' t. P. 4. 1"4841410. SDITOR PRoPluvrox VOL. XVIIIO-43.1, ere 110111011)tis .iv neximr ravren. , , , it is recorded, that whose the *Lest of the TA* buttes" saw in this diteranteritme. the:. people, 'sad the with i kawal:er the .faver, of the Oen*, ap proaching peril, babe& hliyoung with seskshelter with these who would cherish and shield hero and leave blth to mat danger alone, But she nobly prefened:aufotiAt and, death with hint, she loved to We whits/potation kora him. - „Leave thee, Rienzi! Speak not 014 Why should I quit thy aide 1 y shall I shrink with craven fear • Thins thrn, and freedont'a bride ! When! Comm the sternness on thy lip— . -Needs Nina to be tried? I leave thee I dhl'st thou win and wed A fond, weak girl—to twine Her gins around thee in thy joy— Taittlith9l. HIM ta 'Wart, - - - And breathe a love, borne o f t the heart, , • Mit not the soul divine ! . To thrill with childish awe, whene'm Thy brow grow dark with thought, And when tlarthreat'ning lightnings gleam'd, Thy dark'ning sky athwart, .. Shrink from the crash, and leave thee lone,. . Amid the wrecks it wrought! Am Imot thine—wedded to thee la limit, and soul, and mind— Them and free Rome, within my breast As one, one altar ,brined— • • My destiny, my very , life Closely with thine entwined! Thou calrdst me thine, when freemen Rung Tames laurel on thy brow, And ant I lees thine own—my love Less fondly cherished now, When Romeilishonoring tniscreants dare • That fame to disavow! - Look in mine eyes! thou know'et thy love Hsi been to me a heaven In which my soul has footed, like The one pure star of even. _ rsordintilmtiottyconseissnitiess Of glory pined 'and given ! strive wet to look coldly, love, Thou recks't not of the power With which my heart sill cling to thine, . In mad miseortuue's hour— Glowing more bright its changeless truth, As tlarker storms-shall lower. And, oh, Rienzi I. should heaven deem Thy leere d mission done, Bow glorious- 'tam to to the with thee, My own, my worshipped one. As, bathed in living light, the day Alias Tith.thr.settingsam ! FOR TMS " STAR AAR la ANITA." — A /ONO TO 3JIBIII C. - Ntnw - farertinit reiF , my arest Q o For 't is my bitter fate. Nut only to outlive thy love, But to incur thy hate. Yet tears of mine shall never tell My bosom's inmost woe; Deep in my heart I'll hush my sighs, ' And none my griefs shall know. And if in secret i may mourn The bright hopes now o'erthrown, I'll wear a smile when friends are nigh ,Amlweep nay teartglonc..,_ Look back on all my happier hours, And all thy smiles to Inn, • Thee ask tin heart if I ileeerve The frowns I've borne front thee. I have borne—and will bear—the last, Nor mummer at my lot: The erne will come,tbou woukl'at give wort The past could be forgot. No more—the days of joy are gone, And fled the smiles I won ; Thy heart is sear'd and mine is If we mast meet no more. THE WESTERN HARP. Pewee College, Oct. 19th, 1847. WEALTH .4NO I;OVERTI ,We are acquainted with two men, resi dents of this city, (says the Cincinnati Chronicle,) who are fair types of human character in general. The one has been blest with all that wealth can bestow ; lives in luxury, takes his ease "in the inn," rides in coaches, and, in a word, cuts a "grand flourish" in this little world of ours. Ile is fond of contributing large sums to public enterprises, particularly when - his name is likely to appear in the papers in connection therewith—boasts of his public spirit and liberality, and , is punctual in his attendance at church on each-Sunday.— Hut withal!, he is proud, vain, haughty and imperious. He looks upon those leos favored by fortune, and beneath him in so cial life: as unworthy his attention. He has not a grain of charity ip his soul. Ile wonld pass by a poor man, in suffering, without deigning to look upon him. Ho never contributed. perhaps, in all his life, a dime to relieve the distresses of the weak and suffering. Humble want, the wail of the son and daughter of adversity, have no claims upoa ham. He walks by them with a pompous step and an unfeeling heart. The other character is just the reverse . of this, both in condition and in heart.— Poor from childhood, he has never known the moment when he was free from want. His means have been =all. his wants nu , mecum.. Yet in poverty and in gloom,_ he has endeavored to do what little good ; he cound to relieve the miseries of his fel -1 lb* Aniferevit. TOding incessantly for .small wages, he has ortea'divided the re- Wards of his labor with some poor, needy widow. He has - 1 soul—a soul full of ..e.barity, of love, and of truth. His heart is ~ as-braid as man wants of humanity itself. This man is neglected, unnoticed, un cared for t, while the other is the object ..of adulation aid eulogy. How unequal, how anjust prelim rewards of this world did:milk all - thin, we would rather be that pouf ittglecatuk-nesia • with his broad ex paru're, gush than ; ieg heart, than the haughty aristocrat, with's!' his wealth, station and ,pOwer. = 'ITWATOILT••••••ThoUght is the electricity .or the brain ; it shoots to the remotest toe i rioait of history, and touchte the first link .of life. It passes through the elements of ;lire, air, earth and water, It penetrates to ita tlepths of knowledge and rises to the i fittee of Heaven. Thought is an infinites tiiitlray of the Deity bestowed on hunt:lll - t it returns to Him, from a corruptible 'to it, spiritual existence. Cultivate it, end -you will be refined; neglect it, and you .Will be debased.--./. R. Prior, 4tAVY.-A man said to another, "which .. heavier, a quart of ruin or a quart of water t" "Rum, tnost assuredly." said the .other, "for I saw a man who weighed 220 pounds staggering tinder a quart of rum, when he could have carried a gallon of wa ier'itith ease." - - A FALUN FRIEND is like a shadow on ; it appears in clear weather, but van irdies us boon as it is cloudy, " . ‘ jr. F grAn AHD 3A F D 71,--*141011191[1.35:4-421[17SAIiM As I eat on a tomb in the Turkish eras etry the next morning, (March .104 watch ing the preparations for oor departure, I almost •dreaded - the 'interest which every day would now bring, after the calm and quiet weeks we had spent in the Desert. Ourencampment ,looked much the swipe as it had done every morning for a assuela past, the Arab servants busy* takingdown and packing the tents, and a noisy quarrel going on in the midst--(this wanting about a pistol having been stolen from one of tents*) arid'iliedifforairista 'WM ably Oat there were spectators standing by, and that our camels had given place to hones and asses. But, instead of the rocks mad sands of the Desert, Hebron was before my eyes, and the hills where Abrahate spread flocks, and the spot where he and his fam ily lay buried. And before night I abowli see the place where David was bona and lived his shepherd life, and Jesus was bora. We had only twenty miles to travel this day to Bethlehem ; but it was quite estregh for ~fere eager about every old tree, and well, and hill-top. The shrubs grew finer, and the 'wild flowers More abundant, the whole way ; though the hills of Judah were wild and stony in parts, and no longer for pasturing such flocks as covered them when Abraham lived among them, or when the Hebrews drove in their cattle from the Desert, or when David in his boyhood w. mused himself with slinging smooth stones froth' the 'breok, while hie - father's sheep were feeding on the slopes. We sat down to rest and eat under the abide of a rock and a spreading tree ; and for the hundredth , time since we left Egypt, it occurred to me, how little we in England can enter into the meatting of David, when, 'in his divine songs, when he speaks of the shade of, rocks, and of the beauty of '•a tree planted by rivers of water," and all such cool im ages. When one has been slowly pacing on. hour after hour, over glaring sands or 4 heated rocks, under a sun which makes every bit of leather or metal, and one's . ont r erelothing„ feel scorchA . hot, and oppres sing—On-ea veiTlireittßing, ace sight of a patch of dark shade is welcome beyond be lief; and when one has dismounted, and felt the coolnessof the rocky wall and of the ground beneath it, and gathered the fresh weeds which cluster in its crevices.' phrase after phrase of the Psalms and Pro plieries comes over one's mind with a fife and freshness as sweet as the blossoms in one's lap. ' Oil Taig'ht of ire - thlehirii — W was beanti, fill. We came upon it suddenly, just when the yellow sun-set light was richest. Beth- Ichein was on the rising ground on,pu i r . right, malisive-looking (as all the villages, of Palestine arc) and shadowy, as the lair sun rays passed over it to gild the western hills and another village which there lay hid up, emhosomed in fig and olive or-' chards. The valley between. one ofwhieh we were rising, lay in shadow. Before us, perched on a lofty ridge which rose be tween us and Jerusalem, was the convent tit. Elias; which we were to pass to-mor row. I was sorry to turn away from this' view ; hut wcliad to take the right-haml, road, and ride through the narrow streets' of the village to the great convent, built over I the spot where Jesus is believed by the: friars to Lave beenborn: It was too late this etening to see arty of the sacred localities; but ►t was quite enough to have the moonlight streaming in during the whole night through the win ' dow of lofty convent chamber, and to think that on this hill took place the greatest event in the history of the world ; and that in the fields near, the gentle Ruth went about her gleaning, little dreaming, in those days o f her poverty, that from her meeting with Boaz, among the reapers of his har vests, would arise such events to the ha man race ; that the shepherd grandchild. whose divine songs were to soothe her old age, should be the mighty king he was, and I the father of a yet ; mightier, who should build 'the great Temple of the Lord; and' that a more distant descendant should make , these glories appear as childish toys, in the presence of His greater sovereignly over the universal human soul. A wise man of a late century has nobly said, that! "Prosperity is the promise of the Old Testament, and Adversity that oldie New. On this hill was born the prosperity of the Old Dispensation ; and on this hilt was born the Man of Sorrows, who knew the secret -of true peace, and taught it in the saying that it profits not a man to gain the whole world; if he lose his own soul. In the morning, we weal intadifeekaods of the convent. I eared little for the 8,- 1 per part, with its chapels for Greek, Latin, and Armenian worship ; and not me* more for the caverns under ground, where the friars believe that Joseph wok Mazy remained while there was no room for deem in the inn. Itthe town was too fall to ro 4eiVe them while the people wenrcollected for the come, it ie hardly Probable *ay Weald repairio an underfatinal cave; bat. in this cave mass was going on. thia snow. ing ; and striking was the effect, after com ing down fro? the 'sunshine, of the crowd ed cavern, with its yellow lights and their smoke, and the.eohoes of the chanting.— We returned when the .service waft 'over and saw the star in the marble door whieb marks, as the fliers believe, the precise spot where Jesus was born, and the war ble slab which is Mid in the place of the manger. When I saw, throughout the.' country. how the Arabs now use the caves of the hills to bed their goats and cattle. , this belief of the friars appeared less ab surd thou it would with us ; hut still. it is so improbable that the precise spot of these ; transactions (whose importance was not known till afterward) should have been marked and remembered, that I felt little interested in them, in comparison with the landscape outside, about whose leading features there could be no mistake. From the bottom of the garden we over looked the great valley which expanded to the northeast ; and oneenclosure there—a green spot, now occupied by olive trees; was pointed out to, us as the fiela where the shepherdit were abiding on the night SEEM ri..1°141 a"' fogivie THZ 10X LAMM .1411.1.1. GET PAi FB ID . v , liiiii Cliiii . I Nal barna: lieltiiid it, to the . MAJOR Aleut! r,:i . , . . _, ..,. . , mese,leyeamgelliellialleiemeelfhilktielecich- - of '.. I f wetit ea air s. dm midi; and among these, we A correspondent o die . 0 Daily,` knew, lay die'lleall Sea, and de Jordan , Ad v erti s er„ who eireine . Mille 'fortunate iii. !ahem it lama Igo into dell Weill the poseeiniion of eundryAorione- °ldle-, l e" mellecildir bile ' le " Willie cad ' and othermenuariala dr the Put, se I i teat and railar. sad aree"ed the rocky well of mei nai kifewbsige.init nod, arid' i seirraiedl siineyaalls sad olive •we a s co PC' rig y , seal.iderloodose ham that .loseph memory, has furnished for the columns of and Miry mesa hale came dos way from 1 th a t paper a document Witreli we do not ree . jethrwile a tim . " be° " theitthlea , ~...I"..hilt census; member to have ever seen hefore-the dee the errs ele ar kowit -wm ae . 7„ i i 7 their— Vi m;Te fence read by Maj. Anivekbefore the Court =and ri a l awaL ar e l at h e d h a at the tomb , which condemned him to death as a spy: of Bathed, awl at the cement of Elias; t. We have no'donbt dial it will he read with "'clew thawed' were beat tau"' 'eruct': lively interest by mail; , • . ~- 1 km. I mateindier, however, that here 1 I el Game." be esid. 4, to bold a eommunie .fireterrie die watery of die:DiesdlSea.lying; eatitm . with a muta t o the ee .4.ih e mom. We hi *Ude gap betty link can army, by the order of my own cost, 4.... A5 " aill .4 . 21111 k.....1.8111.Wir my ass be ,i r L re mender. I entered the Amorleco lines by -- eiminmi- --- .:_ - _,.....__ sui --- _, °ur 7 5 Z unquestionable authority; when / peeled swiwe „.. w th ' ~.,..."'"'6 s' , w e " from them it was by the same authority. mew mot=or ' "''' lia . ing nilt I used to d tion. I had /heard theta liesemsiohdy email What they were: but provincial officer bad repented of the course the sews sown speed moon us. That he had taken, and that he•had avowed that riblf Mc" was s e , and those bead l e he never meant to go eo far aft lie had gone befogged l i a_.,_ihnismaideoh,_____ . thteabth th e l stmhl in resisting the autfitir °fide King. outride .„, a6 .,, if ~...,.`"' '"" 1 .,....,__, L.,;..._ws'_ir' the “The British commander was will; to theLhige..-"mas t eir e " the ''' perty ''''';". 7. `"g eee d 7 s o e n p. g extend to him the King'b cienitincy--yea, , hie.bounty, in hopes to allure others to do rthilea- I was thic - iewlY because ' the same. I made no plans ; I examined I knew that wie weir appreochieig it from no works. - I only receivedhis communi i' the jeart________,..____Efirirrlde._,,eidieliwedPred___,_,Y bemuse cations, and was on my way to reuirn to ' ' D T 'r"'' .. ......„...7 . ,..,.."'_,_"f r a i ,'" u ,_. the the army, and to make known all I hid. I size ....1 =--- s'''''''''' ~....''' "" . ..F . M . ... - ''7 we learned from a general officer in your camp. '"'" Mir le " a ""` '" "'"'" w a ll s on a ls this the office of a spy ? I never should Tull Wide ' with some and have acted in that light, and what I haVe L ciid while domes eisicir withal-- ~.,_n - done is not in the nature ors spy. --- 11iiiiii - I I lima " the rellr°lr th e way. ‘ i our ( noted neither your strength nor weakness.eight were gas- the sla th a L t ef°° l °' If there be wroug in the transaction, is it ''id!'" '"' s Afieldetha •b as e tt "J the P'' eets mine 7 The office of a„spy a soldier has with the inewes- which the wretched Judas lemma so II " , ' ben be had found ~_.. """ a right to, refuse ; bin, to carry and fetch communications with another army. I nev i bre a..... w u lha l I... Jim h a d d ose- i n t o er heard was criminal . The eireumstan - ""' '"'""-" 1° a'fiert Him claim t° , a ces which followed after myinterview with I rettarr 3l ,- °3 ______,* ° "`", wat ur Gen. Arnold, were not in my power to' IP Z2iI.I ealr O areal- "'''''" at t u e control. He alone bud the management i brow of the high gesond we were on, we , of them. I were oleo by sanewite by the grandeur ofl .It is , said that I rode in disguise. I 1 thelecthe- Zama tarsaliceseed wort h y o f I rode for security inrog., as far as I was her cothe.isad at her place re' the hymns able. but other than.,criminal.deeds induce Ilif Dana. sad in history: We were now one to do this. 1 was not bound to wear overlooLiaig the valley of Gilson, more my uniform any longer than it use expedi- I ersteatakr known b y th e, " of _ _„_,__ _ llinhedit s ' eat or polite. I acorn. the, name of a spy.; Ma- lea - Alvah& am-bi- -PecciPuou- brand - my - offence with , some : other nfieWif reas Ith ear sides I awl ram it a ravine ' it change not my punishment, I beseech This deer da amaims th e I°llVeT EIX 4 ' you: It la not death I fear. ' lam buoy • ed now dry; aid th e alleedicet from So lo- above it a consciousness of having in - - - mow's' Pool is sera ciossemg it obliquely. tended to discharge my duty in an honora- Its ("Pantie sage ili Zi° 4l * iris* very "eV" bre manner. . , 1y sad! term for tillage is some parts, I "Plans, it is said, were found with me. and crowned by die city walL To the I This is true, but they were mot mine. Yet * i d. salmi.* away from the ravine of I must telP you honestly that they would Gihoci- as th e deello led raid valley ct „ Je - have been communicated ill had not been hasa Pbe‘ebtersedathirreeb"the s ed h Y Tateii: - They wale sentlirfie - 6 - /rni - olt , i ett”, and kadiag the eye m ead ' 1° the : to the British commander, and I eh:6l'll' slope of ( *owl- sobeh- lie__ 'seem is hest have delivered them.. From Me bottotn”of Ifilea „_ _, ha ' s ._ _ the a tber lath of Davidthetaw" The' my heart I spurn the thought "of. attempt ""ars "'me ef de swath of w a s the ' ing to-sereen myself by eritninating °cloth -I"lert °b i er "; "dallier that the most sou- :.Cr• but so Itir as I ate concerned the truth cfithloockfiniot 12 the egy - the great dome shell be told, whoever suffers, It was the of ihe .Msewsse of Omar. which occupies allegiance of Gen. Arnold I came out to se de site of Solomon's Temple. cure. It was fair to presume that many a By this time their was silence among brave officer would be glad at this time to co . - I walked bolded me cavalcade. as it tbe able to retrace his steps ; at least we slowly aseeaded the leeeka.,,w 2 Y - gbd O f: have been so informed. Shall I, who the Aram pensained limos/elk so all; for it; came out to negotiate this allegiance only,' was 'we Pesethhe al the aseialeat• - • ( " ~_‘. will i be treated as one who came to spy out the i fi ever be ma de--tospeak °' ' fin " i weakness of a camp? If these actions are Pr'etsisass of that hear- We en t ered by I alike, I have to learn my moral code anew. -the Jaffa gate; and every echo of our 1,. Gentlemen, officers, be it understood heirs& fret in the marrow. saeur- / e ! that I am no suppliant for mercy ; that I mime wilmecl. cidd„ . ' air be "„.,. w . I ask only from Omnipotence-not from hu-i use vaid t L elmelles is Jetemaiese., We era* -.sa l -1 ' f man hands. Justice is all I elelm-thit i ! justice which is not swayed by prejudice nor distorted by passion-that which dowel from honorable minds and it directed by i virtuous determinations. I hear, gentle-1 men, that my ease is likened to that ,of ; Capt. Hale in 1775. 1 have heard Of him ! and his misfortunes. I wish, in all that dignifies man, that adorns and elevates hu. man nature, I could be named with that ac compliShed but unfortunate officer. His. fate was, wayward, and untimely cut oti; yet younger than I now am. He went out knowing that he was assuming`the charee ' ter of a spy. He took all the liabilities into his"hend at the request - of his great_, . commander. He was ready to meet what ; he assumed and aim consequence", His , i death the law of nations sanctioned. It may be complimentary to compare me with him, still it would be unjust.. lie took his life in his hand when he assumed the character and the disguise of a spy. I assumed no disguise. nor took upoS myself any other character than that of a British officer who' had - business to transact with an American officer. uln fine, .I ask not even for justice; if you wauta vitnim to the manes of these fallen untimely, I may as well be that vic tim as another. I have-in-the•mostundis. guised manner given you every het in the case. I only rely on a proper construction of those facts.. Let me be called anything but a spy. lam not a spy. 1 have ex' amined nothing., leaTned nothieg, commu nicated nothing,liut my detention, to 4r nold, that he might escape, if lie thought proper to do so.- --Us was, as I conceiv ed,- my duty. 'I. Inipe the gallieroffieer who was then unsuspicious of his General. will not be condemned for the military er ror he corhinitted. . "1 further state that Smith, who was the medium of communication, did not know any part of our conference, except that there was some necessity for secrecy. He was counsel in various matters for Arnold, and from all the interviewe I had with him, and it was Smith who lent me this dress coat of crimson, on being told that I did STOZT OF A ItTIeSLIA" PACE Time is a soot 41(pr/wilier pas known. we believe. mows gamesiers—at low tasted or very isipticidy, we remember, I among selitelbey ganiestesea—what which asimemices a tad goad lack: When the auras. se doe dies, hare been cruelly I against es, if the tide once tam it will flow I ateadily be same time in ism new and hap pier dametism. In she palace of a certain Ross an Prisme, where SUM. of C0111111e; it nusember, far it is one of dimensions yen do not** of attempting to pronounce even to yeurselfLyou look it it, msimily,and mare it as the Chinese do their mere lessened amibinniimas of etsiiac, tern, where they pins at owe Irma the vis ible sign to the hides--is the palace of this primer. yen are amprined bp:mein die most splemSd of its spirombd suit of apartments, 'impended be a gigs ease—a set of harness !--sammion hareem for a emiple of tooth homes. snek t as you may see , in any pedaloes stable- Of alarm it attracts mare attention than all die pianos', sal mauls sables, with *Sir porphyry tams and gild dacha. "The 3rusa brow is seler nor ram, ~m...+rrr..ibe &qui riolibese r Yell imptite ant told the (allowing atom The IPrinee was ow sig . ht led into deep ad despirsoe goy. He bad staked es tate ober estate, and lest rhea ; he had endued bis phis.. his *hues, hie jewels, the fmnitane of his basso and bat them ; waartiWa bodf. sad Iwo it. - , The leek wai' not sm. His carriage and bones 101 l been bog wait* for biasat the door. ie sedhed thentaad lost! He had nothing more: be *brew ',do window.aad lean ed eat of it in toter despair. There stood his inatitge and boom the sabjeet of his last wager. He bad now nothing left.-- Tea Thew was the harness I No thing bad bees said of the harness. The carriage ad the bonito were lost, but not the banoeso. the opponent agreed to this intespotamos of the Wager. They played for the hang. Ile won They played fix- the caarriut,!e and horses----he won.— They played goir the rodam for the plate, the pit-mires. the famitcre—he won.— They pEtwed for Mate—he still won.— He woo all her IL more. 4.71 d rose from that table the same nth etas he had sat down to it.. Bad he mad gocKl reason to suspend that harrals in has very best saloon ! ETTLe 14 or Itnir Ertottstc..—A little hoy about ten or twelve rears of age, came heore the Recookr of New Orleans a few doss sifter, =I stanti that his mother, his father; his tweeter and two fisters, had been e-Arruz 0c.7 with the fewer, and that without a nca. hr 'sr a* hit moue in the world- ) 4 ..LAL , "1PEA1,2.10A54.1! not wish to be known by English or A i mericans. I do not believe that he had e ven a supposition of toy errand. On me your wrath should fall, if on any one. I know your affairs look gloomy, but that is no reason why /should be saerifted. My ' death can do your cause no good. Mil lions of friends to your struggle in England you will lose if you condemn me. I say not this by way of threat; for I know that brave men are not awed by them—nor Will brave men bo vindictive because they are desponding. I should not have said a word had it nut been for the opinions of others, which I ant hound to respect. "The sentence you this day pronounce will go down to posterity with exceeding great distinctness oil the page of history ; and if huminity and honor mark this day's , , decision. your tunnel., each and all of yon, will be remembered by both nations when thety'ltave grown gilmter and more power they now nit. ' Bet, If misfortune tiefilht me, Ishiil in limo hive all due ho morlidd to my memory'. ' The martyr is i teft_ ll -frcrtkein,bs l lllre when, the tribunal t tatclooneumeu hin rp t, is rotten: I trust this houO'rable Court wilt believe the whdn" reay,tiat What hive spoken was from no .410 Moil of a eoivard. I . five done." ADVEPiTUREO OP A GREEN 'MO UN- THIN BOY. The town of New&ati. in,lhis cmonly,',l was many •years since the birth place , of an infant who watehristerted As hergreirmrstrmanhoed, the spirit of,V,italtee enterprise carried/Ibn 49 Canada, andin the interior oldie cogeltlvi lie commenced the practimi'or industry and perseverance Tiverarewitridedi with anemia, end after *time ha removed, for 11, more lutirative, practice * to the,eity Of, Montreal. Prosperity and imed„, Alaimo still attended hint, and he item laecainte candidate and we; elected lothe Canadian Parliament. where hie abilitY nod good judgement secured to him a tespemalde,po., sition and influence. Nyhile a member cif parflament. he received a letter purperting to be written by ao old, lady in , gieg4n also of, the name of ettaungla Pub -810000, that she lied net a,aiegle relative. and, was alone in, the world,' that , peeing hie • name iu the papers, as a member of the, Canadian Parliament, .and it being. the same asliars,lheWnght perhapatto might be of the some family. She further atated that she was possesited of considerable property, and kne w.of no kindred to-whom to leave it, and that if he would comm te see her, she would pay all his expenses, and make him heir to her property, Mr. F K.,,supposing this to, be a hoax. made no, answer, and paid no attention to it.. -Two , or . three months after, Iteseeeived,amidier letter, from the same perien, urging in still. stronger terms his: visitto her, and With so, much apparent sincerity , and earnestness, thatim.reAolycd to. Rn. w.Englatil imokmm what truth there , was itt it. He did, go, and found the lady as she •had described , herself. She, was , living in , an elegant - ratinsitersmtitt ham -- ite delighted with the, v sit ltortv andApn.l red no pains to make it agreeable to, 1ne1,;,1 After, having spent some time ,thero l he preparid to returns home. 'rite old lady defrayed all his expenses. aittl.rnade hint. many presents. and before4ta departure. she renewed to him her promise ni leave hint all her property, and related dent which. led to the corregimndenct tSlte ifillififfed - hint the, betrothed 0,1 a lemeg man by the name . of Paul kilolland, who was an ot6ae, .in the British Arsuf. That htthadjalletbithAssiv: tle before tbe,contimnotation of their auk: dale, and she had remained unmarried and ' true to his mammy, That seeing his Rattle.' i uniting the name of her lover to her owe. she was struck with the singelei °Mod deuce,• and thought that elle could not het., ter show her devotion to the,memory of her betrothed, than to bestow her property upon him •who leemed by his name to, , be ,the representative of both. lie left her, returned to Mentreal, and within a year afterwards received intelli- Igenee of her death. and that'by tiervilthe was made sole heir, to her estate., He set out immediately fur England, and cm , his arrivalJountLelLthier preeKet • lipe_hint, ille claim WAB • and ePte rect at once • into the possesstott'of a.large 61, 1 tune. fle is now in the enjoyment of, Ins gelid fortune at. Montreal, and is , noel!, or recently has been, a - thember of the Cana dian Parliament. This id a true sketett_Of the history or one Vermont boy,-:and there are donbdese many such. The regions of liation,- and the highest flights of imagination, do not• furnish a more romantic adventure.--Ver mont Patriot. • • I ItAIIITS OF ANONALO.--NOU cannot alter the nitrite of an 'animal-hy'•ehangitig,isi food, It-will atilt - belting to - the family. In this particular bees are better instructed: When they lose their queen bee—which is an entirely 4itrorunk. animal ; (rpm the working bee—if you present anoiher with in twenti- four hours they . will not accept her nor obey her. They prefer taking an ordinary grub, before he beconies it Hier; and feeding it with a particular food and treating it in a particular way, and when it leaves the'grub state. it becomet•a queen bee, and they always suffer.thetneelvel be - goverened by her. . , • The babits.of tutu are - extremely curl. out. We elllbees beard •of .ant houses,, mementoes twenty fest in- diamete4 Mad. with halls and rooms of great strength.— Themeand beaver detrurareconstroeted ttpOn strictly mechanical principles. In some .insect speeies, she males have wings, while the females have none. This is the case with the glow worm, and the featale'hils , the property oteitti Ring phos phorescent light, and were Wein for 'this, the gentleman -glow - , worn would not hold As way to his lady's chamber. The Ostrich. unlike_ other birds, is not. provided with means of sitting down. She cannot, therdare, hatch ,her eggs, but buries them in hot sand, and leaves nature to hatch them for her. Some birds build no nests, like the cuckoo, which deposits her eggs in the nests of others birds—but she knows e nough always to select the nestfl of birds, that have bills shaped like her own, for then she is. assured her young will have the same kind of food as she will procure. A. GRAVE IMPLV,—"Suppose now that A, for instance, should let you a house," said one of Bob's clients to him, "and sup pose ho should be taken sick and die t" "Why, then," said the wag, very grave ly, "then, of course, A would be a—dead !Wen" "In n hotel here," says the Trinidad Spectator, "a man named Drum is the bar keeper. His friends call him 'spirit-stir' ring Drum.' " There are two things which ought to teach us to think but meanly of human glory :—the very best have had their cal umniators, 'the very worst their panegy• rists. AN ODE. AT GROOLCIS Written at the request of the Committee of Arrangement for laying the corner atone of the Washington Monument, at ffamiltmusquare, in the city of New York, on 'Tuesday. the 19th of October; 1841, and sting by the members of the Sacred Music Society. M va1e... 0 Old If mid NA" A iiionument to Washington A:tablet graven with his name Omen be the mound it stands upon, Ag 4 everlasting as his fame. 'Hiss Om. Alla the land—the plain, . Moremoor, the mouittain, end the marls— Mere nem than 'Oakum', urn, or farm, His Monument—the human heart. The Cbristian—patriot—hero--aage ! Thsighlef that heaven in metev sent: y:Aus deeds ore written on the age— iliesiountry ie his monument. "The sword of Giddeon and the Lord," Wan mighty in his mighty hand:— TheOod who guided, he adored, ,Ana. with His blessing, freed the land. The first in war—the tint in pear-e— -lle Ilnit in hearts that freemen own : time shall cease— He lives imniortnt sind atone! „.I"et let the rock-hewn tower arise, High to the pathway of the sun, ' And opeiik to the approving skies, . Our gratitude to Washington. Pretty Thought. The: n hi ;nether of the day, The Winter of the Spring, Aid ever upon old decay ,The greenest moolisps cling. Behind Ote cloutla the etarlintj Through showere the euttbea ues Gal; t'oe Unti who loveth all hie wyrke, talt - hb - hope NM itlrr hpitapli on •n infant.. Rtain not this urn with sorrow's tear,— *aught hut a blighted leaf is here ; The cherished dower not rally blown, ha opening beauties scarcely known. Wag savored tram. inyearthly atem f . To dock an angers diadem. Ad lce. BiYtemperstd-401: no stiisive word , Lay liattetini unction to your soul," TO : tempt yon to the tippling hi:ad, Octane the proffin'il wassail bowl; Ph,'"tpuch AUL," 't is the silder's sting. At Last ‘ 4 01 . 1 want and misery, bring. •,. Tbe of luelowyrs. Them:magma areedo,that clew in every field, Ana tbi4-phniliet*gfit-elimetes VlTlFllkaitntmtnnfirot , icthitirfading blue, raFeTrardinal, of hue, Allegan rote U*olo - 6 the trusting eye, Antliety that Gen.is love, and ever nigh, WROY4MENV,/ IN.gECIIANICS. /Of wajl knana ' man' 44 • ,-' 1 !" vuiouLturning machines in operation for turninglehtss•andliont lasts:=A-axe handles, ttretatitristif leitteka, 0,40.4 t11e ist , rn .fr e h it o4 rinc io ip g le q r o ill o s a l:te o l f t , = - Vherwhnistisistry.of she dig. covets', `and'br its OrWi r itor,:ir, ill be found 1 1 intereeting.' A peitiefejaribiti g the Bust Inatthine in the Bosuns out;rier,exclaims : Imagine, voile reader, a steam engine, in rapid rnmiqpiityliirling round, and torn- Mg out the human hotiti tied face divine, with nose, 41 . sith lipijurehead, eyes, ears, neck bract-anti stioulderth 91 s perfect pro- Poktiel, ,, enkt aetteitt?)e.to.llature ! Imagine such an eccsntrie Machine, and you will "hese lunner:Ootrof the wonderful stretch of itsfantiOn wbialaponceived 'and completed sueh4t;factuity.; • - Such a ,woutlarful machine is now in 1140;34W1Ct4-OpiHll44ll in4lqatori, and-if any patron of genius, or any inquiring mind. or luirOttowthisill. take the trouble to search, he Can eeetkituat of Daniel Webster rapid ly revolving in one end of a lathe, and at the.other s he will.see afac simile head of the great, sxpounder;. of any desired size, turnotl out froumunrble, by machinery. littate.of JtitliitilVoodbitry, of the Su lwelsefe'ol4o, ,have also been turned front 'the emu lathe- Busts and cameos may be maned, after, one. lOW the same inciAeL in imilation,nf arty sizes. from a colossal bust :Ws ; miniature. taco, suitable for a lady's -•- I ~A,,genins damdilerofsuch au achievement ought to be widely known.; and we are; told dun he is ;costive of Massachusetts, T4owas.,lllanpliprd by name. Ilisgenius its developed:early. Its first manifesta tion wattin the Contrivance of: a machine for paringapplea: , • ilis nest desice was a machine for as- ; certaining, without the trouble of counting in.the usual way.-the number of tacks Made in't Amory rat' whiblt he' was at work foi' his brother. HiM.next,was a rnech*for making the tielta-therneelvee; * *Weill, prior to that, had been.tOrned.out by, the hand. It made 500 a•minuth and much more perfectly than by. dm Old method.; %Next he sm. about and perfected a lathe forterniog gun barrels. It was an easy process to tura the muzzle end, but at the lower part, the machinery, by a self-acting change, was made to accommodate itself adroitly to the oval and octagonal parts of the breech. All this was accomplished with great facility by steam power. liVhen this apparatus was first started at Springfield, the workmen came round to witness the experiment. On its success ful operation, one of the workmen remark ed to another, "this man has upset our art." One of the gun-stock makers said hecould "not upset him, for the stranger cot id not turn a gun-stock." Blanchard replied that "he would try." Ile finally rucceeded in making a lathe to turn out gun-stocks with accuracy and facility, by steam power ! Ile secured a patent for the invention, and it is now in successful operation at Springfield and Hapees Ferry, and it has literally "upset the art" of making gun-stocks by manual labor. This curious machine was at once ap plied to making shoe lasts, hat blocks, tackle blocks, and all similar Utensils; and while it put an end to the tedious process of making such articlCs by hand, it produ ced far more perfect specimens. Next he invented an: improvement in steamboat machinery to enable boats of small draft to ascend the rapids of rivers, and his plan itilow in general use for as cending rivers of narrow, shallow, and rap id channels. ' • Such are among the valuable inventions . • TWO 1)01.1. AR$ PEI - NEW SERIgg-40, of Thomas Blanchard, a farmer's sew. whose only means of education wets the common country schools, in a winded part of the country-. And finally, Mr. Blanchard now makes statues by steam. • • But it is a most beneficial achievemetlo.!-- a triumph of Inventive Power—which will multiply the pleasures of mankind and help. to diffuse enjoyments among them, will. iniprove their sensibilities and refine their taste. Its improvement may not app-- pear at a first glance. We base playfully supposed it to be the knell cathe sculptors. But •the sculptor will yet live ; for, so it ie, there is no probability that machinery cost ever do the work of pure intellect. The immortal conception of the sculptor must irradiate the marble model before that mo del can be set in the lathe. The great art ist will not therefore be superceded , - ' bat will perhaps be more frequently eallelltip on than now to supply originals, when the desire for exact copies shall have been increased by the facility of obtaining theft through the wonderful contrivancesaf Me. Blanchard. MRS. LAFAYETIE.—III 1784, Mr. John Adams; wlto was afterwards - President of the 11. StateS, was residingin France fora season. His Wife, who was a Very emu plish ed wonian, called one day on the lady of Gen., Lafayette, and soon this lady visited Mrs. Adams in return. Mrs. Ls fa yette' was very modestly 'dressed, while the American ladies present were in very gay attire. While at the table, oneoftliose who sat near - Mrs. Adams Whitiperad To her, saying. "Good Heavens! how awfully she is dressed !" Mrs. Adams rebuked the observation by saying that "the lady's rank placed her above the little formalities of dress." 'We wish it was the case min', that all who pccupy honorable places would feel themselves above such small matters, and, indeed, that every one would consider that a brilliant and well trained mind,good conduct, and agreeable manners, set those oft' that possess them to almost infinitelti better advantage than costly array and sparklingdiatnonds.—ExelerNews Let. A etymons ECH0....-4 must tell you of a curious echo we heard while lying on the Naples. flats, The orders of the captain to the crew given from the upper deck, and the reports of the soundings on the flats, ("two feet scant,") were heard repeated among the tall trees on the eastern shore, without the stighest variation. Some of the passengers, observing this curious ef fect, began to call. out in various tones to Mr. Echo, and they were always favored with e repetition of the question asked, or the latter tiartofit. Hear some specimens *lloilo the shore !'' Echo—.• I allo the shore !" "Ilow are you P' Echo—"llow are you ?" "Shall we stay here all night !'"'''t Fleho—"Stay here all night!" "Tell me if Gen. Scott has entered Mexico." that there nre Echo—" Scott has entered Mexico." "Hurrah for your good Rows!" Echo—"llurrat fur your good news!" "Who'll he the next Preeident f" Echo--"Zach«ry Taylor/" "Well, that is a curious echo, sure e nough," exclaimed au elderly lady, who was rocking hersellon the afterguard, and smoking a pipe at the same time. We were all somewhat startled by this unex pected answer to the question concerning the next PreSidency ; but after a short pause the questions were resumed : "What is the price of corn ?" Echo—" The price of corn." "What WaS the reason that Pratt and Campbell didn't fight r' E.th.--"PrattandCampbell (titbit fight." "What are you doing out there!" Echo--"Calehing Cat fish!". "Ha! ha! ha! ha!" Echo—"!La! ha! ha! fra!—hol ho! ho! ho!" Thus ended the cat-echism. A sucker W:l9 discovered sitting on a log, down et the point, quietly pursuing his evening sports, and brushing olf the mosquitoes. Some of the answers hid evidently been given by him.—St. Lords Recei le. Some days since there was published an account of a suicide by a young girl in St. !Alois, committed fo , being charged with theft. While ineiti very agonies of death she declared her innocence. Since that sad event the following has made its ap pearanee in the papers : "Hsu INNOCKNCE PROVED.—The jewel- ry alleged to have been stolen by the per vast girl at St. Louis, Elizabeth Reddick, who committed suicide recently, has been found at the house of her former miatress,, and in the very spot where it was placed by her accuser, who afterwards forgot the circumstance." THE PREDICTION OE AN A MERICAN mt.( CER.—CoI. Haskell, who lately' rett — Etheit to Tennessee from service under Uenetak Scott, in Alexico, and who has siiw; *ea. elected to Congress, Om supremo: bit, opinion upon the manner of corm:Finkle the war, and the prospect of committing peace : have contended and do so still, that the course pursued by the Prenident, iti conducting .this war, will not conquer . a peace in ten yeara, the army will have to e recalled from the heart of Mexico sn4 irected : to hold a line. I nreilict that this will be the result of this unhappy ,war. * DISTRESSING ACCIDENT...-00 Wednes day week, the little daughter of Mr.-Hollis Davis, of Lancaster, six years old, was in. stonily killed by the body of a cart falling upon her. The cart body was standing upon end, and the child overturned it in attempting climb upon it. When will men learn the danger of leaving cart-bodies in such a position where there are child*. Repeated accidents have happened kotti that cause.—Worcester Trantenpt. rir An awful calamity mewled 44 7thillaok) Tenn, on the 12th inst.. by the siplisia st. • powder nsaguArte, which heol boon etritch II NOM ning. Ow hundred Winer wevedeeh,Anilifili number of FROS lost. Tea Who -hail covered item the ruins. ' - HMIS