4 11 -I I! COME AXD TAKE -ME. Dcvivjer. vol. i: CLEARFIELD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 185-5. m. 47. Jhi- ll - v . . A - a. . . I 11 - ?TIJE SLAVE'S DKEAX, BT THOFESSORH. V, I.OXGFF.LTW. ' , Beside the ungathercd rice ho lay, Ilia sickle in his hand; i JIU breast was baro. his matted hair Was buried in the sand r -Again, in the mist ami shadow of sleep He saw. his i native land,. While through the landscape of hts dream, ; Tho lordly Niger flowed; Beneath the palm trees on the plain, 'i-- Once more a king be strode; And heard the tinkling caravans l)cscend the mountain road. lie saw once more his dark eyed queen Among her children stand; They chvped his neck, they ki??crl his chock?, They held him by the hand ::; ' " ' " A tear burst from the sleeper's lids. And fell npon the sand. And then at furious speed he rode . Along the .Niger's bank; ; . JI is bridle-reins were golden chain, And with a martial clank. At each leap, hceould feel hisscaLbard ofsteel Smiting his stallion's flank. . r. Before him, like a blood-red flag, ' - ' The bright flamingoes flew. Prom morn till night he followed their flight. O'er the plains where the tamarind grew, Till he saw the roof of tte Caffre huts, , And tho ocean rose to view. At night he heard the lion roar, . ' And the hyena scream; . ' 1 And the river horse, as he crushed the reeds, Beside 1uc hidden stream. ' And it passed, like a glorious roll of drums,' Through the trinnphs of his d ream. The forest with their myriad tongues, Shouted of liberty; . And the blast of the lcsert cried aloud, With a voice so leud and free. . Still he started in his sleep and smtlod At their tempestuous glee. He did not feci the driver's whip, : Nor the burning heat of day; Icath had illumed the land of sleep, . And his lifeless body lay A worn-out fetter, that the soul JIad broken and thrown away. .; KXOW-'OTIIIXt;S. Hark to that silvery trump ! It hath broken The perilous sleep of a nation beguiled; To reason to feeling to honor hath spoken, '" It calls thee to action, O Liberty's child ! )fow noiseless their laarcb, the .invincible host! -Mild and benignant their mission of light; No tumult, no pageant; nor impotent boast 1 The Savior of Freedom, their cause is their might- 'Know-Xothings!" true men! noble sorts of brave ., ; rires! ' ' . 1 Know nothing but country, and duty, nn'd Cod; The spirit of party and section expires, Vhile patriot zeal revives whero you've trod. ': Know nothing of doubt be strangers to fear ;; ilurk not the vile libel of minion and priest; The bought demagogue lie the taunt, and the sneer. Accomplished their work-the rabble have ceased. They beckon you onward, the glorious band The Maeeabees, Tells. Miltiade?, ;ee.. From high peaks of tiiuo, from far distant lands. Your kindred thy claim, worthy sons of the free;! I I : 1 . i 115 St- ' ' ) SOME PASSAGES IX TJ1E LIFE . JO- . BV tnACKKKAT. . xt On the night of the. 1st of November; In the year 1804, I had invited Mrs. Major-General Bulchcr and her daughters, Mrs. Vande gobbleschroy, . andy .indeed, all the: ladies in the cantonment, to a' little festival in honor of the recovery of my health, of the commence ment of the shooting-season, and indeed ns a farewell visit, for it is my intention to take dawk the very next morning and return to my regiment. The three amateur missionaries whom I have, mentioned, and. some ladies in the cantonment of very rigid religions princi ples, refused to appear at my little party. They had . better never have been born than have done as thev did, as yon shall hear. ; u Wo had been dancing merrily,all night, nnd the supper (chiefly of the delicate condor, the luscious adjutant, and other birds of a similar kind, which I had shot in the course of the day) had been duly feted by every lady and gentleman present ; when I took, an op portunity to retire on the ramparts, with the interesting and lovely . Belinda Bulchcr. I was occupied, as the French say, in conter-ing Jlevretles to tbisr sweet young creature, when, ' all fif a sudden, a rocket was seen whizzing through the air, and a strong light was risible In the valley below the little fort. : . .: - - TTThat, '. lire-works I Captain Gahagan,' said Belinda, . this is too gallant.' , ' , ' " Indeed, my dear Miss Bulcher,' said I, they are fire-works of which I havo no idea : '.periiapa our friends the missionaries' f ' Look., . look !' said Belinda, trembling, , nnd clntching tightly hold of my arm ; what l'o I see? yes no yes! it ja-owr bn-ngalme ' ,i in flames . - . - -: was true the spacious bungalow,' occu pied by 'JffS." 3fajor-Gencral wa at that mor nacnt seen a prey to the devouring element -another and another succeeded it seven fcnn ., galows, before I could almost ejaculate the -name of Jack Robinson, were seen blazing :;brightly in the black midnight air! , 'I seized my night-glass, and looking to .wards the spot where the conflagration raged, what tny astonishment to. see thousands of black form dancing round the fires ; whilst by their: "ightjrf conid obeervo columns sftcr .columns of Indiaa horse, arriving and taking .up their ground in thti very middle of the .open spiare or tank, roTiO'Tt n'hich the bunga- I lpw(s w;e buiitt 7 T ,""'"": ' . . ' Ho, warder .'' shouted I (while the friglit- ened and trembling Belinda clung closer to tny side, and pressed the stalwart arm that en circled her waist), down with the drawbridge ! see that your masolgecs (small tnmbrils which are used in place of large artillery) be well loaded j you sepoys, haiten and man the rave lin 1 you choprasecs, put out the lights in the embrasures! wc' shall have warm work, of it to-night, or my name is not Goliah Gaharan.' : The ladies, the guests (to the numhef of eighty-three), the sepoys, choprasees," masol- gees, and so on, had nil crowded on the plat form at Ihe sound of ni y shouting, and dread ful was the consternation, shrill the scream ing, occasioned by my words. The men stood irresolute and '-unite1 with terror; the women trembling, knew scarcely whither to fly for refuge. ' JVho are yonder ruilians said I ; a hnndred voices yelped in reply -some said the Pindarees, some said the Maharattas, some vowed it was Scindiah, and others declared it wasllolkar no one knew. , " Is there any one here,' said I, 'who will venture to reconnoitre yonder troops ?' There was a dead pause , " ' A thousand tomauns to the man who will bring me news of yonder army!' again I re peated. Still a dead silence. The fact was that Scindiah and Ilolkar both were so jtoto rious for their cruelty, that no one dared ven ture to face the danger.' Oh for fifty of my brave Ahmednuggarics!' thonght I. ; ' Gentlemen,' aid I, ' I see it you arc cowards none of you dare encounter the chance even of death. It is an encouraging prospect know you not that the rnflian Ilol kar, if it be he, will with the morrow's dawn beleaguer out little fort, aud throw thousands of men against our walls ? know yon not that, if we are taken, there is no quarter, iio hope; death for us and worse than death for these lovely ones assembled here?'. Here the la dies shrieked and raised a howl as I havo heard the jackalls on a summer's evening. Be linda, my dear Belinda ! Sung both her arms round me, and sobbed on my shoulder, (or in my waist coat-pocket rather, for the little witch cpuld reach no higher.) ; ,'" ' Captain Gahagan,' sobbed she, ' Go Go Goggle-iah !' - ': " My soul's adored!' replied I. ., " ' Swear to me one thing.' : " I swear.' , That if that if the nasty, horrid, odi ous black Mah-ra-a-a-altahs take the fort, you will put me out of their power.' I clasped the dear girl to my heart, and swore upon, my sword that, rather than she should incur the. risk ,.of. dishonor, she should perish by my own hand. This comforted her; and her motherTrs.. Major-General Bulchcr, and her elder isterj who had not until now known a word of our attachment "(Indeed, bnt for 'these extraordinary circumstances it is probable that we; ourselves should never have discovered -it),'wcn under these painful, cir chTHsl;l!icc's made aware of my le1oved Belin da's partiality for me. . Haviri cominnnicated thus her wish of self-destruction, I thought her example a touching and excellent one, and proposed to all the ladies that they should fol low it, anl that at the entry of the enemy into the lort, and at a signal given by me, they should one and all make away with themselves. Fancy may disgust when, after making this proposition, not one of the ladies chose to ac cede to it, and received it with the same chil ling denial that my former proposal to the garrison had met with. " "In the midst of this hurry and confusion, as if purposely to add to it, a trumpet was heard at the gate of the fort, and one of the sentinels cairie running to me, saying that a Mahratta soldier was before the gate with a flag of truce ! '. .. .. , . , - "I went down, rightly conjecturing, as it turned out, that the party, whoever they might be, had no artillery ; and received at the point of my sword a scroll, of which the following is a translation : c xb OOLIAn CAHAOAS GCJPt'TI. " Lord of Elephants, Sir, I have the honor to inform you that I arrived before this place at eight o'clock r. m., with ten thousand cav alry under tny orders. I. have burned since ray arrival, seventeen bungalows in Furrncka bad and Futtyghur, and have likewise been under the painful necessity of putting to death three clergymen (mollahs), and seven English officers whom I found in the village; the wo men have been transferred to safe keeping in the harems of my officers and myself. ; ""As I know your courage and talents, ! shall be very happy if you will surrender the fortress,-and take service as a Major-Gcneral (liookabador) in my army. ; Should my pro posal not meet with your assent, I beg leave to state that to-morrow I shall storm the fort, and on taking it, shall put to death every mala "in the garrison, and every female above twenty years of age. . For yourself I shall re serve a punishment,' which for novelty and ex nnisitc torture, has, I flatter myself, hardly ever been exceeded. Awaiting the favor of a reply, I am, Sir, - ------ - -- ' ' it i Your very obedient servant, ' ' ' . . jASWrST IlOW IIOLKAR. " Camp before Futtyghur, Srpt. 1, 1804. V, v s. y. P'" .' '' " The officer' who had' UcnzU thin precious ned mous Pitan soldier, with a shirt of mail, and a steel cap and cape round with his turban wound, was leaning against the gate on his matchlock, and whistling a national melody. I read the letter, and saw at once there was no time to be lost. That man, thought I, must never go back to Ilolkar. AVere he to attack ns now before ,we were prepared, tho fort would be his in half an hour. -. " Tying my white poctcct-handkerchief to a .stick, I fluiig open the gate and advanced to the olficcr; he was standing, I ssid, on the little bridge across the moat. I mado him a slow salaam, after the fashion of the country, and, as he went forward to return the compli ment, I am sorry to say, I plunged forward, gave him a violent blow on the head which deprived him of all sensation, and then drag ged him within tho wall, raising the draw bridge after me. , " I bore the body into my own'apnrtmcnt ; there, swift as thought, I stripped him of his turbun, camnierlmud, pciiarnmahs, and na- pooshes, and' putting them on myself, deter mined to go fortli and reconnoitre the enemy .'- t i : t : : Here I waa obliged to stopj for Cabrera,! Ilos d'Eroles, and tho rest of the staff, were sound asleep ! "What I did in my reconnais sance, and how I defended the fort of Futtyg hur, I shall have the honor of telling on ano ther occasion. Conclitdel. HAHRY SAMP30N OBTAINS SE7ENGE. Mr. Snarl resides in Forsyth stroet. Mr Snarl is an old bachelor, with au Irish girl for a housekeeper. Snarl lives in good style, but has some queer notions. He dislikes dogs above all things, organ-grinders and beggars not excepted. Snarl's next door neighbor is Harry Samp son. Xow, Harry is the very opposite of old Mr. Snarl. He sets a high value on a dog, and thinks there is only one article equal to a New foundlander, and that's a woman. ' Hairy ha3 several specimens of the cannine race! Tho other evening they got up a howling match be cause the moon became eclipsed. They com menced about ten o'clock, and kept it up till the sud got an inch and a half above "Williams burg. . ' This so annoyed, Mr. Snarl that he had Harry jerked up for a nuisance' and fined $10. Harry paid the money, but resolved on revenge. The next morning the following ad vertisement appeared in the Herald : Wanted. At Forsvth street, two l!ull Doars and four spaniel Pups. For full-blooded Uogs the holiest price will be paid. Call between 4 and C p.m..-. . James fvAiu,. We need not say that the advertisement was inserted by Harry. His reasons for ma king the calls between four and six p. m., was because Mr. Snarl was always out at that hour taking an airing around the Battery. ; At the hour specified,- dogs and pups might have been seen going up the Bowry to Grand, to Forsyth, and up Forsyth to the mansion occupied bv Mr. Snarl. The first person that pulled tho door-bell was a butcher-boy from Centre Market, with a pair of bull-dogs that would 'tear h 1 out of a tiger.' Maggie answer , the bell, when the following colloquy took place : Does Mr. Snarl live here ?' .' He does. "Why do you ax!' . " ' I've got some dogs for him.' , . Dogs for Mr. Snarl mother of Moses, did you ever ; you've mistook the door.' ,. 1 Devil a bit of it read that.' j Here Syksie took out the Morning Herald, and showed Maggie the advertisement. Mag gie was thunderstruck, still there was no de nying the advertisement.' She accordingly told Syksie to go into the backyard wid the dogs,' and await the return of Mr. Snarl. Syk sie did so. In about two minutes Maggie was again summoned by the door-bell. ' v What do you want ?' .' '; j Mr. Snarl : I've got them dogj he wanted.' Tou have well, then go into the yard wid I the other blackguard.' No. 2 followed No. 1 ; No. 2 Ayas soon fol lowed by No. 3, who was succeeded by lots 5, G and 7. By half-past five the back yard con tained twenty-one bull-dogs and fourteen span- j icls. The former got up a misunderstanding, and by the time Mr. Snarl arrived, seven span-' iels had been placed kors du combat, while a brindle bull-dog from Fulton Market was go ing tthe third fight with a yaller tarrier.' from Mott street. Mr. Snarl reached home a few minutes be fore six. Maggie opened the door, and burst out as follows : ' , ' ' ' ': t For the love of the Lord go back and stop 'em.'- They are ateing one another up, and it not choked olf will devour the cestern. Since the days of Crummell, I've not seen such hull abalo entirely.'. : '; Snarl 'went back' Snail looked into the yard and would have sworn, out he could not find oaths sufficiently powerful to do justice to his feelings... When we left, Mr. Snarl was emptying the back yard' with an ax helve. The next morning Harry Sampson complain ed of him for having a dog fight on his pre mises. Snarl was fined twenty-five dollars -fifteen dollars for having such a fight,' and ten dollars for being an old hypocrite. It is not necessary for us to say that narry Samp son slept better that night than any night since tho war with Mexico. ' ' From Chambers Journal. THE HAK-KOUfKEY OF BRAZIL. The captain of the French schooner Adrion no, who last summer was stationed at rernam- buco, Brazil, gives tha following sketcl of a tame monkey : "A short time ago,. I dined at a Brazilian merchant's. The conversation turned upon tho well tutored chimpanzee of Mr. Vanneck, a Creole gentleman, whose slave had brought him tho monkey, which ho had canght in the wood. Every one praised the accomplished animal, giving accounts of its talents so won derful, that I could not help expressing some incredulity. My host smiled, saying that I was net the first who would not believe in these results of animal education until he had seen it with his own eyes. He therefore proposed to me to call with him on Mr. Vanneck. "I gladly consented, and the following mor ning wc set out. The house of the creole lies on the road to Olinda, about an hours' ride from town. We proceed along splendid hedg es of cactus, shaded by bananas and palm trees,' and at length observed his charming villa. A negro received us at the entrance, and took us to the parlor, hastening to tell his mas ter of our visit. The first object which caught onr attention was the Monkey, seated on a stool, and sewing with great industry. Much struck, I watched him attentively, while he, not paying any attention to us; proceeded with his work. The door opened; Mr. "Vanneck, reclining on easy chair", was wheeled in. Tho' his legs are paralyzed, ho seemed bright and cheerful; he welcomed us most kindly. The monkey went oh sewing with great zeal. I could not refrain from exclaiming: "How won derful !" for the manner and process of the ani mal were those of a practised tailor. He was sewing a pair of 6triped pantaloons, the nar row shape of which Bhowcd that they were in tended for himself. "A negro now appeared, announcing Mad ame Jasmin, whom Mr. .Vanneck introduced as his neighbor. Madame Jasmin was accom panied by her little daughter, a girl of twelve years ; who immediately ran to the monkey, greeting him as an,old friend, and beginning to prattle with him. Jack furtively peeped at his master ; but as Mr. Vanncck's glance was stern, the tailor went on sewing. Suddenly his thread broke; and he put the end to his mouth, smoothed it with his lips, twisted it with its paw, and threaded the needle again. 3Ir. Vannock then turned to him, and speak ing in the same calm tone in which ho had conversed with us: 'Jack, put your work aside, and sweep the floor.' "Jack hurried to the adjoining room, and came back without delay, a broom in his paw, and swept and dusted like a clean housemaid. I could not perfectly make oht his size, as he always walked upright, not on his four hands. lie was about three feet in height, but stooped a little. He was clad iu linnen pantaloons, a colored shirt, a jacket, and a red neckerchef. At another hint from his master, Jack went and bro't several glasses of lemonado onatray. He first presented the tray to Madame Jasmin and her daughter, then to us, precisely like a footman. When I had emptied iny glass, he hastened to relieve me from it, putting it back on the tray. Mr. Vannock took out his watch and showed it to the monkey; it was just three. Jack went and brought a cup of broth to his master, who remarked that the monkey did not know the movements of tho watch, but that he knew exactly the position of the hands i when they pointed to three, and kept it in mind that it was then his master required lun cheon. If the watch was shown to him at any other hour, he did not go to fetch the broth ;" while if three o'clock was past without tho luncheon being. called for, he got fidgety, and at last run and brought it; in this case, he. was always rewarded with some sugar-plums. " 'l'ou have no notion,' said Mr. Vanneck, 'how much time ; and trouble, and especially how much patience, I have bestowed on the training of this animal. Confined to my chair, however, I continued my task methodically. Nothing was more difficult than to accustom Jack to his clothes; ho used to take oil his pantaloons again and again, until at last I had them sewed to his shirt. When he walks out with me he wears a straw hat, but never with out making fearful grimaces. He takes a bath every day, and is, on tho whole, very cleanly. ', " 'Jactc,' exclaimed Mr. Vanneck, pointing to me, 'this gentleman wants his handker chief.' The monkey drew it from my. pocket, and handed it to me. " 'Now show your room to my guest,", con tinned his master; and Jack opened a door, at which he stopped to let us pass, and then fol lowed himself. Everything was extremely ti dy in the small room. There was a bed with a matrass; a table, some chairs drawers, and va rious toys; a gun hung on the wall.- The bell was rung; Jack went and re-appeared with his master, wheeling in the chair. Meanwhile I had taken the gun from the wall; Mr. Vanneck handed it to the monkey, who fetched the powder flask and the shot bag, and in tho whole process of loading ; acquitted hfmself like a rifleman. I had already seen so much that was astonishing, that I hardly felt surpri set at this feat.' Jack now placed himself at the open window, and took aim, discharging the gun without being in the least startled by the report. He then went through the sword exercises with the same skill. "It would be too long to jot down all Mr. Vanneck told us about his method of educa tion and training; the above fact witnessed by myself, bear sufficient evidence of the abili ties of the animal, and its master's talents for tuition. We stayed to supper, to which there came more ladies and gentlemen. Jack again exhibited .his cleverness in waiting, at which ho acquitted himself as well as any man-servant. Going home, my companion missed a small box of sweets, out of which he had re galed the monkey with almonds. Jack had managed to steal is from his pocket ; and on being afterwards found convicted of the theft, he was severely punished by his master. THE AMERICAS ALADDIJT. Wc take the following extract from a recent lecture delivered by G. W. Ccbtis, at Boston. The reader will find it a familiar and liie-likc picture : .. . When wo go out on Sunday afternoon to moralize, and 6ce the new houses, we usually take tho yonng ones by the Aladdin's palace Aladdin was a Yankee. Xau'rhter.l He started in life by swapping jack knives, then putting the halves of broken marbles together, and passing them offns whole ones. When he had gatheied some brass ho went to school all the summer to loarn the golden rule of arith metic Addition for himself and Subtraction for his neighbor. Laughter. At an early ago Aladdin was considered to be good at a bargain, which meant that he could always succeed in changing a worse for a better, always keeping the blind eye of a horse to the wall when he had to sell it, and looking right at it when he wanted to buy it ; and the village said that certainly AUddin would succeed. When ho left, " he will be rich," said the village, with moro approval than it would say, " ho will be generous and true." To Aladdin, the whole world was but a market in which to buy cheap and sell dear For him thcro was no beauty, no history, no piety, no heroism. Vainly the stars shone over him vainly the South wind blew. In the wako of the great ship Argo, in which Jason and his companions sailed for the Golden Fleece, over the Mediterranean, where the ships of Tyre, Rome, and of tho Crusades, had boen before him through the pillars of Her cules, through which sailed Columbus to find fame in the New World now sailed Aladdin to find fortune. To him all lands are alike. 2so Homer sung for him in the JEgcnn ; ho only curses the wind that will not Mow him to Odessa.- No syrens sing for him, but he loves the huge oath of the lively boatswain. With a Bible in his hand, and a quid of tobacco in his mouth, he goes about tho holy places of Jerusalem, and " calculates" their exact site.. nc sees the land of Ramesis and thePtolemys, and the reverend record of the Lybian desert, whose echoes have slumbered sinco the- were: trampled over by Alexander's array, are now awakened by the shrill whistle of Old Dan Tucker. Laughter. ne insults the Grand Lama, hobnobs with the Great Mogul, turns his back upon emperors, and takes a pinch out of the Pope's snuff box. Ho chews with the Arabs, smokes opium with the Turks, and rides lor a bridle with the Calmuck Tartars. Aladdin comes homo again, and the admir ing village point3 him ont to the rising gene ration as a successful man. " My son, look at him; he began with nothing, and now sec !" "My son" does see, and beholds him owning a million of dollars of all societies of which he is not president, a director. His name is good as gold ; he has bought pictures and statues he has also bought a Mrs. Aladdin, Laughter, and housed her in luxury ; but i he pricks his mouth with a silver fork. He has a home for.a poet, and he makes it his j boast that ho reads nothing but the newspa per. ' He goes to church twice on Sundays, and only wakes up when the preacher denoun cos tho sinners of Sodom and Gomorrah, and those " tough old Jews" of Jerusalem. :nis head is bald and shiny with all the 6ermons which have hit it,. and glanced off. .'Loud laughter and applause. He; clasps his hands in prayer, but forgets to open them wheu the poor-box is passed round, and he goes home like a successful man, thanking God that he was not as other men are, and after dinner he sits before the fire in his easy chair, lights a large cigar, and looks languidly at Mrs.' Alad din through tho thick black smoke. . Laugh ter and applause. i By-and-bye, old Aladdin dies. The conven tional virtues are told" over, as the mourning carriages are called out. . Tho papers regret they are called upon to deplore the loss of a revered parent, generous friend,' public-spirited citizen, and pious man; and then the pre cocious swapper of jack-knives and model set up to the young generation, is laid in the dust. Above the grave, the stars he never saw, now burn with a soft lustre, which no lamps about a king's tomb can emulate; his" hot brow was never grateful, strews his bed with, anemonics and violets that his heel crushed in living: and we, who are to be formed upon that model, carelessly remark, as we stir our tod.dies, "So Aladdin is gone at last, and . by-tho-bye, how much did he leave?" Loud Laughter. t ' ESP'Byron's partiality toward Amer.a' j3 well known, but perhaps never more8tr'"jngyexpresged than in a letter to Tom Moor fwhors bo observes: -I would rather have n()d , . . Amcrlcan than a enuff t?x fron, an EfWi,7. r UODIIATH A VOICE. "" i: . . BT ELIZA COOK. " God hath a voice that ever in beard t In the poalof the thunder, the chirp of the bird;' It conies in the torrent.-all rapid And strong. ' ' i In the Ftrcanilet'a soft gush as it ripples along. . . Tt breathes in the lephyr just kissing the Llooin; It lives in the ru?h of the sweeping simoon; Let the hurricane whistle or warblers rejoice--- " Whntdo they tellthee hut God hath a voice? : i God hath apre.ence, and that ye may Fee , ' ' ' In the fold of the flower, the leaf of the tree; In tho sun of the noon-day, the star of the night;' . lu the storm -cloud of darkness, the rainbow of lijht1 In the waves of the ocean, the furrow's of land; - In the mountains of pranite. the atom of Faml;'."!.: Turn where ye may. from theky to the .od, Where can ye gaie that ye see not 4 God ? HOW tAVL ATJTO PETER LOOKED: - It is allowable to mention that general' no---tion of the forms and features ol the two aj- tics which has been handed down in tradition,' and was represented by the early ertists.; St. Paul is set before us ashaving the ntrongly mar ked and prominent features of a Jew, yet not without some of their finer lines indicative of Greek thoughts. His stature was diminutive,' and his body disfigured by some lameness or distortion, which may have provoked the con? temptuous expressions of his enemies. His beard, was long and thin. His head was bald. The chracteristics of his face were a transparent complexion, which visibly betrayed the quick changes of his feelings; a bright greyeyethick-ly-ovorhanging, united eye brows; a cheerful and winning expression ofcountenence, which invited the approach and inspired the confi dence of strangers. It would be natural to in fer from his continual journeys and manual labor, that he was possessed of great strength of constitution. But men of delicate health have often gone through the greatest exertions; and his own words, on more than one occasion, showed that ho suffered much from bodily health. -' ; St. Peter is represented to us as a man , lar ger, and -stronger form as his character was and more abrupt. The quick impulses of his soul revealed themselves in the flashes of dark eye. The complexion of his face was full and sallow; and the short hair, which Is described as entirely gray at tho time of his death, curled black and thick round .his tern-. pies aud his chin, when the apostles stood to gether at Antioch, twenty years before their martyrdom. Believing, as we do, that these traditionary pictures havo probably some foun dation in truth, we gladly take them as helps to the imagination. Life and Epistlca of St. Paul by ir. J. Conybeare and J. S. llomon. THE PLEASUBES OF SIN. ;: r. ' There are those who affect to believe that the wicked have great, comfort (in-their, evil courses; and that the way of tho transgressor is not hard. .All. human experience contra dicts tho statement,- and accords, with Bible truth that men are happy in this world puly4n proportion as they are good. ; Wo have .been reminded of this great truth again, on seeing the account of Col. Gardiner, an officer in the British army, who for ycnrs.devoted himself to seeking sensual .pleasures; and in the degra ding pursuit was so far successful, as Dr. Dod- . dridge, his biographer, remarks, that multi tudes envied him, and called him, by a dread ful kind of compliment, "tho happy rake." Yet the Doctor says: "I particularly remem ber, he told me, that when some of his disso lute ' companions were once congratulating him on his distinguished felicity, a dog hap pened at that time to come into the room,; he could not forbear groaning inwardly, and say ing to himself, 'O that I wero a 'dog!' Such was then his happiness; and such perhaps Is that of hundreds more, who bear themselves highest in the contempt of religion aod glory in that servitude which they. affect to call lib- ertv." ' - . :. ' ... ,.- C7" What art thou to the .U-Directing and Omniscient? Canst , thou vet imagine that thy presence on earth can give to the hearts thou lovest the shelter which the humblest take from the wings of tho Presence that live ii Heaven 7 . Fear, not thou for tho future? Whether thou live or die, their future is the care of the Most High! In the dungeon and on the scaffold looks everlastingly "the cycTof Him, tenderer than thou to love, wiser than, thou to guide, mightier than thou to save EThe love of truth is the stimafua of. all noble" conversation. ' This is - the toote of Tall the charities. The tree which springs from it may have a thousand branches- but they will, all bear a golden and generoua fruitage. : It Is tho loftiest impulse to inmire willing rto communicate, and moro willing to receive contemptuous of petty curiosity, but passion ate for glorious knowledge.. ; - - " E7- Thtf child of God, if in the war, anl; itv the place whrch the-Lord' providences has al lotted him, is well employed, though he should have no higher, services than to sweep Uo streets; provided he does it humbly, thankful ly, heartily, as to the Lord. An angel bo placed could bo no more, r . - ; ..... T - D"7 A man should never be ashamed to own that he has been in the wrong.-1 It Is only "but saying, in other words, that fw is wiser toiay than he was yesterday. .ITT Be kind to tho t V 1.1 i p. i'J i v:5 i s lr y r;- J if V Ki ns V , t : j i the form. -."' J ie forms , v ndence). anenor-' I - . D3P The devil aiat up -.. 1 IB