BY, D. A. & C. H. BUEHLER VOLUME XXII. LVCT HOOPER. They tell me, Lucy, thou art dead— That all of thee we loved and cherished, Has with thy summer MRS perished ; And left, as its young beauty fled, An ashen memory in ita stead— The twilight of a parted day When fading light is cold and vain; The heart's faint echo of a strain Of low, sweet musks passed sway. That true and loving heart.—that gift Ora mind, earnest, clear, profound, Bestowing, with, a glad untluift, Its ninny light on all around, Affinities which only could Chive to the pers, the true and good ; And sympathies which found no rest, !eve with the lowliest and the best. Of them-4 thee remains there nought But sorrow in the mourner's breast 1— A shadow In the laud of thought? Itio!Tiven my weak and trembling faith Can lift for thee the veil which doubt And human fear have drawn about The sll•aweiting scene of death. Bun se thou wast I see thee still; And, save the absence of an ill, And polo and weariness, which hero Summoned the sigh or wrung the tear, The same as when, two summers back, Beside our childhood's Merrimack, I saw thy dark eye wander o'er Stream, sunny upland, rocky shore, And heard thy low, soft voice alone • 'Midst lapse of waters, and the tone Of pine leaves by the west-wind blown, There's not a charm of soul or brow— Of all we knew and loved in dice— But lives in holier beauty now, Baptized in immortality ! Not mine the sad and freezing dream Of souls that, with their earthly mould, Cast off the loves and joys of old— Unbodied—like a pale moonbeam, As pure, es passionlesa, and cold; Nor mine the hope of Indra's son, Of slumbering in oblivion's rest, Life's myriads blending into one— In blank annihilation blest; • Ddst-atoms, of the Infinite— Sparks scattered from the central light, And winning back throat* mortal pain, Their old unconsciousness again. No have rafts Dt. in Spirit land— Not shadows in a shadowy band, Not others, but themselves are they. And still I think of them the same As when the Master's summonsemme ; Their change—the holy morn liglit breaking Upon the dream-worn sleeper, waking— A change from twilight into day. They've laid thee 'midst the household gmes, Where father, mother, sister he; Below thee sweep the dark 1,16 e waved, Above thee bends the summer sky. Thy own loved church hi sadness read Her solemn ritual o'er thy head. And blessed and hallowed with her prayer, The turf laid lightly o'er thee there. That church, w hose rites and liturgy, Sublime,and old, were truth to thee, Undoubted, to thy bosom taken A• symbols of a loath unshaken. E'en I, of simpler views, could feel The beauty of thy trust and zeal; And owning not thy creed, could see How deep a truth it seemed to thee, And how thy fervent heart had thrown O'er all, a coloring of its own, And kindled up intense and warm, A life in every rite and form, As, when on Chehar's banks dela, The Hebrew's gorgeous vision rolled, A spirit filled the vut machine— A tile " within the wheels" was seen. Farewell! A little time, and we Who knew thee well, and breed thee here, 'One after one shall follow thee As pilgrims through the gate of fear, Which opens on eternity. Yet shall we cherish not the less All that is left our hearts meanwhile ; The memory of thy loealiores lihall roam our weary pathway smile, Like moonlight when the sun has set— A swag and tender radiance yet. Thoughts oftby clear-eyed sense of duty, Thy generous scorn of all things wrong— The truth, tits strength, the graceful beauty Whichever blended in tby song. All lovely things by thee beloved, shall whisper to our hearts of thee ; These grew MIL where thy childhood roved— Yon river winding to the sce— ne sunset light of autumn eves Redecting on the deep, still floods, Cloud. crimson sky, and trembling leaves Of gilded rainbow-tinted woods,— These, in our view, shall henceforth take A tenderer messing for thy sake; And all thou lored'stelf earth and sky, &am seined tottby memory. ( From the Boston Olire Brunch. STORED AFFECTION. EY MRS. M. A. DENISON "Ton don't love my mother," said little Ellen Crosby, slowly retreating from her father with her hands behind her, and her lips quivering as she spoke. "What do you mean, pot ?" ho exclaim od, springing after her, and drawing her resisting form towards him ; "that is a very strange thing fora little girl to say ; what put it into your head that father don't love mother ?" he continued, smoothing back the soft hair from her whito forehead, and .looking earnestly into her downcast eyes. "Because when mamma went away from the table you spoke cross, and she said she WAS always sick, and she has got a head ache," added the child earnestly, while the tears trickled dorm her cheek. "I have been sitting beside her all the afternoon, rubbing her fOreheisil ; • zaa she is sick and tired very often, and you never toll her you are sorry, and kiss her as-you do me." Charles Crosby drew his little girl closer to hia bosom. The artless words had fallen like fine APOri his heart. Ire felt instant ly that ho had spoken harshly more than Ono° to the gentle being who had never given him an unkind word. Seven years of his wedded life had passed and * o ily ; being young and a most impulsive ."ereiture when ho married, ho could hardly appreciate the deep holy love which hie sweet bride treasured for him and bin on ly. After the romance of the affair, as it soomedto hint, had nettled into a quiet, peOtpn 'Monotonmia reality, his restless yeszand tOr now fresh novelty. TO • speed the evenimphours by the side of his :wife' arid 'infant whciao beautiful face 'Shiantedli.o a rosebud upon the white pil low in herlittle wicker:basket cradle, be- came tiresome to him. Ile wished his El- started from hitt 7ctair, and placing Ellen len had more vivacity, more brilliancy, for- on a low seat, strode rapidly through the getting that these might accompany a va- room. The tears were raining down his riableness of temperament that would truly face, but he kept them hidden from the have made his home unhappy. little one, who sat timidly still on her crick- Ellen was a most excellent wife ; here et, alMost afraid to move for fear she had was that inward purity which stamps upon angered her father. Not so. A flood of the features a loveliness far beyond mere the old tenderness had rushed back upon beauty ; nobody hesitated to call her hand- his heart ; instead of the demure and gen some ; her ways were winning, her form tle Alice, his memory pictured an angel of light and fragile ; with all she had so whom he had been all unworthy; a pure much prudence, and was so good a maim- radiant spirit who had sat by her household ger, that from the time of his marriage, hearth in loneliness and sadness ; with a Charles Criissby had been accumulating slowly, surely breaking heart—a heart riches. But she needed much affection aud yearning and dying for love; unapprecia- much care ; she was delicate, and so ted, lightly esteemed, seldom addressed in sensitive that a word of reproach from the language of affection ) and yet return one she esteemed, would cause almost ing smiles for cold looks, never complain serious illness. The language of her ing; oh! had such an one blessed his full blue eyes, as they were some- dwelling and he had not dreamed bow times fixed upon the noble face of her hus- priceless a treasure he possessed ! Bitter band, was, "Love me ; oh ! how I yearn was his self accusation, hot and copious his for your full unrestrained love ;" then tears; suddenly he paused before her par they would fall to the fluor while the chil-, trait, the young wife in the robes of the ling consciousness that he was not towards' bridal seemed so joyous, yet subdued; just her in manners as he had once been—and I as perfectly as she had appeared on the day oh ! she feared not in heart—would send Ihe could first call her his own. Now, m an icy thrill through every fibre of her ly one thought echoed and re-echoed frame. Of htte, Charles Crosby had be- through his brain—"should she die—oh ! come au alien to his home, übtil the 'mid- should she die !" night hour' he had found, as he, thought, For some moments he stood transfixed, choice and congenial spirits, and with them, 1 striving to check the bursting sob that was "the spirit of wo," that is "the spirit of i almost stifling him, when he felt a slight wine." But alas ! his fine manners were pull at his coat, and turning, there stood disappearing ; his home was not an earth- i little Ellen, her eyes all moist, and her ly paradise to him now—he had grown I pretty lips lilac 'parted. " Papa," she half very cold and very 4 ol,tvorldly ; indeed he j whispered, "may'nt I go up stairs and tell knew not the extent of the change in him- 11111.11111111 you do love her dearly 1"' self. Be Wight her to his breast and clasped He worshipped his lovely child ; and calkd her by the sweet names of "fairy," and "pet," and "darling ;" she was in t truth such au one as few, very few parents I are blessed with ; a child of neither ordi- 1 nary beauty or intellect, and but for her mother's judicious care and teaching, her powerful mind might have too swiftly ex panded, and ripened quicker than the growth of this world will allow, unless the exotic! is to be transplanted into heaven. Charles Crosby sank with his check resting upon little Ellen's head ; the dear child once or twice unconsciously sighed, and these sighs were arrows to the wounded spirit of the father. "Darling, you speak strangely," he said, after a long pause, during which conscience had been busy ; father has a good deal of hard work to do, and comes home tired and perhaps a little fretful sometimes ; but then—he doe's—love your mother," he said slowly, and wondering what had become of the glowing delight he had once felt at the mere mention of her name. "Do you, do you really love her then 7" asked the child, sitting upright on his knee, and fixing her full, beautiful eyes upon him, "how strange : I thought by what mainnia said, that you hated her almost." "By what mamma said I" exclaimed her father hastily, while a feeling of anger shot through his heart at the sudden sur mise that his wife had been striving to em ulate the child's affections from him ; "what did mamma say, Ellen ?" ho de unindod sternly. "Don't look so hard at me, father," she replied, pressing his snowy hands over his eyes, "mamma didn't tell me, but she told God." Mare and more astonished, Charles ga zed upon the child without speaking, and after a moment's pause, she continued, "I went into mamma's room, this afternoon, before I know she was sick, but I heard her talking, nu I went on tiptoe. She was kneeling down by the bed and praying to our Father in Heaven ; and she cried and sobbed as I do sometimes when I am naughty, but I knew she was never naugh ty, good, dear mamma,—was she ever naughty, papa ?" she asked artlessly, wait ing fora reply. "She never was—to you or me ;" an swered the father, choking down his emo tion. "Well, then, I heard her pray ; I knew she wouldn't care if I did, because she takes me with her some times ; and she asked the dear God if ho would maim her husband love her; and said that he went away from his home and liked other peo ple better ; and she said her heart wan breaking, too ; and oh 1 she cried so bad," continued the child, giving such a mourn ful emphasis to the last two words, that her father's lips trembled, and the tears came to his oyes. " And then she turned round and saw me; and she Galled mo to her and hugged me tight, and said I was a precious child, and kept asking me if I was sure.l. loved her---very, very sure—till the wild light in, her eyes almost frightened me. / kept, tolling hor sho was my blessed mother, and I loved her hotter thaati anybody inure whole world eoept my father; and then she toldmo must. love you dearly, for 7!"14 waa a ' kid father to me, and perbape she weitbrikt livelong; sad if they did put her into the cold ground, I must' make you / forget it by my goodness sag affection; but' t never 'could forget it, Could Yon 'fa ther, if tliey put my Own sweet mother into' the cold ground ? This was too much : Charles Crosby GETTYSBURG, PA. FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 14, 1 8 51. her with the warmth of his new love close in his 111111 H ; he kissed her again and again, blessiu&his :%laker that " out of the mouths of ,babes mid sucklings lie has ordained praise; " then releasing the delighted child, he said, " Yes, darling, you may, if you wish to." Thu child flew up stairs while her father followed more "Mumma," she screamed, bounding into the room, " you won't cry any more, nor have the headache now, father says he loves you dearly ; Le told me so; he loves you dearly, my lima mamma." The poor woman sprang to her feet ; she could not comprehend the scene ; she was bewildered; her fair cheeks flushed and grew pallid by turns ; she looked first at her husband then at little Ellen, who had expected her mother to laugh outright, and appear as 'gleeful as she was; little in nocent being. " Ellen," said her husband in a faltering tone, "our child is our peace-maker; abe has wade me a better luau; I do love you, Ellen, will you forgive me for my coldness and neglect?' " With a low, thrilling cry of delight, the wife fell within her husband's arms ; he was forgiven; he was happy ; in that moment old barriers were broken down, old associa tions forgotten, and he solemnly resolved, with the help of God, to be no more au alien from home ; to remember the vow he had taken, and become worthy of the confidence reposed in him. Little Ellen daneml around to room, tos sing her yellow curls and clapping her hands as she shoumd, " oh ! I'm so happy, I'm so happy, mother won't cry more."— then under a childish, yet holy impulse she knelt reverently down and lisped the little prayer she had repeated every night since she was but two years old : " God bless my darling mother, Illy darling father too, And may we love each other, As Christ's dear flock should do." Think you there wore uo blissful tears shed in the little chamber, as they listened to the petitions of the artless babe? The parlor was a cheerful place that eve ning; little Ellen sat up later than usual, because she was too happy to sleep; the astral shed a flood of rod light over the neat, well ordered room, the table was fill ed with books, the piano forte open, and pouring forth sweet sounds as of old, un der the touch of the now light-hearted wife; and a note was sent to the old ren dezvous, in which Charley Crosby declined the honor of being made president of the Club. He never met with his old companions again, nor did he, from that time, quaff the soul-destroyer, " sparkling wine." Little Ellen is now large Ellen, but as happy, and bright and beautiful as over. She will soon give her hand to one worthy of her ; and she remembers, as if it were but yesterday, the dark hour, when she found courage to tell her father that "ho did not love her mother." She rejoices with a joy unspeakable, that this childish effort, of hors accomplished such important results in the livdi and happiness of those so dedrly beloved. ' PNACN AND WAll.—Peuce is that beau tiful essence which flows undisturbeilly from the pure and generous heari, arid which so religiously says, "Though,my neighbor offend me. seventy .timer severi.d.- yet do I freely forgive him." Bat war is a barbarous gametf merchandise murder, wbieh isays, "My neighbor him slightly If fended me ; therefore must I inflict upon him the punishment of Cain." "FEARLESS AND FREE." Fraternity of Man. All men are equal in their birth, Heir. of the earth and ekie• ; All men are equal when that earth Fades from their dying eyes. All wait alike on him whose power Upholds the life he gave ; The sage within his star-lit tower, The savage in his cave. God meets the throng who pay their vows in courts their hands have made, And hears the worshipper who howl; Beneath the plaintain shade. ' 'Tis man alone who difference seen, And speaks of high sad low ; And worships those and tramples these, While the same path they go. Oh! let roan hasten to restore To all their rights of love ! In power and wealth exult no more, In wisdom lowly move. Ye great ! renounce your earth born pride— Y e low ! your shame and fear : Love as ye worship, side by side— Your common claims revere. /torrid Martineau. Au Apology for Mirth. There is a class of people in the world who deem an apology necessary for the indulgence in mirthfulness ! These are a set of beings into whose souls no single ray of sunshine ever entered, and who w ill live and die and rut in darkness—despite the beauty and joy and happiness with which Nature so profusely surrounds them. It has always seemed to us, that the good humor of life is a social kaleidescope, whims hues and phases are as beatnilul, as brilliant, as varied, and as infinite a: are the numberless tints of the rainbow. Its proper and just "appreciation renders its possessor alive to all the most liberal influences of his day and generation—and enables him to look upon hull/all nattir4l, in all its bearings, front the very pinnarle of love, charity and beneficence. For the errors and fully of character, your true humorist entertains a laughing, but philosophical and kindly indidgenve. lle is pre-disposed to tolerate the hobles of mankind; for he is thus inclined to love his species better—and his good luuuur well prompt him to dissect and make bare, with judgment and precision, the moral differences between m an and arts. Caricature ;imply portrays man's faults and eccentricities, lur the sake of rid wide ; while hottest humor presents to the gaze only the man. Guild Milner in its genu ineness, is a heaveit horn quality. It is the very essence of the mind, tor it origi nates in the brave and the heart. it syni pa.tioses with our liVia nature. it enriches where it is lelt, it hooks te.iderly and qui all the imperfections ol Itfe, and ever earnest in Its alierliutis. It t Nice blessed. It bl-sseth Ilirn hint gives and hum Om( tarn; A lid Jolh necoine the Ihrenell lAA ~, arch Even butter Ilion his crown!" True—it often turns nor weakness and errors into temporary• WeirllllCill ; hui never wvlllingly staid, or leaved a Near. Dickens declares that it is something even to look upon &tom mein au that it be free and wild, and in the face of nature, though it may be the enjoyment of au idiot. It is something to know that hea ven has left the capacity of gladness in such a creature's breast—it is something to be assured that however lightly men may crush that faculty in their fellows, the great Creator of Mankind imparts it eves to his despised and slighted work. Who would not rather see a poor idiot happy ill the sunlight, titan a wise man pining in a darkened jail"? Ye men of gloom and autuethy, who paint the lace of infinite Benevolence, with au eternal Crown, read in the everlasting book. wide open to your view, the lesson it would teach. Its pictures are not in the black and sombre huei, but bright and glowing tints—its inusic, save when you drown it, is not in sighs and groans, but cheerful sounds. Listen to the million voices in the summer air, and hind one dis mal as your own. Remember, if ye ean, the sense of hope and pleasure which ev ery glad return of day awakens in the breast of all your kind, who have not chan ged their nature—and learn some wisdom even trout the witless, when their hearts are tilled up, they know not why, by all the mirth and happiness it brings. GREAT MEN.—Atuong the early risers we encountered near the market-place, on the avenue, this morning, were one Daniel Webster and one Winfield Scott. The most favorable time for a pleasant how•do you-do with an old gentleman by the MID of ,Henry Clay, during his occasional visits to this city, is at sunrise in the morning. in the same vicinity. The impress of greatness is thought to be congenital with some men; but energy, resolution, perse verance. and industry may -possibly have something to do with a man's destiny.— Wash. 7d. A QUAKER Larrtut.—An English paper gives the following as a letter from a Qua ker in the country to a friend in the city : Friend John. I desire thee to be so kind as to go to one of those sinful men in the flesh called an attorney, and let him take out an instrument with a seal fixed therm upon. by the means whereof we may seize the outward tabernacle of George Green, and bring .him before the lamb•skin men, (tlie Judges) at Westminster, and teach him to do as he would be done by. And so I rest thy. friend in the light. R. G. Pansua poet gives the following in structions on the manner iu which wen should treat. wo,tnan: ,"When thou ,art married, seek to please thy Wife; but listen not to all she says.— Feont Men's right skid 'a rib was taken to 'form the vvoirtstr, and never was there seen crib quite striight: It breaks * butbettils not: Mince Oath it Plain that Brooked is we mania tegoper,forgive her faults, and Ideate her not; nor let ,her anger thee, nor cor rection uie, as it is vain to straighten that which is crooked." Dying Words of Noted Persons. "A death bed's a detector to the heart; Here tried diaiimulation drops her mask. Through life's grimace.tbat mistress of thssoens. Hero real and apparent are the same." 'Head of the army.'—Napoloon. •I must sleep now.'—Byron. 'lt matters little how the head Sir Walter Raleigh. Kiss me. Hardy.'—Lord Nelson. 'Don't give up the ship.'—Lawrence. •I'm shot if I don't believe I'm dying.'— Chancellor Tnurlow. , Is this your fidelty r—Nern. • " •Clasp my hand, my dear friend, I die.' —Alfieri . 'Give Dayroles a chair.'—Lord Ches terfield. •God preserve the Empernr.'—}layden. , The artery ceases to beat.'—Halter.. • Let the light enter.'—Goethe. • •AIl my possessions for a moment of time.'—Queen Elizabeth. What ! is there no bribing death.'*Car tlinal Beaufort. '1 have loved God, my father and liber ty:—Madame de Steel. *Be serious.'—Grntius. 'lnto thy hands, 0 Lord.'-'l"estio. 'lt is sinall,..very small indeed:— (clap ping her neck.)—Anne Boleyn. '1 pray, you see me safe op, and for my, earning down, let me shift for myself,' (as cending the scaffold.) --Sir 'finnan Moore. •Don't hit that awkward squad lire over my grave.'—liohert Burns. reale,' if I were robe myself again.'--Sir IVaher Scott. .Iresign my soul to God, and my dangh• ter II) my country.'—Jefferson. .11 is well.'—Washington. 'lndependence forever.'—Adams. 1i is the last of earth.'—J. Q. Adams. .1 wish you to understand the true prin ciples of the Government. 1 wish them to he carried out. 1 ask ato more.'—liarri- •I have endeavored to do my duty.'— I•avlor. •'There is not a drop of - blond on my mls.'—Frederick V., of Denmark. `Yon spoke of the refreshment, my Emi lie, lake my last notes. sit down on my pi ano here. stag them with the hymn of your sainted mother ; let me hear once more those .totes which have so long been my soliwement and delight.'—Mozart. •A dying man can do nothing easy.'-- Fran , Let not poor Nay starve.'—Charles "Let me (lie to the sounds of delicious music.'—Miribeau. [American Union. A Negro Sermon. The discourse,- from which the annexed passage is. taken, wasactually preaelted in Ole town of Zausestlle, Ohio, some years The name of the reverend divine, who was a colored gentleman. 14.1141 We be lieve a sincere and bumble Christian. we have forgotten, but the Judge (harper to whom he refers, we remember well. lie was, we believe, at that time, President Judge fli the 15114 Judicial Circuit i)l' the Court of 0 ))))) mon Pleas has since repre sented the District in Congress, and is, if we are not mistaken, the present Represen tative. 'l'lle Judge was present at the de livery of the sermon, and was brought in by the preacher, by way of illustrating a eerrain position, then mud there taken by him, But to the passage : • My dear frees and bedran," said the preacher," de soul oh de brauk man is as dear in de Lord, as de soul ob de white man. "Now you all see Judge Harper.ll setting da hle inin' on; his fp headed cane—you all know de Judge ouggas, and a berry line man he is, too. Well, now. Ise gwine to make a little eomparishment. Supposie de Judge some fine 1111011111' put his basket on his arm an goes to market to buy a piece ob meat. Ile soon finds a nice fat piece ob 'notion an' trots off wit! it. Do you s'pose de Judge would stop to 'quire wedder Oat annum was oh a white sheep, or oh a Brack sheep ? No, nulfiirt-Aab de kind—if do mutton was nice an' fat, it would Wall de seine to de Judge—he would not stop to az wedder do sheep had white wool or brack wool. Well, jes so it is, my Irene, wid oar Hebenly Manner. He does not stop to az welder a soul 'longs to a white man or a !week man—wedder his head is kivered wid straight hair, or kivered wid wool—de only question He will ex, will be, 'ls die a gaud rout r an' if so. de Massa will say— Enter into de joy oh de I•or~, an' set down on de same bench wid white man—yo'se all on a perfect ••quality !" [Decatur Gazelle. Give me a Friend. Give Mu a friend to love mu— A friend that I can ItWe— And let the storm around me blow, The sky he dark above— The breathing of that gentle heart, The light of that bright eye. shall be to me a would of Wealth. The rainbow of my eky. SINK DIE.—In a neighoring county, the Democrant hail for over twenty years been in lite habit of holding their county nom inating convention at the house of a etauuclt old Democrat, Mr. Ile happened on a recent occasion, for the first time, to be in when they had-fita ished their business and heard a little dele. ! gate front R— move that ..this conven tion do now adjourn sine die." *Sine die,'. said Mr. —to a person standing near, • where it; that W'y—thees way up in the northern part of the tsonnty, said his neighbor. Hold on, if you pleave, Mr. Citeermant' said U—, with great earnestness and einphasis ;''hold on,. sir. I'd' like to be heard on that question. I have kept it public hotate'rip , w for omen twenty years: eveal ways been a -Dent= (tend,' itidriteVer split my tioket in'tuy life. This is the must central locution in' the country, and it's where we've aliere hold oar einciauses. I've never had or asked an °Thee, amid have worked night and day for the party, and now I think, adjourning this convention way up to sine die, is mean —it's centeunptible.—S)iiril of she Sirna. Of all the refiners of the course nature of man, true female society is the most effect= ive. There is a respect for the softer sex implanted in us.by nature that makes de desire to appear well in the presence of delicate and intelligent females,- and has a tendency to elevate our feelings, and, make' us assumes gentleness and propriety of de= portment totally at variance with all coarse ness and vulgarity, Such is the influence of the,intercourse of which we apeak, in forming character, that we do npt recollect ever having seen a young man devo ted the society of ladies of his own age, that did not turn QM Well and pros'per while on the other hand, we have observed many who, by confining theater:lies. to as sociations with the mei:Mier! of their sax. acquired a rotighnees end uneoetfinesit 'of manner that entirely unfitted . theii for the intercourse of life. We are 'perfectly a- ware that a ftiolish timidity 'is 'at' the bot tom or this; we esteem it a Treat defeat of character. If the ladies were only a= ware of the Power they rightfully possese in forming the habits and manners of men, they would take pains to allay the' Sehiii tiveness which produces want of ease in their presenee, and by h ecoming affability add kindness. cherish confidence and self possesion. The members of the two 'Sex es were invited by their Maker to be com panions for each other, and the more elegy and free their internimrse•can be--Auere gari being had to strict more delicate and refitted will be the send- MUMS of all concerned. A Talk with Bachelors. What are you tit for in this world 1— What good are you doing your country 1 What are you (tab; for posterity IV hat interest have you In the "generation yet unborn" you read of ? 'Where Will you be when old men, it your vile habits ever permit you to arrive at a good old age 1 Won't you be like lonely, seared nd-icatti ed trees standing in a big 'cleating without a companion, - and your life unprotected from the frosts by young Raplins ai your feet 1 Or won't you be like pumpkins in' a cortt-fieltk more prominent because of your prodigious ugliness and leetiliness, that) the stalks at your aide Wetted with gulden grain? Hold yuur heads up and' talk like men, 'whether you can act so or not. Now don't you feel ashamed of yourselves 1 LoOk at the gills about you, all smiles and sugar—hearts overflowing with love, ready to be spilled on the first gond fellow that can ouch their 'lntim.. tines-feelings rich as cream, which by a kindred spirit can soon be worked. into butter, and spread all over you life, till you Tare happy as the birds of spring. -Look at them, and feel the disgusting; pitsititin which you occupy in the cabbage - garden of humanity. W hat are yon holding trick fort Now j ost reform-Imi on your best I looks and your beat coot—visit the girls, Ice-cream them, talk to them prettily, drive I them, walk them. please them—then pro pose, get aceepted, marry, and the country will rely on you as a faithful and posed citizen. Foolish lipping, Namur gipping. tiweeter Mon thy honeyeal flowers; Cinch employment ! What enjoyment It imparts to twilight hours ! A WAlt A NECHOTIt —During the re nowned " Dorr war," in Rhode Island, a bill wan brought in to "organize the army." This aroused from steep an old man in one corner who represented u town iu the west of the state. ", Mr. Speaker," said ho, "I tell you 1 um decidedly opposed to ' orgaui , zing' the army as you null it. Our fore &chomp through the Revolution with no thin' but a drum and fife, and oum off fuss best too ! Igo agin organs. They'll bo dreadful unhandy things in battle, now I tell you !" This was irresistible, and " Aunt Rhntly's army," we .are informed remains unorganised' to this day. A Nmw Lunrr Ditiooveaso.—lt is said that Mr. fetes, of Dundaa, Canada, has discovered a mode of producing a beau tiful light from a peculiar decomposition of common air. is is clear, smokeless and brilliant; perfectly safe, and can be produced at so very trifling a cost that, if it turns out as described, it must supersede the use of all descriptions of artificial light now in 100. It is the•intention of the in ventm shortly to exhibit the results of this invention to the public, and to apply fora patent. KrAt u late trial somewhere in Ver mont, the defendant, who was not familiar with the multitude of words which the law employs to make a very trilling charge ; after listening awhile to the reading of the indictment, jumped up and said : "Them 'era allegations is false, and that 'ore ulli gater knows it? " The celebrated Ma'herbs dtned one day with the Archbiehop of Rouen, and fell asleep soon after the meal, The prelate. a sorry preacher, was about to deliver a sermon, and awakeited'Malherbe, inviting him to be an auditor. " 4h; thank you." said Malherbe ; pray excuse we; 1 shill sleep very well without that.' Stacy G. Potts The ladies of (Greenland dross rather queer. Their petiipoati consist 9t hides, while the only necklace. they wear: are made up of links of sausages. We have often heard of ladies looking 4 , goixi enough , to aut.?' to Greealead they are Qua might have , heard si pin fall. is A proverbial expression of attlentoo; but, help been eclipsed hy,the French Pltritve*—s y ou al i g ht have heard the unfolding of a, lady's evonbrio,pockel hondlterchisf. , , The . Nlahoinetaits suppose thitshoeting stars are the firebrands with which the good angels (hive away the bad when they approach too near the walls of Hessen. To cure Deafnesa—tell a man you're cows to pay him unoney.., Female Soeletf: TWO DOI LARS PER ANNIDA NUMBER 36. Passia* thronac.aalliDeberip Estrael pveei s hoirohd kept by ai fitermasolgair 00. ved les the Andie Expedinvoi of 1861)-51; • SUNDAY, Jane 80,18811.—Modred toil* iceberg ; weather calm ; •ely tiondleits mut ~.beautifillly blue;" surrounded by it vest , number of atupemlons bergs. glittering anti glistening beneath the refulgent rapt of a mid.day sun. Agreut portion of the crew had gone on ' shore to gather the eggs of the will sea. , birds that frequent the lonely tee.bostitl precipices of Batlin'i Bay, whikrthale on board hadvetired to rest, wearied With 'the harrassing toils of the preceding day: , me; walking the deck alone,. all Nie.'l lure seemed huehed in universal repose. While thus coni e mpiating the 'Milieu of the' monotonous' ;minis around me; 1 ob. , served in the otratkit large ieeherg, , ettro pletely perforated, =exhibiting' in thir die , "" once an arch. Or tinnel, apperendy so Worm in its onnfirmation that I was indo I cedto Gall 'two of the seamen to look it it, at the ism . ° time telling them that -had never read or heard of any of our , aretiet . voyagers prising through one tif those arches no frequently. seen through large , bergs, and that.thera would be weovelty in doing wand if.ther oboes waceoinpatir me I would get permiesion to take thedin. , ' , gy small boat) and endeavor to ectotlb. l pin& theenprecedented lest; therreafillr agreed, and sway we nvemt. - •i , On nearing the arch, bid asitertabilne -thettlieve-wfaiHmffildenor ofiestefletihe boat ur-pess through, we rowed slowly slid silently under, when theresturst open oar view one of die most magnificent , schicli Ivens of nature's handiwork e'er exhibit. , ed to mortal eyes; the aublimitywrid ; grandeur of which no language tan des. tribe, no imagination conceive. • - 1_ _Ealmy untueruie arch of eighty feet I span, fifty feet high, and upwards of oft* hundred feet in breadthi•as entreat-in hp' rronfoftnationws-ifir--fraci-been ed by the most scientifia tirtigt. foimeePor gelid ice of a beautiful emeimid green,' ltir whole expanse of mane the mat potiehed wiabastm Ind yeidmity . form some alight conception of the archl4 tennit beauty of tbis ley tertiplet theltnitio dertul workmanship of tithe antklistillat .. menu'. • r. When wetted got shoat half way thre,.W the mighty structurtclar lookl0(20 , 0q. I.obseriedlhatthe berg wai renttlieSlßlP breadth of the arch, and in $ perpendietKw tar direction, to its summit, shoWilighwrit verticle incidents or irrettilifr"• Intlaelah7 'darkly. deeply. beautifully blue:. here aid: there illuminated by an afatia sitinierhfcli darted its golden rays between, presenting. to the eye a picture of etherial - graattleuri which no poet could describe, no.liehifar portsay. •L• was so,prarfrefi with the' aiglit,that for a mainain f fancied the Nemec vault of heaven' had opened, and 'untie I actually gazed nn the celestial splendor °fel world beyond this. :( Hat, nlasi.in an- instant theseeneehanip., ed, and I awoke, IS ft it were, front adelight. fel dream to expatiatee all the hovers of , a terrible reality. I obeerved the 'fracture; rapidly close. then again slowly open, This stupendous mass of tee, millitirisW• tons in weight. was afloat, nonsequenilyf in motion, and apparently about to t Imes. its equilibrium, capsize or bunti iatoiratii lamina. Our position Was truly awfnl•li my feelings at the moment spar betton.l ceived ; cannot be described. I, 'Coke& down wards'nud amend sue; ibe eight weal equally appalling ; the very two seemed agitated. I at last shut my eyes from a scene so terrible; the men 41 the oars, as if 'by inatinet. .gave way: and'oiirliftle bark swiftly glided front beneath Ahd gamic mass. We then rowed round thebett Itaaptile at a respectful distance Irate it, in °Wet* , judge of its magnitude.' katippoftedirtoi be skint a' mile in eirransfersbeiritudrilar highest pinnacle 260 feet. • - Thus ended an excursion: the bye reeohi: lection of which at this moment sividmitei in me a shudder; neverthelem,,i urtudd' not have lost the opportunity.ofbeholding a scene so awfully sublime, so 3 tragically . grand, fur any money, but Viviruiditot so: gain run such a risk for the. worlds , —' We passed through the berg about-twin. P. M, and at ten o'clock the same eight. it burst; agitating the sea for mileattroutvd... I may also observe that the two men who were with me in the boat did , not ob. serve that the berg was rent mail told - them, after we were out of danger; we. having agreed, previously, to castle, the arch, not to speak a word to each , other, lest eiihn heed' should disturb the ittalw N. B.—Arctic voysgent differ mt4:ta what portion oleo iceberg is under wow. Some say one•filth; •some onrterweith , t some more. I refer the reader to Abe works of Roos and Parry as thiEbeitt au thorities. FRAORANCIN OF ONlOttfo-..94i0n11d0 tero certainly add to the sweetneint,of lady's breath though in fact they really do addict., the fragrance of dowers. Let our lady readers plant a large onioci near 1, foie buith so as to touch its Fonts, antic our.tratot for . it. it will wonderfully increase the odor of . the flowers. The water distilled from those roses would be far superior to soy other. This is strange. but true. The first newspaper tolerated in Virgin.. ia, was in 1780 ;, the subscription pike was $5O per annum for one copy; Weer. 'fisetrituds of moderate length were inserted for ten dollars the first week. and seven dollars for mush .week succeeding. A dandy, remarking ono summer day that the weather was so excessively kW that when he put his head in i t bestir of wow', it fairtrboiled, reoeiveitroo . rapid; utlien. , airi Fon have eat had spuras very little expanse." A nide boy , be4itt Ounthfor tbiliese; Om- ed with the rerlarthenor no theorems, end cried out Mother, mother, 'bore', the monkey t" ' • . How lees id idisto reasais is Poodles before bet Warred ? 68W se awisble spieler to 6 lovers bsebsed. he got e wife. is• welted theirwbsod eslatly.