iRLIN S: SLOAN, PUBLISHERS. MIMI lo ixm E 26. itqct Vottrq. - - - ROBERT OP LINCOLN IT WILLIAM CCLLISM &&&&& T `No Pot:Axon's Alwarsaino fur him ✓ , t o ngioi on briar and wend. ,„ : •ltno nest 0( Ida MU* dam*, g ., e raLmn,,inde or mind, owl of Lincoln to telling hu 061110; link. buto-o'•link, 0,r.0, spank ofook; solo up that mot of ours. sw.aig lb* oisomor &mom Chem. obis, oboe. of L:ne , iin is gaily drert, bright blank wedding coat, C 1 WI shoulders and white kin most, in his merry note,— g i p 40b.0 . link, yonii, Nye, k, 'pink; In! 4 . 131 Ce new coal la mine, .we we.' never a bird ea lac. Choc obe., ghee Qoater wife, ssi:, e nd quiet. with plata brows wimp, s o ,g uolnii a patient life, k, ,rums 'raki,) her hasasass4 WWI B bob-o'-link, Solot. spank, slunk, 4 :rowan,' you used sot tsar • r.boers wh,;e I am hen. Cho, abet, Chet. r t'y W l nna IS obi; .ett chirp II Dor only nuts. tr. , l pr.nee of braggarts is he, from hus little throat„— „.' I:nk, ; •,,s, spank. 'pink; 5,,5a., I s.:ra.A of man, v war 11 knaves, if yoss aim Chef, nhoo, chaos. egg , on a bed of hay, f • w.tl purple, a pretty sight! s. :to al..thrr sun Sit* all day with all hit might ,nt, bob o' Ituk, t , ap.uk; .I• f- '` 3t oe•er goes out. i t; _i -Ju,e eu,lo 1 fr..ho &boat., ebee, Ghee •.e :,:t . e nee chip the shell • . t< ic /Ire t.port for find t • •1 beetles tom wel! ;.eels f:r the hungry brood. huh. ,',l3rik, t .1 ep I k lo.ly to be =I y • ; , Jog fellow like me vile*, oboe ' L.,re qc at :ftugth io mad* • •.•1 w-rit, sod atl.nt with care. itartment laid, tvt:tta that merry air, halt, bob-o'-ltak, opank, tn , we bat my mate and I u.at and our nestling lie. Cheap, rhea, abs.. racer, the children are grown Lou :ro. c nn mere he knows, a humdrum crone .f a., : ha star a, he rm. Poo.c . , nlc, bob.e-hok, 'oak, spank I. eau p•ps that merry old strata et Linc ,, ln tom• back awn. Chee, uhee, chow. icc ffliscellanp. i HOST STORY MOM HOUSEHOLD WORDS . ice to you, toy frivod, the whole hegiutitng to ueurly the eud in...le that—that it happened, wu in . 1111 rn3 :r wor• r:ttiug in a I, the thAatre— At. of the twu lathe 're. The p ii..rwance wa-, I re- E.l.St.ern ptc, e, io wL el Were 10 - •T' irAueduries, and au elephant, at 1%1 6.,4t* We wore c tosid4 rabiy atutwd. •••••• "hiw n )14 , ealat and es% u gay .m t h ~u r ! mud. that evtuiug, "e• t:e•re wiet In any Of the circuta lt,e p.ace r ttin,t to catuta, or render .—at.at I ant :About to describe. SEU L• Ed ' , to piece b, ttcr thanany serious t:r ifs I,A e , o ta 'nod enough of the •., mak:. to o turn with a sick die i.u• th.•/04 to books or plays. r !Agee our in irrisga, Alezir. and 0 • ad d portly cbildlnh , (xlairailn -EAT. v....tw0-log all r•tirrt lig events, and tnixin : z little in ,ciety, and then, , xcep•l .n, corking uo aseociattotia be- tLis to Lnodon; for we had t•—vi• were quit, ahue and free. Free w al, ii) I Vouitlaues grasped Alexis' . tp,it..,l tL.e w )rd wa. I. At times, as on this ' • • utl laugh like children. It ‘.) , kuow of a lurety that now we te „ set—above all, love one ti• , • , l by n. ouuuberacting spell, u )in g creature for our aft and b.• n - , o1) (.•r a year—l had thought •:,i ler, ug. iu the morning—for a •Jtja,. tjaV •:1 very heartily, cherish , , rc, iu‘Pso who would ou '; ith.,t bad been fnghtened out of a"uole and grown wild and rare in its tapping at the lattice for a minute, Le Suddenly, in the pause between u hoise was half darkened, our away. .d it us," said Alexia, shivering. but it was more like the invol- 1.1,r at winch people say, "Some Lb over mj grave." I said so jes- w gpered my husband, reprov • 'Rain the draught of cold air seemed between us. in the front, I behind the curtain i:videl by some foot or two of spur chair. Alexis tried to move this vas fixed. He went round it, and %antic , over my shoulders ' L.4don winter is cold for you my love. we bud taken courage, and sailed LAJ: So wore of the sear said I, 't Liu and stronger ebodcler. - 4u forme r p.aition, looking round in "the audience. But neither of us word Hupanoiia was enough - 'WP au l r sikeuce over us both. 44 dud at last, rousing himself, with tiutik you must have grown cud . 4.11, Look: half the glasses opposite . 4 ' our box It cannot be at me, you 4s: rttlaeliartr telling me I was the . c . v) , ..0 ever baw?" 44 . Yet it wu quite trss—l had .03, ill far back,strangs, awful Wass, Pi of Qum, had ay mad wholly ERR', WEEKLY.. OBSERVER filled with one Ideal—one insane, eaquite dream; I, when I brought my innocent child's garlands, and sat me down under one great spreading, magnificent tree, which seemed to me the king of all the trees of the field, until I felt its dews drop- ping death upon my youth, and my whole soul withering ander its venomous shade. •'Oh, Ales!" I cried, once more, looking fond- 1 ly on his beloved face, whore no unearthly beauty dazzled, no unnatural calm repelled; where all • was simple, noble, manly, true "Husband, I thank he ci for that dear ugliness of yowl. , Above all, though blood runs strong, they say, that I see in you no Ilkeston to—" Alexis knew what woe I meant, though for a whole year—sines God's mercy made it to us only a name—we had sassed to utter it, and let it die wholly oat of the visible world. We dared ; not breathe to ourselves, still less to one soother, ; bow much brighter, holier, happier, that world , was, now that the Divine wisdom had taken— kint—into another. Fur be had been my hus bands uncle; likewise one* my guardian. Re was now dead. I sat lookingat Alexis, thinking what estrange thing it was that his dear face should not have always been as beautiful to me as it was now.— That loving my husband now so deeply, so whol ly, clinging to him heart to heart, in the deep peace as satisfied, all-trusting, and all-dependent human affection, I could ever have felt that emo tion, first as an exquisite bliss, then as an ineffable terror, which cow had vanished away, and become —nothing. "They are gating still, Isabel." "Who and where?" For I had quite for gotten what he said about the people staring at me. "And there is Colonel Hart. He sees us. Shall I b-ekon?" "As you will." Colonel Hart came up into our box. He shook bands with my husband, bowed to me, then look ed round, half curiously, half-uneasily. "I thought there was a friend with you." "None. We have been alone all evening." "Indeed! How strange." "What! That my wife and I should en joy a play alone together!" said Alexis, "Excuse me, but really I was surprised to find you alone. I have certainly seen f, , r the last half-hour a third person tinting on this chair, be tween you both. We could oot help starting; fir, osl tooted be fore, the chair had, to truth, beeu left between ns empty "Truly our unknown friend must have been invisible Nonsense, Colone.; how can you turn Mrs. Sakraal pale, by tbui peopling with your fancies the vacant air?" "I tell you, Alexis," said the Colonel (he was my husband's old friend, and had been present at our hasty and private marriage), "nothing could be more snake a fancy, even were I given to such. It was a very remarkable person who sat here. Even strangers noticed him " "Him:" I whispered. "It was a man, then," said my husband, rather ani grily. "A very peenliar•looking, and extremely handsome man. I saw many gIILMSeeI levelled at, him " "What wu he like?" said Me:is, rather sar castically. "Dui he speak? or we to him?" "Nu—DeitLer. He sat (iliac 'Still, this chair." My husband turned away If the had not been his friend, and so very ..imple.miuded, Lonest and sober a gentleman, I think Alexis would have auliseted some drunken h.,sx, and turned him out of the box immcdiatt•ly As it was he only said: '•My dear fellow, the third act 1, beginning Come up again at its clo,e, an,i tell ni if y,Ki again see my invisible fri,nl, fin great au attrieti.,n to vioting, gratis, a druimitic performance." "I perceive—you tiouk at a mere laaPoic:ll.oilu of mine. We shall see I suvl ct toe triek id on your side. mud that you ar e Lea, 'tiring bottle proscribed Hungarieu. But lit not bete, him Adieu." "The ghostly Hungarian shall not it next you, love, this time," said trying uuee more t , i remove the chair 13.1 t p..issibly, trough be jeste.l, he wits slightly nervous, and his etli,rts were vain "What w.insense this is: Isabel, let us forget it I will stand behind yim, and watch the play. He stood. I clasping his hand secretly and hard Then, I grew quieter; until, as the drip scene fell, the same cold air swept past us It was as if some one, fresh from the sharp sea wind, had entered the biix. ' And, just at that moment, we saw Colonel Hart's, and several other glasses levelled as before. "It ts strange," said Alexis. "It is horrible," I said. For I had been cra dled in Scottish, and then filled with German so-- perstition; and my own•life hod boen so wild, so strange, that there was nothing too ghastly or terrible for my imagination to oonjure up. "I will summon the Colonel. We must SDI out this," said my husband, speaking below his breath, and looking round, as i, he thought be was overheard. Colonel Hart esme up. He looked very serious; so did a young man that was with him. "Captain Elmore—Mrs. Sa!tram. &kraal, I have brought my friend here to attest that I have played off on you no unworthy j..st. Nut ten minutes aims he, and I, and some others saw this same gentlemen sittiug in this chair." "Most certainly—in this chair," added the young captain. My husband bowed; he kept a courteous calmness, but I telt his hand grow clammy in mine. "Of what appearsnee, sir, was the noku. , wn acquaintance of my wife's and mine, whoui everybody appears to eel, exoep - ourselves''' '•He was of middlaiFe, dark-haired, pale.— His features were very still, rather hard in ez •,pression. He bad on-a cloth cloak with a fur collar, aLd wen slams, pointed Charles-th.•• First beard." My husband and I clung hand to _hand with so inexpressive horror. Could there be su-ther man--a living man, who answered this at:scrip tion? "Pardon me," Alexis said faintly. "The par trait is rather vague; may I ask you to repaint it as circumstantially as you can." "He was, I zepeat, a pale, or rather a sallow featured man. His eyes were extremely pierci kig, cold, and clear. The mouth closset—a very srm but ionless mouth. The hair dark, seamed with y—bald on the brow—" " heaven!" I groaned in an anguish of ter fus ror. For I saw again - clear as if he had Dever died he face over which,for twelve long mouths, had swept the merciful sea waves, off the shores of II ispanolia. "Can yon,Captsia Moore," said Alexis, "men the no other dutinguishing mark? this oounk napes m slit resemble many men." "I think nut. It was a most remarkable fare. It struck me the more--beauase--" and the young ; man grew almost as pals as we—"l ones raw au other very like it." • "You see—a chases resemblanoe only Pear ' not, my darling," Alexis breathed in my ear.= "Sir, have you say relostamee so sell me who was the gentleman?" "It was no living man, bat a corpse that we *keg op ell a week, mei 'pis committed to the fiseprwii She Guild illagise, Lt was met. ly the same (see, and had the same mark--w mar cross-shape, over one temple." "'Tim he! He can follow and torture us still; I knew he could " Alexis smothered my shriek on his breast. "3 . 1 y wife is ill. This desenption resembles slightly a--• person we once knew. Hart, will you leave us? But no, we must probe this mys tery. Gentlemen, will you ones more descend to the lower part of the house, whilst we remain here, awl tell me if you still see this figure sit titli in this chair." limy went. Wu held our breaths. The lights in tle theatre wure being extinguished, the au dience moving away. N,, ()nee...me near our box. It was perfectly empty Except our own two sel ves, we were conscious of no sight—no sound. A few minutes after Colonel Hut koccik.,d. "Come in," said Alexis, obeeri.y. But the Colonel—the bold soltlier--shrunk heck like a frightemi "I have seen him—l saw him but thissninnte, sitting there." I swooned away. It is right I should brietly give you my history up to this night's date. I was a West Indiun heiress--a posthumous, and soon after Birth, an orphan child. Brought up in my mother's country, until I was sixteen years old;—I never saw my guardian. Then be met me in Paris, with my governess, and fur the space of two years we lived under the same roof, seeing one another daily. I vies iery young; I had no father or mother, I wished for neither, love nor husband; my guardian became to me u the one object of my existence. It was no love-passi tn., he w as far too o ld for I that, and I comparatively too young, at least too childish. It was one of those insane, rapturous • aduratione which young maidens sometime oon cieve, mingling a little of the tenderness of the ' woman with the ecstatic enthusiasm of the de eutee. There is hardly a prophet or leader noted in the world's history who has not been follow ed and worshipped by many nob women. Such was my guardian, Anastasio.u—not his true name, but itsufficed thee and will now. , Mane may recognise bon as 11 kuown leader in the Prete.la political an I moral world—as one who belle were force of .utellect, wielded the and eileutly complete power of soy wan 1 ever knew, women he won by his pol ished •gsatieuese,—wen, by his equally pol ished terength. He would have turned a com pliment awl signed a death -warrant, with the same exquisitely cairn grace. Nothing was to Lint too great to too small. I have known him, oar his way to advise that the President's solJi ers should aweep t a cannonade down the throng ed street—stop to pick up a strayed canary-bird, stroke ice broken wing, and confide it with beau oral tenderness to his bosom. 0 bow teilder:—hew mild:—how pitiful:— could be be: When I say I loved him, I use, for want of a Letter, a word which iii expresses that feeling. It was—lieaven forgive cue if I err iu using the similitude—the sort of feeling the Shunamite woman might have had fir Elisha. Religion added to its ititeusi . :,; fur I was brought up a devout Catholic; and be, whatever his private dognasa w,ght have been, adhered strictly to the forma of the church He was unmarried, and most people supposed him to belong to that or der called—Heaven knoll-how unlike Him from wittim they 14,,sume their name—the Society art J es 11a. We lived thus—l entirely worshipping, be guidiug, foutliing, watching, and ruling by turns fo r two while years 1 was tnititr•-as of a large fot . uue, and. iii ugh not beautiful, had, I be lieve, a tel, r..bie rut••lli-ei, and a keen wit which he used 10Hits, a., boy plays with fire sveras, ..wu•iur 1....1ibe1' . with heir glitter--some t 'nit hero agtiuet steers, and smiling a. they fla s hed or seorched—knowiug thatagainst Louse-it tlicy w-re utterly femme*, and num less Knowing, perhaps, that ware it other wise. be had only to tread them under foot, and se p aside from the issues, with the same un 'nosed, easy bald.. I neser knew—nor know I to this day, wheth• I was dear to hint or u.a. Useful I was, I iniuk, and piciaaal, I Leoles , Pos s ibly be liked me a 1. , t1e--118 the potter likes his clay, and the skil ful weehao e likes his tools—until the clay had-rued, and the fine tools refused to obey the waster's hand. I was the brilliant West Indian heiress. I did net marry. Why should I? At my house—at least it was c4lie I mine—all ions and societies !net, carrying tn their separate games; the quiet, soft band of Auastastus playing his game—in, and under, and through them all. Mingled with this grand game of the world was a lesser one— to which he turned sometimes, just for amuse ment, and beeline he could not cease from his metier—a simple, easy, domestic game, of which the battledore was that said white hand, and the shuttlecock my foolish child's bean. Thus much have I dilated on him, and my own life in the years when all its strong, wild current flowed towards him; that, in what fol lowed when the tide turne d, no one may accuse we of fickleness, or musclese aversion, or insane terror of one who after all was only man, "whose breath is in his nostrils." At seventeen I was only passive in his hands; he was my sole arbiter of right and wrong—my conscienoe--ealmost my God. As my character matured, and in a few things, I began to dgeju for myself, we had occasional slight differences. begun, tau my part, in shy humility, continued with vague doubt, but always ending in peni• tepee and tears. Since one or other erred, of course it must he I. These differences were wholly on abstract pints of truth or justice. It was his taking me to the ball at the Tuile ries, whi.'h was given after Leuis Napoleon Bo naparte had seized the Orleans property, and it was my watching my consio's conduct there, which made we tirot question, in a trembling ter rified way—like one who catches a glimpse of the te rade-waking pliest's hands behind the robe of the worshipped idol—whether, great as M Anastasius was as a political ruler, as a man of the world, as a faithful member of the Society of Just's, be was altogether so great when view- I ed beside any one ut those whose doctrines Le disseminated, whose faith he prof ssed. Lle hid allowed me the New I statnent, and had been reading it a good deal lately. I plac ed him, my spiritual guide, first in veneretiug love, than, with a curious marvelling °output son, beside the fishermen of Gallilee, leende— re verently be it spoken—beside the Dime Christ.. There was a certain difference. The Beet time we came to any argument—el ways on abstract questions, for my tnereitidivid ual will never bad any scruple in resigning tabus —instead of yielding and awning I (wailed the contest, and brought it afterwards privately to the infallible rule of right and wrong The difference grew Gradnall'Y, I began to take my onusin's wis dom—perhaps, even his vitiates—with certain rescrvatirins, feeling that there was growing in m e some antagrourie quality which prevented uly full sympathy with both "But," I thought, .‘he is a Jesuit; he follows only the law of hie order, which' allows tempo rising,_ and_dipletuatising for noble ends. He merely dresses up the Truth, and pots it in the most charming and safest light, eyes as we do our images of the Holy Virgin. using them for dm Maeda of the ennui, bus mussing wor siinbio Mims NU I •ii beam suit as be $1 50 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE will dandle sad play with the Truth, that, sot fur his hope of actives, would Asastasioa stoop to a lie." Doe day, be told me he should bring to my sailooos en Eng'delimits, his rotative, who bad de termiued on leaving the world and entering the priesthood. "Is be of our faith?" asked I Indifferently. "He is, from childhood. Re has a strong, Ilse intellect; thi.4, under St guidance, may seam. plish great things. Ones of our Society, he might be my right bawl in every Curt is En rope. You will receive him?" "Certainly." But I paid very little heed to the stranger.-- There go nothing about him striking or peen liar. He was the very opposite of N. &taste siuv. Besides, he was young, and I had learnt to despise youth—my guardian wig fifty years old. Mr. Saltram (you will already hare guessed that it was he) showed equal indifferenoe to me. tie watched me sometimes, did little kindness for me, but always was quiet and silo t- mere cloud floating in the brilliant •ky, which M. Anastasia, lit up as its gorgeous sun. For m e , I became moonlike, appearing chick at my cou sin's set and rise. I was not happy. I reed more in say Holy Book and less in my breviary; I watched with keener, harder eyes my cousin A.nastasins, weigh ed all his deeds, listened to and compared his words; my intellect worshipped him, my memo vied tenderness clung round him still, but my conscience bad fled out of hie keeping, and made fur itself a higher and diviner ideal. Measured with common mon, he was godlike yet—above all passions,. weaknesses, crimes; but viewed by the one perfect standard of man. 7 —Citristian man —in eharity, humility, single-mindedness. guile lessness, truth—my idol was no mon. I came to look for it, and found only the empty ahrine. Be went on a brief mission to Rome. I mar velled that instead of u of yore wandering sadly through the empty house, its air felt freer for me to breathe in. It seemed hardly a day till he came back. I happened to be sitting with his nephew Alex is when I beard his step down the corridor—the step which had once Seemed at every touch to draw mu+►c from the chords of my prostrate heart, but which now made it shrink ioto itself, u if an iron-shod football had passed along the strings. Anastasins looked slightly surprised at seeing us together, but his welcome was very kind to both. I could cot altogether return it. I had just found out two things which, to say the least, had startled me. I determined to prove them at once. "My cousin, I thought you were aware that, though a Catholic myself, my house is open, and my friendship likewise, to honest men of every creed. Why did you not tell that Mr ashram has, for some years, been a Protestante" I know not what reply he made; I know only that it was ingenious, lengthy, gentle, courteous, —that for the time being it seemed entirely sat isfactory, that we spent all three together& most pleasant evening. It was only when I lay down, on my bed, face to face with the solemn Dark, in which dwelt. conscience, truth and God, that I dvseovered how Anaataaius had, ft.r some secret —doubtless blameless, any, even justifiable pur ppm, told of me, and to me, two 'towline lies! Disguise it as he might, excuse it as he might, and did, they were lies. They haunted me— flapping their black wing. like a couple of Sends, mopping and mowing behind him when he came —setting ou his shoulders and mocking his beau titul, calm, majestic face—for days. That was the beginniitg nif sorrows; gradually they grew until they blackened my whole world. M Anasta.in.e whole soul was bent, as he had fur once truly told me, on winning his young nephew into the true fold, making him an in strument of that great purpose which was to bring all Europe, the PoptAlom itself, under the p•mer of the S. ekty of Jews and i:s future head— Anastasia.. The young man resisted. He admired and re vered his kinsman; but he himself wits very sin. gle.hearted, staunch, rod true. Something in that strong Truth, which wss the basis of his eharaeter, struck sympathy with mine. He was very much inferior in most things to Ana► issitts=he knew it, I knew it—but, through sU, this divine elenvint of Truth was patent, beautifully clear. It was the one quality I had r,ver worshipped, ever sought for, and never found. Alexis and I became friends—equal earnest friends. Not in the way of wooing or marriage — at least, be never spoke of either, sad both were far, oh bow far! from my thoughts—but there was a great and tender bond between us, which strengthened day by day. The link which riveted it was religion. He was, I said a Protestant, nut adhering to any creed, but simply living—not preaching, butliv lag the faith of Our Saviour. He was not per feet —be had his sins and eLorteomiogs, even as I. We were both struggling on towards the glimmering light.. So, after a season, we clasp ed bands in friendship, and with eyes steadfully upward, determined to press on together towards the one goal, and along the self same road. I put my breviary aside, and took wholly to the New Testament, assuming no name either of Catholic or Protestant, but simply that of Christian. When I decided on this, of eourwe I told Anas tasia& He received the tidings calmly. He had ceased to be my spiritual confessor for some time; yet I could see he was greatly surprised, afterwards he became altogether changed. "I wish," said I, one day, "u I shall be twen ty•ene newt year, to have more freedom. I wish even"—for since the discovery of my change of belief be bad watched me so closely, so quietly, so continually, that 1 had conceived a vague fear of him, and a longing to get away-4o put half the earth between me and his presenee—"l wish even, if possible this summer, to visit my estates in Hispaniola?" "Alone?" "N,►; Madame Gradelle will accompany me. And Mr. Saltram will charter ow of hug ships f )r my use. For I slitmld say Alexis was, so far from being a Roman Catitolio Priest, a manliest of large means. "I approve the plan. It will be of advantage to your health. But Madame Gradelle is not sufficient escort. I, as your guardian, will accom pany and protect you." A eold dread seised me. Was I never to be free? Already I begun to feel my guardian's influence surrounding me--an Wilms of love, now of intolerable dismete, and even f Not that he waa ever hanh or cruel—not that I ald amuse him of any sing le wrong towards or others; bat I knew had thwarted him, d through him, his canse--that awase w boss est dogma is that any means are sacred, an good, to the one great end—Power. I had opposed him, sad I was in • and— ;bat band which I had once believed to have al most superhuman strength. In my terror I be lieved it still. "fie will go with as--we easaot escape from bim," I said to Alexis. "Ile will make you s priest std sees sae, as be glassed—L buoy be did. Our Tory emir are sat au Gm" "What, wbee the worlds ea wide, sad Bib so leg, sad God's Wiwi all—whes too, I as Ate, aid yam Alto hot las sor—doirariP 6,1855, "I shall never be free. He is my ev l genius. He will haunt me till my death." It was a morbid feeling, I had, oonsequent on the awful struggle which had so shaken body a nd mind. The sound of his step made me turn sick and tremble; the sight of his grand facie—per haps the most beautffull ever saw, with its fault. less features ' and the half-melancholy cast given by the high bind forehead and the pointed beard —was to me more terrible than any monster of ugliness the world ever produced. He held my fortune—he ruled my house. All . natant,. there came and went under his coutroi, except Alexis. Why this young man still came —or how—l Gould not tell. Probably becauie in his pure singleness of heart and purpose, he was stronger even than M. Anastasia! The time passed. We embarked on board the ship Argo, for Hispaniola. My guardian told me, at the last minute, that business relating to his order would probably de tain him iv Europe—that we were to lie at an chor, for twelve hours, off Bane--end, if he then ease set, sail. He cam) not—we ailed. It was a glorious evening The sun, as he went down over the burning seas, bedecked us with a finger of golded fire, westward--to the free, safe, happy West. I say us, because in that evening we first be gan unconsciously to say it to—as if vaguely binding oar fates together—Alexis and I. We talked for a whole hour—till long after France, with all our old life therein, bad become a mere line, a cloudy speck on the horison--of the new life we should lead in Hispaniola. Yet all the while, if we ha.i been truly the priest and nun be wished to make us, our words, and I believe our thoughts, could not have been more angel pure, more free from auy bias of human pasaion Yet, es the sun went down, and the sea-breese made us draw nearer together, both began, I re peat, instinctively to say we, and talk of our fu ture as if it had been the future of one. "Good evening, friends!" He was there---M Anastaeins: I stood pet rified. All the gulden finger of hope bad van ishes'. I shuddered, a captive on his compeiliog srm--teeing nothing but his krriblesmillogfsc.! and the black wilderness of sea. for the mo ment I felt inclined to pounce therein—l Lad of ten longed to plenge into the equally fear,oine wilderness of Paris streets—only I felt sure he would follow me still. Ile would track me, it seemed, through the whole world. "Yon see I have been able to accomplish the voyage; men mostly can achieve any strong par pose—at least some men. Isabel, thisseasou will bring back your bloom. And, Alexis, my friend, despite threw close studies you told me of, I hope you will 'bestow a little of your society at times on my ward and me. We will bid you a go , el evening now." He gave his nephew my powerlcu hand; that of Alexis, too, felt cold said trembling. It seem ed uif ho likewise could not resist the fate which, born out of one man's inclotnitalls wi:l, dragged wiasuudi-r. Ere my gnar:ian consigned me to Madame Grailetie, hi. said smiling, but looking through me with his eyes, "Raneniber, my fair cousiu, that Alexis is to te.—must be—s priest." "It is iMpossiblel" said 1, stung to rpsistsucv. "You know be has proved the talseness of your creed; he will never retain to it. His conscience is his own." "But not his passions He Is young—l am old. He will be a priest yet " With a soft hand-pressure, M. Aoastssius left me. [CONCLUDED MIXT WEEK.] Presbyterians vs. the Know Nothing. The Presbyterians of Shenango, of the AAso• elate Presbyttrian Church, at a melitity; hPid at New Win:Tien, on the 17th adopted the 1-4.ll•iw ing resolutiou with reference to Secret S. , ies: Resolved, That in the judgment of Pr s bytery, the priuciplesof our Church_ exclude fi communion the members of the Secret called Know Nothings, and the meniner+ of Yl t such Secret Societies, and that the Presby , :ry direct session 4 to enforce this opinon. This it doubtless the true doctrine—f, r no one who has taken an with to practice deception, die in ul at ion and "all manner of deceit," is dt to cit in oommanion with Christians. Unfortunate ly, however, all Presbyterians do not so regard it; inasmuch as their clergymen and most con spicuous members, have, in too many iustances. been foremost in this unholy crusade against the rights of their 'fellow citizens. Presbyterian., Methodists and Christians everywhere would sd vance tea•.' Christianity by following the exam ple of their Now Wilmington brethren.—..4llen town Democrat. IS IT Se—Somebody—We Mull knew who and it makes no difference—thus warns young m e n to look ont for the women: "Young maul keep your eye peeled when you are after the women! Is the pretty drers or from so attractive? Or a pretty face even? Flounces, boy, are no consequence. A pretty face will grow old. Paint will wash off. The sweet smile of the flirt will give way to the scowl of the ter magant. The neat form will be pinched into taboo. Another and far different being will take the place of the lovely goddess who smiles sweet smiles and eats sour candy. Keep your eye peeled boy, when you are aftir the women. If the little dear is cross and sok lds at her ino. then in the back_room, you ma) be bure that you will get particnlr fits all aroud the home. If she apologises fur washing dis hes you will need a girl to fan her. If she blushes when found at the wash-tub with her sleeves rooled up, be sure air, that she is of the codfish arictocracy—lettle breeding and little sense. If you marry a girl who knows nothing but to commit woman slaugh- ter on the piano, you have got the poorest piece of masie ever got up. Find one whose mind is right, then pitch in. Don't be hanging round like a sheep thief, as though ashamed to be seen in the day time, but walk up like a chicken to a ttingh, and ask for the 'mete line a man." A GOOD TIMZ COMING TO TssysLiats --A worthy lardlord of our acquaintance, whose 4is position to accommodate all is much more capa cious than his house; being applied to by a guest for a bed by himself, replied, "I am sorry, sir, but it is impossible to-night, I hope soon howover to be able to accommodate all travelers." "You purpose building I suppose," said the guest. "Oh, no," continued the landiord—•'but as soon as the nights get warn, so the bed bugs are able to get out, my boarders all give up their beds sod creep on the door; then I can give my beds to travelers."—Ornaka Nebraskfan. Mir A lady in a neighboring town, who had risen rapidly from the kitchen to grim the Lead of her waiter's table, was oSe day entertaining a large party, when the conversation happen ing to Sag, one of the pests remarked, "awful pause. "And what's your hesitate with my 'awful paws?" in wrath retorted the landlady; "if you bad scrubbed the house as long as I Ewe done, your paws would nits hae been ate bonnie and white as they us" TRI 1•414 that, was heard of ..Sam" is Vir4ittia, hip we min for "s 'lodge' in 'otos tut alder. VW TEE POOR APPLE BOY OP PAWL (Prim 41401 Smith Abroad.") The winter se far has been severe upon the poor. Bread is fuel soussee and the weather unusually cold. F.r the first time in many years the Seine has been frozen solid, and enough st.ow ie upon the ground for neighing. Daring hell (Lys I was confined to my room by ill-health, not severe enough for the bed, yet ehutting me up; and as I looked from my window upon Place St. Stdpice, and saw the white flakes rudely shaken down by the bitter north winds, I said—" God help the poor!" Thu Place contivally suggests the prayer, as it appears in its wintry garb--au appearance its architect made no preparation for, in fact never dreamed of. The immense fountain in the centre, with its four colossi figures of church dignitaries sheeted in ice. has a grotesque, chilling appearance; while the huge lions at the base seem grJwling in stiffened rage as they freers to death. The naiads and -naked gods of fouu tains and squares look dismally out of place through the falling snow. The boys are nut ac customed to it—they play in a subdued, quiet way, ea if this rough-visaged winter were a seri ous affair, and not to be tiitlesi c with. Tne voitureo, in a long line, seem frozen to the ground; the drivers, very fat in-n, generally, are shivering upon their boxes, or walk slowly about, beating their breast, as if engaged in an insane attempt to be lively, while the bony horses mum ble and snore in their nose bags. The winds tear about the great towers of St. Sulpwe, and over the many ckintury shaded sells; the bright snow dances down from heights, which made St. Sul pice setae a mole-hill. The fountains of stony dirints and couchant lions, coated in ice, is des- sting white. The broad square is white. The tops of ancient voitures look like sheets. The old church is tipped with light at a thousand points. Odthibuses run noiselessly, while the arntling horses slip and fall upon their noses, then up and stagger ou again. It is winter every where, but nut our hearty, wholesome, merry winter, greet ed by wild shouts of buys, and sPt to the of sieigb bells; but miserable, dull, abirt ring winter. Way up in a seventh story wind ,w, an ~)1.1 Fr‘nehman, iu red nightcap, has pocked nut his Lead and said "saerer Hu pea in and heists an umbrella, fir the roof leaks in numerous plats, and suggests rheumatism. The withered old wu man at the corner, watching her Land-cart .tf nr auger, says "nacre," and the, too, sets up un an cient umbrella, which rather makes things w.irsP; while it mows above, it rains beneath ht r flee. pt• ive shade. All Paris hays "saere," all France says "saere," to this vile, stupid wfuter. which comes so uucalled fir and brings Ault ru.sety. Ail say "acre," but the little boy nn the pave ment b e l.,w, anal lie is too piny try.og to sea his few apples, to notice even ins own sufferings. "Billet pomistes, messieurs; belles pommel mes denies; un sou, warn:eat un sou," ("Beautiful apples, gentlemen; Ene apples, ladies; a son, on- I) a sou," et mos up through the c-Id. air, thin, tremulous and :nceesant. I had watched that lad three 0535. I caunot tell why, but I had to look at him, fascinated, although my heart ached as I gazed at the suffecing little figure He was yutiug, quiet young, yet had an earnest, thought ful expr,:ssion, premature io the large eyes; as sad 4 out of piece was the starved look about she thin lips, blue with cold, the awaken checks and slender neck. Poor little fellow! the miserable, thin blouse hung wet about his shivering firm, while the old cup had an ugly hole in the tip, and its I looked down, I could see the snow fall and melt. And he never sold an apple—a doz en wi, tiered, decayed things, c.:rtainly not tempt ing; yet be never cased in his esruest efforts. At daylight, I awakened, by that appeal; as the fret ziug u alter evening swept down ,he streets, it wAs the last cry to cease. .My iusagivatiou pictured some sick father, some w.dewed mother or sister, depentlieg upon thus It.chle effort for dai:y bread I could nut look at t: , e little sufferer auy more in quiet, and so sett Nannette with order§ to purchase the snore stock of the little street tueictiant. I watched theca :low the window—the glad light which lit up h,s thin, pile face, as sue took Lis apples—the e.geroess with which he,bretight out ~ .6 piece -.2 brown paper and insisted to an it , empt to tie thrui up, .re beyond my telling, as I saw them ngb my tears. Ou Nautiette s return, I r if she knew where he lived -In thus house, madam" “In this house, Nam:lentil?" "Oh, yea, madam, I often meet him nu the back etetrwAy. Hie people live quiet up. I never ace any hut ban ' “1011, Nannette, purchase his apples every day; awl when you see him passing our kitchen, give him something I do not want to write of my few charities, but cannot toil you clearly my huge history without. The next day, au.l the re xt, my little merchant was at his Stan In the meanwhile, Nann,tte, with the activity p•culiar to her, Lad made fresh discoveries, arrt was fall of information. The family above c.uasisted of au old man, and his two grandchildren—a my little apple-mer chant and his sister, sick in bed. They had lost father and mother, some mouths since, of the cho lera; and the old .soldi ,, r, for such he war, with great difficulty kept them in brzlid. Indeed, \an• nette said she could not make out where the lit• tie did come from. Otte afternoon, some days after receiving this intelligence, I happened in the kitchen, as my little friend pissed up the stairway. :Some ill greater than all the r. et was being received, fur the big tears were coursing dawn the check in silence. A strange impulse seised me to follow him. I was framing in my ai.nd exctise fur the intrusion as I followed unnoticed, for he was busy with his sorrows, and a vain at tempt to choke d-awn his sobs and tears Arri• ving at the tuptnost lauding, I had to pause fur strength—and saw Lim go in at a d..ur partly open, which he left ajar behind him In a mo ment I followed. The door was open to aid a pi, or chimney, and as it was, I looked through a smoky atmosphere upon the sickness and misery within The room, a half garret, with ceiling sloping to the fluor, and lit b) a sif3iigbt ut tour panes, was almost destitute of furniture, and so dimmed by smoke, it resembled ait n Au old table, on which where a few dishes, two broken chairs, and a low cot made up the sutu. Upon the cot / saw through the gloom, a thin, pale lace, the counter. part in death almost of my little apple boy—au old man, whose snowy head seemed to gather about and increase the light of tho apprtment. The boy stood with his back to me in silence. "Well, Maurice, my child, did you see my old general, and will the doctor come?" It was a minute before the boy I.( plied, "They drove me fr.= the door—the doctor says be has no time, but will have Marie taken to the hospital." The old man started, and said quickly: "Not there, not there;—we have given it enough." Then after a pause; he added: "Petit:Doe, my children, the good father will find us yet." The little sufferer lifted a skeleton hand, and placing it on the old man's, said: "I am better now—much better—l will be we I soon, grandpa." I felt myself an intruder on sacred ground, and, hastened to offer my services. The embarrass ment mmuctied - witt snob tendering assistance waa great', increased by the prides? the old man. U. who 414 not hmiste to impose idsegad head to . 10 blast al wilder, spa s *Lis bei4p, sad B. F. SLOB, EDITOR. beg for his children, shrunk bark proudly 'bee 46 poor home was entorcd, and its secret lilh laid bare. I drew, Irowev , r, the pr.fered chair t• the other ride of the h , 4.1, and taking his Imam* hand In f•gaud a way to the OW 011111a t i heart and ctut:d rice. By dtgrtis I bad their history—woe told h -,w ha.l lost his brace boy rho wife f ilowed, and Low they oak ep er and dr per in a iryiri•rt`i t Until a ti irvat i us Stitt Pal !Len:. The grandatuer had gotaaht %Turk Lut wis too fen ble for any servica. Th e clildrvu Lad r.tr.‘,t, bravely in many ways, ulna .rie was tak-n sick, and then the furniture and ordinary comforts di,sapivared, until the lest sou went, and the poor sneerer sank nearer sad nearer to death I will not iliv..ll rip:n this sad picture. I um tioned this inE4n , .:o f stress to my friend, Mad am B . and dt', who lows everything woeful, had, among of h. r matters, stored awsy the cipher which. marked tip.in a letter addressed to Los* Ndpoieon, takes it dire,:t,y to his has& MO wrote to him ihlt an of l soldwr of the gruo d army was starving', to death at ti.. St, Svl pieo. She received no answer. and no 'bodes whatever seemed taken of her kind appeal; but 10"11 after, an unknown h-irt came to the assist ance of-our p r Tu. furniture was re s• orol, fu.! at.d c .133! to ahuudantly,-In ter of Charity to•-,k r poaition l. ,v the bed-side, and, stranger than all, one of the most eminAnt ph) ritiaos in P.ris c m. , dolly to the garret. I saw Cie f..t:r t.ue ot ail tui• good -4. stranger tJai al tit,' ki,fi iruas 9 .LLI:CAUSO, seemed familiar. She call. , in a F.a u, private carriage, remained hot a sit•lt Time, yet was very thought ful and kind Po.erty could be d.;ven fnm the clonr, but Sorrow remolded. I:, [ll hid n wineral, the fields no herb. scictiee to rig the fleeting aim (,, hioek his head and every iity ;, ol , w'y from the hurnblo hotno But it mai ull in ram; we felt filet ohe tS flog O u..,fternoon, little Blau nee _; tt tr.slu Jee t the civeing scene. Ab,, ut 'L c Ir• re g , tit,.r , 1 the strange lady, th_ of 8 - r Clarity, Maurice and Th e s ro-.led the sleet upon the r .f, .i, uv,r that• little oonch to catch tt.- a: Leath 'flow slowly the hours work.' ;.fiat. TI, • ~tuna without gradually grew still, a, 'I. -nine quicker and lower. cAt 1:1 , 4 t ) storm sad struggle—Lod sodd,tily th r sun broke through the -ktligLt , iu up-lu the little fore —falling iu g. ay lu gr ay he til—falliog in glory upon I he 1.,1 du ifu..,,'c •.f the Air beet. f ac t ures ., eut T. 0.1 n can ever make her app,a; hlf s aut.fui as age was by the ii , tle p rty. Thew things or,' , Jun •, We arc told, for politiOal effL et; well, perl,:,ps tau only. happy in knowing that they are di,oe. VENANGO COUNTY —Eltehnive fires, as we learn nom Cos , Ir,.sskisu psp2rs have recently prevailed in this, w0 , r14 in v.iitous ruts of this county Some but: also, it appears,-cases destroyed. Th.' ;JyR: 11'e learn that the house of )Ir. Juhn Grit) n•.n.ar Sugar Lake, with all its e.,ntent3, mac totally consumed. p small house nr b , loi,4tng to a man who is clearing ian , l in SJa.lycr„tck t.,wnsbip, contain ing &quantity of doil.,ug, t,,015, and a sum of money, amounting in the who:0 to about lILSO was also thstroyrd 'f htse are all we have heard of, but there lilt doubtless other similiar eases, a, the fire appears to b,t wAls lv r xtuldtd. A Vt ry tine ssw :n;11 own .1 by Jarths )1. Stowe tir, Co ,on 13 , g Ili, ry in "'loners tows. teas Lu.ii lon S.,tu,day week, togeth er with a (I.l,ll'ity :sssulAr The mill was worth $4,:'00-1..),:r.i SJJO. Na insurance.— Thu fire was c , nstouusca , d ibis ease from a burning slab pits. Mr Stuwo was not as home. A LEARNED p,A•tg , 2.lll_, at Nantucket, used every In rniu, : r„ ; 1 p.ls•Jsci at the Bible, and s_tn: aj !:c i.roc_eded, in or der, tun, lit iskinz que , t: oa , s to bow much they retutt_slicr..ti I c Mlllt.l3t, be might MI- Cort3lo W 1.19 Were boy of the school. Ou one r::.:llr;.tu the b)ok of Job, thug: "There Iraa a man in thr land rf and his name was J,o, wtt.. G d and cehewed evti. E-e,kwid evil; that la, he esbewed evil aJ-I ibacc +v“:l,ci have nothiog toile Asti] it " 11 ; c:,e..r and forett.ole elu cidation of !n, w.r ‘•, , coei‘," ho proceeded, until a DUITO , I rCrie+ wc:e read and coa t/tented on 1.11 suelitar clear and intelligible ruaun,r. After a long inrerv:!, when !lie young mind h a d nine t d gc.r ,r s .n p. , li t ;ngue called urn ne r.l b 4. I the Lowing Lnh zuv sra, the m trLo 17,z?" \Vas he a 6`• 1 Luau?" "Wq Le ch , tv to), when nobo-is else would have whiny to ' wL3 11...,b Holmes al.ISWer Tl.e la)) was permitted to take his seat Exca‘Nalso WIN'Es —.I late number of East •n Ciur,na, peth:istiL.cl at P4ulding, Miss., , give; an aecrmot d a -w:p n-gq:ia'eti in that vi emit, by tWU (~! i . . 4 subs:t.b r•-, and v . )uclacs for the trutu n' the. Frey 'llla chattles which changed ownt.r , tvre nothing l sa Cum] tile wives of the parties, wbj w. , re nn Co eve .4 emirs tion, as they erentually did, nn to Alabama mad the other tL Ttx.. Th. Ca/ :tat refrains from giving the real names of the t..ithiess fieoediets, and calls them t•Ohetliah'• and "Dick," but ro cit iv the fircumst itt...a f th,..: trnussetion--lionr ;hey w-ut ~ u t tot to IA inch, ...at down oo s let and emir d opt.° :he bu-,u,ss. liqw they auto near "poi.io,; tue trade bi t5,,u , ,... Ut.es wife WIWI 6 4 `-yt,Lagtr erirer be a dczeu )ear.;" and lbeffle, utter teach ,1,..ti . , r. , 1;, the , 1 ft teuce araallaolly cqu3itzod by the t;..u..r , tta proposal of Dick to izi.-e, in the way -, 1 hr ~t, ".1 cow and calf, toe xtats, Au old gun and an ex-bell." The rrapec tie etiiktreu of the two mothers rematited vitt' ;heir -....rdogtly augaired step-wethets,.failowed them to the Sat a of their aloriuu. SNEZZINCI —An iris ibl , , il , l gentleman was taken with sneezing in the met spasmodic man ner eight times; lie arrest,l the pitvoxistn for a moment, and eztruiting his landkerclu(, bs thus addressed ind.oantly say ing:—"oh! go on—you'll blow )onr isr fern al brains out presently:" A couple of kitticrites who arrived is New Li..utlon on or about th 11, theday whin all thing should have gone ti, :mash. stepped ah a hotel hut refuted hccause they were nawilliug to grope their way out io tits dark, when the time came I, ave. So they sat oat their trunks in the entry all night, and the west day kept an wnfaiter.uit cwion La the road, wain. log for the blowiug -1 the hors. Mow PRICES. —The story that the Rochester . Claim telly of a man who offered twenty 5,0 Sift "for the privilege of Waking a abort dils/11a with that Steak " a frisad was carry's& is, ail 7 equalled by the proposition of soother tonspip. eel individual, who offarsthirty teves.anoi a had await to wad is awl instil widish va51516114. ISM NUMBER 5.