13 W (PLUMB ILL -Aix 6. ~"~-~t3.M~.- • The - "Carlisle. Herald & .xpositor," wllikplasue'd .every TUESDAY AFTERNOON, at Two. Dor.4 tins, per annum, payable in advance. • -ADVPRTISEINIENTS inserted at the usual-rates Letters addresed to the editor, oti buSiness,MUST 134 POST PAID; otherwise they will receive no entioh AGENTS.- lir following nosed persons have been appointed Agents for the " Carlisle Ifstald ExpoSitor," to whom payment for subseription and advertisement 323 D. SHELLY, Esq. Shiremanstown i .Cumb. Co. SeOrr CoyLE, Esq. Newville ' , do P. KOONTZ, Esq. Newburgh ' do ' • Tifos„W. Rums, Esq. Shippensburg do . JOIIN 1 7 .Vuxor.a.ven, Esq. do.' .LM.ATEER, Esq. Hoguestown. do 12.-Wltsorr, Esq. Mechanicsburg, -do . - do - 11. STURGEON, Esq. Churchtown dor , Dr. ABA .IV/I.m, New Cumberland do - Tuns.lkAmt, - Esq. Bloomfield, Perry county. A. BLACK, Esq. Lindisburg do. POETRY. •"—With streeteSt flowers earielet). • From 'various &Tacos ettlPfl with tare." For ilia CarUde lI raIJ,F9 Eipoetior • , • Stant;as: Give me that leaf, by thine own liar 1 Plucked from its' native tree ; 'Twill_ teach me-in some &heel land • Still-to remember thee.:._ • . . .. Aye, give .= flint fading,lenf,_ • . Fresh frotwits - tendee'bough ; - ..trwill cheer nic when old wrinkled grief glits , i3rntiding on my brow. ~: _ .: . ..1 --- its`tvithered forth shall . greet . tny eyes, Still welemne - tu my sight; And thoughts of thee as oft shall, rise,. Replete with.oliastedeljght... --Then give it i askno more: - -• • - Ere I from thee shall - port; let give me what wits mine before— Give back to me my heart. • • • Xovem Ler, 1838. • s • roc the Carlisle Hen;hl Sr. FAiresitor Stanzas. Originally dell:vied fpr a better jaurpos'e ''Tis well ;--I letive-witlt no regret, • • Though friends remain MIMI' met The heart - of love mid friendship yet; • 'Mid bther S ' CCIICS, inay find me. _ I fain wonld linger yet awhile Where friend! 'voices rect. me Anti woo affection's wideonie smile• Where e'er ihat smile should meet me Tut 'Fortune rears her ample • crest • And spreads her waving pinion; - 1 - yielirme - tolier stern I➢hliest; Anayiel'd myself her minion. Ambition- marks a lofty track, • • And fancy gilds it over; But coming years may bring and back . A elieerleps,.friendless roser, - ...Wirtrember, 1838. •Prom the Xezo rqrfre?l, • Staitz'asi ate meg v'eu if this be 'only As a I.ightlyspOken , yord, • • 'Wherefore should this heart be lonely 'As a matt-forsaken bird ? • - • If its meaning be not•deeper 'Than its simple sound would 'seem, Wherefore should it haunt the sleopen, -Like•s‘ murmur in Ids dream ? • * Lowly was the cohl•wer4 spoken, Witlie pule aril trembling lip,. 'When the chance of earth had br6ken 'On our early fellowship.: • • pale the stars were bendia. - Enable!* of thy rarer• charms, And atheamlet ran before us :With the moonlight 'nits arms i ',With the brilliant tear-diopitartitig '---- Fiom thy fringiag eye-lid forth, Like a summoned angel parting With a weary son of earth— inalumber I behold thee, :Elicit as we parted, there -6 • - I<3ut the arras that woald.enfoltt thee CiasPthe'cold and yavant air ;`Quiet in thy`Placplf Sleeping, 1K a Arigliter clirne than ours, Where the islaniivalm is keeping 'Watch aitcnie thy, funeral floWers; And,the tan INiagnolialiugers r ,blear thee , .with its anoisl blossom, • .I'hat the breeze, like terse!s.Own fingers, •Scattel'irceertliyaleepitigbneetn. _ : rare thee well !=my heart is near then, its icive it atilt aa.fleep, " • ' . .Witile the spill ean.see,arl,lime thee, '-- hour'of, aleep; , IBenr.one thy blessin; o'er me. Antl:tikk..9otospsourgiven, Leading opwaivl unto I am :out of humanitei rraolt i 'illa foilikfay Never Irar t h e sw . cet.inisio of spre • I start at the sound of my Own. • : cr.:7: An irentnearnben 'no * ki dinking very short p beevreen L or d o i, • . and Antn:er. • . -.-, • • .. ...,.,, ..,• _ ,--..•..•,• ...,- .. . . . •.. - , .„ . . . In .• . .......,_ . . , . . . . ... . ~ • p . . ~ . „... . ' • • •• .. . • ~%., .. .. . . . . .. . . .. .., .• . .. ~ . . ~ .. . ....7....„: 11 .,.... x .. ... 0 :._ Li ty., lt , . r . .. . . . . , • .• . . . ~.._,.._. , . ~ . ._ .. n . ...,. . . .._. .. ,_:.... . - - 41,,. --:- ,-:', •..-, • - ... ~ . ... .• . t....t... •. . . . . .....",.......••... ..___ A MILY NEWSPAPER:-DEyOTE , . , . .. 91d•.age-!wasindeedliono-te-d'irtninlirei4and public homage .paid ' it in the - Phiditia or •Gorusia, - but it- was deemed an unwelcome ` guest at the 'convivial 'party, and only tole ,' rated•in .private; for corruption' had made troth - and 'rebuke . synonymoas.: - Restraint had grown: irksome, and the aged had gra : dually withdrawn_ froni those halls,. once the_oraeles-of-Wisdom--to to Aid, plorethe - glory -- that - had - departed; -- As When - the Holy 'of'Holies was!scorchect by . ' the Roman faggot, arid the blaze of Judah's . gorgeous temples lighted. tile rapine of the - wes tern-legfp nary,- a -voice -was --heard-fro ni,-; the precinct: ,"Let us 'go hence!" so, here; too, was a - desertion that foreboded ill.-,7 Th ere,,, : are,- perhaps,' few - who' know - hrivv - to -- grew old well, to maintainAminripaired' the' blameless • dignity, which .*as a 'Andy among u the ancients: - Pew know how- to blend the experience of years with the bland teaching:which!delightsw_hile it-instructs, ; -_........ . . . ; . instead of repelling attention and - regard: 7 - Did we ahj,de by the Vaunted precedents'. Severity. and giddiness unctamine - th - e - stane-' 1 of Antiquity, did we admire institutions tity of old age—and its imprudence,. while as we cherish the classic lore 'of its poets it robs youth of the respect, which . it Will -and-scholars;-w. ere-we :gn idea-4)y,-; her-teaoh--•.1 1-0-11-6-ddritriet-tll---vnift,take's-aw-ay-tlic=sal ings a its .politi c al creeds, Africa. had been 1 utary-iscipline of vikuons' restraint. I said-they had retired.. . A sense of delicacy: spared the horrors of - the' slave-trade,-aud had. dictated this Movement', and instead of America had . one atonement less -. to mike -to injured.harrianity .--- • •... :'• s-, the sage anddisciple, the-frivolous sciotist, - - ,:p or _ her r 42* . sinfaiims ,„,,_„H_,.- . o . r-tho-y-oting,sopirist r -therd-aspirect-to!-dis-2, •• , • - ''.! - • . . _ . .But the jubilee. of restoration is -approach-- , ing, and when the word shalt conic, ." Le, - 4 9 .4 • tenon. lien v iMinerva Nemesis, Apollo,-and the e, had reigned. triumphantly, there Ve- jmy people go,". there will be fiend aMoses - nos, Eris,' Mercury, the . _rates, sgrd Nye to direct the ExOtlus of tlid,4lUrkbrowesl ea teiian,:were courted with as cordial honors. I ptiv.esi and national policy, instructed from '-' " ;Instead of disiertations on the law - s,_.Orpss-.I the page of history and revelation, may find Sag - 6e froin the Sublitha, Homer, the old•I it prudent to acquiesce. The spirit .of en- ' with - theftevelry rif