74' intl./140011X _kJ BY JAS, CLARK. ORIGINAL POETRY. Written for the Huntingdon Journal.. TO CABRIE. And is it thus, am I forgot? Then welcome give my bones to nit; My only hope of heaven has fled, Come hours that mourn me with the dead, ft is, I see it in my dreams, My after days in darkness teems ; Sweet, ant! remembrance, must it be That t must bid farewell to thee My inmost soul must then forget, And heip my sun of life tc set, And bid a long farewell to bliss, To teach thyself forgetfulness. CAtinit, my days of joy were few, Until my heart beat but for you; 114 y dawn of life is now o'ercnst, By that request, 'roacur TILE rAsr." Take back that unkind wish of thine, And let me worship at thy shrine; / can't forget 1 I will not try ! I dare not—will not—say, good bye ! Why should rememb'rance give thee pain, Since we can never meet again I A mother's love, a brother's pride, Has marked thee for another's bride. I know, if thou had'st thy own will, Thy virgin heart would love me still; I know thy heart ONCE beat for me, As fond as mine now beats for thee. My shipwreck'd heart has struck the reef, The hull must soon go down with grief; The stranded cords cling round the mast, The ruined emblem of the past. SELECT MISCELLANY. A THRILLING SKETCH, THE BATTLE OF DB,ESDEN. BY J. T. HEADLY. On the evening of their approach, St. Cyr wrote to Napoleon the following letter : Dresden, 23d. Aug., 1613; ten at night, "At five this afternoon the enemy approached Dresden, after having driven in our cavalry. We expected an attack this evening ; but probably it will take place to-morrow.—Your Majesty knows better than I do, what time it requires for heavy artillery to beat down enclo sures, walls and palisades." The next night, at midnight, lie dis patched another to him, announcing an immediate attack, and closing with "We are determined to do all in our power ; but I can answer for nothing more with such young soldiers."—lmmediately on the reception of the first letter, Napoleon surrendered his command to McDonald, and turned his face toward Dresden. Murat was dispatched in hot haste to announce his arrival and reassure the beseiged. In the middle of his guards, which had marched nearly thirty miles a day since the commencement of the war, he took the road to the city. To revive his sinking troops he order ed twenty thousand bottles of wine to be distributed among them, but not three thousand could be procured. He, how ever, marched all next day, having dis patched a messenger to the beseiged to ascertain the exact amount of danger. Said Napoleon, to the messenger Gour gaud, " set out immediately for Dresden; ride as hard as you can, and be there this evening—see St. Cyr, the King of Naples, and the King of Saxony—en courage every one. Tell them that I can be in Dresden to-morrow with forty thousand men, and the day following with my whole army. At day-break visit the outpost and redoubts—consult the commander of engineers as to whether they can hold out. Hurry back to me to-morrow nt Stolpen, and bring a full report of St. Cyr's and Murat's opinion as to the real state of things." Away dashed Gourgaud in hot speed, while the Emperor hurried on his exhausted army. Gourgaud did not wait till day-break be fore he returned. He found everything on the verge of ruin—the allied army was slowly enveloping the devoted city, and when, at dark, he issued forth from the gates, the whole summer heavens were glowing with the light of their bivouac fires, while a burning village near by, threw a still more baleful light over the scene. Spurring his panting steed through the gloom, he at mid• night burst in a fierce gallop into the squares of 63 Old Guard, and was im mediately ushered into the presence of the anxious Emperor. The report con firmed his worst fears. At day-break the weary soldiers were roused from their repose, and though they had marched a' hundred and twenty miles in four days, pressed cheerfully forward i for already the distant sound of heavy cannonading was borne on by the morning breeze. At eight in the morning, Napoleon and the whole advanced guard, reached an eleva tion that overlooked the whole plain in which the city lay embodied ; and lo ! what a sublime yet terriffic sight met their gaze. The whole valley was filled with marching columns, preparing for an assault; while the beams of the morn ing sun wve sent back from countless hel mets and bayonets that moved and shook in their light. Here and there volumes of smoke told where the batteries were firing, while the heat•y cannonading roll ed like thunder over the hills. There, too, Was the French army, twenty thou sand strong, packed behind the redoubts, yet appearing like a single regiment in the midst of the host that enveloped them. Courier after courier, riding as for life, kept dashing into the presence of the Emperor, bidding him make haste if he would save the city. A few hours would settle its fate. Napoleon, leaving his guard to follow on, drove away in n furious gallop, while a cloud . of dust a long the road, alone told where the carriage was whirling onward. As he approached the gates, the Russian bat teries swept the road with such a deadly fire that lie was compelled to leave his carriage and crawl along on his hands and knees over the ground whilst the cannon balls whistled an incessant show er above him. Suddenly and unannounced, as if he had fallen from the clouds, he appeared at the Royal Palace, where the Ring of Saxony was deliberating on the terms of capitulation. Waiting for no rest, he took a single page so as not to attract the enemy's fire, and went forth to visit the outer works. So near had the enemy approached, that the youth by his side was struck down by a spent musket hall. Having finished his inspection, and settled his plans, he returned to the Palace, and hurried off couriers to the different portions of the army that were advancing by forced marches toward the city. First, the indomitable guards and the brave cuirassiers, eager for the on set, caine pouring in furious haste over the bridge. The overjoyed inhabitants stood by the streets, and offered them food and drink; but though weary, hungry and thirsty, the brave fellows refused to take either, and hurried onward toward the storm that was ready to burst on their companions. At 10 o'clock the troops commenced entering the city— infantry, calvary, and artillery pouring forward with impetuous speed--till there appeared to be no end to the rush ing thousands. Thus without cessation, did the steady columns arrive all day long, and were still hurrying in, when at 4 o'clock the attack commenced. 'The batteries that covered the heights around the city opened with their terrible fire, and in a moment Dresden became the target of three hundred cannon, all train ed upon her devoted buildings. Then commenced one of war's wildest scenes. St. Cyr replied with artillery, and thun der answered thunder, as if the hot August afternoon was ending in a real storm of heaven. Balls fell in an inces sant shower in the city, while the blazing bombs traversing the sky, hung for a! moment like messengers of death over the streets, and then dropped with an explosion that shook the ground, among the frightened inhabitants. Amid the , shrieks of the wounded, and the stern language of command, was heard the heavy rumbling of the artillery and ammunition wagons through the streets; and in the intervals, the steady tramp of the marching columns, still hastening to the work of death—while over all, as! if to drown all, like successive thunder- I claps where the lightning falls nearest, I spoke the fierce batteries that were ex ploding on each other.—But the con fusion and death and terror that reigned through the city, as the burning build ings shot their flames heavenward, were not yet complete. The inhabitants had fled to their cellars to escape the balls and shells that came rushing every mo ment through their dwellings; and amid the bustle of the arriving armies, and. their hasty trend along the streets, and the roll of drums, and rattling of armor, and clangor of trumpets, and thunder of artillery, the signal was given for the assault—three cannon shots from the heights of Raeicknitz. The next moment six massive colums, with 50 cannon at their head, began to move down the slopes—pressing straight for the city. The muffled soundof their heavy, mensur ed tread was heard within the walls, as in dead silence and awful majeF.ty they moved steadily forward upon the bat. teries. ft was a sight to strike terror to the heart of the boldest, but St. Cyr marked their advance with the calmness of a fearless soul, and firmly awaited the onset that even Napoleon trembled to behold. No sooner did they come with in range of artillery than the ominous silence was broken by its deafening roar. In a moment the heights about the city were in a blaze ; and the fifty cannon at the head of these columns belched forth fire and smoke, and amid the charg ing of infantry, the bursting of shells, the rolling fire of musketry, and the ex plosion of hundreds of cannon, St. Cyr received the shock. For two hours did the battle rage with sanguinary ferocity. The plain was covered with dead—the suburbs overwhelmed with assailants, and ready to yield every moment—the enemy's batteries were playing within HUNTINGDON, PA,, TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1850. fifteen rods of the ramparts—the axes of the pioneers were heard on the gates; and the shouts, and yells, and execra tions rose over thei walls of the city. The last of St. Cyr's reserve were In the bat tle, and had been for half an. hour, and Napoleon began to tremble for his army. But at half past six the Young Guard arrived, shouting as they came, and were received in return with shouts by the army, that for a moment drowned the roar of battle. Then Napoleon's brow cleared up, and St. Cyr for the first time, drew a sigh of relief. The gates were thrown open, and the impetuous Ney, with the invincible Guard, poured through one like a resist less torrent on the foe, followed soon by Murat, w;th his head-long cavalry. Mortimer sallied. forth from another ; and the Young G uard, though weary and travel worn, burst with loud cheers on the chief redoubt—which, after flow ing in blood, had been wrested from the French—and swept it like a tornado. Those six massive colums, thinned and riddled through, recoiled before the fierce onset like the waves when they meet a rock ; and slowly surged back from the walls. In the meantime, dark and heavy clouds began to roll up the scorching heavens, and the distant roll of thunder mingled with the roll of ar tillery. Men had turned this hot Au gust afternoon into a battle storm, and now the elements were to end it with a fight of their own. In the midst of the deepening gloom the allies now for the first time aware that the Emperor was in the city, drew off their troops for the night. The rain came down as if the clouds were falling, drenching the liv ing and the dead armies; yet Napoleon, heedless of the storm, and knowing what great results depended apon next day's action, was seen hurrying on foot through the streets to the bridge over which he expected the corps of Mar mont and Victor to arrive. With anx ious heart lie stood and listened, till the heavy tread of their advancing columns through the darkness relieved his sus pense; and then, as they began to pour over the bridge, he hastened back, and traversing the city passed out at the other side, and visited the entire lines that were formed without the wall. The bivouac fires shed a lurid light over the field, and he came at every step upon heaps of corpses, while groans and lam entations issued from the gloom In every direction ; for thousands of the woun ded, uncovered and unburied, lay expo sed :o the storm, dragging out the night in pain. Early in the morning, Napo leon was on horseback, and rode out to the army. Taking his place beside a huge fire that was blazing and crackling, in the centre of the Old Guard, he issu ed his orders for the day. Victor was on the right ; the resistless Ney on the left, over the Young Guard, while St. Cyr and Marmont were in the centre, which Napoleon commanded in person. The rain fell in torrents, and the thick mist shrouded the field as if to shut out the ghastly spectacle its bosom exhibit ed. The cannonading soon commenced, but with little effect, as the mist conceal. ed the armies from each other. A hun dred and sixty thousand of the allies, stretched in a huge semicircle along the heights, while Napoleon, with a hundred and thirty thousand in a plain below was waiting the favorable moment in which to commence the attack. At length the battle opened on the right, where a fir ing was heard as Victor pressed firmly against an Austrian battery. Suddenly Napoleon heard a shock like a falling mountain. While Victor was engaging the enemy in front, Murat, unperceived in the thick mist, had stolen around to the rear, and without a note of warning burst with twelve thousand cavalry on the enemy. He rode straight through their broken lines, trampling under foot the dead and dying. Ney was equally successful on the left, and as the mists lifted, it showed the allied wings both driven back. The day wore away in blood—carts, loaded with the wounded, moved in a constant stream into the city ; but the French were victorious at all points, and when night again closed over the scene, the allied armies had de cided to retreat. fr7-Mankind are more what they are made by mankind than they are made by their Creator. The wolf is ferocious, because hunted from a whelp. The snake turns upon you, because you dis turb and pursue it. The child grows surly, because unjustly coerced. But above all, man becomes unjust and cruel, because pursued with cruelty and injus tice by his brother man. lry-Some one says that the dissolution of the Union is a Chimera got up with the design of frightening the North into a Compromise. Exactly ! Oz The citizens of Boston have raised $20,000 for Prof. Webstor's AN ELOQUENT PASSAGE. THE PULPIT ON DISUNION. The following eloquent and patriotic sentiments were delivered before the Arch Street Presbyterian congregation, on Sunday morning last, by the Rev. Charles Wadsworth, in his inaugural sermon : Paul's principle as set forth in the text, applies as well to the Civil, as to the Social and the Ecclesiastic. A Christian minister amid the partizan ship of a community's politics, is to "know nothing save Christ Jesus and him crucified." His duties as a preacher are superinduced duties. As God's Ambassador he comes to man divested altogether of factitious differences. To the sovereign and the slave—to the mighty man and the menial—to the creature fawning on the foot-cloth of a throae, and the freeman standing proud ly before kings in the glory of immortal manhood— to all alike, he comes, bear ing the same flaming credentials of God's anger and God's love ; standing in his high place of embassy, he is not to look that the Holy Ghost will descend from Heaven to give point to a lesson of statesmanship, or power to an axiom of political economy. He is to look on man as a spirit whose nationality is but a decaying garment, a spirit winged for soaring to that high world where men of all kingdoms and peoples are one in Christ. He is to forget all minor in terests. He is to forget all human dis tinctions. He is to "let the dead bury their dead." He is to "know nothing save Christ Jesus and Him crucified." Meantime we would not be misunder stood here. Far be it from us to bow be fore this most foul, yea favorite infidel clamor, whereby a Christian minister, by the imposition of Ecclesiastical hands, is held thereafter divested of all rights ns a man;and a citigen ; even under the shadow of the cross, he will not—he may not—he cannot forget his country. Paul, amid the surpassing glories of a commonwealth like ours, would have cried with even inure than his Romnn exultation, "I am an ilmerican citizen." Our beloved land, with its boundaries the broadest—its government the freest —its institutions the noblest the world ever saw, is God's great gift to every man who breathes its blest air, and exults in its sunshine. And woe be to that man, whether Civilian or Ecclesiastic, who dare lay down at a fools bidding his great birth-right, or prove recreant to one of its ennobling prerogatives— who dare leave American liberty, an un prized thing, to be marred by the hand of unskilful legislation, or wrecked amid the conflicts of self-seeking ambition who dare fail in one title of all lie can do to give steadfast strength to Ameri can name and American nationality. God's pity Off the creeping thing that can listen unmoved to the whisper of Disunion that rises even now upon the ear ! Perish the heart that throbs not in agonizing desire that this glorious sister. hood be never broken I Palsied be the right arm that feels not its sinews tight en like steel, to speed our soaring eagle in its flight to the sun ! Stricken be the bosom that bares not itself in full strength to roll back this desolating surge that would sweep all these glad and godful and glorious things away as wrecks upon the billows ! Not know my country ! not honor my country !—not struggle for my country ! Why then would 1 be a creature without soul, unworthy my ministry—unworthy my manhood. Nay, nay—such political wisdom, I will know-1 must know—because ab. solutely in it, I am to know Christ crucifi ed. For, my audience, dear as to every American Christian must be his country —dear, because of the prayers of its consecration, and the blood of its baptism —dear, because of its great breadth and mighty power, and glorious fame—the home of the free—the hope of the op pressed—the beacon to the nations—the cradle of that infant liberty, which yet, when its limbs shall have waxed strong, will leap from its swaddling bands in great manhood, and go forth in a giant's path, to shake down the despotisms of a world in rushing Omnipotence ! Yet to his loving heart is it dearest of all, as the great instrument under God to bear on to its consummation his adorable Gospel ! He sees Christ in .dinerican nationality ! Christ, the God of all Providence, presiding and preserving it ' —as the great spring in the mechanism of a triumphing Evangel. And to him it seems that to sever this blessed Union, were to loose the silver cord of man's hope, and to break the great wheel at the cistern. And every Christian minis ter will stand by the Union—and pray for the Union—and struggle for the Union—and preach Christ and him crucified as the cement of the Union, till his right arm is withered, and his tongue dumb to death !—Phila. Inquirer. (.. - ----A r .1, . , . o 4, 0/),,,L ~, 4 All 1 f(tttr A Daughter's Love. There is no one so slow to . note the follies or sins of a father us a daughter. The wife of his bosom may fly in hor ror from hie embrace, but his fair hair ed child cleaves to him in boundless charity. Quickened by the visitation of pain to the parental dwelling, her prayers are more brief but more earnest —her efforts doubled and untiring—and if she can but win a smile fron , that sul len and gloomy face, she is paid, oh, how richly paid for all her sleepless cares and unceasing labor. The father may sink from deep to deep,. from a lower to yet a lower depth—Satan's kinsman and Satan's prey. Those who in a happier hour received largely of his benefactions may start when they behold his shad. ow, and accelerate their pace to get be yond it; all may forsake him-- , .God and the world—all but Satan and his daugh ter. Poor child ! if thou canst not save, thy feeble torch made as bright as thy power canst make it, throws at least a flickering light upon the path, till the object of thy unquenchable love has for , ever left thee, and is shrouded in the thick darkness ; and when undone, when gone from thee, and gone forever, though thou mayst wed thy early love and know all in him thy young heart pictured, yet, again and again, in the midst of thy placid joy, even with thy smiling infant on thy knee, the lost one will not be forgotten. Seeing the past as it were only yesterday, forgetful of thy little darling,thou wilt exclaim, from the depths of thy ever-mindful and af fectionate spirit, ' , My father, Oh, my father !" Row to Increase Beauty. There is a divine contagion in all beauteous things. We alternately color objects with our fancies and affections, or receive it from a kindred hue, "Like the sweet South, That breathes upon a bank of violets, Stealing and giving odor." This principle pervades all nature, physical and moral. Let those who would trace an expression of serenity and tenderness on a human face, watch a person of sensibility as he gazes upon a painting by Claude or Raphael. In contemplating a fine picture, we drink in its spirit through our eyes. If a love ly woman would increase her charms, let her gaze long and ardently on all beauteous images. Let her not indulge those passions which deform the features but cultivate, on the contrary, every soft affection. It will soon become an easy task, for one good feeling suggests and supports another. We insensibly and involuntarily adapt our aspect to our emotions, and long habit,. of thought and feeling leave a permament impression on the countenance. Every one believes thus fur in physiognomy, and acts more or less decidedly upon his behalf, I3ut even the effect upon the features of a transient emotion is truly wonderful. A fierce man often looks beautifully tender and serene when either caressing or caressed, and deceives us like the ocean in a calm, which, at times, is 'the gentlest of all things.'—Richardson's Literary Leaves. Perils of Falsehood. ' , When once a concealment or deceit has been practised in matters where all should be fair and open as the day, con fidence can never be restored any more than you can restore the white bloom to the grape or plum that you have once pressed in your hand. How true is this, and what a neglected truth by n great portion of mankind.—Falsehood is not only one of the most humiliating vices, but sooner or later it is most certain to lead to the most serious crimes. With partners in trade, with partners in life —with friends : with lovers, how impor tant is confidence I How essential that all guile and hypocrisy should be guard ed against In the intercourse between such parties !—How much misery would be avoided in the history of many lives, had truth and sincerity been their guid ing and controlling motives, instead of prevarication and deceit 2 Any vice,' said a parent in our hearing a few days since, any vice, at least aziong the frailties of a milder character, but false , hood. Far better that my child should commit an error or do a wrong and con fess it, than escape the penalty, however severe, by falsehood and hypocrisy. Let me know the worst, and a remedy may possibly be applied. But keep me in the dark--let me be misled and dneived, and it is impossible to tell at what Un prepared hour ff crashing blow--an over whelming exposure—may come." V7-An importer in New York attempt ing to smuggle diamonds in a letter, had them forfeited to the Government.— Their cost was $BOO. This is rather more than the ad valorem. ED— Pleasure is like a cordial ; a little of it not injurious-, but too much destroys. VOL. XV, NO, 17. Grumbling Against Editors. It is amusing to hear the contradictory complaints which are sometimes made against a newspaper. A prefers a•quarto sheet---11 declares he could'never get the' "hang" of one. C admires the elegance and neatness of tine type—and old Mr. D abhors a paper that requires a micro. scope. E wonders you insert an few sen timental ghost stories—F detests your abominable lies and cock-and-bull-sto- ries. U would like to see an exact and minute account of Congressional and Legislative proceedings —H curses the journal that contains the endless hodge podge doings and undoings of selfish partisans and demagogues. 1 won't sub scribe because your news department is so contracted-3 takes the "city" pa. pers, and has read your stale items a week ago. K has a mortal antipathy to a paper crowded with riots, horrible ac cidents, frightful robberies, and other demoralizing statements—L is mad as a hare because his miserable paper con tained no account of that bloody mur der last week. M detests your stereer type advertisements—and all N wants of the paper is to see what's for sale.— C threatens to discontinue becanse yotie editorials lack ginger, and•clon't lash pri vate vices—P, a leaden-headooints you to—'s paper, and wonders you never moralize like him. Q hates the rascally abolitionists—R holds in perfect con- - tempt the dastard editor who is too en W ardly to avow his abhorrence of Slavery. S demands long and solid artleles—T wants the close packet essence, and not the thin diluted mixture. U extols a journal that reaches him "a week before it is printed ;" and V tells you he is not quite green enough to be gulled by such despicable liumbuggery. W is aston ished that you never print sermons—and all that X cares for is fun. Yis on fire because you 'will not deduct more for ad vance pay--and Z is amazed at the im , pudence of a publisher who duns hint for three years' subscription and yerob jects to being paid in trade.—Yankee Blade. ME* Beyond' the mere definition of this term, how little can be said of its mean ing. Time is an indefinite part of an unfathomable whole—it is n fraction of eternity—of whose laws we know noth= ing, save that they are regulated by the celestial bodies and by the imperfect understanding of man. Time, then, is so mysterious that of its laws we know comparatively nothing, and our progress is such that, strictly speaking, it is never present. "Let us work while it is day, for the night cometh when no man can work," Of all the subjects brought before us, none is devoured with more eagerness than that illustrating the ways of lengthening the time, or tem poral life, of man. That this srbject ex cites universal interest we need but one day's experience to prove; discuss upon it in public, and you have exclusive at tention ; dwell upon it in private, and you become lost m conjectures: and yet, with what recklessness and apathy is existing life squandered ! Time is not given to us for an animal gratification ; it is given to us that we may educate, mature and enoble our minds, by reflect ing on the knowledge and virtue of society around ; and, finally, that WO may prepare ourselves to receive the mysterious truths of time, and the happi• ness of eternity. Social Virtues. Kindness, forbearance, meekness, ten• derness, love—sweet virtues ! let them be cultivated in every bosom. Who would feel like fretting or szolding, if he had in exercise a forbearing spirit.-- ho would seek for opportunities for revenge, if love reigned in his bosom Oh, be kind, and tender; and forgiving: Study to possess and cultivate the bless sed social virtues—those virtues that make up the happiness of heaven. If a'l were as amiable as it is in their power to be i we should not feel like saying— “There's something every day to make The changeful spirits sad ; A word to cause the heart to ache, When it is sweetly clad. But in every face we should read the lessons of love and kindness. If we should feel the wing of sorrow pressing one hour, a dozen hands would be exten ded to our relief, and a thousand smiles would fall like sunshine on Our path, ID—How short the years are when we are getting old I Till we are out of our teens, Time not only "hides his scythe among the flowers," but actually seems to be mowing by the day. No sooner, however, do we turn the corner of thirty than he is after us with a swarth- that cuts into our years as if they were made up of weeds or wet paper. Q D - Massachusetts has about three millions of dollars invested in School houses. A goat! investment,