VOLUME XVI. Tie Lonely Heart. They tell um I am happy, and I try to think it true; They say I have no cause to weep, my sorrows are so few; That in the wilderness we tread, mine is a favor ed lot, My petty griefs are phantacies, would I but heed them not. It mat be so: the cup of life has many a bitter draught, And those who drink with silent lips, have smiled on while they quaffed; It may be so: I cannot tell what others bate to bear, But sorry would I be to give another heart my share. They bid the to a festive board, I go a smiling guest; • Their language and their revelry are torture to my breast; They call fur music, and their comes some old fa miliar strain; I dash away the starting tear, and turn and smile again. But oh! my heart is wandering back to my fath or's home— Back to my sisters at their play, the meadows in their bloom, The blackbird on the scented thorn, the murmer ing of the stream— The sounds upon the evening wind, like voices in a dream— The watchful eyes that nevermore shall gaze up on my brow— The smiles—Oh! cease that melody, I cannot bear it now! And heed not when the stranger sighs, nor mark the tears that start, There can be no companionship for lonelinesS of heart; A Song of Life: BY CHARLES MACKAY, A traveller through a dusty road, Strewed scents on the lea, And one took root and sprouted up, And grew into a tree. Love sought its shade at evening time, To breath its early vows; And Age was pleased at heat of noon To bask beneath its boughs; The dormouse loved its dangling twigs, The birds sweet music . bore, It stood a glory in its place, A blessing evermore. A little spring had lost its way, Amid the grass and fern, A passing stranger scooped a well Where weary men might turn; He wall'd it in, and hung with care A ladle at the brink— He though not of the deed he did, But judged that toil might drink. Ho passed again!—and lo! the well By summers never dried, Had cooled ten thousand parched tongues ; And saved a life beside: A dreamer dropp'd a random thought, 'Twits old, and yet was now— A simple fancy of the brain, But strong in being true, It shone upon a genial mind, And, lo! its light became A lamp of life, a beacon ray, • A monitory flame. The thought was small—ils issue great, A watch-tire on the hill,' It sheds its rudienee far adown, And cheers the valley still. A nameless man, amid a crowd That thronged the daily mart, Let fall a word of Hope and Lovo, Unstudied, front thy - heart; A whisper on the tumult thrown— A transitory breath— It raised a brother from the dust, It saved a soul from death. germ! 0 fount! 0 work 'ciflove! •0 thought at random cast Yu were but little at the first, But mighty at the last. The Poor Man to his Son. Lr itiAzA. COOK. Work, work, my boy, be not afraid, Look labor boldly in the face; Take up the hammer a• the spade, And blush not for your humble place, Hold. up your brow in honest pride, Tho' rough and swarth your hands may be; . Such hands are sap-veins that provide The life-blood of the station's. tree. There's honor in the toiling part, That Linda Uti iu the furrowed fields; It stamps a crest upon the heart Worth more than all your quartered shields. Work, work, my boy, and murmur not, The fustian garb betrays no shame; The grim of forge-soot leaves no shame, And labor gilds the meanest Mime. And man is never half so blest, As when the busy day is spent, So as to make his evening rest. A holiday of glad content. God grant thee hut a duo reward, A guerdon portion thir and just, And then ne'er think thy station hard, But work, my boy, work, hope and trust! Go IT Boomst—A Mrs. Boots, of this State, has left her husband, Mr. Boots, and strayed to parts unknown. We presume that a pair of boots are rights and lefts. We cannot say, however, that Mrs. Boots is right, but there is no mistake that Boots is le/t. A HumuLE Hoag.—Are you not surprised to find how independent of money peace of cou seine° is, and how much happiness can be con densed into the humblest home? A cottage will not hold the bulky furniture and sumptuous ac commodations or a mansion; but if Gud be there, a cottage will hold as much happiness as might stock a palace.—Rae. Amos Hamilton. ' ~7 ' IT6, 1,)0 AN ANTEDILUVIAN ROMANCE, Mortals saw without surprise,- Iu 'the mid air, angelic eyes. In those far-away times, when the Mammoth shook the ground with mighty tread, and ere the solitary dove fluttered over the waste of waters, vainly seeking re , t, and finding none, there dwelt upon the earth, a fair woman, with two beautiful young daueters, whose reifies were Adith and Nemeth Their home nestled in the bosom of a fertile valley, where bright fountains leaped and sparkled in the undimmed sunshine—where floods of delicious roses wafted faint odors on the balmy air—where cedars frowned in towering grandeur, and the dark funeral cypress scarce revealed the azure skies between. White tents glanced on the distant plains; flocks and herds pastured there; and the moon arose in calm radiance from behind the green swelling hills—those hills from whence celestial melodies were softly heard to float,. from Whence favored mortals often heard strange wild echoes us of voices whispering to each other —beheld shining meteors dart—traced them dis solving away in the silvery light, bounding the clear horizon, or with mute awe, watched their downward shooting to the transparent lake, hid den amid mountain solitudes; deep, mysterious waters, on whose pure bosom reposed inntunera- Isle wan lotus-lilios, dim and dream-like flower over which angels loved to hover and disport in the holy moonlight. Gems of night; blessed and beautiful lotus' lilies! In those days, noble young damsels brought wa ter from the pellucid fountains, and rested pleas antly in the refreshing shade beneath spreading boughs, and thither came Adah and Naamah to fill their vases. Wreaths of fresh green leaves encircled their brows; light snowy drapery, looped up, revealed the round alahaster limbs, and deli cate feet, protected by richly embroidered sandals. They were twin sisters, alike, yet dissimilar. Adult, seen alone, would have been pronounced one of earth's loveliest daughters: but Naninah, a wandering angel, with paradise airs yet breath ing round her the tender halo of a subdued mel ancholy, as if she lamented absence from her star ry home. "What meaneth that ancient womma" whis pored Adah to her sister, as they rested their wit ter-vases on the emerald turf. "What mcaneth she? I overheard her to-day in converse with our mother, beneath the cedar dome, bewailing the doomed one, and methought thy name, sweet Nimmah, was murmured. Our mother smiled, and I thing myself into her dear arms, and asked the meaning of those words I had thus unwitting ly given ear to. The woman of a hundred stun tmen raised her hands as if in prayer; our mother knelt beside her, and I cared nut to press my ques tioning." "Would I were like thee my sister Adah!" res ponded Naamah with a sigh—"would I were like thee, with earthly affections garnered within my throbbing heart! Thou alone knowest—yet but in part—how I have ever felt estranged from worldly sympathies. Harken, Ada and I will now conll2ss that I divine the fate, and know the tale, thOti in thy innocent simplicity &earnest not of. The woman of a hundred summers bewailed the doomed one, ye say? High and glorious doom! —oh! that it may be mine! Snatches of whisper ed eommunings, murmurings, wild melodies, and prophetic teachings, have revealed the mystery to me—wondrous and enthralling! Thou weal our mother, hew beautiful she is—how holy, pure, and noble: thou host often marked the peculiar tender ness which floated: as a transparent veil around her. Her mother was far more beautiful; and, they say, Adah—(thoU knowest I have 'not vani ty)—that I bear perfect resemblance to our an cestrcss." "Dearest Neamald" exclaimed Adah, embra• sing her sister, "what human words may paim thy loveliness? Only let us cease not to remcm• bee whose hand fashioneth the clay. Dist contin• ue thy speech, for Ima impatient to hear thy re. vealment." Naamah sighed, as if overwhelmed with the im mensity of the theme; and in a low voice obeyed her compunion, 't A shining meteor—otherwise, a paradise an gel—wandering over the silent earth, one starry night, folded his glittering wings, and rested be side our beloved waters, in the mountain solitudes. On the banks of the moonlit lake also roved our ancestress—pure and beautiful as the lotus-lilies. Tim angel encountered this fair daughter of men:' loved, wooed, and would have won, but that she was previously betrothed. Her marriage was hastened by her terrified sire, to avert the curse, even said to rest on angel love for mortal wo man! But, alas! Adah, an angel's kiss had been imprinted on that woman's lips—an angel's sparkling tires have Rung around her, and within her soul, their unspeakable, pervading essence.— Invisibly, that disappointed, love-lorn celestial one hovered about her path through life, received her parting spirit, and bore it to heaven's gate,— hath ever watched our mother; and watches over Adah—our guardian spirit ! Changeless aro the Sons of paradise—ever blooming, ever young years with us, bin days with them—nay moments of eternity ! On me, Adult—on me, this angel's regards will once again be fixed. I out doomed to be his bride ! Night after night, when thou art sleeping, I wander away to the mountain soli tudes, beside the lotiely lake. "I feel the fanning wings of invisible spirits.— I hear their dulcet songs of bliss ; and I know that angel eyes are gazing; and I weary—oh ! I weary for my spirit-love to come and claim me as his own ! For never, (mark me, Adab, my sister,) never shall mortal man call me bride !" HUNTINGDON, PA., THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1851: Time glided on. Adah was married to one of the young nobles of Lebanon; but in her distant, happy home, her affectionate heart yearned to wards her twin-sister. Still Namnah wandered in search of her angel-lover; earthly suitors were dismissed; she turned coldly and disdainfully from them all. LOVES Or TUE ANGELS. It was on a night of singular beauty, even in that favored clime; dila Nammth, pale and lan guid, rested on the banks of the haunted lake, like a slanting Moonbeam, white and pure; her rich voice poured forth strains of melody, such as -can not be imagined now, on this changed earth. Suddenly, there stood by her side a youth, apparently travel-worn, and fatigued with long lounging 5 his voice was deep and thrilling;, his demeanor was high, courteous, and noble; while the halo of ghand and pre-eminent intellectual beauty shone in his dark eyes, and illuminated his thoUghtful coat] tepante. "Long-loved—long-sought-for—found at last!" he exclaimed, casting himself on his knees before the agitated Naamah, and pouring forth those ar dent words she had so long pined to hear. Could she doubt that her angel-lover had thus sought her side at length, not in brightness and glory, indeed, but in plain earthly guise—in pity to her weak mortal senses i Could she not discover the inetlitble perfections —the immortal essence? Could they be hidden from her? Ah ! no; Naamah had not a doubt; and to her mother's dwelling she led the graceful youth, where the stranger and way-toter were sure to find a ready welcome. The woman of a hundred summers exchanged mysterious glances with the tender mother, who silently watched the enamoured pair. When OIL the seine spot where he had first found her, at the same hour, the wanderer de manded Of Naamah, in the trembling voice of truo love, if she would leave her mother's side, and ler own people, to follow him, what replied she? 'Long-loved—long-sought-for—found at last— am thine.' Tu a distant, brilliant home, the beautful Naa malt was conducted by her husband. And where the precious gems of earth were sparkling—where all the untold glories of the world shone around her, seated on a golden throne, costly incense burning, peerless flowers strewed beneath her feet, and paradise opening before her in the dark eyes whose light she lived in, Natamah learnt that to mortal love she had devoted her existence—plight ed her faith: Thnt the wandering spirit of the haunted lake, who had sought her by the lotus lilies, was the brother of Adah's husband—Adah, who had dwelt on her sister's loveliness, until, as the youthful prince listened to her description, he yearned to behold it for hihiself, and set forth on his adventurous expeditiou, nlinost tempted to believe that he had discovered an angel beside the solitary mountain-lake, when personating one. An earthly throne Naamah gained—a mortal heart's fond devotion; but there were whisperers on the Lebanon to hint that she revered her ear ly dreams, and cherished, with somewhat of sad dened momory, the illusions of the past. The Bur has long been crowded with aspirants, of every degree of calibre 'and qualifications. It I is extremely pleasant to gaze on the hill of fame and to imagine one's self standing on its summit, admired and envied by the gazers below. How few, comparatively, realize their dreams. Years pass on without adding reputation or practice to one hull of the Bar, who, in desinto of manifest failure, from incompetency on their part, or from adverse causes, still persist in the vain contest,— Happily, another and more judicious direction is about to be given to the public mind ou this sub ject. The New York Mirror well remarks. The Bar is no longer the resort of the ambitious youth of our country. The mechanic departments are being preferred; there are now thirty young gentlemen in this city, that have received liberal educations, who are serving their "times," as shipwrights, architects, carpenters, &c. In a few years, the United States will have the most ae coinplished mechanics in the world: A new class is springing up, who will put the present race of mechanics in the shade. The union of a substan tial education with mechanical skill, will abet this. Indeed, alreadj , we could name some me chanics, who are excellent inathematicians, ac quainted with French and German, and able to study the Books in those languages connected with their vocations. Heretofore fond ththers were wont to educate their sons as doctors or law yers, to insure their respectibility and success.— That day is passed. Mechanics will now take the lead, and in a Jew years will supply the large por tion of the State and Federal Government. Of course you can. You show it in your looks, in your motion, in your speech, in your everything. I ens! A brave, hearty, substantial, soulful, manly, cheering expression. There is character, force, vigor, determination, will, in it. We like it. The words have a spirit, sparkle, pun gency, flavor, geniality, about them which takes one in the very right place. I cash There is a world of meaning expressed, nailed down, epigramised, rammed into these few letters. Whole sermons of solid-ground virtues. How we more than admire to hoar the young man speak it out bravely, boldly, determinedly; as though it was an outreaching, et his entire nature, a reflection of his inner soul. It tells of some thing that is earnest, sober, serious; of something that will battle the race, and tumble with the world in a way that will open and brighten and mellow men's eyes. rcan: What spirit, purpose, intensity, reality, Law 'and Mechanics. "I CAN.,' power and praise. It is a strong arm, a stout heart, a bold eye, a firm port, an indomitable will. We never knew a man, possessed of its energy, vitality, fire, and light, that did not attain emi nence of some sort. It could not be otherwise. It, is in the nature, constitution, order, necessity, inevitable of events that it should be so. I can! rightly, truly said, and then clinched and riveted by the manly, heroic, determined deed, is the se cret solution, philosophy of men's liens. They took I can for a motto, and went forth, and stead ily made themselves and the world what they pleased. Theu young nice, if you would be something besides common, dusty, prosy, Wayfiwer in life, just put these magic words upon your lips, and their musing, hopeful, expanding philosophy in your hearts and arms. Do it and you are made men. The Book of Nature: "Forth in the pleasing Spring, thy bounty walks Tby tenderness and love. Fragrant the meads, The softening air is balm, and every abuse Awl every heart is joy." Again we are greeted by the opening spring. The great book of Nature will soon present to our view, on landscape, hill and plain, renewed evi dence of an ever present and wonder working God. At the voice of his word the fresh foliage bedecks the dreary forest—the brown and frosted earth puts on her robe of green, the garden and the orchard display their varied hoes, and'"Life revisits dying worms and spreads the joyful in sects wing." *ho can behold the beauties of Spring without emotions of delight and gratitude. Dwellers in the country, however bumble may be your quiet homes, ye will not surely in the spring Jin; sigh for city life. ' Though so often yo have seen the king of day descend 'neath the mountain range, ushering in the twilight, as his last faint rays fadedl from the hill tops, ye would not change the view fur a city sun-set, where brick walls or towering masts hide all or half its beauties—you would cot change the stillness that at this hotir so oft invites to thought, to prayer, to praise, for the bustle and din and ever restless rush of a crowded mart—ye would not withdraw from before your oft feasted eye, the thousand objects teeming with life, that point you ever from Nature up to Na. tare's God—and put in their place a mass of hu man thrms, inanimate piles of brick and granite, shaped by man's device for human habitations. 0. no—the city eon give no equivalent for the beauties of the varied landscape,—the fresh moun tain breeze, the rich hues and sweet odors of ad vancing spring. Ye who arc parents, blessed with a quiet home and daily competence, in the work of unfolding and training the infant's intellect, with how much ease can ye teach from Nature's open book when the Spring is revealing its treasures! What though your tinily lot be one of toil, ever and anon there are moments of comparative leisure when the moral and mental wants of the prattlers at i • your side may be satisfied without the stimulus of unhealthful excitement—wish nut fur them the atmosphere of the city—be thankful that the lines have fallen to you and to them in pleasant places I—for the restless desire to exchange countrtfor city life has brought to many a bosom the writh , ing anguish of despair. Christian parents and Christian children may seek the city to find wide ,fields of ustfulnesO, if that be their highest motive—they may also seek it to learn the world, as they would journey well guarded, to leant by observation the geography of I a strange country; but let them. not seek it fur increased personal enjoyment, for the hope of gain, or love of change—for they will find noth ing in cities to compensate fur the loss of rural scenes, and healthful pursuits; innocent pleasures and free access to the great book of Nature—to the melody of birds, and flowing streams, the fi lent beauty of the star-lit sky—or the sweets of I undisturbed Sabbath meditation on the unseen re alities of that country towards which we are ever I hastening with the rapidity of Time.—N. Y I vocate. Wife—Mistress—Lady. Who marries from love takes a wife; who mar ries for the sake of convenience takes a mistress; who marries from consideration takes a lady. You aro loved by your wife, regarded by your mistress, tolerated by your lady. You have a wile for yourself, a mistress for your house and its friends, a lady for the world. Your wife will agree with you, your mistress will accommodate you, your lady will manage you. Your wife will take care of your household, your mistress of your house, 'your lady of appearances. If you are sick, your wife will nurse you, your mistress will visit you, and your lady will enquire after your health. You take a walk with your wife, a ride with your mis. trees, and join parties with your lady. Your wife will share your grief, your mistress your money, and your lady your debts. If you aro dead your with will shod tears, your mistress lament, and your lady wear mourning. A your atter your death marries again your with, in six months your mistress, and in six weeks, or sooner, when mourning is over, your lady. gulf the Spring put forth no blossoms, in Summer there will he no beauty, and in Autumn no fruit—so, if youth be trifled away Without im provement, riper years will be contemptible and old age miserable. (Felt is said that Gov. Bell, of Texas, who re• ccntly quoted Shakspeares "Winter of our dia• content," is no relative of "The church-going Bell," spoken of by Cowper in ono dills poems. ( 4) tintitttir f.7& Another Speech from Webster. The fallowing speech was delivered by the Hen. Daniel Webster, hi float ef the Revere House, in Boston, after the aurhorities of the city refused im Funieul Ilall. Ftt.Low-min:Ns OF BOSTON: -You rather take me by surprise this morning—but it is a very agreeable surprise. lam as much pleased to see your cheerful and satisfied faces, us I am to see again the face of that luminary which shines out from the heavens above us; and if gentlemen, you are half as glad to see me as I am to meet you, there is at this moment a great quantity of happi ness and good feeling in flowdion Square. (Ap- plausb.) Gentlemen, a long and violent convulsion of the elements has passed away, and the heavens and the skies smile upon us. 'There is often on anal ogy between oecurenees in the natural world, and sonic times political agitations pass away, bringing after them sunshine, joy and gladness. May it be so now. I greet you as citizens ofßos ' ton; I welcome you, I offer you my heart and laud with the deepest gratitude for what you and your fathers have done for me, from the days of my early manhbod, when I came front the North to throw myself nntoug you, to partake of your fortunes, for good or evil, to the end of my life. I urn not vain enough to suppose, fellow-citizens that I have dune any essential service to my 'coun try in my clay and generation. If I have so done, however little, or however much it may be, I owe it mainly to the constant, the warm unwavering friendship and support of the people of Boston. I am bound sic way of all the earth. I shall ere long follow yon• fathers to my last home. But while I live and breathe, while my heart beats or my tongue moves, I shall feel and I shall speak of Boston, as the cherished objects of my public, po litical, 1 may say, friendly regard. • Gentlemen, you do not expect to hear from mo to-day any discourse. I come to see you, and you come to see mo. It is not an occasion for the discussibn of any political topics. YOu do not expect me to detain you from your affairs, while I rehearse any opinions of my own, or state the grounds of those opinions. But let me congrat ulate you, and let me ask you to congratulate use, that the events of the last year or two have placed us under better auspices. We see clearer, we breathe freer, we feel a new assurance that our political institutions, the rich blessings and inheri tance which we derive from our ththers, Will en dure, perpetual, be ;noisome', if any institution of man on earth can be immortal. Yes, fellow-citizens, the youngest of your chil dren, the youngest of your grand children, will grow up to manhood, in the proud feeling that they aro born to an inheritance of imperishable liberty in these United States of North America, and in this ancient and beloved—l say beloved, and to kalways venerated, under all circumstances— beloved and venerated Commonwealth of Massa chusetts, Why, fellow citizens, we need not be Vain, we need not be too much self-satisfied, but after all who is there among you at this moment that would exchange his political and social condition for that which befols the inhabitants or the resident of any other country under the wide scope of the canopy which is over us? Where would you go with satisfaction? You would stay under• the institu tions of your country with satisfaction; you would enjoy that political power which is so universally disseminated on popular principles, with satisfac tion and gratification. Fur here every citizen feels he is a man. If he is one of the governed, he is also one of the governors, and he has a voice its every transaction of public policy and ea . tional concern. Let others say what they will; prefer a more royal a more despotic, or a more democratic form of government; fur myself, and I believe I may speak for you, we are satisfied with our condition, as people of the United btates and citizens of Massachusetts—living nude• a free, popular and gloriouS representative government, which makes us known favorably all over the Gentlemen, let us despair of nothiug in behalf of our country. We see it growing in prosperity. We shall see that the returning sense of the com munity, the great principle of love of liberty—and, we might add, and I would add with all the em phasis that I can pour out of my heart—the love of Union will keep us together. (Applause.) If I had ten thousand voices, if I could speak so as to be heard on the shores of the Pacific, if I could gather around me the whole of this vast nation, I would say fellow-citizens, union, UNION, UNION, now and forever! (Great cheering.)— What are all these petty distinctions, and section al quarrels.—They are not the dust in the bal ance. They are not fit to inhabit the heart of a true American, for the heart of a true American embraces his whole country, and if it is not big enough for that he had better tear it out and throw it flora his bosom. (Applause.) I have said gentlemen, that the little I have done, if I have done anything for good, is attributable to the support which you and your brothers and your fathers have given me here in the city of Boston, I sin nut ungrateful for it, As I have found you in times past I find you now, and I am sure I shall continue to find you; and let me say to you, let me entreat you this day to deliver to your children what 1 say—that as Boston found me thrity years ago she finds me to-day, without variation or the shadow of change—and I shall go to my grave full of gratitude which I cherish for her and her support of toe in my political course thus fur through life. (Applause.) Gentlemen, I bid you an affectionate adieu.— By the blessing of God I shall see you again un der circumstances, it may be, that will enable me NUMBER 18. to express somewhat at large my opinions upon the present state of things in this country.— (Cheers, and cries of 'good,' good.') All this, gentlemen, is in the hands of that Providencti which is over us. To him I commend myself, I commend you, and I commend all the great inter ests of our own dearly beloved country. Gentle men, farewell: Loud cheers for Mr. Webster, the Constitution and the Union, followed the conclusion of Mr. Webster's remarks, while from the windows above and around him bouquets fell upon him from the hands of fair women, who occupied them. This mark of apposed on the part of his fair hearers drew from Mr. Webster the remark, "The ladies, God bless theta, they are all for the Union."-- Mr. Webster then retired to his rooms accompan ied by the Committee; and the gathering disper- From the Knickerbocker Magazine. A Dying Wife to her Husband, The following most touching fragment of a let ter front a dying with to her husband, was found by him, sumo months after her death, between the leaves of a religious volume, which she was very fund of perusing. The letter which was litterly dim with tear marks, was mitten long before the hushand was aware that the grasp of a fatal dis ease had fastened upon the lovely form of his wife, who died at the early age of nineteen: "When this shall reach yoar eye, dear G—, some day when you are turning over the relics of the past, I shall have passed away forever, and the cold white stone will ha keeping its lonely watch over the lips you have so often pressed, and the sod will be growing green that shall hide for ever from your sight the dust of one who has so ,pften nestled close to your warm heart. For ma• ny long and sleepless nights, when all my thoughts, were at rest, I have wrestled with the conscious ness of approaehing death, until at last it has forced itself upon my mind; and although to you and to others it might now seem but the nervoda immaginations of a girl, yet, dear G—, it is so! Many weary hours have I paSsed in the endeavor to reconcile myself to leaving yoti, whom I love so well, and this bright world of sunshine and beauty; and hard indeed. is it to struggle on si lently and alone, with the sure conviction that I am about to leave all forever,' and go down alone into the dark valley:—.But I know iu whom I have trusted,' and leaning upon His arm, fear no evil.'—Don't blame me for keeping even all this from you. How could I subject you of all others, to such sorrow as I feel at parting, when titue will so soon make it apparent to youl I could have wished to live, if only to be at your aide when your time shall come, Wipe the death damps from your brow, and usher your departing spirit into its Maker's presence, embalmed in wo man's holiest prayer. But it is not to be so—and I submit. Yours is the privilege of watching, through long and dreary slights, for the spirits final flight, and of transferring my sinking head from your breast to my Saviour's bosom—And you shall share my last thought; the last faint pressure of the band, and the last feeble kiss shall be yours; and even when flesh and heart shall have failed I me, my eye shall rest upon yours until glazed by death—and our spirits shall hold one last fond communion, until gently fading from my view— the last of eswth—yon shall Mingle with the flist bright glimpses of the unfisding glories of that bet ter world, where partings are unknown. Well do I know the spot, dear G—, where you will lay me; often have we stood by the place, and as we watched the mellow sunset as it glanced in quiv ering flashes through the leaves and burnished the grassy mounds around us with stripes of bright gold, each perhaps has thought that one of us would come alone; and Whichever it might be, your name would be on the stone. But you loved the spot; and I know you'll love me none the less when you see the same quiet sunlight linger and play among the grass that grows over your Ma- . ry's grave. I know you'll go often alone there, when I an, laid there, and my spirit will be with you then, and whisper among the waving branches, "I am not lost but gone before ! " Soliloquy. Can't get along so, and yet doing as much busi ness as I did twenty years ago! Then I saved money—now I'm spending it; absolutely going behind-hand every season! What's the difficulty? Profits are reduced, whilst rents and taxes, and expenses arc increased! What shall I dol It's plain! I must do more business—multiply my profitS by increasing the number of my customers. How shall I get morn customers? By giving in formation to a greater number of people, and in viting their custom. How? As other people do— through the newspapers, cards, handbills, &c. In short, I must advertise or quit business.—As there is no other remedy I will make a virtue of necessity. I'll advertise. I will! FAMILY DEvoriort.—lt is a beautiful thing to behold a family at their devotions. Who would not be moved by the tea'• that trembles in the mother's eye, as she looks to Heaven, and pours forth her fervent supplications for the welfare of her children? Who can look with indifference upon the venerable father, surrounded by his fam ily, with his uncovered locks, kneeling in the pees once of Almighty God, and praying for their hap piness and prosperity? In whose bosom is not awakened fin, finest feelings on beholding a ten der child, in the beauty of itB innocence, folding its little hands in prayer, and imploring the invis ' ible, yet eternal Father, to bless its parents its brothers and sisters, and its playmates/