El po DIY FRIENDS. Oh, they are precious to my heart, Illy.choson friends, the few .„ Who guard one with affection's eye, Who blame and bless tue - too; Whose hearts keep echoing fondly back, In love's eternal tone, The joys, the hopes, the thoughts, the tear's,. That tremble in my own. To moot the siCeot confiding smile, Bright with aiTeetion'S dew, To fool that I am with the meek, The pure in heart, the true!. :To look into their earnest eyes. Where thoughts the brightest dwell, An, angels's harp, an angel's tongue, Alone such bliss can toll. And oh, when absent, how I love To call to mind the past, To count o'er every word we spake Before we parted last; To gather up each look or tone, And number every smile, 'Till I am lost amid the gems That gleam on-memory's isle. My friends, they are not many, yet I know tbair hearts are true— , Ah, sweeter than the praise of all Is friendship from the Few! I'd rather lire in kindred hearts, TR glory quite unknown, Than hold a nation in command, Than 1111 a friendless throne. And e'en If same should turn aside, And change, as friends have Bono, They should not perish - Tr - an my heart, Oh, no, not ono! not one! Love is too mighty in my soul To wear oblivion's pall ; And If I.had a thousand hearts I'd love, aye, with them all. gtlert Tule. THE LADY'S REVENGE. I= • Young, beautiful, accomplished, and even learned, was Miss Amarynth St. Quillotte, when she was deserted 'by her loVer and affianced --husband, Mr. Emerond. Above all, she was amazingly rich, her father having been - a West Indiaa Planter, in days when West Indian and wealth were terms synonimous. The young girl had been sent over to England, by her guardians in her fourteenth yclir, soon after becoming an orphan ; and at twenty-one beau tiful and an heiress, wag worth ono would sup pose, the constancy of ant's man. Mr. Eme rond thought differently, however, and after four years assiduous courtship, took the liber ty of changing his mind. He ran away with a silly young girl from •a boarding-school, without a pocket piece even to ,her fortune ; and in a farewell letter to his deceived mis tress, coolly told her he found that within his breast which forbade him to be the slave of any woman. And the worst of it was, he had taught Amarynth to love—and need I say what love is when it dwells in the heart of an ar dent young-West Indian? In truth, it is more fervenaiiii fatal in its consequences than col der minds can well imagine. When this love was slighted, repulsed, returned on the hands of her who had bestowed her entire heart on the faithless Emerond, there was a storm of passion kindled not easily allayed nor brought in to the limits of reason. 'Am I so ugly then?' soliloquised the discarded beauty, looking in her mirror. The image reflected might have been more serene, but, in its own peculiar styhnt.sould scarce have been more rare in its loveliness. 'Am I ugly ?' she repeated ; and as the mirror answered 'no!' she continued— 'Then of what use is b9uty,- when a pale skin, yellow hair, and lack-lustre eyes have robbed MO of all that life held most dear? Oh Em erond ! my girlhood's idol !—my womanhood's pride 1 Come back I—yes come back !—and I will forgive all !' And the poor young lady continued to indulge in similar frantic apos trophes, until her brain became excited althea to madness, and her bosom overcharged with grief nearly to suffocation. , That night Miss St. Quilotto slept not, but passed it,in meditation. The determination . she . Came to was to be revenged—her Creole blood demanded it. But how, to visit the guilty' man with poison or dither would not satisfy her; and to kill herself would be futile inasmuch as she will not be able, in that case, to as'eertain how Ito bore the blow. She wished to ring his heart living, and prove bow little she felt the stroke which had in reality crushed her ardent and haughty spirit to the ground. She would therefore marry. True, Mr. Emerond's was the only offer she had re eieved, and for him she had spurned-all sui• tors, and treated, all mankind with such dis dain'that her report shrewishness had become scarecrow to her beauty ;' but still she be lieved she coUld.attract somebody, no matter who—at least her money would. ~ To give up liberty, wealth, freedom of thought perhaps, and all to a man whom, be ho what ho might, she must loath—for the very name of a man' bad suddenly became' defestible—seemed iin• pasible ; yet Marry sho must and would.— The thought of dying, and bequeathing her wealth to hospitals, parrots, and monkeys, was yet more horrible. There was no purer light shed on that rehellous soul—no "thoughts of gentle minestrings, holy charities,' or pious sympathies; blit the , frightful picture of a old, maid, which flitted in the darkness of her over•wrooght imagination, was that oth splen etic being, wallowing in cards, and scandal, pampering over fed dogs and cats, sneered nt by her acquaintances, and reviled by her en endeß. can never come-to that,' she resumed, as this horrible/rtrait rose before her eyes. *He shag nit lire that gratification. I will have a husband, he shall be my tool—my slave. Ho shah/be an image sot up to sustain my dig nity before the world, and he shall be obedi ent. Never can I love and honor any man af ter such treatment as I have experienced ; never shall any man love me — More, if man's love can indeed be anything but mere pre• team' Now, this kind of sc6ine was all very well 'n theory, but practically it was extremely iliffidult of execution, setting delicacy aside. If Amarynth really ,intended to reverse the general custom and propose to some gentle. man, still thclind of proposals which only she wcu:d agree to, that of entire control over her husband's opinions and actions, was riot like ly to meet with acceptance She paused as the many' difficultieVof the scheme rose in array before her then suddenly flashed a thought Was it 'feasible ? yes! it must it should be so Not far from Miss St. Quillott's residence she remembered to have noticed a young man, whose occupation was—smile if you please, dear reader,—a sweeper of the crossing. Am arynth, who freqeutly, attended by the faith less Emeroud, or at times a single man ser vent promenaded in the park, which the gar den of her house overlooked, had noticed this person; partly because he looked superior to his mental occupation; and - partly - because, - when she doled out her charity, he appealed to reverence the beautiful Creole as some thing more than-human; It was towards this creature that her thoughts were now directed, feeling certain that the man was good looking enough to be made a gentlemen of, to hand her to the carriage, carry her fan in publie,at tend her to the opera or playhouse, and to be set up to the world as a lawful defader and protector. This, too she thought, would wring the heart of him, the false, - the vile—with in dignant envy. He was poor, too, a main point; 'because no rich or independent man could pots . bly be reduced to such a mere pood le's existence. She spent a day in considera tion) and the next morning sent her maid to summon the sweeper, as yet innocent of the strange honors awaiting him. Much astonish ed was Mrs. Abigial, too; at. her mistresses new whim ; but her place being good, she was discreet, and made no remark, not even to her follow servants. CIIA PTER II It was a bitter, piercing day in January; when Paul Meredith was ushered into tho splendid mansion of Miss St. Quillotte. He War bull frozen, and had keen blowing his nummed fingers for the last half hour to keep them from congealing. Aninrynth was not far out in her conjecture. The poor young fellow had feasted hilt eyes so often on•`lit*y Htveliness that passion had been nour.shed in the breast of that ill-fed half clothed 1, op el ese youth. Miss St. Quillotte had become his sun ; when he saw not that via sion of haughtiness and beauty, the brightest summer's day was dark enough to Lim. But further than nourishing her lovely image in his outcast breast. more than daring to dream of her whelk he laid his head ou his miserable 'pallet in his garret, or of wondering at her dainty elegance and beauty, lie had never as• pired, even in thought. Ile knew moreover, r hut the exquisitly dressed gentlemen who of ten attended her was a favored suitor, so much common r.; ort had told the b sweeper ; therefore when ho wns slmw noble room, replete with luxuries nn,l elegnnce, ho 1.), , ke , t i.nd wondered, and concluded he was alyiut to become the object of one of those sudden and benevolent caprices with 'which fine ladies 'sometimes honor poor people. In the mi I witchments, a bright vision appeared to him, and oh ! Ito* glorious in its rinlient and superb loveliness? The rich fur= niture, the perfum e d air of the luxurious. a partment, the beautiful and elegantly dressed roumig woman who stood"there before him, all combined to awe and abash the .poor young mall, who felt his unfitness to appear before wealth and refinement; for with his soiled and coarse attire, though it was scrupulously clean, his apperance was strangely out of charneter with all about him. Yet, abashed'though he might stand there, Miss St. Quillen°, on lit part, felt no less so. She was about to violate all those nice proprieties which fence in an in vest women with the sancity"of respect. She was about forever to annihilate her own self esteem, and-----she paused. At that mo• Ment it would Lave been easy to dismiss the wondering sweeper with an inquiry, a present or an excuse ; but the memory' of EtnerO'nd, his slights, her still deep love, her possiounte regrets, gnawing wish that he too n1100(11)0 u9O to feel;ropentance, braced up, lice singu• ler resolution. Sho spoke. Paul started as the clear, cold, haughty adcents follyn—ltis as (Ear Lisle fjerna. • 4onished ear. Amarynth, who was easy enough to servo and live with, would not for worlds have spoken in such a to ne one of ber hum- . b:est domestics, 'You are very poor,' she said, frowning as if she was denouncing a flagranterime. He raised his eyes L-large, bright, ned blue they were. Midst his poverty, this young man afforded the purest type of the Saxon race, in the pride of manhood, with his' tall, well knit frame, fair curly hair, a bright skin, and those clear eyes, wherein yos might as in a mirror. behold every object near him reflected. He raised them to her. am poor, madam, very; but I am honest.' She curled her lip. HOnesty, to her, was but a virtue of the most Plebeian order—the saving grace of the very abject. do not suppose that you are going to rob me,' she answered. A pause. 'How would you like to be rich V • 'Madam !' lie was so surprised at such n question that his face flushed, for he, thought the rich beauty had sent for him to mock him for her amusement. lie turned; and bowing prepared to go. 'Stay, said Miss St. Qtiillotte, reaching a chair and setting down—for she felt unequal to stand before that honest amazement and those searching eyes any longer. 'Stay : I have a great Ilea! to say. I propose to beStdw' wealth on you—tO make you, in short a gentle- man.' 'Madam 'Speak not but listen ; for I have things to say still more surprising. Hear but dtl not interrupt me. Do you comprehend young man how this wealth and station is to become yours ? I will tell you : you must become— my husband.' . It was fairly spoken now, and for some min tiles a dead silence reigned throughout thi ) s_pacious apartmenL Neither-could -speak.— Paul's face, which at the first receipt of this wonderful intelligence lighted up with eager ness anti joy, now subsided into gloom and doubt. Miss St. Quillotte's spirit rose. 'Perhaps,' she said haughtily, 'I am reject ed?' "Madame' said 'the young man, •I am ,but a poor fellow, earning a mere crust by the most degraded, labor; but I have yet that in my keeping which is better in the eye . of God —ho raised his eyes—those bright Unflinching eyes—reierently to heaven-'than wealth and rank within. I mean, madame. the honor of a man—a man who-has never been debased, further than poverty can debase. I think I understand your ladyship.' Here he blushed, stammered ; hesitated; for he was quite un skilled in the polite art of uttering disagreea ble truths in an agreeable way. He continu ed—'lly own poverty is irksome enough; I cannot bear the burden of a fine lady's shame.' Amarynth started up. Her creole blood turned dark red in her veins, and swept over her brow, face, and bosom. Here was a pre cious mistake indeed ; the youth fancied her guilty of actual crime, and seeking to conceal her dishonor with the shelter of a husband's name ! It was not an unnatural mistake, after all. At least, here were noble qualities— stuff which it is a pity is not oftener found in real well-born gentlemen. She recovered and forced herself to explain. 'You are very bold,' she said, disdainfully, 'but you are mistaken. Listen. Ho who sought my hand and fortune, and whom I have loved from girlhood, is false ; by this time he has wedded another.— My soul burns to be revenged; but the name and sight of man is hateful tome. In reality, I will never take on myself the duties or af fections of a wife ; it is for this I sent for you. You are'poor ; and it will be something for you to be raised out of the mire of poverty and dirt.' She sneered. 'The ceremony of marriage will confer on you some advantages which wealth can give. In the 'eyes of the world you will be my husband ; to me you must bind yourself by solemn oath, a written bond, never to lie more than you are at this present time, standing there, a beggar and an outcast.' She glanced around her proudly— though to say the truth, her pride that minute was 'ot the very basest kind, the pride of vul gar riches exulting in its power over honesty and virtue.' Again there was a silence. Paul's head was bent down oh his breast, his eyes fixed on the ?Wished oak floor. Miss St. Quit lotto was exhausted, but she rose up. 'Re main hero,' she said, 'for half an hour. De _iiherate on the hvantages offered—an oppor tunity .of foitune whiCh few 'would reject in your' - OVCutOstancee. But no mistake: you will be bound down strictly / and on the least attempt to alter' the•conditions of our contract, my wealth shall ot-tain a divorce, and you shall be cast forth to your original-, station. Remember, you will receive the title of my, husband, the fortune of a gentleman, but from myself, only the.consideration I :Sofa tb my wher paid and fcd Magueys. With thiansolent speech, calculated' indeed to crush the Must humble, she left the room, and the young man paused on this singular adventure. At first he was for darting off and leaving the rich lady—those image,' fair. er and fairer than the . reality, had filled his bosom,' and tinconciously had elevated his thoughts above his seeming station—to seek imuie,t , ot better fitted for so humiliating a pos4n; but tuere arose a picture which of fectmilly chained bin to that room, and bold him down as it were with chains. of lead.-- This picture presented a bed ridden woman, whose, tender love for her son had been, spite of their wretchedness and mint, his saving angel, his garditin spirit. To' bestow on her last few remaining days'comforts and luxuries unknown. to obtain medical aid hithertO above their grentest hopes—all this constrained him toil usitnte and doubt as to whether he should indeed throw by the golden chance fortune had so strongly offered him. Few in his rank and circumstances would have paused a mos. ment; but Paul Meredith was one of those rare human plants-which. groan and fostered in a wilderness of weeds. yet lose none of its original parity and *fragrance in its forced contract with vile things.' His father a pri vate soldier, had perished in the American. war; and his,piOther, a delicate woman who had followed the camp, returned to England on the occasion Of hostilities between that country and America bearing with her her infant son, then between five and six years of age. On her arrival in London, Mrs. Mere dith, who had her own and her child's living to gain, was seized with rheumatic fever, and on her recovery she found she had lost the use of her loweLlimhs. Henceforth the poor widow was bed ridden. With the. fortitude and courage Which the poor so often display, she sought, by the aid o' a kind neighbor or two, fur needlework, and for a time managed to support herself and little Paul in decency. At length tbiii resource, precarious in that day as it is in later tiM'es, failed. Then she articles for daily use, and the poor bey Went abolit oe - street's of London vending them-for their bread. Daring this time the poor widow, who as times went was a fair scholar, taught the boy tc rend and write, and to pray for their daily food. These were pie teachings, yet the seed was sown on good ground, :mil promised, in spite of its preco cious and forced knowledge of,the world around to bear the fruits of faith, honesty, and love. .Time passed. The widow and her son grew poorer each day, often fasting for long hours, he the sole attendant of her sick and painful bed. The boy .might, like his father, - have entered the service of his-country ; hub could he leave his mother, she, whose riches he was; whose only hope in this cold, bleak and rug ged world, was the youth's filial love, alone rendering supportable - 11er trials.,and priva tions. This mother, then, was the thought which hindered Paul from depatting out of Nis St. Quillotte's house faster than he had entered it. While ho thought, and wondered, and hesitated, a servent entered bearing a silver salver filled with rich viands and generous wines. Poor human nature! I may not paint thee better than thou really art. Hun ger and poverty drag down to the earth the brightest and most soaring spirit. Paul ate and drank, looked wistfully at the dainties, as be thought of the dear invalid in their roor garret, and finally made up his mind to accept the heiress on her own terms. After all do not think so meanly of him.— lie was. but four and twenty ; and perhaps there burned a latent hope within him that the object of his silent and humble passion might one day repent of her resolve. • She returned, and desired to know if hie mind was settled. Ho, not without much em barrastrient, for he was unversed in deceit, sig nified his acquiescence. Amarynth's face brightened. After thus exposing her affairs to this creature, it would have been too dreadful to have been spurned by him. She placed a urge filled with gold in .is 1 , 1111.1 desiring hii,Weuld procure suita ble attire, and return to hei house at eight o'clock that even' , g, '`when,' she said, '1- will havethe contract between us, prepared and ready for signature. After that I will inform you when the marriage ceremony is to ^take place. Your name ?' 110 blushed as ho told it. lie felt that this meek-inarringo was the only tarnish that honest . name bad known.— She was pleased at its euphony. She bad feared some vulgar sounding cognomen. 'For the present," she said and with the air of a queen dismissing a courtier, 'adieu. My wo man will conduct you through the garden into the park. You will return to,Pight, the same way ; it is important that none of the servants should see you.' And they separated each with anxious thoughts-,-he to tell hie mother this strange fortupe ; she to bribe : and crx her lawyer, old Jeffries whose aid was indispensible,.:.into acquiesenco with her strange whim. • 'Mr Jeffrfes was'nn 01161 . 4 who had had the care of Mis... St. Qiiiittte's affairs ever sinea,her. minority. lle was peculinr, lint not nn unkind old gentleman: and when Am arynth sent for him, and disclosing her forsa ken plight, acquainted him also with her do• lectable plan of revenge, that sage, counsellor deliberately gazed nt his client no she paced up and down her spacious library, which be ing a Javanle, etio used much as her Usual sitting nppartment, and then very quietly de tided that she was very mad indeed. e soon found, however, that the form of her mental disease was that of obstinancy, and nott de liberated how he might prevent the ra• deed 'he meditated. I must, however, explain that Miss 6t. Quillotte kept silent na to the recent occupation of her intended spouse. Mr. Jeff ries was led to suppose him respectable, though übFeure. • Never wne there such a weariaome affair. It took two good hours to explain every cir cumstance to the old lawyer, and then he in 'iated with the caution and cincumapecl of age in going over every individual circumatanee again. At last. Arnarynth fairly lost her tem per. ,''Do as you please,' she said. 'Either draw up tho °attract and settlements as I shall dic tate, or I will withdraw my affairs from your hands entirely, and employ some stranger, who will neither questicn my will nor juge. talent. Then sellinterest promoted Mr. Jeffries to Sigh, shrug his shoulders,, and to mutter,— o ell, I wish you may not repent, my dear,' which being rightly iuterpetcd, meant,,n hope you will.' Ho sent for his clerk, and, under the dit - ral' lion of Miss St Quillotte, a deed of contract and settlement was drawn up. It would, of course, be impossible for me to . transcribe that deed; but, in a word, it contained a con tract of marriage between Amarynth St. Quil otte and Paul Meriden) on the terms she had proposed ; that, in crnsideration of a settle ment of three thousand pounds per annum to he settled on the said Paul, he should entirely forego and resign the authority of a husband ; dint he was to attend her in public, but in pri t:ate, different suits of rooms should tirely Sitpairite the pair from the coMpanionship of domestic life, save nt dinner, or on the occa sion of visitors being present—this last clause appended on time will of the raid Amarynth St Quillotte. In tine, the young husband, or rather partner. was so hemmed in with. con clition4, that Mr. Jeffries, who took n this occasion about twice his accustomed quantity of snuff; muttered that the man must be a perfect tool who could sign such a deed. The divorce threat was likewise to be enforced on the failure of the slightest of these conditions. [CONCLUSION NEXT WEEK] A DEFINITE CONCLUSION. - Noah B—, wet-I-fool eta ugh in-Irls old-age to be addicted to raffia - strong potations, and when under the influence of spirits, was more than usually religious. Now one Saturday afternoon, baking day, his wife, who tyas industrious old lady; and in every way a model housewife, asked Noah to go out into the yard and split some wood to heat the oven with. Noah concluded before he set about it, to start off to the .tavern aud3;imbibe," whereby, of course, the baking vv&f.sfneglected. Coming back in a short time, and utterly oblivious of his good woman's request, ho seated himself in the old arm chair. Noah was very much attached to that old chair, for, like himself, age had made it tottering in the fogs and weak in the back. " Wife," snid he, "do yer think the Lord in his goodness (hic) kin 'send Ins into fire ever lastin' ?" No answer from his wife. • Wife, kin the Lorrd intend to be bu . rn us all in fire everlastin' ?" Mrs. B by this time wns quite in incensed at her husband's derelictions; still ME= wife, (hie) do yer think the Lord means (hic) to burn us all in fire everlustin' ?" This was more than human patience could endure, and she couldn't bold lier tongue any longer; she'd speak out if she died, forl: "No, yer old :fool yer! not if he waits for you to split the wood."' THEY SAT.—Whenever any body comes to you with a story concerning somebody or any thing arid prefaces it with the stereotyped phrases "they say," you may rest assured that nine times out of ten, that report, remark br story, is a lie. When the author of a report must he suppressed there is something wrong in "Denmark." No story, true• in all parts, need be pr, , efaced with "they say." Let those who know it, report it boldly, or keep it an entire secret. We could bring some illustra-. tions of this subject did We deem it at all necessary. No doubt every muff will readily apply it to himself. I=ZINCIE Tun GRAVE.—It buries every error; covers every defect, extinguishes every resentment. From its peaceful bosom spring none but fond regrets and tender reoolleetions. Who can look down upon the grave of an enemy, nod not feel a throb that ho should have warred with the poor handful of earth that lies.moul• tiering before him? I,,An incident of a most outrageous char acter occurred in Boston the other day.— hi , le passing a holthe where they were put ting on a patent roof, a lady was covered over with a bucket full of warm tar which a care less workman let fall. She wore a gay plume, so that she was regarded as being tarred anti feathered.'