.1 ~J. • ‘ '0 r I . 4.;,.•• . • , . • ~;1 . j. . . 1:..;.4.:j. :.11" , I ,_ . I) . i .: igY ,T,:,:s .11 : . , 1,•• : * V2i :,./' ' °'; "•- , i '' -o,i .. 117. ,A•l`-.‘•-" 4 'ci,jfAi- • ,- ,4 1 '•:‘:.t.. 1.... Or • ' ~. i • '• , ) • ' N lll 0 44t t' • 1 .. I . '' • - !•+•: ••); • ' !Pt' ; ~ • f ' --,.' i '‘ . 4 .',. ! • ~,, — 1 Y . r,.., q. , , r •..s . e y:t . . v: .. -..< . . k' • • . f '•• , , : ‘ ;.: tt.; 2 4 1 ,.. `''••':' ‘,...... c :I . ': • . , P Last nif2.ln as I on my conch of down And drcanlin2ly I )Zi'd as the hours passed round, Th e old year breathed in ins - ear and said Some minutes, lily lad, and . 1 have fled "Eh ! what, Forty-five not away so soon !" Why stiro for a voar volt mistake it moon. J moon it) sootli, I uwn volt have ?,001), But moons are not as yet-„years, I ween. But lately I learned to write you, when Away like the wind you're off again. Just introduced I have wade Inv bow, A , ..Anu you cut the acquaintance now Aly hopes were still fixod on the time to vome You've stricken my whole calculation dumb. The many days of ''feed and fun" Forbidden ere they had yet begun. ° . Hold there, thou forgetful and thoughtless boy, Look back on thy life full of passing joy. What toy is this which lies broken here ? Twelve months ago it was a token dear. Who last called St. Valentine's billets forth ! The day of our Washington's joyous birth ? Good Friday's shells which of every kind, You've strained and cracked on Laster too ? Have I not awoke you with thunders when The fou c rth of July lit the land aeain, And givlen the treemen a sacred Ala`. On which to praise, give thanks and pray;? And last you have had to remember me In the revels and mirth of a Christmas spree. When friends, and fruits and the witty stroke, And cakes passed round to complete the joke I've seen the wild winds lav aside their wrath, And clouds let down the reviving bath. The blade of green and the ilowret litir Bedeck the , ground that lay dead and bare. The harvest its Weightiest ears unfold I've seen when the breeze waved the sea of tr,old, And falling leaves and the frost-browned rnnt Till snows and storms the rich scenes have shut. Why sleeper, I have measured ihe lives of some They've gone who with me to this world have come Though some may still dwell a while with • you There goes with the quite anu her too• Complain not to me'of too short a stay— Nor waste thf: bright days as they glide by Good bye ! My errand is run at last Igo to the slit - Ides of the ages passed. Good . Patrons and kind, thus the old year. `,pokeOn my ears the noise of its swift wheels broke. I rose, and gazed with a sigh to see It lost in the haze of eternity. 'Tis gone lint - thank heaven it has left us here, And the sun has now'brokc on another yea r- Herecs mirth, and peace, and all else to bless And the PRINTER'S DEVIL with his first address. THE CARRIER'S ADDRESS .t.s- , , D ' , U 3 Z_w__C Eff.3 LS-) ._, 4 6_1 4 L.L..? CE)„. CE> I_Zu ME' l_v_4 Ufa - ;Pi: 11), I.: 1 JUISILOIS - :041411 01 lanuarn 1, ISIG. "I hope I don't Intrude." Ye sires on whose locks the gray „silvery dew The tlirce•scorc and tenth frost makes glitter anew ; Ye livinc , charts of the sea oftime, Ye fledglings bound for another clime. A stria ling who plays in the sands you've trod This, b ight happy morn asks a passing nod. 0 stnoc tbly.on may your frail barks glide Till wrecked on strands 'o'er this ragitig tide. ,te matrons, who long as the salt of the earth Are spared to behold yet a New Year's birth Whose breath of prayer, as is climbs the slues Dispels the wrath boding clouds that rise To-day as I tramp all the rough streets through I ow happy if I may he blessed by you-- God grant that your sun may itteglory set And stars be the gems of your coronet. good morn my friends of the mid-day life flow oft have we metin . the world's fierce strife, When yon each day not an hour could loose When I brought ro - it,ißl the full sheet of new. But now is the time for rest and sport Your pockets are filled and so is your quart Be merry, 0 be merry ye and full of glee, As I shall be with the carrier's fee. love the young beau, full of glee, tomcat To day with fine dress in shop and street, With brace and. straps, and his beardy dowh As large as the i Pope in his morning gown. His cane in his hand and segar in' his mouth, He puffs like the crater, which rises far south, Thit ah, he thunders a cheerful din, Instead of lava he spouts the tin.' A quarter per rhyme he calls wonderous cheap— A quarter, by cupid its wortha heap ie fold's it neat and presents his miss Who bows in a bustle her knight to kiss. But girls do t‘xcuse me this morn, I pray, So lung my respects'l neglect to pay, I know though but a lad I be, A pretty lass has a charm for me, Your smiles and your cheers are commingling here Like roses and songs in the spring of year,-- May joys as bright as those smiles portray Be thine, and a speedy wedding day. Hurra, now hurra for the year that's come 'f.a. 7 Of hopes'we are full, and of fears hav,,,somea- , -- May the hopes increase and the fears . k - rqw less Or sink in the tide of our hopes success)-. Nor base be thc.sources of our desire Nor low he the mark to which we aspire. Be virtue's robe4our regalia fair, And worth the pearl that shall sparkle there And now my friends I wish you all, happy new year, great and 'small, 4.nci"hope I don't intrude," at all, When I ask you for a, QVAIZTER. quarter, boy, why how . you - Talk, I think you're most too willing," Willing or not at leist you ought To hand us out a SHILLING..,