Arlertttl fflortql. SPRING CONCERT. DT 14118. 1.. /I, 810001tNlir Tanta% 'Concert, n concert of gladness and gleo, The programme is rich and the tickets are free I In a grand, vaulted hall, whore there's room and to spare With.no gaslights to ont up the oxygen there. The musicians excel' in their wonderful art, They have compass of voice, and the garnet by heart They travelled abroad In the winter recess, And sung to vast crowds with unbounded success, And now 'tie a favor and privilege rare Their arrival to 'hall, and their melodies share. Those exiluislte rultudrels a fashion have sot Which they hops you'll comply with and may not re gra : They don't keep Into hours, forJhoy've always been 'Twould injure their voices and make - them look old. They invite you to come, if you hare a tine ear, To the garden or grove their rehearsals to hear; Their chorus is full ere the sunbeam is born; Their music the sweetest at breaking of morn ; It was learnodat heaven's gate, with its rapturous lays, And may teach you, perchance. its own spirit of praise. gil i roc vi !all, an iO. From tho Atlantic Monthly. A CALL TO MY COUNTRYWO- PI'M In the newspaper 4 and magazines you shall see many poems—written by wom,!,n who meekly term themselves weak, and rnc• destly ptotess to represent only the weak among their sex,—t usefully - discussing the duties whicli — Me weak owe to their country in days like these. The invariable conclu sion- is, that thotigh they cannot -fight, be cause they are nut men,—ur go down en nurse the sick and wonuded, because they have children to take care of,—or write effec tively, because they do not know how,—or do any great and heroic thing, because they have not the ability,—they can pr.. y; and they generally do close with a melodious and beautiful prayer. Now praying is a good thine It is, in tact, the very best thing in the world to do, and there is no danger of our having too much of it ; but if women, weak or strong, consider that praying is all they can or ought to do (or their country, and to settle down contented with that, they make as great a mistake as it they did not pray at all. True, women cannot tight, and there is no, call for any great number of fe male nurses; notwithstanding thi , , I be lieve, that to-day, the issue of this war de pends quite as much upon American women "as upon American men,—and depends, too,. not . upon the few who write, but upon the many who do not. Tlie women of the Re volution were not - only Mrs. Adams, .Mrs. Reed, and :11rs. Schuyler, but the wives of the farmers and shoemakers and blacksmiths everywhere. It is nut Mrs. Stowe, or Mrs. Howe, or Miss Stevenson, or Miss Dix, alone, who is to save the country, but the thousands upon thousands who are at this moment darning stockings, tending babies, sweeping floors. . -It is to them I speak. It-is they whom I wish to get hold of; or in their bands lies slumbering the future of this na tion. The women of to-day have not come up to the level of to-day. They do not stand abreast with its issues. They do not rise to the height of its great argument. Ido not flirget what you have done. I have beheld, 0 Durease.i, with admiration and gratitude, the coats and garments. the lint and bandages, which you have made. Tender hearts, if you could have finished the war with your needles, it would have been finished long ago; but stitching does not crush rebellion, does not anuhilatc treason; or trew traitors-in'pietes before the Lord. Excellent as far as it goes it •stops fearfully short of the goal. This ought ye to do, but there arc other things which you ought not to leave undone. The war cannot be finished by sheets and. pillow cases. Sometimes lam tempted to believe that'it Cannot be finished' till we have flung them all away. When l-rea lof the Rebels fighting bare headed, bare-footed, haggard, and unshorn, in rags and filth,--lighting bravely, heroically, suce, ssfully,— I am rea dy to make a burnt-offering of our slacks of clothing. I feel and fear that we must come down, as they have done, to a reek!, ssness of all incident ils, down to the rough and rugged fastnesses of life, down to the ve-y gates of death itself, before we shall be ready and worthy to win victories. Yet it is not so, for the tta:de.st lights the earth has ever known have been made by the delicate-han ded and purple-robed. S a, in the ultimate analysis, it is neither gold lace nor rags that overpower obstacles, but the fiery soul that -consumes both in the intensity of its furnace heat, bending impossibilities to the ends of its passionate purpose. This soul of fire is what 1 wish to see 'kindled in our women,—burning white and strong and steady, through all, weakness, timidity, vac Ilation, treachery in Church or State or press or parlor, scorching, blasting, annihilating whatsoever loved' and maketh a lie,—extinguished by uo • teanpest of defeat, .no drizzle of delay, but glowing on its stead fast path till it shall have cleared through the abomination of our desolation a highway for the Prince of Peace. 0 my country-women, I long to see you stand under the time and bear it up in your strong hearts, and not need to he borne up through .t. 1 wish you to stimulate, and not crave stimulants from others. I e ish you to be the consolers, the encouragers . , the sus tainers, and not tremble in perpetual need of consolation and encouragement. When men's brains are knotted and their brows corrugated with fearful looking for and hear ing of financial crises, military disasters, and any and every form of national calamity consequent upon the war, come you out to meet them, serene and smiting and unafraid. And let your smile be no formal distortion of your lips, but a bright ray from the sun shine in your heart. Talce not acquiescent ly, but joyfully, the spoiling of your goods. Not Only look poverty in the face with high disdain, but embrace it with gladness and welconie. The loss is but for a moment; the gain is for all time. Go farther •than this. Consecrate to a holy- cause not only the incidentals of life, hitt life itself. Path er r husbandvehild,-1 - tio - not sa , Give them -up exp - o - snre,r - sulrerityg, - death, ' out a ndurnitir ; 7 -that implies reluetance.- -I-rathergay;' Urge them to theofferiiig - ; - fill them with.sacred fury ;stir° them. with irre sistible desire ;, strengthen them. tassheroie . will. Look not on details, the present, the . trivial, the flectinginapead of our conflict, but fix your ardent gaze.. on its eternal side. Be not resigned, but rejoicing. - Be sponta neous and exultant: 'lin late and lofty.— Count it all joy that you are tYekoned - worthy to suffer in-a:grand and. righteous "can Gi've thinks evermore that •yeu were borne . in:thiOime vend because it is dark, be'you The.light of the: world: - .Kud follow the soldier7io the. brittle-field h 1 t i • I F '• •-• VOL. 63. A.. K. RHEEM, .Editor & Propr with your spirit.• The great arfny of letters that marches Southward with eve s ry morning sun is a powerful engine of war. Fill them with tears and sighs, Inment.separation and stiff ring, dwell on your loneliness and fears, mourn over the dishonesty of contractors and the incompetency of leach rs, doubt if the South will ever be conquered, and fore see financial ruin, and you will damp the powder and dull the swords that ought to deal death upon the foe. Write as tenderly as you will. In camp, the roughest man idealizes his far-off home, and every word of love uplifts him to a lover. But let your tenderness unfold its sunny side, and keep the shadows for His pity who knows the end from the beginning, and whom no forebod ing can dishearten. Glory in your tribula tion. Show your soldier that his unflinch ing courage, his undying fortitude, are your crown of rejoicing. Incite him to ea thusiastn by your inspiration. Make a mock of your discomforts. Be unwearying in de tails of 0 e little 'interests of home. Fill your letters with kittens and Canaries, with baby's shoes, awl Johnny's sled, and the old loak: which you have turned into a hand some gown: Keep him posted in all the village gossip, the lectures, tile...acturting4, the sleigh rides. anti the singing-schools. Bring out the good points of the world in strong re lief. Tell every smeet and brave and pleas•, ant and funny story you can think of. Show him that you clearly apprehend that all this warfare means it ace, and that a dastardly peace would pave the way for speedy, inert sant, and more apalbug warfare. Help, him , to bear his burdens by showing him loW elan tic you are under yours. hearten hint, en' liven him, tone him up to the true hero-pitch. flush your plaintive .111.rerere, accept the an non', pain for pentium:, and commission every Nurttierti breeze to bear a Te beam laudaznus linder" , ul od, the only question, as to wheth cr this war shad be conducted to a shameful or an honorable close, is not of-men or money or material resource. In these our superiori• ty is unquestioned. As Wellington phrased it, there is hard' pounding"; but we shall pountl the longest, it only our hearts do not tail us. Women need not beat, their pewter spoons into bullets, for there are plenty of ballots without them. I. is, not whether our soldiers shall tight a good tight; they have played the man On a hundred battle fields It is not whether officers are or are not compe tent; generals have blundered nations into vat:tory since the world began. It is whether this people shall have virtue to endure to the end,—to endure, not idarvina - , not cull, but the pangs-of hoße deterred L ef - disappotti t and uncertainty. of commerce deranged and outward prosperity checked. Will our vigi• lance to detect treachery and our persever ance to punish it hold out? If we stand firm, we shall he saved, though so as by fire If. we do not, we shall fall, and shall richly de serve to fall ; and may God sweep us oft from the lace of the (firth, and plant in our stead a nation with the hearts of turn, - and not of chickens! U women, stand here in the Lreach,—for here you may stand powerful, invincible, I had almost said omnipotent. Rise now to the heights of a sublime courage,—tor the hour _has need-of you: - When the. -first-ball smote the rocky sides of Sumter, the rebound thrilled front shore to shore, and waked the slumber ing hero in every human .soul. Then every eye flamed, every lip was touched with a live coal from the sacred altar, every loran dilated to 1.110 stature of the Golden Age. Then we felt iu Our veins the pulse of immortal youth. Then all the chivalry of the ancient days, all the heroism, all the self-sacrifice that shaped itself into noble living, came back to us, poured over us, swept away the dross of sel fishness and deception and petty scheming, and Patriotism rose front the swelling wave stately as a goddess. Patriotism, that had ',teen to us but a dingy and meaningless an tiquity, took on a new mien, a countenance divinely lair and futever young, and received once inure the homage at our hearts. Was that a childish outburst of excitement, or the glow of an aroused principle ? Was it a pue rile anger, or a manly indignation ? Did we spring up startled pigmies, or girded giants ? the former, let us veil our faces, and march swiftly (and silently) to merciful forgetful ness if the latter, shall we not lay affide every weight, and this besetting sin of despon dency, end run with patience the race set be• fore us ? A true philosophy and a true religion make the way possible LO us. The Most, High ruleth in the kingdom of men, and giveth it to whomsoever He will; and Ho - never yet willed that, a nation strong in means and bat ting for the right should be given over to a lja.Lloll weak and battling for the wrong. Na tions hare their future—reward and penalty —in this world ; and it is as certain as God hurt that Providence and the heaviest battal ions will prevail. We have hail reverses, but no misfortune bath happened unto us but, such as is ,common 'ante nations. Country has been sacrificed to partisanship. Early love has fallen away, and luke warmness has ta• ken its place. Unlimited enthusiasm has given place to limited stolidity. Disloyalty, overawed at first into quietude, has lifted its head among us, and waxes wroth and raven ing. There are dissensions. nt home worse than the guns of our foes. Some that did Ann well Ave faltered; some signal-lights have gone shamefully out, and some are lurid with a baleful glare. But unto this end were we born and for this cause came we into the world. When shall greatness of soul stand forth, if not in evil times ? ' , Wheu• the skies are fair_ and the seas sttioll ships• sail festively. But the clouds lower, the winds shriek, the waves boil, anti iminediately.eaeli craft shows its quality. The deep is strewn with broken masts, parted :keels, floating wrecks;. but hero and-there a . shiji ;rides the raging sea, and Hinge defiance to the She overlies the sea because she is sea- worthy.' Not our eighty yetirs or peace alone, but our twd,years of war ere The !totiolietenii• of our oltaranter. - We have rolle - Fd - c - nii -. Democratu as a sw eetiriorsel under our tongue; we have glOried in the prosperity which it brought to the individual; but if . the cotaferts of aced minister to the degradation of man, if Dein. °Grimy levels down and does not_level up, if our era of peace and plenty leaves In Bo fee.' ble and frivolous,- so childish, so impatient,',- so deaf to all that calls to us from the past and entreats us in the future, that we faint and fail under the stress of oar ono shott-of fort; then indeed is our Demooraay ourshame `axid curse. 'Let us show nOw what wanner of people we are. Lot us be clear sighted and fei , eighted to spo now great is the isbue that, bangs. epee the occasion. '-It is not _a_ more military reputation that is at Woke, not the decay of a sepal:44oWe commerce, not the CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY, MARC,II 1863. etor determination of this or that party to power. It is the question of the world that. we have been set to answer. In the great conflict of ages, the long strife between right and wrong, between progress.and sluggardy ; through the Providence of God we are placed in the van guard. Three hundred years ago a world was unfolded for the battleground. Choice spirits came hither to level and intrench. Swords clashed and blood flowed, and the great re connoisance was successfully made. Since then both sides have been gathering strength, marshalling forces, planting batteries; and to day we stand in the thick of ihe fray.— Shall we fail? Men and women of America, will you fail? Shall the cause go by de fault? When a great Idea, that has been up lifted on the shoulders of generations, comes now to its Thermopylte, its glory gate, and needs only stout hearts for its strong hands, —when tlie eyes of a great multitude are turned upon you, and the fates of dumb mil. lions in the silent future with you,—when the suffering and sorowful, the lowly ; whose im mortal hunger for justice gna•tvs at their hearts, who blindly see, but. keenly feel, by their God given instincts, that somehow you are working out their salvation, and the high ; born, monarchs in the domain of mind, who, standing far-off, see with prophetic eye the two courses that lie before you, one to the Uplands of vindicated Right, one to the Val ley of the Shadow of Death, alike fasten upon you their hopes, their prayers, their , tears,— will you, for a moment's b)dily comfort and rest and repose. grind all these expectations and hopes bet wren the upper and nether millstone? Will you fail the' world. in this fateful hour by your faint heartedness? Will you tail yourself, and put the knife to "your own throat? For the peace which you so dearly buy shall bring to you neither ease nor rest. You will buthave spread a bed of thorns. Failure will write disgrace upon the brow of this generation, and shame will out• last the age It is not with us as with the South. She can surrender without dishonor. She is t he weakerpower, and her success will be against the nature of things. ller dishon or lay in her attempt. not in its relinguish ment. lint we shall fail, not because of me chanics and mathematics, but because our manhood and wornanlymd weighed in the hal ftime are found wanting. There ardi'ew who will not share in the sin. There are none who wilt not share in the shame. Wives, would you hold back your husbands ? -Moth erf. would you keep your sons ? From what ? for what ? From the doing of the grandest duty that ever ennobled man; to the grief of the gl cutest infamy that ever crushed .him You would bold him back from prizza before which 'Olympian laurels fade, for a fate before which a helot slave might cower. -Ills country in the agony of her death.strug gle calls to him for succor. All the bitted in all the ages, poured out for liberty, poured out for him, cries unto him from the ground All that life has of noble, of heroic, beckons him lorward. Death itself wears for him a golden crown. Ever-since-the -world swung trim trout God's hand, men have died,— obey iug the blind fiat of Nature; but only once in a generation comes the sacrificial year, the year of jubilee, when men march lovingly to meet their fate and die for a nation's life.— liolding back, we transmit to those that shall come after us a blackened waste The little one that ae:i in his cradle will be accursed for our sakes. Every child will be base worm. springing from ignoble blood. We inherited a fair fame, ilea bilis from a glorious battle ; but for him is no background, no stand point. llis country will be a burden on his shoulders, a blush upon his cheek, a chain about his feet. There i, no career for the future, but a weary effort, a lung, a painful, a heavy-hearted struggle to lift the land out of its slough of degradation and . set it once more upon a dry place. Therefore let us have done at once and for ever with paltry considerations, With talk of despondency and darkness. Let compromise, submission, and every form of di-honorable peace be not so much as named among us.— Tulerate no coward's voice or pen or eye.— Wherever the serpent's bead is raised, strike it down. Measure every man by the stand ard of manhood. Measure country's price by country's worth and country's worth, by country's in: egrity. - Let a cold, clear breeze sweep down from the mountains of life, and drive out these miasmas that befog and beguile the unweary. Around every hearthstone let sunshine gleam. In every home let fatherland have its altar and its fortress. From every household let words of cheer and resolve and high-beartineSS ring out, till the whole .land is shining and resonant in the bloom of awaken ing spring. I NSURANCE AND ASSURANCE. FEIIVANDISE —I have been drinking hard all Might, and will have more time to prepare me, or they shall heat mkt my brains with billets. I will not consent to dia thIS day, that's certain. DUKE.— 0, sir you must ; and therefore I beseech you look forward on the journey you shall go. FERN 081)1:IE.—I swear I will not die to (lay for any persuasion. [Measure for Measure , . " IT is inconceivable to the virtuous and praiawortby part of the world, who have, been born and bred to respectable idleness, what terrible straits are the lot of those scandalous rogues whom Fortune has left to shift for themselves." Such was my feeling ejacula tion, when, full of penitence for the sin of urgent necessity, I wended my way to the attorney who had swept together, and for the most pert picked up, the 'crumbs which fell from my father's table. He was a little griz • sled, and sardonic animal, with features which were as hard as his neart, and fated . their leather jacket so tightly that one 'would have thought it had shrunk from washing, or that they had bought. it second band, and were pretty nearly out at the elboWs. They were completely emblematic of their possessor whose religion it was to make the most of everythinq. and amongst the rest, of the distresses of has particular friends, amongst wheat L had the happiness of standing very forward. . business re_auired bat little_explanation,lor-l _wasAppressed_by_zeitheri-rant-rolls-nor- ti tie '- deeds, (Cod we eat dein to 'consider the read iest means of turning O.U.exaellent income for one year into something decent for a - few — more. ,ftly adviser,' whose smell experienced eye had twinkled through all the speculations of• the age; and, at the same time, had taken a very exact measurement- of My capabilites of turd. ing them to,atiVantage, seemed Ist:be of opin. ion. that Vivas-fit'fitir nothing on earth. For one , undertaking, I-wanted application; for another .I wanted capital. • " Now," said he; . . "as the Ores of• thee° deflcinoies is irretne dittble, wo must do what we tan to supply the latter., Take my. advice rineariryour.life for a (ew thoussods,; you will have but.little pre mitun to pay, for you look es-i 4 you would live forever and front my knowledge: of your TERMS:--$1,50 in Advance, nor $l2 within=the year. . Tattle-pated habits, • entitle Various changes against You;o1. will give you a handsone . ,sum for the insurance." Necessity obliged me to acquiesce, in the proposal, and assured the old cormorant that there 'was every likelihood of my regulating his, liberality by the most unremitting persevei4t.nce in all the evil'hab its which . had:procured Me his countenance. We shook hands in mutual ill-opinion, and ho obligingly volunteered' to accompany me to an insurance Office. whore they wore supposed to estimate the•duration of a man's-life to a quarter of an hour anli Odd secondti. We,arrived a little before the business hour, and were shown into a large room, where we found several more 'speculators waiting rue• fully for the oracle to pronounce sentences.— In the centre was a large table, round which, at equal distanceelivere placed certain little lumps - of money,. which my friend told me were to reward the labors of the Inquisition, amongst Whom the etirplus arising froni the absentees would likewise be divided. From the keenness with'whielt each individual liar. ted upon his share and ogled that of his ab• sent nelghbor, I surmised that some of my fellow sufferers would find the day' against them. They -would be -examined- by -eyes capable of penetrating every crevice of their constitutions; - by noses which- could smelt a rat a mile off, and hunt a guinea hreast high. How, indeed could plague or pestilence, gout or gluttony expect to lurk in Its hole undis• turbed when surrounded by a pack of, tor t iers which seemed hungry enough to devour one another? Whenever the door slamnied, and they looked for an addition to- their-cry, they wers going to bark: audit' 'straggler really entered and seized Ilion his moiety,_ the intelligent look of vexation was precisely like that Of a dog who has lost a bone. When ten or a dozen of these gentry hail assembled, the laborof the day-commenced. - - Most of our adventurers for raising sup plies upon their natural lives, were - afflicted with a natural conceit that they were by no means circumscribed in foundation for such a project. 'ln vain did the hoard endeavor to persuade them that they were half dead al. ready. They fought hard for a' few more years, swore that their fathers bad been al most itatogrtai, and that their whole families had been as tenacious of life as eels themselves.- Alas ! they, were first ordered into an adjoin ing boom, ;wltiolt I soon learnt lees -the con ilvinned cell, and then delicately informed that the establishment could have nothing to say to them. Some, indeed, had the . gciod luck to he reprieved a little longer, 'but even these did not effect, a very flattering or advantage ous bargain. One old gentleman had a large -premium to ---- pay -- kifeeti-; another for an extracirdinary circumference in the girth; and a dowager of high respect. ability, who was afflicted with certain undue' proportions of width, was fined most. exorb itantly. This tanly,eustomer who met with any thing like satisfaction was a gigantic man of Ireland. with whom death, thought was like ly to have a puzzling contest, " Flow old are you, sir ?" inquired an et aminer. Forty." " You seem a strong man." '• I am the strongest man in Ireland." " But subject to the gout ?" " No—The rheumatism —Nothing else upon my soul." " What ago wnsyour father when he died?" " Oh, be died young, but then he was killed in a row." Have you any uncles alive?" " No : they were killed in rows too." "Pray, sir, do you think of returning to Ireland?" May be I shall, some day or other." •• What security can we have that you are not killed in a row yourself?" "Oh, never fear! lam the sweetest. tem per in the world, barring when I'm dining out which is not often." What, sir, you can drink a little ?" " Three bottles, with ea9e." "Ah that is bad. You have a red face and look apoplectic. You will. no doubt, go off suddenly." " Devil a bit. My face was born - with me ; and I'll lay a bet I live longer than any two ip the room." " But three bottles-" "Never you mind that. I don't mean to drink more than a bottle . aud a half in future. Besides, I intend to get• married, if I oan, and live enug." A debate arose amongst the directors re specting this gentleman's eligibility. The words ..row"'and "three bottles" ran, hurry scurry, round the table. At last, however, the leader of the pack addressed him in a demurring growl, and agreed that, upon his mending irregularities, ho should be admit- Led as a fit subject. It was now my turn to exhibit; but, as my friend was handing me forward, my progress was arrested by the entrance of a young lady with an elderly maid servant. Showas dressed in slight mourning, was the most sparkling beauty I had ever seen, and appeared to pro duce an instantaneous effect,- even upon the stony hearted directors themsellies. The chairman politelyrequested4or to take a seat at the table, and she immediately entered into her business, which seemed little more than Le shay; herself and be entitled to twenty thousand pounds, for which her ?ate Ausband had insured his life. • Zounds," thought 1, twenty thousand pounds and a widow." " Ah, madam !" observe the chairman, " your husband made too good a -bargain with us. 1 told him be was an elderly, sickly sort of a man, and no, like .to last: but I never thought ho would die so soon after his marriage." An elderly. sickly sort of a man 1 She would marry again, of course! I was on tire to rte examined before her, and let her hear a favorable report of me. Ai luck. would have it, she had some further transactions which required coma[ papers to. be sent for, and, in the pause, I stepped boldly forward. " tintlemen,l. said trey lawyer, iwithirom - whicth-wh itenetl-t he-t ip-of-bitr-twei-artiktery nearly sent it through the external teguments, " allow me to introduce Mr, a particu lar friend of mina; whoitydesirous of insuring his life.. You perceive ho is not % of yourdying sort." The directors turned their eyes toward me with - evidenteatiefaction, and Iliad the vaulty to belieio that the widow did eo too.; 4 , you Intve a broad' ehest,'! eahleno, Aare Bey your lungh are never affected." 64 Clood shoulders; Ina," 'said attot.ltp,l4.-;- 44 Not, likely to Ito knocked•tlownin a row." , 4 1,8iroag in the lege; and not tiebilltitediby dissipation,,' cried ft 'Elthink thie e n' tiemin will ouitve.". ' could - para.:lva that,unaglaa,_ ampli tnenta, and a . Cow Citbara, Ilia Id dir IT*3 tei7 ,~, '~ ~ .- - ;, ' - (7 41 1% . .1111i11111:11) " Why, I begin to think I shall be obliged to give up my harum-scarum way of life_; d: ink moderately,: leave otf. lox-hunting, and sell my spirited horses - , - whitli, you • knew, will make a material difference in the pro bable date of my demise." - to her late husband. On the table was a half-finished drawing of Apollo, which was, equally without doubt, meant to apply to her future one; and round about were strewn the seductive pems of Moore, Campbell and Byron. "This witch," thought 1, "is the . very creature I have been sighin g afier l" would have married her out of ithedge-way, and worked upon the roads to maintain her ; but. with twenty thousand poundii— aye, and much more, -unless I am mistaken, aho would create a fever in the frosty Caucasus 1 I was in the moat melting mood alive, when the door opened, and in walked the fascina ting object of my speculations. shu was dressed in simple gray, wholly without orna ment, and her dark brown hair wad braided demurely over a forehead which looked as lofty as tier face was lovely. The reception she gave -me was polite and graceful, but somewhat distant; and I perceived that she had either forgotten,-or was determined nut to recognize me. I was not quite prepared for- this, auk-in-spite of my constitutional confidence,, felt a little embarrassed. 1 had, perhaps, mistaken the breakinga' forth 6f a young;and.huoyant spirit, under 'ridiculous circatustances,for the encouragement of %Mt ;.and, for a moment; I was in doubt',whether I.'shonid „not apologise and pretend that - she ;Witi: - . j tiot - ,thei lady 14 whom Ives HOLiettetitut keg on earth could have. aent.me. demmetairs unless I had beed,icieked down t " Madaesi" I began ;- but my bleed' was in a turmoil, no have never. 'heeti able to r.ecOkid.ol4- clear That said. • Something 'Ntrio;.llo4:; . ever; about my late father. aiid'her lepeated husband, 4.isceee and,tho last Indies, liver -eonipltkietkaud, ye' iesilrapeT;[iiiitti 6 01 4- plaiuts, eeedoleacek Ordoe t i.pertuilletio.e, - and, .pretc,r4iliifvprteet., Impartiquem . f. 140 Y 109kact Aer.prieed i . hreke: sat speech with .twe. tkrowwo,ll;briL4.::•itiou!iiticlui%-.aud , 48. tipeisheC ate4Tivtapelk. by; protesting that, she hid.'nevevbeiro.beptoldboa teetitiee Tither niy:(o44o4:ic. totiliotnising Mats heir-, IMM Sehiticlitie& to - titter; 'which I considered 'ad much as 'a flirtation commenCed,r and when I was ordered into another roonCto be farther examined .by the surgeon -in atten dance,' I, longed to tell her to step till Lcome back. he professional gentleman did his, utmost-to find-a-flaw in - Mei - but' was obliged to Write a, Certificate, with which I re-entered, and had the satisfaction of hearingthe man'read that I visa Warranted sound... ; The Board Congratulated me somewhat jocosely, , and the widow laughed outright. Our affairs Were settled' exactly at the same moment, and I followed her closely down Stairs. " Whatimad - trick, arc you at now ?" in quired the corrnoratit. "I aril going to hand that lady to hercar riage," I responded ; and I kept 'my. Word. She bowed with much courtesy,. laughed again, and desired her servant to drive home. " Where that, John ?" said I. ".No. —, sir, in street," said John and away they went. We walked steadily away, the bird of prey reckoning. up the advantages of hie bargain with me, and I in a mood of equally inter esting reflection. " What are_ you pondering about,-young gentleman ?" he at last commenced.. "I um pondering whether or no you hav - o riot overreached yourself in this transaction." " Flow so ?" " But vette: e is the necessity of your doing till this ?" " My wife will, most likely, nuke it at stip " Your wife?" • "Yes. That pretty, disconsolate widow we have just parted from. You may laugh; but if you choose to het the insurance which you have bought of me against the purchase• money, I will lay you that she makes me a sedate married man in lesS than two months," " Done I" said the cormorant, his features again straining their buck-skins at the idea of having madtka double profit of'me. " Let us go to" iiiyiltbase, and 1 wi4l draw a deed to ihat effect, gratis." I did not flinch froM theitgreemant. My case, I knew, was desterate. I should have hanged myself a month be'ore had it not been for the Epsom races, ht which L had al reason for disgust to the world, Would, I thought, be rather a pleasure than a pain— provided I was disappointed in the lovely widow.. . , `Widest . ) , is a bad bugbear upon fortimM 1 have known many who have not been op pressed that remain in the shade, but !Alive never known one who emerged with it into prosperity, In my own case it was by no means a family disease, nor had I lived iii any way by which I was likely to contract it. Accordingly, on the following day, 1 caught myself very coolly knocking at the widow's door ; and so entirely had I been occupied in considering the various blessings which would accrue to both of us frorri our onion, that I was half way up stairs before 1 began to think ot an excuse for my intrusion. The drawing-room was vacant, and I was left for a moment to wonder whether I was not actually in some temple of the Loves and Graces. There was not a thing to be seen which did not breathe with tenderness. The ceiling displayed a little heaven of sportive Cupids, the carpet a wilderness of turtle do', es. The pictures were a aeries of the loves ofJupiter, the vases presented nothing but heart s-ease and love-lies bleeding ; the very canary birds were inspired, and bad a nest with two young ones ; and the cat her self looked kindly over the budding beauties of a tortoise-shell kitten. What a place for a sensitive heart like mine ! 1 could not bear to look upon the mirrors which reflect ed my broad shoulders on every side, like so many giants; and would have given the world to appear a little pale and int,resting, although it might h .ve injured my life a dozen years purchase. Nevertheless, I was not daunted, and I looked round, for some, thing to talk about, on the beauty's usual occupations, which funnd were all in a tone with which I had before remarked. Upon the open piano lay "Auld Robin Grey," which had, no doubt, been sung in allusion MEM eftliar'ent, Wi11402, Henry. the Whole dim's° of their, union.: ittedem," onsiesiozi is 'extretfiely.nikt*al 1: ern- sure I ain:;not' at all offendit with -your late hosband noon that score. Hie* an",elderly,. eickly - sort of man. 'My father always told' him 'he' 'Could not lust, but he never ;theught he-would haiekdied so soon after Marrihge. HO had not time—=he, had riot tune, madam, to:make lis,friendehappy -by intro ducing, them, to you." ' I believe, upon the T whole, muss hale be haved remarkably welli for the widow:could not quite make' up her' mind Whether, to not,which, white Tfti consider credit me or the' very slender materials ' l - had to-work Y pon, is saying El, great dell. At last I con trived to make the conversation :glide away I to Auld Robin Grey and the drawing , of Ap ' Olio, ivhioli I pronounced to - be eke( it' r enure. "Permit me, howeier, to suggest, ' that the "syminetry,of the figure would net be d.e.strciyed by a little more of the Hem. les in the shoulders, which would make'his life a much longer purchatici. , A, little more amplitude :in the chest, too, and, a - trifle stronger on the legS, as 'they say at the . In 'aurance office. The widow.looked comically at the recollections Which I brought-to her 'mind ; her rosy lips began to diseloets. their treasures iu a halt smile; and this, in turn, -expandelt in a laiigh like the latigh of Eu phrosyne. 'This was the very thing for me. I was always rather dashed by beauty on the stilts ; but put us upon fair ground, and I never supposed that I could be otherwise than charming. I ran over all the amusing topics df the day, expended a thousand ad mirable jokes, repeated touching passages from a new poem which she had not -read, laughed, sentimentalized, cuddled the kit ' ten, and forgot to go away till - I had sojourn ed full two hours. Ephrosyne quite lint sight of my questionable introduction, and chimed in with a wit as brilliant asher beauty ; nor did - sh - erput - on a - single grave - look - when r volunteered to call the next day and read the remainder of the poem. It is impossible to'conceive how carefully I walked home. My head and heart was full of the widow and the wager, and my life was more precious than the Piga Diamond. I kept my eyes sedulously upon the -pave ment, to be sure that the coakholes' were closed ; - and I -stover once - crossed thy_ street without looking both ways, to calculate the dangers ofbeing run over.' Whea I ar rived, I was presented with a letter ihma my attorney, giving me the choice of an en signcy hi a - regiment which was ordered to the West Indies; ad going as missionary to New Zealand. I wrote to him, id answer, that it was perfectly immaterial to me wheth er I was cut off by the yellow fever or de• voured by cannibals, but that I had busi ness which would prevent me, from availing myself of either alternative for two mouths, at least. =EA NO,. it. The next morning foui.d me again. of the door of Ephrosyne, who gave me her lily hand, and received me wtth a smile of an old acquaintance. Affairs wont on 'pretty much the -saute as they did on the preco. (hug day. The poem was long, her singing exquisite, my anecdote of New Zealand - lc resistible, and wu again forget••ourselves till it wasitecessary, in common politeness, to ask me to dinner. Here her soberatfire, which fur some months had been a piece of mere gratuitious respect, was exchanged for 'a low evenimi-drec,si and my soul, whichwas brimming before,:was its agony to find room for my increasing transpOrts.' Her Spirits were sportive' as butterflies over the - flow. ors of her imaLtivation with a grace that was quite miraculous. She ridiculed the rapidi ty of our acquaintance, eulogized my mod esty_till..it ~was, well ni gh lntrat.to cinder, and every now and then sharpened her wit by a delicate recurrence to Apollo and the should ers of Hercules. The third and the fourth and the fillidiys, with twice as many more, were equally pro ductive of excuses for calling, and reasons for remaining, till at last I took upon me to call and remain without troubling myself about the one or the other. I was received with pro gressive cordiality ; and at last, with a mix ture of timidity which assured me of the an ticipa:ion of a catastrophe which was, as once. to decide the question with the insurance of fice, and determine the course of my travels. One day I found the Peri Bitting rather pen sively to work, and us usual: I took my seat oppm-ite to her, " I have been thinking," said she, that I have been mightily imposed upon." " By whom ?" I inquired. " Ely 'one of whom you have the highest opinion—by yourself " " In what do you mistrust me ?" "Come, now, will it please you to be can did and tell MC honestly that all that exceed ingly intelligible story about your father and the liver complaint, and heaven knows what, —was a mere fabrication." " Will it please you to let me thread that. needle, for I see that you are taking aim at. the wrong end of - it ?" " Nonsense. Will you anwer me ?" " I think I could put the finishing touch to that sprig Dont you coo ?" I continued, jumping up and leaning over her. "It should bo done so—and then so. What stitch do you call that ?" The beauty was not altogether in a mood for joking. I took her hand—it trembled— and so did mine. Will you pardon me ? I whispered, " am a sinner, a counterfeit, a poor, swindling disreputable vogabond—but I lovo you to my soul:" * * * * * * In about a fortnight from this time I Att. dressed the following note to my friend: . Data Sin :—lt will give you groat pleasure to hear that my prospects are mending and that you have Nit your wager. As I Intend settling the insurance on my wife, I Shall, of enures, think you entitled to tbejotk— Should your trilling loss in me oblige you to become an ensign in the West Indies, or a missionary in New Zealand, you may rely upon my Interest there. ANECDOTE OF POPE.--Onc day, as Popo was ono•au o nd in translatine , the "Iliad," be came to a passage which ° neither he Or his assistant could interpret. A Stranger, who stood by, in, his humble garb, very modestly suggested that, as he had some little acqualtanco with Greek, perhaps he could assist them. "Try it, try it 1" said Popo, with the air of a boy who is encouraging a monkey to eat red pepper. "There is an error in the print," said the stranger,' lookin - g - 'at - the text. "Read iiirthere interrogation point the end of the - line, and you haVe die nieo-P -itm ono." , s • ° Pope's assistant at vhoeitepteved upon this hint, and4endered the passage With out difficulty: "' Pope was .° .. be could never endure to b e:-.1414 ,B P4' aDAiiing. Tii to i n i t o the' f ittanger, ho sOrbwillo 01 26 : 'Will Sou please tell we what an tie ' Toga n tor" ^1 1 "Why, sir." said the strtingorsetionutt% the ill-shaped poet, "it is a little`orooked; contemptible thing that asks questr,--k." Tho work dropped upon her knee