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IVe will thank post to,, to lee t.p • dup in relation to this Original Vottr,. For the Journal. MUSINGS. They tell inn there's a fairer land A brighter world than ours A land of smiles and sunny dreams, Of sunshine and of flowers. They say that holy angels dwell in that bright land of bliss, That choral songs of praises swell, That ne'er are known in this. They say the heart will never mourn— height hopes will never die— And friendship more than empty name, In the land of God, on high. That Christ is there and he has said Mortal shall weep no more— That with him dwell our sainted dead, Not lust—but "gone before." Fee longed to view the golden gates Brighter than sunlit sky— I've longed to quit this scene of strife— I've only wished to die. But like a child in ocean's arms, We strive against the stream. Each moment further from the shore. Where lite's young fountain's gleam. Each moment fainter wave the fields, :Ind wider rolls the sea ; The sky grows dark—the sun goes down ; Day breaks—and where aro we? I;,celten Glen, Hy. 8. '55. I: ATE. `'*allfiful*toto. Pubad.! sr. THE LEPER : OR TRH LOVERS OF CMPERNAVM. BY EUGENE ST. CLAIR. CHAPTER L "Thou a•t uow in thy dreaming thou Tito green leaves on the hough, The sunshine turning these to gold Are pleasures to thee now." It was evening in Capernaum. Noise lessly as the breath of time— softly as the mother lulls to golden dreams her precious child—had the sainted twilight stolen on —deepening and deepening until the stars came out in myriads, and stood with flash ing, helmets on, bright sentinels guarding the frontiers of heaven. Like a diamond dancing on a sapphire sea burned the na tal star of the First-born, and many an eye in the land of Judea, on that glorious night, gazed thereon with feelings of halos and love. I SEE NO STAR ABOVE THE HORIZON, PROMISING LIGHT TO GUIDE US, BUT THE INTELLIGENT, PATRIOTIC, UNITED WHIG PARTY OP THE UNITED STATES.". Moonlight, too, lent its magic influence in rendering thescene one of almost unear thly beauty, as its radiance slept upon the domes, and towers, and snowy walls of fair Capernaum, paving so golden a path along the sea that the dream could glide across and fade in the paradise of Gennes sareth—painting the lofty emerald-headed palms, the smiling vineyards clustering upon the hills and creeping amid the in terstices of each garden bower where en amored flowers, in the parterres of Galile an maidens, bent their coquettish heads to inert the soundless kiss from those silver lips. But who sits dreaming away the gliding hours of eventide in yon high balcony of one of Capernaum's most regal piles ? A h, who but Miriam, the child of Bemßa ma ; Miriam—peerless—from the plains of Idumia to snow crowned Lebanon; Mi riam—the pride and the boast of the holy Land ? Come, lover of beauty, and feast thine eyes on loveliness greater than that which forms the paradise of the followers of Ma hornet ! Ay, gaze awl worship I Was there ever ebon tresses more gloriously luxuriant ? Did the Orient's olive hue e'er lay upon a cheek of more harmonious mould, or the deep vermillion upon more velvet lips ? IVas ever form more fault less since beauteous Eve reigned queen of Eden's floral halls ? Si 25 1 50 2 50 Tell ine, 0, wrapt worshipper—sawest thou ever in human eyes—thuse brilliant mirrors of the soul—a finer blending of earth and heaven, save iu the eyes of that sainted one whose son has ,inco been seen bearing his cross up rueful Calvary ? Never. Was it for the song of the belated fisher man, as his bark sped shoreward from the scene of his daily toil, that she was wait ing ? Was it the beauty of the night— the dirt: nt Jordan sweeping toward the sea—the snowy, phantom sails, twin-wing ed in air and water, far out upon Tiberias, she watched Nay ; but for sweeter sounds—for a dearer sight,—the coming of her lover— the music of his voice I Nor long must she watch and wait. No laggard is Ito who has won the love of Palestine's fair est ; for yonder he comes—past the foun tain that sings below in the garden among the roses—with a step as free as that of his proud Arabian barb. A moment, and his step sounds in the stately vestibule ; another it glides along the tesselatvd marble of the lofty balcony ; and Judalt's pahniegt noble kneels at the lc'et of his mistress—there in the chequer ed moonlight. And well might she love him, with the best and holiest love known to the heart of woman ; "Ire was young And eminently beautiful, and life Mantled in eloquent fullness on his lip, And sparkled in his glance ; and in his mien There was a gracious pride that every eye Followed witltbenisons." "Welcome, Helen ! thrice welcome !" "Welcome, sayest thou sweet Miriam ? Flow knowest thou but I bringtidings that will sorrow thy heart, and dim with tears the radiant eyes ? I have spoken with Ben:Rarna !" ! host seen my father ?" exolaimed the maiden quickly, and the crimson deepened on her oval cheek. "Yes. within the hour I met him in the marketplace, and taking him apart from the multitude, told him my love for and besought him that ho would give mo thee to wife." 'And he said—what said he, Helon ?" ' , He answered not , but gravely stroked his beard, looking down, and toyed with a pebble 'neath his sandal." "Oh, Melon !" 'And then a cloud came over my spit , it ; hope seemed fleeing afar off. But I repeated more eloquently my tale of love, and earnestly implored him thnt he would look benignly on my request. I bade him to remember how we had lived in closest union from our infancy—how morn and noon and eve found us playing away the golden hours beneath the palm•trces shade and told hini that the fibres of our hearts wore so twined together, that now to sever them would be to snap the chords of life. "And then, Union ? He could not re fuse thee thy blood ? He turned not away from the persuasive music of thy voice unmoved ?" Aud the beautiful Jewess bathed her jewelled fingers fondly in her lover's clus tering hair, as she questioned him with iin passioned utterance. then Ben-Rama lifted up his eyes to mine, and tears fell down bis sil ver beard us he answered— "Thou halt asked of me a priceless treasure—greater than all the gold of Ophir or the riches of Solomon.. Marvel not at my tears ; for ago sits heavily upon sue, HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1855. and I weep at thoughts of separati on from my child. Nevertheless, I say unto thee fear not; I have looked upon then long— yea, even from thy boyhood, with an eye of love, and sho whom thou Invest give I unto thee. But I charge thee remain worthy of thy trust There is not another in all Capernaum could rob Ben-llama of his child !" "Heaven bless my father !" said the girl, tearfully, and the young noble echoed her petition—"yea, heaven bless thee, oh, Ben-Rama!" "And now, star of my life, tell mo I be seech thee, how long I must wait ere I can call thee mine ? Let it be soon, I pray thee, for the loneliness of thy lover is great ; his palace halls are all desolate, for woman's voice wakes not their echoes !" And the maiden answered-- 4 lt. is the Springtime now ; but when the Summer bath fled, and the Autumnal vintage is trodden on the hillsides of Gall lee, then Helen, will the daughter of Ben llama go to dwell in the home of thy fa thers !" The youth rose up, the glow of happi ness burning upon his noble countenance, and exclaimed— "It is enough ! Thy words have filled me with exceeding great joy, and my heart. exulteth in the fulness thereof." The sound of his voice had not died away upon the whispering breeze, when another voice, in which was mingled an unearthly power and sweetness arose from the street below, saying-- "Joy fleeth like the breath of summer ; in the midst of life we are in death 1" The lovers started. The voice thrilled their inmost being, even as the voice of an angel. "Knowest thou' who spoke 1" said the trembling Miriam, as Helen, with a cloud ed brow, watched the receding form of him, who had spoken the solemn words. Her companion answered not. fie seem ed troubled. To him it was a prophetic voice, and he felt ah•eady an invisible but mighty hand plucking him down from the high pinnael o of happiness he had gained. "Helen, knowest thou who spike '" "Yea, it was Jesus of Nazareji, he who siyleth himself the Son of the Most High God !" CHAPTER 11, "Yen, be went his way, Sick and lu:nrt•broken, alone—to die I For God bad cursed the leper l" Spring, with its glorious freight of flow ers, and sultry summer, with its burning suns bad passed away, dreamlike, and were forgotten ; and now the mellow days of Autumn had dawned in all their resplen. dent beauty, upon the hills and vales of • pleasant Galilee. The waving grain on the rich fields of •Zebulon leaned gracefully to the reaper's practised hand ; the date tree, and the olive, and the fig bent earthward with the richness of their store ; while along the slope of every bill gleamed tha purple vin tage, more gorgeous in its hue than the fie•-famed Tyrian dye. It was in that golden time, when the pulses of the human heart beat high-- when the bright world is dearer than ever before to man•--when life and health are more precious than jewels or fine gold. But there was one who looked not forth upon the pleasant scene with the same beaming of the eye—the same expanding joyousness of the heart ns had been his wont ; and this was Melon, the young no ble of Capernaum. There had come a deep and melancholy change upon him. As the gentle Spring yielded to the fiery sway of Summer, there had crept an unnatural sluggishness upon his limbs ; the blood coursed ftA , bly in its channels ; fever parched his tongue ; and pain like a fierce lava stream swept ever across his throbbing brow. All day long, and through the still lon ger nights, he tossed wearily upon his couch, but the returning morn brought no alleviation to his pain -racked form. Oh, it was sad to see him prostrate thus, and hear the languid moan from his fever. stricken lips, and at times his wild and earnest cry for "Miriam ! Miriam !--tho dream of his troubled brain ! Illness to him fron infancy, had been a strrnger. But now, in his pride, and his strength, and his beauty, the unwel corned and unbidden guest had come. For a long time, not ho nor those who ministered unto guessed the secret mala dy that oppressed hint. But when "llis skin grew dry and bloodless, and white scales ' Cireled.with livid purple, covered him ' And from their edges grew the rook white hair"— then those who loved him covered up their faces in their mantles, wept tutu, fled away. Fa they knew that the curse of Israel was on him—he was a leper ! Morning, boautiful as ever stolo from out the portals of high hPaven, dawned upon Ca pernnum. Many people were abroad I for it was mann hour for indolent repose. Joy and animation sat on every counte- I mince and from smiling lips that spoko the feelings of the heart, were heard the salu• i tations of the morn. _ All was life, bustle, happiness. But all at once the busy murmur ceased, and si knee Jibe a pall settled upon the multi tude, for the warning cry come wafted down the streets.— 'Room for the leper ! Room for the leper !" Oh, it was a pittiful sight to see--that wreck of beauty ! The swiftest font in Galilee moved as it were manacled ! The once noble eye—bright ns that of the sky staring eagle—was cast down like the eye of a felon; and a form that had been the most princely in the land now stooped as with the burden of an hundred years ! No costly raiment hid his shruken frame nac•ght save the leper's garment, the foul , sackcloth, twined about his loins; the soft brown curling beard and the luxuriant hair were'shbrn and on his lip rest2d a loath some covering, and ashes were on his brow! And on ho passed. Tho throng shrunk back from him as though it ices a passing, by of death. All spurned him, even those whom he had feasted and honored in his palmy days and those who loved hint well have freely given all that he might be restored. On, on, each step eliciting a moan of anguish as his leprous feet passed the sharp stones' along the crying— "Unclean ! Unclean.' •By all forsaken ? Was thole not in all that mighty city one heart to speak a word of consolation to the cursed of God ! Must he go forth in his stupendous grief—with that gigantic mountain of fierce agony resting on his soul—and not a word of j comfort reach him—not one sympathising voice givo him a God-speed its his ctesola. tion No! by the divinity of love! for lo! as a bird darts forth, (Flick, as a yam of I;glit from out of the palace gates of Ben-ltama bounds the dark eyed daughter of his love! and though dishonor, pestilence, or death were in the touch, she would have pressed the ghastly wanderer, plague laden as he was, before Capernaum's thousands, to her snowy breast ! Oh, the deep, fervent, holy love of wo. man ? Show me a diviner attribute of the human heart, and I will show you tow thing implanted there by a mightier bond than that of Clod. Yen, she would hare alas ped him to her bosom, but strong men dashed in and plucked her buck, and bore her struggling to her home again. But ho had seen her, almost felt her white arms around his neck—und he had heard the wild prayer she uttered— ,4llelon, oh, my beloved ! May the God of Israel be nigh unto the in thine hour of trial ! The dime that - though all his agony had bmrayed no weakness, now felt the relief of bursting tears. Such proof of love to tho broken-hearted man, was as balm to his crushed spirit—as a staff to his weary feet. He could go forth, now, in all his misery, out into the the bleak wilderness, fur from the haunts of men, where the hen made her fair among the reeds of Jordan—he could go out and die, and tha arrow of death would be left to its sting. And so with rent garments and the ashes sprink led on his brow, and the loaths'ome cover ing upon his lip, the leper went his way. to to . 41 Before the low portal of an humble tene ment, craving admittance, stood the daugh ter of Ben Rama. A low veins bade her enter; and she passed in. It was the hab• itation wherein the Saviour dwelt, during his ministry, and now it chanced that its only occupant was he—the meek Naza rine . A mild, benignant smile rosted upon his face, detracting none from its majesty, but which seemed to fill the plain, ungarn ished room as with sunshine, "What would'st thou maiden ?" "Rabbi, behold I come unto theo in tears—in great tribulation of heart. He whom I love is stricken with the curse of Israel—even the grievous plague of the leprosy." . And Christ asked her saying—. "Art thou not she whom they call Miri. am, the daughter of I3en-llama ?" "Yen Lord." “Itemembcrest thou once, in the Spring time, when the even was come, that thou spakest with a lover in the balcony of thy father's dwelling?” "Master, I have not forgotten." • „ said 1 not unto thee then that joy fleeth like the breath of Smuttier ?” 1 J,.. , , T , „A ‘ - "Even so, lord, and the words of thy mouth are verified; for 10, my beloved walketh in the valley of desolation, nod the joy of mine heart is turned into mourn• iug?" 'filen said Jesus— "What w•ould'st thou have me to: do— me, the despised, reviled, and persecuted of thy race 1" And she replied— " Thou art mighty, oven unto salva tion, for thou art the son of the living God. Lay hut the hand upon then leper, and he liveth !" "Maiden, be thou of comfort ; thy faith shall surely hare its reward." And kneeling there, with tearful eyes, but a joyous heart, she kissed the hem of his mantle and worshiped Lim. CHAPTER "Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted." It was a wild and desolate spot upon the banks of Jordan. The cypress, aloe, and the hr cast their sombre shade far out upon the water, for the sun was going down behind Lidanus, and the shadows lengthened in its departing glow. Sound was inaudible, save the occasional growl of some wild beast from its gloomy lair, and the gentle flowing river, making. Sweet music over the enamelled :Acmes. And there, kneeliw7, with,his ghastly face upraised to heaven, a haggard and life wearied man besought his God that he inight die. It was but a more wreck— Larely the semblance of a man—and the voice was small and plaintive as as infant's in which he pmyed—and this was Helen! Oh ! how unlike the youth who had passed with lordly pride the streets and places of his native city ! who had been the gayest where the sound of dance and music fell—the boldest and the first. Where the hunter of deer, and the warror trod. To his hills that encircle the seal But hark ! the sound of approaching footsteps disturbs the solitude; the leper, with a quick shudder, muffles up his faCe within his garments giving the warning cry which tells the wayfarer that pestilence is in his paih: "Unclean ! Unclean !" Horror? no heed is given—steadily ad vance the footsteps ! lle ivolild not for the boon of life--life that seems gliding froin him like a dream----that another should feel the curse that his has felt•---that another should bear the agony thai ho has borne ! ‘ , ll elon !" Oh ? he had heard that voice before-•-- on that starry night when the moonbeam 3 danced on the Sea of GaHee, and he had drank deep draughts of love from a mai den's eye ! But not now as then did it thrill his soul with dread, for love, and pity, and redemption w ere blended in its tortes ! "Melon arise ! Be thou made whole ! Great God ! could it be so ? Had ho heard aright? Whole? Cleansed from the leper's damning curse ? The plague of Israel that had brought him within the hour to pray for death- —was it indeed to be removed ? Or was but another of those dreams that he Ile had often dreamed there in the gloom of the dark firs—those gol den dreams that had well 'nigh crushed him at the wakening? No ! none of those•---no idle dream-- no creature of tho fevered brain, but a bright, joyous, heavenly reality ! 011, hea venly was that restoring thrill of health to the noble's wasted form ! Down. to the dust, fell the foul scales that covered him; the awakened blood, like electric currents, bounded along his veins with all its pris tine vigor; each unstrung nerve resumed wonted functions, and in an instant the leper was restored ! And as the peerless girl had done whose love had plead with Christ for his recovery. so did the grate ful Helen !---41e bowed dowri in admira tion and owned him there the Son of the ever living God. * * Again the gem spangled veil of night covered Capernaum. Again we ask, thee gentle render, to visit with us the palace of Ben-Rama. Silence on this night broods not within its stately halls. You can hoar the enlivening sounds of merriment, the dance, the song, the crash of harping min gling with the mellow pipos----the twink ling cymbal and the viol's pleasant strains --all telling of the joy that reigns with in. Ay, pray, for tomight is the bridal eve of Miriam and Helen ! With a thankful heart to Him from whom our blessings flow hail the young bridegroom laid upon the holy alter in the tabernacle of the Most High those ofFerings commanded by Moses for the leper's cleansing, and they with priestly rites hail reinstated him among his fellow men ! Though we Mig,lit gaze opus the wcalth [WEnsTEn. the youth and beauty or Capernaum, yet will we not enter where the festive scene goes on, but tarry without here in the bal. cony, where first we meet l3en•Ranut's beauteous daughter on that starry night. But .ve are not alone; there is a tall form wrapped in a dark mantle gazing with sad dened face over the city; It must be some guest of the evening—now he turns his head,----ha I it is Jesus ! The sound of the song, the dance, the music fall not upon his car. His thoughts were of his Father's mission, and the un thankfulness and unrepentance of those to whom he ministered. 4.1 , 1r0 unto thee Chornzen I wo unto thee, Bethsadia ! And thou, Capernaum, which art exalted unto heaven, shalt be brought down to hell !" Thus he spoke to himself, even as he had spoken before the multitude. But his reverie was broken; fur steps came gliding along the marble floor, and the briegroom and the bride knelt there before him, and besought him saying.— _ "Lord, pur hearts 'admit but one thing to overflow with joy ---•even thy blessing." And he strtt;bed forth his hands and pla ced them on the heads of those who knelt before him, and blessed them ! liscellancons. Natures Lessons of Religion. The following, by J. G. Whittier, is instinct with lessons of Religion, appear ent to every eye in Nature's scenery, audi ble to every reader ; There is a religion in everything around us; a balm and holy religion in the unbreathing things of na ture, which man would do well to imita'e. It is a meek nod blessed influence, steal ing as it were, unawarfs upon the heart. It comes---•it has no terror, or gloom in its approaches. It has nothing to rouse up the passions ; it is untrammeled by the croed and unshadowed by the supersti tions of mon. It is fresh from the hand of the author, and glowing from the immedi• ate presence of the great spirit which prevodes and quickness it. It is written on the.arched sky. It looks out from every star, it is among the hills and valleys of the earth, where the khrubl,ss mountain top pierces the thin atmosphere 'of eter nal winter, or where the mighty forest fluctuates before the strong winds with its dark waves of green foliage. It is spread out like a legible language upon broad bo. som of the unsleeping ocean. It is this that uplifts the spirit within us, until it is tall enough to overlook the shadows of our place of probation ; which breaks link after link the chain that binds us to mor• tality and which opens to imagination a world of spiritual beauty and holiness. -••••••- Nen of Thought and Action. The employments of civilized life may be divided into two classes, corresponding to the body and mind in man. Trade and commerce minister to mater ial wants, nat ural or artificial ; science and literature, to intellectual growth. Thus, the mer chant may be taken as the representative of outward practical life, and the scholar of inward or intellectual life. In this di vision, no disparaging comparison is in volved. Each class of employments has its peculiar advantages and its peculiar dan gers. The ideal merchant is in say judge meat, nowise inferior to the ideal scholar. Indeed as each approaches the highest point of developement, they draw nearer and near towards ono another, as the op posite sides of a pyramid, far apart at the base, meet at the top. By an ideal mer chant, I mean a man acting, but capable of acting. Politics, or the art of Govern ment, in this age of the world, includes both elements. The merchant and the scholar each contributes something to the composition of the statesman. He must be able to ascend to the highiest generali zations from the solid basis of carefully selected facts. The homely details of business, as well as the laws which regulate and control its great movements, must be familiar to him. Speculation must suggest experiment, and exFeriment must confirm speculation. No man can be said to be a finished man who has not both the power of acting and the power of thinking. So, no community is truly powerful and prosperous which has not a fair proportion of men of action and men of thought. pgr"ls it very sickly hero'?" said a son of the Enteral,' Isle the other day, to another. "Yes," replied his companion, "a gteat many havu died this year who never died before." VOL. 20. NO. 37. Foreign Infidels. It is most earnestly to be deplored, says the N. Y. dermal of Commerce, Unit 80 few who are born in this land and love American translations are aware of the rapid hatred of Christianity and its con comitants, yearly increasing in our popu- Judos' from the continent of Europe. We do not speak of the convicts and paupers that are smuggled into our ports from Genoa, Ilainburg, and Treiste ; but of the tens of thousands of Germans who from year . to year conic from provinces of Eu roro completely pantherized, pnd with whom freedom is synonymous with the downfall of the Kingdom of the Redeem er. We called attention some months ago to the fact, that a large number of Germans who have come of late years to this country, disciples of the anarchist school of Heine, according to whose creed, there can be no true freedom un til christianity is bloodily abolished," viz. until a persecution by infidel Christians is instituted, with ends similar to those of Diocletin or Super. We showed that elections had been made to turn upon the single point, whether prayers should be ' offered in Legislatures : whether the Lord's day should be kept, and religious oaths be mantained. One of the most influential I German papers in this city published sim ultaneously articles warning this better class of Germans, of whom there are so many in our city .against encouraging these excesses. Our remarks were repub- I halted in various parts of the United States, and we trusted that a good re sult might be produced. Since then, however,another anniversary has recur red of the birth-day of Thomai Paine, and it has filled our hearts with shame to learn how the natal day of that enemy of God, Isis Saviour, and of his country, has been celebrated. The German language constitutes a barrier which prevents the most of our people from imagining what takes place behind the screen of that un• I known tongue. The Teutonic dialect en isures the existence of the anti-Christian I Legions, whose numbers are reinforced ! continually from abroad, a vast secret So• cis ty to whom none can have access who do not go through an arduous and pains taking apprenticeship of study, which in the end leaves them when initiated, only among the first class of novices. Yet its members are easily naturalized, become as speedily as possible citizens of these states , carrying Atheism to the polls, and receiving the homage of demagogue poli ticians to obtain n few miserable sutlers. ges. A few of the ' , reforms" demanded by the 4, Freitimenuer," so they call them- selves, who have set up Thomas Paine as their apostle, and who strive to gain strength to revolutionize our government by the establishment of the tyranny of at, archy, are—abolition of the laws for the observances of the Sabbath; abolition of oaths in Congress; abolition of oaths up on the Bible ; no more prayers in our Legislatures ; abolition of the Christian system of punishment; abolition of the Presidency, of till lawsuits involving ex pense ; the right of people to change the constitution when they like; n reduced term in acquiring citizenship, etc. These things aro not sought after as mere shad. ows, nor are they dreams with which vise ovaries amuse themselves, but which do no harm. They are seriously inculcated principles, instilled, for the propagation of which there exist several chief and many minor Societies, to which hundreds of thousands of foreigners are affiliated, who are in constant communication with each other, and act in concert, who are begin. ing to be fo's in every corner of the. land, but particularly in the West, where their effort is greatly aided by tine growing li centiousness of abolitionism. DD — There is, (says the Boston Trull. script,) a sign projecting from the door of a mantua-maker's shop, in Troy, the conch ding portion of which reads thus: N. B. "Dresses made lower than ever." Cietr - The Journal of the Academy ok' Medicine nt Turin, states, among (Alter things, that tall men live longer than those of small stature. Of course they do, and lie longer in bed. ffE'Down East somewhere, a pious old lady was summoned as a witness loan int pertnat case. Being told that she must "swear," the poor woman was filled with horror at the thought. After much per suasion she yielded, and exclaimed, "If must, I mitst•--Dam ," The Court ad journed immediately. ger Death is the grand, final senile of life. tVe :should so live that when the eu, • taut drop, tto. shall hear "Well dune—."