. • . ...... , . . • ' , ... ... •.. .„ _ . _ .. .„ . . . ..., -.—........ . ...._ .... , .... ~ . . . • •i.l' • '. : , i 1 • " .r:y..., • .•;•: , ...;,..f , P,t '47 ~ tP., . 1...r.: ti.i.0.3. , ~.: i . ..., ...:„ R,44i4p . ..,.„ •,, 1:„,i , :,,;-,., Ti. ..4 1 . ; ; ; ._ 4 („.., , , , ,; . 1r ;,,, .1,.; .;,;, , , : 1 7 ,1 1. t 3 i , - i - i : ,-,,.!_:.:; i..,,: , ~ i , .:, , :f0, . .1, : 3.;=!,, i ' A ....1 ... , • ~.,,,,, :,,,,.7,... , , . ,:.;,,, ~,,.,.., .. „` ,::.,: ~,.:. • . ..,...: , . r. r-t ~... ..,;-;:• 7...• ... .2 • , ~, . .;,... ~. '.:.' .? ~. •).•, . . C,-. 10 ...1 , , 1. . , t , ~- !"' ".'-''''• 'l'l , • 1 - " ./. • ,'' y,,, 7. , i ... :,..."' ~,,,',: :' - • ; 1 ". - ....-'. 1 ..t". :111 , : , .1 . ',..• ; ,,i11'' "1..: " . ',,1 • ' 1 , . • , i ••• , • -;::, .f* W. '... , i '.l ' ' ~It, ,' , L , . . . , . -, ..,' -.--" i• ..-. ~,: . ; 11_ . :, ~. " .....i. y,,,. .. . .... ..... ~. ~..- ~, . . • •-•;:•• 1: •" .• , .:. I -4 „ . ~.1, . , , •••:1: . .I i' — 'l'!' • • • : ~ . ,c• I . ~ ,,• ':..Ci.i' l l' / - , • ' r . , ... ;), ;,-; MI A ,, FAITHLY NEWSPAPPIC-7-11ENOTED 6EriIERAL , INTELILIGIAO*2:AIIVEIVEISINCf, 1)014ITICOLITEICATIlIedb: MORALITY, r AGRICIJLIIIRE,,,ARYS AND s€lericigS, AMIJSIPMENT% ZSic; R.C. v ormaaas =gm& M.(SE)ZMZ. From Blackwood's Edinburg Magazine; THE, PROPHECY. OF THE TiVIVEIRIBES , • "And Jacbb called unto his sons, and said,Gather yourhelves together that I may tell you that which shall befall yon in the lasnlays. "Gather yourselves together, and ,hear,.yc sons of Jacob ; and hearken to Israel your father."—GENt -418 z.tax. btu., The Patriarch sat upon his bed-,, • His cheek was pale, his eye was dim ; Long years of woe had bowed his head, 'Anti feeble was the giant limb ; And his twelve mighty sons stood nigh ; In grief—to see their father die ! But sudden as the thunder roll, A new-born spirit his frame. Ills fainting visage ilasli'd with soul— ' Ills lip was toueli'd with living fame; And burst, with more titan prophet fire, .krbe stream of Judgment, Love and lee. '"lft.tuntu;" thou spearhead in my aide, Thy fathCr's'first-born, and his shame; Unstable as the roiling tide, A. bli g ht has urn upon thymame. Decay shall follow thee and. thine; . Go! outcast of a hallow'd -lino ! ''Slxeox and 1.V.V1,t.f . 10115 of blood That still hangs heavy on the land ;• Your fl o cks Alan be the t•obber's food, Your folds shati blaie beneath - ids bt•aud Lt swany and forest snail ye dwell Be scattered among Israel! "Juiwi!.l. All hail, thouviesi, thou kin! The'erown, the glory, shall be thine.; l'hine, in the fight, the eagle's iv jog —, Thine, on:the hill, (lid oil and 11ine. • Thou lion.`' 'nations shall turn pale aVlic . n sweli,(illy 'rootupon t!II gale. J "udah, my son, use triii'Lk throne, . Tat tomes from ILi AVCII the: MIL/Jill li.ing— The prophesied, the Mighty One, , Whose. heel shall crush the serpent's Ali% Till earth is paradise And sin is dcau j and death is slain! ttWille - 115 the 6111 . gt:8, ZF:LIULON,I l'hy &wing keel elc ll plough th , tiisen ; Before thee sink pronil Sidon% And sti•olig his:a:hay toil liir thee, Thou reaper .r Lis corn and oil, Lard of the giatil anti the soil 4.'.lVltosc hanner flfnies in battle's van! lA'hose mail is first in slaughter gored! sul,•ticr than the serpent, DAN, :nibs and the sword. Woe to the S)iian charioteer . , Nl'hen rings the rushing of thy spear ! "Crushed to the earth liv W:11. aml woe-, (;),D,4 shall the env 01•boodage drain, hold'reve.nge slu gill.: the blow That pays tint lung 111 . 1 . C111 . i Tliy cup bindl glow n itb 1,1.1111L-goiT, 'lllOll In: my sun—and man 011 Ct! 111100 °Loved t;y [mow-whileloml Im,k beneath the rose and ‘llll2. l'eutol Astina. to the tumult:tilt wilt,: Shall stilt'-like blaze, thy battle-sign. All height to both, Cron' birth to tomb, The tieuieia itll sum:bine, earth all bloom ! • "JosErli,ll' come mar—my s ,, n, my suir! F.gy pli.ui prince, Plgypti.iti sage, Child of thy first and lieNt-loved one— Great .gitardian of thy lather'b age. itriug ErtiltAll , yilal -MANASSEH nigh, And let no blebb them ere 1 the. .11ear me—tlicat (kid or Israel ! Thou, who Lusl Lecu his liN:ug sliichl the red desert's lion-dell, In Egypt's famine-stricken field, In the nark Mingen's stout, Li l'lntraoll's chain—by Pharaoh's throne sea, all bICSBIIIgB be on thee, Ile.hlot abroad, be Licht at lini.ie ; Thy nation's strength--her living; tree, Tl4o , well ro which the'thirsty come; Blest be tln• valley, Meg thy bill, Thy lather's Goo be with thee still ! "Thou luau of blood, thou man of might, Thy soul shall ravin, "IMAM IS Thou wolf by day, thou wolf by night, . Hushing through slaughter, spoil and sin ; Thine eagle's beak,Rbd vulture's - wing Shall etirse the 'nation with a king !" • • Then ceased the voice, and all was still; Tile hand of death Was on the traule ; Yet gave the heart one fatal And lireatheirthe dying lip cue name: ''Sons, let me rest by I,ealk`s Side I'' 'lle raised his eyes to lie:even'r-and died • The privileges of the. fi i si-born passed away from thearibe of Iteuben; . tmd owere divided .innong histrethren. The double pbrtion ni the inheritance -was given to Joseph—the priesthood to Levittad the sovereignty to Judah. The tribe never rose to national powcr,nnd i4W115 The first which was ear .ried into captivity. t The massacre of the Shichcmites was the crime •of the two brothers. For a long period the tribe of Simeon wnitle . phaselLamLits_positilln-on the Verge xif the Annilaites,_raway_sexpostaLlt_to_siatcring.- The LAites, thenigh entrusted, with the priesthood, Lad no inheritance an Palestine: they dwelt scatter sad among the tribes.• • .t The tribe of Judah was distinguished from the beginning of the nation. It led the van in the march to Palestine. • It was the first appointed to expel the Canaanites. It gave,the first.ludge,Othneil. It was the tribe of David ; and, most glorious of all tribes, was the Tribe of our Lord. Zebulun was a maritime tribt--its location ex tended -along the sea-shore, anti stretching to the , borders, of Sidon., The tribe of Issachar were lo cated in the country afterwards called Lower Gali lee; were eltiefly tillers of the soil; were never dis-, tinguished in the military or civic transactions of the Ilaltou.sind its they dwelt among the CanaseiteNseem tO.hsie habitually served for hire: 'lliac:lair is char naterieed as the ' , Wang tiss"--a drudge, powerffill — 7 --- _ ' - § The fribe. Of 'ban were 'remarkable for the der lag of their exploits-in tsar ; end hot less so' for their strutagerni. Their great eldefutin'Sanipson; distin4 "suislied alikd for Strength and subtlety, might beim, amablem of their qualities and 16864'. "'' ' tribe engaged in continued and memo rable conflicts. • . , • "a* hriPlitalkand Asher inhabited the most-fertile portions of PolesUiie.-; , tw,o,,trihes of t phr,ttim.und : d ese4aile(l'from'Jo'sepli t poeseSsed the' fintit,partion lAte4and L talongliOth sides'2,ofJ °Hen. Tile united SritieS - raiildredi 'larger 'population' thaik iiki` or the, 'Besides Joshua; &e'er the twelve judged of bray% sy., , r of , these, ,4aitea Me, i#rniatior. t 4 a p3r4el, , u3,r e ol:a!Mte was the flrat "• • •- • i •• , • 4* -ThS•trilia - df, ilanjamin ~ t anipiCuoui tof fralor ? ..,:litillitspkrkulenee and ferocity wrought rah, in - tbe grest,laittles rpoor,4o in Judges ant and am, Bahl - alas otthienPri 4 F 4 ' tribe; • It' w as finally, I, ll6it'inlltar Of 'Juah. • ; • ; ' : ; 'f'-Thia'greste proplieer - iwas:deliveredillboute. hawked rears before the conquest oC raestine ; t it A persoMittekgcr,ahlriglnan, why be trimCside'qutir ppe4 • kayo, Bald he, illiere,,,aihoter.or4foiner: 7 1. t .1 THE COURTSHIP AND_HONEY MOON. It we-were constantly to bear in mind, in our passage through life, that 'tis 'trifles make thrum of human things,' how much of the misery into which many of us now heedlessly plunge might be entire ly avoided. Unhappily, there are bt.ft: ew f in the married state, who, in their minim- cences, are enabled to look back upon tile unbroken chain of bliss so beautifully de picted in the lines above quoted; and the (..- cAs, only reason that we can imaain by i t is not oftener realized is—next to natural depravity of - our race—the want of proper attention to the thousand little occurrences and unpleasant paisageacontesedly trifling in themselves, but which-in the aggregate "make up in number what -they want in weight.'-' ..• _ . .. . .. It is not, however, 'our intention, even were we equal to The task, to digress into a dissertation upon the various. ills which af flict humanity, or.the causes which pro duct; them, but merely to present the reader with a brief sketch, Which will perhaps. serve in some respect, to illustrate, as , well the cause with which the seeds of un happiness may be incautiously strewn in the, hearts of thoie who love us, as also what stay be considered in tho infant or in cipient state of that bright existence,warm ed by that "sacred flame," which : can. only.qualify'us . A festival was given by a young married lady—one of a numerous circle of' ac quaintances on the return of her birth-day, which was likewise the first anniversary of hors marriage. A large party of her. young friends; the greater part of whom had kneeled at the: byineneal'altar at about tld the same time with ii , ;reelf, were present to enliven the occasion. Mr. and Mrs. Mayland (forauch shall be the name of my host and hostess) presented a most felici tous union, and were noted for their tender regard for each other; which partook more of the rom:antic fondness which character ises the young viol hopeful lover, than of what is usually- observable in the staid re alities of married life of even les'F:, .than a year's standing. Happy with themselves, they neglected no opportunity. to adminis ter to the joy and comfort of theirfriends, whom they gathered about them, and pos sessing the most agree - Hitting manners, it was rarely , rts to please were unsuccessful. With such betngs to entertain, it is easy to imagine that their visitors at such times would be under very little restraint in pur suing the pleasures of the hour, and re 7 straint in such cases, all know, is a great bar io enjoyment. The conversations were animated, and for a time were participated in by all. Clawing with warmth and ani mation, after a number. of other topics had been exhausted, the subject prolific of mat -, rimony was brought upon the tapir. This in some respects was perhaps peculiarly 'appropriate to the exigence of the occasion, but, unfortunately'," it was suffered to take a turn, the only result of which, if left un checked, would be likely, in time, to grow into an unconquerable evil. The untimely interruption of the general harmony which Marked their intercourse fur a few moments previous, was caused by some of they Ming husbands present, Who were disposed to treat the subject in the most disagreeable light, by inveighing a gainst matrimony, and by ridiculing that 'condition and its yanked pleasures, when compared with their former 'single blessed- ness,--Some-of-the'Coarser-minded"amont them went so far—and that in the presence of their, wives—as to discourse eloquently upon the bright fields for various acCheive ments which would be opened to them anti upon Which they Might enter if they were • unmarried: , • "I would travel," said one. "I too t' " Said another, "I would explore .the old world .-ittyl-ft on its Curiosities and its wonders, ere I V bedame a •Settiod . •, 'I would enter the list orAurie at home,' said d' third: 'I would- not yield' to the blind'i'MpUlses nf t Cruidd until I had 'reach ed the bigliest se'at in the 'council of state.' choice,' said a foprdh.!w9re I per mitted; to, ie-eommence my careen; a hoald be the , navy•insiead of u wife: • • %int mine ;the army.' ,' :; ; ;'1 they . Thus'iiroceeded though their - 1 lep i thetied.OategOryt . but; none AllilegY9r to_ matte . . and their wives , contented and,:bapriy their then Invent condition' that they: dill thetigh, : isithout any,appercntrevil 'f ) niallieili; intent broadly enough that` their wives `,'. were ', t`uithenq'3o'°tvhu Ii they„ waif ;iliained, #ll4:V}i'if?4"4l)t:!4m; iftwn,;ri4ng!;, : :: 4 ,!;:,;;, :;,-:-'liiticithere ;tire Oldie thingtob exalteritit be assailed with the trifling jestllin'd-ltitirti was r‘ MEZOMNY Q &MIU,. A SKETCH FROM LIFE. "To keep one sacred flame Through life uttehill'd; tainnorod, • T. , love in wintry age the same As first in youth we loved: . ••••• . • • • This is lovefitithflil love— Such as saints might feel above," " hne iu wi dry age the same As first iu youth we loved." ~Y:iJs:Sata:,'.:~;~ ~k;~Sti:"i:'ak7u.~,'if,"_..~,.....~::s::~nse~'~. za'w are hearts whose chords.are too exquisitely sensitive to resist . the. whithiiiin g influence of the impious sneerwhen'coming front those they love, ' be the motive whit it Will," It is ovident Ihat.the WOrdi'which fell from. the lips of ,some of the.party, descended like molten lead : Upon .the bearts.or their young. and trusting wives, rendering.them. incapable of continuing their participation in the evening's enjoyments. This, though readily noticed by others, and particularly by Mr. and Mrs. Mayland, was 'entirely overlooked or unheeded by those who Were the panic of it..': Painful, Painful, indeed, was the. result to all but such as were its active promoters. Mr. Mayland, who had withdrawn his voice. and was sitting a silent_spectator of what was going forward during this part of the conversation, - was justly indignant at the bxecss of his guests, and longed for an op- Portunity. notT s pnly 'to change' the senor of their unbecoming 'observations, bit to ad- I:Mister at the same time, without involv ing any breach of hospitality; -- soms suita ble and effectual rebuke. They, however, continued their' bitter re ma rks"; and, at length noticing Mr, Maylandlii Silence, one of .thein approached, aid taßphig, him on the shoulder, said.=. " \Veil, Mayland, hero yo'd sit :is quiet, as a mouse. \\Thatch) yOu think of the matter—the advantages and disadvantages! What would you do, if you were not mar ried - • Jlis (Mayland's) sweetheart , wife , was sitting a Ws distanee from him when this question t't'as propounded, she liad boon . highly delightedthat her dcachusband had abstained from the reckless flow of words that liad been passing, but now seeing that he was directly apimaltd to, her heart leap ed, and she riveted her eyes upon him with mingled emotions of hope and fear. It ,was not at that moment; a matter of much difficulty to read her countenance. It seemed - to ask—" And am I, too to be cdm promised by my husband, as my, friends have been by theirs?" Mit her suspense was of short duration. , "What would I do?" slowly- repeated the lover husband, and then - turning to meet the glance of his wife,lie co n tinued --"I would go immediately in search of Miss- 7 . -(repeating leer maiden name) of fer to her 'my heart andliand, be blessed by receiving her's in return, and then get mariied as soon as Possible." This unexpected reply, so deliberately and firmly expressed. had the cfnict to pro duce instant silence. The satirical portion of the young gentlemen understood and ap preciated its full force. They were sud denly abashed. It was a contrast with their own conduct too striking not to have its own weight. The young wife who was the object of it was so deeply affected filled with gratitude that she had been spared the infliction of a pain she so fer vently deprecated- I -that she sprung from her seat and fell upon his neck, and with. a tear of joy glistening in her eye, said in a subdued tone— "My , beloved husband, that answer is in consonance with what, to me, you have ever been,--Would that I were more wor thy of your most devoted affections." "Mor ' e'lvorthy.mv dear wife," he re turned, "more worthy you cannot be. You are tome a jewel of .inestimable worth. DeiriVed of you life would be to me but one unrelieved blank." Ile then impressed upon her forehead an impassioned kiss, and' seated her gently hdsi4le him.— But the scene did not end here. The voices of those whoa-few moments- before were loudest in vain prattle;, were now hushed in silence; and that silence needed to be broken by some spirit that could sug. gest. a different and more agreeable ,pas time than that in which they'had just been indhlging, but which none now seemed disposed to renew: At this crisis,artar te -sistsr-of-the-husbatrd - wholiiid eo sud= denly changed the order of things, which she viewed with much satisfaction; notic ed likewise the kiss, and for the purpose of putting an end to the awkWard missiMi playfully asked, directing atten tion to her brother—. , "Are you not ashamed to be courting here before all the company?" "'rite company," he returned, with an air of triumph which he could not well re press, "will please excuse us.' 'We did net commence our regular courtship' until after marri a ge, it is not yet ended! We trust That it.may continue through the whole course of our natural lives, and that we may sPend'our holey-Moott in -Hen- Veh!" "' • • This was ,enough. The scene was in= deed changed.' The offending gentlemen fully' . eonvineed of the pernicious • tendency ,of ; their .conduct--- frankly acknowledged, their'erron-4.apolo gized. tol their, .wives.—.7ltissed, them all round, and' soon: retired' ri Perfect'geed ha=y mar; all,welltplwed ,tvitii.glei/019n, they kerne d 'tin& which Was pethaps; the gteatts , el, re Asf; discon , tol'y alierunioMantl . Tieery: l ty-zagqii vase tabled, LvOsiso•'neVer met to.: :i 6 1 1 *14:,#A410 1 M 68411 . 1 99PA., is all tho , morat that need , balaitesa,': ' • ' ME ta.3. quvazzgrati - suawauitas ago alma. I 4 E S rTM,t 11,631 C. 14Y. CLAY. iNTI:BLANERY *MEN. letter, saythe Neiv 'York Tribune, from CASSIUS 14.. CLAY to one of the many :W.ho hav;ti4ritten to for:an expression of his views respecting the Pres idency, has been transmitted to us for. pub— liCation. We ask all opponents of Slavery tmgive. it that consideration to' which the character, abilit3, and well known Anti 7 Slavery Pen timen ts of the writer entitle it„ Ile_ has just givenimew proof of theUteer -1,.' „ ity and depth his conviction b, remiincipa 7 ting his own slaves—,thui divesting him self of legally entrenched flights of Property worth some $4.0;009,.. Let ilmmau who has done more,.'rislmd more,Thiacrificed_ more, forErnancipatiqn rilan Cassius M. CLAY condemn the decision anounced in the following mible'ileclarstion. *; Lexington, Ky., March 20, 1844. W. J. I)IcKINNy, ES(l:,lllfiyor of Dalton Ohio Drar Your letter of February 15th last was in due time•recriived, and I waited [thus longwitlityp intention of no ansiver , ! ing it at all '•, be - ti'anse I ain pr All 4 not seeking•ofliee at the hand of the o= pie, it might sewn io place= in the p - sumptuous atiituilc of 'attempting to inflt cite°, by mere 'weight of opinion, thq,otes .of my countrymen in their elniice' of tires idettl•; when neithey •my age, experience, nor fame, warranted the assuMptioM liut since The reception of your letter, I have received many of similar import, from Lib erty Men and Anti-Slavery - Whigs inmost of the Northern States, pressing upon me an expression of itpinitimin sutiii a Manner that I should prove false to that spirit of Can dor which ;,0" - untidly, cherish as -characteris tic of the 'pi:M(4W which I bdvocte,did I, through any affectation of:lfinilityi main longer silent. • • You ask me, "Will' you, if'yeu live and are able to vote at - the, approaching Iresi •dential eleMion, vote for Henry Clay for for President ? If the Third Party, or Lib erty In on , shoull have an elect Oral Ticket in your State, would von vote tirat ticket in .preference , ? Were you a eitizmi, of Ohio, ivhich of .these tick-ts would yon vote I" The last two qui±Stiiins arc such as would require various otheli suppositions. to beinade; before d could g'tVe,:t en itabre answer in justice,to myself, intl all lime pth or parties ecineerned,whieft would be too vo luminous fur the spacCof u7single letter ; and' for all practiea,i, purpoSes, thcY will be sufficiently ;lost% etyd im toy reply to the first question ; that, .// iilt4;*(, determination " to rotelnillikigzv C for President." Alen ceder. have and never will, in all eases, thinl:' - 'ajike; all CteVernment is neeesarily a sacrifice, tosome extent, of individual will ; Minis the ,best @overnment to each individual which fos ters or allows•the most of wliat the individ ual balic,ves to be conduCive to Jiis best in terests. The question then is not, 'Can I find seine matt aneng, seventeen millions who thinks in all respects as thyself but 'Who is the man, all things present and remote considered, that will most probably be able by success to give . effeetnation to those great measures which I doem conducive my welfare, and the welfare of toy whole country ?"I'his question every voter in . the Republic ,tnust determine for himself. For:myself, after looking . calmly upon all the surrounding circumstances, COnscionep, i'atriotiSm, and (if others prefer the term) enlightened self-interest, constrain me to vote for henry Clay. The Tariff, the Currency, the Lands; Economy, Executive and Ministerial Responsibility, and many other interests, all depend; in my humble . , judgment, on Mr. Clay'S election for ben axial determination . .—And - ilheleCtid, the decision of 1840 passed by the POOPIe, will be, confirmed, and the policy of the country settled. Then and (such is thean amity Of the public mind) not till then, shall we' have time to look about us; and pro jecteAltat other great reform, the reduction of 'American Slavery to its. constitutional limits; and to colinOtrate the 'United con demnation of the civilized world Co its final - and utter extinction. • • Cr.mr is indeed e slave holder-L-I wish he were not. Yet it does not Weenie rite,. who baVe been a slave ho'lder . MySelf, to condemn him. It isthy, provenee to defend Mr. r)lay ;• this he' is abMidtintlY able . to do himself. It remains • With pos ; teriti to deierMine hoW Mueli . shall be due 'hinifor the glpiiMlSlMPulSe'his fer Vent SPir . , give to ••Liberty„ throughout Abe 'world: and with them a1504.0-:say, how mach shall be 'subtractedlroni this 'appre ciation, for hiti hatrinionlY'failed . tci do all that could be done in this holy . 'Ca* :Pentosthenes,,lClncinatus,,end .Cipero,,sact rinced•te base. heathen gods ;,yet no-man; becanie they 'know nOt;•theitrue say- that they:'Vverifticit good and, patriotio onif,rthernost . . , saille . ,Sna::enlighted ) mettlif, .this or any' his , rev, ii*;tif,the'lifbltif, 'F . '' . • whicii ME MEE ME a.sin, he peispeuted heretics, should. , think it'unjuit, to calf - bowpees friend, NeWton, a hypoCrite and a monster; because, at a' tiMe when' the .slave tiede Wes commonly considered by the most re speet'able people as. an innoceet and benefi ; 'cial . traTtic,,lieWent, largely provided with hymn books aid handcuffs, on a Gulped" voyage. An immoral action being in ,a particular society getierally, considered as innocent,. is a geed plea for aiOndividual who being one of that. society, and' having adopted the notions which prevail, among his neighbors, commits that action." . I cannot, then,,because — MK Clay.i's slave-holder, in a community Where the whole ch • ristian Church of all denemina timis7 the only professed teachers of inn vitalAr among the people, are, also slave !gliders, prescribe hint, for that oinglellting ordifference betweeh us. In:saYing this much in justilicatVon of my course in voting for Afr: Clay, I should be false to my own reputatbn, ungrateful to thut•ttergc portion of Anti--Slavery - men who 41ave sympathized with me in my feeble. cffiiita in the cause of Universal Liberty, and recreant to - that4Prieiis eiiiise itself, if I did, not avow my belief_ that the time is near at baud when public sentiment will not, aught not, and cannot hold the Slave holder guiltless. Yes, I will go yet fur thei, -and declare in the name of the Chris titittßeligipn and our Republican Institu tions;based. professedly on the principle of tile greate'st good to the greatest number,' that no man, :otter - the next Presidential Election, when so much light shall. have been shed 'upon' this subject, should be deemed fit to rule over a Republican, C Inis : Pedple, who shall violate, by bolding Slaves, the Only two principles upon which either,Christianity or Republicanism can stand the test of philosophical scrutiny fur a single moment. , lu conclusion; . in refutation of the slan ders of the Washington Globe, which - are ever harmless where that print -is known, iu Amin to Mr.- Clay, and in vindication of my own self-respect, you *ill allow me to say, that my opinions and action upon the subject of Slavery aro all my own; that however mueli may esteem Mr. Clay as a Man, a' Statesman, and a Friend-though I - may regard him as one of the most frank,. noble, practical, wise, eloquent, and patri otic of those who, in this or any other age have assumed to govern a great Nation, the Editor of the Globe but crakes exhibi tion own ignoble spirit, when he in sinuates that Henry Clay would play double 114 a to 'deceive the American Peo ple'; bs dictating to me, or that, 1, horn* as I may -be in the estimation 4:lf my coun try, would be used by hica,.or any other man or wit of men, for any dishonorable purpose, or lie treated with upon any other terms than those of absolute equality. Trusting that your wishes; as well as the purpos‘e - s of those persons Who have done me the honor to address me by letter upon this subject, will be best subserved , by making this 7 ..t , vistver public, I scud it at • once to the press. Eespectfully your obedient servant. C. 111. CLAY. THE ECONOMY OF AGRICULTURE. Liberality constitutes the economy of ag riculture; perhaps it is the solitary human oe4tion, to which the adage, 'the more we the the more we shall receiye,' can be justly applied. Liberality to the earth in manufactbring and culture is the fountain of its boubties to us. Liberality to domes tic brutes is . the fountain of matiure. • The good work of a strong:leam cause a product beyond the bad work of a weak one, after deducting the additional eNpense of feeding it, and it 'saves ri!o o ver 'half the labor of _the_driver,:eunklin_ftillo win.: a bad on 6.— Warm betties, produces health strength and coinfort; 'preserves the lives of a multitude of domestic animals to ditive on less food, and secures 'from danger all kinds of crops. And liberality in the ti tensils of husbandry, saves labor, to a vast extent, by providing the proper tool for do ing the work both well and expeditously. Foresight is another item in the econo my-of agriculture.' It consists in prepa ring work for all weather, and doing all Work in proper weather, and • at proper times, The climate of the . Unite d. States Makes the first 4 easy, and the second leSs ,ditlicult Than in most countries. Ruinous violations Of thiS important rule :are yet: frequent,• from 'temper and inipatienec.—;. Nothing.'iS more 'common than a: person in ploughing,' making.,.haY;:etitting'wheat, nnd..oilier Wit „Works,,ema delaysmall Might have. escaped a.,great, lose, and .the • labor employed:to.destroy.,.would have.been ern' , ployod' to save: Propi Of all kinds are. Planied , Or•SOUTtf linpreper periods' or unseasonably, in relation to thicSltite of the weathervlO" their 'iletriineitf or'ilestruction of "an ?tirrangenient of the: work:,tti to fartwealeulatmj,forAiiing, cveo iiPielei3' of '.it,:iiideiseirai'tho•iperiodal and in ,thcananotr,montlkkoky.'tO',ealianOa k •lts, • ! , • ~;' a fi at rat, innesfor get,t , ing • • T!/1:,"3.(r e , d • 1‘: ' C WII TPW i t e. t ° 0110 11)0 ekponrie ;Of' livipg 0 e , 4 ez,,f , , { t ,4 akOnliway. I. 1•1 71 2, •xi •M MR. CLAY IN THE SOUTH. . , ' \ - 110-Mr. Clay's tour thrtugh tlm South is a LH• emptied march.- Every where he is received with the warmest manifestations- of popular regard, frbm all Parties and both sexes. We have.. not room — fer to many spirited notices of ' Os mei)• tibn at fferent lownii, nor of , the remarks made by hi in' reply to Vie numerous add; - esse!i of / wale no that lie receives. Suffice it to ray that no whereiiithe South does Mr. CLAY shrink from a free and clear avowal of those political printi. plus which ho has unchangingly held throughout his public life—no where does lie hesitate to de- • dare himself in favor of aTatill which shall give Just and reaeonedde protection to American indus. try—and no wbeN . does ho hesitate to say that , the whole expenses of our - goVernment should be . paid by revenues derived from iniporto, and the prOcceds of the sale of the Public Land,'S be given to the States! This is the true Whig doctrine. We aprend if notice of Mr. CLAY'S remarks at Montgomery, (Alabama) where lie replied to an appropriate. address from Col. WiLtiasis:— - It is impossible to give Mr Clay's reply, as it was, like .most of his addresses pure ly an extemperaneous effort, mostly in re latiok to - topics presented in Col IVilhams' address, mid of course 'no copy 'eptild.he procured. To particular...subjects-named the'Ciil. in hishappiest mariner, Mr. Clay replied briefly and in their order. He spoke of the war of 1812, to the dec laration of 'which he yielded his hearty.and cordial approval, and to carrying the cnunr Cry honorably through wilich,'he pledged and gave his energetic aid. Ile spoke of the wroligs we had suffered which brought on that ‘Var—of our gallant seamen who had been dragged from beneath the folds of their own stars and stripes to light in for: sign vessels, and for the 'honor of a-coun try that 'was not their own. And how deeply and proudly they avenged those wrongs when. opportunity was o givOn, on their own eleinnt, by tearine down the red cross of England, and nailing their own striped bunting ,where it had been accus tomed to wave. lle spoke of the last glo rious act of that war, at N. Orleans, and of the pride he felt in it while abroad, as an American, citizen, negotiating a peace at Ghent, and of the manner in which that and other victories elevated the American character and fame among the - Various na tions of Europe. Ho spoke of the Missouri question which agitated the republic in such an alarming degree in 1820, and of iris agen cy in effecting its satisfactory Settlement, as only art humble instrumentality such as he and every good citizen should be ready to employ, whim the welfare of that coun try, and the integrity of die Union called. lle spoke of the tariff compromise of 1830, and thanked Col. \V. for haying al luded to that act as restoring peace to the country ,when it seemed on thetive of a fear ful civil and fatal convulsion. Peace, said he, is what we want as a nation—peace— patience—till all our immense resources are fully developed, and then we can stand tip —alone—such a people as the sun never be fore shmie upon. And with peace', union— and that union could only be preserved un impaired by the spirit of compronde—con ciliation-a giving up of minor interests and local benefits for the good of the whole. A ffreat American heart implanted in each „ r citizen where there 'should be no room for the growth of jealousies or local prejudices, but in every throb of which each should feel that the whole- . country was ills coon try--rrs glory ins glory-and he an Amer ican citizen. But there vas one thing, he continued, that had given him more heartfelt gratifica tion than any plaudits' which his public acts might have iron for him. It was the allusion in Col. Williams speech to the fact th4t hts course had beep an upright one. it mils his noblest aspiration to be thought to he', and to merit the appellation of an honest man. WhatiA;er faults I may have had, said Mr. Clay, (placing his hand upon his heart)—"Whatever - faults I may have lhad, 1 have never concealed anything here from my countrymen. They know mu. They read me :is they would read a book—and I rejoice at it-41 . it were other ! wise, if I could not be understood, I should be unworthy of. myself, of the country I [most love, and of my countrymen, who have now and so often manifested their respect for me." Ills speech was emciliatory, respectful to all, no.attempt at di,splay, simple, plain, Unadorned . , and unstndied,.eoming from a I heart HI of deep feeling, swelling up with detiotion' to his Gauntry- and herypeculiar institutions.. Thanking the immense . don- I eoUrSei hiS Democratia as .well as his !Whig friends, for coming, out to, greet him, notwithstanding . the inclemencies , of the I,day, rainedineeisantly) pleasantly i alluding to the fact that•they were no "fair weather frienda," he, epolOgiseitfor break-. ing,,through.his customary purptrse of mak; int:riddling like a . , publiC address, and took his seat' amid' the:.reiterated ,cheers' of aS 001i6tOct aii4 ~epthutiptic audience as we ever mingled ivitlii,:o.rlniede .a . Tart . of. Tun hws.—The condition Of this out cast and despised race seems to be rapidly improving. In many countries their civil state is much nnidliorated, andthey' are be , giuing to enjoy th e rights'of citizens.' The French Chamber tit Deputieit eontaitie Sev eral Jews. l'he confidence of ,the sons of Jacob in their Talmud and their. Rabbini cal traditiOns, is said to be very much ,sha kene.,and cliey . ti begin.t,O regard tiiri,Gospel less distaste'. , D9r,ing , :theiatit ,twen said a .younglady of•twelve to her ty-ftve . , years more voluntary conversions ritother;•'llihOtiltt •Ithe ;to , get tharriedV • to Christianity have taken. place among the in'irlisar,'Ssiiid her Moth- Jaws, than had' occurred since We, days of et, ,!..y,nn 4reoett young yets-,*tatjlut, such t postss lip, to that perm . hero an idea:inid:#ol.o . ,lo l i.e 6 tiis - ,tdb 6 a d :;'N'ilthirittj ohlySoPhtakhere, is over' th e ir fithers:• About :ii l ltyro#! .. ypirS•of aool:3diseye nhewas lein'thOusind'ltiiks:dra 7 nniirestablitshiiil i at :.,i.o,l:,a,,..tgltnil'Acolltil?l/:fiyielcfOallty Jerusalem, altimakh•;ticw_yopri since` the e tel jam i c eog„ "Ir , r truly; damp hgaltAti tg °;?.:;VOryftliei4tereatolltver,y,,,l,a,at Ui V 1 8'!.. 1 1 rOVI BRIEN MEI •. t 1V1M1P.;22 =Z47. , TIIE IVIFE ' S fId*LUENCE, ' --AlOph and Beth were brothers.: Aleph Married . a pil. ous woman of irespectaldu'religious fatni ly. I met him in hisyarb, walking around with . vigor and speed, an , erect, portly,. ruddy, robust man: His outbuildings, were numerous; and his yard was full of wood,utensils and materials for 'veil. I went into his house. It was large well . finished and; well furnished. ''Thera were books there, and they 'seemed to be'read and studied. Aleph was a pillar in the church, the• parish and the town; for he had a good wife. "A wise woman buildeth her house.' Iler husband is known in the gates, when he Bitted] among the elders of the laud. ,She looketh well to the ways of her household, and eateth not the bread of idleness. Her children rise up and call her blessed; her husband also and he prais eth her. Favor is deceitful and beauty is vain; but a woman that fearetlf the Lord Shall be praised. Give her the fruits of her hands; and let her own works praise her in the gates." , • Beth had a good disposition. He was industrious, steady and. prudent. He _was, honest and moral, and respected . religion ; but he hail a prior wife. His tall form was bomMil down. ' On his face was the .c -pressiOn of care and despondency and his movements were of the same character. With the, companiOn and family that he had ; he possessed neither spirit nor ability to . do any thing Tor the promotion of reli gion and the imblic good. He did - not prosper.' There was the aspect of naked ness about his barn, about his house and within his doors. Il is family did not grow up.in'good and reipeetable habits. Their character and condition were not such as to cheer him. Ile drooped at length and died.. lie made no•profession of religion, but he cordially welcomed, my visits as a minister, and I indulged some hope that death waS - gain to him; but as he lived so he died, in. a 'Awnless state of mind. There was considerable intemper- , ' nice and looseness of principle and prac tice in other branches of morals. In the sinking condition of the family, the influ ence' of the poor wife was to be seen.— Sli'e was not herself vicious but she had no high moral principles, no cultivation of mho, no interest in the imprOvement of society, no zeal for neatness and comfort, for whatsoever things arc lovely and of good report. II cr want of the qualities of the virtuous woman described in Proverbs, made her a poor wife, and her husband a poor parishioner. 1 seem to selhis stoop ing form and care-worn face pai:sing before .tae. I seem to see his dilapidatetlbuildings. I scent , !.p see the neighborhood presenting all around the blighting influence of a slack wqrui—a pool. wife—upon her children. Talk to me of educating young men, and of training them up to be good citizens, good members of churches, and good sup porters of religious societies, and I tt ill tell you to educate young women to be good wives, if you will have men be happy meih gond citizens and good parishioners.—Pas lor's Journal. THE PIItSICIAN.--"There is scarcely a profession in which the sympathies of its professors arc more pair fully excited than that of the medical practitioner. How of ten is he called to the bed of hopeless sick !less; and that too, in a family, tho mem bers of which aro drawn together by the closest bonds of love! How painful to meet the enquiring gaze of attached friends or weeping relatives, directed towards hiM ia tiu?t of consolation; assurances of safety, which ho cannot, give! And how melancholy is it to behold the last ray of hope which had lingered upon the face of affection, giving place to the dark cloud' of despair! "And whotral is orer—tvhert = tho bit- Unless of death hall passed from the iletid to the Jiving—front the departed to the he rkiaved—hat k to that shriek of agony, that convulsive sob, that bitter groan . wrong from the. heart's core, which bespeak the utter prostration of the spirit beneath the blow! • "There, cold in the embrace of death, lies the honored husband of a heart-broken wife—her first, her only level Or it may be, the young wife of a distracted husband, Sridc of a year, the mother of an hour, and by tier perhaps the blighted fruits of their love—the bud by the blossom, and both are -withered.":.__ 1