Acireta NOVitrg. IN WAR TIME BY JOHN G. WHITTIER [Road before the Alumni of the Friendif Yearly Meeting School, at the annual meeting at Newport, It. 1., 15th 6th um., 1863.1 Once more dear friends, you meet beneath A clouded sky; Not yet the sword has found its sheath; And, on the sweet spring airs the breath Of war floats by. Yet trouble springs not from the ground, Nor pain from chance; Th' Eternal order circles round, And, warn, and storm find mete and bound In Providence. Bull long our feet the lb,wery ways Of pear., have trod, Content with erred and garb and praise A harder path In 0.11 her days Led up to th.l. Too cheaply truths, once purchased doer, Aro made our own ; Too long the world her smiled to hear Our boast of full own in thu oar By others sown. To see us stir the martyr fires Of long a2;0: And wrap our sntistied desires In the signed mantles that our sires Have dropped below. But noa• tills cross our worthies Lore On us is laid. Profession's quiet sleep is o'er, And in the scale f truth 011 Co more Our tintli is weighed. The cry of Icnoren t blood nt last Is calling down An answer in the whirlwind Thu thunder and the sh tdow cast From Ilea cuss's l,srk frown. The lend is rod willjoirdi,nts. IVho St3nds 'or( II ? flare wu beell Id, WO a: we ICTIOSV, To God aud to our ITrottiot , I rue, To fleavon and Cal How (hint tbrouell clic] col" merchandise Itnd uuttstt ut gain. Jilts seened to u, the € lilt ire.' cries How far ci‘ray the t rare riglis thisouis /It ham : This (Ily the roalo , l'o each and all , \Vo hear 111111thi nines Thu suainhols the Ipt Ii wog, Thu 1,..1g10's Our path is war net draws Round u: in v While, titithiiii the llLit), 0:111,, We keep our fealty to S Through palii•ut pain. Thu leveled gee, the battle 1.: mid We may n t t tio• hot, calmly loyal, %% cnil stand And Snlit•r e,rr clttf• - ttirrq•htflti Fur Why ask for where iA ',tin 7 :quill we :11,11,. Ho left to ad.l Mir v-tint t.) ;:Jinn over An - m.14,1,1,i 4 p The tromp hlowin 7 To Rlliier IV l•ii iS Well serve ; : , :aro ill OM' Lord Tho rigid li o tI tw shall ( . 111,1. To spare uc ; 1,111 OUr 1100ki• ,il.ll I ,01 . 0 i, 0 Its sanaillg cwr I. And light k nuin,,hl,l N‘Pll the Ami j•ly .1 hlll n 4. Divine , t 1 . 1111/1.1 . 1,:1ir .11 , 1111110, Through thorn, uI ud,utcut wct cie , LluLnl In ow ,et Thrinke f“r Our privil,ze f liles.:, By e'er,' mid deed. The iiyid9ic In h,r kt•,) Ili%treqq, The childless :fed the fatherh,s, Tim hearts that blend. For fields of duty, opettint: uu ide s %Viler° nil our rowels Are tasked the en.g . ur to guide Cf mitliuuu in a path unit ; Tue SL&VE It"; : Ours by traditions do:1r and oh', Whirh inak., the ro, Our wards to elirrrdi and uphold, And east thoir irre.loth tits mould Ut Christian gr.irr. And we may (road the sirlc-bed floors Where strong 01011 10 00, And, down the groaninz corridors, Pour freely from our liberal stores Thu oil and wine. Who murmurs that in these durk day.; His lot is ra,t God's hand within iho Rh alo.c lays The stout's whereon llk g rtes of praise Shall rise at I.lst. Turn and o'crturn ; 0 nuts! etched Hand ! Nor stint. nor et IV ; The years have never il,meal their sand On mortal issues vast awl giant Already,s on One sale ground Of M 111 1 .5 do-A, In freod ions pi. turn' found, With all its dusky hands unbound Upraised in pra) Oh, small shall Fm•m all nar ri fie° And pnin and loac, When Ood shall nipo the Ireepinc eyes For suffering give the victor's prize, Thu clown for cross! ut BURNING DOWN A PIATE. * * " Steer due north !'?" said he, still like one whose mind was elsewhere While the ship Foe Coming about he gave minute orders to the mates and the gunner, to insure co operation in the first part of a delicate end dangerous manoeuvre he had resolved to try. The wind was west-northwest he was standing north ; one pirate lay on his lee beam stopping a leak but ween wind and water, and hacking the deck clear of his broken masts and yards,— The other, fresh an.: thirstim , for the eager prey, came up from the northeast, to weather on him and hang on his quar ter, pirate faThion. When they were distant about a ca ble's length, the freshpirate, ship's change of tactics, changed his own put his helm up a little, and gave the to,. ship a broadsiile—well lint „t I. destructive, the guns being loaded w ith ball. Dodd, instead of replying, as was ex• peeled, took advantage of the smoke and put his ship before the wind. `"By this unexpected stroke the vessels engaged ran swiftly at right anglcs toward one point, and the pirate saw himself men aced with two serious perils- 7 -a collision, which might send him to the bottom of the sea in a minute, or a broadside deliv ered at pistol shut distance, and with no possibility of his making a return. lle must either put his helm up or down.— He chose the holder course, put his helm ,hard-adee, and stood ready to give broad side for broadside. But ere he could bring his lee guns to bear, lie must oiler his bow for one moment to the ship's broadside ; and in that moment, which :Dodd had provided fur, Monk and his mates raked him fore and aft at short distance with all the five guns that were clear on that side ; the carronades fol lowed and_ mowed him slantwise with grape and canister. The almost simul taneous discharge of eight guns made the ship tremble,,and enveloped her in thick smoke; loud shrieks and groans. were heard from. the schooner; the smoke cleared;' the pirate's mainsail hung on deck, his jib-boom was cut off like a car rot, and,the sail struggling; his foresail looked 'lace, lanes of dead and wounded lay still or writhing on his deck, and his lee scuppers ran blood into the sea. The ship rushed, down the. wind; leav .ing the schooner staggered and all abroad. But not Or long; - the , pirate fired his broadside . , - after the. now flying —Agra, split one of the earronades in two, a Lasear, and made a bolo id the VOL. 63. A. K. RHEEM, Editor & Proprietor. foresail; this done, he hoisted his main sail again in a trice, sent his wounded below, flung his dead overboard, to the horror of their 'foes, and came after the flying ship, yawing and firing his how chasers. The ship was silent, She had no shot to throw away. Not only did she take these blows like a coward, but all signs or life disappeared on her, except two men at the, wheel and the captain on the nndo gangway. Dodd had orde . red the crew out of the rigging, ara.ed them with cutlasses; and laid them fiat on the foreca s tle. Ile also compelled kencaly and Fullalove to come down out of harm's way, no wiser on the stnouth-pure question than they went up The great patient ship ran environed by her foes; one destroyer right in her course, another in her wake, followitr her with yells of vengeance, and pound ing away at her—but no reply. Suddenly the yells of the pirates on both sides ceased, and there was ti mo ment of dead silence on the sea. Yet, nothing fresh had happened. Yes, this had happened; the pirates to windward, and the pirates to leeward, 411 the Agra, had found out, at one and the 5111110 moment, that the merchant captain they had lashed, and bullied, and tor tured, was a patient but tremendous mina It was not only to rake the fresh schoon er he haul hut his ship before the wind, lint also by a double, daring in aqter-s t rid«i to hurl his monster ship bodily on the other. Without a foresail she could litiV er get out of his way. 11cr crew had stopped the leak, and cut away and un shipped the broken foremast, and were stepping it new one, when they saw the huge ship bcaring down in full sail.— Nothing easier Lil;iii to :-.111) out of her way could they get the lain:sail to draw, but t;.O lime was short., the deadly intim. tiun manifest, the coming destruction After that solemn silence came a storm of cries and curses, as their seamen went to work to fit the yard and raise the sail; while their fighting' well seized their matchlocks - and trained the They were well commanded by an heroic, able villain. Astern the consult thillidered; but the Agra's response was dead silence more awful than broadsides; Fur then was seen with what majesty the enduring A 11 . , Z,lo•Sa.70111 fights. Ur Or that, 111(11unit:tide, lat! on the gangway, one at the foremast two at the wheel, conned and steered the great ship down on a hundred matchlocks and a grinning broadside, just as they would have eunned and steered her into a Brit ish harbor. " Starboard said Dodd, in a deep calm voitte, with a motion of his hand. " 6tarbu,trd it, is.' The pirate wrig: 4 led ahead a little.— The mman l'i.invaed male a mleut sigiif to 1)odd. " Port:" said ])odd, calmly "Pert it is." But at this critical moment the pirate astern sent a mischievous,hut, and knocked one of the men to atoms at the helm. Dodd waved his hand without a word, and anuthur man rose from the deck, and took his place in silence, and laid his unshaking hand on the wheel stained with that man's warm blood whose place lie took. The huge ship was now scarce sixty yards dktant ; she seems- , ( t o k n ow : s t km reared her lofty figure-head with gluat awlul shouts into the air. But now the panting pirates trot their new lbresail hoisted with a joyful shout; it drew, the schooner gathered way, ;mild their furious consort close on the Ligra's heels just thi.n scourged her deck 161.11 grape. " fort!" said Dodd, calmly. " Putt it is." The giant prow darted at the escaping pirate. That acre of coining canvas took the wind out of the swift s,:hooner's Fore sail ; it napped ; oh, then she was doonica I 'I hat awful moment. parted the races on board her; the Papuans iind Sooloos, their black faces livid and blue with horror, leaped yelling into the sea, or crouched and ‘vhinip.2red ; the yellow Malaya and brown Portuguese, though blanched to one color now, turned on death like dying panthers, fired two can non slap into the ship's bows, and snapped their muskets and matelikeks ;it their solitary, executioner on the ship's gangway, and out flew their knives like crushed wasp's stings. Crash! the Indiaman's eutWater in thick smoke beat in the schooner's broadside down went her masts, to leeward like fibbing rods whipping the water; there was a horrible shrieking yell; wild forms leaped off on the Agra, and were hacked to pieces almost ere they reached the deck—a surge, a chasm in the' sea, filled with an instant rush of engulphing waves; a long, awful, gniting, grinding noise, never to be forgotten in this world, all along under the ship's keel— and the fearful majestic monster passed on over the blank she had wade, with a pale crew standing silent and awestruck on her deck; a cluster of, wild heads and staring eyeballs bobbing like corks in her foaming wake, sole relic of ; the blotted-out destroyer ; and a wound ed man staggering on the gangway, with hands uplifted anti staring eyes. Shot in two . plaCes ; the head and the breast I With a loud cry of pity and dismay, Sharpe, Fullalove, .Kenealy, and others, rushed to catch him; but ere they got near, the captain of the triumphant ship fell down on his •hands and knees, his head sunk over the gangway, and his blood ran fast and pattered in the midst of them, on the - deck ho had defended so bravely. The fox is very cunning, but ho is more cunning who catches. him. Among the Dead at Pompeii The disentombed city of Pompeii pre sents objects of commanding interest to the stranger and 'traveler, such as he can hardly find elsewhere among the ruined cities of the world. ‘V hen we walked among the ruins, some years since, thiile miles'of streets had been opened to the light of the sun, which had remained buried for eighteen centuries. The walls of the houses were still standing—the sidewalks and pavements in good order, and the fresco paintings on the walls, and the mosaics of the floors were still fresh and beautiful. But a new chapter has recently been opened in the history of Pompeii fur the reading world, and sonic of its inhabitants have come into view after a concealment of eighteMi hundred years. A letter in the Adiemeant, in lolll9 us that two hundred men, whwen and girls are employed in excavating at Pompeii. Their writer says : The excavations are being carried or in two spots, near the temple of'l6lS, and near the house called that of Abbondann, but, we are inure immediately concerned with the former site. Here in a house in a sniall street just opened, we r e found the bodies of skeletons which are now at tracting crowds. Falling in a mass of pumice stone, those unlortuti'ate persons had not bee one attached to the soil, :Ind it was c:isy to cut away the ground be riCat h Mein ; but - above, - tire; ashes and hot water had been rained itpoll them from the fiery mountain, causing their death, and insuring their preservation fur nearly two thousand years. On reniov in: the det,ri , , whip li consisted of the root ;old the ashes which lead fallen into the interior of the hou-e, something like a human form was di-covered, though nothing but a fine powder was visible.— It occurred to (lay. Fiorelli that, tins might be a kind of sareepharus created by Vesuvius, and that within were the remains of one of the victims of that ter rible eruption. But how to remove Or pre serve them ? A happy idea struck him. Plaster of Paris was-poured into :in aper ture, the interior !taring been discovered to be hollow, in consequence of the de struction of the flesh, and, !nixing with and unitin: , with the bones, restored to the world a Roman lady of the first cen tury. Further re:carehes led to the discov ery a a male body, another woman!. and that of a young ; but that which first awakened the interest of the excavations was the finding of ninety-one pieces of silver einney, four ear-rings, a finger., ring, all of gold, together with two iron keys, and evident remains of a linen bag. The first body, so to speak, is that of a woman, who lies on her right side, and from the twrAted position of her body had been. nilic_h_gsmvuljed. Iler left hand and arm are raised and corAorted, and . the knuckles are bent in tightly ; the right arm is broken, and at each end of the fragments one sees the cellular char acter of the bones. The form of the head-dress and hair are distinctly visible. On the bone of the little finger of the left hand are two silver rings, one of which is a guard. The sandals remain, or time soles at least, and iron or nails arc un mistakably to be seen. The body is much bent, the legs ace extended as if under the influence of extreme pain. By the , ide of this lioure lay the bags of which I have already spoken, with the money, j the keys and the east of it, with till the remains intermingled with or impressed on the plaster, n, preserved in the salv, j room. Passing, on to an inner chamber, we finial the In_iure - of the young girl lying on its face, resting on its clasped hands and arms; the legs are drawn up, the , left lying over the right: the body is thinly covered over in simie parts by the scoria... or the plaster, while the skull is visible, highly piilislied Ono hand is partially closed, t as if it had grasped snnwthin:r, probably her dress, with which it had covi,ncil her head. The lin !,erdiones protruded through the incrust ed ashes, and on the surface of the body, in various parts, is distinctly visible the web of the linen with which it had been covered. There was lying by the side of the child a 1)111-grown woman, the left leg slightly elevated, while the right arm is broken ; but the left, which is bent, is perfect, and the hand is closed. The lit tle linger has an iron ring ; the h.lit ear, which is npperniost, is very conspicuous, and,stands off front the head. The folds of the drapery, the very web remain, and a nice observer can deteet the quality of the dress The last figure T have to.desiribe is that of a man, a splendid subject, lying on its back, with the legs stretched o,lli to their full length. • There is an iron ring on the little finger of his left hand, which, to gether with the arm, are support by the elbow. The fhlds of the dress on the arm, and over the whole of the upper part of the body are visible; the sandals are there, Mid the bones of one foot protrude through what might have been a broken sandal. The hair of the head and, beard —by which I mean of coutse, the traces of them—are there ; and the breath ,of life has only to be inspired into this Ad the other three figurtis to restore to the world of the nineteenth century . the Ro mans of the first century. • The first was the mother and the head of ,the. househOld, for by her-side was the bag of money, the keys and the two sil ver vases, and a silver hand-ueirror f which was only found on Friday. She was of gentle birth too • the delicacy of her arms and legs indicate it; and coiffure, too. 'The hands are closed as if the. very nails "must have . entered into the flesh, and the body is•swollen, as those of the others, as if water had aided-the• cruel death. The child, perhaps her child— does not appear to havo . sufferod so CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1863. /T/liAl but, childlike, it had thrown itself on the ground, and wrapped its dress about its head, thinking thereby to exclude all danger. l judge so far from the marks of the folds of the linen around the arms and on the npper part of the body, and from the partially open hand, as if it had ,grasped something. Poor child !it was not so tenacious of life as the mother, and Soon went to sleep. There is the figure of another woman, of a lower class, a servant pi , rhaps, and I thought so front the large projectit , car, and the ring on the finger, which was of ir o n. Sh e had suffered much, evidently, as the right leg is twisted back and uplifted She firs on her side, and the left hand, which is closed, rests en the ground ; but her suf ferings were less than those of her mis tress, as the sensibility was perhaps less acute. The man, man like, had strug gled longer with the storm which raged around him, fur he fell upon his back, and fell dead flis limbs are stretched out to their lull length, and give no sign of sull'ering. A more touching. tory than that Illicit. is told by these silent figures I hate !lever read, anti it is with emnparatively little interest that 1 closed this day by visiting the sites where the hilJorers are actually at work. They are cutting out strut ts beneath the roots of large trees, art l..cau't iii, MI the soil for many feet above them. Walls are eu ming, o nt Io viewi . 'y or)._ ino- . went, with the lar : ie red inscriptions, ind the popular jokis I,l' l' om p e i,inia. bung; Live been c ompletely uncovered with the exeepiio'n of two or three feet ()I' sand, which are left on the ground floor, and cover up the antiquarian wealth which is reserved for the eyes of distin• gnislosi visitors. One house I remarkud particularly, as it is the largest in Pom peii. There are two large gardens in the intorior of the building. mid marble foun t:lin,, around which- were found the fig ures of a wild hotr being pulled down by 11.1; 4 ,3 F -find a serpent. and other animals, all of-bronze. On the walls are elegant Frisco painting , , -lel in one small room, a sleeping chamber, is a mosaie floor, a portion of which was repaired and that tight artistically too, by smile old [lonian mosnicist. Among the many improve ments which Coy, Fiorelli has introduced is the t:'staldishinent of a museum, in which 11l iny objects of gleat interest are depic.ited, all discovered in There are the skeic'.ons of two dogs; and sixty loaves which were baking' when Vesuvius burst forth, and which were "drawn"..,only the t..ther*day. are the great iron doors for the mouth of the oven. There, are the tallies, too, and hammers, and bill hooks, and colors, should the artist need them and medi cines for the sick, and pulse for the hun gry. Vases and paterae of plain and col 'ore'd'gl;tc:-c- d - cittgarrt forme ; are there, and candelabra, so graceful that one longs to grasp them. There, too, are brasiers more ornamental, and more use ful and elegant than any that modern Italians have made. STRONG C RACT ERN. —Strength of character consists of two things—power of will and power ef scll•restraiut. It re quires two things, therefore, fur its exist ence—strong feelings and strong com mand over them. Now it is here we make a great mistake ; we mistake a strung feeling fur a strong character.— A. man who bears all before hi in, before whose frown domestics tremble, and whose bursts of fury wake the children of the household quake, because he has his will obeyed and his own way in all things, we call him a strong man. The truth is, that is the weak man ; it is his passions that are strong ; he, mastered by them, is weak. You niuq, measure the strength of a man hy the power Of the feelings he subdues, not by the power of those which subdue him. And hence composure is very -often the highest result of strength. Did - we never see a man receive a fla , grant insult, and only grow a little pale, and then reply quietly ? That is a man spiritually strung. Or did we ever see a man in anguish stand, as if carved out of solid ruck, mastering himself? Or ono bearing a hopeless daily tri'al remain silent, and never tell the world what can kered his home peace ? That is strength. lie, who, with strung passions, remains chaste; he who keenly sensitive, with manly poWers of indignation in him, can be provoked and yet restrain himself and forgive—those are the strong men—the spiritual heroes. DREAMING IN CIIURCIi,—.\ I Ballston Spa, one Sunday afternoon, fatigued with his long j 'Laney, a wagoner, -with his son John, drove his team into a barer,.and - detertnined to pass the Sabbath in enjoying a season of worship with the good people of the village. NVlien the time for Worship arrived, John was sent to watch the team, while the wagoner went in with the crowd. 'the preacher bad hardly announced his subject. befell.: the old man fell sound asleep. lie eat against. the partition in the Centre ~of the body slip; just over against him, separated by , very low parti lion, sat a fleshy lady who t eenied all absorbed in tho,permon. She-utruggled hard with her feelings, but unable to control then' any longer, she hula out with a loud saream, and shouted at. tlio top of her voice, arou‘sing the old man, who, but half awake, throw his arm areupd her waist, and cried, very soothingly: " Whoa Nancif Whoa,; Ilerolohn," Calling qts son, "out the belly-band and loOsen the breeching; quick, or she'll tear everything to pieces !"- -Albany I'll/ICS. • A WESTERN editor l having had his last shirt stolen, vents his - rage'as follows : -We would' say to the rascal who stole the shirt off the line while we were in bed waiting for it to dry, that we sincere ly hope the collar may., put his throat. To this a cotemppiary adds. Served himhim right'; no business to have a shirt.—' Such. luxuries. :We expect next to hear of thetxtiavagant fellow aspiring to wear stockings and beaver hats.., `Oh the ava rice - uhreasothibloness of some folks," if TERMS :--$1,50 in Advance, or 82 within the year LIFE IS BUT A SPAN Lifo IN but a span—of homes ; One is "Ago," tho other "Primo," Up and down the hill our coon. ; "do ponies—'•make your thno." Boyhood plies the whip of pleasure : Youthful folly gives a stroke; 111anhood goads them et his leisure, " Let 'em rip, they're tough as oak." " lit ya! there " the stakes we'll pocket, To the winds let care be sent ; Thee, 3,111—• whip In socket;" 's(tive 'em string and let 'em went." On the :ninny road to fifty, i. lino" is drew nod in Lathe's stream ; '• Age IN lett, old, unthrifty ; Lire then proves '' a On e horse team." Aco jots on, grows quite unsteady, Reels and darkens in his pave ; • Kicks the buolcut," always ready,', "(Jives It ur —Death wins the rao, Persian Stories of Husbands A married man presented himself trembling and sorrowful at the gates of paradise. Ile had heard so often of his limits and short-comings while upon 00+4.11, that he Itelieved in them devotedly, and had no hope of being admitted to the habitations of the blessed. One wife, he had been repeatedly informed, was a ble;,sitig far beyond her merits while in the flesh , how, then could he hope for the smiles of seventy humis. But the prophet, when lie presented himself at the_gates of heaven, to his greaLsurprise, greeted him with a smile of ineffable emnpasssion. " Pass On, poor martyr," said 'Mahoinet. " You have indeed been a great sinner, but you have sulfured enough. upon the earth, so be of good cheer, lot you will nut meet your wife A wan who had hitherto crept up to heaven, now stood up confidently and presented himself to the prophet upon the ground that he had heen twice mar ried. " Nay," said the prophet, angrily, " paradise is 110 pl a ce UM' fools." A. ruffling young lellow married the widow of a great Belot On the wed ding-night she determined to assert her authority over loin. So she treated him with great contempt when he came into the ante-room, arid and sat luxuriously imbedded in rose-leaf cushions, caressing a large white cat, of which she pretended to be dotingly fond. She appeared to be annoyed at, her husband's entrance, and looked at him gut of the corners of her eyes with a look of cold disdain " I dislike cats," remarked the young soldkr, blandly, as if he was waking a mere casual observation , " they offend my sight." If his rife had looked at him with a glance of cold disdain before, her eyes now wore an expression of anger and contempt such as no words can express. nut cveo . ffeign" to answerThun, but she took the eat to her bosom and fondled it passionately. I ler whole heart seemed to be in the cat, and cold was the shoulder which she turned to her husband. Bitter was the sneer upon her beautiful lips. " When any one offends mc," contin ued the gallant, gayly, " I cut off his head. It is a peculiarity of mine which I am sure will only make me dearer to you." Then drawing his sword, he took the cat gently but firmly front her arms, cut off its head, wiped the blade, sheathed it, and sat down continuing to talk af ftetionately to his wife as if' nothing had happened . After which, says tradition, she became the most submissive wife in the world. A henpecked fellow meeting him next day as he rode with a gallant train through the market-place, began to con dole with him. " Ah !" said the henpecked, with deep feeling, " you, too, have taken a wifo, and got a tyrant. You had better have remained the poor soldier that you were I pity you from my very heart." " Not so," replied the vilifier, joyfully, " keep your sighs to cool yourself next summer." Ile then related the events of his wetl ditw-night, with their sati , fuctory results The henpecked man liLtened attentive• dy; and pondered long, " I also hive a sword," said he "thou[rh it is rusty, and my wife is likewise foul of cats. I will cut oil' the head of my wife's favorite cut at once." lle•did so, apd received a sound beat ing. his wife, moreover, made hint go down upon his knees anti tell her what ghiu, or evil spirit, had prompted him to commit the bloody deed. " Fool !" said the lady, with a vixenish smile., when she had possessed herself el the henpecked's secret, " you should have done it the first night." MORAL.—Advice is useless to foci TO A BRIDE - The following letter was written by an ole friend to a young lady on *he eve of her wedding day; 1 have sent you a few flowers to adorn the dying moments of your single life.— They are the gentlest types of a delicate and durable friendship. They spring up b . uur sideswhen others have deserted it ;and they will be found watchit, over our graves when those who should cher ish, have forgotten us. It seems that a past, so calm and pure as ours, _should expire with a kindred sweetness about it; that flowers and music, kind friends and earnest words, should consecrate the hour when 'a sentiment is passing in to a sacrament. The three great stages of our being are the birth, the bridal and the burial. To the first we bring only weaknossi—for the last wo have nothing 'but dust I But hero, at the altar, where life_ joins life, the pair come throbbing tO the..holy man, whispering the deep promise that arms each other's heart to help on in the life struggle of care and duty. The beauti ful will be there, borrowing new beauty from the scene. The gay and the frivo lous, they and their flounces will look solemn for once. Aml youth will come to gaze on all its sacred thoughts pant for ; and age will totter up to hear the old words repeated, that to their own lives have given the charm. Some will weep over it as if it were a tomb, and some laugh over it as if it were a joke ; but too must stand by it, forit is fate, not fun, this everlasting locking of their lives I And now, can you who have queened it over,so many bending forms, can you come down at last to the frugal diet of a single heart! liitht o you have been a clock, giving your time to the world. Now you are a watch, buried in one par ticular bosom, warming only his breast, marking only his hours, and ticking only to the beat of his heart—where time and fueling shall be in unison, until these lower ties arc lost in that higher wed lock where all hearts arc united around the Central Heart of all. 'loping that calm and sunshine may hallow your ehisped hands, I sink silent ly into a signature Big Words and Small Ideas Ilig.lvords are great favorites with peo ple, of small ideas and weak . conceptions. They are often emplo3vl by men of tnimb, when they wish to use language that may best conceal their thomrhts. With few exceptions, however, illiterate and half educated persons use inure " big words'' than people of thorough education. It is a very communion but very egregi ous mistake, to suppose that long words arc more Izeuteel than short ones—just as the same sort of people imagine high col ors and flashy figures improve the styles of dress. They are the kind of 'Mks who don't begin, but always " commence."— They don't Jive, but " reside." They don't go to bed, but mysteriously re tire." They don't eat and drink, but " eartake of refreshments." They are never sick, but " extremely indispo , ed." And, instead of dying at; last they "au cea-c." The strength of the English language is in the short words—chirpy inonasylia hie.: of ;-iaxoti derivation ; and people who are in earnest seldom u-e any other.— Love, hate, an.zer, grief, joy, express themselves in short words and direct sen tences ; while canning, falsehood, and affectation, delight in what Horace calls v6rl)o sesquipeauGa— words a " foot and a half long." SPEECH OF PRESIDENT LIN COLN. \VASIIINI; July procossion, with a, hand id music, procee , leil to the Executive Mansion List evetiii. ctowil soon , be came immense, anil there was iii atiditiuu to the patriotic cheerings of the citiaitio repeate.l cheers for the, l'res'iilent, General Meade and General Ito-wet-ans. The President appeared ot an open win dow, and spoke in substance as follows : Fellow-citizens-1 am very glad to see you to-night, and yet 1 will not say 1 thank you for the call but 1 must sincerely thank Almighty God -for the occasion on which you called- [Cheers.] How long ago is it-- eighty-seven years since, on the fourth of July, for the first time in the history of the world, a nation by its representatives, as sembled, and deelarcd, •'as a s ddevident truith, that all men are created equal." [Cheers.] That was the birthday of the United States of America Since then the fourth of July has had se\ eral very peculiar recognitions. The two most chstin,oisbed men engaged in the framing and support of the Declaration, were Thomas Jefferson and John Adams. The, one having formed and the other sus tained it most forcible in debate. The only two of lurk-live who supporlA b. being chosen Presidents of United States. Precisely filly years alter they put their hands to the parr it pleased Almighty God to take them from this stage at toe len. These are indeed reinurkalde events in our history. Anoi her President, live years at ter, was called Irian this stage of existence on the saute day and month at the year, and new on this last fourth at uly, jll.l pissed, when we have a gigantic rebellion, at, the bottom of wader is an effort to overthrow the principle that all men are created equal, we have the surrender Ma most powerful post [ion and army on that very day. I Ch)ers.] -And not only 80, but in a success oft at battles in J'eansylvania, near to hs, continu ing thr(mgh three days, so rapidly taught that they might be called one great battle, on the first, second and third at the month of July, and On the fourth the cohorts of those who opposed the declaration that "all men are created equal," turn tail and run. Long continued cheeriug.] Gentlemen, this is a glorious theme, and the occasion for a speech, but I am not pre pared to malie, one worthy of the occasion. I would like to speak in tones of praise due to the many brave officers and soldiers who have fought in the cause of the Union and liberties' of the country from the beginning of the war. There are trying occasions, not only in success, but for the want of success. I dislike to mention the names of officers, lest I might do wrong Co those I might for get. Recent events bring up glorious names, and particularly prominent ones, but those I will not mention. Haring said this much, I will now take the music. Three cheers were giveu„-and after the music the largest part of the - crowd prcMeed ml•to the War PepartintMC. Loud cheers were given for Mr. Stanton, who- returned. his . thanks for the compliment, and spoke in high eulogy of the recent deeds of the Army of the Potomac, and of the success resultim.r in the fall of Vicksburg. , He expressed .hie confidence in the early crushing out °Nile. rebellion, and anticipated that successdellaitill; follow successes, and claimed that we had: acheivod great victories over the rebels and Copperheads. 'General Hallock, Mr. Stanton, Senators Wilson, Wilkinson, Lane; and others made speeches, WhiCh wore frequently interrupted by applause. Thowater that flows from a spring does not congeal in winter. So those senti ments of friendship which flow from the heart cannot be frozen in advereity. , • Never insult poverty: The truest courage in always mixed with circumspection. Never taste an atom when you are not hungry; it is suicidal. Never speak of your father as "the old man." Reverence and stand in awe of your self. NO. 29. A dollar in the hand is generally worth two in the ledger. We should never mourn for that we cannot have. The man that provides not in sublmet must want in winter. lie that pours hr his rum pours out hie reason. We should peen our injuries in the 8110 W, but our benefits in brass. The bad mechanic will always condemn his material.. A man's worth consists h his virtue and not in his dollars and cents. The man that has beconie enamored of himself has chosen a fool for a lover. Every fashion that is a useful improve ment should be adopted. Tn‘nrguing with a foal you throw away both your learning and eloquence. The person we gene - r.ally love most is the one we see in the mirror, Error loves to walk arm in , arm with truth, to wake itself thought respectable. The evils from which a morbid man suffers most are those that don't happen. The remedy of to-morrow is too late for the evils of to day. The more the merrier, the fewer the better cheer. Give neither counsel nor salt„fill you are asked fur it. Beware of women who seem very sweet healer:; in candy are not always candid. You 'are ley Hie al the quizzical I, usbatitl said to his lazy wife. Many people's heads are like the head of a glass of porter—all froth. The mom) is sf, ()Id, thag, if it is made of green cheese, it is unquestionably in- We often excuse onr want of philanth ropy by giving the name of fanaticism to the more ardent zeal of others, The more ignOrant some of us are, the more we will try to make the people be lieve we are wise. Every man that finds a nest of golden eggs should be allowed to cackle over them. No peoplo are capable of self govern ment, who will first count the cost of their liberties. Great and good men are the common property of mankind, as all nations have a share in the wealth of their intellects. Good lawyers, like good ministers, are the salt or a nation ; but a one-horse law yer is a nuisaneu in any community. As marriago,was not designed for in children should not be allowed to T op tho Tiestion before they arc weaned. It im wrong _to mete out justice accord ing to the wealth or poverty of the offen- There arc some professors so spiritually minded that they scarcely ever draw a suber breath. There is frozen music in many a heart that the beams of encouragement would melt into glorious song. The religious persecutor abominates the Prnell of a raw heretic, but greatly en joys the oder of a roasted one. The highest degree of cunning is a pretended blindness to snares which we knew are laid fur us. Love generally makes a wise man act like a fool, and interest sometimes makes a fool act like a wise man. To every old man, his departed boy hood is a Paradise, Lost—fuller of poetry than A lazy man's farm is always dressed int. weeds, as if he was dead, and it were his mourning widow Love isn't a healthy thing for a young loan, it causes such trementioue swelling of the bosom. Do not anxiously expect what is not yet come; do not vainly regret what is already past. If a beautiful woman lets her heart rest upon her lips, the first enterprising young man she moots may kiss the sweet prize MEI My notions about life are much the same as they are about travelling; there is a good deal of amusement on the road, but, after all, brie wants to bo at rest. Young ladi,E4 , who faint on being "pro posed to," can be restored to conscious ness by just whispering in their ear you were only joking. Some philanthropists are so bitterly fanaticized against hanging that they would gibbet all those who are in favor of Poverty is often despair. A poor fel low went ,Ao hang himself, but finding a pot of gold, went merrily home. But he who had hidden tho pot wont and hung himself. THE greatest men of simple manners. Parade, show, and a profusion of oompli meats aro the artifices of little minds, made use of to swell them into an appearance of consequence, which nature has denied to them. Se - People usually consider_ two hands enough for all parlposes, but we recently saw a man who had got a little behind hand. VW Why is a minister liko a locomotive ? We have to look out for him when tho bell rings.. age -Heaven could execute its ,purposes just as easily without great men as without little ones. gerThe sound of ,a kiss is not so loud as that of a cannon, but its echo often lasts 'much longer. 1 mities.