s,arrtgil gothltj. Pray What do they Do at the Springs. I= Pray what do they do at the springs, Thu question is easy to ask, But to answer It fully my dear Were rather a serious task. • And yet in a bantering way, As the magpie or mocking bird sings; I'll venture a bit of a song, To tell what they do at the springs. Imprimis, my darling they drink Thu waters so sparkling and clearl Though the flavor le none of the best, Thu odor exceedingly queer, But the field Is mingiod you now With wholesome medicinal things, Bo they drink, and they drink, and they drink, And that's what they do at the springs. Then with appetites keen as a knife, They hasten to breakfast or dine, The latter precisely at three— Thu former from seven till`nine. Ye gods what n rustle and rush, When the eloquent dinner bell rings, So they eat, and they eat, and they eat, And that's what they do at the springs. Thou they stroll In the beautiful walks Or 101 l In the shade of the trees, When many a whisper ia,,heard That never Is heard by the breeze, And hands commingled with hands Bev rdless of conjugal kings o they Mit, and they tl rt, and they flirt, And that's what they du at the tieing', The drawing rooms now tire ablaze And music is shrink I' g away, Terpsichore governs the hour, And fashion was seder so gay. An arm ran nd a tapering wa'st lloW closely and fondly It clings, So they waltz. and they will to, and they waltz, And Chars what they do at the springs. In short as It goes in the world They eat, they drink, and they sleep, They talk, they walk. :Ind they woo, t They sigh, they la ngh, and they weep, They read, they ride. and they dance, . With other unspeal,:ilde things, AO" they pray. and they idly, and they ply, And that's what they do at the springQ. ~a,r cltn.~.~~i. THE YOUNG BARON OF LIE BERACH. A great many years ago—some hun dreds, for aught 1 know—there lived a proud and puissant baron, named Ho dolph von Liel,erach, in whom a great many of the virtues, and all the vices, of his race seemed combined. His lifi! was passed in his castle, in a sort of semi-bar barous retirement, except when foreign wars called gun abroad ; and the sudden change from the' bustle of the field then made him sombre and gloomy fur many weeks at ti time. In his youth he had spent much time abroad, and had for two years served in the armies of the Greek emperor, at. Constantinople, in whose ser vice he haii'won muds honor, but little reward. While in the capital of the Eastern empire he had seen and loved the fair daughter of a certain Greek noble at tached to the court, and when he proffer ed her his hand, her father and the em peror compelled her to accept it, because they feared to offend the rude Frank war rior, thoteds she loved him not. But, alas, what a change for her ! About a mile from the city, a luxurious villa stood on a rising ground overlooking the Bosphorus. Spacious gardens stretch ed from the house to the shore, perfumed by We surrounding orange groves, and shaded by the citron and olive trees which overhung the calm water, as if longing to kiss it. A fountain played in the centre, and arbors at every' corner invited to ease and retirement, while the nightingale sang all day Icing in the branches overhead The rarest plants and flowers of Europe and of Asia grew side by side, and in every sight and sound there were music: and beauty. The interior of the house Was in keeping with the garden. Gorge ous tapestry—couches radiant with gild ing, and covered with the richest silks which Venetian enterprise brought front the mysterious East,—busts of the an cient philosophers of Greece, and of the early martyrs of Christianity—piles of manuscripts richly illuminated, and writ ten by cunning hands—small marble foun tains to cool the but winds front the desert —verandahs in which the inmates might sit at eventide to inhale the refreshing breezes from the wAtee; and hear the barking of the dogs, the laughter of chit drenband the song of lovers from the far ther shore , —met the eye on every side. Here the youth of Agatha Kale was pass ed. Site was the only child of her fath er, and he was a widower. She had been carefully educated by an old priest, who had retained a large leaven of the ancient philosophy mingled with the doctrines of the Christian religion. Plato and Pyth agoras had shared his attention with Paul and the early fathers. He had not fallen into any of the extravagancies or corrup tions which time and foreign infloeuce had mixed up in the bosom of the church. Be had too much of t!qt fine sentiment of the beautiful to let one gross thought pass between him and the objects of his love and adoration ; but he had in hint too much of the pride of philosophy to be come d missionary or a martyr He was a priest because it gave him opportunities of indulging his love of literary research,' without coating in contact with any of the common cares and passions of life; but he had little of the ardor of devotion which reigned_ amongst the common pers. pie. fie was its-fact born out of his time, and spent'many an hour in bitter regrets that it had not Men to his lot to mingle in the •solemn groups who a thousand years befbre had sauntered in abstraction amidst the groves of the Academy. Ile undertook the task of Agatha's education with joy; it pile him an opportunity- of moulding. .a human being after his own metal image—to rcprodnee his own thoughts, and aspirations, and regrets in almind.to-which everything was new.- Teaching was not to him the weary drud gery which so many now regard it, but an art .Which Socrates had ennobled.— Under_lis tuition Agatha grew up - all he could, wish her, refined, speculative, fond of reading, and prone to doubt, but hold, ing all that she-embraced with tenacity, and defending irWith Subtlety. She grew up a model' of Greek beauty—that beauty which had lent inspiration to the .chisel of Ptiziteles i . and the pencil of Apelles, a thou Sand years before, when Greece was lir its prime, and which' then,,ind eyer singe, has been continually reprodu ced; as if it clutrg tolho ' "SOU; when "Hi mg Greece" is no more. The high arch- VOL. 63. A. K. RFIEEM, Editor & Proprietor ed head, the lofty forehead, the straight nose,•the thin delicate lips, the energy.in the lines of the mouth, the smouldering fire in the soft light of the dark eye, bridged over by brows black as ebony, the swan-like throat intersected by veins " like streams through fields of snow," the graceful, wavy outline of the figure, which 114 d never known an hour of con straint, and the soft, white roundness of the, arms, were ail Greek. The priest Demetrius took care the intellect should be Greek too. Every evening, from the time when she reached her fifteenth year until her marriage, the old man tottered into the garden two or three hours before sunset; and, sitting in the arbor, with a volume of the Republic, or the Phrcdo open before them, they talked over the anticipated Christianity of Socrates, the sweet souled piety of Cimon, the patriot ism of Epaminondas, and examined the fabrics of speculation which had in later years been built upon the Gospel, until the sun 'sank into the blue waves of the .Egean, and with his last rays turned the waters of the llellesPont into gold. Da ring the last year they were together, their conversations assumed unconscious ly a tone of• sadness. Hire calatnitie's were han g ing over them. The Turks had conic down from their mountains, fiery and fanatical, and threatened to beleaguer the imperial city, and extirpate the Chris tian faith. Strange Illinois were abroad. The emperor held councils by night, and from these Agatha's father returned mix ions and thoughtful. What if their dreams and happiness should end under the scimitar of the barbarian, their faith in their own doctrines be rudely tested by torture and violence, and their names added to the long list of martyrs ;111(1 eon fe‘sDrs ! From this time their conversa tions,, as well as their thom(hts, turned more nrion themselves—upon the disci• Pline of their own In arts—more upon their feelings and less upon opinions and doctrines. They were often sad and tr;irful, but oftener far, hopeful and cour ageous. .flie old prie-t had not lived so long a life, with great thoughts and great examples constantly before him, without i being able to rise to the level•of the heav iest misfortune or calamity ; and his pre cepts availed so well, that at length, amidst the wars, rumors of wars, rears, ;ind tnis givings which agitated all hearts in the great city, the only spot where calmness reigned was the summer-house of the senator's garden. Thus matters stood, when the sorrow ful morning arrived on which she was arrayed in bridal dress, and stood before the altar to he united for life to the Latin knight. Demetrius married them. His strowy -- beard — se me to - quiver air Iris chest, and his voice faltered as he pro nounced the church's blessing on their heads. II is farewell was calm and solemn On that evehing the bride and 'bride. groom were rowed on board the galley in the harbor, and Agatha, standing on the deck, saw the palaces and spires of Con- ALoitinople, and the vine-clad hills above it, slowly fade from her view forever. When the honeymoon was over, her life in her husband'strastle baiatne weary enough. lie was not a man after her heart; their tastes were not congenial.— The summer brought pleasant walks in the woods, and rambles along the banks of the neighboring stream, but neither summer ncr winter brought bark the sunny skies and loved friends amongst whom her youth had been passed. They had one son, born the second year after their marriage ; and when he was but three years old his {tither died suddenly. Time wore on. Agatha was becoming an old woman, and Hugo her son a young Marl. Ile had reached his nineteenth year; was skilled in martial exercises of the Germans, and well taught in all the lore of the Greeks, generous to a fault, ardent in his love as in his hate, fiery and proud. She died before he had at tained his majority. When she was on her death-bed she called him to her side, and gave him a box, containing a small phial, informing him that it was the gifi. of a certain Jewish rabbi, whom she had once succoured when pursued by a mob, and who, 611 giving it, had told her that if the liquid it contained were drunk by her, or those nearest and dearest to her, when in their greatest earthly need or peril, a way of deliverande would ' be speedily pointed out to them. With a romantic trust in the marvellous which was quite in unison with the enthusiam of her character, she had preserved it carefully, and never having been placed in such a position herself as in her opin ion to call for its use, she bequeathed it as a legacy to him whom she most loved, and in whose path most snares and dan gers were likely to lie. In some petty wars which followed he was driven from his ancestral domains, and placed under the ban of the empire for taking part with the burghers of an adjacent town - arr dust the nobles. For several days lie hound shelter in the cottage of one of his vassals; but at last, fearing to involve his faithful follower in-,danger, ho left his retreat, and sallied forth to find aid and refuge where lie could the wide world over. After undergoing various toils and 114 X• ieties and passing through sundry' hair. breadth escapes," ho arrived in Paris; and fur awhile, with characteristic thought lessness, abandoned-himself to all the dis sipations of that metropolis, which was then, as now, the gayest and most frivo lous on earth But his funds were--soon exhausted. Those who at first smiled upon' him, in deference to his birth and his romantic career, began to look on him coldly, or avoid him, and he' was at last driven to cast about for sonic couese, of life that would'aticird him the means .of subsistence. -ll was ono evening mus ing mournfully in his lodgings upon' his ~~~ position and prospects, when he bethought e hirn of the phial, and coining to the con clasion that he could never be in greater straits than he was then, he drank of its contents. Ile instantly fell into a deep sleep—a sleep as deep as death—and saw a vision. Ile was walking, or dreamed ho was walking, alon , b a broad avenue bounded on each side by lawns of iirpass ing verdure. The gntirled oaks, green with the mess.of eenturrie, threw their broad braaches across the path, and streak ed it with shadow. A refreshing breeze sighed .gently through the leaves, and played amongst his hair, and at a little distance a brook ran parallel with his course, and, though bidden from his view, murmured gently and musically in his ear. In the trees overhead birds of the rarest plumage sang in strains of more than earthly melody, without a single pause, and it seemed - to his enraptured senses as if there was hope and courage in every note. A greateful perfume seem ed to prevade the atmosphere.—And far away in the long vista a bright lake ap peared 'dancing in the sunshine, with water-fowl of snowy whiteness gliding gently and graceful aver itszurface. Ile was enchanted. His blood coursed swift ly through his veins; his heart throbbed with rapturous excitement. It seemed as if he could never grow tired of wan dering here. Ile walked on thus the greater part of a day, but to his astonisnment he at last began to perceive that he was making no progress. The lake seeneted still as tar away as ever, the same trees grew by his side, the same brook murmured in his ear, and the same birds sang ()vet:head. Little by little he found all those features of the scenery which had at first given him so much pleasure begin to pall upon his senses. The perfunie• seemed to sicken and enervate him ; the voice of the birds sounded heavy and dull. Ile longed, wearily for a mountain side, with a clear prospect, a refreshing. breeze, and where at least he would Lind the fruits of his Libor in making colon progress uu his way, and weetinig some eliluge or scene. Pondering over th'e time he had lost, an d the strange position in. which he found himself, lie sat down upon a nos-y stone by the way-side. Absorbed in reverie, a vuire whispered in his oar, clear as a trumpet, but he knew not from whence it came. The lone seemed to be his own but he had nut opened his lips. In en ergetic accents but mournfully, reprov ingly, and persmolingly, it seemed to say : Thou art, treading, in a perilow4 path. Delights arc on either side r C thee, Ina d:in A et; and destruction are ever in frnt. -Turn boldly •to the rig,ht, , ,--paNs through the wood, follow the road that leads up yon hill, and at the tup thou shalt find rest and peace." Rising in obedience to a sudden im pulse, he pushed boldly fm ward in the oirection which had been indicated to him. lie soon found himself in the highway. Great numbers of men were travelling along the same road. Some were strong, vigorou4, and hardy—a Bush of hope, courage. and ardor in their cheeks and their eyes ever looking upwards Others seemed faint and weary, as if they were unused to the work, and tottering feebly seemed ever prone to lie dawn and rest, and think 110 more of aseendin: , .— And, alas ! at, every step were the pro,-, trate ftirins of those who had fallen and perished with the smile of expectation on their lips, and manly vigor in every nob. Some appeared to have sunk only after a long struggle and had left heavy footprints in the dust ; and their features - had scarcely yet lost the scowl of the combat, and settled into the dread com posure of everlasting "rest. But others seemed to have fallen almost without an effort,—terrible wracks, like These last'formed by fir the greater number. Hugo prayed inwardly to be preserved from such a fate, and now that lie travelled in company, and that the oyes of ninny were upon •liitn, he deter mined to strike them by the fiery impet uosity of,his onward march. But the as cent was steep and rouged, the sun shone fiercely upon his head, and upon turning round to look 14 sympathy lie saw no look of pity for his faltering steps, and received no offer of aid. All were intent upon themselves. Wearied and disheart ened, he at last sat dAn by the wayside, and, leaning his head upon his hand, wept bitterly. While in this predicament; those with whom he started upon his journey passed on, leaving him behind -alone Ile aban doned himself to despair ; a black curtain seemed to hang betweert him Lindthe fu• tore, shutting out all hope of rest and peace. He raised his head, half-mechan ically, and glanced vacantly along. the road he had traversed. A figure ap peared in the distance approaching rap idly ; a little nearer, and 'Hugo's atten tion was rivotted upon it. It was a man in the prime or life, tall and athletic in appearance, and bearing in his face every niatk of great internal strength. A broad and open — fOrehead, on which thought had ploughed some furrows, was `half covered by• luxuriant hair, which waved carelessly in the fitful breeze that now anti then blew up the valley; There_ was fire in his dark eyes, subdued by many a year of meditation and watchingl in "the thin nostrils and firmljr•set mouth there were traces 'of energy which had gathered fresh strength with every relkof time, and now seemed to hurl defianetriit the world and .at fortune. llis figure was such 'as the ,sculptor would love to copy. TherM were united. all that collec tion of exceildneies in each part ~whieh are said never, to have been seen together 'save in the statues of ,the anciont artist "Ships that have gone down at Fen, When heaven OILS all trannollity." *(1i$111r: CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1863. —the sinewy limbs, the broad shoulders and expansive chest, that seemed able to fling off the heaviest load of grief that ever fell on mortal man, with one impet, uous heave. There was no sign of tering in that rapid stride and firm tread which seemed to claim the ground they measured for their own, and nu backward shrinking in the lofty glances that was ever fixed on the bill top, save when he looked hastily and half carelessly aside, as if to measure his progress. Onward and upward he came, and at last stood for a moment silent and thoughtful be fore Hugo. At length he passed over, and. laid his hand on his shoulder: "Young tnan, thou art wearied and worn," said he; '•but knowest thou not that delay is death ? He who lingers here, goes backward." "Leave me, I pray thee," said lingo, "and continue thy wa), friend. I can go no fur ther." "Nay, I will not leave thee; I have been as thou art, and have overcome toy weak ness; I have gained all my present strength 'from striving, and now find it holy and joy o is to be strong; by persevering here, I have. gained the power to pe.severe farther; by daring I have found my hopes fulfilled. Come on with me ; I will teach thee to dons 1 have -done, and then thou-shah become such as I am. (in the swum tof yonder hill, all the brave, and wise , and g ood, who have, since the work' began', battle d for truth and justice and humanity, and died for them, await our coming. It needs no brilliant ex ploit to qualify thee for admission to com mune wnh them. 'rimy heed not thine a lolities, but thy courage, dune aspirations, and thine acts. All that thou doest r do well: march right onward, ittol let not this: dread weariness any longer detain thee. Shed no more tears on the barren wayside: keep them for the sorrows and weaknesses of others, and they shall make the ground beneath thy lee( blossom as the rose. A rb.e, and let us go; ir hen thou are weary let thy i out-age a vail thee. ll' thou bast none, thou art not worthy of' the goal to which Own_ altirest.' Anus lingo awoke, anti beltuld it was a dreamt. Fifty years afterwards all Ohl malt died in Paris, a priest of great reputation. The poor wept in croivds out-Cele the door way, and followed him sorrownig. to his grave. The learned said a star was gone Iroin the constellation 'of genius and intellect, and even the lelormers, alio declaimed against the It nraiii.t clergy, extolled his virtues, his piety, faith, hope, and charity, and said, "Would that all wme like him!" •, Newspaper Patronage This thing called newspaper patronage is a embus thing. It id cutop,tso.d ul as many colors as Ow rainbow, and 18 as changoble as a clounolPllll. (,)iii2 man subscribes for a newspaper and Fats itir it in advance, he, gnes home and reads it Guth Ilie pimp! sa,t i kt,tiffii that .t k lie 11,11(1A In lan adv,riis,ment. asks the price anti pays, furit. This is news paper pattunage. Another man says please put toy name on your list ol subscribers ; and he goes La with out as much as having said pay once. Tittle passes your patience is exhausted, and per haps he papa, and perhaps not. Another man has b•am a subscriber along time. Ile becomes tired - oh you and %Valli eliange. Thinks he wants a city paper. Tlll5 the postmaster to discontinue, and one I his papers is returned marked "refused." Pcying up for it is among the lust of thoughts ; besides he wants his money to to sencLto a city publisher. Alter a time you look over his account and see a bill "balance-due," But does he pay for it cheerful and freely? We leave him to answer. too, is new:paper patronage. Another imiri Nees [mar you—never took your paper —II is too, small—don't like the editor—don't like the polities—too \\*biggish, or too teimetlibig else—yet goes regularly to his neighbor and reads his by it good li re— finds built with its contents, disputes its pcsi- Lions, mid ipiarr_tls with its Vito,: Occasion ally sees nii article lie likes—gives halt dime or begs a number. This 100, is newspaper• int truflae. A no' lier I.ports a fine horse or perhaps a pair u: always seen with whip in hand or spur on foot—single inanno use Igor him to take a newspaper—knows enough Finally he concludes to get married—does so—Sends a itotice of the fact wi.h a ''please send me hall dozedlMpies.' This done does he ever pay for notice or papers 7 No, But surely you don't charge for such things." 'lhit4, to-, is newspaper patronage. Another man (bless you, it dues us good to see such a wan) conies and says the year for which I paid is about to expire, and I want to pay- for another. Ile does, and re tires. Reader I isn't newspaper patronage a cu rious thing? Aud in that v:reat day when hon est men get the reward due to their honesty, which, say you, of tilos- enumerated above, will olua n that reward ? Now it will be seen that, while certain kinds of patronage are the very lile and 'exist-nee' of rt-nswsp per, there are certain other kinds that will kill a paper stone dead. 'FROM GAY TO GRAVE, FROM LIVELY TO SEVERE:I—Some malicious wretch thus paro dies one of Shakspere's grandest efforts— " All the world's a stage," etc.: - A ll ahe world's a lie— A mighty, jolly, and enormous bouncer ; And all the-int:it and womon-merely liars. They have their "rbite lies," and their nig ger whoppers," And one man in a day tells many crams. According to his notion. There's the school boy, Who s iys he's sick when ho has played old hookey, Then there's the lover, sighing.like tke 'bob lows. • • Then comes the soldier, who kills men and eata 'em As he would larks.. And then the fashiCilna _ hie lady, _ ' • Reading the, papers in her rocking chitir. Then comes the broker, shaving nowt; and charging Like a mad trooper. Then the grocery-man, Who lives by selling roasted corn colli4, Sand for sugar, slafesTor coril, and can4heno For cognac brandy'. Then the brigadier, Who; . knowing nothing of thwart' orwar, Leads men to slaughter, just Co give,bim prito- • ties. To these succeeds the oyster.cellai; critic, Who swears Miss bin - Thins sings like 15Ia- dame Grisi, . All?oni, Jenny Lind, and .(inerabella-- 7 The whole four nightingales rolled up in one; Rut aeon thi lie'S found out, and he is left' *Sans • wines sans oysters kids and opera tickets. 1 TERMS :--$1,50 in Advance, or $2 within the year BATTLE CRY OP FREEDOI+4I. Yes, we'll rally round the nag, boys, we'll roily once again, Shouting the brittle cry of freedom, Woin - 11 Tally from the hill side we'll gather from Ihe plain, Shouting the battle cry of freedom CHORUR. The Union forever, hurrah boys, hurrah I Down with the traitor, up with the star; Whiff! we rally round the flag. boys, rally once again Shou Aug the battle cry of freedom. We are springing to the call of One Hundred Thous and more, Shouting the battle cry of freedom, And we'll fill the vacant ranks of our brothers gone befort, Shouting the battle cry of freedom. CHORCS. —The Union forever, etc. We will welcome to our numbers the loyal, true and brave,. Shouting the battle cry of freedom, And al the' he may be poor he shall never be a slave, Shouting the battle cry of freedom. Cuonua.—The Union forever, etc. • So we're springing to the call from the East and from the West, Shouting the battle cry of freedom, And we'll hurl the rebel crew from the laud we love the best, Shouting the battle cry of freedom. Oloat7a.=ThOlitdon forever. A Most Graphic Account of the Great Battle [Correspondence of the New York World] HEADQUARTERS ARMY OF POTOMAC, July 3-71 I'. M. The sun of Austerlitz is flat more memorable than that which is just fling ing its dying rays Lver the field o f this the third day of successful battle. The victory won by General Meade is now s o decisive that no one in this army pretends to question the rout and demoralization of th 6 Rebel army under General Lee.— he battles on Wednesday and yesterday were sufficiently terrible, but in that which has raged to-dhy the lighting .Thne, not only by our troops, but by those of Lee's army, will rank ii) heroism, in persever ance, and in savage energy with that of W a t Tlin position of lice at the close of last, evening was such that he was forced to= day to reduce all his energies into one grand desperate and centralized attempt to break through our army. iA divisions were so much cut up as to render a pitched battle from wing to wing one of awful hazard. The dilemma was a terrible one, and that the Rebel commander fully appreciated all its risks is evinced by the desperation of his on set to-day. Friday mourning found our army reinforced The reserves or the Siktlf Corps General Sedgwick, and the Twelfth, Gen. Slocum, had arrived and taken up strong positions. At the last hour our troops were ranged in line along the Eintneasburg turnpike and the Taney!: town road. The engagement began by an assault of our troops upon some rifle pits on the extreme right, which were left in the possession of the enemy last '1 heir fire was returned by the Rebels, and the fighting immediately be came general. Until nearly noon the battle raged without intermission, but with no fuss to us, when we finally obtained possession of the rifle-pits—the Rebel force which . had previously held them retreating The firing then slackened, but at one o'- clock was renewed at different points along the line with a fierceness premoni tory of the terrific engagement that en sued. Several charges were made by the Rebels and feints, their troops falling back after the first rush in every part of the field, except•that held by their forces under Gen. Ewell, who was seen to con centrate the infantry and artillery togeth er, and who soon opened a murderous fire of cannon on our left centre. Then the engagement began in earnest. The firing became a continuous roar;' battery after battery was discharged with a swiftness amazing; yell on yell from the Rebels succeeded each gust of shot and shell, untill the valley—overhung with smoke, from whence those horrible sounds issued seemed alive with demons. It ap peared at times as though not a foot of air was free•from the hail of missiles that tore over and through our ranks, thinned but not shaken. Our men stood the shock with a courage sublime—an endurance so wonderful! as to ' dim even the heroic record of the baud that fell upon the acre of Tourney. 'l'hec rpsag .inst which this deadly lire was mainly directed was the Second, the position being command ed by Gen. Hayes. The .artillery fire continued without intermission for three hors, when sud denly having been formed under cover of their own guns, the helm! troops were hurled against our lines by their officers in masses the very tread of whose feet shook the declivity up which ,' ,they came with cries that might have caused less dauntless troops than those who awaited the onsent to break with terror. Not a 'man in, the Federal ranks flinched from his position. Not an eye turned to the right or left in search of security. Not a hand trembled as the long array of our hei'oes grasped their muske4 at a charge, and waited the order to fire. On and up came the enemy, hooting, crowding, showing-their-very—teeth in the venom- Of their rage until within thirty yar - da - Of our cannon. , - - As the turbulent mass of gray uniform, of flashing bayonets and gleamino• b eyes,- lifted itself in alust leap barWardahnost to the very mouths of our guns, a volley of sbut r -sliell„shrapnel and bulletit went crashing:, tfirough . it, it as a _scythe. Its overwhelming'onward, rush was' In the next instant turned to the hesitating leap forward 'of a few soldiers more: dare devil' than the rest, the Wild bounding upijards of more than a ..few mortally wounded:hobroes, and thn succeeding haeltward surge of the disjointed remain. Ider, whiiih culminated in a scamper down the slope that was in some instances ro tarded by the pursuing bullets of our men. The carnage of this assault among the Rebels was so fearful that even Federal' soldiers who rested on their arms triumph ant, after the foe had retreated beyond their fire, as they cast their eyes down ward upon the panorama of deaths and wounds illuminated by the sun that shown upon the slope before them, were seen to shudder and turn sickening a way.r- -l rv, Then the Third and Fifth Corps joined in the fight. As the Rebels rallied for an instant and attempted to make a stand, they were met by such combined volleys as threatened to reduce their columns to fragments. The panic, which ensued is unparalelled in any battle in which the Army of the Potomac has ever been en gaged. .The enemy quailed like ewes before a tempest. Their main line again receded, but numbers palsied by the homir and tumult, fell upon their knees, upon their breasts, upon their faces, shrieking and lifting up clasped hands in token of sur render and appeal for mercy. General Dick Garnett's brigade surrendered al most entire, but Garnett himself, by the aid of two of his men succeeded, though wounded, in making his escape. Long street, who led the reinforcements which enattled the Rebels to make their second bri?f stand, was wounded. Tho musket ry' firing slowly ceased, and the discharge orartillery continued fur a brief period, but even these reverberations filially died away. • General Meade was not deceived in anticipating another onslaught. Lee's columns were collected and reformed with magical haste. Within an hour what seemed to be his whole force was again amassed directly in our front, where the contest once wore opened. The assault this titne was made with a fury even surpassing that of the first. it would seem as if the entire Reberariny bad re solved itself into a gigantic Forlorn hope, and bore in its collective bosom the etin sciousness that the effort now made was the last and the only,one that could be made toward retrieving the fortunes of that army, "or preventing the inevitable disgrace which hovered over it. It. is said by Rebel prisoners taken in the latter part of the engagement that this charge was led by Zee in person.— The prestige of his name and presence could certainly not have added to its power or enthusia.un. Yet the cool and gallant phalanx which, secure in its position and vonfident in its loader, wait ed with a silence only bini - en by the oc casional roar of artillery the approach of the foe, and viewed it as calmly and met it as unfalteringly as before. Back, as easily as a girl hurls the shuttlecoc::, did the soldiers of our gallant army hurl into chaotic retreat the hosts that came on and on, over the stones and ditohes, over the bodies of fallen comrades, piling its deal in heaps and nicking the soil o ver w hieh it trod ghastly and alive with strug gling wounded. The lirin array of Union soldiers which, previously remaining stationary, - now bent furward'to a charge, and became a pursu ing Nemesis to the hordes that in great numbers went reeling westward through the streets of Gettysburg, and beyond, as the brave troops of Reynolds' corps went through the eastward on the previous day bur. one. The victory was secure. It was a victory won not without sad dening losses -sadder in their compara tive extent, perhaps, than those which have chilled the nation's heart so often before to day. Of our actual disasters in killed and wounded it is now impossible to make a just estimate. The same is true orthe-Rebels, though it is positively known from the appearance of the field, from the, acknowledgment of Rebel pris oners themselves, that it is far greater than our own. The number of prisoners taken by us was between 10,000, and 12,000. The Rebel Gen. Arnold was killed. Among our wounded were Generals Gibbon and Webb, slightly, Generals Cauldwell, Han cock, Doubleday, seriously, and many minor officers. The enemy's list of dis abled is known to include an equal num ber of officers of high rank. As 1 write our cavalry are out on the flanks of the retreating foe, harassing him with great success A reconnoissance has this in stant returned from the front to ascer tain the position of Lee's army which is believed to have begun preparations for its final retreat. • NOT A TRUE FRIEND Mr. Haley moved into a small village not long ago. lie is a gentleman of pre possessing appearance / ofraro intelligence as the slight intercourse ho has already had with the people of the village has shown. Ho was, on his arrival a stran ger to all in the village except one—Mr. Petkio. This ghtleinan and Mr. Haley had been schoolmates, as, he said, and a firm friendship had existed between them since-their school .days. -.Though had boon separated; acorespondenoo - lied . been kept up - betweenthen ' anti the?' had occasionally met. Mr. Haley hat decided now to settle in anus it was Mr. Pei kin's• place of residence', for the pleasure ho thought_ a renewal of their former,frondship Wthild'affard. . Some weeks . after. -Mr. Haley had .be come settled„Nr. Petkin happened in one.ovening,- Where several of the village people were colleeted -at a . Aacighlior's/ the emirs° of conversation; some ,one mentioned Mr. Haley, - :the new '.comer.; for, in a little village , -everybody knows everybody and sail about iierybodrii bug ness, and—soriletimeivtt little litoie;— . Some One expressed warm commendation of him as to his pleasing manner's and in telligence, and thought they were very fortunate in hating 'gained such a neigh bor. Some of the young ladies praised his fine looks, and thought he would be such and acquisition to picnics and sleigh rides. Mr. Petkin assented to all these praises; said he was a man of remarkable intelli gence, a man of pleasing manners—whets he chose to be ! " He is a friend of yours—an intimate one, I believe," some one said addressing Mr. Pitkin. NO. 2S. " Oh yes," he assented, "we have been like brothers from boyhood. I know him well. lie is a fine man, an estimable man, an agreeable man, bt;t for one thing —though I have no trouble with him my. , self on thatescore—l know how to man age him. You can never feel any free. dom in conversation with him on account of one infirmity." " What is it ?" from two or three young ladies, in surprise and curiosity. ".no tell I" from one or two older ones, ' which expression was not so much an entreaty to relate as it might seem, taken literally, but an exclamation of astonish. , ment. " Well," said Mr. Pitkin, with appar , ent reluctance, "the infirmity to which I allude is one of temper. He is so irasci• ble, so much under the influence of his temper, that intercourse with him rather a risky piece of business; at least ) with those with whom he is familiar.—• You have to handle him as carefully as you would loaded fire-arms—be as eau. tious of causes of offence as you would of sparks in a powder magazine, for he will some times fire up unexpectedly, upon the slightest opposition. "Du fell the old ladies ejaculated again ; sonic of the younger.ones—"What a pity wouldn't have thought it." . "fis true, 'tis pity—pity 'tis true," sighed Mr. Pctkin—"Anger is madness with my friend, for under its influence he will say and do things which he would not in a sober state of mind, and for which he is sorry when the fit is off, no ble and generous man that he is at heart; but he has estrangedlis best friends by this infirmity, which groW.4 out of a strong love of approbation. He cannot bear the slightest shade of disapproval; in a word,. vanity is at the bottom of the matter—a very harmless thing, generally, except when it becomes so inordinate, as in his ease." " Mr. Petkin gays he is a true friend of flaky," said Jane Ashly, after he had gone : —".l must say, his ideas of friend ship lid! far helow my standard." " Yours," said her cousin, James Allece y "is no doubt drawn from sonic die-away novel, where a friend wants to run into all sous of unnecessary scrapes, and per haps strangle himself to prove the undy ing fervor of his friendship." 'No, my notions of friendship aro. founded upon common principles of jus tice and the golden rule—' do to others,' &c." Let us try them by these. Yitu admit that a friend should hall , e some care . for the happiness, success in life, and reputation of hint for whom he professes friendship. If he does not further them in these, he should at least throw no ob stacles in the way of his attaining them. This best friend let his neighbors into the Becrut that Mr. Haley is a-very passion ate man ; that he had, by not being able to rest rain his passions, estranged his best friends. This was news to them, and lowered him in their estimation. Why not have waited and let them find it out? It would have seemed much more like true friendship. lle also gave them a hint where to look for foibles and weaknesses, that might possibly have escaped observation for a lung time; perhaps the✓ might never have been discovered. A friend should conceal the weakness of a friend, or at least not expose them. What would you think of a friend who should tell a burglar where to find an guarded door or window in a friend's house which he might enter, and take his purse? (I wont repeat the quotation Who steals my purse steals trash") yet probably had Mr. Haley been consulted in the matter, and could he have had his choice, he would much have preferred - that this very questionable friend of his should have told a thief' where to find his purse, rather than that he should instruct strangers where to look for his foibles. having it blazoned abroad that he is a passionate man, will make people treat him with less forbearance, instead of mpre, as might seem likely. There is some thing irritating, too, to a passionate per son, in the consciousness people betray of knowing it. It makes it more difficult for him to preserve his equanimity. Who knows, but, coining here among strangers, where no one know his weaknesses and this particular infirmity, he might have eradicated them ? It would have been much easier to do so, than in a place where be had always manifested them. It is not only true, that if people could sometimes hear what their best friends say of them behind their backs, they would regard them as their worst ene mies, but that they often in reality be come so by want of thought with regard to this matter. They, do not intend in jury, but do not look upon this matter in its true light, and calculate rightly the amount of injury they may inflict. AN ENEMY'S COIIIITESY.—When the Cruse•. ders under King Richard, of England, de• feated the Saracens, the Sultan seeing his troops fly, asked what was the number of the Christians who were making all this'slaugh ter ? He was; told that it was only king and and his men, and that they , weren't afoot.', " laid the Sultan, "God forbid that such a noble fellow as King Richard should march on foot, "and sent him a noble char ger....'_ ~ Te mrssender took it, — and — said , • the Saltan sends you thts - Chargeri that you may not-be on foot."- , 'INC king was as .cunning as, his enemy,: and ordered one of his squires to mount the.. 'horse in order to try - him. The squire Ober.' ed i but -the:animal was -fiery, - and he , -could not hold him" in ; be set off at fed speed4o the Sultan's payilion., The Sultan exported, , lie had got King-Riehard ;• end was not a :little mortified to diSeeiierhia . • -11Ar"John,"i3aid a father •to bis sonison. the day he wao twepty-ouo, "you, h4v,e'zget fool for your, ulaat,er noty . .","Yeg,", oald r dahr ; "tind have had these ten .wtyleare."-. ' • • • • •, "ambition tq wtity ionietin# 4. 1 6 : °vervain es even a - youth's filinl•affectiiiiii:l:l M