El 15,0 ttrti . WATCH- We do not know isheur we Loire met with a more touching and beautiful poetical Morceau, than thttfol lon:lng: It breathes a: sentiment of holy inspiralion which tenches every cord . of the beart: Ilead it: Mother, watch the 'little foot, .• Climbing ovor thegarden: wall, BOunding through the buoy street. Ibinglug cellar, shod and hill'. Boyer count tho =intents lest,' Boyer count the time ircusts, . Guide them, mother, while you may. , - 7 -Mother, tvitch_theiitle. hand ' Picking berria's by tho Way, • , Tossing:up ; Vet. dare the question ask-- "Will to ine the weary task ??' Tho saute little Lauds may-prove :Messengers of I ight and Love. .1• Idoth , ,ir; Watch the litt'Onague, ytuttit_iigyiudutiut and wild:. What is said and what is sung .By the joyous happy child. , Oat:lo4e, wyrd while yet unsii9ken, Ftnii the Tow hcfore 'tis broken; naii mune Couple ul:ty yet pi•oelaiui Blessings . in n Mviour's mime. •• • . Mother, Watejythe little heart, - Denting • soft - sod worm for-ru ;-- . Wnoleßitne lessons flow ; Keep, d! keepilint young-leart true st pleating every' weed, Soying good and precious Seed, • ljarreat.rich you thou may see • • • Ripen for oternity.:' c ileit (tat r. KATE;YAIE'S - N - A - SRIAGE •If ever I merry,' Kate Yale used to 84, half in jest, half in oarnest, ! the happy 'man —or the nnhaPpy 'one, you :ple.asC; ha! ha ! Shall be a perkm pissessed of these three • - • ..Firn!,•a fortune; s , ! 'Second, good I mention the fortune first, beenuse I think it the most needful and desirable qui;li tication of the three. . Although I nerer..could think of tuaining a' fool, or a man' whose ugliness I - should b 6 ashamed of, think to talk sense for the one and shine. for :the 'other With plenty of money, -would.be—prefer. atiltto living' obscure with a handsome intel lectual man—to whom economy might, be ne• cessary." I do not know how :much of this sentiment came from Kate's heart' She un4t.ubtedly indulged in lofty ideas of station and style— for her education in the dunes and aims of life had been deficient, or rither• erroneous;` but that, she . was capable of _deeper, better feelings, none ever doubted who had obtained , even a paitial glimpse of her true woman's nature. And the time arrived.when Kate was•to take that all-important step of winch ehe had often spoken so lightly—when she was. to_ demon etrate to her frivds how much of her • heart was in the words we have just quo(fir: , At-the-enohanting_age_oteighternAilte_lad tam suitors; but as she never gave n serious thought to , more than two, se tvili, iullaw her example, and discarding all except those favored ones, consi d er tile . :statics claims.- • If this trete any other than a, trtit:etory; should certainly use an artist's privileie, and him to produce an effect by making a Strong contrast between the_ two favored individuals. If I'eoutd hatimy own way one should be pook, genius and something of a hero, the other a wealthy fool, and somewhat knave. But the tr4b Is— Our poor gait' MI woo not mach of a gen sywdra very po - IUII.--117) eion a teacher of - aio, and he, could live _very, comfortably by a. exercise thereof.:-- ' without the most dicta hope, however,v • attaining to wealth. More er, Francis Mi not posaCaiied excellent quailB, which . en titledfillhim to be . called by • old 1 . people; a tlks, air4 - 4 4:elairacter,' by his eumpanio a' ' noble' good ff e rally, a illow,' and by the ladies g , ... ' darling.' ' ' • . •, , Kate could not help loving Mr. Frank and he knew it. lie was Certain she' pre red Ids Society even to , : that of Mr. Wellingt4 whintraione - inrsawfit - to - houor - with — ther—a ,:.-_pellation of rival. •:: • . ' b Allis Mr. Wellington (his companions on S'r-, , . , ed him ' Pok4;) was no • idiot' or humpbac I; as 1 cettla have wialie4 him to be, in order i t . Leake4.gtnl-sterf.-- . -On-the-contrari—be-w .. k a men of,senae, good looks, and fine manner:, , . and there was nothing of the knave &bon t• bii is Inotild , aver 4611 4 01 '• • -- • ' -- _ Besides this„his income was _-entlielent t. enable hifn to • live ., superbly. • Ali o ; b e WI two or 'three degrees binslpomertthan , Me. I Therefore, the only thing on which -Fran had to depend„was the power he poieeasei t sympathies and affection."- Ti) b. uk:tr7' — aftt --- ,tb* -- trup or; p every sett e,. hlosseil . with a2.fortuns goiid loOks'and oin . mintin;lienie:—'-inid. Fie* been able to draw these out, and the amiable, .00ticai fed - Mr.Trailk *tar nor-willing—to-Thez ijeve that she would suffer mere worldly con siderations to control the' aspirations .of her, heart. ' • 'However, one day he prei3seder toleolare his fate, she said to !Wm- " h a sigh : . • oh, Frank !I atnSorry•thi we ever met Sorry!' , . _ Yes; for we must part now. • ./ ' Part !' repeated Frank, .turnlng ') was evideht be had riot expected this. Yes—yes,'• - said Kate casting down her head with another piteous sigh. ' ---'Frank_eat_by_hcr_aido..;_lielphaced_bia_ arm aroon :her iv;tuatilirtigtlreading - tirt• — ft ble reeiatance; be lowi.red his voice and talk ed to her until she—proud-Kate, wept, bit terly. 11 'Katie,' said he then, with .a liuret - of pas, Rion, 'I know you love mel, but yon are proud,. .. ambitious, selffsli 4 . New; if. you '.would have me leave you, say We word and I go." . •Go I V murmured Kate, feebly,,,' go . ' , t ,z Have you decided ?' .he whispered. • , • •I have. ' . . . , . . • -*Theo, love,- farewell V • , . • lii"took her hand. gazed tv moment tender . ly and sorrowfully into ter. iteautifol,'tearful face, and then clasped hertOtis bosom. She permitted ilie etatu:sce. .She even gaie way to he 'impulse, and twined her aims • around his neck , but in a tootnaysljafrefiolu• tion - came to her aid,,,and she. pushed hint. from her with-a sigh, "• ' Shall Igor he Urtioulated.• _ • - A feeble yes fell from her lips 7 -end an in stunt later sho tans lying_e s n the sofa sobbing and weeping ulune. To . tear the.tenacious root of rove out Of her heart. had cost-her more than she:.coald -have intioipated.;. and the eertuinly of a., \ gold• en life of luxury proved but. a- poor eonaohs: lion'..,scesned; for the . enerifiee she had made. She lay 'long iipon. the sofa, I say, 'sohliing mid -Weeping' parsionately. Gradually he's' •grief sipper:sc .: 4,3e "eihatt;stAtself.. to .fiow, 'and irt ,length her eves and I _cheeks wets dry. Her lieedwasliillosyed on her arm, and her Lee was half hidden in a at beautiful curls. - • .The .'struggle was over. . .ngany was past: She saw.Nr.'Wellington enter alai rose 'cheerfully to meet -him. His manners pleas .7-e-dtl —llll - iittition and fortunes fascinated her . more. He offered her his hand— , she accept; edit. A kiss's sealesi the engagenient•lout it . ...wee not 'such a kiss as Frank. had given iser, -and the:could-soit:ce repress--a •,,, , There was a magnificent wedding. • Splen: dilly attired; dazzling. the eye with the bean , ty.thus mis f ired, with everything around swim ming in the charnied atmosphere of fairy-land Kate gave her filiart to the man her ambition —mit her lovitv=ltad ohopen. But certninly.ambition could not have ma - de a better _choice. .Already___sho_sart_herselt surrounded by a magnificent court, of which she was theitanowledged and adnaitted , queen. The favors of fortune were showered upon her;Pilie floated, luxuriously uitop the smooth nod gkery wave of a Charmed' S„lt Lis ;4 Willi wanting in ilie:Fbole circle of do r-..xi,)roco to ti.lorti it, and niakelt btight ii 1. piness. Bit elle Was• not long in die• enuring that there with im.ntething wanting in I.t va.t. I 1 r frienilm were numerous, her husband ti.tob r kin 1, an I loving ; but ill their linen um' /iffectiotss could not fill their heart*' ..She had once felt' its ch. rd end sympathy , moved by a 'skillful touch—she had known the heavenly charm of the deep, delicious harms , • ny, and now they were silent—motionless, Muffled, so as to speak in , silks and satins. , — These chords were still and souudless ; her _ _ heart - was dead—no'he the less so because kit -led-by a goltioniiiiot-lia-vitrylatown—a-tal---felt the life of sympathy in it, imoonsoled by the life of luiury. -In short, Katf; in time becaMe ' tnagnifteiently miserable, ,and splendidly . Un haPPY. - • l Then a change became ppari t e tto , tier:bus. bond. lie could'not remain long.bliad to the . fact.tkisiove was not returned. He sought the company' of those whose gayety Might lead lm to' torget the sorrow and despaii of his tiOul. This shallow joke, however, was ine4itititcto. n ry, and impelled by powerful longing Ali, ' love; be went as tl yto warm his heart by 'a _strangtatte; ' t age e,_ , ,Kato saw herself . ow In the midst. of a gor geous desolation, burning with a thirst nn: conquerable by golden . streams_ that flowed around her—panting with a hunger which not ill the food of flattery and admiration could_ appease. - She reproaches , her husliand'lor deserting er thus, and he 'answers her with angry and esperale. taunts of !feceptiou,aud a total look love, ,rhichr emote her conscience heavily. _ - 'lrou,dii not care forme," he cried, 'then y do you domplain that' I bestow elserbeile affections you have met with coldness f' But kis lyrong--sinful,' Xate remonstra• tt' '` tarlicleyalb,. Yes, Fl noa+ it,' said her hilaband',fiereelyA "qt the'Oiviiiruit of an evitseed. 'And who sowed . tbe seed? , Who gave Me' Obarid out a heart ? Who became a sharer of my - forfune' i tut - ga-vo-tne-no , shore:of-her.iyMPathy?- Who devoted mo to, the %to of a loving, - un- - loved husband? Nay, do not weep, and clasp your hands, and' sigh and sOt;;,with stich:des poration of impatience, for fsay notching' you' do not deserve to 'hoar.' ' • 'Very well,' said Kate. .T.:dp_not say your • reproaches are •andeserTed.' But granting I am this cold, deceitful thing yoti cell me, you knovi this state of things.oanuot continue." 'Yes. I know, it.' fam .Well ?' Mr. Wellington's brow gathered darhly cyes_flueltekwithiloteroainniton;:—hii; lip curl, • 1-soorn. hn;e mnde.up my mind,' snit! he,' _!that we :should" not live . together any longer. I tim tired of being called ihe.liusband of tbo:splen: did Mrs. Wellington.. I will move in my eir. plc, you shall shine in . your% I will place no re.straint.,an . _ your actions- nor shall you on mine.. We will be free.',. • •Bnt - tlio world !—shrieked j(pte. trembling. ,•The woild will . ad.nire you the • saute—and what more do you desire ?' aglred bei husband, bitterly. Alio marrisge_of hands and not of hearts is monkery.. We have-played the faro long. enonglt. Yew understand the true mean ing of thc.terms: husband and. wife ; but do you know what they ..sl..uld mean ? , --Then . .etiougli;of this mummery. Farewell.. .1 go to consult . friends about the terms of sepsia 7 tion. Nay, do not tremble and cry, and elihg to see be liberal.• to you. : As , much . of my fortune shall - be'yours as. you de. ES Ile pushed her from him. She :fell upon-the, tt ,‘ tilirivked aloud •I ; runit !' Frank ! why,llJ iiiend-you-•-'4FUIL uie ? Why - riUu . l blind until pigbt bruugbtiub ihisery,-- Shq f,ty upon the Punt sobbing and weeping riaiedotuttely: Gradually . lief grief 'appeortrd to exhitut-t itself ; her breaching bedtime calm; cr eyeli fUflI Cheeks dry, ).a , rrlitaid lay arm, over tier fled tresses--until, with a blur!, she cried Trunk oh, Fratik-Livitiiti . hack !'- • "Here I am." said a soft voice' by her nide. She- raised her hood. ..She opened her aston• 'shed eves. Frank was standing - before her. able x' • 'Anil dreaming; too, I should say--not pleat `flatly either.'„, . • • `I hope so replied Fronk, taking her. band. 'You oeuhrtneiiit 'to send me'away from you so - eruelly; -- I - kinew.-So I waited - In 'youe-fa,tbees study 'Where I have beeri , talking with him an hour. , kerkme beak to plead my cause, once more tiUdfound . you hero where I left you. asleep." - rwir 'Oh! what a horrible dream !' mierutured • Kato, i rubbinglier eyes. •It wns so like a ter: ruble, reality that I shudder now to think of it.—l-thought_twas_marriect!' - • 'And would that',bi. eo horrible t' Frunk.l_ ..I,,hope thou. you d:ti nut drento you • were tUarried to roe'!" • ~ •No, I thought I gave niy hand . without my hearC. • . 'Then, if you gave - me your hand, it would not l be without your heart.' ' *No, Frank,' said Kate ;. her ,bright eyes bearning . happily through hee tears, land heir it, is.' • And soon there was a real marriage=--aot splendid but a happy one- - followed by a - life of love and contentment; and that was 'the marriage-of Frank Minot and Kate rale. - ' • NORTHERN FEELING IN THE Souxu.—As an evidence that there fa a Northern feeling ex , feting even in the hot bed of the South, the Herald mentions . ii circumstance that occurred softie few weeks Since at Columbia; the eapi. tal of South Carolina An intrainifilTia wealthy citizen of the place was engaged in erecting a large edifice, upon which he had employed both white and slave labor,. While the work was progressing he one daY foolish ly and unmeaningly expressed himself in fa vor of the negro meohanies over the , whites,. The remarks he made use, of4toon became known among the 'white' Mechanics of the town, who are mostly from the 'Northern Stook witsti such ‘as were in his employ im." mediately left him to the enjoyment of his slave labor exclusively,. A meeting , of the ortherw-ttieehanies—was_calleiothleit_was attended by two or three hundred, who became so much excitri and incensed at the expressions which the Southern • gentleman in question had indulged in, that they . maaufsotared au mgy, intended—to—represent him, and ,after parading it through the (streets for some time, gave it a covering of pitch and set ; fire to it _Some etthe authorities attempted to inter fere, telling the, mechanics that such' proceed. Inge were unlawful, but a precedent,. was cited.--that,of the ,barsing, of the, cffigy of Senator Sumner in the same place-.—which wati!llowed to `pass unnoticed by the officers of the law; which argument proved sufficient th - krevent any arrests being made. . 3tiorellanntig, WORDS WELL SPOKEN. • Hon. Josiah Quincy, of Massachusatis, now 85 years , old, and still a young man, baS•puh... Ih:died the Address 'which lie delivered at Quin cylaSt_,lun4. It is n,m'ost stifring and able production, and. we copy the dedication : _ _ , _• "The rluestion to be•deeitled at the ensuing . PreshleatiaLeleetioO, shall henceforth rule the nation--The-Slawe States or-the-Free Suites ? All. the aspects ,of ;o.nr'pelitical at. inosphere . indiente au appro Whether it shall sweep the foundations, br whether wh`ether.it shalkbe prosperotis• ly..weatheredi-depends--under : ---Ilkaven;:on the inatt-who-the-peopla4ha-11,chootielt-o-pilot-t-he 1 . , through the 'owning :worm. In my .judguient iliat man is John Cliarles Fremont. I have not and never had,. any. •connection with the party that selected him.• Personally, know . hiro not ; hut I Lade` refurthe history of his' life, end I believrhito to - be as much'inarked out, by providenee fur the pieSent_ exigency of our nation as Wiishington was fat that of .the American Revolution.„lle conies from where great men usually do come, from the -mass of the. people_ . Nursed in ditfmillties ; Practiced in-surmounting them ; council ;- -full of re.sourpee ;, - ,self-posieseed'in --danger k; .fekr : less and Tditiniost in every enterprise unex.- cePtionable • merali ; .with an intolect clever ted by nature, and cultivated in-. laborious fields 4 - 'duty,: I trust he is destined: to save the Union . from dissolution; to restore the consiltutimi itseriginai put ity ; and to re . 'here •that tittrutimitt IY,tatingtou de signed far the preservation 'ainl enlargenteut of FreedOm, from being any longue pieverted exteiaisivti vt •' • ASCFNT. OF MOUNT ARAILAT.-LThe London Tfinesgives an.accout;t of 1111 ascent of Mouitt Ararat fivt;Elielishruen The ,natives be• lire feat to be 'impossible, and that the sutuinit ;vas : guardedby'divine 1t is 17,823 feet atieve the sea level, and ter minates :41. n precipitous: :snow capped 'cone -which has hitherto foiled ,ull-ttie attempts- of explorers. 'Major Iti hers Ste i wart,• who wait one . Of thi - pat ty, and who Wrifes the ,weeount liTirfruni El"7 - .tirairo,:ifnt . ea that on reaching. the top" they struck to the . , -hilt in the snow a short:don-We:edged sward.- They also thank tire health of The Queen: •- On this he observes., Oiler Majesty's is Probably - ~t he first name that I111:i been 'pronounced tnt....that . height since iviiiimuitted by the great :patri arch of theLumiin ratite,44 cir;ooi4,.,pir. dition exist!! of the aseent:,httving over been madirbefore.l' A; most' shocking occurrence took place in Fincastle, Vu.. a few nights since. A gentleman with several motherles 'children, 'arrived at that place, and lu the course of the night the inmates of the hotel -were, aroused_.hy_ terrifie_screarne, and ,on tra cing up the sound found that it emanated _from the room in whieh. the gentleman and his children lodged ilrettking the door open the horrified epectaturs. saw that he watt la- afing undei and was in the not of pulling out the tongue of his youngest child, whom he had taken' to sleep in the bed with him. lto was immedi= ately aroused, to see the body of his little childArendfully bruised and lacerated, and told those who had awakened him that ho bad dreamed that some one was taurdeng his child, and he was trying to resent) i is agony was said to be indtisaribable. -At the time the passengers left Fineastie, the poor child was still alive, but in an extremely poi. loos condition: Tua CHRISAFUL TEAOIIIIII.—A cheerful kind -hearted teacher, will alwitys be welcome to his , They;3till_rejo3ee to ree him the schoolhouse, even if the Witte of study has not yet arrived, Weans° they know he rejoices in seeing.them happy, and will not 'interrupt their _amusement before the_regular time. But the morose and ill natured teacher is eyer'nu 'welcome, and bated by ids eobolars. , Be is regarded . as . the enemy of their happiness, and rarely enjo ys the confidence of his school. Oa the Otter hand, the teacher, eipecially of large b4s, should not forget the dignity of his.po fesolon, nor place himself entirely on a 'with hie pupils. - Tbey should be .tatight to respect, as well sa AO• loveraqd confide in • hits. Whileritis- proper-that- he-should-mittiess,-!apl. prove and eontrottlseir,recreations, we • think - it in general Unadvisable'for 'him to p'artici 'pate in 'then?.. , l!tntryr, tr Tntot.—lt is ' related of Thonias F: Marshall that a Judge having once ' fined him thirty dollars for lonteniPt of court, he rose and asked the Judge tojoan bint the Man tiy ttii and thorp. was ocrerlitid present to whom he could si well apply tut ,te his Boner. Tiale- was a etumper. The Judge looked et Tam:and thettid the shirk, and ft nallY Bald;''Clerk, remit Mr.lifarithall'e fine; "the State lit better able to lose- thirty, dollars than am," • a. Lattan - ONE.—Barnes. tolls , a goe'd'atory of the power of the . Philadelphia engineit. In 1850 he was one of the''' Old Dilly" boys, and' . as such very frequently was honored with t h e. atreani "down the gutter," which 'attracted the 'attention of tk'large Newfoundland dog... The - dog thonght - he would-play-with the stream ---- and commenced•biting at it. Just here Barnes . got ,a good shot at him, and sent a full stream down his threat/and with such force that it passe& clear thr6ugh the: quadruped. Here Darnos_was ( requested to " raise the stream." - . Ile did so, and up went the dog, too.. He en deavored to slide . down but it was .no , go. Every time Lo gained en inch he ,lost a feet At lastbfili) boys were drcleredlo stop playing., They, 'obeyed erders,,-When-dcitn-cemo-the-deg- from a height of some f ( ;vty The vrtn!...... meat he struck the grml ‘ d, he put for home, - with a velocity that could not have been ifi creaSedhad you fastened a, Dutch oven and eight pie pani to his tail: TIMBk.:9T POLITICAL Jogs YEr:---yho Rich. mond Equir,er has a cOrrespolident who pro- poses that in case Coi. Freinont is elected, the Legislature willbe at once convok'ed, end that their very first net will• be, an act making the retaining or accepiing of office under theGen erul Guvernmenti_afier lie ' . 4th of .M arch next, a misetneanur," pun she w tioe_olualess _ - than five hundred.nor more than five thousand dollars., and by imprisobment . for a, term of not lestr.than lour,--nor-tuoreAltan-eight-yeariP,— This is aublimely, ridiculoutt,! All the laws_ ever enacted . could "not keep the - F. •F. Nye ' `from . •flucking to Washington- after' Office, should Fremont be elected. - For our own-part---- wewould like to gu halves with the,- wag who propOsed„a tun of one eent•on every individual crossing-tbe-Potomac-bridge-interit-On-sharingiE tlio responsibilities of gtiverunient, witb any, MACY erected President—were it ,Werniall lips or Giirris u oven ! DEATIi Or A FAST Houss.—The:Milwaukie Wisconsin; tel . 's of a horse that recently died ' iu Oregen, 111, Ile was very ugly and 'would not be harnpssed ; .under thomaddle. co.uld twtke 114ciuld pass over.' . . 'll2 miles in 12 hour's,' Ills' usual timer, froni, H __ Oregon to . Hockford, 23 miles,. was two. hours. The doctor_who Owned him, and who alone - • c,ould ride him, :has licen heard to'say, that .during .years past, he has ridden hint up'. , wards of tWe;ty thousand : Mlles and that du ring all this tittle he was never known to trip 4 stumble,'so as AS airiest the. rider's- atter'. don, Ho was savage, because he was former ly a wild horse on the plains of ArkanisS. AirAt a ball in Wheeling, on Tuesday, a lady *as iu an embarrassing ' position. Her skirt was torn, and ,a whalebone thrust out into the ci'rereln n very thileemly mannerci-,,,The lady coolly took hold of the artiild, dreiv. it from her drees,-and walked to the' door, threw it out, and kink the cotillion just in time to •forward :and back..'' Al. though her-diltss That lady would walk up to the_cannon'e mouth, or to the a4ar, -without fear or trent . • • i t er Andrew Jitoksou was once making a stump speech'imt west, is a _small village.— Just as he was ; _concluding, Aims Kendall., who sat behind him, whispered, 'em little Latin, general. They wail be content ed without it." The ma n of thn..iron will, in stantly thought upon theft)" phrases be knew. and in a voice of thunder, wound up , by ex claiming, "-EAUW6us anum-4ine. qua noa-4 Ice plus ulir . a—tuultuns is parpo." The eirect,_ Was tremendous, :and the Hoosiers' shoutV could be heard for miles. ' • , WATJEING ON TUN ' W.Ailszt.i--,Large crowds' have beezt o attracted at Paris .to witness, s man walking' on the river Seine. He liad, foot- - iura - smail — triatigelarbos, seouret3r.— fastened with straps around his legs, and in hisliands he carried a long balanbing pole, similar to those, used by rope -dancers, ex— cept that at each end ' was attached s large inflated bladder. When gettintoff his hale awe, he dipped the cud of the pole, and the, resistance caused by the.blaoer touching the water restored Elan to - Alt:9LITIONI8T8 1/01% liIIPITANAN-:—Thelro has been a ' large aoceesion of iholitioniste, in New. England , and elsewhere to 'the' cause of Mr. Buchanan... 'William Lort.i.Clarrison, Parker Pilletiury,Wendell:. — Phillpir-these are the jewels whio ~ t th 6 Bemocra to party is adding to eta treasures, nod the Anti-Slavery Stan), fwd. of Massachusetts, and Anti , Slavery Bu., .gle; or .ohio are' noir co-Workers with the, Washingion'Bnion, Itiebmoud . Enquirer, Ohio ;.;; Statesman nod Cinohinati Itiquirer. • .. s t -, leX. Tlte - .l;kted AS lore room in •it _tittqt ..• ~..... • • • peopie.thielti It 7 would fernieh the Ittpiri- 18,.Tying a mackerel to'your oust toil and imagining yourself Slibale is one of the first lessons in codfish EM