IMUNTINGD I N JOVRINA WnOLC No. 171.] TERIVES or THE 2117NTINGDO11 COVRNAL. The “Journal" will he published every Wednesday ►morning, at two dollars a year ►f paid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid within six months, two dollars and a half. Every person who o'►taios five subscribers and forwards price of sabscription, shall be f u•nished with a sixth copy gratintiously for one year. N., subscription received for a less period than six months, nor any paper discontinued - anti I arrearages are paid. All commuhications must be addressed to the Editor, post paid, or they will not be of itended to. Advertisments not exceeding one square ball be inserted three times for one dollar for every subsequent insertion, 25 ficents per square will be charged:—if no detnite ordeed as.e given as to the time an adverisment is to to continued, it will be kept in till ordeed; but. and charge accordingly. THE GARLAND. -"With sweetest flowers eurich'd From various gardens cull'd ?nth care." THE DEATH OF THE RIGHTEOUS. Sweet is the scene when Virtue dies, Where sinks a righteous soul to rest; How mildly beam the closing eyes! Bow gently heaves 'th' expiring breast, So fades a summer cloud away— Su sinks the gale when storms arc o'cr! So gently shuts the eye of day! So dies a wave along the shore. Triumphant smiles the victor's brow, Fann'd by some angel's fostering wing; Oh Grave! where is thy victory now? Invidious DeAth! where is thy sting? A holy quiet reigns around, A calm which nothing can destroy-- Nothing can disturb that peace profound Which their unfetter'd souls enjoy. Farewell, convicting joys and fear, - Where light and shade alternate dwell! How bright the unchanging morne appears, Farewell inconstant world! farewell! Its duty ;one, as sinks the clay; Light from its load the spir:.,fiies! While Heaven and Earth combines to say, "Sweet is the scene when Virtue dies," WHAT IS MAY? MY T. CAMPBELL Oh! what is man' Creation's wonder; An Angel half, and half a brute; A frown can tear his heart asunder, A-tear can make his passions mute. Vire. Virtue, both were his devotion; Now bound in chains—now rob'd in power The king of earth, the king of ocean; Yet ruled by passions every hour. From him bloom pleasure's every flower; But oh! too soon their beauty flies; A thousand cares and pains o'erpower, And then he ripens, droop and dies. To-day his fertile, thoughts develope Worlds mortal eye had ne'er survey'd, To—morrow eirth doth seal or wrap up, And humble him whom dust had made, Cockermouth, Oct. 17, 183 f . THE FLIGHT OF TIME, Moments pass slowly on, Years fly apace; NVhcn shall the wearied One Rest from the Race? Whether we smile or weep— Time keeps his Hight— Hours, days, may seem to creep, Life speeds like Light! Whether we laugh or groan, Seasons change fast; Oh! when lath ever flown Swift as the Past! What though we chafe and chide, Time holds his pace; No step: no noisless stride Doth he retrace! Hastening, still hastening on, None may deem how . ; But when 'ds fled and gone: Then seems Time slow? Time while we chide thy pace, Reckless and proud, Oft cloth thy shadowy face Lough from our shroud! SELECT TALE. From Chambers' Edinburg Journal. SERJE.IXT aLIIII ELL. A TA.: E OF THE LATE WAR, Not a single cloud floated over the clear blue sky, and the full effulgence of a Sep tember sun was reflected in the brightest gold from the dancing waters of the broad sea, whose glittering wavelets came rippling in with gentle sounds. The pier at Ramsgate exhibited gay groups assein• bled to witness one of those exhilarating scenes which so often took place during the late war, the embarkation of troops for foreign service. A small fleet of tran sports, gaily decorated, their sails bent, and colors flying, formed an interesting portion of the spectacle. From the decks of these vessels came the peculiar and picturesque sounds, which, when mellow ed by distance, have a thrilling effect upon the ear—the animating cries of the sailors, who on board the smaller class of merchant ships still weigh the anchor, and hoist the sails to the wild chant of "Foe, heave, ho!"--These sea strains came mingled with the spirit-stirring notes of a regi mental band upon the shore, where, ever and anon, the sharp blast of a trumpet, and the loud peal of the drum, broke in upon softer melodies, aftbrding types and images of the vicissitudes of military life. Boats were passing to and from the beach, filled with gallant hearts, high in hope and in courage, the greater number delighted with the opening of their adventurous ca reer, and none as yet weary and toil-bro ken, or casting vain regrets towards those homes which many were destined never to behold again. The younger portion of the male spec tators, whose more peace?ul lot was pla ced in scenes of inglorious Vase, cast en vious looks upon the briliant pageant; for every female eye beamed with delighted encouragement, and sent radiant glances towards the chivalric band, who, with cheers and shouts of exultation, quitted their native country to combat with a for eign foe. Not one of the young and fair creatures gazing with elated hearts upon the sr.lendid array, could in this moment of excitement rejoice that their male rela tives were secured from the horrors of a war; to their inexperienced minds tha triumphs of that proud hour seemed to be worth all of the suffering of whirls they had as yet formed any notion: Alas, how little did they know of the fearful price too frequently paid for that military glory which now seemed so dazzling and so precious! Happy were those to whom the whole gay spectacle afforded merely the passing amusement of a morning walk, who could go home and calm their excited feelings, and lose in other occupations all ' save a pleasing remembrance of the sights and sounds of the embarkation. There was a group overlooked amid tl e blaze of scarlet uniforms and the waving of milita ry plumes, which might have taught a sad lesson to those thoughtless gazers, who saw nothing beyond the bright side of the picture—the wives and families of the soldiers, who, permitted to accompany the regiment destined for foreign service, were, by the orders of the government, directed to embark on board of one of the transports fitted up as a hospital for the sick. These pour women were strangers at Ramsgate; they had long ago quitted their native homes to follow the often miserable fortunes of their husbands, and {now inured to hardships had prepared to meet the dangers and hazards of a foreign campaign with a sort of reckless fortitude. But they had not anticipated the sepera tion which had been deemed expedient; and their situation was rendered unusual. , ly forlorn, by their being compelled to make the voyage unaccompanied by those who were wont to cheer them in periods of the utmost peril. (Inc family, in par ticular, felt deeply the misery of submis sion to this arbitrary mandate, the wife and daughters of the serjeant-major of the regiment. Maxwell, amid the toils and dangers of a military career, had often re gretted, for the sake of the patient part ner in all his sufferings, that he had indu. red her to leave the cottage, where, far from the tumults of the world, she had spent her early days in tranquillity and comfort. Frequently in his mind's eye would arise the substantial dwelling of his unsuccessful rival, the rustic porch mantled with a vine leading into a well cropped garden, the smilingifields stretch ing to the back, the poultry gathering round the door, and the cow, whose fra grant breath came mingliug with the per fume of the blossoming beams. Then the comfortable interior would contrast pain fully with the squalid abodes in which he was but too often happy to find a shelter for his wife and children; the bright fire. the carved oaken chairs, the handsome clock, and the abundance of dell and pew ter; where there was every thing for use, and much for show. "ONE COUNTRY, ONE CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENEDICT PUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR. HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, Maxwell sighed as memory conjured up these things, and he wished that lie hail I left his beloved Mary to be the contented 1 mistress of so fair a home. Well did he recollect his own invasion of this paradise. ' the pride he had experienced in exhibiting his becoming uniform, military air, and ' superior intelligence, before the eyes of a girl who could not afterwards look with complacency upon the plain and homely suitor who had seen nothing beyond his native fields. Mary shared in the remi niscences, but not in the regrets; though long ago the fascinations of a red coat had lost all charm in eyes accustomed to the sad realities of a soldier's life, she never one.: lamented advantages which she d could only have tasted in relinquishing the chosen of her virgin heart for another. Often, indeed, did she wish for such a 1 rural retreat as she had left, 3 et never un less it was to be shared with the man for whom she was still ready to sacrifice ev ery earthly good. Mrs. /Maxwell had borne the rough and thorny places of the path she had, perchance, incautiously, ventured to tread, with enduring meek ness, never once wearying in her efforts to impart comfort to the most desolate abode to which their wandering lile would lead them. She maintained a decent pride under the most adverse circumstan ces; and though frequently pale and was ted by fatigue, and the absence of nour ishing food, she and her children were al• ways cleanly and respectably attired. The deserted wile had upon former occa sions been left in camps and garrisons, while her husband had accompanied his regiment to the field, but excepting to go into action, she had never been separated from him before, and she felt the measure which was now adopted as one of peculiar cruel and hardship, Maxwell entertain er the same opinion, and too late lie wish ed that he had made arrangements for the settlement of his family rt home. More than once it had occurred to him that he ought to have insisted upon their remain ing in England during this campaign, but his wife, discarded by her own relatives, and clinging solely to him, could not be persuaded of the advantages of the plan. How gladly would the husband and fath er have entered u;ron the present service alone, could he have felt certain that those he most loved in this world, were in a state of security! but to be parted from them while they were exposed to danger and distress, to sail in a different vessel, , and thus be prevented from calming their fears, or procuring for them any allevia tion under the pressure of bodily suffer ings, pierced him to the very soul. For the first time in his life, Maxwell felt him self to be unmitined. Margaret Maxwell the eldest daughter, a girl of twelve, was old enough to enter into all the feelings of her parents. 'Though born amid the din of arms, and brought up in a camp, she had little or none of the Aura-ion about her; courage she possessed, for iirc had faced danger; and learned to endure dis coinfirrture without murmuring; but her tender and affectionate spirit recoiled from the boisterous gaiety which charac temed many of her companions. From her childoood she had felt strong though secret yearnings, for a quiet and perma nent home; and her mother, in teaching her to avoid the evil examples of those with whom they were compelled in some degree to associate, presented such sweet pictures of domestic seclusion to her, mind, that she learnt{ to loathe the public and vagrant sort of life which she was, condemned to lead.—Her courage failed in the present emergency; and when Max well, called away by his duty to superin tend the embarkation of the privates of his corpse, left her with an entreaty that she would support her mother through the trial; she could not obey him, but sat down upon the green in such utter broken heartedness, as to subdue the glee of her younger companions, who until then had echoed the cheers of the soldiers, and dan ced to the inspiring music of tire fife and drum. The sun had set, and the gay crowd had dispersed before Maxwell's forlorn family had reached the vessels destined to receive them. The commencement of their voyage was inauspicious; through the ignorance or carelessness of the pilot, the transport ran foul of , another vessel and sustained a greater degree of damage than was at first apprehended. Before they quitted the channel, it fell astern of the fleet, and in the Bay of Biscay totally lost sight of the convoy. Considerable alarm was felt by the unfortunate passen• Fers, apparently abandoned to their fate in the midst of a wide and stormy ocean; for the sea, according to that most expres sive phrase, employed to describe its forthcoming tumult, was "getting up." Vlrave lashed itself on wave, against the devoted bark; the master lost confidence; and the crew, feebly assisted by a few sick soldiers. found themselves inadequate to the management of the vessel, which was driven out of her course, and in a short time stranded on the coast of France. WEDNESDAY JANUARY 23, 1839 Mrs. Maxwell, from the moment she had parted from her husband, resigned herself to despair; prescient fears weighed upon her soul. On the evening of her (leper- ' tore, she looked upon the clouds which obscured the golden light of the magnifi cent orb that had a short time before so brilliantly illumined the scene, and upon the dark waters through which the disa , bled bark made its sullen way, and she felt that the sun of hope and happiness would never rise for her again. She ga thered her children around her, and, amid the frightful confusion of the tempest, calmly awaited the event. The vessel was doomed to perish, and few of the luckless Leing s it contained, survived the general wrec. The Maxwell family were. however, amid the small number, When the transport went to pieces, they clung to one of the masts, which had fal len acr. ss the place where they were all huddled together, and, though severely injured, and for some time lost to con sciousness, escaped with life. Mrs. Maxwell, upon opening her eyes, found herself and her children in a very decent apartment. of a French house, and attended by a kind looking woman who made herself well understood by the good offices which she lavished upon her unfor tunate guests. Madelon St. Alois was a widow, and childless; she was established in a good business at Bayonne, and had only come to the small town on the coast where the transport had been wrecked, to look after a property lately inherited. She became attached to Mrs. Maxwell and her fair daughters, and began to consider whether she could not render them useful as assistants in her shop; and having suffi cient interest in Paris to obtain the custo dy of her protoges, who were considered in the light of tretenus rather than prison ers of war, she carried them with her to her own home. Painfully anxious to m..ke her husband acquainted with her existence, 112 rs. Maxwell wrote repeatedly, •and through every channel she could think of; but it was very difficult at that period to get a letter transmitted to England, and the ignorance of the language, which pre vented her from communicating all heal thoughts and wishes to her new friends, likewise threw many obstacles in her way. She, however, preserved, and in the fond expectation th .t the pleasing in telligence would reach the beloved object for whom it was intended, hope revived in her breast. Madame St, Allois had no reason to repent the benevolent ar rangements which she had made, for the family were very diligent and efficient. The young girls speedily learned to speak the language of the country, and, full of hope and animation, they were cheerful' and happy. Mrs. Maxwell, though grate ful and even resigned, experienced many anxious feelings about her husband; all her present comforts were embittered by a separation which rendered correspon dence difficult, nay, perhaps, impossible. No answers arrived to her numerous let ters, none from the ags;nts of the regiment in London; at length there came intelli gence of a great battle fought in Spain, in which, of course, in the Parisian Bulletin, the victory was given to the French. The corps to which Maxwell belonged was stated in this account to have been entire ly cut to pieces. A dreadful apprehen sion weighed upon the wife's heart; yet still she did not give entire credit to in ' telligence coming front so doubtful a source By this time she had attained a tolerable degree of proficiency in the French lan guage, while Margaret spoke it perfectly; they could, therefore, communicate freely with all their acquaintances, and one kindly undertook to procure the London Gazette. With some difficulty, and after the lapse of a considerable period, this offi cial document was obtained, and it gave a miserable confirmation of a part of the French statement; the regiment had suf fered severely, and the name of Setjeant Major M txwell was amongst the list of the killed. The blow did not fall the less heavily for the delay; the patience with which the faithful wile had borne all the evils of her lot changed to the deepest dejection;—she was oppressed by the ga iety of her friends, and even the cheerful ness of her own children augmented her, distress. Their smiles seemed to her to be a sort of profanation, when their father's bones lay mouldering perhaps up on the battle field. The two younger , girls grieved at their mother's unhappi ness, and often checked themselves in the midst of their glee, as her sad looks re minded them of their father's fate; but it was impossible for them to enter into her feelings, or to comprehend the depth and extent of her anguish; and the shade of melancholy soon passed away from their brows, and they became joyous as before. Margaret sympathised more tenderly in her mother's sorrow; she was well ac quainted with all the excellences of the parent she had lost; knew until the fatal parting, no misfortune or privation had rendered the hearts so fondly linked to., gether, impatient of their lot. The holy harmony of the domestic circle had never , been disturbed, the devoted pair being , certain of receiving the support and assts. 1, tance from each other %1 hich each in turn could give. New scenes and new objects could not divert the mind of Margaret from dwelling upon the past. She could not help admitting that, with respect to worldly circumstances, her family had gained iiy their shipwreck on the French coast; but they were in a land of strati- I gers, and she saw that her mother droop ed under that home-sickness which so oftea embitters the life of the exile. Mrs. Maxwell, since this last b -eavement, pined, indeed, for her ni.tive land. Often, during her pilgrimage through life, she had cast longing looks at those well-remembered scenes, wherein child hood and youth had been spent, but never did they recur so frequently as now when she saw the destiny of her children, though not an unhappy one, cast in a for eign couutry, t nd could no longer hope to drag herself.ito the church yard of her na tive village, and died upon the turf that covered the ht.inthe graves of so many of her ancestors. Meantime the children grew up in strength and beauty, and Margaret had become a young woman. Thoughts of peace be. tween England and ?ranee-had long ceas ed to be indulged; war seemed to be an inevitable necessity, only to end when no country remained to be conquered. Ma dame St. Alois had taken Mrs. Maxwell into partnership; business flourished; and but for one corroding care, the family would have been happy. Though life has lost all its charms in the mother's eye, still she wishes to live for the sake of her ciii:.;ren; and while hope seemed dead in her heart she was conscious occasi 'illy of a feeling akin to it, a faint expectation mixed with an er nest desire that'she should live to see En gland again, and that her parents would pardon her, and take her daughters to their bosom. About this time her mind was desturbed by a dream, and she could scarcely determine upon the effect which 1 it produced upon her, whether the idea it I I presented reconciled her to her situation, or revived all the keenness of anguish which shelled suffered when the certainty of her bereavement reached her. She dreamed thatiMaxwell was alive, but that in' the full conviction that she and her daughters had perished in the stranded yea sel, and married again, and was now the happy husband of a young and beautifu woman. This dream was never absent from her thoughts. Such an event might have happened and Maxwell yet blameless —Could s'te with this chance now reveal to her; !regret that lie was dead, that she had been spared a calamity more dreadful than any she had yet experienced? Per plexed by so new a view of the circum ' stances of her situation, poor Mrs. Max well now suffered from tan apprehension that site was doing wrong, and that wheth er she, ceased to lament the loss of her . husband or deplored a misfortuhe provi dentially occuring to preserve her from a more terrible ',fate, her feelings could nut be blameless. Though the people of Bayonne were kept in a considerable degree of ignorance concerning the events of the war in Spain rumors of reverses both in the Peninsula and elsewhere, where whispered abroad. The party inimical to the ruler of France, hitherto condemned to silence and pa tient endurance of a govei nmeni which they disliked, now began to utter their sentiments, and to deprecate measures which they considered injurious..to the wel fare of the country, Slow to entertain hope, Mrs. Maxwell, could scarcely be lieve in the possibility of a tree choice be ing offered to her with respect to a return to England. Could she fancy that some of her day dreams would be realized, and she should yet live to present her chil dren to her own and to M axwelPs rela tives? How often had they talked to gether of a visit to the green hills of his na tive land, and how fondly had she antici pated the welcome she would receive in the homes of hi; kinsfolk! The younger girls, pleased with the idea of a chnnge, were delighted with the prospect of peace without knowing what it was to bring them and Margaret felt a strange joy at her heart at the thought of dividing her time between her English home, for she loved the good Madame St. Alois as a second mother. The 'reports, however, •vhen they had attained a certain height, were silenced, and some time elapsed without bringing decisive intelligence of the state of the war, or the real aspect of public affairs. The great part of the community seemed to be aware that a crisis was at hand, though perhaps few understood the ac tual state of events. Thc Maxwells hat! been accustomed to hear of wa. - it a dis tance, but soon it was brought beneath the walls of the city which had sheltered them so lung. They knew that the Brit ish were engaged in a desperate contest with the army of Sault. 'What wet c their [ Vor.. IV, Na 15 sensations during heir state o;* suspense and what convinced beyond the shadow of a doubt that their 'count ryinen had tri umphed I—the gates of Bayonne were throo n open to the victors. It was pleas ant to Madame St. Alois to have so good an excuse to share in the joy of the con querors, rather than in the mortification of the defeated party; so she gladly assis ted in decorating her house with garlands and white cockades', Dud in spreading tapeste ' y over the balconies. Janet and Helen Maxwell had prepared baskets full of briquets, and were s,.ld with (blight at the idea of greeting the British soldiers in their own language. Mrs. Maxwell, overpowered by recol lections of other days, could not look up on the wellkrown uniforms, and Marget fancied that she ought to stay by her troth er's side, though longing with a painfiul eagerness to least her eyes upon counte nances which she had never expected to behold agahl, For some time she retain ed her post; but the first full burst of the trumpets shook her resolution; it was the same sound which had filled her ears on the, pier at Ramsgate; she had listened to many French trumpets since, but they Ind not conveyed notes like these; and scarcely known what she did, she rush. ed to the balcony. and gazed .intensely on the soldiers as 'they . passed. A shriek at deligth burst from her parted lips; she flew down ,stairs out into the street, and hurrying along, flung herself into the arms of a tall, erect, but t oil-worn and weather beaten man, exclaiming. "it is my father, it is my Called" An officer who obser ved the scene, directed Itraxwell. for be it was to fall out of the ranks, and the,bewil tiered man war carried rather than led into the house of Madame St. Alois. Jen et and Helen, though retaining no person al recollection of their father, comprehen tied the whole matter at once, welcomed him with a thousand carasses. Margaret now sought her ;''mother; she endeavored to steal softly to the apartment in which she had left her, and to break the Intel ligence by degrees; but even her very !footsteps betrayed extraordinary t:dings. Mrs. Maxwell looked up at once, and read 'ln her daughters face something, she knew - not what of joy. Jo another mo ment she exclaimed, "lie is alive, you have seen him'?" and then a violent burst of tears enabled her to listen to the confir mation of her hopes. Who shall describe the joy of that meeting/ . Maxwell was indeed alone, and had never ceased to think of the wife and children whom he believed to be buried in the ocean. His name had been among the list of the kil ' led, but he had survived after several days ' exposure on the field of battle. Compelled to go home far the recovery of his health. he had visited Scotland, anti had also been received by the parents of his wife who, too late, lamented their con duct to their daughter. To find his fan, ly ,thus prosperous, and in every way so well worthy of pride and affection, mor: than repaid him for all that he had suffer ed. Mrs. Maxwell too, how was she rc• wtrded for the dreary past. Meekly awl patiently as she had borne her affliction-, she sometimes accused herself of not ha. • in 7 been sufficiently submissive to the of s heaven, and felt that she scarcely d • served this excess of happiness. Made •• St. Alois, who loved nothing so we 11... met ry faces, became at once a confirm supporter of the Bourbons, and thtr. for a time compelled to part with the Ei • ily of her adoption, it as only to n.• again. Maxwell, at the conclusion or war, found no difficulty in obtaining ; • discharge. Though he had gained not• besides honor during his long and me, rious services, his wife had been piaci. a situation which enabled her to reali. sum of sufficient for their future can • and at the death of the good Madan: ' Alois, the younger Maxwells were an,: provided fur by the bequests of all her • sings- Inaugural address. 111.2P1D R. PORTER. Deeply impressed with a sense of gra tude to my tellow-citizens for the dibi. guished mark of confidence reposed in t. I enter upon the arduous and responbi' duties of Governor of Pennsylvania, AI . a full determination, according to'the ities given me, to do my duly . A compliance with custom would sr, to require of me, when assuming the ties of the Executive, in pursuance of choice of the people, to lay before tl some of the leading principles upon wI the administrttion of the government be conducted. Ido this the more willii ly, because in a Republic. the intercor beoween the people and their public fn tionaries should be candid, frank unreserved . Education ‘vith the highest vener and eiratest affection for the men and