, as I felt sure pad upon the gunwale, the boat of course that the monad in the lungs was mortal, it upset, and I fell into the Water, and, not will appear obvious that the overwhelming k now i ng , h o w to swim, all my 4 orts to sensation which accompanies fainting must lay hogeither of the boat or of the float have preduced a peal* conviction that I ing sculls were fruitless. The transactio wail in the act, of dying. Yet nothing in had not.been observed by the sentinel on the least resembling the operations of my the_gangway, and therefm it war; not gii mind when drowning then took place ;kind 'life niliiiiiffffiega'ai aciiiiiii4ii iiiiit ia6in - ' Whani begarr - tollonwsr, I returned-to n of the ship that , a 'mati in the ftft•ekip saw clear c a ff f VP de n o f Ira state." me splashing ift the witiat•icad gave thO'l'l - 'MEMORY RE 1 4---- T DEATH. !arm. The first lieutenant instantly and Sir &Wel Cooper relates the ease of a gallantly , jumped overboard, the carpenter sailor who was received into St, Thomas's followed his example, and the gunner his- Hospital, in a state of stupor from an inju tened into a boat and pulled after them. ry in the head, which had continued some With the violent and vain attempts .to months. After an operation he suddenly make myself heard I had swallOwed much recovered, so far as to speak, but no one water; I was soon exhausted by lay strug- in the hospital understood hie language.—, glee, and before any relief reached me I But a Welsh milk-woman happening to ad sunk below the surface ; all hope had come into the ward, answered him, for he fled, all exertion ceased, and,' fth that 1 spoke Welsh, which was his native lan was drowning. - - . gunge. He had, however, be,en absent “So-far these facts were either partially from Wales more than thirty years, and remembered after my recovery, or supplied previous to the accident had entirely for by those who had latterly witnessed the gotten Welsh, although he now spoke scene ; for during an interval of such agi- lit fluently, and recollected not a single tation a drowning person is too much oc- 1 word of any other tongue. Oa hie perfeet cupied in catching at every passing straw,' iecovery, he again completely forgot his or too much absorbed by alternate hope Welsh, and recovered his English. and despair, to mark the succession of e- An Italian gentleman, mentioned by Dr. vents very accurately. Not so, however, Rush, in the beginping of an illness spoke with the facts which immediately ensued ; English ; in the middle of it French ; but, my mind had then undergone the sudden on the day of his death, spoke only Italian. revolution which to , you appeared so re- A. Lutheran clergyman, of Philadelphia, ' markable ; and all the circumstances of l informed Dr.. - Rush that Germans and which are now as vividly fresh in my me- Swedes, of whom he had a large number mory as if they had occurred but yesterday. , in his congregation, when near death, al "From the moment that all exertion had ' ways prayed in their native languages, ceased—which I intagine_was. the home- though some of them, he was confident,- ' diate consequence of complete suffocation had not spoken them for fifty or sixty —a calm feeling of the most perfect Iran- years. An ignorant servant girl. mention quility succeeded the previous tumultuous ed by Coleridge, during the delirium of fe sensations. -.lt might be called apathy, ver,_ repeated, with _perfect correetnees, certainly not resignation, for drowning no passages from a nuuiber of theolOgiial _longer seemed anvil...- I no-longer thought works in Latin, Greek, and Rabbinical of being rescued, nor was lin any bodily Hebrew. It was at length discovered that pain. On the contrary, my sensations she had been a servant to a learned clergy were now of rather a pleasurable cast, par- man, who was in the habit of walking taking rather of that dull but contented sort, backward and forward along a passage by of feeling which precedes the sleep prude- I the kitchen, and theic reading aloud his cod by fatigue. Though the senses were' favorite authors. thus deadened, not so the mind; its activ ity seemed to be invigorated in a ratio that defies all description—for thought rose af ter thought with a rapidity of succession that is not only indescribable, but probably inconceivable, by any one who has not himself been in a similar situation. The course of those,thoughts I can even now in a great measure retrace: The everit which had just taken place—the awkward ness that had produced it—the bustle it must have occasioned, (for I had observed two persons jump from the chains,)—the effect it would have on a most affectionate father—the manner in which lie would dis close it to the rest of the family—and a thousand other circumstances minutely as sociated with home—were the first series pf reflections that occurred. They took I then a wider range: Our last cruise—a firmer voyage, and shipwreck—my school —the progress I. bad made there, and the time I had misspent—and even all my boyish pursuits and adventures. Thus travelling backwards, every past incident of my life-seemed to glance across my re collection in retrograde succession; not, however, in mere outline, as here stated, but the picture filled up with every minute and collateral feature; in short, the whole period of my existence seemed to be placed before me in a kind of panoramic review, and each act of it seemed to be accompa nied by a consciousness of right or wrong, or by some reflection on its cause or con- sequences ; indeed, many trifling events, which had long been forgotten, then crowd ed into my imagination, and with the char acter of recent familiarity. ..May not this be some indication of the infinite power of memory with which we may awaken in another world, and thus be compelled. to contemplate our past lives I Or might it not in some degree warrant the inference that death is only a change or modification of our existence, in which there is no real pause or interruption ? But., however--that may be, ope circum stance was highly remarkable=that the in numerable ideas that flashed into my mind mfr. -all retrospective ; yet I had been re [Fly brought up ; my hopes and fears next world had lost nothing of their y strength, and at any other period in tense interest and awful anxiety would have been excited by the mere probability that I was floating on tne threshold of e- ternity yet at that inexplicable moment, when I had a full conviction that .I hadal- ready cro s sed that threehold, not a single thought wandered into the future-1 was wrapt entirely in the past. "The length of time that was occupied by this deluge of ideas, or rather the short, nose of time into whieh they were con densed, 1 cannot now state With precision, ytt,certainly two minutes could not hare elapsed (Mut the moment if suffocation to that of my being hauled up. "The strength of thuliumd tide made It expedient to pull the boat at once to anoth er ship, wherel underwent •the usual rul- gar process.of emptying the water, by let ting my head hang downwards, then bleeding, chafing, and even administering gin.; but my submersion -had been really so brief, that, according -to the account of the lookers on, I was very quickly -resto red to animation. "My feelings while life was returning Were the reverse in every point of those which have been describe above. One single but confused Ulea—a miserable be- jitif that I was drowning—dwelt upon my mind, instead of the multitude of clear and lelinite ideas which had recently rushed !trough it ; a helpless anxiety, a kind of continuous nightmare, seeined to press heavily on every sense, and to prevent the formation of any one distinct thought, and it was with difficulty that I became con vinced that I was really alive. Again, in• stead of being free from all bodily pain, as "FEARLESS AND FREE." •••, Dr. Abercrombie relates the case of a child, four years ago, who underwent the operation of trepanning while in a state of profound stupor from a fracture of the skull. After his recovery, the, patient retained no recollection either of the operation or accident; yet at the age of fifteen, during the delirium of a fever, he gave tie waiter an wen' deseription of the operation, of the persons present, their dress, and many °dies minute parti culars. Dr. Pritchard mentions a man who had been employed with a beetle and wedges splitting wood. At night he put these implements in the hollow of an old tree, and directed his sons to accompany him the next morning in making a fence. to the night. however, he became mad.— After several years his reason returned, and the first question he asked was, wheth er his 'sons had brought home the beetle and wedges. They, being afraid to enter into an explanation, said they could not' find them; on which he arose, went to the field where lie had been accustomed to i Work so many years before, and found in the place where he had left them, the wedges and the iron rings of the beetle, the wooden part having mouldered away. ► LIR.. FRANKLIN AND Mmes.—The Al exandria Gazette says :-6•Titles in the U. States," has called to mind an anecdote which Mr. Jefferson used to tell, in relation to the subject, which is authentic and too good to be lost. The anecdote has been repeated to us by one who heard Mr. Jef. ferson mention it. In the Convention for forming the Constitution of the U. Suttee, it was proposed that tides should be given to the high officers of the Government; and the proposition met with favor. The dis cussion had gone on for some time, when Dr. Franklin arose, and with great gntvity. remarked—"that as this matter seemed to be seriously entertained, and might be 1 car ried; he had to suggest one hide which - would be new and appropriate—it was a title for the Vice President—and it was, I 'His Most tufierfluous Highness !' There was not eauttikutore said about titles atter that." • YAWXEE ENTIIIIPRISE..-40frtiell. the mat British reviewer, - seems to have thought the Yankees were "some." It is said he once remarked that it was his firm belief that if a. premium of a thousand dol lars were offered for the best translation of the Greek Bible. it would be %ken by a Yankee, who, till the offer was made, had never seen a word of Greek:4l,Mo life.— Ile would commence learning the language immediately, to qualify himself for the great . undertaking, and would finish the whole work quicker than any other person and bear off the premium.. Arrasst..-4. nun ought, in his clothes, to CQllfOrUl something to those that he con verses with,-to the customof - the nation, and the fashion that' is decent and general, to "the occasion, and his own condition ; Id that iebest that best snits with one's calling, and the rank we live in.' And see ing all men are not (Edipuses to read the riddle of ,another man's inside, and most men judge by appearances, it behooves a man to barter for a good esteem, even from his clothes and outside. We guess the geoclneas_ of the pasture by the mantle we BCC it wears.—FELTIIAM. A CsusTic••llrr.—Piron the French author, having been taken up by the watch man of the night in the streets of Paris, was carried, 011 the following morning, be fore a Lieutenant of the police, who haught ily interrogated him concerning his buai nese or profession. "I am a poet, sir," said Piron. "Olt ! a poet, are you 1" said the ma gistrate, "I have a brother who is poet." • "Then we are even, said ('iron, "fur 1 1 have a brother who is a foul." From a low English PiPa• A PITEQUP YRAQEI)Y, A realintlow-ofihe stmorofilinevrir -trested-both by Hedgers and Stieliy,-14 of then ong of the . .. Mistimed Sough," oc curred at Glascow on Saturday- last.— Three voung boys, two of-them sons 'of ' Mr. I. Wilson; builder, Gallitsgate,' and the other the eon of his brother, Mr.' Charles I Wilson, were lost. As the rest of the family were dolin to the water, the boys' absence at first occasioned no alarm, ap it wits supposed that the youngsters, %heel& eat of whom was about 11 years of age, had set off to join their mother and the rest of the family. As nothing had been'heard of them, Mr. Warren left home early yes iertlay of pro ceeding to Heleneburg, *ere t he &may 'were to ascertain if the 'rattail - rill - Were there. He had not been gone long away, When a carter, who take, care of a horse belonging to Mr. Wilson, went to, the sta. Me for the purpose of procuring some provender fbt the animal. The'provender is kept in a corn chest—a box six feet long and about three deep, with three separate compartmente, and secured on the outside with an iron hasp, which fits into a 'staple in the side of the chest. On opening the lid, the man was horror stricken at finding the three boys motion less at the bout= of the chest, each occu pying one of the compartments, He im. mediately summoned assistance, and they were-taken out_t_ butit_w_as_fontulAtat Jiques Wilson, aged 11, and Charles Wil son, about a year younger, were quite dead, and bad been so apparently for a considerable length of time. The young: est, a boy , between seven and eight years, showed some signs of life, and by prompt medical attendance he gradually revived, so as to be able • to state what led to the melancholy catastrophe. The brothers and cousin had gone into the chest in search of beans; and while so engaged the lid, which, as , hats-been already stated, is secured on the outside by an iron hasp fit ting into a staple, closed on them. In fal -1 ling ' the hasp. as it most unfortunately happened. fixed into the staple,4ml 011 the milted atrengh lif - the poor - captives - was . insufficient to enable them to burst the bonds of what, too truly; proved their ,tcimb. On the side at which the youngest boy was'found, the lid did not fit so close as the other parts, and to the limited supply of air which had been admitaed through this . crevice is to be attributed his preservation. They had endeavored to support . each other's courage as well as they could in their dismal dungeon. and before giving up hope one of them broke the blade of a pen knife in the attempt to make an incision through the side of the chest. Afier they ,had exhausted themselves with unavailing shouts-and cries, whielrwere-am.heartl-on earth, they all joined in prayer. This is the last circumstance which the surviving strfferer recollects, as he soon after became, insensible. To accounttor no noise hav ing been heard, it may be mentioned that the wood yard in which the stable is,situa led is locked up early on Saturday after noon, aiid is not again entered till Monday morning. COI3DEIN Elihu Burritt, in one of his letters from England, furnishes the following brief sketch of the Anti-Corn Law League : "Cobden, arose—not to speak' for the spice of several minutes, but to stand up in affecting silence before the assembly who would have drowned the voice of a trumpet before the swelling peals of ap plause with which they greeted the Napo leon of moral revolution. Several times he essayed to speak, but before he could trams his lips to the' utterance 'of a word, the multitude would burst-forth anew with another volume of cheers. I saw his clear. spirit speaking eye fill with tears, on thus being interrupted the third time in his ef forts to make himself heard. There stood the meekest looking man I ev er saw fronting a public assembly, and in the meekest attitude. He stood with his slight form inclining forward, with one of his thin pale hands hanging by the fore finger front a button hole in the left breast of his coat, and with the other resting on a corner of the speaker's desk as if for support; he-looked the very impersona tion of timid modesty. His whole atti tude and sppearance reminded me of some humble member of the Methodist churilt, in America; arising in one of their 'class meetings to Malkin. experiemmu in a eon-1 trite spirit. And that was England's forti most man ! Among the heroes her annals have numbered, that soft voiced revolutiow ist stood the 'highest in the people's geed tudi ! For England hattbecome a people and he the people's man, and this was the hour of his coronation. The first words he uttered felt upon dte listening multitude in tones of querulous tnothtlatkm. They were uttered with child-tika' and were tremulous with- the emotion he confessed." . I • ' WOMAN. not hers to goklathe storM of war, I To nisi the Math._or thrinder at ttki3 bar; T° sit with teen in legislative ball: To goverti realms, or nark their rise and fall. those things are not for her ;—'tis woman's care, Alone to rear the - shootsthat flourish there ; To wipe the starting tear from childhood's eye, j To sooth his little woes, his wants supply ro guard his morals with unceasing care, And bend for him the suppliant knee in prayer; ' , Then give him in his full and perfect worth, To serve the land that smiled upon his birth. A PROLIFIC %. , oNTiusuirrat.--W hat would the newspapers do if Rumor was to strike, and declare she would not write another line ? Take away Rumor, and scarcely a newspaper would live. If Rumor was paid for every thing that appeared in her name, what a deal of money she would make.at a penny-alining. • ,I; is but reisonahle to bear that accident patiently which God sends, since impa tience does.but entangle us, like the flatter ing of a bird in a net, but cannot al all ease' our troublo,, or prevent the accident; it must be nut, through, and therefore it were better we compose ourselves to patient than to a troubled and miserable suffering. Billsop Jeremy Taylor. • MISS LOW • Miss Polly Dolly Adelina • 'Amelia Agnes Low, Wattlione-of Nature's Journeymen's Onehiaell'd work, I trow. Her. forehead was as smooth as glass, • Her mouth was a straight line, And her eyes stood out as visibly 'As letters on a sign.' • • The "Venus of the Capitol" Was taller than Miss Low, • But, then Miss Low's diameter Made up for it, you know ; And tho' she was the "mould of form," • And wore unrival'd shoes, Her waist was noninvisible, And her feet wore "made to use." 'T was itaid.Miss Polly Dolly Low - Watt waking to• disclaim' The last sweet monosyllable Of her romantic. name ; And - every Ounday evening r she comb'd her golden hair, 'And at the window, pensively, Bat "sighing to the air. And Cupid, little rogue, was kind, That is so often cruel. And to Miss Polly Dolly'. dame If, sent a stick of fuel A tall and handsome man was he, The reigning village beau, • That made his bow one evening To Polly Dolly Low. -• Re took a chair and sidled up, And said, "I guess as how You think, Mims Polly Adeline, I've come 'to court you now."- "I hnow'd mid the overcome-- - Mira Polly, "long ago"— , - And onlits neck Affectionate Misr Low r And thiwitoiltp. quite test Of Mentb. • • lihnitig EbettessrlMen4 -,- Anti spoke agein:_ltittsamt If hew You didn't hear 00-r I . • thank-you kindly tor.yptnk!" But 1 aar sot,yete• hos-, 't was brother' Jerk yds / , " Miss Polly Dolly Lnek " A DASFSAAWIT 4AIVERt s ; ' 'Tore i i a knurl' in I moot' awfhl itioedltion, , end all owing to a alren iftigfrt eiyingthewould'atx , I ktiodf 'tilt a aitt, ' But Put bent eilthe I'll throw anyieWinaa • _ _ 7 7 Thikleep 4 ilk, I:Vbere,nurd - take. 01:noi lb& • •-• •• : bn my body obi riot, And floundeni arid flit fish • Seleetnit fbr diet; • ---- . There soundly !tenoned the rinigif And crab/ without number • t3holl fluty! o'er my pillow, , But my spirit Khali thro' flayeand hewers, And frisk with dur• untriuttWo , ..4l Atli, by the powers! MiSCELLANEOIJO. A swims of bees contain from ten thou- . sand to twenty thousand.in anaturaistate, and twenty thousand' to forty thonsand in , a hive. I f4POMMVIITIF battevndlo - ennalsroOlor= table flesh full of small mouths, by whieh they absorb and eject water. . sloth does not advance above a hundred yards in a day. ' It is two days in climbing and descending a tree. Insecrrs breathe through holes or pores on each side of every , segment of the abdo men, called spiracpla. ' - The gall-fly forms the rill nuts tn , teees and plants-by its egp,.and yptitittoßti.the gad-fly does tks nu the shin, of cattle. A -ugaziliv- liver -weighs nelitl7 fent pounds, but diseased ones' become) our or five times heavier. Thai human brain is the _twenty-eighth of the body,.but the, his* of a hum is but a feur hundredth. Orro of roses is the oil whieh swims on top in the distillation of rose wiser. BIRD lime is prepared from the , berries of the mistletoe, and the middle bark of the hollr ; it is boiled till it becdriies ink no bunion body, in a healthy *tete, is generally at'oB° Fahrenheit. The heat of` an &veil, applied to a dead human body, for twelve days, reduces it from 120 to 12 pounds. Tits earth is believed to increase in heat a degree' in every fifteen or twenty yards in depth. Tux waters of the Read sea nppear to be thirty-two feet higher than,the hlediter ranean---and the Gulf of Mexico, is twen ty-eight feat lower then the Pacific. MOOT mountains present their precipi tous faces to the se; and their slopes to the land. 4 0t.'" 'F n s sea is to the had, in round 'millions of square miles, as one hundred and sixty eight tolitty; foie to One. Tax narrowest port of the Atlantic is more thaa' la other parts it is one and a half miles, kaisers are found in •slate, and flies and onto in amber.. • THil. highest peak of the Rocky inourt lairts is 11,500 feet, and Jaine's Peak is 12,000 feet. Tit* mountains of Seger, in . Arabia, pro duee frankincense ; and those of Serra, the baltn of Mecca, from the amyris opobalsa trigiik which in the early ages sold for its weight in gold. EARTH is eaten as /tread in several parts of the world. Near Moscow, a hill fur nishes earth of this description, whieh will ferment when mixed with flour. LOVE OF THE Senzaxs.'--A mostremark able instance of animal sagacity has occur red at the village. of Rustington, near Arun del, in Sussex. Out ern lane leading from the village tit the sea: a cow has been ob servedm emerge daily a little before high water, arid to walk down on the sands, and take up a position about fifty yards from the rising tide ; there she would stand, e vincing every sympton of pleasure, till the 'waves reached her feet, and then she would very leisurely retire to her pasture again. Ono morning she had not bee Mable to get to the sea side till very nearly high water, and she was seen running down the lane, to the beach in great haste, as if afraid of being too late to enjoy her aeoustoined treat! Such aninstance we helve to be unparalleled in natural history. Doubtless , her sensitive ears would give due warning , of the advancing waters when grazing in her quiet pasture ; but it seems very diffi cult to account for the animal's proceedings,l except we entertain the idea, that it bad a true perception of, and admiration for, “the sublime and the beuutiluV TWO DOLLAEB PER ANNU3C: INEW SERIES -NO . (From the Pietionel tutelage Dow GENERAL TAYLO D.—..We have ireeeired from Dr. Raoxson, the gentleman to whom him eddresied, a copy of the following lettotkoze.asn. ersi TATLON, with a re. guest for its iniieitieh fifth* Intelligencer—a request. which we cheerfnEY \ aud readily comply with: lizsimuswrins A 'INIT ov OCCUP , ITTOX. Camp near Monterey, August 10, 11140. SIR : Your letater of the 17th ultisio, re questing of me art exposition of rorikws on the questions of national policy ndw at issue between tt. e political parties Cd'the United States, b is duly reached me. ..• „ I must take occasion to say thainiiny of my letters, :iddressed to gentlemen in the United Stales in answer to similtin 'quiree;ltaie aireatly been made ptiblie,ind • I had great% loped that all persons inter ested had, by this time, obtained from them a sufficiently accurate - knowledge of t iny views and detoires in relation this sobject. As it appears., however, that, suchls not the mile. I c 1 !em it proper, in reply to your 'letter. distinctly to >Teat that /ern not be. . fire the people of the United Slates a candfdatefnr the next Presidency. le is thy great desire to return at the close of this war to thii ilis , diarge of those proks. alonee dutimi and to the enjoyment of those domestic pursuits from which I was called at its commencement, and for which tit y tastes and education best fit me. I deem it but due to candor to state;at the same - time. that, if I were called to the Tividdential Chair by the general troieltref thepeople without regard to their pots:cal 1 - drencee, I should deem it my duty to accept the cacti'. But while I freely avow my attachment to the administrative policy of otir early Prmidents, I desire it to be r underatood that I cannot submit, even in otheraccepting it, to the exaction of any Other pledge as to the course I should pur sue emu that of discharging its. functions To the best of my ability, and strictly in ac cordance with the requiremehts of the eon- Uhive thus given you the circumstances under which only can I be induced to ac eept the high and responsible office of President of the United saltes. I need rdly add that I cannot in any case per- grit myself to be brought before the people by any of the political parties that now so tinkirtunately divide our country; as their candidate for this office. It affords me great pleasure, in condo. 'Rion, fully to concur with yon in your'high and just . estimate of the virtues, both of head and heart, of the distinguished chi aens (Messrs. CLAY, WEBSTER, ADAMS. MeDome, and CALHOUN) mentioned in your letter. I have never yet exercised the privilege of voting ; but had I been • called upon at the last Presidential election l 6 do co, I should most certainly have cast my vote for Mr. clay. 14114.sizonry_reupeetfully your obedient son% Z. TAYLOR, Major Genonil U. S. Army. F. 8. iluonsow, M. D., Charleston, 8. C. NAQATILY AND TUN DUXE.-A little in. °WOO ; will show you the estimation in which Mr. Macaulay is held in Paris.— Many' months ago, I was walking in the rtitreet with a literary man of some distinc. tion ; a Splendid English equipage dashed Olt Mi. and I observed, "There goes the Duke of—," "Bah !" cried the French man, "what do I care for your dukes rr- A few minutes after, we met a plainly dressed gentleman, with an umbrella under his arni . and a book in his hand, trudging 'slang in the mud, with boots and dress by .no means calculated to look well in the boudoir of a duchess. "There's Macau lay !" said I. "Macanly !" echoed the Frenchman, "Ah ! let's have a good look at him !" And to got a good look at the brilliant writer, and great Parliament m otor, the Frenchman walked as near him its possible for about live minutes.— French Correspondent of the .Edinburg Register. THE RKTORT couirrEoes.—At the Uni versity election, Mr. Butt, the well keown ppliticaLharrister, made a poignant retort upon M. Shaw. On the day of nomina tion, after Mr. Butt had addressed the elec wit, Mr. Shaw said: "Speaking, not as an Oxford graduate, hut as an Irish gentle man, I will say that Mr. Butt's speech proves nothing but the vulgarity of his own nature, which not even an education at this university could refine." Mr. Butt had no opportunity of replying till some time after, when he took care to tell the Record er, "That it was a great pity, when he had secured a retiring pension of three thousand per annum oil the consolidated And, that he had not also managed to put his tongue on the civil list." TwsoT, a modern writer, asserts that of all causes that hove injured the health 'of vvomen, none has been more deleteriott • thon the prodigious multiplication of ro minces during the last eenturr. Females, ivhose constitutions would hare been ro bust, have been weakened gradually by the two strong impressions of impitilotted writings. The tender romances hinder, instead of promoting marriages. A . wt)- nt 4 n, while her .heart is warmed brat& languor of love, does not seek a husband —a hero must lay his. laurels at her leet. Girls—is this so t While Raymond and Waritig's'earavan was being - exhibited in the West, a gawky, long-legged Jo iathan from the 'coitntiy, who had never "eon the elephant.;' glitter literally or metaphorically, was stalltintio lung carelessly in the pavilion, alternately staring at the caged animals and era - taming a sheet of gingerbread into his .rneoutii. w h en ho suddenly came bump agaitutt lurnbus. • '' "Thunder and spikes !" exclaimed Ite. staggering, backwards about twenty peer. while his eyes stuck outlike letter, toopstign —"what darn'it critter withtwo laui‘loo , we here?" , • UNGALLANT ItAN PAIIL t...jallillkal sayi that a lady Otter, if SINI ING0114:10 give the word "h Id' to her atoopk_ *Will do it somewhat ht this wise...olfott Sol grit tilers, all of you, now minift"i onto' , as soon as I have Inhih.J stand "stilt, every one of you, no the, ;, where you happen to be.t don't y 1 me. halt, I say, all of your