El portrq. COME TOME IN DREAMS . Er= Como to me In beautiful dreams, love, Ilh come to nu. oft, When the light wings of sleep. On my bosom lies soft, ' Oh come 8011, • lu the moon's gentle light, Beats low on the ear, Like the pulse of the night— When the sky find the waive, Wear their loi . ellest blue, When the dew's on the flower And the star's on the dew. Come In beantiful dreatni, love. Ohl come and we'll tarty, Where the whole year Is crowned With the blessmns of May— iii 'Whet: Each sound is as sweet As e'erwi of a dove, Alai 1 t oros are as sea As t e bNathing pf love; Where the beams kiss the waves And Ilse waves kiss the beach, And our warm lips may catch The WOOL lesson they teach. Come in beautiful dreams, love, Oh! come and we'll tly, Like two winged spirits Of love through the sky! With hand clasped in hand 1)11 our dream wings we'll go. Where the starlight and moonlight Are blending their glow; And on bright (grinds we'll linger Through long dreary hours, i,, ve 's angels envy The heaven of hours.-- - Aoiniinvi of f6hitarti. From the Home Ju rural. THE MARRIAGE OF POOAHONTA§. LIT BENSON .1. LOSSING During the lovely Indian summer time, in the nniumn of 1608, there was a marriage on the banks of the Powhatan, where the English had laid the corner-stone of the great fabric 01 Anglo-Saxon Empire in the New World, It was celebrated in the second church which the settlers had erected there. Like their first, which fire had devoured the previous winter. it was a rude structure, whose roof rested ups, on rough pine columns, fresh from the virgin forest, and whose adornings were little indeb ted to the hand of art. The officiating priest was 'good Master iluntei,' who had . lost al his books by the conflagration. History, poet ry, and song, have kept a dutiful silence res pecting that first English marriage in Ameri ca, because John Laydon and Anne BurrOwi were common people. The bridegroom was carpenter, among the first adventurers who ascended the Powhatan, then named James in honor of a bad king; and the bride was wai ting-maid the 'Mistress Forrest,' wife of Thom• as Forrest, gentleman. These wore . the first white woman ever seen at the Jamestown set dement. Almost five years later, there was another marriage at Old Jamestown, in honor of which history, poetry, and song htyre been employed. The bridegroom was 'Maser John itelfe, 'an honest gentleman, and of good behavior,' fiom the realm of England ; and the bride was a princess royal, named Milton, or Pocahontas the WeII-beloyed daughter of the Emperor of the great Powhatan confederacy, on the Vir ginia peninsula. The officiating priest was Master Alexander Whitaker, a noble apostle of Christianity, who went to Virginia for the cure of souls. Sir Thomas Dale, then Gover nor of the colony, thus briefly tolls his mss ters of the Company in London, the story or Pocahontas Towliatan's daughter I caused to be carefully instructed in the Christian re ligion, who, after she had made a good prog• resit therein, renounced publicly her country's idolatry, openly confessed her ChristiOn faith. was, as she desired baptised, and Is since mar ried to an English gentleman of good under standing (as by hie letter unto me, containing the reason of his marriage of her, you may per eeive), another knot to bind his peace the stronger. Her father and friends gave appro bation to it, and her uncle gave her to him in the church. She lives oivilly and lovingly with him, and I trust will increttee•in goodness, us the knowledge of God inerenseth in her. She will go to England with me, and, were it but the gaining of this one soul, I will think my time, toil, and present stay, well spent.' So discoursed Sir Thomati,Dale. Curiosity would know meregbf the Princess and her mor tgage, and curiosity may hero be gratified to the extent of the revelations of recorded his tory. • .1 The finger of a special Providence, pointing down the vista of ages, is seen in ° the charac ter and note of Pocahontas. She was the (laugh ter of a pagan king who had never hoard of Jesus of Nazareth, yet her heart was oveiflow• lag with the cardinal virtues of a Christian life. • "She was a landscape of mill earth, Whore all was harmony, and a calm quiet Luxuriant, buddluit."—llrima. When Captalit Smith, the boldest and the best of the early adventurers in Virginia, pen etrated the dense forest, ho was made a pris oner, wee oonductea in triumph from villuge to village, until he stood in the presence of Powhatan, the supremo ruler, and was then condemned to die. Upon the barren , tantl q A singloi - ipt h'e 4lund ; Around hint t• into, with how and brand, The rod..nen of chi, win.d. 1 , ' , Like him of old his doom ho heirs,, Itockboutid on ocean's thic : The cheftaitt's daughter knelt In tears, 4n4Ccatticd a prayer for him. . • . ' . MI Above tearin air The savage war-club swung The franfie girl . in wild despair. Her arms around him flung, Then shook the wairiors of the shade, hike leaves on aspen-limb— Subdued by that heroic maid ' Who breathed a prayer for him. "Unbind him!" gasped the chief— •"Ohey. your King's decree!" • Ho kissed away her terirs.of grief, And set the captive free. 'Tie over thus, when Nit star t' man grows diet, An angel kneels iu woman's for, And breathes a prayer,fur him. Groans P. Monntu. • s !low could that stern old king deny [pSl The angel pleading In her eye? How 4nock the sweet, imploring grace That breathed in beauty from her face, And to her kneeling action gave • A power to soothe and still subdue, though humble as a slave, To more than queenly sway She grew, G. SIMMS The Emperor yielded to the maid, and the captive was set free. Two years after that event, Pocahontas alfain became an angel of deliverance. She hastened to Jamestown during a dark and sttsrmy night, informed the English of a p.on spiracy to dltermillate them and was back to her couch before dawn. Smith was grateful, aml the whole English Colony regarded her as their deliverer. But gratitude is often it plank of feeble root, and the canker of selfishness will destroy it altogether Smith went to En gland ; the morals of the colonists became d prayed ; and Argall, a, rough, half piratical navigator, unmindful of her character, bribed a savage by the promise of a copper kettle, to betray Pocahontas into his hands, to be kept as a hostage while compelling Powhatan to Make restitution for injuries inflicted The Emperor loved his daughter tenderly, agreed to the terms of ransom gladly, and promised unbroken friendship for the Engtish. Pocahontas was now free to return to her forest home. But other bonds, more holy than those of Argall, detained her, While in the custody of the rude buccaneer, a mutual attachment had budded and blossomed be tween her and John Rolfe, and the fruit was a happy marriage—'another knot to • biud the peace' with Pewhattan much stronger. April, in thev Virginia penipaula,•wbero the English settlers first built a city, ie one of the loviiest mouths in the year. Then winter has bid a final adieu to the middle regions of America; the trees are robed in gay and fra• grant blossoms; the robin, the blue bird, ail the oriole, are just giving the first opening preludes to the summer concerts in the woods and wild flowers are laughing merrily in every hedge, and upon the green banks of every et ten tn. It was a day in charming April, in 1613, when Rolfe and Pocahontas stood at the mai'• riage altar in the new and pretty chappel at Jamestown, whore, not long before, the bride had received Christian baptilm, and was nam ed the Lady Rebecca. The sun had marched ,halfway up ' toward the meridian, when a any had assembled bemeath the Pile pleasant odor of • the 'pews ,• , 44,4,441ng1ed with the fragrance of s 411 w.:, which decked the festoOns of t.,et ; zJet ~I sprays that hung over the .1r ..r• 1,1 lows,' and the commandment c:11- - ‘,- ,;.t• chancel. 'Over the pulpit of Long garlands of white flowers, witti the waxen leaves and scarlet berries of the holly. The communion-table wan covered with fair white linen, and bore bread from the white fields of Jamestown, and wine from its luscious grapes. The font, hewn hollow between, like a canoe,' sparkled with water, as on the morning when the gentle princess uttered her baptismal vows. Of all that company assembled in the broad space between the chancel and the pews, the bride and groom were the central figures in fact and significance. Pocahontas was dress ed in a simple tunic of white muslin, from the looms of her Dacca., Iler arms were bare even to the shoulders; and, hanging loosely towards her. feet, was II robe of rich stuff presented by Sir Thomas Dale, and fancifully mbroidered by herself and her maidens. A gaudy fillet encircled her head, and held the plumage of birds and w•veil of gauze, while her limbs were adorned with the simple jewelry of the native workshops. Rolfe was attired in the gay clothing 'of an English cavalier of that period, and upon his thigh he wore the short sword of a gentleman of distinction in society, lle was tho personification of manly betiuttin forn and carriage; she of womanly modesty and lovely simplicity; and as they came and stood before the man of God, his tory dipped her pen in the indestructable fountain of truth and recorded a pr,lphecy of mighty empires in the New World, Upon the chancel steps, wheeci no railing interfered, the good Withtaker stood in his sacerdotal robes, and with impressive voice, pronounced the marriage ritual of the Anglican Olturitir, then first planted on the IVesteru Continent. On 1I ~' , r 'State; his rigliOta richly carvctchair .0f . .., brought:front:England, sat t 1303 Governor, Stith Ills. ever'-atteritlaut halberdiers, witV. brazen helmets, at his back. • ' ••• • . There were yet but few women in this col ony, and those, aeon after this memorable event, returned to native England —The 'ninety young women, pure and Uncorrupted,', eliom the wise SandYe caused to be sent to Virginia, ne wives for the planters, did not arrive until ten years later: All then at Jamestown were at the marriage. The letters of the times have transmitted the names of seine of them. Mistress John Rolfe, with her child, (doubtless of the family of the bride groom;) Mistress Easton and child, and Mis tress Horton and grandchild, with her maid servant, Elizabeth Parsons, who, on a Ohylst mas eve before, had married Thos. Powell, were yet in Virginia. Among the noted men then present, Sir Thomas Gates, a bravo soldier in many wars, and es brave an adventurer among the Atlantic perils as any who ever trusted to the ribs of oak of the ships of Old England. And Master Sparks who had been co ambas sador with Rolfe to the court of Powhatan, stood near the old soldier, with young Henry Spilman at his side. There ; too, was the young George Percy, brother of the powerful Duke o .. . Northumberland, whose conductcwas always as noble as his blood; and near him, an earnest spectator of the scene, was the elder brother of Pocahontas; but not the des tined successor to the throne of his father.— There, too, was a younger brother of the bride, and many youths and maidens Crain the forest shades; but one noble figure—the pride of the Powhatan confederacy, the father of the bride was absent lie had consented to the marriage - with willing voice, but would not trust himself within the power of the En glish at Jamestown. He remained In his habitation at Weroworoinoetk, while the ROSE and the 'forum were being wedded, but cheer fully commissioned his brother, Opachisco, to give away his daughter. That prince per formed his duty well, and then, in careless gravity, he sat t nd listened to the .voice of the Apostle, and the sweet chanting of the little choristers. The music ceased, the ben edietion fell, the steam 'Amen' echoed from the rude vaulted r of, and the joyous company left the chapel for termite' hall of the Gov ernor. Titus 'the peace' weft made stronger, and the ROSE of England lay undisturbed upon the HAreitEr of the Powhatans while the father of Pocahontas lived. Months glided away. The bride and groom 'lived civilly. and lovingly - together,' until Sir Thomas Dale departed for England, in It lti, when they with many settlers, accompanied hint. Tomocotno, one of the shrewdest of l'owhatan's councillors, wont also, that he might report 101 the wonders of England to his master. The Lady Rebecca received great attention from the Court and all „below it. 'She accustomed herself to civility, and curried herself as the daughter of a king.' Dr. King, the Lord Bishop of London, enter tained her 'with festival state and pomp,' be yond what he had ever given to other ladies; and at court bbe was received with courtesy due to her rank as a princess. But the silly bigot on the throne was highly incensed, because one of his subjects has dared to marry a lady. of royal blood, and in the midst of his dreams of perogatives, he absurdly apprehended that Rolfe might lay claim 'to the crown of Virgin ia 1' Afraid of the royal displeasure, Ctiptain Smith, who was then in England, would net allow her to call him father, as she desired to do. She could not comprehend the cause; and her tender, simple heart was sorely grieii ed by what seemed to be his want of tender affection for her. She remained iu England about a year; and, when ready to embark for America with her husband, she sickened and died at Gravesend, in the flowery month of June, - Hill, when not quite twenty two years of age. She left one son, Thomas Rolfe, who afterwards became quite a distinguished man in Virginia. lie had but one child, a.daugh ter. From her, sonic of the leading families in Virginia trace their lineage. Among these are . the Bollings,- Murrnys, Guys, Eldridges, and RandolPhs. But Pocahontas needed no prosperity taiperpetuate her name—it is im perishably preserved in the amber, of history. CLERICAL &tom - pmts.—A physician, writes H. communication to one of the religious journals, in which he attributes this disease to ta > noir- use of the vocal organs on week days and their double , use on Sundays, to Mental anxiety as to` support, and to the use of to bacco, tie recommends to the preacher to read aloud at least half an hour each day, to quit smoking and chewing; and on theniem bership he enjoins a more liberal support of the ministry as the only,sensible way of curing the disease, '. ..4... M.Dr. Charles Kidd, of England, nn} stn— that chloroform is a perfect cure forAy,dre phobia. A teaspoonful of either chlortNipi or ether iq to'be sprinkled, on a loindkeYVq and placed on the patient's face to sm - ell,a'aidot red hot poker is then, within half an hour '.to. be apvlied to the bite. - If these two things be dune, hydrophobia need not be apprehended. MilititiliS'olo THE AIR. e : . , Let a man rolls littltiialrin his mouth, . . what is that? Let Napeleoti . tivistiit betiveen his lips, and' all the•wi!rild is i at wei7 girls it to Fenelon, and he shall so manage it with his' tongue that there shall be everywhere peace. it is but a little agitated air that sets man kind in Motion. If we could live without air, We could not talk, sing. or hear any sounds without it. There would , be a blazing sun in a black sky—stfiishine mingled with thick darkness; rind there would lie everywhere an awful silence.' - `iiere ib less air it the upper than in the lower regions of the atmosphere; the bottom crust of air is, of course, densest. Saussure fired a pistol on the summit of Mount Blanc, and tire report was like the snapping of a stick. There is a well at Fulda three bun ed palms deep; throw a stone down it, and 1,11 noise it makes in its descent will be like the firing of a park of cannon. It goes down among dense air, and also It reverberates.— When a man speaks, he strikes air with his throat and mouth as a stone strikes water, and from his tongue ns from the stone spread undulating circles with immense rapidity.— Those circles may be checked and beaten back in their course, as it is with the waves of sound made by the stone tumbling down a well, beaten back and furiously multiplied. At the castle of Simonetti, near Milan, one IoW note of music will beget a concert; for the note is echoed to and fro by the great wings of the building that reflect and multiply a sound just as two mirrors reflect and multiply a lighted candle. Sound is, in fact, reflected just light is, and may be brought quite in the same way to a focus. A word spoken in the focus of one ellipse will be heard in the focus of an opposite ellipse hundreds of yards away. Such a prin ciple was illustrated oddly in the great church of Agrig;entum, in Sicily. The architect— perhaps intentionally—built several confession• ale ellipses. in which, whoever stood, heard all the secrets whispered to the priest. A horri• ble amount of scandal sprang up in town; no body's sins were safe from getting into unac countable publicitj. The church soon became such a temple of truth that nothing was left to be hidden in it; tat at last, by chance, a discovery was made of the character„of the tale-telling stones, and: the, walls had their ears stopped. How hI.IOIIINEItY INCREASES BENEFICIAL LABOR.—About five years ago, .when eewing machines were beginning to be introduced into this city, some furious attacks were Made upon them by ignorant and mock philanthro piste, who pretended to - be anxiously concern ed for poor seamstresses. Thhy pictured the sad fate which awaited those persons; told how the hard-earned bread was to be taken out of their mouths by such capitalists as could purchase and use such machines, there by dispensing with the labor of needlewomen, and thus bring them to want for lack of em ployment. Have such predictions been ful filled We who have for years carefully watched the effects of labor-saving machinery of every kind upon society, knew that such ideas, when uttered, were no better than the emanations of an idiot's dream, trusted to a few years' experience to prove the benefits of such machines to every class in the commun ity. Thoulsands of such machines are now in operation in our country, and if we nre rightly informed, more than a thousand of them are in operation in New York city alone; but instead of' these having thrown any" in. duistrious females out of employment, they have rather increased the quantity of work for, them to do. We were to'd a few days since, by one engaged somewhat extensively in providing needle-work, that twenty stitches are now made on sonic garments, for one that was made five years ago—in short that sew ing Machines had greatly increased the de (nand for sewed work. Thus coat linings, which used to be made plain, are now mostly elaborately worked, and fliiely stitched, and it is the same with almost every kilml of sewed work. The amount of such work, he stated, hal increased even in a grater ratio than the machines to execute it. A higher taste is now being gratified, and hundreds of women who used to ply the needle early and late with their fingers, for a mere" pittance, are now better remunerated for their labor In at• tending sewing machinesovhile, at the sanie time, their hours of toil have been measur ably reduced. It is our opinion :that the very class—needle women—respecting whom so much was at one tinie said about being injured by sewing Machines . , will be most benefitted. In many, if not almost every in stance, this has been felt to be the case al ready. • Sewing machines, therefore, which aro but a recent invention,' afford abundant examples 'how machinery increase's beneficial labor.'—Scientific American. Z..i-r'S.lttny a man talks with loud comply I t oeuey_nhont_the _charms of his fiTC'sitle, tuu yet let temptatidn give but the smallest tap t, t he . (l o or, and he evinces the most wctiderfu alacritYln.leaving it. rE.9:," 11Uri; is w'ovslii.r," . iEritii old iivlxity. t., l t' r . Sad Termination of a Bridal Tour: , The'New York papers contain various de tails of the late terrible accident on the Hud son River railroad. We coPy . the following: "Iti the ball of the Exchange House we met a gentleman laboring under great mental af. fiction. • Engaging in conversation with him, we learned that his name was Rufiis Blanchard, publisher tine/ bookseller, Chicago, 111., and brother of Mr. Blanchard who was married on the 17th of this month to Miss Farr, a most accomplished lady, at her residence in De Kalb, St. Lawrence county, in this State. The happy couple were on their wedding tour when this accident overtook them It appears that owing to the crowded state of the sleighs at Albany, Mr. Blanchard and his bride were separated from Miss Powell, a lady friend who was traveling with them, and in the society of big wife Mr. Blanchard forgot all about her until they arrived at Poughkeepsie, When Mrs. Blanchard suggested that he should go thrilugh the cars and see if he could find her. After the train had left the Poughkeepsie depot he set out on hiss 'errand, and it was during this brief absence' that the calamity occurred.— Mr. Blanchard sprang out of the door of the car, and escaped unhurt by leaping into the EIME:iI "As soon as the crash was over, be rushed wildly through the cars in ienrcli of his wife, shrieking for help,.and calling on her name. But his words were only echoed by others equally distracted, whose relatives and friends were involVed in the common ruin ; or replied to by the cries and groans of the sufferers. Fur fifteen minutes, which seemed as many 11;in* he sought her everywhere without sue eeril. At length some one nsked'if his name was Rufus Blanchard, and then the blend took him tc the place where his wife lay.— And what a sad spectacle met his view! She who a few minutes before was radiant with beauty and overflowing with her young joy, now lay before him erai'bed and maimed and blackened so that he had not recognized her as his wife, although 'lie had passed her a score"of times during his search, supposing from her face ilplt she was a poor colored wo man, Half crazed with sorrow, he would have thrown himself upon '•her seemingly life less body in his great grief, and have bewailed her as dead, had not the bystanders held him back. Then his noble wife manifestel her gladness at his safety, and bade him hope that all things would work together for good; that she would yet live to make glad his heart and share his love. This was only one of many such scenes at the meeting of friends and relatives after the accident:' ' "The unfortunate lady was taken .to theEZ changeHouse and placed under medical skill. Her left leg is fractured in two places, near the ankle. One of her hands is badly cat, and her face and bosom are scorched or scald ed- nearly black ; and her eyes are somewhat injured. The above facts we learned from yarious parties who witnessed them. Mr. Blanchard took us into the room *here his wife lay; and after showing us her sad condi tion, he took the miniature of a beautiful woman from his bosom, and said, 'There is what she was this time 'yesterday. Mrs. Blanchard ha, manifested throughout her suf feringq the most heroic fortitude, cheering her husbalid, and eihibitiiig a spirit at once hope ful and resigned. her Rhysiciansti are doing all that human skill can du, and strong hopes are entertained that she will recover." Ater A man who would systematically and willfully set about cheating a printer, would commit highway robbery on a crying baby and rob it of its ginger-bread—rob a church of its counterfeit pennies—lick the butter off a blind nigger's Inst 'flitter'—pawn his grand• mother's specks fur a drink of whiskey—steal acorns from a blind sow, and take crothes from a scare crow, to make a respectable ap pearance in society.—Er. A man who would cheat a printer would steel the coppers from a dead nigger's eyes—, e'ttCal the hay from a blind ram, and sue his widowed mother for his father's funeral ex pen 3es. —Devil. CONVENFENT An lANOEMENT.—The ingenius French milliners lave invented a hoop of In ubber, a then tube in point of fact, which call be blown up or colapsed with great facility, to suit.the convenience of the wearer. When? a lady wishes to pass through a door or enter' A carriage or any other narrow place, she touches a spring, which opens the valve and allows the air to escape. When the lady enters a place roomy enough for the fashion, she has only to put a delicate little pipe to her mouth, and blow herself into ths• required s'mpe. Could anything be more clfarmine Tut MUIWEIt OF JusTus ',MATTunws‘.---At New Haven, on the . 17th inst., the Grand Jury indicted Samuel Sly as principal, and Rhoda Wakeman (the prophetess), and Thankful S. Hersey, as neat sseries.to the mt,:rler of.ll cue Niattlliws.' Thelr trial Will soon take place. Abigel Sables and Josiah Jackson have been discharged from prison. file prophetess wept ke an infant on being told that site must re main. iMrs. Horsey said, pointing to, the prp. phetess, "they little know what they'rir, , about in shutting up that persok ltt re,', mom