LUME 29-NUI BER 42. 4 yy " ?oet's c- ----- The Dance of the AntiWial - Leaves. Borne by the res tless l windsahmg w _ Where the sorrowful woodland grivieEt, ~ Hither and thither, a Otfulfining* • ' Merrily dance the Autumn leaves. up i rar d t hey Mount to the murky Ay," • Downward 'they plunge-to the earth below; 1 ; 0w in a giddy. whirl they fly, •• . i, - Now in a madcap chase they 0. , • 1 'tong gaily, their feet advance ) ' . ' Dyer the graves in iboUghtless:glee;. . And the.music to which they dance, Hark! 'tis a dirge'smelody. - `"! - !Onward merrily still t ey go ' _ g • •.• . r 'fs:iiiligh the wood nd over the !wave, t Tilllhey find in the w ntry anvw,• Chilly and dark; their lonely grave.' Berne by the tempest's power along, .. - • While kind heaven in pity grieves, - 4 . 1 . Giddily pass the hunuin throng Thoughtlessly as the autumn leaves. ' , , _ 1 rirard.the, - mount it fancies high, 1 • Downward they plunge in pleasures low; Now in•the passions'-Ni - hirkhey fly,' " \ Now in Ambition's chase they go. * l' Merrily still their. feet ildrance . Over the graves in houghtlessgl4e; ' And the music to whi h they dance, : Bark! 'tis a dirge's melody. ' , I Onward! giddily on they, go, ', . . Over the earth and over the wave, • T they find }lark, the depth -below, i -Chilly and dark, ther lonely grave - • I For tht , Register. _ • • An Acrostic t,b the Son . or Song. Braham! ;chat magic the name appear& Rich is thy roiee, thongh nearly eighty years .treand thy heed hath True, with‘lenient hand turned. In sacred song, Vow grand! Age serins . to-hre melt wed more /than thinned tits' • tone; la i d iN: Y.'•Jourpal. ' " 1 THE HAU21110:111D... ' 1 War *as declared ! • , . - .... The boys in number six cored they would no longer bear the insolenee ofliumber eight: , Theskwere the• two larg,est sleeping rooms in 1 the-school-holl'se whc l re .1 boarded in the days rhea nv . Mee was not ? yet iarorized by travel, when my leg. Were consblerably shorter, and rrly luihriant beard 4s yet an invisib dream. 1 was thirteen, tuld'the oldest bob in t s te room 1 except SlokinS , who was sixteen, though you' .itoirl never have thoiight it to loolc. - at him, tor he was the shortest bey in our class; •and 1 / 1 , ?, 6pidist. Ilowvec, he was a very good fellow, and ready ..eitough ' for anything. but fitittillg • 1 • , —.. . . -..- Our room was . On 'the stop floor of the ouse, so we resolved to-have a grand bolster ng campaign and as,a preliminary measure I pro - posed that somebody should creep on all fours into , NO, 8. and pull Clinton senior's toe. • then utter a warwhoop, and we- ;would all Hush mell, :M I A give No. 8 . fits---in a word. eine down oti tliem like bricks. . „ •Ilut who is• to do.the creeping? Said Box • I er, clumsy; that .lie' never could Catch a cricket-ball in. his life,: and was the poorest shot at . marbles. I ever saw. "Notiou,"' saidS l tOokieson junior., a small, red-haired .hoY, who, - like a little 'terrier,' Would fight anything, however big, and never we *off 'under . any circumstances. "Not-{ ' . Boxer, you always stumble , or knock liething over." t" ' . • . , "Who then W said riVigsy, the boy who: • • ' o delicate that he Was ordered a glass of • loc . every dat to keep tip his stamina, ho was. aliVayS kissing:little Lucy, the r's daughter, in the shrubbery, and who to buy7brandy :and bring it up into the na ut night,_ in a -soda: water bcittle,' 'e it- ti) na to drink out of the shell of C`Warillt. `Why, Slokins, Of courae, bequise s the lest,"-shouted Toth Crisp. " ,-. "Yes, SlokinS forever !" the whole in eliOrizs. . • . But SlokinS' would not go, so J; as lc:icier the' expedition, frnUlly voluUteered.: , to . un- ze the Win:lons enterprise and off we ,e 4, marching noiselessly in.. Indian file, iding our night-shirts. tightly round . .us ' , Vent them from rustling, and e4eb, .with bulster over his. Shoulder, prepared for the . extremities. halted within a Yard of the open door cif 8, and .er4rling like a "last of theMolii: or t .. . - 6.elebrated Serpent 'alio teinpt , on my belly, Contrived to reach the foot Clinton senior's.~\bed , insert mydeiter . under the , bedclothes, and' give his toe a Which roused him like ,a, galvanic shock the - etubrace of an incipient slumber. 1 -6441-y l" sqUealed Clinton, ''° is r and . he sprang .out ; of d Only to be I ;eiddOwn, instanter, by sy's bo4ter. lumediately an !immense slaughter took At the foot of sv,verybed in No. 8.-was - • To of No . . 6, Whaelting away,iiko . a-steam_ : , jue, at the prOstrate form of his•vietim.7--- was a decided 1 :11.e of surprise,. and Soine . "Ites elatme4 before - the enemy . rallied.„— sooner, howcv , did they - recover the first 'of our ',insidiOus.attack, than -out they . )led, and fought with wildy exasperatioU their preliminary drubbing, ," ilokins, j am sorry to say, beat' an ingfori retreat, and shortly afterwai4S .elintan theinninjbody of our army to flight, \ly cutting at ,theitlegs with his susixtudf .. But in .the eorrider, . and on neutral the kik yet raged with Homeric fu id was at the point Of excitement, - When 41eu-tlash of light .from the well-Stairease us of the apprach third • and yet Powerful force.. - It was : in fact the ina§ who was already o t tttru 'of - th . es e ------- - . -If • , , . . • , ... ...: : ' • , T.... ...I •. . •ll• P -, :.',.. .. ..7 1 i . ... . . .. . *. . _ , _,l. _, - ' I., , • _ . • ~, i - . -, i -- :, H . ~. 5 1 ... — . :.... .Q. . ' • 'i l, . I L I II A .'IH . . . • A 1 ' - 11 ' ^ 1 . , • 1 . ::. .."''' .'. , . , , . ~ \ a , 4 . IF - . . . , . . -.--• ..,• - . &:t1.....• :: 1. • ...-1:: , ... .. :: -. ~ .".1 ..: : ..,.. ::: . ..... .....',.... , ...:'_. 1 ''. .: .: : .., . - .. .7.•. :•..,11, 1::.;:, .. . . 7 ._.,•; . ... .., . _ . ... r . ... .. .. . _ . . . . ~ .t • ~ . . . .... , •• . . • .. • • 1 ill thou stands alone s4o . eiies. stairs, and wOnid inevitably he . upon us lie i wAre we couldLreturn. tq,O . ite dOrmitor'ieS, . 1 having been 1.40 last to retreat fAnn' . the . camp Of the ho.itile, forces, wasnow :behind all the rest.of any party,, 'Who had', Mutely taken to their,iheels, and fled madly , iip -the; passage towarlds No.' S. Seeing, -114reftt;,. ,ir that eiPape was-impossiblc, resolied; Second TloratinS„ -tor" defe:nd the stair li e,"_ land commenced by launching niy bolster 0...er. the -I):Misters:t' Falling plump. on lad 'Of the ascending _master, and light, it - was ii‘pcifectly successful opration.. I was snug in tea like the _rest by the time he had obtained a fresh candlestick and re turned to the attack: ". tbrew . tbat bolster?"' sitid ' , Abe deep-totied , yoice. l his -annual - report, said, insubstance,' ,'.` Aside ryiz49 . the Government agents,-.troops and missi'nni ,ries, there are not .t - , 014, time, three white ii habitants. in all that regiOi lying west of th iklissonil, rind embraced in thelimits of. - at says and , Nebraska.'' J 3 it • ten monthsitv i ., passed since then, and ii4w, lastead of a ' of nlation enumeratedh . by - Monosyllable, t let are,:nAny thousands.settled all over the citti try, auk hundreds are ponring in daily, s let tiny and staking out- !farm' s, or. which 'die, piirruise'locating 'their . • We eotAdcittlY - predret that in less than _year from this- time, 4-ei, shall. number full 1 : i one hundred thonsandl'sOnls... The times bid cafe it. - In ill the • northern States ;' ituleet in: neltly-every county', there are mocin i takt Karisas-ward,:and freqUchtly thenumherS ar so great as to deteriorateithe vidueof pro: pert; 'particularly real esta 4 4e.ii Arid why , no ? Ltinds in many parts e , ,f tlllenerth, not litso3 I. whichl aseend4ll,fand - entered our - bedroqual ably: located for a market,. or • peCularlv prO.: and I: windcrv g •P' • • - without. }ring clisOiered. •- . . •• dnetive, e,oznurtnd, froth thirty - to - fifty ses . dollars i4r . aere, - ,. •• , . L 1,. 'These eontinnall'contrivan4s of lity'broth •,, ; ;,. - • , ii • I Alf.i i er made•rne all*ays suspicious . of some trap i • Here, the . gov.^rnment iniee is but onelow tar and twenty-iis7e‘ cciits and the title deeilS i on nay return bet4t, and I generally approach-1 fr , Itc ' -1: ` 1 ht - 1 - , _::. le4 my doruntotyt with the gieittest, degreb!of .1-qm ijle -pve . rnini;uti na to their validity: . . The cost of turning Over the pruiries•ln t..,.res froui tl.vo to'threeldollars • an acre.- ITIt i first-crop---usually of Corn—will pay the ex l; i 1 ie Penses of-culture •,'• tht.ll. the farmer with- his st- :liiindred acres of the rillest land in the werld, c- perfectly' subdued, and capable of-raising any y.. ;species of vegetation-, iitidS it-costing hitri lint be :from three hundred and Seventt-five to lion" es li,tindred dollars. 'lt is in a condition which ir- lkenty years of ,hard labor in a' timbered ..- :country cannot make it, anal .lic finds himself•., x , . . i enabled to produce a, luxuriat crop of v i l ego-, iation "with ncarly - oncithird the labor reiltiik. .. ',red 'on- the " hard pezil."•.:,soil of most of tie . . • 1- -i northern and middle States. ik . ii • .` r. It is true Many of ilthenveniencesilof 4 Jimbekd:eoantry are l - wantinghere;hut these can all be supplied - brig tire hand of\labOr....-=- ,"But,". says the inquire- 4- "what will he doge foro. • fences ? You have . -nb timber, or-not st*: ficient, to be used for fOcing purposes,' and . - .it apperirs.to nici . impossible ':to get along in . such . a.eCtuntry."" In ' l sorite of . the western 'prairie States they Itc66 , got along very ;wepl without: 'timber, and her'. in Kansas, we ex=e ) '-. • - f - - - It , ' .{ i ect to get along- I still .:, ettcr. The - Osage '.Orange, which, is - Used for hedges, groWs in 4 ree years, andprodUc4 a natural fence ea ! a. ...4)able"of turning aside the largest animals. -4 .. • . ',The severity of the winter in more northern . - latitndes makes this itseless to the prairie falr i4ners of lowa and :Wisconsin.; but here it will f 'increase -in ..' valua:: frOn par to •year,' and p 'worth wore than a dozen 'rail fences,' which - . . 1. .ii ''.., 7. . • - , r . . 1 cost such an itntikeise antoutit of labor to e- . - . if • • - Met • -• • ' 4 Ito is objected our ma'fket- is too fur re. • moved. . To thatin:Who are net well acquainted with our position *t, the R4iblic,. the .objec flan is insuperable; but to i . :'those who have obseried that -..o4O'have an: excellent water commUnimtionWilb' - Parts of the world; . and that in- two years, at the furthest; we s tall be banded with:let:l:ood a-railroad . connect. ing •us with tkii andjlievO-, York, .aloe which:the steamlNl)* will 'ibe propelled a the n 46 of from thirty to fortymiles an hoar the objection is worthless: . The whole yalle lof thejliississippi .• furnish, us a market, •L as will the goverrOent. trams which cross the plains' to'New; 3t4i'co and the. Reeky. moon . tains. to Utah,. CallfOrniti,..Or_egen and. Wash l ~ingt' 'on Territory, Besides .expect Aoiire mark*:,. for. IneChanies:haVe ttl .ready-trrnmencesitioneng by thousands Sand the 'fiumeronsif t articles Which are impbrt ed into. other NI,StOrTI PtAtei will be mane - factored among4lAgricuttural implement °revery. species *hie are usually •niade ii the ea.tern ba N cionstructed iu th Kansas Valley. 1 We are: all.eady talkinff ° of • our cam rnercial •!eity,. whichiwe - elaim is to ri , val the growthOCany westeril townN Chfcai go, with its popillatian .0f.70,000 in ...tWentyi 1 We years, will !find her growth less . than the great:cityof the Pains, which•is to be, the half way ! house. betW'pen the Atlanti and Pacifie,Jmill the: eemraccial emporium o I `North Ainerica . . . .' The Pacific Itaitwav Will be completed d ring the nest ten Years. Itimust necessarily pass along the sOntheni ,bat4l;.; of the kanSas i and up one, of its principttlO: : tributaries to th south pass in the pocky ixi,4untains. • Whik. this' road is beiiigieOnstrueted the surplus pro. ducts of the rich titans ichill fancy sees all. ready,/ covered - Oh " bending - grain and gold( en-rinded fruit•, '? Will lie needed to supply . th ; 1 , wants of its laborers, and-the money AV ill' b required-in retort'. to. 4teet the . ineidenta wants . of the Kansas farmerli , • Again we sq, iend ur, five .i hundied thou': sand formers;irroe , hat . lies dud:, artisans, nn we will pledge 'them the moist beautifullarms,, ,and the Tidiest '.eOUntry the bounties of nature _which • the•i!itin-of -H4ven ever shone fipoti.=--,Kansa,!!ll3.rald . oj.4eedom. ' • We fivor our ruder' witlt a &apt-er:lron • the autobiography' . of . ParnUrn,. in course of preparation. ..WO, take it [from the columns of.the Danbury nes, to which paper...the nn thor fornished it: BA• BA/WM A ROY. - !• ‘.- • • t While I Waslelprk traketntorT . in Bethel; -Connecticut,MY-fiither kept the village taverni I usually. slept with Tar __aitrktmeoir- - t!ruttieti was filled with travellers, Were [ Obliged three in a 10; [by, taking in- our, .honest Irish fait mer Edmund, as sleeping partner. After thr store was our at'• night, t ['frequently 'joined Kiper of village boys O i l a party. at the . 'house' of their .parents; and 1 -hat with story telling and varitu4i kinds of; t*child's play,' tt couple, of hotirsl*puld glide; away, rind at o'clock at 'nigh4. Which was later than my pp'. • 1 rents permitted, I would "'slyly creep-; gip stairs, and crawl into bed With the greatest • c,aution; lest I liolrld wake : [ iny brother, who ,;• [[ would be sure 'WI report my:late hours to My, • parents. • .- .. • 1 My brother coliirived all' torts ofplans.to rep eateh me on my'return home; i ut sleep wonid . ., [ overtake him, 404 would elude his vigilant;.:, ; Sometimeshe wOld pile trUnki and- chairs' • . • j againstAhe door, ho that I could hardly °pew]; I itivithOut - npseeting the barricade andawake'n-[[ Inc , by - old -noise, I -Would gencrAy•l ly . \ • Inanage,howeveriO.openthp i door-by degres,„[ ]] d and to get to bed,lNrithout disturbing bis slun hers. o[l ts. .. • • • One night I found the dont likened on the re • inside by a nailiftrinlY drivct over the lat4h.l ; l I Determined thatihe should riot out-wit rue, f 7 1" descended the stairs, found - A 'short ladder - •[! - Ante:, n caution. One night I returnOd us usual I 11 o'clock, and 'opening the' door a few inclies' te 1. with great caret: run in my arm in order itO, l discoVer any ohstitictioni 'Which might lie;in; l wait me.' Mi. , hand soontouched a midi', cord ;Which I found lags"attached to the do'orl latch by one end, where the Other, was f.ksteni ed I eould notlin , )agine, and the darkn4ss, would net enableltne to discover.' I drew, tt: knife from my Pocket, and. cutting' the co . fdl very cautiously' l ;opened the door and gpt into lied without4iscovery. On awakening the next morni4 j. found theother end of the cord.. attached tai roy brother's big toe This, very ingeniOns contrivance he thought would wake him`ltip,and it undoubtedly would', havedone so, bilt for my timely discovery. Another night he 4iat hiraselinp in the , mid dle of the bed andbolstered himself up. Wio l , pillows, determinid to keep awake until I returned. liut Sleep at laSt overcame hini, and when I arrives and found him in that pp sition, I snugged 'Myself in oily. across the fobt of the bed, 'J*nd went to sleep. In the:, .morning he fouild;himselfsitting bolt upright just as he went sleep the t !,nlg,ht before. Giving me'a s'alte ine, he exclaim ed! 'You worked" ; ItPretty well last night, lint I'll catch you y'9 You are weleixne to do It 'it you can:l 7 -1 ` • I replied, but . you sill haye t to get up eat y id the morning f4lcatch a i*asel asleep:, , • \ The next night tie etistene4 a spur upon Itio naked heel and yscut to slev, thinking that enee no que :1 • PEOPLE pip TILE END OF. GOV_EIINMENT.'I.i" MBER hit - • - Alien I, got into bed I should h the spitr, - and porbap,,srake 14 sk i n, the pain' of which would , ,:. I. 1 c..luse pit! to Cry out, ands thus' awake him.—:— Itetired with - 14y usual ;caution . that night, and_ __ 4 diseoverins in l contrivance, I 'Concluded - myi, • .- brother hadhiliandoned the , •Cha : se, _and ttirnin4 my .1 ) 1(4- t,` him I' %.liscs.Oon wrapped et 9 m the nrms Isigip eus. 't , •i • . . 4 .. t it, an - ved . ,thitt tilt that, a number of tin. F'OrliCr* and otlit'v- . .ravolOrs arrived at-a late libur, and -or - 0y - itrod being - cugaged,::.oar , , liish Edmund -itisi obliged to Fleep with 115 i Perceiving me 4olwed aWay on the back . side' . 4 . the ;bed, and tinfr brdther lying as- usual Oimir3,in_the ti*iddle, he(iietly laid hims.(df down .'w).the frOntl part Of the ,be and :went to. sled At about 2 ore i f';.nrful noise. -11, in 'at the. Wind4w, linlit . 'is div il ! - •=4; j - • 'l'll tache4, , q,tc i t e little divil 4• ' ; : o,' beld . 4 1..m04;iir . • OliVitig, his nOk i t i): trending 'IT oti 1 lic;ad..i; -- . 1 i l l .IV:haiis thif -n (I'M in inrprise.4,. ..1 ' Dlvil a thhis. frother of your 1 1 'g.i,oiri,n, matter';i)' li,lndignant,lriOniv -the sli‘iart, of 114' , ---.. 1 . i, ' I' did niit.l',e .Taylor,' • Whitnal itwake. • i ' Diva a cari O sii that I gqti ; • s4.me!lime givi.ti :; . .ii , . winch made WM J. . . I Edmund thett ranging us all la, t§ slop, siniplt ric ,nixt . tintel3" yn will find / , 4 mint r' TM3 Tito story. otl yt~ is Old in nn J : antflJ, in. the t 4-) Only. three y .ars ohlywhen lic canto with lis Mother! to Lresid- [at '..R;hotibrii,riii, the ying Duke of Reichstatlt ;spent : the w1i.)1,.! remainder of hi life iiitber lliereor - at Vim. i• ' , na , only on 'one or- two oOns,ions traveling from ,either 'bey rid the-distance of afeW Miles. By his .grand father, t he.em pror,,,: as well as by all the other nicrithers of the .' a 03-al family, the seems to ha • c-ialw4s . .becu -treated.,,,With ,<4. 7 4.4 4 +,,,, ..1,4 . 0 . , 'Ol., - Att. - t,_trie_ departure Of Ina mother to, ti ejtaliiiii :states, he w:e . ' com - i mitted to the care of vilrious,master.;,,, under the siiperintendilnee . of tin 16strian nobleman 01l rank, the coito t Maurice d c 'Deietrieltstpin. ycgarding his early cdacatiOn, only two facts' or any interest in•enietitioncLd : his.exceSsive reluctance at . firsti to lOarni German; .Whicli, hOweeri soon becamol mo'ic his ' own than . -Treneh,; andhis fondness' err historical read- . ina, tiniVespeeially fur . ' bOks relatin, to the . career of his father. iris a' bee-,-he Was,- on the whole,.thill;_grave, and L - orthleSs: but do cile and affect for ate: '' -.,.:. . - - • . The news of i ts - faker's ideath, •Nvhicli O'c - -- i . , I , . i cum:kJwhen he tras!tert years'of age, is said , . , , . :: : to have prodece a visible 1 cfrect upon hirn. It wasevident, inileed that the bOy,•-oung as he Wiis,'-had _been brOoding in . secret os er his :oWn i.changed. .cenditiOn, and. cherishing-as' , .well as hecould; the thcitight of its, connection: with the extraordinary', htn'pan being whom ho could dimly yeeollect 1141S:father, : . whose. . ,t bust and.' portrai 'he ;:'...could still .see , and rho, as they. tried to 'eitplaiii to liirn;Was new' shut Up on ate island on the other side Of the earth; whither th, natinns Of,Europehad. 1 con spired to send,. him r fo,o heir own 'safety: . The thought, of his father be z cairie the boy's simple ..passiOn, and lilipfr he4ould no longer think of that father us Otisting'ol the earth, his; Fe- speet :, for his inetiory ainelnted to a, wOrAlp . . Every book thai,k!oald; tA I him .any thing about Ins father he devoured with cagernesS ; and if he chaneedi'to he - Otthe. arrival at VI. , i enna oflany, one, Iho ,hitd' kid . . personal -rela'- i wins With the etnperor, lteri'as uneasy till, he had seen him', l i ttlest , to ;ratify this anxiety for information, h 4 tUtUrs, it ,his grandfather's command, begttnito'insyuet him systematic ; ally in modern; his t ory and iiolitieS ; concealing from . him nothing 4 says M. , d,e..lllonthcl,' that \ , . • , 1 - .1 - .1 .'' x)uldenlighten hiiii-asAo,the, rea course of .\, ~ . t ., ; , I - hmfather's life; od l itSicflacts On the- condi :?l, - • . tionaf Europe,. and only adding such% coin merita and expositions . as Might make hint a . ware; at the sane: time, lt , _what point his -fa - . titer was tO \be'' pr eh:ended. . l. '. .. . ::i• -; • Pet plexed s 111 •nelt less Ons in t history, -itc-: .cording to lide4 icti,ithei poor boy _did il n best t:oc.o ine to the.right conclusion, and to ex ',. 0 • . t . - pressliiinselfjudicionsly l to., l his tutors'regard.- ing What he waS tatiglitlo ebasider hisfather'S „errs and ex s; I eessn:nl ,errors I,.iises of feeling and . iiistinethowever;ltis rell,erencelorthe nieniory eif hisfather pre-vailed: The! , .•ery books which hisfatherhad liked, ,such-uSTaisei, and OSSiati beeatne 'for' that Ircasolit, -.ins faVoritcs. 'llis father's eaMpaigns and:diiipatches s ;lte : made, a subject of:diligent study, using ti- A text •for his own Militabt lessons: - : 4 . . before-he , had attained liis surpotc lie had read and Lre-reaerei(ervtliir, I - 1 - •• , ' • been 'Written in regard .to Istaroleou,j and had., fixed ,inhis''Mem pia memory all the most minute p .' .ticulars relating ;to ~ 114sniiitnry,, or political life, F.. the naine 4f hii genqrals, his chief: hat.; ties, and the.'liariousloldentti iu• his longsca-. reer,from his birth in'ic,:irsica, 0 his ~burial in St; lieletia -- ,' l' F C.lne POlitt in this, great.histo . ry he would dwell Qu ,*jtti special interest -1 , 1854. bek I 'am-Oohed:by a e 4:boori was streaming iiiakiiig bite bedroom' as . gn to',..bed with k . spnr . exclaimed _Edmund, as be 'high the air,. one hand turd the other! holding the on, just - over my ciAtter;FAtenui r J exclaim .is the, totter except this. 1 11:is run his spur into nee, 'three Ane,hes,' replied the in, whq \v;l sufrerituy, under !' +n it fbi pni;,l . mealit it . fQr - out my bpother,/only 'halr ~ 10J.eafe wbn. , you :meant it, it,'. repli N ekrEdniuncl i at :tile . .Iriy lirotlier,,severat slaps yi,lll like a.!youtiginill4m. - • • unbuekled !the spur,l'ana ar " bed azabi, he turned t(.Ngo remarliino. to 11)v brotber.-- 6,try to rid me fora horse, kreko g one, ye young var- N OF NAPOLEON. 'W•lS' l apolete,s . son, as rtu le e . ittitied the I')unaperrti . . PNorth British Review, eau read with jeep inte.r ssi • 17 —_:. that Wln?.re (Aid luniversal arelatnatip4:, he ,I himself had'conicinto the world the-um:Mt. um Sei6 US - / elr 1 ,,11 ipi g hiy .- enip - ir6. •' 1- • - ina i •. This:brood!ovet 4 the past. tinturaly• as r sumed !the forM , , ikf a restless anxiety. rei!spect.-: ingthe tuttire • Plat be; the son of Z.;1;Pole • .wasf .1 ~. that, ! : ,,.. . 0n , no cofnmott person, as.titeoun 'er of a great tut+, Superior actions andknal— ifications would he required of hini,, thlit in,,, sonic - iiay or 'other he must take-itart.:ll the aflitirinf Earopestielt4tts the ideethati.in-' eVitably took' pc+session of him. Thttpe'','. lientry of his ten ers seems to have ,fostered:: it to an unduedxt cut: II; for • ex;atitpli, the poor youth, contraCted an admiration 'for the poet BY run, his teaqiers,„ wire ! at hand . eritl , else the poef a iltt lE 4 . l :and reduce' Itirt o p inion to the just shape:anoT standard.'lest he should' impropriety; c'ttiltiS case,' Avould be • the :sig. - .- halof e..a !,. .+,erated praise. If :a . glint,. he ' , :vtis seen' tote falling in, love 1 411 a) a lady his graudflither?s court ; they -.w . re at hand ! te'r''4;tis onhitti.Ont of the affair , byi ' eoni siderations of What was due to ,his per'.uliar- I situation, L aud his impertanee in . the. fluidic eye. : With thisinotion of the 'peculiarity of his poSiiiortbranOishedbefere him from 'Morn; .ing till night, he would:'go moping about th , ~. . . . imperial court,' an amiable, ' but nn Lapp) ,- yOtith : And what,' after all,' was the , ;l l 4 )eeuli: arity of hissitu4ion, except- eNtretnehtsignif-' 1 icance: ' ' : ! ! -1- ' • ' , l a . A pehsioner, it :the nteantiine; on the: ampe, , , rial bounty, ulttrnatety the mere posSesser of 1: some bohemian estates, this'Mother7s 'Second'- - • marrittge in 1$l;)' with: the: , Cotott, I,Nipperg ! having seiTred,lll . i'm from Italy; stilli.more A! ompl e t e ' y-1 llt i n before) doomed to inactivi: . fy by, thetnisfor(tuticy 'of too great' a Ittame.,: , Ai'its there 'iota rekery in all that so*citude, of whielt he foul] himself the object''?'llatint-: -, ed. it . would ap,,p' ear, by some. such, feeling; and yet carried . orward by the restlesi sense that he ino4t do . I soznethittg or other t.(5 merit Ws'naine; 1:e sethns to have grappled at the Only chance that ;vas opened to him--iimilita- S , Fy promotion in, his gratidtather's Serilcc.,- , - i Monet.the,assiditity! with which, lie - 'Ettirsucd his military Stutlies,: and the regularift %Nit!' whirl t lie presented 'himself on 'horsebhcl4 at all the reviewst and -parades, the Vjennese pointing him ou on such occasions , its' the sOn„, of NapoleOn r ' 'When, at last, he - itiS per mitted_ by his .4andfitth • er tOas:suthe the.rank and uniform of 'A lieutenant' Col Oriel,: his: . ch. - 4 i 3.1 . , ' was uithoO Youth app giving the fourth ; he was light - i Poor merit and hoarseness. ,? quarter of the horizon, how; ' le 'son of Napoleon NiPuld of- It—that Franee to which be hielt his plying fiither , had be rah such solenminjunctions, be true one to the other ;1 cDC/W., there 'were myriads oft, at beat high at the name of! is Austrian education had in.) him from all meaus ofdreeti communication Irlth his native country, andl liqd made him, n many respects, alien to it ; i but secret cord there were, , which still bound him to Franee. "1 know no one at Paris' he said to a French officer WllO was about re ,turning home from Vienna,''' but salute fo me the coltunt Vendome.' :On the othe hand, if be weal personally forgottent or an known in the city which he thus knew only . from the map, there were at least principl -- and men thatox re ready to ,burst out in hi , behalf. So, at 11 events, it appeared whe the revolution of July, 1830, came to bt 1 , transacted. iiiiti ycung ' Napoleon ,been in Paris ; or near if, when that revolution occur I red, how dia.-rim might have been th e issue i ' Absent as he "as,' says Lonis Blaney' if ar i 4d !general of the to had, but pro noun-ea his Milne the people, when La Fayette and Gilizot, were chaffering. for Due d'Orleans, France, might hate ivui a Napole on 11. instead of LOUIS' Philippe. Some tiro hl Bonapartist attempts it appears were' actin lay made, ,In Paris, one Bonapartist cant. to a meeting of the leading. Politicians, witt the name of the . Duke of Reiebst; ult on hi. :nips, and 'was dexterously locked up 'in a room till the business was' °Ver. Comma , Mentions were even conveyed to the Duke himself. ' ~- There .was on ever, to _which t ten "t•FiSttitily 1 . helonged"; - Ni )c i'lueatheil 14:ii N that . thPy should and-where; even se Bran hearts,,. - - , ~ 13ona parte. Ift deed. isolated i, When the .news of the revolation„reached yienna,• the yEitingm man, don id -Wait - cottefOliris agitation.; he Viten requested,' it, is-said, : in the flutter of it moment, to be allowed to gi' to the assistance of Charles `X. , Rut ,with the news of the ascension. tif tOitis Philippe; otb ., , ! cr:thotights succeeded, .9ne eVening,-aa-he .'liras ascending a staircase hi theimperial pal. ace, a -:foung''NiOman, enveloped in Seuich plait, rushed forward from a. landing:place, where she.seema to .have been :waiting, :and takingitis hand, .pressed it - eagerly. to.-:her lips.: ills tittor, Uho. was mill] him,' asked, her, business . . - "Stay . Idiot kiss the hand of my. so l vereign'S son.?" she — said,: and immediately; disappeared. -.. For some Aline ' , the incident • I . could not .be explained,,. but ati length • no doubt remained that the :fair 6tranger was his ousin, Wit , Countess Crnerata, a] married i • , daughter of his deceased , . aunt, Boechiochio. i.ht 'i Visit to Vielititt - , : thq : Countriahadconj titiiteti herielf the medium :et :ea!n.rannica:.- tion 'between the' Boniipargistkand her yciung . otiiin,.to wlitnit' She . ventured; some months after the reN'ill9tion'iri Jiiiy; AO:address a let:: Ater . eneotinti lP ing him. - take a' .deeided .- piii,., - 1....-. ' - .- • - I.r - rom these s . and from all ',-ii‘rerthie J,if, the .., ii \ one . iind, j the poor._ youth: seerns -fo' Itat,-e, I • ~ . , . sltrih.withia kind - of the, horror ;, triad . . his exOtement,,during the , revelittiOrt - ot . 1.13 4 46 ~)"- 6 . 11..5u\ 'hied into a.. reinter., mood, tt tid . " - lt: ibegatt, yr_ :are tOlkitt.the,form. of, titt ,. .,o4iii. % rigs 4,11 . i f . y, ‘ , Austrian redeetiOna On his Own '-..\\ .' .' . . - •1 :. •'• ' . e. - OLE NUMBERi.-.Ts4a,ii--, I nded. Tor three'dai : S ihei at-ed at the head of 14 . iegt-! word of ("mita - land- 7 -4)a "the) id aside, with loss of i yidee life, and the relations in. Which Prince. tOnk once did - his,a,,fritation .return —on the oemsion,zriamelyi, of `ibepolities! movements, in his - mother',s:Stale = When the,news of thoe moVenietits-reie he() -Vienna,,,he was anxious to be alViie4 to : go = to . ltaly to leis. mother's assistine6;•bufneith: er on this inelL4on.&luld hi-grant.. Front the first,,indeed, it .bad, beo that the •youngiNagoltiti`could-n4tiiig . Tonsc i , Undoubted synytolui of. the preseneitiii..l4 3. -cop4itution of the seeds !if that 4taladY4hat 1, - had carried t 4 his fluter,. early:pre4l*l themseites; and to t6.se. were added:6o4. symPtonis, too cicarly . matAingi : l4r4 -prey of consum4otr: Froittiberg a heiiit4 SotnO,'delieuee.hoy, ito hid ni t beff!re his eighteenth year, inta:a:tall, - 64dvi.- and siekly, thane, handsotße young rrtan;.ttte s . constant care l of the iraperio Towards the end of the year 1821 he hiaitae•- 1 - . rapidly worse, and was obliged ,to saUitain' from his military exercise, and from all so. tip e e 'ertionS!whatever. During the - *inter - of that, year and the` spring of ,I*heiliviid atSchonbrunn' .alraost who ll y confineirto'hi§' chiunho.. It had been ,resolved to 'remote' him to Naples, should it be,.possiblote`dco#4: in the: . autumn of 1832; but the disea-4- 1 .Ititf - made such. progresh that, before that timeithe fiit:ll result had taken place, For many he.liad been• in great Pain, and incapable: of any change, of poSition save that of ;_being NA heeled to a . Window baleony, , overrooking• the garden of Schonbrunn. -Even this Was - tte last beyond his strength ; and, Stretched On:. his -bed in great suffering, he waited ,113^g `ion A v for hisTelea e Maria Louisa Er rived from `ltaly oily time to see him die. It W:1 on , the 224.1 of July , 1832, and in tbe've: ry room that had heei'becupied by his.iathei. or 'his famon, l 4 Visit to r Schonbrurin,' - that he breathed his last. Some days f atlez thero was a ProcesSiOn . through the , stiJeets Of Viens' na, and the li;ly of Napoleon!s-son mitted to , the imperial vaults.' . The peopte of Vienne showed muchreeling on the occasion; the cholera had just been thinning their own' households, . P inaoNti .'` ~ f I. - - THII MO • , -. , ' The rise,. PrOntess, and present, st ate-' of e, )lormonismii iundoubtedly the most remarb.:, ;;.)le moral The ;of the .nineteenth; ' century. The decline of lalloteetisM in ute East is marked by the rise of anew and:, - mete absurd rellOm in the model Republic Of the ; W,estern; \Vorld. - It is one of Those eigreat ' 'cefices growling on the bo{ly of freedonilike a fungus on', tree,'Or a tumour on thelunu iYstem. ThC a, boasted le4rtun'• i inlelHig and e ce of this phiyisophie age are sadly, at vari . with this ` : exhibition Of Credulous ignorance '- and •.gacrilegx us presumptioP- We are tol& '.. ie the testimony of the missionary, whichWe recently published, that ;there , are in-Greet- Britain about sixty' thousand, an a ; , , ,th - _ bOut fifty t tousand Of people who belong, to this singul. r ; sect. - re 'are not less than •;:1 forty thonatid more Iv o are pattered. otter _ lowa, ItisSenri r Illiuoi Wiscolpsin; and other ', )', l ;tern.tates, niaki ' together' about one .: Hundred aid fifty thou d, kple, belonging - 1 to this new and novel r ligious'denomitiatieiL . ' The avowr.l of polyga yas one of 'the -Ace; trines 'of the -saints seems to hive *had nil ef. eN.twhat,efer in cheekipg the infattiation, ,and this, too, in this age ofliterature, knoivlepge, and _civili+tir ." -We confess that :*e.'' ', etP2' kid t • ulers:tandthis matter. ' The•'fenn -. - 'Ter of Alormonisnt Was an illiterate adv.Mtitt• • er, and tjie Master spirits of the present dvi are little_ better. They haveArafted;:!uptiti their system ca - moit,:licehtiontfe:aterei -arid yeit converts continue to pour in; MuLthese. • _ too, froin the industrious,. thriVing,..`and.geti; erally spe l aking moral portion of the:ixldtla- tiOn.i. '' Thurlow Weedi i reeeritly stated that--a - , is only . 4bout-„twenti=eight years ifineej. 4. Smith, t4e. founder and first prephei . ilf .thiii sect, brought his ,tahlet..Or bible to him jo ted, whiCh on examination, was fbund -tind .ridl i euleui thathe declined itiv; ling to dit With the :_pnbliciitiott.L. , - - t dity has n.eVerthelessi an impo'itsee .. lected as it is astonishing. • Whit the . be no man cart trill : -.The- time is , at when thepopidation of Utah will' en t to aut horizet the shiliSsion of that ' territory ( - into the Unioh as i , State: .:: Then •;..the wholie_-suhject will C6me up for diSeussion ,Lbefiare__Qatgress, miff; Mormonism;,ie..all - -its „phasei, till be - hilly *bed add irteitigai4. Av '._ }fere Ihe another opixtrtimity - to - test-the principle. of the right of the people ofdierrek- - -ritonieslo select mid ,legalize'; dthe loa 'histi- - tutions Mier which they are $ 0 live:. r: There 'is netliivi,g to. prevent a community which 're cognize4;polygamy, and yet adopts a rept liean torn orgo'venitrint, d'om beingadvalt ne of the States of this' Union!"; :::W e e • t'ealy heard the ,opititotif expre;sed iii 1, that Utah ;ought 'lotto , be admitted rilber or theTition . with; that odious f domestic Wier. , .But ,weare 'not awarel 3,t, the, objection is valid; or, could bo reeoneil l ed with the great eitdinal principle wlnchLaklmits to the people the right ,ot self govertnifeni. i The queStion IS one tat, ht., no distant da y_ will have tirbe,tiet and,dechted. havoprin so absur jig any ; Tlijanbsu l ctid will not, dista, 1)0 ailffic ted as have°alf advance MEM feature 4 4, - --- --TheY tit* grest 4 Pn 44 e - Pi o *# in, The Sari . Diego Heraldg iogishis; ting;Writton upon. aio u rig Klan w i g ' dentally shot : . 1, ;;,.. _ . •,\ . -.-.-,., ' lies the 1 1 9diefjeetstiliaiL*4 who was aocidentally TsttOt. :-::',.,.: ,-,'' oa the :bank of the_paeus ririit' s- ' - ':.--.• I. 'by' a young,t:nan " i . ;: ' - •-•-•-' -• , * . w . tie Nina accidentally shot with one vittheiggiy, colts revacir •rithoo •stopPer.'fot_ltANl(.ooeli to rest 1 . 1 It was,one of tita: - .o(l•M#okind brass mounted and_ of such lit the' kingdomof heaven." - • EDIT a 1 1 'for the foni, wa, ace " her INN= . / , `~~l. . ,tJ '''.- -- 1 :•:•:: ......,:',.,:,i-.1.-..1.-:,..; MI=M