HIS VALENTINE. Ah I Will she be my valentine, And dare I hope for, yes ! And will she in these arms recline While kisses I impress? Or shall my wandering missive be Received with cold disdain ; And thus bid every hope to flee And leave despair remain? Long have I waited for this hour That grants to all the right, To use the poet's vivid power, To tell of fond love's might. To pour forth all the heart's desire In burning words of rhyme; 'l'o tell to what you dare aspire In thoughts that are sublime. Ah I Should I be a coward though Thus fearing to declare My love to her whom I have sought My hearth and home to share. In a direct and fond appeal On beaded knees before, And swear that I would take for weal Or woe, for evermore. How foolish that such thoughts should rise To haunt me while I wait; To cause distrust of her I prize To make me fear my fate. No thought have I that by delay I've lost all that seems so dear : Or that some other one might say " Be mine my life to cheer." I'll bid the thoughts begone from me, Bid Hope her pinions spread; And shame, distrust, and cause to flee All doubt, all fear, all dread. For how can she who surely knows., My heart is all her own, Thus to some other one dispose Of that which I would own ? Delay and cowardice receive Their just reward at last; For, by St. Valentine, I grieve To say his hopes were past. No more dare he now hope to gain His darling's kind regard: For he received with just disdain Her thanks and wedding card. THE FRE E LANCE. In the next to the last paragraph of the article on the Stereoscope in February FREE LANCE there was an omission of several lines, which completely obscures the meaning of the paragraph, and, to a considerable extent, of the entire article, since this paragraph was partly a summary approaching a conclusion., The explanation is left obscure, or, rather, false, from the sequence of clauses arising from the omission. After " Hence one set of criteria;" insert the mathematical, liglat, and aerial perspectives which the artist has cunningly used, tells us that the objects are solids, while the other criterion, etc. Also, in line 12, column r, page 269, for conveyed, read converged ; omit and in second line of same column many typographi cal errors (forming grammatical errors) the reader will readily correct. THE treaty of Paris, concluded in 1763, left I England by far the most powerful of all nations: Under the guidance of the "elder" Pitt her arms had won successive victories in both hemispheres, had crippled or broken the power of all rivals, and left Britannia more truly a " mistress of the world " than ever be fore or since. Thus had ended the struggle in which France had been the chief adver sary of Britain, and dominion in the New World the chief prize to be gained. And the power of France was ,so completely crushed, that upon the verge of bankruptcy, and de spoiled of all hope of western empire, she could only helplessly nurse her old bitter feel ing for the Briton and await the opportunity for revenge. In the meantime George 111, had ascended the English throne, and his tory obstinacy A CORRECTION I====:l FRANKLIN'S MISSION IN FRANCE.