f~ poetrq. ga.,ln the latter part of Bayard Taylor's new volume Z-."Poeins of Orient"—WO find a poem upon which ee have exhausted our acisniration. We cannot, lu the wide round of English Literature, discover a poem on . a kindred subject which rivals it in all the qualities wish la rivals it in all the guanaco which are necessary for the perfection of so delicate a work. It is no business of the critic to inquire into the history upon which this poem was founded, or to invade the sanctity of the po et's hearth with indecent hints and impudent conjec. tures, Too much of this has been done lately by the saibblingworld — too much In the cable of the author of tuts poem. We, therefore, give it without further cons. moat :--[iteading Gazette.] THE PHANTOM. Again I sit ritthinthe mansion, In tho old familiar seat; And shades and ISUllbhilleB rhaseleAch other O'er the carpet at my feet. Hut the sweet brier's arms have wrestled upwards lu the summers that are passed, And the willow trolls Its branches lower Than when I saw them last. • Thoy strive to shut the sunslitpe wholly • From out thu haunted room; To fill .the !home that once was joyful, With idlonco and with gloom And many kind, remembered faces, Within the doorway Or voices that wake the sweeter 'mule Of one that uoti ,- is dumb. They sing in tones as glad as ever, The songs she loved to•hear; They braid the roses in tho summer garland s, Whose flowers to her were dear. And still her feutsteps in the passage, Iler_blualles.at-the.noor, fler timid words of maiden welcome, Come Lack tome once mme. And all forgetful of my Enrrow, Unmindful of my pain, .1 think she has but nowly loft me, And soon will come again. ehe stays perchance a moment To dres 7 s her Uark brown hair; I hear the rustle of her garments, ______iteritght step on the stair. 0, fluttering heart! control thy tumult, ' Lost oyes profinui should pro My cheeks botray the rush or rapture t iler coming brings to cool Mho tarios long: but 10l a whisper Beyond tho open door, ' And gliding through the quiet sunshine. shadow on the floor. Ab I the whispering pine that calls me, . The pine, whose shadow strays; And my patient heart must still await her, Nor chide her long delays. But my heart groes Melt with weary waiting, As many a time befare; tier foot is ever at the threshold, Yet never passes o'er.• Pled d)'tile. From the PletorMl A WINTER STORY. A cold night! The 'wind sharp as a Da mascus schnetar, cuts aough the fine chinks in the windows, causing my mother continu ally to change her seat, to avoid what she calls the draught; but as the draught comes everywhere, she is at length fain to come to a settlement close to the mantel piece, caber she keeps cutting • out mysterious hexagons and rhomboids from some linen stuff, here after to be united by cunning fingers into some wonderful article of female apparel. My two sisters are playing chess. Fanny, triumphant over a check inate, leans hack on her chair, and watches with an air of proud pity, the frowning and cogitative countenance of Lizzie, whose little brain is throbbing with a thousand stratagems by which- to extricate her unhappy queen from the impending dis aster. 1, wrapped in all the dignity of nine; teen years, am absolutely smoking a cigar in in the sacred chandler, (a privilege awarded to me on raro occasions by my Mother, who would generally dismiss too to my own room the moment I displayed a Havana,) and reading Sir Thomas Brown's poetic essay on Urn Burial. There is a solemn quiet reigh ing through the, room. The pine logs on the - it tag - out - spaun • is - tre-nn - hiss like wounded snakes, as the babbling resinous juice oozes from each gaping split. The. click of my mother's scissors ►u,ap monotonously, and at regular intervals. The wind screams wildly outside, and clat ters at the window pane; :Is if it was" cold and -wanted to comp "Plcroughlhe_dusty panes theins;:lves, half revealed 1w thCi linrti ally drawn curtains, glitnmor whitely ,the snowy uplands, and on the crest of the ghastly hills a hate old oak lifts up its itTi - k'cil arms,liko ,aged Niobe -frozen in an Dui• - tilde of sorrow. The ~took., or lily ci g ar .g3es curling, eciling-ward in concentric! rings of evanescent vapor, and I am whi4eriug, to Invsolf one of 'those sonorous and /0 1 0r i l , ~ e ntenees with which-the ohl. knight of Nor wich terminates his chapters, and which, after one has read them,,reverberate and echo in the brain, when—rat--tat—there comes a fainyirresolute knock at the hall door. My moffier Shuts her scissors, and looks up - inquiringly as much as to say "who in Heaven's name, is out on a night like' this?"' rhe s 'eliess players are immovable, and seem as if an earthquake wouldba a matter of perfoa indifference to them. I lay down my book and go to the door. I: open it with a shiver, and a resolution to be cross and uncivil: the wind rashes triumph antly in with a great sigh of relief, the mo ment the first chink appears, and I look out into the bitter ghastly night. i w What a strange group stands on the piazza!: 'Winter seems to htive become incarnate in human form, and, with the four winds as his companions, come to pay us a visit. There is a tall, old man, with a long grey moustache, which, as it hangs doWn his jaws, the rude breeze snatches up, and ,swings about, and pulls insolently, as if it knew he was poor, and could be insulted with impu nity. He looks bitterly cold! His long, arched nose is-as, blue as the blue sky above him, in which the stars twinkle so clearly, an! he has on a scanty little coat, on which a few remnants of braid flutter- sadly, like the shreds of vine that bang on walls in winter time, which they; in the golden sum. mer, had wreathed with glossy leaves so splendidly. holds a little, child, his arms—a Itle, shivering child; that trembles most ,incessantly, and. tries, poor thing, to put its head in the Beauty and threadbare folds of that insufficient coat, By the side of this pair is another effigy of poverty and winter. A small, pale, delicate woman, with great blue eyes—profuse hair, , which, matted in frozen intricacies, burst out from beneath a most remarkably shapeless bonnet --s—a shawl so thin that it must have been woven by spiders; another little shivering child clasped in her arms, and carefully en veloped in the poor old shawl, though one can see by her blue neck and thin dress, that she is sacrificing herself to keep the little one warm. A huge umbrella dangling from one of her hands, and which she leans .on Occasionally with great dignity—and the icy picture is complete. But the main picture is not yet finished. A girl about ten years old, standing a little back, clings to her mother's skirt with one hand, while with the other she tries to. keep something that looks like a pair of trousers and round her neck. She is shadowy and pale, and seems like Northern mirage, ready to dissolve into cold air at a moment's notice. "Who are you, and wliat do you want?" I said, in a gruff tone; for the wind blew bit terly on my cheek, and I mtide up my mind to be cross. The old man inclined his heal slightly, and spoke. "We are Poles," said he, in excellent Em glish, with a slight fore 4 a accent; "we wish to go to Boston, which we hear, is but one day's journey from this, but we do not know where to lodge to night. We are here to ask you for a night's shelter." "Pooh!" said I, swinging the door almost to; "we know nothing about you, and never admit beggars. We , caunot do it." The man fell back a pace or two, and looked at the little woman With the great , eyes. Heavens how full of despair those great. , eyes seemed just at that moment" - saw his arm tighten c ) onlidsively round the . little shivering child if his arms. A slug. Gish, half frozen tear r died slowly down that blue nose of his. lie brushed it away with his fold; shrivelled hand, and nodded mourn fully to thh l;ttlo woman, who clutched her umbrella firmly and then turned to doper. without a .Iyord. As the door was htiug slowly closed, he shook his head once cr twice, and said in a very low voiee, " God help ma l" These words had scarce been spoken, when I felt a slight touch on my shoulder. " John," said my mother, "call those pro• ple back." IMAr felt so relieved in -all my life. When that old man turned away in silence at my sudden refusal of his prayer, disdain ing to address himself, to me, but whispdring his mercy to God, a pang of remorse shot through my heart; I would have given wprldS to have called him 'back, but the hideous s Id len pride, which,h r' chained up mt . nature, until it 4M's hedemie a mve d bear, put 'a padlock on toy lips. .Itow glad I was when my mother caste and dissolved the bonds with a lunch. " Come Imelt," said I "my frientl , , we wish to speak with yen." 1 nut sure my Yoke mtv,t. have oftlly been vta'y , Jentle, fo,r as Jlie 'alit Pole turned, his rugged cheek seemQd to soften, and the great eyes alibi pale wile newally !lashed though the aim night, with - a fire of hope. They eartisle ijeratb. had landed from an Orn,igran!, ship in New York, with only . afew dollars in their pos.. Seision ; which was dwindled away to a few shillings. They could get no employment, - The old man was a modeler of medallions and Said bitterly : " They don't care about art in Now York." So they made up their minds to go to Boston; .here they heard that such things find encoragement. With a few remaining shillings, and what money they could obtain by pawning their-, little wardrobe, they struggled thus fareu. their journey.' They were now penniless, and scarce knew what to do ; but the old man said proudly : " If we can only get through to Beqoa to-morrow we have nothing to fear." My mother shut the door; by this tithe:the old man, and the little pale woman and three shivering Children, were on the inside, and Fanny and . Lizzie had, kft their game of -chess with their poor queen Still in prison, and were passing round the pale little wo man, whose eyes were now bigger than ever, and shining with' tears of joy; and they somehow had got hold of the two youngest children; and they. were petting them and talking to them in that wonderful language supposed to be the tongue•commonl?7 spoken by infants, the foundation of which is sub stituting the letter d for the letter 4 and smothering all the is and hs in a remorseless manner. The pool little ,foreigners were therefore informed, confidently, by the young ladies that"` day was dood littlo tings, and ley mum% gry zo, for zey would aye a nize vorm zupper." And whether they understuot it or not, the "tittle tings', ceased- to shiver or cry and looked wonderingly about with. small editions of their mother's great eyes : and the old man twirled his moustache as it thawed in the beat of the pine fire, and made Many bows. and looked that worldless grati• tude which cannot be interpreted. But the little wife said nothing; only she leaned on her umbrella and gazed at my mother as'she gave orders to the servants for the preparation of a Sleeping room and liberal meal for the way-farers; and she gazed at me, as I stirred up the fire with immense energy, (between ourselves, I tried to bustle off the recollection of that cruel speech with which I first met their appeal,) and made her husband sit down sd close -to it, that his legs were nearly scorched through . his threadbare trousers; and so continually gazing at every one ; until at last she could stand it no longer, and flinging away, for the first time, that ponderous umbrella of hers, she cast herself on my astonished mo ther's neck, and sobbed out a heap of Polish biessings, that if there is any virtue in bcne diction, will certainly canonize her when she dies. I swear to you, that when all was over, and the - y were sleeping soundly, I went into a remote corner and Wept bitterly for the wrong I had so nearly done. Well, they staid with us that night, and the next and the next ; and yny mother got op a little subscription among the neighbors And we rigged them all out in good- warm clothing, bought them tickets on the cats to Boston, and ono fine, frosty morning we all sallied down to the depot, and saw them ofl on their journey, and I tell you there was s waving of hands, and Polish gesticulations. and far, far away in the distance, we could e ktch gl'ixyse of that great umbrella, with the little woman still flourishing it by %%1) of a farewell. We heard nothing of oar . Polish friends fur a whole year. Often, over file fireside, we would talk about them, and our neigh hors sneered et Ili And wondered if our spoons were safe, and 'moralized upon for : eign imposture and ingratitude. My mother got much for her charity ; but none of us minded, tbr there was something so true in the ways ampwanners of these poor wander ers., that it yould have been impossible t o distrust them. Well, Christmas came. Winter agan and snow, with huge logs glowing fiercely on the hearth and mistletoe and ivy swinging mer rily in the hail. Again the uplands weiu sheeted iii white ; again the old oak was nit, ked and sorrowing ; again we were all seat- - el round the fire, listening to tho snorting of tile wind as it tore over the hills like a mail stead. In the midst of a deop silence that upon us all, there came a rat tat-tat t the hall'door. It was an enthusia.itic rat-tat• tat., It was strong, deterwitivd.ivil Qager.— went t' the door, I'had scarcely tuth:trr. it, Or took a peep at the new comer, whe'r'i• it seemod'as if a whirlwind with a 'unmet on hi; head scoured pa.tt toe at t d swept into lin parlor. The , next indineut I heard a great einvonotion: Sobli'ng and ,17tughim!, and brol;en English, all swept aloup. as it wove in a catarag of poli,h. 'lt was the litth pale; woman with the great eyes.' No ltniger fmle though,' but with ruddy tdietdts ; the eyeit, this time, looked larger end bright_ cr than ever thrnzh their tcat;:t. They had . - been„ever since in Boston, she breathleasly told us,'and had been . doing well, the. nks 'to the blessed lady whop helped thein, to get there. , The huaband• modeled medallions, she composed polkas, and their only daugh ter taught music, stit they had saved three hundred dollars, and boughta piano 'with it. And she had Said to herselfthat on Christmas night she 'would come and speak her grati tude to the pleased lady who had sheltered her and her little ones ; so she set off in the cars, and here-she was. And then she com menced pulling things out of her poelcets.— Christmas presents for us all I There was a scarlet fortune teller for Lizzie, and a curi ous card case for Fanny, and a wonderfully embroidered needle case for my mother; and there was a beautiful umbrella for Mr. John she intimated, *producing:al enormous para chute. She knew he would because when she was here last year—thanks to the blessed lady who had sheltered her—she had seem hiin looking very much at her umbrella and she would have offered it to him then, but was ashamed, it was so old. But: this was a new one and very large And then she kissed us all round, and produced an elaborate letter from her hus band to my mother, in which she was coin pared to Penelope, and told us everything that had !livened to them since they had left us, until, having talked herself into a state of utter exhaustion, she went off to her bed room, where_ she was heard praying in . indifferent English that we might all ascend into Heaven without any of the usual . duff' eulties. She and her family are still in Boston, where they make quite a respectable income. And every Christmas sees her arrival with presents. for the blessed lady, and her eyes and Irtr gratitu le are as large : s cher. It it, you see, a simple Winter Story. tittle fall: Prom tho Wine Press VOYAGE AROUND A PUDDING Mr. Bushwhacker foldednis napkin, drew• it through the silver ring, laid it on the to ble, folded his arms, leaned back in his chair by which 'we knew that there was something :it work in his knowledge-box. "My de'ar madame," said he with an aboriginal shake, of the head, "there are a great many things to be said about that pudding." Now such a remark at a season of the rear when eggs a-0 five fo: a shilling, and tot always fresh at that, is enough to d-s -comfort'anybody. The doctor perceived it .it once, and instantly added— "ln a geographical point of view, there are many things to be said about that pud ling. My dear math m 1," he continued, tak3 tafioca itself; what is it and where (!o s it come from ?" Our eldest boy, just emerged from chid:- °filmed, answered, " 85 Chambers street, two auors below the Irving House." "True my dear young friend," responded the doctor, with a friendly pat on the head ; "true, but that is not what I mean. "Where," he repeated, with a questioning look through his spectacles, and a Btnhwhacklan nod, " does tapioca come from ?" "Rio de Janeiro and Para . !" " Yes, air ; from Rio de Janeiro in the qouthern, and Para in the Northern part of the Brazils, do we get our tapioca ; from the roots of a plant called the Mandioca, botani cally, the Jalropoa Aulihol, or, as they say tie Cassava. The roots are long and round ike tt . :Weet potato ; generally a foot or more 'n length. Every joint of the plant will pro ince its'roots like the cutting of a grape vine. Tito tubers are dug up from the !round, pealed, scraped, or grated, then put in long sacks of flexible, rattanysacks air feet long or more ; and at the bottom of the sack they susperd a large stone, by which ;he flexible , sides are contracted, and then lut pours the eassaya-juicein a pan placed balow to receive it. This juice is poisonous sir, highly poisonous; and very volatile, l'hen, my dean madame, it is macerated in water, and the resiewnr, afer the part, the poison, j is evaporated, is the innoeu ms farina, which locks like small crumbs of bread, and which we call tapioca, The !ic4t kind of tapiben comes front itio, which Ll' I lielievo, Ow tit live 'thousand live bun. teed Miles from New York ; so we must put (bat donna ?is lilt; pore than one , fifth of un voyage around thelindiing.“ 'fills made our eldest opiM his eves. " Egg.; antl cont.iflue'Ll Dr, Bosh "tire home.' proauuti,Cus ; but sm. s.lgar, is yowl,. partly of ;lit , totilsi turf slvei.st ye low sugar of I,oui..tlna ; pattl, hard and dry of the We6f•lndies, 4 N iL); not go into the proees§ of rifining sngar noW lint I may ob3prvohore, that the sugi - r we get froni.Louisirm, it' refined ntl•:rnatle into a loaf, would be quite soft, with larg Lose crystals i while. the Havana saga). , subjected to the same treatment, wont, make a white One almost as compact an hard as granite. But we have made a tri, to the Antilles for our' sugar, and so yo may add fifteen hundred miles more for th• naccliart)int."a,. "That is equal to nearly one third of th circumference of the pudding we live , upor doctor." "Vanilla," continued the doctor, " witl which a pudding is so delightfully flavored is the bean of a Vine that grows wild ia th multitudinous • forests of Venezuela, No Granada, Guinea, and, in fact, throughOu South America. The long PO, whichlook• like the scabbard of a sword, suggested tht name to the Spaniards; vayna, meanini scabbard, from which comes the diminu five, vanilla, or lictle scabbard, appropriate enough, as every one will allow. The 4 beans, which are),worth here from six k twepty.dollars a pound, could be as easily cultivated as hops in that climate; but the indolence of the people is so great that not one Venezuelian has been found with suf ficiont enterprise •to set out one acre of vanilla; which ,would yield him a small for. tune every year. No, sir. The poor peons, or peasants, raise their garabanias for daily use, but beyond that they never look. They plant their cror s' in the. fobtsteps of their an• castors; they c Nl oald probably have browsed on the wild grass of the lianas or plains. Ah I there are a great many such bobs hang. ing at'the tail of some - ancestral : kite, even - in this great city, my dear learned friend." " True, doctor, you are right, there." "Nell, sir, the vanilla is gathered from the wild vines in the woods. Off goes the hi.ialgo, proud of his noble ancestry, and toils home under a back-load of the' refuse beans from the trees, after the red monkey has had his pick of. the best. A few real! pay him for the day's work, and then, hey fir the cock-pit I There, Signer Olfogie meets the Marquis de Shinplaster, or the Padre Corcorochi, and of course gets whistled out of his earnings with the first click of the gaffs. Then back he goes to,his miserable hammock, and so ends his year's labor:. That, sir, is the history of the flavoring, and you wily have to allow a Stretch. across the Caribbean, say twenty-five hundred miles, for the vanilla." " We are getting pretty well round doctor." "Then we have sauce here, wine-sance--- Teneriffe, I should say, by the flavor. "- from beneath the cliff Of Sunny sided Tenncriffo • And ripened In the blink Of India's sun." We must take four thousand miles at least for the wine, my learned friend, and say no thing of the rest of the sance.". "Except the nutmeg, doctor." "Thank you, my dear young friend; thank you.—The nutmeg! To the Spice Islands in the Indian Ocean we are indebted for our nutme:s. Our old original Knickerbockers, the web-footed Dutchmen, have the monopoly of this trade. Every nutmeg has paid toll at the 11u2ne before it yields its aroma to our graters. The Spice Islands! The al most fabulous Moluccas, where neither corn nor rice will grow; where the only quadru peds they have are the odorous goats that breathe the fragrant air, the musky croco diles that bathe in the high-seasoned waters. !he Isles Of Ternate and Tid nom, whence merchants bring Their spiry drugs." • There, sir! Milton, sir. Front . Ternate andTidnore, and the rest of th t marvellous_ cluster of islands, we get our nutmegs, our utter', ai d our cloves. , Add twelve thousand miles at least to the circumference of the pudding for' the nutmeg." "This is getting to he a pretty large pud• ding, doctor." "Yes, sir. we have travelled already twenty—ti 'e thousand five hundred miles around it, a-Al now let us , mcireumnavigate and come back by the way of Mexico, so that we can get a silver spoon, and penetrate o the interior." REASONS FOR-GOING TO CONGRESS.—George Gordon, Jr., announces hinself - as a candi. date for Congress in the 13th district of Vir ginia, and assigns in an address in the Wyetheville itepublivan the following rut., sons for desiring a seat in Congress : . I think it nothing I) it 001 m m hone,ty tr ! 'confesgthat I am mainly moved to becon candidato because of the easy Tito and tht high wages coneeled Nyith n sent it, Con dress. Now, do not mean to' assert (1( ensy and the As":ll'',VS high as re , jori i . Tho;ze v.ho occupy a di,ting\iishi4l platy, is the great liaiacss of die CCngre“ of thi . reat nation ; I :illtPcle. to tho,ot who 5!..0: (;011 , titniie. thclail of revroet.t. , .li ,4 And of which the r. nin7 , ,t.always !us4, aneof whieh 1 think, ihvrc may nt, and thin he an , idkirtion v.!thont any :Trio), detrimt-nt-,--therefore l 10,ve presort bccom..l a candidate,"