, 4.1 ";•::• • „ 4 ' 7 , I GO 0 nnf rbOn VOLUME XVI. The Wild Dark Storm. Oh ! tie the easement, father, The snow falls on my bed ; Oh ! tie the easement, father, It rattles o'er my bead.— Dont sleep so sound, my father, I'm very numb and chill, And I can't bear to listen, With the room so dark and still." The drunkard heard no plaintive voice, For death enwrapped his form, Nor the Childs moan,—l'm all alone, In the wild, dark storm. The blast mixed clown the chmncy, And shook the fragile wall, And the casement rattled louder, At the shrieking angry call; The drunkard heard no plaintive voice, For death enwrapped his form, Nor the child's moan,—l'm all alone, In the wild dark storm. The light shone in upon her, Her heart beat quick with fear, She could see no form around her, No voice, no foot-full hear, But a whisper come unto her, As vesper's tones might be, And its melody breathed fairy like ° My child come home to me," And though she sighed, she still remained, In the wild dark storm. " There's snow upon my head, mamma, My heart is freezing fast ; And shadows from the corner Are flitting swiftly past, I come to you, dear mother, If you'll make rue very warm, For oh ! I'm cold and all alone, In the wild dark storm, The little snow drifts grew, And so silently they slept, Upon the ragged coverlet, The child no longer wept; She said there must be warmth in them, And thrust within her hand, And drew it forth encircled, With a pale and icy band; Then she shrieked as wild and frantic And shook the drinken form— "l am dying, father, dying, hi the wild dark storm." Poor child, her head sank backward, Her eyes grew dark and dim, Her voice grew stronger in despair, She could not wakon him; With red and frozen fingers joined, She breathed in accents low, " Where mother sleeps, where mother lies, 'Tis there I want to go." THE VIRGIN OF VESTA. DT AUGUSTINE DUGANNII. CHAPTER T. For Rome is as a desert, where we steer, &ambling o'er recollections."—B TRON. The Tiber gleamed in the light of its illumine ted banks. Far down the Palatine Hill, from the Imperial Palace, flashed forth a long line of radi ance upon the Via Sacra. And across the clefir water, from the marble court of Apollo's temple, came the evening chant of the priests, and the sound of music, as if their god had struck his sculptured harp. The temple of Vesta, alone, upon the southern slope of the hill, was lit by the rich moonbeams, that clothed with a silver lustre its marble portico, and glittered through the thick foliage of the sa cred oaks which embosomcd it. Nought burned there but the pure fire of the altar, around which now a circle of white-robed virgins bent in their evening orisons. And now the mystic rite is ended, and the sol emn chant of the vestal train, as they slowly re tire through the dim aisles, sounds faintly in the distance. One is left—the virgin, who, through the still night, shall watch the sacred alter-flame, and offer to the spotless goddess a prayer for her favorite shrine. Wh: gazes she so fixedly at her departing sisters? Why casts she an anxious glance around the lonely court? A shadow stole across the marble pavement, and the figure of a man stood forth in the moon light. The maiden flew to meet him. My brother ! thou art here ! 0 happy—' ' Hiatt they seek my life !' cried the young man, casting an anxious glance around. My brother! what meanest thou?' ' Germanicus is slain !' said the brother in a stifled voice. The maiden gazed into the youth's face as if she would fain read there the contradiction of his words; but she saw that his features were deadly pale. Ah, my brother,' she mannered, it is , not so-0, say not that our benefactor is—' "Tis true—even at the banquet. I stood be side him—l held his cup. Sejanus the tyrant, fill ed from his own, and my master fell dead at my feet. I escaped, but the slaves of Sejanus fol low me And he—Germanicus—he is no more,' cried the sister. , Ay, Livia—poisoned by the wretch who aims at the imperial purple ! Germanicus is dead, Livia. But hark! they come—l hear the tramp of their feet within—' ' They will not harm thee here, my brother— they dare not tear thee from the shrine of Vesta.' ' And what is Vesta to Sejanus 2' cried a voice, as a band of soldiers entered the temple gate— 'Dreg the slave away :'tie the emperor's will!' Beware r cried Livia, as, snatching a torch from the altar, she sprang to her brother's side.— ' Beware, ere the insulted goddess shall avenge her shrine ! Back back ! lay not your hands on him who claims the aid of Vesta.' The sister stood by her brother's side, like the I very goddess whom she served. The rude and superstitious soldier's trembled before the blaze of the virgin's eyes. But their leader's voice arous ed them. 'Ha cried he, ' will ye be banked by a wo• man?' and he grasped the maiden's arm. The sword of the brother circled over the sol dier's head, and the bright blade rung on Isis iron helmet. But ere the blow could be repented, lights gleamed along the corridors; and the bight priestess broke the silence. What means,' said she, ' the clash of steel 7 Why is the shrine of Vesta violated 7 Is Rome so sunk in crime that the temple of her gods are not revered ? Speak Livia ! why are these bold men here 7' A stranger sought the protection of our altar. He is a freedman of Germanicus whom they have murdered. These men would drag him to a cruel death. 0, save him, he is my brother!' And the spirit that upheld her, giving way, she sunk trembling at the feet of the priestess. ' Fear not, Livia! Tiberius himself dare not desecrate the shrine of our goddess. Return !' said the high priestess to the soldiers—' and say to Sejanus, that the priestess Vesta protects her j servants.' ' Advance !' cried the centurion. Pluck him even from the altar's foot. Think ye that the vengeance of the gods is surer or more terrible than the wrath of Sejanus Advance upon the slave !' The soldiers, accustomed to obey, hesitated no longer. Throwing themselves together upon the freedman, who, grasping his sword, had awaited the result of the interference of the priestess, they wrested the weapon from his grasp, and dragged him from the temple court. Livia lay senseless at the foot of the altar.— But the high priestess heeded her not. Iler own proud heart was swelling at the thought of her in sulted goddess. The sanctuary violated !—sacri lege at the very altar! "Tremble,' she cried, as the corslets of the retreating soldiers flashed in the blaze that streamed from the imperial palace —"Trembled, Sejanus ! thy fate is sealed. Whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad !' &JANUS reclined at the banquet. Rival of his master in dissitnulaton, he knew how to preserve in public an austerity that effectually hid the grossness of his sensuality. His was at the pitch of his subordinate power ; for Tiberius sunk in the enervating pleasures of his Capramm palace, had apparently resigned all care of government into the hands of his favorite. The word of &kiwis was law in Rome. Yet his ambition still looked higher, and al ready the imperial crown seemed within his grasp. The children of the elder Germanium were ban ished. Drums had drunk the poison of his host. What was now to prevent the attainment of his vast ambition—the empire of all Rome ? A messenger appeared. The freedman of Germanicus is taken.' 'ro the dungeon with him !—Yet stay—guard him hither!' Ilerman entered between the soldiers who ad vanced towards Sejanus. But the cautious tyrant stayed their approach. ' And thinkest thou, tyrant, I slay at the ban quet?' cried the bold freedman. ' Ha! slave ! are we braved I—a worthy cub of thy master art thou. Methinks rebellion bath grown bold! where found ye him! ' Its the temple of Vesta he had taken sanctuary.' • Sanctuary ! 'tis well. Borne has yet to learn flint Sejanus is her master. Had he papers 7' He has destroyed them.' 'Ha!' cried Salamis, ' bear him to the dun geon. The torture shall be thine on the morrow. 0, fearless despiser of tyrants !' CHARTER 11. "A sister's love—the holiest thing That earth has won from Heaven." The priestess and Livia both knelt at the altar. Together they hung the sacred garlands upon the shrine—together watched the holy tire. Sud denly the virgin paused—she threw herself at the feet of the priestess. 'Can we not save himi' she murmured—' my only brother.' 'Livia!' said the calm voice of the priestess, I knew not thou hadst a brother.—Where dwelt he when Germanicus consigned thee to my care 7' 'He was his freedman—we were once the child ren of his enemy, for our father's sister was Thus nelda, the wife of the bold Arminins. At that dark defeat, when Varas sunk before the power of the German loader, my father fell. Thitsnelda succored us till she herself became a captive, and then the generous hand of Germanicus preserved the offspring of hie foe. Herman became his freedman, and I, at my own desire, (which may our goddess prosper!) be came the child of Vesta. Thou had heard my story.' 'Poor child!' said the priestess. 'He is thine only brother, and in the power of Sejanus. But hearken, Livia,—wouldst thou bravo danger to save thy brother's life l' 'Gladly, gladly,' murmured the virgin, her eyes lighting up with joy; ' what would I not ',ravel— he is my brother. 'Then will I instruct thee,' said the priestess. 'Listen.' The brow of the vestal priestess wee white as the marble pillar against which she leaned, and her HUNTINGDON, PA., THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1851. dark eye flashed in the altar fire, as she gazed upon the young girl— Thou must go to Tiberius,' she said. 'To the dreadful tyrant V 'Even so, Livia, even to the tyrant, and to his un holy palace of Capra'. But fear not ! The mantle of our goddess shall cover thee, and her power shall cover thy heart. Thou mayest seek the dread ful isle unfearing. Myself and the virgins of Vesta will pray for thee.' I will go,' said Livia. ‘Featest thou to ask thy brother's life of Tibe rim 1 Fearest thou to tell him of our altar's sac rilege?' ' I fear not!' said Our goddess will protect me.' She knelt with the priestet; before the shrine of Vesta. rier crossed hand rested on her pure bo som, and her mild, trusting eyes were turned to wards heaven. 'I fear not!' she said. TIBERIUS reclined on his couch in his palace of Capra'. A round of sensuality had enervated him. His meager frame, that seemed the impersonitica don of death, tossed restlessly from side to side and his bright eyes shot uneasy and fugitive glances from beneath their shaggy brows. His scarred and bloated countenance worked fearfully; for the tyrant Remorse was mightier than himself. Ha started —a step approached— 'A lady craves to enter!' said the slave who ny penred. 'Whence cometh she ?' 'ln a barque from Rome—the centurion of the Western gate received her. She answered nought to our subject, but prayed to be conducted to the Emperor.' 'Lead her hither!' And Livia entered. Her white robes were con cealed by a dark mantle, and her flowing hair was hound beneath a close cap. She advanced towards Tiberius. 'Slaves! let her not approali.' 'Nay,' cried the maiden, fear not me!' and let ting fall her mantle, and removing from her head its covering, site stood before Tiberius. It was as if an angel had stood within that den of vice and infamy. Tiberius started from his couch—neverbefore had a vision such as this bro ken upon the eyes of the sensualist. He motion ed to his satellites, and they retired. 'What seekest thou, maiden?' he asked in a low silvery tone he could so well assume. Livia paused. It was with a trembling hand that she had entered the palace of the tyrant. Many and fearful accounts had she heard of his violence and untrammelled passions, and she had recalled them all during the swift passage across the sea, in the barque of Vesta's temple. But the thought of her captive brother gave a high and holy fervor to the meek vestal. 'Mighty emperor!' she cried, sinking at the feet of Tiberius—'l implore thy mercy for my brother!' 'Thy brother—who is he 'The freedman of Germanicus, whom Sejanus' At that name a smile played upon the lip of the emperor. It was a dark and singular smile, like the gleam of the serpent's eye ere it strikes. 'Rise, gentle lady!' said Tiberius; and taking her hand he gazed upon her lovely countenance. The modest eyes of the vestal fell before his keen , glance—but she trembled not—ske was thinking of her brother. A curious and Rutting glance was that of Ti berius. 'And hadst thou no fear?' he asked. 'Didst thou not know that Tiberius is called tyrant? Darest thou to brave hint?' 'I would brave everything,' said Livia, 'for my brother!' 'But thou art beautiful Hest thou not heard wild tales of the crimes of Tiberiust Bost thou not feart—thou art in my power.' his eye fell again with a scrutinizing glance upon the maiden's face. She looked op into his face fearlessly, trustingly, Her eye fell not before the gaze of Rome's impe• rial master. She trembled not. 'Mighty emperor! the gods protect the innocent. Vesta will not forsake her servant.' She spoke with a free and holy confidence:—Tiberius was awed—he bent before the power of virtue. Suddenly he seized her hand—' Why lovest thou thy brother?' he asked. 'He loveth me, ho is generous, good and noble!' Tiberius released her hand and stamping his foot, the slave re-entered. 'Lead the maiden forth, and see her courteously attended.' The slave looked inquiringly to his master, as if for further instruction. Tiberius turned to his couch. 'But my brother, mighty emperor—my brother!' 'lle loreth thee—he is generous, good, and noble! Let that content thee!' Livia was led forth, and Tiberius moved pain• fully to the balcony. The bright moonlight flashed upon the waves; it lit the rocks and the foam that dashed over them; it glittered on the arms of the sentinels that paced the palace ramparts; and it fell on the brow of the monarch of the land, and made it yet more ghastly. 'He is generous, good, and noble—thus she said, murmured Tiberius to himself.—' Ho!' then he cried aloud, ' bring forth the wino, and bid Sem pronius hither!' CHAPTER 111. Wouldst thou he free? Then strike the tyrant boldly. To the hilt Drive thou thy steel.—Gozvoonen. The freedman of Germanieus slept in his dun geon. In dreams he wandered on the bright shores of the Danube. Thusnelda and his mother rose to his view. Then he beheld that mother stretch ed beside his father's corpse—no light was in her eyes—she was dead. He gazed fearfully upon her face—it was Livia's. He started with a sud den cry from his sleep. A form heist over him, and the freedman recog nized the face of Sejanits. ' Ha, tyrant !' he cried, starting to Isis fret, ' than here 7' Pence, slave, and listen ! wonldst thou be free 7 —wouldst thou have wealth and honor? , What meanest thou? , cried the young Ger i man. 'Listen to me—l admire thy fearless spirit, young freedman, and I would sa`•e thy life, and raise thee to honor. Thou bast been faithful to Germanic.; so thon wilt he to. me.' " To his murderer !' murmured the freedman. ' It is false ! he was not murdered,' said Seja nus.—' But speak ! wilt thou liver If I may live in honor !' mid Herman. Thou shalt have riches and honor,' said Seja nue, one thing only I require. Ha!' cried the German youth—' Speak r Take. thou this dagger—a barque shall hear thee to Capraa. Strike this steel to the heart of Tiberius; and name thy reward. Dost thou hear me?' ' Tiberius V immured Herman. Ay, the tyrant—at Capne.' The eyes of the German youth flashed like the lightning's gleam, and his frame towered proudly above that of Sejanns. ' Away !' he cried, ' trai tor and assassin, away from a freeman's sight !' Host thou refuse 7' ' Away, ere I strike thee with my chains,' cried Herman raising his ponderous manacles above his head. ' The torture shall be—' Art thou gone !' cried the youth, springing forward towards Sejanus. The favorite of Tiberius quailed before the eyes of the freedman. With a muttered oath of ven geance, he left the dungeon, and Herman turned once more to his couch. But ero he reached it, a figure stood forth from behind one of the huge pillars that supported the roof of the cell. Freed man of Gerroanicus,' said a voice, while a hand at the instant grasped at his own—' thou host said well ' Who art thou?' cried Herman, turning quick• ' Thy friend—come with me V ' Whither V ' To liberty—speak not, but follow.' The freedman followed the footsteps of his con ductor. They went forth from the prison, and passeti through the grove that surrounded the palace of Augustus. Then crossed the Via Sacra, they descended the bill. A boat rocked lightly upon the wave. ' Enter said his conductor, and Herman obeyed. The stranger placed himself, beside him, and immediately the oars of the stout rowers propelled the barque over the water. Across the blue sea bounded they, and still the companion of Herman spoke no word. Across the blue sea went they, till the waves glanced in the morning sun, and the rocks of Ca prte's harbor were in sight. And when the sun of Italy beamed high over Came, Herman stood in the presence of Tiberius. 'Thou art the freedman of Gormanicus,' said the emperor. Even so.' ' Thy sister has been here.' had the lightning gleamed around him, it had startled Herman no more. Tiberius watched him. 'Ay, youth, she has been here! A generous maiden to sacrifice herself for her brother ! Post thou not thank her V ' May the gods blast thee, tyrant!' cried the excited youth. Oh, Livia, Livia—thou art lost forever ! and for me—' lie struck his breast with his clenched hand—' But thou hast not dared,'— he exclaimed, springing forward and confronting the Emperor—' thou—' The smile of Tiberius met him—that meaning smile, wreathing around the corners of his dark mouth—a low laugh came from his lips ; he stamp ed his foot—the door opened, and Livia appeared. My brother—oh my brother !' cried she, flying to his side. But he returned not her embrace. He grasped her hand, and gazed wistfully upon her face.— , Servest thou Vesta?' he murmured. The maiden looked into his eyes—she smiled; that smile was enough for a brother's heart. He bent his lips upon her forehead, then looked around. Tiberius was gone, but in his place stood the man who had led Herman front his dungeon. He approached them—the brother and sister— ' Tiberius bids me lead you forth,' said he. 'Thy sister's love and thy own loyalty have gained thee a friend in the Emperor.' And thou—' ' I was sent by Tiberius to thy dungeon, and there overheard thy refusal of the dark offer of Sejanus. The Emperor sends thy sister this V— ile gave Livia a packet. It was a necklace of pure pearl, and a scrap of papyrus—upon the lat ter was written' May the gods blast thee, tyrant!' Herman remembered his own daring words. Again Livia knelt before the shrine of Vesta and watched the pure flame. And while she knelt, amid her sister vestals, there came up the hill front the Forum, the sound of voices—a murmur of many tongues—and a mighty shont as of thank fulness and joy. The ucxt moment the form of her brother knelt beside her, and his lips murmur ed Listen !' Livia and the priestess, and the vestals, bent their heads as the mighty shout swelled up from the city—' &punts is no more—the tyrant has fallen !' The priestess knelt before the altar of her god dess. 'Thou hest avenged thy servants,' mur mured she, Sejanus is no more!' For the Huntingdon Journal. Death of A. A. Adams, the distin guished Tragedian." That tabernacle, in which once burned a beau tiful flame, is now mingling with the dust. Ohe of the brightest stare in the galaxy of dramatic genius has gone down into the dark and silent tomb, When the eye of genius is glazed, and quenched in darkness, and his powerful wand lies shattered in the dust ; when the strong minded, and kind hearto are stricken down from amongst as, the loss is felt to he public and general, and no one who takes delight% the purity and success of our drama, and one national literature, can re gard, unmoved, the departure of the man of ge nius and of worth. Mr. ADAMS was a true born American ; brave, generous, and manly. Possessing an intellect of i the highest order, he ranked, justly, among the first of his profession in our country. Though gifted with brilliant talents, his manner was re served and distant, until intimate acquaintance, when he opened his inmost heart and displayed those rich stores of disinterested friendship—feel ing and charity—that characterised all his actions. Benevolent to a fault, lie was beloved by all who knew him, and while many mourned his faults, there were but few who did not forget thorn in his virtues. "Ho had his faults—yet who would dare disclose, The hidden secrets of the sheltering tomb ! Long may they sleep, in undisturbed repose, Deep in the solemn grave's forgetful gloom." But it is not merely as a friend that we deplore his loss, that we miss his companionship, or that we cannot fill up his place in the social circle ; we mourn, too, that the drama has lost one of its brightest orbs. Those that could pretend to com pete with him in his profession, were but few.— , He was one of our greatest native players, and the place that is now vacated, will not soon be oc cupied. In his personation of the great character of Virginius he was truly unsurpassed, and it was always conceded to he a just and lofty embodia ment of the conception of the author. It was full of that intense passion, energy and pathos, that so eminently characterise the play. The reve lation which it gives of a noble and peculiar ge nius, can never be forgotten. He was especially unsurpassed in that part where he waits a res ponse, after calling on his slaughtered daughter, and says : "I hear a voice so fino, there's nothing lives 'Twixt it and silence.' —lt was indeed a lofty and a noble piece of acting, displaying at once the depth of insight, the extent of the attainments and varied culture of the performer. But it was not alone in Virginius that Mr. Ad ams evinced his great talent and powers. He was also conceded to be one of the greatest Hamlets of his day—and, indeed, there was no character, which he undertook to personate, in which he did not excel, and display alike the attributes of his genius, and a proficient in the. profession. Few of all his admirers can understand what a living death his life had been for a number of years be fore its close, and few, therefore, could appreciate the real consideration, that gave peculiar beauty land value to the efforts of his genius, which were I I wrought out under circumstances of the greatest depression, and discouragement. But ho is gone, and is now a resident of the dark and narrow house, where he has only arriv ed a short time before us, and while we cannot but reflect upon the frailty of all earthly hopes, and that lova and life are but words of care and sorrow, we still breathe our humble prayer Chat— s••• Reguiescat in pare. Huntingdon, March 24, 1851 • CmcissrAn, March 20th.—Mr. Augustus A. Adams, the distinguished tragedian, died in this city yesterday, after a painful illness. [Pennsylvanian. Courage in Women. There arc few things that would tend to make women happier in themselves, and more accepta ble to those with whom they live, than courage. There are many women of the present day, sensi ble women in other things, whose panic terrors are a frequent source of discomfort to themselves and those around them. Now it is a great mistake to imagine that hardness must go down with courage; and that the bloom of gentleness and sympathy must all be rubbed off by that vigor of mind which gives presence of mind, enables a person to he useful in peril, and makes the desire to assist overcome that sickliness of sensibility which can not contemplate distress and difficulty. So far from courage being unfeminine, there is peculiar grace and dignity in those beings who have little active power of attack or defence, passing through danger with a moral courage which is equal to that of the strongest. We see this in great things. We perfectly appreciate the sweet and noble dig nity of an Anne Bolyne, a Mary Queen of Scotts, or a Marie Antoinette. We see that it is grand for these delicately bred, high nurtured, helpless personages to meet death with a silence and con fidence like his own. But there would be a simi lar dignity in women's bearing small terrors with fortitude. There is no beauty in fear; it is a mean, ugly, dishevelled creature. No state can be made of it, that a, woman would wish to see herself like. Er However brutish fighting may be, says the Albany Dutchman, it has " its mission." We have seen one knock down infuse more politeness into a coxcomb in a minute, than Chesterfield could have conferred on him in a century. fir Too much devotion leads to fanaticism— too much philoephy to irreligion. • NUMBER 14. THE DEATH OF MOSEg. BY HZNRY HVNITR, D. D. The pen hoe now dropped from the hand of Mo ans, and silent ie his tongue; and another. not himself, must tell us what be is and bow he died. Every scene in the life of this illustrious man is singular, and instructive as singular, and his latter end is not the least interesting and use ful. lie had now completed his one hundred and twentieth year, without having become enbjeet to the usual infirmities of that advanced age. The death of Moses,then, was not in the ordinary course of nature, it was not preceded by its usual harbin gers, it was not occasioned by a failure of the ra dical moisture, by the stoke of violence, by the Imalignity of disease, but by a simple act of the will I of God, Moses has forlfilled, like a hireling, his day— has written, has spoken, has judged, has prayed, has blessed; the business of life has ended: he has glorified God on earth, it only remains that he gloify him, by submissionSto his sovereign will, in dying. Behold him, then, solitary and solemnly advancing to encounter the last enemy; he has passed through the plain, and again he begins to climb up into the mount to meet God. The eye of till Israel are rivited upon his foot-steps. Who is not ready to cry out,— 'Would to God I could die for thee.' Every step he advances plants a dagger in the heart. The distance begins to render vision indistinct; his person is diminished to:a speck; they fondly imagine they see him still; the eyes strain for another glimpse ; they can behold him no more. But he still beholds their goodly tents—he sees all Israel collected into one point of view. Jehovah dwelling in the midst of his people—the tabernachs with the pillar of cloud resting upon it—his affec tion with his sight is concentrated upon the happy spot—his whole soul goes out in one general de parting blessing. As he ascends, the prospect ex pands and brightens to his ravished eye. lie can trace Jordan from its source till it falls into the sea, he wanders, delighted, from hill to hill, from plain to plain. He sees on this side Mt. Lebanon losing its lofty head in the clouds—on that, the ocean and the sky meeting together to terminate his view.— Beneath his feet, as it were, the city of palm freer' and the happy fields which the posterity of Jacob were destined to inherit. The land which Abra ham had measured with his Rich in length and breadth of it, in which Isaac and Jacob bad sojour ned as strangers, which God had fenced, and cul tivated, and planted, and enriched by the hand of the Cauanite for his beloved people, which the sun irradiated with milder beams, the dew of hea ven refreshed with sweeter moisture, and the early and the latter rain fattened in more copious show ers. 'And the Lord said unto him, this is the land which I sware unto Abraham, unto Isaac and unto Jacob, saying, I will give it unto thy eyes, hut thou shalt not go over thither." But what is the glory of this world? It paaseth away! What is the felicity of man, who is a worm? It cometh quickly to a period. The eye which age had made dim, must nevertheless be closed in death at last ; the strength which a htindr l d4nd twenty years had not been able to impair, is in a moment, by one tonch of the finger, dissolved; the heart which God and Israel had so long divided,is nu w wholly occupied by God. In the midst of a vision so divine, Moses gertly falls asleep,—and he who falls asleep in the bosom of a father, needs Ife under no anxiety above awakening. 'So Mo ses, the servant of the Lord died there in the Land of Moab, according to the word of the Lord.' But oh, what a blessed transition ! from the fair est earthly prospect that eye ever beheld, to the enjoyment of a fairer inheritance eternal in the heavens; from the tents of Jacob, to the encamp ment of angels under Michael their prince; from a glory, confined and transitory, to glory unbound ed, unchangeable ; from the symbol of the Divine presence, in a pillar of fire and cloud, to His reel presence, where there is "fullness of joy," and where "there are pleasures for evermore." Be hold Abraham, and Issaac, and Jacob, rushing from thier thrones to welcome to the realms of light the shepherd of Israel, who had led the cho , son seed from strength to strength, from triumph to triumph, while the voice of the Eternal himself proclaims, "Well done, good and faithful servant, enter into the joy of thy Lord." Such was the latter end of the most ancient and authentic of historians, the most penetrating, dig nified, and illuminated of prophets, the profound est, sagest of legislators, the prince of orators and poets, the most excellent and amiable of men, the firmest, faithfulest of believers. A Roland for an Oliver. When General Oglethorpe, then a youth of fif teen, was serving under Prince Eugene, a prince of Wirtemberg, who sat at table, took a glass of wine and flipped some of it into Oglethorpe's face. Oglethorpe, unwilling to be thought hasty and irroscible, waited his opportunity, and then said, "Prince, that was a good joke; but we do it much better in England," and threw a whole glass in the prince's face. Cr The good man contributes to the welfare of others, not alone by positive act and instruc tion, but his life resembles a fruit-bearing shade tree, by which each passer-by finds shelter and refreshment, which disinterestedly and even in voluntarily scatters happy germs upon the sur rounding soil, whereby it produces what is like and similar to itself. He who does his best, however little, is always to ho distinguished from him who does nothing, unlc‘a he attempts impossibibtios.