IN surtrq. THE POUR PHILOSOPHERS Four great philosophers, Como every your; 'reach in the open air; Then disappear. WINTER'S the STOW So chill and heroic; Ile sits In the mountain breeze, biting and pure, And when to bring fear and doubt, Damp nightly winds are out, Wraps an old cloak about—ho can endure, SPRING, at dull hearts to mock, Coutes iu a farmlug-frook, With garlauds and ploughshare a lesson doth give; 110 ship through the field awhile, Turns up the soaking soil, All haste and laughing toll—briskly can lire. SUMMER, witb mantle free— ESIOtrItEkN he— Lolls in the cool shade like a tired boy; While the blazing suns unkind, Leave the stout mower blind, Where faints the mountain ulud—ho can enjoy AuTutta, when all are done, Ite's a guod CIJIUSTIAN one, Fins well the granaries, where seeds may lie, New coming years to bless; Then, ili his russrt dress, All hope and quietnoss 7 sweetly.ean die. TIME. Yes, and the selfless worlds which navigate, The unutlerable deep that 'lath no shore, Will Nowa.; their starry splendors, soon or late, Like tapers, queuch'd by Him whose will is ate I Yes, and the angel of Eternity. Who numb6rs worlds, and writes their names in light, Ono day, 0 Earth, will look iu vaiq for thee, And start and stop iu its unerring And with the wings of sorrow and affright, Veil ibis impassioned brow and heavenly tears. 31igr1iltinfoug. From the Providence Journal., THE MYSTERIOUS TRACKS In the winter of 1851, and the followi. Spring, much attention was excited by my terious tracks in the snow. These tract were of the size that would be made by yiailing . colt, and were deep in the snow, though made by a heavy animal. Yet at tl tame time their appearance indicated th. they were made by a winged animal In son cases they were 'traced up to a high wall, a, commenced again on The other side, althot4 there was no aperture through which animal large enough to make such a trai could pass. In other cases the tracks appeal ed for a few rods and then disappeared, : though the animal had alighted, and aft walking a little distance, had again tnkt wing. The tracks were from eight to ten it ches apart, in asingle trail, as though ma, by a two legged animal. In one case it wi said that a circular mark was observed in tl snow, as though made by the wing of a grei t hire. These tracks :were first observed on tl morning of Thanksgiving day, and were see in many places distant from each other, al. in various parts of the State. The doscril tions of all corresponded,•and in some cast were frozen in the sleet, and the impressi was distinct and well preserved. It is ea: that simPar appearances were found in The explanation generally received was tilt these tracks were made by the vnowy owl, bird which belongs to a more northerly region but which the extreme cold weather ha driven south. This bird weighs from four t five pounds, a weight quite sufficient to nab a deep impression in the snow. Its foot i covered with feathers which curve under and when it stands with its talons bent under. it would make an impression not unlike tb colt's hoof. Some observers have not accepte this theory, but we believe they have nut of feret — itt other. In the neighborhood of Ap ponnug, some boys made similar tracks wit stilts, and we remember that they brought t • our office the stilts with the ends carved i the fashion of a hoof. This idle hoax ex plained the marks only in one vicinity, an was. not probably thought of till after the: bad been seen in other plumb, and their orig , made a subject of discussion. The same appearances which excited r much wonder hero in 1851 and 1852, hal. been observed this wintei in England, al. • have caused - more superstitious dread the the 4 1nysterions tracks" did on the side of ti water. The following paragraph is from Lopdon•Times of Feb. 16. EXTRAORDINARY OCCURENCE.—ConsideraV sensation has been caused in the towns • Topsham, Lympstone, Exmouth, Toignmoutl and Dewlish, in the south of Devon, in cm 4equence of the dicovery of vast number foot-tracks of a most strange and mysteriM desori, The supersticious go so , far as t beliert than - hey aro the marks of Satan hitii self; and that great excitement has : been pre duced among all clasBes may be judged fro! the fact that the subject has been deseantt on from the pulpit. It appears that, L Thurtzday night last, there was a very ho::v. fall of snow in the neighborhood of Exeter and the south of Devon. On the following morning the inhabitants of the above towns were surprised at discovering the footmarks of some strange and mysterious animal, en• (lowed with the power of übiquity, as the foot prints were to be seen in all kinds of unac countable places—on the tops of houses and narrow walls, in gardens and court yards, en closed by high walls and palings, as well as in open fields. There was hardly a garden in I.,ympstone where these foot prints were not observable. The track appeared more like that of a biped than a quadruped, and the steps were generally eight inches in advance of each other. The impression of the foot closely resembled that of a donkey's shoe, and measured fr , m an inch and a half (in some instances) two and a half inches across. Here and thare it appeared as if cloven, but in the generality' Of the steps the shoe was cOntinu; ous, and, from the snow in the centre remain ing entire, Merely showing the outer crest of the foot, it must have been convex. The creature seems to have approached the doors of several houses, and then to hove retreated, but no one has been able to discover the stand ing or resting point of this mysterious visitor. On Sunday last the Rev. Mr Musgrave alluded to the subject in his sermon, and suggested the possibility of the foot-prints being those of the, kangaroo ; but this could scarcely have been the case, as they were found on both sides of the estuary of the Exo. At present it remains a mystery, and many superstitious pc 'pie in the above towns are actually afraid to go outside their doors after night. In the London Illustrated News of Feb. 24th, is nn article stating the same facts, with en gravings rof - the - tracks. The - writer-says :- - "This mysterious - visitor generally passeti once down or across each garden or court yard, and did so in nearly all the houses Sta many parts of the several 'towns above mentioned, as also in the farms scattered about; this regular track passing in some instances over the roofs of houses, and hayricks, and very high walls (one fourteen feet,) without dis placing the snow on either side or altering the distance between the feet, and passing on as if the wall had not been any impediment. The gardens with high fences or walls, and gates locked, were equally visited as those open and unprotected. Now, when we consider the distance that must have been gone over to have left these marks—l may say in almost every garden. on door-steps, through the ex tenaivo woods of Luscomhe, upon commons, in enclosures and farms—the actual progress must have exceeded a hundred miles. It is very easy for people to laugh at these appear ances, and account for them in an idle way. At present no satisfactory solution has been given. No known animal could have travers ed this extent of country in one night, besides having to cross an estuary of the sea two miles broad. Neither does any kno‘tv animal walk in a line of singly footsteps, net even =IEIIIMI man." In the same paper of March 3d are several communications upon the subject, ono of them 'llustrated with engravings. One of these communications mentions a rumor that two kangaroos had escaped from a menagerie, but this was not considered as offering a plausible explana . ion. The same correspondent says: "A scientific acquaintance informed me of his having traced the same prints across a field up to a bay-stack. The surface of the stack was wholly free from marks of any kind, but on the opposite side of the stack, in a direction exactly corresponding with the track thus traced, the prints began again I The same fact has been ascertained in respect of a wall intervening. No animal with Cushing paw, such as the feline tribe—diminutiVe or large (cat or tiger) 1 - . - -exhibit, could have made these marks; for 'the feet of most quadrupeds tread in parallel lines, some widely divaricated, others approxi— mating very closely. The ass, especially, among the animals daily seen, approaches the single line. Tho fox leaves round dots in a single line; the stoat two and one alternately. Moreover, the feline tribe leave concave prints; whereas, iu each of these mystic prints, the space enclosed by the bounding lino was ton.; vex, as in the print of the patten. Early in the week we were informed that two cranes had been shot at Otterton, below 13Jrleigh Salterton, and that these were the mystical printers; but the well informed in zoology at once rejected this offered explana tion. Within the last four and twenty hours, a Try shrewd and intellectual neighbor of mine, about six miles distant, wrote riio word that a gentlemen in the parish adjoining his own had p.m:ed these peculiar prints through his garden walks into a six inch cutter, and there he saw the marks of claws. This has in• duced some to suppose Them to ho, tracks of a catamountain. Two other genthinen, resi dents in the same Parish, pursued a line of prints during three hours and a half, making their progress under gooseberry bushee and espalier fruit trees ; and then missing them, ;legitinecl sight of the impression On the roofs of El IncJ houses to which their march of investi gation brought them. These gentlemen 'swear Zanisle peralb. to claws.' Upon which my correspondent ( a member of the society of Antiquaries)observes, we are inclined to believe they must be otters Driven out in quest of food.„ Our friend felt toe-marks at the'contracted part of the print, though they were not discernible by the eye Som .chiel amang' the congr_igation where I was discoursing three Sundays since had evi dently been taking notes, and faith; he pren ted tittine(its Burns would say, ;)nnd though, without incurring the charge of the elightest approach to irreverence, I I found a very apt opportunity to mention the name of kangaroo, in allusion to the report then current. I cer minty did not pin my faith to that version of the mystery, nor call upon others to receive it ex cathedra; but the state of the public mind of the villagers, the laborers, their wives and children, and old crones and trembling old men, dreading to stir out after sunset, or to - go out half a mile into lanes or by 'ways, on a call or message, under the conviction that ibis was the Devil's walk and none other, and that it was wicked to trifle with each a mani fest proof of the great enemys immediate pres ence, renderesl it very desirable that a turn should be given to such degradingand vitiated notions of a superintending Divine Providence; and I was thankful that a kangaroo was "in the wind," as we should say, and serving to disperse ideas so derogatory to a chris tianised, but assuredly most unenlightene • community. I was reminded never the less. by ono pertinacious recuennt, that it is written that Satan should be unchained for a thousand years, and that the latter days were at hand. Still mine was a word iu due season. and did good. The generality of such of us as can reason dispassionately. In .view of a ph.ctiometionwhich 80C1118, as yet, to be without precedent or prir• allel, incline to believe it must belt bird o ' some unfamiliar tribe, wandering and hoppin over this region ; but all inquiry seems to b. fruitless. I have addressed communications to the British MutCeum, to the Zoological So eTc'tto the keepers of birds and beasts in the Regent's park menagerie; and the universal reply is, they aro utterly unable to form any ;conjecture on the subject. however correctly the impressions bad been copied. In the same paper is a communication from Profeasct Owen. He has seen the •drawing of the foot prints, and pronounces them those of the badger. He says : • "The badger sleeps a good deal in his win ter retreat, but does not hibernate tie regular ly and completely as the boar does in the seve rer climate of Canada. The badger is noctur nal, and comes abroad occasionly in the late winter, when hard pressed by cold and hunger it is a stealthy prowler, and most active and enduring in its quest of food, That one and the same animal should have gone over 100 miles of a most devious and ir• regular route in ono night is as improbable as that one only should have been awake 'and hungry out of the number concealed in the 100 miles of the rocky and bosky Devonshire, which has been startled by the impressions revealed by the rarely spread' carpet of snow iu that beautiful country. The oous s of the proof that ono creature made them in one night rests with the asser tor, who ought to have gone over the same ground with a power of scents and unbiassed observation, which seems' not 'to bee° been exercised by him who failed to distinguish the truly single from t ended foot prints in question. Nothing seems more difficult than to see a thing as it really is, unless it be the right in. terpretation of observed phenomena." DEATHS BY SCALDING. We still ago reported, almost daily, an ap palling number of deaths by burns and scalds not one of which we take it upon ourselves to say, need prove fatal, or would do so, if a few pounds of wheat flour could be promptly ap plied to the wound made by fire, and repeated until ..the inflamatory state has passed. We have never known a fatal case of scalding or burning, in which this practice has boon pur sued, during thirty yours experience, and having treated hundreds in both public and private practice. We have known the most extensive burns, by falling into caldrons of boiling oil, and even molten col per, and yet the patients were rescued by this simple and cheap reuiody, which front. , its , infallible suc cess should supplant all the fashionable nos trums, whether oil, cotton, lead-water, ice, turpentine or pain extractors, every ono of which has been tried a thousand times with fa, tal results, and the victims have died in ex cruciating agony, while a few- liandfulls of flour would have calmed them to sleep, and rescued them from pain and death. Human ity should prompt the profession to publkh and ro publish the facts on this subject which are established by the authority of standard medical works on both sides of the Atlantic.— Flour is the remedy, and the only one, iu so vend cases of s^alding and casual ties which' eke so often destroy life. Let us keep it before the people, ultilu the explo sion.of steam,lAilers, and burning fluid lamps air so rife all over the euuntry.—Rccst's .1/ed. lea Ciazatc. A PARADISE FOR A LAZY MAN Lieutenant Gibbon, in his account of Mire cent exploralion of the Valley of tho Amazon gives the following account of the daily life of Creole family, in the towt. of Santa Cruz, the Capital of the Bolivian department of the same name': " Very early in the morning, the Creole, getting out of bed, throws himself into a ham mock ; his wife stretches herself upon a bench noir by, while the children sent themselves with their legs tinder them, on the chairs, all in their night dresses, The Indian servant girl enters with a cup of chocolate for each member of the family ; after which she brings some coals of fire in a silver dish. The wife lights her husband a segar, then one for her. e self. Some time is spent reclining, chatting and regaling. The man slowly puts on his cot - ton trowsers, woolen coat, leather shoes add vicuna hat, with his neck exposed to the fresh air—silk handkerchiefs are scarce—and walks to some neighbor, with whom he again drinks some chocolate and smokes another segiir. At midday. a small low table is set in the middle of the room, and the family.- go to breakfast. The wife sits next to her husband: the women are very pretty, and affectionate to theii husbands. lie choses her among five, there being about that number of women. to one man in the town. The children seat them selves and the dogs form a ring behind: The first dish is a chupe of potatoes, with large pieces of Meat. The Man helps himself first, and throws his hones straight across the ta . ble ; a child dodges his head to give a free passage, and the dogs rush behind her. The second dish holds small pieces of beef without bone. Next comes a dish of finely chopped beef, then beef soup, vegetables and fruits; then coffen or chocolate. After breakfast the mn oils off his trowsers and coat and lies down i the hammock. His wife lights him a segar She finds her way back to bed with her segar. The dogs jump up and lie on the chairs—the fleas bite them on the ground ! The indien girl closes both doors and windows taking the children out to play while the rest of the family sleep. ' At two; P M., the church bells ring, to let the people know the priest is saying a prayer for them which minims them. The man rai ses, stretches his hands above his head and gaps , the dogs get • down and whinningly stretch themselves; whjle the wife sits up in the bed and loudly Cittle out for fire ; the In dian girl re appears with a "chunk" for her mistress to light her master another Bogar t and she smokes again herself. The dinner, which takes place between three and five, is nearly the same as breakfast, except when a beef is recently killed by the Indians, when they have a boil. The ribs and other long bones of the animal are trimmed of the flesh leaving the bones only coated with meat ; these ore laid across a fire and rorted ; the members of the family while employed with them, look as if all were practicing music. A hCrse is brought into the house t,y an Indian man, who holds him while " the pa tron" smiles and bridles him ; be then puts on a large pair of silver spurs, which costs forty dollars, and mounting. he rides out the front door to the opposite house ; halting ,ho takes off his hat and cries out, " Buenas tardes, senoritas"—good evening ladies. The ladies make thear appearance at the door ; one lights him a sager, another him a glass of lemonade to refresh himself after the ride.— HO remains in the saddle talking, while they lean gracefully against the door poet, smiling with their bewitching oyes. He touches his hat and riles off to another neighbor. After spending the afternoon in this way, he rides into the house again. The Indian holds the horse by the bridle, 'while the master die mounts. Taking off the saddle he throws it into one chair, the bridle into another, his spurs on a third, and himself into the ham mock.; the Indian leads out the horse, the dogs pull down the riding gear to the floor, and lay themselves on their usual bedsteads . Chocolate and segare aro repeated. THE OLD MAN'S SEUItET.—An Italian bishop struggled through great difficulties, without repining, and mot with much opposition with• out over betraying the least impatience. All Intimate friends of his, who highly admired these virtues which ho thought impossible to imitate, one day asked the bishop if ho. could onamunicate his secret of being always ea sy. "Yes," replied the old man; I can teach you my secret with gro't facility. It con sists of nothing more than making a right use of my eyes." Ilia friend begged him to explain , "Most willingly," returned the bishop. - An whatsoever 'state I tn,-J .first of 41 !kik up to heaven, and remember that my principal business hero, is to got there, I thou look down on earth, and call to mind how small a space I shall occupy in it when I game to be interred. I then look abroad 1M the world and observe what multitudes there are who arc in all respecta more unhappy then - myself Thus I learn where true happiness is placed where nll our Cl res must end, and how very little reason I have to refine or coirplaie. STORY OF A BRAVE MAN. The 'telegraph briefly announced the sui aide at Jackson, Mies., of Col. Alexander K. I . cClung. Our manuscript despatch read, "Col. McClung, Duelist;" but lie was other wise distinguished in a very eventful life in . the south-west, than in his prowess under the bloody' "Code of 'Honor," and deserves, in death, to be remembered as the evil which the telegraphic record ,would cause to live after him. He was a bravo man for his country in war, as well as a desperate one in defen 6 of his own perhaps too sensitive honor, in peace. He was prompt gallant and distin guished in the Volunteer Service in Mexico, in 1847, under General' Taylor. Ho was,first to scale the Blank ..Fort at Monterey, and for this intrepidity in placing the Stars and Stripes ou its captured Walls.rwas marked and pierced by the enemy with wounds under which he suffered the most agonizing pain for five or six months, and so chafed that he could not be rid of them to h ar his part on the field of Buna Vista, withi a "few miles of which he was invalided. The personal story of Col. McClung, though a sanguinary one, is not without its reliefs.— He will called a de-perate duelist; not that lie.wati by nature blood'thirsty, or loved the practicer for the poor renown_it brought him , but because when he dill fight in this way, which was not often, he made no compromi ses for the chances of life; and exacted - as well as granted, the extreme terms of the code, as practiced Hi Mississippi fifteen or twenty years ago, when extravagance and desperation in every depai tnieot of life, appeared to run riot. His first meeting was in 1833 or' 1834 with a-man - by. the - name - of — Allem -- The 144-_ pone, pistol:3, to be fired nt ten paces, or ads •ancing nearer to each other, and then the use of the how io-knife. Allen fell. The sec ond meeting was five years afterwards, or more, with - young Mennifee, the brother of Richard 11. Mennifee, Member of Congress from Kentucky in 1838—'89. The weapon, the rifle,- both parties excellent shots, but Mennifee fell at the second fire: There may have been other altercations in Which he was engaged, but they are not now remembered.— Those two fatal transactions in which he. was engaged, gave quite a sufficient notoriety to the man which he was far from being proud of, and the public recollection of which he .en deavored to efface, in his riper years, by polit ical and military service, first as the head of the Whig press in Mississippi in the Presiden tial campaign of 1840; then• as Marshal of the United States for the Northern District of the State, and afterwards as a volunteer to Mexico, the Lieutenant Colonel of his regis meat. After the war he was the political friend of General Taylor, not to the exclusion of Mr. Clay, of whose neighborhood in Ken tucky McClung was a native, but in defeult of his nomination at Philaielphia. Under his administration he was appointed to a diplo matic station as Charge ,d'ilffaites to Bolivia, South America, the capital of which, far in the interior of the country, ho no doubt had too much difficulty to find to be impressed by its greatness or captivated by its social or po litical attractions. Ho returned to the Uni ted States after a two years residence near the Bolivian Government, in the year 1851, since when we have heard little of him until the present dreadful announcement of death by his own hands. His ago must have been 46 years. —New York Times. A WATCH. I have now in my hand a gold watch which combines embellishment and utility in happy proportions, and is usuall7-m6nsiddered a very valuable appendage to - the person of a gentle• man. Its hands, face, chain and case, aro of chased and burnished gold . Its gold seals sparkle with the ruby, topaz, sapphire, and the .klmerald. Ilpen it, and find that the works, without which this elegantly furnish ed case would bo a mereAbell, those motionless hands, and those fingers wikhout meaning, are made of brass. I investigate further, and ask what is the spring by which all those are put in motion, made of? lam told it is made of steel.- I - ask - what is steel ? The reply is, that it is iron, which has - unitergone a certain pro cess. So then I find the min spring, without which the watch would be motionless, and its hands, fingers: and embelishments but toys, is not of gold—that JO not sufficiently good nor of brass—that would not do—bat of iror. Iron is therefore the only precious metal;— and this watch an emblem of society. Its hands end fingers which toll the hour resem ble the master spirits of the age, 'to whose movement every eye is directed. Its useless but sparkling seals, sapphires, rubies, toper. and embelishments are the aristocracy. Its works of brass-are the middle class, by the in -creasing intelligence and power of which.the_ master spirits of the age are moved ; and its iron main spring shut up in a box, always at work but never thought of, except when it is disorderly, brolon or wants winding up, sym bolically, the laboring class, which, like the main spring we wind up by the payment of wages,And, which classes are shut up in ob scurity, and though constantly at work and absolutely as necessary to' the movement Of socisty, as the iron main spt ing, is to the goid watch rani never thought of, except when they require their wages, or are in tionm.wl!!nt" disorder of rents kind .r other,--1/17tcarii , (reit,