El IStituu. INVIVATION HYMN [Br REQUEST.] We'rt.travelling home to lien Vim above, Will you go? will you go? To sing the Savior's dying love. Will you go? will you go? Millions have reached that blessed abode, Aunointed kings and priests to God, • And millions more are 011 the road, Will you go? will you go? Wore going to walk the plains of light, Will you got &c Whore perfect day excludes the uight, Will you got &c Our sun will there no more go down, In that Meet World of groat renown, Our dayx of mourning met and gone, Will you got &c We're going to see the blooding Lamb, Will you go? &c. In rapturous strains to praise his'name, Will you go? &c. The crown of life we there shall wear,, The Conqueror's palins our hands shall hear, And all the joys of Heaver we'll share, Will you go? &c. We're going where tears will never flow, • Will you go? &c. Aug sorrow we no more shall know, IVIII you got &O. ,Tis there the sninte will-die no more, But lice with Christ in Beacon secure, Their God and savior to adore, • - Will you- go? We're going to join the heavenly Choir, Will you go? To raise our voice and tune our lyre, • Will you go? &c. There Saints and Angels sweetly: slug, ITe , s.muits to their God and King, And make the heavenly arches ring, Will you gob &.e Ye wary, heavy - laden come, • . - W111_31)11 go.? Itc. In that blest house there still is room, . . Will you got Le. The Lord IS %m aim; to receive, Trffirm \fin iiii - Fitre now Thelle, Bell give thy troubled eoneienre ease, , , . Come believe, 0 believe, Come, 0 - bactsllder, come away, WIII you got &c Return again to Christ and say, . • 'I will go! I will gol Then lio will all backsliding heal, Ills love again ho will reveal And pardon on thy conscience seal, Will you ght kc. The way to Heaven is free to all, Will you got fee. Poi Jew and (lentils, greaiand Will you go.? ke. Make up your mind, giv4) , Hod your heart, * With every sin and idol part, • And now for glory make a start, • Come away! come away'! Sntcrr►iting MY COURTSHIP AND ITS COMM. (WENCH& We make the following extracts from the recently published biography of Chevalier Wikoff, which will be found to embody the sub,stanee of his most unique, .most erratic .and singular book—one perhaps that has no' equal in the "curiosities of literature"— of the literature of love, at least : "Mr. Wikoff, as our readers are aware, is a gentleman of much note in the world, in general, and of no inconsiderable note in the literary world, in particular. His book is written in a free and easy and graceful style —and in inost respects. has all the charm of novel- - -While there is no doubt that the great body of it, if not all, in fact, without the. faint of fiction, unless it be the coloring. It has, too altogetherthe charm of a novelty in literature—with the exception of Rousso lan's-Confession we do not remember to have , read any:Sueli self-anatomization of love and the lover. The writer takes the &bile right into the secrets of his own courtship, if not inAhis own heart 5 and he has had in the fair 'Miss Gamble his unquestionable epial if not superior, in cut and,,thrust, and the arts of coquetry and flirtation. The book, therefore, has all theattractions of the record' of a title of Knight Errantsr---with this addition, that one-of the combatants is a wo ;man; a specieS of heart-endowed AmaZon. Mr. Wikoff had been in much of the best society of London and Paris, if not of the United States, as his acquaintances show, and as he proves by letters from ,theirs. .He has beftiefilled o ven, and corresponded with the present Emperor of Prance, when he was ~a,prisoner at Ham. In 1836—'37, whett at :tacheda very vague Word by the way—to the'Amorican Legation iii Lendo,t4 ho be came pqttainted with Miss Gamble, a yary b9djr Virginia Woman—the adopted .prot ego of a Scotch merchtint retired: in London ~di p ti'a4g C own rich in the American tobacco A , speciei of love was cherished, hut not; pressed frem this till -1851, when thete , 4Paintatice was rcr owed, and .our love - biog.- raphy 'begins. Meanwhile Miss ,Gamble had become an liciress, and t Mr. JoShiia Bates, (Baring -A Brotherslliad become her trustee. Ip 1851, the lovers, then both itbripened years began in earnest. Miss Gamble tempt ed Mr. Wilteff to.a watering placp; in Eng land, and according ti; Mr. Wikoff's account opened a' battery. of .coquetry and scenic love upon his heart--that; no heart .could Noll withstand--1-eBpecially . whert the battery 'pow er was an heiregs. In 'short, -Mr. Wiltoff fell in love, too, or thought she did—which ,is about the same thing—but the love did not ripen into a deelaratidn,loraproinise of innr ringe. Mr. Wiltoff,seetned to have it in his head that the way to win the fair lady,was o get up a "sensation" with her, to . f) , y ,off and on, and it, would seem as if the coquette with whom ho was dealing, could only be kept ,at, times by those species of fire and re treat, advance and fire again. Miss Ganible grew."serious and meditative," complained of iibt sleeping quite so ),,e11," and "her ap petite fell off," all syraptoms,. Mr. Wikoff seems to think, of her love for him. To stimulate his love, ho would affeetto go away, and would not go away, and then they would flirt and quarrel, and make up again, as all lovers do. But whenever Mr. Wikoff would come "to the "deelaration","his fair inamorata 'would resort to rejoinders, rebutters and sub- rebutters, like any old fox of a lawyer. She would not "face the music," as we say, or come up to the stand point, as the Germans have it. The following will be amusing as a sketch of, some of the preliminary .shir- MEM "Neither look nor word had ever once betrayed My thoughts or feelings, And I was certain Thati bornb,,falling at the feet of triy startled companion, would scarcely astound her,more than an abiupt offer of marriage on my part. As I failed to screw my coOrage . to the 4 stielciag, place,' I resolved to slciftnisb thinking.my_secret,might slip-out in that way. Stiddenly Miss G. directed my at tention ton fine view on the right, but instead .of it T - regarded her, saying,-there—were-otluer objects I had more plea Sure in contemplat 7 ing.' Finding my eyes fixed on her, she blushedand askedme in downright astonish ment, 'what I meant.' To my shame I con fess, I was unable to tell her. Another chance occurred ; 'for, taking off a 'kerchief' she found too warm round her neck, she gave into me to pocket. I took it, and retained er hand in mine. AnOther look of excess ive surprise upset me again, and, her gentle admonition 'to be quiet,' •was quite unneces sary. My strong and varying emotions at last 'made me hungry, and I oat down to lunch with great relish." A lover hungry, and lunching with 'great relish—that will do. • Well, separation took place and Mr. Wikoff went toParis. He was there, it would seeem, a figurante in the diplomatic circles: Lord Palmerston; according to his account, had employedj him to keep up a friendly spirit between England and France, and the United States—and in Paris was "doing it." That he was in some way in the employ of the British Foreign Otlice, there can be but little doubt; for lie publishes letters from Mr. Ad dington, 11. B. M. Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, about his pay and salary; But the lover could not stay long 'in Paris, but bagene back again to London to bre atho the air of his inamorata: 'She had written him in substance to come back, and., back ho came—but to be "friends," in hot words—to' be lovers, in his reckoning. He was pretty* well .satisfied, he says, Miss Gamble had called him over to give him her" hand, and he hurried to take it. Then com menced more cupid skirmishing—more mim• iii nud countermining, all of which Wikoff narrates with the skill of an artist -in such matters, but they all ended in nothing, and Mr. Wikoff again went off in dudgeon. ,Mean while, Mr. Wikoff was working Miss Gamble up' into the belief that he would cut his throat or blow out his• brains—and she seems to have been afraid that he would, and so at times took pity on , him. • Miss Gamble returned home to London, and Mr.'Wikolf to Paris- r with an under standing .nn.bis part that he was soon to go . over to London and marry her but when. Mr. AV. went to London to complete his hap piness; the inconstant had'ehanged her mind Mr. Bates, she Said,Lher Trustee, woUld net give hia.coneent. Mi.'Vikoff scorns to have feared that in this respect Miss Gamble "fibbed,?' as Mr. Bates writes he did no such thing—he would not interfere between lovers, or have anything to. 'do With their love Mak ing.MisS Gamble, however,-played fast and loose again,H Poor Wikoff was'made' happy by one note,.and then miserable by another. It'wonld seem as if Miss Gamble would have "married him ,aadilloyed'him enough to marry him, if there had been no Ulster escapades: The lovers parted—finally, so Wikoff says', he thought. • Miss Gamble then went 'to the . continent again; and when Wilton* heard of it ho made a dash after her—and on his way to Turin he overtook herl—he in the Diligence, and :she with a courier—her maid Mary and Miss Ben net?' bid prior to this, th,e . 9ourier had been corrupted by Wikoff—arkept hint well in. earti9lc fjcrdtb7 feigned of Miss Gamble's movement en route —Without entering into further particulars, we will come at once tie ''grand finale of this love melodrama upon the stage of Genoa , —but the public here are_pretty well inform ed of all that. Mr. Wikoff tools ioOgingq in Gonna and the courier entrapped Miss Gamble into theta—and then scenes ensued—but accord ing to the best 'testimony in Wikoff's book, Miss Gamble was more than half willing to be entrapped. , ITer maid Mary was with her most of the time, and WilcoOvcillet de place was looking • on. She ate mid' drank with him—and she did not raise any hue and cry. She even went late at night, with her maid Mary to a hotel not her own, and there the party all took lodgings in three different bed rooms, and with propriety but nevertheless, exhibiting great intimacy and kindness. Something happened afterwards—what, is Meanwhile, what did Miss Gamble do 2= Did her heart relent? Not at all! If she had only asked for,Wiltoffs pardon, the King of Sardinia, it is believed, would have grant e;-(1 it; but she would not only do no such thing, but took grounds against his being pardoned, , to keep him out of her way ; so Wikoff says she said to .the American Con sul at Genoa. Wikoff pined in prison, and Gamble travelled'in the Tyrol and in Italy. THE BED. The French romancer, cle f nence Robbert, expresses thus warmly an appreciation of one of these everyday (nights comforts, which in the frequency they are enjoyed, are some• times less, highly valued than they deserve to be: "A bed is certainly the most precious and the most favorable asylum to be found here below. In fact, when I look at it and when I think,„as I step into it, bow ono is sudden ly, as if by enchantment, rid of fatigue, cold, wind, dust, rain, importunate visitors, tedious conversations, common-place remarks, pomp ous assertions, bragging, putting forth head strong opinions, contradictions, discussions, travelling stories, confidential redings of a fxr it poem or a whole tragedy, e • ' °mations of systems in long words, into minable mono- . logues, and that in -place of all those ono has piettires, thought; ' memories to be call• ed up, that he is in the midst of a chosen : - society of phantoms mid visions, just to his mind, and all these dreams, which. a foreign writer calls "moonlight of the brain;" When I think of all this, as I look. at a bed, I know not what words to , Make use of to express my enthusiasm and veneration, and T am almost ready to bow in adoration be fore it.", • , TIME TO GO TO BED.--Joseph was a bad boy. He • had succeeded in blinding his mother for some time as to his inibibing pro. pensities. One night, Joseph came before the old lady retired. He sat down, and, with that look of semi intoxicated' Wisdom, began conversing about the goodness of ..the crops, anti:Aber Matters. Ile got along very well until he espied what he supposed Co be a ci gar on the mantle-piece ; ho cought it, and placing . 0116 end Mouth.'he liegan - Very' graVely tolightit at'the candle. He drew and puffed until he, was getting red in the face.—_,The.old lady's eyes woo opened; and she addresged him ; "If thee takes that, tea penny nail for a cigar; it is time thee went to bed."' tier A 'very green sprig from the Emer ald Isle entered a boot and 'shoo •Shop,to pureitahe•hiniself a pair of brogans. After overhauling his stock in trade without being 'able - to his' customer, the shop-keeper hinted that he would, make him a pair to Or der. "And what will yer ax to make a good pair iv 'ern?" was the ciuery. The, price Was named; the Irishman. demurred, but t after a "hating down," the thing was a trade. Paddy was about leaving ,the shop, when the other called 'after him, askiwg: "But What ,size shall I..malte "them., sir?" Och," cried Paddy, "niver mind abgut, the' size, at all; make them. as large as ye conraniently can ,• for the moue.,:" 9.. • • 311.15al1antouo. THE MAN IN THE CHIMNEY. The Syracuse Journal relates the following as an incident, happening the other night, at the Empire House, (hotel,) in that city.— "Help I help I'm . suffocating I Get me' out., Quield.quick 1 or I shall Such were the words uttered in sepulch ral tones, that resounded through the Apart ments of the Empire House, after the board ers bad retired to their beds last night. Of course they struck terror to the souls of the' symmathetie inmates, Ind aroused their dor mant energies to instant investigation • as to the source from, whence the sounds proceed ed. Men soon rushed to the windows, and undressed women to the halls. Bells were rung, and servants and guests joined in the search. "Help! help! Tear down the house.— Get me out," continued the same mysterious MEM " Who are you ?" "Where are you ?" "What shall we do ?" " Where can we find you?'.' were the interogatories uttered by the bewildered searchers in as many different parts of the house. " Here in the chimney 1 choking, suffocat ing, headforemost down the chimney. Do get me out." . , From room to room, and hall to hall, the philanthropists rushed, 'calling to the unfor tunate to be patient, and they would extri cate him as soon as possible.- A dozed sieve pipes.were removed, all& four_mooths were applied to the smoke holes,_ inquiring the where-,abouts of the helpless being, who could liet-be-ekpected-to 'hold-on t—long-in - such- a dangerous position. But still the voice was from a distance. "It is higher up,' said one. • "lie must be lower clown," said another. " He is in the top of the chimney," said a third ; and away they rushed to thestair-case, and speedily the male members of the crowd' were on the roof of the,Empirei inquiring at the tops of several chimneys. "Where are you?" . timidly inquired one of the females en disiwbille cautiously- ven turing near the chimney-bole in her room. " Down here,_crose to these women," re turned the voice. - The inquirer rushed down stairs, her,steps hastened by the piteous appeals of the suf ferer for help. " He is not hero," said one. "Ho must be toward the next room," said another. • "Why d'on't they get him out ?" uttered a delicate voice, whose owner had not dared to venture ont.of her room before. " Is it a man ?" " Is it a woman ?" "Who is it 7" , " What is it P" passed in quick succession from one to another, and general alarm and consternation prevailed, amid which p e be wildered women heard some one say, " It is Phil Rust's ghost!". " I'm dying, dying, dying r' faintly mutter ed the mysterious voice, and the death-rattle was heard, as though the poor victem was about to give up the ghost. " Courage; maw! . we'll have you out I Hero take hold of this rope," and pie search ers on the house- top let down a long rope, ,procured for that purpose. All was now in a state of excitement un surpassed. The' anxious searcher's heeded not the cold night wind. There work was one of mercy and like true-hearted Men, they were determined that no effort should be spared to rescue a human being from such an awful fate if possible. ' "I can't reach it 1" faintly echoed the voice, and lower and lower down weld the rope . " gorerOpe, a little more, more yet and the hearts of the rescuers leaped .for .joy, atcd their spirits rose in antiaipOion of' sue' gess, while all gathered eloier, prepafed to lend their' energiei for " a long pull, a strong pull, and. a pull altogether." • "A little' more cope," implored *the suf fere.r, but, alas . 1 the whole length of the rope had been let down. A few minutes, how ever, Sufficed to proenrO another, which, after-splicing,"was lot doVni till th.o void() re sponded. • ".Enough! There, now •pull."' Cantious.ly, and with palpitating hearts, the seaieliers,eommenced inising the rope— ya'rds and 'itird 'of . the . tibrimis manufacture were,raised, but there was no weight at the end. •What is fie matter ?" He Is not on !" re nmrked the director of cerimonies. , " fle.t net be dead, and lot go," was tiro reply. ' ',' • . "Hell I" yelled some ono down the. ellint- " Hello 1" was returned from the lowes { 4 depths. " Why don't you take hold of the rope 7" "I'm out 1' Who in sold ?" MTh d back • „ accompanied with a loud laugh. „ The searchers could not believe their ears and some one remarked—" We've beet hoaxed—regularly'seld." All hands at 'once gave up the search which had contitued nearly an hour, an: ma'de their way down stairs, when they dis covered that a vaggish fellow in one. of thi stores on the first floor, had caused the great "commotion" "die Empire through," by poking his head into his stove, and talking up the chimney until he got tired, and thought it time to go to bed. A more suc cessful hoax has seldom been played upon a household. LEARN ALL YOU CAN. Never omit an opportunity to learn you can. Sir Walter Scott said, that even in a stage coach, he always found somebody who could tell him something he did not know. Conversation is frew fluently more useful than books for purpcise of knoWledge. his there fore, a"-rnistitlee to be morose and silent, a mong persons whom you think ignorant' for a little sociability on your part will draw them out, and they will be able to teach you something, no matter how ordinary their em,. e • ployment. Indeed, sorne of the most sagacious re marks are made by persons of this description respecting their particular pursuit. Hugh Miller, the - Scotch geologist owes-not-alittle - Of his fame' to observations made when he was a journeyman stone mason and working in a quarry.—Soorateswa — saifliat there was but one good, which is knowledge, and one, evils which is ignbrandE. Every grain of sand goes to make a heap. A gold-digger takes the smallest nuggets, and is not fool enough to throw them away, .because he hopes to find a huge lump-Some time. So in acquiring knowledge, we should never despise an opportunity, however' unpromis ing. If there is a moment's, leisure, spend it over a good or iustructive, talk with the first person you meet. A ItUiSIAR'§- OF TOE WAR.-A Constantinople letter.gives, as riom a Rus sian prisoner, the following explanation of the origin of the present war The Turks massacred the Russian Bishop and several Biidsian priests at Jetilsalem. God, in his wrath, sent a squadron of angels to carry away, the tomb of Christ, which remains at this moment suspended in the heavens, and he commissioned the Czar to avenge the Pagan sacrilege. When the Emperor Nicho las shall enter Jerusalem a conqueror, as by the aid of heaven, he certainly will do, Christ's tomb will be restored to its place.— The phalanx of angels will line the road along which the conquering Russian army will pass, and will present arms to them.— Then the Czar will be master of the whole world, which will renounce its errors, and beemne converted to tin:Orthodox faith."— This story is implicity believed by the Rus sian serfs. . MELANCHOLY . CASE OF CRIME. --In the Bucks County Court of Quarter Sessions on Tuesday last, bury Carver' a wealthy farmer of near •sixty years of age, and the father of - a family of grown up children, was placed upon his trial for the •petty larceny of stealing corn from his own territill — C — The offence was fully proven upon him,.nnd the Jnry refun ded a verdict of guilty. The trial produced an intense excitement, and the court room was densely crowded during its progress. The Trisoner was defended by able counsel, who in his defence produaid the lease much between,hinkas tlie"lttatllord t , and the pro secutor,hictenant, in *III& there was al interlinlation . made . by his son who drew i tip, and who is a member of the Bar, calon tiled to justify, and give'a right.to Ale kin( .lord to the taking away of the corn at an tine before a division of it should be mm between the contracting parties. This lute Halation the prosecution contended had bet surreptitously ,inserted by the son in order save his father from a merited ,punishmei If this were so, it Should by :.charitably", gardedas that filial effectioii, which in tir of sorrow might tempt an honorable man save the parent who gave Mtn birth frc that deep degradation which would nece arily follow upon a conviction, and inevital entail its miseries-upon his happy fancily. Au Englialt paper 'says, that it is an fallible criterion, as far as it goes, of a g( tin, to ses a clean .mustard pot.•, If tha' in proper order, you may be• sure that beds-will be aired, the sheets clean ,and the etceteras properly looked after. 1:01=1