El 16qtrq. "ONLY WAITING,", fr k r"..., A . very aged man in an alms-house was asked whin ho was doing? Ile replied "ONLY W . !" • a Only waiting till the stiliktvws Are it little longer growl?. Only waiting till the glimmer or the day's last beam is flown ; Till the night of earth is faded From the heart, once full of day: TiThro ll t L dars of II eaVell are breahiug ugh the twilight oft and grey Only walling till the reapers Have the last sheaf gathered home, For the summer time is laded. And the autumn winds have come; QUickly, reapers! gather quickly The last ripe hours of toy heart, For the 1,100111 of life Is wit heed, And 1 hasten to depart. Only waiting till the angels Open wide the mYstie gate, At whose - feet I long have lingered, Weary poor and desolate, Even now I hear their filotsteps And their voices far away ; If they call me I am wailing, Only waiting to obey. Only waiting fill the shadows Are a 11Olir4onger grown, Only wait lag t ill the glimmer . Of.the day's last beam is 11..: Then from out the gathering darkness I loly deathless star, shall Ity whose light Toy soul shall gladly Tread its pathway to the skies. rlrrt (ulr THE ELDEST DAUGHTER ItY SiGot"IINEY As the importance of education becomes 'tore and more appreciated by the people. he difficulty of obtaining well qualiffisl teachers, is pmyortionably realized. For igners may he porloundly learned, or highly accomplished, but the political and moral dioms of oar Republic are to be stfalied, and the mind in some measure weaned from established trains of thought, ere it can as• :iimilate with those whom it is expected to modify. The inhabitants of diffi.rent sec tions of our own 1. 7 1d0n, must subniii in t , oine degree. to the same subjugating pro cess. The northern youth,' who engages in the business of instruction at the sunny south, perceives a necessity of conforming to new usages, ere he can be in harmony with those around. Evan natives of different por tions of the State, must take pains to adapt themselves to a new neighborhood. or family where they are to operate, if they would hope their efforts to be attended with full success. Is it understood, that in every family of brothers and sisters, there is' a teacher whom it is not necessary to naturalise as a foreign er? or as a stranger to incite to sympathy? While she aids intellectual progress, her influence on the disposition and manners— her moral' and religious suasion, are still more visible and enduring. She enjoys and reciprocates, the love of those who receive her lessons. Year after year, she continues her ministrations.,-' It will be evident, that I speat of the eldest daughter. Her sytnrmthy with her pupils must doubtless he greater than that of other teachers. They ate her hone, and her flesh.—They comae to her -with more freedom than even to the parent; so that the extent of her sway is is not easy either to limit or to compute. Many excellent elder daughters has -it b3en my good fortune to know, who realised their responsibility to the Grt;at Teacher, and were filled with tenderness to the mo ther, whose mission they partook, and to the dear ones wholooked to them for an example. I think, at this moment, Of one who was the light and life of a largo circle of little ones. They hung, on the lineaments of her sweet countenance, and imbibed joy. From her lovely, winning manners, they fashioned their own. If temporary sadness stole over them, she,knew the approach to their hearts, and her sweet music, and sweeter words cheered them back to happiness. If there were among them exuberance of mirth, or symp toins of lawlessness, or indications of dis cord, she clothed herself with the temporary dignity of the parent, and prevailed. When sickness was among them, no eye, save that of the mother, could so long hold waking as hers. No other arm was so tirelessin sus taining the helpless form, or the weary head. 'The infant seemed to have two mothers, and • to be in doubt which most to love. 'Often, in gazing on het. radiant countenance, I said mentally—" What a preparation are you giv ing yourself for ' your own future : duties.— Happy the man' who shall be permittvd to appropriate to himself such a treasure." Still, at her joyous. bridal, there was sor- row; the tears of the little sisters, They clasped ,her in their tiny arms—they would scarcely be persuaded to. resign her. After they had retired to rest, they were heard lamenting—. "Who now will sing us songs when we are sad? and tench us such plays as, made us wiser and better? Now ; when• we tear our ..roe'cs, who will help us to mend them? and when we are • naughty; who will bring u 3 back to goodness? I have seen another elder daughee; to whose sole care, a feeble mother committed one of her little ones. With what' warm gratitude, with what a sublime purpose, did she accept the'sacred gift. She opened her young heart to the new occupant. She took the babe to her room—she lulled it to sleep on her bosom — it shared her couch. Soon . its lisping tones mingled with her supplica tions. " She fed the unfolding mind With the gentlest dews of piety—"the small rain upon the tender herb." From her it learned to love the Bible, the Sabbath, and persevcr :nice in the path that leads to heaven. And it was early taken there. In the arms of that eldest sister its soul was rendered up. But not until it had given proof; for a few years of happy childhood, that it was one of the lambs of theSavioitr's flock. Afterwards I saw that same eldest daughter in a family of her own. To heighten the happiness, and I elevate the. character of those around her, were her . objects. And she knew' how, for she had learned it before. Thorough expe rience in the culture of the disinterested affections, gave her an immense vantage ground, fur the new duties of a wife and mother. They were performed With ease to herself, and were beautiful in the eyes of oh servers. The children of others were en: trusted to her husband to he educated, and she became a mother to them. And I could not but bless the Given of every good and twrfeet gift, that the hallowed influences to which that eldest daughter had given such exorcise wider the paternal roof, might no w go lorthinto the bosom of strangers, take, ! root in distant homes; and perhaps, in an- I other hemisphere, or in an unborn age, bring forth• the - fruits of immortality. The assistance which tear be afforded to parents, by the eldest daughter, is invaluable. What other hand could so effectually aid them, in the great work of training up their - children to usefulness and piety? Filial gratitude is among the noblest motive to this enterprise. Many young ladies have been thus actuated to beedine the instructors in I different. branches, of their brothers and sisters or regularly to study their lessons with them, and hoar them recite, ere they went to their stated teache'is; or to assume the whole' charge of their classical instruction. I was acquainted with au elder sister, who every morning, when the younger children were about to depart to their separate BCIIOOIB, 'ook them into a room by themselves, and mparted most kindly and seriously such ad. :ice, admonition, or encouragement, as had t visible effect on their moral conduct, in mabling them both to resist temptation, and io be steadfast in truth and goodness. But I have been much affected with the history of one, who amid circumstances of peculiar trial, was not only to those younger than herself, but to her parents, and especi ally to her widowed and sorrowing father, as a guardian angel. It is more than a century since ligede, a nativic, of Norway, moved with pity for the benighted Greenlanders, left a pleasant abode, and an affectionate- flock, to become -their missionary. his wife, and four young chit. dren accompanied him. Their privations and "hardships, it is difficult either to de scribe or to - imagine, amid an ignorant, de graded people;and in that terrible climate, where rayless darkness is superadded to the bitter frost of winter, so that it is necessary to shrink into subterranean cells aid feed incessantly the train-oil, lamp, lest the spark of life should be extinguished. Little Ulrica saw her mother continually sustaining and cheering her father, amid labors which long seemed to be without hope. She heard her read to him by the glimmering never dying lamp, from the few books ,they had brought from their hither land. She observed how cheerfully she de nied herself, fur the sake of others, and with what a sweet smile she discharged her daily duties. She perceived that light and warmth might be •kept within the soul, while all around was dark and desolate, and gave her young heart to the God from whom such gills. proceeded. When the sun, after long absence, once more appeared over the icy wastes, glorious, as if new-created, and in a few moments sank again beneath the horizon, the miysio• nary and his wife, sometimes climbed the high rocks, to meet the herald beams, and to welcome their first, brief visit. Ulrica, fol lowing in their footsteps, with the children, earnestly incited them to love and revere the Great Being, who called forth that wondrous orb. with a word, and sent him on errand's of mercy to the earth, and to the children of men. ,And when the light Of a summer whose sun never set, was around them, and the few juniper and birch trees , letinied out into sudden iblinge, and the reindeer brows ed among the - mus.fe.:l, and the long Ca}' tgartisle which knew no evening, fell upon the senses with a sort of oppressive brightness, she sometimes led her little sister to the shore of the solemn gea, and . raising her in her arms, as some far seen iceberg towered along in awful majesty, bade her to fear and obey the God who ruled' the mighty deep, and all that is therein. The mother was the teacher of her Ail dren. Especially, during the long solitude of the Greenland winters, was it her busi ness and pleasure to form their minds, and to fortify them against ignorance and evil. -Llriea drank the deepest of this lore. Often while the younger ones slept., did she listen delighted to the legends of other days, and bow herself to the spirit of • that blessed Book, which speaks of a clime where there is no sterility, or tempest, or tear. When the father, accompanied by the son, older than herself; was abroad in the duties of his vocation, among the miserable inhabitants of the squalid cabins, Ulrica sat at the feet of her mother, sole auditor, surrendering to her her whole heart. But what she learned was treasured fur , the little brother and sister. Every. lesson wits carefully pondered, and broken into fragments, for their weaken com prehension. She (Whit out to them dairy pdrtions of knowledge, as the bread from 'Karen. She, poured it out warily, like water in the wddern'ess, bidding them "drink and live." 1 • It was in the spring of 1733, that the poor Greenlanders were visited by a wasting epi• detnic. The small pox broke out among Ithem with a fury which nothing. 'could with stand. Egede assuming the betatvolent office of physician, was continually among them. Ale gave-medieines_to the infected; and MA . and 'day, besoug.ht the„ dying to look unto the "Lamb of God who tlieth away the sin of the world. - Dwelling after dwelling was left empty and desolate, and the populationLal ways thin, in that sterile clime, melted away, as snow before the vernal sun. Orphlins fled to their pastor for shelter, ^and sick, to 'be nursed amid healed. Every part of his house was a hospital, where the sufferers lay thick ly, side by side. Some, who had been his open enemies, and coitrsely reviled his coati selsi were there; frightful agonies, so-bloat ed attil disfigured as scarcely to retain a Yes lige of Ituntanity. One of them, when re -q.vg,r.ltt,g,same to hith with a penitent and broken spirit, confessing the worth of that religion which could enable him thus to Bless his.persei.:uturs. Through this fearful calamity, which lasted for many mouths, the wife of Egede, with her' children, patiently and kindly tended the sick, wlio thronged their habitation. But when the judgment was withdrawn, and health re-visi ted the invalids, and among the diminished number of survivors, were indications of that religious sensibility which More than repaid all her toils, she herself became the victim of suddeti decline. "Death has...come for me," she said to her husband. "In the_,cold cup whit•h he presses to my lips, there is no bit• terness, save that I must leave you, while your desires for the conversion of our people are unaccomplished." To Ulrica, her con. stant_nurse, tireless ..both...might_and.da.y r she committed the younger children, towards whom she had so long evinced a sweet com• bieation'of sisterly and maternal care. She heard these little ones wailing around her bed, and comforted them with the 'tope, wherewith she was herself comforted of God. She dictated messages of holy love, to her eldest son, who pursuing his theological stn. dies in Denmark, she must no more embrace on earth. And so, in that lone Greenland hut, she met 'the last enemy, and with the grasp and struggle, mingled a hymn of vic tory arid praise. Around her grave, there stood only the lone missionary and his three children. He was borne down and bewildered by this ter rible visitation. In all his forms of adversi• ty, and they had been many, it did not ap pear to have entered his imagination, that the beautiful being, sb much younger than himself, so firin in health, so fresh in spirit, who front early 'youth - had been to him, as another soul of strength and hope, Should be taken, and he left alone. Then it was, that Ulrica realized, that her sacred charge com prised not only the motherless children, but the sorrowing parent. Asking strength from above, to tread in the footsteps of her saint ed mother, she came forward, and gave her aria firmly to the bereaved man, who, like a reed shaken by the blast, wavered to and fro, on the verge of the yawning, uncovered grave, where lay the lifeless form of his idol ized companion. It was most touching to see the fragile nature of a beautiful young girl; gird itself both "to shelter the blossom and to Prop the tree which the lightning had scathed. Suppressing her own grief, she taxed ever energy to soot lie and comfort her father. Strongly resembling her mother, in person she had the sit* clear, blue eye, the samb profuse, flaxen hair,•tlie same mild, yet re solfed cast of features. So much like 'hers, also, were the 'sweet, inspiring tones of her voice, that the poor bereaved sometimes start ed from his reverie, with a wild hope, that sank hut in deeper dejection. Hourly, it was her study to minister to his comfort. Care fully did she provide his raiment, and when he went forth, so wrap his furs about him, as to defend him from the cold, for he scented less nssidnoos than fortnefly to guard his own health and life. She spread his humble board as her mother had been accustomed to spread it ; but often, when she urged him to take refreshment, he was as one who heard not, gild bowed himself down to pray. Then she knelt softly by his side, and her supplications ascended with those of the deeply-stricken soul. lie would sit"for hours in silence, with his.head resting upon his bosom, or during their long, long evening, gaze motionless on the scat, which his best beloved had so long occupied. Amazed at the weight., and endu rance of his grief, the yotinger children, who often strove to waiton and cheer him,asthey had seen their mother do, sobbed forth their sorrows, as if they ,anew bade her farewell. But Ulrica never faultered, was never dis couraged, though her heart was pierced at his despair, One morning her voice sounded in his enr like that of an angel; Dear father; dear fa ther! your son is here!" And the next mo ment the ytmng missionary, Paul Egede, rushed into his arms. Ile had returned from Europe, his.educa lion completed, to share in the labors of his thther. Scarcely had he embraced his sis k!ni, crc the bereaved pirrent "Come forth, my son, and see the grave of your mother. Let me hear you . pray there.'t The re-union with his first born, and the tender assiduities of Clrica, aided by the blessing of heaven, began to lift up his br:oken spirit. Ile employed himself in his parochial - tliitics, particularly in translating into the rude dialect of Greenland, siniple treaties, and ca techisms, which he circulated as widely as possible among his people. He accepted with kindness the attention of his children, and spoke tenderly to them; but it was evi• lent that he looked for consolation only to yards heaven, and to .the hope of meeting Ills beautiful kindred spirit, where they could be sundered no more Three years of his mournful widowhood had past, when a request came from the king of Denmark, that 'he would no longer exile himself, but return, and accept a professor ship in a newly founded seminary for orphan students. Infirm health admonished him that lie could not much longer hope to resist, the severity , of a Greenland climate, and bidding an af fectionnte adieu to the people, among whom he had so painfully labored, and entrusting them to the care of his eldest son Paul, he committed himself, with his three remaining children, to the tossing of the northern deep. What joyous wonder filled their young hearts at the prospect of a country where there was no long night, where the grain would have time to ripen, erli the frosts came, and where they might be able to on-the surface of the earth, the whole year. A return to the blessings of chillization, the warm welcome of friends, and the re• kindling of 'early, healthful associations, re newed the spirit of Egede, and gave him vigor fur the. duties that devolved upon him. Ulricn was in his path, as an ever-gliding sunbeam, while the pleasures of intellectual society, with the heightened advantages for educating her brother and 'sister, tilled her heart with delighted gratitude, and added new radiance ro her exceeding beauty. Her early history and Peculiar virtues excited the inter est of all around, while the loveliness of her person and manners won Many admirers.— Yet she steadfastly resisted every allurement to quit her father, sensible that his enfeebled constitution required those attentions which she best knew how to bestow ; and the holy light which beamed from her eyes, while thus devoting herself to him, and to his cliildren, revealed the exquisite:happiness of disinter ested virtue. • But it was not long ere Egedo was con vinced that the approaching infirmities of age demanded repose. llr,therefore, retired to a lovely eottsge in the island of Falster, sepa rated from 'Zealand by only a narrow chan nel of the sea. There, amid the rural scen ery which he loved, - and - in_the tbithful dis charge of every remaining duty of benevo lence and piety, he calmly awaited the sum mons to another life. {Arica read to him that sacred Book which was his solace, for his failing sight was no longer equal to this office ; and no voice entered his ear so readi ly, and so much like a,song-bird, as her own. With the help, of her brother and sißter, she et:titivated a small garden, and it was Wadi , :1 ing to see them , in a dewy summer's morr; bearing his arm-chair out among his favorite plants, and aiding, his tottering steps to a seat among tlienk. . , There, dignified and peaceful, like the pa- triarch beneath the oaks of Mature, lie corn- \ mulled with the works of God, or gave les sons of tvisdom to his descendants. Every new shoot, each tendril that, dnring the ktight ,• had thrust feather onward its little, clasping hand were to• him as living friends. The freshness of a perpetually renewed creation seemed to enter into his aged heart and pre serve there somewhat of the lingering spirit of youth, while the clay tended dowitward to ward the dust. When neither his staff nor the arms of his children could longer sup port his drooping form, and he went no . more forth amid the works of nature, Ulrica brought her fairest flowers to his pillow and duly dressed the vase on the table by his bedsid ) anethis dim eye blessed her. Thither, with slow 1 -- " - . downy footstep, death stole, and Ulrica, ova rooming the emotion that swept over her, li to deep billows, girded herself to , t\ sing the hymn with which lie had been wont to console the dying; and when his parting • smile beamed forth, and the white lips, for the last time, murmured "pence," she pressed her trembling hand ou his closing eyes, sooth eil the wild burst of grief of the waifjng chil dren, and kneeling down; in her orphan bit terness, commanded thsim to that pitying Father who never dies. . It was affecting to see her forgetting her own sorrow when.others were to be cheered or cared for, and attending with a clear a ind to every duty, however min to ; hut when there was no longer any thing for her to do, her _brother .antl sister had retired to their apartmetrts, she leaned her beautiful head on the corpse of the old man, and wept as if the very fountains of her soul were broken uf. She made the spot of his lowly slumber 'del - , sant with summer foliage and with the hardy evergreen. She planted the grass• mound with the enduring chamomile, which rises sweeter from the pressing foot or hand, and the aromatic thyme, which allures the si.ng ing bee. There, titthe eloseuf day, she often went with her brother and sister, enthrcing preceipts of that piety which had led their beloved: -father through many trials, to rest with his dear Redeemer. Once, as she returned from her mournful, vet sweet visit to the grave, she was met by Albert, the young, dark-eyed clergyman of a neighboring village, who drew her arm with in his own. It would seem that his low, mu sical voice, alluded to h theme not unfamiliar to her ear. "Ulrica, why should , you impose a longer probation on• my faithful love'? He to whom you have been as an angel, is now with the spirits of just men made perfect. Dearest, let my home hencefbrth be yours. and this brother and siter mine." The trembling lustre of her full, blue eyes, met those of Albert in tenderness and trust. His ple'asant anti secluded parsonage gained a treasure beyond tried gold ; for she who, as a daughter and sister, had so long been a model of disinterested 'goodness and piety, could norltiir -- co Sits tat ityan i beauty, the hallowed relations' of a wife-awl mother. Humboldt Among the brilliant corps of -- ticientitic men who adorn Europe at the present day is one acknowledged chief, who towers over all others. This is the venerable Alexander Von Humboldt who at the age of fourscore and five years, still prosecutes with vigor and success his researches in the broad domains of science. A writer in Blackwood's Maga zine thus describes the eminent philosopher: "Age—it's slightly upon his active head." Still lull of recorded facts and thoughts, he labors daily in committing float to the pagt tier the grave he tells you, Waits him early now, and lie must finish what lie has to do before lie dies. And yet he is as full, at the same time, of the discoveries and new thoUghts of others,, and as eager as the young student of Nature gathering up fresh threads of knowl edge, and in following the advances of tie various departments of natural science. And in so doing it is characteristic of his getter oui mind to estimate highly the labors of others to encourage the young an d as pi r i ng investigator, to whatever department of Nt.- ture he may be devoted, and to aid him with his counsel, his influence and his sympathy. We found him congratulating himself on the posseSsion of a power with which few scien tific men are gifted, that of making science popular of drawing to himself; and to, the knowledge he had to diffuse, the regard aid attentiim of the misses of the people in hi:: own and other countries, by a clear meth( d and an attractive style. Ilumbolt resides in Berlin. Ile is repre sented as having a lofty, massive brow, which ns it overarches hiireflecting,observing eves. seems at first sight almost too large for the• dimensions of the body . and the general size of them itself. his massive chin is indica tive of a rare tenacity Of purpose, of a pci.- severance which, for a long lire has enabled him unceasingly to augment the fieetunnla teal knowledge of his wide experience, and as COlit11111011k: to stripe to spread it titia:O.