N D A KIMIE r s J-L L 4 ,i , . A. '1 . '1):, BUEHLER 01; TIME XXV. t. (r • t it r • • Leah not tin •7.ain not n earth; ita joys arq few ••i t Abd quit rly plow • • „E'e.a.as Alte,-rpipboves earicil,htte. Prides (rein the brute of day I...ean not on earth.; its atarry,sitiee , • • wile Noon •be 'wrapped in 'ittentn i• ' • Itirfritiodebipei hope. and vanities ' • , Lie buried in the tomb. . . . 11.0 on ea!th;,.its,surk so bright 'Must' e'en he clouded o'er. 2 .'And Ivey' Moen on igloo of tight Shod' glad thtearth no mere. %.,1 ,011 ), not ono 4 oht tiMe's fleeting leinge tthiute no needing blown ; De.nli'enrefAin fire a riethoray flings , Hie sbid4w and kis Mown , I . been mit or eorth,.but.look above. T. you eeleetial borne, , Where sine ohs sing sweet songs ot Ibsti And Jure bids you come. hulea for tie Yenr., fo!low1ne rules are Intended, mnin ly, fee' the guidance M young men and. %'vt;Min : Cleeniarritol=it you esn ; hut hink be- Cite ' , nu' leap.' Love inntehee are rc itiaittie?—ttice things to read about—but they;. lisle brimstone, tit; them, now, and then Las says Ike ,Marytll, Feq. Go' to ciiiircit' regularly if possible, and under any . cliO.uixistatices at least once a -Circulate no scaodall ,; • Never ,notice the clothing of persons at. tending, divine worship, nor stand in lioni'of die hunse'of God after the tier- Never ask anothr man .what, his buin., netts is 7 —where he, ,o ; going towhere be carneefrotri--41ten he left:--whati he in. tends to go baeltior the number rif hie dol. lats.,: NMI may. •inquire a 6 to the state of his Iteldthe and U►at , of his •, parents, t..rs end brolters—but venture no fur- ther, • ' ~, ,D efend tho iimocent4 help the, poor,. and cultivate kepirit,ig,frienttellip among yoor arqoaintattres. • Never speak 'diiparagingly of women. and endeavor to conquer all' yodt'preju. throe. • Didieve elf persona to be sincere tallies rtillgooi they race's. . Ile. eminomical; butnot parisimonicMi nor niggardly. „Mike good, use of your dull,irs, boy not idols .'" Lt~n tvithin kour , v tne!ms and never harrow money in antMi• petion of your salary. . • .PUNISItMENTI9EO THE Ecarriamn.—,- 111.g.iyp,t,.itiolden times, murder was a ekiiitaLpJFenpe. So alio wits a neglect to aid a fiersup , attacked on the highway. when assistance could have been render ed. A, parricide wits treated with dread. fill severity, the criminal being put to death tk.s.ve is. ~variltlY„o.l lorme Perjury : was capital ; and false accusers Were con demned in übdergo the same penalty of the innocent accused, had the latter'been con. vi'-te.l. A breach of the law of Amasis, tvltich obliged every Egyptian once in the year to show the magistrate of his district, Ills manner Mille was ptinialied capitally • und, if the party could not [neve .himsell to he,io : an lionest,etnployment, the cons sequences were the Barna. Rape was punished by excision ; treachery by cut• ting oiit the tongue. Adultery was Punish ed with 'a thOusand lashes as the man's prinalty, and-in the- woman's with.the loss of her nose. • 'This was by no means a mild sentence 4 yet we see told that stint term were - not imfrequent among the Egyptians.'!" . - • ..UDR! TUT . 1 DERR DIVERT THEIR Wo ietr.—, Tbe O. rend. ',Signor often diverts his ladies With a variety of repreations.—r Iti, the month, Of May : ,; ,they . have their great tulip feast, which requtresvaitt prep 7 'stations. There are in the gardens of the seraglio large' portions of variegated, tu. lipet ‘ which on thtr &aye ere interspersed with all kinds of singing birds,; shops are erected round them, and furnished by the Sultan'with all sorts of trinkets, toys, and rich stufTs.,:: Some of the moat facetious females °ldle Court are ibe "bop-women, lie huys'friim all, and regales all his la dies,' AknigliCthie bates& is ,tiecorated With tempi, and 'Makes a' pledsing . proi petit even at a 'distance.. " Gruel 'men in dulge their womeriitisinitlar amusements, iinil on these Occliiiithie or - festivity a some calf in'neighboritg harems,so that, per {yaps; the w, u nen pass their time more happily; and agrOably thtin we ';magi;;.; at !diet they JOY , better health and vigor than if theyb'ail:operas, Ranelagh; Iratieli'ali; Willi and rem, continually abridging a short exigence to a vortex of capridiods and -taOuleat.d.iyersionsrt-47elitt i"lect. tWig Wa'Sbinit4 l strifin tree'. inclined, qlis wax triteienifif pinfrayi the - a Il designed. •-• Elaine not the twht,t which flora some dire neklset Bath crooked 'grown, which ehie might he erect ; gi.mtmtAbomo, which fki4kft.l.lo4be seal, 9 0? P ni t ow;ift arb ll 7.sian,lp ?veal ; *Alia not thy i nhi With folly al thy own, Niik I:taint:he slnlasi forth* sin ittone.- ''• • •- , -"•'k , 'barrister torniented•a poor 'German Witness •so much• with questions, that the atin , deelared he was so exhausted, hentust haves (kinkier water before he could say another word. Upon*this , the' Judg 4 , 1 think, sir, you must lisve 'dine with 'the witness now, for you L ..T)1 • IVA PPTPed) • urn dry ." ! if fool knows a secret, he tells it be 'e*uee hit,:s.a fool'::a knave knows one, ltd ':telle it wherever it is his interest to • But women and young men, are 'err opt to tell'whot secrets they keow, •Ifrimn the 'vanity of having been trusted.--, Trust none of thede, whenever you can AAR ATiristh and female beauty do not always Aogether. Pretty , girls ate famous for .libbing ; while ugly ones run with the gob pe4 .Ti 4 poets always harness truth .amtlitiouty:together, but the world jerks iprt, We eee — there is a Rev. Mr. Sunrise at Yellf. ll !” l .fortit &IA recently there was a , Mr..Stsl44ount as ,Washingtun....Wander IV:ahoy aoulda'a.go, up. Day betu'elP f', ~, ~',i ;~ Theilltipterhe Feast.' ,‘ • • Captain Hop; in *if don, ter!s Feast," gives the folloWiug graphic summit of a thrilling edventare be.hlui ,on our, wild Western rivers. While 11l search I of the ibis; his boat floated away and left hint on a barren island. Ile tells his story I ~I lay in a Rlltto of stupor, almost miaow. scions, how, long, I, know Aloe; but many briers, lam certain. I knew this the sun ; it was going'down *hen I awoke, if I may to term the recovery of my stricken seniee. I Was aroused by a strange cir cumstance ; I was surrounded bydark ob jects of hideous shape and huereptiles they were. They had been beforimy eyes fur some time, but I had not seen them :7 - I had ouly a sort of dreamy conscioustiees of ; their presence ;, but, I beard ,them qt length ; ivy ear . was in better tune, and t'Ac strange noises they utiered'reeched'my intellect. It mewl' like the' bldwing of great bellows, with now -and' then • a .inete harder and louder, like the roaring of a bull. I This otertled me, and I looke d up and bent iny, eyes on the objects : they were firms of the crogodilidg, the giant lizards —they %e'er., alligators. Huge ones they were, some of them ; and many were they in number—a hundred at least were crawl ing over the islet, before, behind, and all around me. Their long gaunt jaws and channelled snouts projected fOrevrard' so as .I almost to touch my body ; and theireyes, usually leaden, seemed now to glare.. Im pelled by this new danger, I sprung, to 0 1. feet, when, recognizing the upright form damn, tl - reptiles scuttled oil, and 'piling iug hum ly into the lake, hid their hid eous betties underthe water. The keident in some measure revived. me. I saw that I was not alone: there, was company even in the ertieddileri: I gradually became more mydelf, and begin , to reflect with some degrees of coolness on , the"circumstances that surrounded My eyes wandered over ,the islet,;, every inch of it came under my glancel every, object upon it was scrutinized ; the moulted feathers of Wild' fowl, the pieces of sand,' the .tresh-water muscles (ludas): strewed. upon the beach—all were,examined. Still the barren answer, no alpine of eseape.-,--, The islet was but the • head of sand-bar, formed bithe eddy, perhaps 'gttihered to gether within 'the 'year. It was bare of herbage, with the exception of a few tufts of grass. There was neither tree nor bush upon it : not a stick. A raft, Mooed I There was not wood enough to make a raft that would have bated u frog. The idea of a raft was but briefly entertained ; such a thought tad certainly- crossed toy mind, but a single glance round the islet dispelled it before it had taken shape. I paced my prison from end to end ; from side to side I walked it over. 1 tried the water's depth : on all sides,l sounded it, wading reekletisly in : every where it deepened: rapidly us I avanced. Three lengths of myself from the islet's edge, and I wart up to the neck. The hugh reptiles swam a round, snorting and blowing ; they were bolder in this cleaner.: I could not have waded safely ashore, even bad the water been shallow. To mini it—no—even tho' I swam like a duck, they would have clo sed upon and quartered Ina befcire I could have made a dozen strokes. Horrified by their. demonstration,, I turned bank upon dry ground, and paced Abe, islet with drip ping garments. I continued walking un til night; which gathered around' ine thick and dismal. With bight came new voices, the hideous voices of the nocturnal swamp`; the qua-qua of the night heron, the screech of the swamp owl, the cry, of the bittern, the el-l-uk of the groat waterrtoad, the, tinkling of the bell.frog arid the chirp of the savanna cricket, all fell tiponitty'ear.• Sounds still harsher and more hideous were heard arottud me- r7 the'epleshing of the ligator, and the roaring of his voice ; reminded me that I must not go ' to Medi). To sleep 2 I durst not have' slept fora' ain gle instant. Even• when . .1 lay for a few moments motionless, the; dark, reptiles came crawling around me,, so close that I could have put forth , my hatid'and'tcitich: ed theta. At intervals, I sprang to my feet, shout , od, swept my gun around, and chased them back to the water,,into which they betook themselves with aaullen plunge, but with , little seMblartee of fear. At each fresh de • ; monstratTon on 'my part; 'they shciwed lees alarm, until.l could no longer drive theta,, either with shouts or threatenieg gestores.'. They ottly..retreated a few feet funning on . irregular emote around me. Thus hemmed in I became frightened in tnrn. I loaded my gun, and tired ; killed none: They itro iniparviotis to' ti bullets eiceptin the bye or under the fore arm. It was Apo „dark yo ,situ, at, these parts; and my abets ,gla,need harmlessly tout the pyramidal scales of their bodies. Tlie foild rophrt; however,' arid the'idteie, frightened them, and thitylltid; -161'reteirtt again after a long interval.' ..k.wais attleep When t,Lev rpturnect ; I, had, gotta, to,sleep in spite ei• my by to, keep awake, , tea's: startled by 'the Vint' of itingething bold'; Mid; half stifled tiV the strong musky odor that filledi the air, I , threw out my arms. IMy fingers rested upon. an, objeet slippery and clammy,, it was ,one qf these mousters--on_a of gigantic site. Ho bad crawled close slongsido rops, and was, pre paring to make hi's attack, as I saw that he was bent in form of a bow; and I knew that these creatures assumed that attitude when about to strike their victim. I was just in time to spring aside. and avoid the atroko of his powerful tail, that the neat moment swept the groond where I bad lain. Again I fired, and he, with the rest, once more retreated to the lake. All thoughts of going to sleep , were at an end. Not that I felt wakeful ; on the contrary, wearied with my days exertions —for I had had a long pull under a tropi cal sun—l could hay.aJaid thin upon the earth, in the mud, anywhere, and slept in an instant. Nothing but the dread cer tainty of my peril kept me awoke. Once again before morning, I was compelled to battle with the hideous reptiles, and chased them away with a shot from my gun. Morning came at length, but with no ;lenge in , my perilous ipoattiop, ,The 94 1 Y.44w.0 i# 1 .12.4; 019, ,:....q...,ETT,".:13 ; (1:4;q1,,l rA.,.FiID A Y „... g . E NING, , F E . BRU A tY...,111;:,18.:55,; , . . but revealed ndWay'Of escape from ` it. Jeptbales DiliOtter. Indeed,' the change could not be tailed for - • •BY iiggipi . - the better,. for the fervid rays of an almost . ;There are few ;refugia in Molly writ! . vertical sun poured .down. upon , •Mo Until M recording human transactions. more Muth my skin blistered. . .. I,- w a s already , ~ s Peek-‘1 lag And sublime4.than theileseeipuon given led by the tibia o a thouSand'sivamp.fiiits. elJePtltah meeting his +tighter after the arid ittesqui toes ' that . all' eight - hid preyed 'oveithrow of the children of Ammon. He upon me, 'Mere was' not a . cloud• in the hid - made a vote' that iflili shwa - ear-quer heaveua to sheditOnto3 and the 'sunbeams his enemies, Mr his' remelt honie,"whatso 'emote the surfnee,of, the 4414 bayou w i th ear shauld tome fratibiameet him, ahould a doeble intensity : . • ~' . be offered as a burnt offefing to the L ord. TOwardittirehing I began th'itienieii no; ,H e returne d i ct tr i emp fi, iw i t h t h e ~,,,,.riw onder at. that. , I , had' not eaten since ' er 's wreath encircling la 'fiueited hrose leaving the village settlement. To 'as- hi, h e i r t; il eu m with ,hie meet success. suage thirst, I drank the, water ofthe lab, as. throbbed-with unusual' nimation as he turbid and slimy es it was. , I drank it in ,wail drawing near his biome. But see I, large 'quantities; for it was hot, and only he A tan datnos fi zed with ; horror ; a death moistened my Palate without 'a mackini' tA paitu.'supplants iie f eau" Bush ; for the craving •of my appetite. • , Of water l' tiliat tine's he behold! hi dOighiei" abe there was enough; I- had • , more , to' fear loved daughter. art - only ild,voming Out frommael of food. • What ooliaI:eal? - 1 -- ,to Meet hint with timb e r a ad dancing I The ibis. But how to cook it? There In one brief moment , his, rente r f ee li ngs was tiotbing Wherewith' lii :Mk': : fire-- are wound up to.the.highest key ; slowly not a 'stick.. No matter for that. - 'Cook- his quivering lips part, suid with tremulous ing is a' modern . invention,' a luxury• for accents, in w hi c h a roses agony - 304. patupered palates. I , diveeted rho Mitt of • reeled. lie says : ohlas I my dieghtert its beautifelplurtige, and ate it saw. I thou hast.broueht- me" very low. thou.art spoilea toy specimen, but at tlie timatherti one' of those that tree*. I have made was little thought 'of that:, There Wks' not ', row , and cannot 10 11 ,4 k ,-, , Ni ,. reph!l much of the naturalist left in me I ..11. infer her lot, no reproaches eseepo her nathetnatised the hour I had overpromis. lips, but with true filial devotion warming 1 ad to procure the bird.; I wished my friend her heart, she 'answerer ..my father, .if up to his peek in a sciamp., , The ibis did thou haat made a wow. do onto me accord not weigh above three pundit, biineit atid ing tolthat which has proceeded mitmithy, all. It servedme for a second meal, a mouth." No: bitter words escaped , her breakfast; but at this defamer acnefour: !ilia, no vein regrets rankled in her breast; chef:4'l pieked,the bones. •. , only one request she'' talkies. Cud that fs, W het Emit ? , . Stone 7 ; . N0 7 .-mat yet.-- for "two months to retire to the mountains, In the battles; I had Kith t he alligators du- Ponce with . . .., ring the second night, One of them had re- td prepare herself fur ea acceptable offer ceitied a 'shot , that proved' mortal. The ing. - - • ."41- . hideous carcass of the reptile lay dead up- Methinks; with the eye of imagination on the beach., . , I need net starve; I could we tin behold ,that lovely group, on MA eat that.. Such wore my reflections. I mountain stimmint. witlikheirglossy tre,mast must Ininger, thmi,gh, before I could bring waving , . „,. in the wild wiod, Chair burning myself to'taturti ' the musky Morsel. - .two temples. Fooled by • heavelat. iiinipiemos days' more fasting conquered my .sqestre• gales, Behold Jeptliales tflitghter:,with Winces, , I;dtew out my knife, cut asteak her eyes raised •to .the vaulted sky, her frata, the alligator's tail, and ate. it—nut hands folded on her-tranquil breast. calm. the ono Iliad first killed, but a second, Iv,turn to - her weeping,companion.s. scud the other WaS noVi`pUtricl, rapidlY - deeom- say,. , Weep not for inyor I 'ongoing Loa, petiug under•the hot iiin—its odor filled place where ,110 glitteitng tear:drops ever the mkt. ~ • .. .. • . ' ' ''; courie ddwn the cheek - of others' wites. .The stench, had ; grown ,dntrderable.— There was, not a breath, of air stirring; otterwise I' Might have "'shunned . it by keeping to windward. The w ht 6 pliereof the islet; as well as a large circle round it, was iniprcenated with the fear ful effluvium: I 'could bear it no longer. With the aid of lay gun, I pushed the half decomposed carcass into tit, Jake.-- Perhaps the current might carry it away. It did ; I had the satisfaction to see it float off. This circumstance led me into a train of reflectilos. Why did the body of the alligator float ? It was swollen, in flated with gess.. Hu 1, • • An idea shot sullenly through ..my mind—one of those Jo ilibat,..ideas;.,,the children of necessity.; I thought, of the floating alligator, of iisintestinei—what I inflated them l Yes, yes! buoys and bladders, floatsiand life preservers!. that 'was the thought. I would.open,the alliga. tors, make a buoy of thvir,iniestines, and that would bear me from the islet! I did not lose a moment's time; I was, full. of energy ; hope had given me new ?Argun was loaded-:-a huge croco dile. that swam near the shore received the shot in his eye. 1' dragged' him 'on' the beech; With my 'knife I laid open his ea. bails. Few they were, but enough for my purpose. A plume quill-from the wing of the ibis,servcd,rne for a blow,-pipo. I 'saw the 'skit expand,, until I wile surrounded - by `'objects great sauttagee. l These were tied . together- mid fastened , to my, body, and. then :with ::a plunge, entered , the waters of . the lake and floated, qua, a' I had tied on tr,iy fife-preservers in a' way that T seem , the - water bran upright " positiOh; holding my gun' with both:hands. , This I iatond mkt° have used as a club in case Ishould be attaelked by the alligatera 1. ; but . had chosen ihe'hot hour of noon when. 'these creatures lie in a half torpid state, ntia my joy I was not molested. Oki(• an hour's drifting with the current brought me to the mid of the lake, and Tfound my self at the fiebouehure of the bayou.-- Here, to my great delight; 'I sae my 'boat in the swamp, where it had 'been caught anditeld fast by the sedge: A !few min= mea.mciTe, and. I had, swung myself over the gunwale . 1111 d wee. sculling rritb, fager strokes town the smooth waters 'Ol the bayed. ' ' ' ' ' . ASeutptorPo Idea of a Coquette. Win. it. tarhee, of Luray emuttyota..; who moddekled a statue Of'Plsehe," With out any.instruetion, is now at. Florence, and promises.to,,bcompe,no, mean sculptor. Ile has, nearly completed piece called. "tho Coquette, " which' he hail sold 'id 'advartee' fOr $6000:' It will finished - lit APril,'aitd Wore 'its befog' sent' to the Paris exhibition - 0%111141 have an upper- tunity to seeit lin, the ,United Stlogs.— The, design of 54.13306e5' i‘aiquette,7 ithiciLis' both now and Unique, is - to Plus trite' the art And heartlessness of that' sort or fatuinine: Bhe is. five feet and one inch high, and alight, and - graeefully roup'ded. The weight of the body rests on the left leg, the right being bent, and the foot thrown outward. The left 'arm is carved upwards'from the shoulder to the wrist; the hand holding a heart, near. to which the right hand presoots. a point of an ar row, as if to lareerate it. The, head is`affec caly turned towards the left` hand, the eyes resting upon the bears, while the face is heamitig with smiles, yet bearing an ex pression of mischief. The position of the arms of course, leaves the person carelessly exposed, the design in this being to illus trate the vtanten use of female charms 'for, a heartless purpose. The figure is suppor ted by an ornamented quiver, hung upon a hawthorn stump, while .about =the feet some_scattered tho r ns anticipate the re tributive future: ' .The violet was the national flower of Athens ; which city, personified by sculp tors and' painters, was represented as a majestic female, wearing a wreath of violets . The Romans crowned their domestic Oda, 4tres, with violets, almi Uffd; cbe Apr- Ora 0,1)0440,4.4 !milk , , ssFE,ARLESB ANp-FREE." To a• place where :OWL wild,'jtuittulttious Leavings OE the palpitating !mot are trilled; l where parting sccuew are unknovvir; there, j 10. that,loppy„ that "•,filittiful abode let me j go ; fur toy father's curt - mutt iM fulfilled. know that in, tour tay awl 'bar Inu-; inents in alter-life, the recohectionuf these sJoeties a ill cause a tyinpatlietic pang to thrill every fibre of your hearts, at what j you term my untimely fate ; hut iu reality it is my early release?' For two short months that beautiful train of;,whiterobed •irguis inhabited their mountain - home.— The crescent and futhoreetil a cast,her silvery light on the .ineentain's brow,re yealing, by the pale Ind thelliiir softness of ‘ iter....heirni„ hard Of fernale Wends, In sweet repose reposeruaanaturaletruiilt: The sighing wind would come in gusts, as if dolefully singing the silent requiem to all her eart h ly hopes and aintei petunia. 011. - the melancholy pleas Urn; the painful sympathy they . experienced while scaling the shelving rucks. or walk ing, on the sloping declivity of that Minim of lamentation ! The term that be: grief- I stricken father had given her has expired, and the last dirge-like strain bursts find' throbbing hearts, and is borne along on the; silent breeze ; wilder yet it.ringe,:through ; those echoing cavern.. and rehires laden ; with the echoing sighs of nature; as' they ; defeend the sloping bank. with trernhfing and faltering steps:they advaneel all save one hesitate to approach the altar. That one, frith modest mein and b feariess step, it; Jepthah's, daughter. She beholds her father awaiting her approach. '•E'ather3 am' ready now, but first' let ma bid adieu to my mother,' * With .a.vountentinee glowing with heavenly love she was clasp ed in the maternal arms, which had.so oft enfolded her in lile'wearly morn, and ut ters one vrord,--farewell ! Now she turns to reCeive the last parting kiss kora her father's lips,, ,Ho.,eaurniuns. her ear. "My daughter ! oh, my daughter I' l She new ascends the alter. erected by her father"s trilubling hands. One glance she casts'over ilia assembled' multitude. ' murmur of admiration for: such 'filial love and heroic "fortitude. displayed: by one so Young and lovely, runs through the crowd. Hark" her lips move ; she speaks, and a . bitaienly"lestre beams tram . her bright eyes; a *sillily smile plays,overter lovely features.. tFsiewell. dear father, and mother. who first taught me the power . of love divine ;'farewell, weeping friends, one and all . ; a long farewell, until we all meet in 011R:eternal home?' _..Toe perfume of that offering aseends,and naught pow remains but the ashes of Mat once animated form. Slowly the assemblid Multitude tint 'from that sacred spot ; silently they separate, and wend their way, Mame, for. the Impale of dine has never reeordeil similar transaction. With what heroic, fortituile ditrehe,ttieet her fate r —iiritli . what tru'finfehing inteirity did she' pass through the fiery ordeal--with what firemen did she offer herself as a sacrifire to her, Ma ker She was nearer dieinity.personified than any other human beingthat ever lind existence. A firm reliance on the prom ises of her Maker always supported her ; and we can truly say, in the language of the poet,— "'Tie this, my friend, that create my morning bright; Tis this that gilds the horrors of the night." (Ladies" CAruiwn .4butisaL S. itrourra Eworrow.-- 7 The following, written in an elegant business hand, was inscribed on the back of a five-dollar bill lately received in New York from North Carolina "Here is a $5 bill which I intend to toss nut of my window, in Norfolk, as coon as I have written this. lam now no lover of money. I hate it most cordially, for it has been the ruin of all my family. I will beg from door to door eternally rather than own another cent one hour. It made my grandfathers suicide, mylather a murderer, my mother the victim of a sorrow .that sunk liar early to the grave, my brother a gam bler. .mt motif a .cogvio in the-Siate . piism pw foot yam"' Thi Hllad Preacher, Woodefful inetsnee of zetil4n the ste eumulatien.of know ledge.,and of the • a suc• ceardel cultivation of memory, is that of the blind clergyman, so7pleasantlytlescrib; eel in, the following passage, which oop• ied from at late•Engli'h ter teß . t , z • • my rambles, last summer.: , the herders, of c Waloso fonntl,lnyvblf one, morning alone On the' &alike orate beauti. ful river Wye, Withont a sereanfor riguide. I hadto:ford the river' it a plate Where. according. to the instructions ,tiven roe' at the ,tiv arest,hernlet, if I diverged ever 'to little from the Marks ,which, the rippling of the current Made as it passed over a ledge , of 'rocks. I' should' Mink 'twice the depth of myself and herse. :'While I stood iheeittiing on the,reargin, _viewing attentive ly the coupe o f the ford, a person, mimed the nn the cattier., and the , twit instant I, envy' him, plung,d'irtin'the river; presuming city hie. acquaintance" with the passage,. I •immediately and.closely followed his steps. Ae soon es e,, hag , &anted the opposite , accosted him with thanks for the benefit of ; hut What was my , setotliitbment,Wheri. bursting: i itite a hearty ' laugh; -he obserded, thut •my confidence would