BY JAS. CLARK. From the Quaker City The Departed. ET LIANNAH MAPLE. Oh I wrong not the departed, But let their memories be As plensant as the tuneful songs, Of wild birds from the tree And let their kind words visit us, As do our nightly dreams, Fraught with all holiest images, Like sunlight on the streams. And well do kindly words beseem Each treasured one that's gone, An echo from the trusting heart From whirls no dream has flown ; A sweet strain caught from mem'rys lyre, That tells of other years, And pours its sweetest melody Upon the mourner's tears. For what has envy's voice to do With those who quiet sleep, Tinder the shade of Summer flowers, Beneath the church-yard deep! And what but hopes and tears have we To lay. as offerings, Upon the shrine of buried joys To which our memory clings. All have some in the spirit land, The loved and lost of earth, Who passed away as fresh and pure As Spring thiwers at their birth ; Some one within whose priceless love Our richest trust was urned, A kindred spirit mid the waste, For which the lone heart yearned. May not all cherish in the heart Unseen to outward gaze, The memory of some vanished one The idol of his days And grief that has been hidden long Like water in the rock, May flow in streams of agony Beneath the slightest shock. {From the London World of Fashion for Jan.] LOVE IN TEARS; Or the Morn of the Wedding Day. " Star of my soul ! than powerand fame more dear, And must thou rest in gloom and silence here; No mare by thy sweet tones and looks be guiled, Must I forever say farewell !"—lMitchell. The sunlight of a bright summer morning streamed through the painted windows of Sir Charles Harrington's dressing room, mellowed by the rich tints of the glass, and also by cost ly gossamer curtains descending from the ceiling, and upheld by crystal bands —Sir Charles in an elegant 'Turkish robe, had thrown himself into a fauteuil, to devour the contents of a billet upon which his eyes had fallen, and to which his attendants had failed to direct his attention on his arrival in town on the previous night. It had been written a week before, and was from the pen of his beloved. A weeks neglect in love is, to the sufferer, an age; minutes are days and hours years! And this par ticular letter was written in the kindest terms ! If what I feel I could express in words!" exclaimed the lover, " I should speak joy enough to banish sadness from the world forever! 0, Lydia! Lydia! such worth as thine roust obtain pardon for the faults of all the fickle sex. If our first parent had been but like thee, we should all have lived and died in in nocency; the bright original creation!" Whilst the lover was indulging in these raptures, a cab drew up at his door and Lionel Mildmay, of the Guards, jumping out, was in a few minutes intro duced to his friend Sir Charles. " My hearts best friend !" exclaimed the latter ; " there's not a friend 1 so much wished to see. I have such a let ter here !" What is it me see it," said Lionel. " You must excuse me," returned Sir Charles. " You will not wrong my friendship, and your manners to tempt me to show it to you." "Not for the world, my friend," re plied the other ; and he forthwith turn ed the conversation to the current top ics of the day ; when all the gossip of the gay world had occurred since Sir, Charles had left town, was repeated for his amusement. In this way nearly an hour was passed, and Mildmay then rose to depart. " You must not go yet," exclaimed Sir Charles. " I must," said Lionel ; for I'm invi ted to a wedding; and brides don't wait." Going to n wedding!" said the lov er.—" Then you're in a fit state of mind to become my confident. Read that, and envy my felicity ! But let me tell you first, the lovely creature whose thoughts are there expressed, 1 first met in a country ramble on her fathers es. tate. To look on her, the passing trav eller and the feeding flocks stood still; the singing btrds were in contention which should light nearert her, for her bright eyes deceived even men, they were so like the beauteous firmament. I looked on her and loved. Now read and envy me." Lionel Mildmay took the letter from the enthusiast, who continued his rap sodies whilst Lionel read ; and the ex pressions of the latter, as he proceeded, 'l'; nni z 044b0n were in accordance with his friends ex pectations ; but when he came to the end, and read the name Lydia Walsing ham," he stared at Sir Charles with mute astonishment. " Lydia Walsingham !" he cried. " %% hat Walsingham 1 not Lord Mal ton's daughter 1" " The very identical and adorable Ly dia!" exclaimed the enraptured lover. She is the food, the sleep, the air I live by." "0," continued Mildmay, "what rid• dle or what madness is this 1 Why, Lydia Walsinglinm is to be married this morning to the Earl of Haversham; and that is the wedding I am going to." " No, no," replied Sir Charles, that cannot be." "Nothing is more true, 1 assure you," said his friend. Great was Sir Charles' amazement when Lionel persisted in the correct ness of his intelligence; but the truth was placed beyond dispute by the arri val of a letter (corn Miss Walsinghnm herself. Quickly breaking the seal, he read to the following effect: Sir Charles— You have sported with a heart when you knew it was your own ; and I have recalled the gift. You also knew you had a rival, whose merits were by no means contemptible; yet you cared so little for the prize you had won, as to pay attentions to a lady in the North, to which no doubt is to be attributed your neglect of my last letter. You will please to return that letter, as this day I give my hand to the Earl of Haver sham. " Lady in the North !" cried Sir Charles. " I've been attentive to no lady in the North ! 'Tis but an excuse —a fabrication to gloss over her perfidy! I'll to the church myself, and forbid her marriage. False, heartless, fickle girl! My rival shall not triumph!" 'My dear Sir Charles,' said Mildmay, "be cool I entreat you. Think of what you would do, and the disgrace it must necessarily occasion." "I think of nothing but my love and my despair !" cried Sir Charles, and hastily concluding his toilet, lie took his friend's arm, and leaping into the cab, drove rapidly towards St. George's Church. In answer to his inquiries, he ascer tained that no such marritage had been appointed to take place there: and as Lionel Mildmay confessed he had not thought of asking what particular church had been selected for the nuptials. (concluding as a matter of course that it was St. George's) the dispairing lov er resolved upon proceeding at once to Lord Malton's house. There he obser ved indications of the important event about to take place, that removed all doubts of the correctness of his infor mation. " 0, the' words, the gentle words—so sweet, so many that she has uttered to me !" exclaimed Sir Charles, "as if she had been covetous not to leave one word for other lovers. 0 memory ! thou blessing to all men! thou art my curse and cause of misery!—Thor tellest me what 1 have been in her eyes, and what lam ! Happy's that wretc h who never owned scarce jewels or great wealth ; but speechless is his plague that once was rich, and from supetflu ous state fulls to be poor 1" Sir Charles, who was well acquainted with the chief apartments in Lord Mal ton's mansion, straight way proceeded to Miss Walsingliam's bourdour ; and there the intended bride rat alone, atti red for the marriage ceremony ! Her beautifully rounded arm reclined on a marble table, and her hand was pressed upon her forehead, as if to still its throbs. Sir Charles Harrington paused on the threshold, and at that moment one of the bridesmaids in the drawing room touched the keys of the piano.— The melody was familiar to the bride, and it seemed to strike a chord in her breast, the issue of which was tears; large chops coursed each other down her pale cheeks, as the song, mellowed by distance into something like seraphic harmony, proceeded:— I say not regret me—you will not regret ; You will try to forget me—you cannot forget? We shall hear of each other—ah! misery to hear, Those words from another which once we‘e so dear ! But deep words shall sting thee that breathe of the past, _ And many things bring thee thoughts fated to last." The white arms of the bride fell upon the marble table, rivaling its whiteness; and the beautiful face of Lydia Wel.' singham was buried in them ; the thick curls of her long dark hair helping to obscure her countenance. The utter woe of the bride was observed by Sir Charles with amazement. Suddenly she started up, exclaiming— "! cannot bear that song to-day !" In a moment her eyes fell upon Sir HUNTINGDON, PA., TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1849. Charles Harrington, and assuming a look and air of dignity, she inquired to what circumstance she had to ascribe his presence there Canst thou," he replied, "enter a church a bride—a willing bride—after meeting these eyes of miner Lydia was unable to reply: and thd words of the bridesmaid's song, as it continued, alone were audible: "The fond hopes that centered in thee are all fled, The iron hath entered the soul where they fed; Of the chain that once bound me, the memory is mine, But my words are around thee, their power is on'thine !" " Can there," continued Sir Charles, "be a soul in such a shape! Can such beauty be without a heart 1 Alas! my love is subject to such misery, such strange contradictions and misfortune, that men will laugh at me when I relate the story of it, arid deem me false-" " Yes, false !" exclaimed the bride, with her eyes averted to the ground. "Thy perfidy bath lost thee more than thou canst gain by this unhappy reso lution." " What bast thou not lost by perfidy!" murmured the bride, unconsciously tearing the orange blossoms that she had taken from the table. " Couldst thou believe that false re port of me 1" said the lover rebukingly, but in a tone mingled with pity. "The Earl declared he had proof of "The Earl !" cried Sir Charles ; "the Earl of Haversham !" and then retiring suddenly, he paused to say : Whilst such is your belief, Miss Walsingham, my presence here, I allow must be an offence ; but I will be careful not to re peat it, unless I can bring unquestiona ble evidence of my fidelity, and place my honor and my love above suspi cion." L. W The tone in Which Sir Charles spoke although he enlletn'Ored to conceal his intentions, alarmed the young bride, who eagerly culled Upon him to return ; but he heard her not ; his bruin was ou fire, his thoughts were all engrossed by one important object, the accomplish ment of which admitted of no delay. Presently a murmur of confused voices was heard, and the bridesmaids came about Lydia in affright. Sir Charles Harrington had suddenly entered into the drawing room, and imperiously de manded an interview with the Earl alone. Lord Milton had interposed, and an angry controversy ensued.— Lydia, in an agony of doubt and appre: hension, entreated some of her friends to proceed to her father, and implore him to prevent a hostile meeting at any sacrifice • but the bridesmaids returned with intelligence that the door was fas tened, and nothing was heard but the angry voice of Sir Charles, demanding immediate reparation for some injury he had sustained. " No, no, no !" shrieked the bride; "there has been misery enough already:' and darting towards the staircase, she hastily descended; when, beating her jeweled hands upon the drawing room door, she called loudly for her father. The door was that instant opened, and Lady Walsingham fell fainting in Lord Melton's arms. It was some time before she was re , stored to consciousness, and then, her; riedly directing her eyes round the room, and seeing only her father and sister there, she cried. " Where is he, father; tell me, I im plore!" " The Earl of Haversham !" " No, no ! Sir Charles !" "Here at your feet," cried the lover, who, bounding into the room, and throw ing himself on his knee before Lydia, pressed her white hand to his lips.— "Fear nothing," he said, "the cloud is past. The Earl of Haversham has ack nowledged before your father, that he fabricated those statements which im pugned my honor, and have caused this misery." "And he !" "He is gone, Lydia, disgraced ; never to appear in this presence again." 1 Lydia gave a shriek of joy; and her father, silently taking her hand, placed it in that of Sir Charles. , 6 'Tis past twelie o'clock," exclaimed Lord IVlalton, 66 and the Bishop will think there is to be no marriage to-day. You have no objection Sir Charles 1" Sir Charles Harrington was delighted at the idea of hie becoming the substi tute for his rival, at the altar , and Lydia quickly consented to the nen+ arrange ment, now that her finpreisloh df Sir Charles's infidelity was removed. The wedding-bells rang merrily ; and Mel ton House became a scene of perfect joy, for two worthy hearts were united. uWere you eVei dicias-questionedi'' "Yes, when oe - stint - id by my wife after spending the evening abroad-cross nough in all conscience, [From Breckenridge's Recollections of the West.] First Court in a New County. The first Court in Butler, (Pa.,) drew the whole population to town, some on account of business, some to make busi ness, but the greater part from idle Cu. f riosity. They were at that time chiefly Irish, who had all the characteristics of the nation. A log cabin just raised and covered, but without a window sash or doors, or daubing, was prepared for the hall of justice, a carpenter's bench, with three chairs upon it was the judgement seat. The bar of Pittsburg attended, and presiding judge, a stiff; formal, pe dantic old bachelor, took his seat, sup ported by two associate judges who were common farmers, one of whom was blind of an eye. The hall was bare ly sufficient to contain the bench, bar, jurors and constable. But few of the spectators could be accommodated on the lower floor, the only one ylPt laid ; many therefore clambered up the walls, and placing their hands and feet in the open intertices between the logs, hung there suspended like enormous Mada gascar bats. Some had taken possession of the joists; and big John MeJunkin (who, until now, had ruled at all public gatherings,) had placed a foot on one joist, and a foot on another directly over the heads of their honors, standing like the Colossus of Rhodes. The Judge's sense of propriety was shocked at this exhibition. The Sheriff, John McCin: dless, was called, and ordered to Clear the walls and joists. He went to work with his assistants, and soon pulled down by the legs those who were in no very great haste to obey. McJunkin was the last, and began to growl, as he prepared to descend. " What do you say sir 1" said the Judge. "I say, I pay my taxes, • and has as good a right here as ony mon." " Sheriff, sheriff;" said the Judge, "bring him before the Court."— McJunkin's ire was now up, and he reached the floor, began to strike, his breast, exclaiming, " my name is john McJunkin, d'ye see—here's the breast that never flinched, if so be it was in good cause. I'll sten ony man a hitch in Butler county, if so be he'll clear me o' the la." " Bring him before the Court" said the Judge. He was accordingly pinioned, and if not gagged, at least forced to be silent, while his case was under consideration. Some of the lawyers, volunteered as dmica curice, some ventured a word of apology for MeJiiiikin.• The Judge pro nounced the sentence of imprisonment fin' two hours in the jail of the county, and ordered the Sheriff to take him into custody: The SheriftWitb much sim plicity observed, "May it pleas the courte, there is no jail at. all to put him in." Here the judge took a learned dis tinction, upon which lie explained at some length for the benefit of the bar. He said " there were two kinds of cus tody, first, safe custody, second close custody. The first is where the body must be forthcoming to answer a de mand or accusation, and in that case tho body may be delivered for the time being out of the hands of the law on bail or recognizance ; but when the imprison meet a part of the satisfaction or pun ishment there can be no bail or main prize." is the reason of the common law in relation to'escapes under capita ad sufficiendunt, and also why a ca. ca. cannot issue after the defendant has been once committed and discharged by the plaintiff. In like manner a man cannot be imprisoned twice for the same offence, even if he be released before the expiration of the term of imprison ment. This is elea'rlY a ease of ctoso custody and the prisoner must be confi ned, body and limb. without bail or mainprize, in some place of incarcera tion." By the sheriff, who seemed to hit on a lucky thought, "May it phase the coort. I'm just thinkin that may be I can take him till Bowen's pig pen ; the pigs are kilt for the coort, and its empty." "You heard the opinion of the court," said the judge, " proceed sir, do your ditty." The sheriff accordingly retired with his prisoner, and drew after him three-fourths of the specta tors abil suitors, while the judge, thus relieved, proceeded to organize the court. But this was not the tertnina tion of the affair. Peace and order hcd scarcely been restored, when the sher iff came rushing to the house with a crowd at his heels, crying out " Mr. Jidge, Mr. Jidge—Mr. McJunkin's got afl'd d'ye mind." " What ! escaped, sheriff 1 Summon the posse comitatus!" "The pause, the pusse—why now I'll jilt tell ye how it happent. He was go ing along quaetly enough until we got till the hazel patch, and all at once he . pitched of intil the bushes, an' 1 after him, but a lumb of tree catched my fut, and I pitched three rods afl; but I fell. for it, an' that's good fuck ye minte." The judge could not retain' his gravity, octurtt tit 4 the bar raised a laugh, and there the matter ended, after which the business proceeded quietly enough. THE VELY,AGE SCHOOL. BY RICHATD PENN SMITH. How unstable is human opinion ! In childhood we look forward to the years of maturity for the consumation of our dream of happiness: and when that pe riod has arrived, we call up the recol lections of youth, and they bloom again as •pots of green in the desert. 1 passed my bo% hood in a village far remote from our populous cities, and the oecurences of those thoughtless days mado so deep an impression, that at this distant period they retain their freshness, and doubtless will do so even to the close of life. The joys of youth take deep root in the mind and bloom for years, whether it be winter or spring with us; but the pleasure of after life are but as flowers of a season, that blos som for a day and fade, and fresh seed must be scattered before others appear. I revisited the village not long since, after an absence of many years. It had undergone numerous changes, and, as I walked along the streets, many new fa ces presented themselves, and but few of the old ones were to be seen. fact, time had rendered me a stranger in a strange place, though I had ima gined that all would be as famillia'r to me as my own fireside, add that my Welcome would finie . Veen as cardial. With feelings of disappoinaent, I extended my walk to the commons be yond the skirts of the village, where the school house stood. That had un dergone no change ; it was still the same. but it struck me that time had materially diminished it in magnitude. It is remarkable how our optics deceive us at difirent stages of life. 1 looked around with delight, for every thing was familiar to me ; but the picture was now in miniature. Objects that 1 had con sidered remote were near at hand, and mountains had dwindled away to com parative mole-hills. While enjoying the recollections that the scene awhkened, the door of the school house opened, and a man ap. proached. He would have been known among a thousand, by his step and nir, for a country school master. After an awkward bow he said, "A pleasant evening, sir. A charm inF landscape, and you appear to enjoy "Yes; it is delightful to look upon familiar faces after a long seperation." He gazed at me earnestly, and mut tered, "Faces! I hatie eu2aly teen that face before !" " Very possible, but not within twen ty years." "At thnt period I was a pupil in this school," said he, "and if I mistake not, you were also." I answered in the affi. mative. He grasped me immediately by the hand, and, shaking it cordially, call ed me by my name. "But," continued he "you appear not to remember me!" "True; the human countenance is a tablet upon which time is constantly scribbling new characters and oblitera ting the old, and his hand has been bu sily employed upon your font " Yes , another story has bcea writ ten there since the time we used to lie wait by a salt lick, at midnight, for the coming deer, oi• glide over the Sur face of the river, with a fire in the stern end of the canoe, to light us to the hi ding places of the salmon and trout." I knew him now to be the same who had been my constant companion in the excursions of my boyhood. "But how is this 1 I exclaimed ; have the duties of the school devolved upon you'? Where is our preceptor 1" Debemur morti nos nostraque !' Dead "So his tombstone informs us; and in this instaneeit speaks the truth, con trary to the usual practice of tombstones. He took a cold by exposing hittiself, when over heated by the labour of ,a se vere flagellation inflicted upon the broad shoulders of a dull urchin. You mny re member that his manner of teaching was impressive, for he rigidly pursued the ancient system of imparting knowl edge." "0 ! 1 remember. And doubtless you are as great a terror to the rising generation as he was to us and our com panions. Well, I might have foretold your destiny. Our inclinations are ear= ly developed ; and it was a prime joke with you, as soon as the school was dis missed, to put on the teacher's gown, cap and spectacles, and seating your self in his large oaken chair,'call upbil us, with mock gravity, to•gci' through the forms we had just finished." ' You may also remember," said the schoolmaster, that upon one of these occasions you clambered up behind me and gain me a libation from an inkhorn, while the master was standing in the doorway, the only one present who could VOL XIV, NO. 16 not enter into the spirit of the farce we were performing.' . ' Nor did we highly applaud his epi logue to our entertainment. But where are they now, who joined in our thought less amusements on that day 1' 'Scattered as far as the four cornet's of the earth ! A small room there con tained them, and they found happiness in it; but grown to man's state,' they roamed the wild world in purSiiit of the phantom, and it eluded their grasp.' What became of little Dick Gaylove who, on that occasion, was detectfirt making a profile of our old preceptor on the door T Ho was a promising lad, the pride of his father's heart and a univer sal favorite in the school." " He was indeed a boy of fine talents: but judge not of the fruit trom the flow er. He left the village for the metrop olis, and was educated to the bar. HI was admired and caressed ,by his ac quaintance, became diSsipated, tuinect his father's fortune, and dthd the death of a prodigal at the age or fie and' twenty.' And his brother Tom, who overt urn ed the bench upon which Jack Wil liams and his cousin were seated 1' He imitated the example set by fath er Adnm ; and by cultivating the earth, supported his . aged parents. If more would do o , the world would be hap . . . . As we walked to the village he gave me n brief history of the whole of our schoolmates, unit the picture presented a vast deal more of shade than sunshine. Lire may be corepitr . ed to a tree in full pu bearing. • Of theltitude of blossoms how many are nipped in the bud ! Of the fruit, more than half falls in its green state, and of that which attains maturity, much goes to decay before it' is gathered to use. Old'Psalns Tunes. There is to us more pathos, heart thrilling expression in some of Vie old psalm tunes, feelingly displayed, than lin a whole batch of modernising. The ,trains go home, and the fountain of the great deep is broken up'—the great deep of unfathomable feeling that lies far, far below the surface of the world hardened heart ; and the unwonted, yet unchecked tear staffs' the sage , the softened spirit yields to their influence,' and shakes off the load of earthly care, rising purified and spirtualized, into a clearer atmosphere. Strange, irOxpli cable altiociatiOns . brood oiler the mind like the far off dream of paradise,' mingling their chaste melancholy with musings of still, subdued, more cheer ful character. , —How many glad hearts in the old time bilve rejoiced in those . so gs of praise,' how many sorrowful' ones sighed out their complaints its those plaintive notes, that steal sadly, though sweetly on the ear ; hearts that now cold in death, are laid to rest, around that sacred tune, within those walls they had so often swelled with emotion. YOUNG MAN, STOP.—YOU, young man, on the way to the ball alley, or billiard room, with a cigar in your mouth, and with on appetite for a mint-julep—stop a moment. Are you net in a dangerous wayl Will those places, or your habits, lead you td respectability or usefulh'cis in society Will you, by theM, become, more moral, niecc virtues; or intel:igenti If not, stop where you are, we beseech' of you. You have nobleness or heart peri haps, and a generous disposition. You may do good to those about you, if you will. Your example, if it be such as will lead to virtue, will draw others af ter you; or if it leads to vice or error, will also, and the more readily, lure oth ers in the way of evil. Then young, man, stop and think upon your course!' Where is it tending! If to bad habits and low assciationa, stop instantly. Stand firm. Take not another step - in the dangerous way, but turn .baek while you have power, and seek the ways of virtue, the path of intelligence, and you may dO good in your day and genera tion,'and be esteemed by those who en joy your' acquaintance. HAUNTED.—The colored people in the vicinity of New Castle, Delaware, have received some severe frights from what they suppoied'th bd the ghost of Perry Bailley who Vas exeduted at that place some weeks two; walking with his coffin under hii arm.' They will On no ac count, go near the gallows after dark. Ode - negro in the fail assert's thafPer ry pulled him out Of his bed one night. What siiperstition• (17••" When I goes a shopping,' says Mrs. Partington, "I allays ask for what I wants, and if they have it, and it's sui table and I feel inclined to buy it, antf h's &leap, and can't be get at any Oth er place for less, I almost alldys takes it without chapperiiii about it all day long, as same people does."