lEI L 3 poetry. .pIOONLIGHT ON THE GRAVE. It shineth on the quiet grave Whoa, weary ones have gone, It watchech with angelic gaze Where the dead are left alone. And not a gound of busy life Trithe still grave-yard conies, But Peacefully the sleepers lie Down in their silent houses. All silently and solemnly It throweth shadows round, And every grave-stone path atrace ' In da'rkness on the ground. It looketh on the tiny mound Where a little child is laid, And lighteti4p the noble pile Which human pride bath made. It falleth with unaltered ray, On the simple and the stern, And showeth with a solemn light, The sorrow we must learn; It telleth of divided ties On which its beams have shown, It whispereth of heavy hearts, Which -brokenly, live on." It glearnoth where devoted ones Are sleeping side by tilde; It falleth where the maiden rests Who In her beauty died There is no grave in all the earth That moonlight hath not seen, It gar.eth cold and passionless Where agony hath been. Yet it is well! that changeless ray A deeper thought should tl u •ow, When tnortal lute pours foukth the tido Of unavailing woe. It teneheth us no shade of grief Can touch the starry sky, That all our sorrow we have HERE, The GLORY is on high! ‘ . lflrrt ,6alr. THE FATAL CONCEALMENT A THRILLING STORI BY AN ENGLISH BARRISTER Some years after I commenced practice— but the premise date I shall, for obvious rea sons, avoid mentioning—l had a friend at whose house I was a pretty constant visitor. He had a wife who was the magnet that drew mo there. She was beautiful—but I shall not attempt to describe her—she {Slip - more than beautiful—she was fascinating, she was capti vating. Her presence was to me like-the in toxication of opium. I was only happy under its influence; and yet, after indulgence in the fatal pleasure, I sank into the deepest despoud ency. Iu my, own justification, I must bn y that I never in a word or look betrayed my feelings, though I had some reason to suspect they were reciprocated ; for, while in my porn pany, she was always gay, brii,liant arid witty ; yet, as I learned from others, at times the was often sad and melancholy. Powerful, most powerful was the temptation to make an unre served disclosure of my heart, but I resisted it. That I had the firmness so to do, has been for years my only consolation: One morning I sat alone in my chamber. My clerk was absent. A gentle knock was just audible at the ,outer door. I shouted 'come in!' in no amiable manner, for I was in dulging in a delicious reverie upon the subject of the lady of my heart, and the presence of an ordinary mortal was hateful. The door opened, and Mrs. -- entered; I do not know exactly what I did, but it seemed to be a long time before I had power to rise and welcome her while she stood there with fl timid blush upon her lips, which made rue feel that it would bo too/great a happiness to die for. don't Wimder that you ate surprised to 800 me here,' she begun, with a provoking little laugh; but is yuur astonishment ton groat to allow you to say how do you do?' The spell was broken. I started and took her hand; I fear I pressed it inure j warruly ainb held it longer than whs absolutely necessary. 'Perhaps your surprise will be increased,' she continued, 'when I inform you that I hare come on business.' I . muttered something about not being so ambitious as to hope thataho would visit me from any other motive. She took no notice of what I said, but I perceived that her face turned deadly pale, and that her hard trembled as she placed before me a bundle of 'papers. 'You will see by these,' she said in a low hurried_v_oice,_lthat son roperty_m is Left to me by my uncle and my grandfatherAut so etrictly..settled that even I can tench nothing but the interest. _Now - my husband is in want of a large some of money at.this'inotneitt, and 1 wish you to examiu the affair well, and ace whether, by any twisting of the law, I can place any part of my capital at his disposal,. Unintentionally I have 'done him a great . a tone So low, that no ears loss jealously. alive' than mine could . have under. stood their meaning, 'and poor us this repara tion is, it is all that I can make, and I must do it• if possible.' I pretended to study the paperahefore but to lights danced and mingled; and it', by great effort, I (erect' my eyes to distinguish a word, it conveyed not the slightest meaning to my whirling brain. Every . drop of blood From the Homo Journal seemed imbued with a sepswite consciousness, and to be tingling 'Lila rushing to the side next to her, whose presence, within a short distance of me, was the only thing of which r had a distinct perception. I hung my bend, to hide from her the emotion of which I was thorough ly ashamed. 'You are a tiresome creature,' she said, with a little coquettish air. really expected that for once in your life, and a friend, top, you might have gotten rid of the law's delays, end given"me your opinion in half an hour; ro, far. nt least, as to tell me whether there is any probability of mybeing'able to du us I desire. But I see you are like the rest of the law yers—time! time! time! I suppose you will keep thinking • ahout it till I am dead, and then it will go to my husband in due course of law.' 'lt may not require more thou half an hour to ascertain so much, when I can:direct my thoughts to it for that space of time,' I re plied, and I know that the words rattled like shot out of my mouth. 'But, would you be so unreasonable as to requtred an artist to draw a straight line when he was. under a fit of delirium tremens?' 'You are an. incomprehensible person,' she replied, rather coldly; 'so I shall , leave you to your legal studies. But, if you are going to have an attack of the delirium tremens, I had better send in a doctor—shall I?' 'Well, I don't anticipate an attack this morn ing,' I answered, with a forced laugh; 'so 1 will not give you the trouble. The fact is, I have been violently agitated a short time since, and my mind tins not quite recovered its equi librium ' We talked a few minutes longer, she gal.:- zing me in her liglij , playful manner, and I, delighted to lie so teezed, standmg stupid and dOmb, scarcely able to say a word, though very anxious to prolong the delir.htful inter view by keeping up the war of badinage. At length she went - to the door, and I was about to escort her down stairs, when we heard some one specking below. 'Good God!' she exclaiind, clinging to my arm, 'that is my husband's voice, if he finds me here I nm ruined.' , llon't be alarmed,' I replied, endeavoring to reassure her; 'you came here on buitiess, too! He cJuld only love you the inure for it.' 'You do not understand so well about this as I do,' she said, shuddering convulsively. •Ile is jealous—exceedingly of you; and, oh! I fear not without some cause. Hide me somewhere fur mercy's sake.'l don't know how it' happened, but my arm was, around her, and I half carried her across tht`room to a closet. 'Now, shut it; lock it; take away the Ley, 6r I shall not feel safe. There is plenty of air;' and she sprang into the recess. For one moment her oyes met mine, and I thought they beamed with impassionate love. The next, I had locked the door upon my trearure, thrown the papers she had brought into a drawer, and was apparently busy with my pen when my friend entered. Ile com menced in a roundabout way to question me upon certain points of the law respecting mar riage setlements, &c.; and, after a tedious amount of circumlocution, ho gave me to understand that all this regarded a desired ransfer of some property of h is wife's into this oven hands. He had come upon the same errand as that generous creature. He had also"a copy of the relatives' wills, and these I was compelled to examine closely, for ho was desperately pertinacious, and would not be put off. — l - wsts - angry - at — tite - thought of wirer - his poor wife must 'be suffering, pent up in that narrow prison. I felt that I could have kicked her husband out of doors fur keeping her there. At last heated° a move as if to go. - I started up, and stood ready tb bow hint out. 'So,' said he, tying up his papers with pro voking deliberation, 'nothing but my wife's death, you say, can put me in possession of this'mouq. I want it very much, but nobody will suspect nie of desir,jng her death for the sake of baring it a little sooner.' He laughed at his own poor jest, and made a sort of hyena chorus to it, that sounded strange and hysterical, even in my own ears Ile went at last, but stopped again on the stairs, and detained me there, talking for full five minutes longer. I felt by sympathy, all the pangs of suffocation. My throat seemed swollen—my fore head bursting. Great God! will ho never be gone? Will be . stand here gossiping about the Weather and the generali• ties of the law, while his lovely wife, who Came to sacrifice her individual interestsfor his Sake, dies a terrible and lingering death. 1 rushed to my back room. A step behind the madciue turn round. It was my clerk- T curses .o.n him. I could haye stubbed him—shot him - —beat out his brains—hurled him headlong Aowu stairs. But my violence would have compromised her. In a few minutes my brain was clear again. W.titson,' cried I, 'Mr. -- has just left me.. Ho is gone up Fleet street, I think, run after, ) him, and ,request him to leave , those Purervit.lkmo. Say to him I would like to extiminelhan more at my leisure. Run, run quickly, and you'll overtake him.' 'Watson, disappeared. I turned the key of '.,uts..;l,i'z'.l,.lVe.vrlz . ), the•outer door, and sprang:towara the closet. As I unlocked it. I remembered the look she gave me when I shut it; I wondered, with a beating heart, whether the same expression would meet my enraptured gaze when I open. edit There she sood with her eyes calmly fixed on mine. You are safe, dearest,' I anurmered She did not rebuke me for calling her so ; and emboldened by her silence, I took her hand to lead her front her Darrow prison. She moved forward mid fell into my arms n corpse. I cannot recall what followed. I only know that every means was tried for het restoration to life ; but alas without success. Of one thing I wits firmly convinced—she had not died of suffocation. She was pale, rigid and cold. The tumult of tier own emotions must have killed her the moment the door was clo sed upon her. By some means I kept my secret from the knowledge of Watson and every one else. All that night I was trying to recover her. Then I formed the project of shutting her up in the closet, locking up the chambers and going abroad for twenty years. But the idea was rejected as soon as formed; for it would be hardly possible that thepresence of dead body in the house should not be disco vered before that time. Next I thought of set• ting fi e to the place, burning all my books and papers, making a funeral pile of them, and thus ruining no self to preserve the secret. But that thought, too was dismissed. It might cause lass of life and property to ninny inno cent people. and would be a bungling proceed mg, after all, and if this fire was discovered early, policemen. firemen, mob, all would break in, and finding the body there, all would be lost—for it was Inure to save tier reputation than my life, that I was striving and plotting In the meantime I was it prey to the fearful, anxiety. I was sure She must have been mis missed and sought for. Perhaps she had been seen to enter my chambers. Every step that heard, I feared might be that of it policeman. In the morning a stranger Called on business. This of course was nothing unusual; but, when he was gone I felt thaehe wns a detective of ficer, and had cotne a spy. I (Must few clothes...into a carpet bag, intending to escape to France. I caught up a box of matches to set the place on fire. I grasped a razor and looked eat nestly at its edge as the surest and swiftest way of ending my misery. But then all these would leave her to the jests of the world, and my own sufferings were nothing in comparison. At this distance of time I can look buck impartially and coolly upon that dreadful day ; and I can solemnly declare, that I would rather have been hanged for mur dering her than to have allowed a breath to sully her fair name. 1 had just laid down thilgtzer, when a hur ried step crossed the ant4room. It was tier husband's.„„ Now, I thought all was lost; she was seen to cuter here, and he has come to claim her. 'f:dy dear -,' he began in a nervous un settled way, 'you remember'ihe business that I came about yesterday ?' 'Perfectly,' 'And do you remember the words I used as I was going? I mean in answer to what you said about my not being able to touch this money until after the death of my wife?' 'Yes, I remember them distinctly.' 'My wife has disappeared since yesterday 'Morning,' he continued, turning more pale tban before; 'and if anyllong serious should have happenened, you' know, and you should ,repeat those expressions, they might be laid hold of, and I don't know what might be the consequence. I might be suspected of hav ing murdered her.' Poor fellow ! If I had not known the truth. I should have suspec ed it myself,. from his excessive terror and anxiety Ho wiped the pyeepirntion from his face, and sank into a chair. The sight of a person, frightened more than myself, ronsured me. I was calm er than I was since the proceeding morning. 'Where did she go,? How was she dressed ?' I enquired, anxious to know all I could on the subject. don't' know. She told me she was going out shopping and visiting; but no .one saw her leave the house, and none of the servants know ozac;ly bow she , watt dressed. When I went home to dinner the first thing 1 heard was that she bad not returned.' 'What have you done? llave you sent •t 6) the police and to the hospitals?' •Yes, and to 'every friend and tradesman where she would tie likely to call.' 'You may depend upon it,' I replied very impressively, 'that I will not repent what you 'said yesterday. You are,..right in supposing that it might tell against you very much, if she should be to 4d dead 'under suspicious circumstance.* • Ile talked little longer and then went to renew the search of his wife. 'How IpreseTrii ed,my self-possession dm lug this interVfew; I do not know ; so far from being really calm; I could have gunwed.my flesh off my bones in agony. That night when the . doors \fere fastened and 1 was alone, I shut. myself up in the closet for two hours, to ascertain whether she died from want of air ; for I _distrusted nty own knowledge of the appearance of suffocated persons. The place was well supplied with air from a' couple of crevices. My first idea was correct ; she had died from some other MIR When I emerged 'from the closet. I found that the night was intensely/dark. It was raining in torrents. and tire thunder and wind roared n terrific chorus, passed by the sullen 'booming of the river then at high tide and al ready swelled by the rain. I sat there in the dark upon the floor, holding the cold, stiff hand of death within my own. I thought dream ingly how often it had welcomed me with its soft pressure, while the sweet eyes beamed brightly into Mille, and the full pouting lips had wreathed into dimples of delight. Now, that hand, that .used to be so plump, so full of warmth and life, was cold! Those lips were clammy and hard! Tears came to my relief. I wept as grown Inc:. seldom weep, and with the beart•easing gush came a new idea for her and me. I wits led to believe at that moment, that her spirit rested upon mine, and inspir ed the thought, for it burSt upon me suddenly with a conviction that, if executed at the instant would be crowned with success. How could I otherwise have the temerity to snatch her up in my arms, carry her down stairs, at the risk of being encountered by some of the other in= habitants of the house ; bear her through the courts, and, by a way I knew, into the gar den ? The river was running strong and deep against the wall. I pressed one kiss on her cold forehead, and threw her into the stream. Gladly would I have gone with her, and held her in my heart till death; I ut the impulse was still on me, and the beating rain effaced my footprints. A few days uf.cr, I saw by the papers that her body bad been found far down the river. medical evidence, after a post mortem examin ation, was that s he had died from rupture of the heart, and that her death took place before her immersion in the water. So they conjectured that,she had been standing by the river, when the fatal attack seized her, and she had_ fallen in unpreceived ; and they re turned a verdict of aceidentia death, and bur ied her in a pretty churCh "ard near where they found her. I shall die a bachelor. lam lean and pale, and bowed down and gray-haired, and the sound of my laugh is strange to me. QUAKERS. "There is something in the very aspect of a 'Friend' suggestive of peace and good will. Verily, if it were not for the broad-brimmed hat, and the straight coat, which the world's people call *shad,' I would be a Quaker. But for the life of we I cannot resist the effect of the grotestiue and the odd. I must smile oftenest at myself. I could not keep within drab garments and the bounds of propriety. lucongruiiy would read tne out of meeting. To be rained in under a plain hat would be impossible. Besides, I doubt whether any one " accustomed to the world's ..pleasures could be a Quaker. Who, once familiar with Shakspeare and the opera, could resist a fa vorite air on the hand-organ, or pass, undis turbed, 'Hamlet !' in capital letters on a play bill Y -To be a Quaker, one must be a_QuaLer born. In spite of Sydney Smith, there is such a thing as a Quaker baby. In fact I have seen the diminutive demurity, a stiff plait in the bud. It had round blue eyes, and a face that expiessed resignation in spi:e of the stomach ache. It had no lace on its baby cap, no embroidered nonsense on its petticoat. It had no beads, no ribbons, no rattle, no bells, no coral. Its plain garments were innocent of inserting and edging ; its socks were not of the color of the world's peo ple's baby. It was punctilliously silent as a silent meeting, and sat up rigedly in its moth• er's lap cutting its teeth without a gum ring. It never cried or clapped its bands, and would not have said ;Papa' if it had been tied to the stake. When it went to sleep it was hushed without a song, and they laid it in a drab colored cradle without a rocker. Don't inter rupt me, I have seen it, Mrs. Sparrowgrass ! Something I have observed, too, remarkably, strikingly piakeristic. • The young maidens and the young men never seem inclined to be fat. Suell'a thing us a'maiden ludy,nineteen years of ny,o, with a pound of superfluous tleSh4s_not known among the Friends. The young'men sometimes grow outside the limits of a straight coat, and when they do, they quietly change into the habits of Ordinary men, It seems as if they lose theirhold'when they get too round and too ripe, and just drop off. Remarkably Quakeristie, too, is an ex emption the Friends Appear to enjoy from dis eases and ti'omplaints peculiar to other people. Who over saw a Quaker marked with the small-pox, or a Quaker with the face-ache ? Who ever tqw a cross-eyed Quaker, or decid 'ed case of .he mumps under a,broad•brimmed hut? Nobody. •: Mrs. , Sparrotvgrass, don't interntpt me. , Doubtless much of this is 'ow ing to theif cleanliness, duplex cleanliness pu rity of blood and soul. •I saw a face in the cars, not long sin ce—a face that had calmly endured the storms of seventh yearly meetings. It was a bot, dry day ; the windows were all open ; dust was pouring into the cars ; eye brows, eye-lashes, ends et, hair, moustaches, wigs, coat-collars; sleeves, waist-coats, and trowsers of the world's people were touched with a fine tawny color. Their faces had a gene-al appearance of humidity in streaks now and then tatooed with a black cinder; but there within a Satin bonnet, (Turk's sating a bonnet made after the fashion of Professor Espy's - patent ventilator, was a face of seven ty years. calm as a summer morning, smooth as nn infant's, without one speck or stain of dust, without one touch of prespiration, or exaspiratinn. Mrs. S. No, nor wus there on the cross-pinned kerchief, nor in the elabor ately plain dress, one atom of earthly con t.gt ; the very air did seem to respect that aged Quakeress•" SHORT SERMON ON MONEY. My hearers—this is not only n great but mysterious world that we live and pay rent for. All discord is harmony ; all evil is good ; all despotism is liberty ; and all wrong is right—for as Alexander Pope says ; 'What ever is, is right,' except the left boat, ana wanting to borow money. You may want sense and the world won't blame you for it It would gladly furnish you with the article, had it anything to spurn, but unluckily it has hardly enough for home consumption. Ilow ever, if you lack sense you are Well enough off after all: for if you commit a four pox. as the French say, you are let go with the com pliment. poor Pm! ho does not know any bet ter. The truth is a great deal of brains is great deal of botheration. An empty skull is bound to shine in comany, because the pro prietor of it hasn't wit enough to know that there is a possibility of making a nincompoop of himself, and therefore he dashes ahead, hit pr miss, or generally succeeds beyond expec tation. Let a man be minus brtiins and plus brass and he is sure of a pass through the world as if greased from ear to ankle. but rig up-for him a complete machinery of thought, and it is as much as hi:rum do to attend to it. Ile goes to the grave ruffled and tumbled, cur ses life for its cares, and moseys into eternity pack saddled with mental misery. Oh ! for the happines of fools.. BueincEis O:atbs. _FIR. S. B. KIEFFER. Office iii North ' /Hanover street Os o doors from Weise A: eatupLelrs store. Office hours, moor purticulnrly from 7 to 9 o'clock, A. 31.. and from 3 to 7 o'clock, I'. 31. DR. I.C. I,OOM I S 0 1. 7 : „ o=c South I lane\ er street, next do o r to the Post DEM be absent from Carlisle the last ten days of each month. [Aug. 1. '55 "Alt. (EU. W. NEIDICII DEZ , ,TIST carefully attends to all . 0 111.11111 i operations the teeth and adjacent parts that 111,W:1,W auty requite. Ile n ill also insert rtilnial Teeth of every n. sueh as Pi, I. single and ltl-ch teeth. and till salt main nous I tints." and V, ill erinstitict l'tdatiss. curators. Depilating Pieces. and met.) appliance used in the Dental Art. —Operating room at the residence of Dr S:anuel Elliott, II eat High st:vet. (at lisle. .DR. EORG E Z. BR ETZ, s t irsica . DENTIST. OFFICE at the ri,i.tunt.t.tof • hishrother, on North I'Lt Street, Cur l/SW. OTlCE.—Notice is hereby given 1 that 1 have, this day; asmaiated w ith to in the prlietlee of n protesab M la. M. 1 and lb , . EhiVS. Ali huhines. In tut ure %till be attended oby the atm%u under the trip lif Itttsbt Feb. 11th W. M. BIDDLE, At'ty at Law 1 I P. lIUMRICU, Attorney at Law. Ileclutu•s An btisluebs citrus(' cal to hilll tt 111 Ire pruillptly attl!lldvii to, 11, 1 E I:I7LSJI - 1. ITEEM, Attorney ynt t,ntr. (Klee in Main Street. Pa.— Ase-Husiness entrusted to Imo a ili im promptly at tended to. Feb, N. GREEN, Attorney at law, has • settled in Mechanicsburg; for the Knell,- of his . kinds of Legal NN Colivrtions, Coat t bo.ifienf- protapfly attended to. (Ore opia. rho Or. I: -of ,e-idonee. rtil;\'l . .\' l>lc in 31l its ditto re t branchei, in-inaptly attended to. COLE Attorney :it Lnw, will at- NJ( Lund promptly to ull bw.ineentru,tell to 111111.- 001er In the room formerly occume.l by NV1111:flu lrttoo, E,+, North 11.kumer Area, tpril 15:0.2 \V. BRANDT, 31anufacturor of Nowno Watorg, French Mratl.C a 1: Bottled Ale. Portvr and Cider. N.,rth East' Strvet.. near Ow Kail Road Bridge. Cadislo [VEIN Elt AN I.) (4)N VE' A N IL - SPONS LEI?. Tato Register of Cumber Mint county. m ill carefully Attend to the troisaction of ell such Its may ls, entrusted, to lihn, 1.11441:IP the writing-oi Deeds, Mortgages Contracts. •te. Ile will alt.° des ote his attention :o the procuring of Land NVar , rants, p e nsions, ,te. as. well as the purchase and saht of 1;eal Estate. negotiations, of haus, ,c. los eon 111 " .7s t High ;Street, ti rtnerly occupied, y Vt. U, Penrcet. :crj-tft~ar - tht~trthndi~ti=Frtrti~--_ —p— r I N. itosENBTEEI., - .11.0,50 Sidi, Fancy and Ornamental l'ainter.lrviwi, , (tiirinoily' Harper's) How, near Ilitner's Dry (Mods Store. ilusslfl attend promptly to all the above desoriptions of paint ing, at reasonable view.. The various hinds of graining attended to, such as 111:1110guliy, 041 k, walnut, &v., In au improved styles. It ABlll NG 31A( 1 1I 1 N Of filo ht,t, innkt , efinstpiitly on , hand and for salt. AI th e Foundry :mcl Machine ,Sll,p. FRANK', GAEDN En. (;011.Slir1'S.—just receiv'‘ ll ~ 0 . 7 1. (1 further kunplv Frotich of ex tin si .%1•4‘) tutrvow 131)(.11 logos fol. ItasolteN juuw.:o j;I:O. W. 111 T.\ lit. ANIT L PAPER received, a sph.mt nr. Paper Ilan:dogs. irtkiw 'bads anti Firiilatarkl Prlutti o enibrarinA . all the tiewei , t and aumt approved styli's. Tito tle•iih.na aro Went and and tho prlees hitch as canna 1311 fn giro CIO t hill. We Writ° our frionds moil the tittliliopiiirti.l- ly to vall and oxlmilnu our asiiihrtment pus h! Ing eitil,Wllo) 11. A NTi 'East Mtihi Si rret, haiitsle