, tErriz i , 4 5r 'NN ,S ) , c I A r: . ( 11 1111' 1 4 (1 1- (1 / , r , BY JAS. CLARK. MC MANIAC. The following lines, descriptive of a scene in w private mad house, ate from the pen of M. G. Ltwit, Esq. They Were published in the Na tional bitel/igwics, about eighteen years since, the editor& of which paper introduced them with these remarks If any one can reed the following lines without shuddering in sympathy with the supposed captive, he must have a heart dead to every human feeling." Stay, jailor, stay, and heat my wo ! She is not mad who kneels to thee, For what I'm now, too well I know, And what I was, and what should be. I'll rave no more in proud despair, My language shall be mild, though sad; Sat yet I'll firmly, truly swear, am not mad I I am not mad ! My_tryant husband forged the tale, Which chains me in this dismal cell, My fate unknown my friends bewail— Oh I jailor haste that tale to tell ! Ohl haste my father's heart to cheer ; His heart at once 'twill gri-ve and glad To know, though kept a captive here, I am not mad ! I am not mad ! He smiles in scorn, and turns the key ! , lie quits the gate ! I knelt in vain ! Hia,glimm'ring lamp, still, still I sec ! ''tis gone—and all is gloom again. Cold, hater cold—no warmth, no light ! Life I all thy comforts once I had Yet here I'm chained this freezing night, Although not mad ! no, no, not mad! 'Tim sure some dream! come vision vain! What ! I the child of rank and wealth ; And I the wretch who clanks this chain, Bereft of freedom; friends and health! Ah! while I dwell do blessings fled, Which never mote my heart must glad, Now aches my heart; how burns my head, But 'tis not mad! ho, 'tis not mad! bast thou my chihli forgot ere this, A mother's face; a mother's tongue She'll ne'er forget ybur parting kiss, Nor round her neck how fast you clung; Nor how with me you used to stay ; Nor how that spit your sire forbade ; Nor how—l'll drive such thoughts away— They'll make me mad, they'll make tue mad ! Ilia rosy lips how sweet they Pm ilea- His mild blue eyes, how bright they shone— Noise ever bore a pvelier child— 'And art thou now forever gone And must I never gee thee mote, My pretty, pretty little lad I will he free—unbar the door-- I am not mad—l am not mad ! Oh, hark ! what means these dreadful cries I llis chain some furious madman breaks— lie comes-,I see his glaring eyes— Now, now, my dungeon grate he shakes— Help—help—he's gone—oh—fearful woe, Such screams to hear, such sights to see— My brain, my brain—l know, I know I am not mad--but soon shall be. Yes, soon—fOr lb; you—while I speak— Mark how ybri demon's eye balls glare— He sees me---noW with dreadful shriek, He whirls a setpent high in air. Horror—the rePtile strikes his tooth Deep in my heart ! so crushed and sad; Aye, laugh, ye fiends, I feel the truth— lour task is diite—l'm Mad !—l'm Mad ! THE PILIRIOAT OF VIRTEE: The inculcatidh and pursuit of virtue brings its own reward. Man is a crea ture who cannot act without a motive; motives like the Weights of a clock con trol his motion, but he is given by the wise Creator, a plliver of discrimination, of judgment uplift the motives that actu ate him, and can avoid those which lend Lim to evil, end tiring down upon him pain, sorrow aad unrest. The man of wisdom and tintltlrstanding seeks and does the good fresh' an absolute necessi ty of his sympathies and wants. To him, the pursuit df evil or wrong is re , . pulsive. His soul; like a finely attuned instrument, shudders at every finger of discord touching its keys. Joy and fe licity follow him only in the path of Vir tue. The higher din humanity is de veloped, the more instinctively we cling to the beautiful and true, the inure ab !torrent is everything false and defortn ed. Selfishness—a desire to satisfy walf-leggings, which ate the soul's inau dible articulations, nity lie at the bane of these instincts and actions of the good man, but this weighs nothing against their virtue. Selfishness lies at the bottom of all life, In all its real at imaginable manifestations. Intelligence pyrites and ennobles it, makes it equal to the loftiest actions and aspirations of humanity. The true man is good, be 'candle to be evil would give over the in stincts of his soul to torment. Would that,., in the language of one of the no blest of poets, all might feel that the virtuous man- sq. great ic his humility, a. king. Ate little in their grandetit." That Every heart contains perfections germ, And wisest of the sages of the earth, That-ever from the stores of reason drew Science and•truth, and virtue's dreadless tone, Were iota weak and inexperiencep boy, Tro4d., sensual, unimpassioned, unimbued, With pure desire and universal love, Compized to that high being of dandles. brain, 'Which death, pausing in awe before Ilia changeless eyebeam, might alone subdue." MI think of Thee. VU think of thee when I am fat Away from thee and thine ; Thy memory like a distant star Around toy path will shine. Lip jumps the D#vii atel Waits very solemn, Add sets two lines to fill this column, [Flom the ?few York Commetcial Advertiser.] THE. FALL OF THE LEAF. Yes, the season is changed ; the sum mer is passed ; Autumn's reign is al ready far advanced, and soon the deso lation and dreariness of Winter, will be upon us. Painfully we were conscious this morning of the rapid passing away of external nature's pleasant days; and sadly did the atmospheric gloom exert a mysterious influence on our cerebral nerves. Of the bright vernal mornings which we " once enjoyed," we can only say, " how sweet their inomory still ;" for months to come, the habit of early rising will be inconvenient, rather than agreeable ; and gloomily, amid wind and rain—ankle deep in polluted snow, or exposed to the pitiless pelting of the storm— the luckless wights who provide mental aliment for their fellows must plod their weary way. " Slce, slab, slud," as Cowper bath it, will be the melancholy refrain of each splash in the mud, and the howling blast and the rat , tling hail will add their melancholy cho rus. Truly, a wintry prospect is before us, as a wintry humor now possesses us; a and and melancholy temper, which magnifies its secret sorrows and some , hot , / looks upon the heavy sky, and breathes the damp air, with the forebo ding that they are permanently to remain rather than pass away with the chang ing wind. Resolve and struggle as one will— look up ever so imploringly or confiding ly into philosophy's sweet face—still sad thoughts will have their sway on such a morning as this. And no marvel. They are in keeping with nature's tem per and nature's condition. She is be ing disrobed of her glories; she is en tering for a thousandth time upon the sere and yellow leaf, and for her sorrow the heavens feel sympathy and are ro bed in sombre grey. Poor nature— weeping, grieving, sorrowing Nature —is shorn of her glory. Her beaute ous green, once bright and beautiful and glorious as wings of Peri, or sheen of sparkling emerald, are forcibly taken from her, and a dingy garb of russet grey, or of more sombre hue, now en circles her shrunken form. Did we say forcibly taken from her l Yet the pow er is invisible! The potent hand that, far as the eye can reach, shades alike and simultaneously, the young ailanthus, the spreading sycamore and the tough sinewed hickory, is riot seen ; the touch is only known by its effects, as the showers of leaves drc4 from their stems and are scattered from the boughs. A strange sight are these falling leaves, in Buell a morning as this, when the atmosphere is damp and heavy, and the earth is tbbist and soft, and the sick ly wind travels past in warm and silent gusts: Verily we grew mournful, al most t 6 weeping; es in the sister city, where they are more plentiful, we pass ed through avenues of trees whose leaves but a few short weeks ago defied the ut most power atireas tU wrest them from the parent stem, \Ve can Zook un moved upon the falling leai•es when the ecittifttleiial gale whirls round the devo ted tree, and in the wantonness of strength tears off its Modest garme'rits; and after shekirtg them wildly in the air, dashes them contemptuo.isly upon the hard, dry earth: it teems natural that iti such a conflict the stormy winds should triumph: Even the rustle of the castaway leaves has a Wild Music in it that is in unison with the harsh scenes around. The surging of the angry boughs has in it something of the "dust to dust and ashes to ashes" sound; while the Tttful squealing of the excited blast make a fitting dirge for the departed Summer, But now such excitements are lack ing. The scene is simply saddening— Melancholy, without any relieiring gran deur or solemnity. Involuntarily one , stops in his career, for it seems as though a universal dissolution teas oeer taking earth and she dwellers thereon. ' How si , ently those leaves fell, yet to a sonsittve mind how loud they speak.— ' Nay, they are instinct with life. How ' they run upon the ground noiselessly but with most expressive aspect. Their hoof maketh no sounds yet you hear their velvet tread and feel that they have a message to utter which you must hear. They approach with selfish dance acid you shrink from them. They rub against your feet and you turn aside least you should tread upon them; they lie still a moment, look you calmly and silently in the fate, then lifting up their faded, attenuated forms, they run on before you in cruel mockery, and in every leap they seem to say-0 Ye do all fade as a leaf. 'Till even so— " The lowly shrub and lofty tree, Drop' their brown leaves all witheringly, As children of mortality;" and man, masing upon the general decay , remembers that life bath its seasons too —.‘ may groweth up and is cut down as HUNTINGDON, PA,, ,TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1848 the grass." The fall of the leaf then path its lesson; and if It be sad it is not unprofitable. Thrilling Incident. I passed up the natural avenue and came upon the green. My feelings were very poetical as I walked towards the village church. I entered. A popular preacher was holding forth, and the little meeting house was much crowded. Sev eral persons were standing up, and 1 soon discovered that I must maintain my perpendicular position, as every seat was crowded, 1, however, passcd up the aisle until I gained a position where I could have a fair view of nearly all pre sent. Many of the congregation looked curiously at me, for 1 was a stranger to them all, In a few moments, however, the attention of every one seemed to be absorbed in the ambassador of grace, and I also began to take an interest in the discourse: The speaker was fluent, and many of his flights were even sublime. The Music of the woods and the fra grance of the heath; seemed to respond to his eloquence. Then it was no great stretch of the ins. agination to fancy that the white banded creatures around ate; With their pouting lips and artless innocence; were beings of a higher sphere. As my feelings were thus divided between the beauties taut blessings of the two worlds, and wrap , ped in a sort of poetical devotion, I de , tested seine glances at me of an anima ted character. 1 need not describe the sensations ex perienced by a youth when the eyes of a beautiful woman rest for a length of time on his countenance, and when he im- I himself to be an object of inter est to her. I returned her glances with interest, and threw all the tenderness into my eyes which the scene, my med itations, and the preacher's discouse had inspired in my heart—doubting not that the fair damsel possessed kindred feel ings at the fountain of inspiration. How could it be otherwisel She had been born and nurtured amidst these wild romantic scenes, and was made up of romance, of poetry and tenderness; and then I thought of the pu rity of woman's love—her devotion—her truth. I only prayed that I might meet with her where we might enjoy a sweet interchange of sentiment. Her glances continued. Several times our eyes net. My heart beat with rapture. At length the benediction was pronounced. I lin gered about the premises until I saw the dark-eyed damsel set out for home alone and on foot. Oh ! that the customs of society would permit—for we are surely one in soul. Cruel formality! that throws up a barrier between each other. Yet I followed her. She looked behind her, and 1 thought evinced some emotion at recognizing me as the stranger of the day. I then quickened my pace and she actually slackened hers, as if to let me come up with her. P.4eible young creature!" thought I, "her artless and warm heart is superior to the bonds of custom." " I reached within a stone's throw of her. She suddenly halted and turned her face towards me. y heart swell ed to bursting. I reached the split where she stood. She began to speak, and I took off my hat as if doing rever ence to an angel. _ "Are you a pedlar 'I" '8 &o, my dear Orli that lg Not My 6c cupation.' " Well, I don't know," continued she, not very bashfully, and eyeing we very sternly—"l thought when I saw you in the meeting house, that you looked like the pedlar who passed ciffa pewter half dollar on the three weeks igo; and so 1 was determined to keep an eye on you. Brother John has got home now, and he says if hE catches the feller he'll wring his neck for him; and I ain't sure but you're the good-for-nothing rascal after all! Reader, did you ever take a sticiii•er bath 1 CLERGYMAN. --T he Salem Reg ister givca an account of a Van Buren Convention at Danvers, at which Rev. Caleb Stetson was nominated for Con gress. Among the speakers on the oc casion was Rev. J. Prince, formerly of Salem, who closed his address by sing ing the negro burletta of " Dandy Jim of Caroline." A TROUBLESOME CONGA EGAVON.—The London Standard says, oh Sunday, when the minister of Udney entered the kirk, he was no leas surprised than indignant to find thtit "daft Jamie Fleming" had taken possession of the pulpit: "Come doon, Jamie," said he. "Come ye up, sir," answered Jamie, "they're a stifrneckt end rebellious gen eration, sir, and it will tack us beith to manage them." CP" It often falls out that he wl.o thinks himself the master wit is the 'nosier fool. More Love and Romance. A ybung girl Was found ih sailor's clothes, on board a vessel lately arrived at Charleston, S. C. She is about 17 or 18 years old, very pretty, though look ing a little masculine, from having her ringlets cut off. It appears that she did not ship as a Sailor, but stowed herself away on board, and was not discovered until after the vessel had got to sea— when the Captain learned that he had an extra hand ; and upon questioning him (her) he said he had a brother in Charleston whom he wished to see—that his father would not consent, so he had run away. The Captain not suspect ing any thing, made him "turn to," scrub down decks, and go aloft—which she did with consurnate bravery, even in galesof wind, singing out, " strait en up," to the old tars when reefing top , sails. It was not until near port that her sex was discovered. It turns out that she was anxious to accompany a passenger on board, who, after, the dis covery of the trick, would not acknowl edge the corn," but put out in the cars for Georgia, the morning after their ar- I rival, leaving his friend to take care of herself. She is now under the care of the Captain, and will be taken back to her family. The Last of the Tea Part) • . Frequent mention has been made of David Kennison, the last of the band that threw the tea overboard in Boston Harbor, who is now re siding in Chicago. He has recently published a fel tot ill tine of the Western papers from which we make the foll6wing extract,: "If I live until the 27th this , of No vember next; 1 shall be one hundred and twelve years old. 1 was born in Kings ton, N. H., and my father moved to Leb anon, Maine, when I was an infant. I was a citizen of that place, when ; at the age of about 33, 1 assisted in throwing the tea overboard in Boston harbor: 1 was at the battle of Bunker Hill, and stood near Gen. Warren when lie fell. I also helped to roll the barrels filled with sand and stone down the hill when the British came up. I was at the bat tles of White Plains, West Point and Long Island. 1 helped to stretch the chain across the Hudson River, to stop British vessels from coming up. I a lso was in the battles at Fort Montg omery, Staten Island, Delaware, Hudson and Philadlphia. I witnessed the surrender of Lord Cornwallis, and was near Wee: Point when Arnold betrayed his coun try, and Andre was hung. 4 , I have been under Washington, (for whom I frequently carried the mails and despatches,) Prescot, Putman, Mont gomery and Lafayette. I now draw a pension oh $8 per month for services in the Revolutionary War. 4, When the last war broke out, I was liting at Portland ; Maine / where I en , listed and Marched t 6 Sachet Harbor, end was ill ttit battle of that place, and also at other places; and new have the marks of a wound received in my hand during that war." A gutlvii: A Kentucky friend soma' Oat:8 ago related to us the folloWing anecdote, as habit g defudity oEaurred in that State : There was a roystering sort of fellow named Peter Russell, but usually called Pete Russell, who owned a good deal of prdperty; and, therefore; had a pecuni ary responsibility, though he Was always in want of money, and frequently in the hands of sharers: On one occasion he Went to a certain accommodating friend to borrow two thousand dollars. "Yes," said his friend, " Pete, 1 will lend you two thousand dollars; and without interest, tod, if yon will give me your bill for the amount on London." "Oh, no," replied Pete, "I can't stand that. If f give you a bill on London, the cursed thing will be back on me here under protest four months at farthest, and then I must pay you the amount, and 20 per cent damages. That's too deep a . . . . "6 Well,C. " said Shylock, "that is cut ting it rather fat, I acknowledge ; but I will tell you, Pete, what I will do; I will take your bill on London for two thou sand dollars, and pay you for it, two thousand two hundred ; and when it comes back protested, you will have to refund two thousand dollars and 20 per cent damages, making together, two thousand four hundred, which will leave me only two hundred dollars." "Agreed," said Pete, "I am willing to stand that. So down they sat to pre pare the documents. " Who the deuce shall I draw upon in London V' said Pete; "I do not know using soul there." ..lt is perfectly immaterial who you dtaW upon," said his friend. "So far as I am concerned, I am willing you should draw on the town pump." "By Jove !" said Pete, " I have it : Z e hournar , I'll draw upoh• my cousin, the Duke of Bedford.h It will be recollected that the family name of his Grace is Russell ; and Pete was in the habit of boasting that he had descended from the same stock. So Pete " let fly his kite" for two thousand on his Grace of Bedford, and received the stipulated amount of two thousand two hundred dollars. The bill, of course, had to be sent out to London to be pre sented to his Grace, and regularly pro tested, in order to establish a legal claim upon the drawer. One morning it was accordingly found,with other documents, on the table in the Duke's study, having been left for acceptance or payment. "And who." said his Grace of Bed ford, taking up the bill, and addressing his man of business, "is this Peter Russell, that is drawing on me for two thousand dollars 1 I never heard of him before, and do not know by what author ' ity he does so." " I am equally ignorant, your Grace," said the homme d' spires. "1 know no thing of him," " Well," said his Grace, after musing a moment "it is very probable, now, that he is some poor and distant branch of my family, who has wandered away off to the wilds of Kentucky, and is in distress, 'I he amount is but a trifle ; let the bill be paid ;" and paid it was. In due course of time Pete's friend got back two thousand dollars, less banker's commissions, and without in terest, for two thousand two hundred he I had paid Pete some months fireviously. It was a regular shave ; only the sha ver became the shavee. Our friend, from whom we had the story, said he never heard whether Pete ever renevied the Operiftie: We can only add that we have often wished we tied such a cousin in Lon dam—A': 0. Bulletin. Hint for Farmers: The Celebrated Fitibtri Bak' 6Well; of Dishly, Leicestershire, and the foun der of the new Leicestershire sheep, used to tell an anecdote with exceeding high glee of a farmer not only of the old school, but of the olden times. This farmer, who owned and occupied one thousand acres of land, had three daught ers. When his eldest daughter married, he gave her one quarter of his land for her portion, but no money ;and he foVricl by a little more speed and a little better management, the produce of his farm did tot decrease. When his sebond daughter married, he gave her one third of the remaining land for le • portion, but no money. He then set to work, and began to grub up his furz snd fern, arid, ploughed up what he Cal/ y yB his peloto dry furz covered in 3Offie places nearly half the land.—After giving half of his land away to two of his daughters, to, his great surprise he found that the pro- duce increased—he made more money, because his new broken up furt land brought efteSaiVe drelis; and at the snide time he farmed the Whole of his land better; for lie employed three rinses I I Mord laborers upon it ; he rose two hours soon'er In the ; he. had do more dead fellows once in three years; instead of which he got two green crops in one year; and ate them upon the land: A garden never requires a dead fallout. But the great adfantage was, that he had got the seine money to manage five hitt/cited acres att he had got to menage clue thntitand 021. es—therefore he laid Out double the money upon the land. When his third and last daughter mar ried he gave her two hundred and fifty acres or half of which remained, for her portion and no mo ley. He then found that he had the same money to farm the one quarter of the land as he had at first to farm the whole. He began to ask himslf a few questions, and set his wits to work how he was' to make as much of two hundred and fifty acres as he had done of one thousand acres. He then paid ofl his bailiff, who weighed twenty stone ! rose with the larks in the long days, and went to bed with the lamb--lie got as much more work done for his money--lie made his servants, laborers, and horses move faster--broke them from their snails pace—and found that the eye of the master quickened the pace of the servant. He saw the beginning and ending of every thing; and to his servents and laborers, instead of saying "Go and do it," he says to them, " Let us go and do it boys." Be tween " come" and " go" he soon found out a great difference. Q 3 Jim," inquired a school boy of one of his mates "what is the meaning of rel ics !" " Dont you know ! Well, I can tell you: you know the master licked mo in school yesterday ?" "Yes." " Well he was'nt satisfied with that, b t me in after school and licked me again. This is what I call a re-lick." ED- 'Come rest in this bosom." Paid the turkey to the bluffing. VOL. XIII, NO, 49. The Mothers Lesson. A mother sitting,in her parlor, over• heard het child, whom her sister was dressing, say repeatedly: "No, I don't want to say my prayers; I don't want ter say my prayers." IViotlier," said the chil d appearing at the parlor door. " Good morning, my chijd." " I am going tb get my breakfast." "stop a minute, I want you to come and sat+ the first." `l'he mother laid down tier Work on die next chair, as the boy ran to' her. She took him up. He kneeled in her lip and laid his face down upon her shoulder; his cheek, against. her ear. the moth er rocked lior.Clutir sloWly backward and forward. ." Are you pretty well this morning said she, in a kind and gen tle tone. , " Yes, Mother I am' eery, Well." "I am glad yBu are well. lam well, too; and When I *eked up' this morning and found that f Was well, I thanked God for taking cara.pf me." " Did you 1" said th'e to'y In a low tone—half a whisper: lie paused after it—conscience was at its work. "Did you ever feel my pulse r asked his mother, after a minute of silence, at the same time taking the boy down, and sitting him on her lap, and placing his fingers on her wrist. "NO, but / .hate felt faine.." "Well, don't yon feel thine; node—how it goes beating'!" " Yes," said the child. "if it should stop' //tiding 1 should die." "Should you 1" Y.elf; Can't keep it t'eating." " Who can 1" " God." A silence. "You have a pulse, too, which boats here in your bo som, in your arm, and all over you, and I cannot keep it beating: nor ran you-- nobody Can Mit God. If he should not itilcec.,reof you who could?" "I don't k - now;" said the Child, with a look of anxiety, and another pause en sued. SO when xtaked this morning I thought I'd ask God to take crtre of me and all of us." "Did you ask him to take care of me?„ a ~o.;; " - 01 k ntit f;' "BccaUtie. i though l ydu ri•oufd asic him yourtielf." A long paused ensued—the deep acid thoughtful expression of his coin, fentinai sito*Ud that his heart was reached. Don't you ,thittk vdu held better ask him yourself T" Yes," said the boy readily. He kneeled down again it/ hie mothers lap, and uttered, in his simple and bra ken language, a preye•r lot the protec tion of Heaven. • INDIAN Ittignititt. We do not always have an " Indian Summer," properly speaking ; and the question whether " this is the Indian Summer," is often a very puzzling sub ject far tea table talk. It is unknown id the parts of the Old World, whence we chiefly defite otir literature.—lt is like the fare Well lingering, of a depart ing friend: We Cannot persuade our; selves that Winter is so pleasant as Sum mer.--Winter like old age, may be kind ly and have its own charms ; but youth and maturity, Spring and Summer are the mast joyous seasons: The term Indian Summer is probably unknown to many of our readers. With the white man engaged in agricultural pursuits, which during the early settle ment of the country ; where his chief occupation, the Summer and early part of the Fall are the chief seasons then gathering in craps, and these he then made the occasion for peculiar enjoy ments and festivity. The fa' orite pe riod of the Indian was that time when the leaves fall rustling from the trees, the sun shines dirtily throtigh a hazy atmosphere ; when the nights are free from frost, and difyg Moderately ,'term. This period, whenever it occurred in' Autum, either in Uttober or NoveMber, or indeed in WinirSi Vetember, *as hailed with every feeling of delight by the Indians ; fire was set ta, the dry leaves of the forest, which rapidly spread and drove the deer to the laurel grove for protection, where the Indians were concealed prepared for destruction. Hence the Indian Hunter would say to the European, "The white man's Sum mer is past and gone, but the Indian's . Summer is come."—Buf. Corn. - A SECRET WORTH KNOWING.—There it a man up theOuntry who always riv e for Ms page? in Wynne& He has never had a sick day in him life, never had any corns or toothache, his potatoes never rot, the weezil never eats his wheat, the frost never kills his corn and beans, his babies never cry in the nitr,lit, and his wife never scolds.