*tar * ntlattlottra* ilSa**tor+ VOL. 5--NO. 38.] Tirn GARLAND. "With sweetest flowers enrich'd, From various gardens cull'd with cure." 'MIT DO I LOVE HER: WHY do I love her? I 'cannot well answer, Except in a negative wax; It is not because she is famed as a dancer, And trips over the floor like a fay; Nor is it because she warbles so sweetly, While touching the tuneful guitar, 'Tis not that she dresses with taste and so neatly "Pis something more exquisite far. Why do I love her?—'Tis not that her beauty Is equalled alone by her worth; 'Tis not that in filial affection and duty, She has not an equal on earth; Nor is it because she has genius and talents, With all that the schools can instil, A rich entitled intellect, fancy to balance, 'Tit something more exquisite still. 'Why do I love her?--Beenuse I have reason To know that her heart is an urn, Where purest alfeetion, a stranger to treason, Will warmly and brilliantly burn. Because she will love with as fervent devotion, As glows io a seraph above: Because she's alive to each tender emotion, I love her because she can love. ORIGINAL. Far the Gettysburg Star and Republican Banner. IDLE 110URS.-7 0. 11 WORELING-MEN. A POLITICAL FACTION was SWIM time since organized in several of our cities and large towns, styled " The working men's party." This, however, was evidently a misnomer; it should have been "Agrarian," or some other term ex pressivo of hostility to all of different habits of thinking and acting, and a determination to de. stroy the present distribution and security of pro perty. It was a flagrant act of usurpation to ap. propriate a word doscriptivo of the most valuable members of society to a few disorderly and rev°. lutionizing spirits, who, by deserting their ordi nary occupations to wrangle in defence of theories; have almost forfeited their claims to Ito classed among those for whose riglis they appear so zeal ous. To whom then would wo concede this title? To all moductive laborers—to all who by their personal efforts produce the necessaries of life, or really promote the well-being of a community. 11 But before we discuss the character of those who are engaged in it, let us examine the nature of the thing itsialf—LAnon, we mean. This not only provides for the bodily wants of men, but likewise greatly enhances, and even creates the value of commodities, and is thus the real founda tion of wealth. Accompany me to the swamps surrounding the bay of Honduras. Look at yon leafless tree in which the work of decay has evi dently already commenced, it now serves no pur pose but to "cumber the ground." and will ore long by its decomposition add to the noxious va pors which ars even now floating in the atmos phere. No, its fall is accelerated; the laborer ap proaches, considers well its nature, size, and sit uation, and then appLes atioke a ft er stroke of the loudsounding axe, Atli the forest patriarch IS stretched along the ground. The - saw is next employed to convert_it into planks, which pinged in the merchant's vessel, aro speedily convoyed by favorable winds and waves to some mart of commerce. Again the hand of industry is ap plied; a hundred individuals; perhaps, aro engag. ed in giving it a• thousand different shapes, the plane and the hammer rattle - over and smootho it until it ornaments our chairs, composes our la, bles, sparkles in our sideboards, so that in fine tho once worthless log of mahogany, by this moat potent alchimy, is well nigh equivalent to its o riginal weight in gold. Such are the every-day results of labor, without Which Providence has decreed that mortals shall receive nothing that is good—good whether we consider this in relation to their bodies, minds, or morals. Health cannot be retained without due exercise afire muscular system; knowledge and wisdom come not by intuition, but are the fruits of diligent, unremitted inquiries after truth, and the practice of virtue rot:Oros an endless warfare of principle with passion, tomptat*, and seem ing pleasure. Experience, therefore, fully coin cides with revelation in enforcing at least the lat ter part of the injunction "six days thou shalt la. bor"—obey this law, and contentment, health, wealth (for it is "the hand of the diligent malted) rich,") may be thine,—despise it, and all the hor rors of ennui, shattered nerves, and a dilapidated ()slate must be the result. This furnishes a solo. lion of the secret why the peasant, toiling all day beneath the burning sun, and resting at night up on his bad of straw, is more uniformly happy than his nabob.lord, reclining under his pavilion,fanned by fawning slaves, and on his couch of down in vain assaying to close his eyes in slumber. "The laborer is worthy of his hiro," "what each man sows, that he shall reap." It is time, however, that we designate th'e indi viduals to whom wo would accord the title placed at the head of our essay. No one will doubt but that It is well merited by the hard handed sons of industry, who earn their bread in the sweat of their br . ow—by the pioneer of civilization, who clears our western wilds—by thee,. whO turn the furrow, throw in the precirms seed; and gather the golden harvest-ALdid by all engaged In trades, the products of whit aro indispensable for carrying en the ordinary business of life—articles of food and clothing, convenience and comfort. .Let _it ever be borne in mind, however, that it ie not merely tI:C amount of time and toil exptteded up on any object, but adaptation to en end, dontand for 7 its use, and real utility that doter Mine the question or productive labor. 'A certain Gorman prince devoted himself chiefly-to the manufacture of sealing was, and, if his courtiers - aro to be be lieved, produced a first rate article. Yet what was gained, if the royal wax was,never to be de graded by the contact.of plebeian hands? The do. thronet! Spaniard (Charles IV.) was a most in dustrious tailor, and sent most splendidly em broiderod robes to"our lady of Loretto." Did he on that account desorvo the gratitudo of an op. pressed, impoverished, paralysed nation? Our own aborigines were indefatigable in forming and finishing their bow and arrows—who would for that reason bring these weapons into competi tion with the rudest rills over shouldered by a hack woodsman? Neither can this term, with any propriety, be confined tognarina/ labor. Such might be the tact if man wore merely a material being, with no other than corporeal faculties and animal wants, or if mind were not able to influence his happi. ness, or produce any important result. Far dif. foront is the fact. Who is more engaged in spe culation than tho astronomer? Yet is he to bo ranked amongst the greatest benefactors of the hurriffn race, an every sailor who, by tho uid of chart, quadrant, and compass, fearlessly plows the main, must gratefully acknowledge. Does the physician prevent disease ur expel it from the eye tem, restore soundness to our limbs or lop them when unclose from the body—will any one dare to say that his years of preparation were mis. spent, that his efforts are now mis-applied? Nor can he be regarded as a supernumerary member ofsociety who, studying its wants and mutual re lations, suggests laws suitable to regulate its tercourse, frees innocence from suspicion and in. justice, detects villany and eventually brings upon it condign punishment. Is "an honest man the noblest work of God?" virtue man's highest dig. nity? then must we equally prize those whose 'din it is to promote moral purity, encourage the good to persevere, and urge the vicious to reform. Is knowledge preferable to ignorance, oi . vilization to barbarism, and mental enjoyment riot the least of our pleasures—how can we dispense with those whose object it is to increase, pet 'telltale, and r e. alio all these? All professional and literary men, tkereforo, who faithfully discharge their duties are in truth "working-mon." Many aro disposed to look upon those of studi ous habits as useless idlers, who scorning to put their hands to the plow, live, as the common ex pression is, by their wits. Such persons do not take into consideration the days and nights con sumed in anxious toil, the unwearied research which must be made in every department of na ture, and the thorough investigation of their own minds, of men, and books, of the past, the present, and the future which must be entered into by those who would keep pace with the age, and sa tisfy the intellectual wants of the world. The broken constitutions of ninny of tho brightest or naments of society, and the long list of those who have early fallen victims to Intense application, bear mournful testimony to the zeal with which not one, but hundreds have exerted themselves in throne various pursuits. At the same time, it can not bo denied, that there are not a few against whom this charge can be justly laid, who serve to perpetrate the prejudice which similarly worth less drones originated. Who can avoid feeling the most sovereign contempt for those who, with. out a single qualification for it, pretend to dis. charge the funOions of a responsible station,mrike it a pretext for indulging in idleness, and arro gantly claim respect as due to a certain rank which they do all they can to degrade? Yet would it be as unjust to condemn all upon such grounds as to rail at mechanics, indiscriminately, because a bungling workman had Made a pair ofpincliing shoes, or disappointed you by not sending them at the appointed time. How groundless, then, and how unjust too, in a land like ours, whore peculiar privileges aro granted to none, aro those prejudi ces by which the feelings of one part of society are too often embittered against the other! To the clear eye of common sense, their interests are identical—each Is indispensable to the other.— And what, through some have more of "this world's gear" than others? If originally acquired by hon esty and industry, what reasonable man can ob ject to the fullest fruition which his neighbor can derive? There is another point upon which we had in. tended to touch—the ridiculous ideas entertained in regard to the relative respectability of different occupations, with which is closely connected the opinion that there is something degrading in be. ing under the necessity of toiling personally. But having aptead these remarks over a greater space than usual, we, for the present, forbear, reserving to ourselves the privilege of taking it up in some futyre "idle hour." 11. ( d'i&COELOEi3D Daa)