lIUNTI - NGDON JOURNAL. BY JAMES CLARK :] VOL, XI, NO, 4a KPcs•Ena:a. The “Jou user." will be published every Wed sdny at $2 00 a year, if paid in advance, and if not paid within six months, $2 50. No subscription received for a shorter period than sa months, nor any paper discontinued till all ar rearages arc paid. , Advertisements not exceeding one square, will be itiSerted three times for $1 00, and for every subse quent insertion 25 cents. If no definite orders are given as to the time an advertisement is to be continu a, it will be kept in till ordered out, and charged ac cordingly. cri V. B. PALMER, Esq., is authorized to act -ries Agent for this paper, to procure subscriptions and advertisements in Philadelphia, New York, Balti more and Boston. OFFICES Philadelphia—Number 59 Pine street. . Baltimore—S. E. corner of Baltimore and Cal. vert streets. New York—Number 160 Nassau street. Boston—Number 16 State street. POETICAL. TUE MANIAC MAID. BY J. CLEMENT. Her face is fair, her form erect, Her motions full of grace, But not a gleam of reason's light Within her eye we trace. The bright blue sky above her spreads, The gay green earth around, And myriad voices sweetly tuned, Wake every pleasant sound. And yet to her there's nothing fair, In all that God has made, And not a harp could thrill her soul, Though by on angel played. The beauteous world of mind, to us So full of heavenly light, To her is but a dark morass, Where reigns primeval night. The smile on friendehip's face is dim, The glow of love concealed, And all he woman in her heart, Is like a fount congealed. It here seems strange that God should hide A ray of his own light, But Heaven will yet illume the page, And all will there be bright. MISCELLANEOUS, LETTER FROM MAU BURRITT. We cannot say whether the following, from the Learned Blacksmith," now in England, will ho lead in this country with the more surprise or pity. It is full of food for thought: An !lour with Nature and the Nailers. I was suddenly diverted from my con templation of this magnificent scenery by a fall of heavy rain drops, as a pre lude of an impending shower. Seeing a gate open, and hearing a familiar click ing behind a hedge, 1 stepped through into a little blacksmith shop, about as • . large as an American smoke house for curing bacon. 'flee first object that my eyes rested upon was a full grown man, nine years of age, and nearly three feet high, perched upon a stone of half that heighth, to raise his breast to the level of his father's anvil, at which he was at work with all the vigor of his little short arms, making nails. 1 say a full grown man, for I fear he can never grow npy larger, physically or mentally.— As I put my hand on his shoulder in a familiar way, to make myself nt home with him, and to remove the timidity N‘ . with which my sudden appearance seem ' - ed to inspire him, by a pleasant word or two of greeting, his flesh felt case hard ened into all the duration of toiling' manhood, and as unsusceptible of growth as his anvil block. Fixed manhood had set in upon him in the greenness of his youth, and there he was by his father's side, a stinted, premature man : with his childhood cut off : with no space to grow in between the cradle and the an vil block ; chased, as soon ns lie could stand on his little legs, from the hearth stone to the forge stone, by iron neces sity, that would not let him stop long enough to let him pick up a letter of the English Alphabet on the way. 0! Lord John Russel ! think of it! Of this En glishman's son, placed by his mother, scarce weaned, on a high, cold stone, barefooted, before the anvil; there to harden, sear, and blister its young hands . by heating and hammering ragged nail / rods, for the sustenance her breast can ' no longer supply ! Lord John ! look at those nails, as they lie hissing on the block. Know you their meaning, use, and language? Please your lordship, let me tell you ; I leave made nails be fore now; they are iron exclamation points, which this unlettered, dwarfish boy is unconsciously arraying against you, • against the British Government, and the misery of British literature, for cutting him off without a letter of the English alphabet when printing is done by steam! for incarcerating him, for no sin on his or his parent's side but poverty, into a dark, six-by-eight prison of hard labor, youthless being ; think of it ; an in fant hardened, almost - in its mother's arms, into a man ; by toil that bows the sturdiest of the world's laborers who come to manhood through intervening years of childhood! The boy's father was at work with his back towards me when I entered.— At my first word of salutation to the lad, he turned around and accosted me a lit tle bashfully, as if unaccustomed to the sight of a stranger in that place, or re luctant to let them into the scene and secret of poverty. I sat down on one end of his nail bench, and told him I was an American blacksmith by trade, and that I had come in to see how he got on in the world, whether he was earning pretty good wages at his busi ness, so that he could live comfortably, and send his children to school. As I said this I glanced inquiringly to the boy, who was looking steadily at me from his stone stool at the anvil. Two or three little crook-faced girls, from two to five years of age, had stolen in timidly, and a couple of young frightened eyes were peeping over the door still at me. They all looked if some task was allotted them in the soot and cinders of their father's forge, even to the sharp eyed baby at the door. The poor Englishman—he was much an Englishman as the Duke of Wellington—looked at his bushy headed, bare-footed children, and said softly with a melancholy shake of the head, that the times were rather hard with him. It troubled his heart, and many hours of the night he had been kept awake by the thought of it, that he could not send his children to school, and was unable to teach them himself. They were good children, he said, with a most yearning in his eyes; they were all the wealth he had, and loved them the more, the harder he had to work for them. The poorest part of the poverty that was on him, was that he could not give his children the letters. They were good children, for all the crock of the shop was on their faces, and their fingers were bent like eagle's claws with handling nails. He had been a poor man all his days, and he knew his children would be poor all their days, and poorer than he, if the nail business should continue to grow worse. If he could only give them the letters or the alphabet, as they called it, it would make them the like of rich ; for then they could read the testament. He could read the testament a little, for he had learned the letters by fire-light. It was a good book, was the testament ; never saw any other book ; heard tell of some in rich people's houses ; but it mat tered but little with him. The testa ment he was sure was made for nailers and such like. It helped him wonder fully when the loaf was small on the ta ble. He had but little time to read it when the sun was up, and it took him long to read a little, for he learned the letters when he was old. But he laid it beside his dish at dinner time and fed his heart with it, while the children wore eating the bread that fell to his share, and when he had spelled out a line of the shortest words, he read them aloud, and his eldest boy, the one on the block there, could say several whole verses Ile had learned in this way. It was a great comfort to him, to think that Jeemes could take into his heart so many verses of the testament which he could not read. He intended to teach all his children in this way. It was all he could do for them ; and this he had to do, as all the other hours he had to be at the anvil. The nailing bu siness was growing harder ; he was growing old, and his family large. He had to work from 4. o'clock in the morn ing till 10 o'clock at night to earn eighteen pence. His wages averaged only about 7 shillings a week ; and there was 5 of them in the family to live on what they could earn. It was hard to make up the loss of an hour. Not one of their hands, however little, could be spared. Jem my was going on 9 years of age, and a helpful lad he was ; and the poor man looked at him doatingly. Jemmy could work off a thousand nails a day, of the smallest size. The rent of their little shop, tenement and garden, was 5 pounds a year, and a few pennies earned by the youngest of them was of great account. But, continued the father, speaking cheerily, I am not the one to complain. Many is the man that has a harder lot of it than I, among the nailers along these hills and in the valley. My neigh bors in the next door could tell you something about labor, you may never heard the like of in your country. He is an older man than I, and there are 7 of them in his family ; and for all that, he has no boy like Jemmy here, to help him. Some of his little girls are sick ly, and their mother is not over strong, and it all comes on him. He is an old ish man, as I was saying, yet he not only works 18 hours every day at his forge, but every Friday in the year he works all night long, and never lays off his clothes till late of a Saturday night. A good neighbor is John Stubbins, and the only man in our neighborhood that CORRECT PRINCIPLES-SUPPORTED BY TRUTH. HUNTINGDON, PA., NOVEMBER 11, 1846. can read the newspaper. It is not Often he gets a newspaper; for it is not the like of us that can have newspapers and bread, too, in our houses at the same time. But now and then he begs an old one, partly torn, at the baker's, and reads it to us of a Sunday night. So once in two or three weeks, we hear of what is going on in the world—something about corn laws, and the Duke of Wellington, and Oregon, and India, and Ireland, and other places in England. E. 13. AUTUMN. Autumn has come to pay her yearly visit, and to warn us of decay ! The leaflet hangs wrestling with the wind; the frost of evening now gathers upon it, and its freshness is stricken. Sum mer—soft-eyed Summer ! art thou gonel Yes ; 1 still hear thy sweet adieu sigh ing low in the vales, as thy faint breath steals from leaf to leaf away ! But why should we mourn 1 The flower may fade, and its fragrance die ; yet there is within it the seeds of eternal renovation. In connection with human life, we are too apt to reflect upon yellow Autumn with feelings of melancholy. It becomes a season of contemplation, and our thoughts go upward to the Author of our being, hovering like timid spirits around His holy altar. But there is something in the fall of the year, with even its mournful decay, which charms the soul and sweetens human life : the rustle of the changing green, the winds low sigh, the creaking door,the house cricket's prolonged chirp, and the lit up hearth, send our thoughts back on an errand of memory to those charming hours and happy days of youth and hope—days of childhood—of inno cence—when, with many a beloved one from whom we have now parted for ever, we sat around the family altar and par took of the feelings of other times.— Oh, how agreeable are those melancholy reflections, as they linger and play in the tabernacle of a virtuous heart ! If we contemplate the changes of the sea son in connection with a hereafter, we feel an inexpressible beauty in the com parison, which cannot cease to convince the liberal and creative mind that there is a home beyond the grave, "where the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest." It presents an argument dipped in beautiful coloring— like all of Nature's fine pencilings—so woven with our existence by the unseen hand, that the keenest eye cannot touch the point at which every separate tint is parted from its neighboring hue. lin mortality becomes an instinctive feeling, which carries the soul upward, we know not how, to its destined and eternal hab itation of light and life. A ceaseless change, without annihila tion, is a concomitant of all Nature's works. She never ceases to operate.— Every thing which we see upon the globe has been acted upon by Nature's supreme hand, but has never been des troyed. Wood has been changed by fire to charcoal—passed thence to va rious states of refinement, until it has resulted in a concrete of elementary light, sparkling in the hue and splendor of a diamond. That man whose eye has never opened upon the noiseless operations of Nature, or witnessed the developements of her handy work—who has never felt the charms of her Spring, time, or heaved an unconscious sigh while viewing the Autumn flower in its decline, has left unlearned the grandest lesson of his own immortality. Why does not the steel-hearted atheist, who buries his soul in an eternal sleep, repine at the difference between his fate and that of the plant 1 Does he not ob serve the pride of the forest shedding its leaves in the Autumn—reviving in the Spring—re-clothing and replenish ing through interminable ages 1 Surely he must, while he surveys his own de cayed and nerveless limbs, cry out in despair—" For me there is no returning spring, my withered trunk never will clothe itself in a smoother rind ; my hoary locks shall never more receive the gloss of youth ; no young and vig orous sap will circulate through these chilled and collapsed Vessels !"-- Alas, it will not be so. What! the plant be renovated, and the seasons come again, while the lord of the earth, with his face upward, walking in the majesty of mind, withers and sinks to an ignoble and eternal sleep 1 ~ Belli •e the muse—the Autumn blasts of death Kill not the buds of Virtue; no—they spread Beneath the heavenly beams of brighter suns, Through endless ages, into higher powers." CURIOUS LEGACY.-Mr. Tustin, late Chaplain to Congress, has had a call to the Presbyterian Church in Hagerstown, Md. Mr. Hugh Kennedy, who died some years ago, left a small annuity to that Church, on condition that they should sing nothing but the Psalms of David; when they depart from this they lose the legacy, which amounts to $BOO per :ta nnin, From the Vicksburg Whig, POLITICAL PORTRAITS, CLAY. He speaks !-4 nd viewless chains Upon a Senate rest; He ceases!—look upon the names That gent a Nation's breast. WEBSTER. The calm, unsounded deep Is emblem of his mind ; But roused, its heavy billows sweep In grandeur unconfined. CALHOUN A loom of curious make May weave a web of thought, And ha who rends the shining warp, May in the woof be caught. J. Q. ADAMS. Statesman end poet too! Philosopher in turn ; Link with the past !—a Nation soon Shall sorrow o'er his urn. CRITTENDEN, Now with a gian'ts knight He heaves the pond'rous thought— Now pours the storm of eloquence With scathing lightnings fraught. BERRIEN With temper calm and mild, And words of softened tone, He overturns his neighbor's cause, And justifies his own. CORWIN. The polished shafi wit Is quivering in light; 'Tic sped ! upon . hieing track, And havoc marks his flight. J. M. CLAYTON•. The lightning's glare may turn The needle fronithe pole; Whoever saw it mtwerve, Or bow to low control. BENTON Judgment and tact combined, A mine of knowledge vast; A walking book•case—on its shelves The archives of the past. With neat and rounded phrase He tricks the shapeless thought; Like hope of power, it charms today, To-morrow it is nought. ALLEN Ye gods ! defend my cars! Bass drums around me throng ! Through empty galleries !cap and roll The note. of ' , Chinese (Jong!" PRESSED INTO THE SERVICE. "Mr. Tar !" said the Recorder yes terday morning, as if he was anxious to ascertain whether there was any indi vidual of that mime present, and if so, that he would like to take a small ob servation of the person bearing such an odoriferous name. No one rose to the summons, but the Recorder seeing a po lice officer telegraphing a red faced, weather beaten tar, in one end of the box, with hair enough around his face for at least a baker's dozen of stage boatswains, inquired what the man's name was. "John Hull,, your honor," said the sailor, rising, and slapping his tarpaulin down on the railing. " John Hull, your honor ; and may I be introduced for the first time in my life to the bo'sins cat, if Jack Hull was ever ashamed of his name in whatever port he was brought to an anchor. Hull's a name, sir, as'hl do to stand by in the roughest sort of a gale, or the greatest calm as ever put old Boreas asleep." "He told us his name was John Tar last night, sir," said the officer. " Did your honor ever see such a spooney of a land lubber as that 1 Why he would'nt know the difference 'twixt the figure-head of a seventy-four and the captain's clerk. Jack Tar ! you land lubber, you. An' so lam a jack tar, and does'nt ever mean to sail under any other colors, so long as there's a vessel in the Navy with the old stars and stripes streamin' over her. " You're in the Navy, then 1" inquired the Recorder. " No, your honor, I'm out on it, al though I keeps on the togs of the old Uncle Sam; coz, as soon as ever I get out o' this ore snap, I'm goin to make a straight wake and list for another cruise —an' maybe yet you'll hear of old Jack Hull as one of the chaps as fell in the attack on some of them 'ere Mexican ports in the Gulf. That's what I'm arter. I've been a workin' all my life, and now I wants to have a little amuse ment in the way o' batterin down that ore castle or somethin' o' that sort." " You've been at sea sometime, have you," said the Recorder. " I should say I had, your honor. The first thing 1 ever seed was the flash of a big gun in 1812, for I was born on the old Constitution, in the midst of the ac ition with the Gurriere. My father used Ito be called 'old John'—Lord bless him ! IHe was sent to Davy Jones's by a grape shot, an' I was christened John Hull, for the captain that was, the old commodore I now—Lord bless his old !" _ _ Ott — "Bridget, two pillows missing from the front garret bedroom." " Yes, ma'am, I know it." " Well, then, what have you done with them ?" "Why Miss Sarah and Jane put them , on for bustles this mornite, to prom.- " Well, sir," said Hull, looking down, wide." " But how came you here, Johnl you should'nt be seen in such a place," said the Recorder. "I do feel just about as small as a mid dy that has been mastheaded ; but what's done can't be helped. You see, I'd taken a stiff allowance of grog aboard, and was beating and tacking about lar board and starboard, when I gin a lee lurch an' I fetched up agin a chap with a tarpaulin an his knob. 'Why did'nt you put your lielinn hard a port l' said ; 'do you think a first-rate's going to look out for all such small craft as yowl' 'None o' your slang,' says he. 'Who the blue blazes arc you 'l' says I, for I want altogether steddy, your honor on my pins—had'nt got my land legs on egzactly. 'l'm a watchman,' said he. 'You are, are you,' says I. 'Well, if it's your watch, you ought to be triced up and have a round dozen for not keepin' out o' the way.' Well, you see, one word fotched on another, an' I hauled off 'an gin him a broadside ; but on ac count o' the grog, my guns was'nt heavy shotted, an' they did'nt cripple the ene my ; but he boarded me with a bit of a handspike he had in his hand, an' fotch ed me a lick that made me see more lights than were ever hoisted at the peaks of the craft aloft in the sky ; an' that's all as I recollects, till I found my self up yonder there, hard and fast among this set of scurvy craft alongside here, in this ere chicken coop." 6. Yon intend to go to sea again V' in quired the Recorder. " Aye, aye, your honor ; an' I'm only sorry as I ever left the old Raritan and Captain Jack, for I expect, when the Commodore wakes up in the Gulf, he'll make up for lost time; and as Guy'- ment's gin 'em a touch of the old Perry blood, I want to let 'em have a small chance of old Hull." " Well," said the Recorder, " I sus-1 pect you have been punished enough for your frolic, and I shall let you go this time upon you paying your jail fees." " Thank your honor," said the sailor, joyfully, " I shan't forget it ; and if you ever hear John Hull has been cut in two by a Mexican shot, just think that my last words will be a blessing on your j bead for letting me die in defence of my ship and country." The sailor paid his fees, and wanted every Ludy to gu out and Lake a drink ; but as nobody accepted his generous effer, he threw down a quarter eagie, saying, " Give these poor, miserable chaps something to drink there," point ing to the prisoners in the box, "and let me advise you, comrades, to leave oft drinking, and join the temperance soci ety."—N. 0. Pic. DON'T BE TOO PARTICULAR.—An Irish man once dreamt that he visited the Lord Mayor of London, who treated him with the greatest hospitality, and asked him if he wouldn't "take a little su'thin." He replied that he wouldn't mind a lit tle whiskey punch. " Hot or cold I" in quired his Lordship. His guest prefer red it warm, but while the Lord Mayor was out heating the water, the Irishman awoke from his delicious slumber.— " Och !" cried he, comprehending what a fool he was to wait for hot punch du ring the precarious tenure of a dream, " how I wish I'd said cowld !" A CREDIIILE WITNESS.—Two claimants for one dog lately appeared before a jus tice of the peace, in a town near Bos ton. Several witnesses swore positively to the ownership of each litigant ; when the sagacious magistrate directed the plaintiff to take his place on his right and the defendant to occupy a corres ponding position on the left ; the dog in dispute being remanded to a distant part of the room. The parties were then commanded to WHISTLE, when the dog made for the defendant. "Mr. -," said the justice to the clerk, "record the decision for the de fendant, the dog is the only credible witness in the case." "Tells me, will you, Pete," said Sam Jonsing to Pete Gumbo, " wh-wh who does de poet speaks ob, when him beanterfully ses : " Her walks in beauty, like n ting ob night " Why him means a nigger gal, to be sure, Sam," said Pete ; "if him meant a white gal, ob course he'd say, like a ting ob day." " Den I understands de metainorphor sis oh de idear," said Sam. V- "Do you keep an album, Julial" said the mistress of a boarding school to one of her pupils, a young girl fresh from the country. "No, ma'am," said Julia, keeps a dairy " - - [EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. WHOLE NO. 568. THE BLOWING SPRING, A few days ago, we attended the " Blowing Spring" Camp Meeting in Anderson county, some 21 miles north west of Knoxville, and while there, cu riosity prompted us to visit the Spring after which the Camp Ground takes its name. The Spring is a fine and bold current of pure lime-stone water, coming out of the earth at the foot of a small mountain. At the head of the spring is the mouth of a small cave, the entrance of which is low, and the passage nar row. The only thing remarkable about the place is, a strong current of air is constantly pouring out, sufficient to shake the weeds and grass around, and to chill a man completely, in the short est imaginable time, in the heat of sum mer. These holes and fissures of the earth, abounding more or loss in every section of the country, we know have been oc casioned by different causes: confined air, water, vapors, gasses, volcanoes, and earthquakes, have all contributed to produce them. The earth is known to be composed of substance, which, when mingled with water are calculated to produce vapors, gasses, and explosions, so it must, of necessity, be rent, from time to time into chasms and fissures of different depths. But this blowing, we do not so well understand. The pre sumption, however, with us, is that it is caused by a water fall, upon the princi ple of the water blast, at our furnaces and forges. This opinion is strength ened, moreover, from the fact, that as the stream is increased or diminished by wet or dry weather, the blast from the mouth of the cave is increased or dimin ished. However, this natural curiosity, like many others, may have been form ed, when, at the command of God, ~ the fountains of the great depth were bro ken up, and the windows of heaven opened."—Jonesborough (Tenn.) Wimig. GOOD ADVICE Dow, Jr., in his sermon of last week gives the following very excellent advice to the young ladies of his flock: The buxom, bright-eyed, rosy-cheek ed, full breasted, bouncing lass--who can darn a stocking, mend trowsers, make her own frocks, command a regi ment of pots and kettles, feed the pigs, chop wood, milk cows, wrestle with the boys, and never full under, and be a lady withal in " company," is just the sort of a girl for me, and for any worthy ►nan to marry; but you, ye pining, mo ping, lolling, screwed-up, wasp-waisted, doll-dressed, putty-faced, consumption mortgaged, music-murdering, novel de vouring daughters of Fashion and Idle ness—you are no more fit for matrimony, than a pullet is to look after a family of fourteen chickens. The truth is, my dear girls, you want, generally speaking, more liberty, and less fashionable restraint—more kitch en and less parlor—more leg exercise and less sofa—more pudding and less piano—more frankness and less mock modesty—more corned beef and less corsets—more breakfast and less bishop. Loosen yourselves a little; enjoy more liberty, and less restraint by fashion ; breathe the pure atmosphere of freedom, and become something nearly as lovely and beautiful as the God of nature de signed. Pat at the Post Office, The following colloquy took place at an Eastern Post Office : Pat—" I say, Misther Postmaster, is there any letter here for me 1" Postmaster—" Who are you, good sirl" " I'm myself, that's who I am." "Well, but what is your name, sir 1" " 0, 'liver mind the name." "I must have your name, sir." "An' what the divil do you want with the name 1" " So that I can find your letter if there is one." " Well, Pathrick Burns, if you must have it." " No, sir, there is none for you." 44 Is there no other way to git in there excipt through this pane o' glass 1" " No, sir." 6 , We'll for you there isn't. I'd tache ye betther manners than to insist upon a gintleman's name; but ye did'nt got it afther all, so I'm aven with ye." READ THIS. A B never lent and chair eat table men is all ways come for table in the eye dear of may king his neigh bores and as 0 she eatejoy fool It is threw a cents of dew tea 2 his all my tea make her, and just ice 2 his fel low more tails that he bees toes a few pen eyes up on those who D serve a pea Q nigh airy ass east ants, or claim our come pass I on and pea tea. "but mother (D- A youn man, on being requested to dance a Scotch reel with a couple of sour looking maids, objected, on the ground that "pickles did not agree with him."