Eg .I.l4poc L From Ornimm'a Magazine. 'POP GOES TIIE QUESTION." By cumtus JARVIS List to me inaidon, pray Pop, goes the questlol 1{ 11l you nuirey Inc, yea oe nay Pop. goes the question! I've no time to pleack,or sigh, Ao pniienee to wait (Or bye and bye, !Hits' or rin sure to tly Pip goes the quevtiou! "Ask Papa," Oh! thhllado deq- goes the linchtioit ! fathers and lovers ran ne-verngrea., vices the question! lie caul. tell IN hat I want to Inew, Whether you love me, sweet, or no, To ash him woula be ery slow, rep, goes the question! I think we'd make such n chnrming pair, np, gees the question! Tor I'm good looking and you revery fair, Pup. gees the question! Well travel life's road in a gallant Ftylo, And you shall drive ev'ry other mile, er if it pleast: you, all the e hale, Pop, goes the question? If we don't linve nn ew.hantitig time, gore the quehtiwi! rht—ture it will Le no fault of thine, .P‘ p. pes tin , quest itm ! To he sure my funds make n feel 'le show, rolt lore is nourishing foml p.ll knOW, AlLa eottagrs 11,t lITINIIIIIIOII. hp, g yes the question:! Then answer ine quickly. darling. pray, govt, the questi ,! Will you ttlaPr r nay? tl,c i.)11 I've 110 Limn plond or rich No pat ie T 1 ta, ti) N , ait for Liu and Su: re me nmt ~r !'ul sure to 1)y, tho • tw,tion giqtrf Tia Ir. THE THIRD BOWL. 'Draw your chair close up. Put your feet on those skins. You will find them. soft and Light another pipe and fill your glass, Philip. 'lt is a bitter night. My old hours shudder'wlMu I bear the wind wail over the house- and through the oak-tree. Capital punch, that! John has a knack at the article that I have rarely seen equalled—never sur passed. lie is a prince of servants, is John, if he is black.. have had him with me now —let me see, it must be thirty'yetirs, at least —it is, thirty-two years next Christians week, and I have never quarreled with him, and he has never quarreled with me. A rare history for master and man. I think it is because we love each other's weaknesses, and here he 01133 CS 'John, another bowl of punch, if you please. What, not another! Certainly, man, I must have it. This is only the second, and Philip, yonder, I►as drank half, of course. Nut drank any ! You don't mean to say be has been drinking nothing but that vilu claret all the blessed evening? Philip, you dog, I thought you knew my house•rules better than that.— But you always would have your own way. One more bowl, John—but one. It shall be the last ; and, Juhn, get the old Maraschi no, one of the thick black bottles with the small necks, land open it gently. But you know how, old fellow, and just do your best to make us comfortable. How the wind howls ! Philip, ray boy, I am seventy-three years old, and seven days over. My birth day was a week ago to-day. An old bachelor! Yea, verily. One of the oldest kind. But what is ago ? What is the paltry sum of seventy years? Do you think lam any older in my soul than I was half a century ago ? Do you think because my heart beats slower, that my mind thinks more slowly, my feelings spring up less free ly, my hopes aro less buoyant, less cheerful, if they look forward only weeks instead of years ? I tell you, my boy, that seventy years are a day in the sweep of memory ; and once young forever young, is the motto of an im mortal soul. I know lum what men call ol i d,• I know my cheeks are wrinkled like ancient parchment, and my lips are thin, and my hair gray even to silver. But in my soul I feel that I am young, and -I shall be young till the earthly ceases and the unearthly and eternal begins. ' I have not grown ono day older than I was at thirty-tWo. I have never advanced a day since then. All my lifelong since that has been one day—ono short day; no night, no rest, no succession of hours, events, or thoughts has marked any ,adv' anbe. I have been living forty years by the light r of one memory—by the light of one grave. Jolin, act the bowl down on tho hearth.— Yon may go. You need not sit up for me. Philip and I will see each other to our rooms tonight, John. Go, old fellow, - and sleep soundly. • Phil, she was the purest angel that flesh ever imprisoned, the most beautiful child of Eve. I can see her now. Her eyes raying the light of heaven—her brow, white, calm, and holy—her lips wreathed with the blessing of her smile. She was as graceful as a. form seen in dreams, and she moved through the scenes around her as you have aeon the angel ic visitors. of your' sluinber move thr'ough crowded assemblies, without effort, apparent ly with some superhuman aid. 'The child of wealth, she was fitted to adorn the splendid house in which she was born and grew to womanhood. It was a grand old place, but in the midst of a growth of oaks that might have been there when Columbus discovered America, and seemed likely to stand a oentury longer. They are standing yet, and the wind to-night makes a wild la ment through their branches that sounds mournfully above her grave. I must pause to recall the s#enery of the old familiar spot. There was a stream of wa• to that dashed down the rocks a hundred yards from thp . house, and which kept always full and fresh, an acre of pond, over which hung willows, and maples, and other trees, While on UM surface the white blossoms of the:l lotus nodded lazily on the ripples with Egyp tian sleepiness and languor. • ' The.old house was built of dark stone, and had n massive 'appearance, not relieved by the sombre shade in which it stood. The sunshine seldom penetrated to the ground in the sum mer months, except in oue spot, just in front of the library windows, where it used to lie and sleep in the grass., ns if it loved the old place. And if sunshine loved it, why bikU uld not I. 'General Lewis was one of the pleasant, old-- fashioned nun, now quite gone out of memo ry, as well as out of existence. He loved his horses, his dogs, his place, and his punch.— lie lCved his nephew Tom, wild, uncouth, rough cub as he was ; but ;ibove horses, dogs, house, or all together, he loved hi t s daughter Sarah, and I loved her too. • ' es, you may look at me as you will, Phil Phillips, 1 loved Sarah Lewis, and, by all the gods, I love her now as I loved her then, and as I shall love her it I meet her again where she has gone. 'Call it folly, call it boyish, call it an old man's whim, an old man's second childhood, I care not by what name you cull it ; it is en ough that to-night the image of that young girl stands before me splendidly beautiful in all the holiness of her young glad life, and I couhl bow down on my knees and worship her now again. ' Why did I say again? For forty years I have not ceased to worship her. If I kneel to pray in the morning, she passes between me and God. If I would read the prayers .at evening twilight, she looks up at me from the page. If I would worship on a Sabbath morn ing in the church, she looks down on me from some unfathomable distance, some unapproach able height, and I pray to her as if she were my hope, my heaven, my all. Sometimes in the winter nights I feel a coldness stealing over me, and icy fingers are feeling about my heart, as if to, grasp and still it. I lie calmly, quietly, and I think my hour is at hand ; and through the gloom, and the mists and flints that gather over my vision, I see her afar off, still the same angel in the dis tant heaven, and I reach out my arms to her, and I cry aloud on God to let me go find her, and °tidier to come to me, laid then thick darkness settles on me. ' The doctor calls this apoplexy, and says I shall some day die in a fit of it. What do doctors know of the tremendous influences that are working on our souls? Ile, in his scientific stupidity, warns me against wine and high living; as if I did not understand what it is, and why Lay vision at such times reaches eo very far into the deep unknown. I have spoken of Tom Lewis, her cousin. humor said he was the old man's heir in equal proportion with the daughter; for he had been brought up in the family, and had al ways been treated as a son. Re was a good follow if he was rough, fur he bad the gord nest' that all who came within her influence must have. ' I have seen her look the devil out of him often. I remember once when the horses had behaved in a way not tQ suit him, and ho had let in oath or two esoape.bis lips preparatory to putting on the whip. We wore riling to gether down the avenue, and he raised the lash. At the moment ho caught her eye.— She was walking up from the lodge, where she had been to see a sick child. She saw the raised whip, and her oyo caught his. lie did not strike. The horses escaped for that time. are drove them quietly through the gate, and three miles and back without a word of anger. ' Did I tell you I was her cousin also ? On her Mother's side. Not on the General's. We lived not far off, and I lived much of my time at his house. Tom and-myself had been in superable, and we did not conceal our rivalry from each other: • • 'Tom,' said I ono morning, why can't you bo content with half the: General's for tune, and let mo have the other half ?' " Bah I Jerry,' said ho, 'as if that would be any more even, when you want Sarah with it. ,In licaveik name, take the half of the money, if that's all you want.' "Can't we fix it so as to make an oven di- gsalttob Ajiwrit..ll) , vision, Tom? •Take - all the fortune, and let me have her, and I'll call it square.' "Just what I was going to propose to yon. Be reasontible now, Jerry, and` get out of the way. You must, see she doesn't care a copper for you.' I twirled a rosebud in my fingers that she had given me in the morning, and replied: - Poor devil ! I did not think you Could be so infatuated. Why, 'font, there is no chance fur you under the sun. But go ahead; find it out as you will. Lam sorry for you.' A hundred such pleasant talks wo used to have, and s4e never'gave either of us one par : title more of encouragement than the other.— She was like a sister to us both, and neither dared break the spell of our perfect happiness by asking her to be more. • ' And su time passed on. • One summer afternoon we were off togeth er on horseback, all three of us, over the mountain and down the'valley. We were re . - turning toward sunset, sauntering along the Toad, down the side of the hill. Philip, stir the fire a little. That bowl of punch is getting cold it seems to me, and I am a little chilly myself. Perhaps it is the recol lection of that day that chills Me. I had made up my mind, if opportunity occurred,. to tell her 'that day all that I had thought for years. I bad determined to know once for all, if she would love me or 'no. 'lf not, I would go I cared not where ; the world was brood enough, and it should be to some place ul.ere 1 would never see her face again, never hear her voice again, never Low df:wn and worship Ler maghifieent beauty again. I would go to itus,:a aml oiler myself to the Czar, or to Syria and tight with Napo leon, or to Egypt and serve with the men of Murad Buy. All my notions were military, remember, and all my ideas were of war and death on the field, I rode by her side, and looted up nt her cea:••ionally, and thought :,he was lookinp; lendidly, I had never.t!uun her more sa -1:‘ yr:: attitude was grace, every look was life and t-pir.t. Tom clung close to her. One_would have though.Lhe ,vas watching the very opportunity I was after myself. :Now he rode a few paces forward, and as 1 was catching my breath to say, • Saralt,' he would rein up and fall back to his place, and 1 would make some tlat re mark that made me seem like a fool to myself, if not to her. What's the matter with you, Jerry ?' said she, at length. 'Jerry's in love,' said Torn. I could have thrashed him on the spot. In love! Jerry in love!' and she turned her large brown eyes toward me. ' In vain I sought to fathom them, and ar rive at some conclusion whether or no the sub jeot interested her with special force. • The eves remained fixed, till I hlunaered out the old saw, ' Tom judges others Ly him self.' Then the eyes turned to Tom, and he pleaded gnilty by his awkward looks, and half blushes, and averted yyes, and forced By heaven ! thought I, what would I not give for TOM'S awkwardness now ! The ras cal is winning his way by it. Jerry, is Torn in love ?' "Die liairele of the question, the correctness of it, the very simpliLty of the thing was irre sistible, and I could not...,tuppress a smile that grew into a broad laugh. ''Tom joined in it, and we made the woods ring with our merriment. I say, Tom, isn't that your' whip lying hack yonder in the road ?' Confound it, yes; the cord has broken from my wrist ;" and he rode back for it. Jerry, whom does Tom 'eve?' said she, quickly, turning to me. You,' said I, bluntly. , Why, of course ; but who is ho in love with, rinean ?' It was a curious way to get at it. Could I be justified ? It wits not waking what I had intended, but it was getting at it in another way, and just as well, perhaps. It was, at all events, asking Tom's question for him, and it saved me the embarrassment of putting it as my own. I determines) this in an instant. Sarah, could you love Tom well enough to marry him ?' I! Jerry ; what do you mean?' Suppose Tom wants you to be his wife, will you marry him ?' **l don't know—l can't tell—l never have thought of such a thing. You don't think he has any such idea, do you ?' That was my answer. It was enough as far as it went, but I was no better off than be. fore. She did not love Tom, or she would never have answered thus. But did she love me ? Would she marry me ? Wouldn't she receive the idea in just the same way? I looked book. Tom was on the ground, had.picked up his whip, and had one foot in the stirrup, ready to mount again. I gulped down my heart that 'was up in my throat, and spoke out: Sarah, will you marry me P 'Philip, she turned her eyes again toward me—those largo brown eyes—those holy q.yet —and blessed me with their unutterable glo nous gaze:, To my dying hour I shall not forget that gaze ; to all eternity it will re main in my soul. She looked at me one look; and whether it was pity, sorrow, surprise, or lovo. I cannot . tell you, that filled them and overflowed toward mo from out their immeas urable depths ; but, Philip, it was the last light of those eyes pever saw—the last, the last. 'ls there any thing left in that bowl ? Thank you. Just a glassful. You will not take any ? Then, by your leaTe, I will finish it. fly story is neraly ended, and I will not keep you up much longer. 'We had not noticed, so absorbed had we been in our pleasant talk, that a black cloud had risen in the west and obscured the sun, and covered the entire ;Icy ; and even the sul try air had not called our attention to the coming thunder storm. 'As she looked at me, even as she fixed her eyes on mine, a flash, blinding and fierce, fell on the top of ri pine-tree by the roadside not fifty yards front us, and the crash of the ,thunder shook the foundations of the hills: 'For a moment all was dazzling, burning, blazing light ; thou sight was gone, and a mo mentary darknesss settled on our eyes. The horses crontehed to the ground in terror, and Sarah bowed her head as if in the presence of God. 'All this was the work of an instant, and the next Tom's horse sprang by us on a furi ous gallop, dragging Tom by the, pjrup. Ile had heen in the act of mounting when the flash came, and his horse swerved and jump ed so that his foot caught, and he was dragg ed with his head on the ground. •There was a point in the rNel, about fifty yank ahead, where it divided into two: The Vile was a carriage -track, which wound down the mountain by easy ile. , seents; the other teas footpath, which WaS a short, precipitous cut to a point on the carriage track nearly a quarter of a mile below. falling to Sarah to keep back and wait, I drove the spurs into my horse and went down the steep path. Looking back I saw her fol lowing, her horse making tremendous speed. She kept the carriage road, following on :if ter Tom, and I pressed on, thinking to inter cept his horse below. 'My pace was terrible. I could hear them thundering down the track above. I l6oked up' and caught sight of them through the trees. I , looked down, and saw a gull be fore me full eighteen feet wide, and as many deep. ~ / k great horse ,was that black horse Cesar and he took the gully at a flying leap that landed us far over it, and a tnoruent later I was at the point where the roads again loot, but only in time to see the other two horses go by at a fitrious pace, Sarah's abrest of the gray, and she reaching her band out bravely trying to grasp the flying rein, as her horse went leap for leap with him. To ride doze behind them was worse than useless in such a chase. It would but serve to increase their speed ; so I fell back a dozen rods and followed, watching the end. •At the foot of the locum:tin the river ran, bread nod deep, spanned by the bridge at the narrowest point. To reach the bridge, the road tc eh. a short turn up stream, directly on the bank. 'On swept the fires and the black horse, side by side down the hillside, not fifty leaps along the level ground, and 'then came the turn. .She was on the offside. At the sharp turn she pressed ahead a half length, and reined her horse across the gray's shoul der, if possible to turn hint towards the bridge. 'lt must be all over in MT - instant. The gray was the heavier horse. lie pressed her close; the black horse yielded, gave way to_ ward the fence, stumbled, and the fence, a light rail, broke with a crash, and they went over, all together into the de:qp„lllack stream. 'Still, still the sound of that crash 'and plunge is in my ears. Still I ciiin see them go headlong down that bank together into the black water I 'I never knew exactly what I did then,— When I was conscious, I found myself swim ming around in a circle, diving occasionally to find them but in vain. The grey horse swam aghore and stood on the bank by my black, with distended nostrils and trembling limbs, shaking from head to foot with terror. The other black horse was floating down the surface of the stream, drowned. His mis trosii was nowhere visible; and Tom was gone also. .1 . found her at last. .Ye s , she w•as dead! 'Restore her ? No. A glance nt her face showed how vain all such hope was. Never was human face so angelic. She was already one'of the saintly—one of the immortals—and the beauty and glory of her now life had loft some faint likeness of itself on her dead form and face. •Philip I said I had never grown a day older since that time. You know not why. I have never ceased to think of box' as on that day. I have nom lost the blesSing of those eyes as they looked on me in the forest on the mountain road. I have never eft her, never grown away from her. , m the resurrection we are to resuitio the be / ies most exactly fit ted to represent our wale lives; if, as I have sometimes thought, we shall rise in the forms we wore when some great event stamped our souls forever, then I am certain that I shall awake in form and feature as I was that day and no record will remain of an hour of my life after her burial. 'W.e buried her in the old vault close by the house, among the solemn oaks. Beautiful angel-like, to the very last. 'IIy voice is broken. I can not say more, Philip. You have the story. That is the whole of it. God bless you, Phil, my boy. you liave 'Good-night, boy. Go to bed. I'll stay here in the old chair awhile. I don't—exact ly—feel—like—sleeping--yet.' I left him sitting there ; his head bowed on his breast, his eyes closed, his breathing short and heavy, as if with suppressed grief. 11Iy own eyes wet e misty. In the hall. 'I found John,sitting bolt, up right in a large chair. 'Why, Jc,ln4o thought the Major sent you to bed long ago 9' 'Yes, Sir ; the Major always sends me to bed at the third bowl, Sir, and I always does not go. lie's been a telling you the old story, now hasn't he, Mr. Philip ?' 'What old story, John ?' 'Why, all about Miss Lewis, and Mister T6lll, nod the General 9' 'Yes.' John laid his long blnck finger knowing ly up by the side of his nose, and looked at me. 'Why John—you don't mean to say—eh 't' 'All the punch, Sir." 'What! Sarah and the black horse, anal--' 111 punch, tiir.' 'John, my maw, go in and take care of him. Ile is either asleep or drunk. Curious that Why didn't I think that a man was Intrily to be believed alter the second howi,'and perfec:- ly incredible on the third. By Jove ho is a trump at a story, though.' It would be difficult to describe all that I dreamed about that night. On) ,Ijootis. EW (MODS ! NEW GOODS-! THE LATI-•! , 1! SPIUM. :411,1•:;! am moy reeeiving front New Voris mid illiladelphia an immense steel: uf nem, desirable :111,1 1.11111111 606118,10 W1114:11 I would call the attention .01 all my old &kilos anti customers. :IN well 111, trio 1 , 111.11 c gllllPriar. lliitog purchased must of It goods front tin• largest impel tiog houses in Now York, .1 ant enabled to gin e better Lai gains than can be had at any other house in thecuuuty., Our ristirtnient of NENV :STYLE DI: ESS GOODS is largo. complete and beautiful. Another lot of those elegant awl cheap embroidered Land kerehiets, bleeveh, rfalar., ruffles. eel.loge, raid ihs'ert.- ilL4b, Stock that. tar catvat, ahtl defies all competition. Nltislias, L ooo g, d o lie ors , ticking. , clerks. truilivhd...ils itt,VeS and II —cry thah CS I, 11, 111, I USIA ds, ( . t4R,11:11.112,, So. tC. a hill at•SOIAII,I., and t cry in,. iu price. t' kI:PIITINi;S AND 31A1 rINGs . . An entire news stock ui tin es ton and enitiztal carpeting, lynu;;ltt %ery Mal Li sold rer) low. Also m bite [lid colote4 1;411,1's A large otipply of lthlies and oentlefuen's boo s . and gaiters. Intending to I,;ito up the On ref.) dLf t - Inent. 1 1%111 Import• 01 Wlllll. 1 line 1/11 11111,1 ill 11.:11% 11110. 1%/W 1.1'11 . ..5. Also 1.411111; will ina,l%. I ',of f i ng hand, which I till sell for lest than Ntl,llt to rlune it out. Come our ;111%1 all lit Et, Old stand on East Multi street. and select) our Hoods trout the hugest and elleveNt stork es et. I..rought apr-I CI It It LES 6( LIIY. VW ST(I R E ' 9D R G NEW GO( IDt.!—The un acr.ig is now opeuing in the store room of 11 il;tam Leonard. on the corner of IL,umer 811 , 1 Luther streets, in the Borough of Carlisle, a large and general assort ment Of SIAM'. AND FA NCI Uhl" ri)B, end,rBc- Ing almost every Find and variet) of goods aJaut,d to this market, I ,, gether with au asmatinent of IihIICI:• 111 ES. Ills stock ha% hue Ice)) nearly all purchased ait hin the la.st two weeks, liners will have the advantage ul selecting troll a Fl(F.slt STOCK, ao wvll as of the late decline in the price of many articles. lie will le happy to ON hibit his gads to nil who may tower him with a call, and pledges himself to sell every article as low or lower than they can le purchased elsewhre. ('artiste, Nov. 15, 1e5.1. RUBEHT DICE. SPRIN T G6uvuz!" - . le sub j.. is now opening a large and general aseort, ment of LA 1.11.:51.11tL6S GOODS, tioncistiug ul Mick and Colored Lawns, Silks, Chant Ilareges, :Slow; de Mines, French and'Engli,liabo a general variety of goods for boys wear. a full assmtment of Ladies and Chlldrens Hosiers, Moves I tamiloTchiefs, abs Enigli=h and other STRAcV BoNNETii, Itonnet Ribbons, Bonnet Lawns, with the mmaLvariety of Spring thuds at moderate pri des. GEORGE MTN Mi. NEW .t xi) SEASON . • AILIJ undersignedhav• ng milarged anti fitted up the Store-room formetly or ettpled as the Post Office, immediately 4. pposlte the mil e r of the American Volunteer, in South Hanover Street has opened a largo and general assortment of NEW AND SEASONABLE BRA' GOODS, comprising a great variety of fancy and staple French. British and domestic weds, a general assortment el Ladles' Leghorn, Straw, Neapolitan and Gimp Bonnets, illoomera of various kinds and quality, OuntioUn, Youth and Children's Panama, Leghorn and Straw hats, white and colorrd'Carpet Chain. Groceries ,tc., all of which will be sold at the lowest lakes. May '65 ROBERT DICK, p ONNETS, BONNETS._ The subscriber is just receiving another supp ( iy of Spring and Summer bonnets consisting of English Straw chip, Braidoatin Straws, Neap°Main, anti llermliraid. also a now supply of very choice Colored and - Whits Bonnet Ribbons varying in price from to 50 colts per yard. , Also a large assortment of Childrens rind MissesFtraw anti Braid Ham. • \-- OEU. HITNEIt. May 16.'65 • lIAY A N STRAW CUTTERS, CORN Sitimuns.—A large assortment of lm proved Ilay, Straw and Fodder Cutters, now on hand.— Also, double and single corn shellens for either band or horse power. of the very latest, manufacture, including the prendum - shellerat the into Pennsylvania State FAil. For sale by PAsenni. mounts L Co., Agricultural Warehouse and Sued Starr, corner ot 7t13 nd Market, Philadelphia. p e e, 6, 1854—tf WOOLLEN YARN —A lot of very Superior Wavy and liven Woollen Yarn must received, much better than the city yarn, all colours. nevs Clll6. 00114)?.