i re TUB BLESSINGS OT GOVERNMENT, 1. 1KB TEH DEWS OF HHAVBN, SHOULD BB DISTRIBUTED ALIKH UPON THE HIGH AND THB LOW, TOE EICH AND TH3 POOR. NEW SERIES. EBEXSBURG, FRIDAY, JiNlMY 27, 1851. VOL. 1 XO. 21. T E Ii 31 S : The DEMOCRAT & SENTINEL is published wry Friday morning, in Ebeusburz. Cambria countp. la., at $1 50 per annum, if paid in advance, if not win bo charged. ADVERTISEMENTS will bo conspicuously iuser- iaa at me loiiowing rates, vi : 1 aquaro 3 insertions $1 00 Every subsequent insertion 25 1 square 3 mouths 3 00 " " 6 " 6 00 " 1 year 8 00 column 1 year SO 00 . 18 00 Business Cards with 1 copy of the Democrat . $ Senlmrl per year 6 00 fc?U Letters must be post paid to secure attention. EIY OLD COMPANIONS. ET ELIZA COOK. My; heart has yearned like other hearts, "With all the fervor youth imparts: And all the warmth that Feeling lends lias freely cherished " troops of friends. " A chrtige has passed o'er tbern and me, "We are not as we used to be; My heart, like many another heart. Sees old companions all depart. I mark the names of more than one, But read tbcia on the cold white stone; And steps tbat followed where mine led, New on the far off desert tread; The world has warned some souls away, That once were honest as the day; Some dead, sonic wandering, some untrue; Oh ! old companions arc hut few. But there are green trees on tho hill, And blue flags sweeping o cr the rill, And there are daisies pcepin out, And dog rose blossoms round about. Ye were my friends, " long, long ago, " The first bright friends I sought to know And yet ye come rove where I will. Sly eld companions, faithful still. And there are sunbcam9 rich and fair, As cheering as they ever were; And there are fresh winds playing nigh, As freely as in time gone by; The birds come singing as of yore, .-- The waves yet ripple to the shore; Ilowe'er I feel, where'er I range, Thsse old companions never change. I'm glad I learnt to love tho things That Fortune neither takes nor brings; I'm glad my spirit learned to prize Tlw broiling face cf sunny skies; Twas well I clasp'd with doting hand The balmy wild flowers of the land; For still ye live in friendsliip sure. My old companions, bright and pure. But be we sad, or be we gay, "With thick curls bright, or thin locks gray, We never find the spring bloom meet Our presence with a smile less sweet. Oh ! I am glad I learned to lovo The tangled wood and cooing dove; For these will be in good or ill My old companions, changeless still. Tho KerctaufB Bangtter -and the Judge. A -TALE OP THE PAST. The two vessels joined, and the mimic contest was begun. Of course, the English colors tri umphed over the Papal. Up to UJs point, the merchant bore his pangs in silence, but when the English galley had assumed the victory, then came tho trial of patience. Effigies of the cardi nals were hurled into the stream amidst the shouts and derisions of the mob. At each plunge groans issued from bis breast. It was in vain that Emilia clung to his arm and implored him, by every fear, to restrain himself. Ilis religious zeal overcame his prudence, and when at last the fieurc cf the Tope, dressed in his pontifical robes, was hurled into the tide, the loud exclamation cf agony and horror burst from "his lips : " Oh mon strous impiety of an accursed and sacrilegious king !" sounded loudly above the din of the mob. It -raa enough, the unhappy merchant was immediately consigned over to tho secular arm. Oh ! sad were those prison hours ! the girl told her beads the father pi a3'ed to all the naints and then came the vain consolation by which one endeavored to cheat the other. They thought of their own sunny land, its balmy air, its living beauty, and that thought was home. November came with all its gloom the month that should have been the grade of the year, com ing as it dees with Whroud and cerecloth, foggy, dark, and dreary ; the father's brow numbered more wrinkles, the once black hair was more Dearly bleached, the features more attenuated. And the daughter ! ah ! youth is the transpa rent lamp of hope but in her the light was dim. In fear and trembling the unhappy foreigners waited the day of doom. Tho raerchaut's offence teas oae little likely to meet with mercy Henry was jealous of his title as head of the church. lie tad drawn up a code of articles of belief, which his subjects were desired to subscribe to ; he had instituted a court of which he had made Lord Cromwell, Vicar General, for the express train of those whose orthodoxy in the king's creed was called in question, cither coi-'- i.... w- unhappy .e W noa lavur uu wu.- ouuge, lor . . . i ie.i Cvrm, ti-1 1 p&a Klmni-'w it . tached to the mowing reformation ; and from the ... o...;t V.S be had latclv visited J . . . j- u: some r.f thn adherents of the Komisn crcea m un new character of Vicar General, it was scarcely probable that he would show mercy to one at tached, by lineage end love, to papal Rome. Strangers as they were, unknowing and unknown what had they not to fear, and what was left for hope ? Tb morning cf trial came. Th fogs cf that dismal month spread like dark veil over our north. There was no beauty in tho landscape, bo light in the Heavens and no hope inthehsart. wretched delinquents came to receive jjheir doom. We suppose it to be a refinement of modern days that men are not punished for their crimes, but only to deter others from committing them. This court of Henry's seemed to think otherwise; there was all the array of human passions in the Judg es, as well as in the judged. On one hand re creant fear abjured his creed ; on another, hero ism braved all contingencies, courting the pile and the stake with even passionate desire, and the pile and stake were given with unrelenting cru elty. At length there stood at the bar an agod man and a youthful girl ; the long white hair of the one fell loosely over the shoulders, and left un shaded a face wrinkled as much by care as by age , the dark locks of the other were, braided over a countenance clouded by sorrow and wet with tears. The mockery of trial went on. It was easy to prove what even the criminal did not attempt to gainsay. The aged merchant avowed his fidelity to the Tope as a true son of the church denied the supremacy of Henry over any part of tho fold. and thus scaled his own doom. There was an awful stillness tlirough the court -stillness, tho precursor of doom broken only by tho sobs of the weeping girl, as she clung to her father's arm. Ilowbeit, the expected sen tence was interrupted ; then came a suddt-n rush; attendance thronged the court. " Room for Lord Cromwell ! room for Lord Cromwell !" and the Ticar General came in his pomp and stale, with all tho insignia of office, to assume his place of pre-eminence at that tribunal. Notes of the proceedings were laid before Lord Cromwell. He was told of the intended sentence, and he made a gesture cf approbation. A gleam of hope seemed to dawn upon the mind cf the Italian girl as Lord Cromwell entered. Sho watched his countenance while he read ; it was stern, indicative of calm determination ; but there were lines in it that spoke more cf mista ken duty than innate cruelty. Yet when the Vicar General gave his token of assent tho steel entered Eta ilia's soul, and a sob, the veriest ac- , Jit of despair, ran through that court, and where it met the human heart, pierced thro'.igh all the cruelty and oppression that armed it, and struck upon the natural feelings that ditidc mcv, j from monsters. j rrt i i s .. - . ouu uim..wm,oii.vi-iin,! eye sought the place whence it proceeded ;tVs, ted on Emilia and her father. A strange emo tion passed over the face of the stern judge a perfect stillness followed. Lord Cromwell broke the silence. Ho glanced over tho notes that had been handed to him, speaking apparently to himself: " From Italy a merchant Milan ruined Ly the wars ay, those Milan wars were owing to Clement's am bition and Charles' knavery tho loss of sub stance to England to reclaim an old indebt tnent." Lord Cromwell's eye rested once more upon the merchent and his daughter. " Ye are of Ita ly from Milan is that your birth place ?" " We are Tuscans," replied the merchant of Lucca, "and eh! noble Lord, if there is mercy in thi3 world show it now to this unhappy girl!" " To both or to neither !" exclaimed the girl. " We will live or die together I" The Vicar General made answer to neither. He rose abruptly ; at a sign from him the proper officer declared the court adjourned. The suffer ers were hurried back to their cell, some went whither they would, others where they would not ; but all disappeared. A faint and solitary light gleamed from a chink of the prison wall it came from the nar row cell cf the Italian merchant and his daugh ter. The girl slept ay, slept. Sleep docs r. t al ways leave the wretched to light upon lids unsul lied with with a tear. Reader thou has known intense misery, and canst thou remember how thou hast felt and wept and agonized until the very excitement of the misery wore out of the body's power of endurance, and slept Lkc a tor por, a stupor, a lethargy, bound thee in itschains? Into such a sleep had Emilia fallen. She was ly ing on the prison floor, her face pale, as if ready for the grave, the large tears yet resting upon her cheeks, and over her sat the merchant, think ing what a treasure ihc was and had ever been to him ha could wish that sleep to be the sleep of death. The clanking of a key caught the merchant's ear, a gentle sleep entered the prison. The fath ers first thought was for his child. lie made uiOticn to enjoy silence; it was obeyed. His vis itor advanced with a quiet tread ; the merchant looked upon him with wonder. Surely no and vet should it be! that his judge, Lord Crom- rol1 tho Vicar General, stood before lam, and stood notwith threatening in his eye, not with denunciation his lips, but took his stand on the other side of Emilia gazing upon her wi eye in which pity and teo vcre conspicu. ous. Amazement bound up the faculties of the iner- Ue seemed to himself as one that aeam- cnaue ol li 'Awake, gentle girl, awake, said Lord Lrom Let me hear well, as he stooped over Emilia. I .1 - ;f cr.. ir.V.l in mine tar ; 'uwuatc luuiv., " " in other days.' The gentle accents fell too light to break the spell of the heavy slumber, and the merchaut, whose tears, feelings and confusion formed a per fect chaos, stooging over his child suddenly a woke her with the cry of Emilia! awake and be hold our judge! "Nay, nay, not thus roughly , said Lord Crom well; but the sound had already called Emilia to a sense of wretchedness. She half raised herself bmA W twmJx jxtui into kniing d. sha lowing her dazzelcd eyes with her hand, her streaming hair falling in wild disorder over her shoulders, and thus restir.g at tho Let of her judge. " Look on me, Emilia, said Lord Cromwell; and encouraged by the gentle accents, she raised her tear-swollen eyes to his face. As sho did so the Vicar-General lif.cd from his brow his plumed cap and revealed the perfect outlines of his fea tures. And Amelia gazed as if spell-bound, until gradually shades of doubt, of wonder, of recog nition, came struggling over her countenance; and, finally in a voice of passionate amazement, she exclaimed: " It is the same! it is our sick soldier guest ! " " Even so, " said Lord Cromwell, " even so, my dear and gentle nurse. He w ho was then the poor dependent on your bounty, receiving from your charity his daily bread as an alms, htth this day presided over the issues of life and death as your judges; but fear not, gentle Emilia, the sight of thee, comes like the memory of youth, and kinklicr thoughts cross tho sterner mood that lately darkened over me. They whose voice may influence the destiny of a nation gradually loose the memory of gentler thoughts. It may be Prov idence that hath sent thee to melt me back again into a softer nature. Many a h-art shall be glad dened, that but for my sight of thee unto death. I bethink me, gentle girl, of the flowers laden with dew and rich with fragrance, which thou didst lay upon my pillow, while this heart throbbed with agony of pain upon it, fondly thinking their sweetness would be a balm; and how thou wert used to steal into my chamber and listen to tales of this, the land of my home. Thou art here and how hast thou been welcomed ? To a prison, and well nigh unto death. But the poor soldier hath a home; come thou and thy father and share it. An hour ! who dare prophesy its events ? At the beginning cf that hour the merchant and his daughter had been sorrowful captives of a prison; at its close they were the treasured guests of a palace. The Dignity cf Kan. " It i.J a little thing to be a man " was the expression of a pect, whose heart was embittered by neglect, and crushed by misfortune. And perhaps it is, to those who look upon him mcre- ' bccf-eatir.g and a coffee-driukinpr animal. Mr?,-' .r. f t - est,on w 'atber to be preferred. , r: wart, and a cultivated mind. Wk ins ui,on man m Uusiiiht. he is trulv a er.afi.ro of very little importance. Nothing could be said more intere.ting or more to the point, than the remark of the eld sergeant in Benlham : Give him plenty to cat and send him to sleep." " It is a little thing to he a man." And if so, whence spring this IKtlencss ? What causes it? If men arc but a race of erect brute's but no, this is not the theory of human life', the sum of human harphuss, the limit cf human regres sion ! It is no a little thing to be a man. It is not a little thing to possess a reflecting mind, a feeling heart, an immortal soul. These gifts arc great, and make men great. They are the ei dowments of Heaven, and ally him to it. The opposite doctrine traces his origin to the brutes, and denies his natural superiority and immor tality. It loses siht of his high duties and high er de-stiaics. It degrades him at once to the lowest level of auitnal existence. Man's dignity does not consist in the fact tint he is a being who eats, drinks, end sleeps. His highest honor springs not from his love of roast beef, sausages, dinner tables, and sumptuous suppers. The highest style of man is not tl cue who find his chief happiness in "creature cair.forts" and plum puddings. There is a no blcrlifo than the life of an e- icure or a gommaaj, and theirs is a nobler death than that caused ly ever indulgence, and a surfeit. "Who died mort like a man, tlian Howard, the philanthropist, who perished in ministering to the suffering cf the iicetiy, or the great Roan Emperor, wlo died from an excessive drinking of wine? There is no necessity for a reply the one died in t.'ie discharge of the most.indly ofuees to his fellow men the other, " Lke tlie beasts which perish," The memory of the one is blessed the memory of the other is unhonored if not execrated. It las well been said that seme men are buried, and fi-o:n their graves through the hands of minister ing love, arise fragrant flowers, and clustering boughs, which " smell sweet and blossom in the dust." But there are others who arc deposited iu their long home, and though no flower or bjllgli mailia tK j-. CunliAn it .n-vcr be, for there lies the record of a life ill siut, the record of guilt, and the crown of crime sits si lent and slmdowy on the tombstone. The cultivation cf the mind, and the finer feel ings cf our common nature are greater objects than the gratification of appetite, or the accumu lation of dollars. Even locking at man as he ex ists in the present state of being, with no rtforpi to the future, there are higher ts cf which he is ca::able norjlcr aspirations which should elevate his mind. There are his mental powers to be cultivated, and his s cial affections to be enlarged aud kindled into fresh life. And it is to these that his chief happiness is linked, and in these that his true dignity will be found. How well it wculd be if some persons could only be convinced that they hav minds and hearts. j as well as apatites and purses. Lift up your eves and look at the Heavens. crgci eiic inuigs cf earth for a time, and contemplate the true, the beautiful, and eternal. " Is there such a thing as An immortal soul, " said Carlyhj to Leigh Hunt, as thev walked under the brilliant splendor of the starry heavens; and how eloquent and expressive was the answer: " Look up, and find your an swer there. " Home Gazette. S3?-Mistrust the man who finds everything good, the man who finds everything evil, and still mora, tha Eftaa who is inoiaereat to every tiling A Story vrilh a Kcrel. Mr. Bones, of the firm of Fossil, Bones tCo., was one cf those remarkable money making men, whose uninterrupted success in trade had been the wonder, and afforded the material for the gos sip of the town for seven long years. Being of a familiar turn of mind he was frequently iiiterro- gated on the subject, and invariab'.y gave as the secret cf his success that he minded his own bu siness. a gentleman met .Mr. isones on me Assanpinie brla wftT irazins intently on the dashing, foaming waters, as they fell over the dam; he was evidently in a brown study. Our friend ventur ed to disturb his cognitions. " Mr. Bones, tell me how to make a thousand dollars. " Mr. Bones continued looking intently at the water; at last he ventured a reply. " Do you see that dam my friend? " " I certainly do. " ".Well, here you may learn the secret of ma king money. That water would waste away, and be of no practicable use to anybody, but for the dam. That dam turns it to good account, makes it perform some ustful purpose, and then suffers it to pass along. That large paper mill is kept in constant motion y this simple econ omy. Many mouths are f.J in the manufacture of the article of paper, and intelligence is scatter ed broadcast over the land on the .sheets that are daily turned out, and in the d Ifereut processes through which it passes money is made. So it is in the living of hundreds e.f people. They get enough of money, it passes through their hands every day, and at the year's end they are no bet ter off. What's the reason! They want a elam! Their expanclitures are increasing, and no practi cal good is attained. Tl.ey want them dammed up, so that nothing will pass through their hand; without bringing Fomething back without ac complisliing some useful purpa;c. Du:u up your expenses, and you will soon have occasion to spare a little, just like that dam. Look at it, my friend. Cazcite. Aff33tinr Story cf a V.'if3. We find the following in the police reports cf the London papers, where others of a similar na ture often occur: -A custom house tfljeer, named Mears, doing duty in the Londcn Dock, saw a wo man on a swivel bridge, leaningcvtrthe rails, with head resting on her hand, and looking towards the water. She was crying, and appeared to Le in great trouble. The officer, suspecting her in tention, asking her what she was "doing there; but she refused to satisfy him, or give any ac count of herself. Site then moved away, end a bout ten minutes afterwards returned to the same spot, and resumed her former altitude. The cus torn officer called the attention e-f a police consta ble to the woman, and he spoke to her. She went away; but soon returned ufrain, and wos in the act cf getting over the rails cf the bridge into the entrance dock, wLichis there twenty f ur or twenty six feet in depth, v. hen a boy seized her dress, and held her susr.eiidtd ever the water un til assistance was procured. If the woman had got into the water, as she was nearly tloing, one hundred men could not got her have got out alive. When brought up before Mr. Ingham, the magis trate, he asked the woman what account she had to give of herself 1 Woman (abtiactcdly, and with a vacant stare ) What is it, sir ? What is it ? Mr. Ingham What Lave you to say for yourself ? The woman (suddenly recol lecting herself) Last night, fir, I was at home with my four little chihhvn. with no food. I went out. scarcely knowing what I did : but I had no intention to throw mvse'fover the bridge. (Here she sobbed loudly) Mr. Ingham said he would remand the prisone-r to the House cf Detention for a week, and she would be properly taken care of. Inquiries must be made concerning aud her means of obtaining a living. The pri.sior.er What is to become of my poor children? Mr. Ingham I wV.l issue orders for them to be prop erly taken care of in the workhouse. The prison er implored of the magistrate not to send her to pnsion, and said she never had a key turned cn her before. The mother of the prisoner here stepped forward, and said she lived in the same house with her daughter, who struggled hard to mainta'n four young children, and had a very bad father to them. Her daughter's husband was a very drunken, brutal man, who had been in the nraetico of befttirt" his wife. Mr. Incham then why dia suv . Wc to comr)-iaia cf :cr husband?" The doorsof this court arc always o pen to receive complaints from women who are maltreated by their husbands. The mother I don't know, sir ; but, indeed, I can assure you, my daughter works very hard. Mr. Inh". think the best course will be tarrteT her to pris oa fjra v-'cdl.-.ia she will have time to reflect; ui let the parish officers take care cf the children and feed them. The mother has a shop of work slop work ) and will loose it if she is sent to pris on ; she works early and late. Mr Ingham Has she had relief from the parish ? The Moth er Once only. Mr. Ingham Has her husband struck her lately? Not within the last fortnight. Mr. Ingham If he strikes her again, come here for a warrant. Ifvouwill take charge cf her, and protect her, I will let her go. - The mother I will, sir. Mr. Ingham Then take he away with you. The poor and apparently heart-bro ken woman left the dock, crying loudly. CyPoetry reveals to us tho loveliness cf nature brings back the freshness of youthful feeling, re vives tho relish of simple pleasures, keeps unqucn- ched tha enthusiasm which warmed the spring time of our being refines youthful love strengthens our interest in human naiurw, by vivid delineation of its tendercst and softest feelings, and through tho brightness of its prophetic visions holpB faith to lay hold on future hJo. C k annrg The following from glorious genial Clarke is too tempting. We must copy it for the benefit of our readers who aro not fortunate enough to read " Old Knick." "Here they are again," the Little Folk and hearty Christmas-welcome to t htm all ! "The i more, the merrier !" If wc cannot provide for them all at one time, we will endeavor to do it at another. By the bye. it has been well said by one who read the thoughts and open hearts of children as one reads a book, that " grown per sons are apt to put a lower estimate than is just on tho understandings cf children. They rate them by what they know, and children know very little. But their capacity of comprenension is great. Heiico the continual wonder of those who aru unaccusiome-d to them, at " the old fashioned ways " cf some lone little one who has no play fe'lows, and at the odd mixture of folly and wis dom in its sayings. A continual battle goes on ia a child's miud, between what it knows and what it comprehends. Its answers are foolish from partial ignorance, and wise from extreme quickness of apprehension. The great art of ed ucation is so to train this last fuculty, as neither to depress nor over exert it. But " let the child ren come in," now : A lady one day observed her little boy of some six summers, who was phiying in the garden, showing signs of anger : she said nothing, but he soon came in, an! approaching her, said : ' Ma, elo the penologists say we have sweax-mg-j.ump in our heads ?" Ills methcr told him Bhe did not know of any: when the little fellow remarked that his head felt very queer, and he came near swearing : and he added : " Grand -pa has get a large bump on his head, an J he swears awfully sometimes !" A little girl had a beautiful head of hair, which hung in " clustering curls" down in her neck. One hot summer day, f he went up stairs, and cut all tlu1 curl off. Coming down, she met her mother, who cxclaiiy.ed, with surprise : " Why, Mary ! what have you been doing to your hair ?" To v. hie-h she responded, that fche had cut it off aud laid it away in her box, but that she in tended to j ut it en egain to-morrow, as Aunt Nancy did !" " What dj j-ou learn at school ?" said I to my little Loy, four year of age. " Reading and spelling, Papa, if you please." " And what do the other boys learn V "Oh! 'li.hnie'.ic, aud 'gotrraphy, and Vtloc i ycJe." " What ? velocipede ?" "Yes, papa; but not about wooden horses, but about other tiling ." Now wht do you suppose he meant ? Phil osophy ! " Papa !" said the same little urcliin to me, when he was but three years old, and had just Wgun to catch the phrases of older children it was the pensive hour of twilight, and drawing near his bed-time "Papa, will you make apray er for me, before I go to bed ? " Yes, my darling, if you whh it ; but why not let your mamma say your prayers for you, as she does on other nights ?" 0, papa, I don't want ycu to ay those pray ers : Our Futher,' 4 Now I lay me ; but pray yourself: tnaZe a prayer to God for me !" So 1 put up, with all my heart, a serious pe tition to hi Ihavenly Father, for - i:i.. lie listened attentively, and, as it teemed, most seriously ; but, j'ost as I coucluded, he ex claimed, with eyes sparkling with mirth : Good, papa ! good ! Now pray again pray atraln! Co it!" " When I was in London," writes an esteem ed and popular corrcs;ondent, " I became much interested in a little Quaker boy, a child of re markable intellect, but of a peculiar, quaint sim plicity, as delicious as indescribable. His queer, deep sr.yings used now to convulse me with lauiihter. now melt me to tears. One of the an ecdotes told me by his father is brief enough to relate hrre, and may amuse you. When Char he was about four years cf age, his grand-mother died. She a stately and elegant womau ; the very tyj of an English Quaker-lady. Charlie had always betu accustomed to ee her in rich silks, golden browns or silvery greys, with ker chiefs f-costly muslin, and the most retherdie of lissc caps ; and when he came to see her in her bed dress, he eyed her with more curiosity than sorrow. 1 nc goou oiu uj and said, solemnly : "Grand-mammust bid little Charlie good- Z, ItT she is going away to Heaven, and will never see him any more in this world. Chailic, ia return, gave her alookef 6implc astonishment, and exclaimed: " Why, Graud-mamma, thou art not going up to see God, in that night-cap, art thou ? " Wc remember an anecdote of one of the sweetest and most simple hearted of all our little friends. Sitting on a foot-stool at her mother's side, she had been recounting hci list of brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, cousins, and the hkts. " Now," said she, " I have got all the relations but one ; I should like a jooi-mtxn.tr. l navn i got any, have I, Mother !" It was the sad fate of this sweet child, in after years, to perish ia that compound of calamity and infatuation which the law decides to be no crime tho burning of tho Henry Clay. She pas sed from among us, radient in youth and good ness, leaving four little children, ono an infant, to prove the tender mercies of those that may come after. Vrr An organ in Williamsburg was not played the other Sunday, cn account of having a new ,op whieh was put on by ta ahma. Effects of Feicalo Facinaticn. The control which a female sometimes exercise over the judgment of a man appears to be not un like that which inferior animals are said to cz ert over each other. The power of the charmer is almost irresistible. Petrarch, with Lis Laura and Abclard, with his Helcise, are itgriP.canl examples of this remark. The Paris correspon dent of the New Orleans Crescent, in a recent lot tcr, gives another illustrations of this masculica weakness in the person of an old friend of tha writer, whom Le had not met for many years. He says: "It was not until we had been to gether several days that I learned that the wo man he had with him ww not his irift. She wi a masculice creature, Trith nothing beautiful about her save a pair of magnificent eye3, and they were black as night. She had had a larga mugiiziti dt nonrccrutis in the Rue Richaliea wher she w ts supposed to be very wealthy, and wher sbe had helped him run through tha major fart of his fortune. When I first saw them, she ex ercised over poor R. a land cf actual fascination. He did not love her and yet ho could not shaka her off he did not seem even to w ish it- Sha watched him (I can use no other senile) exactly as a cat watches a mouse. That she loved hjca there could be no doubt ; but ber aOection had a dash of ferocity in it. something like that cf a ti gress towards her w helps. Finally, after endor sing her paper to tho tune of 50,000 francs, ha suddenly left the country, (tOt-t out of her reach I suppose,) and no cue knew of bis whereabout for two years. At the ted of that period his mis tress got wind cf his hiding place, and one fin morning, leaving her business iu the Lands of a clerk, she packed up her fig leaves, stepped across the ocean, and found her recreant lover engaged ia successful mercantile operations in the city of Panama. There the same routine of rsckless ex travagance was run through with again, mora madly than ever. But it seems she grew jealous of him, (tK gentle tigress !) aid so took it into her head to poison him, which she did wih a hg dose of arsenic. But his iron constitution got, however, the better ef the drug, and they wert returning together when I first enccuntcrid them The rest of the btcry is soon tela. 1 had a curi osity to walk down and see her store. I found it all closed up, and the words " to k-t" painted in stsrinj capitals upon the shutters. She was ar rested and thrown into prison for debt iromedi a'ely upon her arrival in Paris, and he, tocscapa the same fate, assumed the garb of a Maltese sai lor ; and the last I saw of him was late at night, in one of the " hotels meub'.cs " of the Quarticr Latin, where I left him surrouLded by an admir ing audience, singing French sor.S of doubtful morality. The Elaidea and tho Hero. On the night of the battle of Brandy wica, 1 was sent with a message lrom General Green t4 Count Pulaski, a noble Polander, w ho took a prcminent part in our freedom. He was quar tered in a next farm house, near the upper forts. After our business was finished, the Count asked me to take some refreshments, and at the sama time he called out " Mary, my lass. Mary ! " In an instant a rosy-cheeked girl entered, hef face beaming with joy, it would seem, at the very sound of Pulaski's voice. " Did you call me, Count? " said she timidly. " How Aen have 1 told you, my little love, he said, bcuding Ins tall ferm -: 1 - - - ..ok io eau me Count; call nie your dear Pulas ki. This is a republic, my little favorite. W have no Counts, you know. " " But you arc a Count, sir, when at home, and they say you come a long way over the ocean to fight for us. " " Yes, Mary, very true, I did come a long wsy; the reason why, was, I kid to come, in a measure. Now can you get for this gentleman and rayfclf a little refreshment ? lie has a long y to rid to night. " ( "Certainly, sir," and she went cut of ta room like a fairy. " Fine pleasant irl, " said Pulaiki, would that I had the weal.h that I once hal, I would givcLcr a portion that would send half the youti hereabout after her sweet face. " On the morning cf the eleventh of September, 1777 tho Brittish army advanced in full force to Chadd's Ford, for the purpose of crossing ths Erandywine Creek, and bring on an action ". Washington. Sir William llo Maxwell l d.vision across the ci '.jy-tcu o'clock, at o; of the low7 n-rJs. " - r.nmi 1ftiV)iitej. with large force advancing i-p the siuc ei tiic ciuk uniting with Lord Coruwalhs, who commanded tho left wing of the army, crossed at the tiprer fords of the river ar.d creek. It soon happened that during the raging of conflict, in carrying orders I passed immediac y in the direction of Pulaski's quarters that I h visited the night before, Sjuddcnly a aheet -t flame burst forth- The house was on fire. Ncs: the doorstep lay the body of Mary, her heal c:i, open by a sabre, and her brains oozing out of tLs terrible wound ! I had not been there but half a minute, w lxn Pulaski at the head cf a troop ef cavalry galloped to the house. Never shall I - get the expression orhis face, as lie sbou: w. a demon on seeing the iranimalo form. Who did this ? " A little boy that l ad not been before noticr.. who was lying amid the grass, his leg dreadfv ; mangled, said: " There they go : He pointed to a company of UcMialu then ao distance off. Richt wheel, men, charge ! " And they did charge: I do not tblnfc that ru man of the Hessian corps ever left the tia-a exce to be rlaccd in the crave. The last I saw of Pulaaki mm ground cf Brrodywioa. r