4- ;TIE rWHOE ART OF GOVERNMENT CONSISTS; IN THE ART' 01? BEING II ON EST.-j EFFE RS 6 N. VOL. 2 STJRQjjbSBURG, MONROE 'COUNTY, PA., THUKSDAY, '.JANUARY 83 1852: . No 14; PtiMisliod by THcodorc Sclsocii. TERMS Two jpHars per annnum.iii ailrnncc "f o uoiiars anu a quarter, nail yeany ;ui -ui-t ,. , l '?.. lore the endx)fthe-year,Twolollarsanda'half. -Those , Cervantes, though he begs; Jt he nights It un- SSSSSlfSte the stars, he dreams heaven-sent dreams cents," per year, extra. . . , , ., No papers ditcontiuu-d until all ar.earagcs'are paid, except at the option of tlie Editor. n-"u..lnmiiTiiV: Tint' hTfpnrtint nVin Sruiarc 1S1X- teen lines) will be inserted three weeks for one dollar, . . r I ........ t incnl-lirttl 1 The Charge for one and three iii-crtiongthc am ana twentv-iire cenis tor every .u-.iii----- incimun. A liberal i aisepimt made to ycany auycriif ers. ID" paid. JET All letters aiiatcsgca to mc -ptor nrnsiuc posi- J O 3 .iP.tt I M TlS'ffl. H.ivms a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and ornanl6hlalTpe. wc are prepared "to'cxecute every desciiptioti of' ' , - , . ; . - - t ! : ;.-,. . .1. - i. jusK LegMivti.w printed with xieamcs ,ai despatgi, on leasouuue terms, A.T lr.i 2 . "OFF C E OF . jil E Be C f erso u t an, Kepn hi ica sa . , , Cheer Uj.- Never go gloomily man -with a rhind, Hope is a better companion -than fear, Providence ever benignant and kind, -tii - a'. ,- f - i ifi'1U.,r., Gives with a smile-.wJiat.you take with a tear; : All will be rightj .. ; Look to the light,T Morning is ever thd daughter of night, -All that is black will Bs all tliat'is briglit,' Cheerily,, cheerily then! cheer up.! -Many a foe. is a friend in disguise, Many a sorrow a blessing most true, Helping the heart to be 'happy and wise, WhH lore ever precious" and joys ever new - Stand in the van V Ff(, . Strive like a man;!; This is the brav.est Sid.clcverest plan, Trusting in God while yob do what you can, .Cheerily, cherily then 1. cheer up ! ' - Trori. the llevcrles'of a Bachelor. Allies: S-zmfyizzff BesoInSso::. After all, thought I, ashes follow blaze, in evitably as Death follows Life. Misery treads j on the heels of Joy; Anguish rides swift after Pleasure. . . j "Come to me again, Carlo," said 1, to my . dog; and I patted him fondly once more, but now ,only. by.the-light of the;dying4.mbers. It is very little pleasure- onex takes in fond- ling brute favorites j-Tuit" 'it - tsr-a pleasuer that when if passes, loaves lid void.. It is on-; ly a little alleviating redundance-in your sol-; itary heart-life, which if lost, anotlier. can be . .. time is leu out mis time you. are too laie. But if your heart, not solitary not quiet- i gJie is onc gha cannot hear-you; she can ing' its htnncfs with mere Ibve of chase, or not lhank you for the violets you put with-dogrr-Bot repressing, year. after,, its 'earnest; in her-stiff; white hand. Jqa3?after BomelhinS belter, and more! And l,'ien the grassy mourid-the cold sha- spiritual lias lainy'iinKed itseir i.y poncis trongras life, to another hearts-Is the.casliiig off easy, then?., ., , ., . .. - Is it then only a little heart-redundancy cutoff; which the "next bright, sunset will fill UP ' j And my facy, as it had painted doubt un- j der the smoke, and cheer under warmth of; the maze, so now it began under the taint light of the smouldering "ember5j ito..picture heart-desolation. What kind 'pongratulatory letters, hosts of them, coming, from old and half-forgotten friends, nowthatour "happiness is a year, or two yea'rs'oTH! ' ' ' !" "Beautiful'5;.' . " ' , ' - rAye, to be sure, beautiful ! "Rtch." . . . m. Pho, the dawdler ! how little he ' knows ofhea r. ; .-'fu'"1 ' t-'"'- f ... .wt. f heart-treasure,1 who speaks.of wealth ' S1 s' t'i '1-1 -r- "' u 11 i who lores jhis -wife-, as a -wife should to a man only be loved'!. ) 'Vnnnir." fa" . -w- -Youngnndecd: gDilclj-SS ; as. infancy; . . ' J l,b ;l Q J charming as the-morning. - ' i . . i - 4 u- Ah, these letters bear'a stmg; they bring , ... ' l- 'i.A'Ti f. c-, to mind, with new, and newer freshness, if it , be possible, the value of that, whichfyou .trein- - J ' ble lest you lose. j ' . . . " Howanondr vou watch ahat step-wf it 1 And' now Wlth lns Pale E,ster in the ravC' lose not its "buoyancy; How vou study the col- ihat Jo ve 'lms come aWQy from thc ,nound' or 6n that check, if it grow'not fainter; Hoiv;'AVhere worms feast' and centera on' the ho?' tMmMn . .t i . - i . t' How you watch the storms lest they harm VflH lrPtrinLP HI t in nctrn in t n, PVPS 11 IT J - be not the lustre of Death ; How you totter , under the weight of that muslin sleeve-a ' phantom weight!.Howyou feartodoit,and yet press orwrd, to note if that breathing be quickened, as- vou ascend .the home-heights, to look off ori sunset lighting the plain. r"eu aJlu "-'"' ". Is you? sleep, quiet sleep, after .tW she tli breathing be regular and sweet! has' whispered,, you her fears, and in theJ , 1Jut da mes-the..night rather same breath-soft ag a flghfharptas an ar- when you can catch.no breathing, row-bid youbear it brav6.y'? ' ' Aye pUt y0Ur ir'awaX-compose your- Tj-i, . i ; - you self listen again. fresher, a little kindling.-before the ashes .. : . . 'Jw . I she triumphs pver.djsease But, Poverty, the Worlds afmoner, has " '- ' - come to you with reidy, sparp hand. 1 18 1,01 -vour T V 7 . ' " " -i Alone, .with .your Jog living on hones, and 3 is- your loy?d b s fehead that is 30 you, on hope-Lkindling each morning, dying C0W alld ryr Ioved boy nver 10 glbWly each-'night-.this could be borne. Phi- '9" agaipho ia dead! . lo-opby Ypuld-hrpg home itsstores to the I &h the lrS-the tears ; mhafc blessed loneman . . Money, is. not -in his hand, but UlinBs are t6arsi everfear mvht0 ,et them Knowledge- is-in'M. brain'! andirora that'fullon l"s forehead,-or-his lip, lest you awa brain.liedraws.o.ut faster, as he draws slower hc Iiim- Clasp liirn-ciasp him Ijarder trom his pocket: He remembers: and on r.e- memorance The fancies, - used f - not in dread, but in 'cdm'panionshfp. His' lie-can liveior davs.-and wnnks. y-ML" aowu, guuuy yi -.; wf'v, rmrfirll JWXSt ,:k . he is Rtiffi" h h sLirk and.cold. '. . o -"v." "." ' i-ii xii :. jj ' -jfi nr ,s."F t" ii.--. --. i .Vnel'Sft-lv 'him j.m coVlge. is elastic ;.,is is opr pr.iu,c. 11 i " .. . ;.--,! i l- I1 U-1--, Mluuo'f ...-. io.ram-peltinggr. )nd.1iis dog crouches '-oAta- 1 1 P ?Mn hfr, nir.,; ' ' ' frr i-JK'KiMr. 7.."V poAvn Xltrflf V,rA rWiifr it f inn t iPRfll crust he divides with him, and laughs. He crown's" Himself with glorious memories of of the prisoned, and homeless Gallileo. He hums old sonnets, and snatches of poor Johnson S plays. He chants Drydeh's odes, and dwells on Otway's rhyme. ' He reasons , , .,. r;nnaB fi, t,mnr -------.---- m lUgvuw, uu uuu.u. j mnta nun, aim luuyna ut ih wurju , lur uiu .!;-.- 1.: . .1 1 l. t- . . Worldj'thanlr Heaven, has left him alone! Keep your money, old misers, and. your palaces, old princes the world is mine ! I earn. not. iFYirtiine. what vou me rlenv ' J J i ou cannot rob me ot tree nature's grace, you cannot shut the windows of the sky: You cannot bar mi' cionsidnt feet to trace The" woods and lawns, by living streams, at eve ; ! Let health, my nerves and finer fibres brace, Anil I, their toys, to the great children, leave ; ! Of Fancy, Reason, Virtue, naught can me I bereave! But if not alone ! If he is clinging to ypu for support, for con solation, for home, : for life she,' reared in luzury perhaps, is faint for bread? - Then, the iron enters the soul ; then the ; nights' darken tinder any sky light. Then I the d&3s grow long, even in the solstice of Winter. She may not complain; what then ? Will your heart grow strong, if the strength , of her love can dam up the fountains of tears, ' and the tied tongue -not tell of bereavement 1 Will it solace you to find her parting.' the poor treasure of food you have stolen for her, ' with begging, foodlcss children! J 13ut this ill, strong hands, and HcaVcn's j help, will put down. Wealth' again; Flow-' ers again ; Patrimonial acres again ;4 Bright-' ! ness again, liutyour little Uessy.-your n. ! yoritc child, is pining. Would to God ! you say in agony, that wealth couii bring fullness again into that! blanched cheek, or round those little thin ijps once more; but it cannot. Thinner and thinner they grow; plaintive and more plain- tivc her sweet voice. "Dear Bessy" and your tones tremble; vou feel that she is on the edrc of the ";rae. Can vou, piuck iier "back Can endearments stay hcrj business is heavy, away from the ovcd chid. home) you go to fondIe while yet j do7 of bead-stone! The .wind, growing witli the night, is rat tling at the window-panes, and whistles dis-1 raally. I wipe a tear, and in the internal ofi pveverjCj thank. God, that 1 am no such mourner. jjut gaicly snaji-f00ted, creeps back to the household. All is briVht arrain; -rthe violet bed's not -sweeter Than the delicious breath marriage sends forth. Her lip is rich and full; her cheek delicate as a flower. Her frailty doubles your love. And the little one she clasps frail too too frail ; the boy you' had set your hopes and heart on. You have watched him growing, I ever prettier, ever winning more and more ! upon your soul. The love you bore to him , when ho firetl"Pl names-yqur name and j I I -1- L.1-1 - k 1 -t . I I ers has doubled in strength now that he . . : , asks innocentiv to be taughtof this, or that, , . ., -, and promises you by that quick curiosity that j flashes In his eye, a- mind full of intelligence. . , i... : i,.m. i... . 1 ; ' Jlood, that he perhaps may have had which 1 . , , ; unstrung your soul to such tears,.as you pray - J . V , i God may be spared you' again has endeared; to. him! Ho w ofren 'ou stcal t0 Ilis bed late at i njShl and la3' J'our hahd UP011 thei brow, vlierc the curls cluster thick, rising; and' WnS with the throbbing temples, and & "nutes together, the little lips j IMo. thpro is nnthinnr! Put' your hand how to his brow-i-damp ip- j i u... L.'.tt. iw'll.r..t t ' " 7"1 utu.u, igm-ueep: 7$ cannot Imrt )'ou canq". wahen. nun : xet mto'a blaze again But courage, and paticnce, and faith, and. hope have their limit. Blessed be the man who escapes such trial as will determine limit! To a lone man it comes not near; for how can trial take hold where there is nothing by which to try?. A funeral 7 You reason with philosophy., You read Hervey and muse A friend dies ? You sigh, A grave-yard 1 upon the wall. you pat your dog it is over. Losses ? You retrench you light your pipe it is forgot ten. Calumny? You laugh you sleep. But' with that childless "wife clinging to you in love and sorrow what then ? ' Can you take down Senaca now, and coolly blow the dust from the leaf-tops ? Can you crimp!yoiir Hp with Voltaire? Can you smoke idly, your feet dangling with the ivies, your thoughts all waving fancies upon a-churchyard wall a wall that borders the grave of your, boy ? Can you amuse yourself by turning stinging Martial into rhyme ? Can you pat your dog, and seeing him wakeful and kind, say, " it is enough ?" Can you sneer at calumny, and sit by your fire dozing ? Blessedjthought I again, is the man who es capes such trial as will measure the limit of patience and the limit ofcourage ! But the trial comes; colder and colderwere growing the embers. That wife, over whom your love broods, is fading. Not beauty fading; that, now that your heart is wraped in her being, would be nothing. She sees with quick eye your dawning ap prehension, and she tries to make that step of hers elastic. Your trials and your.loves together have centered your affections. They are not now as when- you were a loan man, wide spjad and superficial. They have caught from do mestic attachment a finer ton,e and touch. They cannot shoot out tendrils into bar ren world-soil and suck up thence strength ening nutriment. They have grown under the forcing-glass of home-roof, they will not now bear exposure. You do not uow look men in the face as if a heart-bond was linking you as if a com munity that monopolizes your feeling. When the heart lay wide open, before it had grown upon, anihclosed ar&dd particular objects, it could take strength and cheer, from a hun dred connections that now seem colder than ice. And now those particular objects alas for you ! are failing. What anxiety pursues you ! How you struggle to fancy there is no danger ; how she struggules to persuade you there is no danger. How it grates now on your ear the toil and turmoil of the city ! It was music when when you were alone ; it was pleasant even, when from the din you were elaborating com; forts for the cherished objects ; when you had such sweet escape as evening drew on. Now it maddens you to see the world care less while you are steeped in care. They hustle you in the street ; they smile at you across the table; they bow carelessly over the way ; they do not know what canker is at your heart. The undertaker comes with his bill for the dead body's funeral. He knows your grief; he is respectful. You bless him in your soul; You wish the laughing street-goera were all undertakers. Your eye follows the physician as he leaves your house; is he wise? you ask yourself; is he prudent ? is he the best ? Did he never fail is he never forgetful ? And now the hand that touches yours, is it no thinner no whiter than yesterday ? Sun ny days come when she revives ; color comes back ; she breathes freer ; she picks flowers ; she meets you with a smile; hope lives again. But the next day of storm she is fallen. She cannot talk even ; she presses your hand. Vou hurry away from business before your time. What matter for clients who is to reap the rewards? What matter for fame whose. eye will it brighten ? What matter for riches whose is the inheritance it You find her propped with pillows; she is looking over a little picture-book, bethumbed by the dear boy she has lost She hides it in her chair; she has pity on you. Another day of rival, when the spring sun shinqs, and flowers open outof the doors; she leans on your arm, and strolls into the garden where the first birds are singing. Listen to them with her ; what memories are in bird-songs ! . You need not shudder at her tears they are tears of Thanksgiving. Press the hand that lies light upon your .arm, and you, too, thank Goi, while yet you may ! You are early at 1iome mid-afternoon. Your step-is not light; it is heavy, terrible. They have sept lor ypu. She is lying down ; her, eyes half closed ; her breathing long and interrupted. She hears you; her eye opens; you put your hand in hers; yours trembles; h.rs does not. Her lips move ; it, is your panic. " Be strong," she says " God will help you !" She presses harder your hand: "Adieu !" A long-bieath another; you are alone a gaip. No.tears-now 5 poor, man ! You can not find them ! , : Again home early. There is a smell of varpish in your house. A colfin is 'there ; they have clothed the body in decent grave clothes, and the undertaker is screwing, ijown the lid, slipping round, on tip-Joe. Does lie fear to waken- her . "He asks you a simple- question about 'the inscription ppon the plate, rubbing it with hi coartcufft , Ypujppkjjiii! straight in the. eye; you motion to tljp.dopr ; ypu darp. not spqak. . f Ife takes up his hat'und glides but steiiltli fulasacat, & ' ' . The man has done his work well for all. It is a nice coffin a very nice coffin !. Pass yqur hand over it how smooth ! ; Some sprigs of mignionette are lying care lessly in a little gilt-edged saucer. She loved mignionette. It is a good staunch table; you are a house keeper a man of family ! Aye, of family ! keep down outcry, or the nurse will be in. Look over at the pinched features ; is this all that is left of her ? And where is your .heart now ? No, don't thrust your nails into your hands, nor mangle your, lip nor grate your teeth together. If you could only weep ! Another day. The coffin is gone out. The stupid mourners have wept what idle tears! She, wjth your crushed heart, has gone out ! Will you have pleasant evepings at your htSme now. Go into your parlor Uiat your prim, 'house keeper has made comfortable with clean hearth and blaze of sticks. Sit down in your chair; there is another velvet-cushioned one, over against yours-emp-ty, You press your fingers on your eye-balls, as if you would press out something that hurt the brain ; but you cannot. Your head leans upon your hand ; your eyes rest upon the flashing blaze.. Ashes always come after blaze.; Go now into the room where she was sick softly, lest, the prim housekeeper come af ter.. They have put new dimity upon her chair; they have hung new curtains over thebed.T Thpy have removed froni the stands its phials, and silver bell ; they have put a little vase of flowers, in their place; the perfume will not offend the sick sense now. They have open ed the window, that, the room so long closed may have air. It will not be too cold. She is not there. - Oh, God! Thou who, dost temper the wind to the shorn lamb be kind ! 'The enibers were dark ; I stirred them; there was no sign of life. My dog was asleep. The clock in my tenant's chamber had struck one. v I dashed a tear or two from my eyes ; how they came there I know not. I half ejacula ted" a prayer of thanks, that such desolation had not yet come nigh me; and a prayer of hope that it might never come. In a half-hour more, I was sleeping sound ly. My reverie was ended. From the Louisville Journal. ' -A Pedasjai, ' N ERECTED IX Itd-iOI- OF HENRY. CLAY, . To be read, commencing at either the base or.apex, His'e , To the skies. Sublimely great, Surmounting hate, . Oh. gloriouJlHy. ' ' W'Un can repay v. , The el . Rare conservator, Hles.s'd mediator, - ,4'. '.- -- riA' . r, ' 'Contending ever, . I ' : : Fullering never, . Foremost m fight,1 " , Battling for right, " Constant in action, . Despising faction, . Thee! noble Harry ol the West, ShrineiUn each patriotic breast, We proudly hail, ana oft exulting claim Kentucky's favored son, sated with fame, When dangers lower the only hope of all In peace, the object of envenomed gall, Sublimelv standing 'mid each party storm Unmoved"; immocablc vve're marlfd thy form Now curbing factions as thev wrangle wrongly, Uniting now our federal ties moi'c strongly, Like some bold beacon cliff 'mid storms grown gray Stemming the angry flood, we view thee, Henry Clay. Elktdn, Todd co., Ky. JOHN HOl'LEY. Picture o Bistrc'ss ica BreSiiiid. Mr. W. H. Levan has been Tisitin Europe and contributing letters to the Berks and Schuylkill Journal. A late number of that paper contains rt picture of the "worst part of Ireland." We sub join it : That ride, from Marlow to the lakes of Killarney, was one of the most melan choly days of my foreign travel. Of en closures, walls, hedges, or of regular di visions of the fields, I could discover uoth ing worthy of the name, and of pretty gardens, fruit trees, or even flower beds I found none. Instead of cheerful farm houses,-1 saw fallen huts and ruined cot tages. As often as we stopped I survey ed, the interior houses, which excited my astonishment. Sometimes I had no oc casion to get off the coach, .for from my elevated seat I could perceive through the ho'es of the roofs the interior of the dwellings we passed. Those who have never been in Ireland may think I am coloring the picture which I am about to give. To such, if they arc not devoid of human feoliug, I could wish 110 greater punishment' than to force them to travel through the counties of Kerry, Cork, Tip perary, &c. But theyitcll me I Visited the worst part of Ireland. Thank God if it is-BOj for -I little thought -so much wretch edness could or did. cxhit in this bright world of onrs. I never met with a n.ore hospitable, generous, witty people than the Irish. But thc wretchedness of the great mass of the population is utterly beyond description. I have been into cab ins dug out of the bog, with no walls, but the peat mud in which they have been excavated : with the roof of turf and straw and wator standing in puddles on tho out side, without chimney, window, door floor, bed, chair, table, knife or forfi fche whole furniture consisting 01 01 sanu was consuming, uy mis siowm.iu so'mc straw to lie down upon, a pot to 06, until there was not a grain of it left, boil, the potatoes in, a tin cup to drink out.of, aud.a wieker-buaKet to taite up the potatoes after they are boiled-, which is' set down in the middle of the floor, andrparoiits and' children squirt down ori the ground, anH'cSftjfeii'food'witlf 'their fipger,s,' sometimes v(l salt, .but oftener wifliouf.And this is literally the whole of their 'living, day after day, and. year after year,, excepting that on Christmas day they contrive to get a little piece of meat and a bit of bread. Ypu will be curious to know whether I have seen many living so ? Yes, hun dreds hundreds ? aye thousands . I could hardly credit my own senses-, until I went into the cabins, and felt my way in thc smoke and darkness, and actually put my hand on the turf sides. Hero they all lie down, parents and children, brothers and sisters, on the straw at night huddled together, literally naked, with oftentimes the ass or the horse, in the same room. It may perhaps sound strange but it is not thc less true, that the Irish man feeds his pig quite as well as his chil dren. It is admitted into his cabin-in which it lives. It has its coi'ner, as thc children have theirs. On the pig rest the best hopes of every poor Irish peasant, for it frees him from his greatest load of anxiety " The pig pays the rent," is the expression you hear constantly re peated. If you hurt a pig they say, "Let the poor thing alone, it pays the rint for us," or if you praise one, "yes, it is a use ful beast, it is our rint," That source of ail tiic poor irishman s cares. Thc high rent which he has to pay to some lord, who perhaps squanders his thousands in London yearly, is the worst of his earthly sorrows. The distance from Marlow to Killar ney is about forty miles, yet thc whole distance I did not find a village, nay not even a single, 1 will not say regular, but even a tolerable human habitation. We stopped to dine, but the sight of the house (?) took away my appetite. Although I am not over fastidious, I always like to know what I eat. The landscape was eveiy where bare, and devoid of foliage of any kind ; the color of the land was the most nielancholyin the world, name ly, brown, and dirty red or lilack. It was all peat and moor, and even a rising ground afforded an extensive prospect still nothing was to be seen but a greater extent of peat and rhbor, yet more barren, rocks, bleak: mountains, and ruined cab ins. When I asked what had become of the inmates of those ruined cabins, the answer would invariably be, "starved or gone to America." It made me melan choly to travel through this country. But how much more melancholy must it be, to live there dependant on a hard master, and, moreover the father of a row of rag ged children ! Now if 3Tou take the wages of an Irish laborer to be as at present, sixpegooa day, and suppose his wife earns in addition fourpence, daily and upon this pittance they and theit family can exist we have for th year three hundred working 'days, a total product of three thousand pence, or twelve pounds about sixty dollars as thc income upon which a laborer's fam family support life. But if we calculate the days many numbered of care and anxiety, on which no work is to be liad : if we take these into account, the income of the poor Irishman, whose labor is his only means of support, must be still con siderably lessened. The coach was continually surrrounded by beggars. Sometimes they would fol low for miles, with the most piteous ap peals for alms : " Good luck your hon or, something for a poor man to-day, and may thc Lord carry you home safe," or " for the love of God, something for a poor blind woman to keep herself and ten children from starving." Such were a few of thc petitions that were made to us for charity. The German gentleman had been to Italy, but he told mc there was ho wretchedness therein comparison to what we had witnessed that day. We arrived at Killarney at ten o'clock at night, where we were surrounded by a crowd of people awaiting our arrival. It reminded mc of my reception at Bou logne, where a babel of voices and the pressure of the multitude give you ah i dea that you arc about being plundered or carried off nolens vokns at themercy of the most stalwart among them. Here jaunting cars from different hotels await the coach to convey you to any one you may have fixed upon. I was recommen ded to the "l.oyal Victoria Hotel," "ded icated to the Queen by her most gracious Majesty's special permission," at the foot of the lakes, " patronized by thc Nobili ty and Gentry of the United Kingdom," and I can assure you I was fully compe tent to do justice to an excellent supper, after travelling from six in the morning until ten at night without having eaten a meal.' Wlaici-i Would You Choose? Supposing the body of the . earth were a great mass or ball of thc finesf; sand,, and that a sipgle grain or particle of this 'sand should be aunihilateduvery thousand Wears. Supposing then that your choice to bchappy all the while this prodigious -mass on condition you was to be miserable ior ever after; or supposing that you might be hannv forever, after, on condition you k'ould lie miserable until, the whole. mass' Qt sanu were tnus annimr.iu-u, ... iuuic of one sand, in 'a. thousand) years.-1 -. wliicli'of'ti-ese two cass 'would you make! your choice s jFrohi thc y. Y! Home Journal. liossutliN Praj'or on Hie Grave of those vJio had fallen ittHa polna. Those readers who have with some in terest pursued the glorious struggle of thc Hungarians, -will doubtless remember that one of their most victorious battles was fought at Kapolna. The Austrian were driven from all their positions, and relinquished their attacks, retiringin good order certainly on their retreat to Pcsth, but leavings thc Hungarians unequivocal ly masters of thc field of battle. It was an advantage dearly purchased, however. Many a noble and heroic eye closed for ever on the fatal plains of Kapolna. The dead were buried with all the pomp and. ceremony of military mourning ; the flag ofHungary was lowered over their graves, as if to take a last farewell of its gallant champions, whilst the thunder of the can non spoke the soldier's requiem Kossuth afterwards visited thc graves of the fallen herde3j when a scene of great excitemont and p'owerful interest took place. No doubt many, of your readers have now seen and heard the great Kos suth and we may justly picture to our selves thc sublime, almost spiritual, ex pression which no doubtpervaded I1I3 no ble face and figure, when excited by some great thought and splendid imagining. He stoodby the last resting -place of many of his dearest friends, and of thousands whose fearless hearts but a few short hours before beat in unison with his own in thc aspirations after national liberty and glo ry. Kdssuth raised his face to heaven, and uncovered his head, an action in which he was imitated by all present ; a smile of unearthly beauty played i-ound his lips it was not kindled by joy but by faith as he clasped "his hands togeth er, and, with a bearing that can never be forgotten, uttered the prayer, of which the following is a translation from tho German : " Exalted Kuler df tbc Universe, God of the warriors of Arpad, look down from Thy starry throne upon Thine unworthy servant, from whose lips thc prayer of millions ascends to heaven, extolling the infinite power of Thine omnipotence. My God, Thy bright sun shines above me whilst beneath .my knees rest the bones of my fallen brothers. ' Thy stain less azure over-canopies us; butbeneath the earth is red with the sacred blood of the children of our fathers. Let the fructifying beams of thy glorious lumina ry shine upon their graves, .liat the crim son hue may be replaced with flowers, and the last resting-place of the brave still crowned with the emblems of liberty. God of my fathers and of my race, hear niy supplications : let Thy blessing refc upon our warriors, by whose armes the spirit of a gallant nation seeks to defend Thine own precious gift of freedom. ." Help them to break the iron fetters with which blind despotism would bind a great people. As a freeman I pros trate myself before Thee on these irek graves of my slaughtered brethcrn. Ac cept the bloody offering which has been presented to Thee, and let it propitiate Thy favor to our laud: My God, suffer not a race of slaves to dwell by these graves, nor pollute this consecrated soil with their unhallowed footsteps. My Father ! my Father I mightier than all the myriads of earth the Infinite ltuler of heaven, earth. and ocean let a reflex of Thy glory shine from these lowly se pulchres upon the face of my people. Consecrate this spot by Thy grace, that the ashes of my brothers who have fallen in this sacred cause may rest undisturb ed in hallowed repose. Forsake us not in the hour of need, great God of battles! Bless our efforts to promote that liberty of which Thine own spirit is thc essence; for to Thee, in the name of tho whole people, I ascribe all honor and praise." Cold Comfort. One of the papers in .Portugal, gives some statistics which could only be ob tained under ono of those governments of thespy-and-secret police sj'stcm. They re port the state of matrimony in that Coun try. "There are in Portugal S72,G3 4. mar ried couples, of which the present con dition is very nCarly as follows: women who have lef ttheir husbands for their lov ers, 1 275. Husbands who left their wives for other women,2,yGl . Couple3 who have agreed to live separately, ;,120. Cou ples whok live iu open warfare, under tho sanicTOof, 132,003 Couples who cordi aly hate each other, but dissemble tfieir aversion, under thc apperance of loVCj 162,320. Couples who live in a state of tranquil indifference 510,132. Couplc3 thought by their acquaintances to bchap py, but who are not', themselves, convin ced or their own felicityrl,102. Couples that are happy as compare with those that arc confessed unhapp', 131. Cou ples indisputably- happy in each other, U. Total, 872j634;" jg"I3oyvwhat js your father; dpjug to-day!", "Well, I 'pposc he's failing: ; I heern bin tell . mother yestejjlay, toga rqunrf to Jhcishop.. and ctjtrstpd.all,sho. couldrr-and do it rght, ofLtoo-rfor he'd got everythiug ready tt. make. a. bu-4 u except that'" tt